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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB. 6. 1940. 'fiEUHOiE: \/ : U. S. HOldS Nazi f"or Brita{in " v. s. DEPARTM OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU ‘ A (s , BOMBS THE WEATHER NEXT SPRING MAY BRING SHOWERS OF 4 (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) B EH (lnis A Ly; BUI! Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at’ 3:30 pm.. Feb. 6 oA e SEENT Clear tonig Wednesday; slightly colder tonight; gentle vari- able ight about N e - o Clear toni and Wednesday Slightly north portion tonight Gentle to moderate northerly wind . Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. tions are for incre i Wednesday over the s I t [ { \ of Gulf. Winds fr n Entrance to Kodiak will be £ ; to fresh east to northeasterly : | LOCAL DATA Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather Time Barometer ‘lemp, 3:30 p.m. yest'y 42 NE 14 Clear ; 3:30 am. today 38 4 ENE 12 Clear Noon today 45 43 w 3 Cles RADIO REPORTS | TODAY | Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30a. 1 Station temp temp 24hours Weat! | Anchorage 29 | 10 1 0 3 | Barrow | -10 -9 0 b Rotde 4 ) 0 5 Bethel 12 0 i 3 ¥ X ‘113: Fz:g';;::fii'"lgll from ‘:9 Dusseldorf, German steamer captured by Fairbanks 20 0 - \: g 3 L+ Bri ans von ig i, " D) 5 WAVES OF BOMBERS may help decide the war. These are British shins on dawn natrol. o shown (left) ’:},lking toh ,';f,f,':,:',“’},ffi';dé‘;,’,‘,’.‘);e;‘f;’;';i‘:i’ri":::'fif': ! ;L P‘f‘l”l’ o 2;: ‘]"" ' g ; . 2 % ] LTy & vhere he is a prisoner of the United States Army. He will be turned Klrl)!l(if:k} o :;7‘ 0 Many signs point to the prop- aircraft were only wxiliary wea-, protection against defending pur- aver to the British as @ war prisoner, Saatiova 30 0 1 ability of an Allied-German |PODS, With indifferent effectivencss. 'suits y ! | Juneau 3 Trace 3 “war in earnest” in the Spring. In, e, whole, ot thas War 09l auy, Germany and, possibly, f Sitka 0 4 The cha ter of modern land 1.400 ;)l'l.(‘vx)~v‘\r~2 their es in Eng- Bar ndversai‘ie_s are constructing o s | i “° Clouy and sea warfare is well estab- from Zeppelin airplane (ol motored, 1ong-ranige bombers sk | i & lished. That of air warfare is to reach objectives more than 1,000 Portland | 56 2.60 still in flux. The AP'S Aviation Teday, air force ‘,: bomb- miles from ’the?‘ home l;ases.b i San Francisco .. 61 | 54 02 C itor here discusses what a ing planes, compars metlon The aim of all warfare is to breal Ca ol f:a‘tz- scale war in the air would with battleships and po 4 an enemy's will to Tesist, and to WEATH. YNOPSIS be like. striking power far beyond that of pe a5 economical as possible of blood The ' disturbance that had/ b advancing northeastward into the lumbering bombers of 1918, 4nd money in the process. the Gulf of Alaska Monday seems to have recurved. and appears By DEON FRANCIS and of swarms of smaller craft! “one school of 'thought contendsf . va Anein to be moving southeasterly this morning with the center of the dis- AP Aviation Editor which, like those on the sea, have that to defend on land and attack | g\/ii % B E turbance located ak 100 miles off th st, of Q Charlotc e o Feb. €-.The qre- | SUPPEIUERS missions in the ajr i§ the quickest avenue Housq Ap_p[opf]qrh,ons Island, with a trough of low pres nding southws to th D (Am‘ i e Boiking A wholly new type of warplane, to a Ima'l deplsi?n. S | 'y Washington. This low p ure area was at strc ot omises | the bomber destroyer, has come out Air War in Spring ] commj"ee Mal(lng s and heavy rain over the we 1 portions of W 1 f’"k”':‘i”‘ ‘1 ,f“__‘i]v Armed with small cannon. it is de-' The stalemate. on "the Western N € %N and by moderate rain far norlh as the southern por- :1r ‘l’-f“ ‘)'A‘H 5 Jaiar mcheq Signed to attack and shoot down Front, where armies are 1\,ying .C‘O. B|g S]ashes tion of Southeast Alaska. Mo: partly cloudy weather prevailed in 1940—that will stir the shades|nvading bombers | fortably in huge fixed fortifications, S ——— over the remainder of Alaska, w.ch temperatures lower this morn- o Another new type, glimpsed briefly 1ends credence o talk thet & BPHINE | 'y (euNGTON, Feb. 6!/~ The ing over the Interior Bomb reds of in the German blitzkreig and offensive would be confined fo aff| gy, co Appropriations Committee to- Juneau, Feb. 7—St 7:53 an, sunset; 4:37 p.m Dlidie e .re |and again during the December 18 and sea warfage. =, 4y of|day cut $2285000 from Président — {3 ee gy . AN cter of the future. defense of Helgoland against Brit- Germany Way ‘r'.‘“;’“‘;‘;' b oy | ROOSEvelt's $100,000,000 request. for | el ANBHLET ton ¥ h e n e alags . They are p ever - |ish bombers, is the bi-motored pur- WIDING the WAL O LHESS WEL Mk expenses ' for 'the State, Commerce Kansas (o"edo; the type used in war entanglements. able now. Boih sides in Euope's Suit or fighting single-seater. The UAtestricted SUVMATEE SWEEEE oFlaha Justice Departments and Fed- He carries wire with him so that “big war" have built up tremen- United States army also is experi- }91£ uIG";m?p_ys k! nveg- gf,fleff‘eral Courts for the year beginning h . when he finds a new type strun . S i foroen. - The bl menting with ¢his type of weapon. 9f England vap BAVI R deatly. <f. o1, 9 Himis Baqud Wire |Ic: Weten scres 1e oo nature of the air war Must Be Protected I might Togically have a8 its objective |, Ih€, rediiction brought to $196.- L out & mew piece and then September, the German campaigr Squadrons of long-range pursuit . " qechuction of “factories pm_nOO().O(]O the amount slashed’ ‘from SALINA, Ras. Feb, 6__Ben pe- | N fehce with a spare in Boland. excepted, i an \ planes to accompany bombing is gcing” yital whr, fuaterials,” oads | the, Erestdential ese‘”“,a“'“r:":l’::“: SETTLING UP_This kiss, and $1,000, helped persuade |, .o 0 50 (58 00 0 Retie ural lull before a stoxm, in the op- sions are being built up by both ung pighways, nerye cevters of elec- G BT MR S S T R eOn wife of Gee Jordan, crippled Pittsburgh news dealer, to with- | [ "0, 0 0 B Roiace ' skie inion of many competent neutral the Allies and the Germans, on the trical, gas and water supply ser- measur now before Congress. draw her charges of non-support for 17 years. They met in N, Y. (e d i R b & sk 5 2 military men + | theory—borne out by losses in the e’ Sio @ X act but BRSNS after Gee learned he's to share in $39,000 estate. Sighey disterent. i i5 his col- By LafMan ledie Ald ik " New Combat Arm abortive aids up to date—that S WhBIVER SAFLcAE. DUl VLSRR BAEH | lection. He says one kind is re- Feb. 13, Church Parlors, begin- At the close of the World War, bombers to be effective must o \opah, cnely, SlGEORgR. T T QUIYeR for ol modicy o oy DREET Caia! Air superiority, which would be Hl WM S s = g e necessary to victory in thé air, 3 would depend on neutralizing the Y i 8.4 IHREE MORE Yik'!lal | Leal‘nln Arm Alr becrets < effectiveness of the enemy's air d & g y CLOTHES that are CLEANED g R R Go ON EVEN INDICTMENTS Defendants Ditfer OFTEN—Wear Longer! the best place to bag the eagle is| Send YOUR GARMENTS to geo m,;'?: Smash Morale b fa - ARE ISSUED on pl“as T Air attacks during the World War Three more indictments were re- 1 WE! A-.‘ & G!,F were made to destroy British morale. | g tuined by the Grand Jury today Ct illegal co- G -4 Today, both sides would have the| * Peter Chernoff is charged with habi pleaded | Thorough Workinanship 1nd same objectives. burglary and held in $2,500 bail } ) rge not guilty | ¥4 Mo thods Produce | To be economical of both men and | Richard Trask is charged with Wher y appeared in District| 3 FURERLEUAS T Qurpilo materials, the belligerents would| BALTIMORE, Md., Feb. 6. — Ab 5qiau1t with intent to rape and on. Two two, Na- | : choose their bombing targets care- |91, Richard Wahle figures he has contriputing to the delinquency of at Yakutat. | fully. Visibility, depending on the|stepped off enough mileage to Walk . yninor with bail set at $3,000 pleaded guilty \ & | weather, would be a major factor— |aréund the world four times, and if ~ pyward D. Haynes alias Edwin (0 ONe count of contributing to the \ unless navigationa bombing in which | his 35-year-old “cane with thf"roof' D. Hines is charged with larceny Gelinquency of a minor and not guil- p DTONE {bombers would fly at great heights |holds up he may yet do 1t five times. | j;, 5 poy, 5. £ R R ; 4 it out of sight of the ground, were = His ancient umbrella swinging e Jaclg Ayres Meaded ok ity § \ | tempted. freely, Wahle marches 15 to 20 ne count of assault with a danger-| - | Waves of bombers, loosed a. - |miles daily with the regularity of ous weapon | .!7 tervals of an hour, probably would|a postman. He began the custom ARRIVB Io VISII James Carpen l’!“"“l“[“ 3‘;‘“{ be preceded by swarms of pursuit|55 years ago, to oneticons s of ey o sanoa v _to draw the fire of defending air-source of légend angd reputedly se 5 ‘“’" Johnson pleaded not guilty | —_— - g i craft. The bombers themselves, aP- | their clocks by’ him. Jane McK‘mghL the former Jafn- in the same case. | T~ NS SR proaching at great altitudes” and| pe never wears a hat or overcoat, OTigsby, arrived in Juneau on the Sam Jackson pleaded not guilty Mo f fi £y gliding down with motors silenced “What becomes of grass when you McKinley wnb her son c‘.seorgu to burglary and assault and bat- | 5 D of ¢ie OMENT" |to thwart elaborate “‘warning Nnets”|jeave g board over it?" he asks. as| Mrs. McEnight .\nu visit here tery . B AdidoiiaKere = :\Aould drop dfzrr'l(?lltxon. fragmenta- | yis pand” strokes his gray mane. v-'l)'.h he‘nv father ,(,,w.“"ev Grigswy <> e 3y A 2 - on or incendiary bombs, depending | o walking stick is “only for old|%ell known local aitorney. MATANUSKANS DANCED ‘oln the nature of the attack and the|jen » 5o he “earries the umbrella R R e e s |character of the targets. which he bought in his native Ger- Residents or - Miakioiika vty Just what . effact suchs SHGKRI mafyV i 1Bos: Mis$ YOUNG BACK dsletited "t -v‘F}:;‘v‘d(:xn: L‘uxxv':llq: would have is perhaps the Biggest| wanle arrived in this country siving a dance for the infantile question facing the high commands|quring the Civil War and lived for FROM "“p SOUTH Berdlysia’ foundatiog it of both sides to the conflict. Cer-|y time in Jacksonville, Fla. but o iy B s o SN | tainly a mass bombing raid by elther | went back to elist in the Prussian belligerent would be repaid in Kind, [ Army.” In 1870 he returned to the |, Lovthe Young, empioyee of the FLAKNE FLIES and immediately. And just as cer-|yUnited States and joined a G”“mn;Trea.\urers Office, returned on the yp.o \ T. Flakne is a pas- tainly, the destruction in lives and |stock company, playing Shakespear- | OuRt McKinley after spending a opq0p for Fairbanks ecretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr. (center) inspects an [ property would be enormous; ré-|ian roles among others. Later hcjfe“' weeks on vacation in the States. ., o, planning to $20-horsepower bombardment plane motor as ranking government gardless’ of what air defense meas-fentered business. Miss Young spent most of her spend several days visiting friends slficials visit Washington’s Bolling F'i;‘ld for a demonstration of the |ures were taken. Even in his Thespian days he| UW€ With her grandmother in Oak- the Int it = S \my's latest aircraft developments. With him are Col. Edmund W. Hill | S B . oy olYs "€lland, California. B 1 AN € tieft), commander of the field, and Gen. George H. Brett, chief of the air | F walked because then “you can (ul-‘ L AR - e o % corps material division. 16w your trend of thoughts and! T Try an Empire ad. | Hoon': WAH 15y really be at liberty.” Between hikes g - o ¥ 3 - he 'writes poetry and his autobio- I_ .S " 2o o om— g - i SYSTEM mo]E(I graphy ha§ now grown fo three arson u lvan £ " @ ’ | 51 : i véidmes. At the roment he's stud- M . 'l' d . "VES' ED ying "Fréench. He may decide to| ar"age 0 ay g ! ginth il e sample the roads in that ('oHnLry“ z p The Forest BRI, it UL Gl N i | Miss Helen Larson and William - ser IX lett Alk Bay * Tor| WA IS EGen, Sullivan were married today by the Hoonah ' with ' Forest ahd’* Indlan m‘;‘ A | Rev. _G Edward Knight of the Met- Affairs officidls to invéstigatd’ the | "1 ; {ronelian Mewarier Qourol B | o i o The couple was attended by Lila possibilities of the construction of DISC m AT W Nk S . o ' rson and Ernest F. Larson. a v]l}])um(‘xpalkiwhlgr system. e - "RY l pre R hose making ‘the trip are A. Ro n B Glovr Rl Engner k- UNCH| kETCHIKAN DOCTOR old ' Smith, Adminfistrative " Assist- ant; John Brillhart, Assistarit Di§* Frank Metcs.llt Bl Seve. Davic APPROVED Bv BOARD trict Ranger, and ' Ralph Mize' ‘of Poddy, ebiatand 8t the Ror L the Office of Indian Affairs Con- tary Club luncheon their plans for D Io Pritz ¥ i struction Divistor " the Juneau Sports Arena r. Milo Fritz has been i‘\al:lllh“?d Guests at the meeting included and approved by the Territorial 3 = PR s Dr. C. C. Carter, Willlam Douglass,| Board of Medical Examiners, Dr. SERW(H WMORR Heinz salesman, and Leonard Tay. | W. W. Council said today 4 | Qw .+ |lor, new Schillings Coffee repre- Dr. Fntz.»a‘n eye, ear, nose and m ALKE sentative from Albuquerque, New !hrcatv specialist. is xu’ practice at 3 1! BA".E'| Mexico, replacing Jerry Reiland, Ke_u:hxkan with Drs. Turner and 2y L |row district manager at Phoenix, Wilson. | Ariz. R R 3 Funeral services for Mrs. Alice! " Greetings were received from Ll\e‘ GORDON WILDES BACK Bailey, negress who passed away Rotary Club of Aberdeen, Scotland, Gordon Wildes, PWA Office En- p Saturday night at St. Ann's HOS-|which its letter says, is carrying on'|Bineer, returned on the Mount Mc- pital, will be held at the Charles despite the war. PR {Kinley from a vacation trip of sev- W. Carter Chapel tomorrow, after- 2 R I eral weeks. During his absence he noon at 1:30 o'clock. Intérment| MOZEE RETURNS | visited with his son in Virginia, and Will be in Evergreen Cemefery. | Ren B. Mozee, U. S. Marshal ag|Dis daughter, Mrs. Ralph Merill, in S T T | Nome, is a passenger on the Mount | Seattle NARCOTICS MAN COMING | McKinley e Wosteard | e I L Kushner of the narcoties di-|turning home after escorting a CHISHOLM, HERE vision of the Internal Revenue of- group of prisopers south L. B, Chisholm, Wrangell City fice, stopped off at Ketchikan from . = Clerk, came in on the Mount Me- | Z ¥ 5 5 i . the steamer Mount McKinley and CHICKENPOX APPEARS Kinley from Wrangell on business. | P o s will come to Juneau next week to| Several casés of chickenpox have SFeEr o iy T PALEFACE MAKES DEAL W.ITH INDIAN—_When Indian (tri . So you want something different in pa,'bmu? Here'’s a suit of white- attend the term of court. appeared among children at Anchor- FROM PENNSYLVANIA ‘ deserts of Arizona arrived in Bostan, where they’re scheAduled l‘n demnnst‘nu rl:;?:;":hr‘nrc‘::‘ atm; dotted blue cotton poplin, fastened with shining white buttons and - e age and quarantine has been es-| Emmanuel Bernard. of Bala. Pa,| sportsmen’s show in February, the braves found themselves learning, not feaching, a dance. Here's | tablished at the homes. hinf White Horn practicing the bumps-a-daisv with Vera Chanin. dance teacher. b trimmed with a scalloped edgins, 1 Empire rlfl\\‘l(lfids‘bflng resuits. i registered at the Baranof Hotel.