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mct FOUR or care of mc consequences. Accordlnr,' to one rep- SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1942 [_.-.- - ~_ Dmly Alaska Empzre reoonialivs i e ‘Asmetian, v Orow, 188, Noss | — { SUbTehid sesré Svenths Koy Dundis by 8 lnkc“ everything they want whether they need it or HAP BIRTHDAY ' s P iacy-rore H EMPIRE PRINTING OOMPANY o S ——— 4 e C O r ’ } Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alasks. “If T talked for a, vear,” she sald, “T could never | i R A y Castiseon Chanmel HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - - Presdent .. ¢ this e . 1 2o ¥ N i R L BERNARD - - Vice-President and Business l.-nunr\u“ how frightful cor:!dlnons g mdcdri:nc; “l t‘s: MARCH 1 MARCH 7, 1922 —_— e — 4 __.u_.__-g;‘nmc Athens is crowded with wounde en, legless | Merle Janice Schroeder Burdette Winn was making a splmdld success at the Evening Star . °".‘&l‘,',‘fi’ s aocond Class Matter. |44 armless, and the whole of Greece is being deltb- Theodore Hodwalker gold mining claim at Bohemia, Ore., which he was working with several MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 : n-vh- tor $135 ver month. ‘eml.ely starved as a part of the pMQ of the Nazi Jack Schmiitz, Jr. other mén ' according to Grovet Winn, prominent: Junedu attorney, who Second and fourth ! gt Vg B Lioyd 'Hilds Monday of each month i dvance, $8.00; ’conquest From the International Red' Cross head- JO'Y iy Pnler had fust returned from the south. r scot{ish Rite Témple h, 3125, i 3 . i s 57.‘%'.@:..‘.‘1.‘.5‘;“%" % tavdr 1t they will prompily noty |QUArters in Berne, Switzerland, come estimates that | ey i T ———— beginning at 7:30 p. m. § the Busiokls offios: o asy failire or irregularity tn the de- | hundreds are dying daily of starvation in Greece, | MAROCH 8 W. E. Dunkle, engineer representing the Guggenheim interests, had R. W COWLING, Wor- § Telephones: News Office, 603; Business Office, 374. with people reduced to eating grass and weeds in Estella Draper left Ketehikan for Bradfield Canal tp do survey work on a pulp and shipful Master; JAMES W. LEIV< MEMBEE OF ASSOCIATED PRESS | their effot to find nourishment in a land stripped Stanley Nowickn paper project in which the Guggenheims were interested. ERS, Secretary. ) The Associated Press s exclusively entitied to the uss’far ; RSV . § reputlication of all news. a,'x:.'&..":!'u'.a& o 1t or not other- |bara PR A A (DENEEO Lola LaPaugh 55 ® : wise credited in this paper and also the local news published | Tt it 18 possible to prevent it. through the aid of Mrs. William Wakeham Mr. and Mrs. John Ptack had moved from their residence on Sixth % i o7 a Turkish medium or otherwise, the United Nations Henry G. Johnson. . Street to Franklin Street. Dr A w Stewm PIMLY meY : Amfihgmcu; A'grgfl nwmhmlfinu“flolfilwll | must not permit braye little Greece to die of star- Freeman W. Matheson - * i ¥ b e wo5; | Vation under the heel of a conqueror she offended ——————— Charles Miller and Mike Pusich leased the Alaskan Hotel for three DENTIST For BETTER Groceries 'NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alask spapers, ; & Tev ; 2 Sl 4 ” e American Bulding, Sestile, Wash. o only in her love of independence, i years aid were to take over managemient on Apiil 1 sccording to an- | | 30TH ORNTURY BUILDING Phone 16—24 nouncement by James McCloskey, manager and part owner of the hotel. The hotel was owned by James and John McCloskey and J B. Caro Com- pany, who took n over from P. L. Gemett. GEETTING LOW HOROSCOPE The Japs evidently are running a little low on the material needed to stuff bombs with. This, was lindicated recently in a grimly humorous dispatch !from Brisbane, Australia. It told of how bombs dlopped by the Japanese :pnlo'.s on New Guinéa were found to have con- | tained Australian beer bottle caps, used razor blades and rusty nails. { That doesn’'t mean Japan is about to collapse from lack of raw materials. It does mean Japan is using every last ounce| "“The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO, “ s 3 e el T’z;gt‘g:%?ccl;:: el” Wuliam Paul announced that he wou d_enter the general election P as 8 candldntg for membership in the Tcnlwxln] 'House of Represen- tatives as an independent candidate “in every sense of the word.” SUNDAY, MARCH 8 Liet, T. §. Kiifiger was, leaving. Seattle for Juneau to be stationed Benefic aspects are strong today lon the Unalga, on which Capt. E. D. Jones was succeeding Capt. B. L. but adverse mfluences are actlv ‘Brockwny a8 Commander. The mommg hours are favorable to the clergy and to serious con- ;v.emplauon but thert— may be rausm | |for grave apxiet(es of her material resources. { I b ke e TIDE CALENDARS | FREE Bob omgt_:;, 9ne of the best known dog mushers of the Interior, was {in Juneau while enroute south. Griffin had probably brought more gold 4 to the coast by dog téam than any other man. g B il i : DY HEART AND Heartenmg n ar nace n t o i It means, further that the overwhelmingly super- | fews of 1gyed ones may bé expccled\ 7 T T v | 134 f RUMBLINGS IN NADA jlor resources of this country won't mean a thing|in the cq;nmg week which should | Weather: High, 40; low, § ‘4 cloudy. ¢ RS e { { i e 5 s VA ARRE R unlcs§ they are put to work. High-grade scrap iron lying unused in junk yards won't beat a natlon that has figured out a way to | be !ortunnte for the Wavy Wom- en or all ages shou]d k work that absorbs atténtion and removes United Nations defeats in the Southwest PHL‘IHLI have had a more intensive effect in Canada, our “The Stere for Men" Dafly EGSSOIIS in Ehglish % L. GORDON neighbor to the south and west, than in the Unlted‘use old bottle caps. \thoql{ht of se" 'n| stars long ¥ States and England, according to the apparently ace | A N R have been réad a§ warning of grave SAB'N,S . curate reports received of late. s troubles and serlous disappoint- v . ~ % . E Democracy Wins “ments for Americans who watch| < WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I forbid you from going.” me SE——Tflmqlb m ! Canada is not and never has had dominion unity : on the war. The amount of direct Axis influence| | (Philadelphia Record) A Say, “I forbid YQUR.going.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Gigantlc I as In ICE, A as fn AN, accent second syllable, OFTEN IS PALLED Paroxysn{ observe the consonants. war bulletins, but there is no cause 1lo fear defeat of the Allies. Months | | have been foreseen .as necessary for the immense war machine of Pronohnu ji-gan-tik, first there is not strong. But the resistance to conscrip- tion for overseas duty is powerful among the people Uruguay has shown that Axis forces have no| imonOpol,v on quick action when the need arises. of Quebec. { President Alfredo Baldomir, stanch friend of the | lhe nation to. gain momentin EERON T Intadtads, 1od 98 Ly A § RS 1 s United States, has assumed. full personal control | nterlude, interval, intermission, pause. e fie prossot, Qoyernineng, pleriged ftoels SRElOR over his country to prevent Senator Luis Alberto de BUSINESS AFFAIRS: In 5"”“"; WORD SBTUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours." Let qs buying there will be a trend toward | y,.reqse our _vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: caution. War uncertainties may| ogrpNTATIOUS; fond of making an ambitious display; unduly con- fatfect merchandising, Factorles will| o,.0u0u5; poastful. “Far from belng ostentatious of the good you do.” turn out war supplies with in- —Dryden. ts . ’ . sending dra U o 5 2o l(rl'is?