The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 12, 1942, Page 2

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'AGE TWO POROTHY GRAY ”OVERNIGHTER $7.50 M @ Stunning new case stocked with Dorothy Gray make-up, skin-care preparations (choice of dry or oily ing compariment. Cosmetic sec- tion has removable tray, storage space. In ostrich grain fabri- koid. Black, sienna brown, or light tan. Other Dorothy Gray cases from $5 to $40. B M Beloends Cs| QUALITY SINCE /887 | BOMBNAZI | i skin assortment). Ample cloth- il | | | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRL——_IUN[-.AU ALAbKA * QUARTERS ~ INPARIS roadcasting report today said that B a number of bombs thrown into | 1 ! LONDON, Muy 12—A British f | the famcus Parisian hotels used as German headquarters have caused imnsx derable damage and that cor- {dons of police have heen up around the area with all rail-| | ways under c! wateh in an ef- fort to apprehend the bomb tossers. Frece French headquarters here | said that a wave of acute unrest is ".swco)wine thrcugh the former French capital with 17 new clan- destine leaflets having fallen into the hands of the Gestapo, Nazi |secret police, m the last two weeks. NAZI NAVAL STAFF GOES thrown | ) uem' rv M SITKA Passengers returning to Juneat {yesterday from Sitka on the “after- |nocn flight of Alaska Coastal Air- ways included Francis L. Anger Capt. W. N. Snouffe: . K. Rush- ton, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wilcoxon and Dermott O'Toole, coming tc Bills with Dynamife | Ready for Ationas FDR Blows Lid Off 1Conlmuca from Pagc One) | ! | those vital matters of price control, | rationing, the wages and hours of | labor, the wartime regulation of 1g- bor unions, corporate and personal srofits, ceilings on incomes. And any | >ne or all of these, if passed, could | iave mere effect on you, \\'h(-H\ul'! jou warm luxurious leather behind | 2 mahogany desk in Wall Street, or | hoe a rocky acre at the forks of the | :reek, than anything that has been S-T-R-I-K-E ! Juneau from Tenakee. Alaska Coastal yesterday made a charter trip to Juneau from Wr.-gpg 1 and a trip to Pillar Bay for . Mc¢Donald. | A late trip to Sitka with mafl was | plabned’ this afternoon. mwsrm * DIES IN TACOMA | John' Gustafson, oldtimer of Jun- eali, who Ieft, for the south’ in_ 1921, died-in Tacoma last ’I‘huruddy,, May lone since Pearl Harbor. \ It took a lot of phenagling by ad- ministrative leaders on the hill to keep Congress sitting quietly whie the President drew up his overall} program. | That Connally bill in the Senate, | not a drastic measure in itself but ' clearing the way for argument and | possible amendments on every labor | issue from wage control to the clos- | ed shop, almost blew the lid off. | Although' still in committee, the | Smith-Vinson bill in the House of Representatives threatened to rau\r a similar explosion in the Capitol's AMERICA'’S fastest growing fpon is bowling. Safe and sane or adults, young and old, it offers fleuuxe, friendliness and relaxation in wholesome surroundings, With attributes so similar, it’s natural that Olympia Beer, the Beverage of Moderation, is also a great favorite with the millions of alert, temperate Americans who seek relaxation outdoors, at home, club or friendly TUESDAY MAY 12, BOB COWLING | 942 as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the« — CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "HOLD THAT GHOST" Federal Tax—>5c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! NORTH LAND TRAN SPORTATION \_,OMPA '1Y osuoy PNk - TO FRANCE SALMON FRY IN | 7 and . funeral services' werg: held gathering. last. Sunday. This is according to a radiogram received here by Hans south wing. Thie President’s right hand men in CHINESE IN H & i Congress had some bad moments be- | THOUSANDS ASK. 1Y { MOBGEOW, May .!~Ta.ss, Rus-| Berg. fore 'they got all this dv)n\n\ll(“ H Yl SASH l “ (REEK sian news agency, reported today I " Gustafson was an extensive prop- | wrapped up and labeled not to be | 1t's the Water ! a Stockholm dispatch, thal reptes-jerty owner and. was well known | opened until the President had had | jentetives of ““f ("‘"""‘“n Navaliand highly esteemed by old resi- | his say | Premium- priced mgredlcms | : The U. . F. 5. Heron has arrived | Gencral Staff bave arrived in T|°"- dents of Juneau. He drove onc of | Those who crave action may be! and the purity and constant | at Little Port Walter and prepara- | 'O% where A;!ml Al] Jos:dD‘&r an | the old Kelly trucks, and always|asking why the delay. I know at| brewing qualities of Olympia’s ;F—'-—'_-—_W'*_ t 8 hief_of the French armed forces, at low gear. & R SbE: Tt | — TRy tions are being made to count the jchiel o & X least the administration answer. famous subterranean water ink salmon fry resulting from the |15 said to have arrived yesierday. Burvivors are the widow and twolis simply that they don’t want any | . Cont 11, Page One) ; 1 i LBl The -dispatch also said that|sons ) e, At b ORETAEIE | have enabled one family of (Continued from Page On eggs spawned in Sashin Creek last P e aws passed in t) ] . fall, reports S. J. Hutchinson, fishery | Frénch military authoritiés have ! | that might boomerang on the war | Master Brewers to originate, l‘ Serving Southeast Alaska: Passengers, Mail, Express and maintain through three sstablished contact headquarters at SCHEDULED DAILY AT 10‘00 A M biologist of the Fish and Wildlife |effort. Some of the laws proposed, Claude M. Hu‘sh, Superintendent of the Alaska Office of Indian Af- fairs, who has just returned from the area, the Jap remnants are 7 ey 228 B : . till 50 miles within China on the | Service, United States Department |Rundstedt, German commander of in the opinion of the administra- | &enerationsadistinctanddiffer Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- el i o 30 milee | Of the Tnterior, who is in charge of | Eastern FPrance and that Troop " g 3 [tion, might have ben just that.| £R¢ YPe of beer—Olympia, | To% Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd lcan shan gof Sitka Bupma Boed.. Mangshib 1s 30 miles| . 0 apring fleld, work, movements are going on in the TO HONOR MISS | That's why the President took a| "It's the Water,” America’s |§ Juneau..$8 $10 818 810 18 $18° ¢l $t $18 s iy il tiogi The developing pink salmon brood | Eastern - zone. | { \ \hand, That's how the lull came | “Original Light Table Beer.” || sitka....18 18 18 10~ 18 18 0 10 Other Chinese forces continue to| iy Foro B0 een subjected LIS | | about. Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 L] k E\'.mu e ';”p'a "}”'I’””“ to severe injuries during the ]msl‘vE"E'"E (H“.DRE" { GI_ADYS FORREST But it’s almost over and if you l;;]rtmhnn :: }8 }g llg 18 10 ¢ ‘n, ,’rm\.‘ are re u.,‘l (“ J(“-:;\\‘ few months. A heavy snowfall oc- like legislative fireworks, Lc;p your M Tidgln o8 18 10 10 captured Maymyo and also driven | oo By | eyes on Capitol Hill. Only a drench- Y P : | to the outskir ruined Malay \i\\:l»::wl. ::\'x‘mlx:."mllu‘? ;tC]I:F‘B:!l(‘SX ::::‘ HAVE S(HEME m BLs; "‘dw"‘d L Bartlett issucdjng d(mnp:nn of public indifference If_l“:l;f‘e i llg i: 10 They are now moving northeast- | winter. This was followed by a | BU“"G WAR BO“DS '[«:(:;S zlozfi)flywfi;rda ll‘«\] L; be given|can put out the fuses now. ! BE ER ngannh % g ward in an effort to block the Jap | period of heavy rains, and excessive Ligies “honoig M;" ‘(’imd”“ :’”' s st | 2 e zxprm Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 600 it im0 ‘ [ttoods produced by ‘the rain and ; el s b i e BRIt home st ,,“ ‘ Its the Water” | SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY melting snow literally scoured the Native children at Venetle are do. Calts 3 i Vs Woileuns 4t | Ketchikan Kasaan Wrangell Petersburg ke BRITISH ACTIVITIES tream. As a resull, many thou-|ing their bit in providing funds. to|Calhoun Ayenue. One of America's || Juneau $31.00 $31.00 $20.00 $18.00 - 5.00 NEW DELHI, May 12—The Brit- | sands of eggs and immature fry were | help their country in ‘the-war effors, | - }is3" Foktest, of; the Governor: “ Exeeprimnal Brewerie || Kak . 2500 25.00 25.00 12.50 [ Office 1s leaving about the first 7 % I column in withdrawing along | washed out of the gravel and thou- | Claude M. Hirst, Superintendent oi}J LS gaving. gpou the first of | Petersburg 18.00 18.00 .50 Cindwin River in wostern Burma | Sands of others were buried two to |the Alaska Office of Indian Affairs, | ‘;;‘:N © make her home in the| N OLYMPIA BREWING Wrangell 15.00 15.00 nlv turned (heir fury on the|four feet deep by the shifting |reports i COMPANY Kasaan ... 10.00 and drove cver 300 invad- | stream bed A letter received by Mr lnrsl\ VR B Gt i sa | Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.0¢ . htie 1| During the last of December and ' frem John Fredson, of Venetie, tells | ch | A f | r from Shwegyin, a small| TT ot 140 miles noptn. | the first days of January, the|of how the children axe making “V" | anne Ul’SeS ! | ;iéslgl%%béA SEEG(\%\IA{/RI%%% LOBGE Phone slz d | weather turned clear and cold and |for Victory posters, selling them Im | hiirerk H west of Mandalay i | R i Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, Less 10% 1 | the stream dropped to its lowest{rom 25 cents to a dollar, then buy- PI P ' | he Japs re reporte s mad single passenge: The M"‘)"“" Pt :f“””” "”"' level in the past two years. Every ing war stamps or bonds with the an I(n.( 0' | — I An addluonxl chsrge wflrllbe e Tor le o LR el L 2 in motor | nart of the exposed stream bed was | procceds: | 1’9 BULLETIN—Ottawa, May 12 to flag stops. e | frozen solid and more potential fry | If the children collect $50, the| e e une 7! —The sinking of a freighter in . 'w\]; Alr Force planes have suc- | qestroyed. Therefore. a bum per | Venetie' Trading Co. will 'put up the| P the St. Lawrence River in the (Ul e e T T e Y T ; 5 cesstully machine-gunned Jup Ot crop of fry cannot be expected this |other $23 with which (o purchast Al Gastineau Ghammel Nirscs As| first enemy submarine attack | High (ide 044 am. 17.2 fect PA N AMER .CAN By tunapor containing troops. | spring, although the largest number |$75 bond which will mature at $100|¢oeiation met last evening in the! €ver reported in those waters Low tide 7:00 am., -06 feet This was done during an offensive | of spawners in the stream recorded |in ten years. Juieau Health“(:cnwr ,Kn,,km | was announced today by Navy High tide, 1:18 1;m" 5.6 feet. ieconnaissance of Japanese lines of |to date—some 80,000—were counted | ‘The children already have col-'pians’ for the pienic which i t"l Mlnisu-r Macnnnald Low tide 7:05 L 16 fest, A ' R w A Y S communications in northern Burma. | through the weir last fall |lected more than $25 and expect 10 pe held on June 7 gl B - ;’.L:H % hicEe - - — | No information has been available do better when the muskrats begin| phe picnic will ‘bo held at ti ® e 000000 00 i REEIT WAR S ihrlv(n(mv- on the quantitative in- coming in, Fredson writes. summer home of M J \( & ‘N . g . o SEIZED BY U. 8. & fluence of the environmental fac- at Polnt Louisa Y "'"k"r b WEATHER RECORT | SERVICE AC TODAY | tors on the survival or reactions of | HIRSI n ! ‘Appaihted 1o take char p Ivmpvmhur Monday, May 11 e/ | NEW YORK, May 12—Secret Ser- | the pink salmon. Continuous year- P [arrfingemc il o ’“‘ = mum 75, Minimum 46 e | vice agents today announced the |0Wd observations in Eashin Creck | BN e e Tt 80 0 VSREE ah e A , atrect of ten men and the selzure | A€ Providing data that may be used INSPE( 'Rlp T e s Mkt 3L ), T of plates and 210,000 unperforatea | '0, 18 8 basls Lo accuraiely pr e st SIX ARRIVE, SEVEN J ; T e SO Tk ‘m__ rhcux;‘g |hv,l .bun?anco of Spink sal- ,o po'"'s mm / Round-T' Fares: : I 1 mon in each year's run i utheast | p one-! : i scribed @s the first roundup of the | Alaska YRR Bqutlienst I N H o u S E LEAVE FROM CITY || 107 oz m'::: way g alleged War Savings Stamps coun- | terfeiters of the nation i LRl ten s, Empire Class fares, when purchased Arrivals in Juneau last night from HI ay ] WASHINGTON, May the Westward were Marcus Carl- 12 — The| SERVI(E MEN 55 ;u two-weeks’ 1_nspec'.ion trip to In~; House voted tentatively today to, M 1 ] dian schools in the Tnterior, re-|: |raise the pay of army enlisted men son, Mrs. Alfred Nauling, E. J.|I pajrbanks, Alaska ..$ 76 ;;poned that the trip was the quick-| Ladies of the Rebekah Lodge will|t0 & minimum of $50 monthly, up-|Sparks, Elton C. .Davis, Clarence Flat, - 3 |est and easlest he has made yet. |entertain’ on Saturday night in |Ping the figure from the Senate Thomas, Mrs. Mary Thomas. Golovin, Alasks ... 141 s | He visited schools at Tanana,|the TOOF. Hall for al service | APProved rate of $42. The House took| Leaving Juneau were V. C. Bing-|| Juneau, Aaska 158 . .88 Kotzebue, White Mountain, Nome,|men; |this action by a vote of 102 to 40.|ham, R. H. Savikko, Mark Kent mc"‘ml.;{. 1:‘9 -‘1: 1;: ‘5-" $112 Bethel and Anchorage, traveling all|| This party has been changed from | BT T Hulchinson, F. 0. Haldwin, ‘Mrs. g:l‘::& Alaska 121 50 89 127 83 §37 the way by plane. He had afirst-| Wedndeday évening and will he futd | DEPUTY MARSHAL |Irene Baldwin, Mrs. Carry Cupper,|| Ophir, Alasks ... 39 48 13 1256 10 116 $388 = MO[h(‘I’, Iband chance to look over the rein-|in the Hall instead of the Dugout | Mrs. Oscar Ueland, Marilyn Bald-|| Seattle, Wash., US.A. 236 m 217 207 234 . deer herds when the plane waslon Saturday because many of the| bt Whitehorse, ¥. T Can. 144 L b B L X BRINGS PRISONERS ™" HERE FROM S"VVPRIN(E Rupm .~ HALIBUT PRICES forced down in a snowstorm and he stayed all night in a herder’s tent Mr. Hirst said that 4G students (are attending the new boarding school at White Mountain and that applications for the school for next boys wish to dance. | The Army orchestra will play for dancing and refreshments will be served by the Rebekah hostesses. Junior Volunteer Hostesses are in- | vited and those who aye planning Effective Nov. 1, 1841 L. A. DELEBECQU!—DHIM Sales llunnr 3 135 So. Franklin 8t. PHONE 106 Pa4a Come Qut of the 1324-4th Ave. SEATTLE Hellan, who returned yesterd - g K.'c,.(,'. |year bear out the importarice of | to attend the War Bond rally} that |Juncau, brought thiee prisone i g 2 | the new school. He reported that!night in the Twentieth ntmy_hcrc from Sitka, ailer laking an- e the war seems to have had no|Theatre, are urged to stop in at|other prisoner from Ketchikan to| PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., May 12 effecct at all on living conditions | the Hall to take part in the danc-|Sitka. |—Two hundred| and thirty-nine p ‘zmd attitudes in the north with|ing after the rally. In Ketchikan, Hellan arrested |thousand pounds of halibut were H ih!f;%p‘:m& rmMa.s u:ll!a]v ! R N | Adolph Kramer on a warrant issucd [sold here yesterday at 14.60 to 14.90 | “mmmr - | g vas r. irst's first . trip by U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray.|and 11 cents a pound. ey Husbands, remember that it’s a real treat for !nul.h in three and a half years “0(5 ouol‘" gfimeaflchargedtgth forgery. At —————— R T L et e SRS } TR B £ B 12— itka, Hellan arres! Hughes Rog- NOTICI your wives to have dinner out occasionally. 127.000 pou"DfS or widbtdhton orflimwyaumf nine il B e Elfl)\'trl;bgms. R, TRAVEL ON A . Bring her and the family to the Baranof, where o4 stock today is 1%, Americafy,Can|% 2 boat. Rogers is being held | air route from Seattle to Nome, ov "P H & 'l‘ n E pleasant atmosphere and fine food awaits you! | HAMI ARE Sow 6271, Anaconda 24, Bethlehem Steel herc on $2000 bond and has been|sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv ETInCess by 5414, Cmm&nwmm and ' Southern charged with white slavery. Hellan e S SR D e LINER 2 | Twenty-seven thousand pounds _,,w Curtiss” Wright 6%, T |reported that Rogers was armed A_T C 0 of halibut. were brought in to Jun-| o e 8 SR "Ke’l:::,‘c’:"z when he was arrested. Juneau to Vancouver, e |eau today and sold. ’ The Tern, Capt. Andrew Rosness, ll)x'(m[.:hl in 7,000 pounds, sold to | Alaska Coast; the Helen, Capt | John Willis, brought in 7,500 pounds Burton Baker, and Carl Gustaf- son, were brought here irom Sitka to serve sentences on drunk and disorderly charges brought by U. S. Commissioner W. W. Knight, Sitka. The Baranof Coffee Shop Victoria or Seattle LINE a nsportation 28, New. York Central 7!, Ngrth-| €tn. Pafifig 5%, United States Steel 467, Pound $4.04. Princess Louise sails from Juneau May 7, 13—June 1 V. W. MULVIHILL \ ) \ \ N ) I} N \ \ ) \ \ \ \ \ \ ) \ )\ \ \ \ | \ \ \ \ 4 N \ \ { \ N N \ ) N \ \ ) N \ ) ) \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ly 3 C. C. Engstrom.” Prices were 11 angd|Jones averages: industrials $8.56,| suspended sentence which was re- cA"AnlA“ Plflflt - RNt R L e T ORI O SR T B ORI VIR G T e pj)fuul. rails 24:?1. utilities 11.72. voked. # SAILINGS FROM PIER 1 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH ~ By BILLY DeBECK BUY DEFENSE SIAMPS | o 1 CERYAWLY GOTTA 1 DECLAR' % WAND YT TO NOU, SNYFEN ™ \NN\\. TAAR'S CORPL KINKAWD * PASSENGERS FREIQHT 0D KNOW, THET G NOW g : & X OEE An Gifl : ; RUCHED OIT FOR CORPORBL T SWOWY 1 CTREED HE AT OFF 1"0!' Tdeal REFRIGERATION KANKAID - MNAIE INGWRE 2 / T NEUER HEERED 1 RECKON T-ORTER To Friends Outside or ° AWELL, HE ONWM KNEW RER oOF BNNTRWG CONGRADLATE T8 Alaskans in the South THREE DANS / ,,..\ & HSOQ £§§§¥T— i \mRN\\\\X H d Send a Subscription 1o D. B. FEMME AGENT W KEEP BN HAPPY | \araeman Py PHONE 114 NIGHT 312 p X S T WATER-PROOFED | § ALASKA WOMAN e P. 0. Box 284, Juneau, Alaska The Dally Alasks Smpire nas the | largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper. There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising Has

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