The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 8, 1944, Page 1

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I'HE DAI LY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” { —_—— PRICE TEN CENTS == . i VOL. XLIL, NO. 9750. JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1944 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS . N R L T R e e e e * SUPERS IN Bombingls DEWEYTALKS JapPri SECRET BASE | Rear Admiral Wood of : Bombingls apPrize | ‘Rear Admiral Wood o FINAL BIG | | i | BIGRAIDIN Made Near ips Hit | ific Air Fi | ~ Made Near ips Hit OF JAPANESE W Pacific Air Fighters ~ ASSAULT IS | | | | - MANCHURIA Zamboang LOUISVILLE ByPlanes jans | | yrianes § Moveda I¢ Aletiians Al e TR0 T i i 2 H H | Cay I I } : | By NORMAN BELL |this year and Wood ranks second | Onf Hundred Forls Crash Fifteen Jap Planes Smash- Makes Accusations in Cam- Six Diret Blows Scored on Carrier Fighter PIANES| army a2 om0 Viee Aamira | S07€CY Shrouds Prepara- . | i | i i | H signment of Rear Admiral Ralph Jack Fletcher, Commander of the : : wo ImpoTrtant :apa . edinBlisteringRaid | paign Address Given Aircraft Carrier and | Make Destructive Al | eueran of the air war com- | North Pacisic theatre tions for Massive At- | i i i i |mand in the Southwest Pacific, to| Admiral Wood has direct charge : nesefargels | on(Celebes in Philadelphia Battleship | fock on Paula lles 2"t oo i R atin e fack-On fo Berlin : A | 4 sl e 9 5 e : 3 R s ant of the Seventeenth Naval Dis-|ments. (\,‘?.T,STNGT‘.)T& gop: ke A bR HEADQUARTERS, | ENROUTE WEST WITH WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—A halff = By WILLIAM WORDEN |iic is announced here. Meeting the War Correspondents| BULLETIN—LONDON, Sept. superfortress raid on a Jap |SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Sept. 8—|DEWEY, Sept. 8 — World peace, dozen direct hits on a big Jap| UNITED STATES PACIFIC| qpe new Commandant succeeds|here, Admiral Wood said it is ob-| S—Elsenhower swung four ‘Al- arsenal in Manchuria by the Twen-| Another blistering raid was made % on the framework of an in-laircraft carrier and a battleship FLEET HEADQUARTERS IN|p.i;y Admiral Kem Whiting He |vious the Aleutians are the “nat- lied armies against the Siegfried tieth Bomber Command, is reported on the Celebes, west of New Guinea. ternational organization in which |were credited to Navy crews of four|PEARL HARBOR, Sept. 8—Am- wl_“_pd as Commander of v,hL- air- |ural stepping stones to Japan,” but Line for a knockout punch, a + today by the Tokyo radio. More|The Liberators smashed 15 Japan-|small nations will have a propor-|torpedo bomber plan Bin caiies fighter planes Struck |gart in the Southwest Pacific fask |16" ddded, he 18 nod I & osition| dispatch from his headquarters than 100 planes took part in thelese planes, Headquarters announced tionate voice, is expected to be| Lt. Edward Wood, Pensacola,{Palau Islands “in force” Tuesday, | gorce g arinial Heviad’ 16T WHIRK ¢ arediot the: Atune Gours 4 i the| Geclared tonight and the end of raid, the broadcast stated. today. At the same 'time Gen. urged tonight by Gov. Thomas E.|Commanding Officer of Torpedo | wreaking destruction on grounded G e n.c“\'“ld.)pm” o ]f iy H‘ '...‘ i J(“u bt 0“ ,e Germany may come early in No- The United States Army an-|Douglas MacArthur reported, “it is Dewey in Louisville in his second|Squadron 31, was the first to dare planes and defenses of the island the Japaneso. threat on Ausiralia WAL, Fe ssteried iliit S Sl emtien Nokipveis 4B gAY nouncement only said: “Important!now - obvious that the Japancse}ma]v)r address. |enemy fire in a battle off the east-|group f 2 one of Japan's links| beaten host: S T by a combination of Alt,| gqyertised Siegfried Line ap- PO pa o 5 | sl group forming one of Japan's inks| The Commandant of the Seven- sea and land forces, plus the lass targets in Japanese dominated Sixth Air Division has been prac-| He closeted himself today withjer Philippines on June 20. Other with the Philippines. ® District was established early {of maritime st G Tndie | pears of much concern to the Manchuria” have been raided as a|tically annihilated in its attempt at [his advisers as the campaign train |planes followed and five times| This thrust was on one of gfdseentl IS Y establistied early (R MBHHPN SN T Allied Command. It is believed continued prey on Tokyo. the " defense of Western New steamed toward politically doubtful bombs pounded squarely onto thefencmy’s most secret and useful Vi 5 T | the last big battle in the West The communique further stated|Guinea.' | Rentucky. [deck of the 30,000 ton carrier|bases, only 550 miles east of the Is already anderway. that “China air based United States| A Catalina flying boat striking| A ringing defunciation in Phila- Shokaku, Class I and the enemys\Plunpmm.. BEAVERS IN BESAN(ON lS Rl ane e Alr Forces raided Anshan and|for the first time near Zamboang, delphia last night charged that he/best. |" This is the .third carrier, task| ‘ BULLETIN — SUPREME Penhsihu about 1:30 o'clock tOday!Mindanflo Island, heavily damaged|was “tired and exhausted with the| One bomb tore into the decks of force to strike Palau this week, in- | l.IEADQ“AnTE“s OF A“,‘l?l.) with more than 100 planes. At|two Japanese naval auxiliaries off |quarreling and bickering” of the|the 30,000 ton Kongo class battle- /dicating increasing tempo in ac-| | I?XI,EDITIONARY FOROSS least three were shot down. Some|that city Monday night. On Tues-|New Deal who is tiying to keep ship. fitons clearing the way for possible| ! Sept. 8—~Cen. Kissnhower's Frest damage was done on the ground.”|day morning a patrol of Liberators/men overlong in the Armed Forces| Wood's and one other plane made|impending invasions. i | r | assault front, bulging within 25 ‘Anshan is the big steel producing |harrased the often bombed city|to lessen unemployment at the|their way back safely. Another| Other strikes are also reported | miles of tp Blegtrind Tine a4 city of 200000 population andlof Davao. Zamboang is the sec- war's end. landed in the water near an Am-|against the Kuriles in the North| i thres polnts, was placed under Penhsihu is the coal center near jond largest city on Mindanao, 200 Dewey Assertions erican destroyer and was picked up.|Pacific. 4 e { s news bisckout tonight to Mukden. miles west of Davao. | Dewey asserted the Administra-|The other crashed on the lane of | AL TS mask mounting of the final S Af 5 S Tuesday fighters and bombers|tion is “afraid of America getting|the carrier deck, but none were in- | | Lo | Sl "“""“’:h ‘“"“"“" B:“I'I“ “:“ {swept Halmahera island, bombing all set for another depression.” He | jured. | | By Associated Press f . open the way to Berlin. No I.INGI.ING MRBASE lairfields, ground installations an; told a cheering audience of 13,000 el ] BIG RAIDS \ M;mun{l Salvo racked up )hls 16th BIQ Bame Raglflg as Yanksj more positions and advances : % IAKE" BY “IPPONS coastal shipping. They encounter-|that the basic issue was clearly re-| i | 7 | pitching victory of the season last | Attempt 1o Tak | :““»" be announced for the time ed no aerial opposition. |vealed by a recent nnnounwmentil w S ‘ night when he blanked San Fran-| p e . e i e e |by the Director of Selective Service | fgg . ml JAP BASES lcisco 4-0 in a five-hit game aided | . [ i T v CHUNGKING, Sept. 8.—The Am- | $4 000 IN HNES FOR |in Washington, that when Germany [ [y five errors by the Seals The | CI'Y ‘ GREAT Assm'mbruoN'l' crloan &1t basd at Tinglme haa.beers | BN {and Japan are defeated it will still | |victory knocked San Francisco out| _ oo T DLgmfl:&;&mMfi; :;‘l'”e')u';:“: lost to five Jap divisions, pressing | be necessary to demobilize the| ’ lof second place in the Pacific Coast E, Sept. The American . 5% ' e Moy e o Yl FISHING VIOlATlONS‘A,med Forces very gradually.” Mee’s Dea!h | REPORTED;LW\;M and Portiand todk it Seventh Army s pushing into [broke the Albert Canal, and the provinde, the. 'Chifisse Command§ : « } “And why?” he said. “Because | | The Hollywood Stars pounded lesu;}((:o:xdl.fx 5(i\|Ll.|o1'x1AI<jl-allce n[te;: ;l’;muts :z;w closedh up to Ls\eget:ud announced. It is 75 miles So“[h_iLh:gsgol;x;ig;iex:}:%g“;utye:‘wsnfluctan kel(;p pleople in LhcldArmy B D [l w’ ]‘fom- Los Angeles Angel pitchers :“xf;edflh:dkl\‘ecl;v;l(I):;hulnbgm:;x?l:“ik:: wi?.h\‘n 25“:3::,; :';e ;::;r eoerme:: west of Hengyang, where another | s al as cheaply as we could cre- £ for 12 hits last night to defeat the Amerloan air ybasi was previously | terday afternoon to_ the Astoria and |ate an agency for them when they | y rown'ngfnzl?’“fi%]:;, Ssi?:l &:fh:miiga‘:}uague's leading club 7-3. ‘N‘fl f(é;‘ces v:ho arerac;,‘emll:th\g tg"rronuer at, three points along. the Frg ke s Moot K ad b o210 " [bombers -and: fighters raldea Jap|. Ceting lo Padre phicher ) Joo Niassctel ATy Yem o 0 e g i S« than ten miles from the| EXcursion Inlet for illegally oper-| Charging that the New Deal by| SR e A ¢ Bala and Yap for|Wood for four runs on four hits neteenth Army remnants fleelng| To complete the picture. of e pordar oY s PRNHE |he~‘a“"g fish traps after the close 0‘11940 had been in power for seven CORDOVA, Alaska, Sept. 8- Tmfi‘l‘ly ld dd .\‘au"n.: ap for and & walk, tHe Seattle Rainiers toward the Belfort Gap, the sole menace to Hitler's Reich, Gen. Japs are driving forward on a 60 the season. The violation occurred | straight years with still 10,000,000 |COMImUNILY was saddened again yes-| . .tkm lay in & row, and also| "\ o eplit doubleheader with ares, where nio mouritaing blook the |Patziie MKEibound vt ARHY e R G | B el fine, |ynoployed. he. declared that “ig|teTdsy afternoon by the sudden 21t4¢ ,:;3 tho bydassed Mazshall atoll HRROC B UL e pener 2] Thudy e the Reich . |stabied within'60 miles of the Bel- P . miles from Kwellit; L0004 ‘rom“;rfigi‘i’{:)}f‘g;flx jury at| (00K @ World War to get fobs 1 Paieie 08 gne of the oldest plon-| " The report, quoting Tokyo advices, 10 1 behind the hurling of Frankie gouthern and eastern sectiong of :,z‘r:wfi,fl‘gp::fmp"mw"y Ll bz Ar O | g0 found ‘sullty” by o Sy a¢lAmerican people, and now Wash-|TE | UE L TS R g | said that four to five hundred car- Dasso. Besancon, and the first real resist- | myere is ) Rl ddiasiatian | a5t $1.000 for vidistion of tha| LS00 12 Kotiing all set for another |Ze% "8 B3 T - il © | rer-based bombers struck at Palau,| Portland took over San Pran- ance was encountered on the south- |, oY h‘;p o r"" e Supplv lINES E A Delne, Cantinl adt. U A SoRmeion, They intend to keep e on a duck hunting | wednesday and Thursday. About |cisco's spot as runnerup by taking ern French Front in several days. 1‘; et ue ‘;10: ,u L“‘ J mn’; l-' | District Attorney Lynn Gemmill was | the young men in the Army.” B e sy and elsewhere in|a twin contest from Sacramento There is no official confirmation | e 1 Mgiriod Lins ‘AT e or “Alls (u'l"mo, prosecutor. The case is being | : - e € when | the island arc of Jap conquests.last night, 33 in seven innings of the reports that the Seventh e | eppealed by the defense attorney,| LITTLE COMMENT BY FDE |72 Z8 6C ' ° 9% o or aP- |1t sald that 16 U. 8. heavy bombers [and 13-11 in nine innings. The Ammy is linked up with Patton's| .. Germay i LY » | according.to a wire recelved by the | wASHINGTON, Bept. 8- BN o) (_mymm «h:vm Ll)m‘ 1117 'b_? Anf; attacked Iwo and Jima in the Bonins | Beavers hit 21 times in the second Third Army. ]mm‘m,c:t “'Sm“si m,‘ No .',,'fa :n ROME, Sept. 8—All main German | U. S. Marshal's office here. [ velt, in iR De il b B 9 T8l Dyeruoarc. o Wednesday and Kavieng in New |game and the Solons hit eight ——r———— hy w 1e S rmandy supply lines from Vienna-Budapest | it s s BN {relt ) g on Dew ac- Many boatmen and fishermen are! Ireland. Ten planes were shot down. |times. ‘.nox'ug 't!ue Moselle River where Pat- to Bulgaria and Greece are impass- | FISHERMEN, CANNERY ‘c:,sat::::dlha‘:u;)::jd.:‘(ir::msdwur:)l:lnj 'l:Zl ‘:(I)x(‘:mamg the muddy Eyak for - _— | lAIE WAR ;\Z:tz lg%"‘:jn‘i::m{o:: Iilaluhapé":\m able. The U. S. Fifteenth Air Force WORKERS COME HE fa J R0 GOOOLBR LD A GAMES THURSDAY | (Metz, T e German ¥ announced that American bombers | e e SOVER|fd that he had stated before he| Pioneer Spirit Former Sen_ Reed [ i l.cL;‘m- | {west wall. Patrols, which slugged » and fighters struck anew railways | would like to go back to Hyde Park,; Smith was born March 15, 1872, | Seattle 6, 1; San Diego 5, 2 | [their way into the City of Nancy, e aidromes In seething Yugo.| Juncau merchants are extra busy [but not because he is tired or de-|in Otawa, Minn, which itself was D' Br h'r g or Avieio 8 Hplraa | and Patton’s right flank were slavia. The whole rail system is|these days for the fishermen and feated. {on the frontier at that time. The| 'es' onchiiis Oakland 4, San Francisco 0 | forced to withdraw, but clung firm- co devastated that organized re- |cannery workers have come to “’w“i During a barrage of questions at|pioneer spirit in his blood, = | Portland 3 13: smmm}.“m ‘2 11,1 {ly, however, to Toul, eleven miles sistance to the Russian thrust into|on their yearly lay-over. Every |the news conference —about the sought new adventures in Calitor-| ALPENA, Mich, Sept. 8.—Jam \.a'“on'al sy et s | west. the Adriatic 1s impossible. Tito's|year people come to Juneau from Dewey speech, he sald he did not/nia in '98. He headed for Valdez E. Reed, 82, former Missouri Sen-| New York 9, Boston 3 LONDON-Almost,2,000 ke Cross Albert Canal . Pastisans aided in the demolitions, |all over Southeast Alaska, for many |listen, but that a member of thelin 1908 but he and his partner met ator died of bronchitis, He Was| phijadelphia 7, Brooklyn 5 and British Beavy hombers astacked | cnr DEIER Fornd AZH crossed - lof them it is the only trip to the|family told him about it. ‘He said a man on the steamer who talked taken to the hospital two weeks ag0| cincinnati 2, P _‘mf,,h i instaliations io southwest Germany, |the Albert Canal into Beeringen, SIO(K ouounous |“city” they make in a years time, that while he had read half of it|in glowing terms of prospecting on suffering from a “severe cold” He| g Louis 3, Chicago 2. battered chemical and oil plants at|20d the Pirst Army captured Huy The cannery workers, of course, |l did not feel competent to com-|the Susitna. When fall came the had apparently improved and went| Arilasi Diseus Ludwigshafen and ordnance depot[0n the:Meuse after a new or b — |are through for the year but the ment. two came to Cordova but moved back to his ranch home only last| peiroit 3 Clatalons 4 at Kastel. ling “of the' stream. It is note- NEW YORK, Sept. 8. — Closing | fishermen will go back in October ——— almost at once into Chitina because |Sunday St Ohiinacid { — {worthy that neither of these I3 quotation of Alaska Juneau mine|for the fall fishing. Many of them| pA]‘Rl(M ON RouND the building of the Copper River ———r——— ) i | |thrusts met more than medium re- stock today is 6'4, American Can|are now busy repairing their boats| and Northwestern Railroad made 1 STANDING OF CLUBS | LONDON -— Russian troops have sistance. There were no massive 87%, Anaconda 25%, Bethlehem |and putting on new gear. TRIP UP LYNN (A"AI. e e e e DEPUTY HOMPSON IS | STANDING OF CLOBK foined the Free Yugoslav forces and |fortitied positions. Steel 59%, Curtiss Wright 5%, Inter- S R T kept six months ahead of steel, all| £ "“w ‘e"“:"v | captured their first town in Yugo- b e L TR national Harvester 79, Kennecott IN FROM PELICAN the way to the famous Kennecott| I“ w"H pRlSON;RS e Arkeks “;" (;’t Pet. slavia. S { 30%, North American Aviation 8%,| Lorraine Johnson and Lydia Doyle| Motorship Patricia took the fol-' mines. s e S R ey | F * New York Central 17%, Northern | have come into town from Pelican |10WiNg passengers to Lynn Canal| Later Smith joined the goldy Deputy Marshal Sid Thompson e ;’f otsc 50 AR LONDON—Three more American 'REME" ARE Io 8 :jlflflc 14%, United States Steel| and are now staying at the Bar-|Ports: To Skagway--Chester Den-|stampede into the Chisana. where returned here with two prisoners o et 5 _fi Z:: ;:]'; bridgeheads have been thrown 57%. anof Hotel. nis, C. G. Prahl, Dr. George Hayes ne prospec i _ for the Federal jail and one insane | . 14 A ss the Mose) er- SPONSOR MovIE N Dow, Jones averages today are as | - e and wife, Harry and Charles Ask,‘sm',:i°,§fsf‘}m’“{‘i,o":;f,h‘fifie_lf,:,-‘ charge to be sent to the States. Pl e Ll | :icligs;i:u‘»ulxrr:s'g:l'nri:\‘:ra‘rl:;fiz:yur | follows: Industrials, 14351; rails, BACK TO SITKA |W. H. Metcalfe, W. R. McGlaugh-|years, 1| ® Charlie Chuck, brought here from |2kland B, 0. - e soiog it o am lites S e , | Atter attending the American Le- (lin, [C. Hart, Katherine Mathews,|” In ‘1016, Biith settled down in|SXME: Wil serve 150 days on & 2:;"3}{"5” ;; :Z :4’? : ! SHowl 2 "IGHIS gion convention here, Mrs, Ray Pet-|L: H. Burley. Cordova and began working in me‘charge of being drunk and disord- » KN 3 B J‘, MOSCOW-—The Red Army has| Th w h' i erman and Mrs. Frank Metcalf| To Haines — Herb Waugh, Jack|railroad shops. | erly. ational League smashed through the Balkans n al oo o0 "0 oo ored by e as lng On have returned to their Sitka homes. | Gucker, Robert D. Young, James H. Two Business Fire Harry A, Longway, charged with| o linSt Dot [thre)-pronaRd CHoe LA promises“he Juneau Vull‘lntl’el‘ Fire Depart- i S (T lsu’"e' Thomas Knudson. | T . | careless use of firearms at Peters- |St. Louis 94 35 129 to smash Hitler’s fast weakening ' : . s o | ‘Retirnt ] . Ida Freeman in|puro will serve a sentence of 250 |Pittsburgh 76 58 594 hold and will trap thousands of ment at the Capitol Theater Sep- erry -Lo-houn NELSON TO KETCHIKAN | urning were, from Skagway—|1917 and started the first photo f ity e 2 Sl |tember 20 and 21 are announced. » H. N. Nelson has resigned from Chester Maloch, Jim Paterson. [shop here. The shop was buirned [0 S8 DAt iy LR James Orme was named chairman by gni | From Haines—Herb | i 2 2 | o Chicago 58 68 460 —— S the Juneau Motors and will leave Waugh, MrI.lout in 1927. Then he engaged in! . LE e ¥ 4 al s . lof the committee. The picture will y By DREW PEARSON on the first available transportation |[2nd Mrs. Stanley McNallen, Mrs.|a ladies wear shop until 1939 when| HERE FROM FLETT {uBY. oIk 60 71 458| WASHINGTON-—There have been |, .cpqterpox” with Joe E. Brow {Lt. Col. Robert . Allen now on etive |ro. Ketchikan where he wil visit|J. E. Graham and child, Mr. and| o p unil 1639 when | ke, S ., | BOston 54 78 409 no peace overtures to the Allles ¢ ‘Cnaue : & ? service with the Army.) i Rttty A Al v, T, Piek. etk chtlvon |that sgore also burned. Rob_mt Lyman is here from Flett| grookiyn 53 79 ‘402! from inside Germany, Roosevelt and Judy Canova. A | er, J. M. Nelson b ldren. | Despite his 72 years, he was an|and is staying at the Gastineauppiladelphia 51 T1 398 sad this afternoon in response to a| Also on the program at last WASHINGTON — Erudite Gover- | B | From Eldred Rock—Jim Hender-|acfive s ! Hotel | | o | ntehth @ g . A gt e | ey Lanss ve sportsman. He loved his otel. | American Lesgue question. night's meeting was a quiz pro- irs 1 { n | nly two boats sol ish a e | B vodi T P me ac 7 # STROM IN TOWN i o o . cos President’s own lips the explana-|Cold Storage this morning. The| ELLEN STRAND ARRIVES 5alvf;;:gtz;l;:winrnt;espé);:(me;:;m:g | o w\)\‘l‘;;‘slru:‘no“r:g‘:%oru: fmm‘!gtcwlzsxr:( Zi 553 ':55: a,,}éoxf;,;:: l‘hL:’fh[fzu:}::n }’o::::: DU(’:-‘:NS at the meeting last night " Vi Yo bl b Is{;‘::e°g??dct"k:3°";:é’k§r‘"‘$:.‘"em}mm \'[lls?:]dhek:di)a:zx':t‘:dMI: - lncnmon " |vancouver, has ‘arrived in Juneau | Detrolt 78 60 549|another mile on the Adriatic coast|Were Walter Mickens Anchorage 18 ! G : Survivors are his wife and step-land is a guest at the Gastineau| Boston 71 63 530 and reached the banks of the Mar- Legionnaire; John Walmer and v nomination. |brought in 40,000 Taku fish for Ex|Mrs. Laurel McKechnle. daughter, Mrs. Clyde Ihrig, of Hotel. | Cleveland ; River, four miles from Rimini,|Bruce Parker, fire insurance ad- The explanation came about this|E. Engstrom. | 5 S SR Seattl A i | Y oA #4 N AN Sk Kiver, Tour IMRRG SEN e oy s trave Rt A i | sy e, who had just arrived here| SRS DN SO [Phlladelphm 63 72 467 2 | juster who is traveling through the )‘f;‘x-fa nftre‘;" ’;L““:;’ s:::eng:: ‘g’g;fl woo;:_vgm 2 2 ;:;g::fizr":e‘]‘l‘;n 4o g for her first visit in several years TEACH AT KILLISNOO {Chicago @ 13 451] ROME-—Americans today finished |territory and stopped off in Juneau gyl g % ' 2 % it Prasuisl g § 0 i i TS | To teach at Killisnoo in the In-| Washi one solid year of combat on the to adjust the loss incurred in the @ for Wallace at Chicago, and car-( The Moose Lodge will hold a town and has registered at the PATRICIA O'BRIEN HERE | dfan Service school C“““ylw“mngmn ”,55, 2 A an malynlflnd and advanced two fire in the old Central rooms build- ried the entire Georgia delegation business meeting at 8 o'clock to-| Gastineau. el O'Beebe is 5 RUTH SC Mi < | miles toward Pistoia, last important |Ing. v with him, ex-Governor Talmadge night at their headquarters in the | S s AT Patricia O'Brien has arrived here RS, 1f.hicre spsoute fo s ZEN SOHRAJRS ARRIVER i st the Gothic e T Vi ¢ firs Mg N 2 | vV " post. He is accompanied by Mrs. city south of the Gothic Line in The firemen will hold their first- and his friends began jibing Ar-|Seward building. All members are| ANCHORAGE PEOPLE HERE from Sitka and is a guest at the oBeepe. . S | enemy hands. aid drill Monday night at 7 p. m nall about, betting on the wrong|urged to attend. Following the| . M" and Mrs. A. C. Swalling and |garanof Hotel. ;Ef Lo WUl eet ke Apesinl | it Rulh BCiEmKS Das (et - in the city hall 5 Porse. Théy put out the idea that|meeting refreshments will be served, | ar7ison Kincaid are all here from — e e i A R {here from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to'e o o o o o o o o o ¢ e ne had been ieft holding the bag, — e Ig;‘f;;’;?g; "z’l“’ registered at the PASTLS LEAVE s R |accept ‘a position with the Terri- ® WEATHER REPORT e TO WESTWARD SCHOOL 5 that the President had told him | MISS HOAR LEAVES | il &3 Mr. and Mrs. John Pastl are e following were fined today in |torial Department of Welfare. She ¢ U. 8. Weaiher Bureau . —— w' that he }&as‘fur Wallace (which he' Expecting to be away for t.hreel HOWARD SIMMONS BACK |enroute to the States on a vacation | city Police Court: Charles Davis|is now a guest of Mr. and Mrs. ® — e/ Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Kala- definitely did) and then double-| months, Miss Violet Hoar, Territor- | Howard Simmons, Deputy Fish- eral weeks. | Johnson, $25, drunk; James R. Skelp, |E. P. MacCarron. e Temp. Thursday, Sept. 7. @ marides are in Juneau enroute to crossed him. |al Health Educator and Supervisor, | eries Agent for the Alaska Penin- ' gyl $35, disorderly conduct; Nick Nickel- | .o e In Juneau: Maximum 62, e|the school at Stebbins, near Nome, L& The President heard about the ;lew to Anchorage yesterday to begin | sula, returned here on the Fisheries| ROBERT WHEELER HERE |sen, $25, drunk; Adam Perrin, 30| Helen J. BrownThas filed for a ® minimum 50 ® where Mr. Kalamarides will teach Talmadge jibes and asked Arnall | :;grgi'l::kmor;c},he?lcr: suhpervismn‘vessel Crane, having been absent| Robert Wheeler is in town and | days in jail on a charge of drunk- | divorce from Harvard B. Brown in ® At Airport: Maximum 62, e for the Indian Service this winter. - TSRS it e ey ):’mm i rmerxo(:” o the West- :x!r.onwlm‘{unefl“ since the latter part has registered at the Juneau Hotel enness; Gerald D. Chambers, $25, the office of the Clerk of the U. S. ® minimum 48. ® 'Mrs. Kalamarides is employed by _ y. from Seattle, drunk and panhandling. I Distriet Court here, e © ® © @ o o o o o e'ihe Service as a special assistant.

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