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PAGESX TOUR PARTY HERE FOR VACATION; T0 ALSO TAKE MOVIES Jack Flefcher Arranges Chartering of Boat for Special Trip wild life Fletcher aphing of variou As a result o Capt. G. G edor chartered hi Brc party ar mort for a scenic which moving pictures The will end at about June 11 t will entrain moves Vit trip tour Prince their for wife, ‘Mrs. Evelyn Brown, their guests on the tour Miss Helen L. Richards Maltby and Evangeline Springfield, Massachusetts hi: wrer and ier Com- and Louise incj- The Brown party American Gec repre shical tak angles, in n are mmed- | € during the Jairied on for the jeraphical knowledge, Super Market Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Clothing Cabinet ——0AK ——GLASS DOORS ——PULLOUT HANGING RACK ——FOR MEN’S OR LADIES’ CLOTHE ——FACTORY MADE ——KNOCKED DOWN Also ... Men’s Hat Case e 10 Match COST NEW. ,000.00 Attractive Price Terms Qileloth Rack ()‘\ C \\TE RS Showease SECTIONS GLASS PARTITIONS FOR BULK CANDY OR NUTS EORGE BROTHER Super Market Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Phone—Write or Wire George Brothers srday during will be taken. Rupert when the Brown par- eastern m( wn was accompanied north by party Louise Lamb, Society veys and pictures from set to determine the | scier lly any changes that have five-year advancement findings of the Geographical Society will be re- view. The Society also maintain a York City, where DUNCAN NOW IN (HARGE AT DRY CLEANING SHOP and _ are! At noon today, Mr. and Mrs. Rod E.| Darnell were to walk out of the door of of the Triangle Cleaners here, |bound on a fishing jaunt, the R. Duncan tood by to take over im-| in| mediately as full owner-operator of the prominent cleaning ment Mr. Duncan has behind him many vears of experience in the business For 17 years he was with the Alaska | undry Company here. Then af- r that he tablished the Post laundry and c ardson, returning after that was successfully under way to Juneau, |where he launched into business for {himself—opening the Duncan Clean- ing Shop, on Franklin Street, which he closed two weeks ago in order to bhecome of the Triangle Cleaners which he purchased from the Darnells. Aboard their boat, the Silver Spray, accompanied by friends visiting with them, Mr. and Mrs. Amos Wine- gardner of Portland, Oregon, Mr. and Mrs. Darnell were to set out this afternocon for a few days of naissance of fishing are: repar- atory to putting in the summer months in pursuit of, finny denizens of streams and the deep. - (COASTAL AIRI.INI:S ON TRIPS WEDNESDAY | Two Alaska Cu“l.dl Airline mecs flew 10 passengers to Hoonah yes- terday from Juneau. They v\uv Stanley Harris, Johnny Fawcett, B. Hicks, Edward Austin, Lilllul Austin, Tessie Peters, Mildred Aus tin, Sarah Johnnie, Lorraine John nie amd Cecillia James. To Sitka, passengers were Darlin, R. V. in- of son. To Skagway: F.J. Smith, Mrs.| Chris Bailey and Fred Turpin. To Ketchikan: Donald MacDonald, | Jr., 3rd. To Hawk Inlet: Sally Hopkil George Williams and Andree Bolyan. | Incoming planes yesterday brought 25 passengers from the following places: From Haines: Leonard Smith, \l!' rances Paul and Wm. Paul, Jr. From Ketchikan: J. R [‘\Ns L.} W. Higgin, Max J. Rogers. From Hoonah: Beatrice White, s. Ruth Rock, Jack Austin, Dalton, Warren Sheakley George Pederson. From Excursion Inlet: Tom God- sell. From Sitka: Ray Hinkleman, Joseph Alexander, P. E. Beebe, V. J. Samson and Fred Schrey. From Skagway: Mrs. Chris Bailey, Fred Turpin, Royal Burpee and Tom Smith. e ——— DRUNK AND DISORDERLY | Two jailees, both arrested on 1drunk and disorderly charges, have been hailed before City Magistrate | William A. Holzheimer here since Monday. Bill Sakieff was fined $25. |John A. Madwick was sentenced to 10 days in the city jail. | e MISS MUCHMORE RETURNS Miss Madge Muchmore, of the | office | Adventists, has returned to Juneau iafter an absence of several weeks lin Ketchikan. FRESH ASPARAGUS - 2 pounds 35¢§ IDAHO BAKING DARIGOLD FEDERAL POTATOES - 25 1bs. §1.89| MILK - Case $4.89 Peppers . . Lettuce . . Green Onions . . Cucumbers . . Baranas . . Cauliflower . . and many other ifems . . FRESH POTATO CHIPS DARIGOLD SWEET CREAM | BUTTER 2 Ihs. 99 LARGE—FRESH EGGS 2 doz. $1.09 MINIMUM DELIVERY—$2.50 DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A.M. TWO DELIVERIES DAILY - .- LBe/i 10:15 A. H., 215P. M. DHONE establish- | ners at Fort Rich-| \equainted with the facilities| Lillie | Bardi, Thelma Bardi, | Mildred Hanson and Albert Peter-| Silas | and | staff of the Seventh-Day | THURSDAY, MAY 31, 19 Harbor and areas affording photo-|leased through the Geographical R(‘» NEw IA(TI(S quick museum in New Brown of the pertinent material is housed. boat to the - left yest OF JAPANESE - REVEALED: | rCautmucd from Page One) ! thr navy. | This, reason for Tuesday's reshuffling of | while A. :nnkmg admirals, all of whom have | e developing the; | been involved | Kamikaze Corps. “Kamikaze takes much more hit- | [ting” than dive bombers, com-| |mented Vice Adm. Sir Bernard | Rawlings, second in command of |the British Pacific Fleet, which has been alternating with American escort carriers in daily pummeling of suicide air bases in the Saki- shima Islands, southwest of Oki- 1xmwaA | 'The Sakishimas reach to For-| | mosa, just off the China coastal | section, where the Japanese showed | first signs of withdrawing to north China in Flaming City Dispatches from south China re- ported Chinese recaptured Ishan, |a rail town 43 miles west of Liu- | chow, former UGMS air base, which is also threatened by an-| | other column 50 miles to the south ‘recon-| pushing up the Indo-China corridor DU(K (REEK (AB'“ {from (Nan- ning.) The Nipponese garrison was re- ported preparing to withdraw from {the flaming city in line with the |apparent retreat from all southern {China. i American air patrols over the \Asmuc coast sank five enemy ships ,.md disrupted rail lines on For- mosa and Indo-China. DOUGLAS ' NEWS RIGHT INTO GOOD JOB recaptured Yungning of Mr. was Douglas’ only girl High School *| graduate this year, stepped out of \sr‘h()cl into a position, beginning | her duties on Monday. Miss Fitz- |gerald is now a typist with the! | Subport in Juneau. SAM DEVON IN HOSPITAL Samuel Devon entered St. Ann’s | Hospital in Juneau Monday for \mcdiczn] attention. Mr. Devon feels but his legs just don’t want Wm. L. Stoddard and| 10 hoia him up. He has been Wing ot tne Travelers Aid Society was when his the alone since school closed, | second son, William, joined U. S. Navy. GUARDS PRACTICE | Douglas Unit, Territorial Guards, ! captained by Wendell Cahill, wmi hold practice at the Mendenhall | {Rifle Range Friday night, weutheri permitting. Cars will leave the Fire| Hall at 6:30 o'clock sharp. LUCILLE GOETZ EMPLOYED | Miss Lucille Goetz is now em- l | ployed on the staff of the Feusi & Jensen Grocery Store for the per md during school vacation. Miss Goetz,: senior in the Douglas Schools next| term, also enjoyed her seventeenth birthday yesterday, with friends dropping in at her home during' the afternoon, and by a surprise birthday dinner party given by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Goetz. ! Guests for dinner were Martha! White and Marie Hoffman, both of | Juneau. DIRECTORS TO MEET The Board of Directors of the Douglas Public Library will hold a' | meeting Friday evening at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Nor-! {man Rustad. There will be election of officers and other important| business. All interested persons are| cordially invited to attend me1 meeting. | SOME GOOD MERCHANDISE The Douglas Variety Store an- nounces new shipments of mer- | chandise, including boys’ suits up |to 16 years; girls’ dresses, infant’s | dresses; boxed handkerchiefs, sew= |ing machine needles, E. Z. suits, sweaters and polo shirts for boys, anklets and women's stockings. FLOTILLA CRUISERS WILL MEET TONIGHT Members of Flotilla 2100 will meet in the Council Chambers of the City Hall tonight to formulate plans for the Flotilla Cruise on Sunday, June |3, it was announced by Capt. Ernie Parsons yesterday. All members are urged to attend. | CARVEL RETURNS FROM VACATION;ANNOUNCES MANY JOB OPENINGS Journeymen carpenters and la- borers are urgently needed for the various construction projects going on in Juneau, it was announced he said, was the| | foremen, | diesel mechanics, Miss Lillias Fitzgerald, daughter cyening working with a bump the and Mrs. Lyle Kelsey, Who g0 of g Reathes Seattle {was Tex Buresh, but the society ! B e SR { BUILDING PERMITS ‘.‘.’;ij“ * baee hospltal T e M e biood to_the Red Gras, th ISSUED LAST - g ke o it SR e back there were not giving to isaid the shrapnel entered his back Four building permits were ls\uod‘on one side, passed through and here by City Engineer J. L. McNam- | stopped under a rib on the opposite ara during the past seven-day per- |side. Doctors decided to leave the iod. Applicants were: | metal where it, lodged. Ito be dismissed and back in ac North Transfer Company applied| Praising the hospital and staff,|soon. for a permit to erect a Cowan Hut| Grasley closed his letter by saying:Crowell of this city. for garage and warehousé use be-| - tween A Street and Capital Avenue | in the Casey-Shattuck Addition at| an estimated cost of $3,500. | A.J. Buckingham, for addition ol a bedroom to residence at 615-A/| |Eleventh Street, C. E. Boyer, con-| tractor, $500; Dreamland Bar, 289 ~|South Franklin Street, rebuild mar- | partment,” said Mr. Carvel. “In-|quee, M. , contractor, $5 cluded in the list of classifications |Henry Sully, alterations to Peerle needed for the Alaska Department |Baki oo ] WEATHER REPORT o | (U. S. WEATHER BUREAU) | Temperatures for 24-Hour Period Ending 7:30 0’Clock This Morning e o o In Juneau—Maximum, 54; minimum, 46. At Airport—Maximum, 56; minimum, 43. write this letter.” . ° . . . I® " . Already up and going to the m . . e o ¢ Tomorrow's Forecast ® o o/ e Partly cloudy with slowly e e rising temperatures tonight e e and Friday. Schilling VACUUM PACKED COFFEE freight checker clerk-stenogra- | phers, clerk-typists, shop electrici paving inspectors, jani- | tors, laborers, auto mechanics,| Word has just been received here refrij ator mechanics, heavy duty driver for the Yellow Cab Co., was truck drivers, flunkies, warehouse wounded in action in the South are administrative clerks, cabinet nmuu.<500 makers, caulkers, camp attendants, | ans, linemen, engineer aids, l(xl)m‘ firemen, _boiler firemen, stevedore heavy equipment'that Pvt. Alau Crasley of the US.| mechanics, oil burner mechanics,' Army Engineers and formerly a| men nnd ny other -classifica-|Pacific Apul 25 anN is, recuperat- tions. G v g call at 124 Marine VV"A' ERECTED AT SCOUT CAMP BY LIONS (LUB Twenty members of the Lions Club t night at 8:25 o'clock, walked away from a completed Boy Scouts’ Cabin at the Eagle River Camp, which a job well done. It w the end of two full days of working like Trojans on the con- truction and piecing together- the parts torn down at Duck Creek by the Rotarians. The job was completed with only one casualty—Art Hedges, who did not “duck fast enough” when a large plank fell and spent the rest of the r.nmci[ I ‘"VIM Always Fresh—Always the Best Leeks Radishes Bunch Carrols Cucumbers New Shafter Green Peppers Potatoes Tomatoes- - Idaho Baker Polatoes Parsley Lettuce Limes Celery Oranges Avocados Bananas Green Onions Texas Grapefruit Fresh Peas ‘Zuchinni Squash Fresh Spinach Brocceoli Asparagus Cauliflower Wax Onions Yams—Turnips HNew Beels @fiy “walnut on his head.” Anchorage Boy, | On Runaway Trip, Apples SEATTLE, May 31—Robert Bu- resh, 12, of Anchorage, Alaska, ar- rived here by boat from Seward yesterday on what he told members a run-away trip from Anchorage to see his father in Los Angeles. Robert said his father’s name | PHONE 704 Juneau Deliveries—10 A. M. and 2 P. Douglas De]ivery-—lo A. M. Roat Orders Delivered Anytime! had been unable to locate him last night. His mother, he said, is Martha | Jean Buresh, of Anchorage. The lad spent $3.50, almost his entire “capital,” for a train (xcket |to Seward and stowed away on ar= i hoat for the rest of the trip hme,[E where he was forced to stop = lack of Iunds Ill-IIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIII‘I‘I‘IllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIII||lIIIII|II‘II||II|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIII!III|lIIIlIIIIIHIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIII Phone HIFT co-op Phone 767 | 9 PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY —SATURDAY — MONDAY OLD RANGER Mixed Sizes SILVER-DALE CAL-NIA CLING WHOLE PEACHES APRICOTS PEARS No. 2% cans No. 2% cans No. 2% cans 7 80 @ns - 87¢| Jans - 95¢| Jaans - 12@ns$3.30 | 12 cans$3.60 | 12 @ns$3 CASE - $6.40 | CASE - $6.90 | CASE - §7 SOAP - GiantSize 53¢ |GRAPEJUICE - 1qt.44c RELIANCE No. 2% can | WILSON’S FRUIT COCKTAIL43c|BEEF TAMALES - 32« MEADOW BROOK PINK BUTTER-2 pounds$ 1,05 [SALMONIimil - - 25 today by Jack Carvel, manager of the U. S. Employment Office, who has just returned from a month’s vacation in Minnesota. Also the Juneau Lumber Mills are in need of workers. “We also have a great many openings with the Alaskan Des FRESH—LARGE JOHNSON GLO-COAT EGGS dozen $1.15 |FLOOR POLISH - 1 f. 99« _TIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIHlIIIIlIIIIIIIlIiIIlHIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|_IIIIII|IIIII]IIIIIIII]!!II = 45 If you know anyone who has giv- ank you the blood bank, I wouldn't be here to 55 hall for his meals, Grasley expects tion His fiancee is Miss Mickey et “the Eamployment Offie "—'lIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIHllIIIIIIIIIIlIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIII|lIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlHII,'l'. TN AL A TR TR il