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Death With bared heads, Cele Brothers cirens cmplo, loved “Ding.” a mal’s hody (forcground) in 4k tuins of the o 1s building ‘at Rocheste than a hundred animals were burned fo death UP FOR RE-ENLISTMENT _His usual caim was maintained by Snuffy, when this 10-pound mascot re-enlisted at Fort Omaha, Nebraska, with Recruiting Sergeant William Bullard (above) in charge. Snuffy’s been in the U. 8. army three years, attached to the Signal Corps photographer. He has a special rating as Rodent Exterminator Extraordinary. - (RUMSONBEARS Haida a team 1ro Skagway TUESDAY NIGHT 1 - e st soa e W 3 5 arive in mall boats, whi the Haida Sails Up Lynn Canal Eqchian st e comme ane to Get Two Teams for Big Tournament <+ FORMER JUNEAU MAN One postponed baskatball con- (AH.ED m‘l’o ARMY test is slated tomorrow night in the High School gymnasium as a o " prelude to the coming South: ond Lieutenant John E. Mu Alaska Basketball tournament| phy rmer resident of Juneau, ha; scheduled to get wder Thurs- been called to six months extend- day ed active duty with the regular In tomorrow night's game, High army, under the Army Expansion School will vie with the M Program created by the - Limited with the Haida-Henniag's contest National Emergency, effective March indefinitely postp d and pos 11, for station at Camp Ord, Pre not to be played at all le sidio of Monterey, Cal. The ai Krause at the top of the heap units of the Ninth Corps Area ha and - Haida, winner the first been concentrated there for cx- sea- half, to play Krause tensive field maneuve I’ldu szrflsr)rrrli)oath - HO ROTARY LUNCH , will be held Wednesday afternoon | » at 2 __ Rev. John L. Cauble and interment | [ JURY SEATED FOR CORDERO'S TRIAL Trial of Ralph Mendez Cordero |on a charge of ‘assaunlt with a dan- gerous weapon began in Distric Court this morning. After the first prosecution witness had been heard the case was recessed until tomorrow | morning at 10 o'clock Members of the jury are nors, Jr., William Johnson, Hendrickson, Frank Booth, Maurice T. Johnson, Mrs. Don Par- son, Arnold Mogseth, Mrs. Georgc | Getchell, Jackson Howell, Marie A Norma Mackay, ‘E. M. Richardson - - \THREE FLY IN WITH SCHWAMM Tony Schwamm flew up Petersburg Saturday evening it J.J. Con- Arnold Mrs hi Waco float job, bringing in threc | passengers, S iR R Arrivals were Trygve anser n elephant, stand beside the anis | Charies Whyte and Archie- Betis B r, Ind., destroved by fire. More INSTRUCTOR TRAVELS v H. Kazee, Senior -Safe of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, left on the southbound Al- | aska yesterday for he: will conduct safety classes Petersburg and Ketchikan. -e FOREST MEN IN FIELD Forest Service men' Oli T wards and William N. Pa { on the stedmer Alas] for game management and 'recreatior | Instructor Wrangell. Lat¢ at indiana City : Tornado Hit NSVILLE, Indiana, March 4 do dipped into this city, velopment work at Ketchikan killing a girl and injuring several o il other persons. SIDES RETURNING Apparently the tornado blew itself | n | Sides,' Deputy' Colle out across the Ohio River Valley. | of Gustoms and Secretary of (he TR e TR Elks Lodge, is @ passenger on the . stéeamer Prince: Louise which Chapeladms Mee' due here this afternoon. He is i turning from leave in the Stalc oo SIMMONS FLI Shell Simmons took the Lockhc to Sitka today withh Herb Aldrich a single passénger out and five scheduled to come in from the His- toric City on the return’ trip. e Tuesday Evening he Chapeladies jwill hold their regular meeting on Tuesday, March 5. at the home of Mrs. Fred Campen on Glacier Highway at 7:30 o'clock in the evening. R 3 s Mrs rence Wittanen will be Wl_L( OX THROUGH hoste: or the occasion. H. G. Wilcox, University of Alaska BRI L mining extension instructor, passed through Jumeau yesterday on the steamer Alaska enroute from Skag- way, where he recently completed a ”; D. 4 es :es ix-week course of instruction Wra 1 d Ketchikan. Here Yesferday "« Tuu E ix to MARRIAGE LICENSES J. Engles passed away yesterday Marriage lcenses were issued thi 5 .e afterncon to Earl W. Roach and morning at St. Ann’s Hospital where he has been receiving treatment for the past week. The remains ar W. Carter Mortuas eral arrangements. B Charlotte A. Farley. and to Fred- eriek’ B. Reynolds and Carolyn Ann Johnson, > at the Charles pending fun- TOMORROW NOON | Juneau Rotarians will not meet for luncheon at Percy's tomorrow noon. Instead, the club will hold a din- ner meeting at 7 o'clock, with wives of members invited to attend. . — Last Rites Sef | For John Lindell Funeral services for John Lindell, who passed away here February 22, | o'clock in the chapel of the | Charles W. Carter Mortuary. | The eulogy will be delivered by the will be in Evergreen Cémetexy. RS oL JUNEAU MAN HELD " ON FORGERY COUNT, Lester P. Chasey Was arrested. to- day on a charge of forgery, He s accused of issuing a number “of In the war of the airwaves which rages nightly between Germany and the Allies the latter are receiving ble support from the secret German Freedom Station. This transmitter; which has baffled the entire world since it was first heard in January, 1937, sends nightly broadeasts to Germany. As mouth- piece.of the German underground movement, it has long advocated overthrow of the Hitler regime. ‘The Freedom Station is working aghinst amazing odds. From the outset it has had the entire ma- chinery of the German Gestapo against it. But efforts to jam it on the air find it not unprepared. If broadcasts on its usual wave-length of 29.8 meters are interfered with, it cdn readily switch to another ‘wave.. Nor have efforts to counter- act its influence with a fake Free- dom: Station: been more effective. The station has been silenced occa- Ibglfl!. but never for long. nly a few insiders know where the station.is located. At one time me of Elton Engstrom. The according to Assistant U. S. Attorney Gieorge W. Folta, we’re‘ made out to fictitious payees, then endorsed by Chasey. - The . total wn to have beeh collected on such checks is about $150, it 1s/ claimad, e e S WILLIAM FRIEND ‘ ONJRIP, SEATTLE Willlam Friend, | pight {dispateher at the ‘Juneau Post Office, 4 a | L L Feardshd daughier “because pleaded for death, ‘erying, “Why ' de't“they ‘electrocute me?” The child’s body was found in a Los Angeles park rest room, and Mrs. Hardaker mlfl’?flfl’ later at Palm Springs, he'w, b assenger aboard the Taku for.Se- | attle on a vacation trip. He dozs not intend to go further south than Seattle and will visit relatives and | attend to personal -business whue; out wabeh | DR. JOHN GEYERIS Dr, John Geyer, who has been scuth for several weeks, is a p-s-l’ senger aboard the Princess -Loulse for his Juneau home .and dental office. R BROWNELL SOUTHBOUND on Carlos Brownell, Mayor of Seward, is & southbound passenger abeard the Alaska. e BERNHOFER GOES OUT J. B. Bernhofer, of the Harri Machine Shop, is a passenger south on the Alaska, on o brief business trip. say confessed slayiig'her five. s too good to live” is shown as she st or another it was believed to broad- cast from Austria, the Sudeten ter- ritory, Russia, Spain and Luxem- bourg, and even from Honolulu and Iceland. Most people, however, be- lieve it operates within Germany it~ nelf, +Gestapo, storm troopers and élite guards have tried desper- ately.fo hunt+t down. Barns, boat- houses, and lonely cottages from the Alps to.the Baltic seacoast have been searched. One day all cars on roads leading to Berlin were stopped, following a tip that the ‘was installed in an au- tomobile ‘headed for the - capital. time all furniture vans in Urttemberg were halted. E .on the Rhine have been in- cluded in the hunt. ~The hunt is not only for the transmitter, however, but for its audience as well. Short-wa behind “Mein Kampf” and other Teduce the danger Nazi writings, listeners have beem: ar- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1940. Neutral Victim of War (By the U. S. l U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER Weather Bureau) | | Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 2:30 p.m., Mar. | Occasicnal in tonight and Tuesday; minimum temperature 5 | tonight about degrees, gentle to moderate easterly winds } Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Light rain tonight and Tuesday, 5 | slightly warmer over the extreme northeastern porticn tonight; winds 2 | cver the southern portion, moderate southeasterly except fresh over | scunds and straits; winds over the northern portion, moderate east § # | to northeast except fresh mortherly over Lynn Canal. i Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. Winds in vicinity of Dixon Entrance, fresh sutheasterly; from Dixon Entrance to Kodiak, moderate to fresh easterly e LOCAL DATA | | Time Barometer 1emp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather | 3:30 p.m. yesty .. 20.85 43 8 SE 12 Lt. Rain ’ : am. today 8 5 87 w 4 Cloudy i n - today 58 39 3 Wsw 6 Lt. Rain s i RADIO REPORTS Sl | TODAY T e | Max. tempt. | Lowest 3:30am. Precip. 3:30a.m F . Station last 24 hours tenp. temp. 24hours Weatt 4 | Anchorage 38 34 36 0 Cloudy | Barrow [ | -5 0 0 Cloudy M Nome 26 | 19 24 02 < s | Bethel 40 | 0 Clear o | Fairbanks 43 0 Cloudy S | St. Paul 24 10 Cloudy 3 Yo s | Dutch Harbor . 43 15 Cloudy = Kodiak 41 | 15 Rain A neutral ship (name and nationality withheld by British censors) is | Cordova 40 2.63 Cloudy shown going down to Davey Jones’ locker off the Thomas estuary, | Juncau 4 58 Cloudy England, after striking a mine. The ship’s lifeboat is at lower left, | Sitka 46 09 pulling away from the doomed craft. Photo made by a pilot of the = Keichikan 49 1.18 Rain British Royal Air Force, who summoned naval help. seattle 55 T Rain rtland 62 0 Cloudy San Francisco . 69 0 PL. Cldy » L] ce WEATHER S merl‘an e I(a 33 A moderate disturbance but o diminishing intensity was cen i this morning off the coast ol Queen Charlotte Island. The " M disturbance has weakenel and mover northward with the Sub e(l Io prose(u'ionl pressure reported over Bristol Bay. Warmer and cloudy Y was general over most of Alaska. ‘ Light to moderate P 3 amounts of rain fell over the coasal areas [rom the Aleutians east- [ ward to the coast of Oregon. Frosh to strong southeast winds pre- u S (our'A ealskulln vailed yesterday and were still being reported this morning from Vo u Dixon Entrance to the Oregon Coast i Juneau, March 5-Sunrise 6:46 a.m., sunset 5:39 p.n. DISORDERLY rrin and Margaret Per- vife, were arrested today e of being drunk They pleaded guilly Commissioner Fellx € ntenced to 60 days ‘r Dan F rin, hi; and be- cha rly on a disord fore and jail - o CLDTIMER Oscar Yhe: area residen Alaskan haunis or. Yukon, arriving MOrrow BACK veteran is returning to aboard the ste in Juneau in: Juneau - FORSYTHE ON Earl Forsythe is a passenger the Yukon arrivir in Juneau morrew and it is believed he well known local ball player last year to Tacoma YUKON on to- the who moved German Freedom Radio Baffles Gestapo Top, Heinrich Himmler ( Mann, famed German authoi new technique has been developed. Listeners form small groups. Only one member listens in each day, then informs the others. The programs are shaped by the two chief aims of the German Op- position: peace and .overthrow of Hitler. Broadcasts include foreign news reports, exposures of the pri- vate lives and corrupt practices of leading Nazis, talks on exploitation of workers, on the food situation, on -Germany’s economic status, on strikes and sabotage acts. Daily repetition of “Ten Com- mandments for Germans” impresses on listeners the necessity of fighting Naziism with all means at their n | command. “Work slow,” the audi- ence is admonished. *“Spread the truth about Hitler and his hench- men, do not trust the Nazi press, do not deposit money in saving banks, help victims of National Socialism.” Often the station broadcasts the names of Gestapo agents posing as anti-Nazis. It encouraged anti-war activities at the time of the Czecho- Slovakian crisis in September, 1938, and war, It fought anti-Semitism by unmasking ), head of the Lewer left, Otto Strasser, former German cabinet minister, and Thomas Both are prominent refugee leaders of the anti-Nazi movement. again before the present | gian WASHINGTON, March 4. - Tife United Court of Appeals has ruled that ihe Department of J tice could prosecute the American Medical Association on charges of violating the Sherman Anti-Trust act The ruling sustains the validity ik « indictment which charged the American Medical Association, twlo affilates and 20 individual physi- cians acted in restraint of trade in opposing the Group Health Asso- ciation of Washington - - - Denis Cardinal ~ Dou erty of Philadelphia was the first Ame can Catholic Bishop in the Philip- Francis E. T 1send sion planner, w doctor in the B Dakota of If you keep the wait ing for your order while y cn a long conversation, young man, you're not only de ice—you're also b rude. And make up your mind before order of you your food, not the chief worries ses, who are eager to get your food to you quickly, is hav- ing customers change their minds | just about the time their original order is ready te serve. It's annoy- ling to the waitress and it's a ! black mark against her record of | serving—and it slows up all around. Women are especially likely to give ,one order and then change their mind, waitresses 'find. When you start' to leave a res- |taurant, be sure you have your pocketbock, packages and gloves before you be able to return hours later and have the waitress produce them. She will save your belongings un- |til you ecall whenever she does | happen to find them, but sl after. of Scmeone else ‘may get your s before she has a chance. | Gestapo, and his lieutenants. | ber, 1938, as a desperate attempt by the Hitler Government to fill ite empty treasury. At the height of the crisis, on September 10, 1938, the station warned of the imminent danger of inflation. Withdrawal of savings from banks so increased ‘after this broadeast that a government decree three days later limited withdraw- als to 30 marks daily. Reports on strikes and acts of sabotage constitute one of the sta- tion’s most important features. The broadcaster comments on h;dMan-l experiences, suggesting improve- ments on- the methods used. The station elaims the number of strikes has steadily increased since. it be gan broadcasting. Lately arma. ment . workers particularly . have been encouraged to sabotage pr¢ duction. This month the station enters its’ well give it is not. leave. Don't expect (o] Ihe little fellow at the left smiles a che a newcomer at the New York Found ospital. ‘The latter was found in a Bronx hallway, A glass partition separates the infants. (OMMON COURTESY— When Ordering in a Reslarant If you request sp2 be gracious with your thanks really should leave an extra tip - SHELLWORTHS T0 VISIT HERE FOR MONTH, DAVLINS Mr. and Mrs. .C. C. Shellworth, father and mother of Mrs. Robert Davlin, arrived on the Alaska this morning from Haines to spend a month visiting their daughter and son-in-law here. Shellworth, who contracted plumbing here for some time untii taking charge of Chilkoot Barracks plumbing work, is on a 40 days' furlough. The Shellworths; who have a host of friends in the Capital City, will be house guests of their daughter and son-in-law while here. - D NEW T PHONE DIRECTORY To be issued March ! and forms close March 1. For space, listings and changes please call Juncau and Douglas Telephone Co., tele- phone 420. adv. 19 1 “hello” as he tries to befriend