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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. XLIL, NO. 9752. — | - JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1944 PRICE TEN CENTS = MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS AMERICAN SHELLS NOW HITTING REICH p— TARGETS IN REICH HIT THIRD DAY Over 1,000_U. S. Heavy Bombers Strike In- dustrial Centers LONDON, Sept. 11.—More than a thousand American heavy bombers struck industrial - targets in Ger- many for the third day in a row, while other swarms of Allied planes, striking from bases in England, hit in the north and south of France. Fortresses and Liberators attacked Merseburg, Lutzkendorf and Mis- burg a few hours after heavy bomb- ers besieged LeHave. It appeared likely that more than 5,000 tons of bombs would be cast at the Germans during the day, as on Sunday. Weather permitted vis- ual bombing of cities named, and other heavy bombers struck uniden- tified objectives, hidden by cloud banks. The Washington 'NAZISBEING Allied Aircraft DRIVEN FROM 'CARPATHIANS |Hungary's Mounfain Pro- tection Disappears as Reds Advance | QUEBEC, Sept. 11 — President| MOSCOW, Sept. 11 — The Red|craqy sank a 10,000 ton tanker, and Pranklin_Roosevelt and British|Army, by frontal flank assaults, are|smashed airfields in their strikes. Prime Minister Winston Churchill |driving the German and Hungarian met once more and began a victory |troops from their strongholds m“u.ssm, sweeps over Halmahera and conference in a moated-ivied citadel {the Eastern Carpathians alter[a reoord asasit’ agiingt Ush DN in Canada’s oldest city. It is the|crushing enemy 1esistance in the|celehes among the aerial forays eighth in the long series of meetings | Ty, v . % et Havs ibrotieh ta ALl araical 1t | The war of attrition agalut oapy success around the globe. Allied armored columns under|anese aircraft air facilities in Presidential Setretary Stephen | the command of Russia's newest|this area are continuing. A navy | Barly to1a reporters that “thig con=pnarehsl, - Rodig -AgeHiyeky, 'aigCatallna, patolitig near ference, opening here today, makes | 1658 than 30 miles from the Tran- boanga, Mindanao Island sank a it appropriate to say that the p,-esi.lsylvaninn capital of .Cluj. 'His tanker Friday with direct hits. This dent’s recent inspection tour of the [forces are advancing steadily in|is the largest vessel the Allies have Pacific: his tri) Pearl Harbor |the northeast and southeast and sank in Philippine waters and was fic; p to | Roosevelt, Churchill (onferring {Eighth Memng Taking Place in Quebec for Allied Victory | Philippi By C. YATES McDANIEL GENERAL HEADQUARTERS, SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Sept. 11.— Roaming unchallenged in a 1200 mile bombing arc from the Banda . Smash Over 1,200-Mile Arcto nes from Banda \the largest of several Japanese craft |the Catalinas attacked. | In their second thrust toward Zamboanga escorted Libemators un- loaded 180 tons of explosives on |Langoan airdrome in the Dutch |Sea to the Philippines, Allled air-|Celebes Friday in the heaviest raid | lon that important island, west of New Guinea at least three park- Headquarters reported four suc-led Japanese planes were wrecked | jon the airfield runways, and in- stallations smashed. | Lightning escorts continued west- ward along the coast and sank a 11200 ton freighter-transport and a ;roastal v 1. Another flight of Zam- | Liberators sweeping the Banda Sea | | destroyed or damaged five ground- {ed Japanese planes in the Kai is- [mnds Friday. This group lies be- | tween Timor and New Guinea. and the Aleutians; and his confer- (are rapidly seizing control of the | ences with Admiral Nimitz and Gen. ie"ure mountain block which I_’TU'i {MacArthur were a very necessary |tected Hungary from invasion. preliminary to his conference.” The Soviet radio increased the To the question of