The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 28, 1943, Page 2

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)

CRNAMT lz 8y KAET RENZ MAJCHERS READY FOR ETCHIKAN Two Other Fighters Going | from Here to Appearon | September 4 Card leific a middie= New York Denic Vernon (Buixog) 19%10M koyorw ,,6oping Aoy, '€ (j|pqesng) aunt 420D ASNIIW , ONIW H0I8,, T (o011) 9|Ad 5 '3 ,Aupy pup yse), ‘L ! ARMSTRONG LOSES T0 1d 16 amateur them all, the na- This experience to pit him| Knox of . the . Coast to ‘be his opponefit, sened professional count of the number vs and vacant fie has had in one of the hborhoods of Nev imit that manly that the hts in have to is well ver self-defense t Guardsm bad A - to be whe ver n Henry Annbuh"‘ces Perma- nent Retirement from Ring NEW YORK, Aug. 28.—Sugar Ray | Robinson, 10 years younger and five pounds he: , gave Henry Arm- strong a 10-round beating at Madi- Square Garden last night and Armstrong immediately announced his retirement-—permanently He is the only man to have held three titles at the same time. Henry pped every one of the 10 rounds as rangy Robinson pounc- cd away from Armstrong's whirl- wind style, piling up points with left jabs and swinging rights | which never endangercd Henry but made plenty sure of a victory for Rcbinson gt. Eddie Pin- ches that Eddie territory and or essful Coast his re- draw ateur The Joi- music and ced. € exc found several very for Hank of the welterweight to trai Len from tional with Feldman New York reputation who has a na-| Feldman cannot | trip as he has success- the examinations for Cadet training and is duc any time nothing tl sed ve at fon There fiel is definite about ht card in territory as yet, ! however in the making something definite wi as the p a Pl and kng ma ar = OHIO MAN WINS BIG TRAPSHOOT <~ TIDES ToMoRRow | 10 ™ . 15.9 feet. | Fer Rogers, Dayton, Ohio, toolmaker, 0.0 feet, | captured the —Grand Amierican 152 feet, handicap in a six-way shootoff to 25 feet iL«kv the title with 47 out -of 60 targets after five others tied him ‘[a: 97 out of 100 in the regular event. are ¢ High tide Low tide High tide Low tide 02 am 7:32 pm, Tides Mongday Hizh tide 1:37 am, Low tide 7:53 am, High tide 2:11 paa, Low tide ~ 8:06 pan 16.4 feet -04 fect.. 1¢ was the first timesince 1902 15.9 feet. {hat a home town boy had won the 18 feet.greatest of all shooting pr MCTORSHIP PATRICIA PLYING BETWEEN } JUKEAU, HAINES and SKAGWAY LEAVES JUNEAU . uesdays and Saturdays at 8:00 P. M. TICKETS and INFORMATION at PERCY'S CAFE Where all small packages raay be Teft. We are in a position to bid on D in or abo * Western Dredging Box 1923—Juneau, Alaska BRINGING UP FATHER T3 Copr. 1943, King ROBINSON e ™ TOP TEAMS FEW GAMES | § “WIN COAST IN MAJORS; BALLGAMES CARDS LOSE Seattle Turns in Shifouf Over Porfland- Angels Win (By Associated Press) The three top teams in the Pa- t League—Los Angeles, ncisco and Seattlewall won! yesterday Los Angeles took a doubleheader {from Hollywood, 4-3 and 11-3 San Francisco's als blanked | | Cakland 7 to 0 for the second time. | Seattle shut out the Portland} 2 to 0 on four-hit hurling| Frank Tincup, new Rainler| ndsman San Diego blasted ofit victory over Sacramento. Browns Take Defroit ~Bucs Lose (By Associated Press) Only four night games were on the schedule in the major leagues yéstérday, two in each cireuit. Danny Galehouse led the St. Louis Browns to a 3 to 1 victory over Detroit, holding the Tigers to seven scattered hits and scoreless until the last inning. Clevelanid moved to within a half rame of second place by defeating CHicago 6 to 2. In the National, Bucky Walters gave Cincinnati a 3 to 2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals, limiting the single hit after the an 8 to 1 {catds to a | fourth inning. Chicago’ won another 3 to 2 tri- umiph over Pittsburgh as Clyde Pas- seau served up five-hit ball GAMES FRIDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 0; Seattle 2 Sacramento 1; San Diego 8. | Los Angeles 4, 11; Hollywood 3, 3. | } CONTRACT HIT BY OPA TODAY Louis 2; Cineinnatt 3. Awmerican League Detroit 1; St. Louis. 3. Declare Split of Nef Profifs Offered by Buyers llegal Cleveland 6; Chicago 2. According - to announcement re- ceived today by the Alaska Office of Price Administration, contracts entered into between fishermen and Pet.la fish-buyer operating in 658 'castern Alaska, in which a 50-30 559 split of the b net profits in 525 addition to established ceiling prices 513, was offered under an agency agree- 487! ment, have been declared invalid 450 by the general counsel of the Fish 443! Division in Washington, D. C. 364| All transactions under this action jwere Jikewise declared illegal. Any bonus or other money payment in 2 Chicago St STANDING OF ‘CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet. 99 35 .7392 91 50 645 3 60 549 65 68 - 489| 60 75 444 5y ' 76 A8} 56 76 424, | Sacramento 3" 94 293 | National League | Won St. Louis ki | Cineinnati 66 | Pittshurgh 64 | Brooklyn 61 ! Chicago 58 | Philadelphia 54 Boston 51 New York 13 American Leagne Won Lost "4 66 58 62 56 63 58 61 57 58 63 St. Louis 55 . 64 | Philadelphia’ 1L 81 City League Won 8 1LoS . Angel !Sad Francisco | Seattle Portland Hollywood | San Diego | Oakland Lost 40 52 58 58 61 66 64 % Pet. |New York Washington Cleveland | Chicago | Detroit | Boston .582 fish operates not only to raise the .525 price on fish but to establish a mon- .521{opoly for the buyer entering into 517/such contract, the OPA said. It i 479'a plain evasion of MPR 418, which 462 establishes the specific- prices at -345 which salmon - can be sold on the grounds snd ‘at port, and contrar 6t | to all éstablished business practices 85716¢ Tthe fishing industry, 71| clared: .333| ° Pishermen .167) entered ' into Elues Mules Webfeet !city who with and the buyer the contract FIVE NORT AsToafi.fic!9§ Alig. 28] i | Northern Division Pacific Coast Con- gality ‘of ‘the contract and warned that eperations under it will be idealt, with as violations. (ONDA ! Fredeérick’ Fraziet, 11-month old son of- 'Private Jack - Kenneth . Frazier tand “Mrsi’ Margaret ‘Frazier, nee ' Haryis, will be held Monday after- nodn -at two'o'clock inthe chapel 0f thé Charles' W. Carter Mortuary The' Rev. Walter S. Soboleff will ! ference schools are detérmined to carry on with football and ‘basket- ball during the coming ‘sehool year, | it was ‘decided at a meetihg here. | Washington, Washington. Staté, | | Oregon, Oregon ' State and" Tdahio lv.'erc present, with only Montana P " | which dropped out for the duration ,conduct the service: absent, as the coaches drew up a The child was the great-grandson | tchedule to start January 7 in bas- [of Richard T. Harris, one of the ketball. |founders of Juneau. Burial will take Tlie football schedule has ulrcadylmflcr in the family plot in Ever- been drawn. up. . green Cemetery. redging or Construction Work ut Alaska ion gy Phonef—Dougias. 764 & Constrict Cleveland Beafs Chicago-| South- | 622/addition to the ceiling ' prices on| OPA de-| them have been advised of the ille- | ‘ * ‘Funeral ' services for Kenneth| DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASK m me WORL ¢ RELIG YWW.REID n “We liave never had an |church boy, a Boy Scout, a member of the junior police in real {trouble in the juvenile court,” |Judge Philip B. Gilliam, of | Juvenile Court, Denver, Colo., told | parents recently hildren need !;.m.w-p They will get it in some {form or another. War makes nec- | essary adjustments. Take don’t children to church | There a need to teach children Isimple things. They need get close to earth. We must do some- thing our children now. We |not. only need save the world {for ‘our children, but also to save |the children for the world which lwill be theirs tomorrow.’ active or a the some send-—your i to for to The Rt. Rev. Henry St. George Tucker, presiding bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church, has {written thie following prayer wiiich {he "suggests all Christians use for those who have lost loved ones in the: war: “Almighty God, who didst [offer thine only Son to be made | perfect throu suffering, and t {wih our salvation by enduring th |Gross; sustain with thy healing power all those whose loved have given their lives in the serv- lice of our country. Redeem, we Ibray thee, the pain of their be- [ teavement, that knowing their loss |to be the’ price of cur freedom, they {may remember the gratitude of the nation for which they gave dostly a sacrifice. And grant, {LéFd, that we may highly o ones 50 o in yain, and that out of the agony of the present hour there may | arige new and better world in {which thy will shall rule, to the of thy Son, our Savior honor Jesus Christ. Amen a might say it to get a church says Rear Admiral George L. ler) who recently dedicated a new church at this U. S. Naval Sta- tion Guantanamo B: Cuba where the station had existed with- cul a chur for 39 years. “While our; enemies were destroying church- | |cathedrals and all things symbolic of religion, we conceived the great need for a permanent place of wor- ship. As a war measure, or some- |thing vital to the war effort, mohument to religion was trgeted. Into it were put many strdtegic materials. Ships entering | the! harbor may be guided by it to safe and secure anchorage.” took a way Guantanamo,’ Wey- at con- on the east coast of tJay is not only a great naval base but the center of the East! Java Church of the Netherlands| | Missionary Society. In 1941 Soera-' baya celebrated the one hundredth anniversary of the erection of the first church building on the Island of Java at nearby Ngoro. This land other small churches in the| region were founded by laymen-- Van Coolen, a planter; Van der |Emde, a watchmaker, and others —who instructed the Javanese in |their employ in the rudiments of | the Christian faith and then built ;lh(‘se churches for them. It was not juntil seven years later that the first missionary was sent out to them from Holland. In 1938 the |indépendent East Java Church had |62 |organized congregations, 48 ministers, and 34,000 church mem- bers. It has sent three missionaries | {to Bali. The National Christian Council, |représenting all the Protestant chutg¢hes of India in its ‘member- ship,” has recently expressed itself as “deeply distressed over the ex- lisung deadlock and the growing (bitterness and misunderstanding be- |tween Great Britain and India.” In | this Ithe first resolution ever passed | by the Council on the political situation in India it says: “Believ- ing ;that the fundamental issues| are spiritual, we plead for a solu- tion through the reestablishment of goodwill, mutual respect and trust. We wrge (the Indian) Congress to take:ho action which will endanger such ia solution. We also urge the gmm:ximent te make a fresh ap- proach to the problem of securing India’s complete freedom. We ap- peal ‘no less urgently to all other political parties. Failing a settle- ment, there cannot but be a great addition to the sum of anger and hatred in the world, leaving for Sperabaya, | | | resolve | that these dead shall not have died ' * a 'WHO SHAVE ATG UNITS ARETO MARCH IN BIG JUNEAU PARADE Will Take Part in War Bond Procession Next Tuesday The Juneau, Douglas and Glacier Highway units of the Alaska Terri- torial |Guard will march in the parade opening Gastineau Channel’s Third | War Loan Drive Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock.. This will be the first| time that Gastineau nnel fesidents have been given opporunity to see their own in a public exhibition. guardsmen assémble of the Nugget Shop in not later than 6:45 p.m., d in full uniform—shirt, tie, alls, leggings, raincoats, hel- ammunition belts—and with the outfits All are to in front Juneau dress met, rifles. Every member is expected tc turn out. If unable to take part they are expected to gét in touch with their commanding offic and inform him of this fact immediately. -+ FORMAL USO DANCE IS EVENT THIS EVENING | he regular monthly formdl USO dance will be an event this evening at the Scottish Rite Temple, begin- ning at 9 o'clock. | Music ‘will be futlished by the! vicemen’s Orchestra and dancing continue until 12:30 o'clock All GSO girls and non-commis- sioned servicemen dre extended an invitation to attend a future heritage trife generations and resentment.’ Radio broadcasts in Japan, heard listening posts in America, give information that there in- creasing demands in Japan for of the Bible. The Japai Bible Society (“Nippon Seisho Kyo- kwai”), to which {the American Bible 'Society transferred its Bibl House, plates and tures in 1941, i Bibles as fast printed. A revised New Testament 1917 the is coples versiont of prirted J by tt American Bibl and th British and. Foreigns Bible Society. The Japan Bible Sociely is now ported to be well on its way on A revision of the Old Testamen which was last translated in. 1887. S FEET HURT? If so, see Dr. D. W. Knowles, latest scientific methods. Osteopath | nd Chiropodist. Lower Lobby, Baranof Hotel Office 387 ! Home, Red 669 ; adv. | wis in jointly Society - - YOUR BROKEN LENSES Replaced in our own shop. Eyes Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson. | Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. adv. FOR MEN DAILY Special Preparation | Soothes Skin, Saves Time Needs No Brush FOR MEN who must shave every day — doctors, lawyers, business- men and others—Glider is invaluable. It is a special cream for daily shavers. Rich and soothing, it is neither sticky | nor greasy. _To use Glider, first wash your face with hot water and soap to remove the grit and oily sebum that collect on_whiskers every 24 hours, Then spread on Glider (}:Ixickly and easily with your fingers. Never a brush. Smooths down skin Instantly Glider smooths the flaky top layer of your skin. It enables the razor's edge to glide over your skin, cutting your whiskers close and clean without scraping or irritating your skin. Glider eliminates much of the irrication that frequent shaving may have for the tender face and feavel your skin smoother, cleaner. Glider was developed by The J. B. Williams Co., who have been making fine shaving preparations for over 100 years. Get a tube today! | | Features Syndicate, Inc., World rights rescrved By GEORGE McMANUS ISN'T IT WONDER WHAT THAT MEDICINE MY SISTER'S ? JUST THINK A FEW DAYS AGO HE WAS ON CR%ITCHE5— DID FO FIANCH NOW HE FUL THAT'S WHAT GREATEST TRAVEL SYSTEM | —< i ROYAL CAFE Specialties: CHOW MEIN CHOP SUEY AMERICAN DISHES | ROYAL CAFE Phone 738 162 S. Fronklin Contact any Canadian Pacific THE WINGS OF ORDER YOUR RABBIT SKINS Now Tanned, cleaned and all ready to make up. VALCAUDA FUR COMPANY SEATTLE, WASHINGTON WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone Blue 510 % BARANOF || Alaska’s Largest Apartment Hotel * EVERY ROOM WITH TUB and SHOWER * | BUY WAR BONDS THE ATCO LINE Alaska Tramsportation Company O SAILINGS FROM PIER ¢ SEATTLE Reasonable Rates Phone 800 e ® Periect comtort ® Centrally located e Splendid food and service McClare, © Large Rooms— Mgr. all with Bath ALASKANS LIKE THE PASSENGERE PREIGHT REFRIGERATION Ld F. B. D. B. FEMMER—AGENT PHONE 114 NIGHT s12 BUY WAR BONDS YOU CAN FLY JUNEAU to Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks Yakutat Valdez Nome Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Poinis Wednesday Friday Sunday * ALASKA STAR AIRLINES Phone 667 Office BARANOF HOTEL Woodley Airways JUNEAU— ANCHORAGE Via YAKUTAT and CORDOVA Connections to ALL INTERIOR Alaska Points Lockheed ‘Arrives Juneau 2:00 P.M. Electra Leaves Juneau 2:30 P.M. Tuesday-Friday FOR RESERVATIONS ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Phone 612 Agents Juneau ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska. Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Juneau ...$ 8 $18 $18 $18 $18 $18 Sitka ........ 18 18 18 10 10 Chichagof 18 18 10 5 Kimshan.. 18 18 10 Pelican .. 18 Todd ........ 18 Tenakee .. 10 Angoon .. 18 Hoonah .. 10 Haines and Skagway—Scheduled Daily at 7:30 A. M. Haines Skagway $18.00 $20.00 Sitka $18 Juneau Skagway ... - 10,00 Express Rate: 10°cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% Excursion Inlet—Scheduled Daily at 9 A. M. and 2 P. M. Juneau Hoonah Excursion: Inlet .. Bk $15.00 $10.00 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c SCHEDULED TUESDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell Petersburg $45.00 $35.00 $30.00 Petersburg 30.00 10.00 Wrangell . 20.00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to Ketchikan Express Rate: 10c per pound—Minimum of 60c to Petersburg ¢ pusenee e PHONE 612 Juneau Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants. Schedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notice.

Other pages from this issue: