Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
% FOUR. Daily Alaska Published every evening except Bunday by the they must buy ping out of yest: Emvpir;e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA |had the need to catch mice are discovering that They won't do their shop- It is the every 2 trap erday's newspaper. | 20 YEARS AGO fH': gmpire EMPIRE PRINTING OOMPANY day, consistant advertiser, in winter or summer, - 1 3 3 | Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alasl peace or war, who keeps his customers coming in} 4 6 | ber HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - - - President tr A | . | R L BERNARD - - Vice-President and Business Nanager | 185 :g }é 13]| DECEMEER 18, 1921 : B g W PTHE 2 | The Douglas Firemen held the first sleighin rty of the season. : g Entered In the Pu.tu?;gée‘lx:_r..:l\;r’x‘e-nu‘;x“e:ecnnd Class Matter. zism Vs. Humamty gl g party MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. "7 Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.26 per month. St 22 24 Drs Kaser and Becond and fourth By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: A | = Harry Sperling arrived on the Admiral Watson from Seattle. g Monday of month : (New York Times) { Y One vear. in advance, $12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; o mes {29 31 \te T O e enibers. Wil cqpter & favor if they will promptly notiey The ways of German propaganda in this war | Dr. S. Hall Y i i hi Fw i £ the Bomeaee O tfice ‘of amy failure or irrerularity in the de. are harder to fathom than those of the last war.| - | - S. Hall Young, pioneer Alaskan missionary, arrived on the N beginning at 'I.M)Hp. m tivery ot tauir pRsarer L RORIEEE T S There mué{ be a purpose in the Nazi attacks on | Spokane to take up the work of Superintendent of Presbyterian Missions wm VERGNE L. HOKE, B s ot Lo it o oA __ | Christianity and in Berlin’s willingness to have those in Alaska, succeeding Dr. J. H. Condit. PHONE 50 Worshipful iy ¥ o MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS lattide is dn't readily LEIVERS, Secretary. v The Associated Press i sxclusively entitied to the use gor | At1ACKS broadeast in this country. One can't readily | - republication of sll news dispatches credited to it or not other- | grasp what the purpose is. This week Berlin per- | | The Christmas tree for all the Eagles and their families was to be [ise credited in this paper and also the local news PUbllAbd| mitted g dispatch to quote from @ new German best held in Douglas. Juneaw’s Own Store e — | seller in which the assertion is made that “we Ger- | DECEMBER 18 ks, WA Dr A w Slewart AL T N AR R ICATION ' [mans have been called by fate to. be the first to| i Ely § :;’]'“ Judge T. M. Reed and other Federal officials left on the steamer 1SS - e i el e | break W " i ay. ulti- Marjorie Tillotson s § § » i T S wares | s Nevibandts, 10K break with Ch.n.mmm_x ‘15 t.ms the way to .( uln» g Spokane fur Skagway to hold a term of the United States District CmmI DENTIST American Euflding, Seattle, Wash, vate a friendship for Nazism in the United States, Jray in that city. 20TH CENTURY BUILDING j — ——— i in Latin America, or in Axis Italy? It even stirs| GHipett De Jail ALELRE | ! |up protests in Germany itself, as a letter from the, Mrs. T. _S-RH“W"S Weather: High, 37; low, 33; fair and continued cold. Office Phone 469 Catholic Bishops, read in German pulpits, testifies.| o :3'?:'3“ éed A —_ J The Nazis do not merely reject Christianity or| tlizabeth McReynolds 8 3gy 13 352 ok o PO A SRS R R T T 7] the Hebrew Testament. They reject twenty-five| Hazel 8. Stevenson ac . . by "chiropradic" The Rexall SlOl’e g centuries of human aspirations, If they are right, D |ly|_ E gl h z e 0 mudh S el 0t the folowing - essons in English w. 1. GORDON ||| Physio Etectro Theropeuttes ||| ¥our Retabte Prarmaciss Jotations: | . DIETETICS—REDUCING BUTLER- | quotation: e o U | W MAURO “Right_aspiration : is the aspiration toward | e B : p Lake Mineral and Steam DRUG CO. renunciation, the aspiration toward benevolence Lhe’ WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “He was incagable of lifting Baths - ! aspiration toward kindness,"—From the Aryan El,‘:’,hl-l “The stars incline the-falys. - 58y, 50 s, DNARLE. (0 “,“ the table.” o Dr. Doelker, D. C., Bernard Bldg. 5 1 fold Path of the Gautama Buddha. ; but do.nob comper’ 11| OREEEALINEEILAE: Bandker it o B + “Perfect virtue is not to do to others as you|W - - o " as in IF, 'and not' CHEEF. HAHRY HACE | would not wish done to yourself.’