The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 31, 1943, Page 6

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PAGE SIX REP. LEO ROGGE ILL Representative Leo Rogge, await- ing transportation to his home in Fairbanks after attending the ses- Miss Reynolds BIG DOINGS e = Gives 3 Shows ONTONIGHT has been confined to his bed. He ‘ is staying at the Baranof Hotel | ez Today for Boys: Empire Classifieds Pag! e Y i " | ere will be a big time tonight| . She De-| at the Elks as it is Exalted Ruler |Arthur Adams’ night and a large class, to be known as the Arthur| Adams’ class, will be initiated. Following the business session‘ and initiation there will be the| usual “feed” and get together. The meeting tonight is the final | one of the lodge year. Bl TNy 3 DR. COUNCIL LEAVES WASHINGTON TODAY; SEATTLE CONFERENCE at a na- “Strictly G. 1. clares-Leaves for Hol- lywood Tomorrow With all the resiliency of youth, | Marjorie Reynolds, vivacious blonde starlet and Fred Astaire’s latest| dancing partner, today viewed Ju- neau enthusiastically after a nood} night's sleep and was ready for| three shows today—one for the! boys in town and two scheduled for this evening to permit atten- dance of all the men at Duck Creek After Following attendance tion-wide congregation of health officials in a three-day conference | six weeks “on the road” via every conceivable type of air- plane and a whirlwind series of one-night stands in camps stretch- ing out to the very last on the Aleutian chain, Miss Reynolds ad- mits she “will be glad to get back home for awhile.” Today's appearances mark the last of the trip, as Miss Reynolds held in Washington, D. C, Dr. W.| W. Council, Alaska Territorial Com- | missioner of Health, reported by | wire that he plans to leave the Capital today on his way home. Senior Surgeon Dr. George Hays expects to leave Juneau soon, to meet Dr. Council for Seattle con- will leave for the south tomorrow ferences. and does not expect to make any further stops before returning to | the Statest Moderately Priced Summer WASHABLE DRESSES L’'AIGLON NELLY DON GEORGEANNA All nationally advertised. As seen in Mademoiselle and Vogue. PRINTS and PLAIN COLORS Sizes 10 to 44 Priced 8.95-10.95 Jones - Stevens Seward Street R e Empire Classifieds Pay! (PR R AR R RRR PR RIS RO AR PO RRARTRRRAS ] : Frances Ann’s Beauty Salon will be open Thursday, April 1st at 195 Fanklin Street across from Guy Smith’s Drug Store Medal on the tunic of Capt. Charles AMMUNITION DEPOT BLOWS UP IN NAPLES l BERLIN, March 31.—A radio ) | broadcast picked up from Rome A AR AR AR 2SSO SO SN2 N NN\ o Owner ) | day and 72 persons were killed and ¢) 1,179 soldiers and civilians were in- Phone 388 e For Appointments f | = - OO OOOEOOOOOCOOCOCOOEEONN0ROC00cy Empire Classifieds Pay* ANNOUNCEMENT Dear Customer: In order that we may serve you for the duration we are doing our utmost to conserve vital equip- ment, tires, gas, oil and manpower. To do this we have engaged the services of the PARCEL DELIV- ERY SERVICE of Juneau. The following schedule for deliveries has been arranged by Mr. Duane Martin. The object: to conserve manpower, save wear and tear of vital equipment and to still give fast courteous service. The following schedule becomes effective APRIL 1ST, 1943. Deliveries to the following places will be but once daily, the closing time for orders being 11:30 A. M.: BARANOF HOTEL STAR HILL BASIN ROAD, including the Hillcrest Apartments SEATTER TRACT WAYNOR TRACT GLACIER HIGHWAY to the Davis House DOUGLAS HIGHWAY to the Ski Trail All Juneau except those places listed above will be served twice daily as usual. The closing time for morning deliveries being 9:30 A. M. and 1:30 P. M. for afternoon deliveries. Bert's Cash Grocery 20th Century Meat Market Gastineau Grocery Irving's Market Thrift Co-Op Grocery In order that I may give you better service let me ask a few favors of you. In the past I have asked much of your merchant. 1 have made him change his ways and systems in order that I could serve you. This he has done very obligingly. Now let’s get together and help him. PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY. Order two or three times a week depending on the size of your family. Do not order every day unless your family is that size. (Few are). Be sure your order fills a good-sized delivery box. Order often enough so your order won't take up too much space in the truck, your neighbor also wants his order. Don’t detain the driver, call your store to make adjustments. Have a place that is easily accessible and safe from dogs as a delivery location. Have your bottles or anything you want returned ready to go. Don’t ask special favors. Favors take time, time takes man- power. It takes manpower to win this war. LET’S CO-OPERATE! Sincerely, DUANE S. MARTIN. PARCEL DELIVERY SERVIC Phone 492 COM GooD MUSIC THE BEST COCKTAILS BETTER FOOD THE,DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA DECORATION. FOR HERO CHAPLAIN i i . | Helen Morris, Linda Lucille Morris, | Spadaro, Clarence W. Smith, Louis | Tutum, | Joseph 8. Zyblewski. ;FRAI(ES HANSON WILL |FORTY-ONE TAKE PASSAGE FROM JUNEAU WEST Passengers leaving Juneau last |night for the Westward were, for | Cordova—Don W. Erickson, Julian Beakley; for Seward—Oliver C. Nelson, Mary C. Whittemore, Mil- dred C. Kelly, Mrs. Art Koskey, Mrs. Art Koskey, Harvey J. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Ainsworth, O. R. Krueger, Peter Kasx\vm..Raymond‘ H. Heider, William R. Golden, L.} A. Abren, Mark L. Hold, Pearl E.| Keener, George Keener, Henry | |Evans, A, J. Nicolai, Noah W. Phil- lips, C. W. Smith, George Keenen. | Thomas Doran, Carroll E. Gel- wicks, Joseph J. Gulbin, Myrl M. Hall, John Kneip, Harry N. Kruse, Edward B. Kubacki, Esteban L. Martinez, Richard M. Palmer, Spencer M. Potts, Anthony B. Walter B. Van Vechten, OPEN BEAUTY SALONON | FRANKLIN ST. THURSDAY| | beauty shop, Frances Hanson re-| ‘turned to Juneau on the North Sea. | | Drug Store, is named Frances Ann’s | COMMANDING GENERAL of the Alaskan Defense Command, Maj, | Beauty Salon. It will be open to-|aska newspaper. ! Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr. (left), is shown pinning the Soldier's R. Culpepper, A. D. C. staff chap- lain. The award was made at direction of President Roosevelt for Chaplain Culpepper’s heroic rescue of an enlisted man from drowning. He is a native of Glendenin, W. Va. In center is Col. James L. Mc~ Bride, A. D. C. staff chaplain. Signal Corps photo. (International) 'EDWARD PELTRET VISITS FRIENDS * LAST EVENIN Edward Peltret revisited the (scenes of his youth last night when {the steamer on which he is assis- tant purser was in port. Peltret at- ) | t a P FRANCES HANSQN §|today xeports that an ammin'™"|tended the public schools in Ju- ¢) depot blew up at Naples last Sun-',,.0y ang was one of the Empires, ‘newsk’s for a number of years {when his father, Peter G. Peltret, ‘wus Chief Boiler Inspector for the |u. 8. Steamboat Inspection Service here. After leaving Alaska, Mr. Peltret, I8r,, was transferred to Kobe, Ja- (pan, and after a few years there |they returned to the United States jand Edward Peltret entered the | University of Washington from which he was graduated in 1927. | Following his graduation, Peltret {had a position as sports writer on the Seattle Times and later en- tered radio work in Seattle. He was head of the News Bureau | for KIRO when he obtained leave |of absence to enter the merchant !marine service with which he is now employed. This was the first trip Peltret has made into Juneau during hours when he was able to look up his i friends. Last evening he visited {with a number and also called at the Empire office where he began | bis newspaper career. [ JUNEAU WOMAN'S ' BROTHER IS PRISONER OF WAR OF GERMANS Prof. Nick Vukovich, brother of Mrs. Sam Dapceevich of Juneau, is now a prisoner of war in a Ger- man concentration camp some- ,Where in France. | Mrs. Dapeevich has just received a letter from her brother. The let- ter was dated October 16, last year, and reached Juneau through the Geneva Red Cross. | The letter has been censored and i whittled and the only information contained is that he is alive and iwell and asks if anything is known {of other rclatives of the family. | Previous to the present war Mrs. { Dapeevich’s brother was a profes- isor in the University of Belgrade. (He was also an officer in the Ser- |bian Army. i IKE BAYLESS FRO ANCHORAGE STOPS BRIEFLY ON RETURN { | 1 | i { | Passing through Juneau yesterday | on his return to Anchorage after |a buying trip in the States was Tke Bayless, widely-known old time Alaskan and operator of a men’s clothing store in Anchorage. Bayless went to Dawson in the ;hns been in Anchorage since the town began in 1917. In addition to | his store, Bayless is also one of the principal stockholders in the Anchorage Times. While in Juneau he visited with isome of his old friends. early days, then to Fairbanks, and LOTS OF FRESH VEGETABLES Green Peppers, Cucumbers, Artichokes Cauliflower, Broccoli, New Potatoes Rhubarh, Asparagus, Lettuce, Celery Green Onions, Carrois, Endive, Cabbage Avocados, Parsley, Leeks Oranges, Limes, Grapefruit DON'T FORGET NURSES’ AIDES BALL Saturday Night Elks’ Hall Proceeds to American Red Cross Wire, Write or ‘Phone Your Order WHERE SERVICE, PRICE AND QUALITY MEET We DELIVER TO DOUGLAS—Each Tuesday and Friday EORGE BROTHER 2 DELIVERIES DAILY PHONE 92 | ;5w so0p.. PHONE 95 IN BUSINESS SINCE 1908 and still doing the largest grocery business in Juneau, The new shop, located on Frank- | lin Street, opposite Guy Smith 1 morrow and Frances, who has been busy preparing her shop for its| first day, already has a book full| !of appointments. \’ For the last six years Mrs. Han- | son has been a beauty operator in:i Juneau shops. Until recently she | was manager of Sigrids and was! | previously manager of the Baranori Beauty Shop. | During her short trip south, Mrs. Hanson visited her parents and son, | Billy, in Vancouver, B.C. - 'SYDNEY D. SMITH, l | ‘TRAFFIC MANAGER | FOR PAA, WAS HERE | Sydney D. Smith, who succeeded | R. O. Bullwinkel as traffic mana- ger for the Alaska Division of Pan | American Airways, with headquar- iters in Seattle, passed through Ju- | /neau yesterday on his way to' the | Westward, on a survey trip for ithe company. | | While he was in Juneau briefly | yesterday, Mr. Smith recalled that 'he had formerly lived in Juneau| land attended school here during | |1916 and 1917 when his father,| |Sydney D. Smith, Sr., was engineer |in charge of the Jualin Mine. | Mr. Smith has spent the last | fourteen years in the airplane traf- ific business and before joining the {staff of PAA was with the Eastern Air Transport Company. ! 'NO MEETING ON THURSDAY FOR TERR. GUARDS Alaska Territorial Guards will| inot meet tomorrow night or nex | Tuesday, it was announced today by Capt. G. F. Freeburger. Work scheduled for tomorrow night will: take place on Thursday, April 8,: when the next meeting will be| held. | The week’s vacation in Guard | work was necessitated by the epi- demic of infludnza which has so many members confined to their homes. ARMY NIGHT, SPECIAL " LEGION CELEBRATION. | Robert Marks ‘was initiated at| the Monday night meeting of the | American Legion held in the Dug_-t out. l Plans were also laid for Army night, to be celebrated next Mon- | day night, April 5, when a bang-up | entertainment will be provided nnd“ fluscious homemade apple pie will" 1be served. The night will also b"i 1celebrat.ed as Bond Night by the| | Legionnaires. | MATERNITY CLASS SCHEDULED APRIL 13 cepted for the new Maternity Class, to begin April 13, Stephenie Bog- | | Registrations are still being ac-i | health | don, public nounces. Interested mothers may either| phone 218 or call in person, or reg- | ister at the opening class, which | | will be held from 2 to 3 p.m. nurse, an- —— e — The Daily Alaska Empire has the ilargest paid circulation of any Al- | aska newspaper. EARLY TO THE DOUGLAS INN MUSIC STARTS EARLY The Daily Alaska Empire has thl*| BUY WAR BONDS largest paid circulation of any Al- Empire Classifieds Pay! PRE-EASTER SPECIAL! OIL MACHINE and MACHINELESS PERMANENT WAVES complete with STYLE HAIRCUT One Week Only-$10.50 I GRIDULS BCAUTY 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 B.P. 0. Elks’ Hall TONIGHT 8P.M. : &, Initiation Refreshments Entertainment & Be there on time and make this large class inifiation a big success. for an Enjoyable Evening of Dancing 20d Dining! OPEN UNTIL 12:00 MIDNIGHT

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