Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE EIGHT FIRST AIDERS WILL Enli LEARN RESPIRATION Enhs'mems - InNavyAre T Artificial respiration v ticed tonight by the nembe [ the First Aid class sponsored by " the American Wc Voluntary | to wear slacks or nlu lot | group will meet at 7:30 mhnk in —_— | the Juneau Health Center in retiitoript: (BRI " Secrefary Knox Says Two, iy Incidents Responsible for Falling Off WASHINGTON, Nov Beware Coughs tary of Navy Frank from common colds sald the torpedolf nd Reuben James, with a total That Hang On loss of life of 112 men, caused a 1 1 . S decline of 15 per cent in the rate trouble to help loosen and expel The decline in-enlistments set in germ laden phlegm, and aid nature after Kearny incident on Oc- to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- | ;,per 2 L e Ay 1“5%"-2313?&1&2@?3 U e |the torpedo sinking of the Reuben a bottle of Creomulsion with the in- James on October 31 derstanding you must like the way it | Now, Secretary Knox stated, quickly allays the cough or you are |jendency on enlistments is r fo HBve Jout thdniey, Sack to the old level of recruiting c REOM U LSIO N ‘:L:;m 10 uvfi to 11,000 men a l\lul!t{) Subscribe to The Empire, 26 — Secte- Knox today the the urn- torpedeing of the Kearny | 17 and was speeded up with |1 iy 1 'IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—-JUNEAU ALASKA il for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis |but this goal has not been reached, {being about 2,000 to 3.000 men nme)\ short of the Navy's actual| -4 [ 4 needs. Delicious? | S JUNO-MAID Cottage Cheese } George Brothers today announced [that a new entrance is being built Now Available at | for their grocery store so that cus- Your Grocer | tomers can enter more easily. The \GEORGE BROTHERS BUILD ENTRANCE, Every Day. Inew door |of the building next to the liquor | Excellent store entrance. The work is being . done by the Kraftt Manufacturing for Winter Salads ||co | PR L S Try the New | SERVICES FOR WOOD CHOCOLATE MILK I WILL BE TOMORROW 1 { Funeral services for Frederick luc pmi lsc quar |Wood, Douglas resident, will take T |place tomorrow afternoon at JUNEAU ||ocock in the chartes w. carter Chapel. Services will be conducted DAIBIES by the Rev. E. C. Budde Wood is survived by his widow, Incorporated his mother, and one sister THERE’S FAR more to complete insurance than writing the policies. We give extra services at no cost — such as studying all your fire risks and property values, before writing your policies. We want you to understand what your insurance will do whenever you have a loss. Shattuck Agency BONDS INSURANCE PHONE 249 NEW ONE, 10 STORE will be at the south side| a| German infantrymen try to help a horse-drawn supply wagon out of a patch of snow-covered mud on the This picture was radioed from Berlin. Eastern Front, according to German sources. | COLD SNAP MAY Seward Ashes Hardly KEED SNOW ON (ool as Work Starls GROUND FEW DAYS 1 On Rebulldlng (“y Fairbanks Coldest Spot in Alaska with Mercury 36 Below Zero (Continued from Page One) ‘lnu and brought shivers to Seward Ear'hquake Old Man Winter exhaled his {Tessoiafiino fre rauliod proverbial icy breath into South-| | Tesanan GRb VAT T H east Alaska today, with snow fall- Gmgy suhiienssnens, plant jeanihe temperatures threatening (o take | restored. says Editor Lester Bucey | With streets icy, the weather cold land a north wind blasting the city, businessmen, officials and organi- | la drop which will keep the white nket in place for the next sev- 1 days Ocean Area Temperatures in Juneau dove to quackers were shot in the second' | Awarded Annulment of | ~— " BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Marriage fo Miner | ““The Rexail Store” - I | Record Kill Expected in Al- aska as Result of 1941 ‘ SAN FRANClsco Cal, Nov. 2 |idea of competing with an Eski- | duck hunters in Alaska mo rival for her husband’s affec- |fire their last legitimate shots attions, she testified today in win- | the water fowl at 5 p. m, Saturday,/ning an annulment of her marri- |they will probably have accounted |age in Anchorage to M. E. Ed- [for the heaviest kil of ducks. | wards, a miner, in January, 1938. | geese, and brant in the history of| Her Eskimo rival showed up at |the Territory, it was declared t6day|the wedding supper, Mrs. Edwards | :b\ Frank Dufresne, exe:unvg officer | to1d the judge. She testified she, jof the Alaska Game Commission. |jeft her husband ten days later| | Reports of ducks shot last year, ynen people started pointing her |vecently compiled here. show an out as the wife of a “squawman.” | estime*gd 70,000 ducks, 16,600 geese; and 3,000 brant killed in the Te! Girl Scoul Troop3 | Has Party Tomorrow (SATURDAY 5 BmoRaL | o | TrooMuctFor T aers ..] (LASTDAY OF - “yymewoman (s-srsvit) | | DU(KSEASONers Virginia Edwards Is e Headquarters | When |titory during the 1940 season, or | 'a new all-time high record. ac- | cording to Dufresne. Because there |have been hunters and more ducks |this year, another new record will Troop 3 of the Girl Scouts are probably be chalked up by the shotgun artists by the time the|P!anning a party tomorrow after- Hardeman 1941 season ends Saturday, he ! BoOD in place of the regular meet- added 3 {ing time. The party will take | WATER-PROOFED lace in the American Legion Dug- Records of the 1940 waterfowl ® g |kill showed that 15000 ducks and|Cul: Other Troops of the Girl Hats Scouts will meet as usual in the 2,000 geese were killed in the first| division of the Territory. This is Uion Hall. H. S. Graves e For the regular meeting on De- not withstanding the mact that not more than g!ne per cent of|SURbEL 4, all troops will hold an The Clothing Man \ all the ducks and geese which breed it bR e L lin Alaska pass through Southeast | S¢OU™: § Alaska on their way south, Du- | fresne pointed out. Most of the - |birds either take an eastern flyway | through Canada or come down the coast or across the gulf to the Oregon coast. | Biggest duck kill last vear was in| i the third division, around Anchor- age, Cordova and along the Alaska Peninsula, where it is estimated 25,000 ducks met death via lead | poisoning In the fourth division an estimated 10,000 ducks were killed last year, while about 20,000 zations are doing all’ possible to | o 27 degrees during the early moming division hunting grounds. Meat alleviate conditions. Offers of help| 1ISBON, Nov. 26.—Available re- hour: At Haines this morning,ivalue alone cf the estimated 70,000 have come from various quarters. ports received this afternoon indi- Soldiers shivered in a 10-degree ducks shot by Alaska hunters a 3 4 belt. At Eldred Rock, the mercury stood at 17 degrees, with the report of a 37-mile-per-hour wind blow- ing from the north at 8:15 a. m. Army patrols are guarding the town and directing relief work by assist- ing in finding quarters for home- cate only slight damage was cause by yesterday’s “most violent earth- quake recorded here since 1755.” M £ T Asores, Lo g0, aholan Coldest and snowiest spot in Al Manyv newcomers, thrown out of , The epicenter apparently was B 'lwcoxdm. 44 n;f wemhe; clerkships and other work by the the Atlantic where the full force ' g i & fire, are striving to leave tow:. maps, was Fairbanks, where 12 rioks; 1 . 4§ i B *«m)axeml\ BPERY harmicgsly: nches of snow lay on the ground Oldtimers, however, are standing inches a by, prepared to rebuild the burned ;‘\':‘1 3(:"( lfl:livxalflxv this n,l:(m;:nu city degrees below zero. n- chorage, the mercury stood at three Kodiak it AMERI(AN degrees above, while at McCOY ON SCENE |was 16 above SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov i ot ~-The Red Cross has authorize I KlllE an emergency grant of $2,000 for Unemploymem food, clothing and temporary shel- ter to residents of Seward and also announces that Keith McCoy, Red Cross representative in Alaska, has reached Seward by plane and reports 250 are homeless as the re- sult of the fire. IN BATTLE Commission il Awaifs Quorum 26.—United States Bkl ey Delmer Parks, of| Again today, a single member of Phoenix, Ariz., is reported to have tne Territorial Unemployment been killed by German machine compensation Commission put in gun fire yesterday in eastern Libya!an appearance at the commission where he was a technician observer |office, and for the second day of |with the American made tank di- 5 gcheduled annual 5¢ no | vision business could be transacted foc ———————— SHIP'S OWN BOMBS Sle Sy |lack of a quorum. LAST REPORT SHOWS T o e, » e o JAMES (REw1 S(Hool ENRO[[MENT |cently appointed to the commis- | | sion. Meantime, bad flying weather CAIRO, Nov. |Army Sergeant | UP DURING 6 WEEKS | tosy asain kept marry Phinips, TR | Fairbanks business man and also Torpedoed Destroyers i Rdraane of € shaARnil s | Poont Alppulnh'(‘ (}(1) x‘nc commis- 7 i .|sion at home in the Interior. No Depth Charges Went Off };‘ggg;s In the Juneau PUbLIC| od has been received as to the | | | possible appearance of R. E. Hard- | castle, of Ketchikan, whose mem- bership on the territorial the subject of an action court at the First City of Gov. Gruening. | period it was announced by A. B. | Phillips. Superintendent of Schools. | The report, which was given to| | the Commissioner of Education to- | |day, is for the six weeks' period: Safety catch charges on the depth | ending November 19. 3 When Vessel Sank (vontinued from Page One) board is filed in in behalf vear ago exceeds $125,000, Du[x»sne declared Last year in the States, Dufresne said, it 1s estimated that 10,000,000 ducks were killed. During the past five years, there has been strong increase in duck population in the States, he declared, due to protec- tion of feeding grounds and winter- | |ing places for the birds. In 1935, |the estimated duck popuiation of/| the States in the fall was 35,000,000 | birds, while in 1940 the number had lalmost exactly doubled. Aim is to ibxlll(l up the duck population to 1100,000,000 birds, he declared. Most | scarce of the ducks is the Red Head, |seldom seen in Alaska, breeding in the northern part of eastern Can-| jada. | Mulvihill in Active Service In actice service for the next 18 jmonths, W. R. Mulvihill, who ha been serving as Adjutant-General here since formation of the Alaska | National Guard, more than a year| ago, returned last night to Juneau after a trip to Chilkoot Barracks, where he was examined by army medical officers. According to his order from the War Department, Mulvihill was in- structed to return to Juneau after physical examination. It was not stated where he would be placed in service. size from 228 to 471 cu. in. GMC’s the truck to buy for POWER. And GMC prices are right down with the very lowest. Performance tests prove it! The Super-Duty Engines in General Motors Trucks de- velop greater pulling power than all others, in every Time poyments through our own YMAC Plan at lowest availoble rates CONNORS MOTOR €'®. 230 S. Franklin St. Phone 111 THE TRUCK OF VALUE ‘GMC TRUCES GASOLINE - DIESEL - Important Meeting RETAIL CLERKS UNIOH Wednesday, Nov. 26 -‘ A e i \ subscribe to The Emplre. bombs were not locked, the sur-. At the end of ‘the second six vivors explained, because the ship weeks, the Grade School had 569 PRINCESS NORAH | ! 7:30P. M. A.F.of L. Hall I ness, but no change in vehicles was| g and she came into town in; |a hearse. HAGLI G(C {Igloo No. 6, of which Smith was a | member. Q . E. Rice »i SOUTH 1 Dean C. E. Rice will conduct the fill in on your %, 1.)11:/,{”-/%» v orpian, Hiintd now COMPLETE and you can either set or start a new one. niece in California -+ was in dangerous waters near Ice- | pupils enrolled, and the High i land. Some of the rescued men said | School had 245 enrolled, a total of from 30 to 60 lives might have been |g1g For the corresponding period TAKES 14 FROM | saved if me men had been in lee-n | | Ilast year, the Grade School had } only two boats and ll\e} were dam- | \otal of 854 | Sl i jaged by explosion of the torpedo | | Fourteen passengers left Juneau | | magasine. : | o The bresenc ol is 40 students | nis moming on the southbound THE MORNING THE DOCTOR , Three life rafts were thrown into ! Princess Norah of the Canadian an the water and the men leaped uno.""“‘" mostly in' the High School. |pgcific line. Weather conditions :‘Io "’r’s m’”" d ‘ the sea after them. They said some | S0t DO which prevented plane traffic be- | ‘ | of the men drewned when the depth | | tween Juneau and Tulsequah, B. C., | charge explosions ripped their me— | kept several passengers with reserva- ] | belts from Lheir bodie: i tions on the Norah in Tulsequah. , . ‘ ———— | TR | Those leaving were: ”' W/k ” l for SRR XRa R Ror M. 3 Closing | Mys. . H. Likens, Miss Alice Lik- | firam Waikers Ue Luxe ives you 4 ‘ Na"ve woman Dies ‘q[uox; ’lool:']ao 2""’ aAJ"“_e“‘“ “(‘:::Eens, Mr. and Mrs, Dave Tweidt, J § | g y is 2%, American Klein, Mr. and Mrs. A. Harconde, | h ' A' H ' I H ¢, Anaconda 267, Bethlehem My and Mrs. J. J. Meherin, Mr. and more t an you expeCt bl \ i OSDI al here Sleel 57%, Commonwealth and|mrs. Dan Stanworth, E. Peterson, A . \ 3 ‘ {Southern 5/16, Curtiss Wright 8%.|the Rev. M. J. Hagli and H. L.| -In I,uxurlous Taste X ‘ | After a checkered career in Anm!nle'n‘monal Harvester 44, Ken-|Kresge. i jaround Juneau, Katherine Cato{necoit 34 374, New York Geoiesl B & } passed away last night in the Cw-xs 2, ‘Northern Pacific 5%, United | " . . 90 proof |ernment Hospital. The 26 year old| States Stecl 507, Pound $4.04. | “ e I(es —for less than you'd - native woman made headlines some | | “ = expect to pay | vears ago when, after a party in a! DOW, JONES WI" Be F’lda cabin near Salmof Creek, she was The following Dow, | yl THRIFTY TO BU 1 brought into Juneau in a funeral Jones averages: industrials “5'J"'i — L @ X 4 RICH TO DRINK 2 wagon, Someone in the party had rails 27.89, utilities 15.74. Funeral vices for George Mar- ik traight? Tall? Mixed? Any- o | i 2 e yours straight? Tal | Bright Cheerful Colors for ' 27 .o o i S Lin Smith, who died in St. Ann's e 2 missed, the woman suddenly be-| KEGEL LEAVES Hospital recently, have been ar- way you pour it, you'll enjoy rea " ¢ : Yo'.r "0l.day T“ble came unconscipus and was be-' Ppaul Kegel, first mate on the ranged {ur Friday afternoon at 2 faction when you taste Hiram ‘Walki 3 3 il FIESTA DINNERWARE is |lieved dead. When later placed in| westward Trader, left on the Al-jo'clock in the Charles W. Carter 3 %M%fi { Our stock of colorful FIESTA ERWARE is la basket, she regained conscious-| aska for Seattle on his way to visit|chapel by the Pioneers of Alaska, De Luxel Smooth, rich, and flavorful ... !‘ | it's the kind of bourbon your friends will go for. Ask for it tonight. Join its De ILuuxe STRAIOHT SOURBON WHISKEY | made i 4 o Miss Cato was born in Wrangell, ; & !sérvices, and interment will follow A FIESTA Starter Set Is Squesmd land it is believed that her father T‘T,!,‘;““ ll.vf'ud \\}1!,“ l: "(:‘x r::“f:l in the Pioneer plot at Evergreen thousands of loyal boosters) Hiram Walker & Sons Inc, Poorle, L ! as a Charmin GIFT! |is coming here from Hoonah 0|00y for the dedication of the Bethel | Tty it . ‘ln.lkf‘ funeral arrangements. Re- l mains are at tHe Oharles W, cnrm!T bernacle, and also to hold, evap- | FREDERICK OUT . ; l\auxumy iz { gelistic services, left for the SoWER | ' yevpo < prederick, Boy. Scout of- P ' y i | i Juneau-Young Hardware Co. P P42 71 7 TTTIL C n g m B B ALASKA DISTRIBUTORS COMPANY e | R p:rsns»; qrms 1 Subscribe to The Emplre, aboard the steamer Alaska. ) . -