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PAGE FIGHT Pack Outlook In Southeast: Now Improved Run Commencing fo Hit Southern District-Ko- diak Gets Extension of a late-sea three day shown ea District, with a very consid 4\\“ improvement the p wo days, it was Two season extension each have bee suthern District by the Fi ldlife Service, it of 24 ho in the and W nounced. The season the set to close at 6 o'clock . row, August 18 improvement also appeared in the Kodiak District of Central Alaska, with more than 150,000 cases | being packed there during the week | ending August 11. An extension of 48 hours was granted at Kodiak also, with ithe extended season there ending August 16, at 6 o'clock p. m The for the 1945 pack is reflected in pack reports for the season, through August 11, compiled here by the F&WL, released today; with com- parative totals last year: Southeast Alaska: Ketchikan District—Reds, 26,039; kings, 545; pinks, 192,729; chums, 34,- 947; cohoes, 16910; total, 271,170 last year, 234,244, West Coast—Reds, 6,697; kings, 74 pinks, 11,573; chums, 4,870; cohoes 10,788; ta 34,002; last year, 41,271 Wrangell-Petersburg — Reds, 14,- 869; kings, 92; pinks, 27,174; chums, | HS]G cohoes, 6,956; total, 57,401; last Eastern—Reds, 10,484; kings, 182; pinks, 23,870; chums, 18,036; cohoes, 2,302; total, 54,874; last year, 103 472, Western—Reds, 17,958; kings, 19; pinks, 33,870; chums, 49,751; cohoes, 3,722; total, 105,320; last year, 257,- 136. Icy Strait — Reds, 13,193; kings, 277; pinks, 29,751; chums, 22,764; cohoes, 3,576; total 69,581; last year. 130,238%. Yakutat—Reds, 17,766; kings, 563 pinks, 506; chums, 9; total, 18,844 last year, 17,107. Central Alaska: Copper River (Final)—Reds, 70,- 997; kings, 6,021; total, 77,018; last year, 65,018, Resurrection Bay — Reds, 2313; pinks, 482; total, 2,7 last year, 1,- 30. Prince William Sound (Final)— Reds, 14,289; kings, 106; pinks, 482,- 870; chums, 148,446; cohoes, 3,901; total 649,612; last year, 547,570, Cook Inlet — Reds, 117,625 kmg\ 22,182; pinks, 53,825; chums cohoes, 27,829; total, 2488: year 324,996. Kodiak—Reds, 145,727; kings 494; pinks, 410,652; chums, 55,592; cohoes, 2,742; totals, 615,217; last year, 519- 348. Chignik—Reds 18,208; kings, 221; pinks, 17,674; chums, 10,884; cohoes, 229; total, 47,306; last year, 77,860. Alaska Peninsula (estimate) Reds, 61,811; kings, 1914; pinks, 141,511; chums, 61,118; cohoes, 7440; total, 273,794; last year, 264,087, Western Alaska: Port Moller (Final)—Reds 32,621; kings, 23; pinks, 124; chums, 24- 874; cohoes, 4,958; total, 62,600; last year, 44,234. Bristol Bay (Final) —Reds, 569,831 kings, 4,288; chums, 65540; cohoes, 2,294; total, 641,953; last year, 982,- 792. Area Pack Totals Soulhenit Ala:kn——Reds 107,006; proving general prospect | kings, 1 : pinks, 319473; chums 138,707; cohoes, 44 total, 611, 192; last year 867.772' Central Alaska Reds, 431,070; kmL\ 30,988 pinks, 1,107.014; chums, 203; cohoes, 42,141; total, 1914,- | 366; last year, 1,800,609 Wester Alaska (Final) Re 602,452; kings, 43 chums, 90.414; cohoes, .Hul last year, 1,027 laska Tota Reds 1,140,528; 611; chums, total 3,230~ pinks, 124 2; total, APPOINTMENT - OF ACHESON STIRS TALK May Mean More Changes ' in Top Control for Foreign Policy BULLETIN WASHINGTON, Aug. 17—Archibald MacLeish and J. C. Holmes resigned today as As- sistant Secre of State. ar! |« WASHINGTON, Aug. 17—Further {changes in the top control of this | country’s foreign policy appear in the offing today, following Dean | Acheson’s elevation to succeed Un- ‘d.v Secretary of State Joseph C. Grew It is possible, however, that Se retary of State Byrnes may delay 1a final decision until he returns Inext month from the Council of | Foreign Ministers meeting in Lon- don President Truman late yesterday announced the appointment of Acheson, an assistant secretary who first came to Washington early in | New Deal day Simultaneously, Mr. Truman accepted Grew's resig- nation, marking the close of a 41- year foreign service career. Ambassador to Tokyo from 1932 until Pearl Harbor, Grew is credited with formulating Allied policy m-{ ward the Japanese Emperor which | figured in Nipponese s\u'rendu' earlier this week. | Acheson, a 52-year-old lawyer, who served briefly Under-Secre- tary of the Treasu in 1933, went to the State Department three ago after spending the in-| 1ing period in private prac- D NAVY T0 PROBE INDIANAPOLIS DISASTER NOW GUAM, Aug. 17—A Navy Board of Inquiry has begun an investiga- tion of the sinking of the Cruiser Indianapolis July 30, including the reasons for the delay in search for the ship until after it was overdue more than 54 hours. The Indianapolis was lost in the Philippine Sea from enemy action with 100 per cent casualties to her 1,196 officers and men. Five were officially listed as dead, 875 as missing. The remainder were wounded or suffered from exposure. —— - RECONVERTED DALLAS, Texas — Somebody is arrying this reconversion thing a little too far, one citizen reported to- day to police. Mr. and Mrs. Ezell Foster said a burglar, evidently feminine, left a cmplete wardrobe of work clothes— shirt, slacks and shoes in their home last night. She left with a much snappier outfit, ‘a red and white ldu-'\s blouse and suede slippers Assorted Pickles . Green Peppers and ot YES — WE HAVE LOTS OF CUBE SUGAR No Strings Attached AND..O. Limited amounts of Rath's Breakfast Pork Sausage in cans, Hershey and Nestle's Milk Chocolate, Corned Beef Hash, Potato Chips, Jello, J‘IAS"OQOO Plenty of FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES including the following Bananas, Peaches, Grapes, Plums, Pears, Apples, Cantalopes, Casa- bas, Honeydews, Avocados, Corn-on-Cob, Bunch Beets, Cucumbers, Egg Plant, Danish Squash, Celery, Lettuce, Tomatoes, Cabbage, hers. |ed,” the s |’er up.” 'guest at the Gastineau Hotel. CHURCHILL SAYS ATOM Britain Reveals Early Plans | LONDON, Aug. sible for the sudden ending of the Japanese war and saved a million | American and 250,000 British lives | which would have been lost in in-| vading the enemy's home islands. | Prime Minister Attlee said subse- | quently that the atomic bomb dis-| covery would force reorganization “in | the sphere of international relations.” | We have to realize that we are living ina new world, now that we| have seen the atoms, a new force, the consequences of which we find it difficult to grasp,” said Attlee, who succeeded Churchill as Bruain's‘ first minister as a result of the July| clection | Churchill said Generalissimo Sta-| lin promised to enter the Pacific| war three months after the German surrender and the Russian interven- | tion on August 8 after the German collapse May 8 was “but another example of the fidelity and punctu- ality” of the Soviet Union. He disclosed that he and Presi- dent Truman made elaborate plans at Potsdam for “Great battles and landings in Malaya, the Netherlands East Indies and in the homeland of Japan itself,” not knowing how long er..nvw resistance would continue. JAP PUPPET KINGDOM IN LONE STAND Wants to chtaie Own « Peace Terms, Accord- ing fo Jap Radio SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17—The Japanese puppet kingdom of Viet am, created last March by the Japanese from the French Indo- China protectorate of Annam, will not accept peace if it means return- ing to French Rule, the Jdpanz-.w Dcemi news agency reported today in a broadcast recorded by the Fed- eral Communications Commission. The declaration in the name of the puppet premier asserted Viet Nam's intention of “defending the independence acquired in the Iasl stage of the Greater East Asia war,” the Domei dispatch, datelined Hanoi, | said. The people of Viet Nam refuse to be subjugated again by France, “un- der whese fetters they long suffer-| atement was quoted by T00WEAK TRINIDAD, Colo. — A motorist drove into a filling station and ex-| ultantly told an attendant to ml‘ 2 Domei. The attendant complied. As the motorist drove away, the full gas| tank, unused to the strain, drupped; to the pavement. — .- PEARL SPRENGLE HERE Pear]l Sprengle, of Haines, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. DOLLIE TURNER HERE Dollie Turner, of Ketchikan, is a | Come In and See or Call 16 or 24 -—-——-—n‘-—ufiu———_n—_—_—l ENDED WAR Former Prime Minister of | 17.~Winston | Churchill told Commons yesterday ! that the atomic bomb was respon-| THE DAILY ALASKA EME’IRE JUNEAU, ALASKA U-BOAT YARDS AT BREMEN — Half finished U-boats were still on the ways of the submarine yards at Bremen, Germany, when this U. S. Navy photo was taken. WLB HOLD | WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 — The Litt the sands of workers today One immediate the struggle among unions whose con- tracts tiat national wage policy 2 new stat HARRIET CHKISTIANSON HERE Ha terday on an Alaska Coastal Air lines and Hot 3 | = c SOME CASES - le Steel wage formula went into discard for undetermined thou- result W stage for a poten s to set wide call for reopening of nego- ions when there is a change in resident Truman announced the policy late yesterday in a ement in which he also called n labor to continue its wartime trike pledge - >-ee arriet Christianson arrived yi plane from Excursion Inlet is a pguest at the Baranof el You can always get Fresh, Crisp VEGETABLES and ALL FRUITS in Season Here . . .. Local Cabbage Egg Plant Spinach Turnip Greens Green Beans Peppers Lettuce Lemons Honey Dews Peaches Fresh Corn Zuchinni Squash Summer Squash Crook Neck Squash Cauliflower Tomatoes Avocados Fresh Raspberries Pears Cantaloupes Parsley Grapefruit — PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries—10 A. M. and 2 Douglas Dehvery—lo A. M. Roat Orders Delivered Anytime! CRUTCHER HERE Marshall Crutcher terday ka Cot OFFWAGES, | A. Yeatman, of lif., Celery Bunch Carrots Cucumbers Oranges tal Airlines plane and is t the Baranof Hotel. - - YEATMAN HE Robert, E Francisco, a Pan American Clipper banks Distinguished s fre o Schilling VACUUM PACKED Plums < l : from Fairbanks, where he has been arrived yes- vacationing in the Interior, a from Ketchikan on an Al- now a guest at the Baranof oHtel ADAMSON HERE San Mateo, anof Hotel, having arrived yeste returned to Juneau yester- |day via PAA Clipper Malaga Grapes Gravenstein Apples FRIDAY. AUGUST 17, 1945 GEORGE BROTHERS Super Mariket Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P, M. Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. The Largest and Finest SUPER- MARKET in Juneau Where Service, Price and Quality Meet!!! Specials Saturday and Monday Freshh Ranch EGGS 2 Dozen $1.39 GRADE AA LARGE $50.00 Coupon Book for $47.50 FRESH ) 8UTER Pound 59( STOCK UP NOW—NO LIMIT! $20.00 Coupon Book for $19.00 = OHEESE = AMERICAN — VELVEETA CHATEAU — KRAFT 2 PoundBrick $1.00 No Limit . . . The Best for Less COFFEE 3 Pounds $§.00 SCHILLINGS—Drip or Regular (RN No Limit . . . The Best Cash Grocery in Juneau TOMATOES \ Firm--Red " 3 Pounds $1.00 LARGE 1 Bunch Carrois - 3 bu. 50 { Green Onions - 3 bu. 25¢ GRAPEFRUIT - 2for 25¢ APPLES - Pound 20¢ CORN-ON-COB Cantaloupes, Honeydew Melons, Casabas, Bananas, Plums, Peaches, Oranges LEMONS LETTUCE Egy Plant, Cucumbers, Siring Beans, Green Peppers, Celery, Cauliflower, Calavos, Sum- mer Squash, Crook Neck Squash, Zuchinni, Danish Squash EORGE BROTHER Super Marlket Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Phone—Write or Wire George Brothers ol