—Confucius. ‘ OFTEN MISSPELLED: Bouillon (soup or broth). Bullion (uncoined D J H DRU “The more he helps others, the more he benefits | gold or silver). ’ r. John H. Geyer JGGIST [ £, | himself; the more he gives to others, the more he| FRIDAY, DE(;EMBER 19 SYNONYMS: Success, successfulness, achievement, attainment, ac- DENTIST “The Squibb Stores of @ | gets himself."—From the Tao-Te-King, attributed to| This is not an important day incomplishment, prosperity. Room 9—Valentine Bldg. Alaska” ADVERTISING AND THE WAR Lao Tze. | planetary direction. Labor is under WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us} PHONE 762 - { i “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”— an ill omen which presages un- | ingrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Hours: 9 am. to 6 pm. o 1 T i In times like thése, some business houses always | Leviticus i;-c:;fsnablgbcdem;m(hd i;x view of IMPUTE; to charge or credit, as a fault or virtue. “One vice of a | decide that it’s a good idea to cut down or complete- “Therefore, all things whatsoever ye would that|holiday liberties and bonuses. darker shade was imputed to him—envy.” Macaulay. “The S Men™ ly stop their advertising. men should do to you, do ye even so to them’—| HEART AND HOME: This is a| for ! There are reasons for their decisions. Goods for [From the Sermon on the Mount, | favorable date for home entertain-| foeees GG aeeae - S ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. SAB'N,S ale are on the scarce side during a wartime emer- This ethical ideal—for it is a single thing, "m‘:l;i'v xelz:)mf?x "t,f:'ul;‘m}ml::irlf.:i;“G.:"‘**l by Graduate Los Angeles College gency period, When price control measures are put il the least confused—runs through all great re-!Iay e uch. 8 a s of Optometry and Front St.—' Bldg. into effect to prevent inflation, there is always the {ligions, and all pifilosophies: thap have had an en- fdevoiion. from young, meh, Hasty | ' ROBERTA LEE Opthalmology ALEL g 5 s |during hold on men’s imaginations, It is the ideal | Wooing and many marriage en- {__. b lament of merchants that they can no longer adver- ;: o oh 03 d within th 4 1 of all civilized men today, however far it may be |gagements are presaged within the A . tise “specials” to sell cheaper than the same articles | realization in the individual or communal{next fortnight. Actors and musi- Q. When it is necessary to curtail expenses of Christmas gifts, what on shelves of competitors, And with wartime activity | ;7o ¢4 ol o e 3 i _|is the best course to pursue with a friend with whom you have been You'll Find Foeod Finer and life. In the non-Nazi part of the world it does not | clans who furnish recreation for “ ¥ swelling family incomes, business seems good without | oo qerence One would think that the col ciously | holiday amusements are most for- exchanging gifts? Th Ch Bervice More Complete at advertising clever N however foul their actual purposes,|tumate under this _configuration.| A. Write a nice letter, about two weeks in advance, wishing your e arles W Cmer m BABA"“F But consider the fatal experiment of 17 business | w, oy A4 iV they do not. In|There is a sign read as presaging friend a Merry Christmas. would pay lip service to it. But ey i 4 e firms in this nation during the First Wqrld War, all | that arrogant and stupid indifference to other peo- |many meetings and partings that Q. What are some good rules of conduct to observe while in church? -anu’ cnrm snop of which completely cut out advertising for the|ple’s dearest sentiments lies, perhaps, the seed of | cause heart-warming and heart- A. Arrive on time. Enter quietly. Refrain from talking. Avoid ot \ B | duration. The incident was recalled by Columnist |their doom aching. fanning yourself. Pay attention to the minister. PHONE 136 1 Raymond Moley in a recent issue of Newsweek. B O B | BUSINESS AFFAIRS: This willl Q. How can a bride-to-be thank the friends who attended showers i R n ¥ be a slow day in wholesale business that were gis for her? Of these 17 businesses, here was the result of g A | . given for her? 3 Y their “no advertising” campaign What Goes Up . . . 