The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 11, 1941, Page 8

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[ et Roses are Red, Violets are Blue, She’s Expecting FLOWERS FROM YOU! SEE, TODAY, the Juneau Florists 311 Seward St. Phone 311 e e e e e e e e e e b e e eee) COMMANDER JEWELL RECEIVES TRANSFER T0 CUTTER SEBAGO Dr. L. W. Brown Also Ord- ered from Haida to Duties in Ohio Lieut. Comdr. R. C. Jewell of the Coast Guard cutter Haida, has re- ceived orders to proceed to Norfolk, Va.. where he will be commanding | | officer of the cutter Sebago. His | Auties as commander of the Sebago | | will take effect by April 15. Commander and Mrs. Jewell and ydaughter Jerry, have resided in Ju- Ineau for the past two years, Com- | mander Jewell having come here as | velief for Lieut. Comdr. Ricketts. | Also receiving orders of transfer, | Dr. Lawrence W. Brown, Assistant | Surgeon, U. S. Public Health Serv- s The Little Hermits s;y: 77 surE 1 RINGS THE BELL Jor Quality, F2 Havor and Value!” Luther League U. 5. ARMY { TRANSPORT | BATTERED uperstrudur“e‘of Kvichak arried Away-Salvagers Workmg at Scene PRINCE RUPE]’T B.-C., Feb. 11 The superstrueture of the United States Army transport Kvichak which grounded on the night of January 27 on Sisters' Rock, has been carried away by the lashing | seas and is pounding upon the| British Columbia reef Meanw preparations are going forward to salvage the battered hull, | floating it with large pontoons. The heavy mechanized Army equipment has been removed from the deck Removal of eight pump trucks and shovel and other equipment has completed by a tug and scow One hundred thousand fest of lumber has been carried away but the Indians are said to have recov- cred half the timbers. D S sel driven becn | ment, during Farley's visit to the * ancient Santo Domingo Ba FEDERAL BLDG. IS : ASKED FOR VALDEZ Discusses Plans, Delegaie Dimond Infro- Enterfainment | duces Bill for Structure to Cost $750,000 WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Alaska J. Dimond has The Luther League met Sunday evening at 6:30 o'clock in the Luth- eran Chuch parlors. There were 18 voung people present The topic, | Delegate Anthony “Chastity’,” was led by Max Lewis. leaguers discussed the price of ad- ing at Valdez on the site of the re- xnx~51011 to “Luther Leaguers on the 'cently destroyed building which " At a prevoius meeting they housed the court and jail. l\ad voted to charge “25 cents and > up.” Anything above twenty-five will be used to purchase an oil paint- Mrs M S Whl“' cents will be accepted. The money ! ing for the Lutheran Church altar After the business meeting there was a rehearsal of several acts of the program, which will be pre: ented by the Luther League on Feb- ruary 24 and 25. Refreshments were served ls\tm- in the evening D In ccmpliment to the birthday of | her mother, Mrs. M. S. Whittier, residence in the Hillerest. Honors for cards were won during }II' ’JI) /‘ \ I the evening by Mrs. J. A. William | |first, and Mrs. Howard Stabler, se ~p ALASKAN | Telephornre 713 or write | The Alaska Territorial Employment Service | for this qualified worker FOUNTAIN AND COUNTER MAN Group Will Meet —Single man, age 25, nice person- ality. Five years' experience as soda The Women's suuvn of Christian | ———————— ond - ‘Methodlsi Church | o) hix | Former Postmaster General James A. Farley is shown (right) with ve of & diesel| pMaj Gen, Edmund L. Daley, commander of the Puerto Rican depart- ‘American Gibraltar.” He is making | a prolonged tour through South America. They are pictured at the introduced a bill authorizing con- | During the business meeting the |struction of a $750,000 Federal Build- | Honoredf Blrthday) Mrs. Robert Cowling entertained 1a.s|,‘ evening with a bridge party at hm'} Lester Tea(ii;of Baranof Hofel, on Defense Advis- | ory Com. for Alaska Lester E. Teagle, chef of the Bar- | anof Hotel in Juneau, has been ap- | Iyastaurant Association's ‘Working under staff in the Food Products Section of | Council of National Defense, Mr.| | Teagle will act as a lay advisor to Army officers in problems of mess | operations in this area. He is one |of a group of nearly fifty promi- | nent restauranteurs throughout the | United States who have been given | | this assignment. As a result of efforts of the Na- | tional Restaurant Association to co- | operate with defense plans, Mr. Gardner, an executive of a New York | restaurant chain and a former di-| rector of the association, was named | as a special assistant to George M. | Mqfett, Director of the Food Pro-| ducts Section of the Advisory Com- mission to the Council of National Defense. The program Mr. Gardner | has set up for the improvement o1} feeding facilities in army canton- | ments led to the appointment of Mr. | Teagle. | Like the other chairmen, Mr. Tea- | gle is directing a survey being made | One of the most active of the in this area to obtain information newer members of the Territorial about draftees who may have ex- | Legislature is Almer J. Peterson, perience in food preparation work. of Anchorage, Republican Repre- When called for service, these men sentative from the Third Division, will be urged to take training in the | who is serving his first term in Service Cooks' and Bakers' Schools. | public office, {In addition, he will act as an ad- Representative Peterson was born visor for the cafeteria operation in| on June 11, 1890, in Madison, Minn. ' the Service Clubs being established He spent his early life on a farm. at Army centers. | He worked much of his way through | - PR e college and in addition to his legal work studied pharmacy, becommg licensed to practice in 1914 and | working as a pharmicist to pay col- | lege fees. | He was graduated with a degree| in law from the St. Paul College of Laws in 1915, previously having degree from Red' rracks, army headquarters. [ wHo 1S WHO IN ALASKA LEGISLATURE & Almer J. Peterson COSTUMES HERE FOR ROTARIANS' | MINSTREL SHOW Tickets for Monday, Tues-‘ day Performances Are Now Obfainable Costumes for the Juneau Rotary| Club Minstrel Show to be produced | inext Monday and Tuesday evenings | |at the Coliseum Theatre arrived on the steamer Yukon today. A meeting |of the entire cast will be held Fri- | received a B.A. | Wing Seminary. Peterson was admitted to the bar in Minnesota in 1915 and prac-! ticed law there until 1934. He lived| | briefly in Everett, Wash., before | coming to the Territory, in Febru-| | ary, 1935. | 1935, until November, 1937, was with the Alaska | Rural Rehabilitation Corporation in | charge of one branch of construc- |tion and of the Land and Legal| Since then he | | <| pointed a member of the Nnumn]‘ Defense | ,{'Advisory Committee for Alaska 1 instructions from ‘ Horace L. Gardner, who is on the| | the Advisory Commission to the | | ! price you pay. ‘Held in Holdun LET US SHOW YOU HOW TO GET o foe foeeppo ln your mattresses No need to get a mattress that wears out, or gets lumpy or less comfortable with use. Spring-Air gives you a guarantee that its Karr spring construction will maintain the original comfort of the mattress for five, ten, or fifteen years, depending on the, For your protection $31.50 ~Krr Unit Guar.Y Anteed 10 years, Here’s the $29.50 Spring-Air with as long a comfort guarantee as inost $39.50 mattresses. tional value, bringing real quality features into the low-price ficid. New Models Now on Disoler Juneau-Young Hardware Co. PHONE 12—JUNEAU, It's an oxcep- ALASKA ATTENTION EASTERN STAR . Stated meeting Juneau Nu 7., Feb 11, 8 p.m. Social. HELEN WEBSTER, Worthy Matron - ndv. Chapler iter, Has also done some Service will meet tomorrow night at | Department. ifi 1 k in the Edworth League room j Empire Classifieds Pay! | ice, who has been stationed aboard man and wal heind day evening at the Elks’ Hall for the | National Distillers Products Corp. New York SR———— Distributed by National Grocery Co., Seattle, Wash. the cutter Haida, will go to Chil- | licothe, Ohio. He is to be a physician at the Federal Reformatory there. - iPhiIIip Bradley, Jr. ' Is Engaged to Miss Connickfl Berkeley Anncuncemen containing the ement of Miss Katherine Con- to Mr. Phillip e being received in | Jureau Miss Coanick is the daughter of | Mrs. Arthur Connick of | v, and Mr. Bradley is the! P. R. Bradley, President of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co,, and Mrs. Bradley. No date for their been revealed. wedding has BuyaCar You’ll Enjoy Gwning Comfort, dependability, economy, smart looks . . . you want all of those when you buy acar! And you get them in Connors Motor Co. USED CARS, at REAL BAR- GAIN PRICES. Come in and drive one of these specials. Connors Motor Co. PHONE 411 fry cook work. Will travel anywhere |7 0°ClC for suitable employment. Call E. S. | for sew 256. | Mrs. e ng handwork. | Peter Oswald will be in e and plans will be dfscussed The Daily Alaska Empire has the for work during the year largest paid circulation of any Al- = aska newspaper, Subscribe for The F'mpire ONE OF HUNDREDS—Often the target of Japanese pombing raids, Burma road bridges are quickly repaired by Chi- nese crews. This Burma bridge is one of 500 spans on the winding highway over \\h h war ;uppllea for Chiang Kai- \hek are senl. Schilling EXQUISITE TEA FLAVOR o~ Here’s finer tea-Schilling Tea— fragrantly good . . . deliciously refreshing. Compare quality! practiced law privately in Anchor- | age where he resides with his fam- ily. Peterson was married in 1916 | to Miss Lila A. Phillips, Minnesota school .teacher. They have four | children and one grandchild, the lson of the oldest daughter, Mrs. Frank Brown of Bellingham. The | elder son, Almer Jr., od last August from Western Edu- cational College at Bellingham, re- ceiving at the same time his pri- vate pilot’s license. Almer Jr. is | now in Anchorage, a mathematics instructor in the night school. An- other son, Robert is a junior in tke Anch High Echocl The younger daughter charming M Sniriey Peterscn, is in Ju- neau with her tather keeping house for him in their Assembly Apart- ment and acting as doorkeeper of the Territo te. M'ss Peter- scn ished herself here women'’s ski 0 LATHANAN HERE J. A. Lothanan Jr. of Fairbanks, arrived from a trip to the States on the Yukon and is a guest at, the Baranol was graduat- |purpose of fitting the costumes and | practicing ensemble numbers. | Tickets good for either night's per- | | formance were distributed today to all Rotarians, who have them for sale. At today’s Club meeting, members : heard from a man who once obtain- ed valuable help from a student loan fund of the kind which is to be set up with proceeds from the Minstrel | Show. He is Walter Sebastian, who | was granted a loan by the Burling-| ton, Towa, Rotary Club to enable him to complete law school. Visitors at today's meeting in- cluded Ralph Barthclomew, of Ket- chikan, and Archie W. Shiels, of South Bellingham. C. C. Carnegie, who just returned | from the States, has the record of attending four Rotary meetings at| different Clubs within two weeks. He took in meetings in Albany, Ore- | gon, Seattle, Ketchikan, and today | Juneau. | ELLINGSEN HERE C. M. Ellingsen, merchandise brok- |er, arrived cn the North Coast and | is regnsbered at the Gastineau. D Emplre Classifieds Pay! William (Blackie) Zupkowsky | Released as & “reformed and re- | habilitated man” from Eastern Pen-| \iuntury in l’hllndelphn in 1933‘ after serving nine years of a life-| | time sentence, William (Blnelne)* Zupkowsky was held in Newark,| N. J., as the leader of a liquor store | holdup in which a companion was killed and a clerk was wounded. [ S FROM 5 TO 50 THEY ALL ENJOY JUNEAU DAIRIES’ ICE CREAM! TRY IT TODAY! JUNEAU DAIRIES OF ANNOUNCING TODAY THE GPENING THE NORTHERN HOTEL ROOMS ® Double and Single Rooms ® Steamheated ©® Reasonable Rates NORTHERN HOTEL ROOMS A. L. LUNDSTROM, Manager JUST WHAT YOU'VE WANTED!!! You'll experience more cooking pleasure with LESS TIME and LESS TROUBLE than ever before with a new 1941 GENERAL ELECRIC Here’s What 1941 Brings —~Clean Speed Calrod Units— Two-Uit Oven — New Thrift Cooker— Welded One-Piece Body — A New Low Price! ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER COMPANY 5 \ ) \ \ ! 3 N ! { ’ ! ' | ' \ ! ! { ' ' ] { ' ! $ \ 3 ! § 4 § ’ ) § § {

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