The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 9, 1941, Page 2

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Shortly ke-off FOUR-HOUR FLIGHT, 1, are 1 ing appar sorted. Being MAH WHO (ASHED WORTHLESS CH HERE 15 AR P ha st City and a suspended sentence of six months It was understood he would make he dv \§ BROUGHT BACK | BY HRS. STEVENS Fali and Early Winter Lines | ine, Show | | VicorianTrend - | More rel ently from a buy- the West Coast markets, ay Stever of the Jones- shcp in Juneau has brought the latest of fashion news for fall and early winter season, the with what 't or mid-winter. Probably the biggest ws in the bion picture is the soft shoulder| line first started last Spring. There has been a radical acceptance of ;o stiggestion of Charles Beale, | this shouider treatment, which is rounded and slightly dropping, with » arm-holes, some of which full Dolmans and Raglens. ) the more conservative cuts are looking bisi sleeves, yokes, and lling from the yokes lar a fullne waist tuc buik abc € wer than hefore It wi mer hip longisi eplun: In peplums, back fullness is popular, or flares hand- 1 in different ways such as drap- this is the slim-| the peplum. and straight or flared and tiered. Victorian their appeal. Fullness in skirt with draped and gathered| im coats with capelets over! [ sulder, bonnets, and muffs; be the continued trend. Not, cnly in Hnes is this apparent, but! also in materials and trims and| colors. Rich velvety woolens, stiffi aline and faille, and ottoman silks are important. Black 1s Favorite Black is of course the favorite of | tyle shades Others leading the, sreens and purples, the from deep royal 10 for evening di nber with 1 a ) nur nd m-| Twe than ever for Military ir prominent in 100 to fa recom ummes may well the new ) bwebt it hosi nd as a change 1 shift to a je loves. | arance, a| led belt, a lace col-| COnNV tion piece” clips; ised with a basic black! Knits Are Nutura ‘nits are nat for these late h fashil ilwear is| ! ong waist- e bodices and less “'their stay here one of the “ pleasant posts they have occupied ed lines. In other mater-| velveteens are popular with the cer set as well as wool jerseys )l-like mossy crepes. Coarser being used in jackets. Suits are still as important as , but more emphasis is being {laid cn dresses. Care in the details of each one is making them differ- ient and acceptable for the transi- iion period Naklie was others market ed to have Comp! ned by here, where against - | twills backing in the sur Claude Hir | Is Redecorafing | His Office ; un-4 ornaments the Hirst, Alaska for Affairs, toc ST st office ae Superintendent in ! Bureau of Indian | Gel Fishing Fines Five more fishermer 18100 each today ai Petersburg for g in closed ! were y on the Hirst office pen and ink elching Alaska and fe, dc George ol the | were lined objects of ment, hun; walls, is a of a picior rent eer, C. O. Du- , Ivo Du Winther, and e Hisv All pleaded guilty to ree and paid their fines. .o reindeer Eskimo artist. Agupuk, res of rein Expen on new industrial son Chilkat Plants will reach 1.5 billion dollars added to the new this year, the Department of Com-| also pic deer herds and blanket will be THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OMBER ROTARIANS INVESTIGATE GUARDNEEDS Commifleefie(ommend Recreationed Needs at Barracks A committee of Juneau Rotarians started to work this noon to in- will be quartered in Chilkoot Bar- racks after they are inducted into active duty September 15, The committee was appointed on local theater man, after Major Jesse E. Graham, U. S. Army in- structor, had talked to the mnoon luncheon meeting of the club at 's Cafe and called the mem- ers’ attention to the fact that the boys will have practically no hLome. Rotarians on the committee are softened by tunics or Joe Flakne, Dr. W. W. Council and |next Dan Ralston. In his short talk, Major Graham outlined the history of the Na- and flaves on the very edge of | tional Guard units in the Terri-| Tunics are both slim tory and pictured the life of the| |boys after their removal to Chil-| influences still have!yoot Barracks. He said the post| will be isolated, with no periodicals newspapers, radios, pool or ping- ‘pong tables for the entertainment | of the men. He suggested the Ro- tarians and other Juneau business men might get together and pro- vide many of these recreational needs. Graham also pointed out that |Alaska will be the only state or territory in the nation, where all the selectees, training camps after October 15, will be assimilated completely by the National Guard. Besides Graham, the Army was represented at the meeting by War- rant Officer Hamilton H. Bond and | Aarter| adjutant-General W. R. Mulvihill. | Both Graham and Bond thanked the people of Juneau for making most in their Army careers. MOTHER OF PRESIDENT LAID, REST Famous Son—EIends Sery- ices at Hyde Park Church HYDE PARK, N. Y, Sept. 9—In the presence of a sorrowing -Presi- dent, her only son, Sara Delano Roosevelt was buried today at sim- ple, private services held in ‘the home which had been her's and the President’s together for the past six decades. Burial was in the family plot behind ivy shrouded St. James Church where the Roosevelts wor- i shipped. The Rev. Frank Wilson read the Episcopal book of common prayer and the solemn, comforting words of the order for the burial of dead. President -Roosevelt sat in the car which brought him from the family estate while the mahogany casket was lowered into the grave next to the resting place of his father, James, who died in 1900. —e e NOTICE IRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing SEPT. 9, 1941. MISSING 'GOVERNOR FLIES - WITH RYAN FOR - ~ INTERIOR POINTS |Civilian De?nse Chief on | His WayAgain to f Fairbanks | In again, out again, that’s the way James J. (Jimmy) Ryan, Assistant Director Civilian Defense in Alaska, has been playing tag with Juneau the past 24 hours. After a successful trip to the hints to Juneau women of vestigate the recreational needs of states to obtain rifles lor the Ter- ) expect in lines and fabrics Juneau’s National Guardsmen who |ritory’s jhome guard, Ryan landed Senator, 57, to Wed here yesterday evening, with An-| thony J. Dimond, Delegate to Con- gress, and Julius Edelstein, news correspondent, as passengers. The party flew from Edmonton, Canada. | This morning, Ryan hopped off again, with Edelstein still aboard, tbut with Dimond remaining in Juneau and his seat being taken by Gov. Ernest Gruening. The party was headed for Fair- |banks and Anchorage, then on to | Palmer, it is understood. The Gov- ,mbine to provide recreational facilities awaitinglemor will attend to matters waist, which is them at their new training camp | Anchorage and Fairbanks pe |ing to the induction of the Alaska {National Guard into active duty week. In Palmer, he will |attend the annual meeting of the Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Asso- clation. Bt N s PUBLIC HEALTH " COUNCIL MEETS {Members Discuss Summer Adtivities Since Last | Meeting in May | The Juneau Public Health Coun- to be sent to the [Cil met last evening at 8 o'clock in) the local Health Center for the tfix'st of such meetings since May, |{at which time it was decided to | discontinue for the summerimonths. Present for the meeting were the tcllowing: J. B. Burford, chairman and representative of the Rotary Club; A. B. Phillips, Superintend- ent of the Juneau Public Schools; George Jorgenson, representing the LOOF.; E. M. Polly, representing the American Legion; Miss Evelyn Graham, representing the Juneau Welfare Department. ! Mrs. Tom Parks, representing the Juneau Women'’s Club; Dr. Court- ney Smith, Assistant Commissioner of Health; Dr. Wayne Ramsey. Material and Child Health and Crippled Children’s Division of the Territorial Department of Health; Miss Jane Hibbard, senior Public Health Nurse and Mrs. Marjorie Hessig, Junior Public Health Nurse. During the meet, activities of the public health nurses for the past three months were outlined by Miss Hibbard. According to her report, 659 school children were given pre- liminary inspection in the Health Center previous to physical exam- imation by their private physician. The object of early examination is to allow ample time for needed cor- rection of defects before the open- ing of school. There were 142 in- fants seen by the health nurses at the weekly conference in Juneau and “the bi-monthly conference in ‘Douglas. Under immunizations for the summer, ‘50 children were vaccin- ated for smallpox and 50 were im- munized against diphtheria. Miss Hibbard also gave a brief review of the tentative' schedule for the fall quarter, Dr. Smith gave an interesting re- vort of his recent trip with Dr. Fred Foard and Mr. A. L. Dopmyer of the USPHS. into the defense areas of Alaska. He listed a 'few of the many recommendations made by Dr. Foard. Following the above reports was 1 brief discussion on venereal dis- tase and sanitation. The next meeting of the group is slated for ~ G Robert Reynolds Evalyn Washington McLean Engagement of Senator Robert R. Reynolds, 57, of North Carolina, four times a bridegroom, and Evalyn Washington McLean, 20, daughter of the wealthy owner of the Hope diamond, has been dis- closed in Washington. Miss McLean is due to receive $80,000 a year from the estate of her grandfather. Reynolds gets $10,000 & . year salary as U. S. senator. Spiizbergen 3 AMERICAN MinesTaken AIRMEN ARE - From Nazis MISSING NOW, 9.—Three fliers the American Eagle Squadron | missing after operations over German occupied ter on last| Sunday, an American source said todayl The fliers are Eugene Tonin, Los Angeles; H. S. Fenlaw, Lewisville, T William | Nichols, of San | e Jap Cifizens Being Taken From Brifain TOKYO, Sept. 9—Japan is send- | ing ships to Great Britai and to| Civilians helped the soldiers un- British dominions to remove Jap-| load their cra’. of munitions and 2nese nationals, the Foreign Office| |supplies for the expedition led by announced here today. | canadian Brigidier Arthur Pot Three ships are to be dispatched, | of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The one to Malaya, one to the Near| British ships remove dabout 1,000 East and Africa, and one to Europe. Ncrwegian miners and their fam- The route of the vessel bound for, ilies to Englande where the men Europe is not disclosed but pre- signed up for military or merchant sumably will go around Cape Homn.| ‘DA ELECTRA TAKES LONDON, Sept. At | |Norwegian Miners Taken ', | fo England with Fam- & ilies, Join Army LONDON, Sept Alleged Ger- man plans for the seizure of rich |coal mines at Spitzbergen, in the Arctic archipelago owned by cecupied Norway, were d fically to to have been thwarted bloodlessly by the powerful Cana- dian, British and free-Norwegian expeditionary force in full unif dress. The invasion was welcc by the natives. The British War Office said, source of fuel is now denied Germans”, but failed to rel whether the mines had simply beer left under guard or their use- fullness destroyed. They have been | worked primarily by Norwegian and Russian labor. and | this | the FALLFISH - {given as the reason. THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU FORECASTS: Juneau and vicinity: Fair with increasing temperature tonight and Wednesday; lowest temperature tonight about 48 degrees, high- est Wednesday 66 degrees; gentle to moderate easterly to north- easterly winds. Southeast Alaska: Fair with increasing temperature tonight and Wednesday; mederate northerly to northeasterly winds, except fresh northerly winds in Lynn Canal. Wind and weather along the Gulf of Alaska tonight and Wed.: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: moderate to fresh northwesterly winds, fair; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: moderate north- easterly to northerly winds, fair; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrec- tion Bay: mederate northeasterly winds, fair; Resurrection Bay Kodiak: gentle to moderate variajle winds, partly cloudy. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 4:30 p.m. yesterday 29.96 54 85 s 8 4:30 a.m. today 29.98 45 98 w 6 Noon today 30.01 63 56 sw 3 RADIO REPORTS to Weather Cloudy Pt. Cldy Clear TODAY Lowest 4:30am. Precip. 4:30am temp, tempt. 24 hours Weather 2 4 E Rain Cloudy ¢ Rain Cloudy® Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cldy Clear Clear Pt. Cldy Clear Max. tempt. Station last 24 hours | Barrow e 55 Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethel St. Paul Atka i Dutch Harbor ‘Wosnesenski . Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Prince George Seattle 64 51 64 61 46 49 M 50 38 46 50 50 49 45 46 84 417 45 49 49 50 52 58 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Dry air had penetrated the iaterior and the southern portion of Alaska this morning and clear or partly cloudy skies prevailed over this area but moist air was moving in over the western and northern portion with generally cloudy skies and with rain falling at most stations from the Bering Sea to Barrow. Rain had also fallends during the past 24 hours over tie Southeast portion of Alaska. The greatest amount of rainfall was 55 hundredths of an inch whicif was recorded at Ketchikan. Th: highest temperature yesterday af- ternoon was 64 degrees at Fairbaiks and the lowest last night 42 degrees at Barrow. Clear or sca tered clouds and good visibilities prevailed over the Juneau-Ketchikan airway this morning. The Tuesday morning weather chart indicated a center of low pressure of 20.85 inches was located in Dixon Entrance and was ex pected to move southeastward during the next 24 hours. A high pres- sure center of 3040 inches was located mnear Unimak Pass and a high crest extended northeastward into the interior of Alaska. A#% second high pressure center of 3042 inches was located at 46 de- grees north and 144 degrees west. - Juneau, September 10 — Sunrise 6:15 a.m. sunset 7:33 p.m. 50 coocl2ocococoocHol Rain Rain Cloudy smooth concrete base was the sweeping and then vacuuming of the area before 2 by 4 inch blocks, each 10 inches long, were placed in asphalt mountings. When the blocks are all in place, the alleys will be laid, after surveyors have assured the workers that level foundations have been laid.” ‘The alleys, 60 feet long from foul line to pin deck, will bb' nailed with eight-penny nails every, seven or eight inches, the alley flooring being of thin, durable , maple, except for 32 feet on either |side of the foul line, which will Le | | constructed of long-leaf Michigan pine. The pin deck also will be of pine, with the spots and foul line One extension and one lengthen-|inlaid with a hard fibre material. ing of fall fishing seasons in Al-| “These alleys are absolutely as aska made news today from the good as anything recently built® Fisheries Division of the Fish and|in the States Snedaker declared Wildlife Service. “With reasonable care; they ought The fall season, which started into last at least 50 years.” ‘Wrangell Narrows on September 1 and was scheduled to last until September 15 will close at 6 p. m. today, it was announced. A poor| fall run of fish in the narrows was SEASONS CHANGED Fishing in Wrangell Nar- rows fo Close at 6 P. M. Today et BUY DEFENSE BONDS On the other hand, the fall sea- ACA PILOTS KEEP BUSY WITH FLIGHTS 10 ISLAND LANDINGS Alaska Coastai Alrlines planes carried 28 passengers to Southeast island points today, keeping Pilots Shell Simmons, Alex Holden and Dean Goodwin busy. Goodwin flew to Tenakee with Allan Jaros and Rudy Bennett, re- turning with William Faucett, Eu- zene Stout and Sam Newman. Hoiden flew to Sitka with Mrs. Frank Campbell, Mr. and Mrs, John Klingenbeil and their child, Mar- jorie and Dick Klingenbeil. On the return trip, Holden brought Leona Scott, Mrs. J. James and Lee Perdu to Juneau. On a second flight to Sitka, Holden departed with N. A. McEachran, Rupert Rock, Al La son and Mrs. H. Willlams. He w to return with four Sitka passen- gers. Simmons took Ben Twi Office of Indian Affairs teacher, to Hoonah, and continued on to THREE PASSENGERS Leaving Juneau for Fairbanks on | Pacific Alaska Airways Electra this afternoon were Prof. “William | Dean of the College at| and a Duckering the University; Al Mourtsen Charles Cummins. Meanwhile, a PAA Lodestar from: Fairbanks halted briefly en route| a northbound] Lodestar which was weatherbound | at Prince George, B. C., yesterday was expected to arrive in Juneau at to Seattle, while 4:30 o'clock. .- 2 DIVORCES ASKED HERE Divorce of two Juneau couples was asked this morning in suits! filed in Federal Court here. Naney N, Wright asked divorce on incompatibility. Harold T. Wiley asked divorce from Mar- caret I. Wiley, also on grounds of | from Benjamin rounds of A. Wright, incompatibility. Al air route from Seaftle to Nome, on Octéber 6 at the Juneau Health sale at J. R. Burford & Co. sdv, | Center. ——————————— cheme of decoration. merce reports. ) Empire Classifieds Pay! BUY DEFENSE STAMPS e .—— A process for producing tin from ore formerly classed as waste has been developed in Canada, Sitka with W. C, Overby, Art sen and the Rev. W. G. LeVasseur, \leys comparable ‘to any in the son in the Copper River area has been extended three days, to 6 p. m. on September 18. Fall fishing in this region opened on August 10. Only two other fall fishing sea- sons in Southeast Alaska are on| the schedule. In both eastern and western districts of Icy Skraits, fall fishing will start at 6 p. m, |October 1 and last until the same time October 20. In the remainder of the Southeast Alaska area, fall fishing opens October 5 and lasts!| iuntil October 25. EngineerHerefo Supervise | Installation Inficaces Four - spanking new bowling al= i ¥ BARNEY GOOGLE AND‘SNUFFY SMITH T TION Mol CRPTAWN NS CoN - “THS ORDER NMUST 9E HANDLED WITH THE WTHMOST SECRECN W, MOUR CONMPANY ML BRERK COMP BT MIDNGHT = THRE\R, DESTINGTION \S N THIS SERLED ENVELOPE — WHICH \S NOT TO BE OPENED B 4\ 6 W \ 4.5 EPEOGRIN By BILLY DeBECK T CNOW SUMEIN' 1 wou; TeLL T KNOW SUMFIN' Gee NOLLDH 4 T WON'T TELL & NOWD THINR CRPTAW ey L\ MDNGHT 2 T\PPED WS OFF WOTION aayT a0 ie levitie | States will be ‘mflm tbhe :’l:- neau . Elks Lodge Buik y & tober 15, P. D. Bnedaker, installa- |tion engineer for the Brunswick [} Balken Collendor Company, San ! Franc said today, as werkmen e irection imstatied wood- 'en block foundations on the Jevel | concrete floor. Snedaker, who installed alleysat | the Japonski Island NavalAir Base, !at Sitka in March, travels through- Iout the west and north supervis- ing construction of the facilities for the sport which is increasing in popularity throughout the coun- try. In fact, although Snedaker has installed scores of alleys and is a bowling enthusiast, he rarely ls, “because I have time 'for i just or two games on a new IH alley and then baye to movealong i - to the mext job.” " sFirst’ Step after laying of i 3 i) ® Accounts Goverpment In- ‘sured up to $5,000. ® Money available at any time.

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