whether that |intensity of Russia’s appeals to the| means that the Quebec deliberations |peoples of Hungary and Austria to| would stress the Pacific war, he throw off the Nazi yoke, as the| replied he believed “that would be Red Army rolled closer to them. | largely so.” Front dispatches said that Installation H(;Id By Rainbow Girls Miss Alfreda Fleek, of Douglas, 2|Alaska, and her corps of officers | ed Churchill as he and the President |the Danube toward the Iron Gate of the Order of Rainbow for Girls | shook hands and began chatting. jand is expected to assist in Lhelm public services Saturday night | Churchill had just arrived from crossing into northeastern Serbia gy the Masonic Temple. Miss Fleek 6ES Home Com‘ing Dinner Tomorrow stern Star and their gscorts, APPROACHES TO GERMANY _ ARE FALLING American FESI_Army Is 10 Miles from Border- | LuxembourgCaptured LONDON, Sept. 11. — British troops are reported today striking into Holland in a sweep toward the north end of the Siegfried Line after a mass slaughter of Germans. The Amerigan First Army has punched within less than 10 miles of the German border in two places and have also captured the tiny Duchy of Luxembourg. Americans are hurling shells onto German soil for the first time in history, reported bombing Aachon, German border city, troop concen- tration point guarded by the Sieg- fried Line of forts running on’both east and west sides Radio broadcasts from Brussels said the British have crossed The Netherlands frontier for the first time “although earlier reports put them there last week.” The cross- ing apparently is on the road to BIGBATILEIS RAGING FOR BELFORTGAP EXTRA BULLETIN — SUPREME HEADQUARTERS OF ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCES, Sept. 11.—Allied troops are of- ficially reported fighting German soil tonight as Hodges' First American Army has cross- ed the German border “in rea- sonable strength” some miles north of Trier this afternoon. The American are about five miles inside Germany. The entry into the Reich was preceded by a heavy artillery bombardment. The Allied have also captured Herve, 10 miles east of Liege. LATE WAR | BULLETINS | | | Nazis, in Narrowing Bof- : tleneck, Fight to Keep Lifeline Open ROME, Sept. 11.—French troops have penetrated the outskirts of Dijon, an important communica- tions center, 150 miles southeast of Paris, while other French units of | the ‘Seventh Army met bitter op- position in the battle at Belfort Gap. Allied Headquarters said that Am- erican units of Patch’s Seventh Army have advanced to Rougemont, 25 mile southeast of the historic | gateway to southwest Germany, but French troops, inching their way | through the Jura Mountains along | g S ! lthe sw frontier, met desperate | LONDON--American troops have | ssed the Moselle River and estab- | German rearguard resistance. 1”1““3 g The Allied Headquarters an- lished a bridgehead several miles nouncement last night said that me»t‘l’"“ l‘(‘i"d “""“ 5 huge ;“’C“‘“_‘ “” French are fighting near the village | th¢ 01d Maginot Line and guns in- of Blamont, 16 miles south of Bel- | 8% fort and 36 airline miles from the | German frontier. 1 | 1 | LONDON — Patton’s Third Army " 2 has linked up with troops of the The s, s | he Nazis, making a desperate | o ... in Army which has come up | | “Victory is everywhere,” exclaim- |[Red Army flotilla is steaming UP were installed as Worthy Advisor| as well as all visiting members, will | stand to keep the Belfort Gap life- gather for a home coming dinner jine open, found themselves in a tomorrow night at 6:30 o'clock in|narrowing bottleneck, with French from the Mediterranean. the banquet room of the Scottish Rite Temple. ;m the south and Americans to the | west at Rougemont, ‘The French LONDON-—Patton’s shock troops | (have stormed across the Moselle | | Eindhoven from one of the British bridgeheads, 25 to 35 miles east of Antwerp. An Associated = Press dispatch land captured the fortress city of from the British Front said the Merry- [E -Round |Hali(ax, where he disembarked yes- |from Rumanian bases near Turnu-|is the first Douglas girl in many terday. Roosevelt had come from |Severin. The dinner will be followed by a advance to the outskirts of Dijon FAtuhate |years to hold this honor, and to pusiness meeting in the lodge rooms | virtually sewed up the escape to |British have stormed across the By DREW. PEARSON (Lt. Col. Robert 8. Allen now on active service with the Army.) WASHINGTON—It is not often that the Secretary of State has to extend his personal apologies for failure to invije someone to lunch. However, that was what Secretary | south of the border an hour earlier. | L } Forces under General Tmb““m“icelebmte the occasion Masons of From the trains, they motored sep- |are reported to be approaching the|Gastineau Lodge of Douglas, ar- arately up a steep roadway along yugoslav frontiers as well as fan-|ranged for corsages for all the the ancient bastions where out-of- |ning southward close to the Aegean elective and appointive officers date guns overlook the broad St.|seq for a junction between the Red wiss Fleek was presented with - Lawrence River. The cars wound! Army and Tito’s Partisans, vhich |special corsage. after her installa- | through the narrow gateways and | iy prenove the way for a double | ’ s sor. prep e way a tion as Worthy Advisor. at 8 o'clock. .- {MANY ARRIVE HERE ON STEAMER ALASKA ramparts of the citadel; the Presi- | oo jnio the Hungarian plains dent, in an open car with his of-| ficial host, the Earl of Athlone, Governor General of Canada, fol- owed by Churchill in another car. | Prime Minister Mackenzie King of Canada will be with them for the second Quebec conference in thir- teen months. The President and Prime Minister brought top-flight military men and legions of staff Hull did in person last week, when he crossed the street to Blair| House and, while saying good-bye! to President-elect Grau San Mar-| tin of Cuba, apologized for having | failed to invite his Minister of Pub- | lic Works, Senator Gustavo Mor-| eno, to a White House lunch. The Presidents 15-year-old from the east and south, it is be- Miss Betty Bonnett, who was %0, The steamer Alaska, arriving last |he corridor of the German Nine- teenth Army in that sector. The | seizure of Dijon will not only seal |off at least two main highways to ilhe Germans, but will push the | enemy within 55 miles of where | American forces in northern France | | were last reported. |Schelde-Meuse canal, the last water LONDON — British armor forces parrier before the Dutch {have burst into Holland, the pene-lafter a large scale 3-day":2:,‘tel; | tration being made 14 miles north 4yqunq [AF the trokeh Albact Okat Getansa | oL L it Dachial shd s pold, north of the Albert Canal line and within 10 miles of Ger-| *maity sott - |in _which 12000 prisoners were g |taken and more Germans ‘were | (killed in French forces have ROME—After a 24-hour battle occupied the one day than at any itime since the 200-mile march in have been installed as Worthy As-|pioht brought the following pas- | |Normandy. |city of Dijon. | The Schelde-Meuse canal is only | LONDON—American fighters es-|two miles from the Dutch fron- | corting 1,000 heavy bombers are at- | tier where the roads run to Ein- tacking the Nazi oil plants in Ger- dhoven. many and 130 German planes have HEY, YOU THIRSTY, POLITICIANS TO LOOK FOR CLUES MAINE ELECTION been down in the greatest air battle | | | ever fought over the Reich Yester- | grandson, Curtis Dall, Jr., was a| guest at the luncheon from which, Gustavo Moreno was barred. Not! since the Dolly Gann-Alice Long-| worth social feud as to who should | sit where at dinner, has anything so ruffled Washington diplomats. | Blame for the social error has been taken by forthright