The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 14, 1944, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA l:MPth-—JUNI;AU ALASKA Holzheimer Announces " His Resignation from U.S. Atforney's Post last night on the northbound steam- \er. FRIDAY, JANUARY |4 H:EIIRE_ !?‘Mo,?nmet ‘ The Sewing Basket Low tide—11:0 a. m., 4.2 feet. BABY HEADQUARTERS figh tide— 4:48 High tide P: 1, Infant and Children's Wear Low tide—11:18 p. m., 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska 'Darnells Return From 2 Months’ Trip in States BATAAN CAFE Genuine Chow Mein Chop Suey COME ONE -———COME ALL! 3 141 feet. | 1.7 feet. | CARA NOME MASQUE Give yourself"a party- ick-up or a day's end facial with this cream-like Following a two months’ combined business and pleasure trip Outside Hotel Juneaun For Comfort At Lowest Rates ROOMS WITH BATH or WITHOUT BATH 289 So. Franklin Street Open All Night The Darnells encountered no [travel troubles on their extensive | trip, and reported the heaviest travel in the Southern States and on the | Pacific Coast. They found the Souih |teeming with industrial and ship- building actiyity, rivalling that of Lan,\' part of the United States. | Ten days were spent with M {Darnell’s’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. {H. Damell in Tennessee. The latter had just celebrated their golden | wedding anniversary with six of their ten children present for the happy event, and both are enjoying the best of health. Christmas was spent with Mrs. Dar- 1ts at Mobile, Alabama there they met and talked Frank Boykin, Congressman from Alabama, who has been in | Alaska and is a great booster for | the Territory. At Ball Game Returning to the West Coast, Mr. | and Mrs. Darnell attended the East- West football game in San Francisco |on New Year's Day. In spite of the score ending in a tie, the game was | thrilling, they reported, and very colorful, with 46 bands participating | | at the event | Rotary clubs in the various cities | { were visited by Mr. Darnell, includ- |ing a talk with Past District Gov- | ernor of Rotary Marshall Cornett land his wife. While stopping in at ithe Rotary Club in Vancouver. | Washington, Mr. Darnell encoun- |tered District Governor Robert vChevne The latter divulged plans | for a visit to Alaska on official busi- | ness in the early spring. Meet Alaskans The travelers met many Alaskans ~ |and others well known in the Ter- ritory on their journey including Mary Council in Washington, Bill Bates, John Hellenthal, Jr., in San Francisco, Pvt. Ben Mullen in New | York Ci and Mr. and Mrs. Alf ORDER YOUR RABBIT SKINS Most Cenvenient Loeation —THIRD AND MAIN— NOW | Owner-Mgr., Clarence Wise ‘Tanned, cleaned and alt 1 ready to make up. i mask that helps, by stim- ulsting facial circula- tion, to LARGE smoot stralty: Binep S0r 4 and make . your skin | alow. GET IT TODAY AT l BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. | “The Rexall Store” | —— | HURRY! ® VALCAUDA FUR COMPANY SEATTLE, WASHINGTON THE ATCO LINE Alaska Tramsportatien Company - SAILINGS® FROM PIKK ¢ SEATTLE ® Pertect comfort ® Centrally located ® Bplendid food and service ® Large Rooms all with Bath ALASKANS LIEE THR ksl 2w WASHINGTON ] " { nell’s While | with Fine rayons and cottons ™ BARANOF Alaska’s Largest Apartment Hotel + EVERY ROOM WITH TUB and SHOWER L PASSENGER® FREIGHT REFPRIGERATION L $1.25—$1.95 lomnaflo Rates Phone 800 BUY WAR BONDS D. B. FEMMER—AGENT NIGHET 813 PHONE 114 WILLIAM A. HOLZHEIMER f William A. Holzheimer, United | States Attorney for the First Divi- sion since 1983, today announced that he has sent in his resignation from that position and will retire | from that field of Government serv- ice as soon as his successor has been seated in office. But “Bill” Holzheimer, well-known here in the North!” A graduate of the University of Michigan's School of Law, Holz- | heimer entered Alaska in 1915, set- | ting up a law office in Juneau in the Goldstein Building. On January | Monsen in Seattle 1, 1917, he was appointed Assistant tr. and Mrs. Darnell are very | U. S. Attorney for this Division. and glad to be back in Juneau, and spoke went to Nome in October of the |appreciatively of the mild weather. B M Behends Ca QAUUITY SINCE 1887 ’1am what practices and procedures Inre required to safeguard the fun- JUNEAU to ANCHORAGE RF. SINKBEI[ 5| APPOINTED TO NEW | ‘ POSITION, AlASKA CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 14—R. Fred- erick Sinkbeil, M-H-K, Skagway,| Alaska, has been appointed Alaska | Chairman of the Junior Bar Con-»‘ ference by National Chairman James P. Economos of Chicago. ‘This is the only national organiza- tion of young lawyers and is the largest section of the American Bar Association, | The State Chairman directs and | supervises all Conference ncflvity' within his state and cooperates with the state and local bar associations. The 1943-44 program is closely re- lated to the war effort and will be maintained despite the fact that| over 2,000 of its members are serv- | ing in the armed forces. The re- maining members are determined | to carry out its program which includes plans for legal assistance to the armed forces and post-war planning for the speedy rehabilita- tion and readjustment of members | returning from military service, Equally important is its program | to iumprove the nation’s traffic courts in physical appearance, to secure better trained.personnel, and to increase their effectiveness so as | 10 prevent a breakdown in traf- fic law enforcement which is so im- portant to conserving motor vehicles | for war transportation and saving | manpower for warpower. The major | wartime traffic court problems in-| clude (1) a disproportionately large | percentage of traffic violations by | war workers; (2) cooperation With| ment committee is composed of | to military authorities as to vielations | committed by service men and (3) | increased violations by juvenile de- ' linquents and drunken drivers. ! Special attention will also be de-| voted to a nation wide survey of | Administrative Tribunals to ascer- damental rights of the citizen. Mr. Sinkbeil is formerly of Grand Island, Nehraska. 'U. 5. PUBLIS HEALTH ENGINEER IN JUNEAU Garett Sloan, who is & past’ Assist- ant Sanitary Engineer with the U. | S. Public Health Service, has ar- |rived here and is enroute to the Inteuor with headguarters to be established at Anchorage. Mr. Sloan has spent the past 18 | months on the Alaska Highway in connection with Public Health sani- tation, with headquarters at Ed- monton. In Juneau for a few days to fam- iliarize himself with the procedure of the department, Mr. Sloan will leave shortly for Mnchorage, where his duties will entail the responsibil- ity for all sanitary activities in the Interior. Mr. Sloan is accompanied by his wifé and while in this city they are | guests at the Baranof Hotel. Social Affair of Moose Women to Be Held Tomorrow The Women of the Moose will hold their social and initiation tomorrow night, December 15, beginning at| 8:15 o'clock at the Moose head- | quarters. The social committee chairman for the affair is Iva Hermanson, assisted by Mary Haas | and Helen Hildre. The entertain- | Ethel Colvin, | Myrtle Lind. - SONS OF NORWAY Bonnie Viland and | Card Party Sacurday evening at C R EOM U Ls I o N 8 o'clock, I.O.OF. Hall. adv.| throughout the Territory since he | arrived here in 1915, has no thought of retiring from the field of public service. He plans to take a short trip to the States as soon as the new United States Attorney takes over, then will return to Juneau | where he will re-enter the field of private practice at law. Y Oldtimers will recognize from the | o foregoing - that Holzheimer's faith | o in the Territory of Alaska remains | just as strong today as it did 21 |84 years ago. At that time, Judge | William A. Holzheimer had ]ush finished four years on the bench as | United States District Judge for the | Second Division at Nome. That was the year the Republicans slid in. | Holzheimer was then, still is, one of the best Democrats the Territory has. At that time, a few wishful-think- | ing Republicans had passed the word | around that Bill Holzheimer was go- | ing back to the States. A story printed in the Daily Alaska Empire | on. January 6, 1922, carried the fol- lowing statement: “I have no intention of quitting Alaska. I did not come to Alaska in | the first place as a ‘carpetbag’ of- | ficial, and now that my connection i with officialdom is at an end, I expect to resume the practice of law and do everything possible to |aid in the building of a great State | How To Relieve Bronchitis | Creomulsion relieves premptly be- cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel | germ laden phlegm, and aid nature soothe and heal raw, tender, in- | lamed bronchial mucous mem- branes. Tell your druggist to sell you | a bottle of Creomulsion with the un- | derstanding you must like the way it | quickly allays the cough or you are | | to have your money back for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis same year as Judge. | resumed private Ketchikan, returning to Juneau in | 11933 to take his present position |Stops Perspiration !in the States, bliz in Tennessee. After four years on the bench, he including a law practicé in Relief for Miseries of — e . . . B . WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. Bureau) ‘ ose Va-tro-nol up each nostrll It (1) shrinks swollen mem- branes, (2) soothes irritation, and (3) helps clear cold-clog- ¢,~r ged nasal passages. Follow complete di- rections in folder. Temp. Thursday Jan. 13 Maximum 41; Minimum 31 Rain .27 *~tevesoe YOUR BROKEN LENSES jprasst | Replaced In our own shop. Eyes | Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson | lomgren Bldg. Phone 636. adv. New Under-arm Cream Deodorant! safely bor‘u real winter weather was seen | d | This Style $5.95 Many fine bargains still left in a_wide variety of DRESSES and SUITS at Jones-Stevens Seward Street We Appreciate Pan American Airways appreciates the patience and understanding of our friends in Alaska at this time when every passenger and every 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, g m(m stain- less vanishing crea 6. Arrid has been ;\wnrdd the Approval Seal of The American Institute of Laundering, for be- ing harmless to fabrics. Arrid is the largest selling deodorant. Try a jar today! ARRID. 39 Faiar Aloin’59¢ and 10¢ jars priority. Alaska. PAN AMERIC ounce of cargo is subject to military After Victory, Pan American will pioneer new standards of service for IV AIRWAYY BRINGING UP FATHER - S e NOW WHAT HAVE | DONE OR WUZ | SUPPOSED TO DO SOMETHING? I JUST RECEIVED A LETTER FROM OUR SON-THEY ARE GOING TO GIVE A PLAY AT HIS CAMP AND HE IS JUNEAU'S NEWEST EATING ESTABLISHMENT SMAILY—ANDY FONG Proprietors DINE ‘“TROPICS’”’ AND DANCE By GEORGE McMANUS TOO BADIT ISN'T THE PART OF A SINGLE MAN -— THEN HE'D HAVE A SPEAKIN' PART / LISTEN-HE IS | TO PLAY THE PART OF A MAN THAT'S IT'S GITTIN' LATE- MAGGIE-AN' IT'S GITTINT 'COLD OUT HERE -KIN T COME IN NOW? OPEN ALL NIGHT LOCATED OPPOSITE JUNEAU COLD STORAGE Serving Both Chinese and American DISHES VIA YAKUTAT and CORDQVA CONNECTIONS TO Valdez * Kuskokwim Nome Bristol Bay and Yukon Points PHONE 667 Fairbanks Kodiak Office Baranof Hotel Woodley Airways JUNEAU ANCHORAGE Via YAKUTAT and CORDOVA Connections to ALL INTERIOR Alaska Points Lockheed Arrives Juneau 2:00 P.M. Electra Leaves Juneau 2:30 P.M. Tuesday-Friday FOR RESERVATIONS ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Phone 612 Agents Juneau ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska——Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican $18 $18 18 18 18 10 18 10 10 Haines and Skagway—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Haines Bkagway Juneau $18.00 $20.00 Skagway 10.00 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 6oc Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% Excursion Inlet—Scheduled Daily at 9 A, M. Juneau Hoonah Excursion Inlet $15.00 $10.00 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c SCHEDULED TUESDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell i Juneau ... Petersburg Wrangell Express : 25¢ M pound—Minimum of $1.00 to Ketchikan Express Rate: 10c per pound—Minimum of 60c to Petersburg and Wrangell Above rates applicable when passenger traffic Change Without Notice. EE—]

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