The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 22, 1943, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1943 First Bank of Sitka. INDIAN AFFAIRS HEAD IN SITKA ON BU % SITKA NEWS % s 'taining & g »f her frie Sun- >la M rst, tendent CURFEW LAW CARRIES talning a group of her friends Sun-| Claude M. Hirst, superintends PENALTY FOR VIOLATORS day evening at a buffet supper.|of the Bureau of Indian Aff oeks y guests will be ~|with headquarters in Juneau, spent oment has been made About twenty guests will be pres 5 Fths bt i |a few days in Sitka on business that the curfew law for children ent 8 2 under eighteen will be strictly en- | torced in Sitka from now on. The week SHELDON FIELD DAY 2 | SUCCESS | SITKA ROTARIANS »w one short blast at JACKSO? 100L, ;gel;n:mv:?!? :‘\m‘m; and that| The annual Field Day held at . ON QUIZ PROGRAM means that all children under Sheldon Jackson School on May| Four R(.Jh\lmn:\ Jack Calvin, 1:n|, eighteen are to be off the streets 11 was one of the high lights of [Miller, Winn Goddard and Phil unless accompanied by a grownthe school year. The weather being | Johnson 3 presented their club on person having him or her in fine, the events started promptly |the Quiz lu:‘ am U|‘l:.~l\nl(*(l Friday charge at 8:30 am. Two teams, the Blue night over Station WVCX After one or two offences, par-|and the Gold, vied with each (thm‘ At the regular weekly luncheon ents of these children will be taken to win as many points as pos- held la "‘ Tuc 41::\ club members before the Municipal Magistrate ible ‘In-,nd William Cook speak in the for trial and upon conviction will| After keen competition all du\; \T Business” series of talks. Mr be punished by a fine not exceed |long, the Blues finally won with ul“'flk discussed the ('l.l:lnm‘s that ing $10 or imprisonment not e total of 219 points to the Gold's|had ju.m place in Sitka in the| ceeding five days or both 190 point past thi ears Presentation of awards was made | SITKA CHILD DROW later on in the evening and the|USO WANTS SENIOR IN LAKE NEAR HOME exercise closed with the singing HOSTESSES TO VOLUNTEER home Of the school song. The traditional| The USO staff is sending out a After being missing from only twenty minutes, Geraldine Ro ers to volunteer Field Day, as always, had been a|call for Sif berts, two -and-a - half - year old | huge success heir services as senior hostesses daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Jack Ro- All v who can assist any time berts of Sitka was found drowned| MRS. S RETURNS betwe he hours of 9 am. and 11/g in Swan Lake last Tuesday n Mrs. H. J. Hodg returned to |P-m isked to contact either Mr her home here week after | Cra or Miss Howe at the Castle All efforts at resuscitation failed Puneral, services were held Thur day afternoon at the Lutheran|attle Church with the Rev. Hugh Dowler a brief vacation in Se- ARE HONORED dinner and danc- officiating. Interment was at the COMMENC NT WEEK AT ng j for GSO girls was a hu City Cemetery. SHELDON JACKSON HELD succe The fellows proved them- 15 addition to the parents, the| Bnd-of-the-year exercises were |Sclves exct lent ho and even child is survived by a brother, Jack |held at Sheldon Jackson -School 1 promptu show for the this week Roberts, aged fourteen months. LUTHERAN LADIES AT TEA FOR MRS. Achievement night was Wednes- HOSTS day evening. At that time there, SQUARE DANCES POPULAR DRUGG | Was a presentation of the various| The Monday square dances con- Complimentary to Mrs. Nels school activities,. Parents and tinue to be one of the most popu- Drugg, the women of the Lutheran friends of the students were able lar attractions at the Castle. A Church were hostesses at a tea t0 view the displays of things made UEW asphalt tile floor has added Jagt Wednicedny, Many friends called by the stude during the. year r:)ml(!umblc enjoyment to the between the hours of 2 and 5 o'-, ©On Thursday evening, a farewellydancing clock at the church parlors |social was held for the students Mr. and Mrs. Drugg with their|and faculty members children, Virginia and Warren, will The Commencement exercises 10 leave next week to make their home | 00k place Friday morning at on the East coast. o’clock. Members of the graduating perI S |class include Julia Durkee, Flor- MRS. CHARTERIS LNTERTAINS|Srcc Gront, James Welion, George S"KA MEE"NG Mrs. William Charteris is enter- | -o.dane, Jr, Flora Swift, Harrletta |Johnson, Clara Hamilton, Cyril s . | George, Kenneth James, Edward | Verney and Robert David | SITKAN RETURNS FROM VISIT After visiting relatives in Wash- ington for the past few weeks, Mrs. Clyde Hager returned to Sitka last Sunday. Mrs. Hnger is teller at the City,Indian Bureau,Health Dept. Officials Draw Up Progressive Program | PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. JUNEAU Solicits the business of friends in Sitka Electric Service and Repairs Westinghouse Representative - DEEP SEA FISHING Everything for the Sportsman One of the most effectual and far-reaching meetings affecting the welfare of Sitkans was held this < as a result of an urgent call by Mayor Winn Goddard. Attend- ing from Juneau were Dr Hays, U. S. Public Health Service, liaison officer for the Territory, and officials of the Bureau of In- dian Affairs, including Dr. Evelyn I. Butler and Raymond Wolff. Dr. J. P. Eberhardt, medical was prevented from attending by illness. Others the city council, Creels — Rods — Hooks — Line Sinkers — Reels — Spoons — Leaders n were officials of Sitka, | tives. George | director, | the hands of the police authoritics|g members of | mproving soclal conditions. 1tralnlng through the method, which Curfew Enforcement |had been arranged by Commission- f of Police Whittemore an- ler of Education Dr. James C. Ryan. Father To Son Interrupting the proceedings to the complete astonishment of his son, Supt. Phillips made the diplo- lthe public health nurses and {number of leaders among the na-| | | cnie According to information from nounced that the curfew law, the} |Sitka, many problems were clari- enforcement of which has been I()lr fied and settled to the safisfaction!some time overlooked, will be ob- of those involved. Important among |served beginning this week. Youths these were agreements reached re-|und picture show operators wert :’::L P";“M;%" ;‘ézwllric I:xar:xix?\? connection of the ‘“umum.sl\('(l that no sales of tick- ‘when Bob Jo! " " M 1.»| T made up my mind that if I stayed " . a i e “se e to be properties in the Indian Village ets to “second shows” were i o o the public sewer system, \nm'h‘x 1ade to those affected by thé cu :“(‘1 ”:l:‘m‘:flgl;;{\ul:rorrelxg?. ;;\a::n has been controversial for some|few law. The military police willjlr ™o high \chogl Jiplnma,_ . The village is one of five in|assist the home guard in observing . ; . |garding the time s by ~| Because the class members want- | or near Alaska towns that ye m‘(hr actions of youngsters during ed it themselves, the Seniors stood | ago was relieved from taxation by night hours. 2 land sang Auld Lang Syne, before Congressional act. The city there-| City authorities of Sitka also| o plaving of the recessional by fore, was unable to enforce se &x made it known that connections in the usual way, I ‘lnnh! al and nursing service to the| c.s The gymnasium w filled, ing the cost against the property. |people was desired, as the city has|yoth on the main floor and the no hospital or health center. Al-|palcony, with 700 or 800 persons in Agreement Reached % Under the agreement reached, as ;H\Uu”h there is no hope of the ‘\“(\!]dnl)(-e during the war, as a I a result of last week's conferences,|former : Lot i the Bureau of Indian Affairs will|sult Of the conference, authorities| are | | provide the money for connectir increasing .\hmx‘ negotiations the properties of indigent natives, with private citizens and military and naval authorities for obtaining -ee while representatives of the AN.B i e i promised to inventory the material|® 10! and suitable housing for use| on hand as well as that needed for|as 8 health center. all connectior Later Dr. Hay A quonset hut, or two small| and Dr. Eberhardt will return to buildings formerly used by the Sitka to expedite, if possible the | Signal Corps may be moved to a of the piping and plumbing sup- Local funds are to be used for re- plies g furnishing the quarters A nuinber of dilapidated HHI\;...\ \unh-:nmm that the .swm; K b y ’ wi ealth Council is to meet soon and 1 long been eye-sores and \azards, will be razed. The Ind nedical and nursing program that| . S i bazards, will be razed. "The TS| o1y more nearly meet. the de- | Will Be Made Is Sub i B omd the O dll as- Sires and needs of Sitkans. Mili- s c : caed a willingness to participate in the health program of the com- wunity to whatever extent pos- general clean-up i Hall, public health Territorial Health well 1e vil as (Continued from Page One) sineer, of | fended than Guadalcanal. Department, will follow up this| iUl | One big argument against eek to aid in a general clean-up e v T {15 the Japanese have many airfields campaign throughout the city Ibetween Rabaul and the American/ Health authorities here expressed (oMMEN(EMENT positions. To cut them off howe\e) {would be a major task. gratification at the signs of ic | consciousness manifested by the | The United State’s offensive in {new administration headed by |the Aleutians, on either side of the | Mayor Goddara. | Kiska stronghold, may be a preview R a 1l scale of things to come e LAST EVENING = ,!"_'_""",“)‘l)'l""; ';:‘S:‘f:s'ed % in the southwest Pacific. REORIE Do s | The next stop in the Aleutians| hospitalization being rendered non - infectious, - R YouName It—-We Have It Tilson and Sons PHONE 72 Sitka's New Men's Store now on its way toward settlement, 3 » . |is undoubtedly Kiska. i ”x“” "C“";‘l“”‘;l ‘::edmzi’;::‘ 38 SefllOfS RECEIVG DIpIO' The degree of JLflpunesc resistance tion of venereally dise elin- i . (in the Aleutians may influence the quent women. Three native mas in Well Ordered |time for the next big Pacitic of- "\hn are not residents of Sitka w | tensive. hunn held in the jail and treated, ceremony Hel’e 1 If Japan diverts sufficient p«hdmg a solution to the problem strength to the north to put up a of their disposition. Responsibility| (continued from Page Three) | desperate fight in the Aleutians, the for two c s who were minors \\.n\ o | United States may find the going assumed by the Bureau. Final ac- |He expresbed specml Lhanks to the | less rough in the MacArthur-Halsey | tion on the third is pending. | commanding officers of the enlist-|sector. | “The policy was established, by|ed class members, who have per-| If the Japanese let the Kiska | mutual agreement, that hereafter mitted the boys' absences from|force wage a suicidal fight while such cases were to be isolated by camp to attend school examinations| concentrating strength in the south- or otherwise V\hl]f.\“nd commencement. west, a major American offensive Class Accepted in the southwest will be waged at pending court action to determine| R- E. Robertson, chairman of the|a much greater cost in men, ships the agency responsible for reha- school board, accepted the class and | and planes. | bilitation and final disposition 21:: (x”brl::;n::d th&l’r Pund(‘avo]rs ‘mt - In an effort to prevent delin- |20 e > RS : : vencs, (. natives ngrdBULRS.aet/iDN" en Wecibers Lad grandtais-| WER. DESEEN ZUD BOY qx) x"u)un‘}l V\)lh’m‘t‘h(v brother Bie Slaauan WibbRers, - et oo AR Le R HogRIIAL h:m\! e :i»\('rhnod for the Qbkr- the ceremony—"“Skip” MacKinnon| Mrs. Emma Duncan and her baby g . ; 'd Hn b Bk m}and Anna Lois Davis. | boy were outgoing patients at the ing _fl pre-deli fl“‘{’_ natives R. R. Hermann, of the Juneau|Government Hospital yesterday order tb prevent their getting into|gehool Board, presented the 38 afternoon. ss members with their diplomas, or becoming infected. This was ¢on |including that of Lawrence Bolyan, sidered a most forward step in the |correspondence study graduate who| Yemen, in southern Arabia, Js ceeation of better relations 'and|completed all of his high school one of the few remaining countries ‘work and most of his elementary which lack a railroad. First Bank of Sitka Money Transmitted to All Points Do Your Part--- Put 10% of Your Income in War Bonds Make Your Headquarters at the | SITKA HOTEL ~ "The Home of Hospifalify” | RUSSCLITHERO - Manager Il See You at The Silver Foam W To meet your friends To have some fun The Silver Foam is the place to go. | Giftsfor Buy More War Bonds! Sitka’s Pharmacy SILVER FOAM JEWELRY —Have Your Prescription Accurately Filled Here. —Drugs, Jewlery, Gifts, Fountain, News Stand Select Your | Graduates Here? ALASKA DRUG AND You'll Find Something Here - the Graduate Will Appreciate Gifts . . . Fountain Cosmetics Games News Stand “Buy War Bonds™ NEILL ANDERSEN for Over 20 Years COMPANY tmproved |y sonool band, ending the exer- | Crossword Puzzle ) ACROSS 3. Alotc 1. Humid 35, Antique 36. Genus of the | 5 Alack et | 9 Pen wily | 12. Marine fish Mother 13. Egyptian river Malicious burn- 14 Melnllll’emus ing ock 0. Box 15. Ancknl lfl!h ll Spice | 3. Wink . 186, | comet 4» Grow fat 17. : prefix47. Over: prefix 18. \(hn{‘l~"’n':’ cer- 48. 'lr’lural ending aiy fis 49 The sweetso 3‘: I‘ * ish month 50. Starry % m E?m 7 21, Exist 53. Recline | = Nntr\'lflui-‘ 54. Fisherman's RISETIEISIT witchin h ' | 2. Toin metalr 86. Lowest of the Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle | disks high tides | 26 ka)'s hidl‘t :Ilalp child 62 Jewels DOWN | 29. esoun ‘Inished | 30, Serutinize Kind of plum 3. Suffcient: 1 Solne MRER | 31. Round roofs Conjunction poetic & ‘Bouth :Afaeri- | can river | Female horse . Light four- ‘ wheeled car- 1 riage | . Goes before . Teller of un~ . truths ! Lisping ; Self: Scoteh 1 Heavy with | molsture . Make three- cornered . Periods of time Fleur-de-lis . Himalayan monkshood Broom Abrupt outery God of war Tablet Legislator . Cler en ? piles At Imeny Mineral spring Recorded pro- ceedings . Unfamiliar . Be present at . Worthless dog 5. Light wood . Artless Stalk i t fat | | | Swamp Gone by Church sitting. AP Features Empire Qlessifieds x‘;ny! HURL 2-HITTER | — BUT LOSES GAME | Conway Dock (By Associated Press) | company Johnny Niggeling pitched a two- hitter but Catcher Ferrell's ninth inning error allowed the Athletics to defeat the Browns in the first| night game of the season played m‘ St. Louis. i In Chicago last night, it took Johnny Humphries one hour nnd‘ 29 minutes to pitch a 3-hitter as! the Sox beat the Washington Sen- | ators before a nocturnal orowd of\ 8,567 spectators. The Sox got nine] hits. J 0il === Coal Gasoline Insurance Phone 78 BUY WAR BONDS Eat Out More Often \ ¢ Bring the Whole F;mily fo roN MOY'’S _ DELICIOUS CHOP SUEY | and CHOW MEIN —A SPECIALTY HERE! C(mvenient?\l" Put Up to Take Home. MOY'’S 3 OPEN FROM 5—12 | ! for & 5%COCKTAILS Come to , Ernie’s! g You Will Find Your Friends Here! |. ® Let's All Get Behind the WAR BOND DRIVE! ERNIE’S Cocktail Bar

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