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PAGE SIX TALLINNIS turing an ¢ They seized also on a trunk line leading to the Maygar capital, cap- \ 12 miles square on BIG ATTACKS, JAP ISLANDS the way. This road and rail junc- tion is only 10 miles from the CAPTURED BY = tne Russians are pressing the battle for Hungary on a 50-mile front, defended by steel and con- crete frontier fortifications. The exerted SOVIET FORCE Russians Punch Clear is being Arad heaviest 20 miles north of pressure HEAVY FIGHTING LONDON, Sept. 23—The Russians Through German Pockefs ..c again « ia Vista iskE R, Warsaw. “Heavy fighting is going fo. Estonia’s -Coast ' ‘[cn i sectors atone the’ western — bank where Soviet units are land- Estor v \d capital ing.” In a broadcast communique, Gov Army through rov's tri- punched the a communi- quarters announced, in public by the Polish in-Exile, that Bor: attacking the Germar umphar without clear German pockets to Es que made Governm forces were ause remainin s Baltic coast t forces battered within the |from the rear cuter defenses of Riga in an effort The Russians remained silent on to cut off the land escape routes.|ihe operations, perhaps waiting In The Balkans until a bridgehead within Warsaw South in the Balkans, Soviet ar- is secured. Bors acknowledged re- tillery fire rained inside South- ceipt of food dropped on Warsaw eastern Hungary as Malinovsky's by Soviet. planes last night Russian and Rumanian s eads He said, however, that the food thrust close to the Hungarian rail situation remained -critical. junctions at Bexescxaba, a hundred | —e———— and ten miles east of Budapest. 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P, O. ¢ 3 leg 75¢ for mailing first suit add S0 or each additional T RAINCOATS, GABARDINE, 5 HALE-LINED, WaTer Rereiient $16.50 Sanforized Pre-Shrunk Excellent Fit $1.25 | ACK GUARANTEE—We oc be largest organization devot outhtting Seilors. See our ads he Navy magazines. We unconditionally gua antee our uniforms not to shrink or fade and it you right or we'll refund the price. D $ Mail orders'te DANDY NAVAL TAILORS MANUFACTURERS 39 Sands St., Brooklyn 1, N. Y. 0608 YOUR MONE! cupy 4 building That's because they are all made of the very finest materials obtainable, cut with infinite care and assembled by super-skilled workers. After many months of hard usage, they still mould and control perfectly. No wonder so many thousands of smart women will be satisfied only with brassieres which carry Maiden Form’s quality-insuring labell £ L&Y, Shown here are *Allo-Ette” and *Intime”—only two of a wide P | ks Q; :; variety from which you can choose. aMaiden Form for Every Type of Figurel” Besides being so practical, these smart brassieres are also famous for the lovely Il Leading Stores % “There PP SF SRS SRS S ST ¢ S S S S S S SO | ) ) ) ) \ 3 ) i N \ \ ) \ [} ) ) .| 3 ) i ) i i ., AND SHIPPING [Nips Sufferfigvy Damage as Result of Widespread Sea and Air Assaults ALLIED HEADQUARTERS AT Gen. Bors, Polish Partisan's Head- |NEW GUINEA, Sept. 23—Maraud- ;o taken are delinquents or vol- | ing Navy Catalina patrol boats, |sweeping the seas off the southern Philippines, have destroyed'or dam- aged four Japanese vessels and |scattered a convoy of 12 small | freighters. | Air strikes, reported today by Headquarters, ranged from north- west of Zamboanga, the second city fon Mindanao Island, to Davao Gulf. Bombers hit a 3000 ton |freighter and three other craft, in- |cluding a thousand ton merchant- man. Assaults were made Tuesday (nighl, and Wednesday morning |other patrol bombers followed |these harrassing raids with bomb- ing and strafing attacks on 12 |smaller freighters near Cape San | Augustine, southeast of Davao. Attacks continued on heavily |pounded Halmahera by carrier based Hellcats and Avengers in great strength, with Army Bostons {and Thunderbolts ranging over Galela and Miti airdromes. Other strikes were made on the Celebes. b ' HOSPITAL NOTES | Mrs. K. E. Suritzer became | mother of a seven pound, seven ounce son at 10:35 o'clock last evening in St. Ann's Hospital. i the | Clinton Stapleton has been mitted to St. Ann’s Hospital | medical treatment. | for | Mrs. Addie Campus, a surgical | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA DRAFTCALLIN |JUNEAU HUNTERS SEPT. MAY BE | GET BAG LIMIT LASTTHIS YEAR| AT SUMDUM FLAT Territorial Selective Service Di-| Returning to town last night with rector John McCormick announced the limit of ducks from Sumdum today the call for inductees on |Flats, Jack Burford and party re- lsep[ember 28 may be the last mw‘purted wonderful hunting there al- luntil the first of the year. though the weather was trying at | Since the first part of August|times—raining am_! blowing one hour ISelective Service has been taking 2nd bright sunshine the next. |registrants between the ages of | Those making the trip on the Don- {18 and 26 only. They have been|Jac Were Burford, Dr. W. P. Blan- |able to fill the quota easily v.'nh-:mI_]' R _Jack FISLORSE, 'Ellh out taking any of the older mm,‘JR‘y""‘dsv:": V‘; P°Wle’t'“ T"_”‘ L {McCormick said. The only older|JUnieau Wednesday night, arriving |at Sumdum in time for the opening of the season Thursday. Hunting hours in the Juneau area r ducks are as follows, of course | {unteers for induction. The Re-employment program 'S!fu [working out well so far, said|siarting a half-hour before sunrise: McCormick, although the real test| gunday, Sept. 24—Sunrise 6:45 a. will come later when thousands of |m , sunset 6:5¢ p. m. |soldiers are discharged. He said! Monday, Sept. 25—Sunrise 6:48 a. that the discharged veteran must!m, sunset 6:51 p. m. apply to the local board within 40| |days after discharge if he wants| his old job back. However, the di- }SHRINER F rector said with all the war work lgoing on the veteran, in most| N"_E IEMplE |cases, does not want his old job | back. J. A. Martin is the re-em-| ployment agent for Board No. 3 in| Eighteenth Pilgrimage to | Alaska Is Being Made [ by Air Over PAA Juneau. Territorial Selective Service is| busy now preparing a pamphlet | WOODLEY, Ellls | Embarking on Nile Temple's | eighteenth pilgrimage to Alaska, Ray AlASKA COASTAL Eckmann, Illustrious Potentate and 18 B on the GI bill of rights. It Will be | {in questionnaire form consisting of between 15 and 20 pages. |his party of Shrine officials have | flown to Fairbanks from Seattle via Pan American World Airways. Their | f1ignt maxked tHe first thme the en- Woodley Airway |sengers to Anchorage yesterday, Tom Ely and R. G. Sommers Ellis Airlines brought the fol- __ ltire pfigrimage is being ‘made by ‘air. Das The party is conducting a series of ceremonials in the Territory to initiate Masons who are eligible to become Shriners. Ceremonials were flew two B {lowing passengers from Ketchikan: nelq in Fairbanks on September 19. | Harry Sperling, C. L. Lovgren, Capt. | The party goes to Anchorage, Sep- Eliza Harbor. On the southbound trip, September 29, Ellis| Traveling with Eckmann are W. YANK TROOPS ONTHRESHOLD | OF FUTA PASS Nazis' Gothic Line in lfaly ' Widened with Capture of Monte Citerna ROME, Sept. 23—The breach of | the Nazis' Gothic Line in Italy has been widened by the capture of Monte Citerna, Allied Heedquarters said today. The capture of Monte Citerna and Monte Tronale, both west of captured Firenzuola, placed the American troops on the thres- hold of Futa Pass. The Allied com- munique said that high ground north of Firenzuola was occupied while American infantrymen hammered to | the strategic pass toward Bologne. | Eighth Army troops in the Adri- atic sector began a drive northwest from captured Rimini toward the same prize objective, and other Eighth Army units plunged north toward Ravenna, 35 miles up the Adriatic Coast from Rimini, 45 miles east of Bologne. British and Brazilian forces with the Fifth Army continued to make | gains “against varied resistance.” Brazilians, operating the left flank of the Fifth Army near the Ligurian | Coast, were last reported smashing forward in front of Pietrasanta in the direction of Lapsezia, 23 airline miles to the north. B g MATILDA H. FRENCH ARRANGES FINE CONCERT PROGRAM | | | | Sponsored by the Order of Rain- |Rasmussen and two loggers from | tember 25 and will be in Juneau, bov for Girls, Mrs. Matilda Holst |French, mezzo soprano, will be heard in concert next week on | patient, has been discharged frcm |Passengers were Mrs. M. L. Bon- Hal McDowell, Assistant Rabbin of Tuesday and Wednesday evenings |St. Ann’s Hospital. Master Willlam Fortica entered | |St. Ann’s on Friday for medical attention | Mrs. Henry Museth has been ad- mitted to St. Ann’s Hospital where |she will undergo surgical treatment. | PR s RUSSIAN YOUTH 15 IN JUNEAU ON WAY TOMOSCOW Vladmir Camchakoff,10-year - old Russian youth s in Juneau today ‘:\waiv,ing the arrival of his mother, {Dr. Vera Camchakoff, Russian |scientist, on one of the northbound | steamers, Vladmir, who arrived via PAA! vesterday afternoon, became lost in Seattle this week while doing errands for his mother. Forced to leave without him, as her visa had| ‘expired, Dr. Camchakoff notified | |the police of her missing son, be-| fore boarding the ship. The boy was located by Army authorities near pier 88, and when questioned, told his rescuers that! he had become lost and had spent |the night sleeping under a log on| | Queen Anne Hill. I Police turned Vladmir over to | employees of the Soviet purchasing | commission and notified his mother by radio that her son would join her in Juneau. Dr. Camchakoff and | Vladmir expect to fly military air | from Fairbanks to Moscow. During his brief sojourn in Al- aska’s capital, the young Russian | boy has been the guest of Alaska | Steamship Agent, H. O. Adams, and Mrs. Adams. i RGP About 20 per cent of the candy and chocolate produced in the U. 8. in| 1942 was shipped for consumption by | armed forces at home and abroad. | | ( [ | | [ | personnel are taking in the winning of the war . . . | our cooperation. Alaska . . . are bending every effort toward mai an augmented fleet and a highly trained organizati D. B. FEMMER, Agent, JUNEAU Pier 7, MAin 7477 ¢ e = ] The Alaska Transportation Company is proud of the part its fleet and its forces will continue to have first call on our facilities and 100 per cent of We are not unmindful of the friendships built through the years of serving service for these old friends . . . and looking toward the days of peace when to the Alaska of tomorrow in a bigger and better way. KA TRANSPORTATION CO. TACOMA, WASH,, Perkins Bldg., MAin 0840 Dedicated to Victory he needs of the armed ntaining a dependable on will render service I Kitka, Winnie Groom. and the Rev. Matthew Hoch. Priest and Prophet, and Leon Sut- Alaska Coastal Airlines took the | ter, Assistant Director, Second Sec- following to Hoonah: E. B. Fisher, |tion. Mabel Fisher, Marie Wil]mm&# “Our trip to Alaska is made every Henry Moy. |other year to promote the spirit of Hoonah to Juneau — W. M. fraternity and comradeship ameng Sheakley, Max Lundoff, Wallace ‘\members of the Shrine and Masons Jones. | generally,” said Eckmann in Seattle. June Wirt, John Chatham, Henry Pilgrimages, Nile Temple has con- | ducted six pilgrimages to the Orient, Juneau to Tenakee—Eve 'Nye_;during which time General Douglas gard. € | MacArthur was initiated.” Sitka to Juneau—Mae Stephen-| The group will return to Seattle son, T. T. Spuroch, J. R. Holmes. | via Pan American on October 1. ‘Woman Is Tripped Juneau to Ketchikan — Mildred | Keaton, A. R. Diimomel, Dan Sul-| livan, Rose Deltama. Juneau to Petersburg — | Baker. ! Ketchikan to Juneau — Howard | Romig, Stanley Nesmith, Jerry" Hansen, Clayton Flcek. | NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.