The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 1, 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 GEORGE BROTHERS Super Market BUY YOUR WAR STAMPS ON MOLLY PITCHERTAG DAY aturday. October 2 CHOSEN CHIEF OF 40-8 BUNCH | Al Zenger, retiring Post Com- |mander of the Alford John Brad- |ford Post No. 4, of Juneau, was | elected Grande Chef de Gare of the ;P‘orty and Eight at the district (Grande Promenade held at An- | cHorage last month. | Other officers elected | follows: “ J. ©. !Grande C were as Morris, of Anchorage, hef de Train; Harvey Smith of Anchorage, Grand Con- ductor; Jack Holler of Kodiak, Grand Garde de la Porte; Dr, L. L. |Loy of Sitka, Medicine; Leif Strand jof Anchorage, Aumonier; R. H. | Stock of Homer, Cheminot Nation- lale; J. T. Petrich of Juneau, Sous 1Cheminot Nationale. | | Cheminots elected were Bert Ly-| {beck and John Walmer of Juneau; | Joe Freeman of Anchorage, L. P.| (Rorrison of Palmer, and Frank| | Nash of Fairbanks. - on IoBé For Sale: One Hydraulic Water Ram One National Cash Register Fire Proof Filling Cabinet for 300 accounts ;Aviakfi | Big Considerafion - - In Post War Plans WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. — Presi- | dent Roosevelt said the position of aviation in the postwar world has Ibeen under studied by the govern-| ment for months, by both he and! Winston Churehill, who are in agreement that there should be/ freedom and aid ! Some conversations have also taken place on aviation among| other government officials and | other Allied officials he added - D g - Where Service, Price and Quality Meet LARGEST SHIPPERS IN ALASKA! Hautalas Parents Of HuskyfiGirl Baby A girl baby, weighing 9 pounds and 14 ounces, was born to Mr. and | Mrs. Walter Peter Hautala on Sep- 7, at Auburn, Washington. | Extension for Public Utilities WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. OUT ON PAA | Leaying Juneau for Whitehorse yesterday by Pan American Airways | — The | tember 7 were the following: | War Production Board has author- | The little bouncing miss has been' Rod Darnell, of the Triangle ized public utilities to extend service | named Katherine Gray Hautala, Cleaners, on business; Harley F. i 41 areas, 17 States and Alaska, |and joins a little brother. This is Reed of Seattle and George B. which were designated as critical | according to a birth announcement Moody, Seward dry cleaner, both on war housing regions. Areas include Ieceived by Mr. and Mrs. Floyd their way to the States to inspect a all of Alaska. Dryden. mining property in California. Ih RPN | Hautala was basketball coach at An arrival in Juneau from Fair- |the Juneau High School several banks was John Shepard, steel sup- TOM GEORG ars ago. He is now employed at erinendent for the Sommers Con- JONES -STEVENS IN ACCIDENT Well Known ]uvneau Groc- Seward Street er Loses Left Foot in Mishap Tom George, well-known Juneau grocer and part owner of George Brothers, was seriously injured last night at 11:06 o'clock in an auto accident on the Douglas Highway near Lawson Creek. Although details of the accident are not clear, it is believed that the grocery truck George was driv- ing struck a soft shoulder on the road and went out of control, pin- ning the driver’s left leg in the door in the crash that followed. George had probably attempted to get out of the car when it crashed into the ditch. Soon after the accident, a group of autoists in a Ford V-8 arrived on the scene. This car contained Rob- ert Matrin, Dave Brown, Walter Ludtke, Bill Strand and Rudy Krause. They took George into their car and rushed him to St. Ann's Hospital. George’s leg was so badly injured that Drs. C. C. Carter and W. M. Whitehead found it necessary to amputate’ the limb about six inches below the knee. George also suffered chest in- juries and other bruises. ' He is re- ported to be resting and in an improved condition late this after- noon. | Soon after the accident Territorial Highway Patrolman Emmett Botelho was notified and he went to the scene of the accident to get a full report. The red delivery truck was later towed to the Cowling and Davlin Motor Company for re- pairing. ———.————— HARRIMAN NAMED T0 RUSSPOST | WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. — W. Averell Harriman has been nomin-| ated by President Roosevelt as! Ambassador to Russia to succeed Admiral William H. Standley, 71, who returned recently to make a| report on the Soviet govcrnmem‘ai attitude on projected Anglo-Amer- ican-Russian war talks. | Before leaving Moscow, Admiral| Standley made it known that he did not wish to return to the pust.i Harriman, 51, has been Lend-/ Lease administrator in London. — e Subscrive w tune Dally Aluhl Empire—the paper with the largest | paid circulation. | Left: Gal's-Pal . . . The fly-front closing preserves the plaid un- broken in the skirt of this dress, rayon and wool. Aqua, gold, melon or blue. Sizes 10 to 20, $10.95—$12.95 Announcement THE NEW YORK TAVERN Is now under new management and will be glad to serve all the old patrons as well as the new ones with the same efficient service and the best of Wines, Liquors and Beers, as has been its policy in the past. Georg:azgoalo WNER (U len years before going to Seattle. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—-JUNEAU ALASKA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1943 SUNRISES The duck hunting season is now on. Shooting starts half an hour | before sunrise and ends at sunset. Following are the sunrises for sev- eral days: ! October October October October October October October October October October October JOEUSESLUCK |Voling Privileges PIECE FOR RIDE For Alaskans Now ONVNS?TAREH (AR In Seniig_; Is Asked SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1.—~On a | furlough from the Army, Joe Dl-‘ WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. — A bill iMagulo boarded a streetcar and | extending absentee voting privileges dropped five pennies in the coin|t0 residents of Alaska and Hawaii, box. |serving in the armed forces, has “Wow, there goes my lucky pen-|been introduced by Alaska Delegate ny,” he said | Anthony J. Dimond. Three days later railway officials | —_——— emerged from a mountain of pen-| nies with Joe's lucky Indian head piece. | i \ 2—-17:03 3—T:06 4-7:07 5—T7:09 6—17:12 1—7:14 8—7:16 9T 10 11— 12—-T7: ® ® 5 prpPPPREP | GOODIE SALE | By Lutheran Ladies Aid At Bert's Cash Grocery Sat. Oct. 2 at 11 a.m.| spgiEssgsss 8588 B e | STUDENTS CONTRIBUTE TO CRUISER ALASKA FUND Lloyd D. Whitney and Eva E. | Mr. Whitney with the Army| EVANSVILLE, Ind. Oct. i.—Sec- Seattle-Tacoma Shipyards. fifteen billion dollars and then Maynard, Court Reporter, was the sion barge at the Evansville ship- Waugh were married here yesterday H I TS G 0 A l afternoon by U. S. Commisioner | Pelix Gray | Transport Service, and Mrs. Waugh | retary of Treasury Henry Morgen-| |formerly was employed in Seattle |thau announces the Nation's Third as a bookkeeping operator for the War Bond drive reached the goal of Robert E. Coughlin, Clerk of the| went over. S. District Court here, was the Morgenthau came here to partici best man, and Miss Mildred K. pate in the launching of an ir bride’s attendant. vards. The bride is a former Juneau resident, having lived here for sev- | | | Juneau grade and high s(‘hrml’ | students contributed $46.72 to the; 1 he | fund being raised throughout the | ( Territory for the purchase of a silver service for the LENSES ‘ | Important Notice To Our Record Customers Effective immediately and until further notice it will not be necessary to turn in scrap records rl))n any popular or classical recordings handled Yy us. ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY IS AWAY OVER R | TIDES TOMORROW High tide—3:28 a. m., 159 feet. Low tide—9:28 a. m., 15 feet. High tide—3:28 p. m., 176 feet. Low tide—9:58 p. m., -0.3 feet. A s BUY WAR BONDS WASHINGTON, Oct. Treasury announces the Third War Loan, up to last night, was Five Hundred and Thirty Two Million dollars over subscribed but the total | will not be known until about Oc- | tober 18 to give the banks time to report. It is expected the loan will | one half bil- newly-launched cruiser Alaska. — o YOUR BROKEN Replaced in our own shop. Eyes Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson ! Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. adv. | reach eighteen and lien dollars ou asked for ! us of our own free will, lending it, from our pay. And—because this is the American way of doing things—we’re building our own financial security, too, against the day when the war will be over— when we’ve shown you what decent, clean, free people can do. Every year those War Bonds of ours increase i value, Tojo, until, after ten years, Uncle Sam hands us back TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS for every $18.75 we invested in beating you. Get it, Tojo? It isn’t the Jap way, the Nazi way, nor the Fascist way. I¢’s the free American way! So, when you see those clouds of planes over your troops, your ships and your factories—when the tanks come at you spitting lead—and our good Amer- ican boys get you on the run—remember, we’re pay- ing for it—Smith, and Harrigan, and Cohen, and Godowsky, and Leblanc, and Havlek, Americans all, in a free country. So zake it, Tojo—you asked for it! You dished it out, with a head start by treachery —now we're going to see how you.can take it! We're ganging up on you, Tojo, in a way you and your Nazi friends don’t understand. Spreading like wildfire from coast to coast and " from Canada to Mexico is our Payroll Savings Plan —get that, Tojo? Not confiscation—mw’ngx.‘ 5 By the tens of millions, workers and employees of plants in every state of our country are cooperating with their unions and with management. Of their own free will they’re agreeing to put ten percent—a dime from every dollar—of their earnings in United States WAR BONDS. e e WY Every payday the plant management sets aside this ten percent, then, each time it adds up to $18.75, the worker gets his Bond. Aot~ * See, Tojo? Hundreds of millions of good U. S. dollars are going into the planes, the tanks, the guns and the ships to blast you right outof your sandals! And we’re paying for it . . . the workers and em- ployers . . . the farmers, doctors, lawyers .. .all of 107, ,n WAR BONDS \ 1. By investing in War Bonds you help provide the planes, the tanks, the guns and the ships we must have to survive and conquer. 2. You prove that you are a patri- otic American. 3. You aid the morale of our fight- ing men, by showing them that the entire,Nation is behind them. 4. You prove to our enemies that we are a United People. 5. You protect your own financial future, as every $18.75 you invest in a War Bond brings you back $25 in 10 years. You make the world’s safest investment, by buying a share in the world’s most powerful country. EVERYBODY — EVERY PAYDAY This advertisement is a contribution o America’s all-out war effort by PENINSULA PACKING COMPANY

Other pages from this issue: