The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 29, 1942, Page 6

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———_fi PAGE SIX GIRL SCOUTS TO f of 2 to 5 p. m. on Saturday in the ballroom of the Scottish Rite Tem- ple. Some time before 3 o'clock the IVE TEA S‘I‘YLE style show will be given G r | Scouts working on their personal I health badges will act as models {suitable for girls between the ages {of 7 and 16 years. Clothing will be Climax of activities of Juneau |furnished by the B. M. Behrends Co. Girl Scouts during the national ob- store servance of Girl Scout Week will be | Tickets are for admission both to the tea and style show set for Sat- [the tea and style show. Mrs. Harold Foss, who is in charge urday afternoon, and the sponsor- ing of the double feature being |of the style show, announced today shown at the Capitol Theatre to- |that Catherine Carlson will be the | pianist and Mrs. H. J. Powers will be the announcer. | Mrs. Earl McGinty is in charge of the arrangements for the tea. 1Chapela(fl;s. Are ' To Sell Goodies The Chapeladies are to hold a home-baked goodie sale tomorrow |at DeHart's Grocery store at Auk |Bay. It is announced that there |will be an assortment of cakes, | pies, nutbreads and cookies among !the goodies to be on the counters. .- ' PIONEERS MEETING SET FOR TONIGHT Regular business meeting of the Pioneers of Alaska, Igloo No. 6, is scheduled for this evening at 8 o’- |clock, in the Odd Fellows Hall. morrow night The tea is scheduled for the houys Evening ' Sweaters a”d The Auxiliary will also be in ses- sion at that time and a joint so- Bl0uses lcial meeting will follow. Mrs. E, F. Rodenberg and Mrd. | Lottie Spickett are in charge of the Glamorous Evening Sweat- |/entertainment and refreshments |and games will also engage the at- |tention of those in attendance. - 'MEETINGS ARE SCHEDULED AFTER ALERT Following the practice alert which will be held at 7 o'clock tonight, all First Aid Captains are request- ed to meet in the firemen’s din- ing room at City Hall. The meeting will be short but of the utmost im- portance and all First Aid Cap- tains are asked to report promptly. ers, sparkling with sequins Ott with desig s trimmed and jewels. metallic thread and fancy buttons . . In Red, Black, Pink, ‘White, Turquoise * BLACK VELVET BLOUSES and BOLEROS . . . Some plain, others with seq S * LONG BLACK SKIRTS in crepe and jersey. ‘Mrs. Robert Henning ‘And Children Will Visit in Seattle, Wash. Mrs. Robert Henning and her two children, Eric and Randi, are leaving this week for They will spend the two months in the Puget Sound city visiting - Mrs. Henning's moth Mrs. Cora Johnson — e 150 COLLEGE ~ GRADUATES T0 ~ GETNAVY JoBS SEATTLE, Oct. 29.—A call for ap- proximately 150 college graduates from the Thirteenth Naval District |to be available for Midshipmen { training prior to January 1, 1943, | was issued today by the Office of | Naval Officer Procurement | To be eligible for the training, a {man must have a college degree | with the equivalent of at least & | year's mathematics, including trig- {onometry. The men must not have day. | reached their twenty-eighth birth- | Married men who meet the gen- eral requirements for the training, ! which leads to a commission as| | ensign, will be acepted, but men who !nre not married at the time of applying must remain single until | ( completion of the four months’ mid- | | shipmen school Successful candidates will be en- | rolled as apprentice seamen, Class | V-7, for midshipman training prior | to the first of next year. | If a candidate cannot meet the physical requirements for general service in the same class, which has | somewhat modified physical require- |ments in vision and color percep- tion, height, weight and teeth. 