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i { @roamstiek ForBeauty i A B FIRST TRANSPORT COMES T0 ANCHOR BELOW ANCHORAGE First ar ransport to drop an- r below the city of Anchors Ie cthier day, marked one of 10 ghlights of the year's events, says iie Alaska Service Record. The be ef that Cook Inlet ld not be ed by deep- oing ships by the arrival of the T Gibson, 10,000-ton cargo ship, ded with various supplies for An- and the Army base xplcA ling at an- The sight of the ship r ciicr cut in the bay looks good to ¢ whe live in Anchoraze and icinity. With it comes a promise of ihe cpening of commerce with the cutside w Who knows but ships om t drop ancho s ‘may one day nload their cargoes UCILE FAIRBANKS of the movies has an all- in-one exercise that may be what you are locking for to help improve the fit of your bathing suit A length of wooden stick (a picce of broomstick will do) has an important place in the routine. Fair- stanag erect, with the back of the head, hips and heels in a straight line. She grasps the ends of the stick with both hands and raises it above her head. From that position she brings it to rest on her shoul- ders, at the same time rising on her toes. :xt step is to raise the stick above her heaa again and then to lower it to the position illustrated here. She brings the stick back to the starting position, lowers her heels and repeats it all. The exercise was designed to tone muscles of the abdo- men, chest, arms and legs. Neck muscles can be helped by turning the head from side to side while in the position shown here. This phase of the exercise is viewed by Miss Fairbanks as an important aid to a lovely neckline. Miss Fairbanks gives ad- vance warning that any wo- man trying it for the first time must expect sore mus- cles. But, she says, the ach- ing muscles are the posture offenders and deserve a little rough treatment. Poise and coordination are the sure rewards of a woman who makes an exercise like| this a daily habit, Miss Fair-, banks says. ! vpon the shores of Alaska and in turn bulge their hatches with the products from the empire on top of | the world. In the past nothing but small ships have dared to enter the waters of Cook Inlet. Many salmon fishing craft navigate the Inlet yearly. How- are small and could give no estimate of the possibilities of decp water ships. Recent surveys for depth and bars show promise of cxecllent channels during this time of year. - D HAZARDS OF LIVING FORT COLLINS, Col. H. V. Warden was driving serenely in his car when a sharp pain paralyzed his back. A passerby drove him to a hospital where doctors found he had a fracture of the ne—which occurred, they hazarded, when Warden's car struck a bump in the road. Hess’ Successor With Hitler Martin Bormann (arrow), Nazi party chancellor, is shown in Hitler's company on the occasion of the fuehrer’s recent birthday in this picture newly arrived from Berlin. Conspicuous by his absence is Rudolf Hess, &No. 3 Nazi, who has since fled to Scotland and whose duties Bormann is taking over. ATTENTION! CARPENTERS UNION Local No. 2247 All Members Urged fo Attend Funeral Services of BROTHER ART KUNNAS CARTER'S MORTUARY Sunday, June 1,2P. M. ELECTRICAL , ANESTHSIA IS REVIVED By HOWARD W. BLAK scociated Press Science A E CHICAGO, May 30.—Many years| ago a French scientist found that! a lew electric current would put an | animal into the same sleep as drug anesthesia | He was invited to demonstrate, but | became i1l the day of the show. His sister substituted for him, forgot to throw in the rheostat to cut the current down, consequently electro- 1 the animals | Th weeident gave electrical an- sthesia @ bad name, and scientist dropped it. Tt now has been revived sfully, and the ation re o the Ameri iolozical by M. L. & and R. W.| » Uriversity of Chica-| cur rats to tleep and kept| re with no harm for as| 1 as eight hours. The current| ent has put (l';!z‘-‘ mah, three milliamperes for , 45 for di are awakened by | ing the current, or| ing the direction of | ;s revive in one minute, | s in 10 minutes and degs in an| i and 40 minutes | Blood pressure and heart rate were 1i anged by this electri- cal an ..On the _basis of the! experimen to date it might be| used for s . 3 | | 1 | | | | | | Nathan H. Wentworth, of Auburn. dale, Mass., director in France of the American Foreign Insurance Association, greets his two-year-; old daughter, Lana, as he returns; from Europe by clipper plane, land-| | ing in New York. He hadn’t seen | his wife or baby for 14 months | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1941, HERE'S HOW LEATHERNZCKS BEGI Marine Corps rookies are pictured above at the Mariiie base at San Diego experiencing a novel introduc- tion into the life of a leatherneck. Each man is blindfolded, supplied with a pair of gloves, and told to start throwing punches—a very good hardening-up process — if you don’t happen to be one of the participants. GREENLAND JAPANMIGHT ful” policy in the South Seas Informed quarters interpreted ihis | i part of the staetement as a direct 'and Shitanda had the building re- N TRAINING POUGLAS NEWS SHITANDA APARTMENTS | HAVE CHANGED HANDS “Slim” Y. Shitanda, property | owner and preprietor of the Owl | Restaurant, has announced tne sale this week of his apartment Beckenheim. The latter is a Ju- neau man and is employed at the Alaska Juneau. by “Slim” to dispose of ail his holdings preparatory to removing | to Los Angeles where his nephew, Ben Shitanda, is located in busi- ness. His first deal was represented |m the sale last month of a resi- dence property to Ray McCormick. Five apartments on the ground floor and several rooms in a sec- ond story comprise the apartment building. which has just changed nands. Main part of it was built nabout 25 years ago by M. G. Rogers |for - a grocery store and during | following years housed a number | of businesses such as a clothing store, restaurant, tailor shops, bar- | ber shops, beer parlor and other | stores. After the big fire of 1937 |it was one of the few ' business | properties left standing. Housing facilities were very lacking then warning to the Netherlands East Modeled at considerable expense Indies in view of the current dead- | lock over economic problems. | — .- WAR ROLE Report on Strafegic Value Matsuoka ment Over South Seas— ! of Island fo Be Made in Washington Tl 1 the Western officials enroute here by Coast| — Guard cutter after an extensive sur- | vey of the World’s largest island. | Aksel Svane, Governor of South- | ern Greenland, is also coming for‘t conferences with Hendrik De Kauff- | man, Danish Minister, and State Department officials, with regard to | the Island’s defense, administration | and trade. | American apphehension as to the island’s vulnerability is due to its ation off the coast of Canada where it might make for potential danger to the peace of this conti- | rent. i The President took Greenland into the protection of the United States | on April 10, the first anniversary | of Denmark’s occupation by German | forces. 3 >ee “Aux fines herbes’ means with the addition of finely chopped herbs. When this is in a recipe, it means the food is seasoned with herbs. eis in Washi La matfonwide pro of Civilian Defense, EXPRESSES HIMSELF ' With lats of expresson Mayor Fiorelle La. Guardia outlined {o report- gram he will institute as Direcfor. 'PEACE' PLAN Dutch Warning TOKYO, May 30.—Japanese For- | WASHINGTON, May 30.—A re-}cign Minister Matsuoka, reaffirming {port that Greenland fills a strategic | Japan's tole as an outpost of defemses of | power pact, today declared at a Hemisphere will be| conference of newsmen that she made carly next week by American | might have adherence to the Ekes S'a'e- | carefully, three- to reconsider her “peace- bath towel. Do not wring. Hang 2 Phiqrientiy! ~ 160 Monday evening, starting at 8 shaking | remove’ wrinkles. | COLISEUM-DOUGLAS Thursday—Friday GEORGE O’BRIEN in "FIGHTING GRINGO™ Never rub soap directly on hose when laundering. Make up a good suds and squeeze the suds through| o .o, of Eagles and the Ladies'| the hose. Gently press the water 3 | | from the hose or pat it out with a Auxiliary will hold their annual | »l .l | up to the present time. | A AT TR PUBLIC INSTALLATION PLANNED BY EAGLES installation in joint session next o'clock. Members and their friends 1are invited to attend. . ALUMNI PICNIC Annual picnic of Douglas Hizh | School Alumni Assotiation will be iheld on June 8, according to a | recent announcement. It is to be a | boat picnic and several boats will | be used to carry the picnickers. All “members planning to take part in building on Front Street to Alfred The deal is second one planned | but it has been kept well occupied Douglas Aerie No. 117, Fraternal it should give their names to com- mittee composed of Joe Riedi, Hjalmer Savikko and Urho Kron- quist, —_————— MRS. WAHTO AND SONS LEAVE FOR TENAKEE Mrs. Gust Wahto, accompanied by her son Arvo, left by plane at 10 o'clock this forenoon for a visit to Tenakee. On Sunday evening Gordon Wah- to, recent graduate of Douglas High School, will leave for Anchorase where he will be employed on the air base this summer, - ee—— MYRA LEE'S BIRTHDAY Myra Lee Hopgood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Hopgood, was 11 years old today. The event was celeprated with a swimming party for the young miss and 16 of her , friends. Myra was honored w:th nice gifts. - e The urban population of the United States is older, on the aver- age, than the rural population, the 1940 census discloses. | | | i | SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. '8 * Emil Sick, Pres. OURS is a world of contradictions. Here, security; there, destructions; here, neighborliness; there, hate and fear; here, independence; there, slavery. These blessings—this security, this neighborliness, this independence of ours—were bought at a dear price. We've paid for them with the sweat of our brow, with the blood of our fathers and sons and brothers, with the thousands of crosses at Arlington and Flanders. And it's a debt that isn't paid in full, not yet. For we owe the debts of gratitude and honor and re- spect fo those who bought us those blessings. And we owe the greater debt of duty 1o them, so that their blood ...ourblood . . shall not have been shed in vain. Today, Memorial Day, 1341, let's pledge that duty o them. This Message Is Submitted in Ilimble Gratitude by the Following Juneau Business Firms: For the Privilege of Being American Institutions ¥ New York Tavern Alaska Eectric Light City Cafe Snow White Laundry Halvorsen's e e S B v g and Power Co.