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P——— PAGE EIGHT """ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA i MONDAY, JANUARY 28, 1946 T - N . Jui - VB P x 9 3 by Judge Kehoe this morning, af- | garet Maland, “Russian Church”; mentals or practiced slalom and ® ¢ ¢ ¢ @ s e w @ ® © o o s ran urors er uncontested hearings. Decrees i Second, Mr. and Mrs, Al White,|downhill runs. Some time tuns o WEATHER REPORT ¢ i were issued to: ] | Black and White Scotties”; Third, were held. Ad ed class in-|e S. WEATHER BURE. . J 3 . from Helen Mar Blanchard; Violet | WASHINGTON — War bt'cretary‘ v (] cept in the Photographic Di- party of five more polished per- e Ending 6:30 o'Clock: This Mornin . + r'ng e(re M phenson, Skagway, from P L ;:“;bm lPflH son has expressed a | on, no awards or special men- formers half-way up the tricky e e o o . 3 Vern Stephenson; Catherine De s | belief that it will be possible to (RAFIS SHow HERE tions of any kind were made con- Crooks Trail for a couple of runs . ‘A f ‘; Coite, Juneau, from Manuel De Yea”y Drive fo Pay Oper-wm-a the withdrawal of American | cerning the exhibits during the afternoon ey *’""""‘;‘D’M“‘““‘"“' o b 4 Coite, plaintiff awarded custody of . troops from India, Burma and mid- PR 50T All who made it out Sunday were = Munimum, S0 4 . one minor child and $30 montt Bhng Expense Opens | dle east theaters. Patterson declar- | Vre highly-successful Creative >R 3 enthusiastic and came down with|$ At Airport—Maximum, 35; ) support; and Isabel Richman, |F b 0 [ed that it might be possible to dis- | Arts and Crafts exhibit held in the plEN‘I’Y_SWEll ees o6t Oft: the Somirey. sehiedsie| " SNz, 31 . | ! { Hoonah, from Gilbert. Richman, re- Today—BaI en. 7 charge all mien now. 1 HiBEC eS| icottuh Rite Zetllscte the past ahead e WEATHER FORECAST o { ur DIVOf(e De(reeS |S‘ storing plaintiff's maiden nam ° laters prior to the June 30th dead- |!!wee d: ame to an end yester- - —eee . s nity) . 4 Isabel Wesley and awardir her 40th Annual Fireman line day afternoon as scores of last day . 5. 4. V 1 the SITLE i an's % ¢ d by Distri $100 for at v fees and costs 3 ; { visitors brought the total attend- ; sue istrict Court Bull two weeks off, on Saturday eve- BETENA Lo grisie g . e e Clear and cold tonight and e 3 y. REicd ning, Febrary 9, the Juneau Vol- State ‘l)::'\(:]:‘::::r;hc U!n_““d '1‘“»‘ to -colmiga v mduiing SKIERS SUNDAY ® Tuesday, increasing cloudi- ) i Whick r Fire Department today open- = 6§ 1as 0 % COUntTEe N 4 UTICA, W. ¥. — Because of a e ness Tuesday night with e 3 Motions Entered . Whisk Across e ofee-a-rear drive for funds, Send Yepresentatives to the first, °F ‘“E'_”"l ky ”}\‘. J\"“‘“'; Wo- | s €8 growing disregard for traffic lights,| e light snow wzdnes:m- momn- g — ™ : » first Meeting of the Boards of Gover-Man's Club, the exhibit is planned / £ &) ‘plicants for city licenses as taxi x g Fatiire to- N iBrnr" VAT A YU U S Emm pi(lfl( Committees were out for the I'nst viorh | G413 ‘et Werld) Batk ‘da] as annual affair from now on.| TBE best turnout of skiers of the| arplicar i ‘"-“ g5t ; 'LI ; ® ing. Lowest temperature to- @ . i h we ety I Be v ' time today to solicit merchants. Next, 20%8 of the New 1 nd | e brojcct had its beginning lagt SCA%0N Was swooping about Doug- | drivers now must pass a color blind-| 8, night ahd Tuesday night e i residing Distr TO Ag!an-:c ’ e concentration on sale ;«-xfi“h»l»:n“, -‘x;:] TiIe directors. ihe Pr e Sipline W Island’s snow-blanketed meadows 1ness test under a new policy an- e near 20 degrees, highest @ WP S 1 " tiekets b 2],“, 5 jn‘_m."m‘ Kelnd, drtd aho v‘r‘an:. was at- vesterday on one of the hest days mounced by the police department. e Tuyesday near 27 degrees. ® f@llowi I raised in the drive goss to BER! y'r«"v{fl"(';‘lh Georgla, on'Magch | & 8o O O efof visilors: fo. |Of the season. Skiers numbered be- r W i ® Southeast winds 20 mph. e 8. —T A1 pay operating expenses of the Fire n(‘,k“ ~HVIW new institutions into : "“ ‘W : .lr”‘:kvhwn Shis vidr, tween 70 and 80. Holland exported nearly $10,000.- ® Wednesday morning . ents rd Depart Uniforms, equipment,| Working order b i i PO SR Slat riders brushed up on funda- 000 worth of flower bulbs during 1945. ¢ e © @ ¢ & o ¢ & o o » c“nvmr Court business today in- |, i3 % B e lian Ghneral overhead natars . YRGB ded clearing of the motion ¢ ropelled planes streak- &f stmas Day Open| WASHINGTON — The Supreme |, Al ¢XDIPits were ntw this year epdar for civil actions Beach, i House The Firemen also operate Court again, has deferreéd action | L ¢'¢ Were no repeats from a1 3' defendant’s dem Wk & p- and maintain the ball park for the on the appeal of Japanese General| ¢4’ showing. This will hold true mplaint was set fc lock this | o 2 City of Juneau from this fund. | Yamashita from his death sentence | 10" th¢ 1947 exhibit, Woman's Club aternoon in Mrs. Halfdan Moller One pl it 4+ The drive spokesman pointed out for condoning atrocities in the | °lficlals said yesterday. : A <y agtion for divorce 7 13 minutes and 26 nds, that the City itself does not con-| Philippines, The Japanese General| The colorful, and in many cases JFour divorce decrees were signed or 584 miles per hour trit iny funds to the Fire De- challenged the authority of the lSeniously-executed exhibit items T A X C A L E N D A R 4 artment for these purposes and American Military -Commission | ¥¢e being removed by their own- : hat the anmual budget has been met which tried and convicted him. The | ¢S \f;‘)‘” ; “'l"" 5 o'cloek i""“" through public subscription and court heard arguments on the case | “*Y 16y A u.l\_t‘n l,""”" ‘”’,“v'm he benefit dance-in this manner for on January 7th and 8th. Yamashita | '¢Sidents ‘“x‘“ """’”;‘“ A'l“"‘i( s COUI’IESY of : AN : 40 years. “It is the only time the is being held in a Manila prison "¢V tastes for typical Alaskan art, FRESH CANADIAN Fire Department nicks the public— pending the Supreme Court's deci~ | 20d had resulted in multi-fold in- JAMES C COOPEB C P A (3 and for money well spent,” it was sion quiries about ordering copies of 5 ’ # > 7 = ozen ‘, stated i Ay i particular objects shown. 5 d St fi % : Qs inias Lrar the dirice i The exhibit had accomplished o * ! ‘“-“’f"l‘}‘*illifll(‘:";ge‘“*“x‘l‘! LONDON—Russia challenged the | we its two-fold .;\".,,:,.(.' b i an a . she ¢ are dilis Oearge: And validity ~of Ivan's 4 e | + it o7 7 T y S B AT TR T B R RS B G TS e Dilg. Committee heads are: Um,ud’m“m ‘c;u]’,::’}',m&')m:zn ‘(2‘_4)1:\\- the artistic and meritorous JUNEAU Cooper Bldg. ALASKA LARGE TEXAS PINK iments—Waino Hendrickson ' gay after the chief Iranian due.;-“urk of Alaskan craftsmen and to and Percy Reynolds; decorations— gaie pad charged. the, Soviet Gnion | e interest in true Alaskana UARY 3ist—Social Security for last quarter 1945 Barie Hunter, Ellis Reynolds and . Sullty’ df*a number: ofbker Photographic entries were judged due and payable - @r ( Leonard Holmquist. gl g ofiiter- ',y Trevor Davis, Laura Ordway Y 20 4 & 4 Eoliciting (CHNMD 1)L-Earle Huns- | 10 vions Ip Jranian Atia and W. L. Paul, Jr., as follows: i i b bl €T, Lieonard Hobmgtist, Doug Oliver,'{ popppy ' gree s~ p oo " Ly | Photographic ‘eaL placed as Alaska Unemployment contributions for last Gene Kirsten, Spike MacLean; dential cm‘md&date‘ Alf ‘La“don“"r‘);‘rulh,ws: In the advanced portraits quarter 1945 due and payable. Fresh Frozen Pound 49¢ | Con, 2% Jomson. Perer S, Tania e e 1y ison Pt g, toabel - Reynolds, Ed Sweeney, Joe Werner, . (liot, “Dolores”; Second, Fern Eaton, Federal U . R ! { overnmes ving, s ; Federal Unemployment for calendar year 1945 3 Frank Hermann; (Group 3)—Arnot ?nd e ';‘[ e xqmndmg“ Little Man”; Third, Amy Lou 4 POy e 3 5 due o Smwnnnnlss zl/z lh l 19 Hendrickson, Roy Carrigan, John [1s 5 € fij“‘s I‘{‘ givihg away | gjood, “Penny For Your Thoughts.” and payable, may be paid in quarterly installments. . S. dl. Morrison, Walter McKinnon, Roy R::tfgixcaf] told o Kansas Women’s | onorable mention, Don Burrus, é ‘ e et e e [l ThOMAS; Group 4)—Joe Sadler, Her- SO0 EE S Iy mrryg;’h; |“Jean.” Withholding tax for last quarter 1945 due and pa) WHIPPING ';{‘","’d:"g;: fl:;yafi’::g’xds' ‘gxfig financial burden of the world an‘:J Amateur p"]’]'”“;:* E able. Reconcilement for year 1945 due. Last day endrickson, s; : : | James 22, Beall, “Posy” : o Ty its shoulders— ve * . e @ rees rece. » 1945 tax 5)—Minard Mill, Jim Orme, Gearge . U0 s s W o mrilifeR, “Jackle’ . David to give employees receipt for 1945 tax. ! = o es Shaw, Roy Nolan, and Bll Neider- 7 0% (® FI0% CHA0 NG | Wise, “Beauty Salon”; Hohorable ; % ] hauser fe o . PO { Mention, Jim Klein, “Canada Honk- Excise taxes: returns for December 1945 due and | 3 7"*774- MM O T s“p”"“"o‘A‘dvmcm pictorial—First place RegEble, ¥ R I SUNRE P Over Three Million cour oo iobmceo meiess Dorie |00 000G A0 . Al MINIMUM ORDER $2.00 Duke Cromwell almost 14 million goo WEFITh HI0ME ne TE T 1 Information returns: Returns of tax withheld at ; i gt b 8 e dollars today. T i rt re- |, it AR ¥ Y i res & B T a ot i Y MORNING DELIVERY CLOSES .. 10 A. M. Ge’mans Go 'o po"s by bvu any7 1:en:llg’i1ngc°:{,):elf0 Catches Big One”; Third, Bob Hen- source from interest on corporate bonds during last DOUGLAS DELIVERY CLOSES 10 A. M. back up a New Jersey township's |16 “Sweetheart Falls.” quarter »f 1945 due (tax payable June 15). AFTERNOON DELIVERY CLOSES 3P. FRANKFURT, Jan. 28. — The ofror 1o collect that amount in |, Amateur Scenic—First place, J. O. slight right-of-center Christian So- ..o {Rude, “Winter Wonderland”; Sec- cial Union emerged today as the FeE Y, |ond, J. H. Brillhart, “Cradle”; Third DHONE » dominant party in rural areas of popy WORTH, Texas The‘mm-o. E. Thompson, “Twilight ) the U. S. occupation zone of Ger- ..., "of two Rock Island freight | T 8 & A - on the basis of returns from e Amateur Pictorial — First, Mar- L. / 4 : trains at a siding near Bridgeport, = esterday’s .zone-wide election. Tex: has- cost the life of a oofiz More than 3,800,000 Germans o bai: a . § G R L AN SN S i i i Y |(D-Md. demanded in the Senite ] H 000006000000006600080000000000000000606600000046000000044 (0017 thal President Truman ir- | A 3-yea r en IISt m e“t in t h e Regula r Army mediately call a world disarmameht conference to prevent an atomic | am i ar me it nOW entitles American young men to a ployment Practices Bill, the Mary v land Democrat said he doubted that the United Nations acticn for §m LEADS YET ” i went to the polls in the elections, tocior and injured three other limited to communities of less than ' g b 20,000 ons, for rurs council AR rel i g ural councll - yy 4 SHINGTON—Senator Tydirigs | Endorses March of Dimes UNCOVEREDTO | LOST PIONEER. or a Business or Trade School Education Hope today was dormant that | missing Nome pioneer William A, | Oliver may still be found alive. Or- | ganized search for Oliver has non} been resumed since snow: halted the | hunt Saturday after Douglas Island | areas from Fish Creek to the Ready Bullion Mine had been combed. Oliver disappeared from his hotel here Saturday, January 19, after ar- riving from Fairbanks, enroute to the Pioneers’ Home at Sitka. e | GAME CHIEFS HEADE FOR FAIRBANKS MEET Jack O’Connor, Fish and Wildlife Service Game Management Super- visor, flew from here to Ketchikan | Saturday, on his way to the annual Alaska Game Commission meeting, due to open in Fairbanks today. At Ketchikan, O'Connor was to jein national F&WL game head W. E. Crough, Commission Chairman |Earl N. Ohmer of Petersburg and ! Regional F&WL Director Frank W. Hynes to fly to Fairbanks from | Annette Island. | | STEAMER MOVEMENTS Yukon, from the south, bound | west, scheduled to arrive at 9 o'clock | tomorrow morning. ‘Tongass, from the south, scheduled to arrive at 7 a. m. Thursday. Sails | 6 p. m. for Haines, Skagway, Pelican | and Sitka. | Alaska scheduled to sail from Se- attle tomorrow, calling northbound at Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, then to Sitka, Woman's Bay, | Port Williams, returning direct to ! Juneau on the southbound trip. Northern Voyager scheduled to sail from Seattle Thursday. Margaret Shafer scheduled to sail from Seattle Thursday. North Sea scheduled to sail from Seattle February 5. Princess Norah scheduled to sail | | from Vancouver February 5 | By Act of Congress, benefits of the Gl Bill of Rights are open to every qudlified young man who enlists in the new Regular Army before October 6, 1946 Husoreps of thousands of intelligent Since the new peacetime Army will use young men finishing high school have the most modern scientific equipment, been unable to afford a higher education, ~ many technical grades will be open, with 4 Now they. can have it, free. higher pay and rapid advancement. GREATEST EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY PAY PER MONTH—ENLISTED MEN IN HISTORY In Addition to Food, Lodging, Clothes and Modical Care Under the GI Bill of Rights every young MONTHLY man who enlists in the Regular Army Starting 1, RETIREMENT before October 6, 1946, is entitled, after Buce fay IMGOME AFTER discharge, to education or training in the Par =28 Yeues' 30 Yours! school or college of his selection at Gov- Master Sergeantor 1‘;;'; s'"';; l'” ‘;, ernment expense. For a period based on First Sergeant . $138.00 §89.70 $155. ‘Technical Sergeant 114.00 74.10 128.2% the length of his service, the Government Staff Sergeant . 96.00 62.40 108.00 will pay his tuition, up to $500 per ordi- Secgeant . . . 7800 5070 87.75 Y nary school year, plus $65 monthly for Corporal . . . 66.00 4290 7425 N living expenses — $90 if he is married. Private First Class 54.00 3510 60.75 After a 3-year enlistment, for example, he ~ Private . . . . 5000 3250 56.25 may have 48 months of education, with a (a)—Plus 20% Increase for Service Overseas. total of $5120 paid by the Government! ~ (b)—Plus 50% if. Member of Flying Crews. .. . (c)—Plus 5% Increase in Pay for Each 3 Original enlistments are open to men Years of Service. aged 17 to 34, and may be for 114, 2 or 3 years. Get full particulars today at the nearest The Army itself is one of the world’s -+ U. S. Army Recruiting Station, This is best schools. Thorough training in one your opportunity to get the education or more of 200 skills, trades and tech- you want and fit yourself for a success- ¥ nical subjects is open to every soldier. ful career! b President Harry S. Truman (above), in a letter to Basil 0'Con- nor, President of the nal Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, pledged full cooperation in the Foundation's 1946 March of Dimes. President» Truman said: ol _“There can be no slow-down in the fight against disease. Our victories abroad must be followed by a victory on the home front against this common enemy of all mankind. I am certain that no American can fail to respond to such a challenge.” NO, WE CANNOT FAIL THEM NOW So Don't Forget the MARCH OF DIMES DANCE or CARD PARTY SATURDAY NIGHT, FEB. 2ND And We All Can Afford that LITTLE EXTRA for that Child! Space Donated by If you are 17 or over, and mentally and physically fit, you can earn while you SEE THE JOB THROUG learn in the Army. You'll get good pay, qeH food, clothing, quarters and medical care. u s You'll get a 30-day paid furlough each .S. Ar (114 year. If you enlist for 3 years you can BE A choose your branch of service and your GUARDIAN OF VICTORY overseas theater in the Air, Ground or Service Forces, AIR FORCES « GROUND FORCES » SERVICE FORCES ENLIST NOW AT YOUR NEAREST U. S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION ¥ R e g 1 FEDERAL BUILDING onmwmnowmoooommm’;‘fif T ey e | 4 o s 3 JU NEAU, ALASKA '