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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1947 ERS -GET G LOVER: L, I hOVE pEssSon THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA l RULE IN PALESTINE | - BY 1949 ATLATEST | . | LONDON, Oct. 24.~iP—Biitain |plans to withdraw her troops and |administration from Pale: b {March of 1949 “at the very late: |if the United Nations fail to set- {tle the Holy Land problem, an au-! thoritative informant sa Eritain a week ago served a sec-| ond notice on the United Nations that she would give up her L \of Nations mandatc in the Holy, Land, but set no date for with- drawal. The British announcement had said merely that the with-/ drawal would occur “within a limit- | ed period.” H Britain urged the U. N. not to delay “unduly” in reaching a final| decision on the future of Palestine.; ritish sources in New Yo said |discussions already were und y in Londen and Jerusalem on stine ue | | the| withdrawal and that a target date Iwas to be announced AUSTIN CHARGES " SOVIETS TRYING 'GAG' AMERICANS | LAKE SUCCESS, Oct. 24— A brief ceremony at Hudson Motor Car Company’s plant in Detroit marked the production recently of the three millionth car produced by the company during its 38-year history. Number Three Million, a Hudson | Commodore Eight Convertible Brougham, is shown : | beside Hudson Number One, a 1909 Hudson model | formed. Mr. Barit | “Twenty” Shown (left to right) are A. E. Barit, Hudson | with the company. BRITISH WILL END | HUDSON PRODUCES THREE MILLIONTH CAR president, N. K. Van Derzee, sales manager, G. H. Pratt, vice president in charge of sales and John V. Machesky, supervisor of the Hudson experimental macnine shop, | who has been with Hudson since the company was "™ PAGE FIVE 5 DANCE ACTS [N 20TH CENTURY | Sbigiees Five dances whi {sally popular in the {ica of the 1870's are [ Jule . ene Town,” which ¥ i;«::n Century Thea | They were | Lee {ful {iln | started | search, | history of | west | Ann Dvorak, {film with Randolph & | these dances with |a chorus of potential - - PIONFER'S CARD PARTY By the Auxiliary, Friday, 8 p.n Odd Fellows Hall. Pinochle, bridge. whist. Refreshments. Public ted 1dv -t2 | IO ENTURY LAST TIME T Shows at 7: who he dance Before Le 5 LEVEY proseats You'll I and you'll fove od d s the great every gun-sco. second of it! he 1 - { 1 | i o~ | RANDOLPH SCOTT ana ANN DVORAK witn EDGAR BUCHANAN sna RHONDA FLEMING A JULES LEVEY PRODUCTION: Directed by EDWIN L MARIN Associate Producer HERBERT ) BIBERMAN Peteared thr Untad Artte 1 > HALLOWE'EN BARN DANCE Sat. Oct Salmon k Cour try Club ady. 713 | 25 - i T13-t5 - e wantaas for Lest resuits! has the third longest service record Em Caricon Sporilite vorrce 1s neresy civen | NEWS Via Air EXPI‘GSS — |that Pearl A. Heinke, admini } {trix of the estate of Alice Hall, de- |ceased, has filed herein her Final | Report of the administration of the |estate of deceased, and that a hear- n Voyage Party (<) ROMANCE THIS FEATURE STAR' SECOND FEATURE ?® IN THE SHIPYARDS! JANE RANDOLPH - JOHN O'MALLEY . STEPHEN BARCLAY - EDWARD GARGAN TS AT 7:10--9:30 SATURDAY MAT. 1:30 P ADDED “Z{RRO’ COASTAL FLIES 24 THURSDAY:EXTRA SCHEDULES TODAY Alaska Coastal Alrllues compieied only two passenger flights yester- day tecause of the bad Planes reached Haines and Skag way and Petersburg, Wrangell and Ketchikan. In addition to regular passenger flights today, Coastal was making nine trips to Tulsequah, B, C. with miners, Passengers to Haines yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. John Ward; to Skagway, Dr. H. C. Harris; to Ketchikan, W. E. Brown; to Wran- gell, John McLaughlin and Hugh Wade; to Petersburg, Mrs. Bogue. Flying from Haines to Juneau were John B. Ward and R. C Coleman; frcm Haines via Sks way, J. Trelford, Jr.; from