The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 4, 1945, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT 1945 ALASKA' SALMON PACK ABOUT ENDED Fall Seasoflow Under Way Cannery Opera- All trap-fishing Inr salmon in Alaska is now closed for the 1945 season, the Fish and Wildlife Service here disclosed today in summarizing the present status of the salmon sea- son Canning operations also are just about completed for 1945. Most prom- inent exceptions being the Ynkutat cannery, Copper River and possibly Kodiak. The continuous season at Yakutat will not close until Sep- tember 30. Except for Taku and Stikine Ri\- er gill netting and trolling, all fish- ing in Southeast Alaska, except the Yakutat distriet, the fall season opens to trolling and | seining, from October 20 to Novem- ber 30. Taku River opened last Sat- urday for the 15-day fall season and the Stikine is also open until September 15, the date on which commercial trollers on Southeast waters will likewise pull in their lines. To the westward, the Copper Riv- er fall season is now open until Sep- tember 18. The Cook Inlet season| is open from September 1 to Sep- tember 10. Chignik, closed on Aug- ust 11, is re-opened through the month of September, but in view of the very poor run there this year, it is doubted that there will be any| further fishing in that section lhls‘ year. | Part of the Kodiak district re-| | The evening was spent in playing | !including a large birthday cake, were | is now closed until THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— ||mav by her father, wore a moss- |green suit with matching hat and | carried a white prayer book with a | cluster of gardenias and white roses. loo | Her sister, Miss Barbara Geis, was e | | STOCK QUOTATIONS (Deer Observe NEW YORK, Sept. 4 — Closing HOIlday quotation of Alaska-Juneau Mine | stock today is 7%, Anaconda 33%, her only attendant. Curtiss-Wright 6%, International b The young couple will make their Harvester 89%, Kennecott 37'.,} Numerous nimrods from the Chan- | home for the present in Fairbanks, New York Central 254, Northern nel area found plenty of deer sign | where the groom is now stationed| Pacific 27%, U. S. Steel 72, Pound |as they prowled the slopes over the |With the Army Air Forces. $4.025. weekend—but the bucks apparently | Mrs. Downer, accompanied by her| | sales today totaled 1,070,000 had been notified of the opening of | parents and sister, arrived in Juneau | PR {the hunting season Saturday—they | Saturday on the steamer Pringess| Dow, Jones averages today are as | Were high in the hills. Louise. They were guests at“the Baranof Hotel during their stay in this city. Several choice specimens were bag- | ged, though most of the hunters N) | far returned have been empty | handed. Among those bringing buck bucks are: Bill Byington, Vic Power, |Henry Harmon, Mario Sodini and the Minard Mill party. Byington and Power hunted close ©0 home, getting their deer on Doug- hs Island. An unnamed young day party last evening for Dave huntsman, on his first hunt, also follows: Industrials, 173.92; rails, | 55.20; utilities, 3324 Ceee Dave Milner Surpnse ‘The Townsend Club gave a birth- ANNOUNCE NEW APPOINTMENTS Milner at his residence, 713 Twelfth | (0W1d Douglas Island a fortu Street, with twenty-three present | choice, knocking over a four-pointer |near the upper ski cabin, ! | The MM party did its stalking on Glass Peninsula and Harmon pulled | his buck off Glass Mountain. ACS- |man Sodini got his deer at Admiralty | Cove. His trophy dressed out at 150 { pounds a four-pointer. HEAI.TH BOARD ] Hunters on Admiralty The Women of (e Moose met Sat- | urday evening for their first regular business meeting of the fall season, following the. Committee Chairmen for the com- ing year were announced by Senior Regent Ethel Milner as follows: | Child Care and Training, Theresa | Sandborn; Homemaking, Billie Jaeg- el; Hospital Guild, Grace Skaret; | | games, after which refreshments, enjoyed. Island found bear more numerous than OPENS INII'A[ jbucks. One of the many huntsmen yiprary Mrs. Reva Such: Member-! out of Barlow Cove was forced 0 ¢hin ~Mary Haas; Moosehaven, | shoot a Brownie that charged him. . : v % : Irene McKinley; Mooseheart Alumni, Elizaketh Graham; Publicity, Myrtle Lind; Ritual, Odelia Light; Soeial Eervice, Hazel Burkette, and War Relief, Aileen Smith. | The special theme of the month is War Relief and Publicity. A suggestion was made concern- Ho tracked the wounded bear into tlw brush for a way, but decided | discretion'should prevail over desire The first mceung of the Territorial to bring back a bear pelt. Board of Health was to get undcr - - > - way here this afternoon at 2 o'cloc] with all members of the Board pm- RUSSM“ ENG'"EERS HERE ON BUYING TRIP <. i Some oiver might ent. The sessions are expected to ‘and all members interested are urged continue through Friday. Chairman of the Board, which was | to attend the next meeting as this matter will be brought to' a vote. created by the last legislature, is| An auditing committee for the first Seven Russian enginesrs, direct frem Moscow, arrived in Juneau last night, via PAA and left this morn- Gov. Ernest Gruening. Other mem- | bers, who arrived here over the week end, are: Dr. Dwight Cramer, from Ketch)knn Rolland Armstrong, An- | ing for the south, enroute to Wash- quarter was also appointed with chomge Mrs. Katherine Kehoe, of | ington on a Russian government Anna Boedding, Chairman, Gertrude Nome; George Preston, Sr., Fair- 'buying mission. Several of the en- Bergren and Sue Kennedy as com- mittee members. banks. | g Entertainment for the evening was Dr. C. Earl Albrecht, Commission- Rev spent the night with the Eugene Olendy of the Russian janto. The fight started, the agency summer vacation, and | S8id, WI | wright is expected to 'rmoki'd completely by the Army to- MOOSE WOMEN | U, ALASKA BULLETINS WASHINGTON — President Tru- man has drafted a comprehensive message for delivery to Congress this week, the White House said today, and later will submit his views on disposition of the atomic bomb in a separate communication. WASHINGTON—Wartime orders xcluding persons of Japanese an- stry from West Coast areas were day, effective at midnight tonight (Pacific Coast Time.) The action, the War Department said, resulted | from capitulation of Japan. ROME—The Italian News Agency Ansa reports that one Italian Com- munist was killed and two others seriously wounded in a street fight with Polish soldiers Sunday in the village of Palagianello near Tar- hen a Polish soldier asked | civilians to remove Communist cm- | blems from a wall | WASHINGTON Gen. arrive next Monday from the Orient. Wain- here YOKOHAMA-—There will be no kid-glove handling of Hirohito's sub- jects when the United States Navy | takes over. The Navy has instructed its officers and men to use a firm| hand in dealing with the conquered enemy. e | SEATTLE — Presidents or their representatives of three airlines, Pan American, Northwest and United will confer here tomorrow with : committee to fight for retention of Seattle as the airways gateway to Alaska and the Orient. Juan Trippe, W. A. Paterson and Croil Hunter have indicated they will be | here or send representatives. WASHINGTON Secretary of afternoon. | Helen opened September 1 till September | er of Health, has devoted the past Orthodox Church of St. Nicholas. arranged by Myrtle Lind and Aileen gy.¢o Byrnes leaves for London this 30 and it is possible that there several weeks to preparing a heath may be cannery operation in a minor 'and sanitation program for prcfien- way there during the fall season.| tation to the Board. Bristol Bay Re-opened for the Mlvcr‘ season on August 3, with no closing | _date, but there is very little com-| mercial exploitation of the silver wisq Claribel Rakestraw, of Port- runs there. land, Ore, today took over r Alaska Peninsula district's fall sea- ayties g clmkvstenogrnm:cr ‘:0‘: gon extends from September 5 1O tne y, s, Forest Service here, under September 30. | direction of Administrative Officer | In general, fishing from here on in| Harry Sperling Southeast Alaska will be mainly by| troller and gill netters, with catches sold to cold storage outlets. To the Westward, salteries will take most! LIKES JU EAU Miss Rakestraw, who visited here | earlier in the summer on a vaca- tion trip, was so impressed with' - Lutheran Ladies £mith, assisted by Virginia Pugel yweck with detailed plans to give the and Ruth Maurstad United States and other great pow- | Refreshments ~ were served bY o decisive control over the key Marge Frederikson, Frances Beebe jnjand waterways of Europe. He will and-Frannie Timm lay the plans before a meeting of SO('ety ‘0 Meet : BT ‘Blg Five Foreign Ministers. Tomorrow Night SEVEN JUNEAUITES oottt O HELIDARY SRl T0 LAKE BENNETT OI the Resurrection Lutheran Church| Iwill hold their regular monthly A group of seven young ladies em- ployed here in Federal offices took | | LONDON — British newspapers have editorially measured the im- |pact and results of the war and have brought forth a tag which may | | provide a historic label for the con- {flict. They call it “The Six Years War.” meeting at the home of Mrs. Ole! \W("n)\ at 704 Eleventh street to- morrow evening at 8 o'clock. ©of the very minor salmon catches! |Juneau, that, upon being offered | M. Robert