The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 23, 1944, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE SIX THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA i WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1944 School in Sitka, are in town and Burleigh Putnam, of the CAA, has " | and duty at Kodiak, Alaska. Ap- SITKA PEOPLE HERE “Avv IS SEEKING plicants accepted will be sworn in MAKIN TU Y F Gladys Whitmore and Bina M.|have registered at the Juneau |registered at the Baranof from An- an i ive ty Cline, of the Sheldon Jackson | Hotel. chorage. nd placed on inactive duty pending 17-YEAR-OLD BOYS, (it i siic et CONDITIONS IN |————— e . ot FROM NORTHLAND " TIGHTENED | LENGTHENED | " mws secrion Recruit in Junea Thc Recruiting Party will be m‘ | Anders Fjelstad, a member of the sS , Anchorage, Juneau, Fair-| | Norwegian Embassay, Washington, Cl Enlistments fOF TWo Years| tanks and Ketehikan within the o N N A l I S BY ADVA“(E D. C., in Juneau to study conditions assroom next few weeks. Their exact time | in this section of the country with Training at Kodiak— ot arsivar win be advaos : : g mataBére of the Porest Bervide Jaft | & | to prevent unnec: in ap-| (Continued from Page One) | (Continued from Page One) for Petersburg and Ketchikan this Fashlons | it I'SOOH Here plicants presenting themselves for | - morning aboard the Ranger IX, with | enlistment. S it an atiaok T AR oo ey s EEUELS e S | Harold Smith, Administrative As-| he United States Navy wants all Mplees o ik | o b Tl hine Bt e | sistant, for the Forest Service. They | For further information, address ported to be fighting south | era] Alexander Patch’s spearhead |are expected to return here next| Back-to-School ear-old Al for military . are expect | communications to the U. S. Navy o | within less than 240 airline miles | gunday. ‘ Recruiting Service, ¢/0 NAS Dis- | o oW -'\"Vfl"fc of the most southerly points, it was| " My, Fielstad, it is understood, is! ka, or U. S. ; A German report says the 20th | officially announced, reached by the | extremely interested in the mgnner‘ Ne ecruiting Service, ¢c/o Post- | American Corps is striking toward | omerican troops below Paris and it nn which Alaska industries are con- n master at either Ancho! , Fair- [ Nemours and Montereau, both | gppeared that the two Allied French | ducted, particularly the timber and o eurther par. Panks, Juneau or Ketchikan about 40 miles southeast of Paris. | fronts would be joined much sooner | fish industries. He is also investi- | ek irther pa Hnw.\:'d G. Romig is the Recruit-| Supreme Allied Headquarters-said | than originally thought possible. | gating the possibilities of obmmmg‘ Sku’fs and Sweaters e hbr s s Officer {no confirmation has been received | Grenoble is 58 miles southeast of | large quantities of Sitka spruce seed ed copy of the birth cer- . concerning DeGaulle’s announce- | 1,yon and is situated on the river | this section of Alaska at the close | a signed consent of the | ment that Paris has been liberated | jeqding directly to the Rhone Valley, | of the war, which seed will be used | an or either parent must m\ its own citizens, rising to expel |30 miles west and is 80 miles or | for the restoration of a large portion e application the enemy more beyond the last reported Allied | or Norwegian forests which are be- T following physical require- This presumably only because | positions in Southern France. | ing devastated by the invading Ger- ments, among others, must be at- the capital has been freed from| A proadcast from ‘radio France | mane This, Mr. Fjelstad feels, is a | j tained | within rather than by the entry| gy Algeirs said that the Allied| matter of particular interest for| Cardigan and pull - over (a) Minimum vision of 6/20 in one | of Gen. Eisenhower's armed forces. |forces are less than 11 miles from | Norway as the foundation of the sweaters styled by Jantzen eye and 10/20 in the other eye. Allied headquarters imply NO| the Italian front, but there is no | country is largely based on timber ...buy them separately or (b) Normal hearing. | doubt concerning the accuracy of | confirmation of this. | ana fish, in matching or mis-matched (c) Height between 60 and 76 ‘blt‘f:‘i:;“e(lgtx“emem that Paris has —a—— | Mr. Fielstad is the Norwegian rep- sets. Pure, fluffy wool .in inches T | resentative on a number of the in- white, pink, blue, red, y. Those who have r 18th birthday cannot \ey come under the | S 7 (d) Teeth tn\l; (ml(‘(‘r"\blc defects s lIBERAToR ‘ tor"x;\a!ifonzl c:mn;}isgk;:s q“gse;:)ln;; green, brown, purple, yel- or adequate replacements. | wi 00 an T ! i (@ Golor blindness of limited de- | JWO Runnlng Battles Re' ROBERI RoulE | which questions center in Washing- iz‘;’wg ege and new cocoa gree is not disqualifying | | ton. Before the war he was the (f) Certain other defects will be | porfed Early Today bY | | | Norwegian member of the Triterna- waived if the candidate has consent . " | | tional Institution of Agridulture for surgical correction. | Royal Naval ShlpS ) Mth headquarters in Rome. Two-Year Enlistment | SENDS MESSAGE{ While in Juneau he is also con- These enlistments call for two (2) ,1 remng with H. L. Faulkner, the Reserve but may be extended or o A postal card from Capt. Robert | ———e—— ; 3 shortensd to oover the présent Na- ~lxn_\ld eight enemy \Iup& in WO b ‘Foute, son At the 1ata Beark . Ce and we ha\{e just re- ; : tional Emergency, Those desirious |1erne Bay between Brest and Lor-ipo 0“5 i pie Representative| ’ | » | ceived a splendid assort- Pleated skirts in checks, of entering the Regular Navy may |ient before daybreak today, lhe‘m Juneau, recently brought joy to“34 EVB(UGfEd Chlldl’en Are Wh“ehorse coup e ment of ‘"‘P‘?”Gd onl§ sy plaids and solid blues, sign up for a minority enlistment |Admiralty announces. his sister, Mrs, Craham B. Steele, | 5 34 | . Shepherds in English, browns, greens, greys and and then ship over on théir twenty- | TWwo minesweepers, three SUpply| " ge oo Among V|d|ms of Ifag- | Marned Yesierday Scotch and Australian tans . . . in pure wool . . . first birthday. ¥ ships and three escort vessels were\ "p,,/o wno is interned in Jap- d . E | h V" | wools . . . Tish-UKnit sweat- colors chosen to blend with Training at Kodiak k“'?"“]‘“‘ ({‘;l, 24 ““;"’“- The escorts| oo prison Camp No. 1 in tne| €Y IN CNGIISN Viliage Masguret F°r"‘“r\"v:;‘dhn°“al“ it ers by Leon . . . all of the sweaters or sweater sets in The PoENHINEN galls fap taining | wore HeAVIY amee | Philippines, wrote: | ‘Baldwx(x; l"t"‘h °ferd Le(:)r:;le‘.)o:e;e . new styles, -including the ¥ » all: of the dashing new fall | “I hope everyone is well at home.| LONDON, Aug. 23.—An American | FIArTice mie St il &4 sleeveless "“Sloppy Joe" . . . shades. |T miss you all very much and hope bomber crashed, flaming, at the |the offices of ‘'ommissioner to see you soon. Tell Dick and Lancashire village of Freckleton, |Feliv Gray. | Bob that we ought to be able to killing at least 50 persons, 34 ofl Witnesses were Jetta H .Gray and | get a boat and tour the world after |them being small children who were N"ll:‘hflz“i.d ; Ly the war, if th ve their money at church and in school and the! e bride is a nurse employed in ¥ : , ¥ , “:w ‘“(,wle m;‘l:e p‘o t(he raz:;‘; toll may be much higher. Three the Canadian town and Mr. Bald- We have a fine collection of wool 'fascinators’ to match - trienaa | American soldiers were also killed, Win is a contractor at Whitehorse. back-to-school wardrobes—all colors . . . . Capt. Rouze, a graduate of Ihe‘ The British press association said | Seb S'l M k t University of Washington, was|the plane was a Liberator and at| PUTNAM IYN TOWN [ ar e trained as a reserve officer and least three of its crew were killed. ROBERTSON IN 'l}“(x)wN American troops joined in rescue| J: B- Robertson, of White Moun- PHUNES 92.95_2 DELIVERIES :-l(:m;g;s;mn:i awiectzx;fig:licul:‘cn::: ‘work i e one;:::el's registered at the Gastineau % 3 Japanese invasion of the Philip- lof England’s worst sky and ground R R R Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. pincs. He reported that “the last|tragedies. Some of the dead are| yyup TrerD Atizona, Aug. 23— time I saw my automobile was children evacuees from London— |, "y ' o¢ four airmen in the 0 LE! OTAS J US T IN when T went to the camp. It was tiny fugitives from Hitler's robot| .o oe o planes during an aerial { 1 it on the end of the dock” in a bombs. ; sequence in the filming of a movie, i onmens AppAreL communication sent home a year| Evewitnesses said the whole Cen-{uGod Is My Copilot,” is announced ¢ |ter of the village of fourteen hund-|py the Field Commander. . . ago. JOhnnle walker Wh“e Label scol‘:h Rouze was employed as an en- “Ied mhamgnh bfgr\m( a aeahof The collision occurred 9,000 feet . . gineer in the building of the Grand | flames ne soldier near Whenjyup as one type of plane, painted to Haig and Haig Scotch Coniee Dam. Ho s w0t een e |the plane crashed said, “the whole| resomble a Jap Zero dosed in on & formed yet of his promotion to the Scéne was like a battlefield.” second type in a simulated attack. King William Scotch i oo | Windows all over a large part uf Information of the message sent|the Village were hroken. House of LOl'dS Scoich by Rouze to his sister was received | T T T Harvey Scotch pere by Roy Gillespie, a friend of | MRS, McDOWELL RETURNS \ > . i Mrs. Bert McDowell has returned \ Calvert Special Whiskey S G home trom the Soth where she has . SwEDISH SHlpS | been vacationing for the past six | old cl'ow whlskey | weeks. She was joined in Ketchi- | | kan by her husband, owner of Bert's‘ old Tayl“r Whiskey CUT oFF FROM ‘Csstk;‘G‘rocgry, wh{u had g.one to _the! o old Sunnyhrook Whiskey gl | . l;;{&)lgw:;w? ;Exv;:s ’ Bourhon De Luxe e ot R, }su‘m;cLéEaléi‘f Servie, Plague | : Anicelte nousces it Wil sggmxo:gp:;mu&de;,f;"%‘fizidq:a?Li::',fif's:n‘ — ¢ ¢ s da s Mg : ciso to make @ report upon s Public Accountanis—Auditors — Tax Counselors | This in effect eliminates all tory. . 5 Swedish vessels trading with Ger- 3 um | t g er- | — e mel (many. The action is a blow to DIVORCES FILED Apricol cordial |Germany because it is estimated| The following divorces have been of Fairhanks |50 percent of the trade between filed in the office of the Clerk of Blackherry CQrdial 1t‘h(\ two L_oumries is carried m|the U. S. District Court: Mar- |Swedish ships. garet Cochrane from Hugh Coch- Cl‘lel'l'y cordial | iace, ¥ L5 TR G rane, and Cornelia J. Bass from | Empire Want-ads bring results! Marinus J. Bass. Schenley Reserve Whiskey ' = Announce the Opening of Their Juneau Office Seagram'’s 5-Crown ' Seagram's 7-Crown | Headquarters at 208 Franklin Street 0l Jons Whiskey BABY FOODS Oscar Pepper Whiskey | PABLUM—Instant Wheat Cereal : For the General Practice 0ld Oscar Pepper Whiskey - 154590 Seagram’s V0 I Gibley Gin PABENA—Instant Oat Cereal Courtesy Club Gin 29¢ Loganherry Wine GERBER'S—Instant Oat Cereal Olympia Beer 25 ; Columbia Ale i Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer Gallagher and Burton Whiskey Also Full Stock of All Available Calvert's Reserve Whiskey Varieties of Canned Baby Foods These are the new items received today and many others - too numerous to mention. DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES COME DOWN AND SEEE OUR DISPLAY! ‘ 10:15 A. M. 5:15 P. M. All marked to the O. P. A. ceiling requlations, MINIMUM—$2.50 prd Telephone 757 P. 0. Box 3081 W Fairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building PHONE— WRITE—WIRE US YOUR ORDER KINLOCH N. NEII;L : , JOHN W. CLARK GEORGE BROTHERS ) of Accountancy 000000000000

Other pages from this issue: