The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 16, 1942, Page 6

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PAGE SIX NAB CATCHERS NEW YORK, Jan 16— Enforce- ment of the anti-parking law ha become so stringent that it has sent scores of offenders into traffic courts in Manhattan and the Bronx Included were a number of de- tectives and policemen who found appearing against others BASKETBALL wet stre THE HOW TOLIVE |SHIP IS SENT S | Navy Confirms Coasf Guard | SHEETS AND TOWELS AP Feature Service Buy sheets and tows In ngth sheets and smooth even look for for long tensile ve. DOWN OFF N.Y.HARBOR Reports of Enemy Sub- marine Operations WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 Navy today confirmed that the merchant vessel sunk yesterday off the south shore of Long Island was an Allied merchant craft of foreign registry. The Navy thus corroborated re- ports that submarine action has taken place off the shore waters| fixm‘ts 8 “'_‘“"C"l'd l‘;"““‘, IS of the Atlantic and not far from he smallest you should buy and noy vork Harbor. tha t a high count muslin generally gives more wear for the money than percale. Sheets 108 inches long cut down tuck-under strain. Avoid s a powdery when two parts of the rubbed together, | turkish towels with a to hold surface loops in place. long sheet and towel life by folding lantic coast by enemy subs. shel 7:30 P. M. Douglas Reserves vs. Juneau Reserves SECOND GAME JUNEAU HIGH vs. DOUGLAS HIGH High School Students ¢ and Sc Adults, 45¢ and 5¢ and |eact Hal ets. (If pressing h time filr sk it is sized.) a differer in - - BASKET SOCIAL January - BROKEN LENSES Dr. Rae Lillian Blomgren Building. HOME GROCERY ------AMERI(AN MEAT Phone 146 BUTTE Darigold R 2 pounds 89« SALAD DRESSING | TOMATO SAUCE Happy Home Quart— 25¢ Pint— 1 & MATCHES 6-Box Carton 25¢ A COMPLETE SELECTION OF FRESH AND SMOKED MEATS Fresh Home-Made Pure Link Pork Sausage OUR PROMISE T0 YOU! 17, m 1eet are Choose Pro- 1t place By Women of the Moose in 1.O.O.F. 1, Saturday, adv Are promptly replaced In our own shop. Carlson, firm weave Was revealed. second to be sent down off the At-' | | A Coast Guard station on Long Island reported to the Nayy that survivors of the torpedoed craft . were brought ashore late yesterday | but no further information regard- ing the name of the ship nor size The craft was the —— e - TO FIRST CITY T. C. (Bud) Whiteside. Suull\- east Alaska traveling representative for the J. J. Meherin interests, has gone to Ketchikan and is expected to return after visiting in Wrangell and Petersburg. e The Daily Alaska Empire nas the ! largest paid circulation of any Al-| adv. askn newspaper Phone 38 EGGS Large Grade A 2 dozen 99 Happy Home 5 cenis 5 Each FRENCH DRESSING Durkee Full Pint —27 BUTTER .= 93 SCORE SCOT-TOWELS 3 Beets 24 cans OR A N G E—Best Circle FREE ROYAL GELATINES— DESSERTS PKG Bc Vegetables 6 Peas 3 Corn 6 Tomatoes 6 Green Beuns IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Bert’s Cash Gro In these Wi W, ! N ) trying hmea we are e will not advance prices & e will continue handling onl are more economical! Our stoc] same volume e of b\uinou. 2 Ibs. 93¢ | The Finest and Largest in town! EGGS e e, L & H GRAPEFRUIT 6 vo. 2 w 95¢ M D TISSUE 3« 28c — 12 $1.10 2 rolls ch BUY A CASE 33.79| 24 ans [ | | POTATOES ree we. 1 23 pownss $1.00 SOUPS CAMPBELL'S—ALL KINDS Z for 25(: BRINE BUTTER 25 sounc tes $15.25 HI-HO BUTTER CRACKERS te 11tz —crrrom_surey 10:30 A. M. 211 JUICE 12 12 o uus §1.49 CASE $2.95 | NOW ? more than FROZEN FOODS are cheaper! are delicious! Complete Stocks! 12 Fruits—TRY THEM—15 Vegetables Poultry—Sea Foods—Meats Fruits 6 HS Peaches — 5 Blue Plums — 3 BS Pineapple—$§ Pom Apricots—CAS LIPTON°S TEA Black—Yellow Label b.an$] Limit—One Can e e S VU 4 P TWO FAST ¢ The | S o SO SCEIEMSI. .. <IN 'Ying to do a fair until the arrival finest quality foods which in the en s are larger than any store doing Iha DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | ALASKA LAWS ABOUT WOMEN BE DISCUSSED Juneau Woman’s Club fo i Have Special Program Tuesday Afternoon | “Laws of Alaska as They Pertain |to Women and Children” will be ‘(ho subject of a talk by Mr. George Folta at the Juneau Woman's Club luncheon next Tuesday in the | Methodist Church parlors. The 3chislati\'v Department, under the | chairmanship of Mrs. Harold Smith, |is in charge of the program. | Included in the entertainment {will be a playlet entitled “Better 5Cuy Campaign” presented by mem- {bers of the club. Community sing- ing will complete the program, The luncheon will begin at 1 |o'clock, and all members and !friends are invited to attend. | B 'Guam Island | Prisoners On Told They Must Behave i Themselves According to Jap Military Code TOKYO, Jan. | 16 — Major Gen- |eral Dizhuara, Commanding Officer |of the Interment Camp on Shik- joku Island, told his 442 Americans |war prisoners captured on the |island of Guam in the Pacific soon after the war started, that they must behave themselves according |to the Japanese military code with- out the “traditional Anglo-Amer- :ican sense of superiority over Asi- atics.” Dizhauara assured the prisoners |they will be treated fairly. | — .- | | ELFIN COVE | COUPLE WED A couple from Elfin Cove, on Chichagof Island, took their mar- riage vows in simple services con- ducted in the chambers of U. S. {Commissioner Felix Gray here yes- terday afternoon. They are Julius Lund and Mary Rose Sweet. Witnesses at the af- fair were Mr. and Mrs. Victor Fos- sum, of Juneau. DIVORCE ASKED. | A divorce action was filed in Federal District Court here today by Corrine Marie Greenhow ag- ainst Thomas Voorhis Greenhow, radio announcer and technician, |on grounds of incompatibility. The | Greenhows were married in Juneau jon October 11, 1939, { E—— | The first successful heavier- than-air flight was made by Wil- bur Wright on December 17, 1903, 0 cery job of serving o of new merchandi 2 do. 99 ever FRESH :$5.29 COFFEE BERT'S SPECIAL DELICIOUS WHOLE ROAST Ground As You Like It! 2 lbs. 49(9 Samrday Only OUND PKG. 29 Shikoku Isle {program in Alaska and it is onlvi |case known and I hope that those Hearing Is Scheduled, Ship Rafe Maritime Commission Is fo Review Reasons for . Raise Wednesday The U. 8. Mnrmlm- cammLsslon will hold.a hearing on the subject | of the recent 45 percent increase in freight and passenger rates of steamship lines coming to Alaska in Washington, D. C, on Januay 21, it was announced today by Gov. Ernest Gruening, The announcement from the of- | fice of the Governor stated the) hearing will be held “as a resunl of the emphatic protests wired by! Governor Gruening.” In a prepared “press release” ac-| companying the announcement Gov. Gruening declared: “I am very much gratified that the people of Alaska will at least| have the opportunity to make their who feel as I do, that this in- crease is thoroughly unjustified and will be ruinous to Alaska, will| take this opportunity to wire their| protest to Delegate Dimond for| presentation at the Maritime Com- sion hearing. Drive People Away “In my letter to the Juneau| Chamber of Commerce yesterday I stated my view that this increase will drive far more people from! our Territory than any mmnken! alarm about war danger, and I have conclusive evidence from talk-| ing to scores of people in the la<L‘ week that this is so. “I wish to repeat my conviction that conditions do not warrant any such increase. I know of many| businesses throughout the nation' that are being unfavorably affect-| ed by war but which do not have! the privilege of being handed a 45 percent increase by the federal| government. Actually the steam-‘ ship companies have been doing | a bonanza business for the last twu} years as a result of the defense| proper that they should take the| bitter with the sweet. The disloca- tion in shipping has been brief| and temporary and service is again; nearly normal. For Federal Subsidy “However, should examination of | the companies’ books prove that} they have suffered unbearable in- creases in costs and should it thereupon become government pol- icy to indemnify the companies for| such increased costs, then I be-| lieve this should be done by direct subsidy from the federal treasury for precisely such costs instead of a blanket inrease of 45 percent on freight and passenger rates. As a matter of fact the federal treas-| ury will be paying a considerable| part of these increased rates since the government itself is a large| shipper of freight to Alaska. “It should be pointed out that, this increase given by one govern-| ment agency runs directly contrary | to the larger government policy of { price stabilization since, after bringing about increased commo- dity prices in Alaska, it will nec- essarily cause increased wage de- mands and a further ascendingl spiral of price levels. A direct sub- sidy from the treasury, should in- demnification of the steamshi] lines prove necessary and des able, would have no such disastrous effects and could be limited fo demonstrable increased costs.” Commenting on the statement of Gov. Gruening, Horace Adams, lo- cal agent of the Alaska Steamship | Company, stated: “Business is far from normal and we anticipate that as time goes on it will get worse.” Banks Doing Assay Service Gef Rating Banks in Alaska which perform assay services for miners may take advantage of the same preference rating enjoyed by the miners in applying priorities to their pur- chases of assay supplies, B. D. Stewart, Territorial Commissioner of Mines, was informed this morn- ing in a letter from Wilbur A. Nelson, priorities chief in Wash- ington, D. C. The banks may group t.ogether; the serial numbers of mines from/{ which they receive gold—in cases where the mines have serial num- bers—and use these in ordering supplies to obtain the same A-10 nmnz gmnted the miners, LABOR OFFICIAL RETURNS Steve McCutcheon, chief clerk of the Territorial Division of Labor, returned to Juneau headquarters yesterday after a routine business trip to Ketchikan. 7 While in the First City, Mc- Cutcheon made regular safety in-| spections of industries and cou- ferred with employers and labor! ‘near here today from wreckage of | | Frank Kobal, 161 TOMATOES CABBAGE BULK CARROTS CELERY . 20c— APPLES viesops—beicious—owions BANANAS = . THRIFT C0-0P Phone 161 2 soen 49C 1 aeen 45¢ ORANGES PEARS ARIZONA-—SWEET GRAPEFRUIT 35 19¢ TEXAS PINK—SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT . 3+«29c sox $eB. 20 3 rounrs 42¢ Pound ZUC Pound BC Pound SC 25c — 30c CLEANSING TISSUE 500 --31¢ CRAPEFRUIT JUICE 4.27¢ TASTEWELL CORN Cream Style SHURFINE PORK -« BEANS TASTEWELL No. 2 can 16{: CORN Whole Kernel—No. 303 can ],GC ALL GOOD no. 22 18¢ | TOMATOQ SAUCE 4 cans 23c SHURFINE S"”RTEN'NG oF v ba 73c ELMDALE ELMDALE FLOUR . 24 sowe TASTEWELL HOMINY 2 sise can GRAPE JUICE =oxs rumeic MISSION LONG MACARONI or SPAGHETTI . MACARONI svix—susow SATURDAY— wac $1.20| FLOUR 49 sound sacx $2.30 2:27c| TUNA No. 4 sse 23C 1 QUART 40(2 T voua vox $1.00 3 pounds 208 MONDAY-—-TUESDAY There is no substitute for newspaper advernsmg' Nine Bodies Takenfrom Plane Wreck Smashed A—rfi_y Bomber Missing Since December Found in California SAN BERNARDINO, Cal, Jan. 16—Nine bodies were recovered the Army bomber which vanished in a flight in the direction of Ca- jon Pass on December 13. The plane was located on Kel- lar Peak, the Army said. Lieut.| pilot, Lieut. Joseph | Maloney, co-pilot, and seven en-| listed men were aboard. ———— HOSPITAL NOTES Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Ryan nre[ the parents of a baby girl bora at St. Ann’s Hospital Thursday morning. The infant weighed seven | pounds six ounces. At 1:45 o'clock this morning a baby girl was born to Mr. and | Mrs. Gaither at St. Ann's Hospi-‘ tal. The little girl, named Mary‘ Maxine, weighed six pounds four, ounces. | Mrs. William McCurry and her infant son left St. Ann's Hospi- tal yesterday afternoon for their | Home. Miss Mary Jeanne Atkinson, who | has been a medical patient at St. i Ann's Hospital, left the haspnal this morning. SINESCUE SENT ‘ T0 ARMY S(HOOl l Pvt. John Sinescue, recently en-‘ listed in the Signal Corps, U. S.| Army, left Juneau yesterday to at- | tend an Army training school ln, Seattle for several weeks. He hopes to be transferred mk to Juneau when his training is completed. Sinescue formerly was employed at Sabin’s clothlng Su:re e GOES OUTSIDE Mrs. Maryanne Gaudy, wife of] Oliver Gaudy, assistant Alaska, “Why didn’t you tell me 80 yer“ ago— You cant make a bad cup of MJ-B" Barbara Stanwyck asks Joel McCrea-on the set of Paramount’'s “THE PIONEER WOMAN" J08Ls What do you mean—80 years ago? Explain yourself. BARBARA: [ mean in the movie, silly, In the scene 1 did today I was 109 years old. Last week we made scenes in which I was 80 years younger. JOKL: You mean you didn't know about M. ]. B. then? BARBARA: No—but I do now. I've tried it strong and weak and in-between. 1's delicious any way you make it! JO8L: Right! You can't make a bad cup of M.].B. Here’s why it never fails! Make your coffee with the same care as you have in the past. These two exclusive M. J. B. features—a uniform roast— and double blend- ing—will give you the finest cup of coffee you ever tasted! GUARANTEE. Buy a pound of M.J.B. Try it for a week. If you don’t agree it’s better than any other coffee—return the lid to M. J. B. Co., San Francisco, and we will refund double your purchase price. IIIIIII||IIIIIIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllmIIII||||I IIl|||IIIIIIIIIIIIlIHIllIIIIIIIII|I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII flggewmrmm»' DRIP SRIND, for drip or glass coffee makers. REGULAR @RIND, for percolator or coffes por. DELIVERIES2:30 P. M. SEWARD PHONES =e.- 0000000000000 III||l||II|III|||II|||III||||IIIIIllllmllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIiIIII|I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIHIlIlI"l 104-105 OO OO Steamship Company agent here, ! left Juneau yesterday to visit rela- tives in the States, unions. ¢ e BUY DEFENSE BONDS 1 f -

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