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e e e g f i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,409 CHARGES, DENIALS MADE IN SHI ATTACK 1S HURLED ON RUSSIANS Churchill and Atflee Make Simultaneous Blasts Against Communism Winston | er. JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS S e Lorna M. Swanson ' To Become Bride Of L. E. Williams| | Miss Lorna Mae Swanson, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Swan- son will become the bride of Lew- |is Edward Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Williams, tomor- row night at 8 o'clock in a douk¥ \ring ceremony at the Holy Trin- ity Episcopal Church | The Rev. 'read the vows, and the bride will ibe given in marriage by her fath- Capt. Geoffrey Goss, Military Churchill and Prime Minister Att- Aide to the Governor, will be best lee captured Britain’s headlines to-|man. Mrs. Geoffrey Goss will be day with almost simultaneous verb- matron of honor. al blasts against Russia in what The bride-elect came to Juneau appeared to be shaping up as a from Seattle August 4th, of this solid British front against Com- munism. Churchill told his in suburban Loughton last night She has been employed as agent at the Alaska year. assistant X Transportation Company since that | constituents time, ‘The prospective groom is em- that he had _"Iac:s" and “evidence”|pioved as Traffic Clerk for the to support his suggestion—made In|pjaska Coastal Airlines. the form of a question before the The couple met at the Univer- House of Commons Wednesday— ity of Washington and their par- that the Soviet Union now has qnts nave been neighbors in Wash- 200 divisions—more than 2000000} ng¢0n for some time. The bride- men—on a full war footing in Russian-occupied Eastern FEurope. ip. Aajaska Transportation is vicespresident of Com- elect’s father He lauded Attlee’s speech be-/nany He js expected to arrive here fore the Trades Union Congress at from Seattle today. Brighton earlier in the day in The mothers of the couple ar- which the Prime Minister bluntly|,jyeq here yesterday by Pan Am- accused Soviet leaders of erecting orican Ajrways. The Swansons are a “wall of ignorance and sus- residents of Alderwood ~Manor picion” between the Russian people| washington; and the Williams of and the rtest of the world. “The fact that the British Gov- ernment has decisively broken with the Communists and are fronted with them, although it does not immediately affect the course of affairs. on this- -island,” said Churchill, “has an important and beneficial result abroad, because there are countries on the con- tinent—like PFrance—quivering un-!and Purser P. A. Hole, arrived in|livan brothers, all members of the) der the Communist attack.” He said his Wednesday speech'and left for Skagway at 11345 pm.' down with the USS Juneau in No- should be regarded as “a serious warning,” and added: (about Russian forces) weighing very carefully the whole{dock or unload CPR ships. matter and without consulting | Screne Lake, Washington. RS T e ok PRINCESS LOUISE HERE FROM SOUTH Princess Louise, Capt. P. L. Leslie Juneau last night at 7:45 o'clock This was a resumption of regular Canadian steamship service to Ju-; 4T did not ask tke question neau severed for one trip by refu- | without sal of the longshoremen’s union to|ment has dropped the food order,-“;ed, saying he was not in Ger- | which reduced the size of a loaf of Passengers disembarking here others, my friends and colleagues, were as follows: Mr. and Mrs. Carl| an® laying before them the evi-| E. Carlson, Gloria K. Capelle, As-|car and bus strike here is over. Thejsome might be brought in from dence on which I proceeded. “Nor did I without informing the Government lespie, Harold G. Hallet, Oscar A.