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PAGE SIX MRS. CARL LOTTSFELDT LEAVES TODAY ON WAY SOUTH FOR WINTER who has been Mrs. Carl Lottsfeldt in Juneau for the last ten days waiting for transportation so left today for Seattle where she will Soin her daughter and son Frances and Carl, Jr., for the win- ter. Both children have been at- sch in Seattle for the last two ¥ Mr. Lottsfeldt, formerly with the Alaska Road Commission, expects to leave Ophir where he owns trading post, w A ith to timey with his family. Accompanying Mrs. Lofttsfeldt Seatlte is Hugh Matheson, Jr of Ohpir where his parents are en- spend some gaged in minir He will resume his studies at Lakeside School in Seattle which he has attended for the last several years - The famous giant lizards of thc island of Komodo are deaf Alm a MAYOR, STUDENTS ASKED 10 C. OF meer 1oMORROW G |VEN FIVE | Mayor Harry I Lucas, members of the Juneau School board Anrl representing d H('\ and | years in High School, have been M in Musical K h invited to the Chamber of Com- J IMen In Musical Know-how mefoe meeting tomorrow mocn 15 German-American| McNutt, Manpower Com- Claim People Want A provlem aiecuy connected with| Leaders Sentenced for | missioner, Says Labor | p national defense will be brought up | | Ba"ads for discussion and joint coopera- | cOunselmg Evasion | Measure Ready Soon | tion will be requested from busi- | —_— | By RAY PEACOCK ness men and school students | NEW YORK, Oct, 21 —Twenty-| WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 — Paull NEW YORK — That weird noise A large attendance has been re-|eo " tomer German - American|V. McNutt, chairman of the War|you just heard was the banshee quested by President Charles Carter, | gy q “jeqqers, including Gerhard | Manpower Commission, today de-|wail of hep-cats being put back in the problom 15 CoCly identified | ywipeim Kunze, national leader, clared the manpower problem is|their cages. Which is to say that | th business men'’s interests | were sentenced today to five years| becoming “too complex for effective after all these years the jumping - - |in prison each for conspiring to|voluntary action” and announced | jivers have been discovered to be a CARL F. WHITHAM ON ‘| counsel Bund members to evadethat \ntlm_\ two we?k_s he will pws-iminority~nolsy, but still a minority. | WAY TO SEATLE|the draft law ent a national service bill to the| Who says? Bunch of fellows - - — President. named Irving Berlin, Kay Kyser, Carl F. Whitham, of the Nabesna | | He said “There are acute short- Guy Lombardo and John Doe.| Mine, passed through Juneau to~iH .u.m\ of all types of male labor in!Berlin, Kyser and Lombardo may be | day on his way to Seattle to spend Al ll 4(1 major centers of War Production.” | prejudiced, but not good old John. the winter. e Bpaiain He's dry behind the ears and knows G Gay, glamorous dresses to take you to the smartest places! Dirndle, dressy shirt- waisters, pegtop pret- ties with lavish se- quin, embroidery trims. Black, festive Fall colors. 12--20. JONES—STEVENS Seward Street / (4 Not members of the Gedlapa! These two men are not members of the Gestapo! They are your friends, the Train Conductor and the Pullman Conductor. All you do is hand them your ticket. You are then free to enjoy your trip on the Empire Builder. No one is going to question you, search you, or drag you off the train at the next stop, throw you in jail, give you the third degree, and maybe a concentration camp for a home. This is America. You don’t have to hide, nor sneak, nor cringe. You can go openly and tell the truth and fear no one. This absence of fear is the strength of this nation. Yes, it’s worth fighting for. By the same token, it is up to us to maintain this priceless freedom by providing our share of the money to win the war. Invest in War Bonds, the best invest- ment you will ever make. H. F. “Nick” CARTER 1400 4th Av attle EMPIRE BUILDER Between Portland * Tacoma - Seattle - Spokas $1. Paul - Chicago via GLACIER NATIONAL Pl THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 57 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1942 Work Draft [T IS NOW BUNDISTS | Bill o Bo | BTESTENO | what he wants. And it ain’'t hey- \hva ! Lued tn make (hh a mnmu\nv SHIPMENTTO ANOTHER U. S, .- oo oo TERRITORY VESSEL SUNK =55 ‘namfl]esx but we couldn't talk the |same language. It seemed that I | wasn't hep. ' So let us examine first the tes- | SEATTLE, Oct, 21—Shippers dis- timony of the learned Professor !closed today that Mo iptoxicating Kvscr. who has eschewed (a word |liquor has been sent to Alaska for )s meant to look up) the i killer-diller stuff ever since his or- |the past two months = ice B Some points in the Territory have (By Associated Press) zchestgakbmu out of the Carolina | received no liquor since July 8. The! The battle of the Atlantic| canepPrakes. 4 ? i antic | ™, o pulk of the people” he | only such cargoes to go north in the claimed its five hundredth victim last 60 days have been in the form today with the Navy's announce- |of small shipments on Canadian ment of the loss of a medium-sized | vessels, !.he attle Times says. ——————— FIGHTINGIS deposed, “still love melody because they understand it. It's been fig- . ™ 5 ured out that only eight per cent United States merchantman in the 'of the entire audience for popular North Attantic. music wanted swing, and I say that The Associated Press tabulation less than one-fourth of the one per showed that 3,400 lives have been cem of that eight per cent knew lost, and more than 1900 crew 'what swing was. All the proof you members and passengers have been need is that nobody could define it. | i reported missing in the Atlantic “The era of hot music is over.| | since Pearl Harbor. Nobody wants to hear eight hot| | ,ee tunes in a row, but they'll listen to | a medley of eight sweet tunes in | a row, and want more. i Berlin, called out from a re- hearsal of his new wartime musical, “This Is The Army,” was accepted (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) as an expert witness after admit- Bliros ‘a: battles Teard Toay ting he has written about 25 hit S P o = ballads, of which ten sold more over the Egyptian Desert ¥ront and (5l o aiton foles this may possibly herald resump- 5 S\'mmthextir.\'nte tion of the long stalled land fight- N dAnytnin tiAdsriental s alwags g right,” he testified. “And that goes N3 i for the ballad. The public will ac e 5 cept any song that has a sympathet- WOODI.EY PLANE Group Quits fo Give Pres- ic note A The witness Lombardo gave his lEAVES IODAY ident Chancefo Replace | tcstimony i the form of ‘an ex- | p oy perience which happened in 1929 in Pro-Axis Minister cnicaeo RD Caze “We were playing the Palace,” | SANTIAGO, Chile, Oct. 2i-_The he submitted, “and I thought it would be pretty hot stuff if we did a novelty number called ‘Peoria,’ in which we wore very funny hats. After the show the manager came Chilean cabinet has give President Juan freedom of action in replacis For- ,eign Minister Ernesto Jarpa, “who advocates continuing relations with the Axis. The resignation was the result of a recent statement by Under- | secretary of State Sumner Welles | that two South American countries, presumably Chile and Argentina, are being used as bases by Axis agents, resigned to With five passengers from Ju- Antonio Rios | neau, the Woodley Airways plane, | piloted by Don Glass, left today for |the return flight to Anchorage. Leaving in the plane were M. and Mrs. J. Gerald Williams, Evelyn | Austen and Eleanor Oman for An- ‘(llox‘ig(‘ and Eric A. Eklund for Yakutat. up and said, ‘Look, I can get a, hundred bands that will put on hats | for a lot less money than we're pay- stufi ing you. Stick to the simple That’s what they come here Called back for rebuttal, Kyser allowed' that he was and tired of having sweet music| called corny.” ! | “The word ‘corny’ isn't used right, | either in music or writing,” he as-| ‘sen,ed rather violently. “If you ‘write effectively and simply they‘ call it corny, but really, a simple/ story written mushily—that’s corn., Swing Craze Out “Nine out of the first ten songs' on the Hit Parade, all during the swing craze, were ballads. We all| love to hum a song because that's| all most of us know about music. Music is only - a reflection cf‘ thought. Sixteen months ago, we| recorded ‘We'll Meet Again’ but it didn’t click because people weren’t thinking of parting. Now it's a hit ballad because thousands of boys are gone.” The hep-cats probably will re-| fuse to accept the verdict. They'll say that I, too, am prejudiced. All right, so I am. I probably ought to| dance on one leg and wiggle my | forefingers like they do, the while' | shouting “hot-cha-cha” and “vo-de- io-do." But I'll be darned if I will. \I work all day and get tired. PBRBSE @ o = | Mr. A. R. Duncan, who have huen in Anchorage for some time, returned today from the Westward city. ; — - BUY DEFENSE BONDS { Your Electric Toaster Has Gone Ofi 1o War! The electric toaster you now have is the ONLY one you’ll be able to get till the Axis gets the Axe! — the materials used in it are war mater- ials now. This means you must keep it clean, don’t let it get clogged with crumbs, and let the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company make needed repairs! We Make ALL Electrical Repairs!? | | | | ANOTHER TYPING . CLASS WILL BE OFFERED HERE Additional classes in beginning typihg and beginning shorthand | in Juneau Night School, superinten- dent A.B. Phillips said today. Several applications have been received from possible teachers for the two subjects, Phillips said, and a teacher was to be selected this afternoon. All those interested in studying High School, except those who al- ready registered for the Monday class. Beginning typing class will be held at 8:30 o'clock tonight. Also scheduled to start tonight lare Spanish and Trigonometry ight not yet registered for these classes lan dwishes to take either one, may 'do s0 tonight. Mrs. George Washing- ton, who lived in Chile for many years and speaks Spanish fluently, will teach the language class and Mrs. Howard Stabler will teach ELECTRICAL REPAIR will be offered, beginning tonight, | Typing I should report tonight be- tween 7:30 and 8:30 o'clock in the | | classes, at 7 p. m. Anyone who has| BEMANAGER | GEORGE BROTHERS | FOR BROWNS Quitting Cardinals Whi|e‘ { Rumors Persist About Try These DELICACIES ROCUEFORT DRESSING hottle 49c CHUTNEY FRENCH DRESSING, bottle 30c CAPERS hottle 50c WALNUT SAUCE hottle 55¢ MINT SAUCE hottle 55¢ | His New Job ! ST. LOUIS, Oct. 21.—The goosé that laid golden eggs for the St.| ‘L,mm Cardinals may be nesting ]ust acress the hall next year. Despite many rumors which have peen cisuning since it become f MUSHROOM SAUCE - - - hottle 55¢ Branch Rickey was quitting the i BARBEQUE SAUCE .- - s bottle 37¢ [ Cardinal organization, the boys “in the know” around here are pretty | confident that Rickey will join up‘ |with the reorganized St. Louis Browns of the American League. | In such case Rickey, father of the | baseball farm system and one of the |most dynamic figures the game has produced, would merely have to change offices at Sportsman’s Park. Bossed Browns The move also would take him back to where he really got his start | in baseball, as_manager of the| Browns. y “All the straws bend one way,”| said J. Roy Stockton, baseball expert | SHERRY WINE SAUCE MAJOR GREY'S CHUTNEY . RED WINE VINEGAR ANCHOVIE PASTE SALMON PASTE RATTLESNAKE MEAT SMOKED CRAB MEAT and LEGS TWO DELIVERIES DAILY—10:30 and 2:3 bottle 55¢ hottle $1.35 hottle 40c tube 35¢ tube 35¢ tin $1.50 tin 55¢ of the Post-Dispatch, who flatly e d Toe MMGkay. tiking ovee: ftth 108 ¢ PHONES 92 and 95 building up the Browns, who last year tasted success for the first time in many moons. It is Stockton's guess that Rickey will become Pr Mediterranean countries have There is no record of a person dent or Vice-President and General | used sponges for washing since ever having been hit by a falling Manager of the Browns. earliest times. meteor, Salary Question i Rickey's reported salary with the Cards is $50,000 a year plus a per- centage of the profit. With consid- |erable new financial backing ac- |quired last year, the Browns are willing to watch this to obtain the services of baseball’s master strat- egist, the experts believe. £ S Rickey has been mentioned for -4 many jobs, from insurance executive - % and United States Senator to gen- eral manager of the Brooklyn Dodg- ers. In an interview at Denver, Colo., he admitted it's possible he might become business head of the Dodg ers, but added, “I just don't know Rickey, in Denver to address a community war chest raliy, neither confirmed nor denied the prediction | that he would become an executive | of the St. Louis Browns. “I have no comment whatsover,” | he said. Attention, All Elks Be at Elks' Hall TONIGHT--Wednesday, Oct. 21 at 8 o'clock for Official Visit of sirici Depaty Grand Exailed Ruler FRED HANFORD - HARTMAN T. deMERS | TO LEAVEONTRIPTO | INTERIOR AND WEST Hartman T. deMers, who re-| cently came to Juneau to the position of Traffic Manager for Pan American in this city, is | leaving today or tomorrow for the | Interior and Westward to be away | for several weeks. | Mr. deMers is on temporary as- | |signment and during his absence | Bruce Mitchell will be in charge of | the local office ‘ —————————— | ) hutuatunc ALL ELKS Are Asked to Be in Attendance! Henry Ford was born on a farm near his present office at Dearborn, Michigan. The Best Whiskies from 4 Great Dlstlllmg States *Blended with the Finest Neutral Grain Spirits Neutral Grain Schenley Black Label, 67% Neutral Grain Spirits. Schenley Red Label, 72%% Spirits. ao(h 86 Proof. BLENDED WHISKEY. Schenley Distillers Corporation, NewYork City. trigonometry.