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HOLD COURT OF AWARDS Evelyn Butler Speaks ore Group in Northern Church Sunday hinkmg and n in bring- r Light the peaceful of to- Scouts are for this lyn But- ad- their Court Northern organ- 1 as the Girl arvelous declared Dr S y afte she on outs as and ds held in the Church sed the ac- nts of the girls during and their many activities s of their community tioned among other work e of child- bandages at the hospi- Red Cross pillows and the teria 0 discu. okies every week for are useful and wil er for everyone; par- mmunity of Juneau discussed the Girl Scout and laws and the confi- munity natural- who voluntarily Personal Health, tendance Joan Lesher: Tenderfoot Badge, Public Healith, Personal Health, Home Health, Home Safety, Home Perfect At- Nursing, Child tendance Pat Waugh: Perfect E Peters: Perfect Tenderfoot Badge Tenderfoot Badges were awarded o Evelyn Hollman, Aileen Kron- Sylvia Lister, Bobbie Jean Attendance. Attendance, ! quist Tew The following Scouts of Troop VI (Douglas) were awarded Second Class Badges: Virginia and Barbara Eash, G a Maki, Myra Ann Gra- b Jahet Jensen, Nancy Niemi and Gloria Anderson Members of the Juneau-Douglas @irl Scout council include Mrs. Earl D. McGinty, Mrs. S. B. Hill- man, Mrs. Ruth Blake, Mrs. Arthur Hedges, Mrs. Norman Rustad, Mrs. Edith Barros, Dr. Evelyn Butler, Mrs. W. J. Manthey, Mrs. Josephine Boyd, Mrs. Dudley Gerhke, Mrs. Ernest Gruening, Mrs. E. L. Keith- ahn, Mrs. George Hayes and Mrs. Scott L. Murphy. | Members of the Juneau-Douglas committee are Mesdames Donald | O'Conner, Harold Foss, Oscar Olson, | Glenn Oakes, Willlam Carter, B. D.| Stewart, John McLaughlin, E. L.| Bartlett, A. E. Glover, Lynn Gem- | mill and Felix Toner, | The organizations which sponsor | the Girl Scouts in Juneau and[ referred to the pro- pougjae are the Methodist Mission- recently: ich provide many ac- .o socjety, Martha Society, Re-|countries are deeply convinced thab|i,ioest cemetery in the Aleutians, bekah Lodge, Juneau Woman's| Club, Douglas Woman’s Club and the American Legion Auxiliary. | | mme WORLD THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA : £ " | Etcme. Nursing,: Home Health, Horme Refu ee Sallors Are Se' $g Safety, Child Care, Perfect At~ For Reverse at Dunkerque LONDON, May 30. — Thousands of merchant seamen and fishermen from the occupled countries are ready to take part in a Dunkerque- in-reverse, sailing small boats with supplies to the European coast in the wake of invasion. The War Shipping administration has been mobilizing small craft of every de- seription for months to make full use of this pool of skilled, eager manpower. Refugee sailors in England far cutnumber other able-bodied men from the occupied countries. Many were on the high seas when th« Germans swept through their homelands, Kkilling or capturing most of the soldiery. Belgium has thousands of fisher- men and small boat men who es- caped the Nazi advance. They are eager to fight their way back home the past six years this missionary institution has been “in exile” from its own campus, now in Japanese hands, and has been housed in Chengtu, a thousand miles away. But it carries on every school and almost every class, with most of the | former faculty. Recently, 2,000 alumni students and friends cele- brated the sixth anniversary of ex- e with an “alumni day.” The pro- gram included a parade in cap and gown, a dinner, an amusing tableau entitled “Return to Nanking,” mo-| tion pictures and sword dances. Addressing ministers of the Hun- garian Reformed Church and of the Hungarian Lutheran Church, Bis- hop Leszlo Ravsz, of Hungary, said “Most of the belligerent human civilization will be at an end apd that it will be impossible to stop the destruction of human dignity if the spirit of the peace negotiations is not determined by the truths and demands of Christian ethics, The root of all evil is to 1sibility of making rying out such promises. . Willard tty, National Su- of Education for the In- vice, was a guest of honor poke briefly on the respon- |be found in the fact that the na- ncllslu“iuam have departed from the basis| ’ | of pure Christian ethics and pointed +WW.REID of children in the family ommunity is when they are eligible seven years to become then when they become c(n years of age and have done rov as required are eligible bec Girl Scouts. Mrs, Earl commissioner, con- ed the flying up ceremony for f I ls: Doris Ann Bart- Mary Lister, Vara Kay Nordale, Carolyn and Marilyn Isaak. Troop 3 Awards Followinz are the awards pre- elzgar nted T ts in Troop III Pauline Daroff: Public Health, ublic Safety, Personal Health, iome Health, Home Safety, Home Nursing and Child Care. Loffaine English: Public Health, ublic Safety, Personal Health, ome Health, Home Safety, Home vur and Child Care. Claire Folta: Public Health, Per- cnal Health, Home Health, Home afety, Home Nursing and Child| Lois Hared afety, Tealt} g and Public Health, Public Personal Health, Home Home Safety, Home Nurs- Child Care Sarah Jane Linehan: Second Badge, P: Oakes: Scribe, Musician, Weaving, 2 Curved Bars and a Gold tar for perfect attendance Thibodeau: Public Health, Public Safety, Personal Health, Home Health, Home Saftety, Home Nursing and Child Care. Troop 4 Awards for Troop IV include: eplvine Hared: Child Care, Health, Home Nursing, Home Personal Health, Public Public Safety, Reader. 9. ar herine Bavard: nder, Gold Star. Boddy: Design, Class, Service Star. Donna Olds: Book Finder, Gold Salt Water Second 'y Daroff: Public Health, Pub- fety, yme Nursing, Home Safety, Ser- vice St Rober Messerschmidt: Book Finder, Hook Binding, Glass, Gold Gold Star. rp: Gold Star, Troop 6 ds for Tfoop VI were as fol- WS: Jean He: Iva Fublic Schuttpelz: Boating, alth, Public Safety, Per- th, Home Nursing, Home Home Safety, Child Care, Attendance. Gifts from Americai.., contributed "through the American Red Cross, are supplying new suits to the lepers 1 of Fukien Province, China, cared for through the American Mission | to Lepers in a hospital nestled high in the hills on the outskirts of Yen-| ping. The cloth for these suits was (hauled over the Burma Road for | some 2,000 miles, and was made into cuits by refugee women on the front | porch of a missionary home, ac- |cording to the Rev. Louis R. Den- nis, of Concord, Maryland, in charge |of this relief service. The leper {hospital and colony is being served by doctors and nurses from the Yenping City Methodist Hospital, While some of these Chinese lepers; are -ridden, others carry on gar-| | dens, rice paddies, raise rabbits, or 1mak€ baskets. | | Unils of conscientious objectors, serving in civillan public service camps under Society of Friends (Quakers) have been assigned to special work among juvenile delin- quents and mentally deficient child- \ren in six state training schools: Cheltham, Mr.; Pownal, Maine; | Lautel, Md.; Stockley, Del; New| Lisbon, N. J.; and Pennhurst, Pa. | Their services include hospital at- tendance, care of cottages, direction of educational, recreational or other programs, supervision of food, and direction of boys’ clubs. Those min- | istered to are from six to sixty years| {of age, but all with arrested men-| | tality. Says one of these Co's: * personally believe that we have an unparalleled opportunity to prove that the love in practical Christian-| ity is the best discipline and best| therapy there is.” 5] There are church leaders in the United States who assert that sol- diers are coming home from the| |present war far more deéply re- |ligious than they left America's | shores. But Dr. Willlam Barrow | Pugh, of Philadelphia, recently re-' turned from a visit to the battle- | | | fronts of the world, is less optim- ;llstic_ He says: ‘“Chaplains testify Child Care, Home Health,\"ha" if a man enters the service| | with a religious background and | religious training he will come out of the service more religious. The ‘commry is also true. If he has no ‘rehgiuus training and no religious | background on entering the service, |he will come out of it With prac- | tically nothing of spiritual value. | The church must appreciate this| situation and realize that what it) places in the hearts and minds of |the men who enter the service is {just as important as the weapons | placed in their hands.” lout this departure only in others. | They will thus seek for what out- llasts time and is eternal, and souls will conviction that in building a new world this foundation is the most important of all: ‘Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.'” When the war is over, the needs of Christian churches in Europe, beth for buildings and for men, will be staggering. According to Dr. Visser't Hooft, general secretary of the World Council of Churches, Geneva, Switzerland, needs in their order of importance will be: finance reorganizing parishes in devastated and evacuated areas, where neces- sary building provisional church centers; restore pastorate by re- cpening theological colleges, by scholarships, by adjustment pastors’ salaries; provide Christian litera- ture, scriptures, by financing Chris- tian publishing houses, Bible so- cieties; enable churches to organize large scale evangelistic campaigns; enable Christian youth movements to restart activities; subsidize home missions and Christian social work; send ecumenical delegations to de- feated countries; create ecumenical centre in Switzerland; restore health of church leaders and renew contacts; replace missionaries in continental mission fields; rebuild destroyed churches.” BOTTLENECK IN PULP INDUSTRY TERMED SERIOUS B SEATTLE, May 30.—Reduction of reserve stocks to an “irreducible minimum,” coupled with the Armed Services pre-invasion requirements, made the lumber and pulp paper wars currently the most critical of materials, the Army War Produc- tion authorities told interviewers today. Col. Martin McDonnell of tht Army Headquarters Staff and For- industry. — e ! FLY SOUTH BY PAA A Pan American |Bruce Thomas. Mrs, again be penetrated by the| est Products Chief, said “our pre- sent bottleneck of logs, if we don’t get our needs’ here in the Pacific Northwest, bites right into our mil= itary program.” He said production loss was ‘due to the sawmill walk- out which threatens the entire puli) plane left for |Seattle this morning carrying Mrs. | Geraldine Thomas, Elizabeth and Thomas will imtum to Juneau shortly while the The University of Nanking, China, Children remain south for the dur- Bodding: Public Health, | will not down, war or no war. For ation. TRIBUTE PAID T0 | . FALLEN HEROES, ALEUTIAN FIGHT ALEUTIANS BASE, May 30. — |Vice Admiral Fletcher, Commander in the North Pacific, paid tribute |to the men killed in fighting the Japs in the Aleutians at Memorial Day ceremonies. Fletcher was in- ‘troduced by Brig. Gen. Harry Thompson, commander of the army station, and spoke briefly at the base’s cemetery, services in which soldiers, sailors and marines took art. Services were also held at the Attu, where most of the men are buried who were killed in the 20 days of fighting last May before the island was won. The Jap dead are buried on near- by Cemetery Hill. J .P. CALLISON HERE i J. P. Callison, of Union, Washing- ton, is registered at the Gastineau itel. P SPGB SULLIVAN IN TOWN John F. Sullivan is in Juneau and has registered at the Gastinean from Seattle. SCOUTS MAY RECEIVE APPLICATIONS WED. i According to announcement t | FISHERIES VESSEL ENROUTE WESTWARD Fisheries 0-| The vessel, i Swan I, day, Mrs. Josephine Boyd will bé Capt. Roy Lindsley, is in port today | in the lobby of the Baranof Hotel:sznd is expected to leave shortly for Tomorrow afternoon between 1 and|the westward. ¢ 4 o'clock to distribute summer camp | Aboard the patrol boat, Agent applications to all Girl Scouts and Mark Meyer is enroute to the Ko- | Brownies who have not yet recel ed theirs through the mail. Girls having duplicate copies are requested to turn them in to M Boyd at this time as there is shortage of application blanks. CALIFORNIAN HERE James W. McCren, of San Fra cisco, is in town and a guest at the| Juneau Hotel. v-1diak district. | 1'5.3 JOHNSONS al PERT IR T ST o IN TOWN Mr. and Mrs. Sig Johnson .are in town and .are staying at the Ju- neau Hotel, having arrived recently from the States. | e — n-‘, PLEASE NOTICE Lola’s Beauty Shop will be closed until June 1. adv. When ordering by mail gi data: WEIGHT JUMPER: LT A Chest PANTS) Length name, address and following Sactbrs TAILOR MADE BLUES Expertly tailored and care- fully made toYorder or fit- ted from stock. We use first quality fabrics of serge, whipcord or gabardine in any desired weight $37.00 Price {ncludes tailor-made rates Postage Charge $1.00 Satisfaction Guarsnteed or money gladly refunded. COHEN orae (o Since 1911 = 1312 2nd Ave., SEATTLE | ve 12-0z. tins 39 Best Quality Home Style PEACHES 4 large cans §] 49 CASE $8.59 104 TWO DELIVERIES DAILY CANNED—L. and H. Fancy Florida GRAPEFRUIT - 3 cans 87 ¢; 12 cans §3.39 Coffage Cheese, Arden Creamed 11b. 3 5¢ Corned Mutton 12-0z. tins 3% FINEST PEARS 3 cans §1.19 12 cans $4.69 1 Minimum Delivery—$§2.50 B erts CASH GROCERY J UNE FE ATURES-O0n High Quality Foods— LIMIT—12 CANS Corned Beef 12-0z. tins 33« PORK SAUSAGE LINKS 2 pound fin § .19 - BORDEN'S MILK, new low price, case $5.19 NEW POTATOES - 12 Pounds $1.00 HALF SLICE PINEAPPLE 3 cans 89 CASE $7.69 0:15 A. M. and 2:15 P. M. 105 BRINGING UP FATHER SITTING TH DONT YOU EVER THINK OF DOING ANYTHING EXCEPT !:. READING? 5 EOROR L ME OUT-YOU'RE MAGGIE- CONTENT TO THERE'S A LET ME STAY GOOD MOVIE- HOME AND PLAYIN' THIS ERE- STAG [ yoUu NEVER TAKE NATE - I'™M SbRRV- WELL-TONIGHT I'M PLAY- ING BRIDGE - TOMORROW'S MY THEATRE NIGHT- WED- NESDAY THE LADIES'CLUB MEETS - THURSDAY, THE OPERA-FRIDAY MRS.X. CLUSIVE'S PARTY- SATUR- DAY WE'RE ENTERTAINING - ASK ME Hd OH!-YOU BRUTE- o oW By GEORGE McMANUS AND SUNDAY I'M VISITING MY SISTER - YOU WOULD OUT THIS WEEK- R ALASKA AIRLINES JUNEAU fo ANCHORAGE via YAXUTAT and CORDOVA CONNECTIONS TO FAIRBANKS —— VALDEZ —— KUSKOKWIM KODIAK NOME BRISTOL BAY PHONE 667 Office Baranof Hotel Tanned RABBIT SKI;;]: Hotel Juneaun | ! E For Comfort At Lowest Rates I ROOMS WITH BATH or WITHOUT BATH Most Convenient Location’ —THIRD AND MAfN-— ¢ Owner-Mgr., Clgvre!mevwm BUY DIRECT AND SAVE MONEY. Any quantity, immediate delivery. Write for Price List, Valcauda Fur Co. Seattle, Washington Dress up your desserts with FRESH WHIPPING . : CREAM Available-Dalty | | 3 ] Juneau Dairies, Int. WINDOWS, DOORS, CABINETS 0. B. Williams Co. 1939 First South Seattle 4 Hotel * EVERY ROOM. WITH TUB and SliOWER Reasonable Rates Phone 800 The Sewing Baskel BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant apd Children’s Wear 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES* 587 or 747—JUNEAU YOU CAN GET LUMBER FOR ESSENTIAL REPAIRS ON YOUR HOME Woodley Airways JUNEAU— ANCHORAGE Via YAKUTAT and CORDOVA Connections to ALL INTERIOR Alaska Points Lockheed Arrives Juneau 2:00 P.M. Electra = Leaves Juneau 2:30 P.M. Tuesday-Friday FOR RESERVATIONS 7 ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Phone 612 Agents i u el ALASEA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska-——Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Sitka Juneau ...$ 8 $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 418 $18 Sitka 18 )g 10 18 18 10 10 10 1 10 18 10 5 10 18 10 18 10 10 18 18 ” 18 10 10 10 10 18 Hoonah .. 10 Haines and Skagway—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. $18. 10.00 i press cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60¢ Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% Excursion Inlet—Scheduled Daily at 9 A. M. Juneau Hoonah ot $15.00 $10.00 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c : 4 KecschlxiEDULED DAILY an ‘Wrangell Petersburg ot SPADAOR $35.00 S 30.00 10.00 %000 z ] 20.00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to Ketchikan um of 60c to Petersburg ‘warrants. Schedules and Rates Sub) to Notice. o Express Rate: 10c per pound—Minim and 4