The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 30, 1941, Page 8

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] < N MILOTTES VISIT HERE After a summer of travel throughout - the Interior, Al Mi- lotte, Ketch photographer-lec- and Mrs. Milotte are pas- aboard the steamer Aleu- tian enroute to their home in the First City. The Milottes visited au friends while the steamer was in port last ni 7 7/ AH//[.’VES STUFFY NOSTRILS @You've won half the battle against cold discomforts if you can open those stuffy nostrils and breathe through your nose without that smothery feeling. 1f your nostrils are ciogged up, insert Mentholatum. Note how effectively it breathing and relieves th: snifing, soreness, sweliing, and redness. With all these annoyances checked, you can go about your ac- tivities in comfort. Jars or tubes, 30c. Mwwm ’\’OTICE ! Effective October lst, due sts of raw plies, we will be unable -ell DOUBLE-DIP ICE CREAM CONES FOR FIVE CENTS. In the future, only SINGLE-DIP. CONES CAN BE SOLD AT THIS PRICE. JUNEAU DAIRIES Phone 638 o JUNEAU HIGH SCHOOL NIGHT SCHOOL Offering Many Courses Where Any Demand Is Shown No classes will be started unless at least ten students are enrolled. All classes will meet twice each week for 10 weeks. Each meeting or session will be two hours in length. Tuition for each class is ten dollars in advance. No money will be refunded after the class starts. The following courses have been requested and will be offered if there are at least 10 people inter- ssted for any one class: Beginning Typing. Advanced Tpying. Beginning Shorthand. Advanced Shorthand. Public Speaking. English. U. S. History. Latin French. Spanish. Amateur Geology 12. Other Couses. HOW TO ENROLL: Just write 1 note to Night School, Box 1271, Juheau, and state which course sr courses you desire. Send no noney. You will be notified later if and when your class will be started. Probable Starting Date: OCTOBER 7. prEessdRpeepPp e | “younger blood” | BYR! DOUGLAS REED ROBERTS Enemy Goods In ltaly Io‘ Be Nation’ s; ‘Cabinet Takes Action on, Sequestered Industries -0.K. Other Measures | By ALEX. R. GEORGE AP Feature Service Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 30— The Supreme Court, which opens its 1941-1942 session Oct. 6, will be the | youngest—and from the standpoint of judicial experience, the ‘grecn- est’—in more than a century. Seven of the nine justices will‘ have been members of the hxgh! court less than four years. All| excepting the new chief justice, | Harlan Stone, and justice Owen | Roberts, have been appointed by President Roosevelt since his un- successful attempt to infuse into the court by | enlargement to 15 justices and com- | pulsory retirement at the age of ‘ 70. et Only two members were )udges' A before coming to the high tribunal.| ROME, Sept. 30 The Ttalian Justice Hugo L. Black was a p(,me{cabmc( has approved of .ationall judge early in his career and Justice |ing all “enemy owned” industries Frank Murphy served as judge of | sequestered since Italy entered the the recorders court in Detroit for War. v s several years. Three justices, Stone,| Premier Benito Mussolini, presi Mirphy and Robert H. Jaskson, are ing at the Cabinet session, also se- cured approval of measures iner former attorneys general of the 8 United ‘States ing- Ttaly’s crops, authorizing cul- tivation of idle lands. Another | measure given quick approval will The average age of the court appropriate funds and bonuses to members is 56 compared with 71 when the President launched his)| court fight in 1937. None is in the “old man” class. The oldest, Chief Justice Stone, is 68. Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes was 79 when he retired last summer and Oliver Wendell Holmes was over 90 when i New Hampshire farm and a pro-| gressive Republican, was appoimed to the court in 1925 by President Coolidge. ~Stene, Oliver Wendell| Holmes and Louis D. Brandeis then comprised the “liberal minority” on (he left the bench in 1932 because the bench. The court Stone now of failing health. |head¢ is rated o\orwhelmm"l} lib- | The departure of Hughes leaves era]™ the court without a beard or @ The two brand-new justices, for- !mustache for the first time -Sln('l‘imgr Senator James F. Byrnes of pre-Civil war days. To court Visitors | South ~ Carolina and ex-Attorney the ‘symmetrical white beard and|General Robert Jackson, were hizh- |“classic countenance” of the state]y ranking New Dealers. |Hughes was a near-perfect symbol | jof the court’s taditional dignity. He| |seemed made to order for the role| ‘of No. 1 man in the $8,000,000 white | ‘narble temple of justice. Chief Justice Stone, HEear > The other five Roosevelt ap- |pointees had prominent New Deal connections: Black on the senator-| |ial front; Felix Frankfurter as a| ? | brain-truster from Harvard; Mur-| - |phy as attorney general and a | Michigan political leader; William | O. Douglas as professor- Ch’\hm'llh ‘of the ‘Security and Exchange com-| born on 9 ‘mlsslon: and Stanley F. Reed as! | soliefto eral f th United CLEARLYZ Y/ G o™ 05 And what, by the way, do they |mean by “Scotus”? with SONOTONE | Do whnrhuthlvl Simple. Just “Supreme Court Of trouble understand. | AS ADVERTISED | | The United States.” {BOLIEN, ? Then call for full | PRGN Sl \ ey W LIFE) | audicle which is help- o) arte, s . Alice Irene Carte, piano teacher. DR. RAE LILLIAN CARLSON |526 12th ‘St. Phone Blue 730 . adv. | Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636 | S O e s Subsrrlbo for The mere WAKE UP YOUR - LIVER BILE— Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out ol in the Morning Rarin’ to Go 'The liver should pour out two pints of liquid bile into your bowels daily, If this bile Is not flowing freely, your food not digest. It may just decay In the bowels, | Gas bloats up your stomach, You get consti pated, You feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk, | It takea those good, Little Liver Pills to get these two pints of | bile flowing freely to muke you feel “up and | up.” Amazing in making bile flow freely. | Ask for Carte tle Liver Pills by name. Btubbornly re nything else. Price: 26¢. effective Carter's CLOTHES that ars CLEANED OFTEN—Wear Longer! Bend YOUR GARMENTS Triangle Your Appearance Is Assured When You Mave Them Cleaned Here! Phene 507 The floor stocks tax is imposed on liguors, wines, tires and tubes | {held for sale or use on October .| Motor vehicles are taxed at $5 leach per year beginning next Feb- tax of 5 per cent of the amount -'paid for passenger transportation in ess of 35 cents. Manufacturers of radios, musical ins phonograph reco {6 per {light bulbs and tubes is 5 per cent.| {it had fallen. Ruins in $5 000,000 Fre:ght Yard Fice , “{ “Here Is 'the aun'a of Hiin aftér a devastafing fire swept the Bos . The station js less than 1,000 yards from the State Priso; The stubbern blaze, which threatened an entire sectién of STONE BLACK FRANKFURTER Everylhmg But the Air Appears fo Be Taxed as New Provisions in Effect Luntinuea from rage One) winn up to $1 per gallon according | to alcoholic content. | ruary After October 10, there will be a refrige: air conditioners taxed 10 per cent Telephone subscribers are taxed cent of the service charges. TL lephone tolls in excess of 24 cent: |are taxable at 5 cents for each 5l cents or fraction of the charge. Telegraph charges are taxed 10 per cent Manufacturers of sporting goods, | luggage, electric, gas and oil ap-| pliances and photographic appara- tus, electric signs, neon-tube signs, electric advertising devices, business and store machines, commercial washing machines, optical eguip- ment and articles of which rubber the compcnent material of chief veight are taxed at 10 per cent. Manufacturers’ tax on electric| Dufresne fo Make, | Trip fo Westward Frank Dufresne, exerntive officer |for the Alaska Game Commission,| will leave here for a quick trip |to the Westward when the gteamer| Alaska passes through here to- | Dufresne plans to go to Yakutat, | small Seward, Anchorage and points along |the Alaska Railroad. and other districts, he saxd, then' ,return here from the Interior city, He expects to be back in 10 hy plane. Juneau by October PARACHUTE TROOPS ARE DRIVEN OUT Chinese Sources Say that Changsha Still Held Des- pite Japanese Claims CHUNGKING, Sept. 30. — The apanese Army attempted to land a detachment of parachute troops in Chuchow, the important rail junction thirty miles south of the bitterly contested city of Chanz- sha, but, according to a declaration of the Chinese Military Authority, all chutists were either killed or driven away. Japanese military sources claimed yesterday they seized Chuchow, and then said today that they had with- drawn all forces there except a pro- | tective patrol. Chinese sources are insisting that they still hold Changsha despite the four-day-old Japanese claims that It is said that the capital's fate might be decided with- in the next few days. —————— {PORCUPINE RIVER SURVEY COMPLETED Going south on the Aleutian last night was Dr. J. 3. Mertie, U. S. Geological Survey, who has spent the summer making geological stud- ies on the Porcupine River. Dr. Mertie's three-man crew work- ed by means of a river scow pro- He will fly|pelled by a 33-horsepower outhoard ? | sight reading—keyboard harmony. Some of his agents out of Faubanks motor. He surveyed the area map- ped last year bv Gerald Fitzgerald, also of the Geological Survey. BB O i i SE STAMPS ~ & .‘ Y 2 ine freight yards at (‘!hnlummx, about a.mile from the Navy Yard. caused §6,000,000 damage. MU RPHY Hewe Soow/ PLYMOUTH'S FINEST Falrbanks | Given Aid } 'Recreation Centers for Two [~ Alaskan Cities Given | Approval by FDR WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.—Federal | Works Administrator John Carmody announces that President Roosevelt has approved of 68 new defense | | projects, including the Ketchikan | Recreation Center costing $22,500 of which $20500 is a Govemmenc‘ | grant and $2,000 is provided by the | | sponsors, also the Fairbanks Re- | !cretion Center to cost $25000, of {which the Government is to pay | | $20,000 and the sponsors $5,000. H ki 'JOE LARGE, VETERAN " PURSER, VISITS HERE| Joe Large, retired Alaska Steam-| ‘.ship Company purser, and Mrs | Large were visitors in Juneau la; ixught while the southbound steam- {er Aleutian was in port. They are | making - the roundtrip on the ves-| sel. 1 i Large, who retired three years {ago after a lifetime of service on ythe Alaska run, is well known to, thousands of Alaskans. The Larges' | {home is in Stattle. COWLING- DAVLIN CO. AIRMALL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. Christmas Cards JACKSON ROTARIANS 10 SPONSOR CUB SCOUTS Youngsters—8_1—o 12 to Be‘ Organized in Junior | Unifs, Announced | The Juneau Rotary club is j0ing to sponsor a Cub Pack in| :onnection with the Boy Scout or- | zanization in the city, it was de-| Made o Order ASK FOR PRICES SEE OUR CATALCG ITS EASY TO GIVE H A R8s R The Empire THE WORLDS FINE.T sored model plane meet to be held sarly in November. They brought| cheir planes and told of the actunli fiying machines after which their | olanes are modeled. H Also guests at the meeting were | Robert Bragaw, of Anchorage, and | Dr, Noble Dick, of Fairbanks, boti Rotary Presidents of their respec- tive clubs and both here to attend the annual meeting of the Terri-' torial Unemployment Compensation | Commission. A speaker at the meeting was| Michael J. Haas, Territorial Com- wmissioner of Labor, who lauded the Rotary plan to welcoms new citi- zens into their citizenship and sug- gested that they also work to convince aliens of the desirability | of applying for citizenship. Army fo Take 100 Alaskans By Oclober 15 First selecteea from Alaska for military serviee will be sent to| § training centers at Fort Richardson | ind Chilkoct Barracks on October | 15, according to a message received late yesterday afternoon at the of- fice of Gov. Ernest Gruening. According to instructions from the War Department, about 700 young | men from the Territory are to be| sent, to the camps under the first| induction order. Exact quotas of men to be dispatched from each | city will. be made known later, it| was said. Subscribe for The Empire, We Do NOT Patronize Mon(qomerv Ward Co. Procter & Gamble Products Gatner & Mattern Knit Goods Carnation Milk Co. Spruce Market, of Juneau cided this noon when the club] net for their weekly luncheon ut[ MAR\ s -y Percy’s Cafe. The Cub Pack will be led by | “ER Fred Sorri, 17-year-old senior af | Juneau High School, who was in—‘ m"“ roduced at the meeting by Dr.| o diesel jubrica! e W. M. Whitehead. Last year, Sorri | < new marine tyoe 1ul 4 deglared, 45 bo§s between the ages Unlo“o o —the £ A 4 of 8 and 12 organized into Cub D5¥— araffin-ba w8 sroups here with no official spon-: 100% pu P a buy 1 Bet“‘? sorship.: Ouis#oeganizations this fall cant 08€Y 0 © T o factor assUSEs s ecially inder the Rotary sponsorship will n“s“““y‘o ween over! ive sludge segin immediately. | Ttsu eriods bet emperd! 5 Guests of the club were a half-/ Jife, Jonger P X red lo erformanc Jozen youngsters who are build-| mpov ded, high P sesz' ng planes for the Rotary-spon- « en YO LL

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