The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 15, 1947, Page 5

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TR e o . held their first meeting of the year | +in the jungle fighting in the South ! Pacific, where they could scent o e ] man 300 to 400 yards away. Trained | to alert and point without ba they saved hund "JANIE" COMEDY IS NOW SHOWING GR TohenTRy i or whimpering, eds | | of our boys from walking into Jap: H H Cutfo 254 @ 5w AT 20TH CENTURY j Last Times Tonight The patrol, or sentry, dogs were | | Shows at 7:20—9:30 - ;n.-mml to attack, were one-man | S i e ek By JANE EADS | dogs, and fierce ‘B‘.l',]\”' l‘l,,‘,'.‘h.‘\ A{‘,'Ali“.‘;ii " \(h,‘“‘[lf,,‘. WASHINGTON—Only 25¢ mem- These last were hardest to-veturn | | s Elepitiige : $ o of the Army's K-9 Corps, which to civilian life. They had to be de- 1“',“”;" ot G bl MEETING F’ORQONE 50 st reartedly during t rained before they could be con- | 5 ”“\".-':-“: .y“,‘\lxlp‘u»l ::;k v;l‘ly:;t”h';m: THRILL-MAD WEEK! ok ol i BT sl b st i W Sk b i A night with a toprotch cast head- | f using these carefully-pick- Of the dogs enlisted in I-9, some | ok 'y,\“(‘m}'{':,’:,,,‘f" ,\llf;,”tl‘ Bt o | ed, highly-trained dogs for breeding 2200 were war casualties.” Scores | M hridegtoni | purposes apparently has been aban- were wounded ¥ with - (he “same’ excellent: coms | doned, spokesmen at the Quarter- Twenty-five were awarded cita- | ; # master C r varions acts of heroism or e AT o SRl b : ! inchtling Edward Arnold, Ann Some 19,094 c: were recruit- extreme intelligence. One of these | Harding, Hattle BcDniel, . Dick ed by the Army he time of the was Peefka, a German shepherd be- | iman and othets, the new film tnception *int 94T, OF “Thislofging Lo FERNMEIING RETWAEI 0N | lis ‘concerned with the triulation ‘numlvu 10,526 measured up to speci- upper New Hempshire State Pollce- |encountered by Jania in her first fications, were trained and put into man ! turbulent year of marriage and the L i e o ik ; By slerted [0 Sapsian b | made truck is-lowered from a freighter at the complications which ensue when e dogs purchased. in Ttaly and warned our detach- Aidblodigica s e Shipment in the Greek aid programs GJI. buddies (female as well as | Their average price was around $50. ment, which skirted the ambush and | da Ll s el o S . i ; " TBatn). §t0n: ot n' Hortonwile ' 14 sme were donated by patriotic attacked from the rear. Peefka had - |spend some time with Dick, recent- | owners been wounded, but 1o one knew. He | aw her husband lying on top of L e ReopriggRbin “Dogs for Defense” contributed a had been trained not to whimper or 3 IOIS SHOT l'a gun (ANNERS TolD HIM i large number. 1t was a private or- bark | I tried to move it but that awak- | ganization headed by Mrs. Eilsen On the road back he alerted a | ened him and he started to beat '|'o KEEP oUIEI‘ o“ im nger of New York, who later sccond time. It was then the soldiers | me. 1 fled for help,” Johnson quot- SCOI EX(URS'ON | served as an advisor to K-9 because noted his wound. Too late. Even a | l B B E D B Y ed Mrs. Cary as saying. “As I \( u I heard gun fire his life remaining dogs who had transfusion couid not save of of her expert knowledge of dogs. K-9 recruits had to weigh e | an There were trained for either scout Carioon News or patrol work, OAK RIDGE, Tenn, Sept. 15 i Later recruits were limited to ihe P—A motorcade of 75 <o 100 cars | Feature at 7:55—10:00 P. i German shepherd, which through of atomic workers will set out for v N .- - the war years proved to be better Washington about Oct. 15 to dis- — e _ ‘all around for handling and training cuss labor contract negotiations purposes. Also the color of its coat, with the Atomic Energy Commis almost a_camouflage in itself, won sion, President Claude L. Terry of ¢ especially useful ers, (CIO), says. AL To School with Arfificial Arms DENNIS ALL. A baby boy was born to Lir. and Mrs. Douglas Wahto at 6:30 o'clock this morning in St. Ann's Hespital in Juneau. The boy, weighing pounds and five ounces, is the s 1 ond son of the Wahtos, joins brother Douglas, who was a year old in July. The new son has been named Dennis Allan. Paternal grandmether is Mrs. Gust Wahto Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Balog. EAGLES MEET TONIGHT Fraternal” Ofder’ 5 “Edgles " Will hold a regular monthly meeting this evening at 8 o'clock in their Douglas Hall. It is expected that several candidates will be initiated. MRS. S. REED IS DIWC TREAS. The Douglas Island Women'’s Club at the home of Mrs who was assisted during the evening by Mrs. Milforn Marshall The meeting was well attended and the names of three new