The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 18, 1942, Page 6

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GEORGE BROTHERS Birds Eye FROSTED FOO THIS YEAR'S PACK DS FROSTED HUCKLEBERRIES Sliced or Whole STRAWBERRIES THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1942 HIT NAZIS TO RECOVER jPara(hufisIs_I.—emd Behind | German Lines fo Cap- ture Enemy from Rear (Continued from Page One) | the Kotelnikovski sector, 95 miles POSITIONS SHOOTING IS ADMITTED BY NATIVE HERE First Dear;e Murder Charge Filed Against William Paddy William J. Paddy, 32-year-old na- tive who was apprehended as a sus- pect in the slaying of Tony Simin, 'DOUGLAS MAN IS VICTIM OF " BOAT EXPLOSION Clancy Henflfs Refurns, Here for Treatment . Affer Accident | Victim of an explosion aboard | his trolling boat, Clancy Henkins, of Douglas, returned home aboard the Nuisance this morning from | | Hoonah, to undergo treatment for | buwns about the head and one hand. Although his injuries are not se- STRIKE IS THREATENED BY WORKERS Al“minum Union Members Will Quit Unless | Pay Raised ‘ Juneau baseball fans can stay PlTrSBURG;l.—;m, 18—The ln-i home if they want to next Sunday, |ternational Headquarters of the CIO‘ but they’ll miss the best diamond |Aluminum Workers’ Unions reports contest of the season if they do. that its members have urged that JUNEAU NINE CHALLENGED BY SITKANS Infercity Baseball Game Is| Set for Next Sun- day Here RASPBERRIES—BOYSENBERRIES rious, he has one arm in a sling and | southwest of Stalingrad. Douglas storekeeper, last week, con- | Asparagus Tips, Beans, Broccoli, Sprouts. VEGETABLES—Cauliflower, Peas and Carrots, Spinach, Green Beans, Green Peas, Lima Brussel - Scallops, Sole, Fillet of Haddock, Fillet of Red Perch, Swordfish, Olympia Oysters, Lobster Meat, Crab Meat. Frozen Salt-Water Salmon Trout Capture Several Points The Red Star said that Russian shock troops have stormed the en- emy occupied hills to recapture a | defense section hurriedly erected by the Germans and destroyed several ! firing points. | The Russians admitted that Gen- eral Von Bock’s offensive has driven a wedge into the Soviet lines north- ;west of Stalingrad, but front line |Felix Gray and the accused native | of the Izvestia news was to be arraigned later today to} | dispatches | agency said that Red Army infantry, |artillery and tank units had “ful- | filled orders to halt the enemy by | all means” in that sector. fessed late yesterday to the shooting and robbery of Simin and later led officers to the spot on the beach near Douglas where he had cached the murder weapon and a coat he wore during the holdup. U. S. Attorney William A. Holz- | heimer has filed a charge of murder in the first degree against Paddy in the court of U. S. Commissioner have the charge read. Stole Gun Ralph C. Vogel, Special Agent in | Charge, Federal Bureau of Investi- will be incapacitated for a week or two. Henkins went out Saturday for his last trip of the season, heading | toward Shelter Island. While trav- eling on Sunday one of the spring | Ivalves in his engine blew out and unnoticed by him,-as he leaned out | the open window of the pilot house, | the cabin became filled with gas fumes. When it exploded, he was unable | | to extinguish the fire with his ex- tinguisher and was forced to take to his skiff and watch his boat burn | to the water's edge and sink. A service men’s nine from Sitka, which Sitka fans have been boasting |about all over Alaska as “undefeat- | able” is coming to Juneau to take on the best outfit that this area can get together. The Sitka outfit has been spoil- ing for the contest for several weeks, now, while radiograms have been whizzing back and forth as arrange- ments were worked out. Further information on the con- test, concerning the price of admis- sion and time of the game will be announced shortly. The proceeds wiil a general strike be called in the vital war aluminum industry un- less the War Labor Board recon- siders its decision denying them a' wage increase, or unless the Presi- ident “intervenes” in the case. Union president Nick Zonarich !has calle dunion committeemen for a meeting here tomorrow. ¢ | The War Labor Board said that |the union’s demand for a dollar |a-day pay boost was denied be- cause the workers already had re- | ceived more than a 15 percent in- crease since Jan. 1, 1941. go to a service men’s fund for en- | 25cpound Henkins was picked up some time | PHONE 92 We Deliver One Delivery Daily to Douglas @;;.3 Sweaters you'll want from now through winter! Pull- overs, twins, cardigans, novelty styles all in exciting colors. Wool mix- tures. Sweaters $2.50 1o $5.95 Skirts $3.95 10 $7.50 Jones-Stevens Eeward Street | vulnerable parts of his front in|where he had cached the coat which | Europe in order to obtain success on 'he had worn at the time of the | the Soviet-German front.” shooting. Ju3 Was Identified FISHING CREWS PA Paddys confession came as an| anti-climax to the investigation \which began last Thursday night | when Ray McCormick, Douglas resi- | FINES IN WRANGELL cent. touna simin wounded tn nis| L | Douglas store. Simin told several | two boats, Witnesses and law officers that Pad- before U. dy had shot him, and also identified Paddy from his deathbed in the ospital. 5 Joe Dunlap, representative of thé Continental Can Company, left today for the south to remain until L 8 next season. J. E. Boyle, Union Ol representa- | During the summer Mr. Dunlap tive, left with Alaska Coastal Air- has travelled extensively in South- ines yesterday on a business trip east Alaska taking care of company ) business, PRGN S e Other reports said that a Russian | gation, related today how Paddy had | ime | tertatnment. | later by a seine boat and taken into | i oS S PHUNE 95 | Hoonah. ! German rear and beat off an attack | into the cabin of Tom Young on| FRESH U S ! by Nazi planes soldiers and kill- | v ‘s ; | by Nazi planes and soldiers and | August 11, two days before the fatal R. E' BARNES o“ L] ] Nazis on Defensive | volver which he used in the armed FOR SERVI(E ME“ Juneau Rotary Club has taken on west of Moscow and noted “hard |the series of events which resulted | ; f 5 ¥ S . | defensive battles” in the Vyazma |in the fatal shooting. To make a trip of investigation 2 jout-of-town service ‘meny: 1l was Ph 9.) 9P and Rzhev sectors west and north- | Paddy led Federal officers to a |into employment conditions in the | | announced today at a noon meeting one eV | west of Moscow. |spot approximately 800 yards south . \ « . Territory and visit branch offices, | i | concerning this project will be | ) » 64 5 e | A | made shortly. urged the United Nations to carry | las beach and pointed out where he|R. A. Barnes, Acting Director of o the war to Germany “with all their | had hidden the revolver. He led them | conhngent In'rOdU(es New fice left Juneau _SaturdB.Y- 'I' , A m | proposed program for the club dur- |ler has “already laid bare other feet from there and showed them| Mr. Barnes will visit the branch| ype 0 rmy |ing the coming year and also an- Anchorage and Fairbanks. He pos-) |Fred K. Jones will pay a visit to while he is away. He plans to re-| CAIRO, Aug. 18 — Fresh contin-' A visiting Rotarian was Claude turn by plane from Fairbanks in'gents of United States Army troops,|Rhodes, of Sitka Rotary Club. John | prehensive picture of the employ- erican Air Force Squadrons, oper-ja trip to the States. I R |at this war theatre. | The new arrivals hrought the| MRS. N. E. SHARP TAKES ] | | Army helmets see nin the Middle| | “descent group,” of parachutists or |told FBI agents and U. S. Deputy | plane borne troops, landed in the | Marshal Walter Hellan how he broke . SPONSOR pROJE(I ed 300 Germans in a two-day battle. | shooting, and stole a .38 caliber re- ] | 1 | simultaneously, Hitler’s head- | robbery of the storekeeper. Vogel | EXIE"SIVE Tmp | i | quartesr acknowledged that the Red |said that Paddy executed a complete | [ | Armies are attacking German line.S‘conrpssion in which he set forth THROUGH AI.ASKA\ i X - , | \ 1:\ project to furnish recreation for Western and Interior parts of the| ;in Percy's Cafe. An announcement Meanwhile Soviet newspapers |of the Douglas Bridge on the Doug- the United States Employment of- ; Don Skuse gave a report on a *| power and energy” and declared Hit- |to another spot, approximately 250 offices at Cordova, Valdez, Seward, Helme's 3 inounced that District Governor' sibly will make a trip to Kodiak | {the Juneau club early next month. two or three weeks, with a com- including ground staffs of the Am- Bishop was welcomed back after ment problems of the Territory. |ating in the desert, debarked today i R s first new type of United States OVER BOOK SHOP AND = MAKES SITKA TRIP | ‘ The fishing crews of |arraigned in Wrangell | 8. Commissioner Richard Suratt on |charges of illegal fishing paid D {heavy fines, the U. S. Marshal’s Office reported today. | Joe Petticrewm, Chadwick Wyant, Charles McDermott, and Alfred West, crew of the Loccolite, paid |2 total of $600 in fines. James | Gillen, John Burch, James Zuver {and Daniel Burlison each paid $25 fin Simin died Friday afternoon as a result of two bullet wounds, one of which entered his back and passed entirely through his Body, punctur- ing both lungs. A coroner's jury yesterday reached a verdict that Paddy had held the gun which fired the fatal shot. Paddy, a native of Haines, Alaska, received his grammer’ school train- ing in the U. S. Indian School at |Salem, Oregon. He returned to Al- LIBRARY IN BARANOF Mrs. N. E. Sharp has taken over‘w the management of the book shop | and circulating libary in the Bar-| {anof Hotel. Mrs. Sharp arrived in | Juneau from Seattle last May with | her son, Fred C. Sharp, who is in} the Alaska Steamship Company of- | fice. The library and bookshop was| managed during the summer months | BUY DEFENSE STAMPS to Sitka. g aska in 1930 and since that time has resided primarily in the Juneau area, having been employed as a | miner and a fisherman. He has been convicted several times in the Fed- eral Courts for petit larceny crimes 'and is well known to local law en- | forcement officers. PROGRESS ls § : | Funeral services for Simin will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock MEASURED /in the Charles W. Carter Chapel. Simin is survived by a brother, Pet- | RESULTS ALASKA AND | er, of Dalmatia, Yugoslavia, and also | a brother, Nickola, who was residing | - THE NATION 1 Put Your | 1m °§§.?§darffi_lv”3’fi§’e’2 msl?;oc;perty' Accompanying Dr. Limdsay was , & ECONOMIC Trustin RECOVERY Aets and to his brother, Peter, as he lay|Mrs. Rhoda Stetson, who will be by Miss Mary Stewart, who resigned | a short time ago to prepare to leave for college. 10 HEAD HOSPITAL - FOR CONTRACTORS Dr. J. Colin Lindsay, formerly of Spokane, Washington, recently passed through Juneau for Sitka where he is to take charge of the| Siems Drake Hospital to be con- structed there. | I - NEW Super-chatged PARKER PEN holds *; more ink—for greater writing ‘“mileage” Parker's patented “‘One-Hand"” Filler not only vastly im- proves the convenience of filling, but alsosuper-charges the Vacumatic. This and other exclusive features have DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION HAS GIVEN TELEVISION Siprly shows ink level ‘mortally wounded in his shop. ! superintendent of the hospital and ! r five nurses who will form the staff.| made Parker the consistent preference-winner among SCHEDULEFOR | HOSPITAL NOTES | e ot e o i i 2 GU ARD DR“.I.S : g 2 strate the pen with these wmni:q :e;hn':-.' e 15 CHANGED ‘ ‘One-Hand" Filler makes | (Enrollees Who Have Re- Parker the easiest pen to fill, as proved in tests by signed Must Refurn Rifles Deavitt Lab., Chicago, IIL Drill parades for the Alaska Ter- l-‘c in Style. Parker is truly ‘The Jewel of Pendom"”. ritorial Guards have been slightly altered in schedule in order to lets you see the ink level No other pen matches the at all times. Holds % more gem-like beauty of its lami- ink than sac-type pens. nated ringsofjetand Pearl. suit the greatest number, it was announced today by Capt. G. F. Freeburger, head of the Juneau GUARANTEED BY LIFE CONTRACT. Parker’s Blue Diamond :nhnmcugu our Life Contract with the owner guaranteeing make good any mishap (except loss or intestienal damage) BD-VACUMATIC = provided complele pex is rehumed for service. To cover posiage, la- unit. In the future, platoons 1 and 4 will meet on Tuesdays, while plat- oons 2 and 3 will meet on Mondays, Avaliable at all better dealers. *::once and handling, there will be a small service charge. THE PARKER PEN COMPANY he stated. All platoons will hold their second meeting of the week Janesville, Wisconsin still separately, on Thursdays. Preliminary drill is progressing well and it is expected that the manual of arms will be taken up the first of next week, he remarked. “A few enrollees, who have evi- dentally decided not to continue, have not yet returned their rifles and if they are not in the hands of the supply sergeant by the end of the week, definite steps for their recovery will have to be taken. “Some enrollees evidentally be- lieve these rifles to be a gift from the government and one enrollee was even found attempting to leave town with his rifle. Men to whom the equipment was issued are again| : reminded that it is governiment property and any attempt to re- move it from the immediate vicin- ity of Juneau will be an_act of larceny of government” property. “There is. a limited number of weapons which makes it necessary that all of them be in the hands| M EL M ET_Mrs. Milton Thies- of those willing to use them for the| - sen wears new air rald warden | greatest good for the greatest num-' géeel helmet issued by New York. ber,” Capt. Freeburger said, © polics departmenty’ Miss Phyllis Poulin has entered St. Ann’s Hospital for medical treat- ment. stin WritingEase. Parker's non-brittle point“lubrica- ted” with oil-smooth Os- miridium, sets a new stan- dard in ease and resilience. lnh Renlabinity. Parker's Full Television Barrel Mrs. Wallace Peterson has entered St. Anns Hospital for surgery. Paul Dapcevich has entered St. Amn’s Hospital for medical treat- a ment. Compliment DELEGATE A. J. DIMOND on his ten-year record of splendid service to Alaslka. Mrs. John Guerrerro has returned home from St. Ann’s’ Hospital after being under medical treatment there. . Mrs. Henry Godlawski and her infant daughter have returned home from St. Ann’s Hospital. THEY GAVE: The Wagner Labor Act — Repeal 18th Amendment — Banking Reform Laws — Home Owners Loans — Social Security Laws — Federal Deposit Insurance — Child Labor Act — Securities Exchange Act — Wages and Hours Act — Fed: eral Housing Act — Farm Relief — Flood Control — Soil Conservation — Na- tional Labor Relations Act ~ Thirty-five Dollar Gold — Alaska’s Bank Deposits were in 1933, $9,770,685.00. in 1942, approximately Twenty-one Million — Your c‘(‘)luntrg'llh;rengagm in an all-out war for surival of Democracy and the American ay of Life. Vote for These Democratic Candidates and Go Forward fo Victory and Greater Prosperity Blue Diamond Pens from $8.75 up; Other Parker Pens from $2.95 up. 75 SAWMILL MEN WANTED at JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS JUNEAU STARTING OPERATIONS AUGUST 24TH Harry Bigoff has been discharged from St. Ann's Hospital where he has been under medical care. Natalia Emanoff, of Funter Bay, has entered the Government Hos- pital for medical care. For Delegate to Congress Anthony J. Dimond N For Territorial Treasurer For Commissioner of Labor Oscar G. Olson Walter P. Sharpe For Territorial Senator A.P. Walker For Territorial Representatives James V. Davis Andy Gundersen R. E. Hardecastle Crystal Smow Jenne GENERAL ELECTION TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th

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