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MONDAY, APRIL 27, 1942 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ¥ A SULTRY SIREN TAKES OVER THE SOUTH! Marlene how Place of Juneau ATTENTION MASONS Stated communication of Mt. Ju- neau Lodge 147 Monday evening at 7:30. Work in the M. M. De- gree. —J. W. LEIVERS, Secretary. - BUY DEFENSE STAMPS John L. Covich DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE for HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Resident of Alaska for 30 Years I Solicit Your Vote (Paid advertisement) DIETRICH MOVIE NOW SHOWING AT CAPITOL THEATRE Glamour Girl Is Treated Rough in “Flame of New Orleans” The campaign to divest of all false dignity the once-remote and unapproachable Marlene Dietrich continues in Universal's “The Flame New Orleans,” now showing at the Capitol Theatre in Juneau. Once the subject of perhaps over- glamorous treatment in such pic- tures as “Scarlet Empress” and “Shanghai Expre: Miss Dietrich agreed a few seasons ago that it was time she was humanized The unforgettable “Destry Rides Again,” in which Miss Dietrich pulled her famous hair-pull with Una Merkel, was the answer, fol- lowed by “Seven Sinners,” in which Miss Dietrich was socked on the jaw by Bred Crawford. In “The Flame of New Orleans,’ the cycie of planned indignities continues. As a rough riverboat captain who encounters Miss Diet- rich as hey carriage rolls througt the park, Bruce Cabot becomes an gry with her and ‘overturns the en- tire carriage, spilling Miss Diet rich into a mud puddle. In another sequence, she is man handled by a band of rough sail- ors in a waterfront dive. NORTHWEST AIRLINES PLANE IN JUNEAU FOR OVERNIGHT STOP One of the Northwest Airlines D-C type, twin-motored 2l-passenger planes was an overnight visitor at Juneau's airport and left again early this morning. Traveling in the plane, in addition to the pilot, co-pilot and. crew were George Gardner, Vice-President and Operations Manager for the com- pany; Frank Caldwell, Technical Adviser for NWA; M. B. Freeburg, Chief Pilot for the Western Division, of PRIMARY ELECTION - TOMORROW ' Alaskans Will Go to Polls to Nominate Officials for Two Parties (Continued rrom Page One) Territorial positions solely in the hands of the Democrats. Anthony J. Dimond, Delegate to Congress and Oscar G. Olson, Treasurer, are unopposed, so a vote for them is practically complimentary. For Com- missioner of Labor, there are two candidates on the Democratic tick- et, Michael J. Haas, incumbent, and Walter P. Sharpe. First Division In the First Division, there are wo candidates on the Democra‘ic icket for the Senate, Allen Shat- uck and Arthur P. Walker, one to »e nominated | There are 13 candidates for fouse, four to be nominated. The| ‘andidates, as their names appear| m the ballot are as follows: Har- ld H. Bates, Carroll Clausen, J. 2. Ohristensen, Frank Chinella, John L. Covich, James V. Davis, G. A. Doelker, Andy Gundersen, R.| E. Hardcastle, Crystal Snow Jenne, J. F. (Joe) Krause, Frank Per- atrovich, W. C. Stump. The Republicans have no nomin- ation for the Senate and only the| the 1} following four for the House: Grant | A. Baldwin, Ralph A. Bartholomew, Frank L. Garnick and Edmund J.| Krause. Second Division | In the Second Division there is| no contest in either the Democrat- | ic or Republican primaries. Both | parties have nominated only one candidate for the Territorial Sen- ate and only four for the House of Representatives. Howard Lyng is the Democratic| candidate for Senator, and Demo- | and Dr. J. H. Tilliach and Dr. Paul | ¢ratic candidates for the House are Cusick, both of the Mayo Brothers | Prank Whaley, Tolbert Scott, C. H. Clinic in Rochester, Minn Mr. Caldwell, who recently” joined Northwest Airliies was one of the originators of United Airlines and and Wallace Porter. Republican ticket has Stu- Stapgroom for Senator, and G. Miller, Dudley Warner, | House The art L. Henry later Special Investigator for CAA|Ken Rood and Walter Taylor for with the Air Safety Board. AT SRy IR The Dally Alaska Empire nas the largest paid eirculation of any Al aska newspaper. @ et Champion for Peoples’ Rights G. A. DOELKER For House of Representatives Democratic ““Golden Rule” Platform 1} “Action Instead of Promises” (Paid Advertisement) ! A. P. e i} WALKER CANDIDATE FOR TERRITORIAL SENATE Subject to the April 28th Primary Election “YOU WORK FOR ME AND I'LL WORK FOR YOU!" (Paid advertisement) A Check of My Record in the four sessions of the Legislature in which I r have served will convince you of my belief in hon- est, efficient, economical government. I have con- fidence and faith in Alaskans’ ability to govern Allen Shattueck themselves. (Paid Advertisement) CANDIDATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET——Primaries, April 28 Representatjves. Third Division In the Third Division, the only contest is in the Democratic ticket with three men out for the posi- tion of Territorial Senator and eight | for the House of Representatives. Democrats for Senator are Doni Carlos Brownell, H. H. McCutcheon and Karl A. Drager. Those run- ning for the four nominations to the House are Joseph W. Kehoe, Harvey J. Smith, Willlam A. Eag- an, Joseph B. Diamond, Walter E. Huntley, Stanley McCutcheon, Clyde Speers and Michael Hatton. ‘There is no contest in the Repub- | lican primary for this division with | no filing for the Senate and only Almer J. Peterson and Moritz A.| Andresen filing for the House. Fourth Division In the Fourth Division the Dem- locrats have a contest both for the Senate and the House. Democratic candidates for the Senate are Frank . 8. Gordon and C. H. “Alabam” La Boyteaux, Democratic candidates for the| | House are Harry M. Badger, Her- !bert S. Fink, Paul F. Glasgow,| {Hugh M. Hinton, Jesse D. Lander, | Alaska Stewart Linck, R. U. “Bob” McCombe, John J. Shea, Jr., Earl R. Pilgrim and Leo W. Rogge. The Republicans have a straight ticket, John Butrovich, Jr., for the FOR THE SENATE (Paid Advertisement) WALTER BORN IN NOME, ALASKA Resident of Territory—36 Years “Committed to Efficient Administration in Public Office.” PROVEN RECORD AS COMPETENT ADMINISTRATOR YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED P. SHARPE Candidate for COMMISSIONER OF LABOR Restrictions on Goods PAGE THREE ! For Consumers Hitfing Walloping Blows Now GIVEN FORTH Senate, and Jacob P. Drablos, Rob- ert C. Ilsley, Henry P, Karstens and Irving McK. Reed. There are two women candidates for the House of Representatives, Crystal Snow Jenne, of Juneau, member of the last Territorial Legislature, seeking renomination, and Alaska Stewart Linck, of Fair- banks, Fourth Division ARBITRATOR IS REQUESTED FOR FISH HEARINGS No Agreement Reached Between Cold Storage Workers and Buyers Meetings between Cold Storage and fish buyer representatives and representatives of the cold storage workers, which opened on Thursday evening with E. S. Jackson, Federal Conciliator with the Conciliation Division of the United States De- partment of Labor, adjourned late on Saturday wthout reaching any agreement At the suggestion of Mr a request sent to the Jackson, Director |of Conciliation in Washington, D. C., to appoint an arbitrator to set- tle the dispute which is mainly con- cerned with wages J. W. Mendenhall, of the Ketchi- kan Cold Storage Company, Jacob | Otness of the Petersburg Cold Stor- age Company, Howard Simmons of the Juneau Cold Storage Company, W. O. Carlson and E. E. Engstrom represented the cold storage com- panies and fish buyers during the hearings and the cold storage work- | |ers were represented by O. Lystad and O. Holum of Ketchikan and a local committee headed by Victor Anderson, Mr. Jackson said. The meetings were a continuation of those held during the winter which broke down during January. They