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0f Superb New Millinery, by G. Howard Hodge collectio ch of fa tinguishec $15.95 10 $35. A Stimulating Collection MR. G. HOWARD HODGE B Behrends Co QUALITY SINCE /8587 Brifish Forces ABERDEEN YOUTHS ATTACK DEMOLAYS; To Withdraw cuarces areman: g “hoedlums and hotheads,” 36 R veuths accused of attacking dele- MOVemem W'“ Be Grad_‘mu to the three-day State con- vention of the Order of DeMolay Ua' However A“hough Masonic youth organization, last " ' week are slated to appear in police Demands Afe Made court to answer to disorderly con- duct cha s Mayor Foelkner apologized to the LONDON, Sept. 4. — A British , 10 oroanization for the recep- Foreign Office spokesman said t0- i) jeceived here as the delegates day that some British forces Were!e;geq their session peacefully Sat- being withdrawn from Greece but nrowo convention here official quarters said troops will be; @i\t clashes occurred late last kept in the Hellenic dom £0r i myreday when the first delegates ame; tme. began to arrive. The molestation of : is “the first| Visitors continued Friday when the e lent of a general withdraw- Seattle drum and bugle corps and al” from Greece, it ‘was said at the @il team w subjected to show- Prime Minister Attlee's residence, ¢S Of ¢ ruit and tomatoes but complete evacuation as de-!While pa rough the down- manded by Greek Leftists and So- lown street Ru spokesmen depend e i ey S et THIRTEEN CONVICTED =£2 S o spokesman| ABERDEEN, Sept. 4—Thirteen e ot drowal was Aberdeen youths have been con- part of @ general regrouping of|Victed of disorderly conduct as an WAl Torees the Middle East, |2itermath to the barrage of fruit He declined to give the number of 204 vegetables that greeted dele- men being moved out of Greece, 83tes to the weekend 8 e The latest announced strength of Mlay conventior British forces in the Hellenic king- e R aMiges- Mty dom was at least 50,000, 4 3 King George 1T today awaited a| All Of the 13 convicted received e from Premier | SUsPensions of fir but Police o to the Greek Judge Mitchell Kalin ordered them At to be in their homes by 9:30 night- for from 30 to 90 days and to B e ite to the new letters of apology over delegates’ dates with local The MS Princeton-Hall, mission ' girl boat of the Pre ian church - D - under Skipper Roland Burroughs M returmed 1o gunens ey ater o [FUIM@N Talks with trip south to Ketchikan and around the West Coast to Hydaburg H T e oo e win- Byrnes On Doings ary aboard the craft, reported that f Miss Emma Stautfer from Kasaan A' pea(e Sess‘on and Mrs. Vesta Scott from Hyda- burg were transf to Haines 4 Sl L S f where they are up duifes| WASHINGEON, Senl, & —efr in the kitchen of Haines House,|the second time in less than 24 S iaian o hours, President uman today The Princeton-Hall will be in port | 4 lked with Secre “y“ 'u“ hlzll‘n‘ for only two days, Burrpughs ex- }68 Ol deverapmanis a4 o RNgs pecting to ave Friday to start '® ‘j‘ ce ‘““1_"“’ ‘“, Ty collecting students for the open-| White House Press Secretary ing of eldon Jackson Junior Charles G. Ross told reporters that Collage in Sitka Bytnes telephoned Mr. Truman { L S from Paris at 9:30 am. (EST) and The Orinoco river flows 1473 talked with him for about five miles and drains nearly all of Ven-|minutes ezuela and about one-third of Col- “The President is being f ombia, a basin of 368000 square|abreast of all developmen P miles, ROss CHIANG SILENCE HAZARDS CHINA TRUCE PARLEYS Govi. Forces Reported fo| Have Opened Expected | Drive in Hopeh Prov. | NKING, Sept. 4—Chaing Kai- k's failure to state unequivo- :lly that he would order a nation- wide truc stalled the Stuart com-| ittee today as government armies drove steadily through the Com-! munist dominated north. The two government and two Communist members failed to ap- pear for a conference with U. S. Ambassador John Leighton. They wera reported nursing “smouldering indignaticn™ over events of the past few day: Other developments included a Peiping report .that a three-man o-American truce team station- ed at Chengteh had not been heard frem since the day before the gov- ernment forces captured that