Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| PAGE SIX e e U R N GEORGE BROTHERS Super Market JUST ARRIVED—Anotker Large Shipment of Fresh Fruits and Vegeiables lain, will delive Lola Mae Alexander will sing dur- ing the service and Carol Beery Davis will play musical selections. Pallbearers will be H. D. Stabler, E. E. Ninnis, H. G. Nordling, J. O. Kirkham, R. H. Beistline and Robert E. Coughlin The body will be shipped south for interment in the Washelli Cemetery in Seattle. the eulogy. (GUNNAR INGMAN, A J. OFFICIAL DIES SATURDAY Memorial Sen;ices Will Be Held Here This RO Evening 'WORLD SERIES RED, GREEN AND CELERY BLUE GRAPES CUCUMBEF Juneau Gold Mining Company and HALE PEACHES LETTUCE well-known Juneau Y(‘\lm‘m,l(‘l:vd ’::‘ ON ToMoRRow NCY PEARS TOMATOES St. Ann’s Hospital Saturday after- CANNING PEARS CAULIFLOWER noon R ITALIAN PRUNES CARROTS Ingman had been a resident of | The world series of 1943, between | Juneau since 1914, coming here with [the Am an League champions, CANTALOUPES GREEN CORN WATERMELONS CABBAGE a construction crew which built the New York Yankees, and the N;.\- CASABAS TURNIL Goldstein Building in that year. [tional League Champions, the St. v o T 4 . The next year, after the Goldstein |Louis Cardinals, starts tomorrow in HONEY DEW RUTABAG SulinG. was: Comspltid. ' oy BANANAS PARSNIPS o Alaska TatEel GAA | A B A)A) AR L ARSI joined the Alaska Juneau Gold Min- | The starting pitchers will be Max APPLES SQUASH ing Company as an expert carpenter |Lanier for the Cards and Spud SWEET POTATOES GREEN PEPPER EORGE BROTHER PHONE 92 WE DELIVER PHONE 95 Where Service; Price and Quality Meet LARGEST SHIPPERS IN ALASKA! |and had been with the company |Chandler for the Yanks, according ever since. |to an Associated Press dispatch to | He became repair foreman for the the Empire this afternoon mining company in 1923 and has| As during the past 25 years, the been mill superintendent since last |pmpire will post the score board year, assuming the vacancy left by |in the windows giving the runs | the departure of Walter P. Scott. imaqe during the game with final Ingman was well-liked by every- .o and a complete story, play by mr‘u Joe Williams, mine MANABET, | 1o will be given in the regular said he was probably the most POPU- |y "ot the Empire, lar foreman the mine has had i skl " | He was prominent in civic affairs : KODIAK WOMAN HERE and served as a member of Juneau's e Mary Karl of Kodiak registered City Council in 1926 and 1927. e i Vg !mvor the weekend at the Baranof culatory disease. | Hotel. Ingman was born in Ekenas, Fin- | and, February 8, 1888. In the earl s he sailed on various sailing ssels as a ship’s carpenter, | He is survived by the widow, of | Walter C. Short,” the officers in |Juneau, a son, Gordon, power com- | charge in aii when the Japs|pany engineer in Tacoma, Washing- | struck Pearl Harbor, and have de- |ton, and several grandchildren cided to “postpone proceedings until Ingman was a member of the Ma- sonic Lodge of Juneau, joining the ve SHELDON IS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR ~-JUNEAU ALASKA [NEW TEACHERS NOW | ON JOBS AT SCHOOL Two new teachers began their duties today in the Juneau Element- | cion Jeen f ary School, according to A. B. Phil- " lips, Superintendent of Schools. They oa' alms are Miss Frances Cooper, formerly of Casper, Wyoming, who is teaching | NEW DELHI, Oct. 4. Ju])anvsc‘ hipping in Burma has been sm;wh-{ ed during the past tyo days by Al- lied forces. W i MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1943 brook, seventh grade teacher, who recently was a member of the Cres-} well, Oregon, grade school faculty. Miss Ruth Brooks, who has bee instructing the seventh grade, wil begin her duties tomorrow as algebra teacher and director of the band on the high school teaching staff. —— - FROM PETERSBURG John Molver of Petersburg is re: the third grade, and Miss Ruth Hol- | gistered at the Gastineau Hotel. Steamers on the Irrawaddy River, the docks at Bassein, also storage huildings have felt the effects of | Paiterson Says War De- such time in the near future as may be decided upon as being appro- [} | priate.” Both officers voluntarily |~ The postponement rights of e Making FirsTT—rip fo.Sfales! 2% Hiebia: of sue gover in 46 Years - To At- tend Conference time in 46 years, R. E. Sheldon, Executive Director of the Unemployment Compensa- tion Commission of Alaska, will see the “Outside,” when he and Mrs Sheldon spend two months in the States, They will leave Juneau to- night. Sheldon, a boy of 14 years, ac- companied his father, to Skagway in December 1897, when the elder Sheldon was Klondike-bound in search of gold. Before the two left Skagway for the gold fields, the father died, but the younger Shel- don remained in Soapy Smith’s town. . A few years later R. E. Sheldon built, out of various odd pieces, the tirst automobiles to be operated in Alaska. The horseless carriage is now on permanent exhibit in th museum of the University of Alaska at College. Sheldon- lived for years at Haimes and prior to his appointment as di- rector of the Unemployment Com- pensation Commission, with head- - quarters in Juneau, was postmaster | at Fairbanks. | Mrs. Sheldon will accompany her | husband to Louisville, Kenturk, where he will attend the annual In- terstate Conference of State Divec- tors of the Unemployment Compen- | satior Commission. | At the conclusion of fhe C-’Jl”('!-’ ence Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon will| take a month's vacation, including | in their itinerary Washington D.| €., New York City and Chicago. In Rochester, Minnesota, Sheldon will undergo a physicdl checkup at| the Mayo Clinic. In the nation’s capital he pians to confer mth‘ Anthony J. Dimond, delegate, and | former Gov. Thomas Riggs. | At the convention Sheldon will support a plan to pay unemplo; ment compensation to men and| women honorably discharged ircm | any branch of the armed forces during the period of readjustment following the termination of the war. Details of the best method to| handle this matter will be dis- cussed at the conference. Sheldon says: “It will be a sub-| stantial factor in helping to st bilize the purchasing power of U discharged men and women and Is in accord with President Roosevelt’s proposal to give prompt and pro- per assistance to veterans of the! war.” mouncement also ill not A For the first But the Let our skilled styli hair . they have a individual beauty all your own uccess of a hair style OFEN EVENINGS Phone 318 Let’s GO e NO TRIAL YE FOR 'DEFENDERS' | OF PEARL HARBOR TR | Delicious and Both Army, Navy Secrefar- Refreshing ies Say Courtmartial Undesirable WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—The War Department announces the Secretar- jes of War and Navy have “con- cluded it is undesirable in public interest to proceed at this time with the trial of Rear Admiral Husband E. Kimmel and Major General TRADE MARK agreed | to waive the statute of limitations | after. aid the iffect exist- | other officers of the lodge reading government nor o e T T = Beauty begins new change your whole round face can be given a slender recommend the right permanent for your knack” for dressing hair to give you an Masonic Blue Lodge here in 1929 Memorial services will be held in the chapel of the Charles W. Carter | Mortuary at 7 o'clock this evening 15 | under the direction of Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147, Masons, with J. J Fargher as Worshipful Master and | the ritualistic service. The Rev. William H. Matthews, Jr., as Chap- Mair Style that fits your own individuality The right hair style can give you a “slant” on life! It can almost appearance—a a long, slim face can be Jiven a heart-shaped 100k, depends on a successful permanent. Sygr COOPER BUILDING Opposite Federal Bldg. to nany direct hits | parlmeni, WSA Men Namti in northern Burma has| seen raided and warehouses have on Way Here | seen demolished :\~‘>f";ylellw’ném'\”j.’;“"1‘.;:111%'.;;“.‘-.::“ I‘I"‘: Representatives of the War De- ranoMEaT ek | partment and the War Shipping Ad- | No American or British planes ministration are on their way to ‘ 3 |Juneau to discuss with the officials were lost in the many attacks| staged. ! of the Territorial Chamber of Com-~ | merce the claims of small boat own- ers against the Government and | — eee - agencies doing work for the Govern- | ment. SIX PASSENGERS b SRR LEAVE FOR SITKA f Patterson informed L. W. Kilburn, Vice-President of the Chamber to- | sitka on the|day that the representatives of the | Embarking for teamer ly Sunday afternoon Government would arrive here this were Delofes Smith, Patricia Berg, Thursday or Friday to discuss the C. W. Tucker, Lulu Coleman, La- | question. Moine Peterson and H. B. Bates. The move came as a result of a kS - letter sent to Patterson by a com- HERMIA DARNELL ON mittee of the Chamber, pointing out TRIP TO SKAGWAY | the harsh treatment which has been ved by many small boat owners Mrs. Hermia Darnell, wife of Rod | rec in Southeast Al Darnell, proprietor of the Triangle Cleaners, is on a round trip to ——e Skagway, leaving here Saturday ce, owner of Taku Lodge, at the Baranof Hotel. § ATTENTION!! ELK BOWLERS! Your alleys will open for season’s play THURSDAY—OCTOBER 7 TP. M. lolZMidgiglll ; All boys interested in setting pins meet tonight at 7 P. M. at club. evening. “A running fight between the bomber and the 18 Japanese pursuit planes continued for 75 miles . .. continued until the remaining pursuit ships exhausted their ammunition and turned back. With two engines gone and the plane practically out of control, the American bomber returned to its base after dark and made an emergency landing. THE MISSION HAD BEEN ACCOMPLISHED." BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 8Y uneau Cold Storage Co. I'm * “Coca-Cola” known, too,as “Coke” I speak for “Coca-Cola™. | I'm a symbol of its lifeand | sparkle. I'm known, too, as “Coke”. It's short for “Coca-Cola”, | offer you speak for the reol thing . .. the soft drink with the dis- tinctive quality of delicious refreshment . . . the drink with the trade-mark “Coca-Cola™. P.S. Everybody likes fo shorten words. You hear “Coke"... the friendly abbreviation for the trade-mark *“Coca-Cola” <s-0n every hand. EVERY P, how, with one man killed, another man’s hand shot off, and a third man injured, our American boys stuck to the fight, bombed their objective, and brought their plane home. air, and maybe you’ll have another thrill reading it again. of them—and shells—millions of them—and bullets—billions of them! It needs ships and guns and jeeps ... - writers, the men at their machines—the clerks, the farmers, the messengers, the bookkeepers and the salesmen. 10, ,n WAR BONDS 'EVERYBODY__ — President Roosevelt, in his Fireside Chat, April 28, HERE, in the words of President Roosevelt, is one of the war's most stirring episodes—a demonstration of —in War Bonds. Undoubtedly you felt a thrill when you heard it over the But your thrills wow't win the war! It takes planes—thousands of them—and tanks—thousands yourself and your family a favor, too. get a War Bond—worth $25 in ten years. You don’t give your money—you i.iwesl tory, and for your own personal security. It takes money. oo It takes the money of all of us—the girls at their type- YDAY This advertisement is a coniribution to America’s all-out war effort by 1942 It needs a surging, patriotic Nation of people who love their country enough to buy a share of America by investing 10% of their wages every payday—a dime from every dollar It needs—and it’s getting it!—the cooperation of Labor and Management to put the Payroll Savings Plan over the top. Your money in War Bonds—10%. of your salary every payday—not only will help pay the bill to create the most powerful blasting force ever put. together—but yow'll do < Because every time your savings amount to $18.75, you'll it, both for Vic- That's your mission—will you accomplish it? TODD PACKING COMPANY