The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 1, 1941, Page 4

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| their battle against German domination of the world Duil.'v Alaska Empire - u ! a ave a lot of otk hed every xcept Sunday by the b EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY I, ST d Main Streets, Juneau, Alasks. of the Finns to N P President | invasion R. L BERNARD - Vice-President and Business Manager Entered in the Post Office In Juneau as Second Class Matter. TH SUBSCRIPTION RAT Members of t to they're going romptly notify ty in the de- or 1f they will re or irregula neau livery of t papers Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. ducks species of t the MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Y R s ¥ ) ated Pri ¢ ‘h:-i\elyde:\:.:lli(ed"Ln”t}:lemu::h:?f nel Sportsmen’s Association, there will be two duck south, was to return on the steamer Spokane F O O B e e the lacal news Dublished | identifying contests conducted. In one of the tests, 2 2 7R Brrety ten species of the quackers will be on display and| DECEMBER 1 Mrs. P. R. Bradley and her twin daughters were passengers on the ALASKA CTRCULATIC JARANTEED TO BE LARGER the sportsmen will be asked to name them. In a Harry G. Peterson Princess Mary enroute to Berkeley, Calif., to make their home, | THAN AT OF OTHER PUBLICATION. econd duck quiz, an entirely new species, reputed Dorothy Wilms AR | | NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Aluska Newspapers, 1011 | (o have been bagged by Rod Darnell, whose veracity Katherine E. Shaw The legality of the “shimmy” in extreme was to be decided before the > = — — |ig not being conceded by the game experts, will be | Einar L. Olsen courts in Chicago following several arrests fon display and hunters will be asked to to | Henry D. Fuhrman % which duck family it is most closely related. By L. T. Jackson Weather: High, 38; low, 34; cloudy. Frank Dufresne, the strange bird has been dubbed Mrs, "Frelt A. Warten B e he Red-Headed Whifflepoof. ‘\L‘fh ']\;"i’;“" § " It will all be in fun, but aside from the fun,| 05w % D 'l l : E l' h by § Birtidbe RBRGE U6 AL & 15k of ripes out 06 |bad : = ally Lessons In Englisn w. ... corpoN their systems and maybe do some serious talking | [ about next year's shooting seasons when they get |k H 0 R 0 S C 0 P E =k ST T ) ogether tonight at the Elks Club. i WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I was balled up by so many B R ¥ ‘ “The stars ineline questions.” Say, “I was CONFUSED.” . To the Congo by Air | but do not compel” | e ZZ:;EN MISPRONOUNCED: Memorable. Accent first syllable, not (Neéw ¥ork Tiities) | - OFTEN MISSPELLED: Fuselage; SEL, not SIL. Amid t N i % 3 ~ [fulfiliment by war’s exigencies there is a new *hn:l; Good and evil planetary influ- . Room 9—Valentine Bldg. WE HAVE OTHER PROBLEMS in the departure of the flying boat Capetown on & |uncestsuar’ to baldnce' in the horo- CreRse.pur vocahulry by mastering one word each day. Today's word: PHONE 1762 pioneering voyage of more than 18,000 miles to the | . oo 0. today. More labor trou- CON’_I‘R!VF,‘ to plan ingeniously; to plot; to scheme. “Their plans were Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. % ot d | comment in papers | Belgian Congo. Pan American's flights from Cali- o ure’ jndicated and there is a CUnDINgly contrived.” ‘ sl & co ew days ago when Sec- {fornia to the Antipodes are longer, but this new |warning omen for aviators e TR Sl DGR ARG RS € SR RPN Bl Sk b S Cot | Finland she must | enterprise of the air is over virgin l(>x‘|lll)x':\ and m\‘ HEART AND HOME: Women } — il is Siia o, ¢ loss of |Uhe whole over more difficul, terrain. The VerV|... eyl directed by the planets ! MODERN ETIOUE‘H'E by ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. : e o8 extent of the jumps over equatorial forest and ,xlfmm today which is auspicious for wed- } ROBERTA LEE Graduate Los Angeles College untraveled ocean is impressive—1832 miles frOm | gioc ona conil affairs, for clubs | of Optometry and In ever urse, the editors called |\qpa) Bragil, to Bathurst, British Gambia; L7150, lief work, Youhg folk mai- | T Seommtod b oo e Opthalmology ] " d ‘]"“h“ rvm‘tx»]-“l(;;::::““ .