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1 PAGE TWO TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1945 NEW DRESSES For Classesand . . . Nice Little Lasses Cinderella Frocks ) . Schocl, just a few weeks v and Cinderella Cot- tons the perfect little washable frocks for class plaids, solid colo mim‘ Styles, well they're as cute as a Kit- ten'. i 2.50 0 3.50 to 6x 7 to 14 away SIZES: R M. Behrends Co QUALITY SINCE /887 PAMPHLET ATTACKS REP. LUCE Congresswifin Is Lauded as Actor, Criticized at Lawmaker STAMFORD, Conn., Aug. 7 — Republican Rep. Clare Boothe Luce wcn modest acclaim from the critics for her acting in George Bernard Shaw’s “Candida” last night, but her record in Congress was attacked by mysterious pamph- lets which appeared in the Strand Theatre lobby as the capacity audi- nce was leaving the theatre Of her performance on the stage 2id the theatrical critic of the tamford Advocate, Luce handled the part with a sureness that, while really not professional was cor bly. above amateur standards. Of her record in the pamphlets, “during t ant * spring session of C Ccengresswoman Clare Boothe was maki sonal 1gress, said import- 1gress, Luce a ce the European continent, playing politics with Italian and Polisk Minister and billiards with GI Joe Attaches at the theatre said they were unable tc lets were brought lobby. how the pa into the theatre - BROPHY TALKS T0 ROTARIANS AT LUNCHEON William Brophy, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Washington, D. C spoke briefly before the members of the Rotary Club at t regu weekly meeting held in the Baranof Hotel this nocon, on the past, present and future problem the Alaska Native Service Mr. Brophy was just recently ap- inted Commissioner of Indian Af- ‘:u'; and as a conclusion to a con- | fcrence with Secretary of Interior ' Harold Ickes, he came to Alaska to acquire a direct contact with the problems facing the Alaska Native Service now. In his talk, Mr. ut tke fact that EXPLOSION KILLS 35 Brophy brought t is really up to the pcople themselves to help the Alaska Native Service in their work which is mostly concerned with the and health of the Na- One problem which he feels education tives. the Lelp of the people of — Alaska is the “large quantities of PORT ARTHUR, Ont., Aug. T— liguor being shipped to the na- An explosion wrecked storage eleva- tives in isolated places.” tor No. 5 of the Saskatchewan Hew Burkher, Supervisor of Wheat Pool, Ltd., today and offi- Communications Service for the cials said it may have killed from Alas Native Service, explained 20 to 35 men. his work of establishing broadcast-- The elevator was one of the larg- ing stations in small isolated places €st at the head of the Great Lakes and thus bringing these spots closer to civilization, have been killed. Mr. Burkher has been with the Missing, including a number of sol- Alaska Native Service 21 years and|diers on leave to work in the lake has the opportunity to boast the|head elevators. lcngest employment with this ser-| e vice of any other man in Alaska | Mr. Brophy and Mr. Burkher, were: | lonesome Miss Helen Ullberg, E. E. Ullberg 454 fon Posier | RUSS CUTPOST ng Rotarians were: Jack Lew- Eiverett, Washington and Henry MGOSCOW, Aug. 7—Red Star said pest on Rugen Island in the Baltic !NSIA[[ED Bv | The army newspaper said the shelling occurred on a misty night & DR {tcday a German submarine still at sea, where “many small German |from a distance of 400 yards in l o 0 F lODGE answer to a challenge by a sentry WVaVilu reard the U-boat large had shelled a Red Army out- s RE veseels still are hiding.” who engines. - - . a recent meeting of Silver Bow | dc2 No. A 2, LO.OF, the follow-! g officers were installed: Past! T Grand, George Clark; Noble Grand,' OF U. 5. BIGGER l Vice Grand, Floyd Bernt Mork; Con-| W Chaplain, Sam Supporter, T. WASHINGTON, Aug. 7 — The upporter, Dan United States fishing fleet, badly pporter Noble crippled after Pearl Harbor; now tensen; Left Sup- i° and, Tom Rakich; bigger than ever Coordinator of and better. Fisheries Harold s Gecrge Fleek; Out- L. Ickes said today 2,128 fishing ide rdian, Henning Berggren; craft have been authorized under ppor Vice Grand, Mike a vigorous construction program. id Left Supporter Vice Many of these are already in use Wuno. and all but 8 should be completed > officers who conducted before the year’s end, he said. i included District e — . Guardian, Don W. ANCHORAGE WOMEN HERE |& b : /Ui{w e H e Resalind Endter and Annette |- WS Wmes Aoty i i BURKHER IN TOWN Brown arrived yesterday on an|: §5 2ot e droight VARSI B pred Howard H. Bur Hotel her, of Anchor- Alaska Airlines plane from An- s a guest at the Gastineau chorage and are guests at the Gas- tineau Hotel, At least 19 men were known to| ASK CONIINUE | Many other were | | ! ) 4 Alaska Airlines’ Starliner Juneau,! assengers and returned with 13. Passengers from Anchorage num- | | J. Kurevin, John J” Rooney, Ben F. Between Germans | J..cn"Ww.’x ‘Duba and Henry | and RUSSIGHS Other incoming passengers Trom e Anchorage were as follows An- VIENNA, Aug. 7—An official of | Hunt, H. A. Hawes, Vickie Hunt, | the provisional Austrian government | Dorothy Van Zante, Florence Hobbs, Red Army troops in their victorious ' rrank A. Metcalf, Katherine Rohr- | swoep across Austria and was told: paugh, Gladys ‘Whitmore and Mrs. |S. S. They raped your women and| From Cordova: Mr. Terkinstad |killed them. We don't kill your|.,q Mr. Laknes. ! The official commented: “That's| ngers included: W. A. Pienkow- true—they‘don’t kill cur women.” | . Pomeroy McGee, John C. Pes- | |tering a country which spoke the|geott Donaldson, Wm. Connelly, same language as the Germans,| p g Ninnis, Mrs. E. E. Ninnis,| | against .the people and this was| Gipert M. Parker. | divisions of Austrian troops fought AT e % alongside the Germans on the East- {of homes of furniture and removal | | of wrist watches and jewelry still SA".S ‘I'ODAY ON {scale. Here again the Viennese— . AR(II( VOYAGE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA WITH 21 MONDAY e piloted by Larry Flahart and Ed | courtemanche, arrived in Juneau G esterday from Anchorage with 21! | vered 19 and included the follow- Austrians Told Difference, .. Congrescmen: Jea satnaon, 3. Dworshak. By MAURICE MORAN tte Brown, Walter Sharpe, Fern said today he had protested rape by | Roslyn Endter, Mrs, Elvera Griffin, | “Our troops are different from the | GGeorge Mumford. | women.” | Outgoing Anchorage-bound pz The official said the Russians, en- | 1ana, H. L. Henkel, A. E. Peterson, naturally felt a desire for revenge|noma Pancio, Arlene Decker and | strengthened by the fact several| . Cordova: K. Telefson. {ern Front. | Viennese says pillaging and looting | MS NoRIH SIAR (goes on, but on a much smaller who seem bluntly honest in refer- ence to general acceptance of Nazism in the early days of the Anschluss— appear resigned in the belief the Russians are only exacting a sort of “reparations in kind” for the vast dsstruction’ wrought on their homes by the Germans. - LUNDY INFANT BURIED TODAY of the Alaska Native Service,. was a passenger leaving Juneau at noon today aboard the ANS Arctic sup- ply vessel No :h Star. Mr. Geeslin | is bound for Unalaska to investi- gate problems in connection with rehabilitation of evacuated Aleut natives. The North_Star is returning to her pre-war Arctic voyaging after a lapse of several years in Navy Funeral services for Ralph Lundy, | service. She will call, at several infant son of Mrs. Margaret isolated native communities en- Lundy, who passed away last week, route to Nome and will touch at were held at 2 o'clock this after- all ports north of Kotzebue to Pt. noon from the Chapel of the Barrow. The North Star’s role is Charles W. Carter Mortuary. Capt. to supply native communities lying John Hoogstad of the Salvation off the commercial steamer lanes. Army conducted the services. The vessel is expected to bring Interment was in Evergreen out reindeer and other native pro- | Cemetery. ducts of the North when she comes > > |south again, just ahead of thc‘ freeze-up. J FIRE BUGS MRKNEK oBiax 1 ~NEW LOW FARES- ALSO REDUCED EXPRE DC-3 EQUIPMENT JUNEAU to ANCHORAGE . . JUNEAU o NOME . . . . . JUNEAU 1o BETHEL . . . . 120.00 JUNEAU fo McGRATH . . . 100.00 Corresponding Reductions to All Intermediate Points $ 70.00 120.00 2SS RATES BETWEEN ALL POl ion Tax Not Included Federal Transnorta STEWARDESS SERVICE ALASKA AIRLINES PHONE 66 7 BARANOI" HOTEL HOMEDALE, Idaho, Aug. 7.—As the owner of the trailer-house sa@‘ it was a poor time to have a fire. % The siren soundad and the Homes dale Volunteer Fire Department re- sponded. But then: ' The fire truck stalled out of gaso- | line; re-fueled the truck reached the scene of the fire and volunteers | discovered that the hose wouldn't | stretch from the hydrant; and, there | was no pump to take the water irom ! a nearby irrigation ditch. | Meanwhile, the trailer-house be- {come a mass of ashes. 1 - eee . GOING STRONG ‘1 ELDRED, Ill, Aug. 7.—Warren | Boebe says he was rejected for| armed service in the Civil War as| physically unfit, but at 97 he’s | turnishing food for victory in World |War IL | | Beebe and his “kid” brother Frank who is 88, opcrate an 85-acre farm near here and raise grain and hugs.5 | In competition with younger nrm-“ ers, the Becbes won five first ore- at miums and two second priz | the Greene County Fair this y: | S e - | SUBSIDIES ON . MINING WORK HELENA, Mont., Aug. 7.—Immed- |late legislation for a postwar con- tinuation of subsidy payments on | mineral preduction and conservation was advocated by a mine union cofficial to the Senate Small Business Subcommittee on Mining. Reid Robinson of Den Presi- dent of the International Union of Mine, Myl and Smelter Workers (CIO), was the first witness to ap- pear before the sub-committee as it cpened a two-day hearing with em- phasis on problems of small mine operators. D g - ARRIVES H. D. Stephens, representative of the Northern Commercial Company of Seattle, has arrived in Juneau and is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. SERVICE Christenson Bros. Garage PHONE 659 909 Twelfth St. NLTETTT LIS 20 TE ( “It's the Nicest Store in Town” Baranof Hotel Building ! CLENRTRRRNNRNEARRRISIIINNGNLNINING, ~sraman Procfing the aged whiskey at the distillery. There’s nothing secret about the whiskey-wisdom that Hiram Walker’ puts into every mellow drop of Imperial—it’s simply the knowledge of fine whiskey-making gained through all the years since 1858. But it does 87, years at fine whiskey=making -makes this whiskey good KER & teg, PRORIA -1LLINOIS o Rag U.5.Pet OF It takes barrels of money to win a war. It takes all the money you can put into war bonds. Buy more .. . hold them! -~ uct are 4 years or more old. 30% straight whiskey. 70% neutral spirits distifled from graini Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Peorig, lllinois L3 “