The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 23, 1945, Page 2

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cover /f'l yoeed ofoin ceclhe {d/&{%:nnz MRAKE-UR CHEN YU This comple new version of cake make-up antly gives your s the look and feel k! It’s a ook entirely And new to it feels s the exultant All one will be except f exactly right for you. Refills $1.25 (Tas Extra) B M Behtends Ca QUALITY SINCE 'SUPERBLY STYLED, WITH THE EXCLUSIVE HAND-FELTED CUSTOM EDCE "GRANDEUR” When you put on a Knox how it feels to wear something mellow, balanced and smart that fine eraltsmen have taken pride in ing. We take pride in knewing that, under present- day conditions, Knox has not subtracted one « of quality or workmanship. Fifteen Dollars b.M BEHREn%_%a DOUGLAS NEWS BROWNIES TO MEET At the opening ceremony Brownie meeting tomorrow each Brownie will have an opportunity to tell the group anything that in- thrests her At the of the previous me the Henkin idy Niemi #d Pe; Parsons were elected the group to help Mrs. Field Meep the roll and financial records Fhe Brownies enjoyed their cl p ceremony, aft which they d@eparted in quiet Brownie fashion. % All who would like to be Brownies are invited to be present tomorrow whether or not they bring dues : #nt by Mrs can THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1945 BULLETINS WASHINGTON—Price Adminis- trator Chester Bowles announced today that OPA “finds no cause at this time for a general increase in | steel prices.” '/fll‘m selh’ President Tru- y to author- in the WASHINGTON man asked Congress today jan early general election | Philippin= Islands to be later than next April 30 and that the | newly-elected Philippine President. { | Vice-President and Congress take [ office not later than next May 28. WASHINGTON | Stanfill, Republican, was sworn in today as Senator from Kentucky. ‘ > succeeds Senator A. B. Chandler, William H. Democrat, ‘'who resigned to become | Baseball Commissioner 1 “ Ab"l\(.T()\ Senator McKel- | (D.-Tenn.), the Senate’s Pn«l(h ent pro tem, became ill today as he was closing a meeting of the appropriations committee which he heads. Senator Hayden (D.-Ariz.) was called to preside over the Sen- ate in McKellar's absence. WASHINGTON--The Senate Mili- tary Affairs Committee today gave peedy and unanimous approval to th nomination of General Dwight S. :Ahower as Chief of Staff to ed General George C. Marshall, signed. The committee dispensed with customary hearings. CALCUTTA—One American sol- dier was missing and more than 30 had been injured today as Indian anti-British ricting raged for the third day in_Calcutta and spread to Bombay and Delhi. ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. — Mrs, nie Pyiz, widow of the famed war correspondent, often referred to as “that girl” in his column, died at 7:30 a. m. today. Mrs. Pyle, 44, had been in ill health since Ernie was killed by a Jap sniper on Ie Shima last April 18. Her physician said she died of complications a ing from an attack of influenza. /8587 PARIS Charles de Gaulle, as President of France, has asked the Constituent Assembly to nationalize the credit, insurance and electrical De Gaulle’s new Cabinet unanimous vote of n the assembly. FRANKFURT ican Ar today t were Germany—Amer- headquarters announced at more than 3000 Germans arrested in widespread raids Sunday in the U. S. accupation zone Large stores of guns ammunition and radio transmitters were seized in the raids HAT IS RIGHT BOSTON-—Veteran baseball ex- ccutive Bob Quinn resigned today as head of the Boston Braves farm ystems. The resignation is effective ember 30. CHICAGO Me=n and women in uniforms under the direction of Mrs. Edward J. Kelly, wife of the Mayor, served 66,000 servicemen and wom- held not ' !on free turkey dinners yesterday. iru&ul( of atomic energy discoveries. PARIS American soldiers in WASHINGTON President Tru- Europe on occupation duty observed| man, sharing a hymn book with Thanksgiving Day with church serv- | Mrs. Truman, joined fellow-Baptists ices, turkey with all the trimmings, |in a Thanksgiving service. The White football games and Red Cross dances House family went to the First Bap- | and parties. | ton for forenoon worship. WASHINGTON—The Labor-Man- | agement Conference is taking a re- cess and will reconvene Monday. KYOTO, Japan—Three Americans | and 18 Jap laborers were killed in Who has been detained at Fort Ben- an explosion in a small Jap cargo | jamin Harris, Ind., since September ship carrying munitions to be dump- | |4. A War Department statement| ed into Osaka Bay. The ship was | said Bauer acknowledged that Ger- demolished. Presumably it struck a stray mine. WASHINGTON—The Army has recommended that the Attorney | General order deportation to Ger- in August, 1941, as an espionage agent and that he enlisted in the U. S. Army on May 2, 1942 LONDON—Former Foreign Secre- tary Anthony Eden urged scrapping | cf veto powers under the United Nations Charter in Commons as a DETROIT—Two workmen w killed and two other men seriousl U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA many of Sgt. Frederick Emil Bauer, | many sent him to the United States | injured late Wednesday when $25,000 explosion and fire damaged a one-story building at the For Motor Company’s Highland Palk‘ { plant | | UVALDE, Texas — Former Vice- | 'WOODLEY MAKES Woodley Airways landed one flight | 77 years old yesterday’and he and | | ternoon, followed by one in and two | | his wife received friends. On Sun- | out yesterday. The Wednesday | day the Garners will celebrate theh' plane, Pilot Sasseen, Co-pilot Mullin, golden wedding anniversary. | brought the following here: | Donald Neilsen, Leonard Lauder~' | LONDON Princess Margaret;bach John Weeks, Margaret Gomez, Rese underwent an operation yes- | Edna Connor, Gene Connor, Metro 'tu(u) for appendicitis, it is an-"l‘cmko John Hoff, Lt. Comdr. G. | nounced at Buckingham Palace. Her Kelez, Russell Annabel. conditicn is dest ed as satisfactory. Returning to the Westward yes- | terday, the plane carried: Stanley | Fcrester, Evelyn Piotrawsky, J. Bullock, S. Bullock, J. Hayes, M. Simpson, W. Johnson, Mrs. J. Clever, Mrs. A. Woodley. Thursday's plane in from Anchor- age, Pilot Joe Morris, Co-pilot Bow- man, brought: W. Spencer, Renee Spencer, Ed | Olson, Hilda ©lson, Eugene Olson, James Olson, Sverre Klingenberg, | Florence Klingenberg, Bill Kling- | enberg, Anna Brown, John Hill, and WASHINGTON — Senator Lucas (D.-11l) has called for Army and | Navy testimony on how many planes | were available at Pearl Harbor in 11941 and why no long range patrols were being flown when the Japanese | struck TOKYO-—Baron G. Sadao Araki, so-called “high priest of the mili- tary cult,” and Yoshihisa Kuzuu, | head of the once-feared Black TWO ROUND HOPS FROM KETCHIKAN Hcrc from Ketchikan are Mr. Mrs. Fred Walker, guests at the Baranof Hotel. e } CANNERYMEN HERE | James E. Parks and W. J. Wright, | tist Church in downtown Washing- | President John Nance Garner WBS‘hexe from Anchorage Wednesday af- | cannery operators at Hoonah, are guests at the Baranof Hotel after arriving here by Alaska Coustal plane, P iy /LT A ‘ AT HOTEL JUNEAU ‘ Local residents registered at the Hotel Juneau includg: Metro ‘Tomkc who flew in from An- | chorage; R. O. and N. E. Crooks, Chris Ellingten and Mike Seiter, > SLACK LIME AFIRE Slack lime, used in the Goldstein building, caught fire in the parking {lot on Front Street, across from | Cowling-Davlin Motor Company, "rhanksgivmg forenoon, and plas- terers were called to put it through a screen to save the supply - MID- WFSTI'R‘VERS HERE | Folk from the Mid-west section WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOE 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M, Max. temp. last | Lowest 4:30 a.m. | D agon Society, have surrendered at 12TH MERIDIAN TIME | Sugamo prison TODAY 24 hrs. Weather at SHANGHAI — GI's and generals harles ston. | 3 b At of the United States registered here The plane returned to Anchorage |last night at the Baranof Hotel with: H. Schnable, Robert Nelson,|included: Lillian Duggan, Detroit, 4:30a.m. Snow Station Anchorage Barrow | Bethel 5 Cerdova Dawson Edmonton Fairbanks Haines Juneau Juneau Airport Ketchikan Kotzebue McGrath Nome Northway Petersburg Portland Prince George Prince Rupert San Francisco Seattle Sitka Whitehorse 35 Yakutat | *—(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) WEATHER SYNOPSIS: A deep low center located about 800 miles south of Kodiak is moving slowly north. Strong to whole gale winds were reported along the coast from Vancouver Island to Graham Island. Rain was recorded at most stations along the coast from northern Cali- fornia to Ketchikan and snow or rain from Kodiak and Middleton Island northward to the central Yukon Valley and the Seward Peninsula. Temberatures were generally above normal but were below zero at some stations over hwestern Canada and northeastern Alaska, the lowest being minus 15 degrees at Fort Yukon. Temperatures near 50 degrees are reported along the coast from Dixon Entrance to northern California MARINE WEATHER BULLET Reports from Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today WIND Height of Waves Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) ENE 28 NE 14 1 foot NE 5 1 foot N 8 1 foot 24 hrs.* | temp 14 temp. 15 Precip. 04 Fog Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Foggy Fog Rain Cloudy Cloudy Snow Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Rain Rain Rain Clear Cloudy 01 Clear Weather Cloudy. Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Station Cape Spencer Eldred Rock Five Finger Light Guard Island Rain s Lincoln Rock Drizzle 38 NNE 5 Point Retreat Cloudy 36 NNE 12 Calm MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Lynn Canal— northerly winds 25 to 30 miles per hour—cloudy. Inside waters, Southeast Alaska, north of Frederick Sound—northeasterly winds 15 to 25 miles per hour becoming easterly to southeasterly winds 25 to 30 miles per hour tonight—cloudy, becoming rain. Inside waters, Southeast Alaska, south of Frederick Sound and outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Sitka easterly winds 15 to 20 miles per hour becoming southeasterly win miles per hour early tonight—cloudy becoming rain tonight. Outside waters, Sitka to Yakutat—easterly winds 15 milés per hour increasing to 30 miles per hour mnight—cloudy today, rain tonighl Temp. 37 31 35 Crisp Spinach “Grandeur”, you know Bunch Carrots cats Parsnips Lettuce Tomatoes Broccoli Endive Cauliflower Green Onions Cranberries CANOLES RETURNS B. C. Canoles of Juneau has ar- rived back in this city after some ks in the States, spent on the coast. He is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. D ANCHORAGE GUESTS Anchorage residents registered at the Baranof Hotel include: Frank R. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. L. Rensek, Jackie Skinner, A. M. Maggard, Charles Lovin, Mr. and Mrs. Gil- Larson, M. G. Worrell, Frank Dr S. Walkowski and Sweet Potatoes Artichokes bert IIIIIIIlIII|IIIIIIIIIIl|IIIIIIIlllIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII O PLOPLE PLALINUM Mr. and Mr two children, Ed Olson and their Mrs. Anne Brown, Charles J. Johnston and John C. Hines, all of Platinum, «-nrmm- to the States to spend the winter, guests last night at the| 10f Hotel. Mr. Johnston is nt of the Alaska Miners’ Association Hllllllllll|IIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII - Empire Want-ads bring result; ._T_A EVERYTHING THAT IS GOOD We Invite You to See Gur Window Dusplay OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT Can Always Furnish Youwu with the BEST OF MEATS AND POULTRY CAllfORNIA GROCERY Z FREE DELIVERIES 0000000 [ Ruiabagas Cucumbers Egg Plant Hot House Tomatoes Grapes T. H. Dyer, C. H. Anderson, C. H. Anderson, Jr., Florence Anderson, Mrs. John Kahler, Phillip Kahler, Kent Kahler, Lee Hilton. joined yesterday morning in special worship services at Shanghai’s Holy Trinity Cathedral, and aboard ecch ship riding peacefully at anchor off- shore came the familiar order as Mich.; Julius Strickenberg, Karl Strickenberg, N. C. Wickland, Min- neapolis, Minn., and Paul Stiritz, Alton, II1. church hour struck: “Knock off all unnecessary work; keep silence ahout the decks.” SPECIALIZING IN l‘LRMANENT WAVING HAIR CUTTING AND GENERAL BEAUTY CULTURE A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS Mr \\mn‘rl] are Baranof Hotel Moore, of | t registered at vhog LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON PHONE 492 Another Rack of DRESSES Greatly Reduced ALL HATS Half-Price 20th Century Theatre Building Pears Jonathan Apples Parsley Delicious Apples Winsap Apples Roman Beauty Tangerines O Green Peppers Cabbage Red Cabbage Apples Avocados PHONES 478371 A OO Sl -HANDBAGS Halfi-Price CHANNELAPPAREL T S e T e T T T T T S T S T e et ] et LADIES® SATURDAY NIGHT NOVEMBER 24 ELKS’ HALL DANCING PAS REFRESHMENTS Bill Matheny's Orchestra DAY For Elks and Their Ladies Only!

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