The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 15, 1944, Page 6

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ADMINISTRATION PROPOSES CREDIT FOR EUROPENOW WASHINGTON, Nov. 15—Joint government financing of the great- est peacetime export program in the history of the country is ex- pected to be recommended to Con- by President Roosevelt ear SAYS T00 MANY | ska for he pres- gress next rth jobs of . no tir next EARLY MORNING ALARM A call from box 4-9 at 12:15 a. m. took the Juneau Fire Department to Jack McDaniel's house, near the Home Grocery, where an oil burner was on fire. Minor damage was reported. BUY WAR BONDS Funeral services for William S. Wanamaker, who passed away on November 13, will be held at 7 o'clock Friday evening in the Rus- sian Orthodox Church. The deceased was born at Sitka on August 12, 1899, and later moved to Juneau where he helped to or- ganize the St. Nicholas Choir. He served for two years as president of the choir, and upon expiration of his term he became Choir Leader. He was still serving in this capac- ity at the time of his death. He also was in charge of the Russian Ofthodox Church. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mar- garet Wanamaker, of Juneau; four daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Jack, Mrs. Phillis Johns, and Eunice Wana- maker of Juneau, and Katherine Wanamaker of Sitka; three sons, William, USCG, and Matthew and | Samuel, both of Sitka. The remains will be shipped to isnka for burial. INSTRUCTOR HERE 10 TEACH MINER'S COURSE | C. R. Burley, who will teach |the Short Course in Mining for the Extension Department of the University of Alaska here in Ju- ;neau. arrived here yesterday and is at the Gastineau Hotel, At present, Burley is looking for Phone, Write or Wire Your Order /a location in which to teach the three weeks' cdurse. | Burley announced anybody who we Have several H“ndred |is interested in enrolling for the Pounds of - Good Quality course could contact him at Room ‘ SOUTHBOUND STEAMER “ SAILS LATE TUESDAY In Cold Storage s W e FOR SALE BUY FOR YOUR WINTER . NEEDS FIRST HERE...FIRST SERVED . . . It's Going Fast So Hurry . .. Gia e vt WIPED OUT Arthur A, Hedges, War Man- said too many m \d their fam- t's economic advisers be- 9 lE e vance on Budapest be possible to approach the present | work nor any place to live in the lenemy bridgehead on the east bank ployment during ON: | redit will be required, Public or| The boom military construction, PIans | gitional 30 towns. made for women and children the 12 months. It hopes to|wijthin the east sector, medium ar- for section hangs but | that the Johnson Act prohibiting |north and northwest from Nonor rates. There jobs. | repealed or superseded. | A dispatch said Hungary seemed leaving the Territory to check | in the near future to break the they reached the States so they may | A broadcast communique from . |portant rail junction in Yugoslavia e e ITEMS are available Hershey Bars, Gum, and eic. Place your orders early! We have iwo men and their familie ent time.’ power head, who just returned from [Thi o S0 vdex: Seticun i 1o As Bhitel ,)Thmy More Towns Fall Be i ! ¥ there are plenty and op- |lieve that in the first year after the end of war in Europe it would| He added that in many cases men ity AR 50— mhi e and their families could find g ; e e N , Nov. 15. — Th export volume, This is en {Army b Py MUl e a rcrowded Alaskan town, T ohse B tieat corn Lhete 18 dithie | T e Ao s ”“f'or the Danube River, south of Buda- present amount which shows much\FC %0 o ione it Tines with Mokt of tHE: work be e it 3 OF | advances to the south and north- iy N A private credit remains to be de-iw.c of Budapest, netting an ad- i termined, but France alone he said, is about completed and in |10 Procure about two millions worth | Moscow said Marshal Malinovsky's most of the camps no provision i of goods in this country during troops are holding fast to positions The two railroads, the Alaska Rail- | 8¢t most of this on credit. |tillery range from Budapest, and road and the White Pass and Yukon,| All Administration experts agreefon the south speared to the have openings | these jobs are paid at peacetime |loans to nations who defaulted and captured Uri Peteri. The gains are no boom rates |during World War I debts A‘llh(‘r‘yure from three to five miles. paid on these Hedges also asked anybody who | - ilikely to remain the main theater {of action on the Eastern front, for with the local USES office for job {there is little hint of any attempt clearance and check again when | | |stalemate in Poland or in East be referred to critical jobs, of which |Prussia. there are plenty in the States. {Marshal Tito announced Yugoslav Partisans had captured Koplje, im- {and key to the Vardar Valley route { through the Balkans. Whenever any of the HARD-TO-GET WANAMAKER SERVICES 1 ’ Come in and get your quota of PHONE 16 or 24 | . . . deliveries daily: 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. ., SEATTLEITES HERE Agnes J. Cavanaugh and Isabelle Johnson are in town from Seattle, and are registered at the Baranof Hotel. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 194 [ Three Bills By Delegate WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.— Three| | bills have been introduced by Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Dimond as | follows: One would allow Federal employ- | ees to be eligible for postmasterships |in Alaska. | | Another would permit Armed | Forces to provide transportation to land from Alaska for Federal em- | ployees in Alaska who have worked| ‘(here two years. | | The third measure would .n]low‘ | the District Court in Alaska to | grant certificates of ciitzenship to | Metlakatla Indians who have met the requirements. NEW INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT Will Take Oath from South ; Portico of White House | Next January 20 | WASHINGTON, Nov. 15, — Thc‘ Special Congressional ~Committee | announces President Roosevelt will| take the oath as the Nation's first| fourth-term President on the south | portico of the White House. | The three previous 1nmmln‘fl].s“ have been held on the east entrance | of the Capitol Building. The new. arrangement eliminates | the customary expenditure of sev-| eral thousand dollars for stands and | other seating arrangements. { LOCAL CONTRACTORS | NAME PARSONS AS | HEAD LAST NIGHT Ernie Parsons was elected presi- | dent of the Juneau Contractor's| and Employer’s Association at the) annual election of officers, held! following a banquet in the Gold | Room of the Baranof Hotel last | night at 7 o'clock. | Hans Berg was elected First Vice-President; Bill Manthey, Sec- ond Vice-President; Bill Feero, Secretary, and James Larson,| Treasurer. | Those present at the meeting and banquet were Bob Sommers, Burr, Johnson, Jerry McKinley; Jack| Clark, 1. G. Fulton, Parsons, Feero, | Manthey, Berg and Larson. | SURPRISE BIRTHDAY | FOR WAYNE JOHNSON A surprise birthday dinner was given in honor of Wayne Johnson, by close friends last night, in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel.| The table, decorated with ivory candelabra, had various toys at| each place as favors, and was cen- tered with a huge surprise birth- day cake. After dinner, gifts were | presented to the guést of honor to be opened. Those attending the gathering were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Carroll, | Mrs. Faye Durkee, Mrs. Norma Saxl and Art Oszam. AUXILIARY MEMBERS VISIT EDNA RAYNOR A number of - American Legion Auxiliary members met in the lobby of the Baranof Hotel last evening for a short visit with Department President Edna Raynor. She spoke briefly of the Auxiliary plans for the coming year and of her visit to the Unit’s hospitals and National Convention. — e MARSHAL RETURNS | i | William T. Mahoney, United States Marshal, has returned to Juneau from Ketchikan. He had been in the southern city for the past month. |Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Saby, C. Han- sen, Alphonse Hunt, Joel Karna, {Eli Post, Milton Van Sant, John NOW! L J Sold by the Half Beef Only A. Ceiling. $5.76 |G. Vavalis, C. R. Burley, J. Her- |Enis, Violet Hansen, Louise Peter- M | I. K CASH AND CARRY S4 19 i . | $2.00 exclusive of Meat or any | A R . 20-Mule Team SPANGLES Makes Every Floor a Dance Floor! PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries— 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. |man, M. Rolsted, Ella Benson, —WITH THE REGULAR MINI We Reserve the | low priced items or specials we | O. P. :Maggie Adams, J. Brenner, J. R. [} - - Borden's—Carnation—Darigold MUM GROCERY ORDER OF Right to Limit! | will deliver at this price. | Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Douglas Delivery—10 A. M. Boat Orders Delivered Anylime! BECKER, BLANCHARD SERVICES PERFORMED Lorraine Myrtle Blanchard, of Ju-| neau, and Ralph Leland Becker, n[; Olympia, Washington, were united| recently in a simple ceremony which | took place in the Northern Lignt]‘ Presbyterian Church Rev. Willis R. Booth performed the service, and witnesses were Miss Shirlee Dutra and Wallace J. Wel-| lenstein. i e Small Dinner Party Held Last Evening, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Carnegie, of| the Juneau Florist, and Mr. and', Mrs, Ned Cooper had a small dinner party in the Gold Room of the| Baranof Hotel last evening. The party was given in honor of | plA" FOR {Mr. Carnegie’s safe return from his|§400. W. J. Manthey is the con- trip to the Stati R FOLLOWED FIRE TRUCKS; | TWO DRIVERS ARE FINED Chief of Police John Monagle} |were filed. Stutz was a passenger MAXWELL IS KILLED IN ACTION SMASHED WINDOW; IS MADE T0 PAY FOR FUN Last night at 11 o'clock, City Police were called to the 20th| Century Market, where they sub-| dued and took into custody John| Edward Stutz, who had been caught in the act of smashing a| plate glass window of the market.!| Stutz was taken to the city jail,/ but was released after paying sao@We'] Known Juneau Man for the broken window. No charges | el Pays Supreme Sacrifice in Present War (Continued from Page One) aboard a steamer in port. | S eee | BUILDING PERMITS FALL OFF; BUT ONE ISS D . _ |the Alaska Game Commission and But one building permit was is-\;,qe his headquarters in Juneau sued this past week by the City|f,. ceveral months before being {Bullding Inspector. Dan Ulery ob-|yqnsferred to the Anchorage office | tained a permit to make general|,s (he Commission. Before leaving, repairs on a house at 633 Mainpoyeyer, his engagement to Miss Street at an estimated cost M‘S\'lnl Godfrey, one of Juneau’s |popular young girls, was announced on April 7. | Maxwell returned to Juneau and ! % 1)7& and Miss Godfrey were married tractor DoUGLAS !ding and reception in the Baranof |Hotel, the couple went to Ancho: ‘muc to make their home. Several {months later Maxwell resigned his ’Se.’lt(le. whe! {on June 7, 1941. Following the wed- | re he became inspecto! Tacoma Shipbuild Later they re | with the Seattle- ing Corporation. turned to Juneau and Maxwell desiring to enlist in the armeq services, went south and joined th United States Marine Corps. Afte |undergoing intensive training 'a southern base, he was assigned |to the cruiser (deleted) and w | with his ship to the South Pa |battle area. His ship subseque: |joined in the naval battle fo! | Saipan and several cther conflictd |Maxwell was wounded in a late |action but recovered in the ship | hospital, refusing to be t4 a shore station. | At the time of his death, Max| |well was about to be transferre Ito the Air Force, as his de |care disposition, fighting iund ability an expert attained in training as |and for which he had several citations ere positive prerequisit and able airman sent -1 qualitie gunney Marine received cited daring as es for a | In addition to his wife, [survived by his son, Donie |Juneau with his materr mother, Mrs. Mae Godfrey; |parents in California, and severa {brothers, one of whom, a veteral of the Guadalcanal campaign, i still with the armed forces some he i now 4 announced today that drivers of|npw TEACHER, SCHOOL STAFF Position with the Game Commis- (where in the South Pacific. two cars were given tickets early | this morning for following the {fire truck and each was subse~'peginning November 13, replacing became connected ‘quemly fined $10. Monagle said he wished to again' remind drivers that a city ordin- gnce which plaintly states that cars in motion at the time the fire siren sounds shall immediately pull over to the curb, yielding the right-of-way to emergency vehicles. e 1 FROM OKLAHOMA { Jack Kelly and D. Womack are registered at the Gastineau Hotel from Pawnee, Oklahoma. e CHERVINSKI HERE Leonard Chervinski is here from | Fairbanks and is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. | - ANCHORAGE VISITOR | Mrs. H. Sworm is in town and is registered at the Gastineau Hotel from Anchorage. - - JUST ARRIVED R. D. Johnson and H. G. Collins | have arrived in Juneau and are staying at the Gastineau Hotel. e i KEHOE BACK IN TOWN i J. W. Kehoe, Counsellor for the Department of Justice in Alaska, is | back in Juneau after attendance at the District Court session in| Ketchikan. — e | FROM INDIANA ‘\ Nettie Kuhner has arrived in Juneau from Munice, Indiana, and is staying at the Hotel Juneau. | .- ROBSTED IN TOWN M. Robsted is in town and is registered at the Hotel Juneau from Chicago, Illinois. B —— FORM LOS ANGELES Lennie Lempke is in town from | Los Angeles, @alifornia, and is staying at the Hotel Juneau at the present time. —— COOK FAMILY HERE C. E. Cook, wife, and son, are in Juneau and are registered at the Hotel Juneau from Napa, Cali- fornia. .- GEORGE FOLTA SOUTH George Folta, General Counsel for the Interior Department, left recently for Seattle to attend the hearings on aboriginal rights, now taking place in that city. - LEVIN GOES SOHUTH Ed Levin, who has been doing scientific work for the Rev. Ber- nard Hubbard Explorations for the past several months at Hole-In- | M The-Wall Glacier, has left for California to spend the winter. Miss Ethel McNair has joined the |sion and he and hist wife went to faculty of the Douglas High School, | California, where he immediately with a tool . Raymond Nevin who Mmuyimunumuumnz firm conducted by resigned. Miss McNair holds an a brother-in-law. It was in Fuller- MA. degree from Columbia Uni-|ton, California, where a baby bo versity. She has had teaching ex- | Donie, now two and one-! perience in Puerto Rico, Japan,|old, was born to them. South America and the Hawaiian ! Joins Marines Islands. She has been head of Lhe“ The Maxwells then went to English and commercial depart- | i o ments in various schools, including | F the La Hahinaluna High School, Ha- | §| waii, and more recently taught inf} the English department of the George Washington High School in| San Francisco, Calif. | | 3 = 3 CATHOLIC LADIES TO MEET ! A meeting of the Catholic Ladies of Douglas and the Douglas High- way will be held Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Marcus Jensen at 8 o'clock. TERRITORIAL GUARDS MEET Capt. Wendell Cahill of the Doug- las Unit of the Alaska Territorial Guards announces there will be a regular meeting of his unit tomor- row evening in the Natatorium. Time is set for 7:30 and the dress is coveralls, leggings, ammunition belts and rifles. There will be drill practice and, small bore rifle fire. | i D. I. W. CL NOTICE | The Juneau-Douglas Christmas Toy Center is located at 317 Frank- lin Street, opposite the MacKinnon Apartments. Any Douglas ladies who have spare time while in Ju- neau or time to go to the center and assist in re-conditioning old toys will be very welcome. The Juneau and Douglas Women’s clubs are working together on the project and are colletcing all donations of old toys and repairing them to be dis- tributed to children whom Santa may forget this year. Mrs. Frank Marshall is the Douglas Chairman of the D. I. W. Club for the project. | DOUGLAS BASKETBALL | The Douglas High School Huskies, | in a hard-fought game, played in the Douglas High School Gymnas- | ium last night won over the Dol- phins by a score of 39 to 21. This season the Huskies have a| Jo S| | | NES - STEVEN Maxwell attended the Fullertor | Junior College and the School o | Architecture at the University ol Southern California. He was aff | filiated with the Alpha Rho Chi }lmnmu\ architectural fraternity. . California laurel roots are being | used as substitute for imported bria in English pipes. RE-TRENCH For Rainy Weather . . . All Weather TRENCH COAT —in grey, fuschia and black. Slash pockets with complete interlin- ing. Sizes 12-16. Also a Large Selection of UMBRELLAS team of ball rustlers, as shown in last night’s game, and when they meet the Juneau High Crimson Bears to compete for the Southeast Alaska championship, ball fans will get an eye-full of thrills in every minute of play. In the opening game the Sig- nacs, showed better form than in their two previous appearances on the maple court, but lost to the Beavers 29 to 38. 1 High scorers in the two games were Bartlett of the Signacs, 13 points; Krogman of the Beavers, 23; and Bach of the Huskies, 15. DOG 10:15 A. M. ANIMAL — Pre-War Style Dozen §1.59, (ase $6.19 _Also Pard - Red Heart - Calo Friskies - Spratt Ovals Spratt’s Cat Food Centennial Dog Meal DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES MINIMUM—$2.50 Ber CASH GRO FOOD 2:15 P. M. Gahv PEGESEES—————— CRESTA From its origin over 170 years ago, California’s wine industry has grown and matured with the United States. For more than 50 years, Cresta Blanca has carried on this great tradition. Ask for Cresta Blanca by name. BLANCA WINE COMPANY, inc. Los Angeles and Livermore, California For over fifty years, the finest of American wines. /

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