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LABORDAY PARADE IS LINING UP Prizes fo Bfi\uarded for Union Floats, Soap Box Derby Cars tne Lat At the meeting of Union Observance Committee at Hall last night parade Ieatures were lined up. the American and Csrriers of k A itorial flags will iead oft when parade starts from South Frank- rees at 10 o'clock on Labor Day rolowing the flag carriers will be automobiles with the AFL and CIO Councils, then the curs con- arxe short taining these who will r cddr: sse: the Bal! Park follow- ing the parade All unions wiil then be in the line of march, Prices are to be offered for the best union floats, kids with 'he best decorated soap box cars, best dece oratel Licyeles and also boin boys and girls in costumes. Age limits will be anncunced later Following the parade fhere will be labor day addresses zid then the all-sport events for children as as adults. In the evening a oig Lanor Day dar will wind up the ciair at Union Hall The next meating of the Labor Day Commitiees wili be held at Unicn Hall next Monday evening tarting at 7:30 o'clock [ - { Attention Deer Hunfers! Bring your deer to 87 Will- oughby Ave. to be skinned, dressed and cutup by a prelessional. § P e e | Hear > CLEARLYZ 9 with SONOTONE Do you hear but have trouble understand- ing? Then call for full information on new wudicle which is help- ing thousands. DR. RAE LILLIAN CARLSON Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636 AS ADVERTISED wLIFE We Do NOT Patronize f’ RESUMED ANEW i v today. | BRITISH-JAPAN TRADE MAY BE Machinery Being Set Up fo | Continue Relations of Nations ‘ LONDON Al;(: 1;-Bri1£\h\ is set- j ting up machinery for possible con- | tinuation of trade with Japan, auth- | oritative sources disclosed here| involves arrangements | The plan | to place payments for any imports from Japan in a “clearing account” which could be used to finance li- censed exports to Japan. .- — TANANA VALLEY FAIR | [ : THIS WEEK FEATURES | MINERAliSPE(IMENS; A lot of emphasis will be placed | on mining possibilities of the Tan- ana Valley when the annua' Tanana Valley Fair holds sway at Fairbanks on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week, it was learred here today | A feature contest of the three-day | fair will see prizes presented to persons bringing the finest mineral ecimens {rom Tanana Vall Al sperial contest wil! also offer awards Lc the children bringmg in the best specimens, found by then: in lhe‘ valley. ! Another bricht spot on the Ia‘u'-i grounds will be a display of safety | devices used by che U. S. Bureau| of Mines to prevent mine accidents. | The mine rescue car, with artificial respiration equipment and oxygen | tanks, will be prought from Anchor- | age on the Alaska Railroad o form part of this display. | The mine safety will pe direction of Harry Kazee. of the U. 8. Bureau of Mines, who will return from his safety-first dem- onstration work in the Kuskokwim 1 mining district -ee under ROOSEVELT STARTS STUDY OF OPM AND SUPPLY AGENCIES Rumor Say?lfial Wallace Will Head New Super Defense Group WAS iTON, Aug. 19.—Presi- dent Roosevelt today commissioned Judge Samuel T. Roseman of the New York Supreme Court to make a study of the differences between the ¥ . i 4 B | Immediately upon STEWART TO LEAVE | aperations in‘ the Anct as his principal busi B. D. missioner af lcave Juneau this week on the Al- eutian. ciate mining engineers of the Com- mi Sew While in Anchorage, Stewart will| v 150 aitempt to locate quarters for PIONEERS' HOME a territoriai Seazerh ized to be CHURCHILL 5 BROADCASTS B ONSUNDAY ' LPrime Minister Makes Re- @ | por to King on Sea Con- ference with President LONDON, Aug. 19—Prime Min-| ister Winston Churchill returned to | London from his bold Atlantic con- | | ference with President Roosevelt to | be greeted by crowds of cheering | Britons. "WHAT 'CHA CRYING FORY" G O | his -arrival . | Churchill presided over a special | War Cabinet meeting, but previously | 4 |he reparted the results of the mid- ocean conference to the King. 1 | Churchill will address the British ' nation over the radio next Sunday | % I'at noon, Pacific Standard Time. - 55 i(iuardsmen Seeking Ind Lieutenancies Myron M. Christy, ber of the Alaska National Guard, Jast night passed his examination before a board of army officers for promotion to the grade of Second Lieutenant of the National Guard | of the United States. Major Jesse E. Graham, chairman of the examining board. and War- rant Officer H. H. Bond left Jun-| eau by plane today for a trip of | inspection to Companies C and D of the Alaska National ard in| Fairbanks and Anchorage. They will | mmspect the compuanies and eauip-| ent’ preparatory to the mustering! cut of the guardsmen in the in- duction order which becomes effec- | tive September 15. | 1S At Fairbanks three men ot Com- will pany C will go before an examin-| ing board headed by Major Gx'a)mm‘ seeking promotion to second lieu- tenant. They are First Sergeant Richard D. Dunn, Sergeant Mason B. Walker, and Corporal 1 H.