The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 13, 1941, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WHO IS WHO IN ALASKA LEGISLATURE s L S. L. Stangroom Stuart L. Stangroom, Republican | Repiesentative from Nome, Second' Division, is serving his first term in the Alaska Territorial Legisla- ture and occupying his first public offi e. Highly respected in the Ber- ing Sea city, Stangroom had often bee.r pressed to be a candidate but until the primaries last spring had nevcr run for any office, Stangroom was born in Belling- “present political situation in the Highway Act be extended to Al-| ham in 1892 where his parents were Balkans” as well as that country’s aska. Whatcom having ploreer County, residents of his grandfather built the B. B. & I. Railroad. He possible that Hitler, perhaps un- appropriate $400 for janitors reccived his schooling in Belling- Yugoslavia Drawn Info War Turmoil Two Offitia?fly to Ger- many for Conference with Hitler (Contlnuefl from Page One) that the Yugoslavia leaders were in- vited to Germany to discuss the adhesion to the three-power pact. In some quarters it is considered | casy over Russia's traditional “big: IN THE HOUSE INTRODUCED—H. B. 27, by Peterson, Harvey Smith and Egan,; to appropriate $40,000 for a school building at Naknek. INTRODUCED—H. B. 28, by Har- very Smith, to appropriate $6,000 for equipping and operating the Seldovia Hospital | INTRODUCED— H. J. M, 17, by Stangroom, asking Congress not to pass the Dickstein bill for coloniz- ing Alaska with immigrants. INTRODUCED--H. J. M. 8, by| Shattuck, asking that the Federal| INTRODUCED—H. J. R. 2, by Ways and Means Committee, to to clean the House and Senate Cham- | | ham, Seattle, and Redmond, Wash. Slavic brother” protection of Bul- pers, He attended business college in Seattle and afterward engaged in troops through Yugoslavia into on Education, paria, will seek to transport Nazi PASSED—H. B, 7, by Committee | raising license fee| the lumber business and grocery Greece as an alternate route instead jon embalmers to $10. business. He has lived in Alaska since 1931, beig associated with the A. Polet Company in Nome. Mr.. Stangroom is married and he; one married daughte: Mrs. Arthur Harris of Nome. Mrs. Stan- groom is the daughter of Mr. and M::. Alfred Palmberg, pioneer set- tles in ne.r Seattle where the Stangrooms hgve a lakeside home which they exroct to visit, after the legisla- tive session, for the first time in geveral years. While in Juneau Mr. Btingroom are residing HiL rest Apartments. - MEYERS TO INSTALL EQUIPMENT, WRANGEL ob-rt F. Meyers, or the Juneau Weather Bureau Office, is sailing on th> North Ceast for Wrangell where he will spend several days installing additional equipment at the Wrangell Weather Station. and at Mrs. the the Lake Samamish area! of through Bulzaria. It is reported tHat 600,000 N‘lzi‘ soldiers are massed in Rumania for! a swift thrust in southeast Europe | to either Greece or Turkey. | R 4 HOSPITAL NOTES | A surgical admission this morn- ing, Axel Sampson is a patient at St. Ann’s Hospital, | Ar-| st. | After receiving s al care, cino Credo was dismissed from Ann’s today. Harvey J. Christio was admitted to St. Ann’s today for minor sur-| gical care. Mrs. J. H. Likins was dismissed today from St. Ann's after receiv-| ing surgical attention. Mrs, Irene Tucker was a dismis- sal today at St. Ann's aftet hav- ing undergone a (onsilectomy. ! - e Subscribe for The Emnir BVGOLI_\/—I DON‘T AlLS KNOW W, ME- BUT I’M NOT MESELF-~ -oe . — IN THE SENATE INTRODUCED-S. B. 7, by Cof- fey, to appropriate $30,000 for a school at Naknek. INTRODUCED—S. J. M. 4, by | Coffey, (replacing { drawn) asking Congress to extend hospitalization to fishermen. PASSED-S. J. M. 2, by Coffey, construction of a shighwav Palmer to Copper Center. - -e 10 from ROSENSTEIN HERE Y. Rosenstein, Dillingham mer- chant who formerly had a store at Hyder, came in on the North Coast | after a visit to Sitka. Rosenstein | is at the Gastineau. S. J. R. 2, with-|— "THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 13, 1941. WILLKIE IN LONDON PUB Borlesketo Coach Agam= 1 WHITMAN (‘OLLFGF‘ ‘Walla | Walla, Wash., Feb. 13.—The weath- | was fine and Nig Borleske had .._u t returned from Alaska where it was 20 below, but the veteran of 25 years of coaching at Whit-| man College didn't have time to get out his long fungo bat and| 3 knock out any flies. | He left town on another Club business trip, just 24 after he had pulled in—but not without letting it be known he’ll Ibe back to rvesume his coaching duties after the end of February. Borleske, winding up the hardest | part of his year as District Gov- ermor of Rotary Internationa!, left on another two-week jaunt, with stops scheduled at Mount Vernon, | Tacoma and Seattle, but he is slat-| .ed to finish his official visits by the end of February, and after that will be on h.md mosv of the time TAKUS TAKE TRIMMING AT BRUNSWICK The Brunswick Cafe kep the Takus a thorough trimming last night at the Brunswick Alleys, as Mura bowled a high 552 to lead his team to a 4 to 0 \lr‘lmy over the opposing squad. In the second game of the eve-| ning’s pin play the George Brothers Going Home—But Where? T s et g Musketeers to end with total scores 1274 '0 12935. Tonizht's games are between thn Barber's Trio and the George Brothers at 7 o'cloek and the Noirth Transfer and the Baranof at 8 o'cloc Scores lows Rotary hours ‘Wendell L. Willkie, on a recent inspection trip in England, has a drink with a British soldier at a public house bar. | last night were as fol- Cafe | 173 216— 552 Schmitz 189 142 182— 513 172 152 181— 505 524 467 The Takus 196 161 149 130 163 152 508 443 George Brothers | Mortensen 193 190 140— 523, | Harter 180 127 162— 469 ‘B Smith 125 163 116— 404 Totals 498 480 4131396 | Three Musketeers Bradley 141 140 Barbara Garrett 111 129 Smithberg 168 134 420 Brunswick Mura 163 Emily Ragudos Totals Zarate Dora Poole Mangalao® 176— 533 116 395 Totals 473—1434| 181— 462 123— o 147— 449 A Frenchwoman who fled to Switzerland when the German tide swept over France, is shown leaving the refugee camp to return to France She i being handed a lmg of supplies over the barbed _wire. Her home was in Alsace-Lorraine, which again are the “)s £y o »rmfl'v -~ having evicted the French landowners and replaced thm_y.‘h G Totals | *Did not bowl, >oe 403 4511274 Emplra Clusmeas ?uyl Man’s Marriage, Death Notices in Paper Same Day' v- 11; of 41519 "’fl)lfli"” ¥, A‘{“‘I"X}(? Lt iz‘i,v J&umfl. mky? Firevia i3 m prt i, I}Oche;inw mguw j AREta Y ot Mrs. Raynor with somn Robert and the two notices Note the vital statisties at the right above. Both | Knowing he was dying, he insisted on another the obituary and the marriage license application wedding ceremony so that his son, Robert, shown of Lewis Raynor appear—on the same day“-in a with Mrs. Raynor, could have a name. The cere- ‘Wichita, Kan., newspaper!. Raynor, seriously ill, mony was performed in a hospital 12 hours before learned that hla marriage in 1922 was ‘illegal. his death. o By GEORGE McMANUS _ | CAME OVER-VLL PLAY FOR YOU — NEVER MIND- I'VE ASKED UNCLE SPAVINEE TO COME OVER AND KEEP YOU COMPANY — IE YO DO-JVLL NOT BE THE ONLY ONE THAT'S SICK- 579—1570 N7 % "CHEERFUL AS = ITS NAME" //// //// | Proof SUNNY BROOK KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY BRAND National Distillers Products Corporation, N. Y. | E/IW//M gz T TR Distributed by NATIONAL GBOCERY COMPANY Inhabitants of an English Midlands town read about the previous nlzht’. raid by German bombers. Casualties are listed in these bulletin bymculnmdh!omfin,andmrm-lx attest first-hand to Mr ueuncy. - Penguin fo Leave Seaftle on 15th On Pnbiloi Trip The U. 8. Fisheries vessel Pen- guin is scheduled to leave Seattle ,February 15, carrying supplies and mail for the Pribilof Islands. This will be the first trip of the Penguin 'since the Christmas voyage. The Penguin makes five trips a vear to the scnl n«lands and is the mly vessel which goes into the Ber- ing Sea at this time of the year. Occasionally she is delayed by heavy ice in the vicinity of the islands. e - NGIIVE ATRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing alr route trom Seattle to Nome, vn ale at J. B. Burford & Co, adv. - eee VALENTINE SILVER TFA Trinity Hall, Sat.,, Feb. 15, 2 to 6. Publiv invited. -adv. > Try a classified ad in The Emplre, WHAT A TRIP! —Even the monkey, “Otho,” seems fright- ned still by the Atlantic's worst winter storm which battered West African freighter, Otho, and sent her limping into New York, Monkey belongs to Jack Delaney (above), a crewman on Otho. PHONE 374 GLACIER HIGHWAY DELIVERY DAILY TRIPS COAL——WO00D LUMBER —— GROCERIES PHONE 3774 "“SHORTY" WHITFIELD

Other pages from this issue: