The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1944, Page 6

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ANB CONVENTION 5 St | € AN DELEGATES WILL i Bill Is Proposed fo Setle ‘ Indian Claims in Regular Courts REr (Continued from there rese Paul er new develoy 1 rights with the ubject said ed ANB, e proy 1a the the is € Title The ope ates. Condemn Indian ¢ eclaration of t it is the policy es to regard the and waters of the as being in 'd that this | They cover such ibject to the t polic . - o PIECES lands of Alaska public domain osed law would in the dom ritory lands LIOUOR. S'FNDE an Buy $20.00 Coupon Books for $1.00 | Just Arrived CREME DE CACAOQ Fifths 84.25 CREME DE MENTHE Fl fthq &0)»!3 NOT GO TO INGTON Apricot Liqueur Cherry Liqueur Blackberry Liqueur Fifths 84.45 SLOE GIN Fifths $4.25 Phones 92-35—2 Free Deliveries Daily ‘me laid down bal of ductive wartime cor - .o e e E her Temperature, cecoeceovrc0000e00600e We are well prepared o supply your table with the fi FRESH APPLE CIDER AVOGCADOES Bring Your Jug CRANBERRIES Winesap, Jonathan and HALLOWE'EN CANDY Delicious APPLES CORN-ON-THE-COB POMEGRANATES SWEET POTATOES And Everything in Season at PIGGLY WIGGLY PHONE 16 OR 24 R R INATES AIES ‘DR CAMPAIGN Page One) Wed OHIO too” a post- trol over wages REPORT Bureau) October 2 ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNE ALASKA A 'HGTZL BUIDING LOWLANDS BUILT IN 1897 15 SOLD TO McCAUL| Junesu's oldest from the gold ecn purc e O} Page One) T! NEARS END - ate. (Continued from buildir n Streets, Hotel located at and known as the under eight feet of water., ) the south, in France, All made t ga ing t we troops ville 10 s the building - use being nd hold Bl 5 WO yeats 60" counter on Army used it for a e for a stol depot for nd mag all for McCaul to|] and lot to the, Davlin Company who arc » the structure and erect a nd storage| site. { 2 announced | d addition to the com-| probably will nave s are available. ‘ 1ined ener 2e en off -+ MORE CHILDREN == IN SCHOOLS OF ‘% ALASKA IN 1944 - == | ALLIES OPENNEW | BURMA OFFENSIVE increa, Is throughc énrollment t Alaska are James C. Ry ssioner of Educ ed to Juneau I he s in , Oct. 30—A new opened today m‘ with Chinese troops | Bhamo and the | y, to th ) throughout toward toward hwest, the innounced today The Chinese occupi miles north of Bha a fight, and from Hopin d 36 m started triking are reported British in both schools, taxing to the very limit 1id that t of what will a big way tion virtually on the Br e 2se probing uthward from the Myitkyina area |Mrs. on October 15, back shortly each spot with the Japs falling PR before they reached | Fairbanks, Seward, Kodi chools ¢ e > SCOTT HERE A BRINGS FIVE FROM HAINES engers neau to Ski from at the in town istered Everett "airbanks @ ranof Hotel e ARRIVES IN JUNEAU | Seward is registered at anof Hotel from Seattle. iy FROM WASH Hamflton, J Hotch. George L. Ryan is registered at Baranof Hotel from Washing- PG the - ROOD IN TOWN S. Ro f " ViA ALASKA uuesjnf:xf:mfr."““ | engers via m Nome, registered is at oo HE HERE FROM KODIAK wver the weekend Petric Huntley and John H. Craig, G. E. Mann /. M. Gard, W. R, Baranof Hotel from Kodiak. rd, Willlam A Er T Barnes, FROM ST. PAUL Mrs. R. V. Adalphson and son, out on the James Herbert, are here from S vere Ruth Vall-|Paul, Minnesota, and are regis-| and FEugene|tered at the Baranof Hotel. - GERFORD LEAV | \gerford left yesterday | aft 1 short furlough ent with his parents, Mrs. P. M. Hungerford, Ann HERE cam- RS 000,000 | ers W, T k2 fre L _ee A DON HU ‘ Don H w",fi STORAGE TODAY " i Mr. and : of this cil fish at the Juneau | e Alaska Coast | ,000 pounds of | halibut from the sable fish and and; and 9,000 and sable fish e — RAY WOLFE LEAVES R. L. Wolfe, Credit Agent for| the Alaska Indian Service, left for| Suka today aboard the North Sea | on' official business. He planes to | be gone about a week. | bought 1,400 2 Bt | from the STEWART IN 'l'i})“'N | , a packer; 800 pounds of eth Stewart is in town| from the 31-A-674, Captain |{rom Seattle and is registered at ,unds of | the Gastineau Hotel. Captain Carl e | A‘-Vil'\(x[fl'\ Oct. 30 — The| uming dlplomatlc alian govern- | ally 'mxmunced{ from the No D of halibut from the Fremont. Ker ings from the Sadie, Baker. - o FROM HAD ment it There is a London. s. Pauline Py stered 2 om iHaines, | the We have a few PUMPKINS left for HALLOWE'EN and lois of BAR SOAP Juneau Deliveries—10 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Boat Orders Delivered Anylime! I R A A T ‘RETURNS FROM TRIP WEST bulldings, | jonn McCormick, Territorial Chair- h days, has|map for the National War Fund, re-| by Tom Caul from|yrmed by plane late Saturday. | Front| cormick stated, is within $1,000 of s, built in 1897 pivisio ed for I) siness in 1898.1a)50 well underway. $1,000 Commercial Co. |Cab Owners’ Association contributed $500 and the Order of Eastern Star ' NORTH SEA BRINGS neau late last night with the fol- Henry G. A. Bedford. | \Ddle Thomas, H. M. Olsen. | |Bob Davenport. Chinese Command |G- . |Duncan, Mrs, Shirley Duncan, Mrs. 1 Myothit, 24 Helen McShan. ish, | Chittick, Mrs. are said to|Tone | Mrs. Jorene V. Sanger, | Blackwell, Mr. and Mrs. Art Berg- gren, Ray King. | Sam Wanamaker and B. F. Kane. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1944 | SUPERVISOR RETURNS T0 COLORADO OFFICE Supervisor TERRITORIAL CHAIRMAN COUPLE MARRIED BY ‘ FOR NATIONAL WARFUND, U. 5. COMMISSIONER ‘ William H. Denmark, USCG ;mdv‘ Homer Howard, {Myrtle E. Jones were married Sat- Indian Education, left today urday evening at the Douglas home return to his home office |of U. S. Commissioner Felix Gray. |penyer, Colorado. He has been in { The bride was attended by Astrid | o < e | Sadler and the bridegroom had his|Alaska for months work= /twin brother, Glenn L. Denmar! g in conjunction with the office | of Indian Affairs in this city. of to trip to ® Mrs. Back from a two weeks’ thc\ westward and interior, several The Fourth Division, Mrs. Mc- | their $15,000 quota, and the Thir ; ion, with a quota of $25,000, ls‘ Among the larger contributions at Fairbanks, she. announced, was the check from the Northern At Anchorage, the n both cities contributed $50 each. | .. 27 PASSENGERS T0 JUNEAU YESTERDAY The North arrived in Ju- owing passengers for this port: From Petersburg — Olaf Arn Hanson, George Lonsgard, | SWEE T CIDER Bring Ymu'Juq | From Wrangell—Mrs. M. Thomas, From Ketchikan—Francis Lonay, : Also Kristofferson’s Cottage Cheese DOUGLAS DLLIVERY 10 A. M. TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. 2:15 P. M. ‘ MINIMUM—$2.50 {R. L. Wolf, Paul Heckel, M. D.|~ | Willlams, A. Van Mavern, Vera. 1 | BiRerts | CASH GROCERY Just Arrived... " BOOTH'S FRESH EASTERN OYSTEBS From Seattle—Robert W. Olan- | er, Ralph E. Randall, Theodore | Gaparil, O. J. Beene, Melvin D. Mrs. Robert LaBarr, Kenneth Flossie E. Carr. Anna L. Swigard, Austi Austin D. Earl, Be Fred Passengers leaving for Sitka are: LaBarr, | H. Lorenzen, William Barrett, Mr. and Mrs, Val Poor and children, Della Poor, James Boyle, R. M. va- | ingston, Norma Gritman, F. Met- calf, Mr. and Mrs. John Littlefield, at SANITARY MEAT MARKET Phones 49 and 13 WOODVS READY FOR PEACE, T7O0O— To restore the captured port of Naplu, 2,000 carloads of lumber were needed imme- diately. Woody literally goes ashore with our troops in every fighting zome . o o for vicioryl A GREAT America without foresis is as inconceivable as a victorious America without wood. Forest products have been called our No. | critical material for war. More than 4,000 uses mean that wood is an essential of peace, too. No wonder we speak of the "new age of wood," for no other resource serves us in so many ways. America can depend upon wood, because it is a product of growth. America's forest lands, protected from fire and given proper care, have sufficient capacity to continue to supply us with wood . . . today and tomorrow. Columbia Lumber Company ANCHORAGE—JUNEA U—SITKA—WHITTI

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