The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 14, 1940, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 14, 1940. AlaskaR.R. Is Guarded By Soldiers ANCHORAGE, Alas tachments of troops will be placed at certain points on the Railroad between Seward as a part of the t am, Gen be > maneuvers conducting Among the drills guards pos nander of the nnounced n will be required to run n camp Inications systems in which they are commande: program at Elmen- re. Detachments of men and various maneu- » been conducted. 1 various a s divided in a thec has t throughout the railroad yards and at other X a—Small de- Alaska and ining Simon Buckner, Alaska Defense today Anchor: and familiar e country, high- said n under way lof drills in with de- WO groups tical war that of include DAISY RELAXES ON CAPITOL LAWN he of VICHY, France, Aug. 14, Pr las Petain d | ernment mus PETAIN MAKES SPEECH Defends Hismkiegime in Radio Talk-Nazis Make Severe Demands emier Petain defended his regime t ni ech shortly after the formal g of the so-called “war guilt at Riom :ading by the public voluminous indict- t. A curiou ument’s bill of complaint is that to name any of the men crimes against re listed on the d that one of the ith which the gov- rapple with is that the food supply and its distribu- aviest ta: French | in a radio speech to the | people The Premier made | opening day of the trial was feature of the zov-! tegic ;mmz tion The Premier disclosed in a his speech that the German government had demanded impossible conditions in return for the re-establishment of the French government in Paris, - SETON THOMPSON CHARLES JACKSON (OMING TOMORROW Jackson and Seton ad Wild- tomorrow when Elane Summers of Seattie, Wash., attired as v rode up to the capitol to hand Sen. Rush Holt All went well until Daisy, footsore from ted, enjoyed a good roll on All didn’ L go off as scl Iu t]uhtl in W; \shlllglml DT, Paul Revere and mounted on a gray mare named Daisy rod EgvsruninL (D.-W. Va)) a petition against the pending conscription bill. pounding the pavements, gave way (o temptation and, while the Senator w That's Miss Summers trying to g('l Daisy on all fours again. GETIOUGH NAVY ASKS | AMERICANISM 10 BE GIVEN | MORE FUNDS OUT GVER AR 'Los Angeles District Aftor- FOR NEEDS Agreeme”n' Is Made for ney queS Afmlng e . of 0urse|ves Counferacting Naziand | _ . . —, | . Fascist Propaganda | v Charles son of the Fish Service are due he the capitol lawn, T life eries lations. A hearing at Cor-| others interested are invited fo, SEATTLE, Aug. 14.—Funeral ser- - .- and Fairbanks districts, awaits i e s ancnora=e PrOMinent Miner dova preceded it. A Juneau hear- come and express their views, will vices for Carl Petterson, 58, prom- Subscribe to The Daily Alaska Hn arrival of his sister, Petterson conducting a hearing on 1941 fish- 0f North Is Dead ing to which all fishermen and be held next Wednesday inent miner of the Yukon, Anchor- after a flight south for Empire—the paper with the largest died paid circulatiou, treatment ney Buron Fitts of Los seles sald that the Communist Admiral Stark Makes Re quest Direct to Sen- M e Party should be outlawed in the , RO i | state of California, Fitts made the ate Committee BRUE 14| atement in a speech before the south Am¢ an countries are Lo . » state convention of the American 5 be broadca r the purpose of |y ot WASHINGTON, Aug. 14. —United | counteracting Nazi and Paseist pro-| sy pitts: Lo : States Senator James F. Byrne paganda station e Vegast me FIEh day said Admiral Harold St An : nt to this affect has| gocy o, '1“ 2% l”" oz ‘""'”1 Chief of Naval Operations, has ask- | been signe Five ‘ha{oriin: sl | s o fre Lt S b od the Senaté Appropriations Sub- | dios and the National Broadcasting| * e, LM Within He was greeted with a huge ova- committee to increase by $47( Compans 000 funds to go to the Navy pending the $4,963.000,000 appropriation bill nu inc AMERI(AN lEGION GETTING BUSY ON TWO PROPOSITIONS { 'Would Ban Communlst tion when he advoc; he forci- ble deportation of West Coast labor leader Harry Bridges. The District Attorney said that Bridges should be put cn a hoat and sent back SWEN BY RAIN ™ — - Women Vofers Hear Discussion by Child Welfare Supervisor The possibilities of future legis- lation in the Territory for the pro- tection, care and security of chil- dren was outlined last evening by Miss Deborah Pentz, supervisor of Child Welfare Servis for the De- partment of Public Welf: at a meeting of the Alaska Association of Women Voters, held in the City Ccouncil Chambers. - o my insurance agent the other day~'Look here, Mister Agent of the National fire nsurance Company of Hartford, isn't it a \erve racking job trying to sell insurance il day to a lot of people who don't want 17 He said—'Why no! | don't try to scll em anylhing they don't want. | show ‘em hat they need—and they can take it or cave it. Most of ‘em see that I'm doing -e - Hundreds Aire"ReporIed fo Be Isolated in Many Villages ham a real favor.’ “Well, sir, | realized then that my agent 1as dore me a big favor in giving me an ntelligent picture of my needs, and then >, without 'Go ASHVILLE, N, C, Aug. 14, — A vere mountain rain storm swept western North and South Carolina Parfy,Ellmlnale Alien st nignt and tsolated hundreds of persons in scattered towns and | i Fishing in Pacific ~ Twaiee ihwor The [ l elling me use my common sens. sigh-pressuring me. That's why | say © an agent you can trust—and be guided w his judgment.’” SHATTUCK AGENCY i Office—New York Life Phone 249 heaviest rains repc nce the years reported g out of SAN DIEGO, Cal, Aug, 14—The World W banning of the Communist Party only a day after the dyi in California and the elimination the disastrous hurricane that bat- t uth Atlantic coastal areas nmunication lines fell beneath spirited discussion by the ae of 1,N nigh torms and | large and enthusiastic audience fol- ade high- | lowed the talk. Announcement, wa Frank Metcalf, President, that the | next meeting is scheduled for Sep- tember 10, at which time the ko umpire guaran- | winter program wiil be planned. daily circulation o! — rewspaper Fmuoire classirieds h‘:u results. In the Pam of Tc oda_y— of alien fishing in Pa are two proposals befo lmn\'nuon of the American Legion sion e e e s e e s s e s rreesrrrressd | 10w N S mountain gion impassable —————— The Daily DEER HUNTING season is almost here so if you havn't already checked your outfit, it's time you got busy. WE HAVE A VERY COMPLETE STOCK OF RIFLE _f\l()I.)I'IL‘T(D ‘\\’lN(‘II R in 30/06 and .375 calibers. MODEL 'ER in .248 caliber. MODEL 94 in 30/30 caliber. B .22 caliber RIFLES 'ER and REMINGTON A wide variety of models in WINCHI —in both single shot and repeaters. A COMPLETE STOCK of \\'l“\l'lfl{‘\' and REMINGTON AMMUNITION including the FAMOUS SILVER TIP for big game. CAMP and BELT AXES TENTS and PACKS SAFETY MATCH BOXES — FLASHLIGHTS and BATTERIE RECOIL PADS — CLEANING RODS — OIL and GREASE — CLEANING PATCHES—GUN STRAPS—RED HUNTING HATS HUNTING KNIVES USE “RIG” ON YOUR GU'N AND AVOID RUST GET YOUR LICENSE HERE! Juneau-Young ardware Co. Scene at one of the famous sidewalk cafes in Paris today—victorious German troops at ease, relax!nz from their tasks at war, 107,543 pinks, 29,681 chums, made by Mrs.| i 7. BEER of Alaska Credit Bureau CHARLES WAYNCR-Manager First National Bank Building Juneau, Alaska ANNOUNCES THE | OPENING of TWO BRANCH OFFICES ANCHORAGE FAIRBANKS Bank of Alaska Building Lavery Building ° ° BERNICE NOLAN, Branch Mgr. L. KLOSE, Branch Mgr. ‘ We Cover the Entire Territory of Alaska AMBASSADOR TO ARGENTINA REACHES U. §. 5, 1,087 kings chums, 64,776 1,078,726 last | i s P 36,807 pinks, 49,935 chums, 11456 SALMON pA(K OF cohoes, 116566 total; 191840 last SOUIHEASI DowN ‘VV‘("»( Coast—8,328 reds, '.!U.l!l)}‘ pinks, 16986 chums, 8585 cohoes, 54,261 total; 77,843 last year FROM '939 RAI[E Yakutat 14,664 reds, 486 km;;.‘ l'll” pinks, 3 chums, 78 cohoes, IU‘(iljl} total; 27 B year. Canneries Put Up 870,786, Bt L Norman Armour Says Most caSSiS‘JU"elaU District | cohoes.‘soasis “' Friendly Feelings OWSs INCTEASE i s, s Prevailing . | c o5, 870,786 total; e ' The salmon pack for Southeast | year Alaska is running about 200,000 3 MIAMI, § g 14 Un behind last y ording to p: States to Argenttin reports to th 1 an ildlife Norman Armour, arrived here las reports to the Fish and wiiite| NORRIS PORTER T0 TR e b e nsion - fos nly 1€ uneau district in e a special State Department confer mon than it did last year. The Ambassador plans K The total pack up to August 10 Norris K. Porter, Territorial teach- | vacation following his a arance was as follows: er at Flat for the past two years, | at the Capital. He doscribed United Ketchikan—24,796 reds, 42 kings, is spending a few days here befor (m States-Argentine relations as the 12,616 poing to Kodiak for the coming, ! friendliest in history and reported cohoes, 174,678 total; last year 346,- | school year. Mrs. Porter accom- | that Argentine citizens endorsed 486 panies him. They will go to the|heartily the decision of the recent ngell—18,355 reds, 13 kings, westward on the steamer Baranof Havana inter-American conference.s #_ It is with pleasure that Sigrid announces the addition fo her staff of Mr. Charles, recently of Reno and San Francisco. Mr. Charles specializes in hair styling and during his ” seventeen years experience has developed a fechnique of , hair styling and permanent waving that will insure his patrons a coiffure par excellence. If you have hair problems and feel you need the lift a new hairdress gives you, Phone 318 and make an appoint- ‘ ment with Mr. Charles at Sigrid's. ! Sigrid’s Beauty Salon | Men engaged in the production of are not easily influenced by mere ¢ aims —they like Rheinlander because each sip reveals that its quality is “on the 1. For PLUS VALUE in beer, we suggest you try this fine brew—now! SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Since 1878 % Emil Sick, President HEINLANDER the CENTURY"

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