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PAGE SIX Super Market Starting Monday, October 11, We Will Make Two Deliveries Daily: Morning Delivery 10:30 A. M. ived after 10 A M. go on Afternoon Delivery 3:00 P. M. 0 P. M, go on delivery, received after 2 iay morning’, This includes MEAT ORDERS from HUTCHINGS' ECONOMY MARKET EORGE BROTHER PHONES2 WE DELIVER PHONE 95 Where Service, Price and Quality Meet LARGEST SHIPPERS IN ALASKA! All orders DUFRESNE RETURNS FROM FROLIC HELD AT PETERSBURG (ONFERENCE v <\ o Frank Dufresne, Executive Officer for the Alaska Game Commission First social affair returned last night *on the Grizzly for Juneau High School students was the Junior r Frolic last Bear after a 6 day conference at the Petexsburg with Game Commission evening in the Grade School gym. In charge of refreshments were Pat Chairman, Farl Ohmer. sse! Fleek and Audrey Rude and chair- resne reports that the vesse! y . o man for the affair was Don Pegues eNC red hesvy storms and be- 5 Snooun iR e with the following assisting: Bev- & ather very few ]L.::.s:%ofw";):e m‘:ienu advunu“\v_m of erly Varner, Helen Anderson, Connie 2V ¢ Davis and Douglas Gregg. the open season. f Morrel MacSpadden, Wild Lif2 Agent, accompanied Dufresne on the trip. of the season — e - 16 ARRIVE HERE FROM WEST; Meets; Are to Sponsor Dinner [Ifl/ember3 Marked by a large atiendance, the the regular business meeting of |World Service Circle was held ye | terday afternoon in the Parlors the Northern Light Fresbyteri Church. The devotional was Arriving in Juneau last evening from the Westward were the ‘fol- Jowing: From Anchorage—A. W Fury, Jack Guecker, Edward F. Johnson, Pete Kesovia, Perrin, Charles Petry, Ernest Stender, Ray Stump, Todor Perry Burg M, Vuicich, and John Weil. From Seward—E. W. Hull, Lapold Ohnansen, and Peter N. Swanson. . From Valdez — John Cass and Thomas Armstrong. Leaving early this morning for| Seattle were Elaine H, Foster, Frank | H. Foster, Eli Johnson, George A. Comstock, Gideon A. Apell, Peter J Andrea, Frank E. Wright, Charles T. Batten, George M. Booker, Wil- lard W. King, Roscoe Martin, Fred M. Dorman, William C. Burkholden, led by Mrs, book Green During the hucines: session Society in Fellowship Dinner, sponsoring November 3. JWC TO SPONSO World Service Group! Maj. A. H. George Schmidt fl?ld dl{rmy I:l)e ul‘-.‘ Nick Skoff, ternoon an intrresting 1eview of it was decided to join with the Martha |Jenne. the annual VAUDEVILLE SHOW | SKI CLUB WILL ELECT OFFICERS AT MONDAY SESSION The first meeting of the Juneau 8Ski Club this season will be held iMonday evening at 8 o'clock in the Council Chambers of the City Hall, it was announced today by Presi- dent Curt Shattuck. New officers for the 1943-44 sea- son will be elected, committee ac- tivities last season will be discussed 'and plans will be made for outdoor lactivities which will begin shortly. All persons interested in skiing ind other outdoor activities, whether Ski Club members or not, e welcome to attend the meeting. T Sun.~ MRS. MOI DIES ST. ANN'S HOSP. during which Juneau was 16.75 inches, which was 1658 inches above the normal. |excass of precipitation over the nor- |mal since January 1, neau was 1555 inches. ‘ EARI,Y IODAY AI perature in Juneau for the month X ; degrees taken at the storage gage on Gas- tineau iment of THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA LACK OF SUNSHINE, RAIN APLENTY WAS RECORDED IN SEPT, The weather at the airport com- pared to the normals for the city of Juneau for the month of Sep- tember was c\'der, wetter, and| windier with the sunshine below nor- mal, according to the monthly meteorological report issued by the Juneau Weather Bureau Office lo- cated at the airport The precipitation for September was the second consecutive month the total precipita- tion for the month was fourth on record. The total precipitation for The | 1943 in Ju- The tem- | weraged 51.0 degrees, which is 0.6/ above normal. Records line |of and 27.05 inches near Gastineau Peak for the period clusive. The airport temperature for the month averaged 49.6 degrees, which is 0.8 degrees below the city nor- |mal. The highest temperature re- corded for the month was 62 de- grees on the 25th, and the lowest “empfl';\un'e was 33 degrees on the 1 10th. The coldest September on record |1s that of 1914, with a mean tem- | perature of 47.3 degrees, and the | warmest on record is 1938, with a mean temperature of 54.1 degrees. The extreme high temperature on record for September is 77 degrees, and the lowest temperature is 29 degrees, The total precipitation at the air- port was 11.24 inches, or 1.07 inches above the city normal and 551 be- low the amount recorded in the city for