The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 7, 1939, Page 2

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rl}/dwfl to Fields where People Live, Work & Achieve rl:)day there are about 1,000,000 cigar stores, drug stofes, countryand grocery stores Where you ¢an buy cigarettes in the United States. These re- tailers, and the jobbers who serve them, have built up a service of courtesy and convenience unmatched by any other coo opens THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 7, 1939. Doors | NEW COCKTAIL IS USED TO INDUCE TWILIGHT SLEEP PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 7=A new way. of starting twilight sleep with | containing ‘ a port wine paraldehyde was reported to the American College of Surgeons at a symposium on reducing the pain of childbirth, The symposium indicated that twilight sleep, in three main forms is coming into general use in the United States after year of con- troversy. Exceptions when it can- not-be used were noted. The first form of twilight slec which started in Germany scopolamine and morphine and gaye the method its popular name is still in use in this country. The second method uses barbiturates such, as amytals or nembutal the third employs paraldehyde. Cocktail Mixture The new paraldehyde cocktai cocktail p. with and Britain’s Sea industry catering to the American public’s pleasure. THERE ARE ANOTHER MILLION people who are engaged directly or indirectly in the transportation of cigarettes to every town, hamlet and crossroads. IT IS ESTIMATED that there are 1,602,000 tobacco farmers raising tobacco in 20 out of the 48 states. Good tobacco is oné of the hardest crops to raise and bring to market, requiring great skill and patience from seed-bed planting to harvesting and cur- ing. The modern tobacco farmer has done well the job of constantly improving the quality of his product. THE AVERAGE LENGTH of service of the 13,230 people working in the Chesterfield factories, storage houses, leaf-handling and redrying plants is over 10 years. This means that every step in the making of Chesterfields, regardless of how small, is handled by peo- ple who have had 10 years®of experience and ability in knowing their jobs. TRULY TOBACCO OPENS DOORS to fields where people live, work andachieve,and Chesterfield takespride in its ever increasing part in this great industry that is devoted entirely to the pleasure of the American public, TO SMOKERS, Chesterfield Cigarettes have always said, and now repeat, thatinno other cigarette made can you find the same degree of real mildness and good taste, or the same high quality of properly cured and aged tobaccos. Chesterfield Cigarettes are made with one purpose only . . . to give smokers everywhere the MILDER, BETTER-TASTING SMOKING PLEA- SURE they want. You can’t buy a better cigarette. MAKE YOUR N Copyright 1939, Licaerr & Myms Tosacco Co. WOOLWORTH'S | BUMLDING JOB J. B. Warrack Construction Com- pany, well known here, has receiv- ed one of the nicest building plums in Beattle in a long time, it was revealed here today. ‘Warrack received the bid for con- struction of a $750,000 unit of the . . W. Woolworth system in Seat- ° tle, which unit will be the largest in the Woolworth chain ‘The building will bé a three story concrete affair to rise on the south- east corner of Third and Pike in Beattle. EARLING FLYING SOUTH WITH PAA Roy B. Earling, General Manager of the Pairbanks Exploration Com- pany workings out of Fairbanks, was | to arrive In Juneau by PAA plane| this afternoon from Fairbanks. EXT PACK %fi,{_‘ sponse to receipt of word from Ta- coma that his mother passed away Saturday. He will probably fly from here to catch the southbound Alaska. TED KEATON IS A ST. ANN'S HOSPITAL Ted Keaton, electrician at the| Alaska Juneau, is at St. Ann’s Hos- pital today receiving medical care following an electrical shock re- ceived last night while on shift. The accident occurred about 7:30 | o'clock in the evening and Kea-| ton was taken to the hospital suf- fering from shock and bruises about the shoulder. His condition | today is reported to be good. BILL PEEL FLIES IN FROM ATLINTO VISIT IN JUNEAU William Peel, formerly on the Coast (Guarq cutter Tallapoosa here, who resigned to go into the CHESTERFIELD | of CAA work, wes to Hiave left Cor- Smith, returned to Juneau last night, flying in with AAT punt| Shell Simmons. Peel, a guest at the Gestineau Hotel, says he will “stick around” for a while and meet old friends before returning to Atlis. Mrs. Jack Hayes IsBack in Juneau EIRSRtasarases Returning from a month’s busi- ness and pleasure trip, Mrs. Jack' Hayes of the Hayes Shop, returned on the steamer North Coast. During her sojourn in the States, Mrs. Hayes: visited with her son in | San Francisco, and spent some time ‘with her daughter in Seattle. e~ CAA MAN DUE Marshall ; Alaska director dova this morning by CAA plane to fly to