The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 8, 1943, Page 6

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PAGE SIX SHARP WORDS GIVEN AT AFL CONVENTION BOSTON, Oct. 8.—Warren Ather- ton, National Commander of the American Legion, denounced strikes as treasonable, in a two-fisted speech RALPH MIZE BACK | FROM FIELD TRIP; | HAD EXCITING TIME Ralph Mize, Construction Engineer | ! for the Office of Indian Affairs, | relumed yesterday morning by plane | !rom a two months’ field trip to the Promises New | p g non th and west. His trip carried him | | to Anchorage, Bristol Bay, the Kus- H LONDON, Oct. 8 _Admiral Doe- kokwim country, the Yukon and to | blitz, Supreme Commander of the Nome and Kotzebue, and intermed- avy, declared in a Berlin|jate stations. the submarine is| On September 23, while (Iying! s greatest threat to from Kotzebue to Tanana, the plane, | Nazi Admiral broadcast th still Germany THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE——JUNEAU ALASKA 'RAID MADE ON WAKE ISLAND IS MYSTERY MOVE 'Bombardment Pro bably One of Two Import- ant War Actions BY WILLIAM WORDEN War Correspondent of Associated at the American Federation of Labor Convention here. He was told in an equally vigorous reply by President William Green that he was looking at “inconse- gential faults of a’small minority.” Atherton said: “If it is treason for ‘a soldier to refuse to use his gun, then it too should be treason for a man fortunate enough to be on the home front to do anything that keep him from getting that | gun.” | o s war “greater nessed so far. cal intention to carry on the war against the enemy'’s than the means at our disposal,” said |the Admiral in a war summary \bmadmsl by DNB. D FROM STRAWBERRY POINT Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Kuehny of| | Strawberry Point are guests at the| FISHERMAN IS FOUND """ o DEAD, HEART ATTACK . ¢ s EXCURSION [(,h arles G. Mayse, Joe Spitzer and | all of Excursion | Inlet. are registered at the Baranof Hotel. Sigurd K. Bmmbo, 35, was found dead about noon yesterday on the porch of one of the Martin Apart- ments. He was last seen alive by his friends at 11 o'clock, and was noticed by one of the tenants ur‘ the apartments soon after 12, lymsz on the porch. Dr. W. M. Whitehead was called, and pronounced the man | dead from & heart attack. The body was taken to the Charles W., Carter Mortuary. ‘The deceased was born in Nurway.l and had worked for several years at the Sebastian-Stuart cannery at Tyee. He was a member of the Fishermen's Union, and his funeral |bers are asked to be present. will be under the guspices of that TR e o TS organization. An attempt is being MISS FORBES HERE made to locate a brother thought to| Mary D. Forbes, U. S. Public| be somewhere in Montana | Health Nurse, with headquarters in > - | San Franciscso, is registered at the { Baranof Hotel. Purgingof Vichy = .ouivans mecovemne Regime Is Starfe M. (Doc) Hollmann, Juneau | |druggist, who has been suffering from a knife wound allegedly in-| |flicted on him by a sailor, in a | cocktail bar a week ago, is recovering STOCKHOI“:‘" s “‘7Th‘ft§°,“‘an1d was discharged from St. Ann’s IRahs STk WAKIGY . tines a”%_s | Hospital today to return to his the Vichy Government preparatory , —..- . to taking over the Vichy adminis- RS traion, the Zurich correspondent of | TURNED OVER TO MARSHAL the Swedish newspaper Degans, Karl Eugene Gilbertson, arrested Nyheter says, quoting a foreign by the City Police on a disorderly diplomat arriving in Switzerland charge, was turned over to the U from France. S. Marshal's omce lod.x} -os - FROM SKAGWAY Ed Slovinski of Skagway is reg-| istered at the Baranof Hotel. D TRIO FROM SKAGWAY Del O'Hara, O. Lloyd and M. |Hoagland, of Skagway, are guests at the Baranof Hotel. USO COMMITTEE MEET The Committee of Management of the USO will meet tonight at & o'clock in the USO Club. All memi= | | | As seen in \'OCUE Enter Trudy’s School of Color Color is the “glam” thing in campus clothes. It speeds the pulse and fills the date book pronto. Trudy does bright and baby colors in yumm rayon flannel or your adored corduroy. Make a date with your nearest shop to see Trudy's super smooth collection — and let yourself go! the Alhrs He promised a new naval piloted by Gene Jack, developed | anything wit- engine trouble and was forced to | It is my firm fanati- | make an emergency landing on the\ tundra near the Salawik River. The eye by one of the two Eskimos who were making the trip. The plane was equipped with a |radio and calls were sent out to | Kotzebue, but were picked up by the can task force raids similar to those | Alaska Star Airlines in Anchorage |and Platinum, who relayed the mes- sage to Kotzebue. A boat equipped with outboard motor was then sent up. the river to rescue the men, and they were back in Kotzebue six days later. An interesting sidelight on the af- fair was the efforts of Pilot Archie Ferguson, of Alaska Star, who also received the radio message while in the air. He immediately flew over the scene of the crash and dropped | | messages to the natives on the river to send help. After writing out di- rections, it suddenly occurred to him that the natives would not be able | to read what he had wtitten, so he drew ‘a picture of the river with men standing on the bank, and the plane with its wheels in:the air. He also dropped packages of food to the men. Mr. Mize said he would have en- joyed the experience more if they |City Police Court this morning on| Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson . la drunk and disorderly eonduct had had their fishing tackle. - SNOW IN TOWN R. B. Snow of Seattle, employed by the Morrison Knudsen Construc- tion Company, is a guest at the { Baranof Hotel NEW TYPE HAMBURGER WASHINGTON — “Boarburgers” are a new food item in North Af- rica. A Moroccan sheik gave a general a nicely roasted wild boar. The general gave it to the Red Cross. It ended up in a meat- grinder, and was served up to Yan- | Press Silence still shrouds the Ameri- |can activities at Wake Island, for tonnage to the plane turned over, but the only in- [the moment the focal point of the highest level of perfection with all|jury suffered was a gash over the | many tentacled war in the Pacific. The bombardment of Wake, an- nounced Wednesday, can be only fone of two things. It is either a | continuation of a series of Ameri- fon Marshall and Gilbert Islands earlier this fall—or the first step in an attempt to drive the Japanese out of the Central Pagific, ' thus {opening a channel supply line to Ithe Philipines or other actions in the Far Western Pacific and Cen- [tral Pacific campaign. Japanese headquarters made first | mention of the Wake raid today. | The admission said a “powerful” tober 6 and 7 by “aerial ship bom- bardments.” The communique transmitted in English by Domei ended by saying, “The Imperial army and naval 'units on the Island engaged and repulsed the enemy.” - . POLICE COURT FINES I'charge. George E. Purvis was tined '825 on the same chmge CARA NO FOUNDATION CREAM A smoothing, protecting cream that provides need- od lubrication for dry skin and at 4 o time holds face powder on for hours without retouching | Tey it LARGE JAR s'l ‘ ° ASK FOR IT TODAY kee soldiers in the.form of 500 boar- | burgers. - - BUY WAR BONDS | BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. “The Rexall Store” LEFT — Prep school blazer stripes on I-Mtl . Brown ond gold, Yale bl old, nd green siripes. Tw CENTER — Baby scollops on boby fannel. Baby blve, er boby pink, M red, or b"'llh' - groea. Siges 9 10 15, RIGHT — Pinwele cordurey In Rome rod, tur- aveise, russet brown, the hdlulddnbul lopel sizes 9 10 15, o bright copen. See pin. Twe-pieco— $1095 ones-Stevens Seward St. American task force struck, on Oc- | Helen Phillips was fined $15 in Seeks Separation e MRS. CLARE MAPES HATCH, native of Birmingham, Ala., is suing for sep= aration from her husband, Ruther- ford Hatch, grandson of the late Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt. She | charges him with being “abusive”, Mrs. Hatch is asking $100 a week | temporary alimony. (International) | HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Gust Wahto was admitted to St. Ann’'s Hospital yesterday for medical care. C. F. McNutt entered St. Ann's {on Thursday as a medical patient. | | { | Mabel John was admitted to the | Government Hospital yesterday. - | YOUR BROKEN LENSES | Replaced in our own shop. Eyes Blomzrcn Bldg Phone 636, “ New Under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration | 1. Does not rot dresses — does not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Removes odor from perspiration. 4. A pure white, greaseless, stain- less vanishing cream. 6. Arrid has been awarded the Approval Seal of The American Institute of Laundering, for be- ing harmless to fabrics. Arrid is the largest selling deodorant. Try a jar todayl adv, ENROUTE SOUTH Until he secures passage to go to |the States, R. C. Cook, representa- tive® of the National Lead Company, |is staying at the Gastineau Hotel. |He recently was at the Westward on business. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1943 OTICE TO ALL CAR OWNERS Traffic officers will check cars every afternoon on Willoughby Ave. between 2 and 5 p.m. All cars must |be checked before deadline. ] e SR BUY WAR BONDS RAY DAY HERE Ray G. Day, for many years on the mechanical staff of the Empire, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. Day is now with the customs of- fice and makes his home in Skag- way for the present. Note the difference in taste. And it's refreshment that energy — quickly — pleasantly. Coke . » « Coca-Cola. £ * L] well known to the community”. for happiness and satisfaction. body knows Coke. 39}&‘.: jar Also in 59¢ and 10¢ jars hat Bl GimeTil "Boy and girl, recreation and refreshment! There’s two for company and two more 4 3 tefreshment’s first name, of course. Every. e ...You can spot it every time YPECIALIZING in any job is important. And, it takes only one taste of ice-cold Coca-Cola to tell you that its makers have specialized in re- freshment, for years. They created this utterly different drink 57 years ago. Today it’s still individual —and delightfully so. You can sense the special blend of flavors. Sip again. Your thirst is gone before you know it, but some- thing else arrives. This is refreshment. goes into When you’ve finished, you know you’ve enjoyed a drink made to a standard of quality, not to a standard of price. Folks the country over feel the same way about it. They appreci- ate the genuine...the real thing... It's natural for popular names to acquire friendly abbreviations. That’s why you hear Coca-Cola called * Coke. Coca-Cola and Coke mean the same thing the real thing. ..“coming from a single source, and AR A .‘ The best is always the better buy! You know © GOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Juneau Cold Storage Co. — o Only 6 Shopping Days 'Til Christmas For the Men Overseas . . . Yes, October 15 is the deadline set for mailing gifts that will carry your Christmas greefings to your sons, brothers and hus- bands in the fightingforces . . . The store that dressed him in peacetime offers many useful gifts for the man now in uni- form . You are invited to step in and see our complete line of accessories for men in the services. FRED HENNING Complete 0utfitter

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