The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 28, 1943, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE SIX ARMY RULES | KEEP YOUTH | FROMFAMILY Dean Allen, Back from Aleutians, Not Allow- ed fo See Folks Because regulations are regula-| Dean Allen, 17-year-old ~.m“ Mrs. Tom' Allen of Ju- be on his 15-day pending 10 months in Aleutians, although he was at J docks night Allen, with of Mr neau, probabl it nd able to leave | the | the | won't after w last the Army| Service as a machine t the latter part of his| Attu and received his Seattle. He didn’t know had to have a travel per-| attle ATS office age home to Tr ansport at leave in t he mit and the ranged for service his pas his folks He picked up boarded the boat rived here last thorities would the boat his ticket and But when he night Juneau au- not allow him to because he had nol travel permit. The local authorities| say Dean must retugn to Seattle and get his permit if he is to enter Alaska where he has lived all his life. But, of by that time his leave will be over. Capt. R. A. Boaz, in the travel office here, ing could be done. He said the regu- lations and orders he has been told to carry out say that no civilian may enter Alaska without a travel permit. Therefor Allen cannot enter Juneau because he has no permit Boaz said that his office is very strict about seeing that no one leaves Juneau unless that person has a travel permit. He said he did not know how Allen was allowed to board the boat at Seattle with- out a permit Allen had papers with him, in- cluding his birth certificate and a Coast Guard pass. | The authorities permitted Mr. id Mrs. Allen to board the boat st night and visit with their son the boat left for Skagway. - Bail Game . On Tonight of in- | leave Be girl! your » his favorite pin-up Wear a corsage in hair . wear for beau . . . start collection of posy All to make you the prettiest girl he knows ., for a pretty little price. a course, bow your charge of said noth- a combs. Jones-Stevens Seward Street ADAMS WILL HAVE CHARGE TONIGHT OF ELKS INIHMION b hefore 3 scheduled meet- starting at 8 o'- Exalted Rulu charge ]vl.ul regular Elks, At ing of clock tonight, Past Arthur Adams will have the initiation that is to take Final arrangements are made for the trip to Sitka next month for the purpost itiating a large class. In the absence of Exalted Ruler : Floyd Fagerson, A. B. Hayes, Es-| The teemed Leading Knight, will pre- €Vening with a resumption of kide as Exalted Ruler over the bus- in the City League. This game was fness session. postponed from July 16 and will - start at 6:30 o'clock this evening. Weather permitting, games also A white bison was considered sac- will be played on Friday and Sun the Plains Indians. day the the City will play the Blues this play >oo ibassts 7% GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. EDISON MAZDA LAMPS The Standard of Comparison * Alaska Eleciric Light and Power Company Juneau Phone 616 Douglas Phone 18 TWENTY-EIGHT | | Commers THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA Their Day’ sWork Done;Dive Bombers Relax HOWARD CASE ~« DIES MONDAY AT PLATINUM 'Suffers Heart Attack - Re- mains to Be Brought Here for Burial for | < | engineer the Mining Company land well known in Juneay, died |suddenly Monday night as the re- sult of a heart attack, according to advices reaching here from Plati-| num, Alaska Mr. Case, month-old-son, Case, Bay | Howard Goodnews with his wife and 10- spent five. months in Juneau last winter, returning | to Platinum for the opening of work this spring. | | Born at Skagway in June, 1904, he spent his early youth in Ju- neau, attending school here and was graduated from the local high | school. Later he attended the Uni- of Washington, where he |was a member of the Zeta Zi fra-| | ternity. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge in Juneau. In February, 1941, he was mar-| ried here to Margaret McFadden,| former Juneau school teacher. | Besides his wife and young son, f ' lie is survived by his mother, Mrs.| Star Graduates S{X IN CITY R pollCE (OUR‘- Mr. Wade, who is in Anchorage, THIS MORNING will' bring the remains here for Five paid fines and one person was sentenced to 10 days in jail m City Police Court this morning as| follows: i ldon L disorderl; | disorderly meyer, $25, jor Smith, Roy Carrigan, orderly derson Thier day's work—dive bombing the Japanese airfield at Munda Point—done, Capt. Otis V. Calhoun 4]1") Mobile, Ala,, commander of a U. S. Marine Corps dive bomber squadron at Hender on d on Guadal- canal, and Capt. Arthur Moran, Long Beach, Calif., a member of Calhoun's squadron, relax in their Hen- derson Field quarters. On the table between their cots are pictures of the “girls back home.” Ground troops and naval forces now have joined in the attick on Munda. U. S. Marine Corps photo. INDUCTED HERE THIS MORNING Twenty-eight men were inducted U. S. Army this morning, to the local board at 10 -> AUTO OWNERS ~..ON HIGHWAY Kenneth Benson, >1I7‘ | conduct; William Thie- | ARE wA R N E D‘ disorderly conduct; Ma- | 10 days in jail, drunk; $15, drunk and dis- conduct; Inokintie F. An- Auto owners on the highways are warning today by Emmett Chief of the Highway Pa-| into the reporting o'clock Following is & list reported here: Richard Raymond Moses, R. Brown, Joseph John Thomas, Fidel Carpentero Cortez, Olaf C. Peterson, Daniel Perrin, Carl Ainer Danielson, jr., Fausto Mamburam Paulo, Dennis Alonzo Sheppard Fred Harris, Robert Hugh Loug- d, Charles Luther Popejoy, John ederick Morrison, Cleo Joseph Anton Pugel, Raymond Mobert Nevin, Harry Louis John- on, Charles David Henery, Joseph Marion Adamson, Howard George Bremner, William Louis Hall, David Hans Clark and Harry Johnson. Also reporting here were the fol- lowing men, transferred from other boards: George P. Ouellette from Kodiak, Edward Phillip Dick, jr., from Phoenix, Arizona; Larry Wil-| §# liam Dirks from Unalaska, Alaska; | § Rudy L. Notar from Sitka and Ray- mond John Tepp from Steven I:‘ Point, Wisconsin. . Other Juneau men who reported | elsewhere for induction were Rich- | ard Lott Molloy, Orofino, Idaho;| Russell Mertz Maki, Tacoma, Washington; Emil Millard Starks, Long Beach, Calif, Vincent P, Derig, Longview, Washington; Ter- ence Shilleto Gill, Snag Point, Al-| : Thomas Watson, San Fran- cisco, Calif.; Donald Chester| Groves, Cleveland, Ohio; Wilfred| Leo Fleek, Seattle; Emmett Carle- | ton Anderson, Seward; Theodor | Weltzin Mack, Seattle; Frederick| Kirschner, Kodiak; Pete Shpentuk, Vancouver, B. C.; James Joseph| Laird, Seattle; Brownie Willard, Seattle; Alexander Peter Tulintseff, Seattle. Haight, $25, of those who Harold $25, drunk. D STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, July 28. quotation of Alaska Juneau stock today is 5'z, American 85, Anaconda 267%, Bethlehem Steel given a Botelho, trol Closing| The warning is that any mine parked for more than 48 hours on Can | the highway will be towed to town and charges assessed against the owners. Parked vehicles cause con- gestion and also hinder movements of graders, etc, used on the high- ways. | | - ) vehicle tors o The bluefish is m(\sl ferocious and destructive fish 'for its size in the world. a na OVERTHE WAVES NOW FOR THESE NAVY LASSES 61, Commonwealth and Southern i, Curtiss Wright 7', General Mo- 5112, Granby Copper and Min- 5%, International Harvester i, Kennecott 37'%, New York| Central 17, Northern Pacific 15, Packard Motors 4, Republic Steel A J DIMOND 174, United States Steel 55 Dow, Jones averages today are J«, 3568, utilities 21.10. MOVIE STAR Joan Leslie, 18, poses PRICES. SURNDAN ‘ (HAMBER THURS in the cap and gown she will wear | Closing quotation of Alaska Ju-‘ . when she receives her high schooi n€au mine stock Tuesday was 5%, diploma at the University High American Can 86, Anaconda 26%,] Anthony J. Dimond, Alaska’s School, Brentwood, Cal., along |Bethlehem Steel 60%, Common-|Delegate to Congress, Wwill speak with 310 graduates. (International) 'wealth unl Southern 13/16, Curtiss!on “Proposed Statehood for Al- Wright International Harvi aska” at tomorrow’s noon meeting ter 682, Kennecott 31'%, New York|of the Chamber of Commerce in 2 FlIGHTS MADE Central 16'2, Northern Pacific 14%,!the Baranof Gold Room. | Packard Motors 4, Republic Steel| Frereric C. Walcott, ex- ALASKA (OAS"'Al 177, United States Steel 54%. ’Senator from Connecticut; and Dr. Dow, Jones averages Tuesday were|Ira N, Gabrielson, Director of the A as follows: industrials 138.76, rails|Fish and Wildlife Service, have Two trips were made this morning 35 utilities 21.05. lalso been invited. by the Alaska Coastal Airlines, one| > - ! i — to Exeursion Inlet taking Wm. S.! WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,| | Howard, Jim Van Derpool, Wayne|W. Va. July 28—Col. Frank A.| LONDON, July 28.—Hundreds of { Drewett, Thomas Harris and Guy Hunter, Commanding the Ashford | Allied fighters and light bombers 3 | Murphy. Internment Camp, said Italian pu-lflmmkflj industrial targets at Zee- | The second flight took Julia soners of war were not downhearted bruge and enemy airfields else- considered the|Barnes to Todd, and Fred Sobey,|by the ousting of Mussolini. One, of |Where in Belgium and Holland in Tt e 2. Mclntire and Beverly|the prisoners in the camp said: *I|Proad daylight, the British Ai® Min- | wager to sitka. |told you so. |istry announces. | The day operations of the relent- |less air offensive against the con- tinent followed night attacks A STAGNANT POOL 10x15 FEET CAN PRODUCE ONE MILLION MOSQUITOES AT ONE HATCHING. 1,000,000 DISEASE CARRIERS TO THE HUMAN RACE. HELP SITAMP THEM oUT / WAVES HAVE TAKEN TO THE WAVES on the Charles river at Cambridge, Mass., where the U. S. Navy's WAVES are in training at Radcliffe college. The all-male crews of Harvard university, across the stream, long have had the river to themselves, but now it looks as though they might have some real competition. At least the distraction may slow them down. The WAVES are here pictured carrying OF CALIFORNIA Broiled Steak an Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME their shell from their own boathouse tor a brisk workout on the historic stream. _e (International) Tropical | tropical hurri coast late yesterday and blew down § mall houses, tered windows lir timated at $1,000,000. 70 miles an hour. ELEVEN ALLIED High Command ass munique broadcast and picked up here that 11 ‘Allied ships and boats have been sunk and 11 others, cluding a light cruiser, damaged in various sea and air STANDARD OIL COMPANY WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1943 Largest Selection OF Freshest Fruits and Vegetahles in Juneau at all Times! Watermelon FRUITS PLUMS (4 VARIETIES) APRICOTS (YAKIMA) PEACY GRAPES HONEYDEW ME ORANGE LEMONS VEGETABLES "H CARROTS LETTUCE CABBAGE EORGE BROTHER PHONE 92 Phon 95 Where Service, Price and Quality Meet LARGEST SHIPPERS IN ALASKA! Free Delivery STILL A WINNER NORFOLK, Va—Charley Wag- ner, former pitching ace of the | Boston Red Sox, has won 10 games Ithis season for the Norfolk Naval Hurricane o s i’ Hifs Texas B> W, —Houston, Texas, imates of BULLETE July 2! damage to property and crops in the Houston and Galveston coastal regions rose this afternoon to $10,000,000, two deaths and scores of injuries reported. The storm was one of the worst that ever hit the Texas Gulf coast. , July 28, struck the Texas HOUSTON, Ti ne unroofed others, shat- and disrupted power The damage at Galveston is es- The wind blew at a velocity of - SHIPS ARE SENT DOWN, SAY NAZIS ~The German in a com- LONDON, July 28 in- have been ctions. The claims are without Allied confirmation. BUY WAR BONDS 1,000,000 BABIES TO A PUDDLE MAKE SURE YOU BUY A SPRAY STRONG ENOUGH 10 KiLL 'em DEAD! STANDARD 1.W.Harperis unexcelled in taste and in quality... in making L. W. Harper, cost is no object. IW.HARPER The Gold Medal Whiskey , Help win the War! - THE DOUGLAS IN DINE AND DANCE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT — e d Electric Hammond Organ Music DINE AND DANCE

Other pages from this issue: