The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 6, 1944, Page 6

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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1944 ! At e e CONTINUING OUR INTRODUCTORY SPECIALS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'SOVIET PAPER IN_ |24 ARRIVE FROM ARTICLE BLASTS | SOUTH; 24 LEAVE| = "= %" BUREAU OF MINES OFFICIAL ARRIVES Rinehart is the contractor. Reva Such obtained two permits, FOURTEEN PERMITS ‘ | sta 7 a , $15 ISSUED IN 2 WEEKS |tsp, wirins. Total cost. $150 by G permit model a building for a Club at 115 Second ISERVICE MEN MAY NOT GET CLUB ON SECOND ST. Doubt was expressed today by Ter- | ritorial Treasurer Oscar Olson that the proposed Service Men’s Club | could be located in the old Civilian nk to re- Soldiers Esti- took out a | night with the following passengers: i X from Seattle—Mona M. Bakke, Ellen | €ral supervision of three war mineral have Street we 8 P, W to build a house obtained a permit le-room addition to a 21 West Tenth Street ed cost of $1,000. N. itely ik 't You Can Find All the Fresh Fruits and Vegetahles in Season b Notice... STARTING TODAY we have two deliveries daily —10:30 a. m. and 2:30 p. m. Please place orders at least one hour before de- livery time. Locally eowned and operated PIGGLY WIGGLY Phones 16 and 24 704 Juneau Deliveries—, 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Boat Orders Delivered Anylime! EORGE BROTHERS Super Market ( Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Keep Tuned in on KI Tuesday Election Borden's—Carnation—Darigold CASH AND CARRY —WITH THE REGULAR MINI MUM GROCERY MILK We Reserve the Right to Limit! $2.00 exclusive Hutchings Economy Market and EORGE BROTHERS Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily mated cost w 25 | Travel Control building at 15 Sec- ond Street because of its nearness Izvestia Concedes Election| P. Beaty, Miss L. Bernier, Mrs, |exploration projects on Prince of Elizabeth Clark, James M. Deviney, low priced items or specials we will deliver at this price. 250 | A permit wi issued nggly. to re-line a cooler | Church. | cork. No oot estimate Was GIVEN. | ey joq gtates: “No license shall The United States Indian Hos- |y, jsueq for the sale of any intoxi- pital obtained a permit to m~t;\h‘ cating liquor in any building within | plumbing at an estimated cost of 500 feet of any school or church.” | $90. Harri Machine Shop is tae| Olson expressed doubt the court contractor. would approve an application for a The Gastineau Hotel obtained a|club license as the buiiding has | permit to remodel a store space at|never been used for a bar. Under an estimated cost of $500. I. G.|the law if a building had been a bar Fulton and Company are the con-|in 1937 and was then changed over | tractors. | to another use, it could be granted a license agair - e GOLD LEAVES NOW ON | McLAUGHLIN'S SHOULDERS Gold leaves have replaced silver | bars on the shoulders of Major Ger- {ald McLaughlin’s uniform. Major Laughlin, who formerly taugh i the Juneau High School and is now sta- took out a permit }uom\d in Anchorage, received his | % b | promotion from captain last month. | o oil burner in the ["'wpaion and Mrs. McLaughlin, the Je tments on Gastineau | ¢ormer Elaine Housgl, have quarters Aver n estimated cost of | 4¢ Port Richardson and spend most | $350. Spike McLean the con- |of their leisure hours playing with their infant son, Jeffrey Stuart, who | C. C. Carter took out a per- | s reported to be growing like a weed. to repair the foundation of a|At last account he weighed eleven | house at 624 Main eet at an/| pount though still under two | estimated cost of $300. M. Isaacs|months of age. is the contractor. | - F. M. Katdanoff obtained a per-| o1 by CELEBRATE mit to repair the foundation and | . S ey " walls of a house at 425 Southj CHRISTENING OF SON F_mf lin Street. Estimated cost is| Mr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Woodley | s o | sverc stinats dnceutly ik mb i of Ktha Sully's Bakery took out a permit ||, jiact parties given in Anchorage to have electric wiring installed in|go. some time. The occasion fol- | its plant. Parsons Electric Com- | jowed the christening of their infant | PANg6; SOLICHE Estimated cost, | son, born September 15, and about a | $100 | hundred friends called at the at-| John Torvinen obtained a permit | tractive log home the Woodleys pur- | to build a porch on the front of !chased on East Sixth Street. estimated cost of ( Mr. and Mrs. Woodley’s son was | |named John Meredith, after Mrs.) Frank Stines took out a permit to | Woodley's brother, Capt. John Mere- dith Manders, U. S. Army, who was’} lot in action last spring. Mrs. Woodley is the former Letha oohe J Manders, whose father, John Mand- ers, was Republican candidate for | Delegate to Congress in the recent election and Mr. Woodley is owner of Woodley Airways, which operates | | between Anchorage and Juneau. to P:Tfl“ to the Seventh - day Adventist W. P. Johnson obtained a permit renew the foundation of his at 211 South Franklin Street| estimated cost of $200. Hans| Berg the contractor. | P. E. Beele obtained a permit to| make alterations on a house at 365 South Franklin Street at an esti- mated cost of $1,000. to store at ar is J. C. Thomas install an is tractor Dr mit a house, at an build a new foundation, do wiring and install plaster-board in a house at 435 Third Street. Estimated cost is $1,500. M. Isaacs is the !( actor. | - e BETTY M’CORMICK O AIR TONIGHT OVER KINY { On KINY lolll(lgh_( at z;o'ulock. 7 | Betty McCormick will rea in- evccting stk on the National war| COMMITTEES ARE Relief Fund which was recently NAMED uo"S (lUB ] i delivered by John D. Rockvfelh-r,‘} At its weekly meeting, held this inoon at the Baranof, the Lions Club committee appointments were made as follows: Boys and Girls Work—Arthur A. Hedges, Dr. J. O. Rude, Fred Hen- ning; citizenship — John McCor- mack, Milo Clouse, C. W. Wallis; civic improvemen t—Ernest E. Lincoln, John Hermle, C. E. War- field;" community betterment—Rev. |W. A Soboleff, Floyd Fagerson, ‘Linn A. Forrest. Education — Barney Anderson, |Leonard Holmquist, Mickey Mar- shall; health and welfare—Dr. J. O. Rude, Milt Furness, Tom Hutch- ings; safety — Gene Kirsten, Ed Nielsen, Art Oszman; sight conser- vation and blind—Bob Tollefson, Val Poor, Frank Hynes; ways and means—Milt Furness, Earl Hunter. ——————— CITY CLERK VACATIONS City Clerk J. E. Kearney left over the weekend for a hunting trip up Seymour Canal. He and John Hermle of the Home Grocery and Market left on Pete Hildre's boat. They expect to be gone about two weeks. il SN MILLERS HERE i Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Miller are in Juneau, and are registered at the Baranof Hotel from Johnstown, Pa. P Sy L POLICE COURT FINES The following fines were meted out today in City Magistrate’s Court according to the records: Fred Kinch, disorderly conduct, $25; Thomas W, Martinez, drunk, $25; D. Sinclalr, drunk, $25; Dolly George, drunk, $25; Ray Perkins, drunk and disorderly, $25; Lena Brown, drunk and disorderly, $25; George Washington Heins, drunk and disorderly, $25; and Nick Suciu, drunk, $25. NY Night for Returns ORDER OF 4 ! of Meat or | 0. P. A. Ceiling | $5.76 any | UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Serving CHINESE and AMERICAN DISHES DINE AND DANCE Open 24 Hours a Day FRSISSS S SIS SS S NSNS | [ | jand crude | dashed when preliminary data indi- 1000,000 of 1940, adding “chances for | | Frank J. Dorah, Mrs. Alberta Fox- i hill, Ernest J. Gilligan, Minnie J. IS FaS(iS' ;Ooglio, Mrs. Marshia Lavery, Mrs. ‘Lucillc Meath, Robert F. Meath, Marion M. Meath, Patricia McGov- (By Associated Press) |ern, George T. Milham, Mrs. Mil- The Soviet government newspaper | ham, Mrs. Pharoby Oliver, Elsie | Izvestia today in a headline article | peterson :: said “the election of, Roosevelt is| From Ketchikan—James Brooks, | guaranteed,” and sald yesterday | paul L. Cunningham, J. W. Gucker, | there were rumors that Republican | Robert Johnson, Samuel J. McElfa- | interests might stage a last-minute | trick, W. S. Wright. “fake plot” against Dewey’s life and | Leaving Juneau were the follow- charge it was instigated by American | ing: Mary Parke, Roscoe C. Klump, Communists. | Frank Kelly, Edith Wallis, Joe Col- | In an unsigned two-column survey | lier, Mary Collier, Lloyd Brown, of the American election it asserted | Conrad Brown, Vernon Leisdberg, | such a rumor is circulating among | carl Watkins, Ida Wilson, Vance the foreign correspondents in Mos- | Phillips, Charles Marshall, James cow and declared “these Republican | Glark, Mel Padella, Sally Padella, bosses understand that failure is!George O. Rowe, Annette Jacobsen, | imminent” and stating further: peter Jack, Chester Zenger, M. G. “Under these circumstances there is | Monagle, John Dapcevich, R. W. no wonder the Republicans are in|Vernon and Rudy Krusl. despair and might resort to a big| - e, — adventure in the hope of winning | votes by scaring people with the| ALASKA COASTAL ON Communist danger.” | Dewey reached Albany and had 3 TRIPS SATURDAY no comment and Roosevelt is m( secusion in Hyde Park, Insolent—Crude “One shouldn’t forget that history to FDR-Says GOP | the | Alaska Coastal Airlines made three flights Saturday carrying the !nl-‘ lowing passengers to Ketchikan: Dr. Wales Island and other SoutHeast | Alaska points. Upon completion of | these projects, a month ago, he then | began preliminary examinations of | a number of mining prospects. | Mr. Wright plans to be at the Juneau headquarters for some time, until final reports of his work are completed. While here, he is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel >-ee Mrs. Lee"M. Bunnell is registered at the Baranof from Skagway. CARA NOME NASQUE Give yourself"a party- i day's end o your skin alow.GET IT TODAY AT Butler, Mauro Drug Co. | Your Rexall Store includes a number of such insolent r, R. D. Baird. provocations beginning Ketchikan to Petersburg—Ed At-| with a faked document ascribed to kinson, Mrs. J. Atkinson, Mrs. Alex | the Communists appearing on the | Guthrie | eve of a parlimentary election in; Ketchikan to Juneau — Zalmain | some democratic countries, up to the | 3TOSS. | burning of the Reichstag in Ger-| Wrangell to Juneau—H. M. Olson. | many,” said the newspapers. | Juneau to Sitka—Dan Moller, Al-i Izvestia also said Republicans were | fred Kessler, Sam Hunter, James Hudson. 1 | Juneau to Chichagof Goudie. " | | | cated that the number of vote this year at least equalled the 50,- Sitka to Juneau—N. A. McEach- William Holly- W. B. Clark,) the second candidate, Dewey, have |ran, Mr. and Mrs been melting before one’s eyes.” | wood, Fred Turpin, Charges Made | 0. T. Mansfield. The article then said “the Hearst j Hoonah to Juneau—Duncan John- papers and the publications of Mc- |son, Peter Austin, James Lindoff, Cormick and Patterson and Gannett | Jimmie Wright, Harold C. Jones, carried on the campaign for Dewey | No flights were made Sunday. and simultaneously, this campaign was converted into defeatist and | even pro-Hitlerite agitation.” | In Washington, Mrs. Eleanor Me- | dill Patterson, owner and publisher! of the Washington Times-Herald, termed as “crazy” the Izvestia | article. | In Rochester, New York, Frank Gannett, publisher of the Gannett papers, described it as “ridiculous and absurd.” | There was no immediate comment | from Col. McCormick or from the Hearst papers. The Izvestia article said Dewey was “attempting to divide himself from defeatist isolationist concep- tions and, at most, from com- promised pro-Fascist elements but still well known pro-Fascists and pro-Germans, whose ties formed the core of the Republican staff who financed Dewey’s election cam- paign.” | -~ ! Y ! MONTANA GUESTS ” l 7 il WATCH OUT FOR SNIFFLY Head Colds Head colds can cause much suffering. Don’t suffer needlessly. Just put a lit- tle Va-tro-nol up each nostril. Relieves sneezy, stuffy dis- tress. Also helps prevent many colds from devel- oping if used in time! Try it. Fol- low directions in folder. Works fine! The Wings of the World’s Greatest TRAVEL SYSTEM Lontact Al Pierce, Empress Building, Fairbanks, Alasks, or any local Aitlines office. AL 444 AIR LINES Joe E. Halm and Stanley Miller are registered at the Baranof Hotel from Missoula, Montana. SEATTLEITES HERE Elmer J. Byrne and Joseph Brom- ley, registered from Seattle, are in Juneau and are guests at the Bar- anof Hotel. e REFORMED KILLERS LONDON—The Royal Norwegian Air Force recently destroyed its 150th German plane since the force was reformed in Britain in 1941, AFEWDROPS quickly relieve distress Potatoes.. Finest No. 1 Tibs.45¢ 14lbs. 89« 251bs.§1.59;1001bs.35.49 e Apples.. Jonathan—Delicious 6 pounds $1.00 BOX §5.50 DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A, M. TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. 2:15 P. M. MINIMUM—$2.50 Ber CASH GROC ERY v F et All This Wee MACHINE VANITY BEAUTY SALON | COOPER BUILDING Across from Federal Building ELSIE W. HILDRETH—Owner-. or MACHINELESS $8.50 0il Manicure —$1.00 (Formerly Sigrids’ PERMANENT EVENINGS OPEN Phone 318 SRS S S S SN Manager B e ) A Famous in the West for 66 years — Rainier today is one of the great trade names of America from trees. fighting. tomorrow. - Anchorage y’s READY FOR PEACE, TQO - Juneau From training camps 1o bastle fronts, wood plays a vital role in the war. But soon again, wood will be building the fences, fac- tovies, bomes and other essentials of a peace-time America, FOR A WHILE, we must wait before we can build the homes we plan, or buy freely the thousands of other items that come Wood's job in war only started with the construction of hundreds of training camps. It continues overseas wherever our froops are But, because civilian uses have been curtailed almost to the wvanishing point, our forests are able to meet this challenge, and will be able to supply us in the years to come. For wood is a crop which can be grown as a farmer grows crops of grain. Millions of acres of thriving seedlings are becoming our forest crops of i Columbia Lumber Company - Sitka

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