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4 3.95-6.9> THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA :R\\x\\\\\x\\\,\x\mwmv,\xu‘c@«wé?’é!N ATIVE WH o : /,| FOR LO New Millin with loads$ dash...a BERETS 7 POSTILLIONS 7 CLOCHES ¢/| gether. When she died in 1933, he HALOS ;f gave up concert work and - began ; THERE’'S NO RESTRICTIONS ON LOVELY NEW MILLINERY spired brilliance of striking new models a definite air all their own From the in- Jack Cathay, come these Simple, yet with With all the originality and charm which make Cathay 2 VLINESS! | MADEGRADE ~ VISITS HERE Eskimo Pianist, Lecturer, Author Comes Home ) in Khaki @1 (continuea from Page One) Y|of the United States for both stage and radio. He was married to ¢)| descendant of Franz Liszt, famous 7/| Hungarian composer and pianist ;j and he and his wife toured to- ery by Cathay . .. of life . . . and nd becomingness. S CHHELELLLLN LY, ) | lecturing on his homeland. Backed by Junior Programs of . " g ”LITTLE HATS fiiNew York City, and Junior Town / Hall of Boston, Oliver has appeared |all over the United States, telling audiences of the folklore of the | Aleutians and the Arctic coast, and | of the native music. Study Native Music Since 1921 he has made six trips to Alaska, doing research for his | work. He has captured many of the | native melodies in his own composi- |tions and hopes some day to use Originals, hats to be envied. FINE FUR FELTS VELVETEENS Another Behrends Exclusive M Behrends Ca QaGALITY smncE 1887 OO OOOOCCOEEOODOCCOOPTCOOOT DEER SEASON T0 OPENTOMORROW Personal Popularity . Mr. and Mrs. G. Smith 0f Mohandas Gandhi In Washington leeiurn to Home in {them as a background for a story of the Alaska natives. | ‘Lately, he also has spread his | talents into the literary field, and {his first book, “Son of the Smoky | Seas,” was published last Novem- ber in New York. It was the Junior Literary Guild selection for Novem- ber. The book has had large sales in recent months due to the re- newed interest in the Aleutians. | Oliver has two daughters, now staying with their grandparents in | Ilinois. Both are concert pianists His home is in New York. | .- AIR RAID DRILL ORGANIZATIONIS | FORMED, SCHOOL. Phillips Asks Household- ' erstoVolunteer fo Take | i BusPupils in Homes Juneau public school pupils were | | | ADC GIVES | ®5] AWARDSTO |~ MORE MEN Further Honors Issued by Buckner for Aleutian War Adions (Continued from Page One) and was thrown into the cargo sling. Posthumous Order of Purple Heart awards were given a septet who were the crew of a heavy nber lost while attacking the Jap- se during bad weather in the Those honored were: ivate Wilfred M. Hellenbrand, erial gunner, son of Anton H. Hel- nbrand, Waunakee, Wisconsin; | Private Edwin T. Bottelson, gun- son of Mrs. Julia Bottelson, Blue Earth, Minn.; Corp. Edgar L. Rogers, engineer. son of Irene M. Rogers, 444 East College Street, Murfreesboro, Tenn ; Sgt. Orval V. Paul, radio oper- ator, son of August Paul, McLaugh- lin, So. Dakota; ! bay Time Out for Refreshments THE SOCIABILITY and pleasantdiversion that gowith thefascinating pastime of cards have done a lot to promote entertaining in the wholesome surroundings of the home. Adding just the right touch to the enjoyment of the evening is Olympia Beer, the Beverage of Moderation...always right Lt. Francis Cornwell, bombardier, brother of Mrs. Philip M. Chadwell, Battery Lane, Nashville, Tenn.; | Lt. Irving Berman, navigator, son of Max Berman, 155 Illinois Ave, Patterson, N. J.; | Lt. Lyle A. Slocum, co-pilot, son | of Mrs. Asa Slocum, Ellesdale, N.| Dakota. | Air medals went to Lt. Col. Jack N. Donohew, of Stator, Mo, and | to Lt. George W. Gillett, Bonne- ! ville, Ore., both of whom made re- | peated instrument flights in the | Aleutians despite ice and other dangers and attacked the armed enemy. | SITKA LEGIONNAIRES LEAVE LAST NIGHT After spending a day and a half in Juneau, a party of Sitka Leg- ionnaires left last night for the re- turn trip to the Baranof Island | city. They made the round trip| on the MS Elk, Capt. Don Mminl‘ which was chartered by the party, which came to Juneau on Legion | business. | and always welcome . .. the temperate: refreshment for home enjoyment. MANY ASK'WHY “It’s the Water” Forhome entertainment, there is a beer that pleases every taste...Olympia, “It’s the Wa- ter.” Brewed from Olympia’s famous subterranean water by three generations of one family of Master Brewers, America’s “Original Light Table Beer” contains nothing but the best of Nature’s ingredients. OLYmMPIA BEER | the Water” Visitors Welcorte at “One of America’s Exceptional Breweries” “It’s OLYMPIA BREWING | YOU CAN FLY JUNEAU to Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks Yakutat Valdez Nome Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Points Wednesday Friday Sunday * ALASKA STAR AIRLEINES Phone 667 Office BARANOF HOTEL NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION.COMPANY 1t Departmen! tates Navy jshed. The U‘t:"eds,_ pothing be pURo e requests " conveyell CORCEL gynation rinted O cargoes O {n American m,“my‘e:;efchl“ essel of an: waters. EIEA SERVATIONS e ¥OB ®! {NFORMATION OAL JENRY GREEY, AL 18 Freight Phone 23 : M ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Juneau ...$ 8 $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 Sitka $18 18 10 18 18 10 10 COMPANY | ' OLYMPIA, WASH., U.S. A, {to have their first practice air raid |drill today, according to A. B.| Sitka ........ 18 Chichagof Game commiSSion Warnf._% Skagway A"er V|S" In the group were R. L. Clithero, | 10 o e | 5 4Contlnued-tram Page One) Against Violafing Regulations The deer and goat season opens|fatal a Jap victory would be,” Singh tomorrow morning. Limits are two| deer, bucks only with at least three inch horns, and two goats, kids ex- cluded. Executive Officer Frank Dufresne of the Alaska Game Commission warned that all hunters who kill doés will have their animals con- fiscated and will be dealt with in the courts. He cautioned hunters to make sure that they have a buck with horns lined up before they pull the trigger, and to be especi< ally careful of fellow hunters. The duck season will open next Monday. Hunting licenses will be | issued during the evenings for the rest of this week in the lobby of | Jap claims, and a wave of “So | what?” defeatism swept India after Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smith, who Cripps returned home. have been visiting theit son and “The cobbler, the peasant, the lit- daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ev- fle shopkeéper—they do not see how | €Tétt Smith and their daughter, Miss Alice Smith, in Juneau for the last ly see three weeks, left for their home in Skagway. Miss Alice Smith, who is employed in the Liquor Enforcement Depart- ment of the Territorial Treasurer's office, also made the trip to Skag- way to take caré of hbusiness in connection with her office. says passionately. “They onl that another hope of independence is smashed. So they say ‘Why fight for freedom we haven't got?'” Jailing of Gandhi and Nehru plays into the Japs hands, Singh contends, and they are the only Indian leaders who could counteract the Jap pro- paganda but they can't do it from | vell SR L jail . Singh explained the Gandhi- | Nehru demands on Britain not as| blackmail but as more forced by the | Indian masses. Jap agents wo\lld‘AlASKA COASTAL have claimed they were “selling | MAKES FUGH"'S out” to the British had they not | y demanded immediate action. SHKA YAKUTAT " Singh bitterly assails any sugges- tion that Gandhi and Nehru are | the i 5 to g Hedaral BLUcine, o | pro-Axis. They are inviolably demo- | Passengers leaving for Sitka with | Phillips, Superintendent. Today's | |alert was to be merely an organi- |zation drill, showing the pupils how | to leave the building what to do “ir the alarm sounds. | In preparation for the organiza- |tion of the schools to clear the {pupils from the building in case of an air raid, Mr. Phillips today {asked for householders in the eity |to volunteer to take care of some |of the out-of-town children. { “There are about 185 pupils who |come to school on the bus,” Mr. Phillips said this morning. “These | pupils will not be able to get home during an air raid. Many, of ¢ourse, have relatives or friends in town with whom they can stay, but we| would like householders to volun- | teer to take care of two or thrée pupils.” | Mr. Phillips requests that volun-| teers write him, telling him how Bill Markham, Gene Rawlings, L. V. Tate, Gene Marks and William Shephard. Thomas A. Morgan, cf the Columbia Lumber Company and | H. M. Olson, spruce inspector for Alaska-Pacific Spruce, Incorporated, also made the trip to Juneau on| the Elk. FOURTEEN IN FROM SOUTH; FOURTEEN WEST Arrivals here from Seattle yes- terday afternoon were Fred An- derson, Jessie Cast, Louise Kane, M. W. McGinnis, Harold Snell, Mrs. | A, Thompson, Geraldine J. Dawson,| Ed Burnell, Tony Piccinini, Ole Reime and Floyd Sink, BUY DEFENSE STAMP! TRIANGLE CLEANERS New Location Juneau Laundry Building * “for better appearance” PHONE Leaving for the Westward were| 10 10 10 18 10 18 10 18 10 Kimshan 18 Pelican Todd ....... Tenakee .. Angoon .. Hoonah .. 10 Express Rate: 10 cents per zound—Minimum Charge 60c Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan Wrangell $45.00 $35.00 g - 30.00 10.00 ‘Wrangell . 20.00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimam of $1.00 to Ketchikan Express Rate: 10c per pound—Minimum of 60c.to Petersburg and Wrangell FOR INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, HASSELBORG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: Pno“E slz Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants Schedules and Rates Subject to Change Without Notice. Petersburg $30.00 10 Weekly — Seattle - Fairbanks Alaska Coastal Airlines today were | many children may be assigned to o, yakutat, Veronica McAdams, their home. The parents of out-of-town chfl-*&rg] ursxfi.:drnsr::;hnvgo.nm::;zgg:vlfii dren are to be notified of this Simonson; for Valdez, N. H. Champ- policy so that they make their own!lin, Elizabeth Champlin, Kenneth arrangements if they prefer. In|Champlin and for Seward, Carolyn all cases, the parents will be noti- | Moore, Connie Mae Moore, Mrs. fied of the place thefr child is to Bessie Rowe, Mleba Mary Allaire go in an air raid drill, so that they |and Jack Gucker. Lt e Wt a"'er-‘cmnc he says, and points to Nehru's ter - | » s s :U,?_Fes A‘l‘“e”x bsea“::i:); gg;’;evsz'n:‘ig‘record as the first world leader to i Anng Al‘len, Leonard R. Hu.ll, M. D. régular office hous | denounce Jap aggression in China, | Williams, Mrs, A. J Baker, Lucille w,]‘dm) C il § |the Italian move in Abyssinia and | Graten, Irene Benson, Catherine e agents will be in the field s it a1 Maber ey i | the faseist attack on Spain in sup- . o 3 ?‘rjlndmx:::v:w:? (\?fifk bl;p le: v)‘](;l:éiol:; port of his claims. In contrast, he | Returning on the first flight from points out that L. S. Amery, British Sitka were Jean Littlepage, Kenneth check incoming boats. Secretary for India, defended the F. Millard, Ed Boshaw and T. A. Jap invasion of Manchuria in the Davies. 5 Weekly — Fairbanks - Nome We. Fr. Su. 6:25pm 1::15-!.11 Daily 5:5pm 10:45am 9:15am 5:00am PWT 35 MWT MWT MWT Seattle, Wash. Juneau, Alaska Whitehorse, ¥. Al 35 Fairbanks, Alaska 150 THE schedule for ACA AUXILIARY NO. 34 TO MEET TOMORROW Juneau Ladies Auxiliary No. 34 will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Union Hall. All members are urged to attend as important busi- ness is to be discussed. Fi FFE olime RS House of Commons in 1931. | Also on the Singh brought with him a plan | for the U. S. State Department | which he says Gandhi would accept. It's simple. First, a gentleman’s agreement that the veto power of | the Indian viceroy will not be uséd | during the war. Second, a guarantee | of Indian freedom after the war. | Third, replacement of the present government council by an interim government of 15 members, five to be Indian Moslems, five to be Indian Nationalists and five to be named | by the viceroy. “America should insist on a set- tlement of the Indian crisis,” Singh says. “America has a big stake in it. If India is allowed to go by default because her people have nothing to fight for, American boys | now playing in the streets will grow | up to find the country still fighting Japan.” e e — Empire Classifieds Pay! | stock today todagr was a charter flight to Yaku- tat with Dr. Langdon R. White as passenger. STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Sept. 15.—Closing quotations of Alaska Juneau miné is 2, American Can Anaconda 25%, Bethlehem 53%, Commonwealth and 67%, Steel . Southern 3/16, Curtiss Wright 8, International Harvester 4617/8, Ken- necott 29%, New York Central 87/8, Northern Pacific 64, United States Steel 46, Pound $4.04. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today’s DoW, Jones averages: industrials 106.49, rails 2648, utilities 11.75. T BUY DEFENSE STAMPS can always find him. Householders willing to volun- | teer to do this service may write Mr. Phillips in charge of the school, | or telephone. He would prefer to! receive the offer through the mail, however. ELE22 T DR AWVS, Hostesses, | ToMeet Tomorrow Membe# of the American Wo- men’s Voluntary Services and other Sponsors for the dances held every other Saturday for enlisted men, have been invited to a meeting to| bé held at 4 p. m. tomorrow in the Governor's House. | Discussion of the dances will be the main business of the afternoon, Mrs. Gruening announced ATCO LINE Alnska Tral Company BAILINGS FROM PIER 7 SEATTLE BEAUTY COURSE IS . COMPLETED N SOUTH BY MRS. Y. COOPER Mrs. Yvonne Cooper, proprietor of Sigrid’s Beauty Salon, is in Se- attle awaiting transportation to re- turn to Juneau. Mrs. Cooper, who has been south since June, recently completed a course in beauty culture in Los Angeles and writes that she is re. turning with many new ideas for her shop in the Cooper Building. THE M. V. BEILBY will leave Juneau for Petersburg, Port Alexander and Way Ports EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 6 A. M. Please have all freight on City Dock Tuesday, before 4 P. M. J. H. SAWYER tion PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION Ld D. B. FEMMER—AGENT PHONE 114 NIGHT 3812 BRINGING UP FATHER THAT KID HAS HAD THAT RADIO PLAYIN’ NOTHIN' OPERATIC MUSIC BUT FOR THE LAST ME NERVES-— Sish I'D LIKE TO HEAR SOME WAR ” ‘D LET ME HOLIR~ . IT'S GITTIN' ON TURN IT OFF -? AREN'T YOU TIRED OF HST MLN' TO THATQ By GEORGE McMANUS you TURN IT OFF - I_WOLILD HAYE DONE IT LONG AGO-ONLY | DIBO KNOW TOW-= Mo. Tu. We. Fr. Sa. 6:25pm 150 MWT Fairbanks, Alaska ] Ruby, 150 MWT Nome, Al 10:20am Ar 11:25am Ar Ta. 5:00am Ly _Fairbanks, Alaska 10:35am Ar McGrath, Alask: 1:i0am Ar Opbir, Alasks 11:50am Ar Flat, Alaska 12:10am Ar Bethel, Alasks 165 MWT JUNEAU —v-"elICHI)BAGE YAKUTAT — CORDOVA With Connecting Service to KODIAK — KENAI PENINSULA and BRISTOL BAY Woodle;Tfirways (ALASKA AIR LINES) éclz.'.fiSKA COASTAL AIRLINES