-(luf‘r(::l ll:)n?n|‘,1€(rflc:”‘;trc:) n:t"‘o‘l:z‘;vpsl:i‘:;‘z:Hcrrorn,-leamng foe of inter-American cooperation ¥ S i | —from maneuvering himself inte power. of all voters | Unlike Axis coups, General Baldomir's action is But it was noted recently that the debate in|jn aceord with the wishes of the people. He had, Ottawa showed that those against conscription areghe ¢ourage to take a step he called “unconstitutional growl bolder. They are pointing out that the|put necéssary” in order to preserve democracy.. Australians now find themselves with their own | His action was made necessary by a strange quirk | country menaced while many of their best troopsun Uruguay's Constitution. ~Although the followers | fested strongly in, theAut“{gnSab-i are overseas. New Zealanders are in a similar plight, |cf De Hertera fepresent an estimated one-sixth of (944g¢. and treathéry Within great| To this, Canadian opponents of a greater war |the clectorate, the Constitution gave thm one-half | Ceriters of industry Wil be nume | creasing speed hut warning is giv- MODERN ETIQUETTE * ponerra Lex effort abroad add charges that Canada’s coasts, es- | Of the members of the Senate and three out of nine Ous and methods will be so in-| en that labor tfoubles of \mu,sual| type are brewing and will be mani- . . sS at 4 he has not heard it distinctly senious as to puzrle investigators, | Q. Is'it Proper to guess at a name if ohe 3 pecially_the west coast, remain {ll defended by too|PAces M the Cabinet, N Ik o a This gave the pro-totalitarian Herreristas power NATIONAL ISSUES: Statesmen duiring an introduction? PAUL BLOEDHORN ‘ 8. FRANKELIN STREET few troops, inadequately ecquipped. ! 3 land economists should formulate' A. 'No; it is much better to ask and be correct, rather than to guess Thpse, Toa0t0R4, are, ndUualiiNe isun)oAe. B"L\llxocn?lxso::cr:m;; 01[:::32?115 By mr&wbe plans for post-war conditions. | and haye to be correeted. The proper thing to-say would be: “I'm very ncA v- ' n di ! the debate has reached a lamentable state of bitter- Uruguay is the smallest of South American re- Astrologers long have stressed the |sorry, but I did not hear your name clearly,” or, “Did Mr. Johnson call i‘ W, L ALBRECHT ICior naaios ness and factional strife publics—with a_population little more than that of |fact that a pew order is in the|you Miss Ferris? I'm sorty, but I did not hear very well.” g A i and RECORDS There are of course many, probably a majority, | Philadeiphia, In size about equal to the State of‘maklng and have prophesied that Q. What does an invalld do if she wishes to return calls that have Physical Therapeutics Juneau Melody House of ns who realize that Australia would not|missouri. But it is one of the most progressive, and |@ World which has suffered thc\‘been made upon her? Heat and Light Treatments Next to Truesdell Gun Shop be ‘defensible at all except as part of the Britishione of the most friendly in the United States. [most terrible war in. history must | A. She may make her calls by proxy. In other words, she may send, (| passage and Corrective Exercises Second Street Phone | issue from its ordeal purified and {a daughter or close friend in her place, . This, of course, is not expected ennobled. . Social injustices st | { of her, but it is a nice gesture on her part. |be erased, the seers, deplare, and Q. Should, cantaloupe be eaten with the spoon? equality of opportunity , must by:' A. No; the xorl: shotlld be used established in the rebuilding of | Commonwealth, and that defeating the Axis is a great deal more important than the defense of any one country The United States may Canadian situation. Let us outling clearly our policy of world-wide ! We are glad_to, see our friend have the courage war. Let us emphasize that our rapidly expanding military and naval establishments and war produc- | 0 Strike first agdinst totalitarian forees. tion assure the Canadians that we de not mean to chcose between defending this hemisphere and send- Last June we snt a cruisér to Urugudy to back up Baldomir in his successful efforts to block an at- tempted Nazi putsch. If the Uruguay Nazis now join hands with the! ousted Herreristas, we should again offer any assist- Phone 773 Valentine Bldg. INSURANCE Shatiu;figency CALIFORNIA be able to ease the JAMES C. COOPER COOPER BUILDING ance needed. oivilization upon firm foundagions, }WWWM . C. GORDON Frightful waste of life and destyuc- : tion of property must bring about | conditions that make future ware. impossible: INTERNATIONAL AFFAlRB LOOK dnd LEARN Well, at least the bees aren’t uoip‘g ta have any- i 1 | thing to worry about, war or no war. In order to Whi i e ing faroes, broad: nssurr‘c maxunruym honey, productiop, the sugar section | Chianges in the British _Cabinet | ; Wh:hh;sre:g:::‘:t’efheménf:; gm:v;geaoaagra;;s profession? Graeéry ;auk Mont: Marked We mean to do both. lof the War Production Board has advised bee pro- |8gain are foretold and the comiug | ' 478—PHONES—371 0.2 i AR Autumn will be a time in which ! 3. How xong qoc,s it take a ramesnl-ke to, coil itself and strike? 1 b Hi | ducers and apiarists, that they will recelve the sugar 5| 4 Who composed the opera ‘Lohtns.rl no igh Quality Foods at AN (O L B st L 3 !(hey need to keep the bees alive. . Honey is a sub- | the Amplications of victory will in- | 5 e Ftion of Z 1% s thy U‘:ted Hates have Sk (o Moderate Prices THE (.l(lah(,L SlT[ ATION ‘sntute for sugar and has important dletary uses, In fillence the choice, of , statesmen. | 2 Wh!ltprogo on of adults in the Un! ates have foot trouble? bl aged addition, bees are indispensable for the pollination of | Leaders in London will show the et- | i SHOW R o : The accounts of famine and starvation in Gxeece! fruits, vegetables And forage CrODS. fects of long strain through the - Printing. r -all well substantiated—leave little room for doubt { burdens of war; ill health will| 2. Andréw Jobnson. Super WHITE Power | that the Germans are being. especially heartless in | 4 hamper men -upon, whose strefigth 3. About five séconds. 'ower A > | If we can't drive our cars becausé of the rubber ) 2 ¥ their treatment of the people of the brave little na- | Shmég‘: caused by the war, at least we'll be able |the Empire depends. Winstoh (- 4. Richard Wagner (1813:83). g - TRUCKS and BUSSES ton which fought so gallantly for its freedom. | to keep clean, Military. demand for glycerin probably lCh““;b«‘“ often has been warned to '~ 5. Three out of every four. ¥ i NASH CARS Greece's food stocks, meager enough at best, were| will insure plenty of soap, since soap is & byproduct \ulp])'.d by the German conquerors without thought of glycerine mxmutncture S Washirgion Go-Round (Continued from Page One) other New York clean-up officers ever touched the waterfront. Furthermore, the U. 8. Govern- ment, now almost the sole shipper, has no control over the men on the piers. They belong to the In- ternational Longshoreman's Asso- ciation, and are hired not through “hiring halls” as on the West Coast, but through a “shape-up” system. By this the union boss picks the men he wants to work, usually his old friends. There is Iittle rotation of employment. There are also several stevedore contractors, of which perhaps the largest is the Jarka Coporation, headed by Franz Jarka, born in - Hungary, but a naturalized Ameri- Captain of the Hamburg-| can, Amerika Liner Vaterland during the | last war, Jerka was interned as an | alien epemy from 1917 through 1818. His stevedoring company is the agept for United States Lines, Bethlehem Steel, Moore-McCormack Lines, Bull'Line, Isthmian Lines (which is U. S. SteeD), and the Arrow Line Former officers in the German and Italian naval reserves also op- | erate othe stevedore companies un- der an.arrangement by which the AFL permits year. ‘There are a few private protec- tive agencies which supply night watchmen for the steamship lines. But the guards supplied by these agencies don't have to be checked by the Government and don’t even have to be U. 8. citizens. ADMIRAL ANDREWS As far as the Government is concerned, several agencies are sup- men to sign for a| ,po.scd to keep an eye on the New | York waterfront, amoung thém the speclal agents of the Treasury, U. 8. Customs Intelligence, FBI, Mili- | tary Intelligence, Harbor Police, the ents ‘of the New York Port Au- | thority, and, last of all, Naval In- | telligence. Formerly the Coast Guard did a fairly good job, but now ‘it has been taken over by the Navy so that Captain Hayless of the Coast Guard is dlrccfly under Admiral Adolphus Andrews. Andrews is fa- mous in Washington for his beau- tifully-tailored clothes and for hav- ing been aide to Pmluenh of the United States. He. was alde to Teddy Roosevelt, to President Hard- ing, escorted Harding on his trag- ic trip to Alaska, aide to Coolidge, and commanded ' the prestdzmlal | yacht Mayflower. But about the dlnqrmble and dirty job of cleaning up a waterfront is problematical. Government virtually the only ship- | per out of New York, all of the | information picked up from stool- | pigeons, the underworld, worried | ually finds its way to Naval Intel- | ligence. | Naval Intelligence has an ex- | tremely high standard in selecting |its men. They have to be college | graduates and third or fourth gen- college degre has to do with smell- one knows. If you enter the of- fice of Naval Intelligence, you will how much he may know, eration Americans—though what a| ing out sabotaging wharf rats no| |find a group of fine looking, alert young men, all of them at desks ‘and typewriters, apparently compil- | ing data which could be done by | older men or female stenographers. Most of them look too fresh out of Harvard or Annapolis to know anything about hanging around a waterfront saloon or a dive where the real naval intelligence of the waterfront is picked up. | New York waterfront. HOW ABOUT THE BUDGBT’ was informed that workmen, sling- ing_a DeGaussin cable around a iship to nullify magnetic mines, were purposely throwing materials into the water, thus losing yards of expem{ve cable It was su, gested to Naval Intelligence that it, would be easy to hide a motion picture camera in a nearby ware house .and take pictures whi would prove delibérate sabotage. Whereupon, naval officers en- gaged In a debate as to whether their budget permitted them to buy a camera, and wheéther they ought to take the inftiative in Investi- gat!ng the reported ubotage On ' another ooéulon, Treasury,, caught, the Epaniah Ain- er Isla de Teneriffa surreptitiously logding 50, radio_sets, 100 drums of lubricating oil .and a quantity of raw silk—all without export permits. However, with the|And although the Treasury had ar- | efual ranged to requisition the ship as a penalty, the State Department, al- ways friendly to Franco, intervened | tine. Chief move of Naval Inwmgenqe |80 far is to require office workers along the waterfront, plus ferryboat | and tug boat crews, to have cre-- dentials. , Stevedores and longshore- identification cards, but. there have been delays in enforcinx this mea- sure At present there are two police ¥ agencies doing p good job on the The_ special Treasury agents and U. 'S, Cus- toms Intelligence have made a |life work of knowing all ‘the crim- inals and shady characters along | the ; waterfront. - Suggestion to Uncle Sam: Why not let Naval Intelligence men stick i tp.data on guns, armour plate, etc., on which they are experts; and - |specially safeguarded against ac- Gordén | fhd Pyke, crack \special agent of thé men have been ordered to obtain| exercise great care in .the, eon- " servation of his splendid ene: This yéar will begin to show eom- ing victory, which sweeps the glofie but. the conflict will extend throusn many. months. . Persons whose birthdate it is.have ! the augury of a year of delays and * annoyances, - but difficulties | will ‘be only temporary. luck \will: be slowly attained. Children born on this day prob- ably will be bright and energetic. Both, boys. and. girls should be cidents. HONDAY. MARCH 9 Difiavctsé aspects donflnlte wai g 11! iculties threaten in factories. epgaged in defense work. leaders may clash with the exhiment a8 well as with Heads! ; Qm HOME This B a f un- dce frying poblet uwa' that disctiminate against wm be widely discussed . and the ghts mqvement will 3 Specnu rotéctive legislation, a booman.ng for - girl-workers, will interfere with vital defense jobs in {and let the vessel sail after plead-|which there will be an increased citizens and the newspapers, event- llng Nolo Contendere and’ paying a|demand for skillful hands. In American homes sewing and knit- tir will be speeded as house- wives become experts. BUSINESS = AFFAIRS: Ee\gere have storms will cause losses for faym- ers, but tremendous crops'are prag~ nosticated. 8pring. - freshets... will damage ‘certain valley citiés, ref ing factory efficiency. The s appear to indicate that nature will reflect the cruelty of humanity and add to the death rolls in many countriés, Earthquakes and top: nadoes are forecast. It will be detall _the hard-boiled giiys whal hlve leued it up and down waterfront for years, to step in clean up .this hot-bed of nbouée in New York Harbos?. (Copyright, 1942, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc), neéeaury to endure’ grenv. h'publeb hemre there is relief, hut beyond présent. storms are’ sunny 'days. NATIONAL ISSUES: Inasmch | {as isolation has provod an i sibility, due ‘to world events, the | |Umitation of immigration alsd will be impossible; ' astrologérs” declare, | - Good iy thefr view of ‘Post-war ‘condi- | |tions, A great nflux of ‘Euro- ;peans fs prognosticated and: oth- er Qshtlc problem will .dévelop, the ' tnevitable levmnk g:;;x a time when ucéofi& are pemmn ing. miracles . in- speeding - work for the . war there may be grave in- dustrial upheavals due to diffeér- ®0{ences between . twd ‘great 1abor or- ganizations, Despetate. needs will cavse a tide' of terribié apprehen- | ONB |sion when the ude of. conflict is reassuring fo_he, Allles. In, the Autumn there .will be appurent good results that betoken final vic- tory but the United States will bear heavier burdens since it is the.'major sgurce of war suppifes. sons whose ' birthdate it is gxln:s exlrnqrdlnl;y cial, and finanéial. nvo:i extravagance. Idren born on this day preb- ably 'will be so popular as fo, Arouse jealousy and envy. They should be brilliant in, midd and charming ey shaufd fmpos- | ‘of | Territorial Building on the first be Health Deprfment officfals feel [} . | blood typifig of 100, per cent of the 8 roqidents of mgs an |cirtied at-all times. the n\gury' of ‘ )eqr thnt 2 Whfl. BLOOD TYFING With seventy five people report- ing to Have their blood typed at the| | Department of Health offices in the "HORLUCK’S DANm Ice Cream Fla day the program was put into effect, em!oungad at the Acooperation of the public_ ih working toward, the nu ooé t:.?nz 15 now done . be- 10:30 o'clock in the maminq m twegn 1 oelock {and 2 oelock M the :mmotm | thie upormrm f the Térrl Department th. t- [ ménts ‘edn also be made ab_other [ times “in speclal , cases. Each m- dividual typed. is flven 4 card sta ing- his uood whith, shquld be Lumber ud mm Materials PHONES 587 or 47— UNEAU. SECURF Y'UR.LOAN THROUGH US To Im e EA JUMOR SKIERS GIVEN CHANCE SUNDAY and Modernize Your Home Under Title %&in*;‘“ CA l’lTAL——SSG,OOfl er, g S :M. A awrws—sm,ooo chance »tpr ski ' proweu oW . afternogn When the Jun t COMMERCIAL AND ionahlp Rgge ; will, be held at the :SAVINGS ACCOUNTS 'rhe Gasuep\; Channel Nurses" | Ass'n. will hold- their regular busi- | ness meettng Monday ‘night at 8 in the Health Center. BUY DFFENSE STAMPS - [} {events, | Any ski Bowl|a 1 m A fresh pow- der sno t the sigpes in first elug Llon for wmnrrgws is quall- tied for this race ?hf:h wflx et, on . gradual slopes used for unfl-rd races. |, f $(Iver and ‘Gold. ski_runs will. be open Immgdl:gly after the Fh“s‘i fiufloflal fiafifi JUNEAU—ALASKA 1 Thete is no substitute fof nmiispsi adverfising! tire - day with regular admhslan prices prevailing.