Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PA Joe Rogers'Funeral Night Fighter Saturday Afternoon ey e [Planes Rushed From Carfer Chapel | ‘ By Russians eral services for Joe Rogers, Juneau's first soldier killed in the WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 — ® — with an eye on the Korean war, are planned for Sat- urday afternoon rvices will be held in the Carter Walter € Chapel at 2 p.m. with Capt The Russians A. Soboleff giving the eulogy. In-|grow capability of American ¢ will be beside Joe Rogers'|long-range bombers to strike in termen f darkness or storm at high altitude: to get all-weather in- er in the family plot at Ever- green Cemetery are hastening Pallbearers will be . from the, ptor planes into the Soviet air An can Legion and the Veterans|defense system of Foreign Wars. A color guard, This was pointed up in informa- and firing squad will be from the ilwn contained in the newly pub- 208th fantry Battalion (Sep) of|lished e on of Jane's “All the the Vational Guard | World’s Aircraft,” a privately- Graveside ceremonies will be con- ! published manual of planes. It/ ducted by the two veterans' organi- | comments: | zations. Russian development of night| Survivors are a sister, Mrs. Marie | fighters appears to have been| Kines, Stockton, Calif, and two r desultory but in 1949 or vm'ly: brott Henry Rogers, San Fran-| 1950 there became known the exis- of a twin-jet, swept-wing| tence are | fighter of modern conception. It is) acoma, cisco, and Richard Roge: Wash. Also surviving him three aunts, Mrs. Gertrude Peters, | credited to Lavochin (Semyon Al Mrs. Chris Nelson and Mrs, William | Lavochkin, Soviet aeronautical | Sutton, all of J g designer) ti h it is not certain. | Joe Rogers was 23 years old when his fighter has been said to be he was killed by enemy action J eater but in view of the 28 at the Korean front. He had|fact that a good deal of radar is served in the European Theatre| housed in the nose it is possible during World War IL | that there may actually be accom- He attended the Juneau public| modation for a second crew mem- schools and enlisted in the army|ber.” when he was 17 years old. His| & ' ? Some other aviation experts grandmother, Mrs. Jenny Klaney, ( 3 P on foreign fleets have reported that at least two all-weather in- terceptor types are now in use by e the Red air force. GBANTED | “(The extensive radar equipment Divorces granted in U. 8. Dis- | in all-weather or night-fighters is trict Court were: Phyllis Maynard | ysed for locating hostile bombers from Russell G. Maynard; Fred|and for automatically aiming guns Spink from Gladys A. Spink; and |or the plane itself, in the case of Lucille S. Glafke from Willlam B. | fixed gun mounts, at the target.) raised him after his parents died when he was two years old. | Dragged Under, | Glafke. FROM ANCHORAGE Martin P. Schluter of Anchorage is at the Baranof Hotel Jane's also reports what “is prob- ably the first really successful” | Soviet jet bomber. The publication "Meney Man’ Taken Baskefball Bribes NEW YORK, Dec. 6—(P—District Attorney Frank Hogan announces the arrest of Daniel Lamont, 44, | Altoona, Pa., shoe manufacturer, for bribing . college basketball play- ers. Hogan said Lamont's real name is Donato Lamorte. The District Attorney said La- |mont was taken ‘into custody at Al- toona Hogan said Lament was the money man” who put up the cash Jackie Goldsmith and Joseph ota to bribe Harvey (Connie) chaff, former New York Univer- star. i haff is under a six months jail | sentence and Goldsmithh ,a former | Long Island University player, is | under indictment. for Surf Ski Champ | [lilled by Shark | NEWCASTLE, Australia, Dec. 6— P—A shark killed" Frank Okulich, | 21, Australian surf ski champion, at | Merewether Beach here today. His | y mauled body was