The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 14, 1947, Page 5

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"MONDAY, JULY 14, 1947 i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA ; " PAGE FIVE <) YOUNG WIDOW' _ [fomesesd st esens ACTION QN ASST. SECY. LARGEBOND [LOYALISTS % T — :fiwpflitf ROMANTIC FILM Ruthless Exploifation of | , | | LI R AT chpoy et s Forsis - MILITARY | OFWARTO 15 SETFOR | IN GREECE \ronigmr R | T [RAINING QUIT JOB THEFT (ASE SCOREWIN delicate proble Le adores is crueily cut ”“11014 .~‘v]&‘(‘\:hmp ‘1 brought \(n'\»_\( is hancled with great re-|formerly remote for hin the i L int and understending by Hunt cconomic 1ange of the markets and 3 R AP 3 L e : rembiry in D curvent b Y gt imber of compenies aze pres- | Subcommittee Wants Full 3000 S G, eionea o Fx-Army Sergeant Accused Major Victory Reported in ow,” now at the Capitol | il ST P s : i el o [ Chnalt ! » p ed by Richard” Macaulay TR 12 € bl pulp ond paer Consideration — Will @& o seresy ot w0 of Siealing Secref Rec- Fight with Band of ‘ om these oo | Conduct Hearings ront e o ords from Govt. | Rebels on Border | | and TUESDAY of |ently negotiating with > govern- A by | Wood supply Ao ety oy " {done under the supervision of thel o corrn 1d the President a | ‘]M:: .:.‘,:,‘,"mh”.‘.ILlA‘II:]‘,::\U::; T::;,:Fornst Service :l|\(I W’ woherdanos fy. T CHANGHLGIN, ¥ 14.(M— letter had “reluctar come Pittsburgh, July 14 The ATHENS, July 14.—M—Greek of- : T Sy “v - b |with assured forectry practices s ”/\ House Armed Services tubcom- to t} melusion th I cannot af- | Bureau of Investigation to- ficials re ported today that a 1,000~ ear It i dexterous com Jl_xm-“hm tha Abionht Meoved. does tot Imittee voted today to seek full ford OV wended that bond of $10,- man force which attacked the vil- tion of < ol .'ful romance, p‘.?hlf-‘px(‘(‘r\] Tl AEAOMHAY tERt grows 'l§«‘|1n1 ttee action thi: ssion on any long ot for Alexander von Der lage of Konitsa yesterday had been ' cate comedy and \(.nrm,: (ll,umx\.sm“l cropping proposition {mive 1 litary legisla- He sould not do in Laft, 23 army sergeant accus- pushed tack to the Albanian bord- ably ected by Edwin L. Marin.} Pulp and paper ‘mills have to m.m(,“ faitne tamily od of taki SOre ds from |er, six miles awa | Thte RS ge ‘=“L"‘ék;fa‘;“f“g|11uge indertakings, 300 to 500 tons|, The subcommittee, he " -~ he Los Alnes, N. M., atomic bomb! The guerrilla ring around Konitsa he Pin-up Queen of the GIs, has| L LT Hand they call for | TOWe, (R-NJ) will reo R g roje apparently was broken during the the leading feminine role, Wwith 9 on legislation Wedne: CLAIRE WHITNEY TALES Fhe recommendation was made night. Greek veterans of resistance | (investments of 20 to 35 millions of dollars per plant, furnishing em-, ployment to thousands of workers. Tre people of Alaska have been| waiting, not patiently, for years for - X AR {the time when this fine industry ) with fis Tavi. ' DAFROTE ool ~ Besl LibE WAL INARSCIREACHb: S0 The e Has Bow arrived, | Soosideration Real Threat Congress plans to POSITION IN OVA OFFICE ¢ Acent F. A, Fletcher in a letter fighting during the German occu- them in several days, and added U. S. Marshal John E. Sloan. pation under Gen. Napoleon Zervas “We are hopeful of approving a' Miss Claire Whitmore, of N §. Commissioner Roger nox | were engaging the rebels bill at this session and having the York City, has been employed read the letter to von Der Luft and One official report said fighting| full committtee approve it also. temporary secretary in the Of is attorney, Ralph D. McKee, be- still was in prozress at a tiny,f of Vo 11 Rehabil ear- unidentified village about two miles! ing t} Bu and (from the Albanian frontier | r, tirat because 7 wiully removing and co aling| Government forces were rlpartu(lf jjourn July s records and documents. lofficially to have recaptured the, f >-oe— Greek half of the Saranta River| Louis, Hay ad playing opposite. told newsment it hope to finish Others in the cast are Faith Dem- ergue, Kent Taylor, Marie Wilson, | Connie Gilehrist and Penny Single-| ton. tart of a scheduled I 1 re the 1z on a ctharge of willu attending I Riley, i 1 ineisco. M ! E | However, the introduction in Con-|there is little likelihcod that the reeent graduate of MA“. posTAG igress of the so-callzd “Vet House itself will act on legislation of California at VACATION FOR RIVERS bridge at Borozani | Alarka Homestead Bill” now looms|this year ¢ At AEINBA I Jureku one| Mr, and BEs. Rl J. Sivies lely b A - SURCOBBIES of the United real threat to the accom- . S R week 220, here Saturday for their first v _Nations Balkan commission flew at! inoon from Salonika toward Kor FAITH DOMERGUE - KENT TAYLOR 'Io WAY PO!NIS“ a pliskment of .the -planned deveioboy S s tion sinee Rivers assumed the of- ——— PLUS —_— ment of Alaska’s forests .sv,..y-jF“.M A(‘!QR WEFE SAdE fice of Territorial: Astarngy Gens|™ spot 'n{vt-stmullbnn of what 'l SON RAVE \ 1ey will drive over the Alas- k government said w Air mail, only, will be carried in |lezislation, if passed, would sut- o Hatnes to, Fair.|invesion by an “international bri-! MARCH OF TIME “Nobody’s Chilaren” the future, by Alaska Coastal Air- ject these publicly owned forests ka Highway R e lines and Ellis Airlines, to most of to worse treatment than was ap- SU;FER BRUISES Miss Eima Olson, teacher in tne' K BNy Ko O e Riv. |§ade.” Representatives of the Uni| t T . ited States, Russia, Brazil, Australia E arhiiatey their points of call. This ruling plied to the forests of the Western neau Grade Scheol, flew to Seat- i i : { EXP ¢ father, Their children, Joyce ‘ AIR EXPRE Pan g 5 VE€ nd Syria were on the team. NEWS from the U. S. Post Office Depart- (States under the Timber and Stone b tle on Sunday via American ;', fi o are making . the trip] | Act. Airways. She plans to remain in| oo S0 it ¥ D with them and they will be absent | nt was announced today by Mrs. Seattle for ‘(,lyx!.\l Jenne, Juneau Postmaster. | The bill would permit veteran il \:‘nllu Hm‘ )”h‘ : ,v\’ sl 0 e Al ‘OS(AR le"ouS ‘RE € ely plans sit her famil | with five exceptions, all points to take up and patent tracts up 0| goLLYWOOD, July 14— (7 —®ilm | A ¥ b5 - | which had vreviously been served 1,920 acres. Practically the only Actor Charles Boye 9 S in Wisconsin She will return ‘ ver and s wife, 1 WU S e o ot svka womax e |, PARENTS OF BOY BABY ‘ with first and third K‘l;\h§ n?au by :;runfmrm[\\vuu‘ld be t‘x; .“,p, olu the former Pat Patterson, were Py s S Watthar oFF Sitka 18%6 l air, will now be served via surface 'the claim for six months yearly | . .ted for minor bruises in- & tember YELLCW CAB a hos- 4 transporte g ne! B, ¢ three years, or E nth uest at the Gastineau Hotel S ransportation. Under the new rule, for three years, or for six months pital yesterday after their automo- R0 il b et e R no parcel post will be forwarded of cne year if the veteran hasjpn. o involved in a collision. The 25 5 P § na , was b by oir. cpent two years or more in the i ‘t . B et '“'- l‘ KETCIHIKAN MAN HERE HERE FROM SEATTLE to Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Vienola Sat- 3 : . A g couple went home after being treat- N, s . e 4 epted to the rules are Sitka, Army. After residence of six| oq. i s . —_— urda ing in St. Ann's Hos- ines and months on the land, which the, e Lan dstrom of Ketchik claimant could spend in building tepping at the Gastineau Hotel ¥ CLARENCE WISE, WIFE . i act WILL LEAVE ON NORAHI 1s LaVerne Kendall of Seattle is at rital. The baby w 6 ounces. He joins a little