began on Thursday evening and continued Friday and Satur- day in the offices of the Territorial Department of Labor. JOSEPH CROSSON IS SERIOUSLY ILL IN SEATTLE Joe Crosson, General Manager of Pan American Airways Alaska Division, is gravely ill in Seattle according to word received in Ju- neau. One of the early Alaska fliers, Mr. Crosson joined PAA when It first began Alaska opera- ticns and moved to his present po- sition several years ago. Mr. Crosson made a trip through the entire Territory a short time ago visiting all contacting the personnel thoughout Alaska. - eee - ORRIN KIMBALL TO BE IN KETCHIKAN FOR SEVERAL WEEKS Orrin Kimball, Assistant Agent for the Northland Transportation Company, left Saturday for Ketchi- kan where he will assist in the com- pany office for the next few weeks during the illness of a member of the staff there. During his absence Brooks Han- ford will act as Assistant Agent in the office in Juneau. s L BISHOP RETURNS Bishop Joseph R. Crimont re- turned to Juneau early this morn- ing, having made a short round trip to Skagway where he took part in confirmation services. PAA offices andl (Continued from Page One) to him the headline as a whole is = | utterly fantastic: “Wives Warned on Bootlegging Pants Cuffs for Hus- | bands. He reads on: “The wife | who sews cuffs onto her husband’s trousers’ legs may face federal prosecution, WPB warned yester- day.” | Just beneath that story | cther strange headline | Freezes Bicycle Stocks; Rationing | Ordered.” He reads the body of {the story: "Faced with a terrific |run on bicycles, the WPB halted the sale, shipment, delivery or | transfer of all new adult models, | effective at 11:59 o'clock last night.” ‘ To the man who has been doing |a Rip Van Winkie since 1927, it Just dcesn't make sense. As he ! remembers, a bicycle so far as ad- is an- ults were concerned, was a fading | relic of an early transportation per- | |fod. Why, then, a stampede by| grownups for this antiquated ve- hicle? Next he sees this headline: “U. S. in Cheese Business; Seizes Syra- cuse Plant.” Can it be that the land of Lincoln, of Harding and of Coolidge has gone bolshevistic with an American Lenin, nicknamed WPB, issuing ukases to the Yankee proletariat? He turns to an inside page and reads: “Army Streamlines Star- | Spangled Banner So Males Can Hit | ‘Land of the Free!'” And then his eye lights on this| one: “Army BI Hats Wrestle | Over Undies for Women's Corps.” | | The Citizen of the Coolidge Era| |can’t take any more. The paper drops from his hands. He eased down into his bed and whispers, “I'm doing another Rip Van Winkle and it's for the duration.” 15-MAN TEAM (OMING HERE FOR SMOKER Chilkoot Men Will Fight Duck Creek Boys Saturday Night A 15-man boxing team made up of soldiers from Chilkoot Barracks will invade Juneau this coming weekend to tangle Saturday night with a team made up of men from the Duck Creek project, Lieut. George Willey, recreation officer at Chilkoot, informed The Empire to- day. The match will be staged in the Elks Hall, the first smoker to be held in Juneau for a long time. Lieut. Willey is the trainer of the Chilkoot team and will accompany the 15 leather punchers on the trip. Further details of the match will be announced later. Mrs. . Goldstein To Visit Family In San Francisco Mrs. I. Goldstein left this morn- ing for the south to spend the next two months visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.. Lee Kohn and other relatives and friends in San Fran- cisco. Bob Goldstein is Juneau with his father. remaining in Mrs. Gold- part of June. | autumn of 1939 and might soar an- |other 80 or 90 percent during the | next -year ja year after paying his taxes.” |must fix ceilings on prices that con- MYSTERY FEATURE IS BEING SHOWN AT 20TH CENTURY "Sleepers West' Has Lloyd Nolan as Two-Fisted Detective fast-talking, SEVEN-POINT PROGRAM IS (Continued trom rage One) hold personal and corporate profits to reasonable levels, the stabiliza- tion of prices received by farmer: discouraging of credit and instal ment buying and the rationing of | all essential scarce commodities and the stimulating of purchase of war bonds. When a two-fisted 1- [ing newspaper gal tracking down la key witness guarded by tective, the fur begins to fly only fur, but bullets and cracks—when the detective . Only the tax program and the tion’s famous Michael Shayne stabilization of farm prices will re- | Century-Fox's “Sleepers West,” quire legislative action, the President | which features Lloyd Nolan, as sald, but added in the mesage read | Shayne again, Lynn Bari, Mary in Congress by the clerks, he saild: | geth Hughes, Edward Brophy and “I assure Congress that if the re- | Ben “Shadrach” Carter, now s Not wise- is fic- quired objectives are not attained |qpowing currently at the 20th Cen- | and if the cost of living should con- | x % tinua o, 1i8s Kubstantially, 1 ad,sds | LY, THERIS (il Juneal vise Congress to ask any additional |~ legislation which may be necessary.” | issloned to conduct Mary | The President sald there are ob- | Hughes to San Francisco, | vious reasons for taking every step |She will testify in | necessary to prevent the rise of the |murder trial. .They leave on |cost of living, which has already | “Cemanche” the crack mountain moved about 15 percent since the | limited, “but they are not alone. | A gangster.is on board to stop Mary Beth from testifying; Shayne's re- |porter girl friend, Lynn Bari is al- No Big Incomes |so a passenger with a story to get; The President said in his mt-h-;mu[ to top things off there's a sage that during the war, “Ho|stranger with a valise full of green- Beth where than $25,000 witness. net income of more Sol M. Wurtzel was executive In proposing the program 'O;pl'odu(‘t'r on “Sleepers West." Eu- Congress, the President said, “I be-|gene Forde directed from a screen lieve that stabilizing the cost ofiplay by Lou Breslow and Stanley living will mean that wages in gen- | Rauh, based on a novel by Fred- eral can and should be kept at erick Nebel existing levels.” | He asked for repeal of provisions| of the price fixing law which al-| lows farm commodities to rise 110| percent from parity, saying “we - ACAMAKES SITKA TRIPS WITH MAIL Added Rent Ceilings | A“D pASSE“GERS He asked also more steps in put-| Five trips were made to Polaris- ting ceilings on rents on dwellings | Taku by the Alaska Coastal Air- in all areas affected by war in-!lines Sunday bringing in miners dustries. |from the mine. sumers, retailers, wholesalers and| manufacturérs pay for things they buy.” 1 |detective tussles with a quick-think- | the de-! American citizen ought to have albacks who falls in love with the | Where Better BIG Pictures Play TIO"CENTURY . NOW PLAYING 20th | | i . and faces his most ex- citing case! Detective Shayne has been com- | the Callahan | the | | Lloyd Nolan * Llynn Bari | Mary Beth Hughes * Edward Brophy - Ben “Shadrack” Carter —— COLISEUM — “Love Thy Neighbor” ALLEN SHATTUCK . RETURNS FROM - ‘ KETCHIKAN TRIP | Allen shattuck, candidate in the | Territorial primary elections on the | Democratic ticket for the office of | Senator in the Territorial Legisla~ | ture, returned to Juneau Fridaj from a week's trip to Ketchikan ‘durmg which he contacted the vot= ers in the southern end of the First — “It is indefensible,” the President | told Congress, “that those who en-! joy large incomes in state and lo-fy cal securities should be immune to, taxation while we are at war,” and | he urged that state, municipal and other bonds should be subject at Passengers leaving here for Snka‘ Division. with ACA this morning were Mr.| Mr. Shattuck, head of the Shat- and Mrs. N. C. Tanner, Mrs. Amy|tuck Insurance Company and exs Albertson, Leonard Albertson, F. M.| tensive property owner in Juneau, Hamilton and Lt. Col. 8. C. Page.| has served in four Territorial legiss Returning to Juneau with the! jative ions, twice as Senator and first plane to Sitka were, Mrs. Emily | twice as Representative. During his stein expects to return the lanerlJames Bowler and Ed Scanyers left Heay, Harold Kelley, John A. Lawr- ence and Mrs. John A. Lawrence. On the second and last flight to Sitka today airmail and the follow- ing passengers were carried, Mrs. R. F. Messmer, Joyce Carroll, Rob- ert G. Boes and Miss Tommy Car- penter. least to surtaxes. Flatly opposing the suspension of the 40-hour work week law, the President said, “most workers in| the munitions industries are work- ing far more than 40 hours a week and should continue to be paid! time and a half for overtime. Oth- erwise the weekly pay envelopes will be reduced. R s s ——— | Subscribe to the Dally Alaska ‘Emphe—me paper with the largesu vald circulation. | last term as Senator, Mr. Shattuck | was President of the Senate. | = | What About The Old Folks?, When they're not so active anymore, | and spells of constipation them | ot octuring g2 pta, got ADLERIER! ort gas pains, get | We luv;muv l‘:tt-n mm‘ users who are far past middle-age. Your st has An'fimn. £ BUTLER-MAURO PRUG CO. EX-PRESIDENT OF ‘GONZAGA HEADS JESUIT PROVINCE The Rev. Leo J. Robinson, 8. J., president of Gonzaga University in Spokane for the past seven years, | has been appointed superior of the| Oregon province, in charge of all Jesuit institutions in Wnnhlngum.{ Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Al- aska, the Associated Press reports.| Headquarters are in Portland, Ore. The Rev. Robinson’s resignation as Gonzaga president was recently an- nounced. His successor will be named within a month. The Rev. Robinson succeeds the| COMMERCIAL Guy's Drugs in Douglas 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 | TheB.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska SAVINGS Rev. W. G. Elliott of Portland. The Rev. Elliott taught in Seattle College Preparatory Schoo! many years ago. The Rev. Elliott will re- port within a month as pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in} Fairbanks, Alaska. .- FOR SOUTH FRANCES HANSEN, Manager BARBARA GARRETT CAROLINE REYNOLDS LEAVE FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR PARKER HERBEX TREATMENTS WILL CORRECT HAIR PROBLEMS Sigrid’s James O'Connor left Juneau for | Ketchikan over the weekend and Democratic Primary—April 28, 1942 Three Things Are Essential for Your Victory Garden— Seeds, Fertilizer and Tools three items is large and exception- ou can select the size HOE, SPADING FORK or SHOVEL that Little tools for the flower garden Our stock of these all{ varied. Y CULTIVATOR, suits your purpose. and real man-size implement L] NU-LIFE, VIGERO, MORECROP, BONE MEAL LIME FERTILIZER and NORTHRUP SEEDS RUBBER-TIRED WHEELBARROWS RUBBER-TIRED LAWN MOWERS L] LILLY' Everything to Make Your Juneau-‘lqung. Hardware Co. here for Seattle. results every time. 00 mo! RAKE, st A FACT ABOUT NUTRITION YOU SHOULD KNOW Preserye the outritious minerals and vitamios in meats ooking them in their own o5 ‘i\lku. Moist heat created within the oven protects ‘withi meat flavor, and texture. s for the larger garden. Gardening a Success ummmwmw-umnmmuflv GENERAL @ ELECTRIC Alaska Eleciric Light & Power Co. PHONE 616 - BE SURE IT’S MODERN TOMORROW, TOO! - Don’t Invest Your Dollars In a Range lust Because It's New! Be Sure It's Modern, Too! Yes, it has all the latest conveniences you've always wanted. It'sclean, fast, cool, and economical. Accurately con- trolled heat in the Clean Speed Cal- rod units, the Thrift Cooker, and the large capacity oven give the Model Tllustrated DD2-42 sooty pots and pans to scrub. Don’t put up any longer with old-fashioned cooking methods. Cook the modern way — electrically with a General Electric Ask About Prices and Terms. 0. s v ades & i