The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 16, 1945, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT POLITICAL BERLIN IS ANALYZED Gen. Eisenhower Makes Report on His Military Governmeniof Tone WASHINGTON To See First Talkie at Age of 32 SANDUE PEACE MUST l ' BEMILITARY Ohio, Oct who declared cured he UPPER Ninab ision of 16 3 16 16—Ad- welcomed aid today militar; Halsey. heme fro the f Christ story :lh:\r the peace French pea 1 who|0ne if it is to “This is what we Miss | of, hoped for, foug few | Prayed for—to return knowing that our been vanquished,” the admiral in a broadcast after the his Third Fleet had dropy in San Francisco Bay yestc “But let us not ing peace, it ry peace. Enemies are both born ~the United States must that must last have dreamed fc Ger informa and im- Oct. 16 home & 1 | enemies have fair election ipport Party c the .. TWO JUNEAU MEN IN HEROIC WORK, RESCUE MISSION - e oo perfecting a world which will functi DE- metion o efficiency and v. Barti | ™ oo Donn S ALASKA PLANE ) l;l sec on milit American itique Russian Zor Eisenhower declared political devices Communis par woul in the American Here is what he Berlin, where the uthority has its where four four zones Four Parties “Four were Soviet ganize that fos erlir the the with = cert ADQUARTERS, ALA IENT-WOJG Ralph ; J captain and ¢ of the Fs Oct. 5, who days m fish tender 10 miles Glen F rise; Isaac who and three hav have zone of Sgt ctively the jed power Function CRASHES, DITCH VANCOUVER, B. C Twenty persons escaped serious injury last night United States Navy plane into a ditch at Sea Island The plane, carrying nd a five-man crew from Kodiak, Alas] and had come in landing at the airport. The pilot overshot the landing strip and the craft spilled into a ditch a q a mile from the strip. - Popularity of Senator : Vandenburg Growing As Dewey Loses Oui : CHICAGO, Oct. 16—The Repub- lican, official publication of Republican Party, announced survey showed that en. Arthur Felix Gray H. Vandenberg (R-Mich,) had in common joyed the greatest gain in party is o prestige in the last two years while longer required to license the sale the 1944 Presidential standard nd use of explosives. Wartime bearer, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of (“\"j emergency controls on their distri- New York, showed the greatest loss e hution have now been suspended to in popularity M some extent. Effective October ment of the Interior, S. Bureau of Mines, has granted a general license, suspending the is- uance of individual licenses to man- n1 wcturers, distributors and users of {non-military explosives. Individual licenses have been required since They - ind ands 16— or a Oct d Cooper spent when cras! Air day four Party, the mocr the Christian-Democr: and the Liberal Democ: “The first two are well o active and have a basis of f members on which to build latter two groups are new pi though drawing support from middle class, conservative bourgeois clements formerly ciated with Centrum, the German Democratic Party, @nd the German People's Party. They are less well organ- ized and less active than the Marxist parties. This is especially true of the Liberad Democratic Party “The Communist many holds parties S - history and in not gers a 1te attle crew ashore but scued men dered on the rescue the ht of Oct. 4, and earched without results until late dfternoon of Oct when g Navy | plane dropped showing it had spotted the unrise Donnelly “The mnrise was in a sinki condition when we found her. We put two men abozrd to bail water until we arrived in Seldovia.” was Se of 5, - . signals sink St - PERMITS OFF OF EXPLOSIVE USE Party of Ger- a majority of the strategic posts in the Berlin magi- strat and in the administraticns of the Berlin Municipalities. In- formal reports indicate that a fair @nd impartially supervised election in Berlin would not support the present Communist Party domi- nance of posts but would reveal relatively strong support going the Social Democrats and Christian Democratic Union, that order.” MISSA. CONNOLLY IS SUBSTITUTING INFIELD NURSING Miss Alice Crmnnll\ R. N, has'n, been assigned to the Juneau office of Alaska Native Service on a sub-| stitution basis as assistant Field Nurse, Miss Mable L. Morgan, Nursing Consultant for the Service, announced toda Miss Connolly 1 Commissicner en- today disclosed that he, with other Commissior - NORTH ATLANTIC CLIPPER SERVICE RESUMES 0CT. 20 9, the Depart- through the U ay will take over the duties of Miss Marjoric Major who | is now on detail to the University of Syracuse. A recent staff member with the Indian Service at Bethel, Miss Connolly comes to Juneau with recommendations from that office and from Detroit, where she had wide experience in school nursing. She will ‘be in Juneau for four months. At the end of that time Miss Major will return tc sume her position here % - MRS. TAYLOR HERE Suzanne Taylor of to- -t1) | OF THE torch | Bean Sprouis Brown Sauce Honey Butter Chop Suey Vegetahles Chow Mein Noodles | Pineapple Juice 1 TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. 15 P. M. DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M MINIMUM—$2 250 March, 1942 G e losive permits, advised by Commission that they are now|BiXby, Vice President in charge of Yelleved of that responabiily’ | Pan American World Airways Trans- s jccean Services, said today the com- MEMORIAL LIBRARY i’«"' ic service between New York wnd London on October 20. BOARD HOLDS MEET between York and London would be The recent anized Memoria 1‘“ ponE | Committee met la; i ght in the Council Chambers of | ihe ciny sz, with gseeen menvers VETERAN OF S, PACIFIC | both as to the method of camvaign | eliminary procedures, thous : IS HOMEWARD BOUND heomir { ,‘1. enthusiasm for the Project | et Jewel, son of Mrs. Bd.| it was reported y ! s | campaign, is on his way hcme 'uriw and Social meeting to- | ©Ver: he decided to stop in Ketchi Elks Hall. (10,002 |kan for a visit with his sisters,| BT 7, NE " | there to join him. They will spend |’ T HIIIIIIIIIIIMIHH» |about & week i the Firs City i bef POWERFUL INSECTICIDE e ; 'WELDER'S TORCH DDT bring your jug . Gailon $4.00 4 sparks from an acetyler PLANTERS 801 hn c ‘lin the old Connors Motors building P E A N lT ignited a seat cushion and probably |call for the fi : w E W l T E M S (1:55 o'clock this aft 1 o | “Extinguishing the blaze in short |at the Fire Hall within 15 minutes )f the time the alarm sounded. | Only damage reported was to the| the building was crowded with, other motor vehicles at the time. DU Home for Treatment LONDON, Oct. 16—Edward R. athe of the United Nations World urily Preparatory Commission, \h»u by plane today for the United These who have been obtaining NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—Harold M. “ oo : would re-establish Bixby said flying time R New Library Citizen: Yk present ns were fully discussed WALIER jEWElI_ Now definite announcements are ye ited by the members pre: © MEMDETS PreS- | jewell, veteran of the Okinawa| EMBLEM CLUB was expected to arrive today. How: nd Mrs. Jewell now plans to fly ore returning to Juneau. WE HAVE A SMALL SHIPMENT lin the hands cf a car airman | e | SOme grea: I resulting in e g e —] | order, the fire equipment was back ar undergoing repairs, although( Jr., American represen for treatment of a g | e CASH GROCERY | physicians advised the action rday after an X-ray examina-, Adlai Stevenson, depu!y will serve in his absence. |vltll elegate said [ at BOUND SOUTH, | the tr its North Y | housing |se |nated by | erecting THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ROTARIANS HEAR l]emshRelugeesm WORlD FED. ANCHORAGE VIEW, American Occupied ORIENT AIRWAYS| Zone Well Housed | Answers Critics of Housing Authority at this time e Ed Dav Alaska Hou members ¢ their member of Authority told Rotary Clut Tuesday mesting om of the Bar- vital ¢ with Alask wh ILHU for w York gate- in Anchors ain Rub of the main interest we are in that weuld cross h Ke rage Evidence Su aminers I evidence tha lask port two Oriental routes, even the as statistics show, 700 out cf every 1,000 persons in Alaska fly by plane somewhere in the during each year. As ids, t Seattle i Juneau tchikan mitted brought cannot forth sup- it now SAYS HAI,SEY Commissioner Davis Also| amount impor- N are air transpor- the | Harrison the e Du terri- called last {INGTON, Oct. 16 D. FEisenhower reported that Jewish refugees in an occupied Germany gen- y have more housing space than is required for U. S. soldiers. The commander of U. S. forces rope made this statement in a er to President Truman in replying to a report by Earl G J representative on Inter-Governmental Committes ‘ on conditions in the — Gen | today Ameri the -+ Legion Auxiliary To Initiate New Members Tonight 1 President Mrs. Charles the American Legion eduled to arrive aturday, Oct. 20, to th‘ e plans for her entertain- for a banquet to be held d Room of the Baranof atfrday evening, Auxiliary and service men are in- Reservations may be made by Mrs. Olaf Bodding, phone 707. > details will be discussed this g at the regular social meeting Auxiliary, to be held in’ the t 80 Initiation of also take by shments. C aire: members members to be and two new place tonight, a al evening > < " PAIR OF PROBLEMS CONFRONTS COUNCIL IN MEET THIS NIGHT In an impromptu special meeting, Saturday by Mayor Er- nest Parsons, the Juneau Common ere is grave possibility that Ccuncil will gather in the City Hall e might run from Seattle to this evening at 8 o'clock to consider and to the transpire, nothing. Orient Alaska will We cannot gain or allow squabbles over pesed routa will is—we -want an that will enable and develop. Criticism Of AHA aking of criticism leveled at the / , Mr. Davis touch. Oriental air route “often tho: last e the commission power to oper- f so with the understanding 1¢ t funds woud not be made avail- Structed here with FPHA funds. The do able As for house-building. it stand now, Mr. Davis de clared, the AHA cannot build hous but only operate the ones built by aid and the the picture to become confused with ¢ what cities the pro- Club and for The point seription drive to to be Alaska to progress ed advance p If this a pair of problems Fi Selection of an architect to cpare plans for the Jurieau Mem- ial Library, proposed by the Rotary which a public sub- heduled City already has obtain- ning funds from the government, through the E soocn. The Federal FWA. Second: To see what can be done a Housing Au- about difficulties being encountered aid that when by m of the Legislature therity with regard to utility costs the Federal Public Housing Au- 30-unit ng con- the Channel Apartment -cost housing project ks City Council has received a letter from the Alaska Housing Authority, now meeting kere, to enlist the Cit an utilities specialist from the FPHA. He pointed out that al- the regional FPHA office in Seattle |though Anchorage has 160 housing IS now units now in operation and 140 more uncer construction, the AHA can only take out operational expendi- tures. Profits must be returned to be U. S. Government., Recently the AHA returnd $13,000 in profits from units to th Federal Gov- ernment % ‘Actually the Alaska Housing Au-, thority enly works as a small and de- | cidedly powerless branch of the FP- HA as far as building houses is con- cerned,” Mr. Davis stated. fore the criticism we receive from doing nothing drastic about Alaska’s us housing problem is not de- rved.” He spoke of the possibility | floating bonds to raise funds for | house-building in Alaska, but said|Aleutian from S t such a step would decidedly 0 spend be in the future if it came to pass. Before attending the Rotary mest- “There- of their small s Speaker of the Day, Mr. Da-| ot with members of the AHA discharge from the Army, and has their second session here par, at the Moose Hall. this | |a in Juneau working on the problem. - STEAMER MOVEMENTS Aleutian in port and scheduled to sail for the west at 5 p. m. North from Seattle, scmetime tomorrow. Princess Louise scheduled to arrive |at 7 o'clock tomorrow morning and | sails south two hours later. Steamer Alaska, from the west- ard, due Friday, Seattle bound. - - BUCYS RETURN u-m Sea, Sgt. and Mrs. Norman Bucy and n, Richard, w re- turning passengers on the Steamer attle, and expect the next three months| and Mrs. Walter Hellan.! Bucy, who has been with ACS, recently received his | with Mr. Sgt. the re-enli thr ed, and -months’ is now enjoy! discharge bonus FMI\;\&:H:} Mr. Davis’ address, the furlough. |Rev. G. Herbert Hillerman an- |anounced that $1,082 had been do- Rotary the proposed |Library in Juneau. |te turned over to tiwe mittee, now in charge of plans !ox the preject. Gu'sla besides Mr. Davis at to- |day’s meeting were: Floyd W. Warn- er, Seattle; Gill Nordling, Eugene, |Oregon; John Fitzpatrick, Hod(.mg, California. > 'MARINES SOON BE WITHDRAWN, CHINA SECTIONS CHUNGKING, Oct. 16—Gene- ralissimo Chiang Kai-shek said at his first post-war conference that United States Marines would be withdrawn from North China “very soon.” members toward Memorial of Al The money will the Ba Citizens’ Com- | - .- JACOBIN HERE Jacobin, a representative ska Life, is registered at nof Hotel. - >ee - It is estimated that Shakespeare s a year Louis 24-2% Stokley Solid Pack Tomatoes 24-2Y> Norwest Tomatoes with Puree These are fine quality canned tomatoes and reasonably priced. He said they would start leaving| as soon as they Chinese Central Government forces. The Marines were sent into North China recently to help Chi- nese authorities disarm forces. The generalissimo said he churia would be withdrawn ing to provisions of the Soviet pact. felt ertain that Soviet forces in Man-' were relieved by | surrender Juneau Deliveries— i0 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. to which | g of Indian treaties which has been TUESDAY, OCT OBER 16 1945 SALMONTROLLER =2 (0 0 (L | 20F CREW DEAD | oG TAFT, Ore.,, Oct. 16—The 30- f()n!‘ Imon troller Judie Arlenc washed shore north of Siletz Bay yester- | mashed and two apivrently from ! former Elaine sel, ot - > - NGE MADE IN ARMY CREDIT, ALASKA SERVICE Secretary of Alaska Lew M. Will- iams, in his capacity as Acting Gov- | ernor, is advised that the Secretary of War has decided against any further modification, at this time, of ¥cnes for overseas credit to Alaska residents serving with the Army of the United States within Al The retary pointed though additional points will be giy- en inly for service west of the 154th Meridian, in the Alaska Pen- insula ahd Aleutian areas, the Army is progressively lowering its dis- charge 1equirements, making the re- striction on overseas credit in the | Territory less decisive. - Wanc-ads GOVT.PLAR DUBLIN, N. H,, Oct. 16.—Creation | of a World Federal Government ' with clcsely-defined and power adequate to prevent war was contained in a majority proposal to- | by a conference of approximate- 50 prominent men and women in- o 'drowning. v The victims were Howard Bd in world peace and world| Shelley, 28, chats, and FI tien illis, 39, Depoe Bay. Coast Guards- Known as the Dublin Conference,' men spotted the craft, tumbled by | five-day meeting, which con-heavy breakers, during a heavy fog. | d today, was called on the in-| % P, | of Owen J. Roberts, who y resigned as Justice of the sme Court of the United States, | ; Robert P. Bass, former gov-| of New Hampshire. Gran-|{ Clark and Thomas H. Mahoney, ' an of the Massachusett mittee for World Federation Believing,” the Conference id,! McLaughlin, formerly on the staff “that the mounting wa’ of distress, of the Juneau Public Schools, was and fear that threaten mankind a member of the Juneau Unit of may engulf us in a war which, in this'the National Guard before going atcmic age, would destroy civilization ‘'on active duty. Mrs. McLaughlin ind possibly mankind itself; and be- i ing convinced that the United Na- tions organization is wholly inade- quate, a large majority of the Con-| ference proposes: | “That a world Federal Govern- ment be created with closely-defined and limited power adequate to pre- ar and designed to restore and | hen the freedoms that arc alienable rights of man.” ->-se ACA GRUMMAN SIS DOWN SAFETLY AFTER ENGINE QUITS DEAD Launched on its second flight to Ketchikan yesterd afternoon, Alaska Coastal Air s’ Grumman flying boat developed a “dead en- gine” a few minutes out of Ju- neau. In ly terested orgar clud McLAUGHLIN ON LEAVE Maj. Gerald F. McLaughlin. Inf, 2 i 4 AUS, is scheduled to begin enjoy- four months of terminal leave Seattle tomorrow, according to information received here. ville Empire bring resuli MARION C. LANCE From Unity Center, Portland, Ore., Will Speak On “ESSENTIALS IN HEALING and “THE POWER OF PRAYER" at thes METHODIST CHURCH TONTGH October 16 8 o'clock Pablic Invited - - Free Lecture fact that the a full comple- spite of the plane was car "4 ment of passengers in addition to a capacity fuel load, Pilot Clarence Rhode decided to set the ship down rather than press ahead on one engine. Going it 1 miles further on the single power plant, Rhode found sheltered waters in Gambier Bay, landed his craft safely and taxied to shelter to await the arrival of two other ACA seaplanes which had been dispatched to return the passengers to Juneau when word of Rhode’s plight had been reccived by radio. The passengers were landed safely back at Juneau yesterday afternoon. A Coast Guard vessel assisting in returning the Grum- man to Juneau and the plane is expected to arrive this evening. ACA officials today declared that the Grumman is undamaged, only repairs to one engine being re- quired to put the flying boat back in airworthy condition. It is ex- pected that the craft will be bagk on regular schedule within a few days. EORGE BROTHERS Liguor Store Open io 12 Midnight Phones 92-95-—2 Free Deliveries Daily FOR SALE Hot Water Furnace, Oil Burner, B. N. B. Hot Water Heater, 250 gallon Hot Water Tank . .. All for $550.00 Cash. Fireproof National Cash Register Filing Cabinet. 6-foot Mahogany Marble-base Cigar Case. 9-slot Cigaretie Machine. 1 Concrete Mixer, A-1 condition. 'Write for Details to EORGE BROTHER Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Accepied Up to 2:30 P. M. today is - - [NDIANS FROM 20 STATES WILL MEET, | NATL. CONGRESS BROWNING, Mont.,, Oct. 16 Blackfeet Indian tribes of Montana will join with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribes of the Flathead Reseravtion here to fen- tertain delegates from 20 states at the National Congress of Am- erican Indians Oct. 22-25. The Congress plans to work for the right of franchise for Indians of New Mexico and Arizona and to promote passage of a bill" in Congress to bring about settlement negotiated for the officers said. i The organization of American’ Indian ,War Veterans wil talk over pro'ecuon of fhe rights of | mo than 25,000 Indians who fought in World War IL The Republic of Bolivia has no| past 100 years, i | coastline. 2 Quality Hems... SERUTAN and KALDAK They Are Worth Investigating Get Themat PIooly #ceLy Home-Owned and Operated 16 == Phones -- 24

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