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TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1947 e e o —— o e el e A R A B e R i SR Junegu City Basketvall L tenight ot in the roau High will will eteran backethall Frank Lutin victory - for t. The in the to rets 58 to Lea~ue game. Lubin 's scoring with 16 one less than s ncan of De Paul round Peter in the Peters Lizht hea ron last nig San Francisc got the ju feree's to over Willie weighed Pete: ars San Fra ring. d but not ke a split do Brown. Brown 183 to 172 co box: the out- Both Heavyweizht champion Joe Louis is scheduled to fly to M today from Los Angeles. take on Arturo Godoy I in an exhiviticn kout in the ican capital. The Vanccuver, B. C., Commission has Hft sion impoced last Leavyweizht Billy Spokane fighter ter the commizsion vestigations cof rcports ti send was involved in two touts in Vancouser, Townsend was disclcsures that ponents in two rec keen ewitched ncuncament L2ing madz to the fan Townsend told tka commiss did not recegnize his oppon: a Vancouver fight Decem the same man he had kr three days befere in Portland. In Vancouver the man was billed as Ace Carter, while in Portland he frontier - - BODLEMAMEDTO WASHINGTO! White House it Trun Atte to represent Council Biddle ant, former Amba. e John G. Win- to London, an of the National Wage 30. The Board is work next month The Biddle nomination probably will go to the Senate tcmorrow. He itly served ited State ber of which tried the Nazi war - e the TiDE TABLE JANUARY 29 tide 0:12 am., 28 ft. tide 6 ) ft. e 13:0 9 ft 2 19:05 pim., 125 it. Low High Low High ©00806200e ° o 0 % 0 v v = - oo AT BARANOF BRIGGS Phillip G. Briggs, pres Manager Charley Grimm says his| the Briggs Steamship Company, Chicago Cubs will be tough to heat rived in Juneau Saturday and re- this year. Grimm voiced this bzlief gistered as a guest at the Baranof 78 2 JERRILLAS DAN onal mmander ¢ an American MeDC that belic in the ban cdged in a crack a second {1 First Naticr en k at his five-week-old son, David the Ame \al lep of their trip from Australia. AF ling for Thoto) CE IN GREECE — G THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA |acond Division, 15 each in B M R o l l M E Nl’ l szm and Fourth Divisions 13 D! The bill also provides for | apreintment judges in missioner who will reside and main- | EOUNDING UPWARD to nine In the the First Division, seven in the four districi a chief com- the of by Alaska { tain an office in Alaska to inspect of Education Ryan Is- sues Annual Report "Territorial Commissioner | Enrollment in the 21 city schools |in Alaska during the hool year 1945-46 was 6546 an increase 748 | pupils since the previous hool | vear, according to a report just | issued by Dr. James C. Ryan, Ter- ritorial Commisstoner of Education | The report covers the school bien- t nium which ended cn June 30, 1946 City school enrollment has in- creased more than 50 percent in | the Territory during the past 10 years, the report shows. The en- rcilment was only 4,187 in the scheol 1636-37 | Rural school enrollment, on ine | other hand, had taken a sharp drop { during the same period, from 2121 lin 1036-37 to 1,504 in 1945-46. ! The cost of operating the 21 city | schocls last year was $982,300.56, vr | $101,79 per pupil. Of this total ex- | penditure, 63.056 percent, or $619,- 1 347.27 was refunded by the Terri- | tory to the various cities. ! Per pupil cost in the !:cl'.m on an average daily tendance basis, ran considerably higher than in the city schools and amounted to $245.41. The largest city school system in Alaska is at Anchorage, which had a total enrcllment of 1,453 and an average daily attendance of 1115 last year. Anchorage also had by far the largest investment in school property, the viuaticn being given as $709,650. | Local School Sysiem » Juneau schocl system, with enrclliaent of 879 and average daily attendance ot just under 700, had total expenditures of $120,656.- 87, of which 57.60 percent was re- funded by the Territory. The per pupil t of running the hools here $172.36. | In addition to a number of tables showing costs of education in var- ious schools throughout the Terri- | tory, both city and rural, Dr. Ryan’'s ‘report shows that the cost of transporting pupils to schools from cutlying places averages $76.23 per pupil so transported each year and runs to as much as $336.47 per pu- pil at scme places. In addition, the repori summar- izes the work of the Department oy Education, and the activities of the Territorial Board of Education dur- ing the biennfum, includes & section by Dorothy Holverson, Education Superviscr, on the program cof stu- dies in the Alaska schools, and re- p s on the Teachers' Retirement System. year rural Macedonian n Greece. Deputy er at the left carries after the dance. LEGAL PROTECTION , FOR ESKiNCS, ALSO reck guerrillas dance in chalan in north The underground f Greek Army post shortly raid from Mt > MINIMUM SALARY IS PROPOSED FOR CCMMISSIONERS t said “re-i > Governor of the Secretary of N ated that t iving in are private at- object of which some ve sought prop- cent r¢ Al 2 and A minimum salary of $200 a month would be paid to at least 46 United &t Commissioners in Alaska under the provisions of an enabling bill recently introduced by Delegate Bartlett designed to strengthen the pres:nt )nad:quav.e' fez schedule for commissioners. At the present time, compensa- tion for commissioners is derived g ) o e1q. from fess collected in the perform- :“:f:""s"() s f%‘v)m the ”"d"“;"im";afl ance of their duties as justices of P “.