The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 22, 1942, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1942 YOU CAN FLY JUNEAU to Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks Yakutat Valdez Neme Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Points Wednesday Friday Sunday | * | ALASKA STAR PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA } They March from Industry to Uncle Sam’s Fleet l' i "“[Nfl]y S ‘:‘::*:,,Ir?ne;;; gtcc; a?iz::s,fio | | OF BATILE chief petty officer of the navy To Work, Eastern Farms} Recently this reporter quoted | that “Road” will not long remalu' in our midst. With a world at war | the public can't be too interested in a phoney picture of a part of| southern life that doesnt really | ; — S § ) B 3 '[exist. As buffoonery on a lavishly| (Continued from Page One) | { vulgar scale, however, it's a holiday, | aTvest crews —-on. Dad's - place.; E Wt They're arranging their vacations a|in sequence so ‘the farmers who | | s first backed the idea will have a, | : [saying that New York treated ser- Steady f:(li’l’l}' of harvest labor when |Soviet Forces Counter Af-|vice men better than any city ne they meed it. g fhat “vislted—and® forthwith there| [The 188 - isprefeling o other | fack in Rubble Hedp- |came brotests from cities an overfederal offices. There are thous- | L oy " lands of farm-raised. folks in the ? i this country of ours. I am sure . ¢ { ed Industrial CI'Y | thst this ofticer simply hadn't been |BOVernmeit, aud if any consider- ‘ everywhirs and Badi't simpled the |8ble TUIMOST Qe S : 80 3GH the (Continued-trom Page One) | hospitality of New -Orleans, Balti- | Pack-to-the-farm idea, it's going to places in the neighborhood where |more, St. Louis, Ft. Worth, Omaha, help the tight farm labor .\llu;),!,l()l‘l | they can fetch fresh water for the | Chicago and Seattle. However—for in truck areas around the capital gy awhile at least, it's too late sorges He's on active duty. Rumanians Enter Fight The press release to end all press Fresh Nazi troops are reported moving into action to replace the |invaders’ terrific losses. Advices | reaching Ankara, Turkey, described large new movements of Rumanian troops’enroute to the Soviet front. One report said that only five divisions have been left in Rumania | to guard against a possible Hungar- | ian stab in the back, while the bulk D POLICE GAZETTE IS BARRED FROM U.5. MAILS NO releases has finally been perfected Some of them have approached it for brevity, many have tied it for actual value, but this one will never be bettered. | | Joan Rowland, Associated Press librarian, opened an envelope n'om‘ o the National Labor Relations Board, heavily marked as hot stuff for the press, and found nothing but a AIRLINES Phone 667 Office BARANOF HOTEL |of Rumania’s men are battling with ~ | Hitler deep in Russia. NEW YORK, Sept. 22—The Post | Soviet reports quoted one prisoner | Office Department, holding that the jof a German railway battalion as Police Gazette “profitably pandered 4 s . | | saying that his group ha@ been 'to the lewd and lascivious” has|Ples With no stockings—with wea- | ther reservations. Here are the p be vast F e plant, where |attending the day’s classes in mechanical |thrown out of action as a combat been barred from the United States e . | scene at tbe vast Ford Rouge plant, g oA [ force and had lost 65 percent of its | malis. statistics. Wilbur, our agent for| blue-jackets by the hundreds are being pre-|trades. Henry Ford, through the Ford Motor | 1 i : our pared for duties with Uncle Sam’s fleet. The | Company, provided the school and its facili- |men. H. H. Roswell, publisher of the arduous m“‘”“: reports that on| ruit sailor p show! arching to their | ties without cost to the Navy, Reports sald that the German |Police Gazette, said he is preparing |2 recent hot day, 112 of the first| ment Gl e R Al s Sl s | advances are being measured in (o fight the decision and declared |200 women who passed his favorite | taves Navy Dy ea, st 3 |yards in Stalingrad, and not in|the Post Office Department has “be- |lamp post on Pennsylvania Avenue | The Urtl;'fi“ ¢ pothing be Pri,o the ! miles. come the tool of a minority group |wore reques blank sheet of paper. | NORTHLAND ORTATION. COMPANY Government girls go for ensem- DEARBORN, Mich.—This is a familiar¢Navy Service School within the plant after ety no hose. | The women and children have that wants to grab control of cen- | been evaciated from the Volga sorship.” "bnsuon. e o | AP Wrifer Has Story About Jap {Spent 6 Mom of 2 Years in Tokyo in Prison- "Nice People” e 'MONTHLY DISEASE REPORT IS GIVEN ‘With 425 cases reported, measles led the communicable disease list in the Territory for the month ending September 20, according to the re- port just issued by the Territorial Among the measles cases, 182 were reported from the town of Gambell during the month, and 83 from the town of Chitina. A total of 76 new cases of venereal diseases was reported during the month. Mrs.A.M.Glennls '~ Visiting Here from Home in Ketchikan BY GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Sept. 22—A lot of interesting books have come out of this war, but the one with the best title hasn’t been published yet {—though it will be, shortly. Mich.—In the heart of the#aerial view shows the school buildings in the Ford Motor Company’s vast Rouge plant is a | right foreground on the bank of the River Navy: Service Schoeol now training 1,500 blue- | Rouge. The rec. jacket recruits in mechanical trades they in accordance will perform with Uncle Sam’s fleet. This| pioneered by the Henry Ford‘ NOTICE MR. AND MRS. A. PIERCE Starting September 28th, the only feed deliveries to Douglas and the Douglas Road will be on Wednes- days at 4 p. m. Please have your orders in by 3 p. m, FEMMER'S TRANSFER. | Wil ra b AL LY AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing rir route from Seattle to Nome, un sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. ARE HERE FROM SKAGWAY Mr. and Mrs. Alton Pierce are spending a few days in Juneau on official business from Skagway where Mr. Pierce is resident en- gineer on a government project. During their stay in Juneau they are house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Henning. 20 SAWMILL MEN WANTED at JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS JUNEAU @ Now Operating ruits are “learning by doing” with educational methods 'rade Schooi. ' ‘louis; Conn Training in (6!1_195 Now (By Associatcd Press) With brand new sergeant stripes sewed to his uniform, Joe Louis has arrived at Greenwood Lake, N. Y., where he has trained for most of his fights, to go in training for his bout with Private Billy Conn in New York on October 12 in defense of his heavyweight box- ing crown. Louis was promoted from cor- poral to sergeant just a few hours before he left the cavalry training camp at Fort Riley, Kansas. He |is on an emergency thirty-day fur- iluugh which will give him four days |to return to the camp after the fight. Private Billy Conn has been granted a furlough and has arrived at Rumson, N. J.,, and has begun training for the fight with Louis. e e OLD BUT AGILE FOXBURG, Pa.—Harry H. Har- vey, one of the, original founders of | | the Foxburg Country Club, laid out in 1887, still plays a daily round. This is “Exchange Ship,” by Max Mrs. A. M. Glenn, the former 'Hill, for two years AP Bureau chief Martha Peterson of this ecity, is| in Tokyo, and who, himself, just|visiting from Ketchikan with her | got back to the U. S. on the Ex- mother, Mrs. Ed Anderson, on Glac- change ship Gripsholm. Hill spent ier Highway and Mrs. Joseph Thom- {six months of his two years in s in Juneau. | prison. He never met his attorndy, Mrs. Glenn_expects to return soon \the man who defended him, though 0 her home in the First City where . = her husband is employed in the the Japs called around themselves H2GY [to collect his attorneys fees. Nice °ffice of the U. S, Coast Guard. ———————— | people. - DELEGATES TO DISCUSS TIME, | | Antonio Cansino, {an earlier generation to be a great |dancer, is now 83. What pleases | |him most is not the rememberad | glories of his own heyday, but that | i Department of Health. | I_IVER BILE— p ' his granddaughter, Rita Cansino, is fconsidered a grade-A dancer too. Now the name Rita Cansin probably means very little to you, lhut it will mean more when yon | recollect that Rita is more fa- |miliarly known as Rita Hayworth to her pals in the films. Miss Hayworth at the moment is making a picture with Fred |Lovelier,” and they finally per- jsuaded the old man to visit the |set. Everybody was very nice to him. They explained everything to Finally Grandpop Cansino quiet- ly drew Brian Ahern aside. “Tell me,” he said, “what does ‘terrific’ mean?” Plays that have sensationally long runs on Broadway do not, as & rule, fare very well when they attempt revivals. “Abie’'s Irish Rose” is a part of the very tap- roots of Broadway history, yet it was an abrupt failure when it was revived a couple of years ago, What will happen to “Tobacco Road” no one: at this writing can tell. But it seems to me the public was fairly thoroughly milked by the years and years it remained on Broad- way, dropping from $3.30 audiences until a dollar top was finally in vogue. The seats are a dollar top this - time, and perhaps there are enough of the curious who will ~ B.B. PRACTICE ‘Phillips Calls Basketball . Representatives To- | gether Tonight One delegate from each Juneau Of the 112, only| |33 bothered to paint on cosmetic | stockings. | On the first crisp day heralding | | autumn, Wilbur returned to his re- | | search, and found only 58 of 200/ |braved the cool breezes without| hose. He didn’t bother to coum; the paint-ons. Losing interest, may- | 'WAKE UP YOUR Without Calomel — And You'll Jump Out of | Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go i The liver should pour out two pints of | liquid bile into your bowels daily. If thiy bile is not flowing frecly, vour food ma not digest. It may just decay in the bowels. ‘ Gas bloats up your | stipated. You feel | world looks punk, It takes those good, effective C: Little Liver Pills to get these two bile flowing freely tomuke you fecl up.” Amazing in making bile flow fre Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills by nam Stubboruly refuse anything clse. Price: tomach. You get con- sour, sunk and the TRIANGLE CLEANERS New Location Juneau Laundry Building * “for better appearance” PHONE THE M. V. BEILBY will leave Juneau for Petersburg, Port Alexander and Way Ports EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 6 A. M. Please have all freight on City Dock Tuesday, before 4 P. M. J. H. SAWYER c veyed COD ation printed of co:er 0es de‘:’;:r\oun mtove‘;‘e‘:ey'chnm yessel in of an: waters. S 1ONS AND N CALL Agent assengers FOB RESERVAT NeORMATIO! MENRY cmn:rl‘; Freight Phove 23 109 s« + SMART WHITE SHIPS . - - koo SR o SR g e s ) Astaire called “You Were Never! organization, civilian or military, | wishing to use the High School gym- Enasxum this season for basketball practice, is invited to attend a meet- ing at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the High School to arrange a schedule. A. B. Phillips, Superintendent of Schools, made this announcement yesterday, after . many inquiries |about the use of the gym during the coming basketball season. The meeting tonight will be held in Room 1 of the High School and when all the representatives get to- gether, the schedule of times when the gymnasium can be used for practice will be worked out. FROG STORY ROYAL, Neb., Sept. 22. — Ole Johnson, who works in the ice house, saw a dark object in a cake of ice. Closer observation disclosed it was a frog. Johnson put the cake of ice in the sun. Soon there was a pool of water and the frog in the middle. The frog stretched one leg, then another, drew in a breath of air and snatched at a fly. THE ATCO LINE Alaska Transportation Company BAILINGS FROM PIER 7 SEATTLE PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION L D. B. FEMMER—AGENT { PHONE 114 NIGHT 312 i BRINGING UP FATHER FWVE CALLED ALL THE l U.5.0. CENTERS -BUT ] 1 COULDN'T GET A | | 1 IVE BEEN UP AND DOWN TH' STREET AND | COULDN'T FIND ONE -~ SOLDIER OR SAILOR TO COME OUT TO DINNER~- AS THEY WERE ALL INVITED OUT S WELL= | MAY AS WELL TELL TH' COOK SHE KIN THROW ALL TH' FOOD OUT= IT'S | SPOILED BY NOW! WE COULDN'T RESIST THE SM| UL THAT ROAST By GEORGE McMANUS WEVE eoT o o GET GON'-TH' || ILL HAVE REST OF THE ANOTHER BOYS LEFT AN CUP OF IOUR COFFEE- THAT WAS THE BEST FEED I'VE HAD IN A YEAR- ———————————— e ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska: Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon jcan shan gof Juneau ...$ 8 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 Sitka ....... 18 18 18 18 10 10 Chichagof 18 10 18 10 5 Kimshan 18 10 18 1c Pelican .. 18 10 18 o 3.l 18 18 10 Tenakee .. 10 10 10 Angoon .. 18 18 Hoonah .. 10 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell $35.00 10.00 Sitka $18 Tenakee Todd $10 $18 10 18 10 18 10 18 18 10 Petersburg Juneau ... $30.00 Petersburg Wrangell ... Express Rate: Express Rate: 10c per ‘35¢ per pound—Minimum of $100 to Ketchikan pound—Minimum of 60c to Petersburg and Wrangell PHONE 612 FOR INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants HASSELBORG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODJE: Schedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notice. 10 Weekly — Seattle - Fairbanks 5 Weekly — Fairbanks - Nome Tu. Th. Sa. _Daily 9:00am 2:10pm 3:10pm Ar 5:55pm Ar Wash, ___ PWT Juneau, Alaska 135 MWT Whitehorse, Y. T. 135 MWT Fairbanks, Alaska 150 MWT Seattle, Mo. Tu. We. Fr. Sa. 9:00am Lv 10:20am Ar 11:25am Ar Fairbanks, Alaska 150 MWT Ruby, Alaska 150 MWT Nome, Alaska 165 MWT Ta. 5:00am Lv Fairbanks, Alaska 160 MWT 10:35am Ar MeGrath, Alask: 11:10am Ar Ophir, Alaska 11:50am Ar Flat, ska 12:10am Ar Bethel, JUNEAU — ANCHORAGE VIA YAKUTAT — CORDOVA With.Connecting Service to KODIAK — KENAI PENINSULA and BRISTOL BAY Woeodley Airways (ALASKA AIR LINES) ALASKA COASTAL ATRLINES AGENTS PHONE 612

Other pages from this issue: