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PACEEIGHT — RO INTERNEETELLS | SPARK OF LIFE GIVEN SCHOOL OF HARDSHIP AS JAPS' PRISONER DISTRICTS NOW Phylllis Morehouse Says Rivers Asserts Valid Na- Nips Every Bit as Bad | ture of Old 1935 Act on asGermans' Worst | Alaska Law Books i - of-town people a chance to cam- 8 Shaffer, 12th Street, Juneau, Al- Miss Phyllis Morehouse, who was' Apparently due for an attempt at paign either way, and vote either| Cigars were the order of the day |aska, whose loan was insured No- just recently released from a Japa- revival after lying dormant for tenjway. By placing jurisdiction of|at the Lions noon luncheon today | vember 9, 1936, and paid in full on nesé Concentration Camp, arrived on years, the Independent School Dis-|such cases in the District Court,”the | as the youngset Lion Cub, Michael | October 17, 1944, the Princess Louise last Tuesday to tricts Act passed by the 19 r‘mn«;LWmsmnm- has made available in | Anderson, weight seven pounds aud‘ From present indications, addi- visit her sister, Mrs. Patricia Bur- torial Legislature has been given such matters the services of the|twelve and a half ounces was an- | tional groups each year will attain nett consid by Attorney General agency best qualified to conduct or-| nounced by his proudly roaring | credit balances for distribution, and, Prior to the Japanese 4 J. Rivers, at the Tequest of derly proceedings and _safeguard | Papa Barney. The Lions rose to the | if experience continues favorable, of ‘the Philippines, Miss L. F. Joy, President of the }-‘Jm):m}“\pmsm\|1 and pmpcx[\ rights.” | occasion by presenting the Ander- | such credit balances will increase with her mother and fathe School Board 50! a rocking style baby chair.|annually. It is expected that the ing in Baguio, where the The measure, Chapter 77 of the President Frank Hermann's blue | longer the insurance remains in ef- employed as a mining engi 1935 1 Session Laws, ”"”""“TEMPERAIURES water pills received some dubious | fect the larger the dividend the Hearing of the Japanese s adjacent cities and adjacent settle- | credit, but Lion Barney said the | home owner will collect on final in their direction, the Mor ments to form independent school | IN SUDDEN DRop fmx secret was to warn the doctor | payment of his mortgage, according family took a suitcase apiece and districts to embrace not more lhflh‘ uhu there would be no pay—if it | to Mr. Redman. went to Manila. On Januar 1942, 50 square miles. The Fairbanks| fwasn't a boy | The payment to Mr. and Mrs. they were captured, al with (school board asked the Attorney IN MIDD[E WEST The Lions all felt good about their | Shaffer was one of eleven in Alasl other Manila citizens, by the Jap- General's opinion as to the tonsu»l achievement of erecting the Scout included in the first group of div anese, and taken in lar busses | tutionality of the Act Shortly af- | building at the Eagle River Camu dends to be paid in the Territor to Santo Tomas where Miss More- ter passage of the bill, Fairbanks (By Assoclated Press) !in three days, after the Rotarians announced by Mr. Redman recently house and her mother were placed took steps to form a school district| Frosts, which nipped tender|had done their part in dismantling | from his Pox tland ;mm in a large bare classroom along to include areas around that city, spring Victory Gardens and sent | it. Those few Lions who had been | with 40 other women and Mr. More- but the action was never carried|Middle Westerners pawing through | unable to help even cheerfully paid house was placed in a like room|through at that time. |closets for winter clothing, con-|steep fines as their comrn:unm.\COMMu"lSTS To l with other men | Other es Affected | tinued today in the upper Mis- | toward the project They slept in these classrooms, Recently otk Alaska cities, in- sissippi Valley and upper Great| The Lions saw the sound motion every night until December, 1943, |clyding Anchorage and Juneau, have | Lakes region. Many areas reported ' picture made by the U. S. Slgnql Swrl(H AC"ONS with only a mattress between them |peen encountering serious difficul-|all-time low, temperatures for June Corps of battle scenes in the and the floor. During that time ties though influx of students from 4 | cific prepared especially for the Sev- lNTo OPEN AGAIN small shanties were built outside by |gareas outside city limits and which| Chicago recorded a low of 34.7 enth War Loan. Lion George Dale the internees and families were al- no ci At the last legis. | degrees at 5:10 a. m. showed the pictures, lowed to be together and cook their )ative session a Consolidated School| The lowest officially recorded The newest member, Lion Delbert | NEW YORK, June 4.—The Na- seanty meals during the day. Listricts bill was passed but was ves reading in the nation was 20 de- H. Han B cout executive in | tional Board of the Communist In December, 1943, Miss More-|tceq by the Governor. It mainly ' grees at Cranberry Bogs, Wis. | Alaska, transferred his Lions’ mem- | Political Association said today the | house was seperated from her family paralleled the 1935 Act, but was more g SIS | bership from Montpelier, Idaho | organization made a mistake whenl and taken .to Los Banos, where 28 cpecific in regard to voting pro-| ]UNEAU VEIERAN Guests of the club were Capt. John | it dissolved as a political party a barracks had been built and where,' cequres for establishing such dis- Hoogstad of the Salvation Army, ago | eventually, all internees would be tricts and regarding budgets and tax | READY Fon MORE Capt. Homer Kelton and Lt. E. L.| The board said in a resolution, | placed. Her family joined her in jeyying. Also, the 1945 bill provided | Nugent, both of the U. S. Coast | printed in the Daily Worker, Com- April, 1944, when all families were for gistricts of 250 square miles area | Guard, Fred Tyvoll of the WMC, munist publication, that: allowed to be together. |and levied school taxes on a differ-| Friends here will be glad to learn | Cordova, and Rienholt Brust, of the S “The changes we made in our| Scon a settlement of 2000 in- eng basis from the law on the books. | that Cpl. Jake Cropley, Jr., operator | Alaska Native Service. [ form of Communist organization ternees was gathered in the 28 bar-| The vetoed act provided for pro-|of an Army amphibious truck | B e !. .. could not but strengthen cer- racks which were inside an enclos- portional contributions by munici-| through the thick of the European | | tain dangerous tendencies lmhud&y ure of two large barbwire fences. To palities and adjacent areas based on fighting, has emerged without (HUR(H“.I_ RAPS | liquidating the independent- end‘ keep minds busy a sort of town the number of pupils in each area,'rious injury, according to a letter | vanguard role of the Communist | was set up with schools, police and Ppatrols, officials to run it and each persons assigned so many hours of work a day, whereas tZe 1935 Act calls upon out- side areas to pay a millage tax equal to the millage devoted exclusively to school use by the city. Governor Er-‘ “The last six months were the pest Gruening, in remarks accom- hardest,” said Miss Morehouse, “as panying his veto of the 1945 bill we were alloted only one handful of gtated: Senate Bill No. 64 adds rice a day. Because of this three- nothing that is not already possible fourth of the camp had beri-beri under Chapter 77, SLA 1935. Section and soon there was approximately a 18 reverts to a theory of taxation death a day.” | which was abandoned more than 50 In January of this year they were | years ago liherated by a well-planned Tes- | Possible Relief eue staged by the American troops. | * lmg,. American transport plam,x\ With Scnm}- Bill No. 64, as pass- dtopped abtut 150 parachutists, a ed by the 1945 Legislature, out of the large guerrilla band surrounded the Picture cities must now look to the BAmp and Alligator tanks broke into| 1935 Independent School Districts it Withi na short time internees,|Act for relief from burdens evolving sokne ‘walkifig, others in tanks, were 1Tom large numbers of pupils from safe in American Barracks. On May|Outside their limits, hence, perhaps 2 they landed in Los Angeles ending |the inquiry made of the Attorney the three years of hardship. General. | When asked for her opinion ut’“Ih:_ ‘;f:,ls' ?::‘ the Japhnese, Miss Morehouse said b Rivers has declared: statute in all re- e A i o g |spects valid.” Concluding his re- They are every bit as bad as these| ..o on the constitutionality of horror pictures showing German py o Y = 4 | Chapter 77, SLA 1935, the Attorney atrocities — as they copy the Ger- rizes: “That said sta- " § | Géneral summ: :';":“.lf'.‘. everything they do, almost ,¢0 i< in conformity with the fol- Baai {lowing pertinent propositions of Law i “1—The Alaska Legislature has the | |same power as any state to legislate |on all rightful subjects, including (he | field of education. “2—Providing for the mmnlenancc\ of public schools is primarily a! | function of the state. “3—Delegating the actual mg‘xmz-‘ ing and operation of an mdependent\ school district to a local agency, and local cfficers, is both expedient aud‘ lawful. | “4—Under includ- | courts a . DEPUTY RETURNS Fred Bryant, Deputy U. S. Mar. shal at Sitka, arrived in Juneau| aboard the steamer North Sea to- day, after traveling as far south as Portland, Oregon, in charge of prisoners being taken to the Peni- tentiary. Marshal William T. Mahoney has continued east with women prison- | ers in custody, ——————— ! the decisions of thc‘ The coastline of Norwa, statute, such as the one ing the greater islands and indenta- under consideration, which might | tions, is about 12,000 miles. include territory in a school dis- BE. [ | | [ & | | | ACUP Uel‘ COFFEE? BEAN COFFEE is FRESH until IT'S GROUND. Try Our SPECIAL BLEND ... Ground the Way You Like Ii . . . IT'S GOOD | children will be told from 2 to 2:30 | public discontent. i from 2:30 to 3 o'clock. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ~— — MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1945 trict without the consent of the inhabitants. of a portion of the area involved, is not unconstitutional as] subjecting such area and inhabitants | SHAFFERS RECEIVE 'LION ANDERSON FIRST FHA DIVIDEND ROARS OUT AT | to taxation without representation. | Statute Not Harsh [ FHA Underwriter Herbert C. Red- “Instead of being harsh, the in-] lloNS MEETI"G.nmn announces distribution of the stant statute is fairly liberal. By first dividend check within the jur- making a new enlarged school dis- trict contingent upon a petition signed by 25 per cent of the voters involved, it avoids action of a mand- atory nature by the Legislature. By | calling for a referendum in the en-| tire area concerned, it gives the oubl | isdiction of the Juneau, Alaska, of- fice. The dividend was paid from PHSSGS Out C|gafS Ge's[(;mup 29 of thnv Mutual Mortgage Preseni of RO(kIflg | Insurance Fund in accordance with [ Section 205 (e) of the National Housing Act. The check was made Sty,e BabY Chalf | payable to Edward B. and Ellen J received here. Wounded three times - "GESTAPO' TREND """ in battle, | The resolution, adopted by the Two Explosions \* Kill U. S. Army Men, Germans 15 Dead, 80 Injured in Bremen Blasts Attribut- ed fo Delayed Bombs BREMEN, Germany, June 4-Two mysterious explosions wrecked the U. S. Military Government’s police | headquarters in Bremen today, kill- ing at least 15 Americans and Ger- mans and injuring 80 others, An American Public Safety Offi- cer, Maj. E. Russell Kennedy, Jr., of Washington, D. C., said he . be- | lieved the disaster was caused “by | a delayed action bomb.” Incomplete military reports up to| 5 p. m. listed the following cas-' ualties: Three Americans and 12 Ger-| mans dead, their bodies recovered. Two Americans and an unesti- mated number of Germans missing.| and believed buried under debris. | Four Americans and 18 Germans { seriously injured. Ten Americans and 46 Germans slightly hurt. Most of the German -casualties were police and police auxiliaries. — e ALLIED CONTROI COUNCIL HOLDING MEETING, BERLIN (By Associated Press) The Paris radio said today that the first meeting of the Allied Control Commission for Germany was held in Berlin yesterday. The broadcast, reported by the | FCC, said the United States, Soviet Russia, Great Britain and France first in the Normandy campaign board Saturday with Browder dis-!were represented at the meeting and again in fighting in northern OF lABOR pARTY‘senlmu was submitted as a draft by Gen. Eisenhower, Marshal France, he sustained a third injury | for discussion and action by the)Gregory Zhukov, Field Marshal in the Battle of the Rhine. In National Committee and the CPA!Montgomery and Gen. Jean de recognition of outstanding conduct LONDON, June 4.