Pollack will be co- advantage of the three-day holiday SAN FRANCISCO — A dispatch | ‘expected. a position here, she returned to | |hostess with Mrs. Westby for the week end to trip into Lake Bennett from Yokohama revezil_s LhaL. four: g i : | Portland, straightened up her af-!eyening. Friends and members are over the White Pass Route. Army teams are compiiing a list of | - ‘airs and came in by PAA Friday invited to attend | Five of them arrived back here Japanese war criminals. The list| [ PARKS IN TOWN to make her future home in thc -oo this morning after making the round Was started as a result of the stories James E. Parks, of Hoonah, is|Territorial Capital City. registered at the Baranof Hotel. | e | e TO DUTY AT KETCHIKAN | KOHLHASE FAMILY Mary Louise Geis Is Bride Sat. Eve HERE , Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kohlhase and| Lt. (jg) Edward L. Nugent,| two sons, of Harbor Island, are Captain of the Port, Juneau, left| . guests at the Hotel Juneau. | this weekend for temporary duty | Of D I D i S e - | with the Coast Guard District | anle Owner (’ EMBLEM (‘Ler | Headquarters at Ketchikan. During | The marriage of Miss Mary Louise daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Edgar Geis of Los Angeles, to Cpl. Daniel Bush Downer, son of | Mrs. Fred W. Downer of Los Angeles, was solemnized at 8 o'clock Saturday | evening, September 1, of the Holy Trinity, Episcopal, \nth !the Rev. Wm. Robert Webb offi- ciating. Meets tonight at 8 o'clock. Elks his absence, Ensign Carl F. Guler | Hall. Business Meeting. (10,056-t1) is Acting Captain of the Port here.| Geis, oL MG — | Homer S FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT :—— The Science of Ever-Present Good LECTURER :——— Robert Stanley Ross C.S.B., of New York, New York Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts PLACE :——— THE SCOTTISH RITE TEMPLE JUNEAU TIME :—— TONIGHT AT 8 0'CLOCK PLACE:—— SITKA HIGH SCHOOL SITKA TIME:—— Thursday Septe}nber 6at8P. M. Under the Auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Juneau, Alaska ALL ARE WELCOME i Juneau Deliveries— 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. | Louise. trip to Skagway on the Princess Two of their companions, | Edith Moore of the Fish and Wild- |life Service, and Ruth Brooks, Alaska in the Church | COFFEE AS YOU LIKE IT! Ground the way you wish it with the full fresh flavor of the Coffee Bean at the | Native Service, continued into Can-! ada on a three-weeks vacation jaunt down the Yukon River to Circle, from where they will auto to Fair- banks and out over the Richardson Highway. Going just to Lake Bennett_ and return w Margaret Miller, Mil- dred Barron, Alvina Herold, Ida| Hofstead, all of Fish and Wildlife, and Pat Grove, of the Alaska Road | Commission. - LESKO IN TOWN George Lesko, of Anchorage, is The bndc who was given in mar- registered at the Gastineau Hotel. llIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIh!IIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIII Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. SRRSO &opie Twant-aas vring remit of brutal and inadequate treatment reported by liberated prisoners of war. LONDON—A dispatch from Hong Kong says that a Chinese crowd has beaten to death a number of armed Japanese soldiers caught on the streets of the British Crown Colony | when occupation forces of the Em- pire landed last Thursday. WASHINGTON — Censorship of mail and telegrams of American | armed forces abroad has been ended | by the Army and Navy. The Joint | Chiefs of Staffs, as a consequence of the formal surrender of Japan, |ordered discontinuance of the cen- sorship of mail and telegragh com- { munications of all members of the | United States armed forces and civ- ilian employees in the Pacific-Asia- tic theatres and on the European continent. CHUNGKING Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in a V-J message to the nation said “Now that the war is over we shall permit no further delay in the inauguration of constitutional democracy” in China. LONDON—The number of Japa- nese troops who have surrendered to Russian forces to date is estimated on the basis of Moscow advices total approximately 586,000 men—includ- ing 111 generals. SAN FRANCISCO — The Domei | Agency in a Japanese-language broadcast recorded by the FCC, said that Vice Adm. Matsuo Morizumi, Osaka Naval Defense District Sup- erintendent of Shipbuilding and Ordnance, has commited hara Kiri WASHINGTON—An estimate that at least 10,000,000 persons will be out of work up to 15 months during {the reconversion period was given the U. S. Senate Finance Com- mittee yesterday by a union leader, Harvey W. Brown, President of the