sister _{ Betty Jean. Mr. Vienola is owne! Yof the boat Ann Marie, - - INFORMAaTION WANTED ' Wrangell, Petersburg, F | Skagway. These points will rec H t and third class mail when the a log cabin § iplanc load vermits. Plane load lishing, he could limits have been increased from a and retuin to the States with al e & 7 ) it “hiy pockst. thes. muchil Clarence Wiss, SoHme the Gastineau Hotel, and in hunting leave the U 10w 24-hour Dependable Service | 200-pound limit to a 500-pound limit patent 5 ' 7 e s i Famrammren &y | S0T 811 Mail O these planes. Afr as 20 or 30 million poard feet of [OWner of (hc Hotel and 4 g =™ mail to all points will have first timber In fact, he might as weil Mrs. Wise, will leave tol on Anyone having information con- the Princess Norah for well cerning the following person is most of the asked to communicate with the | Governor’s Oftice in Juneau: | DILLARD D. HARPER—Worked for construction company in Fair—‘ prority. After air mail has been leave as stay, as |loaded. the limit will be filled with Alaska timber is pulp timber and| and then, third class cannot be brought into use until | large corporations build modern | termined earned vacation in the States. Their future plans have nct bheen de- & g FAYE EMERSON - GEORGE TOBIAS e i cla izaail | - D — pulp mills at a cost of $20,000,000 e R T T HOWNRD SHITH ' H CAPT. BAKENUS HERE or more per mill. | BABY GIRL BORKN banks in 1944; 39 years old, trown ARD SMITH - HARRY LEWI SO hair. blue eyes, about 6 feet tan.|J§ DIRECTED BY FREDERICK DE CORDOVA 1 ] AL 31ORY | 2 i TR A " o Ao HERE FROM TENAKEE | Bugs Bunny Cartoon Mrs. R. E. Reynoldson of Ten-| Musical—Sportlight | akee is registered at the Gastineau!ll [,atest Air Express News Hotel. { HERBERT CUSTOM SUITS i E - Almost certainly most of the vel- TAILOR-MADE | Captain H. D. Bakenus, Chief of eran owners would eventually sell Mr. and Mrs. Eu ridge |the Drill Team and Band of the to large corporations. Even though are proud parents cf a baby Utah Woolen Mill BLANKETS | Seattle Police Department, airived the patent deed specified that the|girl born at 4:13 on & y. The ‘\!m-v today on a tour of Alaska. owner of the timber tracts had to baby, who has been named Linda cne L Make your appointments with N R. M.~ MARIOW Bakenus is making arrangements produce sustained yie the pub- ne, is the rst child of the lfor a proposed trip, next year, of lic administrative icers would| Lockridge's Lockridge, wellsknown Factory Representative Room 414 Gastineau Heotel the naticnally famous Seattle group doubtless have the greatest diffi-|union official, reports that mother o Alaska. culty in keeping the fee simple|and child are doing nicely and that — 5 — owners from wrecking the future|he expects to recover within a few timber-growing possitilities by im- days. proper logging methods as millions of acres of heavy timber, patented under the Timber and Stone Act, _— were wrecked. Registering at the Baranof Hotel Better System over the weekend from Seattle However, the pulp company, it-|were James E. Park, Mr. and Mrs. UWNERS self, might prefer to buy the tim-|Herh Nelson, Martin Jorgenson, Iris | ber from the Forest ice at an|Brown, Carole Brown, Mr. and Mrs, equitable price to be adjusted from|Bob Woods, Mrs. Fay Kristensen time to time and to do the cutting|Mrs. Mary Leiscke, Mable Tay Those of you who have been planning on under government forestry Tules)Gertrude Schuler, Martha McDon- | improving your property with a concrete side- rather than to wait to start ilsialq and Pat Bell.. walk or driveway, will be interested to know that operations until it can block up from the 1920-acre tracts the enor- | - i Needlecraft & Junior Shop 111Y% Seward St. | f. SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE i | | ] AT BARANOF | BEGAN TODAY PRICES CUT 1-3 TO 1-2 Many School and Christmas Items 'SHOP EARLY ON ATOMIC BOAR chairman of the U. S. atomic energy commission, talks with Gen. Andrew G. L! McNaughton, Canadian member of the United .Nations atomic commission, at Lake Success. we now have on hand, steel for this type of work. 4 mous acreage it requires to justify | E 3 * ¥ its huge investment. It might ) We are not in the contracting busin but if well prefer to avoid either the " ALL SALES F“‘AL your own contractor cannot do the job for you trouble of “dickering with dozens or | N 0 i : , . o Gift Wrapping on Sales Items hundreds of claimants on price and perhaps comps:ting with speculators | D 1 O ) ) 2 ) () ) () ) we will be glad to assist you in getting someone to do the work for you. Our business is Ready Mix Concrete and concrete products. | Who Wouldbuy up veterans' tracts And in the meantime, A]asknn.( T & .who have been longing for aj ¢ Phone 799 and tell us about quarter of a century for these large mnu PLWBING & anl“G co. | PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL Ipulp mills to build up their coun- try will have instead thousands of | : tracts of their best timber held| | by absentee veteran landlords. | | Southeast Alaska has between 15,000 and 6,000 miles of shore lin¢ | forested from the Leach to 1,500 or 2,000 feet elevation, and it could -v ity ’ (4 Ll 1be expected that as many veterans T !as the timber supply could accom- TAYERN l’» modate would rush to Alaska and s § Llock out a tract of from 2 to 6 WELDING PHONE 787 Third and Franklin ) ) Two’s Company your requirements Juneau Ready Mix Concrete, Inc. v, 3 miles in length along the beach iand reaching inland for a half or | two miles. The government would| |be giving the veteran a benus of !20 to 30 million board feet of tim-| X ¥ e Chia e : e ? o s | vor! he stump between " ":;;.0:001?;4%',‘00;, all for gx months | AFFECTI ONATE MOTH ER_ A mother sea lion gives her newborn pup a kiss iv the of his time spent in a log cabin| Philadelphia zoo, where three sea lions were born in a single day. and in one of the best vacation spots in the country. p | After 50 years of painstaking ef- very bride wants the first dinner in her new home to have SICKS' SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING 'fort on the part of the Federal| co. government to build up the nation- | n"complny” sl £0 nlong with £ lal forests as a protected national A SINCE 1878 resource as sustained yield units the candles and cluster of jon- quils, set the scene with gleam- 3 | {to serve as a perpetual source of * raw material, it does not seem E. G. SICK, PRES possible that Congress will make such a tremendous reversal in pol- icy. But the call to “help the veteran” is popular and difficult for the politician to ignore, even when Isuch a plan may be a front for something else. ing Towle Sterling — the solid silver exquisitely designed and fashioned. A six-piece place setting can cost as little as $22.50 including Federal Tax. NUGGET SHOP e o I e R g e T CANDLELIGHT R A SILVER FLUTES TIDE TABLE JULY 15 e Low tide 5:35 am, -0.9 feet e High tide 12:05 am., 13.5 feet ® Low tide 1729 pm. 41 feet ® High tide 23:40 pm., 178 feet ® | At Your Friendly Taverm - - ~-°"°"° " L\ St ur favorite bride— The perfect gift for:’:ely Toule \smling. in a place setting ¥ [EP—— P— S— P S —— T % FROM PORT ANGELES j Distributed Throughout Alaska \ : 2 2 4 i DA . by ODOM & COMPANY | W. P. McCreight of Port Angeles,] POWER PLANT MODEL _ sir Giles Gilbert Scott, architect, explains a scale model Wash,, is stopping at the Baranof. of the proposed Bankside power station on the south bank of the River Thames, Londern.’ D D D D D D ) 5 ' ) A

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