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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU A ALLIES IN CAN'TBUY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1943 Bonds. He asked the Treasurys| tiveness of fighter plane protection lawyers about that. They went deep |for Clark's base and operations can | into the matter and came up with |be greatly extended, a written opinion: Yes, it was all| e right for Mr. Morgenthau's child- ¢ ¢ © © ¢ @ @ © o o o By Weather Bird HERE’'S COMFORT and STURDI- NESS FOR GROWING FEET . . . Weather Bird Shoes for boys and girls, Smart styles the youngsters will love and just right' for school. 3.50 “ 5.50 QUALITY OXFORDS Wing tips or rounded toe, dress or sport styles. Black and brown. | | | GIRLS' SPORT SHOES Moecasin toes, gillie ties, brown, elk and black in per- fectly grand oxfords. i | | | | ren to buy these bonds, but there o was a Stipulation: They must buyl. them with their own money. Their|e father could not purchase them for | ¢ the account of his children, they o said. Then what about Mrs. Morgen- thau? Was she allowed to buy Gov- ernment bonds? the Secretary in- | quirer. Randolph Paul, general| coun<el for the Treasury, gave an cpinion on that: “If your wife uses | her own separate funds, that Js,! Unable to Help Out Governmeni :Iunds in which you have no interest, | ey (and if she acts on her own respon- WASHING=ON, Sept. 17. — TWO|gipility and without any previous| of our most prominent citizens | gyrangement or understanding with | aren't allowed to buy any war bonds | yoy 1 am inclined to view that| |in the third war loan, or in any|a purchase of United States Sav- BLign; JOtons,, OB (tOFRRY d‘W!Government loan, for that matter,‘ing‘; Bonds by your wife would vio- | Pombers from Admiral William F.. Gpne they hold down their fiscal jage no Federal Statute. However, Halsey’s command carried out a | | jobs. |1t appears to me that the purchase! serles of successful daylight raldsi™qnyei; eager sense of patriotic duty ‘might result in criticism because of cn airdromes on the Buin area in |\, Cerriy urges them to buy War ethical implication.” | the northern Solomons. | ; ponds, but what can they do about i 3 Night planes bombed three enemy 1it? If either of them is caught buy- .2 FoR(ES THIRD WAR LOAN BONDS Secretary of U. §. Treasury BIG RAID ATWEWAK Ground Forces Capture Malahang—Night At- facks Reported (Continued from Page One) te) jcver 400 planes destroyed at Wewak in six weeks. cargo ships west of the Buka Pas-|; ., , war hond and convicted of it, tage and Japanese planes made|p.’ ool be fined $3000 and de- night raids on allied positions near 104 forever of holding any office {Munda, New Georgia and Lambu, j, tpe Government of the United on Vella Lavella Jsland. |States. Whoever catches them buy- | Night raids by Mitchells on Am- ing a war bond and tells on them {bon, former Dutch naval base. re-|ng yings about their conviction culted in large fives in the wharf ;g pe paig $1,500—half the fine. | district, explosions in the barracks Would Be Violators jarea and many fires in the town. fons of bombs on Kendari | Celebes, causing fires and explosions {on buildings and docks. Liberators at night dropped 27 and Japanese raided Darwin, ineffec- | tively. New Allied Actions Definitely Planned, Roosevelt Announce (Continued from Page One) N\ B Bekiends QUALITY SINCE /887 7 % She Weds General B eyt e . VICTORY GARDEN Service Men, AT FAIR%ERSSE“ l" T T items between May, 'from China long before this war began,” the President declared. The war to date has cost the United States 128 billions, he stat-| ,ed. Then he listed these fighting as produced and delivered 1940, and September 1943: 123,000 planes; 349,000 airplane nine-and-one-half small arms; 25942000 This is the fate that could over- take Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Sec retary of the Treasury, and W. A. ,Julian of Cincinnati, U. S. Treas- urer, if they are discovered as vio- | lators, | | One of the oldest of U. S. laws | (it dates back to 1789) is just that (strict with Secretaries of the Treas- |ury and U. S, Treasurers. This prohibition is reported to be “heavy on the patriotic consciences of both officials, especially Secre- tary Morgenthau's since he is the one who is out to sell $15,000,000,- 1000 of bonds to 50,000,000 of his fel- low-citizens. He asks 50,000,000 others to buy but he himself is not allowed to buy even one $25 bond— 'a paradox that can't sit well on the |soul of a conscientious