The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1945, Page 2

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PAGE TWO Ny /& SHOES Clean, imple lines that wear tirelessly from one occasion to ancther . .. which endures . . why Vitalities and craftsmanship . Two reasons keep their proud-flair indefinitely THE DAILY Charlotte in lipsticck red pol- ished calfskin . . . high Cuban heel, open toe sling . . . Won- derfully smart. Canfield, stroller type in black or turf tan polished calf . . . Cuban heel, walled toe. $7.30 B M Bebrends Ca QUALITY W i b THE VIEW FROM THE LOBBY BALCONY \$ EXCELLENT AS THE PIGNITARIES ENTER THE BUILDING. NOTICE THE FUNNY HATS ON SOME OF THE, WOMEN. ] ) v ;ouise On . WaySouth & The Princess Louise arrived from E£kagway this morning with the fol- Jowing 39 passengers disembarking ’.t Juneau: R. Perkins, Roy Yevell, . Cecil B. Jones, Sister Mary Clem- £nts, Betty Fitzgerald, Katherine DeCoit, Eleanor Hooker, Robert Messerschmidt. _F. L. Phelps, Mrs. F. L. Phelps, Betty Phelps, A. Van Marvin, Bess Winn, Estelle Wolfe, John Tomasi, J. Corkstrom, Alex Hexoff, P. Sopoff, Maggic Kadnalia, Richard Dick, Mrs. Sykes, H. Hardesty, M. Sprogue, Mrs. M. Sprogue. J. Abbott, Mrs. J. Abbott, Dole Abbott, A. Betts, F. W. Guillin, R. E. Wright, R. Mankin, Mrs. R. Man- kin, James Mankin, Jewis Jacobin, J Marin, Mrs. P. Jones, K. Campbell, Robert Campbell and Sgt. M. Lee Southbound passengers, number- dng 67, leaving this morning were ® For Ketchikan: Rowena Chamber- Jain, Robert D. Martin, John Olof- son, Faye Cummings, V. J. Samson, 1 bel Swift, J. B. Sledge, Louis Hall A M. Ellis, Peter Ellis, Michael fllis and Wm. Rose. gFor Wrangell Ruth = McNeil, . R. N. Scruby and R. N. Scruby or Victoria: Sister Mary Flor- and Sister Mary Xaverine Prince Rupert: J. A. Eding- For Vancouver Priscilla Peter- Dorothy Beck, Nannie J. Dry- S/INCE /8 87 N \-\\\\\\\ UKE AVERY i GORGEQUS LITTLE CHINA DoLt, ONDURAS, MR6.T.V. SOONG ATTENDS NEARLY ~ Re EVERY SESSION. i MAKE THE OPERA EN OF THE W AP Newsteo 1Jane Bailey. Mary V. Morris, Phyllis Grant, Pat O'Laughlen, William J. John- son, Jr., Evelyn Ohlson. Margaret B. Schmidt, Herta Ward, Helen Hermle, Jean Hermle, John Hermle, Edwin A. Peyton, Mary S. Peyton Albert Trulemann, Ruth Trule- mann, John A. Rockas, Catherine Bumford, Carol Rivers, Joyce Rivers, Julian Rivers. Richard H. Byrns, George E. Pan- cheau, Marshall Pancheau, Georgia Arlowe, Duane Arlowe, Laureen Ar- lowe, T. Floyd Dryden and Herma Pancheau. - Moose Women to Elet Officers at Meet Tomorrow The women of the Moose will hold their regular business meeting tomorrow, June 2, at their head- quarters in the Seward Building. There will be election of officers! and it is requested by the Senior Regent that all members attend as there are other important business maiters to be brought up at this meeting This is membership month with Chairman Frances Beebe in charge of entertainment. She is assisted by Bonnie Viland and Sut Kennedy. Refreshment committee is Chair- nan Dorothy Evans assisted by El- i Sofoulis, Mary Haas and Eliz kbeth Graham (IT MAKES You FEEL 50 IGHCRANT! THE STRONG LIGHTS MUST HOUSE SEEM LIKE HOME TO THESE DESERT. " ALL GOT 1O GHIFT INTC ENGLSH FOR You!) tures NEWS D.W.8.C.S. MEETS The Douglas Women’s Society of Christian Service met last evening at the home of Mrs. Norman Rus-| tad. Devotion ceremonies were de- livered by Mrs. Ronald Lister of Juneau. MRS. WHALIN TO JUNEAU teacher during the past two years, | has accepted an office position in i Juneau for the summer months. {She has taken an apartment over i the Family Shoe Store in order to be close to her work. She has a i teaching contract at Palmer, Al- aska, for the coming school term. In Douglas she taught the Seventh and Eighth Grades and was Com- mercial tedcher in the High School. DEVON HOME TODAY Samuel Devon has been reported as improved and will return to his { home here today. | GRANT LOGAN IN Grant Logan arrived for a short visit on the Channel with his | mother and daughter, Phoebe Ann. His wife and son, Billy, left re- icently for a trip to Seattle for ! medical care. Logan plans to leave {again today for another job. (AR DIVORCE FILED A complaint filed here with the Sally Barnhill, | ARMY PLAYS SAFE | VETS REMINDED Gen.A.S. Fowlie | To Wed Saturday Aquina M. Barnhill of this city, jaughter of Mr. and Mrs. . Max Ce- bulla of Haver, Mont., and Brigadier General Alexander S. Fowlie, US.A., vill be united in marriage Saturday morning at 9 o'clock Mass in the Satholic Church of the Nativity., The Rev. Willlam G. LeVasseur will perform the ceremony, and John Doyle Bishop will give the bride away. Matron of honor will be Agnes Dobner, while Mr. Bishop will ict as best man ' The weddirg reception will be seld from 8 to 10 p. m. Saturday it the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex {olden Mrs. J. J. -Meherin and Mrs. R. H. Williams will assist the 105tess. | WIVES, INFANTS OF SERVICEMEN GIVEN EMERGENCY CARE | Three quarters of a million ser- vice men’s wives and infants have ! -peceived care under the emergency ' maternity and infant care program since Congress first appropriated money for it two years ago, and of | that number, more than 300 have' been given medical attention in Alaska, it was announced today by Dr. Berneta Block, Director of the Division of Maternal and Child Health and Crippled Children’s Service, Alaska Territorial Depart- ment of Health. A plan of administration by the territory was approved in July, 1943, by the Children's Bureau of the U. S. Department of Labor, which establishes policies in con- junction with state health officials. | The program provides care for the wives of service men at childbirth land for their infants during the ‘first year of life, Dr. Block said | About 20 cases are authorized for care each month in Alaska. | According to information received from Dr. Edith P. Sappington,' | Western Regional Medical Consult- |&nt of the Children’s Bureau, in ! San Francisco, the nation has paid [ close to $70,000,000 for care of ser- |vice men’s wives and babies, and Uncle Sam now pays for approxi- mately one out of every six babies born. It was explained that under the Emergency Maternity and Infant Care Program medical, hospital and nursing care are provided for mothers during pregnancy, child- birth and for six weeks thereafter, with infants eligible for care during their first year of life. All this care, which is an emergency meas- ure scheduled to terminate six months after the end of the war, costs the service man's family nothing. Eligible for the care are wives ;and infants of men in the four lowest pay grades of the Army,! Navy, Coast Guard and Marine Corps, and wives and infants of | | aviation cadets, | ‘Escape of Convids Foiled by Litfle Boy | PITTSBURGH, June 1.—Little , George Gregor, 5, foiled escape by ! convicts in Western Penitentiary| who dug a 32-foot-long tunnel from | the prison laundry to just two feet jfrom the outside surface—and free- , dom. i | Warden Stanley P. Ashe said the | | i |romping boy, who lives nearby, !ing to Customs officials, is to allow | today ALASKA' EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA IN DISCHARGE OF MEN FROM RANKS WASHINGTON, June 1.—Under Secretary of War Patterson said the soldiers now slated for discharge are all the Army thinks it is safe to re- lease at this time. i ¢ | Announcing this at a news con- ference, Patterson said it was in answer to proposals to release men over 35 or to discharge those whose skills are especially needed in civ- ilian life. Chairman May of the House Military Committee recently urged the Army to discharge all sol- diers over 35 except for certain key personnel Patterson said the army does not favor such ideas, asserting that if they were adopted it would either delay release of soldiers entitled to discharge because of long and ard- uous service or would reduce Army strength below the safety margin for the war against