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PAG!: leHT st new transport a Oriental express,” Mr.|would be the fix A position was tory of Alaska. “These ai ft will ka cannot be sub- ir pattern of world be used on our present routes in Alaska and are concrete evidence of FOR WESTWARD ‘ he continued.'our faith in the future of air tmns~ ommendation, ' portation and mell development A nothing but'of postwar x(l Mr. Wood- Makes Statement Regard- B OBy hitk. anid: TArge e et | . a deserves this type will be ])vH into npvr:\'xun ing Recent Oral Argu- The only way by the company a5 development pet. | in Alaska mits." ments Before CAB ielp to de-! If awarded the route to Seattle,| JR— i Territory Woodley Airways will place into op- i 3 s : an airline ers on this route 6 senger | Recently returned from - ute e: equipment, purc e of ess1on civil clusively for ose of ng which has already been arranged Aeron: States, A. the needs of 2 T commerce -+ . Woodley United States, and then with the RAY PETERMAN BACK Returning abse which time he trips here well kn of about who A rece y plane f Anchor spent ! most of the summer and fall in the Interior and at Anchorage, while | prior to that time, he and Mrs Peterman home Sitka. made their in - WOODlEY AIRWAYS IN FROM WESTWARD From Anchumge to Juneau:O. M. rrison, Margaret Rutledge, Robert 2 Fletcher S. Stitt, Boyd E. Mar- shall, Horace Meier. Juneau to Anchorage: Orin Teige, Thomas Thompson, Elizabet Dona- hue, Mrs. T. Donahue, Melvin Nel- son, Hazel Clawson, Mrs. R. Court- ney, H. Gilfilin, Ernest Johnston,' ‘\.inxmmx D(-Beck Now, Harold Just See What You Have Done HONOLULU, Nov. C. Pacheco, acting mayor Season's Finest PR Fruits & Nuts | g G 30 — Manuel of the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | FATALTO 22 ATTU PEOPLE : |All Capfured Villagers ' Now Accounted for | with 25 Surviving s of remote At- tured in the first ion of American soil st been all accounted The Alaska Native Service offic here has been officially notified of the names of 25 Attu survivors of Nipponese imprisonment and of 22 others who died while prisoners- war of the enemy. The roll of vie- tims is topped by the name of Mike Hodikoff, Chief of the Attu island- {ers. The | those prisonment ed to the rig Survivo Alfred Prokopioff, Mary Goledoff, Olean Golodoff (child), Alfred Go- lodoff (child), Alexy Prossoff, Eliz- abeth Pursoff, Thecla Golodotf (child), Sergi Artumonoff, Mike Lo- kanin, Parascovia Lokanin, John Hodikoff, Olean Golodoff, John Go- lodoff. Mick Golodoff (child), Gregory Golodoff (child), Elizabeth Golod- off (child), Imnokanti Golodoff, Jul- ia Golodoff, 'Stephen Hodikoff (child), Angelina Hodikoff, Annie Hodikoff, Martha Hodikoff (child), Marina Hodikoff (child), and Agnes Prossoff (child). Those who died during prisonment were Mike Hodikoff, total of 47 names includes of four infants, born in im- all of whom succumb- s of internment. re the im- Fred Hodikoff, Lovrenti Golcdoff, Harman Golod- A bas‘ketiul o" City and County of Honolulu, has of¢ George Hodikoff, Peter Artum- 5 messaged President ‘Truman = “a onoff, Bladimar Prossoff, Valcigian, protest against this slander” of peonti Golodoff, Helen Golodoff, Healt h “..d Go‘,dness- Hawail by Secretary Ickes. iannje Borenin, Titiena Lokanin, X X The Secretary of the Interior nurtha Prossoff, Mary Prokopioff, commented in Washington yester- day on Hawaii's hopes of achieving statehood: “The only thing that disturbs me is the economic control that five families exert over there. I'd feel better about it if it really were a democratic institution in- stead of an oligarchy.” PRI v ORI SILVER FOX ROADHOUSE NEAR FAIRBANKS, BURNS SHOP HERE FOR Quality with Dependability at FPlooly wreedy 16 or 24 The Silver Fox Roadhouse on the Richardson Highway was razed to the ground in a $20,000 blaze of unknown origin which broke out about 11:30 p. m. last Saturday. The owners were in Seattle at the time, caretakers boln" in charge. Jonathan Apples Cauhflower Green Peppers Celery Garlic Lettuce Onions ! Cucumbers Yakima Gem ; Green Peppers Potatoes Carrots Grapes ‘§ Parsnips Pomgranates | Cabbage Cranberries Red Cabbage Sweet Potatoes Apples Oranges Yams Pink Grapefruit Cauliflower Lemons Celery Root S Limes Squash NUTS Pears LARGE SELECTION NEW CROP NUTS!! | PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries 10 a.m. 2 pm., 4 p.m. | December 5. | enchanting new fab- | i Marra Artumonoff, Mary Golodoff, Anicia Prokopioff, John Artumon- ofi. The four infant victims were: Mike Golodoff, son of Julia Golod- off; Anicia Hodikoff, daughter of Mike Hodikoff was was engaged to Mrs. Annie Borenin; Gabriel Lok- anin, seven months old son of Mike and Mrs. Parascovia Lokanin, and Arty Golodoff, son of Herman Go- lodoff, who was engaged to Angel- ina Hodikoff. Of the 25 survivors, the ANS office here reports that only a few are fit to return to their former life inthe Aleutians. A considerable number are now hospitalized while several are minor orphans who have been or will be placed in schools. Fred Geeslin, ANS Assistant Sup- erintendent, who recently returned from inspection of resettlement in the Islands, revealed that Atka .vil- lagers have invited the returping Attus into their community which is being.rebuilt into a much-improv- ed settlement. The Atkans would consolidate the two peoples and the trapping rights of the two villages. Both the Attus and Atkans have very valuable trapping rights on the prolific blue fox islands of the outer chain Since the Attu population has been halved and the adult male pop- ulation reduced to eight, of whom not all are fit to return, it is doubt- ed that re-establishment of the sep- arate Attu community would be suc- cessful. The roll of those who died as pris- oners of Nippon was submitted on November 27, by Mike Lokanin, one ,of the Attu survivors. e - ATTFNTIU\' — ATTENTION! Pioneers of Alaska and Auxiliary members are notified that Friday’s meeting has been postponed until (10,128-t3) -ee — KODIAK VISITORS Ben Kraft and Frank Halloran, | Kodiak residents, are registered at the Baranof. %f/ especially | Kayser is creating ric gloves, hosiery, underthings, lingerie. JAP PRISONS |BISHOP BENTLEY COMING TO JUNEAU Bishop of Al(\sku, the Rt. Rev. John B. Bentley, D.D., will be at the Church of the Holy Trinity, Episcopal, to administer the Sac- nt of Holy Confirmation on Sunday, Dec. 30, the Rev. W. Robert Webb, rector of the parish, announces. Two confirmation classes have been begun, one for adults and an- | other for young people. The adult | class meets on Sunday afternoons lat 4 o'clock and the young peoples’ class meets on Thursday afternoons t 4 o'clock. Any persons desirous confirmation may enter one of these classes. These lectures and discussions are open to the public and should other persons wish to learn more about the church they are also requested to attend. The class will begin with a short lecture on the subject for that day and this will be followed by discussions of the topic. This will be the first visit of A Schilling VACUUM PACKED -COFFEE Douglas Delivery 10 a.m. Thane Deliveries 2 p.m. Tuesday and Friday Boat Orders Delivered Any Time! | HOSIERY - UNDERTHINGS - GLOVES ' GEORGE BROTHERS LIQUOR STORE The Largest and Finest in Juneau Liquor Depariment cpen fo 12 p. m. every night . . . Until 2 a. m, Saturday Nights Largest Selection of Imported Liquors, Ligueurs and Wines mea QIPECEALS anne Thursday-Friday-Saturday $3. YOUR CHOICE---FIFTHS 01d Guckenheimer, Fifth Kessler Private Stock, Fifth Paul Jones, Fifth Old Thompson, Fifth Cedarbrook, Fifth Seagram's King Arthur Gin 90 Proof . . Sunset Sloe Gin, Fifth P. M. De Luxe, Fifth RUM e RUM $2.50---FIFTH Old Timothy EORGE BROTHER Liquor Store Phone 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily N BERT’S Better Buys FRESH FROZEN F0ODS Corn on Cob . . Mixed Vegetables . . Straw- berries . . Broccoli . . Peas . . Peaches . . Shrimp . . Apricots . . and many others! U. S. No. 1 Yakima Netted Gem 50 POUNDS 100 POUNDS §269 $5.19 Certified by U. S. Dept. of Agriculture ‘thup Bentiay. o VhbG dnsel | November, 1944, and many persons | are eager to meet him, and others are anxious to receive confirma- tion at that time. | el I LR R R R R Y Iy WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Period Ending 6:30 0'Clock This Morning e o o In Juneau—Maximum, minimum, 28. At Airport—Maximum, 28; minimum, 18. o o LR Y 34; WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau ana vicinity) e o o Variable cloudiness with occasional snow flurries to- night and Saturday. Slight- ly warmer tonight with low- est temperature near 30 de- grees. Highest temperature Saturday, slightly above freezing. Gusty northeaster- e ly winds. LRI R R B B ceee ®Teccevcecssncrcsetssvencnss e Delicious . . Winesap . . Rome Beauty BOX $5.79 ONIONS--U.S.No. 1 10 pound hag 89 CANNED MILK DARIGOLD—BORDEN’S—CARNATION (ase of 48 falls $4.99 GREEN BEANS ONTARIO CUT—No. 2 tins—EXTRA STANDARD 6 CANS CASE 24 CANS §1.00 $3.95 CORN-==-No.2tins WESCO—CREAM STYLE 6 CANS CASE 24 CANS $1.10 $4.25 TOMATOES SACRAMENTO—No. 2" tins—SOLID PACK 6 CANS CASE 24 CANS . §139 $5.25 PEAS--No. 2tins DYKELAND—4 Sieve 6 CANS 99 95 CASE 24 CANS $3.89 NEW ITEMS DROP IN AND SEE THEM Okra . . Hominy . . Whole Roast Coffee . . Kidney Beans . . Red Mexican Beans . . Par | Soap . . Dreft . . Mayonnaise PINK SALMON PACKED IN ALASKA 12TALL TINS CASE 48 TINS i 3.5 $12.00 RED SALMON S4.9A$OCAT—SOCI§JY19H15 12 TALL TINS - CASE 48 TINS WE ARE NOT RUMOR MONGERS . ... but we | believe you should stock up with staple foods. * — TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. 2:15 P. M. ‘ DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M MINIMUM—$2.50 2, 104 83/’ S CASH GROCERY . Fifth o FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1945 Extra APPLESFaney | 1 S