Chief of | Protocol George Summerlin, who| for years has efficiently handled | the not easy task of making sure| that visiting potentates are prop- erly entertained. Actually, a State Department underling made the in-, itial error, but Summerlin says that | he should have reversed him. About an hour before the White House luncheon, U. S. Ambassador | to Cuba Spruille Braden telephoned the State Department to point out assistants for a discussion of im- | pending movements of the world’s greatest combat teams. | Fala, the President’s Scottie, scur- | ried about everywhere. | Mrs. Roosevelt accompanied her husband, as did Mrs. Churchill. | STALIN UNABLE TO COME QUEBEC, Sept. 11.—Marshal Josef | Stalin, replying to the invitation to attend the conference said, “at the present time, when the Soviet arm- ies are fighting battles on such a | broad front, developing their of-| fensive increasingly, I am depnvedl‘ of the possibility of traveling out of | the Soviet Union and of leaving the direction of the army for the short- est period. All of my colleagués| agree that this is an impossible eave.” | Schmaltz, J. M. Stefar, Mrs. J. M. Steear. Lt. Milton Stein, Balnce E, Stev- ens, Hilda C. Toner, Josephine Yana- chela, James Cooper, Elmer Erick- son, L. D. Fillier, Fred Getso, David Hanson, Joseph C. Marsh, Almer O. Olson, Willard R. Rippe, James R. Shearin, Gordon Sontag, Lauri Aspila, T. M. Davis, M. D. Wil- liams, Ira McGraw, and Ray Molen. Leaving on the Alaska this morn- ing were Ernest Harper, E. A. Gard- ner, Mrs. E. A. Gardner, C. E. Taylor, Don Underwood, W. H. Fir- sen, Mrs. W. H. Firsen, John Han- sen, John Whitehill, A. Humphrey, Edar Mehlen, Milton K. Cushing, John Raft, Mrs. Wesley Barrett, Dolores Breno. Robert Henning, George Wucich, (By Associated P ) day 125 German planes were downed. | The Maine elections arrived to- |day in advance of the rest of the | country and, as usual, eagle-eyed | politicians looked hard for clues as to what might happen in November | when the presidency goes on stake. | All 48 States and even partisans who cite figures to disprove the saying “as Maine goes 5o goes the nation” awaited figures to compare them with those of previous years on the Pine State’s contest for elec- | tion of a Governor and for three: The labor vote | langle is awaited because the CIO | | seats in the House. LONDON The South Poland | fortress town of Krosno, 17 miles | from Czechoslovakia, has been | evacuated by the Germans. The | Berlin radio says the Russians have | also started on offensive on Krakow. ROME — Fifth Army units have reached Usella, 17 miles northwest |of Florence ,and only 35 miles south of the great Po Valley in- dustrial city of Bologna. MRS. LINGO 15 HERE JUST READ THIS [ If you are one of those who like ‘thaL little nip either over the bar, ‘lu your room or at home, just get | this. | Tomorrow is election day and |Buffet Lounges and retail liguor “stores are closed until 7 o'clock: to- |morrow evening., So lay in your “supply. | MASONS PLAN REUNION: has been especially active in the| First Congressional District regist- ering voters. The race there is be- ' DEGREE TEAM TO LEAVE ENROUTE WESTWARD | tween Rep. Robert Hale, Republican, On the way to Anchorage to join| At the last regular meeting of 'and Andrew Pettis, President of the her husband, Lieut. Comdr. G. A.|the Scottish Rite bodies arrange- time to 1l that Senator Gustavo Moreno had - Bert Pherson, A. F. Hulse, John portland CIO Shipyard Workers Senescue, H. Bruns, J. Boyce, A. Union, who is the Democratic nom- been left off the guest list. “He is one of the most import-| ant figures in Cuba,” Ambassador Braden urged. “He will be the next Minister of Public Works. “The seating has all been ar- ranged,” was the State Depart- ment’s reply. “‘Pa’ Watson would/ never stand for a change at the last minute.” (General “Pa” Wat- son, military aide to FDR, is the beagle-eyed watchdog over every-| thing in the White House these days.) So the new Minister of Public Works was left out. Next day he was so irked.that, when the guests were about to sit down at the state dinner’ given by Cordell Hull for President-elect Grau San Martin, one place was vacant. Senator Gustavo Moreno would not come. So next day Mr. Hull called on the President-elect and his new Minister of Public Works to extend his apologies. NOTE — In 1944, eleven years after he was first made President of Cuba by a revolt, Dr. Grau now is to be inaugurated again. During the first year of the Roose- velt Administration, the United States forced President Machado out, but did not expect Grau to come in. When Grau jumped the gun and took office by revolution, he was not permitted to stay there. Nqw, after eleven years of patient waiting, he will be inaugurated Oct. 1. BUNGLED GOP SPEECHES ENGSTROM PURCHASES HOME IN THIS CITY Elton E. Engstrom has purchased the Stewart house at Seventh and Gold Belt and will move from Douglas, thei rhome fo rthe past 16 years, October 1. William J. Walker, of the West Coast Grocery, has purchased the | Harold L. Smith residence on Sixth | Street. Perry Pittenger former taxi driv- | er, was arrested Saturday on a charge of stealing government prop- erty and was arraigned before U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray. The preliminary hearing ‘was waived and he was bound over to the grand jury. His bond has been set at $1,000. B ——.—— RICHARD GREEN GETS PROMOTION! Mr. Richard S. Green, sanitary |engineer with the Territorial Health | Department, hag been notified of MRS. DELAND GOES SOUTH |his promotion from the rank of Mrs. Harry B. Deland has left for |Passed Assistant Sanitary Engineer | Minneapolis, Minn,, to bring home |(R) to that of Sanitary Engineer!her young daughter, Eileen, who (R), in the Public Health Service,|has been in the Kenny Institute it was announced today. The ad- | for Infantile Paralysis for the past vices were received by Mr. Green |Several months. According to re- PRICES SATURDAY at his Juneau headquarters office ports received from the institute the | Closing quotation of Alaska Ju- from the office of the Surgeonvhme girl has responded favorably | neau mine stock last Saturday was General in Washington, D. C. to the treatments. 6%, American Can 87, Anaconda —eto——— ST, #7518 POEFET |25%, Beech Aircraft 9%, Bethlehem POLICE COURT FINES NEW STORE BUILDING | Steel 59%, Curtiss-Wright 5%, In- Those fined in the City Police m’“’e row of garages across from | ternational Harvester 79%, Kenne- Gourt, this morning includs the fob-{ 1. 1. Goldstein Store are being|cott 30%, North American Aviation torn down to make way for a mod- | 8%, New York Central 17%, North- lieved. Aantate AN s | Bussia’s néwakapar AikpEtoha - | oo A% Advisor, was unable to be|gengers: Mrs. C. Berg, Bird E. Berry, dicated that the protracted lull m‘px'esent due to illness, and will be‘_A. P. Bursley, Capt. Joseph Cir- the Pild:; ekl Biitix - imetors | 0stalied ab. 8 later Gme. | cincione, Anna Lois Davis, ‘Harry the cALLEA Broht’ is 1008ly to ex- Special music for the ceremonies “Fiedler, L. A. Johnson, Dean John- | lods B o Iyt & be|consisted of a solo by Lois Hared son, Alfred C. Kuehl, Mrs. Gene- lieved that thembu; es': kol wm;followhlg the installation of sts"vieve Kuehl, Mrs. Hilda Miller, Fred | o il frommzhe i) _;Fleek, and a piano selection by E. Moore, Mrs. Fred E. Moore, Mrs. lgionue bl o?psvarsasw‘mre"e Krause, who also accom-|C. C. Mundy, Capt. John D. B i .. panied Miss Hared in her song. toward the 90 mile distant Silesia| At the request of Beverly Lefv and across the Sesupe River fron-| 19200 o . » |ers, retiring worthy advisor who is tier of East Prussia toward Inster-| & L now in Seattle attending school, burg, 42 miles to the southwest on|,. ’ |Miss Margaret Clark acted as In- the Tilsit, Insterburg, Konisberg | 4 ¢ Rallway stalling officer, using a gavel t which was made for Miss Leivers by her father. Assisting Miss Clark (DA MEHS TOMORRO s |were Grace Berg, Installing Mar- ¥ |shal, Marilyn Merritt, Installing DI""ER SE' wED"ESDAYIRecorder, Emma Neilsen, Installing |Chaplain, and Katherine Alexander, e Tk i 5 thi Yall | Installing Musician. e first meeting of the fall sea-| 4y yne close of the services Rain- son will be held tomorrow night by! lhe Oathalis Pricitars of Afaerin {bow Girls and their guests enjoyed e § 4 ning were served by the following 4 ’ . |eirls, with Lily Ann Maurstad as Plans for the anniversary din- 1 S e R \zill b | Chairman of the group: Ada Burns, s » . Jeanne Butts, Sheila MacSpadden, completed. The dinnér, scheduled S Harriet Maurstad, Bonnie McNabb at 6:30 o'clock Wednesday evening and Pay Sey. :;d”::e‘mzl'diwi‘: l;e ior‘smembers The first regular meeting of the o ch: e Vr L gUsL, new officers will be on Saturday rge of arrangements Oriyne 16th, at which time one girl the affair Wednesday will be Mes- wi pe initiated. There will be a dames Tom Rudloph, Evan Wruck, | i 4 g A M. Géyer M. Fumess and prnc?xce this week on Thursday Neal Moore S A |evening at 7 o'clock, and all offi- & cers and choir members must be PERRY PITTENGER i . NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today 6%, American Can 87%, Beech Aireraft 9%, Bethle- hem Steel 60%, Curtiss-Wright 5%, International Harvester 79%, Ken- necott 31, North American Avia- tion 8%, New York Central 17%, Northern Pacific 15, United States Steel 56'%. Pound $4.04. Dow, Jones averages today are as follows: industrials 144.30, rails 39.47, utilities 24.56. | Jlmc:l disorderly; Roy Manson, $25, disorderly conduct; Judson Crans- ton, $25, drunk and disorderly; David Hotch, $25, drunk and dis- orderly; David Bailey, 30 days in jail, drunk and disorderly; Don E.| F. A. Hanson has arrived here erected on the site. The work is being done by the Berg Construc- tion Company. HANSON ARRIVES 55%. Dow, Jones averages Saturday | were as follows: Industrials, 143.32; rails, 39.24; utilities, 24.38. — e HICKOK IN TOWN GOP Congressmen are ' boiling (Continued on Page Four) Cowan, $25, indecent exposure; from Anchorage and is a guest at Martha Golly, $25, disorderly con- 'the Juneau Hotel. duct. CAA. Earl Hickok, of Anchorage, is in He is with the!town and a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. Jensen, J. Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Hughes, C. Jefferson and wife, | Joe Waller, Francis Baldwin, Harry Kiel, N. Coles, Gladys Isler, Emily | Isler, Rosanne Isler, Willam J.' Oskum, C. Keiser, Maxine Manyle, Bernice Bielwic, Joseph R. Shearin, He lost to Hale for the Re- the pri- inee. publican nomination in mary. Elsewhere over the country polit- ical news included Dewey’s trip to his native Michigan, his Des Moines, Iowa, talk today on agri- Lingo, Mrs. Lingo arrived in Ju- neau by plane from the south yes- terday. She expects to leave with Woodley Airways for the Westward tomorrow. Mrs. Lingo left Juneau a year ago for emergency medical attention and spent last winter in Seattle Mary E. Reynolds, Bobbie Reynolds, | cultural matters, and his spending |where Lieut. Comdr. Lingo was on Joe Marsh, Joe Schwartzbacer, Al-|Sunday with his mother and boy-|duty at 13th Naval District Head- | mer Olson, Lewis Howard, and Tom Jones. EIGHT LEAVE FOR SOUTH VIA BOAT Arriving here from Sitka on the | Northland were the following pas- sengers: | A. E. Hansen, Ed. Luoto, Cameron Terry, Chester Williams, Mrs. Ches ter Willilams, Mrs. Jane Richards, |she had seen hood friends at Owosso, Michigan. Governor Stenson of Texas, a re- cent White House visitor, appealed to Lohe Star State Democrats to compromise the differences between A statement made by Marian Martin, Assistant Chairman, Re- publican National Committee, at a news conference in New York said “criticism and dis- integration” vanish within the p: ty. She just completed a 27-State When he was transferred Iback to Alaska, Mrs. Lingo went (to Laguna Beach, California, to |visit her parents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lingo. She was join- quarters. |Miss Lingo left for the East on {August 31 to return to Hood Col- “legv. Frederick, Maryland, where !she will enter her sophomore year ' MINNIE JACKSON {ments were made for the regular }Fflll Reunion to be held at the |Temple on November 1 to 4th - |clusive, at which time the Scottish |Rite degrees from thé 4th to 32nd |degrees will be conferred om ean- |didates. A degree team representing the |local Lodge is to go to Fairhdnks |and Anchorage Tuesday by plane for the purpose of initiating candi- |dates who have no opportunity to |receive the work in Juneau. Those |making the trip are John Fargher, |Wiltred Leivers, Howard Stabler | pro-Roosevelt and anti-Roosevelf| oy (here during the summer by and Walter Heisel the general Sec- factions sufficiently to submit issues | her daughter, Miss Joan Lingo.| | to the voters. i i : retary of the Bodies. They expect to be absent about two weeks. * 11 ARRIVE HERE 0 PLANE FROM NORTH Arziving here Saturday from An- | | chorage, via Alaska Airlines, were R. Wilson, Mrs. R. Wilson, Mrs. Merle Enloe and infant, Steven Casler, Boarding the ship here were Mary Ann Harrington, Patricia Satre, El- | mer Savikko, Charlotte Tabor, P. A. | Hamill, and Edward E. Gill tour SaturcCay night. The speech of acceptance of Re- | publican Vice-Presidential nominee | Indiana, that the campaign issue is “shall the United States remain | | terian Chi SERVICES TODA Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie G‘l’;"r&‘]"f "%ki‘" s ?"P‘frk";hwa‘c: | Jackson were held at 2 o'clock this told the audience at French Wick. | qermoon in the Memorial Presby- Walter urch, with Rev. Fred Dolphin and Andrew Johnson 1 “had | Soboleff officiating. Interment fol- Y‘mu following passengers: Charlotte |Mauk, D. Scott, D. Burnaby, (Olaf Marking, Charlie Steel, Ruth Lofgren, C. T. O'Nelll, Carl Helm, |August Black, D. E." Starkey, and i Howard. Duggan and Curry |piloted the ship. a republic,” said the New Dea were passengers for Petersburg. ’ achieved a new low in American 'lowed in the Evergreen Cemetery | Leaving here yesterday, on the lowing: Don McCamman, $25, drunk | eryy store building which will be | ern Pacific 14%, United States Stee MARRIED LAST NIGHT BY EO!MISSIONER Sgt. Charles Gordon Chopp, U.S. Army, and Jeannette M. Parsons of Juneau, were married last evening in Douglas at the home of U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray. The attendants were Mrs. Shirley Fleek and Sgt. James Wampas. (OUPLE Pallbearers were Edward Kunz return trip, were Lt. Col. Robinson, A decision was made by the Polit- |Albert Johnson, George Wilson,|Agnes Le Caump, S. Davidson, E. ical Action Committee of the Mas- |Sam Knudsen, Leo Dennis, and P. Storestein, I. M. C. Anderson, sachusetts CIO to campaign for the [John Dennis |Z. J. Loussac, C. N. Workman, M defezt of Rep. Matrin, Republican, | T — |Hendron, R. Darnell and J. Dar- leader of the House. A .meeting in DIVORCES FILED Inell disembarked at Fairbanks. | Boston voted approval of a plan to| The following divorces have been S | solicit dollar contributions from 220,- |filed in the office of the Clerk of| GUILD MEETS WEDNESDAY | 000 union workers in Massachusetts. |the U. S. District Court here: Peter| The regular meeting of St. Mar- - |Edward Hanson from Annie K. garet's Guild will be held at 8 J. L. Lotts, of Anchorage, is in Hanson, Bessie Makamura from Joe o'clock Wednesday evening at the town and a guest at the Gastineau Makamura and J. E. Henry from home of Mrs. Botsford in the Feldon Hotel. Annie Henry. Apartments, | i &