The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 21, 1945, Page 2

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‘ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1945 * «—rayon that looks for all the world like an ¢sponsive fine woolen! Wrinkle-resistant stretch and sag resistant...it andholdspleats,gores.fashion details, no bulk at the seams. 38/39" wide. Lah in a lusci range of new prints, clever designs, perfect tor dres blouses, house coats . . . Unusual solid colors, too . . . ike Cohama’s Feather Flannel and ing with it. s - - - 1.50 yd. . Solids, Solors - 1.35 yd. Nn U - .5/1/(. B&AVZEIIQQ QUALITY S/INCE /587 you'll lile Prin ¥ | : ~ IACANTS ASSERTION CHAPELAD'ES HOLDS MEETING TODAY SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21—There e hoe will be a “hard” peace for Japan; Members of the Juneau Rodent assets of her commercial firms will Mrs. Stanley Jekill entertained the control Committee this noon di 2ladies at her homg Tuesday 'd tentative plans for a ge ng, September, 18 drive against rats in this Those attending were M nd, Mrs. Al Blakes Mrs chue, Mrs, Floyd Epp: Green, Mrs. Hi y Arnold, Mrs. Jenny Pederson, Elizabeth Pederson, Charles Dobbins, .Mis. Frank rs, Mrs. Max Mieglke, a guest, Rose Schneider, and the host- next meeting at her home Octotel This will be an important meeting and all members of the Chapeladies are urged to attend. - JEKILL TERTAINS N RAT entirely broken up. Edwin W. Pauley, American member of the Aliied Re- parations Commission, asserted this on his arrival here by plane last night from Los Angeles. He expects to leave for Tokyo within a month. Pauley expects Nipponese pay- ment of indemnities to take this form: (1) to Russia, the Kurile Islands and Port Arthur. (2) To the other Allies, material goods instead of morey. al city It was decided that later, committees will be announced to cover certain zones in the city for elimination of anything that fosters breeding food supplies for the rat mer Cecil , Mrs. sub- - o Irs. Cecil Donchue wiil have the Empire Want-ads bring resulls! Left, Alaska seal coat highlighted with jet; center, white broadtail trench coat; red moleskin jacket, right. New details make fur coats and jackets shown in the August fur sales interesting and distinctive. Es- ther Dorothy has been especially successful in her designs. For instance, Alaska seal takes on a new importance in her model. left, with its barrel sleeves, cup collar, both highlighted with jet and worn with & tuffet on the top of the head and muff to mateh. A white broadtail trench coat, center, has an attached belt that ties in front. Other smart details are the easy gathered blouse effect, cup collar and full raglan graped slceves with short cuffs. The jacket of red moleskin, right, is a versatile wrap, good for all seasons of the year, and at home over long or short dresses. The jacket is made on easy lines, collarless and with full sleeves. (International) TEXAN FINDS ; Big News for Litfle Women MacARTHUR'S POLICY WISE Publisher Believes Nippon1 Commander Will Be "“Tough' on Japs (Continued from Page One) | temerity after having spent only a week in| Japan,” Dealey said ‘“this' writer | cannot refrain, nevertheless, from | siding wholeheartedly with MacAr- | thur in his belief that only 200,000 troops will be needed for thesArmy of Occupation, and against Dean Acheson of the State Department, who has quite different ideas and | who has not hesitated to express| them.” Dealey said he and other pub-| |lishers had lunch with MacArthur ! | “Writing with |in Yokohama as recently as Sept.| 4, and asked him how long the cecupational forces would have to stay in Japan. This was MacAr- thur's quoted reply “Six months if we handle Japs right, and by that I mean if we are not too ruthless and cruel indefinitely, if we do not handle them right.” Dealey said this rather floored the publishers, so the next ques- tion was: “Well, if we do move out of Japan within the next six anonths, what is to prevent the Japs frem starting to build for another war 25 years from now?” “I'm going to fix things,” Mac Arthur replied, “so the Ja have a hard enough time eatinz for the next 25 years, much less having the leisure and materials to build up for another war. The Rising Sun is a Setting Sun. Japan is through forever as a military power.” MacArthur told the American publishers that he planned to in- stitute woman suffrage in Japan, also to encourage labor uni which were just getting started be- fore the war. Also, to find and de- velop Japan's anti-war group and put it into power. “How much better this is, from ur standpoint,” commented Dealey than the forced contemplation of our sustaining a military govern- ment in Japan for several genera- ticns through a tremend: Army f Occupation.” 4 “MacArthur will be plenty tough, and gave no sign he favors a seft peace for Japan,” Dealey added. TRANSPORT PLANE " CRASHES; 5 KILLED the | LOUISBURG, Kan, Sept. 21.— An R4D5 Naval transport plane on a routine training flight from the Olathe, Kansas, Naval Air Base, crashed and burned six miles north- be taken over and her corporations east of here yesterday, carrying its gyes: crew of five to their death. - D TRUMAN SIGNS * PENSION BUL, DISABLED VETS. | { .| WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.—Presi- | dent Truman yesterday signed legis- |1ation providing general pension in |creases for seriously injured veter-| ans of all wars, particularly the| !blinded and those who have suffered | multiple amputations. Tre bill increases the maximum' payments of disabled veterans from! $265 to $300 a month and gives the Veteran Administrator permission to allow more than $300 a month to veterans having unusual combina- tions of disabilities. :luxury?hip ~ Just Surplus NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—The once- preud liner Normandie, now a ghost ship gathering moss and baracles, has been declared surplus by the Navy. The $60,000,000 former French luxury ship was swept by fire and partially capsized in February, 1942, shortly after work was begun to! convert her into a troopship to be known as the U. S. S. Lafayette. The Government spent nearnly $10,000,000 trying to reclaim her. Af- ter an 18-month salvage job, she was towed away and the N an- nounced that reconversion had been dropped. Fate of the ship now rests with the Maritime Commission.. Ship’ circles have estimated it would cost $30,000,- 000 to put the Normandie in shape for passenger service. - JUST PLAIN JULEP NEW ORLEANS—OId Southern customs meant nothing to a visit- ing Russian naval officer. Before drinking that traditional “Deep South” refresher, -« mint julep, he removed the mint, | ceptin: . Junior size slip of ey which necds no ironing. e ne news for those by slips that are al oor and trip them up at ii It's a new line the youthful figure and to appeal to hould be cause a bonanza, for all small women it The garments are made of run hes easily, dries quickly, needs prices. U. S. lieaded for Boom, Then Bust; S0 Just Wafch Out EW YORK, Sept. 21 Bowles, OPA Administrator, sees the s headed for a boom siant collapse if in- are removed during —Chester o fcllowed flation contr reconversion “We our boom all right,’ Eo! “There is no ques- tion about that. We will have the speculation, the zooming pric and the appearance of superficial pros- perity. ‘But when the inevitable collapse finally comes it can shake cur whole tconomic foundation.” Bowles told a general sion of the National Industrial Conference Ecard last night “Ou®Country is un- easy, and I believe with good rea- - - LISTON IN JU U Liston, of Anchorage, at the Baranof Hotel D COLUMBIA TOMORROW Steamer Columbia, from the Westward, is scheduled to arrive in Juneau tomorrow aftern at -ee - DRUD DISORDERLY Nakamura, Juneau native as fined $! on a lerly charge by William A. Holz- Bessie weman, today drunk and diso City Magistrate heimer BODY The body of the “madman” who terrorized the Thane area for som? days during the past summ hd which later found on the beach near there, has now been positively identified as that of Tony Marra, 58, survived by an uncle, Angelo Marra, of Georgetown, Wash. - - oo LESLIE GREENING ADDED TO EXPRESS DEPARTMENT 4 OF ALASKA AIRLINES Leslie Greening, who arrived in Anchcrage on the Starliner DC-3 September 3, has been added to the express staff of Alaska Airlines and will make his home in Anchorage. Mr. Greening has been in avia- tion since 1939, being connected with United Airlines until Septem- ber 1941, and with Aitways from that time his present position Alaska Airlines until ac with meand @ Good coffe e Schilling VACUUM PACKED €O FEiEE By DOROTIIY ROE Sl ated Press Fashion K 0T ays ‘teo long tune mom Pan American ! JUNEAU. ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIY ‘I)I\TA FOIt 24 iOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A, M, 12TH MZRIDIAN TIME 1| Max. temp. | TODAY last | Lowest 4:30am. 24 hrs. 24 hrs.* | temp. temp. Precip. 41 33 44 ~ . S. DEPARTMENT COF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Weather at 4:30a.m. Cloudy Staticr | Anchor: | Bethel | Cordova | Dawson | mamonton | Fairbanks - | Haines | Juncau | Juneau Airport Ketchikan Kotzebue McGrath | Nome Nerthway Petersburg Portland Prince Gaorge { Prince Rupert an Francisco 42 29 37 43 44 42 19 3 25 40 39 Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Rain Pt. Cloudy Clear Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Rain Rain Fog Cloudy Cfear Rain Cloudy Clear 74 Pt. Cloudy 42 Pt. Cloudy 13 3 Clear 41 20 Pt. Cloudy 56 31 Pt. Cloudy (4:30 am. yesterday to 4:30 a.m. today) MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports trom Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today WIND Height of Waves Dir. and Vel. (Sea Condition) NE feet ENE foot NNW feet N feet NE 2 fest NNW foot NNW feet 54 42 &0 36 60 64 47 66 61 59 64 | Whitehorse | vakutat Station . Weather Clear Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Clear Temp 2 1 4 6 Guard Island Linceln Reck Point Ret k Scund to Lynn Canal rtherly winds 25 to 30 miles per to around 15 miles per hour Saturday morning. Channels ¥ nd-northerly winds 20 to 256 milss per hour de- merning to 10 to 15 miles per hour from the e to Yakutat—light variable winds tonight be- northwe. £ 5 miles per hour Saturday. Increasing cloudiness coming Saturday. unfortunat There is no substitule for newspaper advertising! of junior lingerie liam rtor For college girls it's for rejoicir cy, which rayon jer sells no ironing and at pin-money Something MODERN ‘Cutest’, Say Gls THIS DINING ROOM SET IS ONE OF THE NEW POPULAR Boned-Rubbed Sets Drop In and See Qur Assoriment THOMAS HARDWARE (0. PHONE IN A CONTEST sponsored by the Red Cross of the U. S. 38th (Cy- clone) Division, Clare Ann Durney (above) ,daughter of Pvt. and Mrs. John E. Durney of Sharon, Pa., was chosen as “Cutest Child.” She was selected from 150 entries submitied by soldier-fathers. U. S. Sigual T Corps phutro.ifl ‘(Intcin-mlionul) PREW AR SERVICE oliywood Ingenuity * noLLY\\{oo:New ideas for% WE CA" Afim orrm DAY SERVICE! the fairer sex. The latest ingenius bit has been added to the list by | Dinah Shore. Dinah announces that when the next shipload of vmerans; Per Week s from overseas, she and a gui- yer aboard a hlimp will hover | ve deck and welcome them | Pick-Up and Delivery Service h song and music. SNOW WHITE LAUNDRY Phone 299 B Empire Want-ads bring results! Yot

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