The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 6, 1947, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU ALASKA ST S gy MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1947 < S N I o | 1 |were preparing the biggest offensive vour people of a voice like that o : e SUPREME (OURT (ONGRESS ASKED WAN“ '"FORMAHON in n):))(lbln Palestine history to Christmas Day, Judge Murray saidl = e ) { lcrush what they called “the open as he placed the youth on proba- ’ GIVES DE(IS'ON FOR B".I.'ONS lI'O OF MAN I.ASI HEARD |rebellion against law and order” by tion for three years after imposing: 9 \ A Jewish extremist a sentence of one to live years in diitiar earance dié | | " FROM IN YEAR 1903 L A ’ NEwspAPER RATES BE HANDED VEIS’ i iy ! SAN FRANCISCO — More than/ “But,” the Judge said, “if you i | i]\)l\.l‘;ul‘;\\l Cluc[) of Police dl_et‘m\u. 40 firemen were injured in a 5- ever break méo a:\other ;ton:l it { reoeznd | illiamson has received a lot- alarm fire on Market street. The| will be me, and not you, who does 4 QUTTr* T =, | WASHINGTON, Jan. ¢ The Su-| WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—The 1ush yor jnquiring for information con- Chief believes the b which the singing, and you won't like the » Ui ] ) {1" by a 6 to 3 order to-|is on in Congress to shell out MOrejecerning Joseph C. Meister from re- caused almost $250,000 damage, was | song.” e : 3 yéik | d to review a New billions to veterans 3 . ‘latives in Klamath Falls, Oregon iset by an arsonist. e —— - e BURE ! e | Hampshire law which regulates| Lawmakers are tossing in bills| pjscovering anything about the' e N 7 l & ¢ : : wimum charges for political ad-|and getting campaigns er Way missing man promises to be rather PUBLIC SCHOOLS OPEN i ) \ ortant sale with important { vertising in newspapers and on ra- for such things as lditticult, however, because Meister, Sw I F dom Son The High ond Grade Schools % h ore: ; vou. Al ready-to-wear | dio broadcasts. The Chronicle and| 1. A soldier’s tonu {born in Stillwater, Minn, in 1868, ee! rree g opened this morning after the holi- y \ ¢inals and exclusive line 1( tte publishing Company, In-| 2. Immediate ca g of termin-lpag not been heard from since 1908.| {days, students wading through g ccrporated, of Portsmouth, - New al leave bonds, and { Joseph Meister was a prospector,i, CROWN Po.m‘_ Ind. — Alvin | slush caused by heavy rain and ey op = i@ "1"00( | Ham asked the Court to hold| 3. A bocst in government Pay-lang had lived in Missoula, Mont.| Mitchell, €0, convicted of burglary | SnOW. W \ B ¥ £2 A /43 | the law unconstitution But the Ments to veterans going to s5¢hool an4 gpokane, Wash., and probably Of a store, was granted permission -~ & | majority dismissed this appeal, say- OF learning jobs by working!many other sections of the West by Judge William J. Murray in| Less than one-half of one percent 2 | ing no substantial Federal question at the {where he would have the opportun- | criminsl court to sing a song before |of all veterans' loans approved for 9 e VT r rhe le Blona was involved. > lity to look for metals. The letter sentence was passed. {guaranty by Veterans Administra- = { 1 H 11, C wa g | In its announcement, the Court A". ME((A {stated that Meister came to Alaska In a rich baritone voice Mitchell, |tion were in default by the end of = 2 0 to \Mr‘ 075 1id Justices Douglas, Murphy and SKI IR {in the gold rush of 1898, and later Negro shoemaker and choir singer, | September. iy | y 1y 2 10 140 3 : s : N [ Rutledge favored hearing the case. Imade several trips back and forth sang “Silent Night,” and, as the R s RN ; o y 50 IAS 85 | The law bars newspapers and FOR 50 oN SUNDA between thc States and the Te apef:tltcrs in the courtroom re- Veterans Administration estiniat- b ] [ i A it T " . . . | radio stations from charging more § tory. mained quiet, followed with “Ave ed the veteran population at near- . H H Y tn 198 “0 | for political advertising than the Over 50 skiei. were active on the| His family, however, was never Marfa.” 1y 17,900,000 on Oct. 31, an ificreass | iis, i bi J 10 . . . . | vates they regularly charge fore Ski trail and bowl areas over the fully informed as to where in “It v.ould be a shame to depnveof more than 150,000 over Sem 30. g commercial advertising. Validity Weekend despite the warm winter Alaska he was prospecting, except —-—— — - - S e B e i { : ; = % i lof the statute was upheld by the Weather conditions being felt inithat they understood it was in| 3 } i Q Ha ’gcl?er Sondhelm | New Hampshire Supreme Court, (town. Skiers making the trip t0'some colder part. Meister is be-| S L wlviw o 1 I IR0 i the ski bowl excellent snow Wl‘lh 4 lieved to have come North the last oA | n Pa well-packed base on all the ridges time during 1907, and reported his rifig ! Ii leading up from the bowl. Iprogress throughout 1908, sincs : £ ool By 2 DEATH TAKES JAP Board riders on the slalom hill'when no word has been heard from 2 i ) Criite ¢ i r .419 Szg cxperienced heavy snow until it be- him. I ] A giiaily ¥ > s 4 s : FROM VERDICI OF |came packed and afforded a fair| Meister's nephew, Lawrence P. Ay | 29 S [ BEdg sagc- | SEEREEr 35 1 running surface. The ski tow Was Meister, of Klamath Falls, wrote b | ’ " 3 ‘\ ikept busy all afternoon and instruc- the letter and enclosed a photo- A G 684 10 69 19 WAR CRIME couRTnlon was given by Dean Willams graph of the missing man, He said g v i 7 e R o | jand Jim Church that his uncle had lost several 0 1% 73 45 | { > i fingers, and may have assumed a J L i g i 5 2 ' * ! ”G Fleet d'\;‘m» Os- ! name or names other than own. ' > : Qin 85 : ho second key war G Y u'h His relatives suggeste T- ) { 1ginally e e e . it 1 49 |tigurs in Japan to escape a verdict, erman 0l $ baps amiong the ni!g,l b?m[,:::i g:m i . ! * i ‘UI the Am:«-nmLxmmA war crimes G I -I- » ' on ple of Juneau there might be some- 1 o & coury: throtptl Uats : 0 {0 ifa {one who would recall Joseph Meis- | 3 * e g ] Qngone | A vain, centimental man with a ter, and be able to identify the f/' f AV ctubbord faith in what other Japa- 'I'e"or (hm photograph, which Chief William- AnEs e e AR . 9 v $710 3125 nese termed his crowing mistake—| son. has in his pwmm | Jari. 31st, 1947 ! , Sui igin 212-225 e el Ber! ttaskar i allesot B —'Nu. unv;m"i Gmm(n 57&0""1: ON SALE DAILY : e : i anr Nagano had cast the deciding|2hd, @ confused iman o i DEC. 15, 1946 E ; 235 5 145 | 2 on trial here today on charges of B & g " < g $ d 3 jvote for an assault on Hawall, and|gpanising o ceeret Nazi resistenice, THROUGH JAN. 29, 1917 ! in November. 1941, issued the finall povernent in U. S-occupied Ger-! i - | Pur Trims : ider that started the Pacific WAr'many and conducting terror bofiib- | WASHING :ON — President Tru-| et § “! 1 ¥ carly the following month lings in the Stuttgatt area \man in his message today, urged BT e : - i IR Also arraigned before the Amer- a year's extension of the $1,500,000,- ; . ( IS ¢ A $85 ican mi y government court was 000 in wartime excise taxes but the IR . - % s A 3 3 FoRTv.Iwo DEAD one 17-year-old German charged drive in Congress to end them im- | ] ) 95 only wi knowledge of the pess- mediately was pressed ahead. The ', I | ) o . . I cesion of hons by others.” |taxes involved are those on liquor, ‘ ‘ 1 ] ~ )C,Q 110 FN (H'NA S woRSI All were foized by army investi- drugs, ccsmetics and other “lux-! 1 - e ¥ < * k ]2 bmmx after the October bombing uries. 