The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 20, 1945, Page 8

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i PAGE EIGHT GUN-TOTERS TERRYMGOVERN TOLD DUCKS . TALK AT C. OF C. " HAINT HERE ot seli Aaska ot , ' IsHis Plea o Cham- Local Season Opens To-» ber Members morrow Half-Hour | e suneau Ghamber of commerce at it regular weekly meeting held Before Dawn-Buf? in the Baranof Hotel this noon, wel- comed a true booster and friend of Those shotguns that local “pot Alaska for the first time in four shooters” as well as more highly | years, F. L. “Terry” McGovern, who regarded representatives of the brought a helpful message when he “genus duckhunter” have been so said “Don't Sell Alaska Short carefully checking, cleaning and oil- | Alaska is at the cross ads and it ing these past few days are likely by can stay as it is, slip back or go sundown tomorrow to weigh more forward. A more substantial class heavily than game bags. of people is looking to Alaska to Yes, the duck hunting season settle and raise families, people who, (more officially known as the migra- know Alaska, ex-service men, etc., tory waterfowl open season) gets un- but it's up to Alaskan to help them der way one-half hour before sunup L.(-t started.” tomorrow, September 21—but, there's “It is up to each community to not many ducks around yet. |find and advertise its own commodit- At least, Alaska Fish and Wildlife ies, giving the coming settlers a Director Frank W. Hynes today dis-| first hand view of the attractions closed that field reports so far re- of Alaska and bringing these people ceived indicate that northern flights to the Territo said Mr. McGov-| are “not materializing yet” in ern Southeast Alaska | Mr. McGovern then went on to “A few stragglers” only have been point out how fast Alaska is devclup« sighted by agents working in the Icy|ing and advancing to things never| Strait area, he said. before thought of or imagined; such No reports have yet been received as fresh milk and vegetables curh here from Westward areas |day in Nome, flown in by plane,! However, “that ol fever” is cours- large cold storage plants which are ing through the veins of a large Or will be under construction in portion of the local populace and Nome, Kodiak, Anchorage and Cor- the flats are expected to be well dova, the Matanuska Valley project tenanted, come tomorrow morn. or the ldr;.(‘st dairy herd in Alaska Just in case, principal regulatory at Kodiak “Alaska has the mater- réstrictions on the taking of migra- ial things for advancement,” said Mr. tory waterfowl are here listed: ~ McGovern, “now it is up to the 1—Shooting hours are from one- 'Alaskans themselves.” half hour preceding sunrise, daily An announcement was made by until sunset. (Official sunrise tomor- Mayor Ernest Parsons that Juneau how is at 6:39 o'clock a. m., present would co-operate with President Tru- Juneau time. Sunset is at 7:02 man’s proclamation that the week of o'clock p. m.) {Octoter 7 to 13 be Fire Prevention' 2—Hunters 16 years of age or old- Week. Members of the Chamber of er—unless members of aboriginal Commerce were requested by the tribes—must have Alaska Game Board to be prepared to offer assis- Commission licenses with a Federal tance to the city in the promotion Duck Stamp affixed thereto. The of this community enterprise. | stamp is to be cancelled by having = The Aviation Committee presented the signature of the hunter promin- a report to the Executive Board on ently written across the face. |the proposal for a Charter Air Trans- 3—Open season in Southeast Alas- portation Service to be operated by ka: September 21 to December 9. | Dean H. Goodwin from Juneau. By 4—Bag limits (ducks): Daily bag, motion the Board adopted the re- 10 ducks, singly or in aggregate of port as the policy of the Chamber. all species with not more than one The report is as follows: Wood Duck. Possession lmit, 20, .pe committee feels that making ducks [with not mode than one ,yaijaple small airplanes under char- W°B°d i e lter for the use of tourists, hunters, wm::_"g:“;d‘“;:::p' ;;‘:S 5‘:“:‘;’ ’;‘{ prospectors, fishermen, trappers and » public officials, who may wish to some other kind, including Brant, it yemote points in the vicinity of may be taken in one day and 8 SNOW jyneqy and isolated small settle- :;n:hfikgron)tzfidgfi;iufl;: rcg‘;n": ments off the scheduled air routes, SAP s Tomensd. . O s a type of service that should be 'given every possible encouragement. h:"g‘;yb?"" American 3“bd Red- 1t can contribute immeasurably to - ergansers may be taken (pe general development of South- :gllos;fingn"::”:h:;fiif N0 possess- | eastern Alaska and especially to the growth of the tourist industry. The IR Committee recommends, therefore, that the Chamber call the attention pow wHo STAYED {of the Civil Aeronautics Board to ‘the importance of an adequate ser- |vice of this type to Juneau, and re- o" wEl(oMED IN ‘quest that the Board take such ac- n with respect to present carriers RouSING MA"NER fll!d to applicants for new certifi-| |cates for local charter service as |will tend to promote such class of YOKOHAMA, Sept. 20—Eighty-|air travel. However, the Committee six Allied prisoners of war received believes the Chamber should not at a rousing welcome today as they‘ml‘ time support or oppose the ap-, returned to freedom from the |Plication to the Board of any partic- | dreary prison camp of Osaka, xnlular party to engage in or expand| which they had volunteered to stay |this type of service. The Chamber’s to help liberate their 7,217 1e“0w_‘mtercsn is confined to having ade-| prisoners. quate charter service made available As their train reached the Yoko- |regardless of who is to furnish it.” f Hama station, the Americal In-| Dr. E.Stanley Jones, guest speak-| fantry Division Band played mili- |©F Of the day, gave his usual temper- taty tunes and one of the prisoners, |nce talk, stressing the “downfall of Albert Sewell, 27-year-old Britisher Alaska” if present liquor conditions captured at Hong Kong, joined |continue to exist. them with a bugle. Gues including Mr. McGovern Seated at mess tables, they|and Dr: Jones were: J. A. Everson, cheered wildly as Lt. Gen. Robert|of Skagway; Edwin A. Herron, of| L. Eichelberger, With tears in-hjs| Slendale, -California, and Ross eyes, told them that meeting trains Campbell, of Kansas City, Mo. laden with liberated prisoners of| s W war was one of my greatest pleaa-' HARTZOG HERE ures, but one of my hardest tasks.”| T M “To you men who stayed behindf] D: 3, Hazison, Longrlen, - Washe and helped, we all want to give our | has arrived in Juneau and is a thanks,” he added. “It has been a|BUCst at the Baranof. Kar help PSS 2 MRS. MORE ARRIVES BRAUN IN TOWN Mrs. Vernon L. More, of Seattle, | Gust N. Braup, of Annex Creek, has arrived in Juneau and is a is a guest at the Gastireau Hotel. guest at the Baranof Hotel. SAVE YOUR SKIN As in the past years we will collect DEER SKINS for the natives. These hides are very valuable for making moccasins and other handicraft. Please bring your skin fo our store or call us and we will pick it up. They will be distributed impartially and at no charge. PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries— | Shigeru Osanai, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA LATEST WAR [BusY counci. | FUNDNEWS, 3¢ Liquor Hours Time Insur-| ance, Sidewalks | All on Docket 17 WARSHIPS ACROSS OCEAN | optimistic. Aboard Are Vet Guaners, s, “iow"ac’ i e i A||'me|'| Who Broughf year compare with those of 1944? | Japan to Knees | The answer, campaign headquarters| With petitions now in the air sup- | points out, is that they are nearly | porting both angles—shorter and‘ (Continued from Page One) Word from the many solicitors even. After approximately a week |longer hours—the City Council, at its’ {and a half in last year's drive about 1 regular meeting tomorrow evening, | one-half of the total collections had |will seek a solution to the question | been made,—and this is substantially |of most satisfactory closing hours the situation existing in the cam- !for Juneau liquor establishments. only woman on MacArthurs origi| P8len today. This is:encouraging| With the liquor hours issue top- nal wanted list—meanwhile was‘m:mmuch as the 1944 effort went|ping the docket, the Councilmen are taken into) custody’ by the- 0. §.| "e¥: otr the fop before it was looking forward to a busy session, as Eighth Army today. | completed several other matters also demand/ Another war-erimes suspect—the a D ‘Enfertains at Dinner Dance Last Evening Mrs. Ernest Gruening was hostess last evening at a dinner party and) | dance at the Governor's House, hon-| oring several of Juneau's young men | who are home on leave. Capt. Tom Stewart, Lt. George Folta and Lt. Arnold Swanson were the guests of honor, and officers of the port here were among the in- vited ;,uvsts e BRESEMAN HERI John W. Breseman, of Ketchikan, | is a guest at the Hotel Juneau. : y The woman,| s "the contributions keap coming |their attention: zlxllzi A:ézii’ l:;:‘:v‘:,laralt’clg;“:“k;:i“- campaign leaders are lining up | Opening is slated for several bids| Sybille Abe, was allegedly 1inkc& the various team totals, so that they [received by the City Ef_mmeer on with Tokyo radio propaganda may shortly be published. Rightsidewalk paving the special Council The Tl;kyo ncwspapera Mnlfixch\‘l‘o“ the team standings are clnse\“fimmlnee named to report on civic reported; thive. Taord Jepaness ‘sn in many cases; and there's no tellmg\lwbllity insurance bids is due | MacAHBIHE I P yet who will be the final winners. ‘mport a Citizens’ Memorial Libra- suspect list had been|” e, ry Committee is expected to be nam- “’]\”" :‘L:‘m‘T’r‘:i’me‘;c‘; mc"l dAk"“;; d and discussion is anticipated on agahama, ommander o . " Genaarmerie in - the. Phitppines; | SNOW WHIIE EALINDRY - | voetber dusessghoutd i back former civilian of- 0| o e s el TINING ALLBURISE: 1o =ncest T, o Septacsr war mm]: and Sgt. Seichi (Gunzo) | S suard ot ine same camp.| LABOR SHORTAGE OFF All nncc were accused of brutali B ties | With completion of the new Snow A 100 - mile - an - hour typhoon [White Laundry building and the la- which lashed the homeland islands | bor shortage eased up, Milton Daniel Sept. 17 and 18 killed 48 Japancse says laundrying is now back to old and destroyed more than 2,000 business. He says that anything can 1omes, but no Americans were in- |[now be handled as in the old days jured seriously, the Japanese min- \fl"d SflUSfflCtlvn QIVEH istry reported. Aircraft and uucks\ were rolled into wreckage at Ka- nova Airtieid on Kyustms, narcest-| CINA Asks Millions hit area. The storm swept across| Kyushu, Shikoku and western Hon- F R I ' p o beiore neadimg out o ne| 1O KEHIET PUFPOSES Sea of Japan. - > CHUNGKING, Sept. 20 The Chinese Central Government has lAST RlTES FOR requested the United nations Re- lief and Rehabilitation Administra- JAMES PRIMAVERA tion to allot $945,000,000 for China | velief. BE HELD SATURDAY! ©Dr T. F. Tsiang, Director of Re- |lief and Rehabilitation in China, said today that the amount re- Last rites for James Primavera,|quested for China is much lower who died early last Tuesday morn-|than the per capita allotment for ing in St. Ann’s Hospital, will be|TItaly, Czechoslovakia and Poland. held Saturday afterncon at 2 o'clock ———————— in the Charles W. Carter Mm'tuary‘ Chapel. The Elks Ritual servlcej B “ B b will be said. Pallbearers will be the ap a oon om s following, all of the Empire staff,| . of which Primavera was a member | (aused Many Flres for 16 years: William R. Carter, Al-| g fred Zenger, Arthur Bringdale, Fred | e St e I 1daho Section Friend. OROFINO, Idaho, Sept. 20-Japa- Interment will be in the Elks Plot,| nese balloon bombs were respon- Evergreen Cemetery. sible for three of the 91 “Spot” by 5 ool fires in the Clearwater National I-EGIO""A'RES A"D LForest during the past summer, David Kyle, Assistant Forest’ Super- AUKILIARY HAVE |- = | The fires occurred late in July so(lAl EVENING and early in August, just before the end of hostilities with Japan, | Kyle said. i About fifty Legionnaires, Auxil- iary members and their families gathered for a pot-luck supper Tues- day evening in the Legion Dug- out and enjoyed an evening of cards after the dinner. A special feature of the supper was a delicious crab salad, made of fresh crabs sent to Fred Cameron from Tenakee, and generously given by him for the occasion. The next activity of the Legion ' Auxiliary will be the food sale to be held Saturday, Sept. 22, in the ! Juneau Florist Shop, through the courtesy of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Car- negie. The committee in charge, headed by Mrs. James Sofoulis, announces the sale will open at 11:30 o'clock, and promises luscious cakes, pigs and other good things will be on hand to select from. ——— Emplrz Want ads brmg resu.!‘s' PREWAR SERVICE * WE CAN AGAIN OFFER YOU THREE TO FIVE DAY SERVICE! * We Are Looking for 500 MORE SHIRTS Perieek Pick-Up and Delivery Service * SNOW WHITE MRS. ZIMMERMAN PLANES TO JUNEAU AFTER VISIT | After a six weeks' visit with rela- tives in Oakland, Calif., Mrs. Ches: ter Zimmerman returned to Ju- neau by Pan American plane Sat-| urday. Her mother, Mrs. Freda Swanson, and her brother and sister all formerly lived in Douglas. ' Mrs. Zimmerman's father, Olaf| Swanson, for many years an Al-{ aska-Juneau employee, died in Ju- neau eight years ago. | R ROGAU ARRIVES V. L. Rogau, of Anchorage, is a/| guest at the Baranof Hotel. CHAMBERS HERE | . M. Chambers nas arrived here\ from Seldovia and is a guest nt‘ the Baranof. | SEEDLESS | | | Cantaloupe Honey Dew Casaba 10:15 A. M. DHONF 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. LAUNDRY Phone 299 A AR Two Deliveries | exp! A"Iohiic Bomb Proleil : Circulafed i in London LONDON, S(‘])L 20 — A protest] | against the use of atomic bombs on | signed and circulated 31 Britishers, mostly writers, musicians and Japan was today by preathers, teachers. The protest was a asserted the bomb | human life upon which Christian | civilization and democratic society alike have been based and the per- | petration of this crime reduces to hypocracy the self-constituted right of Allied nations to put ‘war crimi- nals’ on trial.” (Former Prime Minister Churchill estimated recently before | Commons that the bomb saved 1,- 000,000 American and 250,000 Brit- knees vu(lmut 'm invasion.) " 5,000 UNOPENED LETTERS FOUND; DATES 1922-1935 “Sept. 20 — Chicago | DIXON, Il postal inspectors today investigated | the mystery in connection with| “further deliberate violation | !of the principles of sacredness: of Winston | |ish lives by bringing Japan to hcx; | I | | the finding of some 5,000 first-class| and registered unopened letters, bearing various postmarks dating | from 1922 to 1935, on the banks of |the Green River, near Walton, 11i The letiers, bearing addresses to scattered sections of the country were found by an unidentificd hunter who notified Sheriff Le Roy Bates. The Sheriff and deputies re- | covered the letters from a heap of trash and estimated there were 'about 5000. Bates said he couldn’t lain how the letters got to the trash pile. S e BEROTO IN TOWN Eugene N. Beroto, of Merr lll Field, Anchorage, is a guest at the| Hotel Juneau. 'vananllla makes milk a new taste delight Dozen 9i GRAPES - 2 pounds 4 5¢ MELONS 1 5¢ Pound | Full Shipment of FRESH FRUITS' and VEGETABLES TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 2:15 P. M DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. MINIMUM—$2.50 1B er | CASI-I GROCERY 2 S PHONE Q5 Again We Have NESCAFE Just pour boiling water on half ieasboon Nescafe and presto you have a fine cup of COFFEE! Ploely wreely Phone 16 or 24 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1945 DOLLIAR . DAY &8 _Specialsfor Friday and Saturday CAKE FLOUR packages $1.00 SWANS DOW Baker’s Chocolate 5 packagesfor $1.00 Chocolate Chips packagesfor $1.00 BAKER'S JELLO 13 packages for $1.00 Cherry—Lemon—Lime N—RBuy at Geerge Bros. and Save Strawberry—Raspberry- Log Cabin Syrup 3 botilesfor $1.00 BUTTER 2 pounds $ §.00 PERRY'S—NO LIMIT CORN B tins $1.00 No. 2 Tin—Cream Style VINEGAR Quarts-- 4 for §1.00 $50.00 COUPCN BOOK FOR $47.50 BABY FOOD 121ins$1.00 Heinz—Gerber's—Fruits—Vegetables $20.00 COUPON BOOK FOR $19.00 GINGER SNAPS packages $1.00 N. B. C.—1 Ib. pkgs.—George Bros. Sell for Less POTATOES 15 pounds for $1.00 S. NO. ELECTED GEMS TOMATO JUICE 6 tins $§1.00 PUREE—NO. 2 TIN Grap efruit Juice 6 fins $1.00 NO. 2 TIN—UNSWEETENED COFFEE-Schillings poinds $1.00 SCHILLINGS TEA 1 Ib. package $1.00 1 Largest Seleclion of FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES In Juneau at All Times EORGE BROTHER Super Market Phones 92 95—2 Free Deliveries Daily _ Orders for Delivery Arcepted Up to 2:30 P. M.

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