Juneau in cohneetion with Civil Aeronauties Authority work. el The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale: $1.00. MGty Earling is hurrying south m re-| Atlin country mining with Sandy Reason for Britain’s claim to control of the seas is given résting off England’s southern coast. the battieships. Although loeation was deleted by L ondon censors, the bay is befieved to be Portsmouth. Mechanized Units to Froni; Y E ima s poised Anticipating an attack by an estimated 1,500,000 Germans poi medn.l:xhd units to augment French army equipment at the front in an effort to halt the huge drive. British mediam weight tanks are pictured above in Instead of leading a charge of infantry, positions. NAVIGATOR: After choosing career at 18, Erich Raeder earned an of- ficer's rating in three years. He later be- aiser's yacht, came navigator of the K By The AP Feature Service Grand Admiral Erich Raeder, vet- eran of World War sea battles at Dogger Bank and Jutland, has spent 45 of his 63 years in the German navy. But up until two years ago at least he didn’c have a gray hair in his head. How gray helll grow in Ger- many'’s second struggle against the world’s Number One naval power remains to be seen. But it's certain that the serious-faced chief of the Germany navy knows what he’s up against, for he recently told a Ger- many youth meeting: “There is no doubt that a strong fleet, offensively directed, decisively influences war. . . . Every war with a sea power, moreover, will be de- cided on the seas.” And besides he's had more than reported by Dr. Howard F. Kane of George Washington Uni- versity the closing session of he eonvention Paraldehyde b more y than the hottest pep a fact which has made it difficult to give oy mouth. Yet that is the quicke ay to get effects—about ten mi ites being required to produce siness. The port wine mixture, Dr. olves the problem. The gulped in three fast swallows ater for a chaser. ldehyde is a form of alcohol, 1y related chemically to drink- alcohol, Its w for twilight after originating in Boston, rted in Washington five ago. Sinee then it has been 6,000 mothers was at severe- Ka cock ing | sleep | was | year ed that about in alonc. city Occasional Danger » trouble with twilight sleep, mposium contended, is occa- danger to mothers and babies, particularly in delay in tarting breathing. Dr. Kane de lared paraldehyde is the safest of T the sional Might Concentrated Off Coas an unusual role on i a naval VETERAN |a taste of the British fleet in ac- | tion. No “desk admiral,” he helped bombard the British coast in 1914 | He rode the North Sea as chief of staff to Admiral von Hipper, whose famous battle-cruiser squadron led the Kaiser's navy into the battle of Jutland. Nine scuttled years after the Germans their World War fleet at [a. He said only one death of a mother has been reported in which paraldehyde was a contributing factor. | Dr hyde about Kane said that with paralde- sercent of the moth- ers N had no recollection | of pain, - although they recalied some event ¥ - Charles Hookers End Vacation Trip ! Following a vacation trip of sev- | eral weeks, Mr. and Mrs. Charles | Hocker returned to Juneau aboard U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE "WEATHER (By the U. S, Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Nov. 7: | Fair, continued cool tonight, Wednesday increasing cloudiness; mod- | erate northerly winds; minimum temperature tonight about 26 de- grees. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Fair and continued cool tonight; Wednesday increasing cloudiness, except over extreme southern por- tion the weather will be cloudy with showers tonight, Wednesday cloudy; moderate to fresh northerly winds over the northern portion, | except strong over Lynn Canal; and moderate to fresh easterly winds over the southern portion. | Forecasi or wincs along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Winds near Dixon-Entrange will be fresh to strong easterly and northeasterly tonight, becoming moderate to fresh southerly Wed- nesday; winds along the southeastern coast to Cape Hinchinbrook, this air photo of a portion ¢f the British fleet Note how th e destroyers and smaller warships act as a screen for Nazi Pus to strike in the west, Britain is rushing they are shown pouring shells in direction of advanced German ¢ In the World war, at the Bat- tle of Jutland, the cruiser Luetzow was shot out from under Raeder. He and others es- caped on the destrover Moltke. | the North Coast. The Hookers vi |ited in the East and spent some | time along coast | -> oo erly, increasing Wednesday. rime 3:30 pm. yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon today 30.13 30.02 29.84 40 32 39 i ROMIGS SOUTH Dr. and Mrs. Robert Romig, wel known pioneer residents of Anchos age, and their son, Dr. Howard Ro- mig, are southbound passengers on | the steamer Alaska, visiting briefly | with their many friends in Juneau. Max. tempt. ]‘ Station last 24 hours Anchorage e Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks St. Paul Duteh Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Seattle Portland San_ Franeisco 58 8 Lowest temp. fresh easterly; and, from Cape Hinchinbrook to Kodiak fresh north- LOCAL DATA Barometer Tempd. Humidity winu Velocity Weather Lt. Drizzle Clear Pt. Cldy 86 93 59 S Calm NW 4 0 y 4 RADIO REPORTS TODAY 8:30am. = Precip. temp. 24 hours 29 1 21 3:3Ca.m Weathar Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Ut. Cidy Clear 83 56 WEATHER SYNOPSIS A trough of low pressure extended this morning from the south- ern portion of Southeast Alaska westward across the gulf of Alaska to a severe disturbance centered over the Aleutians near Atka with the lowest reported pressure at of high pressure extended from a high pressure center located 156 degrees. Over the Interior has continued while colder and sections of Southeast Alaska. rise, | | Nov. 8-—Su «Juneau, NO SECRET SERVICE KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Nev. 71— There won't be mucn mysticism about the mystic rites of Greek let- ter sororities at the University of Tennessee unless the girls find more private quarters for holding initia- tions. The rooms assigned to them at the dormitory for their ceremon- jes, they have complained, permit no secrecy. h Ex pect:zd D ZIBIO CHIMNEY IS AFLAME ONCE MORE Soot fire for the second time at the same residence in a few weeks today called the Juneau Fire De- partment to the home of Alex Zibio at 315 Gold Street. Damage, as be- fore, was slight. .- - FROM NIZINA ithe center 29.12 the coast of California westward An extensive area to at latitude 38 degrees and longitude of clearing weather 31 am.; Charles Kraemer, well known Ni- zini country placer man, is a south- bcund passenger on the Alaska go- ing below for the winter. T R } DIESEL MEN HERE | Cummins diesel = representatives H. F. Schaub and A. E. Young are back in Juneau again, guests at the | Barancf Hotel. ! S e REVENUE MAN Price, Internal Miles Agent, ward trip on the Alaska and back at the Gastineau Hotel. il U7 0 S Try an Empire ad. Revenue is their arrival in the battle zone. | [ | ADVISER: Although he has no pol background or ambition, he has reported- ly become one of Hitler's closest ad- vieare. Hitler made him a Grand Admiral came back from a West- | Alaska clear and cold weather overspread most sunset, 3:56 p.m “Hypnotized” Peggy Ann Kent Declaring she had been under the “hypnotic influence” of Dr. William Smith for ten years and that she didn’t know what she was signing when she rrut her name on a $8,500 note, thrice-married Peggy Ann Kent requested in New York Su- preme Court that the Manhattan drug manufacturer be ordered to show cause why a judgment for $8,777.25 should not be vacated. e Empire Want Aas Briag Results. Raeder Looks Young for 63 Last April the Fuehrer crowned Raeder’s career with the ftitle Grand Admiral, comparable to a He holds an honorary doctor’s de- Field Marshal in the army, a dis- gree for his two-volume “Cruiser tinction held before him by few Warfare in Foreign Waters,” part | others in German history. Among of an official German World War |them was the Kaiser himself, and |history. The book recounts exploits famed Admiral von Tirpitz, builder of the famed commerce raider Em- of Germany’s pre-1914 fleet and den and other raiders that sank author of the last World War's sub- | thousands of tons of allied shipping. marine campaign. Some reports say Germany's pocket autharity. whieh Raeder is an acknowledzed smiles little in- public, makes few speeches, looks serious and de- termined. Nevertheless those who know him say he’s warm, fwiendly, with a keen sense of humor. The son of a government offi- cial, he was born almost in sight of the sea at Hamburg. About 5 feet 9, stocky, clean- shaven, with dark brown hair, he always wears a winged collar with Scapa Flow in 1819, Raeder won his admiral’s stripes and rose to the Commander-in-Chiefs’ job in the German'navy. From there this old-line naval officer without po- litical background or ambition has been drawn into high German councils, = wrn wii propably | adit for fathering Ger- | many's three 10,000-tcn pocket | battleships finished under his Te- | gime. Light and fast these “pan- | zer” (armored ) ships are ideally l.xuxlcd to commerce raiding, on| | battleship Admiral Scheer is now roaming the southern seas trying to repeat those exploits. But despite his big navy name,] Raeder has never captured mass imagination in Germany like ma-| Enlarged. Now On Sale; SL08. jor political figures such as Goer- ET e ing, Ribbentrop and others. He| Try an Empire ad. his navy blue dress uniform. Raeder is married, has a son in his teens and a married daughter. ——-e—— The Book ALASKA, Revised and

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