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PAGE FOUR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1945 - . | tested fact that youth needs at least a high school Daily Alaska Empire o s 5 “oine snciaies industrial nation But parents, civic organizations Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY outh leaders can perform & needed service by and 4 treets, Juneeu, Alaska, ; B Ry O etk Janeen, Alagks emphasizing to tomorrow's citizens that the best DOROTHY TROY LINGO - four jon for future happiness is a well-rounded WILLIAM R. CARTER - = 7 FLMER A. FRIEND « - education ALFRED ZENGER - =~ - Sl M 0 e Enter it Office in Juneau ns Second Class Matter. ' vadad 1 UBSCRIPTION RATES: Getting Them Home Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month: i SRR w3 monghs, $5.00; one vear. $15.00 e b By mall, postare paid.” at the following rates | Washington Post) One yeur, n advance, $18.00; six months, in advance, $1.60; Dismissal notices are already being handed to ome month. in advence. $1.5 ady e ers “will ‘confer & favor 1f they will promptly notity |some of the wartime workers in the Federal service the Businese Office of any fatlure or irregularity in the de- |and dismissals will presently reach wholesale pro- ey of the portions as the operating funds of temporary agencies Telephon fice, 602; Business Office, 374 P EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESE _ are liquidated and those of permanent agencies cur ASSOCIATE! The Assoct: Is ‘exclustvely entitled to the use for | tailed. Already many of the workers who anticips dismissal are beginning to worry about the problem of getting back to their homes. Considering what liv- ing costs in wartime Washington have been, it seems doubtful that many of the girls whose homes are in distant parts of the country can have put by enough to pay the railroad fare. There is also the question whether, even if these | girls had money saved or friends from whom they could borrow, it would be fair to put them to such {an expense. After all, the Government used every |means of persuasion, including the payment of ex- [ penses, to bring the girls to Washington, although when it got them here it was, as we have pointed {out from time to time, none too solicitous about their | weifare, or in helping them to cope with what for Imany of them was a strange and even dangerous |environment. The work was represented to them and | a patriotic service, and there is no | doubt that they were needed. Nearly all of them, had dispatches credited to it or not other- republication of paper and slso the local news published wise credited | beretn. HATIONAL REPRES Pourth Avenue Bidy NTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 ttle, Wash, to their families a - 'any rate much nearer to home ‘The Administration, according to Mr. Jerry Kluttz, | recognizes its responsibility to these girls and will ask | Congress to provide them the means of getting back Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach gives his active | (o their families. But it will be necessary for Con- support to national, State and local educational au- |gress to act rapidly if large numbers of young girls thorities in their efforts to persuade teen-age youths are not to be stranded in Washington without occupa- to finish their high school education. Since the school : tion and without funds. Mr. Kluttz thinks the simplest vear of 194142 enrollment in the nation’s 35,000 way would be to write the provision for travel expenses secondary schools has decreased steadily as boys and into the Kilgore unemployment compensation bill, i ctpipe | Which, an emergency measure, is at the top of the sirls found proftable employment in various industries | ¥ Y 3 PUTE BIY o | Congressional agenda. As the Kilgore bill now stands, o e B e 11t provides! travel pay only in the case of workers In a recent statement Katharine F. Lenroot, chief | who have new jobs waiting for them, and it is of the Children's Bureau, United States Department | doubtful if more than a minority of wartime Govern- of Labor, said: “For four years war pressures have |ment workers are in this fortunate situation. pushed school enrollment down and child labor up."‘ p In the year 1940-41 high school attendance in the | nation reached a record peak with a figure of ’1,-‘ 250,000. The following year the registration dropped (New York Times) 300,000; in 1942-43, 300,000 more. In 1943-44 there | oOut of the reduced store of tulips left to them, was a drop of 600,000 reported’by high schools on a |the people of Holland have set aside 110,000 tulip While & small percentage of these | bulbs to honor our soldier dead and to make more Josses Is attributable to the fewer number of boys and | beautiful our national cemeteries. It Is a generou girls, owing to declining birth rates of previous years, | 618t for" g tulip was no less & casulty of war than o e | the dead it now will honor. Many were lost when the employment of 14 to 17 year olds rose from 1ess | ne fic1q5 were flooded, although reports from Holland than one million in 1940 to approximately thre | now say the damage was not so extensive as at first million in the spring of 1945 | believed. Many were eaten, for the people were In addition to those young people who have drop- ' reduced to that, as a substitute for potatoes, or ground school for steady employment in industry,lgn“ dmixed with the little flour available to make read. - b ot % : The bulbs expected next month will bloom in all afternoons, evenings, weekends and vacation periods.| ;i) )oyeliness next spring in the Arlington, Baltimore The United States Commissioner of Education, Dr.| .4 Long Island cemeteries. They are a first gift, John W. Studebaker, has recently pointed out that|gnd an equal number, promised for next year, will taking jobs away from young people is not the com- |go to other cemeteries. There they will lift their piete answer to this serious problem. In order to|chaliced flowers in all the cclors of the rainbow and make a successful readjustment to school programs |bring a touch of beauty to the rigid pattern of mili- thase who have known the independence and excite- | tary graves set rank on rank and file on file, so m::i: of receiving war-inflated wages must be willing | M&ny paces right and left, and so.many paces front v {and rear. They will do more than words can say to settle down to the everyday routine of school life will be a deeply treasured gift by which the It is a problem that affects society as a whole.| American heart will be touched and for which the Administrators and teachers can emphasize the time- | American nation will be grateful. BACK TO SCHOOL Tulips from Holland nation-wide basis, ped from another two to three millions have found jobs during passes the bill, Truman himself will be betwixt and between Ed Pauley on one side and the orderly process of letting the Supreme Court decide this important ques- tion of submerged oil. (Note—Yesterday, President Tru- man proclaimed U. S. jurisdiction over the rich oil and mineral re- serves on the continental shelf be- yond the three-mile limit of the U. S. coasts.) £ | | merged oil lands. The majority of The Washington comres was oot e T et Merry - Go- Round merits, but took it out of the hands of the court. This action is loaded with dyna- mite for President Truman. One| of his right-hand men, Ed Pauley, | ex - Treasurer of the Democratic National Committee, who did so| Bt obfioar. ‘Col. William . Uk tornomingte Trixan a4 Ol Clarkson, threatened to take x\wuy“'"gc' is deeply inyolved. Most of all_rank from any WAC who ub_‘hh private income is derived from _ (Continued from Page One) | you know, they appoint the gen-| erals.” CAPITAL CHAFF festod to doing the work because of |Whe Ol lands which extend out| its political nature \und.er the water off the California| when Ambassador Pat Hurley SOR%E flew back from China this time, he Meanwhile, civilian employees are being laid off in the War Depart- ment, while WAC's who patriotic- Congressman Charles M. La Fol-| | lette, Indiana Republican, put } finger on a very sore point when| carried in his special plane a sick stenographer and a G.I. returning to visit an ill mother. Once before ally enlisted for the war arely. .omi i s | 1 br;’ught R et obtars - fon| 0T Topnd U collkuues Hurley shipped by special plane a Congressmen | “I find a rather unique coinci-|Cadillac car across the Himalaya (Note — The WAC's have been|dence in the rise of Ed Pauley in|Mountains from India to China. given neatly mimeographed form | the Democratic Party and the re-|: Democratic members of the letters which they must retype.|moval of Mr. Biddle and the|Pearl Harbor Investigating Com- One form Jetter begins: “Honorable naming of Mr. Clark. I am won- | Mittee say they will be delighted to hear Governor Dewey’s testi- mony. In fact they would like to ask Dewey a question, namely, who told him that we had broken the Jap code. A military officer reveal- ing that information would be sub- ject to court-martial. . Henry Kaiser's operation of Willow Run Chief leader of the battle to save | means that other auto companies oil reserves was Congressman Sam | will not be able to shut down their Hobbs of Alabama, Democmt‘»ph\ms and argue with labor. If | After an impassioned plea to pro-|they do, Kaiser will be in a posi- * ok K |tect oil, he concluded: tion to capture the vast new auto- HE WHO LAUGHS LAST | “Vote as you please. You un-imobile market. . . . Fleet Admiral Willkie-Republican Milt Polland‘duubtedly have the votes, but you|William D). Leahy, efficient Chief of Wisconsin got a laugh out or‘have no right to shut your eyes to!of Staff to the President, is talk- President Truman the other day | this plain duty which the Congress|ing about resigning. Truman leans by recalling Willkie's visit in Mil-!ough( to perform.” lon him heavily. . The White waukee., Willkie was being beseiged | Later, Republican La Follette put!House is considering Assistant Sec- by enthusiastic crowds in a Mil- his finger on another sore spot| retary of the Interior Oscar Chap- waukee hotel lobby, while Truman, when he asked Hatton Sumners of man to head the Federal Security then just a Senator, stood on theTexas: Administration just vacated by sidelines watching the show. “Did the new Attorney General Paul McNutt. “I never thought you'd be Presi- |from Texas appear (before Sum-| (Copyright. 1945, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) dent then,” said Polland {n Judiciary Committee) and ex-| s = = “Neither did 1,” replied the man press his opinion?” NOTICE who now sits in the White House. | “He did not appear,” replied - 'S @ | Sumners. “This suit was instituted Dr. R. N. Hester, M. D., Eye Spe- | by the predecessor of the prescnt‘uialiat from Ketchikan, will be in Attorney General just before he Juneau for a few days beginning retired.” ' | Oct. 1st. Appointments for eye ex- “Merely because you change At- aminations may be made in ad- torney Genera shot back La Fol-|vance by calling the Juneau lette, “you don't change the posi- Medical Clinic. (10,073-tf) |tion of the United States.” B SEiaecsc Actually, diplomatic Hatton Sulm-| NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING ners of Dallas probably was keep-| NOTICE is hereby given that the ing his friend, Attorney General|gs;d Annual Convention of the Clark, also of Dallas, off the hOUGrund Camp of Alaska Native spot. If he had called Clark to|Brotherhood and Sisterhood, the sn- testify, the latter would have been pual meeting of the Alaska Fisher- faced with a brief prepared in his men’s Cooperative Association, and own Solicitor General's office di-|the annual meeting of the Tlingit rectly contrary to the recommenda- | and Haida Indians of Alaska (Land tion of Sumners’ Committee and|Suit), will be held at Angoon. Al- directly contrary to the vote of aska, in the ANB Hall, beginning 10 the oil lobby in Congress. | a. m. Monday, November 12, 1945, Andrew J. May, Chairman of the|dering if the Republican members Military Affairs Committee, has|have made appropriate arrange- personally requested me to reply ments for their share of any cam- to your letter of recent date in|paign funds that may arise out of which you asked to be informed!the passage of this legislation.” concerning 1 | * k% Another form letter conclude: TEXAN SAVES TEXAN “The eagerness with which the men | of the Army and their loved ones| await their discharge is appreciated | by the War Department.” OIL LOBBY OPERATORS It was lost in all the news about | strikes and MacArthur, but an important sleeper was quietly slipped through the House of Rep- | resentatives last week giving some of the nation’s wealthiest oil re- sources to individual states—the oil taken from the ocean bed off the Pacific and Gulf coasts. | It was significant that Congre sional leaders carefully avoided a record vote. They didn't want to be lined up and counted. So in the end, only 11 men voted against giving the submerged lands of the natjion to the states ! Phe issue was whether the U. S gupl‘eme Court, charged with de- qp.mg issues between the states Question to watch now is what|and ending at 12 midnight Saturday, and the Federal Government, the Senate does. The oil lobby is| November 17, 1945, in which meet- should decide the fate of the cub-'strong there too. If the Svnuu-} ings of each of the above-named or- |they chosen, could have found jobs at home, or at| HAPPY BIRTHDAY ® o September 29, 1945 © © Mary Harris James Morrison James Ramsay, Jr. Mrs. W. M. Whitehead Louise Skinner Mus. Carl Carlson Judge William A. Holzheimer Winifred Carter ® o September 30, 1945 o o Mrs. F. M. Kardanoff Angus Foss Terry Don Gallagher Merle George M. W. Whitehead Elvird Berggren Sgt. Henry A. Benson . . . ° o . . . ° 0 . . . o . . 3 . . . Mrs. . ° . ° Seeecesceresorsrncetcece © 8600006 00 e - > - L P | HOROSCOPE I} “The stars incline ) but do not compel” {| SUNDAY, SEPTEMBEF 30 Benefic as) rule today which should be marked by good news re- | garding our armed forces in many! parts of the world. Al who are on'! guard duty in Europe should be for- tunate. HEART AND HOME | Understanding should be clear in most families todal. Harmony among ' individuals of differing views should | prevail under the sway of love. | BUSINESS AFFAIRS | This week should be important in| the world of trade and commerce.! Keener business instinct will be ap-! parent as the early steps in recon-' struction are taken. Uncle Sam will | | realize that self-protection is the | { | first law in human relations. | NATIONAL ISSUES | Churches will be prominent in civic reform movements intended to! cafeguard the young. The stars, seem to promise definite reaction to-' vard old codes of conduct. | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS { Wartime prejudices affecting the Nisei and loyal Orientals will dis-| appear, it is foretold. However, ! {lurking dangers from secret mach- inations of both Nazis and Japa-| nese again are prognosticated. " Persons whose birthdate it is have | the augury of a year of good for-! |tune. Happy readjustments to changing social and economic condi- | | % tions are indicated. | i Children born on this day probably. will be imaginative, intuitive and! talented. They may be impulsive and inclined to neglect what is pr;u:-»"‘ tical for what is entertaining. El i — ! | MONDAY, OCTOBER 1 i | Benefic aspects today govern plans |and encourage optimism regarding‘ |business matters. The stars seem to ;Iuvor individual enterprise. i i HEART AND HOME k | . Women will benefit this Autumn | | from clever devices that relieve do-] |mestic drudgery. Organizations that | |take over the hard household tasks, are to multiply. | | | | BUSINESS AFFAIRS | General prosperity and lavishj |spending will continue through the| Inext three months and will encour- age mild inflation. | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS I Germany is to be the center of experiments in cooperation among' four great powers which will prove | of lasting benefit. Misunderstand- " ings and mistakes are prognosticnted‘ but they will be educational in their | effects. [ Persons whose birthdate it is have | the augury of a year of many novel experiences. Trial and error will} mark certain ventures. ! Children born on this day probab- ly will be remarkably talented. Many may incline to self-indulgence and, all will love comforts and luxuries. (Copyright, 1945) ganizations, each camp is entitled to participate after having shown itself in good standing as to membership and finances, by means of a maxi- mum of 3 delegates, which delegates must also be in good standing and | been regularly elected by their re- i spective local camps. Forms for camp reports and for credentials of delegates are available from the ANB Grand Secretary, Box 81, Ju- neau, Alaska. Business to be discussed and acted upon will include, among such other business as delegates and officers regularly introduced, the following: 1. Reports of Grand Officers and Executive Committee. 2. Financial reports of local| camps and Grand Camp. | 3. Bargaining agency including instruction of business delegates, | NLRB run-off election for cannery workers in 1946, and jointure of ANB - ANS cannery workers votes with that of AFL. 4. Resolutions and orders for the coming year on any appropriate subject within the Constitution and By - Laws, including Citizenship, Fisheries and Aboriginal Claims, Health and Sanitation Conditions in | villages, towns, and canneries, etc. 5. Reports of attorneys and others on legal proceedings. 6. Amendments to ANB Constitu- tion. Notice of arrival of delegates should be made directly to “Local Secretary, Angoon Camps ANB;| ANS, Angoon, Alaska,” not later then November 5, 1945, ‘WILLIAM L. PAUL, JR., Grand Secretary. First publication, Sept. 25, 1945. Last publication, Oct. 5, 1945, ’trcaled; a pet. 8| (e ittt | 20 YEARS AGO i sueine e e et et At i) SEPTEMBER 29, 1925 Appearing before the Coolidge Air Board, which was investigating the Army Air Service, Col. William E. Mitchell said, “If we were required to defend ourselves against an Asiatic Power or combination of Asiatic Powers led by Japan, their line of operations would certainly extend from north of the Kurile Islands to Kamehatka, across Bering Sea to Alaska by the Aleutians and Bering Straits.” Mrs. Eli Tanner and little daughter Louise, who had been on a visit | to Mrs. Tanner’s former home in Finland, returned this day on the steamer Alaska. Louise was to enter her first year in school this week. Frank A. Boyle, local attorney, accompanied W. A. Castleton, mln?ns than of Seattle, to the Chichagoff Development Company’s property, going on the motorship Virginia IV. Wcsthoun&, the steamer Alaska with 16 passenger aboard for Juneau. and Louise Tanner. ‘The Masons and Eastern Sta George making the address of welcome. Weather: Highest, 57; lowest, 34; clear. e et i i e e e 8 S el Daily Lessons in English % 1. corp WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: parents have deserted it. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Realm. one syllable, and not rel-um. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Hippopotamus; three P's DENTIST » SYNONYMS: Relax, loose, loosen, slacken, ease, unbend, divert. 20TH CENTURY BUILDING l.‘ u n N l T u n n WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us Office Phone 469 | i " Phone 788—306 Will increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: Willoughby Ave. INSOLENCE; overbearing demeanor; brutal impudence. ence was his only weapon.” g b VENTIST e % MODERN ETIQUETTE "Roprrra LEE Room 9—Valentine Blds. READY. 70 WEAR = OSSN SIS FHONE 763 Seward Street Near Third | | Q. What are the duties of a person who assists her hostess at a ! tea? e A. She should see that the guests are served, should remove their plates, cups and napkins when they have finished, and try to draw all the guests into conversation. Q. Would it be proper for a young man to ask permission of a girl to call, or should he wait for an invitation? A. He has a perfect right to ask permission. _—— Y Q. Is it all right for a woman to introduce her husband to a social equal as “Mr. Jones”? i s 7 A. It is preferable for the wife to say “my husband,” or merely The Rexau store” H s GRAV'ES i . “aame. Your Reliable Pharmacists in port this day from the south, Included in the passenger list were J. W, Gucker, Robert Wakelin, Mrs. W. E. Nowell, Mrs, E. Tanner s of Juneau were planning a reception the following night for Morton Gregory, Grand Master of the Wash- ington jurisdiction, and Mrs. Gregory, with Worshipful Master Wallis S. ON A FONDLING is one affectionately A FOUNDLING is an infant found after its (unknown) Pronounce relm, E as in ELM, Tll-bred insol- | e 0t e e i e 1. How did Mesopotamia gets its name? 2. From what is mocha flavoring derived? 3. For what does the trigonometrical “e” stand? 4, What famous American football coach was killed in an airplane crash in 1931? . 5. Is a sea-lion a seal? ANSWERS: 1. Mesopotamia, the country between the rivers Tigris and Euphrates named from the Greek “mesos” which means middle, and “potamos”, was which means river. 2. From coffee, or a mixture of coffee and chocolate. Knute Rockne. Yes, long-eared one. 27182818 (the base of the natural system of logarithms). - TRIPLETTE & KRUSE BUILDING CONTRACTORS EXPERT CABINET WORK OF ALL KINDS 20TH CENTURY MARKET BUILDING SHOP PHONE 9% -After 5:00 P. M. PHONE 564 Silver Bow Lodge| MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 41 No.A2,LO.0.F. SECOND and FOURTH @Meets each Tues- | Monday of each month day at 8:00 P. M. I. 0.'O. F. HALL. m:g;h‘?{;fm Visiting Brothers Welcome E. F. CLEMENTS, Wore BEN O. HAVDAHL, Noble. Grand | gnipful Master; JAMES W. LEIV- ERS, Secretary. v : GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS . PHONE 92 or 95 —_——— | Warfields' Drug Stoze (Formerly Guy L. Smith ‘Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CREAM - Meets every Wednesddy at 8 p. m. * Visiting + brothers- welcome. L. J. HOLMQUIST, Exalted Rul- | er; H. L. McDONALBD, Seéretary. o s | The Sewing Basket BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear 139 8. Franklin Juneau, Alaska = — DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST CUT FLOWERS—POTTED nwuomefluummo PLANTS—CORSAGES Funeral Sprays and Wreaths 2nd and Frankim Phone 887 T FLOWERLAND | HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., ASHENBRENNER'S NEW AND USED Dr.A. W. Stewart Dr. John H. Geyer Jones-Stevens Shop ot § e o DA s P e e, T s e e S iy Vs g Lot s A om0 P S A Py [ 0 ] "‘“"9“"‘“'““{3 ¥ ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. Uraduate Los Angeies College of Optometry and Optiialmology Glasses Pitted Lenses Ground “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. i | “The Clothing Man" HOME OF HART SCEAFFNID & MARX CLOTHING BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478 — PHONES — 87! High Quality Foods a¢ Moderate Prices HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” The Charles W. Cartér PIGGLY WIGELY | | For BETTER Groceries Phene 16—24 Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 M. S. LEAVING FOR SKAGWAY AND HAINES TUESDAY—-7A. M. Sailing Date Subject to Change PATRICIA WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER hone 247 Phone JUNEAU - YOUNG | Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunttien - ADOLPH JOHNSON Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "THEY ALL KISSED THE BRIDE" Yederar xax—11c per Per‘sun and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU as a pald-up subscriver 1o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. PHONE 14 — THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! FOR TASTY FOO! and VARIETY * TRY Gastineau Cafe Foremost in Friendliness You'll Find Food Finerand | ‘ Bervice More 'Complete at THE BARANOF | . COFFEE SHOP JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A, BUSINESS COUNSELOR Authorized to Practice Befere INSURANCE Shattuck Aggncy Remington Typewriters Sold and Serviced by Metcalfe Sheet Metal Heating—Airconditioning—Boat Tanks and Stacks — Everything, J. B. Burford & Co. in SHEET METAL DAN’S DELIVERY 3 -104—Phones—105 LIGHT HAULING , " We Keep \ It Dry A " JUNEAU and DOUGLAS - DAILY \ \ , = Phone 711 90 Willoughby Ave. “Qur Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfieq Customers’ 1891—Over Half a Century of Banking—1945 - | The B. M. Behrends .7 OldestBankinAlaska = .~ " COMMERCIAL SAVINGS