The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 2, 1942, Page 6

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MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1947 STEAMER TAKES 11 SOUTHWARD Eleven men left Juneau Saturday by steamer for Southeast ports and f Architedt for| G | Grover Winn was a passenger for e rc iec orIWrzmgell, Earl Neuru, L. H. Clark, | Thomas Bonstead, F. P. Smith and | Harold Foss went to Ketchikan; and | Lars Hammer, Hans Nesvog, Jo- ! seph Johnson and A. N. Minard are -~ PAGE SIX THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA THREE AXIS Senafe Okays - SUBSSTRIKE | Repeal Bill U. S._VESSEL For Pensions {Will Be Chi | Ore Freighter Shelled from Congress Also Authorizes| H.C.REDMANTO | ASSUME NEW JOB IN OREGON FHA SITKA AIRMAIL | Nazis Poor Shots, Say Tofpedded Sailors INAUGURATED BY S— - LOCAL COMPANY Two Sections of Alaska Coastal Airlines Carried Passengers and Mail | | State and Also Continue { Present Position N AN 3 . |booked to Seattle. Two sections, flown by pilots Alex ‘ Siem to Stern Before Con"nued Pay for Cap ' H{ o FRI::mF".A(l:mli.rx valm:li;cr:r‘x:;_ : . $ 3 . 21 | > ler for n aska, 2 g ané. Shel Smmot, yese | Senf Down | fured Americans |ine cany pare of next week for uneladies day inaugurated Alaska Coas i 08 | Portland, Oregon to assume the Ch p I d A Alrlines first airmail flight on the March. 3—Three WASHINGTON, March 2 — The position of Chief Architect for the Ie re Juneau-Sitka run, recently author- [ NOWPERS: V6. S0 o e ihelr|Senate toGay completed legislative Oregon office of FHA. Mr. Red- 'I'o M "I‘ d ized by the Post Office Department |Axis submarines - combine action on a measure repealing legis-|man will continue to hold his pres- eel lues ay | striking power to sink the Ameri- | can freighter Maroe off the middle | Allantic coast last Thursday night. crippled lation permitting Congressmen lo}em position as Chief Underwriter obtain government pensions. !for FHA in Alaska though the With only a score of members}hendquar(ers of that office will, as airplane route No. 78233 Four hundred fifty-seven pounds! of afrmail to Sitka and 87 pounds Mrs. Hal Kimmel will entertain the Chapeladies on Tuesday eve- R e R e ] BUY DEFEns: BONDS cessity and not public clamor will ing. A / s ¥ 4 tive order providing for the stream- decide what will be done about lett received notification of this \Vlv'uch the dededaed apd his ggm-l \ibing of existing crganisations ‘and evacuating the West Coast's 200,000 yesterday in a radiogram from the ily had long been active parishion- lenemy aliens, the Army said today. Office of Price Administration. The ers. | Lieut. Gen. John L. DeWitt, com- OPA did not give any reason for / |tional Overseas Department to em- manding officer of the Western De- the move in the announcement, |the casket around which were ar- | : g ds in fense Command, announced after On February 6, the OPA an- ranged hundreds of beautiful flm“'st)}::::r:: eofiai';,effiffi,hci"fififi any two weeks of careful study he is mounced in its weekly official bul-|bieces, mute testimony of €| ther command he deems neces- about ready to disclose the Army's letin that rationing of sugar would csteem in which Mr. Polley was ht'ld; sary. decision. be started in the States “within a|by his fellow townsmen. ! It will make no difference wheth- few weeks.” - UBean, Hice diiciat au - ihe Jove | er the civilian population in non- The plan called for the registra- aEpHl SettioN duiing M | i SR wants to get rid tion of all consumers through Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ehler s:mr';'a of alien colonies or whether other teachers in the public schools.|'One Sweetly ~Solemn Thought” localities object to re ttlement of Books were to be given out to each|@nd “Lead Kindly Light”, accom-| contain 281pamod by Ernest Oberg on the or- |in Douglas met for their weekly news to the folks—collect. " | class in Home Nursing at the Health | She arrived home hours later Center in the Territorial Build- and found the house empty. An- ing this afternoon instead of Doug-|swering a knock at the door she las as is usual. Reason for the{was greeted by a messenger with lchange of meeting place this week & telegram—collect. ? was to receive special instruction in| She paid off—and got her own | hospital bed making. wire. authorizing Secretary of War Hen- large American flag covered|'Y L- Stimson to create an addi- of mail from Sitka to Juneau were | i One of the torpedoes present, the Senate accepted a in the future, be in Portland. ning at her home on the Auk Lake carried by the planes on the first |the ship and the craft was thenjj,ni House-Senate conference re-| The FHA office in Juneau willspur road. flight. | riddled from stem: ‘to stern With{n, approving the pension répealer |continue to operate as a service. The meeting will start promptly ¢ Capacity passenger loads were on more than 100 shells, members of ;5 an amendment to a House bell foffice for FHA and will be under at 8 o'clock and an interesting eve- each trip. Sitka-bound were Ana- the ship’s crew of 39 men related | hjs bill provides for continuedilhe supervision of Mrs. Nadja Trip- ning has been planned. bell Broulette, W. A, Holzheimer, A, | here upon their safe arrival. {pay for ihembers of the armed|lett who has been connected with| i e i E. Johnstone, Virgil Heath, Mrs. | /Twenty four hours later the forces and government civilian|the office for many years. Oper- MRS. GILKES HERE R. Lajol }iav Howard, Lars | Fifth Naval District permitted the|workers reported missing or in en-‘fltlons of the Juneau office will| Mrs. C. W. Gilkes, wife of Capt. F‘ Pz, 'Hnn'v‘ ik DA | crewmen to talk but withheld pub-|emy custody. The payments will continue as in the past except for| Gilkes, Army Air Corps, who vis- gn. y 3 |lic announcement of the sinking of | go to dependents. (the transfer of the Office of Chief|ited Juneau recently, arrived here Lllllepfxe i | |the Maroe until today. | AN st Underwritef, Mr. Redman said. Mrs. ited Juneau last week, arrived here . Arriving in Juneau w ;b PR | The 8100 ton freighter was owned | |Redman will accompany her hus-|from Fairbanks over the weekend “ Morgan, Pearllchudross. Zel b ar- |by the Ore Steamship Company of {band to Portland where they will and is staying -at the Baranof Ho- rvis, K. F. Millard, L. R. Smidt,| qpirey survivors of the 33-man crew of the tanker Rochester are pictured at Norfolk, Va., after their |New York and was northbound with & |make their future home. 3 { James C. Cooper, K. F. Sampson,| rescue. Their ship was sunk by two torpedoes fired from a German submarine in the Atlantic off the la full cargo of iron ore when at-| | PR, PR TN | Mrs, Robert Jernberg, Katherine Virginia coast. The U-boat came to the surface later to shell the tanker. The concensus among the crew- | tacked. . | 1 GET APPOINTMENTS ) e I e ' STOCK QUOTATIONS | rou Susces women e wer l Alaska Coastal Airlines announc-f— —— e ST P AES , H "l W|l | employed recently by the Office ot | es that the company is making nol ! [ D : increase 1 scheuled sdvertised) | 'HUNDREDS PAY | NEW YORK, March 2. — Closing 1iclah Alfairs They are Mrs. wi- ' iton ! rm o u e quotation of Alaska Juneau mine 2 Jekins and Alta Black, tem- passenger rates. | | i . porary appointments, and Legia Ol- s 21 S ) 7 | R ESPE('I' To ! | stock today is 24, American Can 61, | (o "o aian Agnes G. Melvin A survey reveals that the | M | | . [ | Anaconda 264, Bethlehem Steel | Mrs. Agnes G Melvin, , American boys of today are taller 79 SINKINGS n I Is o JUNEAU MA“ {60%, Commonwealth and Southern| BRING PRISONERS HERE | and heavier than 50 years ago. i | ! ‘"‘I B . U .i ' A-r ;9/30. Curtiss Wright 7%, Intema-: U. 8. Deputy Marshal Kenneth E