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PAGE EIGHT ROTARY CLUB HAS WELCOMEHOMETO " [OCAL SERVICEMEN == ulated, Rotarians have already M)ld‘ and purchased $26,025 worth of SEAR(H FOR bonds, or $1,025 more than Rotary's $25,000 quota | that Edward | * AlASKA o|l completed the model m pole that is to t was announced the “Money Talks, | saw her Totem Walks" drive for Memorial Next morning she signed a long- Libr imnds. Work on the eight- term movie contract and that foot 1 be started tonight, \ afternoon played a part in a\new with Mr. Keithahn and Hank Har- ‘movh-' That, claim Hollywoodites, . mon in charge of “the carving crew." B — sets a record. Says Bonnie: “I'm The pole will have three segments, WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 The ! dreaming!” (International) geranes witl on the top and bottom | House Naval Affairs Committee to-! % ular 1 1 the “spirit of Juneau” | day approval of a i e reaffirmed its the Baranof ) & ited fish, symbolizing search for new sources in its In I € gold and fishing industries, in Alaskan reserve and recommended who I dy v\ . » center the Appropriations Committee ap-| & those W n th otes of Be: o announced were the funds | names d prove necessary ing rett o : Rotarians who, having birthdays| Commodore W. G. Greenman, di-| those 0B, TR 1 Dec ) il make up the rector of Naval Petroleum r Birthda bratior table next| serves, told the House Naval A veek, ‘On Dec. 19, the club will hold s Committee it would be neces- annual “childr part with to carry on the explorations Ellis Re ¢ e of arrange- ate contract because of the ment impending demobilization of Naval [e] ' ervicemen ' personnel now engaged in the work d Prouty, represen- | Estimated Costs wu High for t He estimated costs for technical and Pre work and the drilling of wells for and the next three years at $8,900,000, George | He said the costs would run at - least 66 per cent higher than the i | origina stimates based on the el sl (AGE GAME | use y personnel and equip- 1[\{ “: :.]‘l:\“fi] t [' : “‘m ‘In order properly to plan and the word “Juneauite”, his servic | execute their responsibilities for % it okl G ke Aladkw, De- | the natjonal defense,” Greenman ekl bt R T [ told the committee, “the Army and e it v itis B & o | Navy must first know what the it to With TUHEAY Deopia $ :] jiu'urr supply of petroleum or its a real interest in community The last games in the first round | SuPstitutes will be L “I know that Alaska has a great f he City Basketball League wint| Ofl-Bearing Samd S Pt AT Aima - bt feabidy las High against the| 10 the closing months of World Bb'a patt bk it cs and Juneau High's Crim-| Wer II petroleum requirements had S B \ts versus Paa in the Juneau|'eached & point where grave doubt existed as to how much longer the Benecke, bond chairman for tonight at 7:30| the club, thanked all for their sup- o'clock e Bears are now the|NAtion’s petroleum resources cquld port and cooperation in the orgar ten team in the league.| ™ n the high rate of with ization’s recent Victory Loan d > | drawels demanded campaign. He announced that with Brazil, is the leading cof-| Greenman reported that five sep- several members’ sales yet not tab- fee port of the world arate oll-bearing sands have been found in a test well at Mountain in the Alaska reserve. | “Although none proved to be of | commercial value he said, their .:IIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIII"II“IITI,IIIIh flurries to- Not tempera- ® tempera- ® . occasional snow and Wednesday. change in with much ture. AR ert s feE CASH GROCERY ~ Names by Senator highest DEL[CIOUS APPLES | discovery indicates beyond question | that drilling is being carried out {in an oil-bearing country Exira Special $ 5 1 9 Box ‘ e e e s eo00eseee e ExiraFancy.. [ o . * WEATHER REPORT ¢ Y o\ . (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) - PLE“TY or ALL FBESH e Temperatures for 24-Hour Period @ . Ending 6:30 ='Clock This Morning L] . o o o . FRIUTS and VEGETABLES e In Juneau—Maximum, 36; © | minimum, 28. . | e At Airport—Maximum, 34; e TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES : IR, : 10:15 A. M. 2:15 P. M. e 6o c o s 00 s 0 00 T 7 . . DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. e WEATHER FORECAST e MINIMUM—$2.50 . (Juneau and Vicinity) ° . “ o 0 . e Variable cloudiness with e . . . . e ture near freezing and low- ® est near 26 degrees, . . o e e e e e ws oo s | | | | -eo - The Senior Class of Juneau High —— School Will Presents Its | Bt ol i e 1) Annual Senior Ball Germany to become a satellite of which he termed a “preda- Friday, December 7th 9:00 P. M. ressor Speaking in land said “The Communists know that hungry chaotic Germany will and must embrace Communism and that a Soviet Germany would lead the Sovietizing of the smaller nations of western Europe and the collapse of nation. the Senate, East- to ADMISSION : Per persor $ .50 democracy outside Tax 10 Britain and the United States. Total $ .60 E |' | d Sl 'h 'Enlisted Sireng | Of Nav_y_ls Boosted All J-Hi Alumni and Parents of Students Are Inviied to Aiiend WASHINGTON, Dec. 4—Legisla- !'tion more than doubling the au- G00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000¢ thorized peacetime personnel 900000000000 0000005000000000 EESNONNNCRNVNDVNDNVANDNDDNNEE QRN Christmas and all the TRINMINGS = HWNDER ONE ROOE/ See Qur Fresh Vegetahles, Fruits, Cakes, Cookies, Candy and Nuts 16----PHONES BSOS BHDS N Ve Yo Ve B T Y PP P P Pl PP % ASKS FORBOARD | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1945 SHE’S DREAMIN’, BUT 'IT"PA,Y&S OFF BONNIE BLAIR, Wilmington, Del., i - - |came to California to see her : ®rother off for Navy duty in the | Pacific and & movie talent scout | in a Hollywood cafe. { | | Keeps Hubby No. 2 American (areer SR %, Diplomat Admis : Larceny Charges HOBOKEN, N. J., Dec. 4—Tyler Ke 34, American career diplomat jailed by the British nearly five years ago on charges of larceny of an embassy document, arrived home aboard the British Steamer Silver Oak today and declared “I did take certain documents from the embassy to my apartment, but it was for the purpose of turning them over to the United States Senate.” | “I considered,” said Kent, “that | those documents contained infor- | mation which the Senate and the people of the United States should } know about.” P | |Delicate Heart ‘ | Operation Planned For Two-Year-0ld BALTIMORE FILM ACTRESS Marjorie Weaver was more fortunate than many young women who remarried when they were officially notified that their first husband had been in action and Dec. 5-Judy Hack- killed or missing man, two-year-old daughter of Mr. then discovered that they had | anq Mrs. Henry Hackman of Buck- been prisoners of war. Miss |joy Wash, arrived in Baltimore Weaver's first husband, Lt. Ken- ' neth G. Schacht, a submarine of- ', ficer who spent more than three years as a captive of the Japs, understood perfectly and agreed to walk right out of the lives of Marjorie and her second husband, Lt Don Briggs. (International) rd an American Airlines plane ot 2:10 p. m. today and was taken to the John Hopkins Hospital where a delicate heart operation will be performed. | The girl, her mother, and the fam- ily physician, Dr. F. C. Wilson, ar- rived at New York this morning after 6-mile flight from Seattle, h strength of the Navy and Marine W Corps was passed by the House and Judy has a heart condition which sent to the Senate. Action was on has caused her to lose consciousness a voice vote without objection. an average of once a day since her birth. Doctors told the Hackmans that the girl could not live another year, because the faulty heart cannot pump sufficient blood to her lungs. The measure bousis the enlisted strength of the Navy, for peace- time operations, from 232,000 (pre- 500,000 (postwar), and the from 46,000 to 100,000. 40,000 officers of the Navy and 8,000 for nm1 One oi Ri(hes' ol Japs Dies in Tokyo war) to | Marine It p des line for the Marine Corp: TOKYO, Dec. 4—Baron Koyata - - Death Senfence Is (ommu"ed by Iwasaki, one of the richest men in! Japan, died at his home Sunday GOV., Wash_state after a month's illness, his office said today. e . | Cause of the death of the 66-| OLYMPIA, Wash., Dec. 4—GOV. year-old head of the family which Mon C. Wallgren today commuted gonirolled the Mitsubishi financial to life imprisonment a death sen- jntevests was given as thrombosis. tence for Mrs. Blanche Patton, 60, ___ Tacoma, forestalling what would have been the first execution of a | woman in the state of Washington. Mrs. Patton, erippled since child- hood as a result of infantile par- | al was scheduled to be hanged | for the butcher-knife slayin affection | ‘can't say thi Lis subject to |Haugh, Jr., Shanghai Fuli | 0f Gyp Joints; "HelloSucker’ By RICHARD CUSHING SHANGHAI, Dec. 4. — Shanghai bar owners may never have heard of Texas Guinan's famed *“Hello, Sucker,” but they use the same line with even greater success—except that suckers don’t like it here. Americans almost unanimously say they have been robbed from Honolulu to Sydney to Manila and from Bombay to Chungking, but never quite so thoroughly as in Shanghai They assert the moderation of the Austrzlian squeeze, the finesse of the Indian gouge and the laugh- ing acceptance of the Hawailan gyp are missing here—but they aren't warned. placards the Restaurants feature practically announcing that place is a gyp joint. Othe warn you to look at the. pi before ordering Servicemen claim prices auto- matically rise from 100 to 200 per cent to uniformed men. A ilian can get himself pulled across town 200 Chinese dollars but a Yank viceman offering less than 600 screamed epithets. The cry everywhere is “gold,” the Chinese name for U. S. dollars. An: old piece of silk costs 20 U. S dellars and jade that won't stand bright light, 15. The answer, of course, is that the Yanks don't have to buy, but most of them want to bring some- thing home It all boils down to the old law of supply and demand. Shanghai is doing what every other city has done—charging what the traffic will bear. D Says Emperor Halted Killing 0f U. §. Airmen TOKYO, Dec. 4—Only Emperor Hirohito’s personal intercession pre- vented the execution of all Ameri- can fliers captyred in the April, 1942, bombing of Tokyo, Field Mar- shal Shunroku Hata, former war minister and chief aide de camp to the emperor, said today Hata, named as a suspected war criminal in Gen. MacArthur’s latest list of wanted men, said in an in- terview that the emperor’s clem- ency order was issued around Oc- tober, 1942, after three of the cap- tured Doolittle airmen were exe- cuted in Shanghal. Hata was command -in-chief of all Japanese forces in China at that time. - D DAVENPORT, Ta: — I! takes a mighty big tip to get a rise these days out of Bellnop Thomas P. The discharged Pacific war veteran learned he had in- herited the $22,000 estate of his grandfather. His plans? To stay on the job as a bellhop L0STLOOT SAN BERNARDINO, Calif, —| Thieves used an electric hoist to get a 500 pound safe aboard a truck.‘ But when it fell off at a downtown| intersection, there was no hoist | handy. Disgusted, they left it and| the truck—which also was stolen—| in the street and fled on foot. . S EORGE BROTHER LIQUOR STORE Phones 92-85—2 Free Deliveries Daily BEER SPECIAL=== This Week Only BY THECASE... $3.95 Sick’s Select or Rainier EORGE BROTHER Ligquor Store Open to 12 Midnight Phones 32-35—2 Free Deliveries Daily QUICK MEALS FOR BUSY SHOPPING DAYS —Meat Balls and Gravy —Corned Beef Hash —Chicken and Noodles —Chili Con Carne —Tamales —Boy-Ar-Dee Spaghetti Dinner —Campheil Soups 704 Juneau Deliveries 10 a.m., 2 p. m., 4 p. m. Douglas Delivery 10 a. m. Thane Delivery 2 p. m. Tuesday and Friday. BOAY ORDERS DELIVERED ANY TIME Public Accountant-Stenographic-Tax Refurns MURPHY and MURPHY ROOM 3—First National Bank Building PHONE 676 - ] of | Fred Stone, 63, at a Tacoma Nurs- ing home, because, the state con- | tended, Stone failed to return her . FOR STUDYING OF U. 5. AIR POLICIES WASHINGTON, Dec. 4—Creation of a nine-member board to estab- lish national air policies is proposed in a bill by Senator Mitchell (D- Wash.). i 1ue bill would require the board to work out procedures to stimu- late a healthy rate of technical progress in air transportation; to coordinate military and naval air forces and government agencies concerned with aviation and trans- portation; establish the size of peacetime air forces necessary to the national defense: provide for maintenance of a properly balanced productive capacity of aircraft ln‘ peacetime; determine to what ex- tent, if any, plans for future war time expansion should rely upon peacetime aircraft production com- panies and the extent to which this expansion should involve conversion of the automobile or other non- aircraft industries. | - e - FEmpirs Want-ads bring results! COME ON FOLKS .-. . Let's look into the situation . . . and sce if we have any STRAY BOTTLES in our basements, porches, etc. . . .and RETURN THEM to your grocery stores and drivers. This favor will be greatly appreciated and for a good cause, as the milk bottle indusiry cannot supply us with additional bottles for some time. BUT if we all cooper- ate, and refurn our empties we can dig up enough empties to supply the demand. JUNEAU DAIRIES, Inc. Quality Dairy Products Juno-Maid Ice Cream : PHONE 638 WW “"‘WU"“""W- Apeanetpo]