official. On one occasion at a war savings rally a pretty girl pinned a rosette of war stamps on Mr. Morgenthau. |He accepted it graciously but as | scon as he could he gave the rosette away. As Secretary of the Treas- | war stamps. About Children IN ITALY Eighth Army—Makes Amaz-i ing March fo Reinforce | American Fifth (Continued from Page One) shoreline and recaptured the moun- tain village of Albanella, 10 miles| inland and smashed three tremen- | dous German counter-attacks, also| flattend out several German salients driven into the Allied positions. The Algiers Broadcast of NBC says Monte Corvino, 8% miles in- land and 11 miles east of Salerno,| at the Northern end of the bridge- head, has also been captured in a {™= BARANOF WEATHER REPORT (U? 8. Bureau) Specialties: | | | | Temp. Thursday, Sept. 16 | CHOW MEIN i Maximum 50; Minimum 45 CHOP SUEY | * Rain—12 b4 AMERICAN DISHES | e » z ————— | rmon stra | ROYAL CAFE | | Hugh B. Autren of Sitka is regis- Pk Kli 3 red at the Baranof Hotel. ! 748 1828 pre ! i | 1 ISMAEL HOTEL : ORDER YOUR St Heat i p o water ana snowes s | {BABBIT SKINS Quick Service. Barber Shop ook i NOW . on Second Floor—Room 3 Tanned, cleaned and all Under New Management and Proprietor ISMAEL VOSOTROS Opposite Juneau Cold Storage Reasonable Rate VALCAUDA FUR COMPANY SEATTLE, WASHINGTON SEATTLE Alaska’s Largest Apartment Hotel e EVERY ROOM WITH TUB and SHOWER Ld Reasonable Rates _ Phone 800 D. B. FEMMER—AGENT PHONE 114 NIGHT 313 BUY WAR BONDS repulse of a severe German attack. Airfield Seized London dispatehes said the seiz- (more significant Allied vietory as; |the town is understood to be thel| e | YOU CAN FLY | 1engines; 53,000 tanks; 93,000 &rtil-|yry he isn't allowed to have any Ure of Monte Corvino will be one| lery weapons; million rounds of small arms ammunition; But what about Mr. Morgenthau's Site of one of the best airfields Present War, RO BnMiR! 1,233,000 trucks; 13,000 landing ves-|children? ' Superior Lot NEW YORK, Sept. 17—"The service men in this war are far | superior to their fathers in the | first World War,” Dr. William Bar- vow Pugh, who is now overseas on |a tour of war theatres, told a group of friends here just before he took a plane for Europe. “They are more intelligent, they are better balanced. They think | Seryice Director, Lorin T. Oldroyd, | reports that the results of the Fair- | banks community market, operating | under the supervision of a velun-| teer group known as the Fairbanks | Cooperative Marketing Association, are highly successful. The market was established chief- | ly to facilitate the sale of surplus Victory Garden produce to various construction concerns engaged in operations in the Fairbanks area. As a result, both buyer and pro- sels, and 2380 fighting ships and,to see them saving their monsy by ian coast. With the, airfield in Al-!{ auxiliaries. Mr. Morgenthau wanted along the whele stretch of the Ital-| buying United States Savings lied hands, there is scope for effec-| SPECIAL! EVELYN VERNON, dancer, and Erig. Gen. Robert W, Johnson, chairman of the Smaller War Plants Corp., were married in Salt Leke City, Utah. They are honeymooning in Washington and New York. This is Evelyn’s second marriage and | Johnson's third. (Imternational) |ducer have profited, inasmuch as more. Right now they are watehing | g really considerable amount of fine their chaplains closely. And nfwr‘vege;amgs and fruit has. been as- the war, when those chaplains Who sembled for sale. jhave shared their difficulties and gales from the opening date, July (Sufferings overseas return as their 12 1948, through the market date of pastors in their home towns, they September 7, total $1452370, ac- | {will listen to these former comrades cording to market manager Murrdy of theirs with immensely keener in- w. ghields. Mr, Shields states that |terest and prompter response.” {126 gardeners have participated, Dr. Pugh made it clear that he which, indeed, is indication that was going abroad as a messenger Fairbanks Victory gardeners have ibetween the boy at the front and supported the institution, and that | MEN’S WRIST WATCHES Stainless The Very Latest Makes and Styles | 4 uterprtmf {his family pew back home. But also, ! be indicated, he felt acutely his re- | sponsibility as an ambassador from |the Protestant Churches to the |chaplains themselves. “When I was |a chaplain in Prance in the other lwar,” he said, “never did 1 get a /message from my church. Never fonce. I am determined that this Investigation of Civil Service Reveals Bi Useless, Costly Action from Page Oné) ¥ {Continued of the minor mysteries in the ques-’ tionnaire. ‘!he present war. Wherever I go {T'll have only one thought. I go It's true the Civil Service Com- not as an individual, not as a min- mission” 'nus‘set up a system orlhwr‘:‘(s‘: fitru;,;nu church, but as checks ‘and balances. |a mi r of the whole Church of If a steno or division chief (the!lu’ufi Cbrist in America. For it is grading applies to all federal work- ers not' appointed by the Prumem“all g: America, that is today with and some of those who are s0 its boys overseas.” appointed, but also are under Civil| The American Churchman has Service) doesn't like his grade card,|been in Great Britain since August he can appeal. 121 visiting camps and army chapels, If the rating official can't talk!conferring with chaplains and other him (or her) out of it, he (or she) officers, and making public ad- can go kecfore the reviewing olficllll d:‘es:esbebr. fgxh is the chairman and if he (or she) isn't completely|of the neral Commission on Army cowed by that time, there still is the and Navy Chaplains and executive efficiency rating committee. 'hend of the Presbyterian Church in Zince all three of these personsithe U. S. A. or groups already have put mexr; —.>— — stamps of approval on the original| report card, they are in the same! % il 3 spot” as ‘the baseball umpire who so, see . D. W. Knowles, already has shouted “Out.” If he]hwfl scientiffe methods. Osteopath changes his mind, it’s an admission '-nd Chiropodist. FEET HURT? that he didn't know his business in Office 387 the first place. E Lower Lobby, Baranof Hotel (Tomorrow: - The Government's Home, Red 669 Red Tape Road to Progress.) adv. jcannot be said of the church in' heart of America, the heart of Victory Gardens can and have been |a definite factor in food production. Two markets have been held each week, between the hours of 7:00 to 9:30 a. m., facilities having been made available at the old Fairbanks Gardens for the handling of the produce. The market has handled quite a variety of vegetables and fruits in- cluding, of course, such established items as cabbage, lettuce, radishes, beets, greens of various sorts car- rots early potatoes, etc. The as- tonishing factor is the volume of |ved, ripe tomatoes which has come in, Most of these tomatoes have been grown out of doors this sea- scn. Also, there has been a con- |siderable offering of squash and cu- cumbers. Some wild blueherries and low bush cranberries have been brought in. At least one member of the mar- keting committee of the Association has assisted in supervising sales each market day. These people de-~ serve a lot of credit, serving, as they do, without compensation. The Extension Service, headed by Di- {vecior Oldrayd, has assisted in grad-|] ing the produce offered, e FROM WHITEHORSE R. W. Perry, associated with a ‘Whitehorse construction company;: )is a‘ guest at the Baranof Hotel while jn Juneau. 20 Years Guaranteed 15 jewels $65.75 17 jewels 79.50 MONEY REFUNDED IF NOT SATISFIED 20% Deposit with Order, Balance C. 0. D. Y Mid-West J obbing Co. MAIL ORDER DEPT. ROOM 400 10 NORTH CLARK ST. CHICAGO, iLL. BRINGING UP FATHER OH-ISN'T THIS TERRIBLE »TO THINK MY RAN OFF WITH THE MAN AND LEFT HER FIMNCE - THINK OF THE SCANDAL ¥ WHAT WILL. MY FATHER THINK LS SO —— ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES 18 JUNEAU to Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks f \ Yakutat Valdez Nome i Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Poinis Wednesday Friday - Sunday * ALASKA STAR AIRLINES saraNorioree Phone 667 Woodley Airways JUNEAU—— ANCHORAGE Via YAKUTAT and CORDOVA Connections t¢ ALL INTERIOR Alaska Points Lockheed Arrives Juneau 2:00P.M. Electra Leaves Juneau 2:30 P.M. Tuesday-Friday FOR RESERVATIONS 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 Sitka $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $13 S8 g8 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 0 18 10 138 10 5 10 18 10 18 10 10 18 18 18 10 10 10 10 18 : . Haines and Sk.my—SchdlhdHunDflly at 7:30'A. M. {50 es Juneay .. $18.00 Express Tta und a0 it .Xpress T pol l—Min ; M ind Trip. Fare: Twice One-Way l‘"-lr.e.-mm Excursion Ihlet—Scheduled Daily at 9 A. M. and 2 P, M. Expres Bais: ib scnis 3 ki) vy cents per pound—Minimum Charge 68¢ SCHEDULED TUESDAY and TH RSDAY Ketehikan Wrangell Petersburg o0 2000 $30.00 20.00 ; Express Rate: 25 und—] Express Rate: 10c per poundnirions o $LO o Ketchikan and Wrangell of 66c to Petersburg