|‘.1(-\ 11\(:()\1":\ ‘m L‘xvx;'n\‘ in l,."u.l-rm an‘\rllu-.f‘u on 1‘(,!'3;1&1 under this configuration may Q. Is it permissible to supply a word for a person who is talking Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground g ’ i 1,286 miles over trackless jungle to the Congo capital. |yaye giffjculties in making new| if he seems at a loss for the proper word? invayiahly e URLE R0 TR The world was shrinking fast in terms of UMe .45 6tments in manner of living A. No, un he asks for it. Otherwise it would be ill-mannered | 3 b N Py country and the feel- jand accessibllity before tie war turncd DROBYeSS|y.; ‘nappifieds is foretold “for thoee | 1o do so { of aympatty ‘wHich ¥ expressed for. the FiRGs|fram 8, canter into & gaiicn. - The ghidiron routes 0%l yivg igee guided by oliddstuat yan Q. 1Is it good taste to ride in a street car or bus in evening clothes? | | The Chules W. Carter ‘ were walked over by the Russian Bear |the air now reach into places previously deemed un- .. pooite Bad news of some phase Sl R D i sccotis s vakien A axkaioe drki shecl g . M \ Sk attainable. The giant airship blazing this new trail | 5 kA % Oy § & G g dress should pro. in days of the present war d e + . {of the war may fouch American yige gither his own care or a taxi of the editors then called fo the at-|took along 40 passengers. Initially a fortnightly | el vnic month, The Navy to- k! Mofluary ¥ tk L » had come service is planned, but war needs may soon call for; . 8 PRS2V A iy 5 2 Q. When passing around refreshments to both men and women ntio that the time had come to call A £ i o, ‘J.u is under favorable planctary guests, who should be served first? Fourth and Pranklin Sta. . juits. Most of the territory lost {o|MOre frequent voyages. And when it is all OVer.| o iqance R R L T e e 'PHONE 136 : : : o vears ago has been |Peacetime requirements will closer to satisfaction |~ prervnes AFFATRS: Increased i .w refreshments should be passed to each of the women, thi { ¥ cinted out. Then, oo, America is|[0F this adventure that war made imperative ST e deveraly by, agn| 0 the men } ’ e Russia now, shipping her w sup- Does Not Pay “l“(' Women who operate .bu.\mbv'» e e e e s e S e S e A | Sl LG s Not Pay Willi Nl chpite). While priesattcy b Jones-Stevens Shop | : o e e |is enjoyed by tens of thousands of LO OK a nd I.EA RN Y LADIEY - MIBSRS (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | employees many small concerns will A. C. GORDON i i ¢ or remain on a friendly footing with Truth with a moral is stranger yet {be forced out of business before, ) $ READY-TO-WEAR ‘ war with the power being aided A group of crooks for many months has been |January 1. Despite Government ef- . . o) S e ) Seward Street Near Thrrd we can't find it in our 10 | (elling counterfeit lottery tickets in the region ex-|fort to protect independent mer- 1. How many people voted in the 1940 Presidential election? the Finns » Finns mean 10 | tending from New York to Chicago. Some tickets|chants and manufacturers who 2. Which is the oldest English colony in America? until win enough territory | were counterfeits on genuine lotteries, others were | have flourished ynder old-fashioned 3. Whose portrait appears on the United States two-dollar bill? i H. W. L. ALB i f ompletely secure from their on drawings which never existed | conditions their' fate is inevitable 4. What are amphibians? { - W. L. ALBRECHT || neient enemy. Long ago they declared that “con- The industry and ingenuity of crooks, devoted|if the stars are rightly read 5. How many ages of man did Shakespeare describe? | Physical Therapeutics | 1 ng objectives they consider vital to honest pursuits, would bring rich succ Any-| NATIONAL ISSUES: Protests by ANSWERS ook it Light Thedtarart: ‘ Je country is not a part of Finnish war plans. way, these fellows went so far as to publish fake isolationists will become desperate 1. 48818995 people voted ¥ sdsage ana camestive el The Finns still assert tha f-protection is the only | editions of Havana newspapers to list names of this month when emotion will 2. Newfoundland { Ph"p 7,‘1 G Al 1'; purpose of their campais ainst the Soviets. We | ‘Winner The numbers put into the papers were |blind mental vision. The stars,long 3. Thomas Jefferson i o AL Slenting tldy certainly have more reason, by way of past experi- | numbers not appearing on tickets sold | have been read indicating t} 4. A division of vertebrates between reptiles and fishes, which can | ence, to believe Pinland than we have ever had to A few days ago a salesman showed a paper to|impossibility of the United Sties' | live both on land and in water; this division includes frogs, newts, and | | T e believe either Russia ‘or Britain. an Indianapolis barber. But alas, as the result of ;A:n.]u' from actual participation ia| salamanders | JAMESC COOPER We d % ry Hull or the n-| @ typographical vn‘m". the barber's number was ‘L:w cond world “j”‘ The stars 5. Seven, in “Ave You Like It.” . L ¥ N e 15 i e among the winners! The ~‘.|le~|‘nan could not pay, | have forecast repetition of history | e — C.P.A. { i E so the barber went to court. The FBI took over | step by step as policies adopted in LLWORTHS LEAVE Business Counselor | war a most complicated game of ct and last week 83 persons were indicted in New York.|the first World War have been J M B TRty B far o s ey B comebriinte BUL our atlention, of the threats agents report that the gang had reaped |again made necessary in Wash- uneau a“ at Chilkoot Barracks, and Mus. | ened checkmate by the rook, the knight is likely { ington. | Shellworth left on the Yukon for| el to hop in a crooked line and put us out of the > moral is: typographical errors do not pay. | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: the Army post. They have been ne completely. Finland, as all the other world B — Danger of an invasion of the Brit- In Glendale visiting here for the past two weeks| L. C. Smith and Corons be kept under observation. If Finland Here's another idea on a use for our fish. A |ish Isles appears to have vanished with their son-in-law and daugh- TYPEWRITERS seem become a permanent ally of the new plant in China is tanning fish skins, including as winter weather closes in. Oddly ter, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Davelin, of | | S0l mnil B iosd by Nazis, W have no choice in the matter. Then, |shark and dolphin hides, for coat material. jenough the lasi hostile force ‘0| GIENDALE, Calif, Dec. 1—Clar- ihesialder Tertace SORcUpent. J B B ! d & c' we will be forced to take sides against the little rtisifiog |land in Britain was America. JOhn {cnce Foster of Juneau, Alaska has ;e 3 . 8. DUrior . ion If it becomes Hitler’s Crimea, we can pardon- [Paul Jones with 32 men landed at arrived here to become a student GCOT8€ Anderson, piano tuner, is “Our Doorstep Is Worz. by But our aid to the Russians right now is for |ably spell it without the final “a.” | Whitechaven and tried to burn of Master Aviation Mechanics at il tOWn for a few days. For expert Setistied Customers” < A the British ships in the harbor. Curtiss-Wright Technical Institute,Piano tuning, call Anderson Music . |ea with this schooling he was L:X‘l\(l-‘porled the Roosevelt Administration, | OR¢ ShiP was set afire before the | Qurtiss-Wright Tech, headed bF"ShZ’_)' s ad\:,o———-———————-———; wasmng'fln uated from drug store errand boy to ' This paid him big political dividends | '21ders were driven off. More than [Major C. C. Moseley, noted former | ——————— | DR. H VAI‘CE bank clerk. But banking held no last year when he was re-elected |70 Major attempts have been made Army flief, is one of the largest } « 11\ MQ"V' lure for him, so he worked his way despite the handicap of being a|(© invade England within 20 cen-|aviation technical schools in the| | OSTROPATH through the Kansas City School of “Pendergast man.’ | turies, according to history. Astrol- |nRation and was selected by the| || Consultation ard examination Go-Round Law and hung out his shingle, Also, he became active in the Pen- (Continued¢ from Page One) dergast organization, where his quiet - — efficiency soon attracted the atten- | tion of the squat political boss. The |World War interrupted Truman’s budding legal-political career. He | enlisted in the Army, was sent to the longer in the Senate. in the background a henchr of they are no Truman kept was known only a Jotorious Pendergast machine. 3“ notorious Pendergast Machil®: | fumed artillery school at Ft. Sil, ung L5 years ¢ Oklahoma, and won a commission a first term, so far as the man in the second lieutenant. By the time his concerned there was only streel was concerned Lhers was Oy |outtit, the 120th Field Artillery, went 1e Senator from Missour: nnet e : E” i e to France, Truman was a captain in K command of a battery. Then came the conviction of Boss | He saw action on the Meuse-Ar- Pendergast; and many of his asso- o,onne front, his battery firing its clates took (o the tall timber. Bub |1, gun at 10:45 on the morning of not Truman. He publicly acknow- novemper 11, 1918, just 15 minutes ledged his political debt to Pender- gast and their long friendship. The wise boys wrote it down that before the Armisti Returning to Missouri, young Tru- man renewed his Pendergast con- it we yver for Truman. He was |tacts and soon was awarded an ap- a courageocus man, but he had cook- 'pointment as a county judge. In ed his goose. They were wrong. In | this office he quickly made a reputa- one of the hotfest campaigns in Mis- | tion as a conscientious and trust- souri history, where fiery elections |worthy jurist and several years later are an old Truman, the Pen- |was elected presiding judge of the derpast man, W decisively re- | court. It is one of Truman's great- elected est prides that as presiding judge he | He returned to the Senate as quiet | directed the construction of $25,000,- and as inconspicuous as before. |000 worth of public highways and Since January he has been on his buildings without a penny of boodle. feet only four times, and his re- — marks could all be printed on three | FROM COUNTY Bl pages of the Cc ional Record. SENATE Each time he lked about one Truman was a little-known coun- subject—S. Res. 71, the resolution |ty judge when, in 1934, Boss Pen- that autho his investigating |dergast picked him to run for the enate seat voluntarily relinquished by the famous Jim Reed, whose acid tongue and devastating wit is a Sen- Fort Leonard |ate legend. Tt was a three-cornered race, with Truman pitted against two prominent Democratic leaders But with Pendergas potent back- ing, Truman handily won the nom- ination, and later the election obe has been his iends back home bout waste in committee. Thi passion ever s began writing h the construction of Wood, at Rollo, Mo FARM BOY In Missouri they that ‘he was born of Truman i be- tween the plow h of a Jackson Throughout h even years in the S unty tarm.” His job was in | Senate, Truman has heen overshad- & drug store, running errands, dust- owed by his colleague, Bennett ibg bottles and washing windows. |Clark The son of a national political leader, a ready orator and two-fist- ed fighter, Clark quickly made front-page figure in the Congress- ional arena. Truman was content Tyuman never went to college. He 'lo let him have the limelight wok a secretarial course in Inde- While Clark bacame a bellicosc pendeiice, Mo., his home town, Arm- New Deal foe, Truman quietly sup- Pven as a youth he was thrifty, and when he hears of the waste of mil- lions, he remember that drug store job and the munificent sum of $3 a week it paid him. a a portsmen who believe they can identify various annual varied i iy that We her more threatening aspects of the o turn our gaze upon than the fight te on phase of the war. from | 20 YEARS AGO 1y v in ) i L e e S TSP S S S protect themselves against further DECEMBER 1, 1921 | R N S The driving of the golden spike signifying the completion of the Alaska E DUCK DERBY Railroad from the ocean terminus at Seward to the Interior of Alaska at Alaska Game Commission think | with Ju- Fairanks, was planned for the following February he have a lot of fun tonight owner of the Coliseum Theatre, was returning from a business trip in the States. Harold H. Post, who left several weeks before on a short visit to the banquet of the Gastineau Chan- HAPPY BIRTHDAY | S0 astened | SYNONYMS: Refined, cultivated, cultured, polished, well-bred. accomplishments hastened to | UBS oot ¥ o WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us ogers believe that because Hitler |United States Army Air Corps as| was unable to succeed in Septem- [OD€ Of a few schools. throughout | ber, 1940, when the planetary signs !the country to train mechanics for | they the Army. i the Approximately 2,000 students are ““‘;r.cw enrolled here, of whom Mr. Fester is the latest to arrive. Of | these, approximately 600 are Army When the defense and foreign pol- icy issues developed, Truman con- tinued to back the President. Clark graduated from anti-New Dealism to | were more favorable than violent isolationism, but Truman did | have been at any time since, not swerve. He is exposing every |peril is definitely a thing of dollar of waste and other failings of | past, :,l“,(l (:;.fe,x,:_i I:.Lt;”;;,‘.";‘,;;:,‘3:;‘"(:9‘lrpv“'wm_ BEGaapaate 1) personnel and the remaining 1500 - " S have the augury of a year of pros- 'nre civilians, | and foreign policy bill sponsored bY | perity, but risks in travel shouldd ity mhe. Fresident, |be avoided. Domestic relations should be happy. | Children born on this day will be sentimental regdrding home and | friends. They should be gifted in| i INSURED k& e 'Public Invited, CDA Card Party | ! DEAD HORSE While poles apart politically, Tru- man and Clark are good friends per- sonally. Their friendship dates back . mind and gentle in nature. They | . | to the A. E. F., when on one oc-| i) have many friends | : Thursd N ht\ casion Clark played a practical joke | (Copyright, 1941) ay lg on Truman that both now recall | 1) with smiles | Vg, i | A | J ot ¥ CDA CARD PARTY | A door prize will be offered by the| Truman was bringing his battery | pyplic invited—bridge, pinochle, | Catholic Daughters of America on| et b CIa¥k, & LisutebAnt. Cglanel, | IBHISRIa LHgpe . ches; awasg./SIHE £2o0 DRty 404 Hide CHEAC The superlar ‘officer pointed drai: | WussaaY, December 4, at 8 pan HEMECE, © oe0nt Bt IEE VLA C Parish Hall. ady, | Hall. This is the first time a door atically at a dead horse lying near "iprize has been given at the affair, the station platform, and said: “Captain, you better get your men and guns out of here in a hurry. ‘The Germans are shelling this place and you ought to unload and get under cover as quick as you can.” Taking Clark at his word, Truman ordered his battery to detrain in a PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT! KETCHIKAN. i In the Maiter of the Regular and other prizes will also be awarded the winner of the card games. | Bridge, pinochle and whist will be; played. The Hope Chest which will be) awarded durnig the evening is filled | January, 1942, Term of the District | With many articles, and the public Court for the First Division of the |15 InVited fo take parc in the award. 4% EARNINGS Drs. Kaser and Freeburger D Bl Building ' ngren PHONE 56 ——— Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 449 —_— % LY - - " Chiropractic Physio Electro Theropeutics DIETETICS—REDUCING Soap Lake Mineral and Steam Baths Dr. Doelker, D. C., Bernard Bldg. Dr. John H. Geyer free. 10 to 12; 1 to &; 7 t0'8,20 by appoinment. ’ Gi a Hotel Annex * On Savings Accounts ©® Accounts Government In- sured up to $5,000. ® Money available at any hurry, even pitching in himself to help with the task. After the bat- tery had sweated frantically to get out of the “zone of fire, Clark walk- ed over to Truman and said with a Territory of Alaska, at Juneau, | Rerreshments will be served. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That pursuant to an order of the Ce' b I Court dated November 21, 1941, a e ra es Regular January, 1942, Term of the Party grin, “That’s a fine job, Truman. » . proy But the joke is on you. That horse| United States District Court for N]nfh B]nhday e 't killed by the Germans. He (the First Division of the Territory { i]] © Start an account with $1 shot by a veterinarian.” bchons, 7 1l or more. >f Alaska will be held in the Court | Truman didn’t think the jbke was | Room of the Federal Building at | so funny then, but he laughs about | Juneau, Alaska, beginning at the it now. He also laughs to himself | your of 2 o'clock in the afterncon about some of Clarks senatorial an-lo¢ january 6, 1942. tics. He has a hunch that this time IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have the joke will be on Clark rere set my hand and cause NOTE: Significant of the differ- ]::g'c‘f\‘l’ u”: n]':y,]b oi:d“"'l'l‘(‘;)‘i‘."“‘_d ence between the two men: Clark’s : 0 congt Celebrating her ninth birthday| yesterday, Roberta Messerschmidt| | entertained 17 of her friends at an | afternoon party in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Mes- ! | serschmidt, on Twelfth Street. The| guests spent the afternoon playing games, and prizes were won by| Rale Cu;renl 4% Alaska Federal Savings and Loan self-penned biography in the Con. | © b affixed at Kelchikun. this|pgry ‘1ou Fagerson, Evelyn Hol: gressional Directory takes up hearly | 2150 day of November, 1941 mdnn, Gail Morrison and Alice| Assn. tlhnoa?l three-quarters of a page of fine| SEAL) Jean Davis, K4 print. Truman’s consists of thrée ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, Refreshments were served for the FANTRE i lines. Clerk, U. S. District Court. |gypsts, and a big birthday cake (Copyright, 1941, by United Feature | Publication dates, Nov. 24, Dec. 1- Syndicate, Tnc.) 8-15, 1941, adv, trimmed in pink and white was the % nk nniin atiraction. | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 Second and fourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. VERGNE L. HOKE, Worshipful Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. —_— e Juneau’s Own Store ""The Rexall Store” Your Reliable 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 Rldg. You'll Find ¥ood Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP Watch and Jewelry Repairiag at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN 8. FRANKLIN STREET [ BCA Victor Radios | and RECORDS Juneau Melody House Next to Truesdell Gun Shop Second Street Phone 65 ! | INSURANCE Shaflu;k_}—&gency CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices — TRUCKS and BUSSES NASH CARS Christensen Bros. Garage 909 WEST 12TH STREET “HORLUCK’S DANISH” Ice Cream Flavors Peppermint Candy, Fudge Ripple, Rum Royal, Cocoanut Grove, Lemon Custard, Black Cherry, Caramel Pecan, Black Walnut, Rock Road, Chocolate, Strawberry and Vanilla— at the GUY SMITH DRUG H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man® HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING USED CARS See Us Today for Models Many ¥i=s and Types to Choose From! CONNORS MOTOR CO. CAPYFAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$§150,000 o COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES S First National Banl wJUNEK’&@iAW Raspberry Ripple, New York, | oA

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