The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 5, 1941, Page 2

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lan ;Admin_islralor’ | General for Alaska Asked Smith Bill Would Strip| Governor of All Terri- torial Powers A bill to strip the Governor of all his Territorial administrative powers and vesting them in a Ter- Administrator General was ced today in the House of Representatives by Rep. Harvey J Smith of Anchorage The bill provides that the first ritorial intre Administrator General be elected by members of the Legislature in joint session and that the office| be filled by popular vote every| four years starting in 1942. The Administrator General would have to be at least 40 years old and a resident of the Territory for at least 10 years. He would draw , salary of $10,000 per year Pplus offiee and contingent expenses and entertainment fund Take Over Powers The Administrator General would perform all duties and functions imposed on the Governor at pres- nt, leaving the latter merely as a representative of the Federal Government. The ~ Administrator General would be Chairman of the Board of Administration and would take the place of the Governor on all other Boards of which he is a member except the Territorial Board of Education and Universnty of Al-| aska Board. of Regents. | All appointments now made by the Governor would be made by the Administrator. General. He would receive all departmental and Board reports which now go to| the Governor. | n THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1941 Mrs. Wilmer Munn and baby Mrs. Wilmer Munn of Union, Miss., who celebrated her 12th birth- day only last December, is shown above with her new-born, six- | pound son. Mrs. Munn married her 17-year-old husband last April. | BRITISH AID NOT T0 KEEP TROOPS HERE Sec. Hull Sa_y;Amendmenf House Members Must Not Desire To Hear Drager There’ll be no “Huey Long” hold- ing forth in the 15th Territorial Leg- | islature, action in the House today indicated. Just as roll call was beginning on a bill this morning, Karl Drager of Anchorage, who was a Representa- tive during the 1939 session, in| which he earned and rather fancied the title of “Huey Long of the Leg- islature,” said he wanted to be heard Would Encourdge Japan fo Be More Aggressive : ‘ on the bill before it passed. No | member of the House offered to ex- WASHINGTON, March 5.—Senate | 2 3 ¢ leaders decided late today to r)pmse\tend him the privilege of the floor iti id Bi and he wasn't heard. any British Aid Bill amendments de- | *1€ slgned. to confine the activities of| This afternocon Rep. James V. American troops in the Western Davis asked that the privilege of Hemisphere. ‘lhc floor be extended to Drn_.ger, They made the decision after Sec- | for the balance of the session, point- retary of State Cordell Hull was re- N8 Out that the Legislature usually ported to have said that such pro-|Made this courtesy on behalf of posals would encourage the Japanese | fOrmer members. " p | Rep. Howard Lyng asked whether | te be more aggressive. o :I::e‘:urn;:; el = i such privilege would mean that mith, a v ) | Drager cpuld talk whenever he Peterson of Anchorage, mlroduced‘ wangmd w‘ on all measures. another . measure today, a House| Finally Speaker H. H. MuCutcheon Memorial requiring no action by| the Senate, which would ask Con-| gress to amend the organic act to give the Legislature 12 Senators instead of eight, Three would be elected from each Division, with the third to serve a two-year term| instead of the present four. | It is now possible, the memorial complains, for four votes in the| Senate to defeat a bill which may have been passed, unanimously by | the 16 members of the House, ., — GRADUATED GOLD TAX SENATE SETS | disposed of the matter by declaring forcefully: “we’ll take that underl LIQUOR TAX ~ 1 GULON AR, Wickersham [ibrary Bil|3 HIS FIRST NOVEL Uncut-Opposition fo fyme of Action Is Shortl MacDonald Gif After American Revolu- If the House and Senate can get hon_S(ene m N Y together on the amount, the ex-| cise tax of 50 cents per gallon on| | per Ballon Nl \EW YORK, March 5—Carl Car- | mer, whose last book was “The Hud- | hard liquor has been either doub- | led or tripled. The Senate passed | groom, asking that the Territory be | IN THE HOUSE INTRODUCED.—H.M. 1, by Peter- son and Harvey J. Smith, asking | Congress to amend the Organic Act to provide for 12 Alaska Senators | instead of elght as a present. INTRODUCED.—H.B. 75, by Har- vey Smith, lo reorganize executive departments by selecting an Admin- istrator General to take over the Territorial duties at present im- posed on the Governor. INTRODUCED.—H.B. 76, by Dav- is, to appropriate $10,000 for crimi- nal identification. PASSED.— H.JM. 12, by Rogge, asking removal of Richardson high- way tolls. PASSED.—H.J M. 14, by Stan- given a Delegate in the Senate as well as the House. PASSED.—Substitute for H.B. 40, by Peterson, defining the exemption for judgment creditors. 2 PASSED.—H.B. 59, by Stangroom, requiring independent candidates to pay a filing fee. b | INDETINITELY POSTPONED.— | H.B. 70, by Peterson. providing for| a graduaied gross gold tax of from| 2% to 10 percent: vote 14-2. KILLED— H.B. 48, by Herbert, | limiting actions against the estates| of deceased persons; vote 13-3. KILLED.—H.B. 54, by Lander, ex- tending contempt of court to cover disobedience of decrees for payment of suit money, etc., in divorce ac- tions; vote 13-3. | KILLED— H.B 57, by Herberf,| authorizing postmasters to take ack- nowledgments, administer nmhs," etc.; vote 13-3. | PASSED.—Substitute for H.B. 25, by Shattuck by request, to prohibit the sale of certain drugs except on prescription. PASSED.—S.J. M. 4, by Coffey, ask- ing Congress to extend hospitaliza- tion- to fishermen. PASSED.— SJM. 5, by Coifey, asking Congress to transfer admin- istration of Alaska fisheries from the Department of the Interior to the Territory. e — IN THE SENATE PASSED—S.B. 14, by Cochran, | raising the exemptions from pa_v-} ment of inheritance taxes. PASSED — H.B. 20, by Harvey Smith and Peterson, to raise the excise tax on hard liquor to $1 per 25 MILLION IS T0 BE SPENT FOR HARBORS Army Engineers’ Report Lists Alaska Projects for 1942 Fiscal Year ‘WASHINGTON, March 5. — An expenditure of nearly $25,000,000 for new river and harbor work and flood control in the Pacific Northwest for the fiscal year end- ing 1942 was recommended today in the Chief of Army Engineers report. to Congress, Alaska projects listed were: Sti- kine River, $9,000; Nome Harbor, $22,500. The report listed flood control projeets under way or expected to be placed under way with no ad- ditional funds required for Lowell JUNEAU CAA | showers tonight and Thursday; pleted-Work fo Be- gin on July 1 Creek at Seward, Tanana River and Chena Slough. | >, — | MEASURE ATTACKED Commitiee Members Are| Opposed to Seftling North with Refugees (Continued from Page One} | pean refugees to Alaska. | Ford declared the bill “would tear the heart out of our quota system.” Other members of the commiitee said America should care for her own destitutes before furnishing a haven for foreign refugees | Paul Gordon Talks Dickstein replied the quota law |favored Germany and England and discriminated against eastern and southern Europeans. Paul Gordon, Superviser of Alaska Affairs for the Interior Department, id the Department favored colo- nizing Alaska. He reviewed the bill ubmitted to Congress at the last on by Secretary of Interior Ickes to premote colonization under cer- tain conditions, but Congress did not gallon. license all insurance agents. Smith, to appropriate $5,000 to equip | the Seldovia Hospital. PASSED—S.B. 30. by Cochran, to the bill today, after having adopt- ed an amendment making the tax IS KILLED $1 per gallon. The House version —_— provided for a $1.50 tax, A H | Up on reconsideration, the bill| Peterson Bl" for Levies to appropriate $5,000 to equip the | Seldovia Hospital was passed in the | Senate five to two, with President Roden not voting. | 'The Senate also passed the Coch-| ran local option bill after amend-| from 2% to 10% Finds | Only Two Friends Rep. Almer J. Peterson’s bill to junk the present 3 percent gross ing it to provide that such elecuons“ could be called on petition of 35| sen” of the widely known River se- ries, is writing a novel and the time of the action will be shortly after the American Revolution. The scene is| the Genesee river valley, in up-state New York, and the title will be “Gen- esee Fever.” This will be something of a de- parture for the former University | of Alabama professor, who has ad- ventured successfully in many other fields of writing, but has never writ- ten a novel. “Deep South” was a book of verse. “Stars Fell on Alabama” allow local option elections when 35 percent of voters petition for such election, with the majority vote to be sufficient for closure. PASSED-H.B. 61, by Egan, to ap- propriate $120 for Lye Airways for flying an injured indigent to hos- pital. INDEFINITELY POSTPONED— H.B. 60, by McCormick and Stan- groom, to have a referendum vote on statehood for Alaska at the 1942 | election. | : {act on that measure. Kramer and |forts to arrange a peace settlement | PASSED—H.B. 4, by Peterson, to |others insist that the United States |in THE WEATHER (By the U, S. Weather Bureau) cloudy; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: Moderate westerly southwesterly winds; local showers tonight partly cloudy Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: Moderate northerly winds &EA!Y - U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BU A'RPORI NoT Forecast for Juneau and vicinily, beginning at 4:30 p.m., Mar, i: | Mostly cloudy with possibly occasional very light st tonight 2 ! and Thursday; little change in temperature; lowest temperature to- FAR DISTANT night about 42 degrees, highest Thursday 49 degrees; gentie to mod ) erate southeasterly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Mostly cloudy with local lig little change in temperature; gentle P to moderate southerly to southwesterly winds. Prellmmary Sufvey Com- Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaskas Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Moderate westerly winds; partly o Thudsda _____ local showers of rain or snow tonight; partly cloudy Thursday; Res- (Continuéa from w2ge One) | urrection Bay to Kodiak: Moderatz northwesterly winds; party AN | B - EERSC SN T L) |winds and with the best ))msiblr“ LOCAL DATA i approaches. o Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 'T‘lm use of lho‘ mxp»nrf and r?u?- 4:30 pm., yesterday 29.82 13 48 SE 12 Omatoast ways will not Be restricted, said| . 30 a e SE usts sFeast Lample, but will be for the use of| . °, ik 2954 4 = (’1 “‘(:\N"I 0.“” g any person flying. The runways! 11:30 a.m. today ... 20468 " - A R X st will be so constructed so that the RADIO REPORTS largest plane built could be land-| TODAY ed with safety. The “heaviest ship| Max. tempt. Lowest 4:30am. Precip. 4:30am flying in the air today will be able, Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. 24 hours Weather to land in Juneau and find the Barrow -8 -15 -9 T length of the runway and its con-| Fairbanks 37 | 11 12 struction suitable * | Nome 14 | 7 9 Snow Immediate Availability | Dawson 17 | 1 1 Clear The chief of Airways Engineer-| Anchorage 36 | 28 28 Cloudy ing said that the purpoe of CAA! Bethel 20 | 12 13 Pt.Cldy = activities in -Alaska is *“to make| St. Paul 22 | | 10 Snov something available at all’ points| Atka 38 | 27 27 Pt.Cldy immediatel, This he said is one' Dutch Harbor .. 35 | 27 28 Rain, Snow of the reasons why full programs' Wosnesenski 39 | 34 34 Cloudy for airport development are not‘ Kanatak 41 | 36 36 Clear in effect and that construction is| Kodiak 41 | 33 34 Cloudy going ahead immediately on only| Cordova 38 | 34 38 1.62 Rain portions of the projects. He indi-| Juneau 49 | 37 48 0 Cloudy * cated that the rushed constructiml} Sitka 49 31 45 0 Cloudy would complete Alaskan airports| Ketchikan 49 44 15 08 Cloucy ' for their hurried need in the de-| Prince Rupert .. 46 | 38 43 99 Pt. Cldy fense program. The first part of|{ Prince George .. 38 | 20 32 0 Cloudy the Juneau project should be com-| Seattle 57 | 33 34 0 Foggy pleted, he said, before winter sets| San Francisco .. 59 ‘ 46 44 10 Pt. Cldy in. s i WEATHER SYNOPSIS . Accompanied by Harry O. Strawn, The storm which yesterday morning was located near the Kenai a e and Strawn are complet-| ing a two months’ tour of Alaska CAA activities before returning (o Washington, D. C. D SETILEMENT IS~ NEAR, FAR EAST BORDER DISPUTE Peace Arrangement Over french Indo-China-Thail- | and Fronfier Progresses ! TOKYO, March 5—Japan’s ef-| row, dova. The lowest temperature this which was recorded at Cordova, 158 degrees west, and the pressur> of Alaska and over Norton Soun! tending ington. was minus 9 degrees, which was reorded at Barrow. skies with local showers, moderate'y low ceilings and good visibilitics i prevailed over the Juneau-Ketchi:an airway this morning. The Wednesday morning weath:r chart indicated a low pressure area of 983 millibars (29.03 inches) was located at 57 degrees north tnd was the Gulf and the interior high pressure area of 1027 millibar (30.33 inches) was located at degrees north and 123 degrees wes, with a crest of high pr northward from this cen'er to the coast of western Wq A second high pressure c:nter of 1030 millibars (3042 inc es) was located at 31 degrees north and 175 degrees west. Juneau; March 6.—Sunrise 7:41 a.m. sunset 6:39 p.m. fallen over most The minus 9 Mostly o relatively low of in of t Alaska. airways engineer, Lample arrived| peninsula had moved to near Southeast Alaska this.morning and wa |in Juneau yesterday from Fair-| continuing its slow progress eastward, and is expected to move (o banks in a CAA plane piloted by| the east of Southeast Alaska sometime today or tonight. Only light Jack T. Jefford, airways inspector.; showers are expected during the pragress of this storm. Local in showers were falling this morning from Southeast Alaska fo Cordova, | and rain or snow from the Aleutian Islands along the coast to Bar- Partly cloudy skies prevailel generally over the Interior, partly cloudy to overcast skies aloag the coast from the Alaska F insula to Cook Inlet. Rain or snow had coastal regions of Alaska during th2 previous 24 hours. amount of precipitation was 1.62 iiches, which was recorded at Cor- morning was Tae lowest temperature this morning and eatest degrees vercast A § 28 ure ex- the French Indo-China-Thai-| first try to settle Alaska with cap- !land border dispute is still short of the convenience of Mr. Whaley, Mrs. Saturday night he will have another PASSED — HB. 28, by Harvey |able, but unemployed, now in the success but it is authoritatively in-| Kirkham, President of the P.-T. A., States. -ee . 0. OLSON SELLS FAIRBANKS BANK - TOCAPT. LATHROP Capifalist Adds Financial Institution fo Alas- | dicated only technical details re- announces. main to be worked out. | During intermission between pic- | It is said the French Govern- tures Brownie Whaley will doa song ment has not accepted full scmc-;and tap dance. free show for island. In addition to the free entertain- ment a number of prizes will the children of the be given away on Friday night. > REGISTRATION OF VOTERS | ment of the plan offered by Ja- There will be other interesting pan’s mediator, | numbers and everyone is invited to - > — attend. Freshmen girls will serve | Citizens who are not registered 2 ‘rerreshments, voters _must register by March 29 | A AL i A to qualify as electors at the muni- ‘ | cipal election to be held in the DOUGLAS ! MASONS ARE HOSTS =~ |Town of Douglas April 1. | Following the regular session of | porong who voted at the last 4 municipal election need not resi }businoss last evening, Douglas lodge ter again as their namss are on the F. and A. M;, entertained.the mem- | NEWS MAYOR KILBURN RECEIVES bers and invited guests at cards and | dancing. Bridge and pinochle were [plnyed. For: the former Mrs. Elton permanent registration lists. If you are not registered, do not | delay in so doing at once. Regis- | tered voters who have changed their | addresses since last. election must notify the City Clerk promptly so kan Inferests | Oscar G. Olson and associates have | gold tax for a graduated tax from, 2'% to 10 percent was killed on its first appearance on the House floor today, when a motion to indefin- e | FIFTY YEAR EMBLEM | pocirom and Mrs. Alex Sey were percent of t{le voters a_t the last|was a book of impressions and stor- | general municipal _election. lies of that section of the country. Statehood Bill Killed “Hurricanes Children” was a' sort | i | the*high and low scorers; respeetive- L. W. Kilburn, Mayor of Douglas: | )y por pinochle, Edward Bach was The bill for a referendum itely postpone was supported 14 to two, with only Rep. Harvey J. | onlof anthology of folk tales, most uf | Statehood was killed by a Senate|which were told by Mr. Cramer on MORESHIPS, sold their interests in the Bank o Fairbanks to Capt. Austin E. Lath- | was the recipient a few days ago of | high and Orville Gushaugen, low. a special badge indicating that he! peerechments were served after proper record can be made. CHARLES TUCKETT, 1 vote of six' to two to indefinitely broadcasts. As has been stated, “The | rop, Fairbanks capitalist, Olson, first |has been a Grange member of the | followed = i Smith voting with Peterson. {postpone: Only Senators Brownell| Hudson” was the biography of u i ] m}r')s,idem and orgpanmr of me'rgrm_:Pntrons of Husbands for fifty years. ;::; camzm:ely l?ilfl;y X z,gsyn:d ady, R e S Tlflrl’!.’ other bills were kil_led byjand Roden voted against postpon-|river, so that “Genesee Fever” will anncunced today. | An agricultural organization, the\the' event. | lopsided 13 to three vites in the)ing. |be a brand new adventure for him. The bank, opened in the Interior |nearest chapter is located at Mata- | e S s Subscribe for The Empire. 1 House today. All dealt with legall A move to reduce the appropria-| Even if you didn’t know yeu could city on July 1, 1940, is located in the |nuska. Kilburn says, as far as he | wARNER PLANS CELEBRATION e ARG i matters of small public interest. | Two memorials and two bills were passed by the House, On one, a measure by Peterson to limit the action against estates of de- ceased persons, Rep. Harvey Smith gave notice he would move to re-| consider his vote. The vote was| 10 to 6. Cemmittee Reports | Committee reports.. found “do pass” stamped on a bill to provide for appointment of Assistant At-| torneys General and on several minor Senate bills. “Do not pass” was-the recommendation on a bill for compilation of laws relating to Alaska and on Mrs. Crystal Snow Jenne’s memorial asking creation of machinery-to accomplish slum clearance. The Ways and Means Committee recommended that the bill to pro- tion for the Wickersham library|almost guess that Carl Carmer was from §20,000 to $10,000 was de- the author by the title “Genesee feated five to three after Senator|Fever.” Few writers give so much C. H. (Alabam) LaBoyteaux argued: |thought to titles as does this one- “I can't see to save my life why|time undergraduate of Hamilton we need more than $10,000 worth| (Where Alexander Woollcott also of books.” | went to school). “Stars Fell on Ala- | McDonald’s Bill Opposed !bama” is a case in point, as is “Listen The bill to give Donald Mac-|For a Lonesome Drum.” Donald another $5,000 for his work| When we called to ascertain the for the International Highway had!Progress of work on this novel (it a three-to-one “do not pass” tin|iS almost completed) Mrs. Carmer; can tied to it today by the Sen-|the former Betty Black, of New Or- ate Finance Committee. Senators 1€ans, informed us that Carl was in| Sullivan, Walker and Coffey rec- Ped With the flu. ‘Its really laryngit- | ommended against passage and|'S” She explained, “and we try to only Senator Hjalmer Nordale for.| <P him from talking, but it’s no Gov. Ernest Gruening notified Y€~ the Scnate by letter today that| “rUng in bed isn't the problem he had been asked by Juneau cxcytmr Carmer that it would be for most officials to convey to the Legisla-| €"- He does all of his writing in ture the word they will |long'hand, leaving the typing to oth- make| .o BY BRITAIN Lord oflAmeally Warns of | "Battle of Atlantic Now Opening” LONDON; March 5—A. V. Alex- ander, First Lord of the Admiralty, told the House of Commons today that Great Britain needs ‘“many more ships and great numbers of men” to fight the triple German menace of submarines, long range bambers and, surface raiders. in the “battle of the Atlantic now opening.” But to a member's question of whether Great Britain had told | bank from $25,000 to $50,000, and to new Lathrop theatre building Lacey street. Capt. Lathrop will immediately as- sume the office of President, and leading Fairbanks businessmen will be added to the Board of Directors. Lezal formalities have been in- stituted to raise the capital of the cn provide a substantial surplus. Capt. Lathrop has had long ex- perience as President of the First Bank of Cordova. No changes in, the existing per- sonnel of the bank are beinz pres- ently contemplated. Upon Capt. Lathrop’s return tg Fairbanks from his present trip Qutside, which will be shortly, he intends to put into effect certain plans which he has evolved to increase the variety and desirability of the different serv- knows, he is the only representative | on the channel. His membership was | acquired in Chapter 53 at Sterling, Mass., in 1890. This week marks the third an- niversary of his start in business in Douglas for Jack Warner, proprietor of the grocery store bearing his name and to celebrate the occasion he is sponsoring a free show at the Coliseum Theatre Friday night for |all’ the residents of Douglas. On - - P.-T. A. MEET 1S TO BE IN SCHOOL GYM | 4 (OLISEUM-DOUGLAS Wg(inesday-—Thursday 3 h:of the Range” Rhythm “Mr. Motto Takes a Vacation” K Regular meeting of Douglas P_ar- ent-Teacher Association scheduled for this evening will feature the showing of a series of motion pic- tures taken in and around Nome by Representative Frank Whaley. The meeting will be held in the gym for PILARCES R T 2 o Lol e S { CALIFORNIA | k Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices | GLA AR CIER | available. at no cost a- site for an Aparics thal what.ve. need mm-e}lu's Pow, betng qutiered. by 410 bank. . vide $3,000 for tuberculosis diag- nosis be withdrawn and the item | armory and a Territorial building | urgently than airplanes and mon-| The friends and admirers of the e here. ey is ships and more ships,” he was TR - included in the Department of | e Ll O late’ Hal Kemp, whose untimely |silent. HAROLD BYRDS ARE b2 a2 i Health appropriation. i death in an automobile accident some | Alexander told the House of Com- VISITING IN CITY Ice Cream Flavors ; ) ' L Y 73 T n' P S The House adjourned until 11 weeks ago shocked the country, will imons that the 50 American destroy- “HORLUCK’S DANISH” : D A o'clock tomorrow morning. WALSH REFUSES THIRD TERM ON |have no trouble picking up a wide |selection of Kemp's recordings. Both e | Victo * and ‘Columbia have issued | GOLDSBORO, N. C., March ‘' — | memorial albums. Officers seeking bootleg whiskey Our NY film critics do not see searched a dwelling unsuccessfully eye-to-eye on the virtues of “Vir- and were about to leave when one ginia,” which had ‘its local premierc‘ of them turned a spigot for a drink recently. This is a motion picture ers: transferred to the British Navy last year had already done good work. riicis Lt SO V HE IS 83 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Byrd of Liv- engood, are ng with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Millard, parents of Mrs. (‘Byrd. The Byrds arrived here from the scuth on the steamer Alaska and are stop,'ing here briefly enroute to the Interior. Peppermint Candy, Fudge Ripple, Rum Royal, Cocoanut Grove, Lemon Custard, Black Cherry, i Caramel Pecan, Black Walnut, ' Raspberry Ripple, New York, Rock Road, Chocolaté, Strawberry -and Vanilla— y i i at the GUY SMITH DRUG [|§™ .~ COAL——WO0D ~ LUMBER —— GROCERIES . 1 {of water—and got liquor. in technicolor about modern gi . T 0 honk . ‘ & . . : Ewc"lo" BOARD ‘m;‘]:j“’“'l’é“;?ai‘;(: i:‘vee: concealed be- |returning to the ancestral hom:. ifrllr(: Se‘:;'lg;' xfilfllfi::hg:l::z; (;:"::: Motorists in several western Thork 91 for fee coven HO ! gy er and a still was in one critic declared: “Even Virgin-| ¢'n b B wiliams Jr, Mrs, A‘l_istates‘ beset by heavy winter| o et t I { M. J. Walsh of Nome, member of| : |lans won't lke this” . . . The re- |\t Whiteana peiey L e e Bl i F ; : the Territorial Board of Education e viewer of a rival paper thought oth- | et e and Mrs. Leonard Holm- | o1q pedsprings hitched to their WHEN IN NEED O : { since 1933, has declined resppoint-| NEMAHA DOCKS Topay | (TVit. “Southerners will go for this | S0 1 MoGesty, celebrating e cars. Pl e g it ‘ : ) men; for o third term, the Board| The Coast Guard cutter Nemana| ! NOTtherners will want none of S1&% fif;:?&" e e ok o e s Y 4 notified the Senate today in a reso- tied up this afternoon at 4 o'clock ”’F?‘e PUIBIITG oR. N L e — 0 o fs Fi— Sioeat Kl Tston SHOBT lution expressing appreciation of the |at Femmer's Dock. The cutter xom: Wite' 76 would . thinys ey OLEAN, nicely furnished 3-room CALL USI .’ veteran member's services. The resolution was printed in the Senate Journal on motion of Senator “Nerman R. Walker. S film would relate to the War. It doesn't at all. It is just a bit of nensense that doesn't harm any- I body but then neither does it make from Ketchikan. e A PR The first subway was built London. 1 {muech sense. | Subscribe to the Daiy Alaska | Empire—the paper with the larges. paid circulation > and bath, at Cliff Apts, $20 and $25. The best rental value in Ju- neau. Phone 209. | T8 classitied ad in The Empire " Empire Classifieds Payt SuncanTranster |l WHITFIELD Phone 48—Night Phone 481 fimfllm[mmmm|m i ’. 3 i ickace i, i

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