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4 Daily Alaska Empire selves; that they are putty in the hands of the real agents of the new credo, that they will be cast aside as soon as their usefulness is over. They forget the oblivion into which all the Henleins, Forsters, Quis- Second snd trects, Juncau, Aleska HWELEN TROY SENDER 5 4 - President | lir R L EERNARD - - Vice-Prosident and Business Manacef | the poy state has established its domination. There is one other class of deluded native. He is the one with whom life has dealt harshly. He| (would have a job if his country was only managed by a Hitler, he thinks. He is fooled by the mirage of German reemployment, little realizing that the cond Class Matter. | the Post Office ¢ to normal economy, but an economic stop-gap that| can logically solve itself only on the field of battle. : menace to any country, be; SUBSCRIPTION RATES jer in Juncan and Douglas for S1.25 per month. Delivered b e These people are a One year, In adv.nce < months, in advance, $6.00; | it at war or peace. They will agitate against the month, In ac:ance, 125 | 00 aubscribers favor 12 they will pro notity | established mode of life when all goes well and they ilure o irre ty in the de- | ¢ = of ARy dMvery of thelr tab in the back in times of adversity. It is hard Telephones 602; Business Office, to guard against them. They serve as false frontsj i MEWSER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS for the real agents, wittingly or not. Every nation,| The Associated Pre. i cly entitied to the use for | {1 dino thic APl iad i republication of il news d o credited to it or not | including this, must take reasonable steps to curb otherwise credited in this and also e local news them bublished herein PR e ALASFA CIRCT N GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ™ o/ > TRRQQ xA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LA BOAT HARBOR PROGRESS G Ol fhions 36 Bhs Fraviisoo. Ted. AT e Juneau's new small boat harbor, from present| SRS, CHichay peeus P reports, will be ready for use within a few weeks I e rt A Wellington, 1011 |y 4o coptain that it will be full of masts before the | American Bank Building July 1 date originally anticipated for the opening. | With pleted and in place, all that remains to be done is the installation of a gangplank and dock, breakwater, piling and floats com- at harbor Degrelles and a host of lesser fry sink once[ dictator's solution of that problem is not a rcturn“"‘ PO from 20 YEARS AGO 7H'%: emrpire JUNE 5, 1920 Under the auspices of the Alaska Historical Society there was to be opened in Juneau a museum containing many thousands of interesting articles and curios from all parts of Alaska and covering the Territory from the earliest days of settlement. The incorporators were Gov. Thomas Riggs, Dr. Daniel S, Neuman and the Rev. A. P. Kashevaroff. --a 9[10[11[12[13[14[15 16[17[18[19[20[21[22 ulz4/2526/27/28/20 . 4 Walstein G. Smith, Territorial Treasurer, arrived here on the Admiral H 0 R 0 S c 0 P E Evans from Ketchikan where he had been for several weeks on business. “The stars incline william Robinson left on the Princess Mary to visit with friends but do not compel” | |in Scattle. i Mr. and Mrs. J. Hallett and son left on the Princess Mary to locate THURSDAY, JUNE 6 I Adverse planelary aspects are e LR T r strong today. There may be a John W. Troy, editor and manager of The Empire, left for the south sense of fear and depression which on the Princess Mary. should be overcome by work that i distracts attention from world af- C. J. Cannon, one of the original discoverers of the mining property fairs. Labor troubles again will re-|gperated at William Henry Bay on Lynn Canal by the Alaska Fndicott {mrd I Mining Company, arrived here on the Admiral Watson. Heart and Home: Under this SE gt o tlone, | That Juneau was to be the logical center 6f the fishing industry in Alaska, the contention of R. H. Snow and S. Simonarson, two commercial traveling men who were in the city. ness is likely to be prevalentamong il the young. As commencement days the placing of a few facilities such as water and power lines 1 The boat harbor will be a valuable asset to th community and it is gratifying to learn that it will| for use ahead of schedule, May Juneau the fisherman of Southeast Alaska profit) this public facility. be ready and | greatly from may Holland Will Live Again FIFTH COLUMNI PORTRAIT OF (New York Times) PORTRAIT OF A From her exile in London, Queen Wilhelmina | has asked her stricken people to “remember calami- What sort of person will turn against his notive| jes jn past centuries and the repeated resurrection | land to aid a foreign power? What motives lie back jof our country.” The Dutch have known disaster of enlistment in the “fifth column? before and have known how to meet it with supreme iy |heroism. They now face a prospect more terrible An appraisal of these auxiliary troops of the new |y . "a0'e Gnce the days of Philip of Spain. They form of warfare is important, for every country har-|are to be slaves of a tem which they loathe to| bors these vipers in ambush. The United States the depths of their souls, They will see their liber-| ties trampled, their riches plundered, their whole | M K0 SR0PPULOD way of life defiled. All that will keep hope alive There are two kinds of “fifth columnist Those |is the knowledge that others will be fighting until| whose origin in the foreign power gives them a sen-|the day of liberation comes. | timental incentive for treasonable activities against| The Allies who must do the fighting, particularly thelr adopted land or who are paid agents of that|the British, will find the German conquest of Hol- | pover can be under l—in a way. They are com- land a dangerous threat to themselves. In German | paratively easy to spo But ‘more dangerous, be: hands the Netherlands will be a dagger pointed | X ; : | straight at the crowded heart of England. From air | cause they are difficult to find, is the second type bases on Dutch soil the devastation of war can be the native-born citizen who turns againse his home- ' carried in less than an hour to London and the in- land | dustrial north; and there is no telling how much They are found among people of all degrees of |“blood, toil, tears and sweat” will be needed from intelligence and in economic strata. They |the British before this new threat is overcome. may wear dinner jackets or dungarees. Probably Events on the battlefield will crowd upon one the most common motive is an inferiority complex.|another so fast in the coming days that the fate of | Life. 50 they think, has not been' generous. enough|Holland may be overlooked. No news will come from 10 them; it has not recognized their talents to suf-| e 1O XEURDle word of the spirliafl Gnd puye ot b |torments fhe Dutch people will have to undergo.| ficlent degree. Their warped reasoning leads them | ot ™5 oo Uit the outer world will be broken, | to believe that if the old order is swept away and|for prison bars have shut upon them. But they will a new one established they will have a chance t0|not be forgotten in this country or in any country shine at their self-estimated worth. Therefore,| where freedom still survives, One can anly hope whatever they do to undermine the status quo, to|that their spirit will not be Hroken, that their cities pave the way for the new dispensation, will be amply [and their countryside will not be ravaged beyond | rewarded by the new masters | repair, and that Queen Wilhemina will live through 1t is not uncommon to find well-educated persons | these dark days to re-enter her capital in triumph. among this group. They consider themselves so su- ; & ¥ : that they) Carefully as we've scanned the faces of the front perior to the rank 4 ‘rank soldiers, we haven't yet caught a glimpse of develop a distaste for democracy and every political| . Robert Ley of the German Labor Front, who tenet which gives the common man a voice in his|qiq all the talking about how Germans should con- destiny. Thev a voild in which they would|sider it a pleasure to give a blood sacrifice To the be the ruler the common herd—in other | Reich words, a toialitarian with themselves the | elite. and file of mankind ant leading state as If the Many “fifth columnists” with this outlook think | gium were unneutral, they must thir the has “gone soft.” In they ,”,\(-“h,.::\ real war of aggression on Germa to a lopsided Nietzscheanism and in their own egos| K . B e consider themselves “supermen.” They find it smart | Snglands m Uy Sare: teen, hetiar {prepaved; dop s A | the war had Premier Stanley Baldwin paid more at- to mimic the slocun and salutes of the Nazis "'"“lvnlion to Hitler than to Wally Simpson, the Fascists and whenever safe to be quite openly| on the side Gerinar in its campaign auulnMJ democracy, for Germany is “strong.” They do not realize how soft they are them-| Nazis really believe that Holland and Be!- we're waging world this ok Pittsburgh young man is.fined for driving with one arm around his girl companion. Gone, indeed, are the horse and buggy d: EMPIRE PHONE: 374 REASONS WHY . The Daily Alaska EMPIRE WILL AID YOU TO Produce Effective . . Profitable and attrac- tive advertisements . . Art Work For ® Advertisements ® Folders ® Letterheads, etc. Attention Compelling LAYOUTS Tested Selling IDEAS Complete Merchandise (OVERAGE Effective 5 GOOD hard-hitting reasons! True this month—next month— and every month for advertisers in the Daily Alaska Empire! An “exclusive” for advertisers who want to bring back their adver- tising dollars in the recogniz- able form of increased sales! . ) We can design ANY KIND of advertise- ment or Artistic Layout you order! | the future, focus interest, employment should be planned for the summer. Mili-| Weather: Highest, 50; lowes {ary Lraining WLl e IMPOPLANL | uemsamoew oo oo am om0 nd aviation will claim many ; B e oung men, Women should preparc D I l E l ! o e mace. memorae | U@IY LESSONS IN ENQHSN w. 1.. GorpON by the social affairs that belong !_ S R M R R L s e e con i e T s e WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: “I must first eat dinner before I go.” FIRST is redundant time to assure happy memories for Do not say, Business Affairs: Unusual trade OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Gorgeous, Pronounce gor-jus, not gor- conditions will multiply as ipter-| jo_yg ]lml""l"dl ‘V”'""‘“"" “’"; f:’)'{“;)"‘l:‘ OFTEN MISSPELLED: Rhythm; two H's, not rythm p ars resage (1S S1- - 5 5 i i jbub. he stars (presase HL SYNONYMS: Vertical, perpendicular, plumb, erect, upright ness through the summer, although effects of the war in Europe will WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us be felt in this country, neutrality increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: problems hampering certain indus- | IRREFUTABLE; incapable of being disproved; indisputable. (Accent fol- tries. Transportation organizations |lows the F). “These figures are irrefutable.” WALl DIOFIt A5 travel 1Ures WIN SUIML- | remommoem: e oo oo o o - o o . B MODERN ETIQUETTE ** goperra LEE e s s ) ) ) ) s ) U3 mer tourists. Aviation will gain in i patronage. National Issues: ' Suspicion re- % garding motives which govern the major political parties will be wide- Q. Should one use the salutation “Dear Friend” in a business letter? ly disseminated by subversive in- fluences. The culmination of Sa- A. Not unless the person is really a friend. Otherwise it will be turn and Jupiter in August is considered unduly familiar. tavorable for Washington and the Federal government. While impor- tant changes in government af- Q. Would it be all right for a person who plays only auction bridge to accept an invitation to a contract bridge party? fairs are presaged :there likely A. Tt would be advisable not to do so. to be a continuance in office of Q. Ts it correct to call a butter knife a “butter spreader”? leading statesmen. B B International Affairs: AcCOrding | Sheeomsoemoemims st e e S o am e sem e e s to noted astrologers; the Panama ' LO 0 K a n d I. E A R by Janal to require protection or even defense against hostile powers The United States Navy may have a chance to prove its splendid ef- ficiency in several places. A “dan- is A. C. GORDON j o s . S5 1. What is a certified check? 2. Under which President of the U. S. did Will Hays serve as Post- gerous and sensitive condition of affairs” is foretold for this great- | master-General? est of democracies. Secret data a 3. Who was the first king of Israel? quired from Americans abroad will 4. What is the largest inland body of salt water in the world? now prove of greativalue, | 5. Who carried the first English flag to America? Persons whose * birthdate it is ANSWERS: have the augury offadvancement, 1. A check, the payment of which is guaranteed by the bank on Travel and change lare indicated which it is drawn. 2. President Harding. 3. Saul. 4. Great Salt Lake, Utah. | 5. John Cabot, in 1497, for both men and women. Public service will engage many. Children born on this day prob- ably will be original and ingenious in their mental processes, Many ar- tistic folk belong to this sign. (Copyright, 1940) NEW ECONOMY [“Beaver,” first of iis Kind to D= | Gramommommvemsmmremrmmsmmsmmommomn: b L BErls Nisthweets will H APPY B|RTHDAY be placed in daily service between Portland and San Francisco for ./the summer months, beginning '|' AIN vI Ewlnm- 8, it was announced today | e=Uemeee o o B bys J. A. Ormandy, general pas-| JUNE 5 senger agent for Southern Pacific company. | Mrs. August Aalto Edwin Sutton Frederick J. Fisher Leslie R. Hogins Mrs. Robert Fraser Nicky Savovich Summer S(hedlfle ls An-; The new train will be for coach Paific Lines low fares will be good on the train and the dining car will fea- ARTEARE . |ture breakfasts for 25c, luncheon | SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. June 5 lgg0 03 dinner 35c. It will carry | Fair, accordmg to Ormandy. With —A new economy train, the ., 40 air-conditioned equipment |ated by Southern Pacific Railroad WL R 7 | consistingof chair cars with com-|Will have four trains daily in each fortable reclining seats, tourist | direction between Portland and Named to SEC Pullman cars and a full-length)San Francisco. - ‘e lounge car for tourist passengers.] Other company type trains oper- ated by Southern Southern Pacific have proven highly popular, Or- | mandy said. These include the Coaster between San Prancisco and Los Angeles; the Californian be- tween Los Angeles and Chicago. When the Beaver goes into ser- vice it will be possible tc go from Portland to Chicago via California with economy train service all the Schedule of the Beaver will be almost as fast as the famous Cas- cade according to Ormandy. The south bound train will leave Port- land at 5:45 p. m. and arrive at San Francisco at 1:55 p. m. the next day. Schedule both north and wsouth bound provides close connec- tions with trains to and from Se- |attle and other Pacific Northwest points. Woy; EE o S The train is being placed in ser- vice to accommodate extremely| Henry L. Stimson, former Sec- heavy rail travel which is in pros- pect for the summer season on ac- count of the San Francisco World's retary of State, was a law part- ner of the late Elihu Root when he was Secretary of State. Sumner T. Pike President Roosevelt has nominate ed Sumner T. Pike, Maine Re- Jublican, to the Securities and Zxchange Commissipn. He suc- seeds George C. Matthews, who sesigned. - Pike is WD as an HISTORY RETO L D—When the Southwest celebrates this year the 400th anniversary of Coronado’s search for “seven cities of Cibola paved with gold,” scores of cities in New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma, Texas will re-enact fragments of Conquis- tadores history. These little Cochiti dolls (made by Indians) are ready to add to festiveness of occasion, expert in the oft‘industry. Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 —— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 | A e et e e Dr. Judson Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physictan Office hours: 10-12; 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 — Dr. John H. Geyer | DENTIST | Room 9—Valentine Bldg. | PHONE '162 | Hours: 9 am. to 6 p.m, — e ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. | Graduate Los Angeles Coll~ge of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground P Y The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson OPTOMETRIST Blomgren Bldg. 2nd Floor Front Street—-. Phone 636 | . > JAMES C.COOPER C.P.A. Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers” DR, H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:00 by appoinment,. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 177 T * * Juneau Melody House Music and Electric Appliances Next to Truesdell Gun Shop Second Street Phone 65 —mm— Archie B. Belis PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Bookkeeping Tax Service Room 8, Valentine Building Phone 676 IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY AT DEVLIN'S Helene W. Albrecht PHYSICAL THERAPEUTICS Phone 7713 Valentine Building—Room 7 Directory eau Channel | PR S S FPRAR Professional Fraternal Societies B. P. 0. ELKS meet every second and fourth Wednesday at 8 P. m. Visiting brothers wel~ come. H. E. SIMMONS, Exalted Ruler; M. H SIDES, Secretary. ] MOUNT JUNKAU LODGE NO. 111 Second and fourth Monday of each month G in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:36 p.n RALPH B. MARTIN Worshipful Master; JAMES W LEIVERS, Secretary. - GUY SMITH DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- »ULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery Today” ‘ ’ {| Juneau’s Own Store i [\ "The Rexall Store" | Your Refiuble Pharmactsts | Butler-Maurc | HARRY RACE DRUGGIST “The Squibs Stores of Alaska™ 1 “The Store for Men” ! SABIN°S Front St—Triangle Bldg. GASTINEAU CAFE LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES | Y When In Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer ! Phone 48—Night Phone 481 ity e s FAMILY SHOE STORE “Juneau’s Oldest Exclts- sive Shoe Store” Seward Lou Hudsen Street Manager * Try The Empire classifieds -fo results, TELEPHONE—S51 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS +* CAPITAL—$50,000 3 SURPLUS—$125.000 * 2% PAID ON SAVINGS * SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank JUNEAU— ALASKA -