| Beistline, son of Juneau's city coun- | cilman, i At Anchorage, members of Com-| pany D who will be up for ad-| vancement to second lieutenant will| be Sergeant Edward V. Murphy,| Sergeant Frank Brandt, Corporal Frank E. McCoy and Corpo-al Clyde| W. Henley. Also t, be examuned for| i TRt | That seems to be what King Bobby Familant is saying to June Burk- hardt who burst into tears after being crowned queen at the annual baby parade in' this seaside resort at Wildwood, N. J. The two Phila- delphia children were chosen from 325 contestants. | ap of increased coal mining aetivity trought about by the fuel needs of | the military bases in the Westward {and for use in connection with the great population increases in de- fense bases. At Seward, Stewart expects meet with J. C. Roehm, 2asso mining engineer, and talk over pl. for field work which Roehm carry on the rest of the year. At Fairbanks, Stewart will con- fer with H. R. Joesting, associate mining engineer, and Artbur Glo- ver, assayer, both of whom make their headquarters at the Univer- sity of Alaska. - ,ee LORING MAN LEAVE ONSS ALEUTANFOR COAL MINE CHECK With a check-up or coa: mining rage section s on tap, orial Com- is slated to to te £tewart, Mines, =l Stewart ntends to contact asso- jon of Mines at Anchorage, d ana Fairbanks. office, author- in the de assay up se | Alaska, was E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUG. 19, 194T. Junexu mem- | a GET A BIGGER BAG with Beiter Equipment! If you like hunting, you'll like shopping at Juneau-Young Hardware Co. Here you'll find all the things you need . . . all the famous names in guns, equip- ment and hunting supplies of all kinds. Enjoy hunting more this year ... and get a bigger bag with quality equip- ment from Juneau Young Hardware. GUNS-—Mndel 71 cal. 348 Rifles. - for hunting, for “UNT]NG 5 camping, and for cutdoor life. See our stocks of tents, out- door clothing, flashlights, batteries, ete. . SUPPLlEs—shotgun shells, rifle ammuni- tion, gun cleaning equipment, and parts. Come to sports and hunting headquarters. Jureau-Young Hardware Co. ' TERRITORIES T0 FORM SEPARATE MILITARY UNJTS * Units WiII_R;eive Arms from War Department- » Finally If's the lawyers’ Turn Now fo Get Business From This National Defense Montgomery Ward Co. Office of Production Management Procter & Gamble Products | and the Office of Price Adminis- Gatner & Mattern tration and Civilian Supply, as runi- Knit Goods ors spread that Vice-President Hen- Carnation Milk Co. of a new super defense agency. TUNEAU CENTRAL LABOR TR COUNCIL The oldest pecan tree in Ari- Affiliated with American zona was planted at Yuma in 1894 Federation of Labor k et s (YO TEX8S, EXQUISITE FLAVOR If you enjoy really fine tea, drink Schilling ...fragrant, refreshing. Compare its quality! OWNERS nt—is L 3 rica sine diesel WU g st tyPe John Roy, of Loring, prometion in Anchorage i Private (Continuec iro:n Page One) city by the last session of the 1€gis- | Gischarged from the Alaska ‘Pion- fh',hn S. Hellential, formerly ‘0!; VRN R SHRINERS DOFF NO‘ Part Of Guard lature, and for permanent qUAIETS oo Home at Sitka yesterday at Juneau and a member of Head-|(nat the cause of the delay was — for H L. Fielder, associate engin-|pis own request " quarters Detachmint, First Battal-|gimply that the United States bus- , WASHINGTON, Aug. 19, — cer now stationed at Anchorage.| pov pom in Fraice, came to ion. I 23 ot P Gy FEZZ‘ES BE(OME President Roosevelt ( ,F“"'t']"" Cipae e ;";};‘f":‘(“ Alaska in 1916 aad has heen en- oS QP b s :'hc;,ac;umw;xpm“;p“mhogyt v signed a Dbill authorizing the :xlxlm";h u?olco‘urtfls‘; o ‘Ehc b “:J(I ; “'[Shs’"n“r‘\mll”*‘ulhi‘inlf\r"ll{]o Mathias F. Correa, new United|causing dislocations. They thought ROTARY MEMBERS territories of Hawaii, Alask Railroad. T G ! States District Attorney for the| they could deal with priorities with- Puerfo Rico, and the JFans Stewarh irspection ‘of ‘coal mire oo el o Southern District of New York, s out disrupting business-as-usual. ( g Pyum Fous-fp jermhoe hd operatiais fa tha) AncHiorsge nelgh- but 31 years old. He is the youns- | Now, say the lawyers, they ore FOrMer DistrictRofary Gov-| (2w units which are not a purt uar borhood will be a thoroug.. check- est man ever to hold the post. | finding out. A few of these cases—engendered mostly by priorities—are interesting BUY DEFENSE BONDS ry A. Wallace is to become the head | by Frank Ingalls, who brought it iand throw some light on the situa- | tion. i There was the case of the west- }em contractor who got his big | gest private contract in years. It | German Troops Take Cover in Russia ernor Recalls Ju- neau Conference | Visiting Shriners doffed their fezzes this noon and put Rotary buttons in their coat lapels to at- These units are to receive arms from the War Department when the National Guardsmen are in active Fcderal service. —— - HAIDA COMMANDER . ARRIVES THURSDAY | required thousands of feet of tend the weekly luncheon of Ju- LT sk | lumber. He went to Seattle per- neau Rotarians, Comdr. and Mrs. Nounan H.™ sonally to place his order. Sure, Among the visitors at the meet-|Ieslie and their daughter are ex- the lumber, company officials told ing were Marshall Cornett, Kla- pected to arrive in Junean Thurs- 'him, they ‘would be glad to have math Falls, Ore., petroleum pro-|day afternoon on the Mount Jvi:- {the order. They would guarantee ducts distributor and former dis- | Kinley. ¥ | delivery in 490 days . . . in 1943! trict governor of Rotary; Jim Comdr. Leslie will be the new |His lawyer's problem? To get a Woodford, Seattle abstractor and commander of the Coast Guard | waiver of priorities so the con- president of -the Seattle Rotary|cutter Haida stationed at Juneau. | tractor can have his order slipped Club; and Harold . Gray, Seattle| J L b LR RSN | /into the batch that are purely de- manager of the Bethlehem Steel| | 1 | fense. Company’s rolling mills there. “"E AR” i | WANTS NONE OF IT Another visitor was Harry Gow- y . There was the small Pittsburgh man, Seattle hotel man, described with i steel firm which for years had been jokingly by Gray as “a Kiwaniau| supplying steady customers with in good company now.” Still anoth- ELE“RO EAB D | about 3,000 tons of processed stecl. er visitor at the luncheon was the The big company from which it° Rev. W. H. Matthews, Methodist | $35.“0 1 got the unfinished steel assured it minister who has recently taken 3\ | German troops seek cover in a roadside trench on the Russian warfront. The highway at left appears to be + jammed with vehicles. The Nazi caption with the picture did not explain the action, although the troops that it could continue to have 3,000 the pulpit in a Juneau church. ' Free Demonstration ‘appear to be facing nothing more lethal than a picket fence. tons' a year. Then the little pro-| Cornett Woodford, Gray and Rev. | S e, i . b , i sy A ik oo . |cessing company got a defense con- Matthews each spoke briefly. DB. DOELKER . . 9 2 tract—10,000 tons a year—and a Cornett, especially, recalled with NaZl Soldler'P hOtOgraphet‘ S l.aast p lCture priority order for that 10,000 tons. enthusiasm the Rotary district con- Phone 477 o | The small company went back to ference held in Juneau two years | 7= ” = the big company. Okay, its men ago. He also told of having attend- | were told, yowll get 10,000 tons— ed the recent international con- |but we can't let you have the 3,-'vention of Rotary at Denver. This 000 additicnal. The govemment’year. he remarked, representatives | wouldn't like it. of foreign clubs were particularly | So this firm actually has hired “conspicuous by their absence,” and 1 {a lawyer to get it out of a de-;the talk outside of convention ses- fense contract which would quad- sions was mostly of war. | ruple its business. It would rather| “Rotary must avail itself of these | |hold the customers it has had years to lay the groundwork for X P | | through the years. | fellowship on an international basis| JAYeTd "R SN LT TL- Ty These aren't isolated cases. They in that golden day when peace Distilling Co. are just a couple of the thousands comes,” Cornett declared. | : | | of shocks that are waking industry B — i YOUR GUIDETO P up to what defense really means—. and skyrocketing the capital law| CHOR, BEREARSAL Q U A L l T Y business. | The choir members of the Res- h 1 H - H urrection Lutheran Chmeh will Whi = k 1€5 Gins . v Lol the weekly rehearsal tomorrow JAGIGRUCLECLIREIN /01 | night at 8 o'clock. Always Reasonably Priced | ? | THE AMERICAN DISTILLING CO 4 i (A"(Els DIvoR(E Subscribe for The Empire. 369 Pine Street, San Francisco | e . . i Figterand Wie Pl | NO-TA-E LODGE ! - - ‘ | Troubles Before Hear- ing Is Resumed | R — HUNTING and FISHING | champ of the world Joe Louis and. | : . - - Mis wife Martha are ready to patch 7 < 7 { Radiophoto up their, marital differences, with $5 Pe}’ Day—Lodgmg and Transpoflahon R Mrs. Louls wi to forget her { 5 The soldier photographer, who made this picture on the Eastern Front was killed, according o the oficial | | gy for divorce, their attorneys ALL uz 580 3 ' | | German caption with this photo, which was flashed by radio from Berlin to New York. A wounded German ~revemed-just ‘before ‘the Tesum c 2 BL b ) ifler 5, EVClllngs | officer is shown at left, his head pillowed on his arm. Behind him shock: troops are bolding & position, ar Ferin 1 while another soldier lies wounded. “ h g. v e w0 e - 1%