members re- ceived. Mrs. Shelly Reed ' was elected Treasurer of the club to replace | Mrs. Gordon Gray, who has moved to Juneau. i The ladies plan on a rummage sale early in October, so they recom- | mend that all old garments, etc., be | saved as white elephants. On Friday evening, September 19 i the parents and friends of the ! Douglas School are invited to nl-; tend an informal reception at the school to meet the new teachers and | get acquainted with the faculty as | i well as new neighbors. | Michigan. Shelly Reed, | - e Charlene Fisk, five, who lost both arms 11 months ago when she fell from a horse into the path of a haymower, starts to learn readin’, writin’ and 'rithmetic at first grade in Stinsen School. Kent County, Miss Katherine Harris is the teacher. (P Pheto. 0. . TUESDAY rosoAY | the world's Nugget Chapter No. 2, Order of Eastern Star, will hold their regular | ].argest Selling meéeting tomorrow, Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in the Eagles Hall. | | . 1 whiskey . TO COLLEGE Four Douglas young men will leave today, weather permitting, via plane for Fairbanks, where they will enroll at the University of Alaska They are Gordon Wahto, Harry and Frank Cashen and John Asp. —— e NBC, AFFILIATES T0 PUT BAN ON ! CRIME PROGRAMS ATLANTIC OITY, N. J. Sept.| SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORPURATION P—The National Broadcasting SCHENLEY | RESERLE W15, Empire State Building - New York, U.S.A. Company and its affiliates have 5 agreed that, beginning January 1, BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS EX-243EA 1948, it would not broadcast any = & series of detective, crime or mys- ;,‘:,-H--.':;--«,-.::.,m---.‘.-.,--”----,o_;w-a type program before 9:30 p. (New York Time). The decision by the NBC and 160 of its affiliates attending the network’s first annual convention was taken “in order to further re- tery m McCLELLAN - DECORATOR has a few short periods of un- . scheduled time between now duce the exposure of adolescent b1 A £y minds' 10 m:,? suggestions.” and Thanksgiving for inside The approved recommendation decorating . . . a phone call continued: “Dramatization of will bring you time and crime, mystery and detective, while particulars. a recognized and justly popular form of entertainment and litera- ture, requires particularly mature and discriminating judgment inj radio presentation. “While mystery and crime stories are as old as literature itself, the vivid, living portrayal of such dfama on the air has an impact on the juvenile, adolescent or ime pressionable mentality that can not be underestimated.” PAPERING PAINTING DECORATING Phone Douglas 374 i PR S A R nd when I re- Lee Covery i 4urned with a neighbor, .+ [l about 50 pounds and be from 23 w0 served in K-9 many were returned Billy was dead and the other chil- ot WO \\\\\\ {24 inctes nigh at the shoulder. The to their owners. The others were dren were being beaten with ihe ’m[ —= ||| age range was from 14 months o sold by War Assets Administration |\ riflc three and a half years at uime of at auction Johuson said Cary had quit his nlistment e ‘ - job at a lumber mill ten days ago —— A LSO ———14| gty 3 | i y ¢ and planned to enter a hospital for MARCH OF TIME |} ..o s wore German ana Aloitiic Workers Are Neighbor's Child Beaten, uevument o wouwie ariing srom ceptable. These were German 2 an cld hea : “Fashion Means Business”!] | Belgian shepherd, Doberman Pin- '[ S k" t !‘ —_— : seir oiert. Do 7 To Seek New Contract| Shot in Leg Over i Pleas for Mercy UC SESSIONS IN OMAK, Wash.,, Sept. 15.-(® FAIRBANK ENDED Police Chief Tom Johnson said a |31-year-old father, Willlam Cary, " lwas being held on an open charge in the Okanogan County Jail today FPAIRBANKS, Alaska The Al- | after the man’s three small children aska Unemployment Compensation “ywere shot and clubbed to de Division has concluded a 4-day muv lay in their beds early yes annual meeting in Fairbanks dur- {day morning. ing which persons having susine ALASKA STATEHCOD (CRAFT FOUNDERS; 20 FEARED LOST 'Five Members of One Fam- Alaska Airiiné§ President Recounts Threats of | Loss of Business KETCHIKAN, Alaska —An airlines president in a letter to a House Lahds subcommittee that uned by cannery ln remain . ily Among Missing- Only Three Survive Sept. 15 charged ! Public | he hadj interest GLASGOW, Scouana, Sept. 15, silent on the controver-'(M-—Twenty persons, mostly women were dead or missing ebwarD ARNOLD - ann HARDING DOROTHY MALONE - HATTIE MCDANIEL - DICK ERDMAN oweoreos VINCENT SH[RMAN ‘x.ll Al.u-kd statehood issue. or children, nes Wooten, president of Al-|and feared lost in the sinking of 4*: Airlinos t the lotter to (hv excursion boat “Ocean,” which Rep. Fred L. Crawford (R-Mich),|foundered last night in heavy seas chairman of the subcommittec'jn the Firth of Clyde. P LUS which was holding hearings on| Only three of 23 aboard the 50- the proposal for Alaska statehood. foot motor cutter were known to “le 'I'OPS n Sel‘fled Wooten said he was prepared to have survived. Five members of one SHORT SUBJECTS Johnson sald Cary was captured | with ~the —commission conferred jmake an affidavit that two pack-|family were among the missing. by police officers af terrific | with members in the council cham- |ing company officials sounded search for the missing, abandoned I.ATESI WORlD NEWS (struggle 10 a blood- ed farm | kers of the City Hail :\rq \vm'h;]:u 1m| .&Iv:nu.» He saidjat miduight, “lwcxcluwumlod lhlls I house rcrth of here by iAo g i he was told that he was “a new- morning in e two-mile wide . . bl G e B AR i comer to the Territory, did not|stretch of the firth where the craft Via Air Xpress & ""“;‘:“*{1“ "*L“l“‘“ ard, a l"“"; I e 5t A s \p|understand its probiems and was|went down after being buffetted by mate o he Car children, was shof PRIE RS £ C rKi 1 oC) { " P 9 ale. L o e | TEeeD of | Junsihy.® ou) for | Sticking his neck out too far” |a southerly gale. [l’ 'lv i " des. ok g R Pl 3, Wooten said he was threatencd! Loss of the cutter was reported ‘;nxn s she plgaded for mercy, Zosich of Kotohikan, and George|Ylth 10ss of business' from can-|by the crew of & motor boat after et \“l‘l:;("“l‘l “;‘”W-‘;’n;‘”;‘hb‘( f“l‘;‘“ B e Tuge Wade |neries which amounted Lo $100,000| discovery of a body in the water. | Johnson quoted the little girl as regional director cf the Fode S0 SRR, RO "’” isaying she begged ase don't Social € it Administratic DISAPPEARS AT SEA shoot me in the head” and that her | WAs also in attendance at the ses-| pARIE JENSEN BACK i ailant replied “All right I'll shoot SlOnS FROM MONTH'S VACATION | A man listed on his ticket as ou in the leg.” The girl is recover- | Robert E. Sheldon, executive di-| Miss Maie jensen, desk clerk at |Charles A. Martin, 1231 N. Yakima 1 ing in a local hospital recdjor of the commission, announc- | the Gastineau Hotel, returned on Street, Tacoma, disappeared last i 'The dead are Johy Cary, 3, Billy |ed¢that the body took up routine Saturday via Pan American Airways | Wednesday from the Baranof when { Cary, 6, and Bobby Jo 4 w.im\, during four days, from Seattle. She has been on alit was southbound. He boarded | Johnson said Mrs. Cary told him and said that a detailed report month’s vacation in the Stotes, vis- the ship at Seward. When and 1 jshe was awakened about 2 am., by would be issued in the near fu- | iting friends and relatives in Port-jwhy he evidentally jumped over- {the pressure of a rifle barrel and |tuse land, Bellingitam and Seattle, board is not known i 0000 Fixed [RCRAFT ea. Lycoming Engines ea. Pratt & Whitney Engines ea. Pratt & Whitney Engines ea. Wright Engines Pratt & Whitney Engines ea. Pratt & Whitney Engine ea. Pratt & Whitney Engines e E———se 1] [ T I NN - INSPECTION DATES: Sepiember 16 threug SALES DATES: Federal Agencies Veterans of Wotld War I1 Territorial and Local Governme! Eligible Non-Profit Institutions Non-Priority Purchasers VETERANS: No certification is required and purchase during the period desig: will be made on a first-come, 1175A with their purchase order. BUY * WAR ASSETS ADM Box 2466 Anchorage, Alaska l first-served chase by mail will be requested to submit a properly executed WAA Form 00000 Attention AJR MEN The War Assels Administration OFFERS SURPLUS Price ENGINES Located at ANCHORAGE, Alaska e—— W HERE 1S — AS IS R-1820-87 R-1830-90C R-1830-90D R-1830-92 ENGINES h September 19, 1947 September 22nd September 23rd September 24th September 25th September 26th, 20th and 30th nts ill be recognized other than erans of World War II. Awards Veterans desiring to pur- 1o priorit nated for Vi basis. NOW INISTRATION Phone: 766 A OO ONTS SAILING Juneau Southbound Tass., Sept. 16 Princess Norah Following Sailings Tuesday, September 23 PRINCESS LOUISE Friday, September 26 PRINCESS NORAH Friuay, Setober 3 PRINCESS LOUISE Wednesday, October 15 PRINCESS LOUISE Sunday, October 26 PRINCESS LOUISE Gl YELLOW CAB Phone 22 24-hour Dependable Service o g T Call 646 Representing Transportation Companies WORLD WIDE we will arrange for your satisfaction your reser- vations and tickets for BUSINESS, PLEASURE or NECESSARY TRIPS REGARDLESS OF YOUR DESTINATION ALASKA TRAVEL BUREAU “Never a Service Charge” Baranof Hotel Phone 646 EE RO RO R

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