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PAGE SIX | Many Alaska Bills Okehed By Committee To Reorganize Legislature | Before 1944 Election; | Dimond Reports | Oct. 22.--Alaska ate A ny J. Dimond an nounces that Senate-House con- ferees on the Alaska Legislative Re- organization Bill ave agreed to make it effective prior to the 1944 election. The House bill was amended l),\" Senate to make it effective at red that it would Territory’s 1943 the once, but it was fe interfere with the election The UNDIES Kickernick and Van Raalte measure provides for the re- GOWNS organization of the Territorial Leg- PAJAMAS islature with the 16 Senators equally SLIPS divided among the four judicial dis- | PANTIES tricts, and 24 Representatives, to be Satin, Taffeta and Crepe elected on the basis of population. SLIPS Delegate Dimond also announced that the House Territorities Com- favorably on a nization of Alaska mittee has report hlll for the reorg Wearspruf from Malouf o i ame laws which would permit TOMGARD and DADLELES . members of the armed forces to se- LADE/ /BOBBLE. . potton ko cure hunting and fishing licenses on rayon silk PAJAMAS in ga¥ | ype same basis as other residents, prints and stripes. after living in the Territory for one g year FLEEXES GIRDLES and Delegate Dimond said the com- FOUNDATIO: mittee also had approved two other ot bills to convey to Cordova land 3 formerly owned by the Copper River ) DI MATDEN FORGS L1 and Northwestern Railroad, and nd BRASSIERE s ¥ authorizing retroactive pay increases from September 1, 1941 to December 1, 1941, of the Alaska ! Railroad Jones-Stevens Seward Street for employees - 1 EYES EXAMINED | and BROKEN LENSES replaced. in our own shop. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson, Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. BUY SE BONDS 1—Liked a lot! When we put IMPERIAL into the picture, experts agreed we had a masterpiece —a whiskey with an aroma, a smoothness, a flavor that put it in a class of one. And predictions were that we had the makings of a winner! ever since! the big crowd! fastest-growing whiskey. Ask for it at it’s getting the cheers! it's America’s fastest- growing i whiskey! IMPERIAL IS GREAT 1 Eighty-six proof. 70% FOR 2 BIG RH\SONS grain neutral spirits Copr. 1942, Hiram Walker & Sons inc., Peoria, (Il “Yelveted America’s | Kttt Fastest | Lllndid Wiiskey Growing l{ oy Distributed throughout Alaska by Maritime Building Al a Distri | only %PM v%aszw 2—Liked by more! And predictions were right! When we decided to really show off IMPERIAL, folks zoomed. For instance, in one big test-state it hopped ahead of 332 long-established whis- kies to reach first place—and has stayed there 3—Liked by n'lillions! Taste IMPERIAL— and see why this grand whiskey is drawing Taste why it's America’s bar—or take home a tryout bottle. Taste why " for extra smoo!hness. “Flavor-| -peaked” for extrarichne IMPERIAL Floren Weallers / ncedd 7// THE .DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1942 T0G0 Sloppy Housekeeper, Kiska Island WILLIAM L. WORDEN AN ALASKAN BASE, Oct. 22— Tut-tut, Togo, what housekeeping! You didn’t finish the grass roof on By that hut, and, even when you do, it’s going to leak. You've left lum- ber just thrown around anywhere. | And those holes in the ground are downright ugly. In fact, they're not ugly; they're obvious. And whoever told you that any- body on Kiska planted gardens in straight rows? You must have thought they did, else you wouldn't have bothered to make that little building look like a nice, straight- rowed vegetable den from the air. As for those wrecked planes lying around, some in the water and some out, with the noses shot off, and others with only part of the wings left—why, 20, how ould you be so sloppy? Shows Up Badly Togo's housekeeping shows up omething awful in recent pictures taken of Kiska Island by United States airmen now in almost daily raids and pushing their plane-a- day record hard ‘The pictures taken during raids, and they a good idea of what is to be seen when the weather is clear enough for a photographer to see anything at 107 STUDENTS HOW U.S. USES $100 FOR WAR A REGISTER FOR BOOOO OHOOES HOBOO AIRPLANES SHHNH ODOOO A total of 107 students is the en- rollment of Juneau Night School at the present time, A. B. Phillips, superintendent of schools, said to- day, adding that there is still room for a few more students in some classes. No new students will be @ $ ‘$ 3 “$ $ | accepted, however, after next Mon- | day night ave now closed be- are too many les- new ones to catch | Some class | cause students | sons ahead for L) ORDNANCE ) ) } up. [y DOOOD| " croes v sens st are Ml;%;mgmus @ On Monday and Wednesday, | Typing I, 8:30 to 10 pm., Mrs. i | vance Blackwell, teacher; Typing NAVAL @ 11, 7 to 8:30 pm., Miss Evelyn SHIPS | Ohlson, teacher; Shorthand II, |8:30 to 10 p.m., Miss Ohlson; Span- |ish I, 7 to 8:30 p.m., Mrs. George | Washington, teacher; Trigonometry, |7 to 8:30 pm, Mrs. Howard Sta- INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES P 35 5% bler, teacher. ® POSTS, $ $ $ $ $ $$‘$ Classes in Typing I and Short- DEPOTS \ Ihand I taught by Miss Ohlson are | offered on Tuesday and Thursday, typing from 7 to 8:30 pm. and " NIGHT SCHooL CHAMPAGNE DOMESTIC and IMPORTED JULES PERCHARD Pint §1.95 Finest Qalifornia Champagne Qf, $2.95 Naturally Fermented in the Bottle GOOD AS THE BEST! SPARKLING BURGUNDY »t- 1.65 California qt. 2,95 Naturally Fermented in the Bottle THE LARGET SELECTION OF IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC DINNER WINES IN JUNEA Mumm's Exira Dry Champagne Pint - $35.95 OQuart - $9.00 - B wree—— « PAY, SUBSIS- TENCE, TRAVEL Y SHIPS armed forces The classification labeled “other” i for housing. 1 camouflage standpoint—of course | t would not be so laughable if our all over the Japanese -occupied island. They demonstrate that the Jap- anese certainly have not aban- doned Kiska. In fact, apparently they are bending every effort to make the base stronger and tc get as much as possible of it un- derground Some of these underground ef forts are a little laughable from * “crowded ’round”—sales your ss! butors Company Seattle, Washington »wn forces were trying to hide an| its fate for Fooled for While P weeks afterward. | HODOEA (3839 GOOHO OHND ¢, arge mnugh to throttle the Axis. how the money is spent when an American invests $100 in war bonds. iThose Uneq;a_lio War De- This chart shows includes $3 for food exports and $1 shorthand from 8:30 to 10 p.m. | Eight more students can still ERCHANT |register for the Typing II class, TWO DELIVERIES DAILY—10:30 and 2:30 | Phillips said. The Tuesday and Thurs {but |class has room for 8 more pupils, !meeting from 8:30 to 10 o'clcok. !Spanish and Trigonometry classes Figures from Office of War Information can still have elght more students \each, Phillips said. The United States is spending the greatest sum of money in history— } Enrollment in classes up to to- about $2,000 a second—to produce enough equipment and sustain day was as follows: Typing I, | Tuesday class, 26 students, closed; | Typing I, Monday class, 18; Typ- jing I hand metry, RESURVEY OF reement o {ily plot in Walla Walla, it was an- ;nounccd today at the Charles W. EORGE BROTHER e — PHONES 92 and 95 day Typing I class is closed, he Monday and Wednesday I, 18; Shorthand I, 16; Short- II, 10; Spanish, 8; Trigono- 1L Delicious! Curried chicken, lamb or veal, with fluffy rice! Enjoy them often—try this lively curry blend. nstallation—because Kiska’s land- | rench or a misplaced board shows | M E N l i ) ip like a sore thumb in an aerial | | To 2 Tim is a territory where a man’s | FOR INDUSTRY Burial of Mrse Lorene Gucker, rail through the tall grass lasts | y or days, and a wrecked plane, };’;’:‘3““"?0?:"a:?:m‘;'s;efflzacl::d::‘ PUT WAR STAMPS ON YOUR SHOPPING LIST vhich catches fire, hopelessly shows {Monday night, will be in her fam- chorage where they will make their GERALD WILLIAMS Nevertheless, the Japanese have | H | carter ry. iams 1ade desperate errorx;_ | mandS fo Be PIa(ed in C‘:\";;’ (!xli::::‘”hw et future home. :vt; r;l}x:mi w[;;s "1::; iy They made a beach look like a | 1 ‘S‘Lkfl eaterday, will i OFF To A“(HORAGE cflently} appolniag, sssaian an' i unway—and it had United States Other 0(([][)3“0"5 th Bsr o el $BER Len bady ,States Attorney for the Third Di- irmen fooled for a little while. | | ‘h‘e Sieees on ey os e | vision with his headquarters at They set dummy planes in mws" WASHINGTON, Oct. 22. - The W3 ?f‘ml‘hf“’;':;': vé“fi‘“"v};;"j Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Williams|Anchorage. =~ hat fooled nobody. War Department is studying plans| JCC8 50 T8 T8 8 YAEY and baby daughter