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{ Basket Ball TONIGHT Petersburg Hornets Vs. FIREMEN JUNEAU HIGH SCHOOL GYM 7:30P. M. P e e e T DS NEW BILLS FOR tive and native residents. It is highly | convenient and sometimes absolute- ly necessary, that these hospitals \population. Under existing law any money so received goes into the Trea- sury of the United States and is not |available for expenditure in main- — |tenance and upkeep of the hospital unless and until, at some future [ date, Congress shall make another appropriation. Delegate Dimond Has Fou Measures for Improve- ment Bureau Affairs BY M. W. GODING |are never directly reappropriated as all appropriations are made out of |the general fund of the Treasury. | Under present practice, the aia that ’can be given to the white people of Office of Delegate Dimond | the regions in which the Indian hns» WASHINGTON, March 1—1Spec»;|)n,€lls are located is .gncnl_v limited ial Correspondence)—On February | The enactment of this measure will 24, Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Di- | enable such hospitals to give an en- mond introduced several bills forlarzed and improved servlc.e to all the improvement of the service giv- People of the regions in which they en by the Office of Indian Affairs are situated without in any WAy e, in Al‘u:‘ka and to effect certain econ- | tracting from the service given to in that service. The following the natives. Proceeds oi Sales HR. 3542 is a bill to authorize appropriations omie is a list of the bills so introduced: | H.R. 3539, which provides that hereafter miscellaneous revenues de- | the purchase from rived \cilities maintained and op-|Plies and materials for resale to the eratcd by the Indian Service for the Datives, native cooperative ascocia- benefit of the Indians and natives of | tions, and Indian Service employees Alaska shall be covered into the stationed in Alaska, and providing Ti v under the provisions of a that the proceeds of such sales shall previous act of Congress which mak- |be credited to the appropriation or es such sums available for expendi- Appropriations current at the date ture, at the discretion of the Secre- 0f deposit thereof in the Treasury tary of the Interior, “for the bene- | and shall be available for the same fit of the Indian tribes, agencies,| Purposes. and schools on whose behalf they Transportation Regulations are coliected.” | HR. 3540 is a bill providing that White aid Limited |the Security of the Interior, under In a number of places in Alaska such rules and regulations as he the Indian hospitals are the only|May prescribe, may transport Gov- hospitals available for both non-na- |ernment and non-Government pas- |sengers and freight on Indian Ser- {vice ships operating between the' ) N | continental United States and Al- FOR RENT [0 fori from ine rans- | Juneau Liquor lortation of such freight and pas-| Store Space sengers shall be deposited in the | Treasury to the credit of the appro- Will Remodel to Suit Tenant. 1 | priation available at the time of deposit for the operation of such! !ships, The measure will enable the' |Indian Service to better accomodate| all persons residing in the areas' |served without depleting the fund| which is apropriated for the aid of i the natives. A fourth bill, HR. 3541, makes provision for the purchase of articles or the procurement of service by the ' | Department of the Interior, or any of | its bureaus or offices operating in Alaska, without advertisement whenl the amount involved is $300 or less. See Percy’s Cafe Empire Classifieas Pay! RIDE THE SEE the New | FIVE - SPEED CALRODUNIT | in the 1941 GENERAL ELECTRIC RANGES What MAZDA means to LIGHT, CALROD means to COOKERY. CALROD is the name given to GENERAL ELECTRIC'S HI-SPEED sealed in met- al cookery coil. wvenient, compartments, bedrooms, or Glacier National Park are by The only range unit with Builder on your next trip Ea a hermetic glass seal! Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. 0 Your 9. Shup GREAT NORTH {should furnish facilities to the white ( As a matter of practice such sums from schools, hospitals, and made for the Indian Service ot sup-; T the TWIN CITIES, Luxurious comfort is the keynote of Standard Pullman Sleepers on the Empire Builder. - Berths have special decp, coil-spring mattresses. Dressing rooms are spacious and con- our choice of accommodatiom——drawing rooms, MILLIKIN ISMAYOR, SEATTLE County Auditor Elected by 5,000 Votes Over Po- lice Judge Devin SEATTLE, March 12. — County Auditor Earl Millikin, former school teacher, was elected Mayor of Seat- tle yesterday over Police Judge Wil- liam Devin by a majority of 5,084 votes. He will serve for the remain- |ing 14 months of the unexpired term of former Mayor Arthur B. Langlie, now Governor of the State of Washington. Millikin is 50 and is serving his second term as Auditor. He came from West Oswego, Kansas to teach at Grants Pass. Unofficial returns give Millikin 53,000 and Devin 48,000. Turkey Has Nothing fo Fea_rLReporI (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) Unofficial dispatches declare that Russia has promised Turkey she has nothing to fear as Soviet armies are massed along the Danube ready to act if Russia decides to fight on Greece's side. AR i BILL TO PROVIDE GRAZING DISTRICT CREATION SIGNED Another New Act Requires Election Boards to Nofify Secrefary Two more bills of the 15th Terri- torial Legislature have been signed by the Governor and enacted into law. Both will become effective 90 days hence. | provides for the creation of grazing | districts upon petition to U. S. Com- ! missioners by 75 percent of the resi- dent owners of land within the area of the proposed district. At a public hearing the commissioner then de- termines whether the required num- ber of signatures to the petition have | been obtained and if so enters an order creating the district. The owner of land within a grazing dis- trict is entitled to recover for any injury done his property by animals running at large, being empowered to impound such animals until dam- ages are paid. The other new law is Chapter 15 (H. B. 32 by Lyng by request). It requires that election boards, in- stead of retaining one copy of the canvass of votes and certification, shall send it to the Secretary of Al- aska at Juneau. ———— DR, CARLSON RETURNS Dr. Rae Lijlian Carlson returned to Juneau on the steamer Yukon af- ter a two weeks business trip to Wrangell and Petersburg. e Henry Hudson first came upon; the present site of Albany while seeking a route to China. CHICAGO and EAST partitioned berth sections. Unexcelled scenery adds interest to your trip. Historic Kootenay Canyon and 6o daylight miles along Glorious t highlights. Ride the Empire st. For details ask: .Ask H. F. “Nick” CARTER 1400 4th Ave,, Seattle Fast, dependable service /7] CREAT MORTHERN ST. PAUL CRICAGD ais GLACIER NATIONAL PARK Chapter 14 (H. B. 16 by Peterson) | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 194T. l PAIR SKATER | | | | | | | | | o Best in California when it comes | to senior pair skating is pretty Arline Mendleson, who won the recent State championship in Berkeley with her partner, Ed Bodel, junior men’s titlist. FIERCE AIR RAID TONIGHT IN MIDLANDS | | | | | | | LONDON, March 12. —“Gierman night raiders came back in force : - - | BRITISH AID | it Out Over Air Intimates Convoy Torpedoing (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) | ment on the passage of the British | | Aid bill by the American Congress is that “let President Roosevelt, the | voy (and this part of a sentence is | left dangling). We are determined to torpedo everything that approach- ; The brief, unfinished statement comes out over the air from Berlin. - e Japanese Foreign Minister | lin, Also Rome TOKYO, March 12.—Hundreds of Japanese shouting “Banzai” gave a Minister Matsuoka who left by plane via Moscow for Berlin and Rome| “to tighten Axis cooperation and Japanese foreign policy.” ———e-e— ATLIN, B. C. March 12, — Well| past the half way mark on the the proposed International High- | way route, Ed Borders, University ST | of Alaska student, will have a husky Bombing Attack Reported iz, : HISE: [ | Borders and the husky are| Heaviest Sustainedin | .coccuica co'euve e ey on s Borders arrived here two days |ago from Carcross on a caterpillar tractor train, the only part of his or on skis. | midlands and gave several cities in | northwestern England the heaviest sustained attack in several months. "o FIll"Gs i | Hundreds of persons have been | |driven from their homes to shelter | FOR oFFI(ES | posts. | reported heavy in the west Mid- lands. — e N Lucas Will Run for Another (H I “ E S E A Term-No Candidates 2 | Filed fo Dafe ’ to file, City Clerk's records today showed a total blank for candidat- SIGN pA(T es running in the 1941 Municipal el- deadline for nominees to file for offices, according to the City Clerk. SHANGHAI, March 12, — Local |The election date is April 1. Japanese newspaper circles said to- to run, up to today, is Mayor Harry tual assistance pact has been made | I Lucas, according to the City Clerk. whereby Russia will assist Chinese |Election date is April 1. Communists in establishing a Chi- ballots for voters who may be cut 1t is said the accord was conclud- |f town on cle-tion day may be ob- ed in Moscow March 8 by Gen. |tained at the City Clerk’s Office af- Mao Tse Tung, leader of the Chinese C. OF C. DR\VE IS TWO COASTTRIPS | cryprie <am MADE EARLY TODAY S 3 N : {Commer - Five passengers winged out of co e (Ial Cranberry In 1 Coast with Pilot Shell Simmons in the Lockheed, They were Ozrow fo Be Repo"ed Martin, Sam Argris and Gus Gus- e 2 Plans for the annual membership Norm Cameron for Sitka. The pilot|gng finance @rive and members of is expected to return with two pas- sengers from Sitka, one from Hoo- ing year will be announced at the weekly noon luncheon meeting of Alec Holden flew a trip to Chi-|the Juneau Chamber of Commerce chagof Island mining towns later in the day as he carried Eaf Jen-|Baranof Hotel. : J. M. Wykoff of the Forest Service | and returned with four passengers will give a report on the possibility from Hirst and one from Chicha- gof. | .. |Unfinished Statement Sent The only official German com- | unpredictable man, send one con- | es England.” | | I | Begins Flight to Ber- rousing sendoff to Japanese Foreign explain the real significance of the 1,300-mile southward ski hike along| to pull his toboggan on the next 200-mi 7 several Mon'hs ‘ mile hike to Telegraph Creek. hike he has not ti 1l |tonight and bombed the industrial EAveEL Mlme Bombings are continuing. Casualties up to late tonight are | I" EI.E("O“ | With just two weeks left in which ection. Wednesday, March 26 is the Only nominee showing intention day it is learned that a secret mu- It was announced that absentee nese Soviet area. ter March 15. Communist Party. Junesu early today bound. for the! froduction Info Alaska tafson for Hirst and Bob Stoft and the finance committee for the com- nah and one from Hawk Inlet. , tomorrow in the Gold Room of the sen and George Martin to Hirst of introducing the commercial culti- vation of cranberries in Alaska and especially Southeast Alska. Wykoff has recently returned from a trip to| the States where he made a study of cranberry cultivation and its pos- sibilities for becoming a commercial ——————— MRS. FENTON THROUGH Mrs. Dave Fenton, who has been on a vacation of several weeks in the States, visited in Juneau yes- terday enroute to her in|crop in Alaska. Sitka. Mrs. Fenton wifh®per hus-| Ed Locken, Petersburg banker, and band manages the popular Colum+,C. Qlausen, Petersburg City Mag- bia Cocktail lounge and the mhfklrfiem invitéd * guests to the Liquor Store. #° Nuncheon. ¢ R e ...It’s SIMPLE and EASY with a New Wesfinghmlse You get the right heat every time from 5-Speed 1 2 3 Corox units—clean, eleci Cook complete meal for Cooker—for about 1 cent. Balanced Heat automatically maintained. Start and stop oven automatically with Timer Clock. (Extra on some models.) tric heat. 5 people in Economy COME IN—LEARN HOW EASY AND SIMPLE IS TO PREPARE MO (g RE HEALTHFUL MEALS; PARSONS ELECTRIC COMPANY ELECTRIC DON'T POUR-GOOD HEALTH “DOWN THE SINK. Protect Vitamins, Misorals eud Rich, Notoral Foed Flavers v VITAwizeo COOKine lncoofin;mmun.nfimdcnmhdmvmum Toss of essential yitamins, Healthful minerals are nat dissolved away and poured down the sink .. meata are deliciously tender, rich in natural nowishing juices. Exclusive SingleSe! or L 4 Switch reduces wtonwtically. shts off hea! a! CONVENIENT TERMS HOME APPLIANCES "poucGLas | NEWS PASSING OF HARRY REXROTH IS LEARNED News of the death of Harry Rex- roth, former resident of Douglas, and nephew of the late Mrs. John Feusi, was received here in the last mail by Mrs. Marcus Jensen. The deceased who was in his early forties is well remembered by old timers of the Island. He had been a patient in Vet- eran’s hospital at American Lake for quite some time as a victim of shell- shock occasioned in the last World | War, and about two weeks ago dis- appeared from the institution. His body found in the woods indicated | he had perished from exposure after becoming lost. Present world unrest seemed to have unbalanced him mentally. The news was conveyed in a letter from Harry’'s uncle, L.ouis‘t Ott. H Funeral services were held in Spo- | kane under auspices of the Masons and American Legion. - —— D. L. W. C. TO ELECT An important issue to come before the regular meeting of Douglas Is- land Women's Club tonight is the matter of choice of the triennial of- ficers of the-Alaska Federation of | ‘Women’s Clubs. Their term of office is 1941 to 1944. The reeting will be held in the city hall with Mrs. Frank Camp- bell in charge, All members are urg- ad to turn out and help with work of repairing the library books. — e —— GUNS FOR HOME GUARDS More than thirty men were present for the weekly drill of Home Guards held at the Nat last night. There were three companies of eight men each and most of them had. their| rifles and were given gun set-ups for the first time by drillmaster Walter Andrews. All are greatly en- hused with the practices. ————eo——— | SON BORN, FORMER RESIDENT Born on March 5 was a son, Rich- | ard Kent, t6 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Miller of Petersburg, according to news of interest lere, received this mogning. Mrs. Miller is the former Verne Hannah, Douglas High School graduate, She also taught in public school here and in Petersburg. I ————— COCHRANE FILES CANDIDACY | To succeed himself as member of the Douglas School Board, H. L. Cochrane filed his candidacy in the || City Clerk’s office late yesterday. He | is now eompleting a three year term and holds position of Clerk of the Board. : - GRAND MASTER F. & A. M. i PAYS VISIT TO DOUGLAS | D. D. G. M. Ed Locken of Peters- burg, was a visitor in Douglas this| morning and with some of the local | lodge members viewed their quarters | here ‘in the Eagles’ Hall. Mr. Locken | i (OLISEUM-DOUGLAS Tuesday—Wednesday Bombs Are DroppedOn No. Ireland DUBLIN, March 12—It is offic- ially announced that bombs were dropped by an unidentified plane this afternoon near Carndonagh, northern Donegal, but no damage has been reported. e OFFICIAL HOME OF KING, QUEEN AGAIN BOMBED Windows Are Shattered in Buckingham Palace- Officer Killed LONDON, March 12.—A belated report issued by the British Govern- ment discloses that Nazi bombs re- cently damaged Buckingham Palace, official residence of the King and Queen, shatering Palace windows Ladies” Auxiliary To Hold Session A regular business meeting will be and killing a Lodge House police- man. This is the second time Bucking- ham Palace has been bombed, the held tomorrow night by the Juneau Ladies Auxiliary at Union Hall. The session will begin at 8 o'clock and all members are asked to be present. e ee— FOSS ON TRIP Harold Foss, architect, sailed for Sitka on the steamer North Sea. He is making a short business trip. is the Territory’s representativ from Grand Lodge. ——eoeo—— D. F. D. MEETING las Volunteer Fire Department is scheduled for tomorrow evening. LABOR. Regular monthly session of Doug- ! first bombing reported was last fall. CENTRAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Baltim?::e, Md. HAROLD H. BATES " AGENT—Phone 321 Room 1—Valentine Bldg. WE DO NOT PATRONIZE IRRESPECTIVE OF THE FACT THAT PICKETS HAVE BEEN WITHDRAWN FROM MONTGOM- ERY WARD & CO., THIS COMPANY IS STILL ON THE NON-PATRONAGE LIST OF ORGANIZED RETAIL CLERKS, Local 1392 .SON OF THE ELKS HALL SATURDAY—-—MARCH 15 e H MUS!C"»:\by Lillian Uggen's Orchesira Sponsored Jointly by JUNEAU CITY LEAGUE and JUNEAU ¢ I CLUB