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RD ' | Mflfiglfgfi " BRIDGES' AIDE b ek GETS 3 YEARS y /) ICKS COLDS FIGHT MISERY where you feel it—rub throat, chest and e e g Hurricane Crushes Boat THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8, 1941. 1 PRIORITIES 'RATING FOR MINES LOWER Former Juneauife NOTICE! I will not be responsible for any | debts acted y In Coast Guard Now o, conrecree v anyone hut On Adive Service " *™" * =t Commarider Fletcher W. Brown of the United States Coast Guard Service, who was stationed in Ju- neau for several years, has becn called back into the service after Three Days BERLIN, Oct. lowing conviction economic sabotage on 25 Czechs in three days. || We Do NOT Patronize Montgomery Watd Co. Hardeman 5 Procter & Gamble Products | WATER-PROOFED | Hats 1. S. Graves The Clothing Man i Gatner & Mattern Knit Goods Carnation Milk Co. Spruce Market, of Juneau JUNEAU CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL Affiliated with Ametlcan Federation of Labor Not One Single Penny Wasted! And GIBSON Meeis lhe‘Tesj! DELICIOUS FOODS FOR EVERY MEAL SPEEDY AND SAVING - SAFE, CONVENIENT, COMFORTABLE ' EASY TO USE EASY TO CLEAN GIBSON 5 Completely Fulfills he Parpose of Cooking! Finest Food You Ever Tasted! The DNB has received a report from Prague that |14 Czechs have been hanged fo!- charges of The hanging raises the total executions in Bo- hemia and Moravia protectorate to James O'Neil Is Sentenced for Lying at Deporta- tion Hearing SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 8—James O'Neil, former C.1.O. publicity man, was convicted today of purjury in his testimony at the Harry Bridges deportation hearing and was im- mediately sentenced to three years in prison and fined $100 by Federal Judge Welsh, | Judge Welsh brushed aside at- tempts by defense attorneys to gain! New Amendment by OPMI Changes Rating for Sup- | plies from A-3 to A-8 ! (Continued from Page One) |as gold placer mining,” for which, apparently, no priorities rating has been set up. ! For Emergency Repairs . | Under the order, a top priorities & |rating of A-1-A is provided. “for delivery to a mine operator of ma- ks | i a delay with an argument for a new trial, but after hearing their terial essential for emergency re- protests, he sald he would hear pair to a mine. T_o obtain this such argument Saturday. rating, however, mine operators must communicate directly with When the defense indicated that it wanted to move for probation the court commented: i “I can tell you now the Court is not disposed to grant probation.” | From the witness stand at his trial and at the Bridges hearing !O'Neil denied he ever had seen the California C.1.0. director paste dues stamps in a Communist Party mem- bership book. { OPM, describing material essential for the emergency and the nature The A-8 rating applies to “de- liveries of material required for |emergency inventory, operating supplies or maintenance.” The same | | rating applies to deliveries of ma-| terial to a supplier of mining | | equipment to operators. \ | F.BI agents testified at both ! g | 5 ¥ b ) the hearing and the trial that | ) | The order describes a mine asi ! O'Neil had told them of seeing {“any plant actually engaged in| | the extraction by surface, open-| | Bridges paste the stamps but had| |refused to sign a statement to that | effect. and said he wouldn't give such testimony ‘from the witness stand. When winds of hurricane force swept over Miami Beach Sunday night, it crashed a sight-seeing boat into the pilings under the county cause- way which links Miami, Fla., and Miami Beach, and left it battered wreckage. Only such minor damage resulted from the storm. Picture airmailed to The Empire by Associated Press. pit, or underground methods or in| the benefication, concentration or! | preparation for shipment of the | | products of mining activities.” A | mine operator is described as any- E TS 7 lone operating a mine to whom a| been| et R g e ! THOMPSON TO SPEAK | Seton Thompson, assistant chief of the Fish and Wildlife Service,| Scviet reports, n(‘know]?dging‘mme serial number has that the Germans won some initial|given. | will be guest speaker tomorrow noon advances as the war’s mightiest Must Report Purchases at the luncheon meeting of the battle raged toward a climax on the| The certification of orders of Juneau Chamber of Commerce in| road to Moscow, declatea the in-|mine supplies:will be handled in the Baranof Hotel. |vaders “are striking with the furyleach state or territory through an |of mad beasts, straining all effort emergency coordinator, the post i jHegnrdioes of oosk." ihe]d in Alaska by Stewart, the or- The Russians said there was no|der pointed out. Through this co- { lIKE BEASIS sign of a major break-through,grdinator, serial mine numbers will | { however. |be given operators and these num- { Leningrad Holds Out {bers must be placed on endorsed (Continuea from Page One) Red army troops were reported statements accompanying all pur-! it ——houding on grimly against Nazi chase-orders for equipment. q tanks and dive bombers. A sinsle! The order further sets out thai Russian infantry division was said|wegch operator shall file with his! g have da.\u‘syvd f“o;;’ "h““iggg state agency on or before tie erman n 5 Wi rov) " 'hand gre:lidrs :r extnlosl‘:':pbotnes LSRN SR o[- éadh. moukn, bhgin | 2 he ¢ gasoline. ning October 10, 1941, a report of | |entire south wing of the Soviet | purchases made during the preced- |army is broken. The drive already| In the siege on Leningrad, the|ing month.” has engulfed Ossipenk and Mariu-|Russians drew a brighter picture, e | BUY DEFENSE BONDS ] | Hitler's High Command reporte I that in the south, too, the plight of |the Russians appeared to be grow- |ing more desperate by the hour. | Nazi military dispatches said the i Chocolates There’s a flavor to. Whitman’s once tasted, always preferced. All packages direct from the makers! Sampler, 17-0z. 100 pieces, $1.50. Also | the new gift Sampler at $5. Other sizes | § at$3and $7.50. | Faitbill, the popular box st 31 Ib, Call in snd select NOW | Butler-Mauro Drug Co. The Rexall Store pol on the Sea of Azoz, threatening declaring their counter attacks are the Don River port of Rostove, gate- | 8roWing in intensity. Four thou- way to the rich Caucasian oil fields. $and German and Finnish troops ' Rosteve Threatened |were reported killed and many German battle flags were re- Mmore captured after an 18-day ;porml within 100 miles of Rosl,ove‘bfl_l,tle n}ons a river near the he- | after a 350-mile advance from meiw’lged city. | Prut River boundary between Ru- lmnnia and Russia where the Nazi onslaught started 15 weeks ago. = I Ha"owe'en Tea Da'e IMPERIL JAPS !He left in 1935 for Honolulu, Ha- THREATENS TO a four-year retirement, according to news receiyed here. Commander Brown and his fam- ily lived in Juneau for two years, while he was in command of the| Coast Guard ship stationed here.| WORN OUT? Drink Milk ‘When you get that dead, “I can't do it” feeling, what you need is a glass of cool milk. It perks you up right away without that bloated feeling. A good habit to get into, is to drink a glass of milk every day about 3 o’clock in the afternoon. It's just what you need. . DRINK TWO GLASSES 'OF PASTEURIZED \ MILK A DAY JUNEAU waii, where he was in command of the ship ‘there, and retired from active service in 1936, Since that time he has resided on the East' coast. In his present capacity, Com- mander Brown is Captain of the Port at Portland, Maine, the base of the Atlantic Fleet. Mrs. Brown | will join him there. His son, Fletcher Brown Jr, is at present enrolled in the Coast Guard Aca- demy at New London, Conn. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS n A l R ! E s PR e TS TR W R SR Subscribe Now TO THE ALASKA WOMAN Monthly Newsmagazine Iy 3 THE ALASKA WOMAN is dedicated to the modern Alaskan woman. It will carry news of women’s activities all over the Territory. DON'T MISS A SINGLE COPY. The first issue will be off the press within a few days $1.50 FOR ONE YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION Mail check or money order to THE ALASKA WOMAN Mary B. Pool, Publisher Box 284, Juneau, Alaska | IT‘S FAST, AND EXACTLY CONTROLLED SEE THE GIBSON RANGE AT Harri Machine Shop O. HARRI, Proprietor YOUR Buicher isa GOOD FRIEND! He's pretty important to the health of your family . . . and the discretion he uses in the buying of meats is reflected in Junior’s grades at school — Dad’s success at work — and your own well- being as Director of the House! 20th Century Meat Market realizes this, and is proud of its responsibility in bringing to you the best and purest in meats. Buy GOOD Meats at the 20th Century Meat Market Attention! JUNEAU MINE and MILL WORKERS UNION---LOCAL 203 . The Election of Officers and Referendum Vote-By-Laws Amendments, will be held P. O. Box 1143 Telephone 319 ! | Oil Burners and Household Appliances Acetylene Welding, Heating Plumbing, Blacksmithing . THURSDAY --- OCTOBER 9th Polls will be open from 8A. M.108P. M. All members are requested to cast their ballot. JOHN L. COVICH, Secretary. | set by the Junior Trinity Guild for a Hallowe'en tea which they are planning. Arrangements were | made by the group at a meeting |held last night in the home of | Mrs. Courtney Smith, ‘The tea will be held in the par- ilors of the Holy Trinity Cathedral, Set by J@ior Guild | The date of October 26 has been | CHUNGKING, Oct. 8. — Chinese forces captured five strategic points laround Ichang today, making the | Japanese position in that central Yangtze River port precarious, a | Chinese communique said. Japanese communications lines along the Peiping-Hankow road also were reported cut. - 0fJuneau (Gontinued trom rage One) That™ Juneau - folks are heartily in favor of a drive to raise recrea-| tional facilities for the Chilkoot Barracks has been shown by the efforts of the Chamber. of Commerce and Rotary Club along these lines. {The Daily Empire ENTERPRISE | FUND will coordinate those efforts |into a city-wide drive for this | purpose. In Ketchikan, citizens raised $1,080 in a fund t- be used by the soldiers from tho Pirst City for {their recreational s, In Juneau, the ENTERI L FUND is asking for donations of _athletic equipment, radios, etc, in addition | to financial subscriptions to the drive, Starts Tomorrow Starting tomorrow morning, sub- [ ENTERPRISE FUND, Daily Aloska Empire, Juneau, Alaska as a subscription to the fund at a Juneau bank. Empire Sponsoring Fund | ~ For Recreational Needs (Name articles or ameunt of money on line above) ities for Juneau men at Chilkoot Barracks. Clip the above coupon oat and present it with your subscription at the office of The Daily Alaska Empire or Menin Uniform scriptions may be left at the office of The Daily Empire and will be deposited in local banks for the ENTERPRISE FUND, or subscrip- tions for the fund may be left at the banks and will be deposited to} the fund’s account. Donations of: books, footballs or any other rec- reational equipment may be left at the Empire office. Within a few days, a committee of prominent citizens will be named to administer the fund, and each day the Empire will publish lists of the donations received that day, together with a total of the money subscribed since the beginning of the fund. To start the fund, The Empire today subscribed the first $10, while a Juneau resident who heard of the fund in advance and who signed himself as A Friend, donated an- other $10. ... hereby donate to provide recreational facil- NATIONAL DEFENSE through. FIRE DEFENSE Let this be your waichword dur- ing National Fire Prevention Week, and every other week. This is one way you can do your share in the National Defense effort — the only fulness! * Shattuck Agency INSURANCE — BONDS JUNEAU price is care- PHONE 249