Skag- way, Jean Hildebrand, George Lundy, Jr. Lydia Armstrong, Stan- ley Kilev, Bent Paxter, Leland Smith and R. N. Haster., Inbound to Juneau from Peters- burg were Jerry McKinley, Mr. C. H. Perkins and Miss E. Mosher. > MRS. ASLESON, WIDOW OF PLANE (RASH VICTIM, IS HERE ON ESTATE CAS Mrs. O. S. Asleson, widow Obert Asleson, whko was killed in a plane crash at Yakutat last August, has arrived in Juneau with. her nephew, Ben Opheim. of weather. | yj S BLACK WHIP" 'i:ouise In From South | Paciiic Steamer Prin- uise under Capt. Leslie, & 1 Juneau from the south la gway at 10:5 Passenge: Evelyn Butler Dale, the Rev. and Mrs. Willis R. Bocth, Mrs. Adrian Cooley child, William Jorgenson, M Johnsc Mis. Lily Kraenar, Mr. M: D. Plum, Mr. and Mrs Pearce, Miss Margaret Silliman Mrs. Margaret Sly, Mr. and Mrs - ving here were Dr. nd child, Dr. George Arthur Bone, James Campbell, Per |Jorde, Mrs. Lena Strumbley and ! two children, John Station, Edward ! Templeton and Ernest Webster. WORD RECEIVED FROM GLASSES IN CALIFORNIA A letter has been received in Ju- neau from Mrs. John A. Glasse of Alameda, Calif. The Rev. and Mrs. !Glasse and their, three children made their home in Juneau for many years when the Rev. Glasse | was pastor of the Northern Light | Fresbyterian Church. He is now 1paslor of the Presbyterian Church Iat Alameda. | Mrs. Glasse said that her two Boyd, Milan andl ¥ Ella '8€0on of murder with malice in the Werner, James Andersen, Charles Blasko, Arthur Bond, James Boyd, | y Hanson, Carl Lill- | Mis. Aselson plans to go to va-|sons, Jim and Jack, are both at- kutat to settle her husband’s es-|i°nding the Yale School of Divin- tate, following his death just 22 days after their marriage. Botk Asleson and William Aus- tin, chief mechanic for Pan Ameri- can at the Juneau Airport, were killed when their Piper Cruiser went into a spin at Yakutat on August 28. Mrs. Asleson and her nephew are from Opheim, Montana. The town was named after Opheim's grand- father who established the post- office’ around which the commun- ity was built. Opheim plans to work here during the - winter. e e Complete Automotive Service MT. JUNEAU SALES & SERVICE 909—12th St, PHONE 569 Specialists in Radiator Work e e 9 N j |1ty at New Haven, Conn. Jack is in | his last year and Jim is beginning :hls first year. Marie Jean is beginning her first vear at Willamette University at | Balem, Ore., where she is affiliated | with the Phi Beta Phi sorority. 'MRS. MARY JACK O TENAKEE DIES HERE | Mrs. Mary Jack, 67-year-old resi- |dent of Tenakee, passed away last levening at 6:15 o'clock in the Al- aska Native Service Hospital here. She is survived by her husband, Andrew Jack. Also surviving are two sons, Frank Williams of Ten- lakee and Edwin Lindoff of the State of Washington; a daughter, Mrs. Margaret Rosen of Juneau; 'two granddaughters, Mrs. Martha Osborne and Mrs. Paula Taberilla, of Juneau. | The remains are at the Charles |W. Carter Mortuary. They will be |shipped to Hoonah for burial in the town where Mrs. Jack was Iborn, and where many of her re- |latives still live. | R i MRS. COOLEY RETURNS Mrs. Albert Cooley and small | dauzhter Susan returned to Juneau on the Princess Louise. They have Leen visiting in Portland with rela- tives for the past month and stop- ped brieflv in Seattle. "rnv United States charges that |Russia’s anti-“warmongering” cam- |paign is a “police state” measure| idesigned to “shackle” the minds| {of the Ameriean people and “gag”| their leaders. | U. 8. Delegate Warren R. Austin declared that the Soviet resolution! on “warmongers” was a “direct at- jtack on the policies and principles |of the United States iposal be “obsolutely suppressed.” | "Ihe road of restraint |leads directly to the establishment |of ccnsorship and a police state,” |Austin declared. “The United States does not intend to support |any steps along that road.” { The Soviet resolution, Austin isaid, “would put shackles on the brain of man as we!l as a gag in his mouth.” \ SENTENCE DOCTOR SLAYER OF FAMILY 10 ELECTRIC CHAIR LA GRANGE, ' Tex., Oct. 24. {—A jury of ten farmers and two! |craftsmen brusned aside the in- sanity plea of Dr. Lloyd 1. Ross |San Antonio surgeon, and decreed| i | | | ‘ evening at 8 o'clock, and sailed for |death in the electric chair for the aid under the Truman program for slayer of a family of four. .