|.erences to arbitration. trid, Forest, Robert and Anne Fen-i ask the question nessy, Frank S. Faurot Hazel Gil- | sides agreed to submit their dif—j No plans have been made for before hand of my intentions, but| Hahsen, Ernest P. Harkiss, Larry | you can take it from me that the! M. Hagen, facts I adduced are correct.” — ., % | Lind LONDON—Pravda, official organ| o, 1 aatoon Louise of the Communist party, said taliyarorie B. Malcolm, Malba C.|a statement to spike reports thatjhuman experiments. P | Mayhew, Ann E. Preston, Adele S.| both branches of the military would | had found ‘reliable and muhml‘Lemieux, Belle G. Simpson, Albert&have to cut expenditures furtheri “American monopolistic support” among the leadership of the American Federation of Labor. SEATTLE—The new $500,000 per- menente cement plant which went into operation here today has a storage division capacity of 80,000 cement for use in western Wash- barrels and will provide additional ington, Canada and Alaska, com- pany officials said. ——— —— The Washington Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON — The amazing thing about Nazi propaganda before to suck in certain high-placed and supposedly intelligent Americans even after Hitler had invaded Po- land, overrun France and spread out over most of Europe. The Read- er's Digest, largest circulating mag- azine in the world, was one of them. The report on Nazi activities in the SA, prepared by John Rogge of the Justice Department after weeks of interviewing top Germans, gt tomorrow's shows that one editor of The Read- er's Digest, Paul Palmer, was in consultatios with Hans Thomsen, Hitler’s personal Ambassador in Washington; Zapp, propaganda agency, News Service. The Rogge report, which many high politicoes tried desperately to suppress, also tells how DeWitt Wallace, owner and editor of The Reader’s Diges, hired Lawrence Dennis, now under indictment for sedition, to do some smrear pieces against Henry Wallace, then Vice President of the United States. Apparently, DeWitt Wallace knew how “hot” Dennis was, because he warned him to cut out his fascistic (Continued on Page Four) Trans-Oceon | for Skagway were Sister Mary Hen- [ on the mass removals of German; 1 1 | also with Manfred/ head of the official stig |C. Lavenik Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Anna Kearney, Jack| Kearney, Martin A. Lavenik, Bessie and R. Stephenson, Stanley E. Stretton, | Wakeman Reynolds, Albert Bacon,| J. Darwin Smith and Robert R.| Newman. 1 Embarking on the Princess Louise rietta, John Mancell, Hazel Lyons, Harold Mcore, Mr. and Mrs. V. Sparks, D. G. Hardin, Brooks Han- ford, H. E. Peterson, R. S. Ander- son and M. A. Moe. The steamer will arive in Juneau southbound from Skagway at 6:30 sail south at 8 am. — - EXECUTIVE BOARD o { Members of the executive board, Pearl Harbor was the Nazis' ability| ;oo Chapter, American Red | Cross, will meet in the Baranof Hotel “doghouse” tomorrow at 12 Homer Garvin, general chairman of the Juneau Chapter, has an- nounced the following appoint- {ments to the executive board for {the quarter term ending the first meeting in January: Bert Riley, J. Cropley, and Eckley Guerin. | Meeting with the executive board luncheon will be Ition Publicity Director and Rob- VA. —————————— DOROTHY BILBO HERE Payroll for | Mrs. Dorothy D. Bilbo, {Clerk and Cost Accountant ka, who has been in Juneau this week processing payrolls at the Ju- neau office for the Sitka station, ka tomorrow. Mrs. Bilbo has been staying at the Baranof during her visit. — ., BELLE SIMPSON BACK Mrs. Belle Simpson is back in Juneau after a trip south, return- ing north on the Princess Louise. W. Robert Webb will| | permitted to spend $13,150,000,000 am. Sunday and is scheduled to| OF ARC TO MEET| noon for a mno-host luncheon. | Verne Ayers, Veterans Administra-| ert Hooper, Assistant Manager of; the Alaska Natiye Service in Sit-| returns to her headquarters in Sit- 81 NATI DOCTORS ARE Tt rins oo RIKE VETO insuMax pracrices FROM AGENDA | mining operations were sunt stu; Hundreds of Military, FI’RUSS DEMAND . . nancial, Government | E‘RANKF()IFKTV,V l; —Gen. J(m:\-: 7 —— than Wainwright has added a new I.eadel'S Arra|gned 3F0rma| S'ahmem ISsued : [ fo Assembly of United BULLETINS SAN FRANC 0 — Alaska Ju- neau Gold Mining company re- | ports $15,835 sales for the Septem- ber quarter this year. Income re- sulted mainly from mill cleanup, as honor to his already sizable col-| lection, he’s a Kentucky Colonel | now. He was presented the honor- Ger- BULLETIN—Nuernberg, | pess | LONDON i any, Oct. 2 Twenty-three | . jary commission by Gov. Slml-onI b 34 3 | Willis when he called at the exe-| Nazi doctors were indicted to- | Nations TOdflY | cutive mansion last night. { day cn charges that they “mur- | e | dcred hundreds cf thousands of | —_— { i human beings” in Germany's By MAX HARRELSON Colonial Secretary Arthar Creech Jones told the House| War-time program of medical | NEW YORK, Oct. 25 — Soviet of Commons today that Britain| killings and brutal experiments [Ru&sin demanded formally today would publicize in America detailsi With living prisoners. |that the General Committee of { A woman Herta Oberhauser, |the United Nations Assembly | of new Palestinian outbreaks which | he termed “abominations and cold blooded outrages.” and Dr. Karl Brandt, one of Hitler’s personal physicians, |strike the veto question from the | provision agenda and bar it from were among the 23, who will be |discussions at the present session tricd next menth in the first of | Andrei Y. Vishinsky, Soviet Depu- a series of war crimes trials by |ty Foreign Minister, declared that WASHINGTON—Democratic Na- tional Chairmadl Robert E. Hanne- gan says Democratic prospects in recial American Military |any change in the veto provisions the November elections are improy-j Courts: B g0 N, sharier would be i 4 fice ustice Walter B. Beals of eavy blo o the new world ing. As Hannegan put it: “Things thu“’“ o “‘: l"“l: ‘:‘ 1 m’ c:g:m .l\tlin‘x’xl w" to the r 1d are more encouraging every day. SR Lot do R ol o) 2 3 . g Court, who arrived in Noern- | In a brief statement before the MOSCOW — Russian newspapers berg yesterday, is one of three | 14-nation committee, the Sovict and radio stations joined today in| Judges for the trial of the doc- ‘l??;::gln:fulg‘e onig: bt ficritiotsin ot Latie | SIS <ot "hpl s rig)‘fl’ to expre: irs api;fm‘\ (mnlrf- [N canersl Sasqibiy. gl Spvith in detail at the right time. I will | press and radio said the American| NUERBERG, Germany, Oct. 25 now say only that these it°ms | police assigned to the UN meeting]__ prig Gen. Telford Taylor, chiei should be stricken from the Dot {ux*e harsh and tactless. 'wunsek for the American War da” P 450 3 }Crimes Courts, said today bcetweeu Me réferred fo Australion and BOMBAY—There were new TiotS{s50 and 500 former Nazi military, cuban propesals for a thoroush teday jn Bombay and Calcutta, In-|inqustrial, financial and govern- discussion of the veto issue, with {dia. The latest account has fivelmental leaders would be arraigned o view of restricting its use or |dead in Bombay, and 10 dead infj, 4 series of trials expected to last climinating it entively Calcutta. at least through 1947. Vishinsky said that unanimity | Taylor told a news conferencc was ‘“the basis of solidarity” in | WATERLOO, Towa—A sister offine defondants would include tob the Security Council. He then sai |the five Sullivan brothers, Gene-iofsicials of I. G. Farben, 8ait thu, “in the spirit of solldarity” | vieve Marie Sullivan, will be mar-chemical and industrial combine, Russia called on the committee fo ried in Chicago next week to Mur-znq “some one” from the Krupp join in eliminating the veto ques- { ray Davidson of this eity. The Sul-|punitions Wor tion from the discussions. Friedrich (Fritz) Thyssen, pre- Sir Hartley Shawcross, British | Navy and on the same ship, went armaments and big war head of Attorney General, immediately took steel works, is “under study like the floor to oppose the Soviet de- | vember, 1942. janyone else,” Taylor said. HoW- mand R, | ever, other official sources indi-| The United States and Britair WASHINGTON — The govern-icated that Thyssen would not ke are spearheading the opposition. — e — — RECEPTION IS GIVEN HONORING SCHAPIR Following last night's concert, members of the sponsoring soror- ity Beta Sigma Phi tendered a re- ception for Pianist Maxim Scha- piro in the penthouse of the Bar- anof Hotel. Schapiro did not arrive until al- \most three-quarters of an hour af- ter the close of the concert, but !through no fault of his own. The |delay was caused by a milling throng of autograph seekers, young jand old, who swarmed behind scenes at the 20th Century The- ater at the close of the concert. Members of Beta Sigma Phi, guests and friends gathered to meet !the concert artist numbered ap- proximately 60 Schapiro was ly received and congratulated many during the war. | bread by 10 percent to save wheat.[ Most of those wanted for trial COLUMBUS, Ohio — The street!are in American custody, but that 5-day-old tieup ended when both!other zones. ! additional joint war crimes trials | with' other Allies, although p; ‘The Army and|vision is made for such action of fNavy were assured today of being;it proves desirable, Taylor said. The trials will begin next month | for defense during the current fis-; with the arraignment of the 23 | cal year. President Truman issued|German doctors charged with in-| WASHINGTO! ————— than he ordered in the August bud-! (oAl SIRIKE ls get revision. ! ' BERLIN—The United States and) BROUGHI up AT Britain today protested to Russiaj (ABINEI SESSIO“ i WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 — The threatened coal crisis was brought warm | skilled technicians and laborers | from factories in the Soviet sector | of Berlin to new jobs in Russia. } | Jeim OKYO—Gen. Douglas MacAr-jup at President Truman’s Cabinet on his fine performance. Many thur today blamed reported deter-|meeting today and Attorney Gen- of those present found it possible ioration of Filipino-American rela- eral Clark later said his office is to discuss mutual acquaintanc in tions in the Philippines on an “un-{“analyzing” the Government's con- the musical world with Schapiro derstandable feeling of nationalism|tract with John L., Lewis’s Unned‘wl'n is well acquainted in the San; on the part of Filipinos” as a re-yMine Workers. | Francisco Bay area, particularly sult of their newly-born indepen-; Clark told reporters that while| i e — dence. 'Ihe had not been asked to study" CRANE IN PORT . the contract, “we always analyze, U. S. Pish and Wwildlife Service | WASHINGTON—Gen. Dwight D.Ithose things so we will be ready",smp M. S. Crane arrived in Juneau Eisenhower indicated today that he}if called upon.” !wday from the Craig district, where believes his successor as Chief of| The contract was negotiated last|she has been conducting surveys. Staff, when he steps aside, will be,May after the, Government selzed"n\e Crane, skippered by Francis Veterans Administrator Omarithe idle soft coal mines. | Britt, is based in Seattle, but has | Bradley, but disclaimed any actual | | spent the past summer working in knowledge. The appointment of the | the Alaskan Peninsula district. She active commander of army Iorces'sE"!oR S(oul' 'IRoop | is now returning to Seattle. is made by the President. | o l PLANS BIG MEETING - « ¢ « o o o o o NUERNBERG — U. 8. Army A . | spokesmen said that a three-man f . W K EPORx * ;milh.ary board investigating the m:;?e :z::f;gscmti:e‘zzg IX‘ h&l‘: . 4UE8A 'lv.v‘l:r;!rtataR BRUREAU) k1 suicide of Hermann Goering still IOOF Hall o ® Temperatures for 24-Four Period @ was in session, its work incoml)lem«ll ‘The next meeting will be a joint| ® Ending 8:30 o'Clock This Morning & { i . ©c o o © L0S ANGELES —Pan American| DSne, S U0 VOO S o gunenu—Maximun, 43; @ World Airways flights westward| poivc yome: 707 Dixon Street, at ® minimum, 38, . | irom Honolulu have been tempor-,.q) Mondsy, ‘October 28 "We ® At Airport—Maximum, 43; ® :30 p.m. Monday, October 28. We | arily suspended because of deter-| will discuss final plans for a Hal- ® minimum, 38. . joration of wartime communications lowe'en Party and Scavenger Hunt * . ARl 'to be held Friday, Nofember 1. All ® WEATHER FORLCAST o e i members of both Scout Troops are * LBy asd Visiolty) : . | STOCK QUOTATIONS | reqiceisd,so uend ™ ™ ¢ vastable cloudiness and oc- { i ! s < ST | casional rain shewers tonight e NEW YORK, Oct. 5 .— Closing e and Saturday.. Cooler. . | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine FENNESSEYS RETURN ° & stock todaf is 5%, American Can ‘o PRECIPITATION ° 1%, Anaconda 36%,Curtiss-Wright'! Mr. and Mrs. Forest Fennessey e (Past 24 nours eading 7:30 a.m. today) @ 5%, International Harvester 70%, and their two small children Anne e . | Kennecott 45%, New York Oentral and Robert, were welcomed back| ¢ In Juneau — .28 inches; ® 15%, Northern Pacific 19%, U. S.|to Juneau by relatives and friends,' o since Oct. 1,. 1065 inches; ® Steel 71, Pound $4.03. when they arrived here aboard the| e since July 1, 33.85 inches. . Sales today were 920,880 shares. steam Princess Louise. They havel B At Airport — .11 inches; Dow, Jones averages today are spent the last year in Salem, Ore, e since Oct. 1, 9.72 inches; @ as follows: industrials 168.76, rails and will be making Juneau their| e since July 1, 2685 inches. . | 47.80, utilities 34.96. permanent home. 99 9 0 s v 00000 P STRIKE Magnuson Asks State Depl. /UNION SAYS To Invesiigate (anadian (ONSPIRACY ~ Embargo on Alaska Highway IS REVEALED ; o » ‘ 87T SEATTLE, Oct U Sen L3 §, TERRIFIC WINDS v o e, 2% Waterfront Employers State Department to investigate re- HIT SECTIONS IN Make Reply-Food Now ports that Canada was refusing i |to permit trucking of Amer . WASHINGTON STATE iooct trom e thica Coming fo Alaska i Alaska over the Alaska Highway i | ik } The charge, made yesterday by SEATTLE, Oct. 25 — Charges Donald MacDonald, former mem- and denials con back and One Man Is Electrocuted— ver "o ‘the Alaski Internationa|forth 1 the . Fusifie® Naethwest Commission, was denied maritime icials koth in Ed-|Burt Highway by Canadian o monton and Ottawa tieup 1last night with I Nelson, Northwest chairman for the striking CIO Union's Com- ' Heavy Property Damage -Rain HOOdSnghways Magnuson told interviswers he mittee for Maritime Unity, accus- | — would oppose any further nego- ing the Waterfront Employers As- SEATTLE, Oct. 25—Winds reach- | tiations with the Dominion, for sociation with ‘“conspiring to close ing a reported 75-mile-an-hour vel- establishment of “freeways” in the down operation of the (Seattle) ocity swept over centrsl and west-' United States for use by Canadi- Pert of Embarkation.” ern Washington last night and left ans, until the situation has been! CMU chairman said the associ- in their wake at least one man resolved in U. 8. Favor ation was seeking to provg th The Scnator estimated the Unit- longsheremen to stop work ed States spent $137,000,000 on the withholding the retroactive pay due dead and hundreds of dollars prop- erty damage. by truck, not even our own citi- ¢r Jr. Aide to Alaska’s Governor, rens, so certainly it can’t be called gid firms with food, clothing and The Rev. Karl Tiedemann, O.H. discrimination if we refuse this 0 medjcal supplies should call the C., of Nixon, Nevada, will arrive people from the United States.' attle Chamber of Commerce. in Juneau this afterncon prepara- At Edmonton W. J. Eveleigh, Ad- We had hoped to get a ship tory to his series of mission ser- ministrator of the Canadian sec- jike the Palisana, which has a large vices in Juneau next week. tion of the Highway, denied the p,mount of refrigerator space, but s will be the Rev. Tiede- truth of reported refusal to Per- find it hak been chartered to the mann’s only appearance in Alaska mit shipments. Army,” he said. “If we are un- and he comes to Holy Trinity akle to get a suitable ship, we may |Church in Juneau from Trinity have to mak2 representations to Church, Seattle, and St. Michael REV KNIGH]’ HERE (he Army to obtain the Palisana.” and All Angels in Portland. . Chester and other members of John J. Stader, city light depart- highway and s d “the whole pur- Cctober 30 wunder terms of the ment lineman, was electrocuted in pose of the United States was to June 15 settlement.” He said the Seattle where winds of 58-mile have a free International High- emplos were acting “upon ad- strength whipped a utility poie way.” . vice” from Frank P. Foisie, San against a 4,400-volt electric line. A~ ancisco, head of the Pacific Airline traffic was moved from| Danalis Denfal Coast Waterfront Employers Asso- Bocing to Bow Lake Airport be- clation. eavy, OTTAWA, Get. 2 ¢ M. G. Ringenburg, President b Monroc-Snohom-| Clistoms officials denied discrim- Washir erfront B | % " inetes of ‘nation against United States truck- ;. yerc A promptiy nd f b | a s on Alaskan Highways as |,y o0 | ¢ ; ¥ ty ¢ arged by Donald MacDonald. § la ¢ % spokesman said apparently 5 Sy MacDonald referred to SHIPMeNt (; (1. compuniss in makine out in bond by truck. “There is no ; | 3 WCEif reaty belween Canada and the ¢ 2 (HR'S“AN MfiSSl(JN United States on the suljici il- CARGO FOR RELIEF Sitp : . ko urh tReve: ds an - wwoskement. S SEATTLE, Oct. 26 A cargo SIARIS Nffl WEEK t Canada wiil ) ; list for an Alaska ieliel ship inst United States citizens et undeiznatcd, was being 1 Customs matters. However we don’t ed here today. >oo His first service will bz at 11 s Jén Alcska Relief Committee signed o'clock on Sunday morning at y lan agreement yesterday with the Robert which time the Webb will conduc Rev. o Horthwest Committee for Maritime t the service and| Unity (C10O) for release of a ship. PREACHES SUNDAY the visiting clergyman will be the It provides that the CMU could preacher. He will preach again at veto any cargo it deems non-es- ,St. Luke’s Church in Douglas, Sun-, The Rev. G. Edward Knight, sential and that the ship must day evening Superintendent of the Alaska Meth- return to Seattle in non-revenue The Christian Mission Wwill be-|odist Mission, arrived in Juneau ballast unless the maritime strike 1 on Monday evening at 8 0'- yegterday to hold the Fall Quar- has ended. clock in the Church of the HOlY torly Conferences of the Juneau! Trinity. This service will be an pnq Douglas Community Metho- BOATS LOADING AT SEATTLE informal mission of spiritual in- gist Churches. Fi 1g Loats, schooners, and oth- spiration. Opportunity will be giv- My Knight spent the last two'er privately-owned seacraft, were en for members of the congreza- wecks at Ketchikan and at Met- l2aving Seattle' this weeck loaded tion to give questions to the mis- japaila dedicating a new memorial with food, livestock feed and other cion leader and thus many DPer- window and holding the quarterly necessities for Alaskan ports, strike- sons who have questions about the conference at the Ketchikan lound by the maritime walkout ,Christian religion are urged to at wetnodist Church and conferring fer the past 25 days. tend. The Rev. Tiedemann Will wipy church officials at the Dun- Tcnnage 'detzils and departure especially describe the spiritual life. ¢y Memorial Church at Metlakatla, dat:s were wired to the Governo:'s T e which is affiliated with the Metho- ctfice this morning by Commander new Douglas church going up at {rcm strike regulations and on its dist Alacka Mission. Bdwerd Chester, Naval Aide to the FROM TRIP T0 SOUTH * the bands of the Berg Construc- way with emergency cargo to Al- Mr, Knight is pleased with the Governor, Cmdr. Chester has been tant agent for tion Co., and James Larsen and aska. tuilding and repairs gcing on at|in Seattle for more than a week the two local churches, with the getting relief shipping untangled Jack Kearney, a; Northland Transportation company his erew, foremaned by Carl His wire reported the following here, returned last evening to Ju- Stromberg, one of the Church sailings: neau aboard the Princess Louise trustees, hard at work repairing Dcrothy left Oect. 18 with 100 with Mrs. Kearney. the foundations of the Juneau/tons of general food items for The Kearney's left for a yacation Church. Ketchikan; Eskimo left on the 23rd |in the Pacific Northwest on August The Morning Message will be with 100 tons of general food for !26, and while they were out drove given by Rev. Knight at both Sitka; CSF left Oct. 23 with 100 hundreds of miles by car around churches Sunday, with reception tens of food and livestock feed for | Washington. They ate apples in of members at the Douglas Chur Wrangell and Haines. | Wenatchee and Yakima, visited the The Juneau Quarterly Conference, Leaving Seattle yesterday were: Olympic oyster beds, saw baseball Lusiness meeting of all officers and Chirikof with 80 tons of meat and games and two coast league foot- hoard members and all members, is general food items for Ketchikan; ball games. Mrs. Kearney won all scheduled for Monday evening at|Alameda with general food and | her $2 bets at the horse races. 8 o'clock and the Douglas meeting|'ivestock feed for Wrangell; Alda- While they w in Seattle, their for Tuesday at 8 o'clock !B with ‘50 tons general focd and daughter-in-las of .k Jr, Mr. Knight will be remembered | lives feed for Wrangell and who is in the traffic department of by many in Juneau as P of rg: Aflas with 25 tons of laska Steamship Company, gave the Juneau Church from to food for Ketc birth to a baby b I ccighed 7 1941, just before I Commander Chester sald the tol- pounds and s ounces, aud along Superintendent of t! Met hodist 2 beat \ with his ar-old sister mokes a Churches in the Territory expected to sail today fumily of four | e vi'vn “”1‘ 300 khnxh 11:1 ucr‘\:al R . focd end livestock feed for Ket- Raymond S. Anderson wellknown P|0NEERS' AUX"!ARY ""k"’(:r ‘:‘X"’""'i :Z”‘"‘ ne l“";"h‘slmf‘ Youth for Christ speaker from " fons gener cd and livestock Minnesota passed through town ARE MEH’,NG '0"'6""’ feed for Juneau: North Pacific with yesterday on his way to Skagway. FE¥ s 65 'L::\ n; \'m‘u‘r..]- f('mifl-:\nd h\'pv' Be il ot SRR HIOFMNG ! s S O et S s 100 Toll with 35 tons of d and livestock feed: Roamer and will speak here in the Baptist auxiljary will meet tonight at 8 Church mornil and ning also gelock in the Odd Fellows Hall in the Salvation Army in the after- pysiness sessions will be held by with 40 tons of feed and livestock feed for Wranzell The following vrssels were Tre- noon. each organization then a get to- ; b | On Monday evening there will be g-ther social time following. lzzf!(lfild[;‘:‘q‘epxismz ‘%:‘r,'y;r::ln':f {a Youth Rally with Mr. Anderson| 1t is understood that plans will| o 80 (s T ot | Tuneau: (Continued on Page Two) |as a guest speaker. A place for the|pe started for the Days of '08 t | mecting will be announced. }be glven early in February.*