The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 23, 1943, Page 2

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& PAGE TWO TH TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1943 e nit SLIPS, GOWNS g A nK 11 4\ o Rayo Sleek, tim wonderful fitting . . . these liceties, by LUXITE. to care for—no ironing—and a world of wear new ravo Easy moer SGI. ELLIS LEVI - GOING T0 COAST | | ARTILLERY SCHOOL | Technical Segéant Elis Levi of |the Army Finance Office in Juheau. is waiting in Seattle, his. port'. of |embarkation, to be sent to . the | coast Artillery Officers’ Training | School at Ft. Monroe, Virginia,’ for which the orders of assignment were issued here yesterday. Sgt. Levi left Juneau about three jweeks ago on emergency furlough {to visit his mother in Rochester, N. Y., where she had undergone Isurgery. Having completed the wvisit he returned to Seattle and will pro- each Sunday afternoon for several months .to hold a special congert for patients' and the staff of st |Ann’s Hospital. CLARENCE L. OLSON, . FISHERIES HEAD, T0. LEAVE FOR SOUTH Clarence L. Olson, Fishery Man- |agement Supervisor, for the Fish rand Wildlife Service, will leave the i} 1atter part of this week to attend '} conferences regarding the conser- |vation afid management of the Al- | aska Fisheries resources in the | Chicago and Washington; D. C. offi- (ces of the department. Mr. Olson expects to be in the jeast for about two weeks and before ireturning to Alaska will spend some | |fime in Seattle nmking prepara-| | tlonis for the comling season’s activ-| {itles. % A | AtAsKa Slips 2.50-350 | E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU ALASKA ceed from there to the Maryland ** ! " & Angeles which he will assume upon | {training center. Those — arriving from Yakutat|pis arrival in' the California city. ¢ An accomplished pianist, Sgt.| Vere Alexander Antonetz, Everett > | Levi ved frequently in private Evickson, Woodrow, | W. Goings. | i ¥ . ar! 3 inbottam, Vernon C. ! homes and in public, appearing Carl R. Higginbot | G G G S ) L St Loy, Thomas McGuire, Kenneth F.| RAY RE ORY EI | Lester MR. AND MRS. FORESMAN | AND DAUGHTER LEAVE ON WAY TO LOS ANGELES, CAL. Mr. and Mrs. X. R. Foresman and | their daughter, Gretchen left re- cently for the south on their way| THIRTY - SIX ARRIVE HERE FROM WEST Arrivals this morning from Sew- ard were Kenneth C. Carson, H. L. (5 Los. Angeles where they will Clites, R. H. Cox, Mrs. R. H. COX.|make their future home. They had| |H. B. Crewson, G. E. Edge, Lloyd jiyeq here for the last two y ars | S. Edwards, Pete Kesovia, J. A during which time Mr. Foresman| arshall, Clara McCutcheon, Je: ry McCutcheon, Lt. T. E. Richard- son, H. W. Squires, Fred Summe! |was Supervisor of the Division of the Child Welfare Department for| the Territorial Department of Pub-! field, Leonard Taylor, Mrs. H. L.\)jc yyelfare i Wood, Stanley Zuern, Chris R.| My moresman has accepted thel Ellingen, Earl F. Ellingen, Carl D"posltion of Chief of the Child Wel- Hupp, Stanley E. Lind, Edward D-"fm-e Division for the city of Los wiley. i z A ORDER YOUR RABBIT SKINS Now Tanned, cleaned and all ready to make up. VALCAUDA FUR COMPANY SEATTLE, WASHINGTON ™ BARANOF Alaska’s Largest Apartment Hotel * EVERY ROOM WITH TUB and SHOWER L 4 Reasonable Rates Phone 800 Martin, Capt. Dean Parker, John | Sztuk, C| Beauchens and Peter | ARMY PROMO"O" i DeLucg. | ks | Leaving for the south were: | Ray Gregory of the Finance Of-| For Ketchikan—W. G. Yatakme- fice, U. S. Army, has just recently| noff, Martin Z. Knukoff, Charles |received notice of his promotion} Bunnell, George Vig, Linn A. For- [to the rank of Captain, according| rest, Basil Fitzwilliams, Charles F.|to an order issued March 17. | Graham, Mrs. Elizabeth E. Gra-| Capt. Gregory first came to Ju- ham, Thomas G. Ilanos, Kennem!neau in October of 1940 .as special! F. Pond. |disbursing agent for the U. S War | For Seattle—Robert E. Miller, | Department, and continued as a Vern D. Markergie, Eugene Wil- |reserve officer and special agent| liams, N. O. Morrison, R. L. Thomp- | Until July, 1942, when he went into| son, H. M. Gibbs, E. W. Sand, Ti_lactive service. Since that time hej mon E. Bay, Ernest R. Miller, Ro- | D88 been with the Finance office bert E. Timmor, Corbitt H. witt, | AS @ member of the Officers’ Re- Hobbie, Howard Reed, Mrs, | “erve Association for Alaska, Greg- tedric] y . Wi _|ory played an active part in that C. Niedrich, Roy Lec Wiebe, Ro-| o o0 piation, for which he was sec- | bert C. Preston, Burdette Williams | detary-treasurer for some time. His| E. E. Diener, Edward J. Moeller, L. 'pareflls are’ residents of Portland, | Azzarello, Lonard J. Thornhill, | oyeoon | Corporal William H. Field, Cor- | As the result of his promotion,| poral John Klatz, Angus R. Mayo, friends today called him “the most | Oliver T. Wentz, Henry G. Nesbett, | congratulated man in town.” 1 - | [ | Earl John Steiner, Frank Riolas, - Jr., Herman W. Resler, Delmar A.| Stickney, Fred Summerfield, Oscar |PR. C. E. BUNNELL ON TRIP TO KETCHIKAN Gowns 2.95-4.50 Strikingly simple slips and gowns, and for you who like it dressier, lace trimmed models, too . . .'Sweet as a lullaby in economical loveliness. Black, White, Tea Rose | Al The American Federation of! La- 'bor Hall on Second Street w |erowded with delegates to the re- |cent Alaska Territorial Federation rof ‘Labor~ convention~and scares of jother .union men (o witness the showing of Alaska pictures by A !B. Cain. Pictures of the Matanuska | Valley especially caused special | comment and high approval ofthe great project. The showing of the | pictures took over two hours. .and |was thoroughly enjoyed by Jthe |{arge audience. NEWLY CREATED " MAJOR IN ARMY. FINANCE OFFICE “Major, if you please” hereafter when you address the former Capt. Arthur J. Hoffman of the Army Fi- nance Office. Major Hoffman has just received | James and his boys had a three- notice of his promotion, and while day wait in Syracuse, missing three unusually young for the distinction, s certain to bear the weight of the NURSES’ AIDES BALL For a Gala Evening SATURDAY, APRIL 3RD, attend the NURSES' AIDES BALL. Proceeds to American Red Cross. QUALITY SINCE /887 MARCH ISSUE OF | Winters. Aascawomanss One Night MW O 51405 Band Hops g Ruled Out uction of Sidney Lawrence's By ROBBIN COONS B rep) famed Mt. McKinley, the March issue of Alaska Woman is now on the stands with an excellent re- view of February news, a strenm-} lined sketch of Alaska legislators | in a form thats fillable, and 4| HOI1YWOOD—AIl but incurable pointed editorial on the prime ques- jitterbugs will doubtless be able to tion of providing adequate but con- | oo up, but the touring name structive activities for our teen-age|j.nqs ope-night stands seem to 8 ks SHcme | be on ice for' the duration. Club highlight listed in the Al-‘ Tommy Dorsey and gang, before :“\kfl Woman ?’or Juneau d}m{ng the | coming here to make “Girl Grazy,” past month was the Woman's Club | yaveq to 68,000 fards in 23 one- luncheon henoring Territorial leg- nighters, during which tour his islators, ‘and ‘a resfime “of topics | had one ecvening off, musicians discussed. (. pad | They intended to spend it in Salt g T Lake City, but passed most of it in Ogden, waiting five hours for ‘ (o train. Once they traveled 659 ‘ 'miles in a 1931 truck, and once the 31 band boys and their instru- :gg:',lu';‘cclfefig! '“T | ments were packed into a 14-pas- Sheoet, Chikt wdd vscks senger bus for a long hop. So Dor- Dback wiih time-tested 'apoRug Sey has ruled out one-night stands. |~ Johnny “Scat” Davis is ‘back— {minus his band. He's in “Sarong | Girl” with Ann Corio, playing an orchestra leader. He found the | band business more lucrative than | pictures, but he's given up—couldn't | v - | Weilake a Specialty the draft, and the transportation % of { - CHOP SUEY , | problem was too tough. ALSO THE BEST-IN | Harry James, in “Best Foot For- | AMERICAN DISHES ward,” was playing & one-pight | |stand in Syracuse, N. Y., last year | Th R lcal |shortly after Pearl Harbor. During e oya e |the evening the army took over | |the bus they were using, together | THAT'S TH' FRONT | DOOR-BELL- I'LL ANSWER 1T- MAGGIE - ME DARLIN'~ YOU SIT RIGHT WHERE YOU ARE -YOU'RE NOT GOIN' TO GET NEAR THE FRONT DOOR YOU'RE NOT GOING TO SNEAK OUT TONIGHT=- B haven't tried any tours since that{new responsibility with dignity and| | | Mr. Forrest will be away from | ! his Juneau headquarters y for aJ\ Sunlamp for your fine strong legs 1 | week or ten days. ! | G | ‘l"OR)fl'IR RESIDENT OF | K JUNEAU DIES, SEATTLE | Fred W. Goetz, former resident | ! ;of Juneau, about 40 's ago, died | ‘ jrecently in Seattle at the age of ‘ | 86. He came to Alaska as a youth i | | | fW. Carlson, James P. Dougherty,L |Roy Lee Leftwich, L, A. Allen, Wil- | Dr. C. E. Bunnell, President of liam S. Joseph, William A. Red- |the University of Alaska, left today |ding, Fabian Anders, Walter F |for Ketchikan to spend a few days. | THE YAKOBI | will leave Juneau for Petersburg, DV [LINN A. FORREST i lEAVES TODAY Port Alexander and Way Ports | |EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 6 AM Fon KEI(H'KAN:Please have all freight on Ci — Dock Tuesday, before 4 P.M. Linn A. Forrest, architect for the | For Information Phone 513. United 'States Forest Service, left | & REST |this morning for Ketchikan where | e 1 he will design a building in con- nection with the Marine Station of the Forest Service. Some day youll thank a GE | before the gold rush days and at | ‘vm'xous times owned mining claims | bere, Dawson, Fairbanks and Nome. | He has be en a resident of Seattle for more than 30 years. Survivors e |keep 15 men together, what with | with other means of transportation.' other engagements, and they experience. Kay Kyser (“Right About Face") generally is able to charter a bu to take his gang to service centers |to put on shows, and he isn't try- ing any other tours. Food as well as transportation complicates the business. Kay and |'his boys, returning from the east some time ago, went without food for 27 hours. Soldiers and sailors are fed first on trains, and the other passengers take pot luck—if any. On this trip, after the 27- hour fast, they learned that the train would stop for five minutes at a small desert town in Arizona, and two of the boys were nominated to run across to a little grocery by the tracks and buy bread and saus- age. Just as the train pulled in, a freight train barred the way. One boy crawled under, made the dash, and crawled back just before the freight pulled out. He sold sand- wiches to the others for $2 apiece. Freddie Slack’s band (in “The Sky’s the Limit") tried a series of | one-nighters in the San Joaquin (valley, had the usual trouble with | buses and trains and an additional woe with sleeping accommodations. | In Oakland, Calif., where the tour | started, there were no rooms to be had. “We stayed with relatives, slept on park benches, in bus sta- | tions - and telephone booths,” he says. ————— f NOTICE | All coal orders from this date on must be for cash. All coal accounts jare due and payable at the North Transfer, Office, 3rd and Franklin, adv, | competence. Hailing from San Francisco, Ma- | jor Hoffman has been in Juneau nce last July. 'ROY THOMAS SPOTS " ROBINS, THANE ROAD § | Roy Thomas, one of the eity| |truck drivers, reports that he gaw |two robbins yesterday on the ne |Road near Jim Cole's house. e |two birds were apparently on ir | {way to Juneau. f Two other robins were seen - ‘terday morning by Mr. and Mrs. {M. D. Williams, in their yard] in | Juneau. - i Spring hit Juneau last Sunday, |according to the almanac and the robins are perhaps the real fore- runners of the time to get garden- ing tools out ready for work, when the snow goes and the ground thaws out. D Canteéfi Clafls's Megts_ Thursday Members of the Canteen Class will meet Thursdey morning at 8:30 |o'clock in‘the social rooms of- Northern Light Presbyterian Church, instructor Mrs. John Mc- Laughlin announces. All members are urged to go take their assignments. There will are his widow, daughter, Mrs. Sy] via Bagshaw and a grandson, Pri- | vate C. L. Bagshaw. D MRS. McCANN OF KETCHIKAN VISITS Mrs. Mary Ellen McCann, resi- dent of Ketchikan and owner of the Smith Plumbing and Sheet | Metal Works in that city, is now | in Juneau and is the house guest | of Mrs. Bert Kiefer | Mrs. McCann expects to be in | Juneau for several days on busi- | ness. . MR. AND MRS, HAMILTON HERE FOR A FEW DAYS Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hamilton, Jr., teachers at the Office of Indian Affairs school at Haines, visited in Juneau over the weekend on of- ficial business. They returned yes- terday to their headquarters. | ————— A sign reading UXB means, in| the language of the armed forces. | Unexploded Bomb. | WAKE UP YOUR " LIVER BILE— | Without Calomel — And You'll Jump Out o | | Bed in the Morning Raris’ to Go | . ‘The liver should pour out two pint hfluld bile‘into your bowels daily th bile is not flowing freely, yor fuod man net digest. It m Gas bloats up your stipated. You f. be no public luncheon this week, Mrs. McLaughlin state: Payt Empire Classifieds world looks pun. | It takes those good, effective ! Little Liver Pills to get these ;\\ bile flowing frecly to make you fe | up.” Am: in making bile flow | Ask for Carter's Little Li | to you how simple and easy they are 1S GETTING ENOUGH ULTRA-VIOLET From: the time yows baby is born, be sure she gets her daily sunbath—Sammer and Winter. The ultca-violet in sunshine will hefp to grow sturdy, straight bones, In these months, when Summer sun is lacking, it's wise to use @ G-E Sunlamp. A Ganer- al Elec'ric Sunlamp is handy —a short exposure, tvery doy, is all you need THIS HANDSQME MODEL Actually G-E Sunlamps are priced at almost half what they cost a few vyears ago. ‘The new, popular LM-4 lamp, illustrated, is only $31.50 Come in and see wnc latest models and we will explain to use. See them today. Give your baby the daily ultra-violet she needs. The GENERAL BLECERIC Suntamp affords | ultza-violet in abundance and:has a similar beneficial effect to the ultra-violet radiation |* in the Summer sun. SIOLES GCENERAL 3 ELECTRIC; SUNLAMPS and Power Co. Phone 6 e —— e—— YOUNG MAN-DON'T YOU KNOW BETTER THAN TO DELIVER | \T_THE FRONT. R -GO AROUND By G EORGE McMANUS I SHOULD Copr. 1943, King LISTEN-LADY / vyou ("Pfi FERGET-I'VE GOT COFFEE- SUGAR AND BUTTER HERE -HUH - WEAR OUT Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved. BUY WAR RONDS —— e Empire Classifieds Pay! THE ATCO LINE A.luka Transportation Company L BAILINGS FROM PIER 1 SEATTLE PASSENGERS PFREICGHT REFRIGERATION L J D. B. FEMMER—AGENT PHONE 114 NIGHT 312 e e FLY SEATTLE - WHITEHORSE FAIRBANKS - NOME BETHEL PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 135 So. Franklin fo P.AA Phone 106 YOU CAN FLY JUNEAU to Anchorage Yakutat Cordova Kodiak Valdez Seward Kuskokwim and Yukon Points Wednesday Friday Sunday * ALASKA STAR AIRLINES paranoriore. Phome 667 NORTHLAND Fairbanks L Nome | Bristol Bay f ® TRANSPORTATION COMPANY LASKA A An- Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Juneau ... Petersburg Wrangell .. Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.09 to ketchikan Express Rate: 10¢ per pound—Minimum of 60c (o Petersburg and Wrangell FOR, INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, HASSELBORG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants Bchedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notice. COASTAL AIRLINES | Serving Southeast Alaska——Passengers, Mail. Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk Pel- joonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan Juneau NGHOG0" 53 810 s18 s1a s 818 4 Sitka 18 I a0 i e ! Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 4 J 10 18 10 18 0 i 10 18 18 » 18 10 10 10 10 18 ‘Wrangell Petersburg $35.00 $30.00 10.00

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