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PAGE SIX ™ GEORGE BROTHERS Super Market Largest Selection OF Freshest Fruits and Vegetables in Juneau at all Times! Honey Dews Casabas Gravenstein Apples Johnathan Apples Crab Apples Pears Peaches Danish Squash Hubbard Squash Tomatoes Cucumbers Peppers Parsnips Rutabagas LOCAL CELERY, HOTHOUSE CUCUMBERS and TOMATOES BLOEDHORNS SELL STORE 10 0SBORNES Pioneers in Pioneer Jew- elry Business Sell Out to Pioneers Mr. and Mrsi—I;;l Bloedhorn, in the jewelry business in Alaska for the past 35 years, have sold their | jewelry and curio shop on Franklin Street to Mr. and Mrs. George Os- borne, also pioneers of Alaska. Mr. and Mrs. Bloedhorn plan to| leave the first of next month for| the States for a visit of several months. San Francisco and visits/ with relatives and friends in Cali-‘ fornia will be their first destination. | After that.their plans are not def- inite, although Mr. Bloedhorn sa; be probably will work “at some-| thing.” | Bloedhorn, who opened his first| jewelry store in Alaska in 1908 in| Douglas when the Treadwell mine was in its heyday, said he and his| |son, Director of the National Park GLACER BAYIS SEEN AS FUTURE TOURIST CENTER Glacier Bay, adjacent to Juneau, will probably be the scene of one |of Alaska’s outstanding tourist cen- ters following the end of the war, |according to Major O. A. Tomlin- Service for the Western States, Hawaii and Alaska, with headquar- ters at San Francisco. Major Tomlinson, making his first trip to the Territory, has just re turned from Glacier Bay National Monument, after making a study of possible post war development sites for providing accommodations for tourists in that area. He was accompanied by A. P. Bursley, Senior Land Planner for the National Park Service in charge of work on the Alaska Highway in reference to future zoning. While in the Interior, the two | men made a trip over the highway and also made an inspection of re- gular National Park areas Alaskan’s liesurely way of living will no doubt be interrupted after the war, according to Mesjor Tom- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU ALASKA Leaving on the first availabie transportation, Major = Tomlinson will return to headquarters in the states, while Mr. Bursley, on duty in Alaska from the Chicago head- quarters, will remain in Juneau throughout the winter. JUNEAU GOES MUSICAL; PIANOS RECEIVED AND ARE QUICKLY DISPOSED Six planos of a consignment of | 12, have been received by the Alaska Music Supply and all have | been disposed of according to Art Uggen. Six more pianos are ex- pected any day now from the fac- tories. The pianos arrived yesterday and were quickly unpacked. Lillian Ug- gen ran her artistic fingers over the keyboards and pronounced them in tip-top condition as to tone and touch and as soon as the transfer company can get to the job, the pianos will be delivered. AT S L A GUILD FOOD SALE The Junior Guild of the Trinity Church will hold a cooked food sale on Saturday, September 25, at Bert's Cash Grocery. Featuring home- baked cake and ple, baked beans, salads, etc., Juneau housewives will i | | NO ACTION BY SENATE, RESOLUTION WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. — The Senate Fdreign Relations subcom- mittee delayed at least a week any action on the dozen or more pend- ing postwar polioy proposals, in- cluding the House-approved Ful- bright “lasting peace” resolution Senator Guy M. Gillette predicted ihe committee will act within “thies or four weeks” on a resolution of its own. ALASKA SEAL SKINS TO BE SOLD OCT. 18 WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. — The | annual fall auction of Government | seal skins from Alaska will be held | | | | | | | be able to whip up a dinner without | in St. Louis on October 18 by the THURSPAY, SEPTEMBER 23,'1943 PLANS UPPING OF , NATIONAL DEBT WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. — Con- gress may be asked soon to boost the national debt limit to three hundred billion dollars, Chairman Cannon, of the House Appropriations Coommittee, told reporters this afternoon, Cannon said this is necessary be- cause of the present rate of spend- ing which is approaching the present statutory debt limit of two hundred and ten billion dellars, Dean, Mrs. Rice Are @ng South Leaving today, Dean a; C. E. Rice of Holy Tnnityndcs::l: dral, will spend the next severnl months in the states, zoing first o | the General Convention of the | Episcopal Church which is being held October 2-11 at Cleveland, Ohio. This is the Rice's first trip to the south in several years and the couple plan to visit throughout the states and in Canada. Hurray! This cake Tops off my dinner,. The pure Vanilla Makes it a winner! £ W% K ——2 NE LAY EORGE BROTHER much effort, | Fouke Fur Company, Government | ‘The sale starts at 11 o'clock. | agents for the processing and sell- - |ing of the furs, | wife gave up the business because linson, who explains that every- their ill health. {where in the states |ecople are| The couple married in 1910 in'awaiting the end of gas and tire Schilling BUY ANOTHER BOND TODAY of PHONES2 FreeDelivery PHONE 95 Where Service, Price and Quality Meet LARGEST SHIPPERS IN ALASKA! LEGION IS P.BADOGLIO FAVORABLE, BROADCASTS PEACE AIMS STATEMENT OMAHA, Sept. 23—The American, ALGIERS, Sept. 23—In a state- Legion convention adopted the re-iment on policy of his government, port of the Foreign Relations com-|pjetro Badoglio declared that the mittee, declaring that America’s King of Ttaly expressed the will that national interests would be best ytalian people in the nation’s armed protected by “participation in the|forces remain faithful to the King, establishment and maintenance of ! gheying him exclusively. | an association of free sovereigh na-| Among other points in the Italian tions implemented with Wwhatever|premier's speech, broadcast to the force may be necessary to mainiain ypited Nations by radio, was his world peace and prevent the re-|claim that the Italian people wish currence of war.” | to have nothing to do with Fascism The convention voted flPI”‘"’““br it called Republican or Mon- mately $250,000 to a World War 2| archic, Liaison committee to conduct a| He said the Italian people have campaign among men now in the not petrayed the Germans but in- military services encouraging their|stead have been betrayed them- Joining the Legioni when they be-|selyes by a Nazi Fascist gang of come eligible for membershio citizens. The population in the an honcable discnarge. inorth will never forget the thou- b Vs (Tig | sands of sons sent to die in Russia | and the African deserts in the sole ] | interest of Germany, he claimed imson Is B e Ab FEET HURT? and Chiropodist. Office 387 Lower Lobby, Baranof Hotel Iclas.ses. Beginners ballroom dancing. Douglas and continued to operate a‘ jewelry store there until 1917 when they went to Cordova on a similar| business verture. They returned to| Juneau in 1931 and opened the smre] which they have operated until last| Monday when the place. traded| hands. Mr. Osborne was the first jeweler to land on the beach at Nome. He | was there in 1899 when the gold| rdsh to Seward Peninsula took place | and a few months later went into business. In those days it took 36| days to go from Seattle to Nome by schooner, Osborne said. | From Nome, Mr. Osborne went to| Cordova and then came to Juneau where he entered into partnership with Jurgen Nelson in the store room now occupied by the Butler- Mauro Drug Go. That was between | 1913 and 1915. Mr. Osborne sold out to Nelson, went to Anchorage then to Cordova again, remaining there from 1927 to 1939, during which time he was in the jewelry business with his brother, operating the Osborne Brothers Jewelry Store. | Mr. and Mrs. Osborne again re-| turned to Juneau and have remain-| ed here since. Mr. Osborne has been | engaged in engraving and jewelry repair work, lately doing business| at his home, corner of Second and | Harris. | Appropriately enough, the new| store will be known as the Pioneer Jewelers, - DANCING CLASSES | NOW ENROLLING | R | Baton twirling, tap, acrobatic, toe! ballets, moderne, eccentris, special- ities. Stenographers’ body toning Studio, 411 7th St. Phone Red 575 adv. RAATIKAINEN HERE Charlie Raatikainen, with the Pel- | latest sclentific methods. Osteopath Home, Red 669 | ' If so, see Dr. D. W. Knowles, | MacArthur | | ican Cold Storage Company, is at adv. the Gastineau Hotel. Declines fo Comment on, "Subordinate” State- ment-Job Important WASHINGTON, Sept 21—~Bx‘ush-‘ ing aside inquiries about the possible | significance of the statement of Gen. | Douglas MacArthur implying that he faced a “subordinate” role in the ! Pacific war, Secretary of War Hen L. Stimson said that MacArthur is engaged in an extremely important | operation, and declined to speculate | on the meaning of MacArthur's! statement. In connection with the specula- tion that Lord Louis Moumbat(en'sl Southeast Asia Command might ov- | ershadow Gen. MacArthur’s South- | west Pacific theatre, Stimson was asked whether there was any reason | to believe the two combat theatres | overlapped at any point, and his reply was, “I never heard it sug- gested.” | Without a doubt, here's the A smile was the only response most versatile cost turned out Stimson gave when asked about the | in many a moon! Well-dressed prospective assignment of Gen.| "'M'""" (Vm_ and old) throw George C. Marshall as Commander ‘“' ?::“ °',"gv:r°".:"' . of all the Anglo-American forces in | St Mywl\lonl Reinl, snow or the field. However, when a reporter | ghine doesn't harm the high, solicited comment on some of the | wool worsted pile of news stories which implied that | Ipby. Magically, i Gen. Marshall was “being kicked o.n:;q!ginwldvr:fl:v ot just upstairs,” he retorted with a grin: | rght in more Mediterranean “You have been reading the news- | d'“";:- Cd"';‘?” "'”"‘m papers lately. Others have answered mz‘ 5 Y's' S 4 that completely and fully. I don’t| 2Pd red, $39.95. care to add to it." | - Hello, Moscow; Hello, America WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.—Direct | telephone serviee between New York | and Moscow has been established It will cost $21 for three minutes’| conversaton. This was revealed here today by the tariff rates with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company by the Federal Communi- | cation 3 JOAN LESLIE; Watch for the label. Pot_ Offica [~ - i With matching berets, *ionsl g Room, %6 ——————— BUY, WAR BONDS 1etioring in anticipation of explor-| The Andes reach their greatest About 18,000 skins taken ny the ing the Territory, which heretofore | height, more than 19,000 feet, in | Government by sealing operations was inaccessable by motor travel This ad Peru | in the Pribilofs will ‘be offered. vertisement should never nave been written Joan Leslie, Warner Brothers' Star, in Yankee, Doodle, Dandy” . Fashions Holl, . Broadway. Factor; 726 6 Washagton. Les Angeles. Coforsia Jones- Stevens Seward Street o need fo an you should phrases telling Bondse The yisements 1 ghare of Bond® the yictorye Ty pay check you aren 2 1f whye « ¢ s;eater than Y°‘:;dc yourself av ghro\l&h payroll § any, wrier sittist T ering out vuy War eds of 8dverT puy your to insure ting for U° ot under- necessity to . money nt of your P ask your- ng 10 pere 10 percent. ings. YOUVE DONE YOUR BIT cz— §005T YOUR BOND BUYNG The Treasury Depgrtment acknowledges with appreciation - thosponsdrship of this advertisement bys | P. E. HARRIS & COMPANY 7 b