—Po- N R jlice were searching a woman sus- POLICE COURT FINES I\pected of stealing a large sum of money. Those fined in City Police Court Up when one officer noticed some- this morning include Donald .New-|thing green in the hamburger ton. $25, charged with being drunk sandwich the woman was holding. and disorderly and James Huston,ilnspection showed it to be the $25, on a charge of drunkenness. missing bills, and not lettuce. g Virgil .While travelin we'll be thinki see them . . . BUY FRANK B. McCLURE, Manager Juneau to Sitka—Herb Schlangil, |“Besides sponsoring eighteen Alaska | By "Green’ Sandwich They were about to give; FOR THE DURATION . .. in Alaska. . . Even if we don't Keep On Buying Bonds TO WIN THIS YEAR BONDS ... |ner, James Hudson, Lt. McCain, | Nile Temple, Jo Dudley Cook, High | The musicale will be given in the | Northern Light Presbyterian Church and the program will begin {at 8 o’clock. Mis. Carol Beery Davis will act as accompanist for the well known :singex, Mrs. French's program follows: O! Divine Redeemer Gounod (By request) He Shall Feed His Flock .....Handel from the “Messiah” | Recessional, with organ ..deKoven Immer Leiser Wird Mein Schlummer = Brahms Sur<mannchen <evver. Brahms Vergebliches Standchen .....Brahms Weigenlied —eee.... Brahms Der Schmied .v Brahms i Obsiination deFontenailles L'Adieu du Matin ..Pessard |Mcn Coeur S'ouvre A Ta Voix ... b ...Saint-Saens {from the opera “Samson et Delila” | Iris e Wolfe iMammy's Song Ware | Bow! of Jade Flood I Dunno! ... Wells | Inter Nos Mac Fadyen - The longest aqueduct ever built is | the 300-mile Colorado River aque- duct of Southern California. g is difficult . . . ng of our friends MORE THAN BEFORE New Washington Hotel, Seattle | 8 SATURDAY | | | Gl GIRL_ponna Senecal, a senior at Alexandria Bay, N. Y., high school, honors her boy friend overseas by wearing in- signia of army units when she «swims at Thousand Islands. D FLEET COP PLAYS DECOY FOR DOG ST. PETERSBURG, Fla—Police were stumped momentarily when they tried to run in an inebriate who had lain down in the middle of the street to rest. The man’s big police dog stood guard and growled whenever they approached. Finally one of the officers acted | as a decoy, taunting the dog until| it ran after him. Two other offi-| cers then picked up the inebriate and hustled him to jail. On the way they picked up the decoy, out of breath but without a tooth mark on him. e —— England’s Profane Oath Act of 1745 inflicted a sliding scale of fines for the use of profane oaths accord- ing to the rank of the offender, with those ranking above a gentle- | man receiving the heaviest fines. | grass and several species of palm, SEPTEMBER 23, 1944 In addition to cane and beets, ugar has been extracted commer- cially from Indian maize, sorghum z 'f 3 24 % d Perhaps your NERVES Are Hungry for VITAMIN B! Thousands of people suffering from EXCITABILITY, NERV- OUSNESS, SLEEPLESSLESS, UPSET FEELING ITY, SENSITIVENE POOR MEMORY, scientists claim, in many cases are due to a need of Vitamin Bi1. VITAMIN Bl has become fam- ous because of its ability to SOOTHE and RELAX TAUT NERVES and because of its need to keep the INTESTINAL TRACT, BRAIN and other vital organs funtioning efficiently. ALBERTY PHOSPHO-B OFTEN GIVES RELIEF IN TWO WEEKS It’s New, It’s Different— Try It! ALBERTY'S PHOSPHO-B — is Vitamin Bl combined with HOMEOPATHIC rations of the 5 PHOSPHATES — IRON, SOD- IUM, CALCIUM, POTASSIUM and MAGNESIUM. Ask for Al- berty’s Phespho-B and really re- lax. See how added daily rations of Vitamin Bl SOOTHE IR- RITABILITY and NERVOUS- NESS and give RESTFUL SLEEP. 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