The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 7, 1942, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA WILLIAMSON Jap Bombers Downed in Attack on U. S. Aircraft Carrier TRIP SOUTH SuperimenM of Alaska| Juneau Says Mine Oper- ations Not fo Close F W & 4 | FAIRBANKS, Alaska — What's, good for the geese in Manhattan Eskimos of - Barrow in War Effort —FOR SALE- 4-WHEELED TRAILER—Good Rubber. 2 HORSEPOWER ELECTRIC MOTOR-—A-1 Condition NEW 400-EGG INCUBATOR. 500-CHICK BROODER. 1 1 NEW 1200-EGG INCUBATOR. 1 2000-CHICK BROODER. — {is good for the ganders 'way u s ey J. A. Williams has left on a at Barrow, 2 pj FEEDERS, ETC. short business trip to San Fran- Which is simply an unpoetic way ® cisco and other coast cities of expressing that the Eskimo| False rumors have been making population on the most northerly ! WHITE LEGHORN LAYING HENS— the rounds once again that the, ‘shoros: of Uncle Sam’'s domain are| HANSON STRAIN—ONE-YEAR-OLD 1 Alaska Juneau was about to close in this war as deep as the chief| ¥ down. This is the case, he air ‘raid warden in Times Square. n " said, although operating conditions Three residents of the village 325| at present are es y tough. His miles north of Arctic Circle are ‘ ; E 0 R G E B B 0 S visit to San Francisco is for mak- in Fflil'bunks. two of them watch- ] ing plans to continue gold-lead | ing life in Fairbanks from a den- mining operations and it is also | tist's chair, the third recuperating| T Ph sz dgs being made in connection with a from a rendezvous he kept with a wo r’nhones an war emergency product on which i the company is now working | - "Blifz” Camp Has More Gufilhan Men surgeon’s scalpel | Which, again, tells a story in it- self—there is neither dentist nor doctor in Barrow's 24-bed Office of | Indian Affairs hospital. Democracy Defined The Barrow Howard Burkher, instructor in the| i | visitors are Mrs.| Dfilresfié Has Plan fo Stop |Jap Threafs LABOR GETS ~ NOTE FROM Office of Indian Affairs school; Miss Clara Kaufmann, hospital ¢ § J . Frank Dufresne, Executive Offi- ] o b KI‘.'OX‘ By, Aol T § nurse; and Corporal James Truly,{ laska G © o Strange as it may seem, a U. S. L 1 raidl 7 | cer of the Alaska Game Commis armored division has 8000 more | D8, .Slgna. ‘?0”’5 radio operator. gion with the help of Dave Wood, weapons than men! The ultra- | Blobs of smoke all over the sky are anti-aireraft shells bursting as 18 Jap bombers attack a task force of the U. S. Fleet somewhere in the South- | Corporal Truly is recovering fromi go.ne: commission employe now an appendectomy at the Ladd Field | | hospital. Perhaps more than any previous experience under the wing of the| big eagle in Washington, this war |and Selective Service have defined west Pacific. A column of smoke rises (right center) from a Japan plane which, after being disabled by Lieut. Edward H. O'Hare, tried a 000 men and 20,000 guns, ranging | suicide dive at the plane carrier (left), but was stopped by concentrated gunfire and exploded as it plunged into the sea O'Hare was credited from the 45 caliber pistol 10 the | yin pagging six of the 16 planes downed in this engagement, February 20. 105 millimeter howitzer : The seemingly unbalanced ratio living in New Mexico, has worked out an airtight defense for Alaska against Japanese invasion. The plan is simple, As Wood pointed out to Dufresne, simply mechanized “blitz” machine has 12,- DETROIT, April 7.—A letter from President Roosevelt was read today * at a special war conference of the United Automobile Workers and of men and weapons is not due to an over-production of pellet-spray- ers. The varied activities of an armored division requires that some | 'MANY TRAVEL ON ALASKA COASTAL LEO J. JEWETT IS TRANSFERRED Air Raid Safety Chart | Casualties from democracy for her Eskimo neigh- bors, in the opinion of Mrs. Burk- set up a licensing station on Attw |Island or at any other strategic outpost and enforce the law relat- |ing to Alien Special Licenses. This stated that the Government’s in- tention is to “renegotiate contracts with employers wherever necessary to insure that savings from the re- of the men fire as .Xnfln»\-‘;}s‘ 1'1\"-} Standing in Street ription has taught the ES-| equires a payment of a fee of |linguishment of double or premium different weapons from their ar- plANES MONDAY To WHIIEHORSE < T |kimos that they may march on|§100 for any alien who wishes to time will g0 not to the employer, but migret Vih,ml% e - ; YoUR SAFLS c\'ex.-n terms in the same »ranks with carry a gun in the Territory. No to the nation.” WALTER G. HELLAN | " e GG L P B e thelr white foster-cousins. ~Pearl|jap soidier will have the $100 and B S MAKES HOONAH TRIP A iiea | tiative A= # PLACE IN AN Harbor proved that, as civilians,| yjil be required by law to release M 2 on Alaska Coastal Airlines| trative Assistant for the Public they are entitled, and anxious, to RAY PETERMAN HERE Walter G. Hellan, Deputy U. S| 500 ociorday were, Lois Hill, Ed Roads Administration office here rub shoulders with their fairer- Za : e g e v, Lot B 3| Roote SSRGS ook AIR RAID <o winks e plan nx - EROM STTKA MONDAY plane to Hoonah on Monday to i:u\\u.s(. le'm” I;l ; up ‘.[ s plans to _.m‘e .1?1‘ m‘.",“f )‘1»‘ | ‘.s}mmed compntrlots in the protec- Dossibilities. e o A Sbamness tor - the| OB A0 Bardley, Ray SEictSD, | 008 L0 SRR S R tion of their own, bleak, barren—| e e—— Ray Peterman, prominent Sitka B John Schultz, G. E. Naylor, Ra- for an indefinite assignment as but their own—front yard. business man, arrived in Juneau by Marshal's office. chael Scott, Amy Jackson, Mr. auditor and accountant for the Wartime Precautions WEATHER BUREAU | plane Monda;' to attend the annual BUY-”l;FL.N.SE' sT;\AMI’S and Mrs. J. J. Conway Administration’s engineering or- Since December 7, Mrs. Burkher MEN ARRIVE HERE | meeting of the board of directors Making the trip from Juneau ‘o ganization. (FROM OFFICIAL BRITISH said, nightly blackouts have bem‘xw 'WULZH‘?;;E\lxn am; A. E. Mc- of the Columbia Lumber Company Sitka yesterday was M. Benson. Jewett nas peen with the Ju- effective in the Eskimo community.; Kenzie, U. S. Weather Bureau men | Jast evening. Mr. Peterman was Airmail both to and from Sitka neau office since March, 1926. At CASUALTY EXPERIENCE) Twenty-four-hour volunteer guard|({rom the Anchorage office now elected Vice-President of the com- TRIAN G LE vas carried on A. C. A Whitehorse he will apparenty be has been maintained, with each(are in Juneau. They have been pany at the meeting. On a flight to Haines Monday in charge of the auditing setup | shift, whites among the greater|assigned to duty in Southeast Al- . o o = & - CLEA“EBS n an Alaska Coastal Airlines plane of a large governmental organiza- number of natives, standing a six- | 1ska. CONNOR TO SITKA i hour turn at distributed intervals. | Emmett Connor, local broker, left . passengers were, Donald McGilli- | tion in connection with work on cende. s 1 New Locahon : , William Latten, William Mor- | the International Highway. ::f::lt:.hsf,r::: To make the plan clearer for i B today by plane for a business trip | Juneau Laundry gan, Joe Diamond, Ernest Eichom| Mrs. Jewett and the family will - the Eskimos a large peg-board was BUY DEFENSE BONDS to Sitka Building ind Leonard Fiedler remain in Juneau. ‘consv.ruc(ed Each peg represents| = L 8 - Monday A. C. A. made a round s T |a volunteer guard. Each hole sym-| “for better rip flight to Hoonah with those was made to siika n Sgt. R Casualties from bolizes an assigned post. When ] appearance’ eaving here for that place, Pat'S. Winn, Joseph H. Peterson, Do: Lying Behind an Eskimo leaves um_ village, tem- PHON Sweeney, John L. Clarke, Harold | ald Tibbes, Emmet Connor, C. J Low Cover porarily, for a hunting foray on | Prentice, Charles Grahum and Davis and Don Moller as passengers o ce———— | the? tundra back . country, hey pulls | | Walter G. Hellan. Returning pas- and returning on the plane to |his peg. Upon his return the peg sengers were, Pat Sweeney, Walter | Juneau were Joe Higgins, Mrs |t crammed backiin the hole, { G. Hellan and Frank McKinley. | John Zeranoff and H. R. Raymond Civilian Defense Staff 1 Arriving in Juneau from Chichagof | C. T. Bostick left here this morn- Sergeant Stanley Morgan, ihv; i were Jack Littlepage and Jack ing on an A. C. A. plane leaving man; betiind - {hadjcbiadashiice Atha Gaudie for Ketchikan and James E. Boyle e Qfifi: Ctfir:r;::;cal\;b;; rfiys‘t:r:m:;; Today's Flights took the same plane as far as Pet- s s itk e Ao Meannr o This morning a round trip flight ersburg ——— | Hi5 lieutenants are Douglas John- | son, U. S. Reindeer Service, and| |Delwyn Rasmussen, government | iweatherman, instructors of the| |rifle unit; Howard Burkher, prin-| icipal of Barrow's five - teacher — school, chief air raid warden; the| EVERYBODY IS LOING IT DOING WHAT? WHY, PLANTING A GARDEN OF COURSE! : S e Ry s e : o | Reverend Fred George Klerekoper, | “ 'T‘C})\ere (}I(“(Lé).l nber of good reasons why you should plant your own garden this lA(K ll“l[PAGE EHEA“’“ DEPARIME"I | Presbyterian missionary, fire chief; | There's lots of woik ‘to:Be lone these year. ne is ECONOMY; another is that every pound of potatoes or carrots you raise - |and Mildred Keaton, hardy, dog-! d b N T k § g e, ays, both in Civilian Defense and the yourself, relieves the boats of that much carac ‘e for DEFENSE work. HERE MONDAY FROM | REPORTS ON DlSEME‘,n}ushmg “angel of the Arctic, ‘“Sli s;'vgces You'll nesd frash rintey and There is a THRILL in watching the th you plant develop and grow. Besides I(“AGOF M'“E Health Department officials re-| %14 chairman. | the Baranof Coffee Shop is the place to all that you will get a lot of good healthy exercise for those unused muscles. (H port this week to the Territorial| | find it. Meals DELICIOUS ] | Department of Healgh that 88 cases | 2 | d it. Meals are . 4 Jack Littlepage, noted mining en- ' of mumps are known in the Ter- all aper | b : - " ral g 91 cases of common 1 gineer and for the last several ritory and 91 cai of | years General Manager of the Chi- | respiratory disease . | e aran” chagof Mining Company, "‘}T_‘:’e"d‘;‘ Of the mumps cases, 31 are in| II Fr n(h i Juneau by plane late yesterday ..., .00 and 37 in Ketchikan; i afternoon from the mine. Mr. Littlepage is staying at the Coffee Shop 176 of the common respiratory dis-| A total| + vhile in the city. eases are in Anchorage . 2 J Gastitioau Bglel e Y |of 17 cases of German measles- are I o | LES TEAGLE, Catering Manager GO A e Jrepm‘te(l. 10 or inem in Peters- s L] 4 BUY DEFENSE STAMPS burg. : S | | PARIS, April 1.—Jean Luchaire." | editor of the German-sponsored | Paris newspaper, Les {Legs and Costumes will appear “ForThe Heartier Meals | MORECROP Nouveau | LILLY and NORTHUP CREBENT LAWN SEED | o better advantage in | Temps, predicted “France will have | VIGERO KING CLOVER | a new government by the end of this | 3 NU-LIFE s 2 i s ial Mi L Seed | week or the beginning or_ next unless i Saloctad for Bonlhs pecial Mixture Lawn See ! she agrees to commit suicide for the e ense s s o“ o 5 BONE MEAL eastern A a . | benefit of Roosevelt.” | PLANT CHEM. Clim Per pkg. 15¢ GARDEN TOOLS HOES —— RAKES —— CULTIVATORS —— FORKS —— SHOVELS —— SPADES WHEELBARROWS with RUB- RUBBER TIRED, BALL BEAR- BER TIRE ONLY slz'nn ING LAWN MOWER slu'sn Juneau-Young Hardware Co. Luchaire said that if “political | association between unoccupied | France and the Anglo-American bloc continues, the Axis will take measures more harmful to our coun- | try than all the diplomatic breaks imaginable between France and the | United States.” | .- { {DAN MOLLER LEAVES 'FOR SITKA TODAY | " AFTER SHORT STAY | Dan Moller, City Engineer in Sitka ! and head of the Civil Defense or- | ganization in that city, left Juneau by Alaska Coastal Airlines plane this morning after spending a short time here consulting with local civil de- fense officials. While in Juneau, Mr. Moller also attended the annual meeting of the Columbia Lumber Company board | of directors which was held last ! evening. | Every Housewife Can Serve Her Country Best By Serving Her Family More Healthful, Nutritious Meals i HOLEPROOF HERE'S A FACT ABOUT NUTRITION YOU SHOULD KNOW Loss of food value in cooking vegetables is caused by the dissolving of sugars, min- crals and vicamins in the liquid in Which the food & . Therefore, vegetables should be cooked in the smallest possible amount of water. ALL SILK in 3, 6 and 10 Thread 1.15, 1.25, 1.50 1¢'s aBeauty! THE 1942 GENERAL ELEC- TRIC RANGE has beea scieatifically de- signed and kitchen tested to cook the most healthful meals. The accurately measured and controlled heat of the fast heating Clean Speed Calrod Units, the economical Thrift Cooker and the large capacity oven assure wholesome, delicious) zooked food. Vegeables and_meats retain the natural juices with their abundance of awritious vitamins. See thel1942 General Electric Ranges Today - - - On Display at Your Local G-E Dealer GENERAL @ ELECTRIC WALTER P. SHARPE Candidate for | Cotton—Rayon COMMISSIONER OF LABOR | Ceton e : 3 : 1.00, 1.15 / BORN IN NOME, ALASKA 36 Years “Committed to Efficient Administration in Public Office.” LOW PRICES AND TERMS Resident of Territory ‘ | |( J. DAVIS LEAVES FOR | SITKA BY PLANE TODAY | w ! PROVEN RECORD AS COMPETENT ADMINISTRATOR | : YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED » Family Shoe Store (Paid Advertisement) e e e e e et e it Seward Street £y C. J. Davis returned to Sitka by plane this morning after spending the last ten days on business in Juneau. Mr. Davis, formerly Chief of Police in Juneau, is now with C.A. A Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. PHONE 616 b Democratic Primary—April 28, 1942

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