the month. The greatest amount in any 24-hour period was 2.25 inches on the 23rd and 24th. Meas- urable precipitation fell on 26 days of the month, which includes 23 ays with .04 inch or more, 13 days with .25 inch or more, and 3 days Peak indicate a measure- | 23,60 inches at the timber- | Mrs. L. T. Mol, 57, resident of Ju-| neau for many years, died at 3| o'clock this morning at St. Ann’s| Hospital. | The deceased was born in Nor-/ way on May 18, 1886. She is sur- vived by her husband, Lars K. Moj i 1 two daughters, Mrs. Julia Louise | {Rian of Douglas and Marie Sofia | Moi, residing in San Prancisco; and | |one son, Gilbert. K. Moi, now in the United States Army. | Funeral services have been set| for next Thursday morning, Octo- ber 14, at 11 o'clock in the Chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortu- ar The Rev. G. H. Hillerman, | pastor of the Ressurection Lutheran ‘Clzlurh will deliver the eulogy, and !interment will be in the Evergreen | Cemetery. - D SERVICES TUESDAY s FOR MRS. JACKSON Mrs. Lottie Jackson, 68, died yes- terday morning -t the Government Hospital. The .-ceased is survived |by her husband, James Jackson, and one daughter, Mrs, Alice Vav- alis, besides several more distant relatives. The remains are at the Charles W. Carte Mortuary. Funeral services have been set for Tuesday, Oct. 12 at 2 o'clock in the | | Memorial Presbyterian Church. Th2 |Rev. Walter A. Sobolefi will read |the service and interment will be | in Evergreen Cemetery. BPW CLUB WILL | HOLD MEETING MONDAY NIGHT | A business meeting and social will “Who Waik ‘bp held Monday night by the Busi- ' Alone,” was given by Mrs. Hefry |ness and Professional Women'’s Club | |at the Franklin Street residence of !lhe President, Mrs. Crystal Snow i The session will begin at 7 o'clock and all members and those inter-' ested in the club work are invited | to attend. Non-members are re- quested to phone 557 in order that | arrangements may be made tor| their attendance, with 1.00 inch or more. The wet- test September on record is 1924, the top| | September 8 to October 7, 1943, in- with 18.85 inches, and the driest is| 1910 with 1.19 inches. There were no clear days, 3 part- {1y cloudy, and 27 cloudy days at the airport. The total hours of sun- shine recorded was 446 out of a possible 3855 hours. The percent of possible is 12 percent, the normal | for September is 26 percent. Sun- | shine registered on 18 days of the| | month, the highest percent of sun-| shine recorded in one day was 75| percent. The total wind movement at the| airport was 7533 miles, which is an| average of 10.5 miles per hour. The | total wind movement and the aver- age hourly velocity are higher than any on the city record for phis month. The prevailing direction for | the month was east. The maximum | velocity for a 5-minute period was 35 miles from the east on the 28th. The highest wind velocity this| month since 1917 was 39 miles from the northeast in 1934, Light fog was observed at’ the airport on 6, 8, 10, 13, 14, and 15th; moderate fog on the 10 and 14th; dense fog on the 10 and 14; solar halo on the 25th; Tunar halos on the 9, 14, and 15th; and aurora on the 10th. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1943 PROCLAMATION Seventy - three thousand women engaged in business and professions, organized in a National Federation of seventeen hundred clubs in every State and Territory of the Union, will observe their sixteenth annual National Business Women's Week from Monday, October 10 to October 16. The 1943 week is to be devoted to the subject of “Living pon the Hcme Front” and is part of the Federation’s annual program of “Winning the War and the Peace.” Here in Alaska, as elsewhere in the nation where so many men have been drawn off from their usual pursuits into war, the role of our women i$ more important now than ever. It is desirable that they utilize this experience for themselves and for the community. When the war is over, many of these women may give up their present activities to make way for the returning service men. In addition to their professional and business occupations, theirs will in large part be the task of making homes in Alaska and of helping to I build Alaska into a flourishing, pros- | leff. pering, American community Their Sr?sen;‘expetl;ences in new fields will elp them the better t this task. S Although we are deeply engaged in all-out war, our thoughts ‘are already turning to the important problems of the peace, to post-war planning and to reconstruction. Al- aska should increasingly become a community of permanent American homes and permanent residents, which hitherto it has been to a very limited degree. That to a large measure is the task of the women. NOW, THEREFORE, 1, ERNEST GRUENING, Governor of Alaska, do hereby proclaim Monday, October 10 to October 16 as National Business ]Women‘s Week in Alaska. —————— PETERS ¥UNERAL MONDAY | Wilmath Peters, infant daughter |of Mr. and Mrs. Willis Peters, who died on Monday at the family home on Willoughby Ave, is to be buried |In Evergreen Cemetery on Monday | following services at 2 o'clock in the Chapel of the Charles W. Carter | Mortuary. The rites will be con~ ducted by the Rev.“Walter A. Sobo- THIS IS PART OF YOUR PAY CHECK tive today that you want to help win ? Government a regular amount from Frank C. Ward, and John A. Mein- hart. For Ketchikan—John L, McCor- injck; Louis Jacobini, ‘John P: Koto ‘npfi Irvin Bunn. y 1 ; DR BLOCK WILL - . ¢ SPEAK MONDAY AT Hifil H COUNCIL Dr. Berneta Block, Director of Maternal Child Health and Crip- pled Children’s Service, has selected “Adult Health and Its Promotion” as the subject for her speech Mon- day evening at an open meeting of the Gastineau Channel Heallh‘ Council. Scheduled for 8 o'clock, the meet- ing will be held in the Council | Chambers of the City Hall. This is the first in a series of public meetings to be held by the Council. | STOCK QUOTATIONS " NEW YORK, Oct. 9. — Alaska| Junean mine stock closed at 6% at | today’s short session, Anaconda 25%, | Bethlehem Steel 584, Curtiss Wright 7', International Harvester 67!, Kennecott 31, New York Central 18's, Northern Pacific 15%, United States Steel 52';, Pound $4.04. | Dow, Jones averages today are as follows: Industrials, 137.10; 34.84; utilities, 21.38. |the _entertainment line are issued | rails, | | Anyone interested in participating | in a vaudeville show being planred by the Juneau Woman's’ Club. in| the near future, is asked to con- | tact Lillian Uggen,: who will have charge of the affair. | All persons with any talents :n| the: invitation, regardless of whether they are members or connected witt the Juneau Woman's Club. Mrs, Uggen may be interviewed| during the day at the Alaska Musiz Supply. 4 P U S i The Army Service Forces (for- merly Services of Supply) is the organization charged with supply- ing the Army with all services and ‘ SEE THAT GUN Carnegies Have | & 24th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. Carnegic observed their 24th wedding an- niversary yesterday, and said it with flowers at a steak dinner at Mike’s Place in Douglas. Guests at the informal affair were close friends of the couple, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zenger and Mr. and Mrs. Waino Hendrickson. The Carnegies were married on October 8, 1919 in Albany, Oregon.| ‘They later moved to Canada, where they remained until they came to Juneau, where they have lived for | the past ten years. | wol Iv's making things plenty hot for the Axis, Know u;bcn that gun came from? Y ) From the pay checks and pay eave- lopes of people like you. It was bought with the money you lent your Government ia regular installments from your pay. But bold on now— Maybe this isn’t your gun at all. materiel including transportation, keeping personnel records and sup- plying mail service. lof Salem, Oregon. Maybe you haven’t been leading the Mrs. Carnegie’s parents, Mr. and | |Mrs. Henry Bartels are residevltsi ELKS’ | | FRIDAY PRICES Alaska Juneau mine stock closed Friday at 6'c, American Can 85% Anaconda 25%, Bethlehem Steel 57%, Curtiss Wright 7%, Interna- tional - Harvester 67'., Kennecott 30%, New York Central 17'%, Nor- thern Pacific 147, United States Bteel 52%. Dow, Jones averages Friday were as follows: industrials 13674, rails| 34.54, utilities 21.23. ——————— ‘There were 74,704 idle or aban- Admission $ $ doned farms in the United States in 1940. I TONIGHT BOBTEW'S BAND HALL SERVICE MEN - 55¢ 1.00 .10 1.10 SAVE WITH U.S. WAR BONDS EVERYBODY...EVERY PAYDAY... your pay. Maybe you haven’t been setting aside at least 10 percent of your salary and more if you can for War Bonds! You can’t make ment— There are still some people around who aren’t ; : ; not many—but it’s just possible that you’re one of them. pledty. e If you are, we’re sure it's not for want of patriotism, but because you just haven’t quite got arouad to it. e R e i 5 Tell your boss or shop representa- This advertisement is a contribution fo Almerica‘s all-out war effort by by putting it into War Bonds. the war by joining the Pay-roll Savings Plan, - Tell him you want to save &t least 10 percent of every pay check & better investe Yowll be buying the wespons that fnsure a future of freedom, peace and You'll be getting back $4 for every $3 you save when the bonds mature. Mabhes sense, doesn’t it? THEN—START TODAY! AT LEAST10% oot SAN JUAN FISHING and PACKING COMPANY