The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 6, 1941, Page 2

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{ARRIAGE VOWS BITTER REDS focumem BY JUNEAU couplfl and Kotzebue and Wainwright and| Mrs. Hilda Runquist and daugh-| : et some specimens 'of polar bear| ter, Mrs. Ethel Whyte, moved to- and walrus and take a lot of pic- day to Mrs. Runquist’s cottage on RAI‘.VJA Miss MafJOrle JOhnS'Ofl erner added. St. Ann's Avenue. Mrs. Jack Ell- . b N ! vd better reverse your hunt,'!man and daughter who were oC-| ‘\‘ fls h(‘“‘; d Hess|g in Dufresne advis “Fly | cupying the cottage this summer —_ ¢ h traight to Wainwright, while therehave moved out the Glacier High-| Germans Claim Shelling oi Lutheran Church [Communique ue Dedlares U. |Couple Who Have Hunfed =i or i way for thelr temporary residencs s | 7 i's. Lerner's eyes opened wide .o ~ Approach 25 Miles iss Matjorie J | 5. Destroyer Made : and Fished AllQver ana « smie of antcipation 16 w0 oy ppriv ~ became the bride « iarold H. | her face as Dufresne went on to| # sifie: ooting of East of Cily Floakigh I i c el Atfack on U-boat | World Here tell them how an Bskimo whale| ReSulsr | business imeethg o | I 1o ouglas y C s s cton Luther Church, w th | hunt might be arranged, giving i | < s s 6 o e R i1 . [for next Monday evening, begin- (Continued from Page On: ev L. Cauble re (Continued from Page One) | A lively, likeable couple, brown them a chance to take complete ‘= "% 0% . was as a proverbial nut from their out-| color pictures of the event ¥ - S ade Rod | was attacked, when he told the of-door jife, Wiil leave Juneau to- “Thats the way we'll do it, the . Wit EER S 1e Ju Groar Was fived ‘upon without country, to ge some .=~p°('1mem of \“‘,m in - Abrils ahd g6t -oliv o g ey’ Y The Germar gh Y " I and get our polars | a are ng se 12 The German High Commar “or sning while enroute to Iceland the Osborn Caribou for the new .4 £ R e _DOATS |5 boats are amon ihose g e its usu retice during it g and walrus and ‘whale pictures, gq)) fig] ¢ fleet now assembling e phrics o DAL ylack suit With | with mail, and the Greer retaliataq North American Hall of the Am- then we can still get to the Alaska §o 4 ¢ Tabu Rivesifor o i S § black accessc | with depth charges, erican Museum of Natural History. .. . : Ska [at the mouth of g said, “Operations of attack " Hessis | 3 bR | gt {“'They are Mr. and Mrs, Michael| eninsula : in time o get somefiny try to accumulate thelr win- asb are progiomeing fAVOrT mdiihs'Htutlough akeview,| COMMENT UNNECESSARY |Lerner, who have fished and hunted | Brownies before the season closes.”|ter stakes. The locak seiners arc e cities OTegON. Where he is with the Gaz-| gyDR PARK, N, Y. Sept. 6— all over the world, and who keep The T4mers B been dn SOUthagrs, genry Stevens g sokidovge O O e Ukraine, cone 1D Service under the Department white House officials here declined coming back to Alaska often, to American waters, fishing off the|jack Marshall and Thomas Bow- B o o o iti5 scaMdehiule ot O Agtist to'make an'y comment on the Ger-|enjoy the'thrill of the Territory's|C0dsts of Peru ‘and Equador, then|mgp, tinwed: to's i b e peaiolr oo U JITHR A will live in the Fosbee | man communique. unspoiled’ wilderness and abundance|in the Bahamas, this summer. They — g Ll German assaulie afer b the Apartments while in Junead, and | “acting Presidential Secretary Wil- of big game. also got in some rod and reel fish-|FRANK CASHEL AND xxlz‘y'l'«‘fv.,:“:};;}‘:f:xl~E~f‘f‘ ey sad, | | an DR B e liam Hassett, informed of the con-| In Juneau the past two days, the ing for broadbill swordfish off the MYRTLE HOLLYWOOD - i 4 BB tents of the communique, said: |Lerners yesterday went salmon Nova Scotia coast., ARE WEDDED AT SITKA 9 % P {“I'll show this to the President fishing with Dr. W. W. Council| The Lerners were the first fish-| Returni from attendance at Senlor Gu]id Sews HfiHE‘E fiow {when T have a chance but consider-|and Mr. Lerner demonstrated hisiermen ever to land a broadbill|tne marriage of her son Frank to X "' ling its source, I don't think any|fishing ability by catching a 28-.swordfish caught on rod and recl|ppiss Hollywood of Sitka, Mrs. E. ¢ o \ k P | comment is necessary. It carries|pound King. Tomorrow morning|in Canadian waters. In fact, they'p Cashel, ‘accompanied by her of eliare vvor [ J lits own' comment. Tt is & typical they' Will ‘fly to' ‘Whitehorse, then gaiq, in all the world, only 358 gaughter Margaret Lindsay, ar- . comment considering its source, O & special plane to their camp at wordwish have ever been 16| ijyed home here By plane. Story Members of the met puml( S{m Your interpretation is as good as x"':gye ';:‘;:m“,‘re‘x’r‘;‘mc“‘““gpjx’;;l‘i by the rod and reel method of the wedding which took them 17 A k. ", mine.” were willing to assure anyone that|, e " for their first fall w‘m, x) | 2 getting the caribou specimens, they Al :‘ntrh” ;l L :"‘;lml‘h ‘4. « e former capital city about afternoon to ou ".L‘r-llll i' Total enrollment in the Junea\l ln‘end to take some Kodachrome |’ e a 4 s 8 ea hing ten days ago was told as follow: for the coming seaou. Mrs. . C-lp une g inonts after the first weekd | OIS hiottes of the Blg gAmE N the| "\ 1oL o nog accoctate of| gy aRde D Gardner, president of the organt- (dbel SRR o ooy to.” B m.e,' Specially bead u el el associate of | gqughter of Mr. and Mrs. John zation, presided at the meeting, oo el o ade by Superine| Spring Plins };u- Ame 3;(:“. Museum of Natura! yollywood of Sitka, became the which was held in tendent’ of Schools A. B. Pmmps Talking this morning with Frank “'“fl- oy not only enthu- yride of Mr. Frank Cashel, only Mrs. C. E. Ric today. Du!resne, executive officer of the Siastic fishermen, hunters and stu-/.on of Mr. and ‘Mrs. E. F. Cashel The group decided to start their e figurcs are slightly lower Alaska ' Game Commission, they dents of natural history mft they o Douglas at a pretty church wed- activities including a icod sale .4 on the same day last year, but were planning far beyonid their are sincerely concerned with con- ging in the historic city on Sat- planned soon, and thi 1 i a rise fs expected as soon' as many immediate trip to the Yukon. |servation measures to preserve yrday evening at 8 o'clock. them further the next meetiuy of the farilies, now living ‘outside 14 Tonks like: gt R | “We want to make a ~pnvg hunt-; wildlife Given in marriage by her father, on September 19 During the afiei- Juneau, enroll theéir ‘children. wpeko"nd“ q‘cé’m“,mg Wf; -;"rle;'oc‘;i:):: the bride was beautifully gowned noon members sewed for the Red In' the Gtade Sehool, ‘enrollment , 8000 s | BO BOd F d I b in white satin with long train and this morn p \ & Cross and for own welfare is follows: Kkindergarten, 3 Here, ing of the Weathet' Buredu y s y oun ln ce ox fingertip veil. She carried a bo- work under the direction of Mrs. first grads 68; second ecrade, 48] ol quet of rosebuds and gardenias. T " b lear weather today and to-! 35 ™ Willlam Holzhed The custing (hird giade. 49; fowtn grade, 08/, S AL NECOIEE ORR A o Miss Esther Walters, bridesmatd, committee s composed of Mrs. fifth gTA i :“Q",';‘r&di‘ i probable cloudiness toworrow after- wore a'‘godn OF blue salin' amd Holzheimer. Mrs. Charles Fox, Mrs, seventh ara an :‘N R 1 *«l"»h : moon, but with little possibility of she carried rosebuds and sweet 2 making ot o) o g Gardner, R bo s 'i b 1 : 't"“w':r.“ ”““ hedvy rains until the ' weékend 18 peas. Best man was Bill O'Dell of mittee asks ti ‘»‘fl‘ Sk e ;1 + was 592, | Pet. | Sitka. in helping with this work contact “”'.’ ol A S “‘; 4:)110‘.1-(-33 i SR | . Following the ceremony a recep- Mrs. Holzheimer, cor: Sl e o 08I 3 tion was held at the home of the Several visitors were present at (Wb S Tor in the junior BRANI lEAv.m | buide’s parents and during the eve the meeting, which was followed by [¢ ,and 45 in the Senior class, a | ning close to 200 pe to a social hour. Viotal of 2110 'Dhe ‘preVISls YeAr's congratulate the coup! re~ G AT total was 247 on the sdme day. FOR KET(M g i i - - Woman's (1t Plans |y hoen'BEpsoN, Rummagi sale ing held © rummage b by : the Juneau Woman’s Club | Muss Martha Person, who is visit- scheduled to get under way at the planned for Thursday, Fric:y and jn, her brother the Rev. Walter A. First Cicy on next Wednes'dn.y Saturday of next week, il Wes gopoleff, was honored yesterday Men from here headed for the | announced today. The sale willtake evening at a surprise birthday hearings are Clarence Olson, F‘ish- place in the Occidental annex \p;nu for eighteen guests by Mrs. eries supervisor; W. E. Couch, rep- which is across the street from the | Hilmer Johnson, and Mrs. Walter resenting the Fishh and Wildlife Bus Depot. |A. Soboleff. After games were Service in Alaska this summer: and| ed favorite songs were sung. Frank Dufresne, executive officer| G LS i HOSPITAL NOTES .7 gifts and all enjoyed refreshments by hostesses. The | R Memorial € Kalia Albegoff of & was ac mitted last night to 5t Ann’s Hos-' Pe <L week fisheries pital to receive medical attention. ‘1, v her homie In ‘Wrar and | plans on ente the Wrangell In- Dr. and Mrs. Taylor J. Pyle are stitute as a ser high school. the parents of a baby bov AT this morning at ¢ \ i to vale So0n " LONORED, PARTY - SEA BATILE The leave sheries Juneau ) Ketchiban, and of the Fish aboard to attend fisheries in Southeast Alaska, today, with en route local of- 1earings The honored guest was tendered of the Alaska Game Commission. In Ketchikan, they will meet Dr. v Ira Gabrielson, director of the Fish h and Wildlife Service, sent here to| conduct the hearings. The Juneau is here on September 18. Fleeing Prowler boat Brant is due and Wildlife scheduled to be held THE DAILY ALASKA [-MP]RL SATURDAY, SEPT. 6, 1941. i ing trip Gp here,” Mrs. clared entnusia H ally to do spring hunting would be the Alaska Peninsula. 3 1 ] | Charles Bower, a playmate of Billy Krewson, shows how eight-year-old Billy’s body was found stuffed into an ice box in a vacant Reading, Pa., store. Dr. P. D. Good, coroner, looks on. The boy had been missing for & week when the body was found. His bruised body showed evidence of The child weighed '-—-'"— | S0t ks by WimATise: ounces, and has been named J | il P) A \ Sllps ws Ca M s cailes)s 3 Franklin. | Y ] ! blue jeans, a sudcen fear struck the — i1 AN i g SHRI"KAGE city farmer “Wait a minute—those Mrs, Mary Rellly entered St Anu's | | A1SK AN ' PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6—An in- fit me now. But I expect to lose a Hospital last night as a | = truder fleeing from Thomas Me- w0t~ this summer. Maybe I better patient. | one 713 or wrile Farland’s home today was chased by | NEW YORK, Sept. 6—Determined | buy a smaller pair.” — ‘ | Ter . two goliphuen. ito lose some excess poundage during | The clerk shook his head, con- Alvin Rudolph was admitted to | It looked like he might get away his summer sojourn in Vermont, the | tinued to wrap the overalls, replied: the Government H al for med- | | | | unttl— rather stout gentleman decided the |«pister, if you can shrink as fast jcal treatment yesterday He sprinted by a gasoline filling quickest way would be through labor | 55 th youll be deing pretty e i Sl WATTRESS—Young woman, age | Station, stepped on an ofl spot and oh his farm. So he went to the |go0q." i " Subscrice o the Deny Alaska|21, high school education. Experi- Skidded right into the grease pit. general store to buy a pair of loose, | = oo Empire—the paper with the largesl;enced wailress soda fountain work, | ity comfortable overalls. pnld circulation. ete. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS As the clerk was wrapping up the BUY MEFE STAMPS Cun ior ES 362 BRINGING UP. FATHER GIVE ME A BOX OF= TI "BRING YOLI BACK PILLS-PUTONE IN_ A GLASS OF WATER-PLEASE-~ I WANT TO TAKE IT NOW= § G OF THET TvE \© ABSOLUTELY WORTHLESS Y. TOKE & LO0W AT THESE svecxv\cw NS RTOR - 3w UALZ DD Y01 EER GEAR 0F ANTHWG -0, RIDICLLOLS 2 WHAT O Nou SUGGEEST, COLONEL? o FYQU GLAS NEWS te' tapers and three-tier wedding cake, The newlyweds will continue t» live in Sitka whers Mr. Cashel is employed on the base project A 1001, an assista; of Douglas as engine Hi gradu- the ate young man had a couple of years at the University of Alaska. For the past two years he worked oa various engineering in Juneau, projec B e TEACHERS RETURNING Miss Eleanor Warren, ol home economics, Douglas Hign School, returned to the channel yesterday after a summer vacation in the States, ready to resumé her teaching here next Monday. An automobile tour in company with two teachers from Kirkland, Wash.,, which covered a ot of ter- ritory from Seattle to Mexico and east to New York City, they visii- ed many points of special interest. | Arthur Ladd, last of local faculty members to return for the new school term, was due to arrive to- day by plane after a brief visit with his parents in Cataldo, Idaho. ... — 4-H CLUB MEETING Meeting of local Four-H Cluo girls was held at the City Hall last evening with their leader, Mrs. Glen Rice. Reinstatement of twn former members, Noreen Andrews By G EORGE McMANUS By B;LLY‘ DeBECK T RECKON T\ SRRNE To WOL ON THER, \W{Q\M&TS 1 TARRIEY To REVENQOERS WHEN T SHUCK OFF THESE CRCKN_BR\TCHES AN GO BACK TO Ty BlG SMOKIES " THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU FORECASTS: Juneau and vicinity: Clear or partly cloudy and not much change in temperature tonight and Sunday but with increasing cloudiness: Sunday afternoon and with morning fog in Gastineau Channel; lowest temperature tonight about 48 degrees, highest Sun- day 64 degrees, light to gentle variable winds. | Southeast Alaska: Clear or partly cloudy tonight with increasing cloudiness Sunday ‘afternoon, local morning fog in the chanels; not | much change in temperature; gentle to moderate variable winds, be- | coming southerly Sunday afternoon. :‘ Wind and weather along the Gulf of Alaska tonight and Sunday: | Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: moderate 'southwesterly to south- erly winds becoming moderate soitheasterly Sunday afternoon, part- ly cloudy with increasing cloudiness Sunday; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: moderate 'southeast rly winds, becoming moderate to | fresh Sunday, local rain tonight, rin Sunday; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: moderate t> fresh easterly to southeasterly winds, rain; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: fresh southeasterly winds, becoming moderate to fresh southerly during Sunday, rain. LOCAL DATA i Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 4:30 p.n. yesterday 30.18 53 187 s 5 Overcast 4:30 a.m. today 30.29 49 99 Calm [} Overcast 10:30 am. . 30.33 56 80 w 4 Cloudy RADIO REPORTS ! ™ KY mopay Max. tempt. Lowest 4:30am. Precip. 4:30am. Station last 24 hours | temp. tempt. 24 hours Weather Barrow 40 25 38 T Overcast Fairbanks 64 34 3¢ [ Clear Nome . 56 40 41 0 Cloudy Dawson 64 33 45 07 Cloud; Anchorage 66 | 44 44 0 Clear St. Paub, 51 | a1 49 19 Rain Atka 58 | 50 50 0 Cloudy Dutch Harbor .. 59 i 49 49 AT Rain Kodiak * 65 51 54 0 Overcast Cordova 60 45 46 0 Clear Juneaw 55 49 49 20 Sitka 64 46 51 4 Ketchikan 65 | 49 50 0 Clear Prince 'George .. 65 47 n 24 Overcast Edmonton’ ... 64 45 45 ™ Overcast Seattle o 55 56 .04 Overcast, Portland . ¥ 53 53 01 Cloudy WEATHER SYNOPSIS Clear or partly cloudy: skies prevailed over Alaska this morn- ing éxeept mostly overcast with light rain falling from Kodiak Is- land to the Aleutian Islands and the Bering Sea. Rain had fall during the past 24 hounrs from Petersburg to Juneau and at Barros and from the Alaska Peninsula to the Bering Sea and the Aleuti: Islands. * The greatest amount of rainfall was 47 hundredths of an inch which was reecorded at Dutdh Harbor. The highest temperature yesterday afternoon was 65 degrees which was recorded ai Ket kan, Kodiak and Anchorage and the lowest last night 25 degrees Barrow, Scattered to broken clouds except local patches of fog near Petersburg’ and overcast with moderately low ceilings near Juneau prevailed over the Juneau-Ketchikan airway this morning. The Saturday morning weather chart indicated a new low had developed and moved northeastward with the center of 2932 inches iocated at 52 degrees north and 165 degrees west and was expected to'move to near Kodiak Island during the next 24 hounrs. A high pressure center of 30.45 inches was located at 43 degrees north and 137 degrees west and a high crest extended northward over the eastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska. Juneau, September T7— Sunrise 6:08 a.m. sunset 7:43 p.m. and Peggy Cochrane, was effected. which affords such jolly time for After a routine business session dance folks on both sides of the games and refreshments were en- channel. joyed. Their next meeting was set - eees for September 26, to be held at the e Z 2 home of Patsy Balog. | SHWING _‘_‘E’_“ MEETS AT T RIS The Monday night sewing club EAGLES DANCE will hold the first session, follow- The Eagles Hall will be the scene ing the summer vacation on Mon- tonight of another of thoSe popu- day night at the home of Mrs. A, lar priced Snturduy mght dances J. Balog ODD ADDRESS | THE BOSTON CLUB 1S . LOCATED ON CANAL " | STREET IN NEWORLEANS CoLoniAL pOSTMASTERS HUNG LIGHTED LANTERNS IN THEIR WINDOWS TO ANNOUNCE. THE ARRIVAL OF THE MAIL/ MAURICE PROC’TER OF MINERAL PoinT, Wis., GE PAID THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT THE &U"‘r OF $28792 FOR'THE PRIVILEGE OF HAULING MAILS 93,000 'MILES! g™ Jopace— y 5, 1936, n-—nou-dumnm 75 ¥ Contributor: Alfred Tishler, Los Angeles. d a bid of one cent a year to haul the!:nlisx? &flgsewizoc i Ofl“endah. received eight one-cent checks ight' years’ work. necessary, however, to post a bond ?:m’h cast Pxoetep 38687‘0:. 'us, Procte; actually paid the governs ment;to haul Ha- United Shm mails. Ak, i s -« ) ) N -

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