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PAGE FOUR D(ul ¥y Alaska NTRE PRINTING €0 SUBSCRIFTION BAT Delivered by carricr in au and Dous six_months, $K.00 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS entitled to the use for exclustvel patches cred 1 also th ATIVES — Al ! Memorial Day nments of E m ptr(’ iay by the ANY Again cisco ™ we las for S$1.50 per month bill e collar Federal for thi that justice onic leasure that C to wai The perienced nc white-collar have Govern t or not other published ited t e local news nd me erv laska Newspapers, 1411 only leave their employment what they has been Department {over of civi increasec B have by for course investigating operation The proposed pay it for Percenta lowest $800 for the much’ ladder | would ettable go, as it we th MEMORIAL addres newspaper them seec into stalwart t conta New Y rth € te Nation ational i Perhaps one such seed was ter to the Editor of Hamiltor Mr. Hamilton Memorial Day Wednesday, will be why not; Mr. Hamilton “The nations are observes, for this troubled world shall of Charlotte nticiy which this inte sou at foundation of The worl offers laboring to lay the succeed But of the which yearly emphasizes the shock ferings of war should be and to strengthen the sy We our regardless outcol rit of . the nations Day time may well affect all nations During this war--as in the has been well observed in the among own people, an i 1s B with peace, ideal of International Memor people, and this, of course, applie “We hope that with th have the minute at touch the the adop! nations cease 12 noon. Such a spec and hearts ir and make a lasting impression or the world. The cpildren of a half-holiday on every Ma tig graves of their own ¥ allies. ‘In Paris on the Allied Washinglon Merry- 6o-Round (Continued frm;n Page One) 30 o ic deac November 20, from Veterans 1s out. Stalin, probably with » on the Balkans, argued that road to Berlin was \glish Channel and American military strate- concerned only with winning quickly, not with spheres , agreed with him, gists, the war of influence DIVIDING THE BALKANS After that w settled and it was agreed that Allied Armies would not invade the Balkans, Churchill and Stalin got down to dividing up this area into spheres of influence They agreed that Russia was Lo Rumania aria and Yugoslavia England, always vitally concerned with Mediterranean routes, would dominate Gree Albania and the Dalmatian of Yugoslavia This extended right up to Trieste —then in Italian hands After this was agreed U. S. observers report being in an expansive Churchill some advice out that the Briti fluence in Yugoslavia w Croa- tian and Dalmatian, yet Churchill was working with a Serb, Gen. Mihailovitch. The Serbs and the Croats hated each other, Stalin re- minded Churchi Therefor he said, he would be glad to instruct his man Tito to coopers with the British This was marked the Lend-Lease a British son, Col cooperate W Mihailovitch favorite S coast at Teheran that Stalin mood, gave He pointed sphere of in- And that Thereafter British nd dry Tito. the one-t ime left high TITO SMELLS PLOT However, Tito the British thereafter last summer cumstar sion staged headguarters with begar and re under to co ached mysterious cir- Al borne Nazi divi- surprise raid oh Tito and he escaped with an inch of his life. But aroused Tito’s suspicion wa yoling Churchill chose that ticular morning to leave headquarters, together with Britishers, for the first time two months Tito, therefore, British of having tipped off the Nazis regarding the whereabout of his headquarters and of w uspected th col DAY—WORLDWIDE fruit of benefit generally San utilized to aid world peace brotherhood among all realize the influence of Memorial this homage will likely more unless an organization in each Dominion keeps from their inations of all nation: 19. Associa rejected the of Government but the national Memorial Day and say approved to raise long- even did not come employc only t worker had no effe G And in no I i award of overtime pay worker MONDAY, MAY 28, 1945 it will be nece nations formally to adopt r its observance.” Why nk it over, Government Pay ton Post) the Se (Washing \ate Civil aries for 1,500,000 white- gives promise of tardy s of workers. committee indorsement for thi until after VE-Day. We hope whole will not feel it necessary y to grant the relief proposed es affected by this bill have e disadvantage threughout within the could not go on and ctive me of protest. They could vernment jobs and go into private great numbers, this is precisely The to tt mean: nconsiderable T example 80-per-cer onnel ve Thi: ense recruiting it riously by b: loyee neglected clas: ex- but of ) live ice. The done War turn- el Is, of hiring and efficient ser e side hampers from $240 hy to as top of the boost It is would range in the Federal hier few persons at the a lar share of the to lower levels gewise hould that the ger he and recommended instead a | continuance of the present formula under which onl of grow ed to editor ht-time In the bureau: is that later ined recently rk from J Jarolina in a increased living Time workers i1 time when our to the benefit next | pill for their And will observe n character nd argument Prancisco,” he a new world order | d prays that they | After three anate passed the me, any influence margin of 76 votes ing losses and suf- | finally neg psts of the Colorado and The Mexican nfluence which in Both State Stettinius of the treaty 15t—Memorial Day ritish Empire; but be forgotten once in attaching operation or by the Mexican view is correct It ial Day before its to other nations tion of this day to activities for would would deeply all mankind 1 the statesmen of | might well have tacle tion jealous of our with talking a one, with to make 1 which to decorate 1 and those of their g 920, representatives |to allay those wtion adopted our | 1aborating in the faid After that his distrust the British knew no bounds. And shortly thereafter when he landed in Bari, Italy, which served as refugee Yugoslav headquarters, his plane was immediately surrounded by several hundred Yugoslav parti- |sans armed with tommy guns who would allow no British official to get anywhere near their chief On his last nignt in Bari, Tito was invited to dine with Gen. Sir Henry Maitland Wilson, British Commander in the Mediterranean And, much to Wilson’s amazement, Tito turned up with two dozen husky Partisan g s, carrying | tommy guns, who lined up on both | sides of the dining room “I1 say, Marshal," remarked Gen Wilson, “isn't this a most unusual procedure?” To which Tito replied: “This, General, is a most unusual war of TO RUSSIANS ito flew to Bucharest with Russian officials, returned to Yugoslavia {His cooperation with the British was completely dead. Later, the 3ritish planned a Commando raid on Split, an important seaport on the Dalmatian in order to head off the Gerr 1 Army then fleeing from Greece. But the minute the Commandos set foot on Yugoslav soil, they were met by Tito’s Partisans, disarmed, and sent back to Ttaly Since then have been at swords become * increasingly anti-British, considering them responsible for subsidizing a strong anti-Tito movement amonk the Croats. has blamed the British for taking several tho! nd Fascist Crcats, many them Nazi col- laborators, of Yugoslavia, equipping them with new clothes and plenty of money, and sending them back to work against the coming elections Yalta, Roosevelt took a stab ironing out ained relations the British and the Tito But it was an uphill had the tangled affairs liberated countrie also It was definitely agreed however, that the British were occupy two provinces of istria and were to invade Aus- tria through Trieste conferred and then coast, relations with points. He ha also out between Yugoslavs. job. He of other to iron out at Yalta ROO! However reaching ELT'S SOLUTION British troops were slow that key city at the head of the Adriatic, so their old triend and enemy got there first. And in the rough code of the Yugoslav mountaineers, possession is nine-tenths of the law in main have labored diligently and devotedly. have been badly pinched, especially in cost comparable treatment for them will certainly redound, in the end, of taxpayers who must foot the | salaries months of t appeared a reg t Tia Juana Riv Senate orable action when it convenes President Neither apparently reservations which the to the any Senate have American relations Rio Grande who are economic sking conce concessions uulwl\ the Water Treaty by suspicions. earnest of our good intentions He | Tito at $2900 in ba Fede! They hington, by | ity with war- ywed on the first the men and women in They deserve pa jobs in other industries the The Mexican Water Treaty (New York Times) gument and delay ty by the > needed. As Mexican Water Tr to 10. Sixty-four we tiated and presented to the Senate the onable compromise between the | wo countries in the waters of the s and the Rio Grande. xpected to take similar fav- this fall and the Secretary to applaud ratification sees in the three opposing Senators succeeded any real crippling of its ason for its rejection to be hoped that this is Truman were quick tre sufficient It is real tragedy for Inter- been a of our motives and They charge us but not acting as them but declining Ratification of | ority should help suspicious position a good neighbor a bipartisan m: It is a fair treaty How much Stalin had to do ‘with Tito’s actual occupation of Trieste is anybody's guess. Unquestionabl he is the general mainspring be- hind Tito. HoweVver, it doesn’t necessarily hold that alin ever ordered Tito into Trie if for no other reason, he wouldn't need to. Anyone who has been in Trieste and lived among the Yugoslavs, as this writer has, knows that they have been itching ifor 26 long years to take o area which they consider justly have been theirs after last war. an should the The whole question of Trieste and the Istrian Peninsula is just as complicated as the dispute be- tween the Poles and the Russians. But to mar observers the tion always favored by Roosevelt seems most namely to keep Trieste port under the Italian flag, the Istrian Peninsula behind it re- expedient as a free y for the Gov- Inter- san | Service | It is | suffered by all | & Government | Civil Service Committee | on the full \411’\!‘\ i Fair { the | had the treaty failed of ratifica- | There still are many people living south of the | - NO REFUGE solu- | President | but let' e o 0 0 o 0 0 0 o @ HAPPY BIRTHDAY 28, & ® o e May 1945 o o @ ndy Holden" v Joanne Erwin Marie Nelson Thelma Hanford Mrs. P. A. Gregg Alida Pierce Irene Cookston M. M. Hopkins Caroline Kellogg escescecssccecscens ee0cepe0cccccnese ® o o o 0o 0 0o o - .- it sy | HOROSCOPE |4 “The stars incline but do not compel” TUESDAY, MAY 29 | Adverse aspects rule strongly to- day which may unfavorable to our naval operations. be HEART AND HOME ged persons may reach ends of long careers under this con- fighration. The stars are read as |indicating the passing BUSINESS AFFAIRS Agriculture is subject fo stimulat- | ll]L and expanding influences. Thu(- {is a sign that seems to presage a ! | system of collective farms conducted ! al | along the lines of big business. M.my ¢ ‘ servicemen will desire to return | the land, it is forecast. NATIONAL ISSUES Erasure of race and class con-| sciousness must be assured if de- mocracy is to work out happily afteg | |the war. On the people of the United Stafes rests this great re- | sponsibili! Subversive propaganda [will be widely circulated by enemy | agents. ] INTERNATIGNAL AFFAIRS Canada is under the most promi |ing planetary influences. Growth in power of the Dominion will be rnp)dw |in coming menths when it will have | special Trecognition in the family| | of nations. | | Pergons whose birthdate it is have the augury of year of advance- | {ment. Gemini women may expect | goed luck, especially in employment. | Children born on this day probab- Iy will be mentally keen and physi- cally vigorous. They should be ex- ceedingly good looking. (Copyright 1 a | main Yugoslav. The latter area is populated by Yugoslavs, while the city of Trieste |is largely Italian. However, the hinterland countries of Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Swit- zerland must have Trieste as a free | port through which to,_trade (Copyright, 1945, by Bell Syndicate. Inc.) PO — and an | ¢ TID e 00 . . . . . . il TOMORROW May 29, 1945 ® o » High Tide Low Tide High Tide 1 Low Tide 21:2 2:46a.my.: 9: 173 ft. | SALT LAKE CITY — Two con; {victs at the Utah State Penitentiary are in solitary confinment. 'rhey‘ “)uxed insufficient fund drafts; against accounts they had depos- “lvd \uth pu.son officials. - CAA GIRLS llFlll‘ Ruth Glaser and Betty Nemeth, Jof Cleveland, Ohio, have arrived in Juneau and are guests at the Hotel Juneau. They are CAA em- | ployees. ‘Crossword Puzzle 29. Rebuft Serpents Tito | Auditory organ American Indian | | vl o/m/—/m 2]~ |/m/v mclO0®»/om m|=> /M Z/0/X Solution Of Saturday’s Puzzle 4. 5. DOWN . Malt liquor ladness Feathered vertebrate Worry Bring 1o p; Donkey Answer the purpose 26. Light open | of old ideas | | ana those who cherish them. ! 20 YEARS AGO 7%% empire i it ) MAY 28, 1925 G. E. Krause aided in raising the flagstaff at the American Legion plot in Evergreen Cemetery by supplying a concrete base, donating sup- plies and services. All stores were to close May 30, Memorial Day. Gov. Scott C. Bone made the addr at the closing of the Parochial School Thirty-seven Boy Scouts, with Scoutmasters and assistants, were to leave soon for Chilkoot Barracks for a training period of two weeks. Weather the Moose and American Legion were to clash night permitting Weather report: High, 66; low, 55; showers (ot et e 2w et s Daily Lessons in English %. 1. corbon WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Say, “I shall ENCLOSE (or INCLOSE) papers you requested.” Both words are correct. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Abject, abjectly, abjectness; accent first syllable. Abjection; accent second syllable OFTEN MISSPELLED: Fuzz; two Z's. SYNONYMS: Also, likewise, besid milarly, in addition, as well as. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word : ARIFY; to make clear. 'My explanation will clarify the matter.” % MODERN ETIQUETTE *%.omrrra LEE 5 ’ WMM BRSSP E P SO - Q. When taking a girl to a night club, should a man go first to his table, and then excuse himself while he goes to the men’s room to “brush up”? A. Yes. It is the girl's privilege to go to the women’s room first, put a man should always get his companion properly settled at the table before leaving her. Q. Which is the proper way to serve soup, at the table or from the kitchen? A. Either way is all right; it is merely a matter of preference. Q. Is it obligatory to answer a wedding invitation? A. Yes, if the invitation is a personal note, or one is also invited the ir {{o the reception. P et e e ———— 1. About how many parks are there in Washington, D. C., counting | both large and small? 2. When was the United Kingdom established? 3. Who is said to be responsible for the remark: together, or well all hang separately”? 4. Which city in the United States is known as the Monumental City? 5. ‘We must all hang What is the literal translation of “der fuhrer”? ANSWERS: 682 parks. . In 1707, on the union of Scotland with England and Wales. . Benjamin Franklin, during the Revolution. Baltimore. (S = ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle FOR RESERVATIONS l’HONE 612 LOUIS C. PETERS as a pald up subscriner to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon %o the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "SHOW BUSINES" Federal Tax---11c per Person PHONE 14 — THE ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appenr! D IN THIS BANK ton fabrie . Coat with metal . Parrot fish Absolute comb. o 6. Kind of sail Anger Atmospherie moisture ARE INSURED First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASEA & FEDERAL DEPO INSURANCE CORPORATIO é TRIPLETTE & KRUSE:! BUILDING CONTRACTORS EXPERT CABINET WORK OF ALL KINDS 20TH CENTURY MARKET BUILDING SHOP PHONE 96 After 5:00 P. M. PHONE 564 No.A2,LO.0.F. @Mefls each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M. I. O. O.F. HALL. Visiting Brothers Welcome GEORGE CLARK, Noble Grand . R MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. _E. F. CLEMENTS, Wor- shipful Master; JAMES W, LEIV- ERS, Secretary. GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 Silver Bow Lodge [ ———— . ' Warfields' Drug Stoze (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM — The Sewing Basket BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear 139 8. Franklin Juneau, Alaska [ DR.E. H. KASER DENTIST BLOMGREN BUILDING Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M, B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday, 8 p. m. Visiting Brothers welcome. L. J. HOLMQUIST, Ezalted Ruler H. L. McDONALD, Secretary FLOWERLAND CUT FLOWERS—POTTED PLANTS—CORSAGES Funeral Sprays and Wreaths 2nd and Frankiln ~ Phone 557 ’ ASHENBRENNER’S NEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788—306 Willoughby Ave. Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Ofiice Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer VENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 762 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES* READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third —_— “The Store for Men" SABIN’S | Front St.—Triangle Bldg. ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. traduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Optiialmology Glasses Pitted Lenses Ground ""The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmaciste BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. CALIFORNIA | Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 37) High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 1368 PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries Phone 16—24 WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone 247 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company BShelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP FOR TASTY FOODS and VARIETY TRY Gastineaun Cafe Foremost in Friendliness JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. BUSINESS COUNSELOR Authorized to Practice Befere INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Metcalfe Sheet Metal Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks — Everything in SHEET METAL Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. L. C. Smith and Cerens TYPEWRITERS Bold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batistied Customers” [ ZORIC | SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry “Say It With Floweis” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI" Juneau Florists Phone 311 1891—0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1945 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska UCOMMERCIAL SAVINGS