The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 17, 1939, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

b T f outes, allowing the Allies to shift almost enough Dall » Alaska Empire | o o me sinic w mae w e oo sutera .M aR o | through the American neutrality bill. Transferred: Pubii 'y evening except u y br EM) r'nnwl\(. COMPANY | about 45 ships. RELER 0Y BENDER - - - - - Presidsnt B L IIKTRNARD - - 1 and Business Mubager Becond and M eau, Alaska. Eatered In the Post Office in Even if the unexpected happens hips eplace them -if Allied cargo eets, = Matter. if American vessels are forbidden to in gaps for the Allies in fe” trading areas— e would still be another source of shipping re- the Allies could tap. Neutral coun- ries in Europe have more than six thousand ships, Second Cla unesu forcements t »me of which Britain and France might buy or| harter. The Allied merchant fleet is a bridge of ten % housand Britis] n n and Fre g SURSCRIPY nives | thousand British, British Dominion and French cargo Delivered by carrier In June; d Douglas for §1.25 per montb. | <hips that spans all the oceans. If sea warfare By mall., postage paid, at the following rates g % 5 Ome year, In advance, #1. six months, in advance, $6.00; | takes a vy toll of this shipping, Britain would one month, in advance, F1.25 s probably turn for aid to the 705 Danish vessels, 607 Bubscribers will confer a favor If they w promptly notify - g & the Business Office of any failure or irre ty in the de- | Greek, 1,523 Dutch, 1,987 Norwegian and 1,231 Swed- livery of their papers I tean otor ships Telaphones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, L - and Atk " MEMBEE OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. T 5 The Aasociated Press is e v entitled to the use for ]{]— Vv ]« \(, republication of all news d not otherwise credited in this news unnn-a bemn Adolf Hitler, it appears, has been stung to the NTEED TO BE LARGER | quick by the British propaganda raids. Y FUSLICATEUS His scheme of revenge is announced via Swit- T OBORGE D CLOST, It National Newspaper Represe land. From Berne come reports of a “robot _“‘m'{,‘;,ejf,{)",,"‘"ym Ry i Avkeles, Portland. | ... phileteer’—a balloon, 10 feet in diameter and —_— ———— | cquipped with a clock mechanism designed to drop on, 1011 Mibar SBATTL PRESENTATIVE .—-mzfiu“fifim, propaganda leaflets over the Allied countries at hourly intervals What are they trying to do? Bore each other to death? Too Much 'Ierrl(or\ (Philddelphia Record) Colonel Lindbergh, continuing his new career as a publicist, has written an article for the November issue of Reader’s Digest which will make most men ;ood will unhappy. It is an horrendous screed, partly a tone-poem about aviation (“another Icarus to dominate the sky, and in turn to be dominated | by it") and partly a Jeremiad against “racial de- The Colonel warns that aviation and all me- THE WAR AT SEA chanical progress, while giving man new powers, EUTRRGRRAL L Iso removes him from the soil and thus weakens Just how great a Br 1 ipp him, rendering him a prey to “the infiltration of the German subnm makir erior blood.” 'I‘s)v Colonel’s thesis is that ‘au the a day passing j rpedoing repc ions of the “white g ought to «‘«:)p fighting e, each other and stand firm against “As by which is something mos like to knc . , S : S Lo 7 et = i he means Russia, and thus “guard ourselves against SUOuL. I e saulima et AL tack by foreign armies and dilution by foreign it may very well win the war for Hitler, for E A is entirely dependent upon its shippir This is all very mystical. Certainly the democ- ore vulners 0 a sea de t other racies of Europe are menaced by Stalin’s imperial- nation in Europe ism. That hardly calls for a kiss for Adolf Hitler. Reassuring ir on f the And the business about “European blood” is a con- e cept no scientist of standing would care to expound upon. submarine campaign has been United States good man to listen to on the “The real facts are,” explains the News, “that The Colonel is a the Allies are builc more ships ed subject of aviation. He knows something about it. el mibmstines: ave Bnkine When he departs from that into politics, he begins | e Ioher e At Ciragt BAMA: and to extend himself a little. Finally, when he wanders : b to anthropology, sociology and the psychoses transfer snough tonnege from colenial ¢ : ization, he is beyond his depth and flounder- fastic: routes’ fo e 51 ships displaced ing. It is always a mistake for a good man to take by restrictior law. AlMediiniitas aan officials are confident car be - e starved out unless attacks on t . . iy ars much more intense and effe (-eoumph\;nid_ Dollars Great Britain and France can put three new or Naw Vork imes) transferred ship: Atlantic run for every two The insatiably curious Bureau of Labor Statistics that German submarines or -American neutrality has recently worked out some figures showing what rulings take aw provided sinkings are held to people spend money for in New York and seven recent figures. other cities. They suggest that there is a good The United Stat News ¢ inues in part: deal of variety in our habits. In the two war month: r and October, A New Yorker with $1,500 a year might spend German attacks by sent 271,800 $570 for food for himself and his family. In Denver tons of British and French shipping to the ocean D¢ Wwould spend only 8410, T Cloliing yewid . cosb Woor: ‘Mstil: 56 adds him §102 in New York, $135 in Denver, $138' in Port- land, Ore. Rent would be a little under $450 in But British and F sards have been . Pt i i 7 i New York, a little over $300 in Portland. He would working twice .as fast as th n U-boats. 1IN ghenq more on reading matter in New York than two typical months this summer Britain and France jn columbus, Ohio, or Atlanta, but less than in constructed 591,000 tons of new shipping. Built: ' Chicago, Providence and Denver. If he stayed in about 115 ships, New York he would smoke considerably more than More drastic to the normal British-Frenc i in any other city, but would spend less thian in Co- supply system than the havoc from German tor- lumbus, Omaha,. Denver and Portland on general pedoes are the shipping rictions in the U. 8. re In Portland he would be more than neutrality bill. These re fons sweep 345000 tons nine s likely to buy an automobile as he is of American shipping fror in ’ forbidding after checking through fourteen main fite’ North I lanladen objects of expense, he would have left for "onher 5 ;: items” $10.50 in Columbus, $9 in Denver, $7.50 in 51 ships. Somewhere along their col Britain and France must find sps to the Atlantic to replace the bar £ bill, w Portland, $6 in Atlanta and $4.50 in New York. Perhaps in any city money is fun while it lasts, but the kind of fun varies. If money could talk it would probably observe that this nation has not yet been trade routes ps to divert nerican ves- sels. The new U. S. neutrality its eased completely standardized, except in having a universal sh rictions, makes this a simple task desire for about one-third more income than it actu- ality bill allows Al a ips to | ally earns visit French and British ports in the Pacifie, the AT SR LI South Atlantic and all other oceans in the southern The President of Harvard University says we part of th Thus Allied supply chiefs know must combat the view that every man is just as that when the neutrality law bars 51 erican ships ""“m" &s his neighber. “Quiet, ‘fellows; mayte he out of having to keep up with the s a way from their normal Atlantic and Mediterranean trade with nations 1 at war, all these vessels except £ : NG a few huge passenger lines will go job-hunting in Rome tox has the largest population in its other oceans Dn‘;lhu vessels will almost | history F\nl« ntly Mussolini proposes to keep it all find work on *h empire trade | that we Armless Mother Feeds Her Baby & Mzrs. Ruth Matthews uses her foot and toes at a Safford, Ariz., hospital to feed her born alongside a highway. Mrs. Matthews does her own housework, takes care of her Her husband, who was taking his family to Oklahoma by the hitch-hiking route, ranch near Safiord, H % a Armless ‘rom birth, week-old baby girl, eight other children. has got a job on a THE DAILY AL /\Sl A EMP[RL FRIDAY NOV. |7 re torpedoed faster than Allied shipyards can | | adventuruous '939 %roscope “The stars !nclmo do not oompd" NOVEMBER 17, 1919 Canadian coal men state that Al-| |aska would freeze unless the e“-j | SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18 bargo on shipments is lifted. R. R.|tions and best wi:hu t-day, their Adverse planetary aspects are ac- | Young, manager of the Pacific C‘”‘Sl‘b-l thday anniverzz to the roi-, are also Coal Co, said that enough coal was | lowing: |tive today, but there s 5 MRS e dnt strong beriefic’ flhenoas "M Stne | on hand in JUNEAu¥g fAsk 248 SUELY 3mmnmg class consciousness and avku but coal conditions in other NOVEMBER 17 critical attitude may be strong | pt of Alaska were becoming ser- ‘Walter P. Scott Leroy Huntington |among employees. It is not a favor- | 10US | !able sway for executives. | | Heart and Home: Girls may be| Delegate George B, Grigsby de- | lisappointed in new friends of the | feated an attempt in the House of opposite sex. This is an unfortunate | Representatives to compel the Can- configuration for romance. Young 2dian lines operating between Al- |men will be preoccupied and cauti- 4ska and Eastern American points | ous. In domestic circles there may be | to reduce their freight and passen- lunrest and discontent, due to the |3er rates. | intangible uence of war. Infor- mal hospitalities should be popular Affairs: With Jupiter prosperity for Washing- Edward Jahnke John E. Foote ! Henry L. Satre Adelaide E. Holbrook | Everett Judson Mrs. Robert R. Brown | Elroy Hoffman i Fanny L. Robertson | PSR PP I DAILY LESSONS | | i | A house warming committee of | Knights of Columbus was busy preparing for the dedication and op- | of the new Parochial School | | Business presaging | | ton, trade will bring profit to many | ®Ping | IN ENGLISH 1 American merchants, manufactur- | ®Uilding on Thanksgiving Day. | * | and brokers. Although there 3 | By W. L. Gordon 1 The power boat Morengen had | been dispatched with 30 tons of sup- | plies for the Falcon group of mines | will be restrictions due to war con- ditions a good spirit should prevail | Commerce with South America will greatly increase, although Para- o0 Falcon Bay. Chichagof Island.| wyords Grien Misused: Do not say, | ;uay and Uruguay may sustain a Another shipment was to be made|.rhere is an old adage.” Old is re- | setback. shortly for active work there. | dundant. An adage is a saying which | National Issues: The stars pre- has obtained credit from long use. | |sage new and younger leaders in| Miss Kathleen Boyland was a| often Mispronounced: Carrousel, Washington, and changes in circles SUest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dott o carousel (a merry-go-round). | Iclose to the President. Severe Of Perseverance for a week. | Pronounce kar-oo-zel, a as in at,| accent | torms will damage roads and cause |oo as in book, e as in bell, Dr. P. Kirby of Chichagof was a ereat expense. There will be an | last syllable. earthquake in the West. The seers Suest at the Zynda Hotel and was| often Misspelle. * Elasticity; city. foretell two serious epidemics as tO leave for the south on the Ala-| oy jogity: sity. 4 winte radvances. meda. | Synonyms: Building, house, struc- International Affairs: Australia : ture, edifice. | (and New Zealand are subject to Mr. and Mrs. Charles RINgUNg| worq study: “Use a word three. timulating planetary influences 2nd family were to leave for Seattle tymes and it is yours.” Let us in- ch should help internal condi- 7 the Alameda. The two countries will ren- der brilliant aid to the British war forces. Serious incidents will af- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Immanent; indwelling; inherent.” “It was the divine spirit that he| felt to be immanent in his being.” { [ tions, The Gastineau and Zynda Hotels were rapidly fiiling up with perma- fect the United States and its neu- €Nt tenants for the winter months rality policy. German provocation With many local persons taking ad- will increase at the end of this vantage of avoiding the perplexi- month and the beginning of the ties of coal problems. B 1 < next. [l LOOK and LEARN || | Persons whose birthday it is have, Weather—Highest 45; Lowest 43; l 5 i the augury of a year of anxiety, ‘a1 but prudence will solve many prob- R o R By A. C. Gordon ems. Disputes should be avoided with more than average caution. Children born on this day will be MO DF R N 1. How mang. U, 8. Presidents | and self-willed - and FTI Q U ETTE have been re-elected? guided. 2. Who wrote, “I am monarch ot should be wisel (Copyright, 1939) { all T survey”? = 3 R { By Rabeflq Lee ! 3. From what city in Russia was '———;——-—————1 === ===+ | Napoleon forced to retreat? | HE LP THY b o { 4. How much is a “baker’s doz-‘ Q. When someone telephones a en”? | 5. What river connects the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean? member of the family who is absent, should one ask who it is? NEIGHBOR | Merely ask, “would you care | | | Telephone 713 or write to leave your numbr?” 1. Eleven. | The Alaska Territorial Q. If the bridegroon is also to| 2 William Cowper. | Employment Service have a ring does the bride place it| 3= Moscow. | for this qualified worker. | lon his finger before she gets her| 4 Thirteen |own? | 5. St. Lawrence River. l — { A. No; the bride puts the ring on|™ # ] STENOGRAPHER — Female, age his finger immediately after she has ! 22, single, graduate of high school received her ring from him. F B and business college. Trained in Q. Would a silver platter of fruit of ;Dest /ping, shorthand, and modern of-!be all right as a centerpiece for the SHEAFF[KSPS';"”"Q"CG Use fice machines. Born and raised in dinnertable, on Thanksgiving or i Alaska. Desires chance for exper- Christmas K ‘ ience in office work. Can opepate A. Yes; this would be very appro- switchboard. 'Call for ES 16. priate. 3 W o fraak oty { LI s quickly ‘and does Try an Empire ad. Stitog Empire Want Ads Bring Resulu: lllIllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII|lIIIIIIlllIrllllllll!IIIllIIIIIIIIIII|IIlIIIIllilIHIIII]IIIlIIIIIIIIIII"lllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"|I|||' | ! ELECTRICITY > i i It's ~ Easy to Stay Young Electrically [ ] [ ) ® | Your Tireless Servant No. 1 A General Electric Range Seattle Prices Are Our Prices The GENERAL ELECTRIC RANGE is making ELECTRIC COOKERY more popular than ever. It's simple, fast and economical—See the many values today at the . . . 1_Alaska Eleciric Light & Power Co. rofessional Fruternal Socleting Gastineau Channel L = = B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers welcome. H. C. RED- MAN, Exalted Ruler; M. Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS H. SIDES, Secretary. Blomgren Building PHONE 56 MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and fourth ‘l 2 / Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Templs beginning at 7:30 p. m. CHAS. W. HAWKES- WORTH, Worshipful Master; JAMES W LEIVERS, Secretary. GUY SMITH DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Next Coliseum Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. Judson Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-8 kooms 2-3-4, T-iangle Bldg. PHONE 667 Front Street Dr. John H. Geyer || DENTIST PHONE 97—Free Delivery Room 9—V:. entine Bldg. L SESEPMI AP ESE i PHONE 1762 Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. fr— "Tomorrow's Styles » Today” | DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination {ree. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 9:30 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 177 ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optowmnetry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground Juneau’s Own Store e————————————————————————— "The Rexall Store” Your Relisble Pharmacists Butler-Mauro v f The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson Drug Co. PRESCRIPTIDNS H. S. GRAVES or’romznusz'r < “The Clothing Man” Fromt Dot e Fneue 68 | | | TOME SR Suny somayrwn e T e L T, T e P'll;un“';gf}?}.lop Gastineau Motor OEE A Service roceries Phone 727 — - o ||| EERAL ATTO. REPAIRING = =E = a—0 FINNISH STEAM BATH Your Ailment Calling You Scientific Treatments and Baths Open every day—10 a.m. till mid- night—Dr. E. Malin, Prop. HARRY RACE 142 Willoughby Ave. Phone 673 DRUGGIST AR B “The Squibb i Stores of Alaska” FINE Wlfieh and Jewelry very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN 8. FRANKLIN STREET “The Store for Men” SABIN’S Front St—Triangle Bldg. L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” GASTINEAU CAFE Juneau Melody House Music and Electric Appliances (Next Irving’s Market) Front Street Pheue €5 LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES e = Weather Stripping SOLD and INSTALLED by LOCAL DEALER FREE ESTIMATES Krafft’s Mnfg. & Building Co., Ine. CABINET WORK—GLABS Victor Powers PHONE 63 Phone 123 TELEPHONE—5I COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100,000 29, PAID ON SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES PHONE 616 AR First National Bank JUNEAU—ALASKA

Other pages from this issue: