The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1945, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPI RE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1945 e C - lasting fragrance Ly | f 4 o Bond Street, the tradition of the British imports. KINGS MEN “clcgne, 3 fragrances heese frem. Castle Eir Thastle and Pleid . . Knight Errent, $56.50 B MBEHRENS),; U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MERIDIAN TIME Max. temp. last L 24 hrs.* 40 41 39 19 26 33 33 37 33 40 33 40 33 Station chorage Edmonten Iairbanks neau Juneau Airport Letchikan {otzebue VicGrath {cme Northway Petersburg Portland Prince George ince Rupert n Francisco seattle Sitka Whitehorse Yakutat 35 58 52 70 55 43 30 42 Weather Rain Rain Snow Station ‘ape Spencer Idred Rock Hive Finger Light MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHE southerly winds 25 miles ver hour trance and Cross Scund—southea. in morning veering to southwes miles ver hour by Wednesday Lynn Canal—southeast southwesterly or westerly ncw mixed tcday entire area night l);)l'(il,AS « 17|‘rx(‘u? : l,;)l'l..\‘s d“MSON BHRS 'l‘o St. Luke’s Episcopal Church is to reopen Sunday evening, Nov. 4 with evening service at 8 The Rev. W. Robert Webb of Ju- neau is in charge the work at . St. Luke’s, and will preach at this service. For the past several weeks, re- pairs and interior decorations have been underway at the church and se have been completed suffi- ntly to permit services to begin. large group of persons is ex- pected to attend this first service and, undoubtedly, the congregations will be excellent D STEAMER MOVEMENTS Steamer Alaska scheduled to ar- e from the south at 8:30 o'clock evening. W%&V{/ %1/ &- In their cool virile scents, their is the character of Saville Row and 4 Handsomely presented in e temp. 35 28 21 27 26 9 2 49 18 30 57 49 15 2 (4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) MARINE WEATHER B Reports from Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today Temp. afternoon. ly winds 15 miles per hour this morning veering to | tc and Wednesday. Rain pr rain und; - [ cleudy with scattered rain showers Wednesday over DOUGLAS vARIE" STORE | JUNEAU THANKED | BY NAVY MEN AT | | ARGUMENTS BEFORE CAB ™ peceprioN eve: i | N CONRLICT o e . | i luncheon meeting in the Gold —— Room at the Baranof this noon Alaska Airlines Asks Bofh |2 joca! servicemen, cight Nawy Interior and Coastal Routes to Stafes imen from the visiting fleet, and 13 | Standard Oil men, here to attend the first all-Alaska conference of Standard Oil Company, were among | !the honored guests. All six Rotary | |Clubs in Alaska were represented | (Continued from Page One) at the meeting. | R After introductions, greetings and irdling aspirations of the domestic |brief announcements were made lines,” declared Gerald P. O'Grady,|the floor was turned over to SKD wttorney for Woodley Airways |2-c John Davidson of the U He contended that Woodley was|Panamint. Storekeeper Davi he real pioneer in Alaska; and|SPeaking in behalf of the P ince its establishment in 1930 has|mint personnel, expressed xpanded successfully within the | thanks to Rotary members and all Territory on its own capital. He Juneau for the past week's enter wgued on the other hand that | tainment and hospitality. He then Alaska Airlines, recommended by introduced Lt. Ted Christianson, he examiners to operate between |Lt. (J.g. Joseph McLaughlin, Chap-| Seattle and Anchorage “has all thni“““ Meiers and Seaman 1-c¢ Glen| armarks of a purely speculative|W. Fox, all from the Panamint nterpr | Chaplain Meiers spoke briefly on As the hearing got well under|What he termed “the surprising vay before the four-man CAB.‘warth of Juneau’s greeting to the there Were representatives of 10| Navy.” He added that in no port airlines and 12 intervenors waiting |Or harbor along the coast of the to testify. | Pacific had he found townspeople More Ideas Suggested | “so gracious nm.l. charming to visit-| Too few airlines into the Orient | M€ Servicemen 3 would be worse than too many, the | SoRe CuINPITE Y Civil Aeronautics Board was tolq| Lt- Christianson added to the ety compliments heaped on Juneau by Seth Richardson, attorney for, ROWIY'S Navy guest by saying that Northwest Airlines, Inc., said the|iD 1O previous combat action had company’s bid for an Orfental route | h¢ 10st so much sleep as in “The through Alaska, declared, “the great|Battle of Juneau,” where he isy oty of what the Oriént will be” | &{Taid to go to sieep early or tl t6 be! 661964 | abed late for fear of missing some- thing. é finest 1 hi fi plated in gleaming /23 karas gold.. [ AS FEATURED IN ESQUIRE | Cclcgnes, loticns shaving requ’sites, $5.00 Sets of varied | combinations, A 1050 to $1550 { Rejills for most items, $2.5 He insisted that Northwest, naving | pioneered the most northern route| In giving Rotarian members and across the United States and having | guests a thumb-nail sketch of operated service for the Army over | Fighter Direction, Lt Christianson | the Pacific during the war, is thp‘said that team-work evidenced be- “most experisnced and cflmpetent"[lwem] the 10 officers and 61 men company to operate thes North Pa-|in the Fighter Direction division of cific route on a commercial basis. |the Panamint and the pilots they Co-Terminals | directed had been an “inspiring He contended, also that Seattle|instance of how American boys can | and Minneapolis-St. Paul or Chi- |pull together as a team.” He told cago should be co-terminals on the | of many Fighter Direction experi- line, which would extend from Man- |ences in in the Okinawa area, in- | ila, through Hong Kong, Shanghai, | cluding enemy plane “knock-downs Tokyo, Paramushiro, Kiska and |directly attributable to Fighter Unalaska to Anchoragz, where it| Direction and courageous pilots would divide. | working together in complete trust “You can’t perfect a route to the| Lt. McLaughlin told of humorous Orient and ignore Seattle,” he de-|and tragic anecdotes occurring ‘lared, adding that the route must during Fighter Direction « work | also be made to serve the industrial | aboard the Panamint. He also ex- area of tha East. *The National Cityi tended his thanks to the city and Bank of New York, he declared does| to the Rotarians for their hospi- more business with the Orient than | tality. “Juneau is the kind of town the entire Pacific Coast. | we like to come back to,” he He observed that Pan American, said in conclusion. one of the two principal contenders| Other guests at the meeting in- for the North Atlantic route, already | cluded: Lt. Carl Bloomquist, Ju- has the Central and South Pacific| neau officer home on temporary routes. Transcontinental and West- duty; Lt. Comdr. Douglas Gray, rn Air, the other contender, has|y, s Navy, home on terminal been awarded 16,000 miles of new jeave: Dr. M. M. Van Sandt, new route, he declared. Northwest's pro- physician at Government Haspital; posed co-terminal plan, he added, (g A Fitzsimmons, M. B. Vincent, | will give Alaska two modern through! g’ ‘A Evenson, W. L. Corliss, w. | Foutes to the United States. | Coon, W. H. Reynolds, Z. M.;Brad- | Five Reasons { ford, E. C. Arthur, J. D.“Smith, Five reasons why Great Falls,Lw C. Eruin Ge‘glrge E. PFitchi Fr("d: Mont.. should be considered one of | Nyjoon — John Fitzpatrick, €. W. | the great gateways to the N(’"h‘Rogeré B. E. Stratton. Dean B.‘ wers advanced by City Attorney c“Anders. J. P. Bernard H L Hagen" B. Anderson. His reasons were: (1) | o)ty "Seavdarg ofl groun { Location of one of the largest and | ot ke FON best fields in the country, used by H FROM FAIRBANKS the y - m.:n:r;::i ;:ei;:ioTl;:EE;Ol:ngoz-' Corrinne E. Kintner and Vivian | aska: (2) Almost perfect flying E:g?:r;"refr:“:‘);fi i?;‘;:?::k‘ S weather along the route; (3) The| o £ i most direct route for the Inter-| PARETE ] PR mountain and Midwestern States, | Sltk"xsr::x,)(tegrl:::er:cdllsfikfiu Bar ‘ Central and South America to Al- | 2 i aska; (4) Community of industrial anof are: R. A. Evenscn and Niles interest; mining oil, livestock; (5) | Bredvik. Outstanding tourist interest because | e of the chain of parks along the| Colerado Rockiss up into Canada. ‘ { o (< i g | SKAGWAY RESIDENT HERE | | | | W. L. CORLISS HERE | | | t | | { | | | | S. J. Rogers, a resident of Skag- va is registered at the Baranof W. L. Corliss of Cordova guest at the Baranof Hotel. S e LLETIN SEWARD VISITOR | Virginia C. Buckholder of Seward | is a guest at the Hotel Juneau. e ANCHORAGE MAN s TOILETRIES Heore wwtbe ey el { TODAY st 4:30a.m. 24 hrs, temp. Precip. Weather at 4:30 am. Cloudy Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Snow Rain -Snow Rain Ra Cloudy Snow Cloudy Snow Clear, Snow Rain Cloudy Clear Pt. Cloudy Rain Rain Cloudy 08 44 0 03 0 - FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Oct. 30— | Fairbanks topped its $200,000 Vic- ;tury Bond quota by 4 p. m. on the iopening day of the Victory Loan | | drive and campaign officials. said | E 29 2 feet Gordon K. MacKenzie, Anchor-! they believed it would be the first| ST ALASKA: Lynn Canal— |age resident, is a guest at the‘city under the American flag to| t Yakutat to Dixon En- | Gastineau Hotel. ‘reach its goal. | y winds to 25 miles per hour y or westerly and decreasing to 15 Protected waters south of | WIND Dir. and Vel. ENE 24 Height of Waves (Sea Condition) | 3 feet 21 3 feet 36 HERE 37 35 N —~ 1 | CLOSING OUT SALE TAKE ON ALUMNI AT , October 29 through November 3 GAMESEVENNG | pupp o THING TO GO AT Juneau High Crimson Bears will | ; 25% OFF! me=t the Juneau High Alumni team tonight at 8 o'clock in the high school gymnasium. i Playing on the Alumm team will | be the followi £ er basketball | 8 s players for Juneau High who are on BOYS' AND GIRLS' CLOTHES LADIES’ SWEATERS and HOUSE DRESSES GIRLS’ and INFANTS’ DRESSES ALL INFANT GARMENTS ESMOND BUNTINGS . * GAMES and TOYS OF ALL KINDS armed services: Evan Scott, John! Dapcevich, Hank Mead, Bob Thibo- deau. Merritt Monagle, and Gil Nordling. eee FROM CRAIG . | a | this organization of the Secrefary of Armed Forces IsProposal Single Civilian Head Sug- gested for Army, Navy, Air Forces of U. S. WASHINGTON, Oct. W Department proposed to Con- gre today that the Army, Navy and Air Forces be placed under a single civilian “Secretary of the 30 — The .|Armed Forces.' Under the department head, who Iwould be advised by military chiefs of staffs and a secretariat of civili- n stants, the Army services “The Air Force should include land-based combat aircralt except those allotted to the Army or Navy ll i for reconnaissance, spotting of gun- fire, command and messenger ser- The Air Force should Armed Forces.” “The Army would include all combat ground forces other than the Marine Corps and would have its own service forces. “The Navy would include United States Fleet with arm, the Marine Corps service forces.” Each component apparently would be directed by a military rather than a civilian head, as at present, retain the its air and > STRIPED EFFECT SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 30—A new hairdo—“Skunk locks"—has been adopted by the bobby-soxers at the South High School. Dark-hair- ed girls use bleaching solution to turn one lock of hair blonde. Co-ed Darleen Buckley admitted the result was startling, and she added: “My parents were stunned at first—but they're reconciled now.” AUTO IN PLUNGE; 5 ARE DROWNED FAIRFIELD, Calif., Oct. 30.—Mrs. Rose Natividad, Sacramento, and four of her children were drowned ‘when their car plunged off the high- way into a deep, swift flowing irri- gation ditch near Ryer Island in €olano county, Deputy Coroner J. L. Stewart reported. Ranched Mink Silver Fox Ranched Mink Ranched Mink Silver Fox J. D. Smith of Craig is a visitor in Juneau, registered at the Bar- anof Hotel. leave or furlough home from the Get Your Christmas Gifis at Cost proposed 1945 AUCTION SALES DATES for Silver Fox & Mink Last Receiving Date, Nov. 24 Last Receiving Date, Dec. 1 1946 | Last Recelving Date, Dec. 24 Last Receiving Date, Dec. 29 iom“mmom“nm 0000000000000 0000000000000000000000000000000000008 $ Kegular Service from Seatile and Tacoma FREIGHT . . . . PASSENGERS REFRIGERATION ALASKA TRANSPORATION CO. Gastineau Hutel Phone 879 J. F. (Jim) CHURCH, Agent 0000900000000 000000009000800000000000000000000000¢ 9000000¢ SUN LAMPS FOR HEALTH Nothing Will Produce RICH VITAMIN D as Efficiently as a Short Daily Exposuretoa Sun-Kraft Ultraviolet Lamp . . . A lamp that will give you the same benefits in just a few minuies an hour's exposure to the sun will give. .. . It will build up within you a resist- ance fo frequent head and chest ills that will make these gloomy winter days as enjoyable to you as sunny southern days. ; Purchase One of These Health Malkers at SKA ElE(TI.!I( LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY Phone 616 Soon enough this kitt will grow a prime pelt . . . if all goes well. Helping breeders make sure all does go well . .. from pre-breeding to the **Auction Block' . .-, is one of our major functions. Services instituted by this organization have aided fur ranchers In many important ways. Lampson, Fraser & Huth offer you the experience of over 100 years Dec. in handling and selling raw furs . . . the preferred Dec source of supply for the largest buyers of furs — plus unsurpassed facilities for selling your pelts at i Public Auction or Private Treaty Sales. It is on the an. basis of the consistent results shown, that we solicit Jan. your consignments of Silver Fox and Mink this year. [4 REMOST FUR S E L

Other pages from this issue: