The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 14, 1941, 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)

'] 4 ) E . “uc(‘u]n('d territories, will try to preserve her conqumaks U‘lll} /5 'lska mplre iby turning brother against brother aud reach’ out Publis 'md evilly evening exobbt Sundadby he | for new conquests with slave-soldiers. MPIRE PRINTING COMPANY cad S— | Second and Main Streets, Juneat, Alaska. | TROY BENDER - - president | g Vice-Precident and Business Managet | B in the Post Office u as Second s Matter. (1 ek SUBSCRIFTION RATES: " Gt Delivered by carrier in Juncau and Douglas for $(.25 per month. " e lowing party feuds, partisan jealousies and look to our One yea dhs lu mavance, $6.00 | ountry and not to our party in the consequences | t they will prompily no of our action, Sir, I am as good a party man as or urregularits ‘2 Jae anyone living, w! 2. Bustuess Office, 374 & MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS vided for. ated Press is exclusively entitled to the use foi “We must fi & dispatches credited to it or not other: differences, aper and also the local news published and berein. ALASRA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. to the first. “National Newspaper Representa | Were fired in the " GEORCE D CLOSE tives, with off Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland !ias who had long been the foremost opponent of g e b ; _____ Abraham Lincoln, the same Senator Douglas who SEATTLE REPRESENTATIVE—Cilbert A. Wellington, 1011 had been defeated for the presidency but a few e o *® 3 2 months before by Lincoln White House to dent footsteps of !the fall of Fort the north? Could the government count upon the support of those who demanded peace at any cost? George Ashmun of Massachusetts, friend of Lin- coln and of Douglas, called upon the Senator on [Sunday evening and urged that Douglas go to Lin- {eoln with advice and announcement of support. — Douglas hesitated, doubting that the President want- W DITTRNING QITN 'ed his advice. Mrs. Douglas joined in Ashmun’s THE® RETUR s NG SUN pleas, and late that night Ashmun and the Senator 1 ) {a it had a singularly mild winter st the [ G { ihe sourdough ' genator Douglas 1 the sonth earlier than porder states to two balmy w ld be | policy of preserv mu to expect | Bellaire, Ohio, a Ln shets suiil f s n there & ple of for to do with winn: Iarch to prove ir mettle deed, It would be here en Apell comes we are 1ot safe T from a late blizzord |fhe trisls apd = 1t ther thi, x .achi day the sun ™ ises & little earlier and seis a litic later; each day{ “mcmpered, an c¢nd in June it has r It you look carefully ai the jqyaq hadows at poon you will they grow shortex to Liit This rriimph tury he sun is the gresd!accomplished to 0. e year. lis 1 o is slow. But he lived, we can othing halts il. Pr it will put winter to As Willkie w: flight and usher in the glory of the spring and the |of our splendor of thc summer. ‘iney are as yet far off, of 1861: and winter may struggle monfully against its in- e trusp we ance: 2 evitable defeat. are numbered. But its days BROTHE,\ A\' \I‘\ M ( According to a decree of Vidkun Quisling, Hitler L T s it Wormians Trom 1. A0 80 While we in this country have been watching B! 55 b SRS ' the ASCAP-BMI feud, Great Britain and Vichy have will now “have the opportunity” of forming a special|peen waging a little music battle of their own, regiment called “Nordl:nd” to be placed under Ger- Tt started when the British Minister of Informa- man command. They wouwid thus feel themselves|ticn, Alfred Duff Cooper, claimed that the British nembers of “the greal Ge! nic race” and be able anthem “God e the King” was sung in Paris to take part he glorious stiuggle against the during the Armistice Day pro-British demonstrations. encmies of worli” and sharve in the “delivery The Vichy Goveinment through “an authorized of the Aryai race sours replied that it wasn't the British anthem that was The decree #1171 promises Téwards ranging from government jobs after one of service to com- : b Kt A 3 5 une for 3 pletely built-up farms for those who actualiy fight LShelr a for two As an ad tiona! recomnense, Ger- replied that it w nd music Carey, also offered, and be sent t s promised dlace; resem- £ English the Norv - Since » rent country with Nazi Germany as vegians in the occupied homeland are te ners of war, and as such—according to rules accepted among civilized nations for centuries—they should never be asked to take up arms on behalf of the enemy. At the beginning of the invasion of Norway nine months ago, the Nazis solemnly declared that they would never try to make Nerway a fighting partner against Great Britain and the other democracies. But now this promise—as. well as international law— has been broken. And this fresh evidence supports the assumption that (urmam faced with eventual upnsmgs in .all it was too busy the Marseillaise. two verses as so against us” and he A New York they may be mi mood just aren't that The Fifth C¢ been ordered to comes America’s er, using REA electricity, and one of those reflector heaters like you see in the bathroom. “Then I went back in the morn- ing, and I found that one sow had ten little pigs, and I want to report (that mother and pigs are doing nicely, thank you.” “Looks like you LOVE.little pigs Washmglon Merry- Go-Round (Continued from Page Que) man and Ttalian opinion inside the NOW," observed a friend. United States have heen e Bund, “Oh, yes” Wickard replied. “We the Fascis: Black Shirts ¢ yilap always love them when they are Nazi-Fascis gar rhere €ight or n ine dollars. But we don’t has been no active ps '(v.)a"a 1da from love them so much when they're two the der side or three dollars.” Furthermore, these Ita terman : = groups can be the most effective NOMONKEVING spearhead in getting prepecanda ‘Able. hard-hitting Donald Nelson. into German W ttaly 410« Whom Roosevelt named to head the printed i England #nd i Procurement Division of the OPM, is om British airplanes hay X td to have real authority tible - influe in | mal Army and Navy ent from purely ape get defense supplies, n the Un-rm the p! of orennization he has cvmans under Hit- | UPritted for his division, Nelson weigh ltely firmly in ists upon com- sorg. Creel did |V iete contiol over all mmajor military under Wood:c son 3, Pol- | I ;Ch‘“s' : ish, Austrian and Slav groups from | 1uS Was quite a shock to Armay Chicago to Pit eh cre NE d Nevy 1ss-hats, who on several effective A | oecasions e blandly disregorded B B loouisht whout 1 | both White House and Defense Gom the Ausrria-Hungs Empire ang | ssion “dire €s” on basie policy the crun of the tire. warl ranting ccutraets. Yor example, ot he Ford orders, awarded over the NOTE: Only effective propaganda | /hement protest of Commissioner established by the Goverament so |Sianey Hillman far has been by Karl Bickel, ex- Nelson proposes to put a stop to chief of the United Press, who has | this by centering all contract super- organized a Pan-American newspap- | Y5100 in his Procurement Division. er campaign under Nel-on Rockefel- | Under his plan the Army and ler's cultural commi Navy would determine what suy ior plies, arms and equipment ! needed, and he would do the order- Ing—instead of letting the brass- PIGS ARE PRECIOUS The old days when AAA urged | nats dish out the contracts as they farmers to “plow under” their Jittie | saw fit, Furthermore, Nelson would pigs are gone forever. Or at least | have the last word on price, time of that is the deduction drawn from the remarks of Secretary of Agricul- ture Wickard, who was chatting with newsmen about ‘ic pigs on his farm in Indiana. “I went back to the farm the -other day,” he said, “and I saw my pigs there, being warmed in a brood- ielivery, quantity to be ordered, and specifications. This businesslike plan may seem logical enough to private business men, but it is a radical innovation in the military services—particularly in t Army, where buying is scat- ;_l.ered among a number of offices, Willkie Walks Wilh Douglas stake, and the fate of political parties to be pro- There can be but two parties—the party So spoke Stephen A. Douglas as the first guns When Wendell Willkie the other day went to the in an hour of need, Senator Douglas. On Sunday morning, April 14, 1861, the news of entous cabinet meeting Lincoln read a procla- into service 75,000 men, am mation calling anxicus moment. met with Lincoln at the White House, A short time later, at the request of Lincoln, men of Ohio and men of western Virginia had much d his entire party to the President's support; 60 well known to need recalling. however, that Douglas’ career came to ie gave great comfort, and through it strength, ol cannot be denied. nation keep before them the historic words sung, but an old French song written for King Louis XIV—that With a certain amount of reserve, the British of the anthem were written by Henry The Vichy Governmeént didn't answer that one; is maintained; Many knew that. ordnance reservation eveland Plain Dealer) may lay aside all party grievances, hen there are only party issues at ght for our country and forget all the party of traitors. We belong Civil War, the same Senator Doug- throw his support behind the Presi- he was following in the Sumter reached Washington, and at It was an What would be the reaction of set out on a tour of the northern rally the people behind Lincoln's ing the Union. Douglas stopped at nd a speech he delivered there to ing West Virginia for the Union. wrong to intimate that Douglas ibulations of the great emancipator It must be following the outbreak of the war. What he might have lighten the President’s burdens had only guess, alks with Douglas, may the leaders may lay aside all party griev- usic War Spreads Philadelphia Record) the British had swiped the nthem, as “almost certain” that the words | oet and musician, about 1740. the French anthem, It has forbidden the singing of toning down unding too contemporary—“Tyranny “The bloody flag is lifted.” | authority on antiques reports that‘ xed with ordinary furniture if thv that the mood is the thing. Our kick is that our pocketbooks moody. ‘orps Area Medical Department has raze a shack settlement near.a new This medical group thus be- first shack lroops of World War II. Whether Nelson gets his way, re- {mains to be seen. The brass-hats' {don't like it and they will do any- | thing they can to scuttle it. But if they do, insiders are betting that | Nelson, formerly of Sears Roebuck {and one of the most brilliant and | enlightened men in the country, iwnn'l be with the OMP very long. | MERRY-GO-ROUND The War Department isn't adver- | tising it, but it has assigned one of the Army’s brainiest officers, Major General Robert C. Richardson, to make a detailed survey of its press relations and organization. Richard- son, former Commandant of West | Point and now CO of the First Cav- ‘ | alry Division, Ft. Bliss, Tex., is the officer who got along so well with | WPA workers that they. volunteered o work overtime without pay on a construction job he was directing. ~,> HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. H. Tullis was admitted to St. Ann's today and is receiving medical | care. Baby Bailey of Thane, was dis-| missed from St. Ann's today after receiving medical treatment. Admitted for medical care, Isaac Neimi s at St. Ann’s. Willima Strebe was a surgical ad- mission ¢his morning at St. Ann's. After rwceiving surgical care at St | Ann's Jack Whaite was dismissed. ————— British Destroyer Blown Up, Report| BERLIN, Feb, 14. Command lists a British ‘as destroyed at m Ibfl.h in an, air raid, i {bank account | ivelt named him to direct E 'EMPIRE | | O e e e e e, | HAPPY BIRTHDAY | ..-.—.—-.4 FEBRUARY 14 Mrs. Olaf Bodding Mrs. Edward Bach Gary Aalto Bach Lloyd V. Winter Mildred Bryson John A. Larsen Austin Brown Axel Nielson Scott Ford HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” Pl S R SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15 Benefic aspects dominate today. It is a date most fortunate for| women who should push all their personal interests. Men have the portent of increasing business and professional activity. | Heart and Home: Under this configuration whatever pertains to the heart is well directed. The stars presage domestic harmony and happiness, Girls may expect joyful reunions with fiances and boy friends. Many marriage engage- ments are forecast. This is a luck: wedding date, although it does not | promise much wealth as a balance for love. As the stars promise eco- nomic partnership in marriage and & equal responsibility regarding sup-|° port of the family, the bridegroom's may not be so im- portant as it has been in the past Business Affairs: Many malad justments in carrying out govern- ment contracts are forecast, but they will be overcome within a short time. Trade will continue k and prosperity widespread he seers advise careful planning tor the future when there must b a financial reaction after the flood of money poured out for na- tional defense. It is well to assurc widened distribution of indus-| trial plants and to work toward self-sustaining activities in smail communities. | National Issues: Subversive be evident through an unfortunate episode which may have wide per- cussions, Warning given by those who read the stars that secret agencies influence legislato: and government employees as well as members of unions. There is a sign which seems to indicate cause or desperate speed in turning ont airplanes and other necessities needed for adequate national de-; fense. International Affairs: and hostile gestures will be nu- merous as aid for the British gais impetus and volume, but the tide is to turn strongly in favor of the democracies. The second World | War will assume new phases and it may be extended far beyond this | ar, but victory for liberty and| stice is prognosticated. A long| pull and a hard one is presaged, but the struggle will prove the strength of free peoples. ) Persons whose birthdate it 91s| have the augury of a year of good fortune and domestic happiness. Romance shouid be avoided by those past youth. Children born on this day wul be ambitious and intuitive. They should have good reasoning powers which they may forget to use when they fall in love. MEN WHO ARM AMERICA: 14 CLARENCE A. DYRSTRA Clarence Addison Dykstra pot his biggest job when Presidont Roose- the job of registering 17,000,000 Americans for selective military secrvice He started as a teacher in the University of Chicago and later | taught at Ohio State, Kansas and California universities. He did civic !work at Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles; was city manager of, Cin- cinnati until the University of Wis- consin picked him as presxdem, pg 2 scholar can do pral ga, too, Threats will | be made against the United States| FEBRUARY 14, 1921 Some were telling it with flowers, others with comics, but the major- ity with the cusiomary tinsel or re paper art s, for this being Valen- | tine's Day, the younger generalion was recognizing it in true form. | plant was to be established in Juneau and everything proposed cold storage plant was favorable, according to in Seattle. A freezing relating to the a cablegram received here from H. H. Snow, Four persons were elected to honorary membership in the Alaska Historical Society at a meeting of the Board of Managers at the rooms of the Territorial Bureau of Publicity in the A. B. Hall. Those elected |were Roald Amundsen and Viljalmar Stefansson, Arctic explorers; |Dr. Edward W. Nelson, Chief of the U. S. Biological Survey, and Dr. | Daniel . Neuman. | E. M. McIntyre of Douglas, who had been working during the winter |at the California Grocery, was to leave on the Ambassador for Chi- | chagof, to be employed in the company’s stort. | Alaska’s total donations to the European Relief Council’'s Fund for fb(arving Children of Europe was expected to exceed $15,000, according | to a statement made by Gov. Thomas Riggs. | SR i Al Ostrom, who had been visiting at Tenakee Hot Springs, arrived | here on the Estebeth. Weather: Highest, 14; lowest, 13; clear. P e Daily Lessons in English %. 1. corbon s e e - A s S WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “It is quite cold today.” | Say, “It is RATHER (SOMEWHAT, VERY) cold today.” QUITE means wholly, entirely, completely. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Neuter. Pronounce first syllable NEW, not NOO OFTEN MISSPELLED: Annoy; ANN. Anoint; AN. SYNONYMS: Misuse, misapply, misappropriate, misemploy, mal- treat, abuse. 3 WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: | PATALISM; the doctrine that all events are determined by necessity. fate. (Pronounce fa-tal-iz’m, first A as in FATE, accent first able). or o.-..— MODERN ETIQUETTE * R()BFRTA LEE in-| fluences in labor organizations will ,M—.- Q. Shonld one ever hurry through the simple formality of intro- ducing two persons? & D te is undiznified, and mistakes and embarrassment often rezult from burrying through introductions. ke plenty of time and proncunce the names slowly and distinetly Q. How should a girl’'s wedding invitation read if her mother has remarried? A. Her step father’s name and mother’s new name should be used. Q. When a man is wearing a full dress coat should the coat he buttoned? | A. No; it should be left open. e e e Ty LOOK and LEAR A C. GORDON o a0 - o e 1. What is the sheath for an archer's arrows called? 2. What is collateral in the commercial world? 3. What was the Battle of the Three Emperors? | 4. Who was the greatest Scottish philanthropist? | 5 What is a “paterfamilias”? ANSWERS: 1. Quiver. 2. Property offered as security. 3. Battle of Austerlitz, in 1805. 'The emperors were Napoleon 1 Alexander T of Russia, and Francis II of Austria. 4. Andrew Carnegie. | 5. The father of a family the male head of a household. Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS Blrngren Building PHONE 56 *r— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 —_— | Dr. Judson Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Phy: Office hours: 10-12; 1-5, 7-8 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 1762 Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm, —_— ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. Graduate Los Angeles Collge of Optometry and ‘Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground Helene W. Albrech! PHYSICAL THERAPEUTICS Phone 773 Valentine Building—Room 7 The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Qeward Street Near Third { JAMES C. COOPER C.P.A. Business Counselor OCOOPER BUILDING L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doors! Satisfied Is Worr by ‘ustomers” Sea Monsler | about as large as a medium-sized ‘flur with ears erect like those of " DR, H, VANCE _ B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting brothers welcome. H. E. SIM- MONS, Exalted Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary. MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Worshipful Second and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. VERGNE L. HOKE, Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. — “T-morrow’s Styles | Today” Juneau’s Own Store "The Rexall Store” Your Rellable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Post Office Substation NOW LOCATED AT HARRY RACE DRUGGIST “The Squibb Stores of Alaska™ “The Stere for Men” SABIN’S Front St—Triangle Bldg. You'll Find Food Fimer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN S. FRANKLIN STREET H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING L B SR When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING SBTORAGE and CRATING ld cat, and a stubby tail. The shag- OSTEOPATH OALL US gy coat was brown or black, spot- Consultation and examination ted with white. free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 6; NOW AShOI'e" oo soumal moved with, tia|| | ¥a8i0etysppstnuent Juneau Transfer ® smooth grace of a feline. Its | Gastineau Hotel Annex Phone 48—Night Phone 481 tracks were unlike those of a cat{' South Franklin 8t. Phone 177 ot ia or a dog. WINSLOW, Ariz, Feh., 14. — A Latest to report the creature strange animal, the like of which Was Hosteen Nez Navajo veteran . mever has been seen i this region, 0 8 winiers. Unable 1o account Archie B. Belis Juneau Melody House s reported to be roaming (ho for it any other way, he said PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT botLoml'md.s of the Liltle Colorado Must be a “chindi,” evil spirit of Bookk Music and Electrie Appliances River, east of here. | someone who died by violence. Room 8, Valentine Buflding Next to Truesdell Gun Shop First noted six months ago hy, bR R o ST Phone 676 Seoond Street Phone 6 |two white hunters, and later seen VALENTINE SILVER TEA by a pair of Navajo youths, the Trinity Hall, Sat., Feb. 15, 2 to 6./ b | creature was described as bcmx.: Public invited. adv. BUY PROTECTION i Grocery and Meat Market for Your Valuables . S. After Escape | 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices SEE THE SHATTUCK AGENCY Office—New York Life GMC TRUCKS Compare Them With All Others! PRICE - APPEARANCE - ECONOMY DURABILITY CONNORS MOTOR CO. PHONE 411 SURPLUS—$125,000 * Baron Franz von Werra (right), Nazi Messerschmitt squadron leader, 1s pictured with Chief of Police Herbert S. Myers in Ogdensburg, N. Y., where he was picked up for vagrancy escaping from a pruonerl' train in Quebec and swimming %’Wu River. The-Naz air- n.p, eredited with enemy planes, was rcleased c@ b bml furnished &w eonnhh in New York, 5 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS * SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES

Other pages from this issue: