The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 27, 1944, Page 6

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[ beans, ete PAGE SIX Other articles to be on display SPRING CONCERT |5 1 e o s FIVE FLIGHTS FOR lection of dolls from any lands will |prove of interest, as well as the | quilt display. The Alaska Coastal Airlines yes-| The annual Spring Concert pre- A fortune telling booth will be in terday made five trips to various sented by the Juneau High School operation during the afternoon and points. A charter trip was made Music Department under the direc- | evening. to Warm Springs for Mr.rand Mrs. tion of Merle Janice Pitts will be The public is invited during the Corbett Shipp, and another flight an event of Friday evening, begin- | afternoon and evening, to avail'was made, carrying Harold Bates ning at 8 o'clock in the high school | themselves of the opportunity to to Skagway. On the return trip auditorium. A cordial invitation is purchase their evening snack, and | the plane brought Sammy Tuyada, extended the public to attend partake of the club’s hospitality, be- | Dean Stony and Jimmie Claire to Following is the complete pro- fore attending the high school con- | Juneau. gram cert which begins at 8 o'clock in! A flight was made to Sitka with| August Burns, Rokprt Schoettler | and E. C. Lincoln as passengers. The Riff Song singing Debs Bells of Saint Mary's March of the Musketeers Tramp, Tramp, Tramp ....... Eight Balls Modern Harmonies— Trombone: Buddy Hunter Guitar: Doug Gregg Dark Eyes Russian Folk Song Indian Love Call .. Friml-Lawrence When, Day Is Done [ 3 . Katcher-Lawrence Girls' Glee Club If My Song Had Wings Nevin | S. Swanson and N. G. I Want to Be Ready..Negro Spiritual 1 Airways plane |Adams to Excursion Inlet. Girls’ Glee Club {attle, bringing Hawley A. Dudley back from Sitka, Eoff Philemonoff, The Sleep that Flits on Baby's Bellingham and W. L. Freeburn, from Hawk Inlet. Chorus Lockwood to Fairbanks, where he|Victor Sanipson and Nanvy Fulton. The Boys Morrison-Kfiudsen Company. Two flights were made today to dollars in war contracts for the | Kelsey, and Robert Claire. A sec-| |noon by Fred Birch to take THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA - with Major D. M. Beebe, Mrs. Wal- | ter Soboleff, Mrs. W. P. mrlanon‘ and Henry Moy to Sitka while Paul | Beirly disembarked at Hawk Inlet Joe Green and P. P. Pittenger were flown to Haines this morning and T. R. Story, Mrs. Mitchell an Joseph Romberg continued to Skag- way. John Marin returned with the plane to Juneau. A plane was chartered this fore- him to Petersburg. ' RecentBride Honored At Glassware Shower - JUNEAU WITHOUT POWER FOR HALF HOUR YESTERDAY A record of twenty-two and .a half months uninterrupted power service was broken here yesterday afternoon when the power line in the Sheep Creek Basin went out of commission. The cause is yet unknown, said Homer Nordling, chief of the A. J. power plant. Housewives in the act of prepar- g the evening meal were stopped in their tracks, and numerous ad- resses groped through the darkness to wait on the customers. The break came at about 5 o'clock, and power was again restored half an hour later. No great inconvenience was caused, although the Fire Depart- ment was called to the Baranof Coffee Shop to cope with a range which back-fired when the power came on. coming there from Holdingford, Minnesota, according to advices re- ceived here by the Rev. G. Herbert Hillerman of the Lutheran Resur- rection Church in Juneau. The Rev. Nygaard is married and the couple has two children, one seven months old and the other four years of age. pf The Rev. Nygaard was born in Norway. He is a graduate of the THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1944 Augsburg College and Northwest Seminary, Minneapolis. He has spent a year at a pastorate in Prince Rupert, B. C. 3§ — The Royal Netherlands Marine Corps, senior among the sea-going soldier services of the United Na- tions, dates to 1665. e BUY WAR BONDS NEW LUTHERAN MINISTER, SITKA The Lutheran Church congrega- Honoring Mrs. Gllbert Schultz |, iments had to be made in the | tion at Sitka will soon have a new whose marriage to Lt. (j.g.) Gilbert | Lyman Schultz was solemnized | Monday in the parsonage of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, a buffet-supper and glassware shower | | was given Saturday evening at the Gold Street home of Miss Kathleen McAlister. Miss Charlene Arnold was co-hostess ftr the occasion. Invited to attend were Mesdames Helen McAlister, Sarah Spear, Helen Bond and the Misses Caroline Mc- Alister and Esther Commet. i’he Wings of the World’s Greatest TRAVEL SYSTEM Contact Al Pierce, Empress Building, Fairbanks, Alaska, or any locsl Airlines office. Salutation Gaines | the high school auditorium Balloons in the Snow Boyd " T SRR Girls’ Glee Club Coming back were Frank Kelly, Hahn pAN AMERI(A" IN Norvel Nelson, W. T. Pege, Bob The Rosary |Hays and Tony Marsh. Venetian Love Song Nevin YESIERDAY wITH | Outgoing passengers to Hawk In- Chorus let were FOUR PASSENGERS Myers, while Auxenty Stippitent| I Waited for the Lord.Mendelssohn TN went to Funter Bay, and A. C. Solos: Thelma McCorkle and | A Pan Amer! The re-| Mary Hoffman flew into Juneau yesterday Trom Se- | turn flight carried Harold Johnson | The Butterfly Grieg |l and Kenneth T. Atwell, engineers Raphiel Galmin, Alfay Melovidor, Piano solo: Lily Ann Maurstad | for the Austin Company. Other pas- and Alexander Malavasky from | Bells in the Rain Mead | sengers were Charles A. Adams from | Funter Bay, and Johnson Johnson | Eyes Carpenter | owner and manager of the Sitka| Passengers going to Sitka yester-| Singing Debs ! Fish Company day morning were L. Freeburn,! Immortal Song. Tschaikowsy-Gaines | Ap outgoing plane carried Floyd | Peter Ouspigoff, Alex Medovida, We Sail the Ocean Blue will work for the Alaska Road Com- Returning were Carl Johnson, John Gilbert-Sullivan | mission, and Lowry J. Bjerknes to | Luota, Tom Morgan, Fred L. Burns | Romberg | the northward on business for the and R. J. Schoettler. Giannina Mia Friml - - |sitka, the first one carrying as pas-| Softly as in a Morning Sunrise Changing war needs have forced sengers Grace Tringali, Lola 'a| Rombes | cqycellation of nearly two billion|Pointe, Harry ', Hopewell, Samuel | A;:::‘: automotive industry. ond flight was made this afternoon Herbert - [y X Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Paper Doll Black Everyone Semper Fidelis Flute: Dale Roff Chorus Star Spangled Banner— Everyone Sousa Notice: JWC Art Exhibit | VICTORY Be Held Tomorrow GARDENERS One of the main attractions to be | # s : Our entire farm land will be plotted in large seen at the art exhibit on display tomorrow afternoon in the social e DAFIEES Gf (e MigEiplie: ORATCD Wil | enough plots for large families to farm. Please contact Fred Geeslin in the Federal Building for your plot. be a fine collection of native handi- work from the Arts and Crafts De- partment of the Office of Indian Affairs, including genuine Chilkat blankets. | The exhibit, together with a food | sale and tea, is being held as one | of the final undertakings this season ; by the Juneau Woman'’s Club, and will be held between the hours of 2:30 and 9 o'clock tomorrow after- noon and evening. The food sale, in charge of Mrs. D. W. Herron and Mrs. Frank Mdrshall, will feature' a variety of home prepared dishes, in- cluding cakes, pies, rolls, baked PHONE— WRITE—WIRE US YOUR ORDER EORGE BROTHER Dedicated to Victory The Alaska Transportation Company is proud of the part its fleet and its personnel are taking in the winning of the war . . . the needs of the armed forces will continue to have first call on our facilities and 100 per cent of our cooperation. We are not unmindful of the friendships built through the years of serving Alaska . . . are bending every effort toward maintaining a dependable service for these old friends . . . and looking toward the days of peace when an augmented fleet and a highly trained organization will render service to the Alaska of tpmorrow in a bigger and better way. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION CO. SEATTLE 1, WASH,, Pier 7, MAin 7477 TACOMA, WASH,, Perkins Bldg., MAin 0840 D. B. FEMMER, Agent, JUNEAU streak of We know fight ahead. of Peace. This is all Unless it Unless it won. IN NEARLY ALL Americans there’s a row. We know there may be a long hard But we can’t help looking forward to the beautiful and wonderful-seeming days to win the war . . . menu. In the restaurants the wait- | pastor, the Rev. Ernst H. Nygaard, Best and Freshest LOCAL EG GS O¢ Dozen NOW AT Preely wicely Many New ltems—Ask Our Clerks $2.00 Minimum Orders to be in before 1 P. M. In order to conserve manpower, gasoline, rubber and eguipment, we have only one delivery each day, Call — Phones 16 or 24 natural optimism. the war won'’t be over tomor- O'CEDAR POLISH 0'CEDAR WAX JOHNSON WAX MOP STICKS MOP FILLERS MOPS 0'CEDAR DUST MOPS EBer CASH GRO Clean-Up Specials - $.30 1.29 0'CEDAR LIGUID WAX JOHNSON GLO-COAT AND MANY OTHERS WAXER FOR RENT TWODELIVERIES DAILY 10:15 A, M.—2:15 P. M. MINIMUM DELIVERY $2.50 'FINER FOODS ALWAYS AT BERT'S! &alv This is no time to lose your memory Don't lose that n:lemory now. Don get the depression . . . the poverty that hit the farmers . . . the breadlines in the cities « - . the soldiers looking, looking, looking for jobs, and not finding them. Remember that Peace broug,ht' difficult economic problems, economic stresses. And this time, we must be ready to meet them. ‘This time we must make sure of having right unless . . s makes you relax your efforts makes you lose your memory of what happened after the last war was a real financial cushion . . . to ease the transfer to normal peacetime business, peacetime employment, peacetime living. That’s one big reason why you should buy War Bonds. .. and hold on to them. ' WAR BONDS o Have and fo Hold INTERCOASTAL PACKING COMPANY 't for- this war is won. Peace! .Every War Bond you buy, every one you hold to maturity will keep bringing you $4 for every $3 you invest today, And that steady flow of buying power will make jobs. It will create markets for peacetime goods. It will do a lot to insure an America that’s prosperous and sound . . . the kind of America we all want when So let’s not forget the lesson of World War I. Keep buying Bonds. Keep hanging on to them. They’re your security . . . your Country’s security . . . for the days of

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