The population of Argentina is | " £l i ree as“ NIIS 101 AT, | tionar Harvester 4714, Kennecott | Sampson of Sitka arrived in Ju- roughly equal that of New York . . | 13312, New York Central 8%, North- |neau yesterday with two prisoners : state lAST MONIH Enemy A||ens OUT HERE Impressive Services Mark| Ground, Supply FOIeS &, acic . tmiten staies Steet wi. Wi sorse "thmee moprmccners : P ERIUBERS o £ o | H 50%, Pound $4.04. |tences in the Federal jail. The , ey : | | Funeral of Late E. M. | Now Established 5 | riuiera e, W T Betniey | and ! { FRANCES HANSENi BERLIN, March 2 — A German|(jvilign Opln ion Won't OPA Informs Admg Gov- Po"ey Sunday | WASHINGTON, Marcn 2—Presi-| Thlzo:r;m.:](::zsar:v::;:f::zow | Owitsrine Jathce ' { formerly of the Baranof Beauty | |army bulletin today reported 525,-| 5 5 dent Roosevelt today reorganized| = 7€ ,vemge: Tudustials 106-,5." i | salon now at your service at z Ooukwdns_of ;":""" it S R ulod Make Any Dl"eren(e, ernor Plan Doesn t Impressive funeral services for :::2 :x::l}; ‘::'gur::r‘;zr:::‘ct::n;r—_‘ rails, 27.08; utilities, 1346, ! FASI SERVI(E ; \ ' sun. uring February & . the late Ernest M. Polley were con-| 5 B2 H _._._'.__ ; ! SIGRID'S {| Submarines accountea for 448,000| Gen. DeWitt Says i Hit Alaska ducted by Dean C. . ice, in Holy|my Air Force and the Services of| o z Shampoo and Finferwave $1.25 { |tons. The tonnage destroyed repre- | Trinity Cathedral yesterday after—‘:sugzfi' unit will be in charge of HOME NURSING CLASS IS | COFFEYVILLE, Kas., Mar. 2 — ! R e b SAN FRANCISCO, Calif, March There will be mo rationing of noon at 2:30 owclock. Scores off 00 PV Foo of) HELD IN HEALTH CENTEK wWhen her high school debate team HERBEX TREATM { A4 3 & 2—The stern law of military ne- sugar in Alaska for the time be"mendé 9. the R donown Ju‘neau‘ The President issued an execu-| Girl members of the 7th ana oui Won a tournament at nearby Par- ; B AR 3 Acting’ Governor E. L. Bart-|resident crowded the Cathedral of| grades of the Government School sons, Virginia Harper wired the ] 1y ‘ iliens in their midst The Army person and would : o will decide, DeWitt said | stamps, numbered, each one to en-’g““- Following the service, Dean - Ititle the purchaser to three-quar-|Rice paid sincere tribute to Mr. {ters of a pound of sugar. Polley in a short eulogy. | As each consumer applied for| Members of both the American {War Ration Book No. 1, he would Leglon, of which Mr. Polley, a | be required to make a certified|World war veteran, had been a lead- | statement as to the amount ot“mg member, and of the American | : Japanese Afraid | Of London Barbers | sicnz = o e ama ofive musber, ot ot the Amecinhs _ it. If there was found to be more|Vvices as well as hundreds of other LONDON, March 2— Japansse|than two pourds of sugar per per-|friends. diplomats in London are badly in'son in the possession of the fam- Tead by a color guard®made up need of haircuts. ily, the balance would be (:onsld-l"r John H. Newman, and Bert Ly-| The embassy staff, living as vir- ered as hoarded sugar and the ap-|Peck. color bearers, accompanied by tual prisoners in the embassy since |Propriate number of stamps torn|Waino Hendrickson and Thomas war was declared, have asked the|from the book right at the start. ;Pliqutchinxs‘. guards, the members of British through the Swiss repre- Penalties for falsification of thisi!heé American Legion marched in | sentatives to recognize the fact|T€POrt run as high as $10,000 fine | the funeral cortege to Evergreen |that they .have been shut up for|°F, 10 vears' imprisonment. | Cemetery where military and com- | 3 X ¢ In selling the sugar, storekeepers;Mittal services were held. three months without being able to| 3 ' At the cemeter: 1 | visit a barber MR ek 8 st ot or Weiwihe (000, D, ST 8. Ble. e | chasgr’: r sacti | squaad of twelve soldi i Tt was assumed that, in the pres- ser's book for each transaction. iers | It's prompt . . . efficient . . . courteous: it will help you particularly if your time is budgeted to deiense activities and you want a hurried, but tasty luncheon. The Baranof Coffee Shop LES TEAGLE, Catering Manager Thi { from the 42nd Engineer Corps, U. S. ent mood of the British—barbers | gy Would be pasteq on a 8! pe, U8 ! Army, under tie command of Lieut. and all—the Japanese insist on | storekeeper’s card which he | would‘ - Ja use in obtaining fresh supplies| Gr2Yelel. Taps, played by a bugler shaving ' themselves. from the wholesalers. - |ifrom the same organization, fol-| B — — | lowed, with Fred Sorri ———-—— U. 5. AIDING FREE FRENCH ON PACIFIC Partial Rectfilion Grant- ed fo Anti-Vichy Forces on Islands LONDON, March 2—The United States has given partial recogni- 'tion to the Free French regime on the Pacific and is cooperating in (the defense of French islands there, General DeGaulle’s headquarters said today. These islands are vital stepping stones along the route to New Zealand and Australia. - e, — 29,500 POUNDS OF SABLEFISH sounding jthe echo from a distance. After ! the impressive military ceremony, Dean Rice read the Episcopal com- | mittal service. Interment took |place in the American Legion plot jof the cemetery. Pallbearers were Charles G. Bur- dick, Fred Alexander, Harry Lea, Alfred Zenger, Homer G. Nordling and Harold Smith. Dr. Clayton Polley, son of the deceased, arrived in Juneau from Skagway shortly before the funeral by airplane. OAKEN STORAGE FACILITIES FOR CRESTA BLANCA LIVERMORE, Cal, March 2—An oaken storage capacity greater than that of any other winery in the country has just been achieved by the Cresta Blanca plant here, with completion of an expansion. pro- gram increasing its facilities from 200,000 gallons to 1,500,000 gallons. The plant has been completely remodeled since it was acquired by Schenley Distillers Corporation last year, for large-scale production of HALVORSEN'S Liquidation Sale! Stock Must Be Completely Disposed of by 6:00 P. M. MARCH 4 FINAL CUT IN PRICES Effective Higher than High —— in America! AMERICA—-whero a hundred and thirty million people are meeting the test proving that there is no ceiling on the oppor- tunities of this nation, on its ability to fight for the principles upon which it was built, on its hope and {aith in the future. We are still in the Winter of the War. But we know that Spring will retum—to America to Juneau . and most of all, to our hearts. THE time will come when you can shake off the ‘ice and grime and dirt of that Winter. Once again Spring will come and you'll throw back your shoulders and feel how. good it is to be alive . . . you'll smile a greeting to the bus driver on PUR(H ASED “ERE fine American wines. your way to work . . . you'll buy your Best Girl the first According to Max Bartholomew, violets of the season . . . all because the sky is “higher than \ local plant manager, the expansion o 2.2 3 Three boatloads of sablefish to-|included purchase of oak casks and high” in Americal talling 29,500 pounds were bid in at 8 cents a pound today at the Juneau Cold ‘Storage Company wharf. Livers and viscera were {sorted and put in cold storage to ‘await establishment of prices, as season contracts for the vitamin products have not been let as yet. | Purchases were by the Alaska ovals with a capacity of 700,000 gallons, oak being considered essen- tial for storage purposes in aging fine wines. Large redwood tanks were Also installed for preliminary “racking,” stabilizing and clarifi- cation of wines! Oak and redwood cooperage is mow on a 50-50 ratio, at 9 a. m. Daily Alaska Empire i i | Coast Pisheries, Oc: 4 000| he said. : NoCredit NoAlterations NoReturns e T Lt 11,000 pounds; Addington, 6,500 A house wren fed her young 1,- pounds. 217 times a day. I

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