The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 8, 1945, Page 3

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MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1945 N GREAT LOVE IS ; ek % oAl 1 ROF usiCh oRtLaeriie penct A Oo 8T CATTIA 70 s":“ of ¥ with ROBERT BENCHLEY FELIX BRESSART JOHN HODIAK JACQUELINE WHITE ot e SEE IT with Someone You Love! ——ADDED— “SUBMARINE LIFE" “MEMORIES OF AUSTRALIA" CARTOON NEWS SAMPLER 191 t5s famous sssortmeat of best-liked confections here direct from the makers-v$1.50 0 $7.50; BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. “The Rexall Store” e | Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulsion relieves promptly be- cause it goes right to the seat of the | trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- flamed bronchial mucous mem- branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of omulsion with the un- derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Fironchitis THEME OF FILM ON CAPITOL BILL “Song of Russia,” new Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer film starring Rob- ert Taylor, now at the Capitol Theatre, can modestly boast one of the most interesting aggrega- tions talent brought to the screen many a blue or silver moon. In the first place, there are the two out-and-out, 100 per cent Am- erican leads. Taylor, playing one of the most exciting and unusual parts his career, is seen as a young American symphony con- ductor visiting Ru in the days just before the a k by Germany, and ‘caught in Susan Peters, the skyrocketing young actress who was seen in “Random Harvest” and “Assign- ment in Brittany,” appears as a talented young Russian pianist who marries the young American after a breathtaking courtship. of in the pinions of war.| REPORT GIVEN BY GIRL SCOUT TROOPS Girl Scout troops of Juneau make {the following reports: Troop 2—Troop 2 had its meet- ing at Holy Trinity Parish Hall. The main business of the meeting was |planning badge work. Since Presi- |dent Sylvia Lister was gone, a shor |time president was elected. Elsa Johnson was elected. Donna Jewett clected as a short time song r. Shirley Ann Mulvar and Joan Williamson passed sports and games by teaching a game called Magic Writing. Elsa passed Nature by giving an interesting report on the Water Ousel. Joan Rhodes pass- ed sports and games also by teach- ing a game called Enemy. The Wishing Circle was given and every- one said goodbye, then went home. —Reporter, Beth Daigler. Troop 9 — The roll was called Members answered by making a New Year’s resolution. The election of officers was held. Those elected are: President, Ann Louise Henning; Vice President, Carlee Roberts; Sec-| retary, Rae Peters; Treasurer, Paula Kay Cook, Sergeant-at-Arms, Lynn| Bodding; Reporter, Aileen Kron-| quist; Musician, Joan Lesher. —Reporter, Aileen Kronquist. In addition to its dramatic con- temporary story, contrasting the peacetime and wartime Soviet with powerful impact, “Song of Russia” has an exceptional musical accom- paniment. A mphony orchestra made up of 150 pieces was used for big musical scenes of the produc- | tion, playing Tschaikowsky and other music, under direction of Albert Coates. THREE NAZI ‘Troop 2—Troop 2 had its mbeting Thursday at the Holy Trinity Parish Hall. The meeting Thursday was a “Chrlslmas party. The girls decor- |ated the party tree. Packages were exchanged by Beth Daigler and Syl- | via Davis. The girls of Troop 2 gave { Mrs. McGinty a very pretty hand-| { kerchief in appreciation to her being | | the leader. Mrs. McGinty gave the |girls Girl Scout napkins. Troop 2 now has nine full pledged Girl IScouts as follows: Audrey Feero, Barbara Feero. Donna Jewett, Bev- erly Junge Olgo Kobbivick, Lois Lawrence, Sylvia Davis, Betty Man- tyla, and Shirley Ann Molvax. Bar- |bara, Joan and Elsa served refresh-| ments. After everycne finished ex-| |changing gifts they finished the Allies Make Big Comeback cartc fr ihe chiaren o e civ- German Supply | paper . Then| is ——— CLEARANCE SALE 1 dress, $20.95; 2 dresses, $21 at the Channel Apparel Shop. = S JAMES IS PROMOTED David T. James, stationed here with the Coast Guard, has been advanced to Chief Radioman from | Acting Chief. AUDITS KINLOCH N. NEILL WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 7567 SYSTEMS NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Fairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building TAXES JOHN W. CLARK WE NOW HAVE SOME of 750-Watt and 1000-Watt Lamps For Movie Projector Machines Alaska Electric Light and Power Company JUNEAU Phone No. 616 the jed up the paper and snaps. Then feveryone said goodbye and left to Roads Cut e | Brownie Troop 10—Brownie Troop (Continued from Page One) |19 met for the first time in 1945 on The Germans also reinforced |Sicilian Circle. | their Colmar pocket to Yuth, cap- —Reporter, Peggy Lesher. tured Witternheim and Friesen- | S L heim and drove north along the | PORTCOMMANDER | Supreme Headquarters said: “Fighting continues north of these | towns Hewever, in the extreme nm‘th‘ mentioned a second crossing of the McNichols, T. C., Port Commander river, 38 miles northeast of Ant-|of the Juneau Subport for the past werp in the Geertruidenberg area. three months, attended a farewell This holding was described as an|party for him given at Mike’s Place American counter-blows are de- |transferred to Seattle and he will be |clared to be beating back a Ger- |Telieved by Major Chester T. Wag- man spearhead which last week ner T. C., who will come here from gouged within 10 miles of Saverne | Seattle. FEDERAL BLDG. When the war is over there will George Gullufsen, Federal Build- {ing Custodian, declared widening of the sidewalk on the front entrance side of the building is to be included the walk. This project, along with improvement of the parking area in the rear of the building and gen- eral painting and replastering will Meanwhile, Federal office occu- pants dubiously eye falling plaster, dirty walls and cracked windows. “We’ve got no money to put in time shoestring economy policy. Gullufsen is in shirtsleeves and busy with his crew preparing Senate and House quarters for the coming bership will be taken care of by doubling up in the House and re- moval of one row of seats from each gallery in the Senate. ‘ his brow and temporarily laying down his saw, “no contractors were interested.” 2ub scout pack will be held tonight ‘'n the Grade School auditorium at 7:30 o'clock and Ray Adams, pack leader, asks all boys to be present. DOUGLAS | hospital for the past eight years. "IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Valentine Silver Tea | Date Is Announced | | | JUNEAU, Alaska Comer Plans Twin Deal, Come Spring . February 10, be- | Thousands of letters every month 'tween the hours of 2 and 5 o'clock | |pour into Federal and Territorial nx-fix'x the afternoon, the usual Valen-| |tices requesting information on'tine Silver Tea will be given in | Al but few would-be Alaskans|the Pariski Hall of the Church of {are as specific in their questions as the Holy Trinity by the members ione man who recently wrote the of the Senior Guild, and the public| War Manpower Commission. His invited. i “Tell me,” he asked, “Where can| This announcement was made by I get a job in an Alaska town where Mrs. J. Guerin, President of the| there is (1) a school for my seven- Senior Guild, last Friday evening| year-old boy (2) plenty of hunting|at the meeting of the Guild, held and fishing (3) and a doctor because at the home of Mrs. J. O. Kirk-| my wife is having twins in May, !‘hnm in Douglas. think.” | Letters of thanks were also rmd! Manpower officials admitted that by M Edna Polley from Dean | was “something to think about.” land Mrs. C. E. Rice for the pres- | |entation made to them by the BY CITY MAGISTRATE they are now located. | Four cases were heard in City Po- WARNING 1S GIVEN e Cout oty aeasss ol HIGHWAY AUTOISTS The weather bureau gives a warn- {ing to autoists that the roads are {icy, growing worse and hazardous. Careful driving is cautioned. e ee——— drunkenness. Mabel Stoltz was given a ten-day sentence for drunkenness. Hazel Coffin was given 10 days for drunkenness. Sentence was sus- pended during good behavior. Harold McCreery was fined $25| and given a five-day suspended | sentence on a charge of being drunk | and disorderly. WE SIERN UNI o" PRGNy U T INS WELL BABY CLINIC A Well Baby Clinic will be held at the Government Hospital tomor- row afternoon from 1 to 3 o'clock. WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 — The Supreme Court set aside an order restraining the Western Union from sending interstate messages |from offices where there are em- e kot o IN FROM POINT RETREAT ployees under 16 years of age. Justice Jackson delivered Edward Hope of Point Retreat has court’s five-to-four decision. arrived in town and is registered at the Gastineau Hotel. .- HERE FROM FAIRBANKS George Crow, of Fairbanks, has arrived and is a guest at the Hotel Juneau. The Southern New York Federal | District Court had ruled that trans- mission of messages under such | circumstances violated the Child | Labor Provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. Its order restraining | Western Union from handling any the B — CHENOWITH AT JUNEAU C. M. Chenowith is a guest at the Hotel juneau, registering there over the weekend. e SPRAINED ANKLE interstate messages produced in an Clare Folta, daughter of Mr. and |office “in or about which within Mrs. George Folta, is recovering at |30 days prior to transmission” of home from a sprained ankle suffered the message there was an employee while skiing yesterday on the Doug- |under 16. las Ski Trail. 1 —_———— 4 N SENATOR ARRIVES i"Ew (OlD WAVE l Senator H. H. McCutcheon, hold- | over from the Third Division, ar-| rived in town today from Anchor-! Blows IN FROM age to attend the legislative session| starting here January 22. I (ENTRAL (ANADA e e——— | GOVERNOR DUE | Governor of Alaska, Ernest Gru-| ening, is expected back in Juneau (By Associated Press) today after several weeks in the! A new cold wave is blowing in States. {from Central Canada and fore- S e casters said it would spread over ENROUTE TO PORTLAND the entire midwest by night and Mrs. Lee Haitmeyer is in Juneau bring zero or lower temperatures to today enroute to Portland, Ore. to several states. join her husband in making their, It was 25 below in Northern home. Her husband, Dr. Haitmeyer, | Minnesota this morning and almost was head of the Alaska Railroad as frigid in South Dakota and Montana. It was slightly below zero in North Dakota. - MRS. TRIPLETTE JOINS INDIAN SERVICE STAFF Mrs. Nadja Triplette has joined the staff of the Indian Service, and assuming her duties in the Welfare Department today. e PASSING THROUGH Harold Koslosky, Ahchorage cloth- ing merchant, and his mother, pass- ed through Juneau today on the southbound steamer. Son and mother will spend sev- | eral weeks in the States. — et KINGMAN RETIRING Wyatt Kingman, former Juneau- ite who has been in Anchorage for the past four years, was here today enroute to Southern California. He sold his interest in the New York Hat Shop to his partner, Emil Pearl, and is retiring from business. King- man was a resident of Juneau about 30 years. e MARTINEZ ARRESTED Thomas Martinez was arrested here Saturday on a charge of family desertion and non-support, according to the U. 8. Marshal's office. Martinez is a recent arrival from Ketchikan —ero———— RETURN TO VALDEZ Mr. and Mrs. Ben D. Stewart, Jr., left today for their home in Valdez after spending several days in Ju- neau on business and in visiting Mr. Stewart’s parents. He is super- intendent on the Richardson High- way. A person who has suffered sun stroke is thereafter always sus- ceptible to heat. 'NEW AIR SCHOOL KETCHIKAN BOY | Music Sfore ) SENTEN(ED\M - IsTe Build SEATTLE, Jan. 8.-~While his par- ents and four younger brothers and | sisters looked on, Benson Johns, 25, ‘ of Ketchikan, was given 18 months A new building for Juneau, when | suspended sentence in Federal Court the war is over, will be erected m‘ today on mail theft charges. the corner of Seward and Second. | Provisions for a suspended sen- | That information was revealed to- tence require that Johns, part In- | qay in filing of incorporation papers dian, return to Alaska and con- with ‘erritorial Auditor Frank A. tribute to the support of his minor Boyle for the Alaska Music Supply brothers and sisters. Company. oo o T Organizers of the corporation and Board of Directors are Arthur M. | Uggen, William E. Hixson, Kenneth | G. Merritt, Earle Hunter, Richard IS plAN“ED HEREiOnrrison and Ernest Ehler. Garrison, now in the Signal Corps, | will operate the radio shop end of Plans for a postwar aviation|the present Alaska Music Supply school in Juneau were revealed to-|business. day on the filing of incorporation) gxtent of “building plans for the papers by three well known Juneau| corner were unrevealed but incor- airmen. | porators said, “We do plan a new PAGE THREE RUNAWAYS FROM HOM AND DISCIPLINE. . CRIME- RIDDEN YOUTH RAGING IN Incorporators of “Flying, Incor- porated,” are Sheldon Simmons, .J.| R. Meek, and O. F. Benecke, all of| Alaska Coastal Airlines and partners at present in one training type air-| crgft, a float-equipped Aeronca. | Specialized air service and school-‘I ing will be the purpose of the new; company with plans for new air-| craft and operations awaiting V-! Cay. | | PILOT RENSHAW | WILL WED SOON Ray Renshaw, popular Ellis Air Transpert pilot, is to be married to Jeanne Ellis of Ketchikan, according to a recent report from the First City. Renshaw formerly flew for the Alaska Game Commission and is well known here. Miss Ellis is on the office staff of Ellis Air Trans- port in Ketchikan. The engagement of the pair was announced last week. Lt | BRITISH MOPfiIG UP GREEK FORCES ATHENS, Jan. 8—British troops, having cleared Athens of ELAS forces after a month of civil strife | within the city, drove the retreat-| ing Left Wing militia deeper into the hills north of the capital, while cannon firing and RAF planes shot up retreating ELAS columns. British armored units clashed yesterday with Wing rearguard in the Elevsis area, 15 miles west of thens. Sixty-| three of the group were killed and 44 captured. ————— CDA TO MEET v Ty A business meeting of the Catholic Daughters of America will | be held tomorrow evening at 8| o'clock in Parish Hall. o CHANNEL APPAREL Clearance Sale—1 dress, $24.95; 2 dresses, $25. - TAKE GOOD CARE OF THOSE CLOTHES! Deliver PHONE ! WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. — Presi- |the Supreme Court decision holding one of the Left| building.” Indebtedness of the group is lim- ited to $50,000. Share issuance is limited to 100,000 shares. i sy ROOSEVELTFOR | MORATORIUM FORINSURANCE ¢ ADDED Popeye Cartoon dent Roosevelt favors the general and Other Shorts principle of the legislation giving insurance businesses a moratorium ! under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, ‘until March 1, 1946, except for the 18(:',5 which concern boycott, coercion or intimidation. | The White House made public the correspondence between the Presi- dent and Senator Radcliffe, Roose- (velt in a letter of January 2, said such a moratorium as provided in the bill by Senator O'Mahoney would give the insurance business {sufficient time to readjust itself to LAST DAY! PAT O'BRIEN in “BOMBARDIER” | CHANNEL APPAREL insurance “in commerce” and there-' Clearance Sale—1 dress, $24.95; 2 fore subject to the anti-trust law. dresses, $25. WINDOW AUTO PLATE GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO. Glass Work of All Descriptions ! 121 MAIN STREET Gox Amie PHONES 633—549 DON ABLE JUNEAUCAMPS NO. 2 A.N. B. and A. N. S. H_eelul:ach-flonday-'lfill P. M.-A.N.B. Hall CABINETS FIXTURES L. G.FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made PHONE 433 149 So. Main Street /AX’.'I‘ AMERICAN , & Qe TIRWAYS SYSTEM \D) v, \G OUTSIDE? : ,a_ll the way 3 in less than a day! GO Fly FAIRBANKS { WHITEHORSE ' JuNEAU Dally Service . SEATTLE —— PASSENGERS EXPRESS . AIR MAIL ' Connecfions 4« ANCHORAGE, NOME, BETHEL, and All Alaska Points INFORMATION . RESERVATIONS . TICKETS A% 135 So. Franklin St. Phone 106 4 N AMERICAN AIRWAES da BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH WITH SMOKEY MOUNTAIN ATTIRE AND MAKE-UP KIT, OH,ROVAL OMNIDOTENT ONE MAY NOW DISGUISE AS - STUPID AMERICANY Friday. For roli call each Brownie | the west bank of the Rhine eight |told about something sne knew how Rhine Canal within 18 miles of the cil which reported as being IS HONORED AT | | the German bridgehead across the | i Maas, north of Venlo, endured Al-| outpost, and Eisenhower's com-|in Douglas Saturday night, | munique called the engagement| Capt. McNichols relieved Major W. Pass, threatening to cut off Stras-| Capt. McNichols says he expects to | bourg. be transferred overseas but will re- | be bigger sidewalks to bother the snow shovelers in front of the Fed- in postwar building plans. Three feet will be added to the bring repairs bills to a total of “somewhere around $50,000 or $60,- new windows unless they bust ‘em clear out,” Gullufsen said, defining legislative session now only two weeks away. ‘Total emergency appropriation for the job was $1,500 and as Gullufsen He has also asked the Boy Scouts who are assigned as den chiefs to miles north of Strasbourg. 1to cook. We learnea a new dance.j ,evacuated hastily. lied attacks. Supreme Headquarters Fifty-one friends of Capt. B. A, | “mopping up.” T. Fisher when that commander was port to Seattle first. i eral Building. present sidewalk, on the inside of 000,” Gullufsen said. the Post Office Department’s war- The increase in legislative mem- put it, wiping the perspiration from The first regular meeting of the be present, Phone No. 18 QAMERICAN, - NES ! STUPIO, - NovstTABLY

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