1 Manoo ') 1 AIRP[ANE (RASH thr German denazification | e " 4 M angone 0" ' 01 > : J 7 ¢ el = 5 ceurts a U. S. military police’ WASHINGTON — Senator Wilcy 1 Ma gone bCfl‘ 219 ] ? 129 jail | (R-Wis) introduced legislation to- . o Wy : > : A' A 145 Jan. 6.—Suspension - - day to bar all pending portal-to- i Tan a to of commercial f{lights rortal pay suits. Another bill in- | 2 el gone (oats, 2Infto 244 | L0 was ordered today in the wake of| STEAMER MOVEMENTS |troduced by Senator Capehart (i- PACIFIC NORTHER}VA[RLINES ' n qo Coats 289 ) 323 189 gedy, the! Square Sinnet, 1vom Seattle, due Ind), would define the terms un- 4 ) | 4 mangoene il ks S R e e vily-loaded frans- tomerrow der which workers could qualify for Reservaticns and Ticket Office, Baranof HotelL,—Phone 716 vesterday near Teingtao Sailor Splice, from Seattle via portal pay. CHARLES A. WHYTE, District Traftic Manager 4 ! & e nNn< 1 r' in which all 42 persons aboard, in- Sitka, due Wednesday i [ | U’I’]f]’]mm’:j L{Jnis 1”1; ° A“_ WQO_" tasual Dress cluding three Americar re kill-| Sword F from Seattl>, due. LONDON — Government sources | > 2 " ' . lea. Thursday said British military authoritiss s s m g Q Checterfialds an ) ¢ | American victims in the Tsingtao Princess Norah scheduled to Gl o2 2RV ek L I_ i i s ["Cs‘““eldf and Dress, 34245 . . . . 823 jerash were fcd as the _plot frow Vancower 9 p. m. tomorrow SR ! 21 Tohi‘“?‘ and Casuals 569 35 the Cl National Aviation| Alaska scheduled to from o i JEYS d b2 RO T 29 ] : of Scattle Wednesday. ik IM angone TO pers, BReTR b = A e Rl nee, x‘n\; .r;‘i:‘xx duled to sail from Y 5 ; 8 Mangons Topgrs 58 19 wawann | JUSE Received. .. some = i . Jolg 1 DV . . > : J * ; 10lic nun, Siste Ce- Scattle Saturday. b 198 of the Fra of, Baranof, from west, scheduled to E 3 Mangone Coals fo 125 s L dRh oot ik Tuheat e noon T = ; r St ! scuthbound S I 0 R A G E v, 8 T/'aflgc eoatsdol8he s o iR e 79 The globe’s surface is 71 percent! Denali held up at Seward, time ; 29 e eng land joceans of arrival in Juneau indefinite. B A T T E R I E s § iy TRPRGRT “ i DYQQS 38, olfeel, C(}Sllcl, DI’ESSY, Formals 1. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU i i ¢ = | NEAU, ALASKA —_— . | | 7 SAree!, originally: 81995 0 LRIk | WEATHER BULLETIN 1 . i a R 00 DATA FOR 2 SNDED AT 1:30 A. M., 120TH MERIDIAN TiIME Chrysler Mar“!e gmes « | 18:Sireet. Afternoon, 29.95 .. = aei & ol et FODAY ‘ PR | last Lowest 4:30am. 24 Weather at | - | G Caminl: Cockiailfo 85 . 70 1ha . . LB M hrs® | wmp. temp. Pre wam | “ 41 15 35 and Snow . 21 Dressy, Alternoon to GLGARE 2 e L - 1 ‘ * & | Bethel 36 17 17 17 Snow i i ol e 5 29 Cordova 34 32 35 48 Rain and Snow | \ 1 | Dawson 1 -10 1 05 Snm\' | SRR IHS R 37 Edmonton 40 26 28 Trac . Cloudy | " 2 ) f | Fairbanks 25 10 23 Trace Snuw | i @ et L | Haines 3 20 3 09 Rainand Fog| PHONE 473 Chrysler Marine Agency 406 S. Franiklin Street n o, ’ | Havre 40 33 07 Cloudy | T E . & 3 % 29 " Juneau 7 36 97 Rain | ; 1 | Juneaun Airport 36 3 17 Rain and Snow i ) | | i mm:lmmm|||||n||mmuum||||m.|||mmu|muumm||||muummmmu|||m|||||||||mm|unnnlumnnmw ‘ N-H- | Kediak 44 36 Trace Pt. Cloudy PARE e 32 22 1 | Nome 14 14 01 Snow o ’ | Northway 20 20 Trace Snow ! 19 s | Petersburg 35 34 10 Drizle | B o 7 T Portland 36 32 24 Fog R h, t i R h. i ne& . u e H ] » ~ (o, ZE[) 3 O i Prince George 36 25 02 Cloudy | e Igeri ors € Iyefl ors - raiors AR | | Prince Rupert 41 36 06 Rain | 2 | QUALITY SINCE /887 Seattle 3 37 Cloudy | - | sitka 40 40 30 Drizzle ‘ Whitehorse 33 29 0 Cloudy . . . — ———= Yakutat % % ™ sowandram|§ - Announcing the Arrival of Sufficien! Refrigerators = v Sl T (4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) : 2 | I quires the joint efforts of WEATHER SYNOPSIS: The low pressure center which has been to Take Care of All Demands MA N Cain and Magnuson, the latter said, located in the Bering Sea appears to be filling this morning and cold | U the building ot the 750 mile {air has moved across the North Pacific Ocean as far eastward as the| v plEDGE WORK'NG A Highway connection from HANDSAw MURDER Kenai Peninsula. A ridge of high pressure extends from a high pressure ! George to the Whitehorse center about 700 miles off the Washington coast castnortheastward . " - K A NOW acress southern British Columbia. This pressure distribution has caused All persons who have des1gnated to us their desire to ion would afford a OF HER HUSBAND relatively warm marmml: air to continue over most of Alaska during | = & o FOR ALAS he said. “The The past 54 nours. However, cold air. appears o bo penetrating ihe | obtain a new refrigerator as well as any others who may be WASHINGTON r Highway just isn't v | extreme northwestern pcmon of Alaska where temperatures were re- | - A gl R $ 4 2 b Warren G. Magnusc D-Wast NEWARK, O., Jan. 6 — L‘“"l'“ ported below zero this morning. Temperatures over Southeast Alaska | ln!erested m ohlammg. one at ihls hme, may iake ’helr plck pledged his cooper H he would like to have Belle Deviin, 72, who collects old f continued above normal. Rain or snow has fallen during the past 24| p £ e Harry P. Cain, W C accompany him to lace, was held without charge to-|pourg along the coast frem Oregon to the Alaska Peninstila, over west- | and immediate dellvery NOW new Rep Senator W he at- Gay in the handsaw slaying of herfep, a) the Rocky Mountain and Plains area of southern Canada his effort W Gonge her way husband whose dismembered body | and nerthern United States at scattcred points over northern Canada | was found ttered in the back-|ang the nertheastern and portions of Alaska. + 0 & he. mistizep- “ois d of their home here MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN | iful odels , S ) REPORTS U~ ZINC, COAL Police Chief Gail Christian said Eeports from Marine Stations at 1:39 P. M. today | Come and See These Beaut New M P! : ARE NOW RELEASED the mild-mannered little woman WIND Height of Waves | \ told him she cut up 75-year-old} ggtion Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) . i Robert Sanford, Director of the Thomas Devlin last week in the|cape Spencer 39 WNW 30 s that | I Mines, Federal Division, parlor of their modest two-stor 'Emn-d Rock 31 SsW 24 3 feet *- o f release of two new house. Both were old age pen-;pgint Retre: Rain 37 SE 16 2 feet W oex vestigation on zinc sioners !lmwlu Rock Cloudy 40 ESE 10 1 foot ] A ! yone interest- “He wriéd to kil me so many|Guard Island Drizzle 42 SE 10 1 foot i f th re- times that I decided to end his|cape Decision Drizzle 42 WSW 10 2 feet | T t it the Federal life” Mrs. Devlin was quoted as MARINE FORECAST FOR PERIOD ENDING TUESDAY EVENING: ‘ ; \ hips | E ted a5 saying calmly. Protected waters of Southeast Alaska north of Sumner Strait—souther Y ] h B | 4 Aply I 3967 w e ex- Asked why she didn't call an un- | to southeasterly winds 20 to 35 miles per hour slowly decreasing to 15 to | [ ] o ‘ he 1 edanka Zink Deposits dertaker, Mrs, Devlin told Christ-!25 miles per hour—rain cr snow. Protected waters of Southeast Alaska d ¢ The other re- lar I'm awful sorry I didn't do|south of Frederick Sound-southeasterly winds 15 to 20 miles per hour i hip- p 1 934 entitled Explora- tb beccming southerly to southwesterly winds 15 to 20 miles per hour Tues- i € cn of Deposits of the Point el day—rain. Outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Yakutat—southwesterly to 2 B W Wali zht Area Noah used petroleum, in the form|westerly winds 15 to 20 miles per hour—rain or snow. Filling low pressure center near Bering Strait. pitch. in building his ark

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