Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1945 — Page 6

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ADULT EDUCATION * SOCIETY PLANNED iow.

meeting to organize an Indiana

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at 10 a. m. Saturday, Dec. 8.

[addi tion in g Age.’ £ A luncheon at the Athletic club will RUG ED

sail POCAHONTAS TO MEET state association for adult education] Alfarata council 5, Degree of Pocawill _be held at Central Y. M. C. A. hontas, will rieet at 7:30 p. m. Friday in Red Men's hall, North st and Dr, Cyril O. Houle of the Uni-|Capitol ave, for nomination of

versity of Chicago will talk onofficers.

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KENTUCKY ROCK ASPHALT is the perfect preservative for our modern streets and highways. With the ever increasing amount of heavy trafic and Indiana’s abnormal precipitation, it was very necessary

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Pay Is High, Opportunity Plentiful but Only Those With Capacity and Grubstake Are Wanted.

By ROPERT C. ELLIOTT © Seripps- Stall Writer JUNEAU, Alaska, Nov. 28.—Tens of thousands of veterans and former war workers are steamed up about settling in Alaska. Most of them can’t make the grade. ' . Not that there aren't opportunities for jobs; Swiil~businesses and industries, and even fortunes in this “last frongier.” But some of the highest wages in America are offset by the equally high cost of living. It's a rugged life, where success } goes to the jack-of-all-trade, the|business in spruce just for local

hardy, sports-loving, air-minded trade. If you want information on man of out-of-doors, and the risk- your chances in Alaska write to: taker Division of Territories and Insu-

lar Possessions, Department of InAlaska can’t take the Influx of terior washington, D. C. settlers as fast as they want to come| chambers of Commerce of Fair—and most Americans can't take pangs Anchorage, Juneau, Ketchi- | Alaska. kan, Nome or other town. in which Bring at’ Least $2500 you are interested. eZ Alaskans — from Gov. Ernest| Alaska Development Board,

NEEDED IN ALASKA

from Broad Ripple, directed by W. Owen Beckley. : .

secrefary-treasurer; and Marshall Howenstein, West Lafayette, Miss Thelma Sines, Logansport, and Mr. Owen Beckley, Indianapolis, board members,

REVERSE CAMOUFLAGE WASHINGTON, D. C.—When the war is over camouflage in reverse will be used t60 make factory and other roofs conspicious and attrac-

Gruening ‘to laborers — agree on Juneau. these rules: " 1. Stay out of Alaska until you've

a half years of his sentence, began {the work Dec. 28, 1043. It was completed Aug. 24, 1944, and bound

COUPLE INSPIRATION.

FOR ‘OH,’ JOHNNY, OH’ AKRON, 0. (U. P..—Most folks are familiar with the :song, “Oh, Johnny, Oh,” but here's a little ingjde dope on its origin. Mr. and Mrs. John Hansen of Akron began going around together when they were attending an Indiana college.

that one of their classmates, Ed Rose, wrote the song about them

They were so obviously in love ||

tive to the airplane-traveling public.

got a job or a definite idea of a

feasible enterprise. 2. Bring at least $2500 to get , started, and come in the summer. 3. Have a skill or business talent ¢ |adaptable to the Far North. Prefe erably be ready to put your. hand $ [to many kinds of occupations. | There were 35,000 whites in all | Alaska before the war. Goyernor | Gruening predicts 60,000 will be located here in early post-war years. Fairbanks pays automobile mechanics $1.78 an hour; short-order cooks, $2.19; men general clerks, $1.13; women grocery clerks, $1.05; bus drivers, $350 to $400 a month.| [i Butchers in three Alaskan cities get| J $1.40 to $1.50 an hour, 2 Need Building Workers

Building craftsmen will be in good

Anchorage, grown to 12,000 people, talks of paying as much as $1.50 an hour for common ldbor, $3.50 for carpenters and 87 to $8 a day or more for waitresses, laundresses and

dishwashers. But the catch is the sky-high i rices, and then that will get higher f the U. 8. Maritime commission] orders an increase in Alaskan ship

rates. : i Fairbanks charges 50 cents for a hamburger, 35 cents for a 15cent can of beans, $1.25 a dozen for oranges, $1.50 for a short taxi ride, + ~1$1.25 for a head of cabbage. . So every working man is urged to come to Alaska with a grube stake. He may need to work at many trades and round out a living ® by trapping or fishing or working {in mines or canneries. '* Fliers Are Needed Aviation pilots and mechanics {have great opportunities in aire {minded Alaska. Bush pilots hop jeverywhiere, supplying mines, traps pers, hunters and fisheries. Many {war fliers will seftle in Alaska. But (they are cautioned to try it first, {hire out to one of the many little | airlines, until they learn the rigor={ ous game, | Farming and cattle raising offer | opportunities. | Mata nuska colony, President | Roosevelt's. project to resettle 200 families from drought-stricken sareas, is flourishing, though only | 57 families are left out of those who left San Francisco in 1935, - Some cleaned up by selling, but many proved misfits. Present owners are doing well. some clearing more than $10,000 a yeer and rapidly paying off debts. They grew cabbages and some other vegetables to phenomenal size, ané -|got high prices, Leather work; fyr farming and » | trapping opportunities abound. - A| . \ 800d trapper can, earn £3000. up.intoc pene er winter months. . 1 . Tourist Industry The fishing industry has hardly been touched, except for the valuable output of on, halibut and * , | herring, . . . * | Furnjture-makers can do a good

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