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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1942, JUDGE W. . ARNOLD | PRIN RETURNS BY PLANE | 0 KETCHIKAN TODAY | mnfi !ffi%%(s)wu McNARY ASKS By TorrEboiNG SENATORS TO One American Vessel Crew STUDY B“.I.S Go to Death in Disaster on Mexican Gulf ASSOCIAT PRE Three small merchant s} Norweglan, Yugoslavia and Amer ican have been sunk in the Atlanti the Navy announces, by enemy tor- pedoes. The entire 33-r an American vessel, sunk in the Gulf of Mexico on ' me 22, perished when the vessel went down in a|tion flaming mass ICE RUPERT HALIBUT SALES A RUPERT, B. C., June 29, - ( Halibut sales here today totalled | Judge W. C. Arnold left today |40 00p pounds. The price paid was with Alaska Coastal Alrlines 0 re- | 1 45 1549 and 14 cents a pound turn to his home in Ketchikan ‘ b’ i Representing the Alaska Salmon Industry, Incorporated, Mr spent last week in this vicinity in | connection with the price adjust- | ment between seine fishermen and salmon packers. PRINC Arnold | GIVEN SIX MONTHS IN | JAIL,ON DRUNK CHARGE | Convicted on a charge of being |drunk and disorderly, Lola Smith | Saturday to serve' months in the city ‘Says 42 Billion Dollar | Army Measure Should : Not Be Rushed WASHINGTON, June 29—Assert- ing that members of the Senate are being ‘pushed around” with de- |mands for unduly hasty considera- of war measures, Senator | Charles J. McNary of Oregon ob- |jected to an immediate Senate s i o action on the $42 billion Army MISS ESTELLA DRAPER [ supply bill * RETURNS FROM TRIP TO | e toid his colleagues that he had ANCHORAGE, FAIRBANKS |peen informed by the War Depart- 5 Miss Estella Draper, Secretary to |ment that the $35 billion appro- Gov. Ernest Gruening, returned this | priations at the present time have- morning by plane from Fairbanks, |n't been committed in any way and (BY was sentenced a Jail a5 term of six BUY DEFENSE BONDS O P N N % e 2. L L o) BRRRRNG RREECBEORIPCRRFRICFRFFFRRIT () 2 ) Announcing the Opening of 4 2 9 Pat's Beauty Shop 431 Seward Street, across from side 1) & crew aboard AR I NINE POSITIONS IN SCHOOL MUST YET BE FILLED With the resignation of two ad- ditional teachers in the Juneau Pub- lic Schools, seven teaching positions remain to be filled for next year, according to A. B. Phillips, Super- intendent of Schools. Miss Katherine Green, kinder- arten teacher during the last school r, has tendered her resignation and plans to take the position she | formerly held in Rochester, Min- (nesota. Miss Elsie McManigle, who | taught the first grade last year and who was to teach the third during the coming year, has also resigned, Mr. Phillips stated. Hoover sald the men were Mr. Phillips, who returned Satur- | equipped for two years of work “l’“‘ f;"’:“ 8 two weeks' trip “” S‘]”“' |and had listed under questioning tle, nterviewed several eac \(‘l’-\ln number of Ob_'eCth?S. {Gucing - Bas nbsl’ll('v ol e These included the Aluminum some applications on file here. H”C et e PRER T expects the existing vacancies to be | COrPOration of America’s plants' a filled during this week. Alcoa, Tenn., Massena, N. Y. and Positions to Be Filled ;East St. Louis, Ill; The Cryolite Positions in the schools to be |Plant at Philadelphia, manufactur- filed are as follows: Cun\bmauonimg light metals; the Chesapeake third and fourth grade teacher; and Ohio Railroad in. industrial German Sabofage Experfs Landed in U. S., Under Arrest (Continued from Page One) against the American war effort. Some arrests of suspected ac- | complices have been made in Chi-| cago and some in New York. Those “madr in New York are among a| |group of German people living on |Long IslTand and not far from the |deserted beach at Amagansett where | |the first group of four Nazi ter-| | rorists landed on June 13, coming| ashore in rubber boats with money and stores of explosives. entrance to Post Office, where you may receive the latest in Miss Draper has spent the last|he remarked that no harm would few days on a combined pleasure |COMe In permitting the Senators| and business trip to Anchorage. j‘f_’ read and study at length the | F: AT | bill over night. 1 MRS. LAVENIK RETURNS | 3 i Mrs. Bessie Lavenik has returned Subscrive w tne waily Alasga | Permanents, Finger Waves, Manicures, efc. chikan before comin g on to Juneau. ) - b, vaid circulation, Be Ready for \ Duty In Your Airline BOB! R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R A R R R R R R R R R R R AR R A R AR ARG Be smart and trim for your Civilian Defense work in Pat's Airline Bob! Its short curls are perfect for the uniform hat. In the ev ning just whisk a comb through your hai and see how soft and utterly feminine your coiffure becomes! This new short cut is adaptable to women of all ages. In these trying times relaxation is all- important. You'll find it is a pleasant relief to eat in the atmosphere of charm and friendliness so prevalent at The Baranof Coffee Shop LES TEAGLE, Catering Manager OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT Patricia Brown, Prop., Phone 158 L OODORODEOPGIETEOE O What Every Property Owner Should Know About GOVERNMENT WAR DAMAGE INSURANCE FOR WHICH WE ARE NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS The following are excerpts from an announcement made recently by Hon. Jesse Jones, Secretary of Commerce: oR “It will be necessary for everyone who wants protection against enemy attacks to make his ap- plication . . . because the blanket protection now in force will expire, by law, June 30th. “iI‘hc policies will be issued for a 12-month period to cover physical loss of real and personal prop- erty which may result from enemy attack or action of our own forces in resisting enemy attack. .“B‘Iackout, sabotage, capture, seizure, pillage, looting, use and occupancy, rent, rental value, or other indirect loss or consequential damage will not be covered. 4 “Effort has been made to provide reasonable protection at as low a cost to the insured as pos- :ml)le. Recognizing that losses occasioned by war are a national problem, Congress specified in its leg- islation that rates for this protection should be geographicaly uniform, that is, the rates to be charged will be the same in the middle of the United States as they are on or near the Coast. “No protection will be given for accounts, bills, curreacy, deeds, evidences of debt, securities, money and bullion.” A home owner may insure his home, personal effects and furniture, and private automobile, any or all, for $1.00 per $1,000.00 value per year. Rates on most rlewr property (churches, public .buildings, apartments, business building, and all contents of thf‘su risks) vary from 60 cents to $2.00 per $1,000.00, depending on their occupancy, type of construction, and percentage of value insured. On all property other than dwellings or farms, from the south, stopping off at Ket- Empire—the paper with the larges: ‘_ rand C. G. Page; for Excursion In-|plants. bandmaster; language teache : Hell Gate Bridge, New York | mathematics and commercial teach- ! City; the Pennsylvania Railroad | r; kindergarten teacher; third |terminal at Newark, N. J.; and all| grade teacher; junior and senior | bridges on which transportation was | English teacher, and secretary to|carried in the New York area. the superintendent. | Other objectives, Hoover said Due to the resigation of J. Will- were the inland waterways systems, iams, as janitor, that position for la series of canal locks on the Ohio the schools also will have to be|pier near Cincinnati, the New| filled, Mr. Phillips said 5 York City water supply system, con- | duits in Westchester County, hydro- FORTY ARRIVE electric plants at Niagara Fadls, and | |railroad tracks on the famous| FROM Sou'I'H | horseshoe curve near Altoona, Pa. | Hoover added they planned to plant bombs in locker rooms at rail- oN SATURDAY road stations and in department stores to create panic and break Passengers arriving here from the South Saturday were from Seattle, down morale. Hogp! Lists Agents John J. Henry, Robert Robertson, | Pl 4 Harold Heide, Burr Webber. Ford GFoup T (landed on Long Island) | Hoover them as: Kingman, Dick Manson, Robert —Ctoréc John Dasch, thirty-nine, Hume, Steven Holt, Kenneth T, 3'0uP leader; Ernest Peter Burger, Webster, W. J. McDonnell, Alfred |thirty-six, who in 1931 was a pri- B. Phillips, Howard Stabler, J. C.|Vate in the Michigan National Paddock, Henry Giebeler, Thomas Guard; Heinrich Harm Heink, thir- Madison, Ivan E. Flowers, Norman | ty-five, and Robert Quirin, thirty- Ebbley, Kenneth Moe, Miles Man- | four. ary, James C. Colino, ‘Gregorio S.. Group II (landed in Florida)— Pijo, Maxunn E. Gonzales, Felix Edward John Kerling, thirty-three, Conception, Francisco Ramboy, group leader; Herbert Haupt, twen- Rohvrln_Mauuum Vincente Pereira, | ty-two; Werner Thiel, thirty-five; A]m:hu(:“: I'nh_gatu\ Ernest Cam- |and Hermann Neubauer, thirty-two. aliche. Theodore Douglas and Rob- | No specific charges were placed ert Truit.. PRI < against the eight, Hoover said. From Southeast Alaska ports ar-| . 9 " ’ . The men were trained near Ber- rivals were, from Ketchikan—Mrs. ' 5 ini lin in a special sabotage training By B Revnols; Mra. B. Tavenik, school Hoover said, and were taught E. R. McCauland, I. L. Lev; ' J v : oy, "nd!LhQ handling of all kinds of in- M. Berg; from Wrangell—W. C. Ov- x . erby, Miles Price and V. W Uhnm‘dusmal equipment. They were tak- and from Petersburg—Miss Bertha | €0 to industrial areas, where they Moore and A. Shaguanie. {were taught the best way of de- Leaving here for Sitka were Laura | 5troying or putting out of com- Hatch, Ellen Hatch, Gertrude Halch[mts:sion important devices in war let—Edward Melhart, Lyle Steiner, ! Roger Jeffries; for Wrangell—Mrs, | T. J. Gillingham. i Bound from here to Seattle are | Hallie Rice, Miss Betty Brown, Robert Rossiter, William Rashkoo, | Ralph Oyler, Jane Hibbard, Jim Harris, Robert T. Johnson and Lucia Stone. WALKERS LAUNCH SPEEDBOAT HERE W. A. Walker, warehousesnan for the West Coast Grocery Company here, launched his 20 foot speedboat | Betty B. at 1 a. m. Saturday, with | the help or the Arlaska Steamship | | Company, who gave the use of a| {loading boom for the purpose. There were no launching cere- monies because of the weather and instead of the customary cham- pagne, the boat was christened with | Alaska rain. \ Mr. Walker has been building his boat for the last year and a half and is highly pleased with the speed attained and its maneuver- | ability. | For his first cruise, he took | members of his family," including | Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Walker, for a| trip around the channel. ——— Empire b it | The Daily Alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al-| aska newspaper. [N WL 354 Striped Chambray Charmers Classifieds Pay! o, — s 50% of the value must be insured if any insurance is desired. You should make arrangements for your war damage insurance at once, since coverage will not be effective until your application is in the mail. No policy will be effective in any event until July 1, 1942, All applications must be signed by the assured, accompanied by money order or check of the applicant for the full amount of the premium. : SHATTUCK AGENCY INSURANCE — BONDS Choose Chambray for work or play. Flattering, easy- to-wear styles, in bright}| stripes. | $2.50, $2.95, $3.75 Sizes 12 to 44 | JONES-STEVENS Seward Stree eorrrrrerererrrrrereral) | Buy Home-Grown TOMATOES and CUCUMBERS RADISHES, GREEN ONIONS and TURNIPS We Have a Fresh Shipment of Cherries Cantaloupes Watermelons Cauliflower Asparag Lettuece Zucchini Squash Rhubarhb Waxed Tomatoes Cucumbers Celery Carrots Green Peppers EORGE BROTHER PHONE 92 . WE DELIVER PHONE 95 M. D. WILLIAMS T0 BE AWAY FOR WEEK ON PUBLIC ROAD WORK To spend the next week or ten days in Anchorage on official busi- ness, M. D. Williams, District En- gineer for the United States Public Road Administration, left by plane today for the Westward. PO S H S S A © &£ CALL MEETING OF WAR BOND GROUP Members of the War Savings Bond Committee are asked to me2t at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the City Hall. Ac¢ this time, alphabetically compiled lists of all pledge signers will be given to committee mem- bers, ‘according to Mrs. John Mc- ) Cormick, committee chairman. CLOSE OUT | of Women’s White Dress Shoes Mostly high heels, bzoken stock but almost every size from 4% to $8.00. t09. Former values Men’s White Oxfords $2.50 pair Former value to $6.85 We have size 62, 7, 7%, 8, 8,%2 10% [ Family Shoe Store Seward Street Call An OWL WHEN USING A TAXI TRY JUNEAU'S NEWEST CAB COMPANY PHONE 63 For Clean, Comfortable, Well-Appointed Cars 24-HOUR SERVICE We Serve You at All Times, Day or Night STAND OPPOSITE COLISEUM THEATRE Jmmy DeMers Jack Peterson