washed o shallow water an hour after horrified onlookers saw him drag- ged under. Okulich, a guard at the beach, | was swimming 100 yards from shore with three other guards when at- | tacked. polev, who also copied the Ameri- can B-29 to produce what the Rus- | sians call the TU-4 strategic| bomber. | | believes this plane is designated as ! the TU-10, designed by Andrei Tu- The TU-10, as described by Jane’s | appt to be a light bomber. Info Custody for | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 13 Come in on PNA; 110 Fly Wesiward Twenty-three travelers flew with Pacific Northern Airlines yester- Former Juror Stirs Probe day with 13 arrivals and ten de- | partures. From Anchorage: Douglas Gray, M. Bruton, F. Marshall, J. H: ing, H. H. Brady, W. Elkins, C. Park- er, P. Clark, J. Smell, A. Ziber, O. | | Sennes, B. Needham. | From Yakutat: Mrs. F. L. Over- | hauser, T. Pennock. To Anchorage: Kermit Scram- stead, Alfred Boberg, Frank Drew, A. Carlson, J. B. Morton, Major Cassidy, Mrs. Ray Parker. To Cordova: Leon Enok. To Yakutat: Clifford Swap. One Lone Passenaer Arrives on Pan Am S lone passenger, Kenneth Loken, arrived from Seattle yester- terday. Twenty-seven flew south. To Seattle: F. Redding, Mr, and Mrs. H. .C. Clark, Bruce Harpoll, D. Koon, Bev Beanland, Jack ke, Col. Vegsace, Col. Lewin, Leo Saarela, L. Moor J. Pope- joy, Maty Lindsey, Larry Pusich, Mr. and Mrs. V. II. Leak, M. Seiler, R. Alexander, To Ketchikan: Edward Krum, Floyd Volk, J. McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Beck, P. Mather, Wayne Pendleton, L. Smith, L. Royer. P. GRAY RETURNS y, proprietor of the Hotel Juneau, returned yesterday from Anchorage and Fairbanks. He had been on two weeks active Dou Douglas |duty with the Navy at Kodiak. FROM SITKA D. W. Thomas of Sitka is stop- at the Baranof Hotel. | Hilary Crawford, wife of a San| — EMPIRY WANT ADS PAY — With Charge SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. A former juror's charges that the Justice Department is trying to “keep the lid on the truth” today eclipsed a federal grand jury probe of the Northern California Federal Internal Revenue Bureau. The accusation was made by Mrs. in letters to Francisco attorney, 6—m— | No Pirate Dance ‘On Safurday Night The Pirates Dance, sponsored by the Emblem Club for Elks and their ladies, scheduled for Saturday night in the Elks ballroom bas been postponed to a later date. This postponement is because the ball- rcom is now being painted and refurnished and will not be ready for the dancing party at this week- end. FOOD SALE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1951 g Olympic Ski Team : Member Dies from Skiiing [njuries SALT LAXE CITY, Dec. 6—(P— James Grifrith of Ketchum, Idaho, member of the United States ski team chosen for next year’s Olym- pics, died today, thr days after he was injured in a skiing accident. Death was attributed to pulmon- ary embolus*-a blood clot. The Westminster Fellowship is‘ Griffith crashed into a tree dur-| e {having a food sale Saturday Dec- |ing a downhill run Monday at the | ¢ EMPIRE WA ADS PAY ember 8, Sears, Roebuck, at 10 am. ' Alta resort. 'e s 60600000 Sen. Richard Nixon (R-Calif) and Lowest Everyday Prices — Lowest Everyday Prices—Lowest Everyday Prices Rep. Patrick J. Hillings (R-Calif). Mrs, Crawford saill government prosecutors subjectad her to an “ made her ill, result- elease fYom the grana tember ¢ d Secretary of the /day ot Pan American Airways yes- grand jury and served - for six months. Assistant U. S. Attorney robert McMillan, director of the investiga- tion, denied the charge and said he knew nothing of any inquisition. In Whittier, Calil., ililings said he intends to ask = Congressional investigation—leading (> possible impeachment proceedings—of rul- ings by three federal“judges dur- ing the seven-month grand jury probe. He did not name the judges. Contents of Mrs. Crawford’s let- ters were disclosed in Washington and confirmed by her in San Fran- cisco. She said she wrote the two solops because “I think people should know the treatment that at least one juror had.” CLYDE FRANKS HERE Clyde Franks, Sitka contractor, is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. H. A. Van Ermer of Petersburg is at the Baranof Hotel. Shimbedm Cooks eggs the sai actly as you like them without chance or guesswork. Very soft, medium, hard, or any degree in between. Ca: it's thermost No watching. Poacher nu:gm No worrying. E, eut also available. i ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER COMPANY Sinbeam wonmaster Heats quicker, stays hotter, irons faster. Hot in 30 seconds! Thumb-tip heat regulator in handle. Easy-to-see, easy-to-set. EGG COOKER me every time, ex- v 0t miss tatically controlled. lighter cak ixmaster does Exclusive, larger for o Automati to every off. Sinbeam mixmastir Marvelous, new features for higher, es—creamier, fluffier mash toes—velvet smooth icings, etc. rfect mixing job. JOWL-FIT beaters reater AERATION, more thor- mixing in LESS TIME. Siinbeam suavemastir Give him a Sunbeam Shavemaster! Then watch him beam when he finds out how it shaves closer, faster than any method, wet or dry. And with more comfort than he ever thought possible. Hes the TWICE-AS-WIDE shavia head that shaves twice as mucl beard in same time. It's America’s most popular electric shaver. Y For coffee that's AUTOMATICALLY 5ood every ly with & automatic—you can't miss. fee every time. No watching, 0o worry. slices or thin—you always get the same uniform toasting. time, thrill the whole fam- Sunbeam Coffeemaster. It’s { § Rediant Contrel Shimbeam 1oxsTER Beyond Belief, All you do is Automatic drop in the bread. Bread lowers itself lmldfl“’ raises itself, , 00 levers to push. Toast sileatly without pop .MohtLudotdry. BABY BOTTLE WARMER cally heats milk and other correct tempera- time—antomatically, then shuts 1It’s scientifically correct. Cali — Lowest Everyday Prices — Lowest Everyday Prices — Lowest Everyday Prices — Lowest Evervday Prices — Lowest Everday Prices — DELIVERIES: Juneau—10:060 a.m., 2:00 and 4 YES SIR! For Genuine Food Values the Week Shop at BERTE" 00 p.m. — DOUGLAS—10:00 a.m. Every Day in S FIRSTY - « VIIXED CASE SPECIALS .. FANCY FRUITS FANCY VEGETABLES Seven Variety Assortment Seven Variety Assortment ALL FANCY GRADE ALL FANCY GRADE Pt e i el SILI0 S$1.35 $9.75 $7.25 T6c $6.49 DELICIOUS Ground as ¢ COFFEE 2 lbs. §1.55 JUREAU'S FINEST MEATS from JUNEAU'S FINEST MARKET | FRESH FRUZEN Whole Bean You Like It! d ADPISAT }SPMOT — S9Dlid ADPAISAT }SOMOT — SODNJ ADPAISAT JSOMOT — Lean .— Kresh kresh -— Lean -~ S92, PICNIC HAMS Ih. 49 From No. 1 Steer Beef DELICIOUS APPLES Chicken PIES each e Kancy — Solid TANGERINES Florida -— Sweet CABBAGE Ground BEEF 1h. 4Ge FARM FRESH-—Pan-Ready RIB STEAKS - Ih. 83¢c | Frying CHICKENS b 6S¢ LARGE VARIETY SEAF 0G0DS-Salmon, Halibut, Lobster, Fillets Cod, Sole, Rockfish, Oysters, Prawns, Shrimp, efc. 7 pound bag $l.29 CLOSE OUT? Pound 28¢ Raspherry Preserves 2 Ib' jar 69‘ h}NCY rANUCY — All Whité Meat PERIL STRAITS Solid Pack (RAB. Ige.can ¢ | TUNA . . can 29 1 8croll - 12 rolls $2.05 MATCHES Pound llc SUNNY JIM Secot Soft Weve TESSUE BAKER'S Chocolate Chips Pkg.2c | Carionldc Plain—SWEET Shurfine — RIPE ICKLES - Large jar 43¢ | OLIVES No. 1 fall can 27¢ cororer MARSHMALLOW __...POUND 3¢ SWIlt—AL TET—Colored TFresh Frozen Concentrated MARGARINE - pound 37¢ | LEMONADE 6 oz ca» 23c Gl AN T Size DUZ Diz Does Everything ... .....PACKAGE 93(' CRACKERS 2 pound carfon 49¢ McCORMICK TEA BAGS Pacakge of 100 95« MAYONNAISE | Large 24 oz. jar 63« 3 1b. can $1.09 pa — sadjad ADPAISA] }5oMOT — sadlld ADpPAIaAT jSamoT