3;nlnd lme &.;u'kb nml(;cl will ptlobu» A. She may thank each guest as she opens the gift, and then write FIN — bly languish, ut hristmas shop- » s S L SRR g ¥ ) guis, P- | a note of thanks a day or two later. sh Watch and Jewelry Repairing Slx‘\u/ld ‘om or. were absorbed |>),\ competitors. (OlhoianALt Rnirer) {ping will be profitable in, all.par Jon.’.slevm .P . ey Giablo One, Talled wikd woml it of ‘biasiness. Members of the Nationa! Grange apparently do|of the country. Jewelers will seil o= e e LADIES'—MISSES’ i PAUL BLOEDHOB One went into reogivership. not know that what goes up must come down—|many engagement rings. Keepsakes i b READY-TO-WEAR N One shrunk 97 percent in terms of personnel. |including farm prices. will be in demand for the boys i Y 5. FRANKLIN STREET : A. C. GORDON R : - One lost 81 percent of its sales volume. The grange, like other farm organizations, has|uniform. Dealers in leather good E . U B . P 1 o One ended with only two customers. fought against a ceiling on farm prices in anyshould profit as diaries and bill- (oo 5 7 e Y One was operated by the banks for five years. | price-control bill. Thus far it has won that fight. ! folds are sought for many pockets. | bt 3 : m: Three lost their leadership in their fields. Sarm prices ate floating in the stratosphere, and the|Although astrologers long have| ' 1-“VXbat are the slx-most Gommon, suruames in the United States?|{ H W, [, ALBRECHT A Viclor Radios ; Py e il {iskngL R (e iR i ! Hibiiliseion abonomy. th . 2. Which of the senses does a person use the most? and RECORDS Two found that competitors had grown at their | sky is still the limit. jOiseled SUORNIS; s g g 4 Physical Therapeuti expense It therefore is rather amazing to read that the|presage reckless expenditures for 3. ‘Who ‘was the onlly. Ameriodfh post evER to: bs: Sogorded: the honot o, Juneau Melody House L] In no cases did these American businesses main- | érange, at its annual convention, has complained gifts |of a bust in the Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey? Heat and Light Treatments Next o Truesdell Gun Shop taln! thetr veliime of business whed they. discarded | et presenb:Bederal progtams, sad farm. laws dot NATIONAL ISSURS. Ctedually 4. Which two States are bordered by the most other States? Massage and Corrective Exercises Second Street Phone 65 | the aid of advertising | not afford ample protection from a possible price|there will pervade the nation a| 5. Who was the only graduate of West Point to become President of || Phone 773 Valentine Bldg. || - 5 lv “.v‘ on? “-: Simple. | collapse after the war. . {sense of its high place in the fu- the United States? | -+ St al ’,'I"Y”" ; : | Grange members are right. Farm prices after|ture when it will be the greatest ANSWERS: INSURANCE Al e e too much unlike the |, way wiy hit the floor with a sickening thud.|of all nations. Cancer, the sign 1. Smith, Johnson, Brown, Williams, Miller, and Jones, in the order B e o Eonb ioustiout the, i1, e advertis- | 414 no laws are on the books to ease the blow. They |of universal motherhood, influences named. JAMESC COOPEB RiSiaas ing conscious. They “read the ads” in their “e“’“';‘nre not on the books because farmers, in their sel- | the United States, Canada and Ar- | 3. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-82). c.P- A, sh papers, quite as much as they read the news. They | sishness and shortsightedness, kept them off in gentina. Since the destiny of worid| 4. Tennessee and Missouri, each bordered by eight other States. Bust . afluck- AQGIIGY develop favorite places to trade, and they watch the |order t o glut themselves on their new-found | leadership belongs to the Westein 5. Ulysses S. Grant. Counselor O papers for advertising from their favorite merchants | prosperity. { Hemisphere it is evident which of | COOPER BUILDING | and other places of business. If ¢ don' 5 armer its {the, three Cancer nations is able : and other places of business. If they don't see those | If the farmer permits the development of a|the, thice Cance ins. {6 able | b oo S Galvin Bogl sdic) which e’ suffated:. Tast., Baturday, c ALIF ORNIA ads, they read the message of the competition, and | war-induced inflation which will push hog prices | (o assume the greatest responsibili- . < ‘ : i | 5 ities. Tt has bee hesi recting the dialogue. Two or three weeks perhaps, will 3 Grocery and Meat Mark if that message is appealing, who is to blame the [up to $16, for example, he will have to accept a|€s. 88 been propResied FEAL | i |be required before he is able to L. C. Smith and o Bt i customers for taking a, look to see what the adver- | Post-war deflated price of, say $5. If he insists on the new world is to evolve by 1048 .\ oyvpe AND FRANK et stk 1 o Corons 478—PHONES—371 v tising competitors really have to offer the one, he will have to accept the other. No law of 1949, and it is imperative that ENROUTE TO BARRACKS | e i | bt behmg Jiels Qualtiy, Prody at ronage being ife + ;i | can protect the farmer from the consequences of |there should be unity and harmony | Sold and Serviced by Moderate Prices tronage being the life blood of business, the 5 ¢ Two more Douglas young men, SCHOOL CHRISTMAS PART sustome! 4 1o 1o Xer b & Y his own avarice. Not even a major miracle will do|among the peoples of North Amer- | pro) o 3 . J B Blll‘f d & c. — 1‘15 )rr{(ra must be : l‘.‘pl coming or they will eXClC‘lme iy ;ica and South America. | 1jal m;x Sav;ll;xo auq Frm:lk S_tra-,‘ Tomorrow evening Douglas High o & Or! 9. their democratic prerogative and go elsewhere with | The grange cannot expect much sympathy for | INTERNATIONAL AFF‘AIRS:lg'Er' .aw': left for induction into | School will be the scene of a “Our Dootstep 1s. Worz by —_——— thpimhustuses its petulance and irrationality. The attitude is ex- | Tense conditions will mark com- | " Arm¥. oo DA TE S, sdents Y R WHIT he man who “builds a better mouse trap” must | yemely unbecoming. When the farmer gives his|ing months on the war chessboard. | i bo' celelmate. (HbARONARY season. ¢ | 1y Sy Fawer let people in the market for mouse traps know his .~u|)pox"l to an effective, over-all price control bill | Winter is to bea time for prepara-{‘ LADD ON SICK LIST | —————— V- ATh % RETE TRUCKS and BUSSES superior rodent catcher is in existence. And what | om nove the best assarance of o fair price in|UOR as well as conflict, war plans| AFthur Ladd was absent from| NOTItE DR. H..VANCE NASH CARS > is more, he must do more than just announce the | (he post-war period must change in methods or policies | DS class room at school today on | i : + heoll £ : ® PRl peried. i i account of ill i by et . OSTROPATE Christensen. Bros. Garage invention. Every day, persons who never previously Otherwise, what goes up must come down % suit sudden conditions, The | oL Fimess | special i ST bt / Blon: | & C g e e e ek rerosdid tHYL b ! 9 ‘D pemn “;neim‘;g Priday evening, ! Consultation and examination 909 WEST 12TH STREET - PR - OB = - -—— — | see ; sur- . | Dec. i ork in 18th Degree. free. 3 ' B wash'm |m servants, they have maintained an|China, and we were to resume the grlseslwo:l.dhmfark L%‘e world .up-! EHOME FROM HOSPITAL WALTER- B. HEISEL, 7t0 b‘:m s: o cheh fl conquerors. Frequently operating as|sale of gasoline, oil, scrap iron and e:va W mh { ollows no previous Anl§ Post came home from St.|ady. Secretary, - - amazing underground ' {ntelligence |other raw materials. for “civiljan|PRtEKR of-history. Masch -1, 1041, ARR' yesterday. tocammplete hih —————— “HORLUCK’S DANISH” - system in Japan. L84 lis to be a critical date for the|recovery from .the .recent accidenti /BUY DEFENSE STAMPS S D. ISH W i = 8 e o | United States, it is forecast. This| ==& -~ ¥ = |~ Ice Cream Flavors J On October 28, 1941, Kilsoo K. t the very time Mr. Hull W8S (i que o the Mars conjunction g - Peppermint Candy, Pudge Ripple, 3% i Haan, a Korean who had been a|discussing this plan with Kurusw,!ypan,;s § member of the Japanmese consular |his Government in Tokyo is now . ;i o el #.4Continued Ifrom Page One) Persol who: | ) service, wrote Mr. Hull, reporting |revealed as even then alreadyly . ] m’fa“u,;eofm;t?g:;eo[“ .l (By, the U. S; Weather Bureau) : m,m“;“ b s e b dhe S meeting ‘of the Black Dragon |launching its plans for a;nm:king‘n;mn A R t.nhwe,re' U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU ; . i (sec i r | Hawaii. Juneau, December 19 — s 9: i ) Bouich Brchrosniies: Who Belonied | Co%. S50t Jeagleh order of the imay be annoyances through cor- ot e Suntigz 9:44 am. sunset 4:06 p.m. A ° Japanese military) on August 26 However, Secretary Hull was 50 \l e . to the Cliveden . Set, they were Wy : A 0 7 respondence or agencies. Wind and stong for appeasement in which Foreign Minister HU'Ola.anxnous to rush this truce to a| Ohildren born on this day proo-| pi weather along the Gulf of Alaska tonight and Fri.:| Hamilton bawled oul.hm subor- revealed “a total war preparation’conclusion that he did not want|ably will be fortunate throughout | 1 oo s e v eL: northeasterly to easterly winds, dinates and’ told them they had no| t0 meet the: armed forces of the to give Lord Halifax time to cable|their lives but ‘they must he ;fl:’ 25 miles per hour, local rain or snow tonight, partly cloudy Honlogss. Hstertering. Bib they in_‘Umwd Sv,_aws.‘ s the plan to London for Churchill's|guarded against nervous maladies. | 12 84!7-2 Cape Spencer to cn.pe_ Hinchinbrook: northeasterly winds, sleted thak Thely Temprandum. be| . ¢ (TyR). Blsd sboke Of Fre- approfdlerkiea thoudli the. Britsh (Copyright, 1941) o oy miles per hour, partly cloudy; Cape Hinchinbrook to Res- sted that (helr memorandum Ve |yyer Tojo ‘piving oiders to_com-|and Australians were sitting in on | B R ! jrection Bay: northerly to northeasterly winds, 12 to 20 miles per g Y44 ! pleté ‘the ‘mounting of guns and the conversations. | our, generally fair; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: westerly to north I T And Cabot. Coville, in protest, 08, . Seatiins v : y to north- HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER ; ; rush supplies to the Marshall and . 5 3 v winds, 12 to. 20 miles per hour, partly cloud: MARX CLOTHING against appeasement, resigned. coine”groin by November 1941 Lord Halifax insisted, however, Southeast Alaska: Local rain ¢ 5 4 ( & < When his resignation came to the p. R 2% anuer 1941/ ang when Churchill got a cabled and local ¥ fesnay Tnties I south. partipn ’ ) g Hirota and 'others in the meeting 3 snow flurries in north, portion tonight; clear A £ attention of Assistant Secretary i 3t ''° report on the plan he hit the ceil~ cloudy Frid - 4, » or partly| ——————7" Berle, however, Berle refused to !r;elyuexpreased .. SE" Mogt st ing. He did not think the Japanese “qmd.sy 1211“'20“,::1“ in south portion; easterly to northeasterly 13 % ¢ " - 3 0 o A N * accept it. and Coville was trans- auls time t0 wage Wb Wi AP-| would keep faith, and argued that hour in L 9 PRE DO ERSEDY IOMESRlY BRito 25 miles. pex : ; v T 4 erica_as December 1941 or Febru- ' n Lynn Canal and Taku Inlet. mmu l. cmm ferred to the Philippines where he |, . " g0 » +f TUATT it merely gave the Japanese more Juneau and vicinity: Local " is today. The chief results of his i |time to increase their armament. lear or gt siow flurries in . vicinity tonight, | ALASKA effortseto oppose appeasement are 3 1 was Jobthfnoed B0 B~ Simultaneously the plan leaked out 323!‘685 {’al'l'-lytcloudy Friday; lowest temperature. tonight about 28 OF < ’ ® | rear: 1 > s, highest Fri s : 3 that today he is belng subjected mway I;U lmzylesczlrat%rmc‘v:lzm. ol;m the Chinese, and the Chiness|POUGLAS GRADE SCHOOL . ig iday 32 degrees; gentle to moderate northeasterly [ ’nd to the bombing attacks which he, |poo o0 S THET 8 O COMe | Ambassador delivered a personal TO PRESENT? OPERETTA| ! i e himselt, wammed mere COming. BEh IRt m:my' of the | Protest from General Chiang Kai- LOCAL DATA i PHONES 58 | ) shek to th ident. The ~- t ] Prank, Schuler, another of {he| Koreas betimatinn ot Ho pha|ohek to the Presidet P h;ape.{e?ta Legend of the| ‘A;I;lm : Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veloclty ~ Weathes SECURE YO!'R LOAN THROUGH US To Improve rebels, was shortly transferred 10| posed a- Senate investigation of 1 View of the Churchill and n” is to be presented six| 4:30 p.n. vesterday 29.40 32 100 s 5 Snow and Mouosiize, Your Home Under Title L F. H. A. * a tiny post in the British Virgin|Japanese activities, but wWas dis- Chinese objections, Secretary Huj |98¥s from today, December 23, in| 4:30 am. today .. 29.27 31 96 8 2 Pt. Cldy - : e pL 4 . Islands. | couraged by the State Depn.r‘tmént.‘sudde"]y withdrew his proposal of :hle school gym. As the story un= Noon today - 2020 33 0 s 3 Cloudy s oz e ” ” These men were all hardened ex-| Despite ~this, Secretary ~Hull's 2 three-month truce and fell back h‘:fi: T}::wma':l c‘:_'l';s to: Hfe and ! RADIO REPORTS : PRy SYYERES perts on the Far East who had conversations with Envoy Kurusu °° the traditional American policy ish:s fh g(:) children, he pun- | ; b CAPITAL—$30,000 lived there and who knew Japan.|began shortly thereafter, and con-|©f the Open Door in China plus e e o Max tempt. Lavest "4 ¢ < SURPLUS—$ 150,000 Tiey were not youngsters, However, | tinued In very carnest vein, M. “itbdrawal of all Japanese troops, |7l bad. : Station last 24 Murs w:t St e ol b . their_ wamning memorandum, though | Hull apparently believed that It President Roosevelt is right Ilf;lmnrd Harju plays the pathl yuneay . 35 ”? :p. # gurs Viestlidy B 2 it finally reached the hands of |something could be Worked outwith | [l the Japanese had begun pre.|Of the snowman who listens in on i 4 COMMERCIAL AND Sscretary Hull, made no impres- | the Japanese, and at one point he PtINg for the Hawail attack well the children’s _conversations. Other | eoereeere— E — ) siqn, A few weeks Jater, special en-'and his State Department advisers An advance, there seems no ques- ;;’”'mum’ include Lucile Goetz as|.{ i gi SAVINGS ACCOUNTS o ks was sent o Wasting. | actually ‘thought thib ‘an ‘geree. |tion Uhab mome’of Mr. Hulls pro.|MSry ahd Raymond Erickson g8 n l'y ank . l ton with a big blare of Tokyo ment was just around the corner. POSAls, Whether appeasement or the her brother John, a young selfish ; : trumpets about peace, and the ne- Open Door policy, would have|P0V: Billy takes the part of the g .SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES gotiations continued. CHURCHILL omsEcys. changed the course of the Japanese NCWSPOy who is tumed away by I enter OUTDOOR CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS ‘to This was on November 24 and | Wor lords. e S A be given in' Juneau, sponsored by the Chamber of Com- o = 3 i e KOREANS WARN HULL 25. Mr. Kurusu suddenly seémed| (COPYIIEDt 1941, by United Fea- The operetta is in three acts merce: Nation About this time, Secretary Hull willing to talk a three-month com- '€ Syndicate, Inc.) a;“.’"“ of ‘dances, solos and group Name ... e R, g i > was receiving letters from Koreans mercial truce, gnd the State De- 7 e : ¥ n:u;g. The high school Glee Clubs Addr j Ezn, % AL A gx in the United States warning that Partment worked out an involved NOTICE {220 P Rl Ao, render M N Japan was preparing to attack the formula Whereby no more Japa- AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showlngIa Er,Lfinséberg i o p First Prize, $50; Second Prize, $35: Third Prize, $15 " z .3 E i 5. 5 charge . s United States. Koreans, being a nese troops were to enter Indo- air route from Seattle to Nome, on being assisted by Miss M(;‘Nei‘:;]dand” Mail this blank to Box 470, Juneau, before midnight, December 22. subject rage, hate their Japanese China, i but were ‘to remain in sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv.[Miss Fraser, who are in charge of