The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 5, 1941, Page 7

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Count five average words to the (ne. Dally rate per line for consecutive usertions: One day . coeee 100 Additional days . Se Minimum charge 580 Copy must be in the office by 2 solock in the afternoon to insure Kuertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone #om persons listed in telephonel Wrectory. LE ~foot, FOR S# no engine Phone 92. OIL STOVE, $45; field glass, $35; Kodak mera, $ John Knud- Call 124 after 5 pm 1934 FORD V-8 sedan, radio and cater, $150. Phone 446 BOAT troller North Sta 30 ft., beam 9 ft., 12 hp. Frisco Standard. At Boat Harbor 2] FOR Income property in the heart of Juneau. Cash or terms. Write Box XXZZ c¢/o The Empire. ALFE-—4-room modern house bath, full concrete base- garage, electric range and heater, paved sidewalks gain. Call at 419 Geo. Messerschmidt FOR with * ment water and me property in of Juneau. Cash or Box XXZZ c/o The FOR SALE heart Wrile Near Auk Bay Store. C. H Donohue. ATKINS 634. Products, Phone Black "URNISHED home at Auk See Milton Ward. Bay, 3 weres. FOR SALE--1937 V-§ Panel Deliv- ery. Case Lot Grocery. Restaurant and apart FOR SAL ment house: Income property & ba in. Phone Douglas 28. MISCELLANEOQUS 8 ISH baths. 12th St. m ssage and cabinet Phone Green 662, 3% sound gunny sacks at Coal Bunk- t!vac Mrs. L. Skeie, 410 West’ CENTS EACH PAID for used | | FOR RENT~4-room flat, oil ranze and heater—Gastineau Ave. In- quire at Juneau Paint Stor FOR RENT — Two steamheated| apts. One with two bedrooms. Call 2. Both center of town FOR RENT-—Steam heated apari ment. Green 67 FOR RENT — 4-room fur. Telephone 3 flat TWO large, clean, steam heated, front room apt., including water, garbage, $35. Phone 143. COMPLETELY furnished 6-room house, $45 monthly. See Billy Jaegal at the Sewing Basket HOUSEKEEPING rooms, every- thing furnished. 208 Main St, upstairs. VACANCY: 3 - room Decker Apts. 3-ROOM furnished apt., new oil range, newly renovated, showcr bath. Phone Black 479, at 1565 Seatter Tr: “ROOM furnished house, oil heat. Phone Blue 474. Apariments. VACANCY — Francis nt: Inquire Snap- Shoppe. | 5-ROOM fur. 4 | house. Aduits | 432. FOR hath, Phone t.; also preferred. Phone ‘with Apls RENT-—3-room teambeat. Black "¢ apt. Klein VACANCY Shabaldak Apts. Phone 4-ROOM partly fur. house. Phone after 5 167 fastauglene g 3T ‘J»RO()M nicely fur. | apts. and houses. p.m. “stm. heated Windsor Apts apartment FOR RENT—Furnished _| in Triangle Building. See Stan | Grummett, Phone 253 5 ugget Apartments. Re- | duced rates. VACANCY Evergreen Apartments. Phone Blue 629. ONE FURNISHED APARTMENT | AND ONE UNFURNISHED | APARTMENT. HILLCREST. PHONE 439, APARTMENT for today. vent. Call 478 GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- $450. Finger wave, 65c. y Beauty Shop. Telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. ¢ Ciassinecs rav ©my SANITARY PLUMBING and L3 | | HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner Let your plumbing worry be . PHONE 788 our worry.” RADIO MART CONSOLES Crosley 7 tube - Sparton 11 tube special e TABLE MODELS Sparton 3-tube Sparton 6 tube Sparton BC Sparton 3C Detrola T Detrola Bre s PHONO. M Table model Crosley, with Rec- ord Player, Recorder 7 tube BC & SW ——$T4.50 COMMERCIAL S20R Hallicrafters (Champion) $42.50 RME 70 with built-in DB20 Presclector, complete with speaker—a steal at 5149.50 RME 09, new tubes __ $99.60 USED Battery Portable . $12.50 Silverton 8-Tube, New . 520.50 5.00 BC and SW —$35. All radios sold on easy terms, small finang i : : | RCA Table Model down payment, 5 per ce charge — Six months to pay—Liberal tradé-ins, BATTERY Emerson G-volt Delco G-volt console _complete with batsery aud chafger . $9,30 ELECTRIC SER\ SHOP 217 Seward STREET EVERYTHING IN RADIO ELECTRICAL LINES $34.50 ~ BARNEY GOOGLE i CAWNT NE SEE /Tl GENRILS PLUMB PETERED OWT .PAW 2 THEM BRNN MANOONERS WORE WA TO & FRAZTZLE - SHW - GO ON BACK TO T HEN HOWSE AN' FINISH NORE AN T SEZ AT AN'T GOOD FER i CRITTER TO WALLER N BED ROUSE HIN UP, WOMBNY | SLEEPING room with or without | board. Phone Green 462. VANCANCY — MacKinnon Apart- | ments. Phone 671 or 304. | VACANCY — Snow White Apts. .| Phone 299 ar Green 355 after | 6 pm. | 3-ROOM fur apt, ofl heat, 12tn 8t. | Phone Black 490. |2 FURNISHFD apts. Phone Red | 600, FOR RENT—3-room apt. Owl Cafe, | Douglas. | ONE OFFICE room for rent. Pirst National Bank Bldg. | FOR RENT-—Apartments, inquire | at office 20th Century Bldg. COZY,-‘wnun furn. apts. Lights, | water, dishes, cooking utensils and | bath. Reasonable at Seaview. | VACANCY at Foshee Apts, - |VACANCY | Perelle apartment. Phone Blue 575. -ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house. Phone 484. I WANTED | WANTED—Mill and mine worker: If interested see Howard Stabler in Shattuck Bldg. or Sam Peko- vich, Baranof Hotel. "FOR RENT Juneaun Ligquor Stere Space Will Remodel to Suit Tenant. See Percy’s Cafe { i oom fur. | _ | for the hotied of THE DAILY ALASKA, EMPIRE, MONDAY, MAY 5, 1941 THE REVOLT IN IRAQ--JUST W BARREL OF TROUBLE FOR BRITAIN NOW APP By MORGAN M. BEATTY | AP Feature rvice Writer | WASHINGTON, | shock of | Washington is not the battle |the Balkans, not the blitz in | rica, but revolt in Iraq. The sudden seizure of power by the Iraq army’s intriguing Rashid Ali al Galiani and his pro-Nazi clique means the British rear in the Middle Fast is threatened, as well as the back doors to Turkey and { Russia. | | But tha May 5 — The of Af- 's only part of the story Primarily the Iraq coup reflects | the realism of all Moslems, and | therein lies a barrel of trouble for | Britain. 1 At ds throughout axiomatic that Moslems the Middle and Asiatic {East are bitterly hostile to she Jewish planting in Palestine. It also is known through the ! diplomatic grapevine that Mos- {1em eyes are popping over German | blitz successes. With a Moslem,) pmlhm:: succeeds. like success! | While the Iraqi broke off reia-| |tions with Germany at the start| {of the war as a gesture toward the play. The real conflict has Lries over-run or conquered by Ger | their British sponsors, they never |closed the door to Italians, The ITtalians are primarily responsible intrigue in Iraq. That little cut-out country down under Turkey is quite a bit | than a strategic chunk of te | Primarily, Irag is Turkey's bati-| [door supply line to the outside | world. The Turkish end of the | Berlin-to-Baghdad railroad termin- |ates at the Iragq port of Basra, ‘Likvwi.\c the Mosul oil fields are |in Iraq, and the pipelines |through the territory of belligerent {Iraqi tribes to British fleet supply | ports in Palestine. So do the cross- | desert bus lines. | Iraq was scissored out of ‘the pre-World War Turkish Empire by |the League of Nations, mandated to the British. Through a series of treaties and oil . concessions, the, Iragi won their status as a naticn along about the end of the 20, jsigned an alliance, giving the Brit-| {ish the right to move troops, e: tablish air bases. The Royal Air Force also has tank corps for des- |ert werk against rebel tribesnien in | Iraq. Undercover reports to Washing- ton say the Germans offered Iraq to Turkey as a prize if the Tyrks | would turn against Britain at the beginning of the war. This the Turks refused on the ground that the Germans were offering some- i thing they did not possess. Likewise, the British are sald to {have made assurances to Turkey | (about Traq after the war, meaning! that Turkey might again win’ back her possession. | Of these secret dealings 'the| |Tragi are well aware. So it hap- pened that when the pro-Nazi Gal-| iani seized power in Iraq, he was careful not to translate his Geérman sympathies into public action | against the British. Instead, he an-| nouriced there'd be no change in| relations. | That is interpreted here as mere| Galiani insurance. The British| called his hand on the weekend of | | April 20, by exercising their treaty] |tights to move troops into Traq.! If Galiani had wanted to exhibit i his pro-German leaning, there was| s chance to do it, by re!usinz; the British permission to land their| | troops. But he did nothing of the kind.| | He again pledged his cooperation. | | So, for the time being the British | were assured their oil contrdl, and | their ability to keep the backdoor| to Turkey open and ready for mili- tary business. % | But for how long? Nobody, knew. Galiani and his German-| Italian friends obviously waited, in the view of diplomatic Washington, for a break. There are some advantages in| the month for diplomatic|- run - = T Aty J % Modern oil pumping station on a pipeline which stretches across barren, eraded Iraq. the British position. They do have strategic bases in Iraq, and they do have an air force in the desert to nip revolt in the bud. It is believed here generally, that the masses of Iraq’s 3,000,000 Arabs sympathize with England, even though they rail at the Jews in Palestine, offer asylum to anti- Jewish agitators. They are dis- turbed by Hitler's repeated state- menis that the Germans are a su- perfor face. If he could hate the Jews so much, could he not also one day regard the Arabs as a subject nation, exploitable ruthles Iy for German ends? But Moslems are also real and they know British defeat means either German supremacy or a period of confusion, in which Moslems generally might reap rich booty from western civilization. And so, Iraq has become the bell wether of the Moslem world, theidentials to President Roosevelt onlv|apy machinery to turn out bulk testing ground, where Moslems & few s ‘befdre the Nazis march- | tenography, multigraphing, photo- learn how far they may flout Brit- ed into'his country. Both'de Kaufi- | sffset, hand-addressing and |unn|‘()—i ish power in the Middle East. The mann and the State Department|sraphing. first trick in that games goes .lo|recognize Denms: a wern-| - J. P. Golden started the store.! the British. They've moved iniment “iunder dures De uff-| Like 85 per cent of the workers, he troops unchallenged. 'minn’s’ position as a result of thi vietim But that's only the beginning of | unique. Nearly all other coun- (example: | started, possibly, a Holy War, Meet Ihe.Man Who Could Not Hear as Ordered fo Protest (Continued from Page One) as of school age, the family re- turned to Copenhagen and Henrik went to the schools and the uni- versity there and to Oxford, where he studied law. He turned early to the diplo- matic service and has been in it constantly for 28 years. Looking back, . he observes that almost everywhere he has been, there has been something happening. He was Vice-Consul in New York when the World War broke out. He saw the end of it as a_member of the legation in Berlin, As Min- ister to Italy when only 32 years old, he watched the rise of Musso- linj and the mdrch on Rome. The eight 'years he spent as Minister Lo China and Japan were filled with the turbulent events leading up (c war there, In China, he met the young wo- man who was to become his wife ;Charlotle MacDougall, daughter o! Admira] William MageDougall of the U. S. Navy. 4 Even in the happy and com- paratively quiet eight years that followed when he was Minister to Norway, de Kauffmann had his [ & AT DOES IT MEAN! 8 i ity # o o hands full. It was during that| period that the World Court at'T (RIPP'_ES oNlY Hague refused Norway's claims to a part of Greenland and awa the whole of that land to Denm: It was de Kauffmanns duty smooth the troubled waters worked always for close cooper, tion of the Seandinavian countri and is convinced the day will come | when there will be a United States of Scandinavia, rd NEW YORK, May A Brooxlyi 9 stock market NO SUPERIORS RECOGNIZED In the months that he has been in Washington, his only recreation | has been occasional Hours of simple| ana mast of the 25 persons working had a gross income of $ year ARENT e e o (| TIMELY ] NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS - Quality Work Clothing [ | | L] FRED HENNING Complete Ogtfitter for, Mem *> o Ve, THRIFT CO0-OP CLomES | Member Natlonal Retailer- | Owned Grocers ‘! * NEXT TO CITY HALL | PHONE 767 - >“">-A7'—‘"“%‘“ » - T —— ] PSP SYSTEM "ARE EMPLOYED, . BROOKLYN FIRM siness begun a month after the crash by a crip-| | pled cmployer of Trippled employees $85.000 last The firm offers a mailing service to 0 ! pleasure with his family—his wife re distinguished by crutche and two very attractive daughte: canes, leg brac r other devices | Tilda, 13, and Lisa, 10, His realf physical handicaps { hobbies are travel, mountain climb-| Apgut 140,000 pieces of mail ‘mv: (he has scaled peaks in Eu- ut daily for clients such as dep: | rope, andinavia, Japan, and|ment stores, tr portation com- | Chi, and “skiing. 3 and religious erganization. panie De Kauffmann presented his cre- | many have governments in exile|cut down fatigue, | which are recognized by the Unit- - - oo |od. States. De Kauffmann has no| | such superiors. | Phone 648. Chiropodist Dr, { Thus, as far as the United States| lis *concerned, de Kauffmann 1S| | Denmark. Which explains why he| |can sign treaties without consult-| imu Copenhagen, and can turn :Back Fl'om Bermuda l s (s, | e a deaf ear to protests that come {from there, | i e 'Eight Men Split lce Classic Award (Continuea irom Page One) | { in Seattle. i Fred Miller has a wife and two- '} year-old daughter in Crawfordsville, Oregon. Maft Bischoff is single but has been a long time in Alaska. | Herman Medford is married and has a son in Seattle. Howard McDonald is single, from | Seattle. } Francis Anderson, formerly ofi Lakeside, Oregon, has a wife in | Fairbanks. s Elmer Larson is a single man. Art Erickson is a single man and was born in Alaska. None of the winners plan to quit L. W. (Chip) Robert Returning to New York by clipper s )lane from Bermuda, where he in- the minihg company. |ipected - construction of the new Ice Runs—Jams . J, 8. naval base, L. W. (Chip) Rob- The Neriana' ice ran for about 90 |t refreshes himself with a hot minutes after the 1:50 a. m. break, ‘l"nki-ml:)oo?gf;t w;:v*énr: :.Eel;.‘:n:?::: and then jammed in front of the 'U38 4 ks 4 town of Nenana and held fast for | ¥ill Feport to the Navy Department t the British island some time, R s 3 asbnsely QUADS GO THROUGH DAILY BATHROUTINE (TON Licheg S A AL Connie and her three brothers, North Daketa quads, splash through a daily bath routine in tubs labéled for a gallery of spectators peering Brown of Leonard, N. D, are still through & glassed door. The quads, children of Mr, and Mrs. Niek in a hospital at Fargo, ; TIND DENS HA: RUNNIN' — L RE-MNSILL GET Wi ON TH' FRONT PORCH WHAR RELL WHIFE SOME GOOD FRASH AR w S\CH A DAY ' \T'S GITTW DARKERA. & WOLF'S MONTH— W\, PAW '\ DONT NE T NRWS BEEN 1P A o 2 ENNFE 2 =1 T ByBILLY DeBE S D. They are eleven weeks old. T The office is equipped with mod- || Alaska Alaska M \ " HOME GROCERY | Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Ulah Nut and Lump | COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 CLEANING NE 15 Laundry usic Supply Opportunity Is Always Wailing! ALASEA SCHOOL OF AERONAUTICS o e FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealer~) GREASES GAS — OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors —— EVERY .3 Rl ol A — D Soothing Orgem Music and Delicious Fried Chicken NIGHT DOUGLAS INN ‘ lohn Marin, Prop. Phone 56 || Sas e | | | Krafft’s MANUFACTURING CO. CABINET WORK-—-GLASS —A4 PHONE 62 Phone 146 d ——a Home Ligilor) Stove—Tel. 699 | [ [ ~— American Meat—Phone 38 Sanilary Meal Co. . FOR QUALITY un’l‘s' I “SMILING SERVICE" | | Bert's Cash Grocery | PHONE | Free Delivery STEP to Health with Better Feet. | Steves, | AV, | ——————— ‘ 1 The Juneau Laundry | P Z |1 Phone 464 ———— | FRANKLIN STREET between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 [ ‘Every house needs westinghouse' PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Electrical Contractor—Dealer 140 So. Sew-rd st. Junufi. Alasks Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black 480 | ZENTYH BADIOS s v imany JUNEAU RADIO -SERVICE 104 or 105 Juneau AND POULTRY FREE. DELIVERY Call Fhones: 13 and 4¢ i e —— '|| GEORGE BROS. ‘ Widest Selection ol | | MARINE | BUILDING | — Bill Hixson * H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man™ HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates * Phone—Sinzle o largest -paid ecire aska newspaper, The Daily Alaska Empire has the" ulation of any Al- COMMERCIAL .. SAVINGS... Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel 0il Delivery GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” [ — IF I'T"8 PAINT \WE HAVE IT! COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH - HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests LIQUORS , PHONE 92 or 95 " Bodding Transfer | odding Transfer | PHONE 67 "_\‘ | Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS | Builders’ and Shelt HARDWARE L\—_‘ JUNEAU-YOUNG | Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition l & MARX CLOTHING | mm Pflilil Shop t '"Pm'ivx'n [T} Rice & Ahlers Co. ||—m— Plumbing — Oil Burners . Hectisy | COWLING-DAVLIN Phone 34 Sheet Metal AU

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