city week. The team is headed by H. Rustmeyer of Leaven- last Col. J worth, Kansas. (In Peiping, the Catholic news- paper Social Welfare, reported gov- ernment forces had opened their leng expected offensive against the Communists in - Hopeh Province. It said op:crations east of Peiping would be “especially tense.") - >ee CAPT. LUTHER GIVEN AWARD SEATTLE, Sept. 4—Capt. Philip H. Luther has been awarded ° the Maritime Commission’s meritorious! ervice medal for his work in the rescue of the 36 officers and crew cf the Army transport North Wind, lost on an island in the Shumagin group, Western Alaska, Dec. 14, 1944, Three ships took part in the rescue, his vessel, the steamship Carl Schurz, the David Branch and a Coast Guard cutter. “Each vessel had a separate act to perform in the operation,” Cap- tain Luther, now a Puget Sound pilot, said. “A 100 percent rescue was made.” The North Wind’s men were in lifeboats when the rescue ships ar- rived. peak bt The wartime year for ex- '~ ports of iron and steel from the|ence United States was 1945, {note that his government could not lassume responsibility for the crash- les. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA ALL'S SQUARE |Two Boys LosE IF TITO PAYS uas, Faesa uints Have New ’Baby Brother; Are 'Picking Name NORTH BAY, Ont., Sept. 4—The HIS Blll N0w‘ Dionne quintuplets are trying to | H H pick a name for their new baby , Youngest Commercial Pilot 11, iy 2 L ieht | The 12-year-old quintuplets were i — ’ IS one Of VI(“mS' (excited by the new arrival, des- . | H |cribed by doctors as “a beauti- | American Demands on Yu-| With Brother [5a bor™ wagan aboussight f | E— j pounds | gos|aVla Met EX(epi | FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept AL e Vit et e o | . . |Alaska’s youngest commercial pilot,!Myr. and Mrs, Oliva Dionne. Thir- Ifldemfll'y ualms {18-year-old David Johnson, and his |teen, including four other boy ! A Lrother, George, were killad yester-|are living. Mrs. Dionne is 37 g WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—Under- day when th {secretary of State William L. Clay- hit a 300-foot radio antenng after |ton said today that if Yugoslavia,takir off in dense fog from the |will pay indemnity for loss of life Chena River. and property, the United States| The tragedy came as an after- |stands ready to close the dispute math te a holiday weekend moose | |over the downing of two American|hunt. The brothers were taking | planes. joff for the 1 | Clayton told a news conference er a mcose they had shot during {this country hopss to have its billlthe weekend {for damages ready for Belgrade in, David was licensed as a commer- ithe near future. |cial pilot upon his graduation from i He added that the United States high school last . {considers its 3100-word note tolilying as a “bush pilot” | Yugoslavia yesterday as closing |Point Barrow until this |correspondence on the matter, ex-|George was a mechanic and cept for the indemnity issue. |vate pilot He recalled that Marshal Ala out a pr | Tito 'cock ({had met all other American de-| imands including a formal apology ->-e JACOBS' PRIVY land a pledge that the Yugoeslav tarmed forced would never again |tire cn American transport planes. COUN("' lIF'I'S Tito to date has given no def- {inite indication of his reaction to I ithe projected indemnity claim, al- SERvo S IIITI.E' |though he did assert in a recent | Mike day for a tour Should he refuse to pay damages, boxing ment small float plane]her husband 43. anana River to butch-|unteer fire department and had been|it secemed everybody of | Park wants to week. - Both were born at Hay-| ©nly Jacobs began laying plans to-) to -~ — KILLJOY SHARP'S PARK, Calif..—The vol- warned that unauthorized drivers of the Itown's fire truck will be prosecut- |ed Board Secretary O. F. Tonella in Sharp's drive the fire truck those who don't know especially how last week an unauthorized driver tdok half the firehouse door [to a fire—on the truc H -e ;Kekhikan Pioneer - James Mc(ain Dies KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Sept. 4.— / YORK, Sept. 4.—Promoter |James N. McCain, 81, member of a pioneer Oregon to Alaska in family who cam2 98 with a ccmpanion sailing a schooner north from San United States might have to select a successor to Marty Servo, 3 ) SLZL off its 13 day old threat to Whose world welterweight title was | Francico, died today. His boat, the take the case before the United doclared vacant yesterday by !hv,’!’ill,\' Sachs, was used later for Nations Security Council. New York State Athletic Commis-|Polar explorations. He was born e S VG IR fon. jnear Sheridan, Ore., son of a min- Altho Servo still is recognized by:iSter and served in the Alaska ional Boxing Association as|Legislature in 1929-30. Survivors SPOKANE SEEN AS mpion York Sta Commission lifted the New the New include a son, Harry, living here. e o"E or ARMY'SS fon of the tile from the| America learned about ice cream Schenectady, N. Y., battler for’ hisjifom Dolly Madison at a White refusal to defend it against Ray|House dinner in 1809. sinson here Friday night An injured nose, the same trouble that caused the champion to ask a postponcment of his original date with Rotinson last May, again in- terrupted plans for the bout sche- duled this week in the Yankee Stadium, brought about the com- ,mission’s action - e — MAIN AIR DEPOTS SPOKANE, Wash., Secpt. Gen. Ira C. Eaker, deputy mander of the Army Air Forces, told a Chronicle interviewer today that the Spokane Air Depot,is be- coming one of the Army Air Force's tive main supply and air depots. —Lt. cem- “One reason the Spokane depot 7 is important is because of its prox VETS DEMAND YUGO " he said. “We ¢ imity to Alaska pect to maintain several big peace- tithe bases in Alaska and the Aleut- ians.” Here on a flying tour of western bases, including the depot, the Gen- eral declined to predict whether 15th Air Force headquarters would SLAV SHOOTERS BE BROUGHT TO TRIAL BOSTON, Sept. 4 A demand Le moved from Colorado Springs that the Yugoslavs who shot down to nearby Fort George Wrigit, American airmen be brought to indicated that proximity to Ala trial before an international tri- would be a factor in locating it ‘One of the strategic air forces, the 8th, is to be headquartered in the northeastern United States,” he said, “and it would be logical that the other, the 15th, would be in the Pacific Northwest. However, Colorado Springs is not too far away from the Northwest.” il Resclutions Committes of the Veteran of Foreign Wars, it is learned. James M. Hayes, Jr., 28-year-old former Marine from Winston Sa- lem, N. C, said the Committee which he heads will send the reso- | lution to the convention floor with Transfer of headquarters to Fort “ynanimous endorsement.” Wiight was started recently but In addition to demandin was later suspended by the Army (he er h perpetrators of this crime” b ir Forces. b to t the tion call- 5.9 g it United States govern- full reparations for cf “the “airms who WIEN AIRLINES IS gl USING NEW PLANES = Rerenelis Hill, ! Friice Ruperd,Is Named After FDR PRINCE RUF&RT, B. C., Sept. 4.} Acropolis Hill, site of United| |States army installations during the| iwar, has been renamed Franklin| o D. Roosevelt Park. { .- | CEILING PRICEON | CERTAIN FISH UP: WASHING'ICX, " Sept. 4. — The | Office of Price Administration to-; da increased fishermen's ceiling | | prices one cent a pound for albo- | |ecrs and two cents a pound for | other species of tuna. The agency said that as a result the action, retail go up akout three cents a pound when retailers receive their first shipment at the higher prices. | The increases, OPA id, were |granted to keep the price differ- ential between producer and can- ner prices at the.customa level. They are effective immediately. Canner ceilings were raised Aug- ust 23 to comply with the new price control t which required that ceiling prices for canned fish be at least the average of their 1942 prices. - - FATRBANKS—Wien ' Alaska lines is replacing the Naval Transport Service on the daily c go runs to Point Barrow, Sig Wien, president and general manager of the lines has announced. Douglas C-47s, which will be purchased through surplus property channels, are to be made available for the service. 1 —,— Air Air WEATHER REPORT * (U. S. WEATHER BUREAU) tures for 24-Hour Period 6:30 0'Clock This Morning °c o o In Juneau—Maximum, minimum, 40. At Airport minimum, 41. Maximum, 65; eceececeoo WEATEEZR FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) 1of Fair with high thin cloudi- ness tonight and increasing cloudiness ~ Thursday. Not much change in tempera- ture. - DR. CLAUNCH 1S KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE AUGUST 30 Dr. Stanford Kiugsley Claunch, teacher and health lecturer who was in Juneau in June, was killed August 30 by an automobile on highway 99 near Everett. On his way in to Everett, by automobile last Friday, the horn of his car stuck, Dr. Claunch started across the highway to a repair shop and was struck by an auto- mobile and died soon afterward in a hospital. Word of his death was received in Juneau by Mr. and M Hm"ry Bracken in a letter from Miss Flor- - British Flotilla On Visif fo Japan KURE, Japan, Sept. 4.—Thirteen ships of Britain's Pacific Fleet are here for an official visit. The flo- tilla includes one cruiser, five de- Funal has been drafted by the pov- ! ceilings will | streyers, one destroyer escort, four | submarines and two submarine ten- | 1 | | { | cers. Another cruiser is expected 1CMOrrow. Beaver, secretary to Dr. Claunch, FROM DICKIES FROM $1.00 to $1.50 +al SPECIALS $1.93 to $4.95 Original $7.95 - $13.95 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 ALASKA INVITED T SPOT IN PNU Portland’s Mayor Riley Says Needs of Alaska Part of Program SEATTLE, Sept. 4—Headquart- ers of Pacific Northwest United's interim committee reported todayv| that Mayor Earl Riley of Portland| invited Alaska to join the region-| organization in a talk at An- age before his return to Seattle air last midnight. Riley, chairman of tk P.N.U. in- terim committee, warned Alaskans: “Thresh cut your problems to- gether, organize your program and then come in"” to P.N.U ‘There nover has been a disc in any meeting of Pacific Northwest United that didn't in- clude the needs of Alaska and your| neighbor to the south, British Columbia We don’'t think any broad general program for Pacitic Nerthwest pro jon is complete without you. H said Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana “intend to ferge a solid bloe that can act as a unit inside and outside of Cor gress,” and added: “We are one region of the United States that wants to sec Alaska develop and ants t0 help Alaska reach state- hood. HE'S PEACHLESS OREGON, Ill, Sept. 4—Every- thing on the court house square was just peachy until Sheriff Wil- liam Hungerford moved his head- quarters from the court house to the Oregon fair grounds for the duration of the fair. | While Hungerford was gone, mebody helped himself to all the peaches on the sheriff's court house square peach tree. Original $2.95 t0 $5.95 CLEARANCE PANTIES FROM P50 §1.25 TEA ROSE BLACK et T T lliomen's Avoanes “It’s the Nicest Store In Town® Baranof Hotel Building 1946 Wang-Vi-Tang Says He Should Be Shot For (gll_aboralion PEIPING, Sept. 4—Wang Yi- tang, former chairman of the Jap- anese organized North China Poli- tical Affairs Commission, listened | today to the reading of 12 charges of collaboration filed then remarked simpl. I should be shot.” He declined to answer any ques- tions or to make any other com- ment. He against him, ill be sentenced Saturday. - (hené River Bein_ Dragged for Body, Ladd Field Soldier FAIRBANK! crews were Chena river Sept. 4. — Army gging the muddy erday for the body dr of a Ladd Field soldier 48 hours after his over-turned rowhoat was found. ——— MORIZ ROSENTHAL DIES LAST NIGHT NEW YORK, Sept. 4. — Moriz Rosenthal, 83, internationally- {known Polish pianist, who was ac- clainied by critics on his American t in 1888 as “the perfect pian- ist,” died last night. He had been in poor health for several years but had been seriously il for only a week The of the great pupils of Franz Yisz, he made his formal debut in Vienna in 1876 at the age of 14. v — Arirena has a total land area of epproximately 114,000 square miles and is the the union. fifth largest state in 2 GOSSARDS and COLLEGE MAID BRAS T5c to $1.00 LASTEX PANTIES GIRDLES Small Size Only $1.50 .i