The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 10, 1942, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, NN \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\mmw HI!llll'HVHVWIHH///r’//////////////////////// o? Send out an J // PERIP N % ' SEATTLE IN SPLIT WITH SACRAMENTO Los Angele;’Fi‘ghting Hard to Keep Lead, Wins Doubleheader ted Press) Sacramento, in ninth punch, beat Seattle veterday the second game after the Rainiers won the opener, San Diego swept a doubleheader from Portland yesterday going to eleven innings in the opener. Oakland rallied to score three runs in the last inning yesterday ake the nightcap of a double- er from San Francisco after the Seals won the opener. Los Angeles, fighting hard to keep the lead, still kept a slim ad- age on first spot and took two| in a row from Hollywood. Party dragging N7 \uly ’Je’r/ el ‘II/ 2 4‘\ RN R (By Asso inning in oLD > — e . | SUNNY BROOK Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey BRAND 90.4 Proof « National Distillers Products Corp.. N. Y ///W 2 uummn\\u\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ Distributed by NATIONAL GROCERY COMPANY Seattle, Washington BUY DEFENSE STAMPS @\\N\\\\\\\\\\Vx\\\\\\\\\\\\\mm‘mmnmflml/llllll/llllf//fl//flm /WW/M//M///// g with a Navy blimp in protecting an Atlantic convoy U-boats have found it rather difficult to evade these fleet paid tribute to the efficacy of U. S. anti= Chil Powder Specially blended Chili Powder with It United States Coast Guard patrol planes join forces 1oaded with supplies for our far-flung war fronts, shepherds of the sky. The head of the German submarine submarme measures and specifically mentioned the impor GAMES WEDN AY Pacific Coast League Sacrament 1, 4; Seattle 4, 3. Hollywood 1 Los Angeles 5, Oakland 2, San Francisco 4, San Diego 11; Portland 3, National League No games played. American League New York 8; St. Louis 3. Philadelphia 5; Cleveland 4. Only two games played. speaking {after the war,” he says, s RUSSIA No relatively. “As I see it, the twenty- | some billions we’ll have in gold at | Fort Knox, raised to $70 gold, \uIl‘ tant part played by the hghter-'.hnmmt crafte 1)ust about satisfy our debts.” While stopping here at the Bar- ‘Vlsmng Flnancler R ‘\noi Hotel, awaiting transportation, WRITES YARN Davles is greeting the many friends he has in Juneau. The well known | o F H I s l I F E \bu;messman has for many yearsi bers Soviets Long " " on "Guts lively, more delicious flavor comes in a morc economical package. Schilling YOUR SHOPPING LIST been active in Alaska spheres, was s{\eral times President of the Se-, emem'*'utle Chamber of Commerce, chair- |man of its Alaska Committee, and! |still serves on that committee. Dav- | STANDING OF CLUBS | Pacific Coast League Won Lost 99 67 94 67 9% 72 84 81 82 83 75 88 70 96 62 102 National League Won Lost 94 43 91 46 76 61 66 70 62 1 63 1 PUT WAR STAMPS ON Pct. 596 584 | 510" 309 497 460 422 378 auxiliary| Los Angeles DEFENSE (OUN("_ police and firemen they take|Sacramento lM EI AFIER their oaths of office. 98 members| Seattle are now entitled to helmets, but|San Francisco when the entire 120 helmets are San Diego distributed it will be impossible to|Oakland distribute any more helmets until Hollywnod further supply is received from Portland Washington, D. C. How soon they ctice alert which will be obtained is not known. 7 o'clock a meeting will be held in the City Hall by the Juneau Civilian De- fense Council, Director Civilian Defense R. E. Robertson said to- day. stated in last night's Empire iir raid wardens will serve as pa- tients at first aid stations tonight. Not only in the residential but also in the business districts. Mr. Robertson also said not only air raid wardens but all members of the Civilian Defense, including auxiliary policemen, auxiliary fir men, first aid and canteen workers must take the official oath of of- fice. To date 140 Civilian Defense mem- bers have taken their oaths of of- fice, but the wardens of fifteen posts have failed to submit any oaths The 120 helments on hand A' WONDERFUL SELECTION OF BRASSIERES and FOUNDATION GARMENTS in the following nationally advertised makes: be distributed to wardens The “wonderful guts” of Russians will carry them through| {to certain ultimate victory in this war. Pct., That is the candid opinion of 686 T, A. Davies, well known Seattle 664 | financier who is visiting in Juneau 555 | today on his way to the Chlchagcf. 485 mine of which he is president. 466 | Davies, who has made seu‘ml 450 {rips to Russia, his most recent| six years ago, declares, “The Rus- jan knows no other country but Russia. He loves his soil. And if Pet.'you could have seen the way he 676 tackled his problem of industrial-| 5 o 604 | jzation in an agrarian world, you Loyls il 532 would know what I mean.’ { » Tenacity Characteristic L Tenacity of purpose is a national After the pr: be held this evening at can A i Brooklyn St. Louis New York Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago | Boston 55 81 Philadelphia 36 94 American League Won Lost 94 45 of Auditor Frank A. Boyle on an | Alaska is in San Francisco. Guy ners were required to hold the en- and is about to expire for the re- SEAEY | Up at the end of things, spiritua];wst”day were in the American MORE THIRD Charles Brower, Point Barrow's jond grand slam. ’ authorized capitalization of 15,000 Requiremenis | B Atkinson fe 18 company’s presi- tire pack of salmon, pilchard, At-| mainder. Under today’s order, pil- 5 NEW YORK land physical, ‘where Point Barrow anq New York overpowered St. DIVISION |trader and champion for the pas:- In the only other game, Phil THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1942 NEW FIRM WIL shares of non-par stock. Alaska agents are R. E. Robert- i dent, George H. Atkinson, vice- WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. — The | president, and Donald K. Grant is War Production Board has passed | lantic herring and mackerel for gov- ernment purchase for a 60-day per- chard, Atlantic herring and mack- erel may be sold after the new 60- | | L i | juts its low jumble of a few tundra |Louis to increase their lead to 10 |rimmed frame dwellings into the|fyll games as big Ernie Bonham RETURNS IN hl\‘deCBdLs cherished a hope there Marchildon, taking over the ninth |beside the grinding ice pack. He|inning, notched his seventeenth vic- . i . | Kodiak, Seward Precincts son and M, E. Monagle of Juneau, listed as assistant secretary. an order “refreezing” for an indefinte | iod, following notification to the day period expires. The WPB said | Bt Joe Gordon Smacks His [ies, still associated with the big| chill and lonely wastes of the Arc-| |registered his nineteenth pitching would someday write a hook and tory as Philadelphia edged out Also Cast Light The Guy F. Atkinson Co., of SALMON PACK and Alaska office of the firm will period all salmon in the hands of WPB that the fish had been packed that action will be taken to make | 'Charley Brower on Way fo Eighteenth Homer | parent Pacific Coast Company, was | |tic Ocean, there is, like anywhere| triumph, Joe Gordon smacked a tell the world himself of the fan- Cleveland in 13 innings. } | | Votes Tuesday Flexees Maiden Form Vassarettes Van Raalte Playtex Full length Foundations and Girdles and Panty Girdles . . . sizes 32 to 44. .- JUNEAUITE WITH BOMB SQUADRON Edward Baumann, formerly of | Juneau, now is serving with the Twenty-First Bomb Group, 398th Bomb Squadron, at MacDill Field near Tampa, Florida, according to information reaching the Empire today. 277 New York Boston St. Cleveland Detroit Chicago Washineton | Philadelphia |King of the Arctic,” most fabled characters North. | The hope was a dream that came | L characteristic of the Russian, gODIAK, Alaska, Sept. 10.—A[true. Next Tuesday, Dodd and| | Mead will release Brower’s saga of Dayihe S0 |fair vote was cast in Kodiak in | the Arctic Slope under the title| ] /N TECHNICOLIOR “Russia won't quit,” he declares Tyesday's general election as many | of “Fifty Years Below Zero.” 20 th CENTURY positively, “and right now you can ejgiple voters failed to take time of bet your life that Hitler & UP out from defense work and load-| Apg Charley Brower, visiting his |against a real problem.” ing and unloading vessels to cm,,,.,mds (i Ju,fe“u lod.d;, on his way|— If Stalingrad holds out and the pajiots. The results: {Outside to be in at the christen- ian armies remain intact, Dav-| Representatives ing of his brainchild, thinks back | ies convinced Hitler is “bu!tmz; Democrats—Joseph W. Kehoe 92.]with no r’egms on his 81 yém,s of| his head against a stone wall.” |William A. Egan 86, Stanley J.|yoaming about the world and ever | “The Caucasus is no place t0 McCutcheon 78, Harvey Smith 53.|requrning to his lonely outpost at| |fight a mechanized war, from & Republicans—Almer J. Peterson 53, Barrow. | physical standpoint,” Davies sald, Mauritz A. Andresen 30. They’ll tell you weird stories of ‘and I believe Hitler has begun {0 Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Di-|charley's loves and adventures, and if you happen to see Charley at the business in Alaska by Territorial VJI“ SaiISfy FlSh {in Juneau. Main office outside of Under an order of May 26, can- for a small part of the salmon pack ments are satisfied. Coming Out 5 {he| President. i | The only major league games | against hope. eighteenth round tripper and sec- ers have found made Charley, “The | ecil B. DeMille's 57 one of the! SPECTACLE Nevada, has been authorized to do I To Make Sure Government| be at the Alaska Barge Terminal canners. The 60-day period has expired sure the government salmon require- | States with Book for many years that organization's wlih Bases Fu” | else the American flag flies, no 1aw | homer with the bases loaded, his tastic things which so many writ-| — - g _COMING NEXT WEEK of the| 55 51 A Paramount Pictyre Jones-Stevens Seward Street will realize that Russia is no push- mond received 105 votes in Kodiak, for full AP and Wide World 4| It seems friends of Davies’ An American air fighter smashes an enemy formation high over the Pacific, over Europe or the African desert—and the news is flashed to this newspaper fastes than the speed of its bullets. Thus Associated Press newspapers— with the world's No. 1 facilities and staff —tecord history play by play. It's the greatest coverage of world news ever known . . . literally bullets to bulletins, coverage read THE EMPIRE A member of The Associated Press in | Moscow had suffered persistent loss lof miscellaneous effects and the | militia desperately was trying to, apprehend the culprit responsible. Interpreter Scared “My interpreter was scared stiff,” { Davies laughs, “but I finally con- | vinced him he should tell the po- lice that I said no American thief! would be so brash as to run around| with flashy luggage—Americans are/ smarter than that, and the whole thing was finally ironed out.” Heavy industry was growing by leaps and .bounds when Davies was {last in Russia. | “They had tractor plants then to switch from tractors to tanks.” A few miles out of Stalingrad, Davies said the Russians had a steel plant that was then as large as some of our greatest in America, and that even at that early date, more factories were springing up east of the Urals. “Hitler,” Davies says, seeming (0 dislike the taste of the word, “is going fo get what the little boy shot at before this war is over.” Chichagof mining operations will said, declaring “We've got thous- ands of tons of float left to work and we'll do business as usual when we get this World mess straightened .|out.” Davies has no fear of gold. He rather has the gambler's outlook on the precious metal at the present time, {the following results: that employed as -many as 30,000 men, and you know it isn't difficult | continue after the war is over, he|, | Treasurer Oscar G. Olson 95, Wal- ter P. Sharpe 84 for Commissioner of Labor. The name’ of Michael Haas was written in on 5 ballots. H. H. McCutcheon received 86 votes for Senator from the Third Division. Arrested In Stalingrad | So convinced is Davies of Rus- sia’s chances to stave off defeat, he manages to remember with hu-' |mor the time he was arrsted in Stalingrad as a suspected thief. “They picked me up when I ar-| rived in Stalingrad with my two fine traveling bags,” he relates. “You know it was quite apparent I was a stranger. The Russian can carry his belongings in a good |sized bandana.” SEWARD RESULTS SEWARD, Alaska, Sept. 10.— A total of.186 votes was cast here and in Precinct Mile 3% in Tues- day’s election, a light vote with Representatives Democrats—Joseph W. Kehoe 164, William A. Egan 117, Stanley J. McCutcheon 102, Harvey Smith 100. Republicans—Almer J. Peterson 98, Mauritz A. Andresen 71. H. H. McCutcheon received 128 votes for Senator. Walter P. Sharpe garnered sioner of Labor. Anthony J. Dimord received 178 for Delegate to Congress, Oscar G. Olson 143 for Treasurer in confi- dence votes. Talmadge Loses Out In Georgia Beaten Hard by Can- didate Arnall ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. parenty beaten in his unprecedented bid for a fourth term as Governor of Georgia, Eugene Talmadge trail- ed far behind youthful Attorney General Ellis Arnall. Nearly complete returns from yes- terday’s primary, give a popular vote 135 for Commis- | .GovernomApparentIy 10—Ap- Gastineau, where he is a guest, and | press him too far for confirmation he will probably just scratch hisI heavy weathered chin and youri answer will be in the glow of amusement in his still keen eyes. | Charley went to Barrow in the roaring days of the early whale ships after sailing as wild as any | youngster in those days to most of the ports of the world. Charley expects to spend the| winter in the States—he likes to “get out once in awhile,” see a few old friends and perhaps lecture a bit. But when the eiders start their swing northward again and when the pack ice tears its crumbling| way again to the eastward nhead‘\ of the northing sun, Charley will| be back in Barrow. “Sure I'll be back!” he tell you. “In Barrow you live. you don't run around like a chicken with your head cut off.” And there might very well be something to it. Fifty years below zero ought to prove something. B SPECIAL MEETING OF CITY COUNCIL FRIDAY EVENING Juneau's City Council will hold a special meeting tomorrow even- ing starting at 8 o'clock to discuss problems relating to the police de- partment. Chief B. H. Manery has requested raises for patrolmen and the ad- dition of a patrolman and a police- woman. The Council also is ex- pected to name a councilman to fill the vacancy left by Ernest Parsons, resigned. PRI TWO DROWNED Alex Arason and James Morgan were recently drowned at Hidden Inlet when the row boat they were of 154,000 to Arnall as against 113,- “1¢’ll be worth $70 or nothing, o 000 for Talmadge. in was caught in tide rip and lo'venurned. The Good Provider Sit down to a fine meal on the Empire Builder in comfort and security. Look out your train window upon the evidence of plenty—upon the bountiful harvests. We have enough, and more than enough, to share with the people of the United Nations the world over. You can shorten the time of delivery of needed food to some starving child when you invest in War Bonds. You are making no sacrifice but a good investment. You are doing your part in creating that overwhelming power that will win the war and bring peace. Yes—it’s worth fighting for! % * Travel Anticipation Plan * * Anticipate your travel needs. Tell our when you intend to go and what accomm: In case of change of pla Great Northem Is, need. promptly. The government requirements first, available space ot all times. ent where and o:fllom you will i cancel m':lt'l.uufi urse, meeting al but the Mbl“ ig is wcleo-’c o H, F. “Nick” CARTER 1400 4th Ave., Seattle l_n-

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