The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 27, 1943, Page 2

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PAGE TWO )TAKES A WALK : Smart women insist that even their prettiest shoes, can 1k anywhere, everywhere. That's Vitality to a T. Jaunty ties, glove-smooth pumps. .. flattering, divinely comfort- able. Gy fer let you walk and love it! MW% CLEREMONT—In smooth BABETTE—Low Cub- slack or turf tan polished an, tie walking oxford. If. Low Cuban heel, per- In black or turf tan pump. calf. These and many other . unusi VITALITIES. Sizes 4 to 10. A/ AA, A, and B widths. B Rehends Co QUALITY SINCE /887 | | | | | \ | | | | i and Jea its |of pockets for THE DAILY ALASKA BWPIRE-JUNEAU ALASKA NEWBANON Rosie Snaps Out oi (I.OTHES FOR | 1 War, believe it or not, has caused WASHINGTON, May 27. < Thely evolution in the corset industry. War Production Board has deerged| = Mapufacturers accustomed . tof 1 ban on the manufacture of Wo-ichange the shape of the female then’s double breasted suits and|population at will, governed only. ome other special types of gar-ipy the vagaries of fashion, nnw1' ments, limited cuff buttons to tWo,ifing themselves to face with} instituted n use of fabr he sweep of ¢ At the same origif wool for linir aid it was “acting two-way control!yeality in the form of med at trimming | women-in-overalls vening gowns. Rosie thz Riveter and her legion time, the WPB llfl-wt sisters have put the facts square- 1 ban on the use of ]y on the table, and the girdl and pockets and|manufacturers have hastehed to encourage in-|yeverse their lines. Says Rosie reased unit output of women's and “What we need is a girdle to children’s clothing out of available:wear with our work slacks apd cctton, rayon and wool fabries.” |coveralls. It has to be a pantie The “body basic,” or the basic|girdle, but cne strong enough to ilhcuette of the untrimmed dress, |give proper support o a gal Who end the “trimming allowance,” Oristands on her feet 8 to 12 hours a restrictions on the size and design | |day. We don't want any satin-ands l of fabric trimmings, constitute the| |lace nonsense. We want a girdlef§ new double control of fabric use. |that will keep us from getting back= Brought under restriction for the|ache.” first time in revision of WPB's| That's why you'll find corset desf clothing production conservation| partments assuming a down-ti order L-85, are maternity anexsewmuh attitude this spring. That's| ¥ and all types of neckwear. |why you'll find pantie girdles by, Newly banned, in addition 0 |the hundreds, scientifically de-1 double breasted suits and jackets,|signed, strengthened with stays| are culottes, skating skirts, rever-{:md in all sizes from juniors to| sible or ‘lined or quilted sKirts,|44-inch waist measurement dresses with bi-swing or Norfolk| Shops have found that backs, and epaulets. {corset buyers are looking for sup= | Buttons on cuffs and the numberlporl, Doctors have found that the every garment, ex-|correct foundation garment pre-‘ skirts, were limited to two. vents workers' fatigue, aids health ts may not have more than one|So the manufacture of girdles millions ofl, wartime | & cept 'in 1919 he mm his tobacco business | s Es ION There will b THURSDAY, MAY 27, 'NO BALL GAME THIS EVENING 1943 [wicks is 6 3 d Max Rosner,| | who arrived here from ”””“"“‘NINETEEN ARE |when he was 12. A cigar manuf IN""A”ED A]‘ Rosner first regarded the l).lll; sidelin hobby and an| turer, xh.h as a e no ball playing in mens Park tonight but it is ex- »d the regular schedule will be his attention to has an organiza- Fir turned all all. Now he ticn, team and park, worth, some| Nineteen new members were tak- pec sav. a half million dollars. His park [en into the Elks at an initiation picked up tomiorrow night, a game is bigger than some major league|held last night in the lodge room, hatween the AN Stars and St. Louis layouts and his players are paid|Exalted Ruler N. Floyd Fagerson Blues more than those in some minor presiding. - - Yeagllen | Following the ceremony, refresh=| o pono ataska Bmpire Bas the ‘ ¢ . b Rosner recalls,|ments were on tap under the sup-| . 