‘1.1;' and e < ’ '|the peace, recorders, coroners, pro- 4 s thak kate judges and notaries pukblic, and taken o is wholly inadequate for the cost of living and out of proportion to are not aned with duties performed. csecution for exercising these or Dzlegale Bartlelt's measire pEgs t corded vides that a commissioner retain ¥ other rights accorded them by Federdl 1amw |all fees he receives up to $1250 AR ST jevery quarter, and if a commis- nerally from access t ave been the nes under scrupulous neighbors h separat2 them from t ion: call to “statutes ch ex- tend to Alaskan natives varicus special res redericl an tennis {eam arrived in Helding MRS. M'CORMICK BACK ON JOB, ARC QUARTERS Back on the job at fice of| g American Red C ted: john MeCormick, Exect Juneau C She has been ill for the past se days. sioner's fees total less than $200 a 1(ees $1250 in one quarter of the| year he shall receive that amount| jon will hold its regular weekly a year for some commissioners. > weoeting at 7:30 o'cleck this eve- Commissioners receiving the mini- month, the difference will be paid {to him from Treasury funds. If HSHERME" MEH» lany one commissioner collects in AT 7:30 [o"lehll‘n the cther three quarters should jthe feas collected fall below $1250, | au Deep: Fishermen's Un-|thus providing a maximum of $5,000 ning in the Union hall Refresh- mum compensation of $200 per| ents will be served. e —— S — -+ of hi fded in years > pr offices of the various commis- ners and report to the judges »f commissioner at the time pointment, must have re- Alaska for at least two have been admitted to Ice of law in the courts Everything in Sporting Goeds PAGE THREE of the Territory and Lave practic- ed law in Alaska for at least one year. - Mr. and Mrs, Ken L. Wood, Civil ronaudcs employees at Yakutat, have arrived in Juneau and are at gest Furriers” 3USINESS RATIONS BINOCULARS FIELD GLASSES BAROMETERS THERMOMETERS TELESCOPE SIGHTS SPOTTING SCOPES YOU'LL BE MONEY AHEAD IN AN ARMY JOB! An average civil- ian in an American manufacturing job gets $191 a month. Pretty goed pay — but how much does he have left to spend or save? With rent to pay, food and clothing to buy, transportation, income tax and doctors’ and dentists’ bills, he’s lucky to end the month with §25 clear. The Army Private doesn’t pay for any of those items. Out of his $75 a month he Las niooe money left than the u civilian worker. And that's a newly enlisted Private, with every chance for promotion and higher pay ahead of him. There's addi- tional pay, too, for overseas duty, and for paratroopers, fly- ing and glider crews, The Army man also gets Re- tirement Credits —at no cost —~enabling him to retire at half pay after 20 years, and on up to three-quarters pay after 30 years' service, Such a retire. ment plan would cost a civils ian between $75 and $100 & month for 30 years. Find out about all the other Army job benefits at your U. 8, Army Recruiting Station, o . Army PROFESSION NOW BINE YOUR KECULAR ARMY SERVCS THE NATION AND MANKIND IN WAR AND PEAGE Keeruiling Officer Lt. FRANK FEDERAL BLDG. The Triangle Cleaners Save your time ~by using ours to be NEAT--CLEAN and WELL PRESSED WE NOW HAVE 48-HOUR SERVICE JUST CALL g with Mrs. Grimm at Hotel. THEY'RE HOUSE HUNTING, T O O — These 8-weeks-old puppies have been living at the Humane Society's animal shelt Kalamazoo, Mich., _whilc t.!}gy_!mk for a new home. Left to right: Sicepy, Dopey, Doc, Grumpy, Sneezy and Happy. CHRISTIAN SERVICE MEETS TOMORROW The evening ci men’s Society of Chr will meet , tomorrow c'clock. The meeting will be held at the parsonase. Mrvs. Florence Phelps is in charge of the program, and Mrs. Susan M. Kennedy is + hostess. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to visitors. . i NG TOWNSERD (LUB MEETING ON TONIGHT 4 present weather ng, it is announced that s weekly meeting of the nd Club has been postponed. | The next meeting will bz cn Tues- ) day, February 4. night Roden’s “ALASKA MINING LAWS” Covering Lode, Placer, Oil and Coal Locations " Water Rights, Mill Sites and Tunnels With Forms and Expfia_fions ... Easy for the Prospector fo Understand Written o Assist the Miner and Prospector ; PR‘CE $l 00 SEND MONEY ORDER TO BOX 1981 JUNEAU, ALASKA