—Prime Min- | membership. | Lattre de Tassigny, respectively under fire, his company has received | ister Churchill opened the Conser-| The board voted that the Na- 1 i a unit citation, he wrote his pa! vative Party’s election campaign to ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Cropley of ‘ night with a forthright attack Juneau, adding that at that time,|against the Socialist policy of the May 14, he was awaiting discharge | Labor Party which he said “is ab- | or reassignment to a new theatre. | horrent to British ideas of freedom.” Cpl. Cropley entered the service| “There can be no doubt that So- | about two )ears ago. c m inseparably interwoven with totalitarianism and the abject | LIBRARY STORY HOUR | Tt o i sitant, 4 iEnL'.’,{. TOMORROW AT 2 P. M. TIIJ the July 5 election. “I declare it to you, tional Committee be convened with- in two weeks to take up the reso- lution. —eeo— Ve | SEATTLE-Seaman Rudolf Senge- bosh, Newark, N. J,, on leave h(‘n'] is and his fiancee from Newark, Mary | Alexander, discussed their marriag ~'plans as they blissfully taxied away | from the railroad station. | from the Juneau children liked last week’s { bottom of my heart, that no Social- Sometime later Miss Alexander | story hour at the library so much | ist system can be established with- discovered she had left her purse it will be repeated tomorrow and |out a pelitical police,” he said.. “No ! containing $500 in cash and $15,000 | in jewels in the cab. i The cab company was notified | and they began questioning their drivers. The fifty-second queried found the purse and valuables on his back seat, ignored by several other fares. regularly on Tuesdays hereafter, has been decided. With Mrs. Jean Rogers as story- teller, stories for prima grade | Socialist government conducting the entire life and industry of the coun- try could afford to allow free, sharp or violently worded expressions of They would have p. m, and for older boys and gnrl.\l‘o fall back on some form of Ges- tapo.” U. S. WACS IN MANILA_some of the first WACS to arrive in Manila, P.I. selves at an undamaged swimming pool they found at the city’'s outskirts, | | "IIIIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!II HIIIIIIIIIIMlIIllllllllIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIiIIIIII|I|ll" ANNOUNCEMENT The Juneau and Douglas Telephone Company, through the cooperation of the Alaska Communication System, is happy to announce a new service for the convenience of its subscribers. Beginning June 1, long-distance calls to the States, and to some points in Alaska® may be made from office and residence phones of paid-up subscribers, within the city limts of Juneau. Subscribers will be held responsible for all long distance calls made from their telephone. The Alaska Communication Systém will also continue to maintain long-distance phone booths in the Federal Building, as in the past: For further information, call “LONG DISTANCE.” ‘Anchorage .. Seward . . Whittier || I Juneau Deliveries— 10 A M.and 2 P. M. Douxlas Delivery—10 A. M. I'night at 8 o'clock in the Dugout, ! “The first task of this commis- si the broadcast said, draw boundaries of the urumtmn zon JAP NAVAl TASK FORCES REPORTED OKINAWA BOUND SAN FRANCISCO, June 4—The Blue Network reported hearing a Melbourne overseas radiocast today that two Japanese naval task rorces are approaching Okinawa Island on' suicide missions—a broadcast that disagreed with records taken by other Tokyo monitors. 1 The Melbourne report describing | the approach of “Japanese” suicide | naval units would be in line with recent Tokyo announcements that| the Imperial Navy was being re-! modeled to adopt suicide tactics. “is to various P AUXILIARY TO ELECT The American Legion Auxiliary will hold election of officers and a | regular business meeting tomorrow with Mrs. Olaf Bodding presiding | in the absence of Mrs. Dorothy Manthey, president. QIIAI.ITY FIRS‘I' If ever your dealer is temporarily out of sh:k we ask your patience and understanding. His u”!y will be quickly replenished . . . and the !nmkl’ he will have will be of the ndeaficn' quality m*l‘i‘n* always known. * . SiCKS’ SEATTLE 3R§WING & MALTING CO. Since 1878 % E. G.Sick, Pres. WASHIKGTON'S OLDEST INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTION - i W THE WEsr /o NO PRIORITY RELEASED Y0, "RIORITY NEW MACHINES Underwood Typewriters and Adding Machines Marchani Calculaiors . . Hand or Electrics | PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW 5 ) First Ordered———First Delivered Exclusive Agents for Alaska—WRITE or WIRE ROSCOE TOWHSEND,' Anchorage, Alaska EORGE BROTHER Super Market Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. Phones 92-35—2 Free Deliveries Daily Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. iN TODAY... PLENTY OF FRESH FRUITS and CRISP VEGETABLES EORGE BROTHER Super Market Phones 92-95—2 Free Deliveries Daily Phone—Write or Wire George Brothers Fairbanks . . KetchikAan. IO, RGO AR R TR S i