Japan. He said the Army ‘had made its “best judgment” of the number of men needed to defeat Japan with the fewest casualties. -——— INTER-PORT ALASKA CARGOES BANNED T0 CANADIAN VESSELS The Customs Office today issued a clarification of the announcement made yesterday in regard to the waiver granted by the acting secre- wary of the treasury in connection with the transportation of mer- | chandise on Canadian vessels. The intent of the waiver, accord- Canadian vessels to carry mer- chandise from Southeastern Alaska, south of Yakutat, through British Columbig ports as part of the trans- portation of such merchandise from Alaska to the continental United | States. The special waiver does not permit Canadian vessels to carry merchandise between Alaskan ports, according to the statement made The carrying of passengers, how- ever, on Canadian vessels between | Alaska ports is still in effect and will be until July 31, 1945. AGENCY CONSULTANT WILL LEAVE SUNDA In Juneau to review the work of | the Alaska Merit Systém and per- sonnel administration of the Public Welfare Service and the Unemploy~ ment Compensation Commission, Miss Isabel Morris, Personnel Con- | sultant from the San Francisco of- fice of the Social Security Board,| has completed her study and will| leave by Pan American plane Sun-, day, it was announced today. | “Special conditions governing ch‘ ployment in Alaska, caused by the| war and the keen competition for available personnel, must be taken | into consideration,” Miss Morris said. 1 Concluding the study, a meeting of Merit System Council members | and agency directors was called | Thursday to review local problems. | 4 - b HALIBUTER ALLOCATOR | LEAVES SOUTHBOUND “Vic” Samson, halibut allocator for the International Halibut Fish- | eries Commission, left Juneau south- | bound this morning aboard the | steamer Princess Louise after a | week spent in the Juneau-Sitka area discussing new regulations with | buyers and fishermen. Principal change in the allocation order since last season is a pro- | when the Mrs. Lee Whalin, popular Douglns' stumbled on crumbling ground and , vision for setting buying quotas on| slipped into a hole outside the walls. | 2 coastwise basis rather than con- | He shouted to a guard at the tnp‘sidermg landings at each port in- | of the wall. dividually as in the past. | IRICE CRYSTAL PERFUME BOTTLES ... 1o enhance her boudoir 'moments. 14 OFF | BONUS BONDS T0 | ~ BE DUE JUNE 15 Seventh War Loan Pre-| . sents Reinvestment Op- | portunity to Holders | ; Secretary of the Treasury Mor- ‘gcmhnu today reminded veterans of | the First World War who hold 3| percent Adjusted Service Bonds of 1945, issued in payment of amounts’ due on Adjusted Service Certificates, that the bonds, which are dated| |June 15, 1936, will mature on June| 15, 1945, when the face amount of the bonds and interest for the full nine year period will be payable. The amcunt due on each bond is $63.50, which includes $50 prineipal and 181350 interest. No further interest will accrue after June 15. | Tre bonds may be presented to jany post office in the United States, {or may be presented by owners dir-! {ect to any Federal Reserve Bank or' jBranch, or to the Treasurer of the< | | United States, Washington, D. C,, |after the requests for payment on HALIBUT FISHING (2722 e INAREAS 1 AND 2 ' CATILEMAN HERE 10 TAKE LOOK AT TOCLOSEIOMER?) 70 hokan Raees Areas 1 and 2, northward along A. L. Bennett, of Benson, Arizona, the Pacific Coast to Cape Spencer, has arrived here by plane and is a Southeast Alaska, will be closed to guest at the Hotel Baranof. M. fishing at midnight, June 12, the Bennett, representing both himself International Fisheries Commission and large cattle company, is ex- announces, according to advices re- amining pessibilities of Alaska for ceived by the U. S. Customs office cattle-raising. He is accompanied and the Fish and Wildlife Service. by Larry Kensie. The assigned quota for Area 2 s : of 24,500,000 pounds of halibut will Chaucer was given a pension by be taken by June 12. Area 1, on King Edward IIL FRIDAY, JUNE I, 1945 ) jthe . southern Washington ang | Oregon' coasts,’ has no' quota. in !the backs of the bonds have been | | properly executed, Payment will be !made in each instance, by check, |drawn to the order of the registered {owner and mailed to his address. Many veterans owning Adjusted Servic: Bonds have expressed the| wish to continue their investment, and exchange their bonds for other| erest bearing securities. Wmle‘ direct exchanges are not possible,! the Secretary pointed out the avail- ability of War Savings Bonds, Ser-.‘ ies E, which are on sale at post/ |cffices and commercial banks gener- ally, and at many other agencis In addition to these bonds, United States Savings Bonds of Series F rand G, which are cn continuous sale, and, during the period of the Seven- | th War Loan Drive, three series of Treasury bonds, in the denomina- tions of $500 and upwards, will be| available for purchase up to June 30, | subscription books will close. | The veterans recetved bonds total- ing $1,847,488,400, and of these $216,- 909, 750 remain outstanding on which | accrued interest up to June 15 will amount to $58,565,632.50. Ac- cordingly the value of the outstand- ing bonds at their maturity is $275,- 475,382.50. Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, Admin- istrator of Veterans' Affairs, has also released information pointing cut to veterans who possess the ma- turing “Bonus™ bonds the advisabil- ity of re-investing in War Bonds. | Platinum’s great military im- portance is derived from its use by the electronics industry. IS YOUR Think back to the most perfect, sparkling- bright morning you ever saw . . . and you'll have some idea how fresh and sunny, how LEY Reserve! That pleasant freshness of flavor mellow and light is the taste of ScHE is the result of genius—no less—in blending! SCHENLEY Zuoue Schenley International Corporation, N. Y. C. Blended whiskey 86 proof. 605 neutral spirits. OIL BURNER A FUEL HOG? A study of confidential records reveals the fcllowing as the most common causes for low efficiency: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ot might not be 1l members having rituals are Improper adjustment of burner. Air leaks in furnace or hoiler. Poor firebox design and construction. Excessive or uncontrolled draft. Wrong shape flame for firebox. Poor atomization. Boiler or furnace either UNDERFIRED or OVERFIRED. Firebox or flue baffles needed. . Too high stack temperature. Poor design of oil burner. Are you only getting 6% or 7% CO= when you should be getting 109 to 209, CO=? Let us test your burner with a reliable COMBUSTION TEST SET- Get the FACTS not mere GUESS WORK. The fellow who five years ago declared he could tell the efficient flame by SMELLING it or LOOKING at it, as extinct as the dodo, but he does not come out in the open 'Very often today. asked to take them to meeting so Clerk of the U. S. District Court , Mrs. Grace Sanford, Mark O. € ¥ T they can be checked before install-|this morning by David Woodring, ., Helene Johnson, Dalma on, Marjorie Tillotson and Ma- ‘Monson. ation of afficers. - ! Juneau fisherman, seeks a divorce from Anna Woodring, now residing LWomen's AppAarel Smith 0il Burner Service Phone 711 P. 0. Box 2066 RAINBOW GIRLS TO in Minneapolis, Minn. The couple MEET TOMORROW has three minor children, now in The Rainbow Girls will hold their, the care of the defendant. The X regular business meeting at 1:30 plaintiff lists no property except a ulla Johnson, Owen Carruthers,| p. m. Saturday in the Scottish small fishing boat and charges in- ret Morris, Miss Pat A. Mur-| Rite Temple, it was announced to-!'compatability as the cause of Poris Bailey, Nathylic Bailey, day. lac“m' “Por Seattle: Nell Parker la Bates, Mildred Lesher 2 Margietta Lesher, Mrs Robert Joan BARANOF HOTEL BUILDING “It’s the Z\'itvét Store in Town”

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