The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 16, 1941, Page 2

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HESS T0 BE QUIZZED BY MAJ.ADAMS Britisher fo Seek Real Facts, Regarding Nazi Man’s Flight to Scofland 16—-0Out of the versy and speculation to Scotland 1zi man ment ay by ms, that he will whether Hess made Du.e of Hamil- ivance with t of the German Govern- 3 11 Conservative Parliament. nderson, Britizh Am- | supporter of the Nazi ), in my epinion, became convinged in the past two years that zism developed, is on the and was being used to serve the ¢ through the going seoundrely cf Gefmany, such as| Himmler, von Ribbentrop, and the! general party s who are acting| solely for themselves.” - Sneak Today, Seniors Underclassmen Picnic| - Fifty-four seniors pulled their an-| nual “sneak” early hours this| morning and spent the day dodging raindrops instead of s, The outing was held at Eagle| River, with class Advisor Phyllis Poulin and Principal A. S. Dun- ham, accompanying the students and thelr chaperones Yeste afternoon 75 members of sophomore class enjoyed & picnic dinner at Auk Beach. Parents of students chapercned the group, with Supt. and Mrs. A. B. Phillips s special guests. Miss Ruth McVay | advisor. shman at at class, with Miss| Helen Harrell as class advisor, held| its annual picnic Tues after school hours at the Auk Bay Recre- | ation Area. | R e | NOGAME TONIGHT There will be no baseball game! tonight between the Moose and Douglas as scheduled for two rea- sons, the grounds are wet, as it was otill showerng at 3 o'clock this af- ternocn, and then many will be to the dock to welcome the| LOUISE NOT ~ DUE TONIGHT [ * BULLETIN — Steamer Prin- | cess Louise, previously sched- | uled to arrive at 7:30 o'clock | tomight, will not. At 3 o'cleck this afternoon the steamer was reported to still be at Wrangell nd is now scheduled to ar- | e sometime early tomorrow morning, This is according to Agent W. Mulvihill and Charles | W. Carter of the C of C wel- | ¢cming committee to the Ta- ma tour party. ik i CITIZENSHIP 1S DENJED EVADER OF 1918 DRAFT | {Court Heré Tfirns lDonwn Pedersen for Alleged Perjureflitalemem Because he evaded the draft in the last war and later perjured himself in relating - the circum- stances, Oscar Hjalmar Pedersen yesterday was denied citizenship in District. Court here. Pedersen, former subject of Nor- way, had the right under an act| Congress to turn in his papers the purpose of avoiding the draft. When he applied for cmzen-‘ ship two years ago, however, he f for THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1941. WOMEN AS PICKETS Weomen magde up nearly half the line of 500 pickets which surroundes the strikebound Packard Eleetric Division of General Motors Corp., as it reopened its Warren, Ohio, plant to workers. Several employees were turngd back at the plapt gates and none enigred. testified that he was drafted but| that the armistice was signed be-| fore he could he inducted into ser-| vice. A checkup with the War De-! partment showed this was not so.| Pedersen lives at Hood Bay. . - | Cora Brostrom | Is Married fo | John Costello At an 8 o'clock ceremony perform- jed last evening in Douglas by Unit- ed States Commissioner Felix Gray, Mrs. Cora Bostrom became the bride of John J. Costello. The bride was attended by Mrs William Schmitz and Mr. Wallace Jacobson was best man for the aroom Following the marriage a recep- tion was held at the newlyweds’ apartment in the Brunswick, where approximately 200 friends called to wish them future happiness Mrs. Costello is an . employee of the Ideal Paint Store and Mr. Cos- tello is employed by the Alaska Ju- neau Gold Mining Co. - MRS, PATER! COM Rocseveit extensively toured cn her current Nerthwest visit. Kecping in touch with national defense acti attle’s big Boeing aircraft plane recently ma tour party. This will be the| st scheduled game of the present| Mrs. Dave Paterson, wife of the eason that has not been played. | Chief Clerk at the Baranof Hotel, The next game, weather permit- is a Juneau-bound passenger aboard ting, will be Sunday at 6 p.m. be-|the Princess Louise due here this (ween the Elks and Douglas. tevening. | A GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR LIKE THIS ouly S124.95 DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR this is the refrigerator buy of the year! All- Steel Cabinet with Porcelain In- terior' ‘o Famous Sealed-in-Steel G-E Thyift Upit * 62 cu. ft. | Capacity ¢ 11.7 5q. ft. Shelf Area o i Stainless Steel Super Freezer ¢ 80 'Big Ice Cubes. And a host of fea- | " $15 DELIVERS | tures you'll want, ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER (0. PHONE 616 ol at gineers Lady, as she further cuestions him Adress, Sin Olympe Brand 22, radio singer, apply for a marri ATILE ity, Mys. Franklin D. Above, a young mechanic at the defense plane plant explains the workings of his machine to the First on its function. ger fo Wed . 20-year-old screen player, and Douglas W. Wilheit, age license at Los Angeles . They announced they would be wed socn in Beverly Hills. Their honeymoon trip will take them to Boston. 'YAKUTAT BASE SENDS QUERY ABOUT LABOR Army En- construction the intermediate Army airport| Yakutat asking to know the of available tractor and mechani here, was r ed today by the Juneau offis An the of inquiry from in charge Southeast Alagka towns by the Service to determine the number of men available. The Yakutat field is being constructed under the sup- ervision of the Army Engineess and is using Army enlisted men and CCC enrollees as laborers, Few civilians are employed on the pro- ject, - oo TAKES HOME Dave Dishaw has purchased the imprevements and taken over a summer home site on LepaaCave. previously leased by his f; TE mel Dishaw, the Forest Servige an- of the Alaska Territorial Employ-; nounced today. ment Service. | Inquiries-have . been sent.wotlwrl _ The auy Alasis Empire ‘Ill'll— —_———— *NEw SERVI(E Cadastral ['-n_g_ineer Will-| : | Seattle tomorraw. i PASSAGE CANAL BAD WEATHER PO chhr CANCELS OUT 1o BE SuRVEYED iamson Leaving Mon- | day with Crew ke a survey of a townisite at Canal terminus| . Railroad, Cadastral! Enginter F. W. Williamson of the| Public Survey Office, will leave for| the Westward with a crew on Mon-{ day. Girl Scouts Make Trip! ToFlorist Greenhouse | sse 14 planes in and out of Ju-| Gi Ineau weekly, g meil service inlal’trip {Juneau far supericr ever be- |zresnhouse fore, With four flizhts weekly mak- | pcints toward: d trip from Seattle to!tadge, expl badge, gardener nd stopping at Juneau,|tadge and foot traveler badze. | icials pointed out that re. Robert LaJoy lectured during the cs of the time of day or day afternocn te the following girls: |letters are mailed, they will reach |Mary Avoin, Jean Butts, Pat Dav | Seattle before delivery by ship. }Loraine English, Roma Fargher, | Because of bad weather in the Claire Folta, Marie Jean Glasse, Eva i Interior of. Brit. Columbia and; Graham, Gloria Gudbrandson. Peg- lin Juneau. the fiight on the first gy Jean Houk, Betty Lou Hared, jrun has been cancelled until 8:30 Lois Hared, Bernice Harris lo'clock tomorrow Lee Hobgood, Dorthea Hend | One flight from Fairhank: Dianee Hunsbedt, Marilyn Jewett, lin the air this afternopn, however,| Lodema Johnson, Aileen Maloney, |as the Douglas DO-3 left the In-|Sheila McSpadden, Kathleen Peter- | bound for Jur with 11 son, Pat Sey, Irene Shirk, Marilyn Passenge! on board | Showers, Joyce Smith, Antoinette are George Christianson, Mary | Spendlove, Lois Standafer and Mar- | Kelly, Pete Reinseth, Mr. and Mzs. | Jorie Thompson. { John White, R. L. Harrison, Mr.| Troop leaders land Mrs. Bert Lein, Leo Lorenz &irls on the trip. and Millard Kingley. g The Douglas is due TO VISIT Mrs. George 8. Ma lished of the Nome Nugget, arrive on the steamer Princess Lou- ise to visit her son and daughter- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Russell G. Maynard. Mrs. Maynard has been in the States for several months. - (PAA Is For(ed to Cancel Flight Today of Seattle- Fairbanks Plane Weathet conditicns 1 ut the inauguration of the direct Seattle<Fairbanks run scheduled by Pan American Airways to start to- |day as two Lodestars planned to from Beeing Field in Seattle to Juneau, then on to Fairbar ing the 1,620 aiy miles in less than 11 hours. Fo mal today ed 1 Scouts enjoyed an education- through the Juneau Florist yesterday and gained their garden finder will :kson, was accompanied the to fly to ' GOVERNOR'S RETURN " POSTPONED ONE DAY The return to Juneau of Gov. Er- nest Gruening has heen postponed PELICAN OFFICIAL one day due to cancellation of the| Stanton Warburton, Secreta plane flight because of bad weather. Treasurer of the Pelican Cold Stor: Acting Governor E, L. (Bob) Bart- age, is due on the Princess Louise lett, Secretary of Alaska, talked to to visit the development cn Lisi- the Governor by telephone this af- anski Inlet ternoon after the plane returned to Seattle after being 700 miles on its way. porth PRINCE RUPERT S KELLY IRELD | A burglary' charge against Pat| Keily was dis in T 3. Com- missioner for lack of THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. S, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinidy, beginning at 4:30 p.m., May 16: Light showers tonight and Saturdiy, becoming partly cloudy Satu day afternoon; slightly warmer Siturday Lowest temperature to- night about 42 degrees, highest Saturday 58 degrees. Gentle var- iable winds. 4 Forzcast for Southeast Alaska: Local showers tonight and Sat- urday; except partly cloudy in sou:h portion Saturday; slightly warm- er Saturday; gentle {o moderate sjutherly te southwesterly winds except moderate to fresh southerly in Lynn Canal tenight. Forecast of winas along the ¢oasy of the Guif of Alasks: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Moderate to fresh slowly increas- ing southerly to southwesterly winds; partly cloudy except local showers tonight; Cape Spencer (> Cape Hinchinbrook: Moderate easterly to northeasterly except sutherly to southwesterly winds near Cape Spencer; local showers; Cape Hinchinbrogk to Resurrection Bay: Moderate northeasterly winds; partly cloudy; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: Moderate northerly t> northwesterly winds; fair. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 52.1 36 N 5 431 %0 S 6 40.9 83 SE 18 RADIO REPORTS Weathel Cloudy Rain Rain Time 4:30 p.m. yesterday 29.39 4:30 a.m. today 29.3¢4 Noon today 20.44 TODAY 4:30am. Precip. tempt. 24 hours 20 0 4 35 36 39 36 4:30am. Weather Qvercast Rain Cloudy Overcast Overcast Overcast Overcast Rain Cloudy Clear Pt. Cldy Clear Rain Rain Rain Overcast Overcast Cloudy Rain Rain Clear Lo vest temp. 20 49 35 35 38 35 32 39 38 50 Max. tempt. last 24 hours 24 52 Station Barrow Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethel St. Paul Dutch Harbor Wosnesenski Kanatak Kodiak Cordova Juneau sitka | Ketchikan Prince Rupert | Prince George Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco . 28 0 11 o 0 06 34 43’ 41 42 42 48 38 50 50 i 50 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Fresh moist maritime air had invaded Southeast Alaska, and rain had fallen over this area during tie previous 24 hours. Rain had also fallen at scattered points in the Tanana Valley, and over the Bering Sea and the Aleutian Islands. Partly cloudy to cloudy skies prevailed generally over Alaska, except mostly clear from the Bris- tol Bay area to Prince Willlam Sound. The greatest amoum_u[ pr cipitation during the previous 24 hours was 1.04 inches which W recorded at Ketchikan, Barrow reported a temperature of 20 degr this morning which was the coldest in Alaska. Overcast skies, 1 rain, moderately low ceilings and fair to good visibilities pre over the Juneau-Ketchikan airway this morning. The Friday morning weather chart indicated a center of low [ sute of 2032 inches located at 57 degrees north and 137 deg west. This low was expected to f.l slowly during the next 24 hou The frontal portion of this storm extended northeastward and thence southeastward to near Tatoosh Island, and was moving slowly east- ward. A second low center of 2037 inches was located in the Bering Sea, and relatively low pressure pravailed over the interior of Alaska. A high pressure center of 30.24 inhes was located at 33 df.')zX'vcs north and 133 degrees west and a second high center of 30.35 inches was located at 34 degrees north and 160 degrees west. i | 63 RANGLES BABY CHICAGO, May 16 — Sixtcen- month-old Thomas Lec Corbett May 16 strangled to death today when al —~Only 63000 pounds of halibut piece of cord which tened a| were sold here today at 10.10 to teething ring to became | 10.30 and 7.50 cents a pound twisted around his Mother Seeks House Sc CORD HALIBUT PRICES PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. his ne crib Juneau, May 17 — Sunrise 4:29 a.m, sunset 9:21 p.m. 5.5, TANANA DOCKS HERE FROM SOUTH Alaska Steamship freighter Tan- ana, Capt. A. W. Westerholm, Purser GAMES TODAY The following are final scores of baseball games played this after- noon in the two major leagues as received up to time of going to press: National League New York 4; Chicago 2. | W. Hubbell, docked in Juneau from | Ketchikan at 4 o'clock yesterday American Ledgue Chicago 5; New York G. Mrs. Wunam D, Byron and chiidi Widow of Representative William D. Byron, killed in an airplane accident in February, Mrs. W. D. Byron plans to enter the cam= paign for her late husband’s congressional seat in the Sixth Maryland district. Meanwhile, she directs the musica! education of her children at her Washington home. 81, She Wins Painting Prize Mrs. Anna Mary Robertson Moses, Eagle Bridge, N. Y., who first began with her prize-winning oil ninfins,v York State Exhibition of Oils and Water Colors in Syracuse. first painting she has entered in competition, it won & $250 purchase wiu.l 4 iglist Tho! ‘atson, who do; B al-yur-ol}i great gnndmpth;r of inting four years ago, is shown B:)‘ld 35m Bucket,” at the New | with lumber and other freight, the [ this afternoon at the Baranof Ho- Detroit 5; Philadelphia 4. Cleveland 9; Boston 3. 5 G CLEVELAND ON LOUISE G. E. Cleveland, of B. M. Be; rends Bank, who has been vaca- tioning in the south, is a passei- ger aboard the Princess Louise for Juneay* afternoon with rails and machinery for the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company. Bound for Seward and Kodiak Tanana is scheduled to sail from Juneau for the Westward at 3 o'clock this afternoon. The vessel will return direct to Seattle from Kodiak. . FOR RENT Juneau Liquor Store Space Will Remodel to Suit ___Tenant, See Percy’s Cafe —————— Mrs. Enn Gemmill Is Htflgss Today Lynn Gemmill entertained Mrs tel with luncheon and bridge. Twenty-four guests were asked for the occasion. QUALITY DAIRY SERVICE Boiling Temperature 9 =2 19 Southeast Alaska ALASKA'S FINEST DAIRY PLANT — the only dairy in JUNEAU yet to be award- ed GRADE “A” rating on its PASTEURIZED MILK — is able to supply demands for its products, from districts away from Gastineau Chan- nel. JUNO-MAID ICE CREAM COTTAGE CHEESE BUTTERMILK All produced right in Alaska. All the highest possible stan- dard of quality and sanita- tion—are now easily available to you. Whether you live in Angoon, Sitka, Hoo- nah eor any other SOUTHEAST ALAS- KA TOWN, you can epjay these - 50 Pasteurization Temperature 5% Tuherculosis 139° Destroyed T | Typhaid 137° Destroyed | Septic Sore Throat 134" Destroyed | | | Diphtheria 131° Destroyed | | | Scarlet Fever Destroyed adaedondidyelwdonds g 1 Dysentery Dectroyed Undulant Fever Destroyed lll_ll‘llll'llll'lllI||l|l|uu|nnlvmlml|l||||uu‘ul0|lmllllllllll‘l“l‘ READ UP From Findings of U. S. Department Fresh Dairy Products 4., © of Agriculture. JUNEAU DAIRIES, Inc. Juneau, Alaska—PHONE 638

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