International Association of Machin- ists. LONDON--The Financial Times says that immediate thanges in the dollar-pound exchange are unlikely. However, the paper hints that an adjustment may come later on, per- haps by November 1. CAMDEN, N. J. — Declaring the United States is on the threshold of “a new industrial revolution,” Wil- liam Green yesterday called for a 50 per cent raise in the American standard of living. CHICAGO—Blond Betty Hutton, 24-year-old film actress, and her new husabnd, Theodore Briskin, 27, President of the Revere Camera Cempany, plan to leave tomorrow for a Florida honeymoon. They were married in the Camellia Room TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1945 PUBLIC SCHOOLS OPEN: INCREASE IN ATTENDANCE All teachers were present as the Juneau High and Grade Schools op- ened at 10 o'clock this morning for the 1945-1946 sessions. Registration of classes proceeded throughout the day and regular classes will begin | functioning tomorrow morning at {9 o'clock. Registration the first day proved a 44 student increase over last year’s first day and a still larger enroll- iment is expected by Superintendent | A. B. Phillips in two weeks, due to returning students from hunting, working, etc. Enrollment as of the first day this year, noted by first figures, in comparison to that of last year, sec- ond figures, is as follows: In the High School-Freshmen Class, 61-45; EORGE BROTHER Super Market Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Deiivery sccepied Up to 2:30 P. M. CANNING PEACHES . QUALITY GUARANTEED Sophomore: 44—55; Junior clas: —35, enior class: —29; f(fak?:g ;r:?)msli:}"fiis sctl?ints??vhizch AT Lowzslr PBIGE IN TOWN! See Our Display of FRUITS and VEGETABLES 1st grade: 70—45; 2nd grade: Largest Selection in Juneau GEORGE BROTHER Honor Young Couple Super Market FO I I OWIHQ Ma"lage Phone—Write or Wire George Brothers The mariage of Miss Kathicen [ RSRE O T ITR McAlister and Mr. Robert Glenn Prather will be solemnized at — 43; ed students this year, which is a 22 student increase over last year's 466. Band, orchestra, and glee clubs will not be orgarfized until next week Text books will be given out tomor- row and lockers were assigned t... SRERES SO oL TR Home Reception Is io |a nuptial mass in the Church of the Nativity tomorrow morning, with the Rev. Louis B. Fink, S. J. officiat- ing. A reception in honor of the young couple will be held at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. James K. McAlister, at 9 o'clock in the evening, to which all friends are cordially nvited. COASTAL AIRLINES FLIES EARLY TODAY Alaska Coastal Airlines, flying yes- . — WANTED — WOMEN WORKERS PART TIME OR FULL TIME terday, had the following passengers. To Hoonah: Harold Parl AT THE o To Tenakee: E. E. Rallston. To Sitka: Sam Forum. To Haines: A. Mickstrom, Mabel Mickstrom, Dorothy Mickstrom and Ida Mickstrom. To Hoonah: Schoonover. To Excursion Inlet: R. W. Smith. Inbound passengers were as fol- lows: from Hoonah: Harold Parks, James E. Parks and Wilbur Lunduff. From Hawk Inlet: Mrs. Nick Pjakovick, Audrian Pekovich, Vicul Pekovich, Samuel Pekovich, Mrs. W. S. Pekovich and S. G. Pekovich. | 3 From Tenakee: A. A. Kiefer. sy CANNING PEACHES | ez rate 52,19 Crate $2. 19 me Lake Hasse]bmg w. HALE'S FANCY FRUIT ... Can Now While Quality and Price Is Right NEW SNOW WHITE LAUNDRY Pat Daniels and Mr. Stephen Sheldrup, From Hoonah: Mabel and Harold Stjern. From Excursion Inlet: O. S. Syre, Mrs. O. S. Syre and Hazel Ford. Early Morning trips today includ- ed: To Sitka: C. L. Bartiett. To Tenakee: L. E. Reynoldson, Mrs. L. E. Reynoldson, L. C. Gaults, Jr., and Mrs. L. C. Gaults. Arternoon trips included: To Ketchikan: Frank Benkovic, Joseph Rigatti and Gordon Norg- quist. To Petersburg: Mrs. J. K. Steele, Mrs. J. A. Hudson, Julia Hudson and child. Johnson TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES. 10:15 A. M. 2:15 P. M. W.S.C.5. Meets Tomorrow Night DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. : MINIMUM—$2.50 The regular monthly meeting of § & & the W. 8. C. S. of the Methodist Church will be held tomorrow even- , ing at 8 o'clock, with devotional services to be held in the little chapel of the church. ks Following the devotional services the business meeting and program will be held in the parsonage. Mrs.| James Parsons of Douglas will be hostess for the evening. PIGGLY \"eel.v; ’00” 1’R0’0¢'E I/E‘Dflk’ffi 2 - CNRAE All Fresh Fruits and Vegetables thal are available at prices that are reasonable. See us for Staple and Fancy Groceries. Don't forget of the Drake Hotel Sunday night: your CANNING PEACHES PHONE 16 or 24.

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