1@ we will do our utmost to pre-| |vent others from doing those acts EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA GLAD TO BE HOME! I'LL SAY S0, SAYS LES TEAGLE TODAY “Everyone in Alaska who is com- plaining about shortages and other disruptions in their normal life ought to make a two-week trip to the Pacifie“Coast to really appre- ciate how little our lives up here have been changed, so far, by war| conditions,” Lester E. Teagle, man- ager of the Catering Department | of the Baranof Hotel said today | after a six weeks' trip to Pacific| Coast cities. | “Life is so .completely altered in San Francisco and Los Angeles, in fact in every city and toyn on the coast that it is like going into a different world than we know in Juneau,” Mr. Teagle said. [ Whether one wants a_hotel room, | service in a restaurant, department | store or garage, one s up against the need for standing in line to| take one’s turn and is frequently unable to obtain anything, whether | it is service or an article to pur- chase, he said. One wholesale gro-| cer, of San Francisco, told Mr. Teagle that in the 45 years he hud; been in business, he had never seen or dreamed of conditions as they are now. “People must make | up their minds to take things as they come. Many commodities are| not obtainable and merchants must | plan to substitute and accept the allotment of merchandise that will| be allowed them,” the wholesaler | declared. Mr. Teagle visited his family in Seattle and motored from there! south to Los Angeles, taking his| daughter, Sharon with him on the trip. “All motor transportation, in- cluding busses and trucks must ob-| serve the 35-mile per hour speed| limit which makes a long drive any- THE DAILY ALASKA 'JUNEAU PUPILS DETERMINED TO DO NO DAMAGE} Sign Pledges fo Avoid and| Prevent Destruction | on Hallowe'en Practically all Juneau children,| through their schools, have pledged | themselves to refrain from pulling| any harmful pranks this Hallowe'en | in support of the nation’s war ef-| fort. Furthermore, they have agreed | to do their utmost to prevent any damage. The approximate 409 pupils of | Juneau Grade School have signed the following pledge which was read this noon by Superintendent | A. B. Phillips at the Chamber of Commerce meeting: “As a patriotic American citi- zen, I hereby solemnly pledge that during this Hallowe'en season, I shall not commit any act of van- dalism or do anything that might cause other people unnecessary work or expense.” High School Pledge ! | A like pledge was signed by the 142 Juneau High School students | and reads as follows: | “We, the undersigned, all being students of Juneau High School, hereby pledge that (1) we will not jcommit any acts which will lead to or cause destruction of property | during this Hallowe'en season and 1 if it is in our power to do so and (3) we realize that waste and de-| {struction of goods is contributing to the work of fifth columnists, saboteurs and other enemy agents | and (4) we know that destroying | any useful thing now gives “aid and comfort to the enemy.” Interviews are being given at 117/ Marion Street, Seattle, and 1233 | American Bank Building, Portland. | g | U. 8. CUSTOM DEPUTY i COLLECTOR AND WIFE | LEAVE FOR SKAGWAY J. A. McCann, Deputy U: 8. Col- lector of Customs, who has been sta- | tioned at Tulsequah left last night for Skagway where he is to be on duty. He was eccompanied by Mrs. | McCann. {that we may, perhaps, by so doing “THEREFORE, we glady sign! and agree to abide by this pledge assist in saving even one life or ! shorten this war by even one day.”| The Empire regrets that it does |not have sufficient space to print the names of all students who signed these pledges. Reject Party Offer | At the same time, Mr. Phillips Iinformed members of the Chamber | that the students had rejected the | Chamber’s offer to treat them to| jan ice cream and cake party after | | Hallowe’en. The students decided | !that they had no desire to be paid | | | Seattle, | department. thing but a pleasure. The dimouts| practiced along the coast make! even a familiar city look strange; and unreal. In fact, life everywhere! is completely altered and will re-; main so for the duration,” he said. | The trip was made for the pur- chase of needed supplies for the“ Baranof Coffee Shop and catering | It is surely good to be back ™ Juneau where life seems to go on| more or less normall, so far, Mr.