The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 24, 1941, Page 2

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§ ¥ t LSO Gt RUSSIAAID ~ entertan roTC Roosevelt Says All Help Open House at Dugou for Possible to Go to In- Men on Destroyers Due vaded Soviet Here This Weekend WASHINGTON, June 24.—Pre The American Women's Volun- dent Roosevelt today declared tho tary Services, under the chairman- tiris country will give 211 aid possiblc ship of Mrs. Ernest Gruening, to Russia. He tol! a press confer- | urges that all who can volunteer ence that it could 11" be determined | to help entertain the R.O.T.C. men vet just what form the belp will|on the three destroyers arriving take, He said no list of KRussian over the weekend please contart neec has been submitted Mrs, John McCormick. The organ- e ization has made plans to hold an open house at the American Le- = the ships are in port, so that the GE'S ORDERS men will have a' chance to meet Juneauites, Because the destroyers are ar- organization needs as many vol- X > unteers as possible, both to serve Russian-German War during the two days the open house will be held, and to donate Changes Japanese cakes and cookies. It is also urged 8 that there be invitations for the| Stand men to homes in the city i Volunteers to help serve are SAIGON,. Ihdo-Chind, Jtne 24 | asked to call Mrs, McCormick, and Colonel Saito, chiel of the Japan-|those donating cakes, cookles and ese mission in: Indo-Ching, today|C8ffee axe fo call Mrs. Fred Gees- received instructions from Tokyo|lin- All whe can are invited to go o go immediately to Bangkok,(1® 8By time to talk to the men Soilar o) ThAIIGhG |and to send magazines to the Dug- The reason for the order was|Out for their use | i WD 1 il The group expects to continue some quarters, that it has been such entertainment during the sum chused by the new: Situation ’ cori-|Mer for other visiting destroyers,| fonting . Japan because of the 8nd hopes that many will offer| Cermat - Fusdan war. The. orders| their services and come in to: help. from Tokvo canclled the initia1| The Dugout will open Saturday| - flight of the Tokyo-Bangkok sea- MOrning at 10 oclock. plane service which was to have R T been inaugurated today == SOVIET ASSETS RUSSIAN TANKS ARE DESTROYED, GERMA" DRIVE Morgenthau Signs Order wique issiedtonighe says tnel ai Request of Deparf- | ment of State ; INU. S. FREED | Germans have destroyed 280 Rus- sian tanks in the drive eastward at an unnamed point where the| Nazi columns have smashed Soviet | positions after fierce fighting. WASHINGTON, June 24 — The Treasury Department to- | The DNB, German news agency,| day lifted restrictions on Rus- i substantiating the communique,| sian assets in the United says 180 tanks were destroyed in| States. one sector and a luftwaffe de- Secretary Morgenthau signed stroyed 100 more elsewhere. the order at the request of the e R State Department after con- _Louisiana’s production of musk-| sultations. #% fur, in the best seasons, is | The action constituted the apout three times that of all the| first concrete aid step of the iest of the United States and Can- United States te aid Russia in ada combined about 6,000,000 the new war with Germany pelts. and Italy. = A— The freeing of the Russian NOTICE OF HEARING | assets n?nke them available for NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN| DPurchasing war material, here that @ hearing upon the position| ©F €lsewhere. of WESLEY W. BARRETT, bank- B i rupt, who prays that he be dis- ¢harged from all debts pmvnhlv;Refreshlng MUSKaI against his estate under, the pro-| visions of the Acts of Congress lating to Bankruptcy, will be had| before this Court Juneau, Al-| aska, on the 26th duy of July. 1941, at_the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, or soon Of interest to the residents of Ju- neau is the announcement of the held Sunday evening in the Odd thereafter as counsel can be heard,|Fellows Hall. Beginning at 7:30 home and that all known creditors aund|c'clock the program will consist of | other persons in intere may ap- time and place and|ented local musical artists. 1 show cause, if any there be, | Being arranged by Bernice Mead, the prayer of said petition should|Mary Jukich, Elder Huffaker, | Elder Tate under the auspices of the not be granted. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, June|Mormon church, no effort is ‘being 21st, 1941. spared to arrange a program will be refreshing from world events and give real enjoyment to the peo ple of Juneau GEORGE F. ALEXANDER, District Judge June 24, 1941. adv. Publication date, -+ HELP AN i CLOTHES that are CLEANED OFTEN—Wear Longer! Bend YOUR GARMENTS Triangle Your appearance 18 Assured When You Have Them Cleaned Herd! i Telephone 713 or write The Alaska Territorial Employment Service for this qualified worker. papers, has had following work ex- perience: 1': years as helped around lumber mills, month at kitechen helper in nery, 1 year as whistle punk around logging around for ES a shingle mill. Please call 323, ——eeo—— Bubscrme o paid circulation. CANADA DRY &5 | = SPARKLING WATER ! Nraip Protesting anlml'whal they {ermed gross imaccdracies in a mural representing their forehears, Cheyenne pressed the opinion: “It stinks.” dians’ side mo per cent. (COUPLE MARRIED EARLY MORNING SERVICE TODAY | BY TREASURY yyics (orreta Gaynor and. Mr. George W. Kellyfo | Honeymoon in Sitka I At an early morning service to- | day, Miss Lorreta Gaynor and Mr. |George W. Kelly were married at { the Church of the Nativity, the Rev. whmm G. LeVasseur performing e ceremony. i The bride was lovely in a two-| piece French biue afternoon dress with pavy blue accessories and a | white orchid corsage. ’ Her attendant, Miss Kathleen K(‘l- {1y, daughter of the groom, was at- | | tired in a beige wool suit with dark | | sage. Isto Be Held Sunday . and |in the ALASKAN | kitchen| hour |arrived in Juneau and left aboard |un Electra for Fairbanks enroute blue accessories and a gardenia cor- Mr. Joseph Bird man for the groom, | The church was decorated with baskets of pink and yellow gladiolas and other garden flowers [ After the ceremony the bridal par- | acted as [ty, with George Kelly, Jr. Charles Kelly, and Mrs. Joseph Bird, had a | 5:30 'clock wedding breakfast, in the | | Iris Room. at the Baranof. The couple leaves on the North | Joast tomorrow morning to spvnd‘ a week in Sitka for their honey- mocn, and will stay at the Sitka | forthcoming musical festival to be jote]. \ Mr. and Mrs. Kelly will make their ! t 850 Basin Road. Kelly is the daughter of Mr.‘ Mrs a variety of numbers given by ml-j;md Mrs. John Gaynor of Milwau- kee, Wisconsin. She is a graduate of | Milwaukee University and she taught | Milwaukee pyblic schools tor‘ a time. . Mr. Kelly is assistant architect o[ that | the Construction Division in the Of- | fice of Indian Affairs, He formerly lived in Vallejo, California. ] — .- HOME COOKING | ~ DEMONSTRATION | " WELL ATTENDED | | i | | With an appetizing aroma of| | cooking food filling the Coliseum | KITCHEN HELPER:.Young man,| Theatre, Miss Elizabeth Lake, West-! | ment Adjutant J. T. Petric age 20, possessing current seaman’s inghouse Home Economist, todny‘ conducted the first of thrée two-, demonstrations of vitamized| 1| cooking to an interested gathering| can-| of over 250 women. The stage was attractively ar- camp, and 4 months work|ranged with modern kitchen appli- ‘ anc A stove was on either side; of a large refrigerator, | In the center of the stage was| the Dauy Alaska a table where Miss Lake demon- | Emplre—the paper with the larges |strated actual cooking and serving.| | She stressed - attractive ways of serving - foods to appeal to ‘the ap- petite. i Tomorrow Miss Lake will hold| another demonstration at the Col-| iseum at the same time, starting ut 2 oclock GAMES TODAY Final scores of American League|’ games played this afternoon as re-| u»nwa up to press time, are as fol- ; New York 9. Cleveland 2; Boston 13. | g gy BEZ FLIES TO INTERIOR ! Nick Bez, prominent Alaska can- | neryman, President of the Peril Strait Packing Company at Todd, to Anchorage, tribesmen picketed the postoffice at Watonga, Okla. The panel is below. south with him. THL DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1941. POST OFFI(E PI(KETED BY INDIANS After studying the mural, » man is Mayor A. E. Goerke, who said he wa Chief Red Bird, 71, éx- on the In- The whi ]udy Garland Man She'll Wed | - Wedding of Judy Garland, popular screen singer, and Dave Rose, & young musician-compose; xpected before the first of the This picture was tak after they announced their engagement. 'WARNER, LEGION COMMANDER, T0 | ITALIANSHIPIS TORPEDOED BY COMETOJUNEAU BRITISH SUB Arrives by Plane July 14‘French Deslroyer Thought for Five-Day Stayat Sunk by Aerial At- Headquarters : tack Off Syria ‘ 2 | Commander J. National Milo LONDON, June 24—The British Warner of the American Legion Admiralty announced today thet will arrive in Juneau by PAA plane'an Italian liner of about 20,000 tons July 14 for the first official visit|was hit by two torpedoes in the of a National Commander to | Alaska Department. | The Admiralty also announced| Warner and his aide, Deutschle,| twe Trench desiroyers were dam- will remain here until July 19, vis- | aged in a battle with British war- iting Department headquarters and |ships off the an coast. The es-| third “was almost certainly sunk” ra- by aerial torpedoes. a limited number of defensc tablishments, according to a diogram received today by Depart. from! - Exclusive Tongue Of Switzerland Used by Minority BASEL, Swilzerland, June There is no single “Swiss™ language, WITH GERMANS Alo"G FRO but there is one tongue, Romansch, ‘which it spoken only in Switzer- Little Nation Clalms Neu- frality, But Joins Nazi Troopers -e- National Adjutant Frank i | uel. e St < S FINNS FIGHT | Sw1tzerland has four languages— German, French, Ttalian and Ro- mnnsch The latter is spoken by 0,000 of its more than 4,000,- | \uoo peoble Because Romansch, which is de- | scended from and closely related to cast over the Rome radic today, ;231::;; u:;,l::h;: ”A‘Li on;}:m:;f; | picked upf here, said Finnish sol= yexthooks and translations of class. diers are definitely fizhting aion3-|jes are being published to Keep it side of German troopers on a front| gjjve, stretching from the Arctic Ocean to i ings ! i (e B ok | To. c_ampl te things further in | multi-linqual Switzerland, there are R leven two Romansch languages— | Ladinisch and Surselvisch. ——.re d- § NEW YORK, June 24s-A brc LAC! Kl“YS LEAVE E; V. Lack T nal fiscal vgonL; . for the Forest Service in th: San| 0 FAIYT CAMP. Francisco area, who has been on :m[ Bids o8 painting the bulldings inspecticn tour in Alaska for thej©f the Montana Creek CCC camp past three wesks, leaves tomory ow on\ b R e M the Aleutian to return to San Fiafig) Bervisor W. A. Chippertield of the cisco. Mis. Lackey, Floramay In F""‘“ SErvice fut Jusied and Shirley Williams - will xu!um 5 ‘BUY DEFENSE BONDS | vis the ; Mediterranean Sea [ | i Jerby cars in Thur: m p start cf the i ;'H be held in Juneau, i STRIKE BILL GETS HOUSE RIGHT OF WAY Frisco Shlpyard Workers Fail fo Sign with Navy Civil Service ASSOCIATED PRESS) Sam Bayburn of the iouse today told reporters that the ill to give President Roosevelt rcad powers under the draft law > deal with strikes in defense in- ustries will be given the right-of- vay in the House. The measuredds to replace the Vin- m Bill, providing for a 30-day cool- 1g off period before a strike could called in defense industri: Striking CIO and AFL machinists n 11;8an Francisco Bay shipyards ailed tc ister for Navy work on Civil Service status late he Navy opened rezistra 5 an_hour Jater there was no in- ut ication that .any machinists had igned, United Mine Workers union rep- sentatives and Southern Soft Coal perators held another two-hour cnference in Washington this af- erncon on the details of a ontract, hut it was repc \greement has been reached. i A o N M IBIG PRE-DERBY MEETING TO BE HELD TONIGHT Numbers amweaiers for Thursday Race fo Be Given Drivers n by Soap Box sday’s race here ¥ill be assigned tonight at a meet- ng of all entrants in the social room :f the Resurrection Lutheran Church it 7:30 ock. Every bey will also be given a race ring the Soap Box Der- sweater b )y emblem in red, white and blue. Numbers to be The sweaters are gifts of individual members of the Rotary Club. | Yesterday lanes ted on |the 12th Street ccurse for the big | race Thursday. Racing will bezin at {2 . following a parade. The parade will begin at 1 ¢ afterncon from-the , proceeding Franklin, along F ward, up Sew g Fourth and DI ck Thurs Wost Coast n Admiral Way to ans will be in the pars vill cars and racers, Eteel crash helm tributed o entrs be dis- the par- s..when | ade forms. The Soap Box Derby, first ever co-sponsor- Club and »d by the Juneau, Rotar | Daily Alaska Empire. Prizes include | |a free trip to Akron, Ohio, to com- sete in the national finals, a bicy- | le, radio, sleeping ha: iit, yes iter, a variety of medals and trophies Chief of Police Dan Ralston le afternoon asked that dog owners g, fishing out- keep their canines at home tomor- | row night and also Thursday after ngon during the running of the der by. The dozs ter in.s the sport but unluckily get in front of the cars or otherwise make the going Llangerous. >-oe luncheon Tomorrow Honors Mrs. Glasse: In honor of Mrs. John A. Gluse a| luncheon will be given by the World | Service Cirele in the social room.of | the Northern Light Presbyterian church, tomorrew . afternoon at 1 olclock. Original plans called for a picnic at Auk Bay but unfavorable her made a change of plans ne- sary. The tables will be decorated wit.h | sarden flowers, The afternoon will be pent informally. Mrs. Claude Hirst is in charge of the luncheon and helping with arrangements are the Mesdames Burrass Smith, Fred Geeslin, and Earl McGinty. Nine- | Leen women wfll mmplete the guests. HOSPITAL NOTES Michael ‘Skehor, a medical pa- tient, was admitted to St. Ann’s | Hospital yesterday. William R. Gerry was admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital to receive surgical attention late yesterday. Walter Neylon, who has received medical treatment at St. Hospital, noon. ! Mrs. A, W. Stewart underwent a major operation at St. Ann's Hospital this forenoon. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Bromley are the parents of a six-pound baby gir] -born this morning at 4:45 o'- clock -at St. Ann's Hospital. Mrs. George Peterson was dis- missed” from St. Ann’s Hospital this| forenoon, She was a medical pa- | tient. . . ¢! War Department announces s pass to the Capitol The-| pen and pencil, tool chests and | appear to want to en-! Ann’s was dismissed this fore-| . THEWEATHER U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinit7, beginning at 4:30 p.m., June 2%: Mostly cloudy with intermittent light rain and not much change in temperature tonight and Wednesday; lowest temperature ht toni | about 53 degrees, highest Wednesday 58 degrees; gentle to moder- ate southeasterly winds, Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Occasional light rain and t much change in temperature tonght and Wednesday; moderate southeastetly winds eXcept moderate to fresh in Lynn Canal, | {Forecast of - winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alasko Dixon Entrance to Gape Spencer: Moderate to fresh southerly to southeasterly winds, becoming scutherly 0 southwesterly Wednesday, local shewers; Cape Spenecer to Cape Hinchinbrool moderate (o fresh southerly to southeasterly winds, local shewers; Cape Hirehin- brook te Resurrection Bay: maoderate northeasterly winds, partly cloudy tonight, increasing cloudiness Wednesday. LOCAL DATA ‘Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathel 4:30 pm. yesterday 29.82 60 64 3 20 Cloudy 4:30 am. today 29.81 82 6 Rain Noon today 29.87 5 82 12 Cloudy RADIO REPORTS TODAY { Max. tempt. Lovest 4:30a.m. Precip. 4:30a.m. Station last 24 hours | temp. tempt. 24 hours Weather Barrow 41 | 35 36 01 Pt. Cldy Fairbanks 8 5 52 05 Cloudy Nome 54 ! 48 51 06 Showers Dawson 75 | 54 54 0 Clondy Anchorage 58 52 52 25 Rain Bethel 57 } 47 11 Cloudy St. Paul 42 | 38 Rain | Dutch Harbor .. 51 1 45 Cloutly Wosnesenski 52 | 46 Cloudy COordova ... 58 | 50 Cloudy Juneau 63 | 53 Rai Kefiehikan 51 | 53 Rain Prinee: Rupert 64 | 51 01 Cloudy Prince George .. 71 ! 42 05 Cle Edmonton 81 | 60 28 Pt. Cldy Seatitie 3 | 53 [ Cloudy Portland 8 | 53 5 y Cloudy San Francisco .. 69 | 51 59 0 Cloudy WEATHFR SYNOPSIS Moist maritime air JWird xpenet ‘ated most of Alaska this morning and due to the influence .of a low pressure center to the west of Atka, fresh, maritime air had peneirated the Aleutian Islands and the Bering Sea: Rain was falliny this morning at most points from Southeast Alaska fo the Alaska Range and Cook Inlet and at | tered points in the Aleutian Isands and the Bering Sea. Rain had | fallen during the:previous 2! hours at most stations over most of ‘Alaska. The greatest: amount of cipitation was 1.06 inche which' was recorded at- Ketchikan. The warmest temperaiure yester- day afternocn was 78 degrees ‘at F .irbanks and the coldest this moderately low lings, the Juneau-Ketchikan morning 36 degrees at Barrow. O rercast, light rain: and fair visibilities pr:vailed over airway this morning. Fhe |Tuesday morning weathe: chart indicated a storfh frontal trough . extended from the interio- of Alaska south southeastward to near the ceast of Southeast Alaska and thence southwestward into lower latitudes and was expectel to move slowly eastward during the -next 24(hours. A Jdow cenle’ was located to the west of Atka and the storm frontal trough extended from this cented to near Atka and thence southward into lower latitudes and was expect- ed to move about 500 miles eastward during the next 24 hou Rel- and atively low pressure prevailed along the coast of Washington Oregon. A high cester of 3041 inches was located at 34 degrees north and 147 degrees west and a second high center of 30.30 inches was located at 35 degrees north and 167 degrees west and a high crest cxtended northward to the Alaska Peninsula. Juneau, June 25 — Sunrise 3:52 a.m., sunset 10:09 p.m. SOLDIERS LEAVE | INGLEWOOD PLANT WASHINGTON, June 24 — The that soldiers were withdrawn at noon today from the Nerth American Aviation plant at Inglewood, Cal. | The troops were moved to a bi- vouac area mear the plant, which |they took over when the factory was tied,up by a'strike. | Tenant. SO AT See Percy’s Cafe i | BUY DEFENSE BONDS R TR, ‘The Daily Alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska mnewspaper. FOR RENT Juneau Liquor Store Space Will Remodel to Suit DEMAND GENML ELECTRIC Announces the New 74 o A "e” MODEL CLEANER These features indlcate the great value built into this cleaner: ® Motor Driven Brush @ High Speed Motor ® Requires No Oiling ® Dustproof Bag @ Spotlight PRICE ONLY 39.9 5 m,gsxn mcmc IGHT & POWER (0. OPEN ALL NIGHT Percy Has : Thrown the Key Aumy! It's m llle Channel OPEN ALL NIGHT-Every Nigh! PERCY’S CAFE PHON E 94

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