Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
YEARS OF WARMTH IN THESE SMART NEW TOPCOATS... Coat that are i fabrics that ke a millior 100 pe not only ve got them, all ready weather w cent wocl and woven wear, but look we're ng to a complete selec- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA fW P.BOARD OFFICEOPENS - ATLIGHT (0. | Norman C Stines‘ Area Repre- sentative for the War Production |Board in Alaska, is in Juneau and |announces completion of arrange- ments with the Alaska FElectric Light and Power Company whereby he will open his office in the dis- MONDAY ANUARY 3, 1944 Mrs, E. N. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. | Joseph Lawton, M. O. Johnson and Nell Couch. Tle vessel left for Skagway ear Saturday morning with the follow- ing passengers for Skagway-—Mrs, Bemis, N. Bates, J. G. Cook, Evelyn Deane, E. Giovanetti, Mrs. N. S Honor, Charlotte Horn, A. R. Hil , John Homethko, John Lund, ammy Nelson, Mrs. Sammy Nelson, | andra Nelson, Sheila Nelson, Mrs. | Edna Poiley, R. J. Schoettler, Ken- One Hundred Sixty-fhree ", i ip e searm- | Known Survivors, Many - &..."5" Savard sronon Suffering from Burns BLAST TAKES PLACE EARLY: THIS MORNING The Sewing Basket BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska Hotel Juneau For Comfort At Lowest Rates ROOMS WITH BATH or Johnson, Howard Erick- Martin, V. G. Sontag, Robert Hutchins, Robert M, son, C. J. Charles Tuckett, BATAAN CAFE Genuine Chow Mein Chop Suey COME ONE ———COME ALL! . 289 So. Franklin Street Open All Night ol i il ORDER YOUR WITHOUT BATH Most Convenient Location cheviots, coverts, tweeds W. A. Anderson, Harold Sommers, Frank Hamilton, N. S. Hornor, Mrs play room of the company’s head- (Continued trom Page One) quarters. - RABBIT SK!!IS both Michaels-Stern and 1944 styles. from $45 Winter Suits . . . Yow that Chr of your winter wardrobe it yeu need of Michaels les—every s everything to be had at the price stmas is past among the take stock You'll find that large selection and Hickey-Freeman representing the best of to fulfill a promise of long seasons of service from $49,75 will be missed in Douglas, and it is regretted than he cannot finish the Channel League Series. —————— TO NEW JOBS Grant P. Logan and Arthur Wes- |ton are leaving for Excursion Inlet today, for the winter. Logan is a steel beginning at 8 o'clock. Mrs. Thelma Engstrom will be Installing Matron for the Stars, with Roberta John- con as Installing Marshal, and | Alex Sey Installing Chaplain. Glen Kirkham will be Installing Master HEALTH CLINIC TOMORROW | f0r Masons, with Alex Sey as Mar- Tomorrow afternoon, January 4v5h“1 and District Deputy Grand o+ Well Baby Conference will be|Master, District No. 3, Howard Stab- 3 3 ler as Chaplain. i held in the Public Schools. Terri-| " worker and Weston's trade is pipe torial Helath Nurse will be Helen| All Stars, Masons, visiting mem-| g0, . | bers and families are invited to at- ohnson, who is relieving Mrs. Frey, | - — former nurse tend the affair. Each member is ot oo meroma |t e e e *| Franees Cooper Is MarriedonDec.29 | Lee Grant, who has been on va- | SCHOOL TODAY Christmas | | cation with his family here for After enjoying their ToC.P.Nevenheim DOUGLAS NEWS Ty b UL ST several months, is returning to Ex- cursion Inlet today. He will be|vacation, Douglas students are re-| Superintendent of a gravel project | turning to their studies today | AL BN there. —— | TO JOIN FAMILY Frances Cooper, first grade E. S, F. & A. INSTALLATION| John Asp, player on the Douglas| teacher in the Juneau grade school The Order of Eastern Star, Nug- | Huskie basketball team, is leaving| Was married on December 29 to get Chapter 2, and the Gastineau|for the South on the next steamer. C. P. Nevenheim of Ketchikan. The! Lodge 124 F. & A. Masons will hold /He will join his parents, Mr. and wedding took place in that city at| a joint installation of officers to-|Mrs. Sam Asp, who are spending the Presbyterian parsonage, and morrow evening in the Eagles Hall, the winter monms in Seattle. John|was performed by the Rev. Hall. v ~———— |Attendants were Marian Lang,| | kindergarten teacher of Juneau, and | 0. POLICE COURT FINES Bob Phaleen was fined $30 and |given a 5-day suspended sentence | | this morning in the City Police | Court on a charge of being Grunk | and disorderly. Bob Bentillo Carlos | was fined $25 on a disorderly con- duct charge. ——— |tion was held at the home of Mr.! The bride is the daughter of Mr. of Sioux Falls, North Dakota. They| EXTRA FANCY ‘vthe Office of Price Administration They will make their home in mn(l Mrs. Ernie Lunbeck, where the and Mrs. J. W. Cooper of Roaring |met in Casper, Wyoming, where HOME STYLE PEACHES in the First City, and his bride will | Kétchikan. SEE BERT'S FIRST FOR FINER FOODS! where they will be employed | The regular office hours will be from 9:30 to 11:30 o'clock in the forenoon and from 2 to 4 o'clock in the aftewrioon, each week day. Mr. Stines also announced that ap- pointments may be secured for in- terviews otitside of the regular office hours by those who find it incon- venient to contact him during the specified time. He may be reached either at his office in the fight com- pany or at the Baranof Hotel. With headquarters in this city for the next two months, Mr. Stines will also make brief trips to Ket- chikan, Wrangell, " Petefsburg and Sitka, where priority problems and civilian requirements will be ironed out. Well acquainted with the Terri- tory and its problems, Mr. Stines first came to Alaska during the Gold Rush Days. He later returned to Alaska as an employee of the United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company, opening their dredging property at Nome in 1922. From 1924 to 1927 he was in Fair- banks for the company, opening the large dredging opcrations there. In between residences in Alaska, Stines took in most of the world From 1909 to 1919 he wes in Russia, representing some of the. Jargest mining companies operating copper, steel, coal, zinc and lead properties He lived in Leningrad throughout the various revolutions, From 1922 to 1924 he was mining in Ontario and from 1935 to 1939 he was in South America in Col- ombia, Bolivia, Peru and Equador, operating gold properties. He re- turned to the United States again _ in 1939 and remained until hée join- ed the staff of WPB. -, JOHN D. BISHOP LEAVES SUNDAY ON BUYING TRIP John Doyle Bishop, mang, B. M. Behrends dry goodls d !ment, left by steamer yesterday morning on a six-week buying trip to the States. He plans to leave the boat at Vancouver, traveling across to Tor- {onto and then down to Rochester, ! Minnesota, where he will look into the spring line of men's wear at the Hickey-Freeman and Michaels- Stern companies. From there he will travel to New York to cover as much of the mar- ket in ready-to-wear and other | dry goods as time will allow. From there he will go to Chicago in time to catch the new lines of stock in that city, then down to St. | Louis for shoes. From St. Louis, Mr. Bishop will travel to Los Angeles, where he will place orders for the new sport clothes and other California fash- ions, coming home by way of San Francisco, Portland ahd Seattle.. | R s R NOTICE The Alaska Laundry will closédts | plant and office during Tuesday and | Wednesday of this week to finich | work now in the plant, No persqnal laundry or dry cleaning wili we weu- ed for or accepted during these two days. —adv. r200LD§ from developing Put a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol up each nostril at the very first s‘g. sneeze or sign of nasal irritation. Jts quick action aids , ’ Nuuu's detenaes VICKS RU " WAR BO\DS i Tolder, VATRO-NOL N. 8. Hornor, C. H. Peterson, George | J. Brown, and Mrs. Edna Polley. B MRS. WALLIS GEORGE Tl Third Naval District gave this deseription of the explosion “All communications of the; ship disrupted. ‘The mast toppled, | the bridge buckled and collapsed. AND MAYDELLE LEAVE Cne barrel forward of the 5-inc X | gun went whirling, through the air.| Mrs. Wallis George, accompanied | § There was no disorder. Fire com- py her daughter, Maydelle, left yes- | panies were orgehized after the terday by steamer for an indefinite blast and engineers kept the No. 1 yisit in the States. boiler on the left at work to keep > - up light, power and steam. HERE FROM ANCHORAGE “The ship was ablaze forward, Here from Anchorage, . Eleanor | and on the bridge. Fire fighters oman is registered at the Baranof. could get no closer than No. 1 stack.” Survivors said the destroyer seem- ed to break in two under No. 2 gun turret. The Coast Guard went to the scene. One Coast Guard ship nosed to the side of the ship and ran lines aboard and aided sur- vivors to get aboard the rescue Creomulsion relieves prompt! be- sel. The fire aboard the de-! cause it goes right to the seat of the | stroyér waB folighb Bl 7066 o, ’;?,’;;.,,E“’ e E‘R{’n&‘l’x’fié when the ship was ordered aband-| to soothe and heal raw, tender, in«| oned and she went down soon after.| flamed bronchial mucous mem= S e branes. Tell your druggist to sell you | 1 E 4 bottle of Creomulsion with the un- FROM SKAGWAY; 46 —THIRD AND MAIN— Owner-Mgr., Clarence Wise S SEATTLE ® Periect comfort e Centrally located . © Splendld food and F. B. service u.;c]'u‘ ® Large Rooms— Mgr. all with Bath ALASEANS LIEEK THER {mnAnANm«‘ Mlaska's Largest Apartment * EVERY ROOM WITH TUB and srgovma Reasonable Rates * derstanding you must like the way it 1 quickly allays the cough or you are ' to have your money back. CREOMULSION | for Coughs, Chest Colds, Fwnchms | BOUND FOR SOUTH \ ! Passengers embarking for the ) South from Juneau yesterday were: for Seattle — Maurice McDonell, \5 va McDonell, Maurice McDonell, | r., Ervin Walker, Ruby V. Walker, ' s "/I:u'v E. Walker, Fred Walker, Dor- othy Mars Mae F. McFall, Sarah Lee Atkinson, Emma D. Langseth, Ardys Stiles. | Wilbert H. Sievers, Betty McCor- mick, Laurel Martinsen, Duane S.| Martin, Erma J. Martin, Zola Dev- lin, Josephine Staples, John L. Asp, Ruti M. Gudbranson, Ella Coker, B. L. Mynatt, Harry J. Naiman, and Lawrence Motley. For Vancouver—Marian McDonell, Maurice McDonell, Mrs. Wallis George, Maydelle George, John Bishop, Stanley Grummett, Leota R. Smith, Bess Winn, and Joseph D. O'Leary. For Ketchikan—Mr. and Mrs. J V. Hawkins, Mrs. F. Pettygrove, Joseph F. Stevens, and Frank Mar- shall. For Wrangell—Pearl Loft, Walter Turner, Mrs. John Brantar, Mr. and | R 4 Spfelafire i SAMPLER 133 the famous assortment of best-liked confections . . . here direct from the makezs - $1.50 w0 $7.50. BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO.| | “The Rexall Store™ s i Passengers to Alaska That is the 1942 record of Pan Amer- ican Airways’ Alas] ka Service. But every passenger is now priorited by the Armed Forces, importance to the war effort. When Victory is won, we will pio- neer new standards of service for our friends in Alaska. PAY EMTERICAN selected for his AIRAE Y |Ernie Lunbeck. Following the ceremony, a recep-| 'many friends of the young couple | c s “ G R o c E Y lcalled to wish them happiness. | . | pnngx Texas, and the bridegroom NEW YEAR SPECIAL |:soimi oo ™s ithe bride was teaching. My, Nevenheim is associated with M Jjoin him there in about two weeks, arge 'Ins ,at the close of the first semester. L] —e—— 12 @ns$4.59 BY GOLLY- IT'S I'VE BEEN WANTIN' ER TO DO THIS F A LONG TIME # 1 Copr. 1913, King Features Syndicate. Inc, World rights. rescrved 1318 | HOP! MORE - THE THERE'S ISHES IN ANTRY - ME TIME AN’ I'M GONNA SPEND ALL THE PARLOR-1 HOPE THAT MAGGIE MAKES HER VISIT TO HER MOTHER FOR TWO WEEKS INSTEAD OF ONEY RIGHT HERE IN ESTABLISHMENT SMAILY—ANDY FONG Proprietors EAU'S NEWEST EATING é ‘ T R o P ' c SI 7 DINE AND DANCE OPEN ALL N IGHT : LOCATED OPPOSITE JUNEAU COLD STORAGE Serving Both Chinese and American DISHES Phone 800 e 3 BUY WAR BONDS NOwW . Tanned, cleaned and all ready to make up. VALCAUDA FUR COMPANY SEATTLE, WASHINGTON THE ATCO LINE Alaska Tramsportaties €Company L SAILINGS FROM PIRE ¢ GEATTLE PASSENGERE FREIGHT ARPRIGERATION D. B. FEMMER—AGENT}., PHONE 114 ALASKA ATRLINES JUNEAU to ANCHORAGE . VIA YARUTAT and CORDOVA CONNECTIONS TO Fairbanks Kodiak Valdez Nome Kuskokwim Bristol Bay and- Yukon Points Office Baranof Hotel PHONE 667 Woodley Airways JUNEAU— ANCHORAGE Via YAKUTAT and CORDOVA Connections to ALL INTERIOR Alaska Points Lockheed Arriyes Juneau 2:00 P.M. Electra Leaves Juneau 2:30 P.M. Tuesday-Friday FOR RESERVATIONS ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Phone 612 Agents Juneau ’—————-_ AL ASKA COASTAL AIBLINES Serving Southeast Alaska——Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican $18 18 18 18 18 10 10 $10 10 10 10 18 10 Hoonah .. 10 !hn- T 10 5 Pel- $18 !# 18 18 18 $18 18 10 10 Haines and Skagway—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Juneau Express Rate: 10 cel Haines $18.00 10.00 Skagway $20.00 per pound—Minimum Charge 60c Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% Excursion Inlet—Scheduled Daily at 9 A. M. Excursion Inlet Juneau Hoonah $10.00 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c SCHEDULED TLESDAYWand ;{‘HURSDAY Juneau ... ‘Wrangell $30.00 Express Rate: 25c per m—llnhn-mo!ll.o.u Express Rate: uownnd—llhlnlnolmhrm and Wrangell " Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants. Schedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notiocs.