| Teagle said. { - CARD OF THAN We desire to express our sincere | | bills contracted by anyone but my- | for doing something that was their|and heartfelt thanks to all our self for the Tee Harbor Herring|duty. A letter of thanks andsnotice | neighbors and friends for their| '@ ALASKA TERR. GUARDS MEET AT 7 TONIGHT All Alaska Territorial Guards are to meet at 7 oclock tonight at| the usual platoon meeting places | with full equipment, prépared to participate in the practice alert as they have done in the past. | Immediately following the alert there will be a lecture of instruc- tion on the technique of fire con- trol in the grade school audit jum which all members are re quested to attend. THERE'S A WAY CHEWELAH, Wash. For 15 years W. B. Carter had been prom- ising his wife venison, but what with the chores and all, he just never found time to kill a deer. So Mrs. Carter looked out the | farmhouse window and saw a big buck nibbling in her garden. She | reached for the Carter rifle. | There’s venison on the Carter table | | now. S e FRANK MacPHERSON, OF POLARIS-TAKU MINE, | AND WIFE LEAVE TODAY Frank H. MacPherson, superin- tendent of the Polaris-Taku Mine, | and Mrs. MacPherson, are leaving | for Vancouver, B.C, today or to- morrow and will spend about two weeks there on business connected with the mine which was recently closed for the duration. From Vancouver they will go to their heme in Butte, Mont., to spend some time before continuing to Du- luth, Minn,, headquarters of the Polaris-Taku Mine. Mr. and Mrs. MacPherson have been in Juneau for the last three weeks on mine business. While they were in the city they made their home at the Baranof Hotel. MRS. JOHANSEN'S Funeral Johansen, who died last week after a short illn GEORGE BROTHERS NEW ITEMS DAILY! SALTBLACKCOD - Pound 30c PICKLED HERRING - Pound 45¢ FROZEN TROUT - Pound 35c Fresh Frozens=-- Scallops, Red Perch, Lobster, Crab Meat, Sword Fish, Shrimp, Filet of Sole, Mackerel and Haddock: FULL LINE OF FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 2 DELIVERIES DAILY 10:30 A. M. 2:30P. M. PHONE 92 PHONE 95 | Alex Tavasieff, Hans Johansen and Mingo Avoian. Burial was Cemetery. in the Evergreen FUNERAL IS HELD Mrs. - TIDES TOMORROW services for John were held yesterday afternoon from the chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. Dean C. E. Rice gave the eulogy | High tide—5:54 a.m., 132 feet. Pallbearers included Abel Ander-' Low tide—l11:39 am. 6.1 feet. Cliff Matthews, R n Ellers, High tide—5:26 p.m., 138 feet. ® lof the rejection was read. | kindness and sympathy shown us Bob Helgeson, President of the|in the loss of our beloved wie, | | Juneau Student Body, also spoke in |and daughter. Also for the many | Also scheduled for xmmedlately, - +* after the alert is a meeting of the | !Civilian Defense Council ~ which | NOTICK will take place in the Council| I Will not be responsible for any Jones_Slevens Ohambers of City Hall. | i ! Company and the Gasboat Seward Street Albinos appear at the rate of | “Wilson.” one in 10,000 persons. 'adv. JACK DUNN. WANTED! NURSES’ UBSES AIDES coRPs x AIDES ® SERVE YOUR COUNTRY HERE! Has Juneau 50 More Women Who Want to Help When Only They Can Serve? You can get the satisfaction that comes only with intelligent and patriotic serv- ice by enrolling now if you are between the ages of 18 and 50. Training Period Consisis of: 35 Hours of Class Work; 45 Hours of Supervised Hospital Training; ! Followed by 150 hours of Voluntary Service a year. | 1S T GE 18 DONATED TO THE RED CROSS AND OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE BY Charles W. Carter Call Mrs. Harley Turner, Phone Blue 400, for Application Blank 3P | IL— connection with this matter, as-| suring the cooperation of the stu- dents. | The. Chamber also moved to |send a letter to Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Dimond, supporting his {protest to the Office of Price Ad- | ministration’s propesal to general rationing to Alaska. R. E. Robertson and Allen Shattuck were appointed to draft the letter. d PUT WAR STAMPS ON “winter hands. Every time you wash going out, apply Miss Ardes protected by soft NiGHT eLOV! HAND LOTION, 1.00 AND 1.75 apply, M Schilling pure Vanilla. Its ex- | quisite bouquet won't bake out. | | | COMBAT Combat the drying effects of steam heat and cold weather . . . and keep your “'gentlewoman's” HAND LOTION. Every night, soothe with emollient HAND CReAM (if possible, leave on overnight, NIGHT GLOVES, 200 ARDENA HAND SOAP, 1.00; BOX OF 3, 2.50 beautiful floral offerings and do-| nors of cars. | MR. JOHN JOHANSEN, | MR. AND MRS. B. CHER-! 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