The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 19, 1943, Page 6

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SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1943 Yamamolo Is [JUST WHAT THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA GET FORMS | - CASE OF “HEROINE" WORSHIP f v PAGESIX 7 * SITKA NEWS % JOHN F. CU MR HING AND . CUSHING ARRIVE Mr. and Mrs. John F. Cushing of Milwaukie arrived the just been gradu-|last boat to make their home here f nursing school in Oak-|Their s Cushing, is land, Calif., and at the present|cal contracto Wis on time had John a lo- Held Victim | WE'VEBEEN JOHN STARK RESCUED AFTER ACCIDENT ON CLIMB, MT. VERSTOVIA her John Stark, an employee of the I Columbia Lumber wit ka, was on t is at Anchorage. Also during| to the Outside she spent in Minneapolis visit the winter Company in Sit- her sister forced to spend all night BOYD ARE S OF DAUGHTER and Mrs. Sam Boyd are the parents of a 10 pound 2| baby girl born on June 9 at home. The baby y Colleen AND MR PARE! e slopes Mt via after MR. falling over nee while Mr proud { the moun- ounce their object of a search W. B rk was the led by Chief Coast G Allen of and Ru AND MRS. BILEY ARE PARENTS OF SON and Mrs. Arthur H. Biley are receiving congratulations on the birth of a fine baby boy, Arthur Michael. He arrived June 13 at the Jackson Hospital and REV. Rey who is 17 year from Wauwatso, Wi MRS. R. J. CLAIRE WAS RECENT VISITOR HERE R. J. Claire, the former V ginia Dufresne of Juneau, has beer visiting in Sitka for the past few days. Mrs, Claire is the young of James Claire, assistant m of the Photo Shop Studio. young couple were rece in Portland. Mr. and will visit her parents, Mr Frank Dufresne in Juneau few days. Mrs. Claire wil return to complete ate nurse at Hospital in Se will return t A Sheldon weighed 8% pounds Mrs A HELEN RUTH MOORE, ‘R ALLEN WELCH NOUNCE ENGAGEMENT The engagement of Helen Ruth Moore to Walter Allen Welch was told informally to intimate friends and MIs. ;¢ the pair recently. Miss Moore for ‘a gaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W Wittmeyer, is a popular member > 2 of group here. She service position on her he younger he Columbu civil and Mr. Claire holds a the base Welch, il son of Mr. and Mrs. G. Welch of Kirkland, Wash, been stationed on the base for He announces daily Army Radio Station, MEMBERS OF MOOSE AND FAMILIES WILL HAVE INFORMAL PARTY . iber Order of the po Moose June 27 thetr over a year the Royal Wome wedding date has been set next N at 8 o'clock SITKA COUPLE LEAVE HERE FOR WESTWARD Mrs. Walter Wilson left horage a short time ago. they will join her parents, nd Mrs. E. Drake, former resi- of Sitka for MRS. DEARMAND BACK FROM VISIT SOUTH Elizabeth DeArmand re- for to Sitka on boat. There her past she | N her who Mr the last During visited daughter, Harriett several years. JACK KLINGBERGS ARE PARENTS OF BABY BOY Mrs. Jack Klingberg the [ baby boy, Kenneth Earl, born June 7 at the Sheldor Jackson Hospital. The child weighed PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. JUNEAU and are Solicits the business of friends in Sitka Electric Service and Repairs Westinghouse Representative = Tt was named| § Lk i ¥ DINNER GOWN _¥or dining and dancing, Actress Eleanor Powell wears this short dinner dress of brown moire with sleeves and bodice of sparkling sequins and blue accessories. HOUSE CUTS OPA BUDGET 20 PERCENT Representatives Also Ban Rollback Program IS ADVICE U. S. Infernal Revenue Collector Warns All Employers TACOMA, Wash,, June 19.—Eri- ploy having more than 10 eu- ployees were advised today by Clark Squire, Collector of Internal Reve- nue, to make immediate request 'oi the number of additional Forms W-4, Employee’s Withholding emption Certificates, needed meet their requirements. He said his office had mailed 10 copies of this form, along wiin instructions relative to the new in- come tax withholding procedure, to each employer on record in the Dis trict. It will, therefore, be neces- sary for those employers with a payroll larger than ten persons io request an additional supply unless they plan to have their own sup- ply printed as authorized by Commissioner Internal Revenue, Due to the deluge of mail in the Collector’s office 2 result of the June 15 income tax installment ments, there may be some de- in furnishing requested sup- plies of form W-4 said. Supplies of Form W-4 have b furnished Field and Divisior throughout the District f convenience of employers additional fc to secure their local Internal Revenue Ex- to the of he of fices the desirc from Offic Tid to the Withholding must be employer by the em- 1 time to make the correct income withholding deduction the first payroll period begin- on or after July 1, 1943 emption C cate The Hou to forbid ti rollbacks onh so voted, use of any funds for foods which had not parity prices and on un- It voted, 88 229 to 105, reached essential commodities 144 to require all OPA price policy officials except Adminis tor Prentiss Brown to have had at least five years' actual business ex- to CoNNEWTAY | o } “WHEN | GROW UP I want to be a WAAC,” is what little Sally Lu- cille Hogan is undoubtedly thinking as she gazes worshipfully at Auxiliary Grace Brown during a review at Fort Benning, Ga. Sally is the daughter of Army Capt. Charles Hogan. @ (International) ~ GALS RUSH ‘LEG BAR’ o ~ 0f Quarrel | Claim Jap—A?my-Navy: . Feud Caused Ad- ; ‘ miral’s Death | NEW YORK, June 19.—A Chin- ese military spokesman said today |the Chinese had “fresh evidence” | indicating that the late comman- der-in-chief of Japan's combined fleet, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, “was probably the victim of a feud between the Japanese army and navy,” the Chungking radio re- ported. | | A Chinese broadcast recorded by the Federal Communications Com- | mission recalled there were varied |reports from Tokyo concerning { Yamamoto's demise, first learned |May 20, including suicide, during | operations in the South Pacific and | during an air raid. Killed in Mdy “The spokesman said. . Mthe broadcast continued, “that Yama- |moto was not killed late in April but early in May, and that he |could not have been killed in an air raid since there had been no Allied air attack on Manila around that time, “Yamamoto's death prompted Premier Hideki Tojo's hurried visit to Manila, where the admiral’s | beadquarters were located, on May 5. Tojo's mission, the spokesman £aid, was principally to straighten out the tense situation resulting from. the admiral's mysterious d h. Tojo returned to Tokyo May 8, and when Yamampta's ashes were brought back to Tokyo by plane, high Japanese officials with the exception of General Tanaka,| commander in chief of the Japan- ese forces in the Philippine area, all attended a special ceremony at | the airport Was Absent “When it was pointed out that Gen. Shizuichi Tanaka was con- spicuously absent from the airport that day, the spokesman said, Jap- anese government authorities ex- plained that he was unable to at- tend; having become suddenly in- TELLING 'EM owl Domesfi?’ropaganda Bureau Is Abolished by- House WASHINGTON, June 19. — The House voted 218 to 114 last night abolish the Office of War Infor- mation’s domestic bureau after Rep. Joe Starnes, Alabama Demo- crat, shouted, “America ‘doesn't need a Goebbels or a Gayda ir Washington to tell the press what to publish!” His motion strikes out a $5,- 500,000 hunk“from the OWI appro- priation bill for the operation of the domestic bureau. Said Starnes, “I think it's an in- sult to the intelligence of the Am- erican people to have foisted on them the kind of propaganda put out by the OWI." aka was relieved of his command. “In light of these circumstances, the spokesman said, Yamamoto's death should be traced to the long standing feud between the army, which favors northward advance, and the navy, which favors a south- ward pus - e - BUY WAR BONDS Conv)ay Dock Company 0il =-- Coal Gasoline Insurance Phone 78 perience. The vote was 140 to 85 ; 4 5 disposed. On May 29 on a measure to forbid the use of i ’ i z funds for programs involving grade labeling or standardization of any civilian commodities, There was no 1oll call on the subsidy ban! fete Beyond July 1 June 19.—In a bitterness policies, the t Office Price Adm: rollback pro- gram beyend 1 and to slash twenty percent from its ensuing biennium budget, cutting it from $177,000,000 to $130,000,000. The ban vote was 160 to 106 and the appro- priations cut vote was 185 to 147. The Party’s Set .. I've ordered CHOP SUEY from percent of Navy trade - school their ca- About eighty personnel complete courses sometime during reers. \WlTN NYLONS RARE, New York girls welcome the new “leg bar” which . has just opened at a fashionable shop. Dana Jenney and Betty Mc- Lauchlen are having camouflage stockings applied in liquid form. For - e — ia dollar, they get artificial hose which never run. (International) First Bank of Sitka A COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE Money Transmitied to All Points Do Your Part-=- Put 10% of Your Income in War Bonds Empire Classifieds Pay! You Name It—-We Have It * DELICIOUS CHOW MEIN ... and CHOP SUEY ... A SPECIALTY! Conveniently Put Up to Take Home! _ MOY’S OPEN FROM 5—12 BUY WAR BONDS! We're Celebrating Right Now! WITH COCKTAILS at THE COLUMBIA Refreshing Beer and Mixed Drinks Made by Experts p* s COLUMBIA COCKTAIL BAR Tilson and Sons PHONE 72 Sitka's New Men's Store WHEN IN SITKA Make Your Hfiadquarlers at the SITKA HOTEL "The Home of Hospitality" RUSS CLITHERO Manager See Cream, SUNDAES For Real 0ld-Fashioned Goodness . . . Try Our Fountain News Stand Games “Buy War Bonds” NEILL ANDERSEN Good Fun Good Music Good Drinks Good Company WHERE? ° “lLet’s Go Over and Join Em!” CAN BE FILLED IN OUR WELL-STOCKED STORE e o o COSMETICS to enhance Summer Glamor-LOTIONS to soothe the skin. DRUGS FOUNTAIN JEWELRY NEWS STAND BUY WAR BONDS —And Support OQur Boys ai the Front! Gifts Cosmetics BUY MORE WAR BONDS atthe BUY WAR BONDS! SILVE ERNIE’S Ceocktail Bar Sitka’s Pharmacy for Over 20 Years ALASKA DRUG AND R FOAM . ’ JEWELRY COMPANY S < S

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