The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 1, 1946, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT 'CITY CLEANUP GOES ON AT ENCOURAGING PACE The City C 1p Campaign ap- parenty has cted some residents with really ambitious ifhipulses, ac- cording to reports now coming in, and Mayor Hendrickson was moved to remark that “it hadn't been ex- Hundred Fifty Buyers At- fend Sale-Over $2,- 595,000 Taken in ®» pected that people would go into the logging business when they were asked to raks up branches and other trash. However, Dave Ramsay, being one of the more ambitious folks, decided now was an opportune time to dispose of the two big cot- ed for the United State: uth Africa by con governm and the Uni the Fouki trucklc of ip and hauled consume piles 58 percent ¢ Cape of G¢ brought 2 1 Scheol stu- of it, the », while the boys Two truckloads ristmas tre »f no one kno vhere that many came from— were hauled away by the city trucks g with the rest of the stuff ned up around the school Even the weather man has done good job of co-operating and Townsend Club Is Given India Talk Members of the Juneau rownsend ke a with continued good weather there is every indication that the cam- !paign to clean up the city and p it clean will be a real suc- Club were treated to an interesting ce address on the customs, traditions, Boy Scouts and Cubs are clean- and religious beliefs of the inhabi- ing up parking lots and play- tants of India last night by Dr. H.|grounds, and the city trucks are C. Murphy, a former missionary in making the rounds as fast as pos- committee, announced that she was again reminded to be careful with The usual old time dancing follow- ithrough the trash, or on the and prior to adjournment news be- | tion, was leading on the Democratic; the recipient of felicitations from| Alaska Coastal Airlines yesterday Tea hss been cultivated in China| To Hoonah: Vincent Isturis, Jerry c Mothers Day - from that country. Mrs. F. I. Timm, sible, picking up piles of rubbish arranging for special numbers for broken glass, and to put it in a ed the speaking program last night streets. - — gan to trickle in that G. E. Alm-| (oAs"Al AIRLINES ticket for the nomination for the many members. |flew the following passengers to for more than 2,000 years. McKinley, George Towle, Leo Hous- Make a Selection for I Elv \ I-lt o ¢ °—g Y | memn A chairman of the entertainment put out on the curbs. People are the next and succeeding meetings. box whers it will not be scattered | quist, President of the orgzmizn-‘ v GH'I'S House of Representatives and he was| S apamas o |and from this city: Harri Machine Shop Building [ e w FHONE 317 o B S R Juneaw’s Oldest Super Market Phone 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Will Arrive on Tongass TODAY § Fresh Tomatoes . . Pink Grapefruit . . New Potatoes . . Yams . . Celery . . Lettuce . . Cauliflower . . Bunch Carrois . . Cabbage . . Parsnips . . Calavos . . Rhubarb . . Aspara- gus . . Cucumbers . . Green Onions . . Green Peppers . . Appples . . Oranges . . Lemons Juneaw’s Oldest Super Market 2Free Deliveries Daily—10:30 A. M., 2:30 P. M. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ton, Frank Williams; to Hawk In- i o ‘ . _—— 16 Ole Hansen; to Skagway: Jim An(horage Bound - GIS BE A'I'EN Houston; to Haines: Mary Broul- ' lette, William Wilson, Joe Schnabel; to Sitka: C. Didrickson, Henry Moy, Mrs. Alton Cropley, Frank Wright, M A. Long, Tom Sanders, John Kienast, Louis Vogelweid, C. A. Chamberlain, Mary Smith. To Ketchikan: Hans Floe, A. W War Bride fo Get Exira Reservations ANCHORAGE, Alaska, M2y 1— Brindle, Tom Parks. ‘Fcllow-orriz‘f'rs of policeman Tom From Hoonah: Patricia Daniels,|Carroll hoped to surprise him by| Louise Kane, Harry Douglass; from |speeding his Irish colleen war bride, | Skagway: Jim Houston; from Sitka,|Kathleen, here from Seattle. |C. Chamberlain, Tom Morgan, R.| Learning she was delayed there J. Prather, Jerry Strong; from Peli- by the cannery workers’ union ship can City: Marilyn Jones, Frost O./tieup and unable to get reserva- Jones, H. C. Jones. ‘tion.\ they made arrangements for From Ketchikan: James Church, her to be flown north either on a George S. Ley, Willlam R. John-|freighter plane by a private party ~ UPBY JAPS ~ INKAMATA TOKYO, May 1.—1wo American Soldiers were beaten Sunday night by a mob of Japanese, one of whom said he would “not take any- thing from any GI's,” the Army newspaper Stars and Stripes report- - tonwood trees in his yard, so down ed today. ST. LOUIS, May 1.J—About ny Incid . the city son, John E. Mathy Mrs. Neill or on a cargo ship. Capt. Miciiaci G. Frisch. chief of fepresentivy ny responsibility for re-| Ancerson, G. Swanson, R. S. Hut-| They had to ask Carroll, how- the Criminal Investigation Division| s paid a total of . which was dam- ton |ever, for her address (CID) of the Provost Marshal’s of-| i—for 1s] By T | R fice, was quoted as saying the twq 808th At Seattle today, Carroll's moth- ricans—privates in the SERIOUSLY INJURED er, N a Carroll, said she and Er eer Aviaticn Battalion—were {rer a in-law were waiting painfully but not seriously hurt. Hel g {should They had expected The two soldiers wer S R R S esterday, The younger Mrs. down a street in Ki 43, olbak 40 R IRESGHE R Boldenbas _is from Londonderrytown.| Tokyo and Yokohama. fall from a roof of the Gastineau w804 gie d AN | S D seen each other for many of whom said he had been throug the Okinawa campaign and did n Hotel to the concrete alley Gene Faith, an ex-WAC and W in Juneau for the past month, St | res: is in U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M,, 120TH MERIPIAN TIME Max. temp. TODAY Ann Hospital today with a pos: ompanied by Beb Kirkpatrick ne had just left a vacant room in | the Gastineau and was evidently attempting to find footing on mg ~ GETS AUTHORITY | *--(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today> i WEATHER SYNOPSIS: The low pressure which was located south of FOR "Ew ROUTES‘Kodmk yesterday morning has. moved south of Kenai Peninsula and is| | | filling this morning. Another low center appears to be developing about i 700 miles west of the coast efyOregon this morning and is expected to WASHINGTON, May 1—Civil move slowly northeastward. A’ ridge of high pressure extends over | Aercnautics Board Examiner Ray- western Canada to the Rocky Mountain region of the Unifed States. {mond W. Stough recommended that Some rain or snow showers were reported during the past 24 hours from |the board authorize Alaska Coastal Wycming to central Canada apd rain was reported at scattered puims{ | Airlines and Ellis Air Transport to along the coast from Washington to the Gulf of Alaska and over the | {fly mail in addition to per and Aleutian Islands. Temperatures over the Tanana and Yukon valle ys | | property over their regular Alaskan were as high as 57 degrees yesterday and were slightly above or slightly routes. below freezing last night. | Stough, in a report yesterday — : . lalso Tecommended that the DOATd M —— —— T BUILDING FOR SALE kot i eites b resand Must be DEMOLISHED and REMOVED Considerable LUMBER and TRUSSES Suitable for SHOP or WAREHOUSE . . . Also OIL HEATERS route between the terminal point p Y {Juneau, the intermediate points at Willoughby Housing Project 2 last | Lowest 4:30a.m. 24 hrs. Weather at kened rooftop when the accident 24 hrs.* | temp. temp. Precip 4:30am | occurred R i b g 7 > ud | The injured girl and Kirkpatrick ' oo e° e S 5 g | had spent an evening of “skylark- | p.ipe 25 14 14 0 Pt. Cloudy }ing" according to authorities and o, qova 47 40 40 06 Rain i had been asked to desist from ring- | poweon 5 27 35 0 Cloudy | ing: door bells and “cutting up” in gamonton 30 30 0 Clear the halls of the Baranof Hotel, be- | mairhanks 57 33 36 Trace Cloudy fore going to the Gastineau. The pgaines 49 38 38 0 Cloudy | vacant room in the Gastineau from y,neqy 48 40 44 01 (‘lcud;' { which the two made their exit had yyneau Airport 50 | 37 41 Trace Rain been left open for redecoration getchikan 47 40 45 Trace Cloudy work. Kotzebue 5 18 .03 Snow ! Both are residents of the Home nfeGrath 52 23 23 0 Clear | Boarding House and were not re- Nome 25 | 10 10 02 Snow | gistered at the Castineau. Nerthway 50 29 31 Trace Cloudy | Police termed the fall “accident- ' petershurg 50 | 31 42 01 Cloudy {al” pending a talk with Miss Faith portland B o8 46 0 Clear | when she has sufficiently recovered prince George 52 26 26 0 Clear | irom the shock and injury. ( Prince Rupert, 49 38 45 Trace Cloudy | e ! san Francisco 66 42 46 0 Pt. Cloudy | | Seattle 36 43 £ Clear ‘ALASKA (oASIAl | Bitka 48 39 44 Trace Cloudy | ! | Whitehorse 46 | 30 35 0 Cloudy | | Yakutat 55 29 38 24 Cloudy {‘ | | {Berners Bay and Haines, and the i terminal point Skagway. | 2. Adding Gustavus as an inter- |mediate point between Excursion Inlet and Hoonah on its route be- tween Juneau and Sitka. - CHIPPERFIELD HERE | W. A Chipperfield, Divisional' ___ | Superintendent of the U. S. Forest 22200V ON Service, has arrived here from § !.uu'xsburm He will be in the city n cfficial business for several days and is registered at the Baranof (/ Hotel Daily ARPRRRR X PR RRRGRTG: ‘¢M’>\m&" BRRRRRRRRG PR IE IR RRORR RRRFEEG RNt o oot oo NN N ONO0OE | propose to G. I's” Then he % i “take anything from any whistled and 75 to 100! Japanese varmed around the Americans, ‘while 15 or 20 beat them. Many of the group carried wooden rifles and sticks. 'HOPE REVIVEL VIVED FOR WINTER WHEAT AS RAINFALL STARTS | CHICAGO, May 1.—Hopes that |sections of the western winter {wheat belt still may produce good | crops of grain were revived today | when rain fell in western Kansas and Nebraska, and rains forecast | for northwestern Oklahoma this af- ternoon are expected to spread over the state tonight. However, the Atchison, Topeka A Complete Li VALUES GALORE=- MORE IN THE STORE GLY WIGGLY JUST PHONE 16 or 24 for FREE DELIVERY | SO and Santa Fe Railway which car- | ries grain in the southwest, says that the drouth in southwestern Kansas has spoiled one of the brightest prospects ever held in that area. STUDENTS WALKOUT PORT HURON, Mich, May 1.— Failure of the voters to approve a school building program resulted in noisy demonstrations by pupils at four schools today . A number of students at the high school and three junior high schools walked out of their classes. And finally, the school principals ‘sent a total of more than 2700 students home. “Fverythingin Season” AREIVED TODAY ON THE “TONGASS” o Select From WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1946 2NOMINATED T0 ALASKA OFFICES WASHINGTON, May 1.—Presi- dent Truman nominated today two men for appointment to law en- forcement offices in Alaska. They are Raymond E. Plummer, to succeed Noel K. Wennblom, whose term as U. S. Attorney for Division Number Three of the Alaska District has expired, and Benjamin B. Mozee for a new term as U. S. Marshal for the Second Division. FORT DOUGLAS, Utah, April 26, —Maj. Earl G. Linhart of Bethes- da, Md. has specialized in Army discharges fcr the past eight menths Afte: handing out 33,000 GI. discharges, he got his own yes- ierday. 00 Arriving Today On the ‘“‘Tongass’’ " Everything You Have Been Waiting for in the Line of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables We also carry a large assoriment of FROZEN FRUITS and VEGETABLES California Grocery PHONE 478 FREE DELIVERY For Our MEAT DEPARTMENT — PHONE 371 AR RRRRRRETRRRROE % NNNoNNoNoNoYo FRRRRRRRRIRRIR XN ONNOE Tl amn@fi Bubble Room offers Rosita del Rio with her FANS OO NSO Direct from the in Mexico City STARTING TONIGHT May Ist Muisic by the 0'Reillys Dinner Served Every Evening _ On the Bubble Room Terrace No Cover Charge Sans Souci Club

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