The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 16, 1945, Page 2

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: Cuba is devoted to sugar cane. PAGE TWO Mean Service — and Smartness in Wilsere Brolhers form fitting shirts from 2.75 to 3.50 Team them with your suits for business and pleasure. They'll do double-duty handsomely—and may we suggest you come in on the double for yours? The stripes are smart. The form fitting style is smooth —full cut where you need it, tapered neatly at the waist, hand-cut collars. Fine-count fabrics that launder long and well—all Sanforized, of course. Nced we say more? WUilson Mear B.MBEHRENBSS, ;% SQUARE DANCING Nafional War WEDNESDAY NiGHT HONORS SGT. RICE Tomorrow (Wednesday) night square dances will be headlined at the USO in compliment to Sergeant Buddy Rice, who has been three years in Juneau and has been a frequent and popular participant in the oldtime dances held weekly at the USO. Buddy expects to leave during the month for the States, and kis many friends feel that he should b2 given a good send off before he goes outside “und Progress As of noon today the National War Fund total for Juneau and Douglas stocd at approximately $8,440. This represents just slightly morz than 76 per cent of the Gas- tineau Channel’s quota of $11,225. The local Campaign Committee calls attention to the fact that the War Fund drive throughout the States is just getting under way. For various re ns the campaign was Legun lecally in advance of that drive, According Juneau and A r(,_nmu'.m- has been appointed pi.uelas have a long lead on other sting of Henry Goddard, chair- ¢ommuynities, but, as the committee man, Lester Linehan and John peints out, we still have a long way Oberg, representing the civilians, and 1, ¢4 pefore the campaign reaches Sergeant Francis Blackwell, T-5 Bob jig goa). Phillips and Corporal Jim Wheeler, gpecial attention is called to the of the Army, to arrange to have asfaeq that the War Fund is now get- larger attendance than usual. Buddy ting very fine publicity in the news- has been a generous contributor of pupers in the States, as well as in his time and talent on his guitar ion-wide radio broadcasts. and has helped repeatedly to enter- ; Ly % tain audiences of both enlisted men and civilians, pHo"v Pat Murphy, teacher in Ju- neau schools, has been delegated by pemicin i the committee to invite the other. SEATTLE — Secret Service Super- teachers, especially newcomers, to vising Agent W. B. Cline warned that attend and enjoy the dancing. E. M. counterfeit $1 bills, bearing the fol- McIntyre, violinist, and Mrs. David Jowing legend in Italian script, have Milner, pianist, will furnish the mu- appeared here: sic, and A. B. Cain will call. “American promises have always Lhe public is invited, and it is peen vain, hoped there will be a gocd response| “They are beautiful bubbles, bub- 50 that at least two sets may be in ples of soap, position and ready for action when “Just as this little bank-note.” the call “partners for a square” is -—- — —— sounded. D e MRS. LANCE HOLDS INTEREST OF MANY ATTENDING LECTURE Mrs. Marion C. Lance, minister from Unity Center, Portland, Ore- gon, presented her first lecture here last evening, held the interested at- tention of her audience with her dis- cussion of: “Man’s Unlimited Possi- bilities.” Mrs. Lance supported her state- ment with scriptural quotations and references, pointed and aply select- ed Completing the program, Mr. Neal Lance, gave Juneau a sample of his fine voice, singing The Stranger of Galilee.” He was accompar at the piano by Mrs. Arthur Bring- dale. At her closing meeting this eve- ning, Mrs. Lance will lecture on two topics: “Essentials in Healing” and “The Power of Prayer.” Her meet- ing this evening will open at the Methodist Church at 8 o'clock - EMBLEM CLUB Initiation and Social meeting to- night at 8. Elks Hall. (10,092-11 ———— Half of the cultivated land in }mcns voted 258 to 139 last night to l E I N l’)and the government's wide war- | ‘| time controls for five years, after ! the Labor majority beat down a | spirited Conservative attack led by WASHINGTON President Tru- | former Foreign Secretary Anthony man recommended to Congress to- | Eden. day that it take steps to ascertain! whather the people of Puerto Rico | desire full independence. SITUATION ONSTRIKES; | LONDON — The Exchange Tele- ? | graph reports from Malaya today IDlE DROP V. that 25000 tons of rubber are ex- pected to be shipped to the United States and the United Kingdom be- fore December 1. Tne Japanese left (By The Associated Press | Chief of Staff General George C.|about 50,000 tons in the area, the| Nation's labor disputes—at | Marshall. The President will attend ' agency said. 135—idle, around 385,000, a dinner by the Reserve Officers at — total during October. which General Marshall will be the Major Strike Development | guest of honor. AMEM(A" lEGION COAL—Government’s effort | settle critical soft coal st WASHINGTON Tonight Presi- | { dent Truman will join with fellow Reserve Officers in paying tribute to | WASHINGTON-—The Navy has il lapses; Secretary Schwellen! n sioned Navy ourses, both egular T | has hopes of some solution to pu |and resery e being released from As the number of returning vet- 208,000 minerg back to pits: fuel | the service. Nearly seven hundred erans increases, so does the mem- scarcity hits steel and other i nurses are affected by the order. I»2rship of the American Legion. threatens to close I - | Seven applications for membership schools and churches. WASHINGTON The Senate were accepted at last night's meet-' SHIPPING — Augmented polic Judiciary Committe> gave its ap-|ing of the Legion, and the following ordered to New York 1 will be initiated soon: Harry Wat- kins, John E. Dapcevich, Wm. S. Dapcevich, John L. Senescu, Jr. land Louis I. Levy. all of Juneau; Robert Nealy of Hoonah and Tony Florendo of Tenakee. re Anthony E. Karnes, veteran of AT World Wars I and II, was, after BALTIMORE—Coast Guard Com- |some discussion, admitted as a vet- mander Jack Dempsey today entered | eran of World War II. Brady Clinic at Johns Hopkins Hos- | 7 g T T pital for a week's physical checkup." K ‘Alaskans Receive reported factions fighting proval to a bili to authorize Presi- u within AFL lon dent Truman to reshuffle govern- ment bureaus and commissions. But the bill would give Congress the right to veto any changes and this | provision may bring a heated fight on the Senat> floor. i after rival shoremen as well as CIO unicnist some of 35,000 strikers re: 1 world's biggest harbor as strike enters sixtec day; Mayor La Guardia warn against “rough stuff.” TRANSPORTATION trolley service along east of Massachusetts from New shire to Rhode Island after three day strike cof of Massachusc in idle in WASHINGTON- Those elected t3 33rd degree Masonry here today . included William Kendall Spaulding, l ' M governor 1 Ketchikan, Alaska. : i 'cense o a’r property; ccmpany spokesman d — | e near normal service for 1,000, Japan—Marines polic-| SEATTLE, Oct. 16.—Marriage li- riders. HAKAT ing southwest Japan have had their | Cénse applications have been made job greatly complicated by the rush | here by the following: Louis A. Bak- of 1500000 Koreans to Hakata to |l 52. Seattle and Evelyn Philbrook, await transportation home. The |57, Ketchikan; Carl R. Kahmer, Koreans have bean working on Japa- | Army, and Ethel G. Wislicen, Fort nese farms, mines and factories. The | Richardson, Alaska; August J. Heit- Koreans, liberated from their Japa- | man. Kodiak and Isla M. Jensen, MOTION PICTURES-Eric Jc ston, new president of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributo of America, steps into eight-month old jurisdictional dispute, plar meet federal conciliator: fighting between pickets and non- fiese overlords, are arriving at Ha- | Seattle. pickets. kata at the rate of five hundred iR - LUMBER-Hope for partial scitie- a day. ''romM G GE, JR ment appeared in strike of 61,000 = | DN REOBOE, AFL lumber workers as Unic NEW ROCHELLE, New York—The : 4 group meets with operators; CTO & Tom George, Jr., U. S. Navy, will : Reverend Dr. Frederick . Knubel, |, mo0 SER8e o b o o Be. union, with strike vote for 40,010 75, died today at his home here. He | cording to word received by his workers, resumed negotiatior f was h?r 26 years L{ur Presldf-nt "r\rafher. and hopes to get leave soon settling wage issue the United Lutheran Church in -oo ‘and come home on a visit. He is on | the escort carrier U. S. S. Bataan, | part of the Third Fleet which was among the first ships to enter Tokyo Bay after Japan's surrender, and which will celebrate Navy Day in New York. DRUNK, DISORDERLY Albert Morris e being drunk and disorde fined $25 in Police Court morning, by City Magistr: liam A. Holzheimer America LONDON-—The great naval base of Singapore soon will resume its role as base for Great Britain's Pacific Fleet. The Admiralty says | the base will be re-established before | long. During the war, the British Pacific Fleet was based at Sydney, | Australia. | | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN ATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MERIDIAN TN JERSEY CITY—Nearly 850 pas- sengers have boarded the exchange | Max. temp. | ¢ TODAY liner Gripsholm. The vessel is sched- | last | Lowest 4:30am. 24 hrs ither at Station 24 hrs.* | temp. temp. Precip. )a.m uled to sail later today for Mediter- | ranean ports ©—(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30-a. m. today) MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN 32 17 19 01 ' LONDON The subject of the atemic bomb also came up here | Anchorage today. . Lord Darnley told the House | Barrow 3 = of Lords that there is an even |Bethel 34 8 24 T chance that the world will be blown | ordova b 3 35 51 up in the naxt generation. But Lord | Dawson 3 02 Cherwell said he didn’t think so, | Edmonton a “ Clear that there is no evidence that the |Fairbanks u 20 20 03 Cloudy atomic bomb ever could explode the | Haines 48 41 43 1 Ra world. Juneau 48 42 4?2 51 R: T Juneau Airport 4 43 44 09 Rain CALCUTTA—Sir Khwaja Nazi- | Ketchikan 53. 46 46 62 Rain muddin, ex-Premier of Bengal anq Kotzebue 3 16 E a leader of the All-Indian Moslem | McGrath ed fed a Snow League, declared today the Moslems | Nome 26 10 23 T. Cloudy of Bengal were ready “to undergo | Northway 21 19 20 T. Cloudy any sacrifices” in support of the |Fetersburg 50 42 Rain stand taken by Christian and Mos- | Portland 49 58 Rain !lem Arabs against Jewish oxpan- |Erince George 66 59 07 [kt Batesting Prince Rupert 54 18 18 50 Cloudy San Francisco 61 56 01 Cloudy PARIS—Pierre Laval's widow says | Seattle - 50 . | her husband was executed because |Sitka 51 43 Rain some politicians were afraid he | Whitehorse 44 Cloudy would make unwelcome statements Reports from Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today pefore the coming French elections. WIND Height of Waves Mrs. Laval told newsmen the execu- | Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) | tion never would have happned if | Cape Decision Cloudy a0, B 33 3 feet |there were a French Parliament.|Cape Spencer -Cloudy 44 NW 18 3 feet | France will elect a National As- [Eldred Rock Cloudy 4 S 8 2 feet | sembly on October 21. Five Finger Light Fog 42 NNE 5 1 foot Guard Island Cloudy 46 w 8 | CHUNGKING—Generalissimo and | Lincoln Rock 45 Ssw 6 Smooth Point Retraat Drizzle 43 SSW 6 Soomth Mee. Chiang Kai-shek were hosts, today to Asst. U. S. Secretary of War John J. McLoy, and a party of six which flew here from India yes- 1 terday. MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Yakutat and eastward channels inside passage—w erly to northwesterly winds 15 miles per hour—rain showe: Lynn Car —southerly winds less than 15 miles per hour—showers. Remaind PR | north-south channels—variable winds less than 15 miles per hour LONDON—The House of Com-|showers. More thanever... More flights than ever . . . more service than ever ... more comfort than ever — for the people of Alaska from the Alaska Airlines. Now, with DC-3 aircraft, your flight is a pleasant one from the moment you sit down in the com- fortable, reclining seats of this modern airplane until the time you arrive at your destination. Rates are lower, too. TICKET OFFICE PHONE 667 FOR FULL INFORMATION ON ALL FLIGHTS | | CLEANING T % SUN LAMPS FOR HEALTH ihing Will Produce RICH VITAMIN D as Efficiently as a Short Daily Exposurefoa Sun=-Kraft Ultraviolet 3 R B A B TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1945 COASTAL AIRLINES HAS 6 FROM SITK Alas Ce Airlines flew six passengers into Juneau from Sitka Ce yesterday. They were: Dick Nelson, Henry Moy, Roy Arrit, James Coope R. M. Dennis and Mrs. R. V. Nelson. E oo - (PL. B1OMGREN 15 AGAIN "CIVILIAN" 1. Gunnar 1(!!;1‘ ren, Jr., is no C but he is not pp; ince it means his UP IN VIENNA—SS women work in the streets of Vienna, clearing away 2i men who were too old or otherwise unfit for army duty. return to civilian life. He was dis- charged from the Army October 13, | at Fort Monmouth, N. J., and is now on his way to Seattle. | He plans to spend the holidays with his wife and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Emme, at Richmond Highlands, near Seattle, according to word received by his mother, Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren, Sr. About the first of January he and his wife will return to Juneau, where they plan to make their permanent heme. - - KETCHIKAN VISITORS Mrs. Robert Howard Beymer and Mrs. Krankshaw of Ketchikan stered at the Baranof. BOURBON WHISKEY — A BLEND 49% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Lamp .. . A lamp that will give you the same benefits in just a few minuies an hour's exposure to the sun will give. ... Tt will build up within you a resist- ance to frequent head and chest ills that will make these gloomy winter days as enjoyable fo you as sanny southern days. Purchase One of These Health Makers at SKA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND DOWER COMPANY Phone 616

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