The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 3, 1941, Page 5

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i \ Double Your Enjoyment With TEN HIGH! tion, Pre: hood LABO FIGHT NALZIS, SAYS HILLMAN 0.P.M. Assodale Direclor Addresses A.F.L. Conven- | tion Despite Profest R MUST SEATTLE, Oct. 3—The defeat of . Ishculd ney Hillman, associate di- rector of the Office of Production Management, of the AFL Building Trades De- partment today, Hillman |was lodged by Willlam Huteheson, dent told the convention spoke after a protest of the United Brother- of | Firemen’s fall dance on October 11 EAGLI HALL WILL BE E OF FIREMEN'S BALL Commitiee in charge of Douglas * has made arrangements for ‘the af- to be held in the Eagles' hall ording to most recent an- ncement, also that Glen Ed- wards and his orchestra will furn- sh the musie. One of the big events every fall for the Island, the dance this year prove more popular than ever. The new lodge hall with its gleaming walls and shining floor offers an attractive setting where comfort and pleasure are asured. e, |ENDRES ARE AT HOME AFTER EXTENDED TRIP and Mrs. Fred Endres ar- home today after a ' two g Mr. rived Carpenters end Joiners,menths absence during which they _ who said he “cast the one dissent-'(oured several states in a new ing vote when the question of in-'tudor Chevrolet sedan which they Rivers received an ugly gash Over vjiing Hillman to address the con- purchased while south. First part | one eye. The former Governor wis| vention was discussed.” {nf their trip took them through} so badly bruised and gashed that' putcheson added: Canada to Winnepeg and from| physicians gave him a sedative. “My objection is based on m@f'nere to Flint, Michigan, where' they Neighbors trailed the attacker to|fact that Hillman still is affiliated secured their car to drive back a roadside camp on the outskir's with and helped to organize and 2long the northern route, to visit| of Valdosta and notified police. |bring into existence an organiza-|in Eastern Washington where they Police Captain Murphy reported | tion dual to the American Federa-|*Pent several weeks before coming that when he and two other offi-|tion of Labor.” |home. Something over 5000 milage cers confronted the man there, he| Hillman, high official of mei\:la*";t’c:rds‘l in U:;ir travels. Little turned on a light in the trailer in|cg; ¢ . _ | Feally ~warl weather was exper- Committee for Industrial Organiza feniced: during thelr whole trip they which. he was hiding and fired a| tion, evoked sharp protests from FLY! Fly for Pleasure Hunt or fish, near and far, in your own plane or in one which you have rented. thirty-two :-ealibre _bullet, kINng|APT, sources wheti *he was “p_!rvporrcd, } Learn the Modern Sport! | |himself. - | pointed to OPM. ‘ { In searching the body, police| “The defeat of Hitlerism is our| SCHOOL DANCE | found a driver's license bearing the|first obligation because we cannot| Junior students, Douglas high| Aviation is not expensive. { |name of Walter Bikle, and an ad-|realize the aims and ideals of de- <chool, have planned a dance to T g Qg ap dress given as Pittsburgh, Pa mocracy so long as the Nazis hold be given this evening in the.school There’s more pleasure per g lollar i I“ it TR oD R TRTEAG |sway anywhere” Hillman declared.!8Ym. Each student is allowed to sl e e |invite one guest. { st About 72 percent of Missourl R e Of a total production of 1,038,666 | reported $to the Census| Ir-; nt for shotguns B. P. W. will meet Oct. 13 instead highway travel is for busin of Oct. 6. —adv. poses and less than 28 pei Start Preparing for - ‘;“6‘]’5‘1’{ l;leensc — e | pleasure and recreation, a recent|Bureau by the firearms industry | survey indicated. in the last two Censuses of Manu- NOTICE | L e e—— factures, 197,241 were double-bar- | Subscribe to the Daily Alaska reled, and 41427 were single-bnr-f Empire—the paper with the largest reled, including automatic, repeat- adv ;paid circulation. ling, and single shot. AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing |air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. MICKEY OWEN SAFEONSTEAL It's Easf At Alaska School of Aeronautics, Inc. P. O. Box 2187 Phone Black 769 JUNEAU WOULD-BE | KIDNAPER IS FOILED Former Georgia Governor and Wife Get Beating Be- | fore Assailant Driven Out LAKELAND, Ga. Oct. 3.71“0!'-; mer Governor of Georgia, E. D.| Rivers and Mrs. Rivers were clubbed on the head with a pistol butt in their home Wednesday | night by an assailant who Wwas finally beaten. off, and foiling what police said appeared to he a bizarre kidnap plot. The attacker later killed himself in a nearby tourist camp. Three shots were fired, Mrs.| Rivers said, in a tense struggle be-; fore she and her 45-year-old hus- band drove the intruder from the Mickey Owen, Brooklyn catcher, slides head first into second base on a steal in the second inning of the | “crucial” game between the Dodgers and Bostor, Owen reached second ahead of Braves catcher Ray | Berres' throw to second baseman Al Roberge, who is waiting for the ball. The Dodgers, by winning, 6 to 0, while the St. Louis Cardinals lost to Pittsburgh, clinched the National League pennant and are now GRID GAMES ONSATURDAY Associated Press schedules slate he following leading football ames (hroughout the nation to- morrow (host team named first): Far West ‘Washington vs. Oregon State. Washington State vs. Californfa. Stanford vs. U.CL.A. U.8.C. vs. Ohio State. San Prancisco U. vs. Nevada. Portland U. vs. Willimette. Oregon vs. Idaho. _THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, OCT. 3, 1941. Santa Clara vs. Loyola (Sun.) Gonzaga vs. Coll. Idaho. East Dartmouth vs. Amherst. Army vs. The Citadel, Boston U. vs. Cincinnati. Columbia vs. Brown, Muhlenberg vs. Bucknell. Allbright vs, Carnegie Tec! (night). Colgate vs. Penn State. Cornell vs. Syracuse. Fordham vs. SM.U. V.P.I vs. Georgetown. Penn vs. Harvard, Holy Cross vs. Providence ton. Navy vs. West Virginia, Lafayette vs. N.Y.U. Pittsburgh vs. Purdue. Princeton vs. Willlams. Temple vs, V.M.I. Villanova vs. Centre, Yale vs, Virginia. Midwest Oreighton vs, St. Louis. Detroit U. vs. Wayne. Drake vs. Grinnell. Illinois vs. Miami. Notre Dame vs. Indiana U Michigan vs. U. Iowa. Iows State vs. Nebraska. Kansas vs. Washington U. Northwestern vs. Kas. State. Wisconsin vs. Marquette. Missouri vs. Colorado. Okla. A. & M. vs. Tex. State. South Alabama U. vs. Miss. State. Tulane vs. Alabama Poly. Clemson vs, N. C. State. Davidson vs. N.C.U. Duke vs. Tennessee, Florida vs. Tampa. Furman ys. Wake Forest, Georgia vs. South Carolina. Georgia Tech vs. Chatanooga. W. & L. vs. Kentucyk. Texas vs. LS.U, Maryland vs. W. Maryland. Miss. U. vs. Solithwestern. Tulane vs. Auburn. cvanderbilt. vs. Tenn. Tech. W. & M. vs. Rand-Macon. Arkansas vs. T.C.U. Rice vs. Sam Houston. Tex. A. & M. vs. Tex. A. & 1. Rocky Mountain B.Y.U. vs. Greeley. Colorado State vs. Wyoming. Montana State . vs. Colorado | Mines. Colorado College vs. West. State. Montana U. vs. North Dakota. DA L Helen irances Griffin \Passes Away,Chicago Word was received in Juneau to- day that Helen Frances Griffin, sister of the late former Secretary | of Alaska Edward W. Griffin, passed away in Chicago on September 21. Miss Griffin was well known in Juneau where she lived for many years, ——o——— Subscribe to the Dafly Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest living room. Neither of the Rivers was hit by the bullets, but Mrs. playing the ‘Yarikees in the world series. vaid- circulation. Manhattan vs. George Washing- | Get the SUCCESS Shotgun Shells WINCHESTER DS TRADE-MARK RANGERS and SUPER SPEE famous for success Centenary vs. Louislana Normal. | with high dependabil form, balanced patterns at standard velocities. Super Speeds for long range — maximum velocity, with W N WINCHESTER SHOTGUN SHELLS— you have in your pockets exactly the right shells to meet all Alaskan hunt- ing conditions with the best shooting your gun can do. Economical Rang- ers for all average-range shooting, in hunting— Load Your Gun To Shoot Its Best short shot string, balanced pattern and extreme power and penetration. Super Speed big-game shells in buck- - shot, single ball or long-range Rifled Slug load. Ask your dealer for Winchester . . Shot Shells, in the loads you want. " ity and uni- And see his stock of Winchester Shotguns. Folders on guns and shells WINCHESTER i free on request. Ask your dealer for copies, or send us a post card. HUNDREDS " HURRY 10 ~ WESTWARD }Rush for California De- fense Jobs Bigger than | Flight from Dust Bowl AP FEATURE SERVICE SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 3.—The iamous dust bowl migration to California in the 1930s is being rivalled and perhaps exceeded by a inew one—a westward rush for the |well-paid jobs of a booming de- (fense industry. Officials are looking on with (alarm. They wish these would-be shipbuilders and planebuilders would use the processes of the Faderal Employment Service, which can tell them before they set out |when and where work is available. | The first seven months of this year 58,251 automobiles poured ac- ross California’s borders, three- fourths of them with out-of-state tags. This exceeds the rate at the heaviest stage of the “Okie” mi- gration. Many arrivals are disap- pointed, but many are getting jobs. Aircraft employment is up 128 per cent over a year ago and shipyard personnel up 200 per cent. Half-Million Figure Debated The most extreme estimate of WEARD A MAKINY THEM INSULTIN'G REMARKS FALL ONT QN REPORT 6F CONPRANN HERDQURRTERS By BILLY DeBECK BALLS O FIRE® T WOZNT G NE © N0 BRCK SR55— THIS \S TW HEEL T WUZ Tk QBANT WELL-IT'S A CINCH ISN/'T WHAT THAT Wear Warm WOOLRICH Mountain-Made Clothes E SURE that the Winter clothes you buy have what it takes [ 1o keep you warm and protected. For | doore, get Woolrich Woglen Clothes. all roug] ar n hunting clothes stylea—and backed by moye than 110 years of successtul Woolrich sprvice to outdoor men. Everything you need-complete from mackindw down to underwear, socks values in shists. Buy any garment you want. your dealer for genuine Woolrich Clothes. Look for the Woolrich shesp. trade. mask.in every garment, Catalog FREE. \ | cap. Special ‘WOOLRICH WQOLEN MILLS (John Rich & Bros.), Dept. 000 'WOOLRICH, PENNA. Best Every-Day Clothing | ot . | the influx comes from Victor W. Killick, state motor vehicle statis- | ticlan, who believes that since the ! federal census was taken in 1940, icalilomin's population has in- | Créased 66,351. The Federal So- | cial Security Board heavily dis- counts . Killick’s figures, although |confirming the heavy migration and recognizing the danger of dis- | rupted economics and human hard- ship, | The mest specific report on the new trek westward comes from the | staté department ' of agriculture, whose plant quarantine inspectors at the state line hiave been trained to spot “persons in need of manual employment.” In the first half ef 1941 these inspectors reported 48,- 10556 in this class; but this did not linclude those traveling by bus or {train. The largest number came from Oklahoma, the state which unwittingly gave its name to the {“Okles.” Opportunity And Headache Over the present rosy picture of California’s booming business, van- ishing unemployment and fairly stabilized farm labor situation, res- ponsible officials are inclined to cast a shadow caused by the new migration, Says Edwin Bates of 1lhe SSB: | “National defense business cor-| ‘tainly means opportunity to Cali- fornia, but it also means a major | headache.” R. G. Wagenet, state director of employment, warns that ‘we do not encourage migration unless specific ! jcbs are available.” Hopeful ar- rivals, out for big wages, find many | disappointments, The SSB says many are victimized by “gyp” tech- . nical schools promising to train them for defense jobs. Housing may be scarce and rents high. They may find that jobs are open for skilled | workers but not for ,merely ambitious, In case of hardship they run up against - a- stone wall in Califor-| nia’s three-year residence require- ment for relief. 1 3‘2 Lodestars f- AreOnWay, Two Pan American Lodestars, | me: | position, ftoxbound at Prince George, B. C, for three days, took off today for 'Juneau or Whitehorse, depending Values for Outdoor Men RUSSIA WON'T RISE UP AGAIN SHOUTS HITLER Fuehrer, Home from Field | Headquarters, Screams for 65 Minufes (anunun from Page One) “By August and September of last year it became clear that I had an enemy at my back, ready to siab any time,” he shouted. Hitler said Russian Foreign Mins ister Molotov came to Berlin late in 1940 seeking a commitment from Germany on Rumania and Finland. | Hitler said he “declined all Russian suggestions that the U. 8. 8. R. ex- tend her influence westward, includs ing the Dardanelles.” Asserts Everything In the address, which lasted an hour and five minutes. Hitler serted everything had proceeded As | cording to plan since June 22 when the German armies “struck against Russia. E To illustrate Germanys military Hitler declared Russian prisoners now number 2,500,000. He called the Russian forces “not hum- an beings but animals — beasts! That is what Bolshevism has made them!” Miss VanderLeest Is Honored Guest At Bri_dge Shower Honering Miss Mary Vander Leest, who is to be married the latter part of this month to Felix ‘Tener, Mrs. Walter Hellan and Mrs. Harley Turner were hostesses last night at a shower for the prospec- tive bride. Miss VanderLeest was presented with a blanket by the hostesses and the guests. The desvert bridge for. four tables was given with pink as the color ccheme, flowers and tallies being in this shade, upon where the best weather pre-f vails. 1 | In Juneau, a southbound Lode- | star ‘remains on the ground due to weather conditions, but an Electra was scheduled to take off for Fair- | banks this afternoon. Bound fo: [the Interior on the Eleetra are Mrs, Paul larsen, Joe Qireen and| lllrs. Earl Ohmer, 1 Claiming high honors at bridge was Mis§ Marguerite Shaw, and Miss Mary Jean McNaughton took cecond. Consolation prize was won by the guest of honor, At the one table of pinochle, Mrs, George Shaw teok high honors, ¢ e Empire Classifieds Pay! Y |

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