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2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA AlertfoBe SMAlégl'écgsfl’;’wAMERI(ANS MUNDA IS TER. CHAMBER RUSS REPORT Held Tuesday - " VICTIMS OF SHOWERED OF COMMERCE ON GOEBBELS' BY BOMBS HAS SESSIONPOPULARITY! PAGE. SIX Hospi is u"\Al slain h\ a Ann’s I ad, s 8 ruthless hobo tomcat” who insinu- Civilian Defense R.|;teq himself unseen into the recep- announces there Will| ;o y where the cage and its Director of E. Robertson }»!' “ln k‘IN‘» tomorrow evening at pept occupant stood b —— The Territorial Chamber 01 | 7 o'cloc A few pitiful tail feathers an vill meet at 7:30 o'clock | The Plist Ald problem will be an-|q Ahatieres sage were all that rec| BOM SHips Sent fo Bottom Americans Make Another Sl e Senate cram-|COMMENt on Propagand | nounced tomorow. Members of the majned yesterday morning. These ; o s eing the ! D erritor pé 1 pers with special business being the Aluskn Terorial Guard wil ptrol e beon svept vy, bt e in Less than Thirty Raid on Jap Aitbase— | omor s W memens . ist's Rise fo Power | BUY WAR BONDS and staff, lingers still President O. D. Cochran of Nome | (Continued from Page One) . WASHINGTON, Feb. heavy in both sinkings ican bombers started fires at the Tore than 6 the total com-|Japanese airbase at Munda, New Bl S DI?P("I‘ I UNC]I plement of more than 800 of the Georgia Island, in a raid yes first vessel were lost and m the Navy announced this morning 29 Amer- Will preside. Representatives are| (By Assocmml Press) expected from Anchorage, Cordova, | Thé Mos/ow radio quotes a smck- Fairbanks, Juneau, Ketchikan, holm dispatch saying neutral cor- Nome, Petersburg, Douglas, Valdez |respondents were amazed at the! and Wrangell. !unusual honers accorded Plopngnn- da Miunister Paul Joseph Goebbels ! CA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22 EORGE BROTHER Liquor Store BLOOMER WISCONSIN PILSNER BEER | S4. 1943 15 SE T 7 i han half of the approximate 500! wunda has been raided inter- S on the occaston of his speech to thel| Now Re-Opened Under persons ahosid the second <hp ¢ ety snce Novemver 2 an- GU] | UFSEN. PUT B e st TR R ither dead or missing erican attacks are undertaken in | 'The report added that the Sv\ed- ew Management W Home-Cooked Foods and Pastry | The next of kin have been no- ified.” A Navy spokesman said no de- tails, of the attacks have reached here yet He described the dead and miss- s mostly members of the Armj y, Marine Corps and Coast ard. The civillans are assumed to be technicians or other war vorkers. § an effort to make the girbase use- less for the enemy. —————s FINLAND T0 TRY TO SUE ON SPOT TONIGHT, George Gullufsen AM I-EGIO“ MEEI““?‘:S broadcast, has something | in common with George Washing- | | Anthem” were played twice during! ton, whose birthday anniversary Lhe‘lhe ceremonies in the sportspalast| Nation is observing today. It is 10- |4, ‘goi1in ac Goebbels told the Ger- cal George's birthday also and to-|,,.n¢ what he called the “unvarn-| |ish newspapers emphasized Geob- | bels' steady rise to Germany's “first man since the Axis defeat at Stal-| which {ciated Press | “Fuehrer’s March” and the “Nazi| the Asso-| recorded, said the| | | ‘Made Since 1885 EORGE BROTHER - Mrs. John Connor and Rosie Ed- wards, at St. Ann's Hospital for medical care, have been discharged OPEN FROM 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. | John Mitchell, was an outgoing |patient at St. Ann’s Hospital yes- 'S, terday. Mrs. Ole Westby and baby girl have been discharged from St Anns’ Hospital. night at the weekly meeting of'the |04 trytn” about the winter bat-! d B C - d were not Army or Navy transports an e Onvlnce . Incidentally, it is cherry pie day, labors.” yesterday. ated by either of the servi NEW YORK, Feb. 22—The New | A say to avell repor st night that Fin- have apple pie at the Legion do- COCKTA”_ PARTY this seemed land has decided to sue for a sep- ings tonight probable because most Moscow can be approached.” at the Legion meeting. W. J. Malen and Mr. and urday afternoon from 4 to 7 o'clock. Mrs. Malen is the wife of Lieu- Medical patients Willlam Mowr» Mr. Jernberg is assistant U. 8. Hospital. current term of court. They Are Real Tasty! All those aboard except the crew- H Y N i M 1 H men were traveling as passengers. American Legion Post in the DUg-|yo¢ in Rissia. ave Our ex ea ere The spokesman said the ships out, local George is going to “set- Hitler, the report said, remained | L up” the cigars, those you can really in the shadow under the pretext of |—— in the strict sense of the term in smoke, too |fatigue and ‘“excessive cares and|mitted to the Government Hospital that they were not actually oper- T ) i ¥ S. all on account of George Washing- He said he was unable to say York Times Stockholm correspond- ton, but local George is going whether the vessels were traveling ent reported last in a convoy althoug i 49 oF % " A j 3 North At- arate peace at the first opportunity —There are going to be other ELMI and CABOLINE lantic shipping i§ now organized and “through any channel by which things doing tonight, movies, etc., HELD SATJRDAY on a convoy basis. | A cocktail party honoring Robert Jernberg was given by (Jane Alexander at her home Sat- About 40 attended the delightful affair, TS tenant-Commander Malen, former- and Walter Wilson are recent out- ly executive officer on the Haida. eoing medical patients at St. Ann’s | District Attorney stationed at Ketchikan, and in Juneau for the Alexander Meloridor was discharg- Special Meeting - For Woman's Clu ed Saturday from the Government Hospital. Mrs. Lillian Nelson has been dis- | missed from the Government Hos- mu! | Liquor Store ATTENTION MASONS Stated Communication of Mt. Ju- neau Lodge Monday evening at7:30 o'clock. All Masons inyited to at- tend. ‘ J. W. LEIVERS, adv. Secretary. ————,e——— Musicians Dance, Marrh 6. adv. . Medical patients Melvin Gray, Alexander Geiger and Frank Yar- not were discharged Sunday from St. Ann’s Hospital. COMING in TECHNICOLOR! 1048 PAYNE = wauresn O'HARA » wanooips SCOTT 20th CENTURY This MESSAGE for VICTORY Sponsored by What's Mrs. Petrov got that you havent got ? - Meet Mrs. Petrov, citizen of the Soviet Union:’ When the Nazi Panzer Divisions approached the small Petrov farm in the Ukraine, she knew what to do. ‘The wheat, so near to harvest time, went up in flames. The potatoes, stored in the cellar, were soaked with kerosene. The jars of fruits and preserves were smashed, and the cow, which had given her children so many quarts of pre- cious milk, was shot. After piling her two young children, a few blan- kets and some food on the farm cart, Mrs. Petrov did one more thing. She went back to the house where she and her husband had been so happy s . . where they had worked so hard to make a home for their family—and applied the torch. Now, everybody in this country knows that Americans are as patriotic—as capable of sacri- fice—as grimly determined to beat Hitler as are the Russians or anybody else on earth. But—by the Lord Harry—do we have to wait till ‘a Nazi tank comes rolling up the street before we prove it? ChildrenJoinYour Schools-at-War Program Now We aren’t being asked to burn our homes and destroy everything we own. Please God, we never will be. But we are being asked to join the Payroll Savings Plan and put at least 107 of our earnings into War Bonds! We're being asked—not told— to loan money—not give it! And to loan this money at a good rate of interest and for good reasons! We’re being asked to buy War Bonds to help win the war—to provide a nest egg for the future—to provide peacetime jobs and peace- time goods and a generally decent world that the fellows who are doing the fighting can come back to. That's our job. And it's a job that won’t be done until every mother’s son of us is buying bonds until it hurts. There are, right now, still people who ought to be buying War Bondsthrough the Payroll Savings Plan—and aren’t. Right now, while some of the people in the Payroll Savings Plan are setting aside more than 10%—a lot of others are investing less. Let’s change that situation—quick. If you aren’t in the Payroll Savings Plan—sign up tomorrow; If you're already in, but haven’t hit 10% yet— raise your sights. And if you can put in more— do it. What's Mrs. Petrov got that we_ haven't? Nothing! Let’s prove it! e o o WHAT YOU SHOULD DO: If you are : : 3 1. Already investing 10% of your pay in War Bonds through the Payroll S-vingl Plan—boost that 10% if you cah. 2. Working in a plant where the Plan is installed, bus haven’t signed up yet—sign up tomorrow. 3. Working in a plant where the Payroll Savings Plan hasn’t been installed, talk to your union head, fore- man or plant mapager—and see if it can’t be installed right away. The local bank will be glad to help. 4. Unable to get in on the Payroll Savings Plan for any reason, go to your local bank or wherever bonds are sold. They will be glad to help you start a Plaa of your own. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS THROUGH THE @ PAYROLL SAVINGS PLAN PACIFIC AMERICAN FIiSHERIES A special moehng of the Juneau Woman's Club, to be held tomor- row evening, Tuesday, at 8 o'clock in the American Legion Dugout, will be devoted to the examination The meeting will be women of the Territory. The meeting will be open to wcmen guests outside the club, Mrs. | Thomas Parke, president, announ- ces,, and all regular members are | asked to be present to register their convictions on pending matters. e EASTERN bTARS Juneau Chapter No. 7, regular meeting, February 23, Tuesday, 8 o'clock. - Refreshments. ALICE BROWN, adv, Secretary. ot el Pt i Musicians Dance, March 6. adv. * RN |MRS. GRANT LOGAN | GOES HOME; RECOVERS | FROM AUTO ACCIDENT open to dent, was discharged yesterday nnd returned to her home: Together with her husband, Mrs Logan was traveling in a taxicab when it collided with a bus, the jaccident being caused by slippery streets, i 3 | HOSPITAL NOTES ical patient at St. Ann's Hospital yesterday. ~John McLaughlin and John Sul- |livan have been admitted to St. Ann‘s‘Hmpital for medical care Gust Nurmi has entered St. Ann’s iHQspital for surgery. Jerry Thomas from Sitka was ad- SAMPLER s34 the famous assortment of liked confections . . . here :r:u from the makezs -§1,50 0 $7.50. BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. “The Rexall Store’ ) lof legislative matters of special in- | |terest to women of the Territory. | Mrs. Grant Logan, at St. Ann’s | Jeff Aldrige was an incoming med- | [ S ATE BB DR BG T Nl & I \ 4 \ 3 ) 2 N ! | | i . N Hospital since January 14 from in- | juries sustained in a traffic acci-' { B | | | | | | | | | YVONNE COOPER WITH YOUR SHORT HAIR BE READY FOR SPRING Consult our expert Hair Stylists. Let them work out an individualized upswept short coif- fure to make you lovelier this Spring. ‘Incredible, flattering and yet easy to manage. OUR OIL MACHINE or MACHINELESS WAVES, a gentle solution that gives a soft, natural-looking wave, which will "HOLD" the curl indefinitely. 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