The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 28, 1940, Page 8

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8 SPLINTERED NAZI DEATH DEALER LIES IN ENEMY TIDE POOL Crumpled ir king goose by fire from effective anti- of the solintered craft HaidaWins COMMUNICATION Juneau, Alaska, Aug. 28. B |I G 2 To the Daily Alaska Empire: ¥ Daily Alaska Empire, August 26, entitled “Thou Shalt Not,” in which the writer tries to give the im- one o ay pression that he has thought the matter over carefully, and then ex- a so-called parallel situa- like a stre: pla tion.” The Elks ball club took a defeat the hands of the Coast Guard In my dictionary the word par- last allel is defined as “lying side by side, equidistant at all points, ex- Ensign James Paine pitched for, tended in the same direction.” The the Coast Guarders and the Elks Cditorial begins by saying “Sup- veryone from Addleman to Pose the Territory should sas, Christianity as it is, is all very well.” I am quite sure that our preacher friend, or hundreds of others, who are working for a change in the a cutter Haida baseball club night in Firemen's Park, 5-3 Darkne called the late-starting n the fifth inning THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 28, 1940. Polar Susie 'WARTHREAT | a tide-washed stretch of beach somewhere on England’s eastern shore, this huge German bomber is pictured aft gunners. Tommies stand guard amid tide pools Gold!—For Sale after it was bagged Note crumpled motor and wheels (COAST TOWNS OF ITALY ARE RAIDED BY AIR British Long Range Bomb- ers Reported to Have Appeared at N|ghI " long range bombers apparently fly | ing from England to Italy, scheduled game be- champion Moose and all All-Star team has seen cancelled until better weathe: The halibut IJl)n( J. B. of Ketchi- long line and was pre, t out when the clutch froze ot T w Off Yakutat at the time, they tried not like it, any to free it. but when they found their liquor flaunted befc e, ran to Juneau with under any system, in constant full speed ccm2 even a hope of improvement So far as the prayer hymnals are concerned, fect on people resembled would like to help burn them, send the ministers out job hunting. cir- cumstances what chance of a decent eithes and without reverse. - — Empire Classifieds Pay! Artistic Razor ROLLER AT DOUGLAS — EVERY NIGHT say this of the is fiendish. If the churches in our took money for buildings and hymn shoes for children, their stomachs; SENDS HALIBUT i tion mentally that and encoura from the community, were robbed of the necessities of life; kan, is at the Upper City Float while | if we saw with our own eyes that rs are being made to a frozen conditions grew we might call this a ball Manner of handling liquor, cannot ystem of control, cr lack of control, which was forced oon us in the last Legislature. It Territory to buy if they sent people a condi- un- ved 3 “”; S teom of rock. A charwoman, she asks eople 'The rocks which Mrs. Violet K‘lin—? owitz is holding represent every| Iprospector’s dream. They were dugy lup in her yard in New York City,| and contain gold—8$21 worth to ai I $50,000 for the property. . JAPANESE NOT IN ¢ had just baited as a citizen and a church member, d vote I am wondering and any sober parallel as suggested in dis- SHAPING this disgusting arti Permanent Brace .jo every ydiar GESEL P AT AR antive 1 fory, and an open Insult to every the States after spending the entir Waving hieen kb summer in Alaska making a survey and Hairstyl- 1 weuld appreciate it ) ‘much ‘OF, the selmon ”‘fh"m!!:;d"‘\“y ing by if you would publish his R ) i e o 8 | (signed) MRS. F LESHER. | ® ke ‘ 5 vy CHARLES || (Sinee ‘-: Do jcan waters,” Gabrielson said. “Fur- g Slgrul s Beauty 5alon ||s,cripe o - vany awska Em Phone 318 for Appointment and pire — the paper with | guaranteed circuiaiion DOORS OPEN AT 7:45 COMPLETE NEW ROLLER SKATE EQUIPMENT JUST ARRIVED Plenty of Skates for Everybody—the Right Size, Too! SKATING EVERY SUNDAY! Special Afternoon Skating—Monday (Labor Day) SKATE \ ESTERDAY a neighbor came fum- ing to me about amess he's in with his car. His nephew borrowed it—and skidded into tree~and now he finds that, because he *saved' a little money buying his insurance he has to settle for the damage himself because he told his insurance man that if he had any accidents it would be the other fellow's fault, and the other fellow would pay for the damage. s a case where there isn't any w' 1o pay for the damage. He can't coliect from a free—he may have to way for it, 100, | told him that | ask my egant who represents the National Fire insurance Company of Hartford about my wnsurance, and | take his advice. If my ncighbor had done that, 100, he'd have prehensive Automobile Insurance, in- cl.ding wsurance against collision damage 10 his own car, and wouldn't have fo worry SHATTUCK AGENCY Office—New York Life Phone 249 paring to and the referendum as on the bal- ALASKAM WATERS might o SAYS GABRIELSON but I would wel- Wi Fish and Wildlife Chief if their ef- 11 Says Season Free of Orienfal Poachers There have been no Japanese fishing boats in Alaska waters ( yes rding to Director Ira Ga- brielson of the Fis Service, who recently returned to mm ‘more, no one in the Bristol Bay .'area had seen any nor was there the largest even a rumor that any Japanese were in the area this year.” - | Gabrielson told game officials at pond” in Alaska and said that the Territory fast is becoming a new source of supply for migratory birds, .- - NORLAND HERE WITH HALIBUT Capt. Tom Saudvlk was in port today with the halibut schooner Norland and a cargo of 21,000 pounds ”of halibut from the ocean banks. Salmon packers unloading in the last twenty-four hours to crowd the exchange with troll-caught fish were the Fern II with 43,000 pounds, and the Tillacum with 32,000 pounds. i Adding to the busy market, the Louhelen has unloaded 17,000 pounds of cable, or black cod. e i ' 2 40 Ty iSr Groupof Jr. | ' Legion Auxiliary | - To Elect Officers Election of officers will be held at tomorrow afternoon’s meeting of the Senior group of the Junior Legion Auxiliary, The session wiil start at 2 o'clock at the Gold Belt Avenue home of Mrs. Frank Met- ans to- aid the American Legion and Auxiliary during the convention next montn. The last fitting of uniforms wnll also be held. | - -ees MRS, ZUPAN V| | FRIE SITS |neau, flew in with Shell Simmons from Hir: She will ~-Chichagof yesterday. no consequence, being issued by Information e British Minis- from Rome. , accompanied by fast fight- , winged over > way to Italy peated protests from the BOB BARTLETT ELECTED HEAD OF 1. B. GROUP Succeeds Watédn as Presi- ent of Alaska last night was elected Pr the Juneau Health Cente succeeds Harry and Wildlife s Vice-President; Edward Knight, and James McNaughton, ssioner of Health, st report on tion and the hospital program FROM KiM>nAN are in town, Gastineau Hotel. AP IR, Buhseribe for The Bmp\re Seattle he saw waterfowl “on every gro Is New Salmon Fly Yesterday evening in the cool sweep of a Taku Entrance tide flooding past the kelp patch at Marmion Island, Polar Susie was | born The little lady is another Juneau creation in the fly-fishing world Designed last week, she caught a almon last might, a nice ten-pound cohoe A large streamer fly made of polar bear hair, a green body, tin- sel and red tag, the Polar Susie has all the colors of a live herrir Just as strip-fishing supplant- ed the more clumsy method of hand-lining salmon in the sport fishing world, so will Polar Susie and the rest of the salmon flies capture the interest of anglers, ‘n the opinion of fly fishing devotees. A few visiting sportsmen have taken salmon on flies in the Ju- neau district, but little interest has been evinced by local ang in trying the new sport, but the maker of Polar Susie, who desires to re- main ancnymous, says “everyone will be doing it next 3 This is the second “Juneau” fly to be designed and will take its place beside Alaska Mary Ann, the polar bear hair trout fly How soon the new Polar Susie will be on the market was not revealed by its inventor, but he indicated it will appear in circula-| tion soon in a single large size with some color variants and choice "|of with or without spinner, - > — <o SEINER CAUGHT FISHING AFTER SEASON'S CLOSE Lorlie Pays~$TSO Fine in Petersburg Court- Three Others Magnus Martens and the crew of the seiner Lorlie pleaded guilty in the court of U. S. Commis- sioner Harold Dawes at Petersburg this week to a charge of fishing during the closed season. They were fined $150. The Fish and Wildlife Service confiscated 5,004 fish found aboard the Lorlie The Lorlie was apprehended by wildlife it C. Douglas Swan- on of the patrol ‘vessel Be; the Fish and Wildlife Service | Pybus Bay Three other arrests by Fish and | wildlife Service vessels, two at of in L. (Bob) Bartlett, Secretary of | Craig and one at Wrangell, have si- | been reported to the office here. flllxlculn\)d - 'WOMAN'S (LUB wilL HOLD RUMMAGE SALE Club will hold a rummage sale . Priday and Saturday in the base-! Luther League fo ment of the Singing Tea Kettle. |of the sale and all proceeds will > ROHRBACH HERE is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. .- Subscrfue for The Empire. Members of the Juneau Woman's| | Mrs. Ray G. Day is in charge go towards the club’s building fund.| SPREADS TO S. E. EUROPE sgmemrr Hitler Afiem_pfing to SIavei, Off Conflict Between Two Nations | | | S | (Continued from Page One) | | maker in the Balkan eri while bombers subjected the B s to a new ordeal by a fire of salvos of incendiary and also time-fused | gasoline bombs, | Hitler received Italy Foreign Min- ister Count Ciano and presumably dictated his desires for maintenance of a status quo in southeast Europe in the newly threatened war between | Rumania and Hungary. Count Ciano, following the con- ference, left by plane for Vienna| accompanied by Germany's Foreign | Minister von Ribbentrop for a four- | hour parley tomorrow with Balkan | representatives. The parley is to be | aimed at settling Hungar: aim to | the rich Rumanian proyince of Transylvania. | Hitler's Move | Hitler previously expressed a sfern | wish to keep the flames of the main | European cohflict from spreading in | the so-called “Balkan Powderkeg” | for two reasons—to insurance un- | interrupted flow of vital oil and food | supplies from Rumania and Hun- gary to Germany, so as to battle against Great Britain, and to pre- SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Like other "riches from’ the earth” of this region, Rheinlander has a well- staked claim to quality. Tl | gredients, plus brewing standards that are with- s based on local in- | out a peer in the Pacific " Northwest. Result: PLUS VALUE in beer that you can’t afford to pass up. vent diverting of troops in taking Since 1878 ¥ Emil Sick, President RHEINLANDER sides in the back door conflict in | southeast Europe. Meanwhile mixed Russian and Rumanian commissions are investi- gating the border clashes in which hundreds of Rumanian and Red Army soldiers are reported to have been slain. Russian Planes Shot Down The Rumanian government con- firn reports, previously denied by Russia that a Soviet plane on a reconnaissance flight had been s down over Rumanian territory, but said the Russian pursuit plane fired ‘ on the Rumanian plane. At the same time another aerial clash is reported in which six Rumanian fighters are reported to have shot down two Russian planes. Dispatches from Bucharest today | said Rumania planned to meet Hun- World War lost Transylvania, which formed a part of the old Austro- Hungary empire, offering to cede | 10,000 miles of the province to Hun- | gary provided Hungary agrees to complete exchange of populations, g e R Gl CHAMBER TO HEAR INSURANCE HEAD Julian Price, President of the Jef- | ferson Standard Life Insurance| Company of Greensboro, N. C., is to | be the speaker at tomorrow’s lunch- | eon meeting of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce at the Baranof Hotel. | - eee Plan Boat Cruise To make plans for a boat trip on o'cleck in the social rooms of Res- | urrection Lutheran Church. All ‘members are invited to be Dresent [} § ) calf 1 Also on the program will be the; | discussion of pl H NDS IN Jl‘NE:\lV‘ | Mrs. 1. Zupan, formerly of Ju-! isit with friends here.| ,8She is making her headquarters at| 1lhe Baranof. | l Ilavllans ‘HOISI Flag on British Fort The German censor-approved caption on. this picture, sent by radio. from Berlin to New York, says it shows Italian soldiers planting banners atop Fort Jirrch immediately after its capture during the Italian advance on Berbera, British Somaliland. The British attacked the African colony under heavy attack. ry’s demand for the return of -he" | um The BEER" o trhie . CENTURY SPY SYSTEM N GREAT BRITAIN UNDER CONTROL Round-up Made of Fifth Columnists-Work of Secret Service LONDON, Aug. 28—Britain be- lieves that she has the fifth co!- (ever, is not being lulled into a false sense of safety and a vast {number of undercover agents are constantly at work to halt the rupted espionage agents from re- organizing. The story of the secret smvxf‘o will probaby never be told but| here are two examples that have | been made public. ts well under control, Up to | three months ago they were a dan- ]v,cmm threat to the security of the | British Isles. The government, how- 'WEATHER BUREAU EYES ON ALASKA, THOMPSON FINDS The United States Weather Bu- reau is more interested in Alaska today than it has ever been in the past, Meteorologist Howard J Thompson, head of the bureau in Alaska, said today on his return with ‘Thompson after a five-month stay in the States Thompson attended a regional technical conference of bureau men in Washington for three months, leaving the Capital July 1 to spend a week in Utica visiting Mrs. Thomp- son’s sist three days in Michigan at his former home, four days in Yellowstone, three weeks in San Francisco and two weeks in Seattle. - STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Au 3 28, — Closing British confidential diplomatic quotation of Alaska Juneau mine | reports were finding their way to|stock today is 4%, American Can Berlin, These reports are sent to|96%, Anaconda 21% Bethlehem embassies in friendly countries in| Steel 78%, Commonwealth and a code which friendly nations all| Southern 1%, Curtiss Wright 7%, have the key. It was discovered that| General Motors 47% International an embassy in a friendly nation| Harvester 44, Kennecon 28%, New was relaying the information to York Central 11%, Northern Pa- jectives was discovered in time. A row of houses in a certain vlllage were reroofed shortly after war| broke out, by a so-called Nether-| lands concern. When the job was finished it presented a picture from | the air of a gigantic red arrow pointing to the objective. PSRN iy S The Dally Alaska mmplre has the | largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper | William Rohrbach, traveling man, Labor Day, a meeting of the Luther | the Reich, The guilty men have| cific 6%, United States Steel 52%, arriving yesterday on the Aleutian, League will be held tonight at 7|been captured. [ In another case a clever method | of directing planes to military ob-| Pound $4.03. R e Empire Classifieds Pay~ I,/ POLITICALLY CONTROLLED LIQUOR MAY BE .. % VERY $ COSTLY s VOTE AGAINST () THE REFERENDUM . SEPTEMBER 10th You Are Invited to ATTEND and ASSIST SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA'S NINETEENTH ANNUAL F A IR Seplember 12, 13, 14 Every effort is being made to make this FAIR prove ENTERTAINING, EDUCATIONAL the PROSPERITY of all ALASKA. - Premium Books May Be Obtained » - Address R. B. Martin—P. O. Box 1615 and PROMOTE

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