Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGEFOUR Daily Alaska Published every evening except Sundsy by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and HELEN TROY DOROTHY TROY LINGO WILLIAM R. CARTER ELMER A. FRIEN Main Streets, Junei Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by carrier six months, $8.00; one year, $15.00. By malil, postage paid, at the foll ear, in advance, $15.00; six mon! e, $1.50 ibers will confer a favor if the: jness Office of any fail One MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED clated Pr republicats all news 1 in this paper and slso the herein ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER P! NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE Fourth Avenue Bidg., Seattle, Wash Al RATES: Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; lure or irregularity in the de- Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, s is exclusively entitled to the use for | dispatches credited to it or not other- | is not Empire | resultant loss in ta financing more th au, Alasks functions, In the three ¢ President - Vice. President Editor and Manager Managing Editor Business Manager 75 fishtraps Island, of 000,000, Second Class Matter. alone salmon a year lowing rates: ths, In advance, $7.50; y will promptly notify | From the PRESS local news published | | will be to dllow f UBLICATION. aska Newspapers, 1411 | |the areas set aside. operate by paying FAR-REACHIN Although it clear at is not native petitions requesting the re: this action will be taken by the Department of the Interior after hearings scheduled to begin in a few weeks on | forbidden. Or | The result coul finances especially due to war. deal chusett | the and an along the if the G the investment tion in time just what would A [ servation of huge | | if the areas in dispute | |use of the Indians, the Territory will suffer from the At present the canneries are an the Territorial Those produce waters of the mated 50 percent of all of the fish caught in the certain at this time the | some way of operating canneries for the Indians xes lion's share of ases to be heard in the of 450,000 more than an average with a value of ‘West Coast Territorial waters by trolling to continue Or present canneries royalties to Indian owners Interior Department may d be disastrous to the Territor: at the present time when m area about the size of and they would be shut are established, many of following the poor fishing season this year And from Ketchikan comes word that the Crown- Zellerbach company has been investigating the pos- sibility of investing $20,000,000 in a pulp paper opera- disputed Needless but coming area to say be welcome apparently would blocck such a move The Canadians, ever quick to grasp an oppor- tunity, already are suggesting that potential investors land and water areas in Southeastern Alaska, many | take their pulp paper business to Canadian territory Alaskans are beginning to realize that the results may | closer to Seattle, and no chance of losing a business be far-reaching The Juneau Chamber of Comn resolution, directed some attention Washingfon Merry- Go-Round = ntinued from Page One) as a youngster, made pro-Com- munist speeches and said a good many uncomplimentary things about the political views of his father. Chiang doesn’t particularly care for him, and it's mutual, He does care for his $econd son. SAILOR'S OUTMODED UNIFORM Now .that Admiral Ernie (“Clothes Horse”) King has finally relented and w:il let naval officers shed their jackets under certain conditions in hot weather, a lot of sailors wish he would also examine the uniform of the enlisted man. Most enlisted men would whoop with joy if their present, long-out- moded uniform was discarded. What most people don't realize is that the sailor's uniform was designed by the British ebout two hundred years ago and is now just as out- moded as the sailing ship. Take, for instance, the broad col- lar wern over the shoulders. It was designed.. for vermin-infested ships of the 1700's when sailors had to be deloused and a broad collar was practical to catch the tar oils used in a sailor’s hair. Again; the bell aped tro which flap around the ankles and nearly trip the wearer when he runs, were designed for days when sailors rolled their trousers up over their legs to scrub decks. Today, dungarees are provided for this sort of work. Again, the drop-front, 13-button! trousers: were designed for a day two cepturies ago when tidiness | was nothing like what it is today. | One ‘thing which particularly | gripes the enlisted man is the| tight-fitting waist of his | which has to be slipped on and off over his head. If a sailor is| dumped into the water and has to| swim for any length of time, it is| almost impossible to get this blouse | off. It is tight, sticks to the I)ody,; and you can't very well swim and at the same time hold two arms| above your head while you wriggle | Baranof Reauty Salon EXPERIENCED OPERATORS SPECIALIZING IN: ® (Cold Waving ® Permanent Waving SHOP HOURS PA.M.TOEP. M OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 538 blouse, |~ | site to the Indians: merce, in a recent | to the fact that re set up for the exclusive | this month are land areas and tidelands containing 10 canneries and | th of Prince of Wales cases $4,- The disputed areas contain 10 percent of all of the operating canneries in the Territory of Alaska come an ('.\H-i Just what the outcome of the hearings will be It may be that the decision to| i may be that all but Indians will be forbidden to use Or that all development will be find ng operations and other industrial activities are curtailed | Two thousand miles of shoreline are involved in | Massa- Several thousand white workers make their living “West Coast” reseyvations out the trollers would be put out of business at a bad time, this events ‘If Alaska is to have a revival of industry after the war these reservation proposals must be defeated. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA L e e e HAPPY BIRTHDAY P e SEPTEMBER 9 (vt om 20 YEARS AGO 2% pupirm e e R SEPTEMBER 9, 1924 An order closing all of Lynn Canal north of the 59th parallel to commercial fishing for salmon was received by Assistant Fisheries Agent E. M. Ball and was to become effective immediately. It was designed to protest the late runs of fish in Chilkat Inlet, the Chilkoot and Chilkat rivers and other streams in that district ) N ) N { \ A. F. McKinnon John P. Monagle Mrs. Edward Butler Jean Johnson SEPTEMBER 10 B. O. Havdahl Thais Bayers | Mrs. W. R. Spain Mrs. Thomas L. George Gladys Gray Thelma Thompson - (| prrrr e | HOROSCOPE { “The stars incline but do not compel” v} SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 4 day ! This is not,a day of compelling planetary influences but there is an| |ill omen for shipping. | for a two weeks trip. HEART AND HOME: The clergy | g = id their churches will benefit Weather report: High, 50; low, 48; cloudy gr through the Autumn when| ,,,,,,-»_V,,,,,,,,,,-,N,-,_,,_-,,,‘,__",W? wim to e | Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpox § turn to religion for solace. There is a sign activating spiritual under- standing which may reveal a new |} F i vision of life after death. WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “The judges will select the BUSINESS AFFAIRS: This week two stories” Say, the judges will select’ the TWO BEST stories,” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Debauch. Pronounce de-boch, E as in ME unstressed, O as in OR, accent last syllable. in the world of trade should be profitable. Fall shopping will be OFTEN MISSPELLED: Deference (reverence). arity). bris Homemaking will. be of SYNONYMS: Portrait, photograph, painting, picture, likeness, minia- More than 125 persons were in attendance at the opening meeting }of the Juneau Parent-Teacher Association in the High School Audi- | torium to welcome the teachers and start the association’s program for the Juneau’s observance of National Defense Test, which was to be an I..\.m within a few days, was in keeping with the spirit of the occasion {and along the same lines was expected to be followed throughout the tion in towns where there were neither regular nor reserve military organizations, according to Mayor I. Goldstein Earle Hunter, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hunter of this city, left for Seattle on the Queen enroute to Corvallis, Ore., to enter the Oregon Agricultural College. He was graduatedsfrom the Junau High School the previous year. i } B N N \ Cedric M. Davis, who had been captain on the mine tender Chichagoff for several months, left on the Northwestern for Kenai Peninsula points ) bes iffere; (dissimil- major interest to young folk. Hous- Difference ing difficulties will be overcome, when invalided soldiers return to| war brides | ture NATIONAL ISSUES: Despite the| WORD STUDY: * great influence of women this year, { increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. reformers will be unable to change| LINEALLY; in a manner descending in a direct line from an ancestor. long-established methods of elec- | “The prince is lineally descended from the conqueror.” se a word three times and it is yours.” Let us Today’s word: out of your middy. Some of the bo; miral King would take off his new grey-green uniform, don, long enough to with a middy-blouse in ‘They think that, despite a century delay, he would then design them new uniform overnight. BYRD LOSING GRIP ON VIRGINIA | Believe it or not, it looks as if the rock-ribbed citadel of reaction- ary Senator Harry Byrd were d serting him on the highly import- and controversial issue of the poll tax. It even looks as if Vir- ginia were slipping somewhat out of Senator Byrd's clutches gener- ally. | Three important Virginia figures, hitherto staunch stalwarts of the Byrd machine, have now come out against the poll They are Congressman Dave Satterfield of| Richmond, Congressman CIff Woodrum of Roanoke, and McCall | Frazier. ! Their defection from the poll tax, | of which Byrd is one of the most| unreconstructed defenders, is con-| sidered indicative of a n-w trend| in Virginia. However, it is not the| worset set-back Byrd is getting. Although not generally J:ublicized. the fact is that able, forthright| Governor Colgate Darden has be- come a more important figure in-| side the State and could take the| machine away from Byrd if he| wished. Furthermore, Darden has| expressed himself privately as being | opposed to the poll tax as a voting | requirement, though favoring it as| revenue tax for the schools. i Byrd and Governor Darden are| friends, and there is no indication | of an open revolt. THe Governor,| however, has far surpassed Byrd in | popularity and can do what he wishes, regardless of Byrd. Polit-| ical prognosticators predict the the water. du an a ant a | gradual wish that Ad-|from here on. When the Byrd-controlled designed for | Virginia cut him by His Majesty’s tailor in Lon- the pensions of Confederate widows experiment from $15 to $8 per month, Gover- nor for | W eclipse of Byrd NOTE Legislature recently Mrs. 1 Pont) sent idows’ Home mount which (Copyright, 1944, by United ature Syndicate, Inc.) Darden (she a check making and is to up Someone must pay OBODY ever wants to be financially lia- ble for a smashup! But when two cars collide, someone must pay for the damage done. The cost of accidents comes much higher than the cost of insurance! ET this agency pro- tect you with Auto- mobile Insurance that fills every requirement. Shattuck Agency INSURANCE—BONDS rossword Puzzle ACROSS . Sunken fence | IZxposed . Kind of lettuce Dance step Omit in pronouncing. . Epoch . Pose for a painting Burdened 24. Auction Metal fastener . Go Orchld meal 44, Hebrew letter . Stitched 47. ‘Bhreatened Perfect golf holes Feminine name Body of soldiers Walk 8. Parcel of ground Town in Maine . Term of address Tree Become exhausted through the nose cly dance k portico I of 65. 66 67. Assyria Ethereal salt About . Lukewarm Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle DOWN . Part of a chureh . Accost Aft . Accepts as wiiue Ving . Erees . Blissful regions . Signily . Musical compositions . Moldiug Affirmative Sleighs Debased Irish coin Ovule unter . Antarctic sea Scale or flake: comb. form Roman Harden King of Tyre Abscond Remarry . Cancels Footways along canals date . Legislators Location Young salmon Hangs down Roman general Canadian city Drama Be defeated Negotiable financial instrument Italian opera rall Masculine nickname influence the the the Legislature cut tioneering. Devices for influencing | ¢eeeoeeorrrreerrrrrorsrorscrerrsrorrrrrsrearorrree i i | MODERN ETIQUETTE devious as in the past, for there are ik ROBERTA LEE | aspects that encourage clever de- ception and misrepresentation. [ P s ——— SUSUSSUSSTUUB SRS 4 INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS:| "0 "How should a club sandwich be eaten? s ISR G EUNVES, MG 2 Sl A. A club sandwich is eaten with a fork after the toast and other rule which presages the greatest|; .gionis have been broken. In doing this one uses a knife and a fork. achievements in defeating the Naz . 2 NP Ol derand o Gesisive| @ What sise should » womarfsivifliing card be? % P : 1 A. Two and three-fourths to three and a half inches wide, and voice at the peace table. Stalin| F 5 : : i will be a force in meting out - to llhwv and three-fourths inches high. There is, however, no ixed rule. punishment to hated foes and may g 5 meet with strong opposition among| Q@ In case of a broken engagement, what becomes of the wedding ,the United Nations. | presents? Persons whose A. They are usually returned to their donors. have the augury of a year A SRR U LS changes and perplexities. Danger b?/ of domestic discontent is foreseen. t A. C. GORDON Children born on this day prob- e S —— ably will be talented but tempera bkt o d mental. They should be wisely di- What stadium has the largest seating capacity in the U. S. Irected and carefully disciplined. The Ganges River empties into what body of water? | S Is the Roman arch round or pointed? Who is generally acknowledged to be the world’s greatest epic poet? What country leads in the production of silver? ANSWERS: Soldiers’ Field, Chicago (150,000). The Bay of Bengal. Round. Homer. birthdate it is of {1 LOOK and LEAR o A2 { MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 Conflicting planetary influences mark this day which' should be for- tunate for bankers and merchants.| Good news from battlefronts is in-| dicated i | HEART AND HOME: Women | lare under rather uncertain aspects. i Mexico. |The day may bring them first-rate lbrospects for. employment. that WhI|T e |be declined. Indecision should be! “En ALBBIGHT overcome and positive plans worked as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA | | out. It is not a lucky day for ro-| mance. Girls should concentrate L : . on their jobs. EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this BUSINESS AFFAIRS: The stock| evening at the box office of the——— |market will be variable but indus |trials will be in demand. Invest-| CAPITOL THEATRE iments in War Bonds will increase| o 7, . |among persons of limited means,| it and receive TWO TICKETS to sizc " At last, responsibility in financing | |the war will be felt by all the peo-g TKE FALco“ STnles B K‘ |ple of the nation. Federal Tax —11c¢ per Person | NATIONAT ISSTIES: | BUigy WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! of recreation will be widespread immughout the month. Baseball S 54 |games and horse races will attract 1d; crowds that are unmindful of gaso- M. ISAACS——BMHNQ Contractor {line restrictions. But many persons will pay for their reckless pursuit REMODELING e REPAIRING lof pleasure in wartime. Uncle CABINET SHOP 1Sam will cease to be forgiving. 270 South Franklin Street ! INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: | Appeasement and temporizing poli- lcies in South American affairs will |prove so unsatisfactory that the United States Government will re- ;vorse its good neighbor tactics, as-| | trologers predict. Friendly overtures !will be succeeded by stern decrees (that prove effective in breaking Nazi connections. 4 Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of un- expected good fortune but there may: be periods of seeming bad luck. Children born on this day prob- ably will be intelligent and talented but they may be too temperamental to. make the most of their ability. ~ (Copyright, 1944) LR N TIDES TOMORROW Low tide —1:51 a. m.;, 22 High tide—8:19 a. m,, 12.3 Low tide —2:01 p. m,, 58 High tide—8:14 p. m, 14.1 TIDES MONDAY Low tide —3:10 a. m,, 26 High tide—9:49 a. m,, 122 Low tide —3:25 p. m,” 63 High tide—9:35 p. m,, 13.8 - e MEN WANTED to work at the Juneau Lumber Mills. ‘ PHONE 799 THE FERRY WAY ROOMS ; TRANSIENT ROOMS Clean—Steamheated—Hot and Cold Water 212 FERRY WAY JOAN WALKER IN WAR <= AS IN PEAC feet. feet. feet. feet. Y E DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED feet. feet. feet. feet. ————— EASTERN STARS Regular business meeting Tues., Sept. 12, 8 p.m., preceded by Home Coming Dinner for members, their escorts and 'visiting members. Res- ervations must be in by noon, Sept. 9. Phone Worthy Matron or Secre- tary. ALICE BROWN, adv. Secretary. First l\l %floj&:‘n&l Bank FEDERAL SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1944 LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON SPECIALISTS IN ALL TYPE S OF PERMANENT WAVES AND ALL TYPES OF HAIR FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS PHONE 492 Silver Bow Lodgt | No.A210.0.F 'Meets each Tues day at 8:00 P. M. 1. 0.O.F. HALFK Visiting Brothers Welcome Forest D. Fennessy ....Noble Grand H, V. Callow Secretary 8.V, 000 o DAY The Sewing Basket BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear 139 S, Pranklin Juneau, Alaska R —————————— DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. At | Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer I Room 9—Valentine Bldg, PHONE 1762 e — ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground R S R ) e e ey DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Gastineau Hotel Annex | S. Franklin PHONE 177 e el ———— ""The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. s | HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” / The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone Red 578 JOHN AHLERS CO. P. O. Box 2508 PHONE 34 PLUMBING, HEATING and SHEET METAL SUPPLIES Oil Ranges and Oil Heaters INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Duncan's Cleaning - and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” ZORIC SY¥YSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry MOUNT JU> EAU LODGE NO. 1 4% SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m WALLIS S. GEORGE Worshipful Master; LEIVERS, Secretary. | Warfields' Drug Store (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM "B P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- come, A. B. HAYES, Exalted Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. FLOWERLAND CUT FLOWERS—POTTED PLANTS—CORSAGES “For those who deserve the best 2nd and Franklin ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788—306 Willoughby Ave. | Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third —— “The Store for Men" SABINS Front St—Triangle Bldg H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” & MARX CLOTHING CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Markel 478 — PHONES — 37] High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries Phone 16—24 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammaunition You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP JAMES C. COOPER C.P. A Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS 8old and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURS!” Juneau Florists Phone 311 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1944 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Phone 557 JAMES W N HOME OF HART SCHAFFNEhR | v