3 § & Qur first club, By ¢ Vie iBewers: Erufe. Bhe largest paid circulation of any Al cost $48.50 in salaries for one:game; (ervision of Vie Powers, Ernie PAr-| .. cvenaper. Today we pay more than $100 to scns, J. A. Thibodeau, Art Burke N e and !and Phil Bertholl. PONET N | i |one man. We gave Babe Ruth and |and PRy Berioll o] i sehrig $3600 for one after-| Candidates at last night's ses- . S WACHING o oeu 200 ion included: Capt. R. A, Boaz WINDOW WASHING nOGD. o gsters on their way to|B: ®. Bluil, Capt. I’ O.'Gorivelt RUG CLEANING the' Wiajors get thelr start with|D.'A. Dwiser 1:. H. Belens W SWEEPING COMPOUND the Bushwicks and some oldsters, !i rh“r; <R J“H'V'Ir!d]:)‘l‘n.uvw kp‘ FOR SALE h ir string | Harrison, J azen weyko, on the way. out, finish thelt 8§\, = 0 e B. W. Manthey, D, D. DAVE MILNER xter Park. Major league teams » Do Phone Blue 510 Simmons, Jr., L. A. L. Ullman, S.} es | Neves, Lt. J. M E. Steiner, Major play exhibition the 3 S club and, after X b e b or, stars|Woolfolk, F. H. Yarnot and Lt. F.| f=—"=""" | big league ason is over, stars| 1A Aachbeitt 3 |s form teams to play the Blhh\\lrk\‘ ambetti, Jr. x ORDER YOUR : - > o> - ! Cubs Sign Two In October, 1940, the Cincinnati| A substitute for tea in Belgium ! J | pattery, Bucky Walters and Jim-|is made from a mixture of finely| | NOw | my Wilson, opposed the Bushwicks, | chopped leaves of the strawberry | } Tanned, cleaned and all land that attraction has caused Ros- plant, hazel tree, raspberry bush, i ready to make up. For | ner more than passing wor mulberry tree, and a varlety of|| VALCAUDA FUR COMPANY | Wilson, now Cub’s manager, re-|blueberr frraibag St sl membered Wally Signer, then a b AT DN 4 Bushwick hurler, and a few Weeks| foooooma—r oo e A S ago signed him as well as a veter- e ™ BARANOF | Alaska's Largest Apartment | | an southpaw, Bill Sablin, for the Cubs. Signer, in winning seven| straight last summer, hurled 42 2/3 THE consecutive scoreless innings. | H?:’l | TC 0 A trio of Yankees are ‘former \ A | Bushwicks. Marius Russo got his| | EVERY ROOM WITH TUB | |start at Dexter Park and Hank and SHOWER | L l N E |Borowy pitched several games * | * |there. Paul Schreiber’s control with | Reasonable Rates * pocket threatened last year as a the Bushwicks so impressed the ; The trimming allowance is|sential use of rubber, now Yanks that he was lured away to | Alaska Tramsportatien achieved by square-inch limitations|a vital war industry : |become batting practice tosser for| Phone 800 Company | of fabric usage, with the maxxmumr It is usually of sturdy fabric,! (the Bronx Bombers. p cquivalent to half a yard of 39- | with criss-cross tape reinforces | Joe DiMaggio, Hank Greenberg, inchmaterial. Design . is restricted|ments at back and abdomen, elas Mel Ott, Bill Terry, Diz Dean, Phil SAILINGES FROM PIER Y [in width, thickness and depth of tic panels at sides only, and front- | Rizzuto and Buddy Hassett are only é‘n SEATTLE SEATTLE neck-wear items, Bows, ruffles and|and-back boning | a few major leaguers who have ) other frills likewise are limited. | . Since the new garments have ap- | “ : played against the Bushwicks in . Zeu'ectucommn RS The body basic control' regula- peared on the market, housewives > STYLE: W, ; . |recent years. @ Centrally located tions are designed to mnarrow the|have snapped them up almost i I‘“\“':‘ \“‘l:,::t;?“l;:,‘ h‘::'r:‘n ° Two former big leaguers are on y ® Splendid food and PASHENOXES -/ FERIGHT sweep of evening gowns and skirts!fast as factory workers, having| the Bushwick roster now—Al Cuc- ey service REPRIGERATION and to eliminate the peg-top skirt, found them just as practical for| cinello, former National League in- b which came into fashion when The|Victory gardening as for assembly lder and brother of the Braves McClure, ® Large Rooms— L original order limited skirt hem |lines BROOKLYN puIS sny, and Eddie Boland, one-time Mgr. all with Bath measurements but not skirt top|: Along with the girdles goes sales| Phillies outfielder. Going back a AL ASKANS LIKE THE D. B. FEMMER—AGENT prentice seam and then follow- given ratings commensurate with F R AS‘I’ GUARD their experience and ability All qualificd men between ages of 18 and 38 are the urged to con- SEATTLE, May Opportunity| tact the Coast Guard Recruiting for d horesme 10! s offered | Office, 323 Alaska Building, Seattle by the United States Coast Guard, for further information. A num- Machinist Melvin L. Matson, Dis- ber of 17-year-old recruits also trict Personnel Procurement Of- is being sought. ficer, said o - penings are available for men o tave MRS. W. MAHONEY experience with hors- re, to engage in ted beadh-patrol activities the Pacific Coast r contacting the Coast Guard rict Recruiting Office in Se- nd their UNDERGOES MAJOR OPERMION TODAY attle by a personal call or by mail,| Mrs. William T. vmnnm\ under- those interested must pass the stan-| went major surgery this marn- dard service physical examination|ing at St. Ann's Hospital, where and the submit to voluntary in-|she was an entering patient yester- duction for duty with the Coast|day, with Dr. W. W. Council as the Guard surgeon. Her condition later today Men accepted will be rated as ap- is ’p(»xud as s.tthl(lnr\ WANTED 1 Bull Cook 2 Wood Splitters 2 Gasoline Saw Wood Buckers 2 Firemen 2 Chokermen 1 Second Boom Man 2 Choker Setters 1 High Climber {0 icave en lughoat within nexi day or two APPLY AT SAWMIL .8 Lv;,;’ Z Fallers MR. JIGGS - ALL THAT NEW GUY | DOES 1S PEEP OUT THE DOOR AND WATCH ALL THE OFFICE GIRLS IN THE BUILDING PASS - ‘ left St. St. Ann's K measurement ‘Ln]k for correct posture. Health di-§ Nor can there be any more be-|rectors in war plants advise unmvm tween-length dressy dresses, for a|to straighten up and breathe :Iw-p- dress must either conform to ankle- |ly whenever they feel the abdomen | length evening dress regulations or|slumping against the girdle front.y daytime length measurements. | Housewives. are following suit—and | Maternity =~ dresses, and dresses|soon we'll have a n:'uun of m.mm.‘y for women more than 5 feet 7.1/2 ! inches tall, may be one inch longer | DODGERS BROOKI The Erocklyn’s t 1c Duroct BUSHWICKS NEXT By lh\\l\ H. HRSI few years they pitched Waite Hoyt —at $800 a month—and George Earnshaw and these veterans will vouch for the Bushwick opposition furnished by other Eastern inde- pendent and Negro national league ECK clubs. Dodgers are but the Bush- Dandies a NIGHT 312 i = NEW WASHINGTON [R i ent Four To Pro Ball Bushwicks sent four play- J “’ “ E A “ ! ball this spring. Beside 0 ~ than the prescribed dress lengzlnRED (ROSS IS JRacEs run S - ers to pro for regular sizes jclose second in the interest of many|gjgner and Sahlin, Catcher Tony 2 ¢ Although maternity dress allow-| IVI of this borough's baseball faithful.|pephllips and Gar Del Savio are Anchflrage Kodiak Fairbanks ances are restricted for the first! The Bushwicks are a Seml-pro|yith the Reds. The Dodgers, too time, the hip measurement may. ex- | un, one of the. oldest and best-|have ‘aded fo Rosner! Yakutat Valdez Nome ceed the body basic measurement FlooD AREAS §nown in Past, whose -park 18| g e atter i nbw mouid e 4 vithout curtailing any other mea- L. 1, on the Brook- wayly Holborow, who pitched Cordova Seward Bristol Bay surements allowed in usual wo-| A > 15 border. They owe their seoreless innir i 7 men’s wear | . WASHINGTON, D Msy, 21— |AmS Lopthe ou0o PXClUsESBORR: || Hitner Is the Lansdale, Pa,, Kuskokwim and Yukon Points The WPB emphasizes that the|The American Red Cross is caring section of Brooklyn and “"‘“1 Hawks Stamford Pioneers, revision, as well as the original L-85|fCr more than 90,000 persons left y ground, Dexter Park, is named | gartforq Gems, West Haven Sail- . order, allows wide designing lati-| hOmeless by floods sweeping across a oy ““\”“‘4 a. famous op gpringfield Greys, Union City we nes aY rl aY un ay tude. At the same time, the an- | tndiana, Ilinois, Missouri, Kansas ter right after the Civil War, is s and Mount Vernon Scarlets ried in center Arkansas and Oklahoma, Chairman | P nouncement sald, the basic mea- surements are planned to keep e,(_;’\Tmman H. Davis reported today isting wardrobes in fashion and to, Total of 140 Red Cross disaster discourage nonessential purchases | 'elief workers including doctors and |3¢47 for, senlanaihrii nurses, have been assigned to the ¥‘ ye Sunday fore dimou field. and, ht games a week. nong the top Eastern independ- double-head- ( nt clubs. in other t regulations, * ALASKA STAR - - he order takes effect now for|fiooded areas by the National O plonseeed. Tlahy AL In ik R L manufacturers soon will be cutting, | THY are supervising emergency re | 1! plaved me BBV 080 100 nd i ke i BE S and July 1 for summer wear. lief work of several thousand Red ® :(n“‘ Fetia “[l-”‘ l‘}l&v{,')ugdr“l:;“ v\mfl( th:lx\m::to:mm l;)n";nu\s‘ Office Ph 667 s st % 9 iise crewds of more than 10,000. The | ¢2f R o 4 | e | Gross _volunteers, including local | ore than L0000, The | hat they are. stristly fresh when|| - 'BARANOF HOTEL one SMALL DOG HAS e e L 'e ban on night games. but| included with other foods. They| i d more than 14,000 homes have been ‘iZ2ble crowds still come and the | Pecome rancid quickly unless Mm(‘d = - LUCK-BOTH KINDS | camaged ana more than 1000 e Bushwicks continue their winning| i & cool place. | |strcyed in the southwest, where Red WA¥S- : ; | A small long-haired black and|CTCsS has 58 emergency refugee! _ ~ Started As Hobby BUY WAR BONDS | white dog, weighing about 30| CCRIers. About twenty are operat- The dynamo behind the Bush- 1 pounds, is not lost or dead, in case "¢ In Indiana. Homeless families | some young owner is worrying |are being housed in army tents or He was run over by a taxi last !in public and private buildings. Cots Monday and picked up by Dr. Eb- and blankets have come from Red erhardt, medical director of the| | Cross warehouses and nearby army {Bureau of Indian Affairs, who took |POStS: Evacuees are being fed by him home and set the broken leg,!ccal Red Cross Chapter Canteen He is now reposing comfortably and ' CO'PS while doctors and nurses may be claimed by his owner :u‘h'k after their health. tne Eberhardt home on Gold Belt | (Ir\.’: ‘f;t‘:“:'effmh‘;’(i‘ 1{’;}”“"" e Avenue | acre: e ousands of hmd of cattle were driven to safety THREE HOSPITAL NOTES ot more e peng fed by the e | Afier his stock is exhausfed, no more will VATIONS AND |the U. S. Department of Agricul- b il ble § he d = FOR RESER’ OALL —— |t supply 10,000 seed packages € avallable Ior t € “rahofl INFOR/ MAT!ON Martin Dahl from Pelican enter- | to be distributed to farmers through ed St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday for|local Red Cross chapters. care. Prompt and efficient evacuation kl‘pt down the loss of life. Cooperat- Joe Parent and Thomas Drayton, ‘mg with the Red Cross were U. § a local attorney, were nmomim,\toasv Guard, U. S. Engineers and medical patients at St. Ann's Hos- | civilian Defense workers. At Clin- pital yesterday. ilnn. Indiana, the city hospital was kept in operation when bags, flown L. A. Hudson and baby boy |in by the civil air patrol, were filled Ann's Hospital yesterday|Wwith sand and earth by Red Cross |and returned home. | workers and placed around the hos | pital. Such water as had seeped in- at|to the cellar was kept from the dis- bollers by continuous operation of emergency pumps. CALLA Mrs Ruth Perry, medical Hospital, patient has been charged —-FOR SALE- 1 PRE-WAR PRICES i ELECTRIC RAZORS | SALES DEPARTMENT Alaska Electric Light and Power Phone §16 TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Regular Sailings jght engers, Freid Pa:\il Y?einge““““ REEN, Agent of this man’s war. assengers 199 ND INSPECT THEM IN OUR BENRY G phone 23 L4 Freight Company Juneau, Alsaka R A T —— —————— ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska: Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. SAY--ARE YOU GONNA JUST LOOK OUT THAT DOOR ALL THE. TIME-OR DO A LIT’TL_E WORK IN HERE 7 Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- BY GEORGE MCMANUS Inlet Hoonah goon Temkee Todd ican shan gof Sitka |} Juneau..s8 $10 818 $18 $18 $18 $18 418 || sitka 18 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 GOSH-DO | R || Chichagot 18 10 18 10 18 10 [ Kimshan 18 10 18 10 18 1 Pelican - 18 10 18 18 Todd 18 10 10 Tenakee - 10 10 10 Angoon - 18 18 Hoonah - 10 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge $0¢ Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED TUESDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell Petersburg $35.00 $30.00 10.00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to Ketchikan Express Rate: 16c per pound—Minimum of 60c to Petersburg and Wrangell FOR, INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, HASSELBORG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: Pnon ‘lz Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants Bchedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notice. > - s Wb

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