The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 5, 1945, Page 2

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| PAGE TWO It your Fall What mo will be in colors It's p what you when you cially THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA asure to select be from our large your preference patterns and we're ready to serve you. »art of our job, knowing want, and having it here want it This is true new Fall jo in Michaels-Stern suit selection s Your complete assurance of authen- ticity in styling of tailorin lo fabrics of dist quality “ o tion. $45. to $35. - BBEHRENGS), ., — VET CAVALRY GIVEN ORDERS FOR ACTIGN (Continued from Page One) Discussing the Japanese who killed and tortured captive Ameri- cans, Gen. Eichelberger said they would be delivered to Gen. Mac- Arthur's headquarters for courts martial. He added that many of the guilty persons may have killed themselves rather than await ar- rest and trial Hunting For Tojo He said he did not know where Wartime Premier Hideki Tojo was. Finding him is a headquarters job, he remarked. Japan’s new premier, Prince Hi- gashi-Kuni meanwhile told the two Houses of the Diet (Parliament) that the nation had surrendered y after “it seemed almost im- " to carry on the war. He used the word surrender, ‘according to Dcmei, the first time the word has been broadcast. The Premier’s speech, as recorded | by the FCC from a Domei broad- cast, pictured Japan prostrated by Allied aerial attacks and sea-air blockade, with “enormous” losses, and without resources for further fighting. Surrender In China In China, Gen. Leng Hsin, com- mander of Chinese troops in Nan- | king, said surrender of all Japa- | nese troops in that country would occur within a week, and other sources expected the ceremony by Sunday. Mass air movement of Chinese Sixth Army forces to Nan- king began today. The Chinese Government Probably will not be transferred there before December, however. al s C Yenan Communists and the Chungking Government continued conferences seeking peaceful settle- ment of their differences, Occupation of Japan's home islands will be divided between | & Eighth and Sixth Army forces, Gen.ia MacArthur announced. Eichelber- | ger's Eighth will occupy northern Honshu and Hokkaido, bringing in more than 130,000 troops by the time Japanese are disarmed Oct. 10. Gen. Walter O Krueger's Sixth shu, Kyushu meeting here, Henry Green announced. MEETING TOMORROW The Juneau Chamber of Com- merce will have as guest speakers t the regular weekly luncheon meeting tomorrow members of the Board of Health, now Program Chairman erritorial Members of the Board are Gov. Ernest Gruening, Dr. Dwightl Cramer, Katherine Kehoe and George Pres- | show why they should not be en: ton, Rolland Armstrong, Mrs. Sr. R "HARLES McCLELLAN HERE TO ATTEND HIGH SCHOOL Charles Don McClellan, 15-year- nd Mrs. Willis R. Booth, and to ttend High School. For the past three years, Charles Twenty-Fourth Corps will occupy“md" the supervision of the Uni- southern Korea. | - -ee | NEW TRIAL DENIED | The condemnation proceedings against John F. and Beatrice Mullen, concerning a Mendenhall | Valley land tract, moved another | step in U. S. District Court here! vesterday afternoon when Judge‘ George F. Alexander overruled a| new trial motion entered by A torney R. E. Robertson for the de- fendants. i The defense is expected to enter notice of appeal of the $6,500 award | made by the jyry which heard the! case here this spring. { S eee MARGARET FEMMER SOUTH | Miss Margaret Femmer departed aboard the Princess Louise for| “hicago where she will attend the! rthwestern University School of Journalism -+ ANCHORAGE MEN ARRIVE | J. E. Beattie, Fred Anderson and Martin E. Roe arrived recently on a Woodley Airways' transport plane from Anchorage and are reg- ered at the Baranof Hotel. - MR., MRS. MURPHY HERE Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Murphy and child arrived here from Anchorage via Woodley Airways, and guests at the Baranof Hotel. - - i Lmpire Want-ads bring resu.'tx[“ R R R R R R R R R R R R T R R TR R R R RR RN RO R AR R IR AR AR RRRRIRR 5/ are | ’/ b f | versity of Nebraska. |SATKO PETITIONS FOR RESTRAINER OVER TIDELANDS On petition o1 Paul Satko, a show cause order was signed yesterday in Federal Court here by Judge G Alexander, against Mr. and Mrs. | Henry Seaberg and their agent W. | E. Graham, doing business as Fem- mer’s Transfer. | The defendants are required t joined from entering upon property | claimed by the plaintiff at the corner jof the junction of Harbor Way and Irwin Street, Juneau. Petitioner Satko claims to have | been in exclusive possession of the | tidelands area since January 1, 1945, old son of the reindeer supefvisor | demonstrated by the erection of 80 in the Kotzebue area, with the | pjling and Alaska Native Service, has arrived puilding thereon. He cited his in- |in Juneau to make his home for|tention to construct a repair shop the ensuing school year with Rev.|on the site as soon as construction a frame storehouse ‘ restrictions are lifted, | Satko charges that the defend- | ants have encroached upon his prop- has done his school work through | erty, have knocked over some of his extension courses, under the super- vision of Dr. James Ryan and the | some of the area. universities whose extension courses: are used in the Territory. His first | Army will take over southern Hon-|Year of high school work was com- | and Shikoku. The |Pleted through the extension course piling and have filled rock upon e SEATTLE MEN HERE C. E. Taylor, J. L. Warson and C. V. Anderson, of Seattle, have arrived here and are guests at the Gastineau Hotel. AN OO FAIRBANKS MKNEK o xobiak ¥ JUNEAY M-3Equipmenl..$e(reshmen|s Aloft . . Stewardess Service ALASKA AIRLINES PHONE 667 VOOOROPOOOOONE RRRRARRRRRRRRRRRRARKN RRRRRRRARR ‘CHRISTIAN SCJENCE LECTURE GIVEN HERE 'BY ROBERT S. ROSS A Christian Science leciure was given by Robert Stanley Ross, C. S‘ B. of New York City, member of| the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass- achusetts, at the Scottish Rite Tem-, ple last evening. Mr. Ross was in-| treduced to the audience by Pfc.| Frederick C. Becker. The lecturer spoke, follows: as! in part, Prayer as understood in Chris- tian Science it not an appeal to the Giver of all good to do more than He has already done, nor to grant the special request of a peti- tioner. Rather is it joyful recogni-‘ tien and humble, prayerful, childlike{ affirmation of the eternal fact that 1 God has eady done all things well; {that where evil seems to be there is, always the presence, activity, and| power of God, good. “ | True praygr enables us to look| through and beyond this mystified | | human sense of things into the rare- | fied atmosphere of spiritual reality,| \where we see things as they are,| and not as they seem to be. In | the words of Isaiah, delivering God's| | message to mankind: “For, behold, [T create new heavens and a new |carth: and the former shall not | be remembered, nor come into mind. {But be ye glad and rejoice for ever in that which I create: for, behold,! |T create Jerusalem a rejoicing, and !her people a joy.” | | And who would not rejoice in the glad discovery, and continue to re- | joice in the eternal fact, that—sense, testimony to the contrary mot- | withstanding—good is ever present, infinite, all? | | This prayer of joy and gratitude, | vebuking and rising above sense- testimony, demonstrates that men |need not be out of health, happiness, | hcme, friepds, employment, money, {nor anything else that is necessary and good, so long as they under- |stand spiritually that man (God’s {idea) can never be outside the realm ‘s[ Ged, infinite good, nor be any- | thing less than perfect. God has not 'made a poor man nor a failure any more than He has made a sick man lor a sinner. | Therefore, if obeyed, the same divine Principle which Christian | Scientists invoke daily in their own 'and others' behalf to silence pain, | keal a broken heart, or restore wast- ed tissue of the body, may surely be depended upon also to replenish |a depleted purse. { The Psalmist sang, “No good thing will he (God) withhold from them that walk uprightly.” And Jesus |caid, “If ye abide in me, and my | words abide in you, ye shall ask !what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.” These passages indicate |that the fulfillment of God’'s prom- ises is inseparable from loving obedi- lence to divine law. thc iaw of in- finite Spirit or ever-present good. | Opportunity And Supply | Surely, there is no more concord (betwesn Christianity and poverty |than there is between Christianity of discord and | limitation, sin, , and death jincluded! Whatever seemed to be |the human need of those who called {upon him for help, Jesus demon- strated God's willingness and God’s {ability to meet that nced and to |meet it instantaneously. | His at-one-ment with the law of {Love made this possible. Accordingly, Mrs. Eddy writes on page 494 of Science and Health, |always has met and always will meet |every human need.” And, is not our greatest need to awaken the the {truth that God’s idea or image and |likeness has no lack because God {has none? Argue the senses what they will, God is ever saying to His idea or image and likeness (the real jand only self), “Son, thou are ever with me, and all that I have is thine.” Although God is a respecter of spirituality, He is not a respecter of persons. The divine Mind could have no human favorites. Principle must regard one idea or reflection’ as highly as another. If some persons shoili appear to be sharing more abundantly in good Baranof Hotel lus on page “Divine Love than others, this would noi be due to divine discrimination, but to the ctivity in ‘'human consciousness of divine law, a law which, Christian Science reveals, is ever present and as available to all as it is to one, But in order that divine law may become operative in our behalf, we must be loving and meek. We must be joyfully expectant of good. We must lay claim humbly and impor- tunately to all that is included in man’s birthright as the son or idea of God, who gives us dominion, not over Supposed outward circumstances and things, but over a mortally men- tal sense of the infinite. Referring to this, Mrs. Eddy tells * 86 of Science and Health that “mortal mind sees what it be- lisves as certainly as it believes what it sees. own thoughts.” Overcoming Limigations Some time ago, for example, while motoring with a friend through a public park in one of our large, mid- western cities, I saw a beautiful pclar bear going through a series of |motions from which, 1 learned, he never deviated 0000000000000 0000000000000 ( g 3 i i i 1t feels, hears and sees its| Year in and year oui, the bear had taken three or four steps for- ward and, without turning, the same number backward, hundreds of times a day, with tedious regularity. When asked for an explanation, the keep-| er said that the animal had grown up in a cage that permitted him to take only those few steps in either direction. Although he was then at liberty to roam where he would in a large, rugged, outdoor inclos- ure, including a pool of water only a few yards away, the bear, in bond- age to the sense of limitation, be- lievetl still that he had room enough for those few steps only. Like the bear, are not most per- sons in bondage, more or less, to the belief of limitation? Are not many of us saying to ourselves that we are incapable of doing this, unworthy of undertaking that, or too old to attempt the other? Christian Science, however, is showing mankind how to throw off the small-cage habit. Instead of telling us to bow submissively to sug- gestions of limited health, limited happiness, limited opportunity, lim- ited ability, limited income, and so A Real Treat in Store for All Members EATS BOAT OWNERS Why Let Your Old Engine Spoil Any More forth, this Science encourages to face fearlessly the foe calling itself limitation, in the assurance thac error is never real or true, plead for recognition as it will. Thoughi the sun seems to rise and set, we know it is the earth turn- ing. Though the earth seems to be flat, we know it is round. Though, at the horizon, ships seem to dis- appear in the sea, we know that un- seen to us they continue on their vay. Our great need is to be awake spiritually to the unreality of all sense-testimony, with its lying lim- itations, and cheerfully, confidently, expectantly fix our gaze on spirit- ual reality, which is ever-present, unchangeable, unlimited good, and to which fear, sin, disease, sorrow, poverty, failure, discouragement, dis- aster, and death are unknown. And whatever is true about God must be equally true about the divine idea or God's image and likeness. And of course it will be proved true about you and me just to the extent that we recognize the only true existence as that image and likeness. 0000000000000 000000000004 FIRST WEEKLY MEETING Wednesday, Sept-o Special Enterfainment and Better Not Miss This One! 00000000000000056000006040060000000000000090000000000000000000000000000000¢ Cruises or Fishing Trips? Let Us Order Your New Marine Engine for You NOW! No Matter What the Size or Type of Your Boat We Can Furnish the Engine You Want Agents for: Chrysler Marine Engines Universal Marine Engines Wisconsin Air Cooled Engines Johnson Outhoard Motors We Will Gladly Help You Choose the Engine to Fit Your Need CHAS. JUNEAU WARNE PHONE 47 R CO. P. 0. BOX 620 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1945 ¢ -

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