The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 9, 1945, Page 8

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To Gef Rigid Enforcement Processing Channels Are. Set Up at Meeting Here Last Week Having devoted almost a week to discussing manpower problems in ar Manpower Commission' | officials from all ® sections of the riday wrote finis to their conclave here and set about return- ing to their various stations | Arthur Hedges, Alaska Director| for the War Manpower Commission summed up the business of the Con- ferences as being mainly directed to-| ward blishing channels for pro-| cessing employment requests which | are flowing in an ever-increasing stream through the several branch-| ency as Alaska's busy season draws nearer. He .»tre.«ed: that employers must realize the vital | nature of requirements that the hir- ing of new workers be handled| through the Commission Good news from the battle fronts, he pointed out, is generally reflected | by a laxer attitude on the part of | both employers and employees to-| ward manpower controls. Such an| attitude is entirely unjustified, he emphasized, since a quick end to world-wide fighting requires un- swerving concentration of efforts on the home front. Rigid enforcement of controls now will hasten their en- tire elimination, he copcluded, and rigid enforcement of controls is to be the order. | Details were thrashed out at the meeting to bring Alaska in line with the continental United States as to requirements for securing worker It will be absolutely n sary for employers to place their employment needs before the local offices of the manpower agency. From the local office requests will be forwarded to the central office here for priority — sereening. as the relative rating of s request is ay be issued acilities of the es of t and then the en ion will be mo- : needed workers 1 the Territ 1 that effort fail, from d 1 Mr. Hedges underscored that for d minimum, 30. Preciy prewar population of almoest thre taining additional -workers or re- . ¢ Airpe R S placements . lies* through compiete| SeCONd Cabin fo Be cooperation with the War Manpow er Commission and its control pro- cedure. Employers who “go out on their own” for workers will leave themselves open, not only to loss of workers they may so obtain, but alsc m to punitive action, Workers too can ye best assure their job status by ad- wood supply there herence to procedures outlined. In- tr dependent action by either empioy- John Brillhart of the United States ers or employees will lessen chances for securing the results they uj desire. met here with Mr. Hedges during the hot past week, were: Fay W. Hunter, the relief crews took over, Regional Director of the War Man- ar their Forest Service, were felled and cut TOMORROW’'S FORECAST dents, in a contest sponsored by the p into firewood e o o American Legion Auxiliary, will be The women skiers built a fire in Rain or snow - tonight, on display at the Legion Dugout Included among those who have ! the shelter cabin stove and cooked Tuesday and Tuesday night. tomorrow afternoon, when the Aux- dogs and made coffee. When Temperatures: Lowest to- iliary will hold a Silver Tea honor- the tired night, 34°; highest Tuesday, ing the prize winners, whose names | 1d hungry choppers came in and 38 will be announced at that time, ® ©o 00 0 0 0 0 0 power Commission, from San Fran- fortified themselves with food and cisco; E. E. Lincoln, Assistant Alaska drink. Then, out, to® the job again. Director; Earl Cooper, Area Direct-| or for Westward Alaska; 8. Army’s Director of Civilian Pef- sonnel for the Alaskan Department; Wer specialist Klein, Jimmy Rude, L. Turner, Earl Virginia Krass, Bill Hixson, Suzy Winn, Earl for Nelson, Bonnie Klein, Sylvia Drow- Alaska; Emory Vincent, Ketchikan ley, Edna Williams, Irving Stimp- office manager; Nan Holt, Kodiak son, office manager; Milton Ward, Fair- Virginia Smith Wafer, Max Rogers, banks office manager; Jack Carvel, Jane English, Irma Johnson, Dr. J. Roy Stewart, placement with the Juneau Office; Carter, Seattle representative Juneau office manager. ——————— 10. El M ANDERSON JURY - BRINGS GUILTY |rovi. Winhorst and Dorothy Evans. VERDICT TODAY Sitka Wom;n—Expeded fo Appeal for New Trial inWhife Slave Case | “Guilty as charged,” was the ver- dict of the jury, returncd in Fec al District Court here t THREE CORDS OF William three cords Maitland, Anchorage office mana- stowed away in the shed behind the ger; Charles Hood and Roy Himes, cabin. Aleutian representatives; T/Sgt. Jo- quickly done,” said Club President seph T. Flakne, representing the U. Bill Hixson. ‘m vning Judge William Holzheimer W HEAD-ON V VIGIL FOR THREE IN A FOXHOLE KRUPPWORRS o | FOUND To BE PULVERIZED Essen — Employee Tells of Bombing By ROBERT EUNSON (AP War Ccrrespondent) ESSEN, Germahy, April 9—Ninth Army forces entering Essen found the Krupp works perhaps the- most pulverized spot in Germany. Not a wheel has turned in it since March 11, when RAF bombers gave the factory its coup de grace. A tall, bespectacied man who was an employee of the Krupp Works until” it went out of business last month, surrendered to Ninth Army trocps as they reached the city WHILE HIS TWO BUDDIES catct ap in their foxt limits, saying it was a relief to River area, Pfc. Gunther Lang of the Bronx, New. York City, keej know “those God-awful nights and watchful eye on enemy positions whence shells were coming a few min- ys of bombs have come to an utes carlier. Next will be his turn to sleep. ‘International) end. I think about 2,000 people were killed that last night; after that, nb Krupp, no lights, and the ssen, railroad destroyed,” the tired looking German said. e o 00 08 ~ - WEATHER REPORT (U. S. Weather Bureau) o o o Temperatures for 24-Hour Period Ending at 7:30 o’Clock Essen was the railroad transpor- tation link in the huge Ruhr arma- ment productior? line, serving Ham- | WOOD ARE CUT BY (HoppERS SUNDAY This Morning: born, Oberhausen, Gelsenkirchen, e o o Bochum and Dortmund, all sur-| AT In Juneau—Maximum, 35 iing Essen, with a combined | 06 of ar 20 c 9 000 000 0 TEMPERATURES SUNDAY e o o Popp:y Posters to Well Stocked . | £ s Be Displayed af | A large crowd of woodchoppers ; . i i bl Wav .t the easond Gabin In Juneau—Maximum, 4 S' -I- T d | e T st ilver Tea Tuesday| 1 ke At Airport—Maximum, 39; VEBCY minimum, 13 e o o ¢ 0 0 0 0 o s which were made | | advance by Poppy pos by Juneau and Douglas School stu- ees, marked out in A cordial invitation is extended By 3 in the wood afternoon had been o'clock of “A day's work well and . By Groves [POST-WARTH OMESC Those at the cabin yesterday Joe Werner, Bill Carlson, Jim THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA IEW OF SUPERFORTRESS—Here is 2 head-on view of the mighty Boeing B-29 Superfortress, a sister ship to those based in the Marianas, now in almost daily bombing service against the Japanese mainland. Ninth Armmrtes Enter 'GOVT. SCORES ] \ MONDAY’, APRIL 9, 1945 Fa ps! ' OPENINGBLOW IN ROUSE CASE ‘Court Orders Single Trial | on Two Indictments . | Against Woman First round weht to the Gov-! ernment here this morning at the opening of the trial of Lois Rouse, accused in two separate indict- ments returned by the Grand Jury. Defense counsel, W. W. Renfrew, |Anchorage attorney, opposed a prosecution motion for consolidation of trial on the two indictments. | Judge George F. Alexander ruled in favor of joining the two charges for single trial. Associated with Mr. Renfrew in the defense of Mrs. | Rouse is M. E. Monagle, Juneau attorney, i Following settlement of the pre- | to the public, as well as Auxiliary members, to attend the tea, and view the work of the young artists. Mrs. Olaf Bodding, Poppy Chair- man, is in charge of the tea, and other members of her committee b are Mrs. George Martin and Mrs, liminary argument in favor of the F. E. Moore, assisted by other Government, with defense excep- ! Official U. 8. Coast Guard photos. The U. 8. 8. Callaway, tough old Coast Guard-manned assault tra port, has buried her dead at sea (below), patched her gaping wounds in the shelter of a pin-point Pacific island, and now, less than a month after her most recent bout with the Japanese, lies ready and waiting for tion to the ruling, drawing of a | jury was commenced and continued | through the remainder of the fore- noon. Twelve jurors to try the case Auxiliary members. SOUND PICTURES PICTURES OF SOUTH AMERICA ARE 1asc finally settled upon shortly | 500 aotion. Skippered by Capt. Donald C. MeNeil, USCG, of Boston past noon, when the defense had (inget), the Coast Guard ship is veteran of six invasions, including exhausted its" allotment of chal-| Luzon, where she suffered a direct hit on hef superstructure by a Jap SHow" I.Io"s (I-UB lenges. \ dive bomber. Her gunmuers, alrcady credited with downing two Nip planes, got the bomber, too! | Ray Harrington, of the Pan Am- erican Airlines, showed sound mo- tion pictures of South Anrerica on the route of the UAA at today’s noon luncheon of the Lions Club. Lion Harold Roth, of the Seward Lions Club, brought greetings from that organization, and told of re- cent activities of the Lions in Seward. Lion Jack Talbot of the Ketchikan Lions Club was also in- troduced. Lion Barney Anderson announced the Annual Spring Conc‘rt of the Juneau Public Schools, to" be given on Friday evening, April 13. Lewis. Jacobs, associate editor of Alaska Life, was a guest. D Sitting on the jury to hear the & case are: Edna Anderson, Arthur - ol || GEORGE BROTHERS garet O. Skinner, Myra Peters, Bertha Jahoda, Peter” Lowe, Ethel ] Liguor Store Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Sipprell, Samuel Kunz, Gwendolyn Epperson, Sigurd Olsen and Mabel Lybeck. The Largest and Finest Ligquor Store in Juneau Nothing But the Best Opening arguments by the at- torneys were to be delivered this MR. BOSTON-—AUTOGRAPH afternoon, commencing with the re-convening of court at 2 o'clock, with presentation of evidence and testimony to follow. Indication that the trial might be completed by tomorrow evening was given when Judge Alexander ordered the jury panel to report back to court again ‘Wednesday morning. The defendant, Mrs. Rouse, is ac- cused in one indictment of nine misdemeanor counts of fraudulently obtaining and receiving soldiers’ family allowance funds. In the second indictment she is accused of polygamy. It is alleged that she went through a ceremony of mar- AT GASTINEAU Joe Brown and John McLaughlin, both of Juneau, are staying at the Gastineau Hotel. D FROM SEATTLE Jennie Clair, registered from /riage to a second man while still e Seattle, is a guest at the Baranof.|legally married to Mr. Rouse. stralght Bo“rbon e - e - BUY WAR BONDS WHESKEY SPECIAL, 5th, $3.65 SEED POTATOES UAL, 3 THREE FEATHERS RESERVE from HAINES, ALASKA 1001bs. $8.50;501bs.4.50 |} SPECIAL, 5th, §4.25 3 RIVERS 11Pounds $1.00 : SPECIAL, 5th, $3.95 RDER YOURS NOW! - ALSO ALASKA FERRY LILLY G I N--5th--$3.50--G I N SEEDS ONION SETS 2 pounds 7 5¢ Dixie Belle——100% Grain Spirits CHAMPAGNE B s Stan Singer, Marvin Perry, Rude, Tom Dooley, Betty Jones, izabeth Thompson, Pat Grove, ildred Steen, Vi Klassen, Nathalie ailey, Joyce Smith, Dorothy Hen- son, Dorothy Thibodeau, R. Dr. James Ryan, Forrest Bob Thibodeau, Velma | S ‘ IVE PAY FINES IN (ITY POLICE COURT M strat In City s Court this ned Carl H. ge o Widman §: on a “...Andwe'd ikeawaffleironin eyery room. . . waffles made with (entennial Hotcake and Waffle Flour are good anywhere!” morning, conduct in the White Slavery trial of Maude . Harry Olds was fined $25 on the + & » « MORE Northwest women have switched to Anderson, of Sitka clarge-of Stk wnd Girarderiy: son. Centennial Silk-Sifted Flour In the past 12 months The jury reached agreement at | duct. ¢ ny other brand, according to impartial surveys. 1:40 o'clock Saturday afternoon, fol- | lowing three hours of deliberation d and returned a sealed verdict which was opened this John | di Livie s fore- morning verdict, imum pen- ars in the one cuted. Attorney M. E. Monagl for Mrs. Anderson, has s he intends to enter an a seck a new trial. Mrs. Ar in a composed manner chair as the verdict was be e ASP HERE Sam Asp, of Tenakee, has arrived in Juneau for a, visit and while here will be at the Baranof. o e cc. GARRY McDONALD John W. Smith was fined $25 on @ = — runk and disorderly conduct charge. PHONE 202 Mary Molyfield was fined $25 on a isorderly conduct charge. (R i Two Free Deliveries Daily ll 20th Century Meat Market JOINS SALES STAFF, C(OLUMBIA LUMBER rry MeDonald t ined the i Lumber lable fc CALIFORNIA'S FINEST MINIMUM—$2.50 ! fi"h o 83.80 V.74 A4 || GEORGE BROTHER GROCERY | Liouor STORE R { 2 FREE Deliveries Daily—10:30 A. M., 2:30 P. M. e e ———— TWO JUNEAU DELIVERIES 10:15 A. M. 2:15P. M. DOUGLAS DELIVERY 10 A. M. CASH % 55 SO AR RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRORRRRRRRARS The Best Costs |/~ No More Spring Is Coming Darigold Butter soarethe Shamrock Grade A Large Eggs GE TM ('))'l"‘l{/S. MO Kristofferson’s Cottage Cheese ' Kills meths, larva, worms — prevents mildew — reduces dampness — eliminates musty odors and keeps your clothes closet dry and SOLD AT sweet . Plooly wyeety Juneau Deliveries— wiwaiti & 7 16 == Phones == 24 Boat Orders Delivered Anytime g 2 Deliveries Daily: 10:30 A. M., 2:30 P. M. AOOCOOOCOOOCOOCHOONRNNNNE -} . ™ ¢ «

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