The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 30, 1943, Page 6

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PAGE SX ADAMS’ NIGHT TO BE OBSERVED BY ELKS TOMORROW Large Class 16 Be Initiated ~Hanford Comes Here for Big Event The Juneau lodge of Elks will observe Exalted Ruler Arthur Ad- ams' night tomorrow night and there is expected to be a large Adams’ class initiated. The meet- ing will also be the last session of the present lodge year Coming to participate in the Dep- event, Fred Hanford, District uty Grand Exalted made a special trip here from Wrangell. He was one of the delegates with Exalted Ruler Adams, who attended the Elks National Convention in Kan- sas City last year While in Juneau Mr. Hanford is t%e house guest of his son, Brooks Hanford, acting Agent of the Northland Transportation Com- pany, and his family - BUY WAR BONDS [FIRST FILING IS MADE HERE IN CITY ELECTION Russell Hermann Comes Ouf for Another Term as School Director for the city elec- week from to- first filin, held to be day has been made. Russell Hermann has filed for Di- School Board as his three-year term has expired and he is seeking reelection to the ame position Filings . for offices will close to- morrow afternoon and include may- or and three councilmen R - rector on the OLDTIMER PASSES ON George Rankin«Brown, 72, known Potato King of the Yukon, at Carmack, Whitehorse Odd Fellow as the and for died recently in the Hospital. He was an and a Mason, vears located > - Empire Classifieds Pay? GORDON T0 % THE.DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA Legislature PLAY WITH ' Did Nothing N.Y. YANKS To Aid Labor Second Baseman Comes fo' One Juneau Union Refuses Terms-leaves Immed- | 1o Commend Adtion iafely for Training of C.of C. | } There is one union in Juneau |that takes exception to praise of EUGENE, Oregon, March 30.—|the recent Territorial Legislature Second baseman Joe Gordon, voted by the Juneau Chamber of Com- the American League’s most valu- merce. The organization is the le player last year, ig said to Juneau Mine and Mill Workers' have come to terms with the Yank- ’Lmon Local No. 203, according to ees and leaves here immediately for | the following resolution adopted: spring training at Asbury Park, N WHEREAS, the Juneau Cham- b7 |ber of Commerce has stated in the The figure is not disclosed but Empire, that the people of Juneau it is believed Gordon will receive 'have approved the Sixteenth Alaska a substantial increase over his 1942 Legislature and have claimed to salary, reportedly in the neighbor- speak for the people, and, hood of $17,000. | WHEREAS, the Legislature did - > |not pass one bill benefiting Labor . land we can see no reason’for La- Some parts of a modern torpedo |y, t, commend them for what are so small that thev_v could be they have done, be it therefore lost beneath a fingernail. REOLVED, that we state that the Chamber of Commerce is not speaking for Labor and that we are not satisfied with the results of | this session of the Legislature, (Signed) Juneau Mine and Mill Workers Union, Local No, 203, by JOHN D. KENNEDY, | i | WAVE Poster Gitl SELECTED by a group of well-known artists to pose for the WAVES' new recruiting poster is beautiful Sele= ne Mahri of Stockholm, Sweden. HEARCHARGE ONMARITIME COMMISSION ! Aiken "S(ra—fzfl_es Surface’ | of “Most Revolt- ? ing Scandal” WASHINGTON, March cusing the Maritime Commi |seven alleged acts of ment and collusion, Senator Harold Aiken told the Senate today he had. “only scratched the surface of what was destined to become the most revolting scandal in the his- tory of national expenditures.” | | | I on on Fighting against the Senate con-| i firmation of the President’s re- nomination of Rear Admiral Emory S. Land’s appointment for a six- year term as chairman of the Com- mission, Aiken charged among other things that the Commission requi- sitioned “ships for sale to the Army | and Navy and reimbursed itself on| certain costs from the funds of these departments in a manner not | authorized by law.” Aiken said the total of unauthorized augmentation of its own funds apparently is over $100,000,000. He said the Commis- sion failed to recapture excess pro- 30—Ac- | mismanage- | such | TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1943 LOTS OF FRESH VEGETABLES ‘Green Peppers, Cucumbers, Artichokes Cauliflower, Broccoli, New Potatoes Rhubarb, Asparagus, Lettuce, Celery Green Onions, Carrots, Endive, Cabbage Avocados, Parsley, Leeks | ‘\ | i | | Oranges, Limes, Grapefruit DON'T FORGET NUR AIDES BALL Saturday Night Elks’ Hall | Proceeds to American Red Cross l Wire, Write or ‘Phone Your Order | WHERE SERVICE, PRICE AND QUALITY MEET We DELIVER TO DOUGLAS—Each Tuesday and Friday | GEORGE BROTHERS 2 DELT S DAILY PHONE 92 2 DELIVERIES DALY - pHONF. g5 | | IN BUSINESS SINCE 1908 and still doing “the largest grocery business in Juneau. The Hawailan islands form one | The hevea rubber tree is the SMOKING LESS.OR SMOKING 424 ®Smoking today at all-time peak —latest Government figures. tioning beyond that now in effect You'’re SAFER smoking : Survey Here Office of War Information indicat- led in a booklet published today. | ! Three all-purpose ration books . will be printed, says the hooklet, and adds, “with these books it will | WASHINGTON, March 30—The | be possible to ration many things office of Defense Transportation | without advance noti will make a survey of civilian trans- portation in Alaska, primarily in- tended to determine whether there is a need to establish an ODT re- gional office in the Territory. Ralph Bogan, of Chicago, Vice- President of the Greyhound Cor- portation, a member of the com- mission, last fall investigated con- ditions in Puerto Rico and re- cently assisted the War Dcmxunent on the Alcan Highwa ROTARIANSMAKE | LAST PLANS FOR MINSTREL SHOW ;Wull Be Slaged Tomorrow, | | Thursday Nights in 1 20th Century i President. She won the assignment after com= PAUL R. SHANKLIN, peting with ten other beautiful, Secretary. shqpcly models. (International) BRI MORE RATION INVESTIGATE HEADACHES TRAVEL FOR Office of Defense Trans- portation fo Make WASHINGTON, March 30.—Ra- Scientifically pr;ved less irritating for your nose and throat o> Why should you change to PHILIP — so-called. That’s the findings of MORRIS? ww—w g doctors, working with gctual smokers. In authoritative medical journals, i doctors report their findings — that: * EVERY CASE OF IRRITATION OF NOSE OR THROAT, DUE TO SMOKING, CLEARED UP COMPLETELY —OR DEFINITELY IM- PROVED . . . WHEN SMOKERS CHANGED TO PHILIP MORRIS! Last minute plans for the Juneau Rotary Club’s bigger-than-ever Min- | strel Show, to be aged in the Twentieth Century Theatre tomor- | row and Thursday nights of this; week, occupied the time of the Rotarians during their noon lunch- eon meeting in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel today. Proceeds from the show will be | used to furnish a children’s roem in | the Juneau Public Library, including | books, shelves, pictures and other decorations, the amount of work to be done depending upon the money {collected. Some of the funds will » NOTE: we do nof claim any curative power for PHILIP MORRIS. But this solid evidence proves they’re better —safer— for your nose and throat. A better-tasting cigarette —that’s proved better for you! Try it today! That’s not ‘‘laboratory analysis,” IN STATES TERRITORY | homes throughout the Territory was of the most isolated archipelagos source of 97 percent of the rubber the world jused in the world fits from shipbuilders although re- | quired to do so by law, that the|" Commission paid exorbitantly high | prices for old ships and insured ! ‘shlps for excessive values. DESTROVER ~ OF NIPPON ~ ISSTRAFED American Plane Goes So i Close in Attack, Loses Part of Wing | | | i | | PRE-EASTER SPECIAL! OIL MACHINE zlml~ MACHINELESS PERMANENT WAVES complete with STYLE HAIRCUT One Week Only-$10.50 WASHINGTON, March 30.—Am- | erican fighter planes, attacking at | very low altitude, resulted in one craft losing a three-foot section of | a wing against the mast of a de-| stroyer it strafed and set afire in| the northwestern Solomons area, | the Navy reports. | The damaged plane and all others | participating in the operations re- | turned safely to bases. { The planes are credited with set- . ting fire to from seven to nine planes in addition to damaging the | destroyer. e 'DEMOCRATS ASK ORGANIZATIONTO ENDORSEH. J. M. 9 ° Profests Are Made Against Unendorsed Appoint- | menis and H. R. 333 Last business of Democratic Leg- islators before returning to their LG RIB BEAUTY sALON PHONE 318 Open Evenings by Appointment. COOPER BUILDING Opposite Federal Building |ALL ELKS Are Asked to Bein Attendance at the Initiation of the ARTHUR ADAMS' CLASS an informal meeting with a group of | Juneau Democratic party members in the office of Allen Shattuck last | night. i All four divisions were represent- ed at the informal meeting called by Chairman Howard Lyng of the Territorial Central Committee at the request of other party members. At the meeting it was requested | also be used to continue the Rotary | that Mr. Lyng, as chairman of the | Club’s program of aiding the re- Territorial committee, ask endorse- icreaumml facilities of isolated ment of Divisional Committees of | camps of the armed forces in Al- | House Joint Memorial No. 9, which aska. | memorialized Congréss to make el- | The curtain will go up at 8:15 | ective the Governorship of Alaska. | sharp, but the doors will be open | Other matters that it was decided | shortly after 7:30 to allow plenty | should have party backing were a | of time for seating. Tickets for the | protest to the Democratic National | show sell for $1.10 for adults, and | Committee and to the Hon. Ahthony | |85 cents for children and service | | J. Dimond .against the making of men. Tickets may be purchased in | political appointments in the Terr advance from any Rotarian, at tory without proper party endorse- Juneau drug stores and the Baranof \ ments and a protest to Congress, to | Hotel. * ( Delegate Dimond and the chairmen B. P. 0. Elks’ Hall WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31 8P.M. & ! What's the entertainment to be | like—well, perhaps it will open with a real first part of noisy, | eracking tambos and bones, spirited | choruses, several jokes, more songs, Bloomfield Creations as presen‘ted by Madame busy), an interlocutor who must wise- | more jokes (unless the censors get | Initiation Refreshments | of the Congressional committees on | Territories against the passage of H. R. 333, a bill to place under classified civil service the office of the Secretary of the Territory. Plans for the next Divisional and Territorial Conventions were dis- GOOD MUSIC——o CALLFOR & PHILIP MORRIS America’s FINEST Cigarette COME EARLY TO THE DOUGLA THE BEST COCKTAILSA-——MU BETTER FOOD Entertainment 4 Renauld One- and two-piece frocks in half sizes . .. In lovely prints and plain colors. Sizes 14Y2 to 22%2 Jones - Stevens Seward Street | keep things moving, then olio num- | cussed. Mr. Lyng announced that it | bers—but one will have to take the |had been decided that the next show in, either night, to get the real | Territorial Convention would prob- puhch. ably be in Fairbanks. ——,———— James V. Davis, Speaker of the | FOUR ARRIVE TODAY House of Representatives, was nam- | FROM SOUTH PORTS |ed chairman of the informal meet- ‘ Edward V. Anois arrived this ing and speakers before the group afternoon from Seattle; from Ket- | included National Committeeman | chikan, arrivals were Lisle F. He- |Oscar G Olson, Leo Rogge, Joe; ‘Ibert R. N. Hester and Neal M. Green. Harvey J. Smith, Allen | ' Muir. Be there on time and make this large class initiation a big success. Shattuck and Frank A. Boyle. | L b B AL et v ' S INNfor an Enjoyable Evening of Dancing and Dining! OPEN UNTIL 12:00 MIDNIGHT 1C. STARTS EARLY —MM =

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