The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 17, 1942, Page 2

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PAGE TWO STOCK QUOTATIONS 17 Juneau NEW YORK, Oct A mine of is quotation of aska stock at today's ort the New York Stock Exchange 1%, American’Can 64%, Anaconda 27%, Bethlehem Steel 57%, Com- monwealth and Southern 9/30, Cur- tiss Wright 8¢, International Har- vester 50%, Kennecott 31's, New York Central 11%, Northern Pa- cific 7%, United States Steel 49'¢, Pound $4.04 session JONES AVERAGES are today's Dow, ihdustrials 11354 utilities 13.33 S DOW, The following Jones rails 28.58 averages Empire Classifieds Pay! WHOM will you call after a fire destroys your home, or a windstorm damages your property, or an acci- dent wrecks your automo- bile? This Hartford Agency is “Johnny - on - the - spot” when it comes to settling a loss promptly and effi- ciently. e INSURE NOW WITH— Shattuck Agency INSURANCE—BON JUNEAU Closing | | | have lost a friend of thirty-three “ln years of Christian service. Super- In THE |intendent of the Elende Mission Hospital, Sachikela, trainer of hundreds of native boys as nurses with knowledge of elementary med- icine and hygiene, minister of the Congressional Church, authority on the wiles of the witch doctor, pert in the Portuguese and the na- ¢ RELIGION yW.WREID ex- The International Missionary tive Umbundu tongue, Dr. Hollen- Cotincil, representing Protestant|peck served Angola as have few mission agencies throughout the|,ther ‘missioparfes. The influence world, announces the clection of the | ot hic Sachikela training extends Rev. John W. Decker, Th.D.D.D.|phyndreds of miles “into the bush”| as American secretary, succeeding|j, a1l directions and has ¢hanged {the Rev. A. L. Warnshuis, D.D., Who |t life of the entire tountryside | retires at his own request. DI.|a native of Sheldon, lowa, Dr. Hol- Decker, a former naval chaplain, a|jenpeck attended Iowa 'State Col- former missionary of the Baplist|jege where he was 4’ football star. Church in China, and more recently | on completion of a medical course foreign ary of the American|at Northwestern University and at Baptist Foreign Mission Society, Will| the London School of Tropical Med- assume his new duties on JANUALY |jcine. he went to Africa and gave {1, 1943. He is a graduate of the the rest of his life to its people | University of Richmond and the S Southern Baptist Theological Sem- In recognition of 30 years of inary {unusual service to rural churches g {in Towa, the Board of Missions and At an impressive service recently Church Extension of the Methodist lin St. Paul's Cathedral, London, Church has made its annual award ‘:((IL’X\(I('«’I by church leaders from of the “Chalmers Fund” this year| England, Scotland, Ireland, and to the Rev. and Mrs. Otis H. Moore, | now pastor of the Methodist Church of Kenilworth, N. J. Graduating| Wales, and with the Archbishop of Canterbury as the principal speaker, the British Council of Churches from Cornell College, Iowa, Dr. and was formed. This Council is the Mrs. Moore entered the “travelling| | British counterpart of America’s|ministry” of rural charges in lo\val | Federal Council of the Churches of |—Mrs. Moore often preaching at| icnri.at. It contains high and low one church of a circuit while her | churches, and practically every de-|husband held services at another| nomination of Protestants. Three|“point.” Many more lucrative| large interdenominational bodies|churches and appointments were| are incorporated in the new Council: offered them through the years but| the Council on the Christian Faith they remained with | the country! ‘.‘\nd the Common Life, | the Com-|churches and were beloved by the mission of Churches for Internation- countryside. Four of their children, | Friendship and Social Respon-|one now a minister, were reared and| sibility, and the British section ot‘educated on a “country prvacher's‘ |the World Conference on Faith and, stipend” and all graduated with| | Order Phi Beta Kappa honors from Cornell | [ College. Hugh H. Linn,! o PR RAINBOW GIRLS T MEET TONIGHT A meeting of the Order of Rain- { For fifteen years |M. D, has been carrying on al unique medical mission service in India as founder and superintendent ‘ul the “All-India Missions Tablet| Industry” at Bowringpet. During | | that perfod he has manufactured and | distributed more than three-fourths | of a million homeopathic table s i per month--the largest quantities|POW Will be held at 7:30 o'cloek"to- | being of quinine to fight mnmm.‘“’gm' with initiation scheduled on England, Germany, the U nitedtme order of business for the even- States and the Netherlands Indies|'%: furnished most of the drugs: the| ToHowing the mecting, a dance tablets went everywhere in India | Will be held for Rainbow Girls only, d to practically every country in{8nd their escorts Asia and the nearby islands. Because | of the war, Dr. Linn is having great | difficulty in securing cinchona, the | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ALASKA DAY 7O ntresting Rumors oV B LI, \Most Territorial Offices, - { City Hall fo Close : will do it by going back to DOOFS our old post-World War I indus- e {rialization plan—the one that the (Continued from Page One) fur fly and will have the juction mess straightened out in a few months. And that 1z the | | Because Alaska Day, tomorrow, Nazis swiped, revamped slightly {falls on Sunday, Monday will be a and used to build the produetion legal holiday in the Territory, and machinery with which they are although stores and banks will re- | carrying on their war against {main open for business, most Ter- | the world ritorial Government offices will = | close If Elmer Davis, the director of | In the Federal and Territorial the Office of War Information, | | Building, the Treasurer’s Office, De- | hadn't done anything but cut or| | partment of Education, Commis- 1il the publication of 523 gov-| | sioner’s Court, and probably the.opment publications, his appoint- | District Court will shut their doors. would have been justified. Most_offices v;'fll u_:; closed in Li?li order Y5 % B8R, AN Mriore small ;F'lllnl;);l? ~Ev|1‘1dm&illm\d the | sev than it appears on the {Olty Hall offices also Wil ODSEIVE . face -and t- 15 Just: the begin- the holiday. ng. Davis at the same time set Alaska Day commemorates the o ThtabohJaREy? Bl gt official transfer of Alaska to the OC- e B L lopaons | mittee with instructions that | United States which took place on October 18, 1867. ; — e report within a month on further | eliminations and curtailments. Also, | while Davis’ handymen were mak- BADLY BURNED ing their original survey, a lot oI‘ Little Tommmy Grenier is recov- agencies got busy and did their ering at Petersburg from painful |own discontinuing and curtailing, { burns on the neck and armswhen some agencies cutting as much as he accidentally pulled a kettle’ of 40 percent their output of publi-| boiling water onto himself. cations, official reports, news re- " e leases, etc. P How many bales o GUCKER RETURNS X ny bale: .ni such stuff | 3 3 roll off the government presses| J. W. Gucker, merchandise brok g 5 every month is anybody’s guess. er, has returned to Juneau after Wi ie s 15 3 Certainly for the duration, we| a business trip to Ketchikan g i can struggle along without such - D things as the Index-Catalogues of SALESMAN HERE Medical and Veterinary Zoology; Harry K. L. “Lafry” Johnson, the Department of Agriculture Ex- representative of a jewelry firm, tension Service Recreational Let- atrived in Juneau last night from |ter; the Bureau of Plant Industry Cerea] Courier; some of the issues| of World Economic Notes; the rou- | Seattle and is making his head- quarters at the Baranof A g tine pr releases on Domestic MATERNITY CLASS Economy; the Molybdenum Report; | A SET FOR MONDAY |and the Foreign Minerals Quar- The regular weeékly maternity | terly. jclass’ will' be held ‘on Monday at ¥ — = |2 pm. in the Juneau Public Health ! Center, although other offices' in ilhe Territorial Building may be (closed that afternoon, Miss Steph- enie Bogdon, Public Health Nurse, FLIERS LOST tree bark from which quinine is ex- tracted. So important is the Bow- | ringpet supply to the welfare |the white man especially that the | Salvation Army, local government | and various missionary agencies are | helping round up supplies of cin- | chona. The cost of these tablets, | Dr. Linn says, s now more than twice the pre-war price In the recent death of Henry Stanley Hollenbeck, M. D., the large tribe of Ovimbundu peoples of Angola, Portuguese West Africa, Wmm&w&&mfl ey ) @ ) ¢ ’ 4 & NOTICE! ’ “ A ;g THE FAMILY SHOE STORE, ¢ Seward Street, will be closed for renovation from clusive. - paironage. AR R R RN RN RRRRRRRREIRRRRRN Family Shoe Store Seward Street Monday, October 19th, to Saturday, Qctober 24th, in- Upon our re-gpening we will appreciate a continuance of your of ' DOUGLAS . NEWS | CLASS DANCE WAS | VERY PRETTY EVE | The annual fall dance of Doug- |las High School juniors given in {the school here last night provid- |ed a most delightful evening for| | those attending. It was a program |dance for faculty, students, and linviteqa guests Leaf motif designs in fall mlmu\i were used for room decorations | and the programs formed colored | leaves. ! | autumn Students comprising the junior| class are Alfreda Fleek, Betty Bon- nett, Doris Balog and Roger Con- nor. Miss Eleanor Warren is the adviser. el o | | HUNTING TRIP SUCCESSFUL Bringing home their share of game, Glen and Leo Weiss re-| turned yesterday from a week'sl‘ hunting on Admiralty Island. Th made the trip in the latter’s troll- ing boat. e EYES EXAMINED and BROKEN LENSES replaced in our own shop. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson, Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY | is to be published this month and forms will close October 19 For space, listings and changes please call the Juneau and Doug- las Telephone Co. phone 420, be- fore the .c]ming date. adv. NOTICE | I will not be responsibje for any debts contracted by anyone unless authorized by me. Oct. 16, 1942, adv. HENRY A. NELSON. For Expert Radio Service TELEPHONE BLUE 429 | or call at 117 3rd St., Upstairs | 15 Years’ Experience '\ E.E.STENDER || DIESEL—]OBS—TRACTOR Men 18-40 who REALLY want good pay, permanent future in this b field as servicemen, ! operators and dieselmen. 25 will be selected from the Juneau area in November for training and placement ser- | | vice. For full particulars write | Tractor Division, 610 Mead Bldg. Portland, Oregon, AT ONCE. R T T said today. S DN i Mrs. Feldon Is A . | & . WEATHER REPORT . Feted by Guild | o %525, ¢ FLIGHT e e y UI ® Temp. Friday, Oct. 16 . | FROEE ® Maximum 53, minimum 45. e A birthday cake honoring Mrs.|® Rain—113 inches. . —— [sam Feldon was the feature of[®* ® ® @ © ¢ o o o o o o & the social meeting of Senior Tnn-i ity Guild, held yesterday afternoon | in the home of Mrs. Robert Rice. No special business was transacted during the ‘short ' session. - e Story of Trek from Wilderness Hunfers Leave Guns | | Then IragfiBuck Alive VAN NUYS, Calif—Three hunters |, § sat polishing their guns preparatory ‘ berman, whose jaw was fractured, to 4 deer hunting trip. They looked | and MacIntosh ahead to search out’ the window of the hofise, ana for help. They left scraps of paper there in the yard was a large buck. | along their trail so Baily could fol- Dropping their arms, Robert Kemp- low, after putting Gault on an im- ley, H. C. Mathers and Tom En- |Provised stretcher, riquez gave chase, cornered the deer 168 in splints. in an adjoinnig brickyard, and cap- tured it alive. | |CHARGE TENAKEE | MAN DAMAGED PIPE | U. 8. Deputy Marshal Walter| {Hellan returned to Juneau last | night with Charles Hartman, arrest- led in Tenakee on a charge of des- truction of property. He is held in connection with{ allegedly damaging a water pipe! line on the property of a Tenakée | cannery. Part of the damaged pipe {1ine has been brought along as| evidence. (Continued from Page One) e BUY DEFENSE BONDS Douglas Firemen’s DANCE DOUGLAS NATATORIUM - | Hospital, has been discharged. i S A T U R D A Y has | | October 17th Starting at 9:30 P. M. | Lillian Uggen's Orchestra Admission $1.00 - HOSPITAL NOTES Irene Haffner, who recently un- Mrs. Ina Graves, a surgical pa- tient in St. Ann's Hospital, gone home. Sam Morton has entered St. Ann’s | Hospital for surgery | | « Johnnie Jackson entered the Gov- ernment Hospital yesterday. - e WOMEN OF THE MOOSE Regular meeting Saturday night at 8, Moose Club Rooms. Initiation. All members urged to attend. GERTIE OLSON, Recorder. Service Men 50¢ "A Good Time Assured” adv. = - ' YoU SAY YOUR BEAUTIFUL |, DAUGHTER GIVES A KISS WITH EVERY BOND THAT IS SOLD ? MOTHER-YOU T/ CHARGE OF TfiéE RETESNUW\- o -I'M GOING TO GET A CUP COFFEE - E \Canadian Tells Dramatici,, and Roberts’ | - % SEATTLE ® Perfect comfort | - Cent?a]ly located | | Large Rooms e Splendid food all with | bath. | Special Rates to Permanent Guests | ALASKANS LIKE THE | SHotel | NEW WASHI and service TON THE M. V. BEILBY will leave Juneau for Petersburg, Port Alexander and Way Ports | EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 6 A. M. | Please have all freight on City Dock Tuesday, before 4 P. M. J. H. SAWYER THE ATCO LINE Alaska Transportation Company i L ] SAILINGS FROM PIER 1 SEATTLE PASBENGERS, FREIGHT REFRIGERATION ® D. B. FEMMER—AGENT | \ PHONE 114 NIGHT 312 HUH-IT'S BEEN A GOOD MANY YEARS SINCE SHE'S BEEN A DAUGHTER- DO mvy Ele SHOPPING LATER- L WANT TO BUY SOME BONDS -BUT | DO NOT WANT A PENALTY TO GO WITH iT=- ILL BUY MINE AT MY BANK— SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1942 YOU CAN FLY JUNEAU to Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks Yakutat Valdez Nome Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Points Wednesday Friday Sunday * ALASKA STAR ATRLINES Phone 667 fice F HOTEL NORTHLAND TRANSPOR TATION.COMPANY ! tes. N:Wb?p‘ub\\shed. ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska———Passengers, Mail Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Sitka Juneau ...$ 8 $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 $18 Sitka ... 18 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 Kimshan 18 10 18 10 18 10 Pelican 18 10 18 18 Todd 18 18 10 10 Tenakee .. 10 10 10 Angoon .. :8 18 Hoonal 0 ailxpress Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c | Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY ; Ketchikan ‘Wrangell Petersburg Juneau ... ...$45.00 $35.00 3 $30.00 Petersburg 30.00 10.00 ‘Wrangell . - 2000 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to Ketchikan Express Rate: 10¢ per 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 LODGE: Schedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notice. i | | 10 Weekly — Seattle - Fairbanks 5 Weekly — Fairbanks - Nome Dally Tu. Th. Sa. ; 9:00am Seattle, Wash, ___ _ PWT Juneau, Alaska ___135 MWT Ar Whitehorse, Y. 135 MWT Ar Fairbanks, Alaska _150 MWT Fairbanks, Alaska 150 MWT Ruby, Alaska 150 MWT Nome, Alaska 165 MWT PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS JUNEAU —;l;\NCHORAGE YAKUTAT — CORDOVA With Connecting Service to KODIAK — KENAI PENINSULA ‘ and BRISTOL BAY | Woodley Airways (ALASKA AIR LINES) ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES AGENTS PHONE 612 S e " 1 e . o,

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