The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 25, 1945, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT Holzheimer, Franks Hosis To Oldfimers al Unigue Banquef Here La WILLIAM A. HOLZHEIMER Nearly 90 oldtimers of Juneau, those 65 years of age or over, were guests of Judge William A. Holz- heimer and William Franks, 75 year olders banquet last night in the Gold Room of the Baranof. It was one of the most unique gather- ings perhaps ever held in Alas any maybe anywhere else for that matter. Sixty-five y all walks of life, many who have been on various stampedes to gold strikes in Al a, others who came to the north years ago to engage in business and remained, and others who have just been employed in various industrial pursuits, were th guests for the even the Bills who just gave the affair as a court two oldtimers, observing their 75th birthdays, to other old- timers. And, incidentally, the two Bills ex 1 an invita present be their gue: same place just 25 years night in from last n a to The 65ers began arriving early ar were given liquid refreshments, “what will you have”, at a service bar in one corner of the Gold Room Shortly after 7 o'clock the order wa given to “sit and take it,” and the claborate chicken dinner with all the trimmings, including an im- mense birthday cake, was efficiently served Judge Simon Hellenthal was toastmaster of the evening and | tinent remarks were made by Char- les Goldstein, Dave Brown, Lockiz MacKinnon, Jack Wilson, Henry Roden and two especially invited guests, both under 65, Judge George F. Alexander and Lew Williams, Eecretary of Alaska. Both Bills spoke briefly, Judge Holzheimer stating the idea on the banquet was a dream of several ye that at last came true. Franks thanked the bunch for at- tendance and again renewed the in- vitation for a similar affair, years hence. Frank H. P. Rogers presented the two hosts of the evening each with a gift from friends and Dolly Sylva, young oldtimer, who had charge of the serving, was presented a love- ly lavalier from cldtime friends Dolly Sylva was assisted in the serving by Benny Berry and Bobbie Kemp, and Earl Barcus was the mixologist behind the serving bar. i 25 Aimee Lou Flood took flashlights of the crowd during the evening. The oldtimers, but as Judge Alex- ander said, oldster youngsters, en- joyed the affair immensely and con- gratulated their hosts for the honor of being present, and the sentiment manifested Among the 65ers sitting at the banquet table were John W. Wilson, Henry Tamma, Tom Dull, Hans Nielson, Andrew J. Streed, Frank H. P. Rogers, Alired E. Lundstrom, William B. Robinson, L. A. Wood- ward, Simon Hellenthal. J. M. Olsen, Harry terson, Knut Nystrom, Frank nick,, Dr. L. P. Dawes, J. P. Morgan, Arvid Ander- son, C. J. Bergstrom, G. E. Almquist, C. Boyer, E. Loomis, John Clauson, John Newmarker, M. S. Whittier, Charles Goldstein, Frank A. Boyle, James J. Connors, Georgg M. Simp- kins, W. S.. Pullen, Walstein G Smith, Frank A. Baldwin Arthur Knight, Roy A. Rutherford, Samuel G. Stevens, Fred J. Fred- rickson, Robert H. Burns, August Aalto, John Ca Walter C. Bar- ron, George Osborne, John Torvinen Mark O. Johnson, Neil John Nich- clson, George Getchell, U. S. gory, Fred Crowell, Neil Gall BLAZING FLARE HURLED TOWARD JAPANESE HOTEL WATSONVILLE, —This community corded case of hostil turning Japanese ye unidentified persons )m'.u( flare toward the Buddhist which is being used Hotel The flare set but there was no other Chigef of Police Matt Graves .The hotel guests included Nisei servicemen on fu; and many families who have sons in the armed forces. fire to three ou ar olders from ) two 7 nd £ the | wI AM FRANK Phil Gallagl A P. Lagergren Chris Christ Ray Stevens, , W. L. Baldwin, insen, A. L. Reindau, W. H. Robinson, Neil icci, Bert Harold, A rt John- 1sen, Felix Gray, Henry M Williar Charles E. El- A. Friend f Roden, D Naghel, mer Fred C Thomas Andrew m Guyot, . Ole H A hby, Erickson, Walter Radovich, Kiefer, S; Tom Bert Bathe. Jay Williams, C. F. Fulkerson, win C. Adams, Art McKinnon, Dave Brown, John Nowicka, H. S. aves, Thomas J. Ryan, Lockie MacKinnon, Raatikainen, Peter C. Dalgard, Richard Williams, Sr., ecial guests, der and Lew Ed- Judge Wil- came to Alaska and practiced law , then in Ketchikan, later Assistant U. S. Attorney, to United States Judge of the *cond Judicial Division, returning Ketchikan, resuming the prac- aw, then Juneau and s United 'States Attorney un- he resigned & ouble. He nov a law office here. has been a re el for th r man in then with to tice erved of to % ident pas th Treadwell the Juneau - o> Mrs. D. MacArthur i Tokyo Unveils Plaque At Hospilg& Opening TOKYO, Sept. 25.—Mrs. Douglas MacArthur, wife of the Allied Su- preme Commander, today unveiled ¢ plaque in his honor the U. S Army's new 42nd General Hospital which will open officially tomor- Tow On the plaque is the likeness of MacArthur and the emblems of the Eighth Army and first Cavalry Di- vision, which served under him on the long road to Tokyo. The General's wife also presented to the hospital a battle-worn Ameri- can flag which was seized by the Japar in the fall of Manila in January, 1941, and recovered by troops of the 12th Cavalry Regiment later in the fight for the Manila Hotel The 1,000-bed se hospital, formerly 8t. Luk International Medical Center, is the first American Army General Hospital in Japan. - FOX FAMILY HERE Mrs. D. B. Fox and children, Janie - and David, arrived from Skagway teday and are registered at the Gastineau Hotel. - Empire Want-ads bring results! * Haile Korkonen, ° SUSPECTED NALZIS STILLHOLDS JOBS; COMPLAINT MADE} sf fl!@hl General Patfon Receives Report that Denazifi- cation Is Lagging 2 | MUNICH, Sept. 25 |that denazification was I that suspected Nazis still active in the government {eccnomy of the Eastern District in Bavaria, Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., were reported under investigation unl.:\ by a representative of U. S. forces, European theatre. Some complaints were aired weekend conference at Patt headquarters, when the commented on the Military Germans jobs. general by were Government that Nazis to some holdir Thi situation in ways like the Democratic and Republican fight back home,” Pat- commented at one point during interview. “You always find ‘outs’ back home making inst the ‘ins’ That's ctly what is happening here. ‘outs’ are comir to me and g the ‘ins’ are Naz - "LION OF JUDAH" MAKES DEMAND CAIRO, Sept. Emperor | Selassie of Ethiopia has sent London Conference of Foreign | Ministers a demand that and TItalian Scomaliland be over Ethiopia, Addis Ababa in the F said yesterday The “Lion of Judah” was quoted by one newspaper, Al Misri, as say- ing he sought territories “not as a bonus because we have been fighting xis 10 years, but be- to the Ethio- e stolen from some ton the the 25 the turned eports from yptian press the pian Empire and wi us.” - ROTARY (LUB SEES FILMS AT MEETING HELD THIS NOON of Juneau Rolary Club enjoyable hour and a the regular weekly lunch- eon meeting, held in the Baranof Hotel, today watching the quite lengthy but highly entertaining {ilm of scenic wonders in Southeast Al- Members pent quarter at an Complaints Carl F. Benecke, Ethel Ryan, and | Bickie, P. were | and | Military | Ho commanded by |Norris, Mrs. C. A. No |P. at a'C. L. s mett Wallis. charges presented Kins. Mrs. S. Whitely !John Perlas, | | Eritrea | | tial™ | of aska filmed by the Rev. B. R. Hub- | bard In technicolor, this picture brought out tographers are able to film. beautiful shades of blue sand purples blended into wierd ice formations and the huge unnamed waterfalls at scenic | Philippine splendors that few pho- | The | Terror Fiord along with the treach- | erous whirlpools, were breathtaking- | ly beautiful. - The last half of the | film was spent showing the "u,dmu glaciers at Tracy Arm shedding huge pieces of ice. It was announced by President | Hillerman that a board meeting will be held at the home of John Young, Secretary, at 8 o'clock Friday eve- ning to discuss continuing ahead with the program on the Memorial; playfields and pers- Library, spot pective members. Guests today Capt. Paul Lang and John Kleeb. Ray Harrington, formerly of the an American Airways office in Juneau and now of Fairbanks, was | a visiting Rotarian. - e, | MARRIED HERE | were Lu Liston, M. John H. Willard and Jessie Jacobs, both of Haines, were united in marriage in a ceremony per- formed here at the office of U. S. | Commissioner Felix Gray. Attend- |ants were William E. Nigh and Bessie Sawa. CANADIAN EGGS DARIGOLDBUTTER These Are Tops in Quality at No Extra Cost _ Juneau Deliveries— 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. | | l [] [] {attorney, argued today that I UNITED AIRLIN i g St | Sty g ovtaial TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1945 _DOLIAR [Cn DAY &0 SPECIALS CAKE FLOUR packages $§.00 SWANS DOWN—Buy at George Bros. ahd Save Baker’s Chocolate 5 packagesfor $1.00 Chocoléte Clll S packagesfor $ 1. 00 BAKER JELLO 13 packagesfor $1.00 Strawherr; FLog Cabin Syrup 3 bofiles for Sl 00 BUTTER pounds $§.00 PERRY'S—NO LIMIT CORN & tins $1.00 No. 2 Tin—Cream Style VIRNEGAR Quarls - 4 for $1.00 $50.00 COUPON BOOK FOR $47.50 BABY FOOD 2iins $1.00 Heinz—Gerber's—Fruits—Vegetables $20.00 COUPON BOOK FOR §19.00 GINGER SNAPS packages $1.00 B. C.—1 Ib. pkg POTATOES 15 pounds for $§.00 U. S. NO. 1—SELECTED GEMS TOMATO JUICE 6 tins $1.00 PUREE—NO. 2 TIN Grapefruit Juice 6 fins $1.00 INSWEETENED THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA tk if a should and not at Ameri- Pacific it Northwest, wher as its base sly estimated at mu between 30,000 and sengers will be flown a the nate in the San Francisco, FOR PACIFIC LINE " & was Vi aring, that = ‘l,‘(l UUU air IINGTON, Scpt. 25—United dines predicted before the Civil each year between the United States and Hawaii when full-scale @i Aeronautics Board yesterday that | en the opportunity it will take civilian travel is resumed. half the airline passenger - > ffic between the United States POLISH NAVY T0 AS RUSSIA'S GIFT Johan- | granted permission to operate WARSAW, Sept. 2 Kelly, cisco Hawaii route, A pany expects a profit in Me- $200,000 the first year appeared before final ents Polish naval sourdes sai dtoday that Poland expects shortly to get twen- ty ves: a gift from Russia, destroyer, X mine- and other auxiliary craft. Ru n Rear Adm. Kilotay Am- bramov, it was disclosed, has been ramed Commander-in-Chief of the Polish Naval Forces. The Polish Navy, comprising one cruiser, six destroyers and six sub- marines, now is at scattered points in England, Poland and Sweden Meanwhile, a Polish military mis- sion is expectegl to leave for London early next week to negotiate the re- turn of Polish troops in England. The mission already has arranged crar port home for troops in German areas. | MAKES ARGUMENT From South, The Aleutian arrived from the outh, at the Alaska Steamship dock | this afternoon at 1 o'clock with 50 s of which the gi inbound from V. L. More, H. E. Allen, E. Allen, Geo. H. Anderson, Alva G.| R. Bradley, Mrs. Fern Finley, Elmer sen, H. E. Kelly, Mrs. H. E rd Kelly, Clara Markey, C , In D, D. McMullen. Glenn Oakes, Mrs. Esther Orcutt, O." Pederson, Mrs. P. O. Peder- son, T. S. Sandborn, C. O. Tubbs, Tubbs, Ernie F. Saukko, Em- Karl C the ‘\hx]ltn Mrs. L. the ap- for be- * is- | including sweepers Godehn beard for plications authority tween the lands. The an of six to operate air routes mainland and the applications are being Pan American Air- the sole carrier be- compganies M. L. Watkins, Mrs. M. L. Wat- orge Whit, Duncklee, R. W. Oberline, W. J. Plumley, Wm. L Ripley, Jr., and Wayne Writa From Ketchikan: Helen Gamble, Everett J. Wilde, Dorothy N. Wilde, Rowena Vaara, Judith Vaara, Alvin Fletcher, Albert Brocker, Edwin Cruse, Dick McCormick, A. E Johnstone, Sr., Bernard Holmen and John L. Houts. Leaving at this afterncon for the westward will be the following: Lucy Metjay, Lillian Metjay, Edith Valle, Virginia Valle, Mrs. Carl Dan- felson, Gary Danielson, Carl Daniel- 'k Buffalo, A. E. Ralston, M. Lacey, Mrs. W. M. Lacey, D. P, Faulscner and M Zn.mmmuk D by W ly. 8. E tween Today vecor ine: argument endations by b that United granted a certificate Francisco-Hawaii route. The board recommended dismissal of applica- > companies Airlines, Ltd.; Matson Navigation Company; Airlines, Inc Aeronautics and Ryan Aeronautical Company Jorthwest Airlines is seeking per- cn to operate a trans > between ttle or Portland and Hawaii, a route which the ex- aminers found is not required at his time w IN PHILIPPINES gY PRES. osMena | SONATHEAN APPLES oo | 2 s, $5¢ Box $6.25 were ard ex Airlines for a San on m- be A BIG SHIP IN PORT ocean The Iran Victory arrived -Raspberry—Cherry-—Lenon—Lime night at the Subport Dock, aft fast run from the Columbia Riv Northwest having left there last Saturday Richardson, MANILA, Sept. P Osmena today the Philippine Legislature to cre: the first office of Foreign Re ticns Department, headed by secretary with cabinet rank. As he prepared to depart for the United States in a few days to help Resident Commissioner P Romulo obtain for the war-ravaged Os- mena described as “fair and impar- the People’s Court Bill vised at his request, providing trials of Filipinos accused of borating with the Japanese “We can assure the Filipino people and the whole world that the accused will be tried by the cue precess of law and justice,” he said. Several hundred persons accused cooperating with the Japanese | § during the occupation were taken into custody recently by U. S. Army authorities and turned over to the | Government. Virtually all were released on bond. g F 1 CRAB APPLES pounds @9« TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. 5P. M. DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M MINIMUM—$2.50 Berts $H GROCERY Carlos economic aid Philippines, re- for cel- s.—George Bros. Sell for Less Another shipment of those Delicious, Thin Rind WATERMELONS at Fresh Shipment of Watermelons JustReceived! 00000“‘0“0“00““0000““000QOMWOOOQO“QOQMOWWW‘M 5 ELKS’ LADIES’ NIGHT 4 SATURDAY September 29 Maiheny’ Orchestra Largest Selection of FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES In Juneau at All Times EORGE BROTHER Super Market Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Accepied Up to 2:30 P. M. Dancing Refreshments

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