{ The jurors, 11 of whom are fath- |ers, debated less than 15 miuttes .|last night before convicting the | Ohio-born, Harvard-educated sur- | York. San |shooting of Mrs. Gertrude ‘|Her husband, Gaylord York, | Antonio investment broker and ‘|formerly Ross' intimate friend; {her 9-year-cld son John, and York’s mother were killed in the {same hail of bullets on a rural |road last May 25. Chief Defense Attorney Fred }B)undell said he would file a mo- tion today for a new trial. | Ross did not deny the shootings. Five Ot Gver : Alaska Highway, i (ape Horn Bound FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Oct. 24— (P—Five heavily bearded former | University of Alaska students, all| ex-GlIs, set out on a jeep over the Alaska highway yesterday with the ultimate destination, Cape Horn,| on the southern tip of South America. ! They were George E. Aiken, Frederick F. Khols, R. L. Willy, John W. Wood, Jr., and Robert E. Shafer. They carried letters to City officials along the route and invitations to residents on the Pan American highway to visit Alaska. | They said their information was that a stretch of about 200 miles| south of the Panama Canal might be the only impassable part of the trip to Punta Arenas, Chile. e 23-DAY DROUGHT CONTINUES OVER | WIDE U. 5. AREA (By The Associated Press) The 23 day drouth threatening the nation’s wheat, meat and tim- ber supplies continued to burn the soil and the forests today, only partly relieved by showers in some sections of the mid-west. Forest fires raging in 10 north- ern states have burned off more than 100,000 acres of timberland, made 5500 homeless and caused property damage well over 320,000.—‘ 000. Nine persons died as a result of the fires in the last 24 hours. Rains fell yesterday and today in Iowa, Southwestern Minnesota, Eastern Kansas and Western Mis- souri. However, none was consid- ered heavy enough to benefit the soil and there was no rainfall in the worst drouth areas of Western Kansas, Oklahoma and the Texas' panhandle. | | i ! | f of America", {and demanded that the Soviet pro-| | cy edict| |United Naticns today against what| Russ Incifing OCEAN-BORN Bo HURRICANE HITS COAST Turk People Against Govt. Complaint lmade fo UN. . of Communist " Aggres- c» sive Propaganda” |camase e | The storm—described as “one of LAKE SUCCESS, Oct. 24.——|the Worst in years"—forced the Turksy formally complained to the|entre B. C. fishing fleet to race to port ahead of the gale-lashed the Turk delegation called an “ag-| W2'%S. gressive propaganda” campaign by . Meanwhile weather officials in Russia to incite “the Turkish peo- Vancouver reported that a second ple against their own government”| Pig Storm” appeared brewing far and other friendly governments. |Cut to sea off the extreme eastern The complaint was made by Tur-|UP Of the Aleutian chain, but es-| kish Delegate Selin Sarpar in reply| {imated that it would follow a to Andrei Y. Vishinsky’s charges:PAth “well to the north” of the that the United States, Greece and|Present storm. | Turkey were permitting “warmon-|{ TE e | gering” ageinst the Soviet Union. WIND TO WESTWARD (Continued from Page One) northern tip of the Queen rlottes, reported winds of ‘“gale |force” and heavy rain, but no 'also given a beautiful pin HonO{s Mrs. Cahill Wendall E.! a surprise given last In honor of of mr Cahiil Treadwell, bon voyage party was evening by Mrs. Guy Russo at her home in Douglas. Mr. and Mrs. Cahill are leaving Sunday on the! Princess Louise: to make their home in California after living in the Channel area for the past 32 years. Mr. Cahill is superin-' tendent of the Alaska Juneau Foun- | dry. | Attending the far:well party were 20 friends of Mrs. Cahill. Each guest presented Mrs. Cahill witha lovely handkerchief and she was! ty the ladies. During the evening bingo played and those awarded prizes were Mrs. A. J. Balog, Mrs. Alfred Bonnet, Mrs. Jack Guerin and Mrs. Cahill | At the close of the evening, re- freshments were served and a beautiful cake decorated with white | roses was cut by the honoree. | was Sarpar charged that Russia,i ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 24 through propaganda, was trying to|P—Weather Bureau officials here turn the Turkish people against reported today that wind gusts up the United States by spreading re-|10 65 miles an hour and steady ports that the United States was winds at 35 were blowing at Kodiak taki over Turkish military bases"tuday. ! under the Truman aid program. | Seas werc reported running high Turkey and Greece are receiving along the Alaska coast and these wind gust velocities were reported: Yakutat 36, Cape Spencer 22, Mid- | | dletown Island 38. | An Army B-29 from California cut through the center of the storm area yesterday and reported heavy rains, severe icing conditions and winds of hurricane force. It followed the same cou southbound flight today i Pilots landing here from the Eantic o £ coastal route reported winds to 100 Baptism to Pamela Christine | ynuec per hour at flying altitude Ward, infant daughter of Mr. and| ;.4 described the trip from Seattle Mrs. Daniel A. Ward, Jr. Spon-| g the roughest they ever exper-| sors for the young Miss at bap- ienced. Y, tism are Mrs, Robert Webb, Miss Merion Cass, and Mr. Alger Cheney. Mr. and Mrs. Clay Scud-| der will stand as proxy for Miss| Cass and Mr. Cheney, who are out of town at this time. The| Wards are planning a reception| at their home in the Dull Apart- ments following the service. PAMELA WARD 10 BE BAPTISED ON SUNDAY On Sunday mcrning at 11 o'clock the Church of the Hcly Trin- . the Rev. W. Robert Webb will dminister the Sacrament of Holy se on a D HALLOWEEN BAKN DANCE Sat. Get. 25, Salmon Creek Coun- uy Club, —adv. 713-t5 | D Gold and petroleum are the prin- | cipal sources of mineral wealth in‘ Colombia. 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M. on December 19, 1947, at which time and place all persons interested in the sald estate may appear and file objections, in writing, to said Final Report, and contest the same. GIVEN under my hand and the seal of the Probate Court this 16th day of October, 1947. s/ FELIX GRAY, Commissioner and Ex-Officio Probate Judge, Juneau Precinct. First publication, Oct. 17, 1947 Last publication, Nov. 7, 1947 ROY LEE Representing Real Silk Hosiery Mills at the BARANOF HOTEL Phone 800 1009, NYLONS ACME BREWERIES, Son Froncissl Distributed Exclusively in Alaska by WEST COAST DISTRiBUTORS, Inc. 2201 Alaskan Way Seattle, Wash. MARINE WAYS REPAIRING AND NEW CONSTRUCTION and Boat Sales Marine Hardware Rubber Boals root west minin . Appraisals PHONE 29 JUNEAU, ALASKA BOX 2719 Have Your Boat Steam Cleaned While on Our Ways BUS ANSELL announces . ... A New Garbage Disposal Service for JUNEAU On or About NOVEMBER FIRST New Equipment Is Expecied Soon Pick-up Schedule and Rates will be published soon ACME DISPOSAL SERVICE PHONE 631—AFTERNOONS FOR INFORMATION THE ALASKAN CAB CO. “THE FINEST CARS AND SFRVICE IN JUNEAU” “The Packard Clipper System” Pt rrrrmrrsorssee e aes e e————