Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE EIGHT NEW OFFICERS . i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-JUNEAU, ALASKA EW DISCOVERY BULLETEN SR o NOMINATED AT oo o wowe— CIHLLANS TANGLE projector L. Emil, secretary of the Feder- NFFE MEE'HNG ,. ‘mm‘\.' w(l:vlml the Juneau Men on Waf Vessels NOW;;;x $3 a share P-TA has invited members of the purtiepate. enner Resfricled of Quarters iduals, in the the t o be heid Frigay, i Honolulu Trouble imm Theatre for Blackerby and Emil Chosen for Office Again-Victory A, 2 the purpose of raising a college| pFONOLULU. Nov. 14 — Civilian Loan Movie Shown scholarship fund and military police joined forces to x 2l introduced at e gopochan ‘n’ repetition of Mor the mactin Earl L. Fosse, Highs 4 night’s rioting, in which, said Pol er with t Agriculture I Feder . | SAN FRANCISCO-—-Alaska Pac 'rs Association will pay a divider December 17, record December 1. It will bring the 1945 dividend to $8 a share, the same as paid last year SYDNEY, Australia—Allied inves- tigators said today that natives had fcund the headless bodies of five American fliel Japanese on Celebes Island near o e e Glieg Chief William A. Gabrielson, 1500 | Mzkassar. The bodeis lay in un- nominated Pé . A Naval personnel tangled with civi-'marked gra -election on the 1946 slate of Clerk in t 1 Housiig Ag= |, py tion burial ground ted at the Ministration department in Juneau. 248 Foh s presented at the|ministration cepar \dent Black. The violence would not have oc- dei monthly lunch- In the abser o Karnes. Vice Pres. | Curred, he asserted. if Navy of-| WASHINGTON — Congressional e 1in the Baran- | erby, ”..”l;‘,» Bint = este were | ficials had cooperated “the Way |leaders announced that both Houses of Gold Room AR o y they said they would must stay on the job even if it takes Other nomir ns announced by | Preser o Shore patrolmen telephoned civil|until Christmas to handle so-called Chris Wyller, man of the nom- Fse S "authorities for help Tuesday night|must legislation . The order 1e inating committee were: First Vice- ARRESTED, ARRATGNED o)en sailors, confined to the Naval|following a White Housé Gohference President, A. E. Karnes; Second Air Station (NAS), began to, of the leaders with Mr. Truman Vice-President, R. L. Wolfe; Third, Mrs. Ellen Kitka is being held in Mrs. Ketherine Nor- | the federal jail here pending sen- dale; Secretary, R. L. Emil. Nomi- tence on a charge of family de- nations will k2 open for one more Sertion. Mrs. Kitka was arrested menth, At the December meeting yesterday afternoon by U. S officers will be elected I Marshal Fred Bryant, and A movie, “Objective, Security,” de- 1t before U. S. Com- picting scenes of the Okinawa in- missioner Felix Gray pleaded guilty vasion was shown, through the to the charge courtesy of the War Finance Com- itence was deferred. She was mittee, at today's meeting. The film, accused of having deserted her four presented as a Victory Loan feature, children Vice-Presider without disorder. The shore patrol explained that they would be restricted. Detective Capt. Eugene Kennedy said the Navy personnel went on a — e | three-hour rampage because they were enraged by a false rumor sailors. Lt. R. M. Singer, NAS public in- formation officer, blamed the police for the disturbance. He charged that more than 30 NAS personnel were beaten by civilians in the Finer quality and flavor make it a fa- vorite of tea lovers. — past two months, but that police = Jrange Peko 7 " made no arrests > ; DDA d Pekoc Tea HELD FOR KILLING L i ] WIFE; "DID GOOD e Ea JOB,” MAN SAYS held in jail today, booked on estranged ion of murderir fe w horror-strickent and ill mother look- ed 1 Mrs. Florence Honeycutt, nday night in the cottage whe she had bes nd step-father, Mr. and Mrs. Frank e Lieut. Ernie Johnst yeutt told him I had ng to kill her for 'weeks. 1 job, don't you think? n said the Honeycutts sep- Francisco last August fter arriage and the hus- band, trying to effect a reconcilia- tion, followed her here N Sk o POTATOES LEONARD TATE WAS TH THIRD FLEE Leonard Tate sends greetings from Connell, Wash,, to friends in Juneau, where he was employed during 1942 by Radio Station KINY, and in 1943 by Pan Am- erican Airways. He joined the Navy early in January of 1944, was at- tached to Rear Admiral William Halsey's Third Fleet, and saw a good deal of service in the Pacific war zone 704 Juneau Deliveries 10 a.m., 2p. m, 4 p. m. Douglas Delivery 10 . e Mr. Tate was employed by the a. m. Thane Delivery 2 p. m. Tuesday and Friday. Cripple Creek Mining Company at BOAT ORDERS DELIVERED ANY TIME Folger (Alaska), and prior to that was with Wagner's Radio Supply Company in Anchorage. S JUST PHORE 39 or 33 for that 9 FULL BREASTED TURKEY gather near its gates. The combined police force broke up the crowd there had been no further trouble but the help of city police was deemed advisable “in case” the sailors tried to leave’the station. There was no indication how long |a disagreement, General MacArthur that civilians had Kkilled two h a butcher knife as her ice found the multilated hody n living with her mother . friendship between Japan and Am- In the mining season of 1941,/ + Pear] Harbor, which opens tomor- State Byrnes said that the United States and Russia remain at odds on Soviet demands concerning,an Allied Contrel Council for Japan. The United States favors an approach under which each council member would have a vote. In the event of would have the final say. The Ruc- sians, however, prefer a unanimous vote before any step would be taken WASHINGTO! man has nominated Robert E. Freec of Ohio for a new seven-year term as a member of the Federal Trade Commission. The nomination ‘goes to the Senate for action. BOSTON, Mass. — The aircraft carrier Enterprise, fighting flagship of Admiral William F. Halsey, wl carry a different cargo this season. She sets sail tomorrow on her first |flight into the Arctic which carried bim within a few hundred miles of the North Pole voyage to England as a luxury troop transport WASHINGTON President Tru- man has accepted the resignation of Assitsant S McCloy. The resignation become: effective on November 24. The Presi- dent ext ssed his regrets early in ' September when he had refused to accept McCloy's offer to retire with his chief, former Secreatry of War Henry Stimson WASHINGTON—About 4,000 men in training for air crew service will > The Army announced the order applies to those trainees who have had two years of Army service and are no la needed. They are enlisted men w had transferred from other branche of the Army /ASHINGTON Action on a resolution favoring free entry of o G, PHONE YOUR CKDERS EARLY! During the present Taku weather we are doing our best to keep deliveries on sched- ule. .. You can help by phoning your order by the Senate Foreign Relations! Committee. The full group instruct- ed a subcommittee to provide a re port on the resolution by next Mon- day The committee made ~this decision after two and one-half | hours of discussion in a closed | meeting. | | | TOKYO—One of the candidate for the Japancse House of Repr sentatives in the coming general election is a globe-circling flier. The | aviator, Zensaku Axima lived in the ! United States for 18 years. Axima | said he would make the most of his | residence in America in promoting | erica. WASHINGTON—Chairman Alben | Barkley has announce the names | of the first two witnesses to appear | in the Congressional inquiry into row. They will be Rear Admiral | T. B. Inglis and Colonel Bernard | Thielen. Barkley said that the two officers will give an account of the Pearl Harbor attack. SANTA FE, New Mexico—United | States Ambassador to China Patrick | Hurley, has left by plane for Wash- ington. Hurley said before leaving | that he planned to confer with the State Department on whether he would return to China. | WASHINGTON—Former Censor- ship Director Byron Price has given President Truman a lengthy report, cn his survey of relations between the military control authorities and civilians in Germany. Price under- took the study at the President's request. —ee AUTO PRICES UP BEFORE CONGRESS WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—A plan to held retail prices of new biles at or near 1942 levels target of Congressional criticis day. Republican Representative John Taber of New York charged in the House that OPA Administrator Choster Bowles is trying to cr price control on what Taber called & racketeering basis IS MADE PUBLIC By EDDIE GILMORE MOSCOW, Nov. 14—Highly impor- ant discoveries which may well have rect bearing on R in the field of atomic energy were reported today from Mt. Alagos the shores of Lake Karagel in s, executed by the the Armedian Socialist republic. The government newspaper Izvestia expedition engaged in ves in a Japanese execu- |studying cosmic rays had discovered | a numter of heavy protons, kernel of atomic hydrogen.” “Under the action of cosmic on thin lead film,” the paper s |“a large number of heavy bits ob- y protons, that is the kernel of atomic hydrogen, was discovered This is of outstanding interest Izvestia said the Russian tist Peter Kapitza, the Soviet Union's WASHINGTON Secretary of | [T€MOSt expert in atomic research a leading role in the building of a power magnet for thel ide | viously Kapitza studied and workad for 13 s at Cambridge as a protege of late Lord Rutherford, | British scientist | pioneers in experiments of radio ac- | tivity, transmitation of elements and {splitting the atom the olar Pilot Returns from Near L ~ North Pole; Has Dafa | JSCOW, Nov. 14—M. A. Titlov, viet Polar pilot, has returned to ) a two-engined plane, brcught back data on ice drifts that etary of War .John Northern shipping routes. FAMED AMERICAL DIV. HOMEBOUND Mindanao in the sport bringing e due Mon- from Tokyo and rode by Seat At 44, he is one of ungest generals. ca Philadelphia in Race for Meeting Oua@s for UNO NEW YORK, Nov. 14—Philadel- phia has officially entered the race to become the permanent home of the United Nations organization Four Philadelphians, including Dr. Robert Johnson, President of Temple University, took off from La- Guardia Field for London today The group discovered here that a Chicago group will leave on Thurs- day and a San Francisco delegation is scheduled to go on November 22 in efforts to make their cities head- quarters. 'BIG HURRAH AT SPARTANBURG IS OBSERVED TODAY SPARTANBURG, N. C, Nov. 14. There'll be big doings here today. Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson will be on hand to present a 62-acre “thank you farm” to a ar-old son of a sharecropper. It's the gift of the community, their way of saying thank you to a fellow by the name of Gene Atkins. Spartanburg has known Gene all his life and when country Dr. A. R Walden proposed that they should do something for Gene, the homefclks chipped in $7.500 to buy Gene farm. Why? Well, Gene is a home- town boy who made good in a big way. He got home from the wars not s0 long ago—from the dank, derk jungles of Luzon where, one night, as he lay wounded in a fox hole, he kept plugging away with his rifle until he had killed 44 Japs. Shortly after Gene got home, he gct a call to go to Washingion The President Harry T placed around Gene's n the r tion’s highest award—the Congre: ional Medal of Honor - o Financial Scandals Involve Hideki Tojo TOKYO, Nov. 14—The Japanese demanding an investigation int 1 financial scandals during ti ministration of War Premier Hideki Tojo A Tokyo newspaper (Asahi) says that the Japanese procurator general bing asked to investigate charges Tojo received gifts of more than $650,000 front the Mitsubishi Industrial interests. S g The principal families of plants e distributed worldwide. Fruit Cake Fixin's-— Orange, Lemon, Ciiron Peel Mixed Fruit, White and Dark Raisins Figs, Nuts, Cllrranis, Everything ‘ TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M MINIMUM—$2.50 Be/. 2. T 2:15 P. M. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1945 CHARMING HOUSE FROCKS Betty Baxley | They're Washable All Sizes All Colors \ | . JONES -STEVE SEWARD STREET Super arlet Phones 82-85—2 Free Deliveries Daily Buy Your CANNED GOODS Now! By ike case while our stock is complete! We will gladly give you any assoriment you wish FOOD SALE and BAZAAR at GEORGE BROS. December 8th by Ladies' Relief Society of the Church of Jesus Christ, Latter Dav Sainis EORGE BROTHERS | Super Market Phene 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Democratic Representative Edward | Drawn and Cellophane Wrapped... Ready for the Qven ALASKA MEAT COMPANY e T Iment in the record ac of using pressure ta gress. sing Bowles s on Con- - CITY COURT CAS Two women, Joan Willis and Dolly George, were fined $25 each in City Police Court here this morning. The former pleaded guilty to drunk and disorderly charges, the latter to a drunk count. i RO {Hebert of Louisiana placed a state- | PIGGLY WIGGLY originated self-service, and nowhere but at PIGGLY WIGGLY will you find real sell’-s'ervicf. scientificaliy iupioved to make shopping a minimum of trouble and a maximum of pleasure. Here you really learn what it means (0 skop conveniently—take as much time or as littie as vou p! ¢, We iuvite comparison.