Catherine Anne, | But, most of all, they’ve .mcnmt-"“‘ a resurvey of men for the . = 00 th been among the jop¢ yesterday by plane for An-! Empire Classifieds Pay! d to get underground; sinking|Army with the view of releasing s there. ah uildings into pits and then put-‘ ing grass roofs over them: put- | ing dirt roofs on their structures; illing in parts of the island, and| utting out others. However, the Americans, in re- |€rs. ent pictures, found the Japs had |'ion of copper and other critical een so busy on such projects they aven't taken time even to pull lown the Zeros or wrecked sea- lanes off the beach; to repair lamaged barges or do much of nything else. . . . : About the bomb damage, of ourse, Togo, you were a little puz ling to us when we saw you in hat one picture, running—dozens f you—down the beach as the lane came over. The men who study the pictures oked a long time at those run- ing figures, but they finally fig- some physically unequal to the |demands of war and placing them industry and agriculture. Secretary of War Henry L. Stim- son said that some 4,000 gold min- furloughed, will speed produc- in ores. | CALVIN POOL RETURNS FROM OFFICIAL TRIP After being absent for two months on OPA work in the In- terior, Northern and Westward sec- tions of the Territory, Calvin Pool, Assistant Director and Organiza- LAST DAYS BARGAINS Come in Friday and Saturday and participate in our CASH and CARRY PRICES on red it out. It was those queer|:onal Officer for OPA returned to aaped figures up above you in the|Juneau late yesterday afternoon. ] [ icture. Apparently they didnhave| Mr. Pool went from Juneau to "~ ou fooled. And that's why you|Fairbanks and proceeded to Nome TOBACCOS U an. where he organized price control | They were falling bombs, weren't! 2mong the merchants. In Anchor- hey, Togo? age, his next stop, he reestablished CEREALS brosmmne. o o oo s price control and held a meeting with merchants. Meetings were held :lFTv IHREE and organizational work was also SPICES EXTRACTS i - done by Mr. Pool in Seward, Val- ; o dez and Cordova. - TAKE PASSAGE | %o covioe ser moo e and CONDIMENTS turned to Anchorage and both ‘ F 0 R S 0 u I H there and in Fairbanks established BABY FO0DS district offices. 1 Passengers leaving here yesterday or Ketchikan were Joe Meherin, lobert Carlson, Sevenin Peterson, ‘red Berglof and Fred Carrilo. Leaving Juneau for Seattle were Ars. T. Thebault, George Gill, Eric ilander, Mrs. Anna Alander, Unis|busy, Mr. Pool said. One of the| «slie, Com. N. C. Leslie, Frans J.|chief difficulties he encountered ‘ors, Miss Kay Doran, Ethel Han-|was the delay in transportation, on, Edward Hansen, Andrew Lund- tad, Olof Bordson, P. C. Hesdal, “hester Kaler, Harold Christensen, James Gunter. “While merchants were coopera- | tive in all communities I visited, Cordova had by far the highest percentage of compliance,” Mr. Pool said today. Merchants and business people throughout the Interior were very | caused both by congestion and the 7ad weather prevailing in many sections of Alaska. Mrs. Mildred R. Hermann, Di- Arlie Stricklan, ’hillip Oakes, June Hugh Forrest, Mathewson, Ars. Sophie Lottsfeldt, Paul Astrei- | Washington, D.C., until Mr. Pool’s is, Harry Hall, Victor Bjornstad,|-eturn. expects to leave within al v. A. Taylor, Richard Browning,|few days for the National Capitol.' tobert Epson, Jack Myer, Ethel R P TR | Jnklesboy, Fred Charles Milter, ! Irs. Anna Leake, E. B. Church, HOSPIIAI- NOIES | stanwood Johnson, Melvin Sar-; geant, Jane Leslie. Jack Coal, Charles Glass, Orville| Phillip Oakes has been dis- Johnson, Melvin Kincaid, Kenneth |charged from St. Ann's Hospital wutchinson, Daniel Wilson, Ver- where he underwent a recent op- ion Fritsch, Felix Kearney, Sidney |eration. Ambrose, Bernard Davis, George bl i suerrero and John Guerrero, —— The British Admiralty reported in ' 1941 that the Thompson and Lind- say Islands, on the charts since 1825, 1ad vanished from the South At- antic, cector of OPA in Alaska, who de- layed her planned departure for lent of St. Ann’s Hospital, has gone ‘home. Mrs. Mary Snyder has entered St. Ann's Hospital for medical care. Mrs. K. Bloxham, surgical pnti—' of Tenakee, 1 2 JELLIES and PRESERVES DRIED FOODS TEA, COFFEE PICKLES FRESH ORANGES.APPLES, POTATOES and GRAPEFRUIT Everything PricedtoSell Now /‘_—_— 20th Century Grocery — - 4