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P Z\(,\l; FOUR Dady Alaska Em ire Published every evening except Sunday by ma EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY l, A BIG JOB | When total war hits a nation, it means far more than steel and aluminum, ‘airplanes and tanks, ma- Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaskp, president | ChINE tools and auto industry conversion. It means D e ahl = e, i roop Gl Sl dgibde M:nn:er hard work and sacrifice on the part of anyone— farmers and the people who make civilian goods as Entered in the Pou tonns‘;‘;l]pt‘l'(l;:”l&;;:ssemnd O AR, much as those who work in the more spectacular Delinecad b7 gacrier In Junsaw and Dossihg fof SLO M war industries. The men and women who man the One vear, in advance. §12.00; six months, in advance, $6.00; |civilian front have the task of supplying the Ameri- By mall, postage paid, at the followine rates: month; tn advnce, $1.25. e S\]lf:x‘:fl\hrn will confer a favor if they will promptly notify [can people, as well as a large part of the rest of the the Business Office of any fallure of irregblaxity in the de- | yong, with necessary food and clothing. /Theirs is Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, |the task of keeping the best-fed and best-equipped MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS army in the world—an ever-growing U. S. Army—in’ e s e e hen Srediied to It or hot giher- |the fleld. And that is no easy task in these days redited in this paper and also the local news¥published | of scarcities—scarcity of raw materials, scarcity of labor and scarcity of time. Theirs is really an enor- mous job, for the average American in the Army needs almost double the food and clothing he gets in civilian life. The average male civilian in this coun- try eats 125 pounds of meat a year. The soldier gets 360 pounds. The civilian drinks 150 pounds of milk, but the soldier drinks 210 pounds. The civilian wears two pairs of shoes a year, the soldier three. The civilian gets one pair of trousers, the soldier five. These manufacturers and producers of ‘“non-essen- tial” goods are making it their job to see to it that the civilian population—millions of whom are man- ning the production front—do not suffer for want of essential food and clothing, and that our soldiers have |the highest quality of everything necessary to make them the strongest army ever known. month. i ALASKA CIRCULATION GUA.RANTEED TO BE LARO“ THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. 3 PRESENTATIVES — Alaskn Newspapers, 1011 Seattle, Wash. NATIONA! American Bui Hitler, Enemy of Religion (Philadelphia Record) Michael Cardinal von Faulhaber, militant leader the religious opposition in Germany, has given the world additional proof that Hitler is the enemy not only of churches that oppose him, but of all re- | ligion The Cardinal's warning to the believers of the world is contained in an eleven-point indictment of l)l'TCH HARBOR According to all available dispatches received by lof The Empire on the Japanese attacks on Dutch Har- erday, the initial raid was no surprise. Our forces were on the alert, and apparently because of this little damage caused by the attack. It isn’'t an easy thing to keep soldiers and sailors | on their toes for such a raid, especially after months \“ b i euat g b ThE Rt e hurch situation in ermany sen 0 e atican filled with report after repor: that the Japs were S . ) on the way. It's the old story of the shepherd boy ‘Ncws of the indictment trickled through Italian cen- W sl:u\xi(»(l when there was no wolf; |sorship to correspondents in Switzerland. wolf, and : when the wolf did come, the hoy didn’t get any help | Cardinal von Faulhaber declared that a “veritable against Christianity” the Undoubtedly, Jap radio announcers last night | crowed for hours after this minor assault. Undoubt- | edly, the Japanese people were talked into believing | that a terrific blow had been struck at America, in | retaliation for the American bombing of Tokyo. ‘bhckm'\ll" SR Gltnlios to discHiaks bl We know this isn't We know that a few warehouses were st afire, ves, and that ' féw pmple‘chmch attendance, attacks on religious instruction for B, BUS AT the J6x ki DG mrbor]clulmpn suppression of religicus textbooks and other : | publications, seizure of church property. was made also for the purpose of frightening the | R e . # e warn civilian population in the Territory and the Pacific | “T:xln‘ N SR s Gl Al Coast states, we don’t think it worked. et ¥ b 89 o s We know that it didn’t actually terrorize any o '['i’w Clardinklls diidichant <t wiiing esniohe Alaskans that we talked to yesterday. Alaskans are o 5T ih revelx;non last Dflcersnber thagt t‘l)m anl; pretty tough to terrorize, | 2 i ‘o) g ; 'l;)\n\"x'«~ even hard to make nervous. |had a blueprint for abolishing the Christian religion. ¢ 4 = g s : 5 7 | The blueprint was contained in a book called A barber in Juneau was snipping the locks from “Gott 1ng Volk™ (God and Nation) widely clreplated a patron’s pate yesterday afternoon when he heard en figs Nagt olite.” T6 aakias ‘d “We G >mans e 0 i 3 clared: “We Ger: 2 i “H“ REMKpLstne, tiack on Dyieh - KiNeligr . o been called by fate to be the first to break with Chris- that so?” said the barber, and he went on cutting ity.” " hair without missing stroke, and his hand was | MW . = 5 p h i | The Nazis are putting their just as steady - Two Juneau women were wailking up the street.| ™ 'x?;:m s e L e § ERE I % re c relig! T id one Did you hear that Dutch Harbor Seas o 3 g Y freedom in the world so long as Nazism lives, | i i | | | bor y was | war | Reich He cited case after case of Hitler’s warfare on ireligion—arrests of bishops or priests to prevent read- ing of episcopal documents from the pulpit, “moral is being waged in a blueprint into op- was bombed? It's in the paper.” Said the other: “My goodness, that's a pretty dress you have on. All of the barbers in Canberra, the capital of Aus- yourself?” (mIn have been called to military service, and cable As long as this attitude prevails among Alaskans | | reports that beards and long hair may become the in the face of an attack on Alaska, we're going to | s[)le there. Well, it’s better that way than to have be better off for it ' a close shave with the enemy. Washmglon Menry- Go-Round (Continued from Page One) is that so? My, Did you make it | at first. He had been too bitter a|dents, went so far as recommend- critic while running for vice ])lL’Sl-‘h]u the court-martialing of an ar- dent. = But finally he yielded to my officer, Col. Truman Smith, Felix. because he was supposed to be Biddle always has been a protege wirting Lindbergh’s speeches. of Frankfurter’s, but has cooled | Frankfurter and Stimson have toward him recently, remarking 10 |peen intimate friends for thirty ;mends that he w: ‘too indiscrest | years, When Stimson was district |to be trusted.” |attorney of New York in 1906, he tice Owen Roberts—who is ap-| However, Felix's greatest influ-|brought Frankfurter in as his as- pointed. If a federal judge is t|ence is in the War Department.|sistant. Later when Stimson be- be named in Massachusetts, Frank- | There two close and very dear| came Secretary of War under Taft, furter recommends his old Pupl| friends are the Secretary of War he gave Frankfurter a job in the Charles Wyzanski, and Wyzanski|and Undersecretary of War, while|War Department. During the last is appointed. {two of his students, John J. Mec- war, both men at first were in the fclov and Robert Lovett are assi t-ijudge advocate general’s office <f UNCLE INTERNED BY HITLER ‘ant secretaries of war. This great the reserve corps. Then when Stim- In addition to all reasons for|influence in the War Department son became Secretary of State un- being zealous about the war, Prank- | probably was why “the little jus- der Hoover Frankfurter staffed most furter has special, personal in-|tice”, as he is called by old stu- of the high-ranking offices in the centives. He was born in Vienna, a country taken in one gulp by, Hitler. And when he swallowed it, | Hitler threw Frankfurter’s aged| uncle into a concentration camp. These factors, plus the persecution of his race, long before Pearl Har- bor made Frankfurter one of the most energetic and effective pro- moters of intervention. Beveral times his friends suggested that a Supreme Court justice should not meddle in the executive branch of the govern- ment; that the Constitution created the judiciary as a check on the ex- ecutive, not a collaborator; that he should not be quite so open in dashing back and forth between the British Embassy and the War Départment However, nothing has daunted Frankfurter. Justices Van De- vanter and Sutherland were criti- | cized when they were consulted re- garding Republican politics in Wy- oming and Utah. But the blithe- some, passionate, tireless Mr. Frank- furter considers himself in a dif- ferent category. NOGE BE0E EEG Crossword Puzzle nng GouMc AnD ACROBI Mountain in California Revolve | Disease ot Brapes . Snapping beetle Oceuipy Cylindrical . Close | Sheeplike 20, Exist . Danish flord 30. u-w- 31. Scandinavian measure 82. Cut at ran- dom 34. Heavy breathers in sleep Minced dish 88 Defeats at chess 3. Eye: Scotch 2. Coquette 0. Compass point : Bird of the u’a% Stirs cuckoo family 42. 24. New Eogland = 43. B state: abbr. 4d. . Beauty of form 45. of movement . Dismounted 46. 27. Kind of rock 29. Aromatic con- 48. diment have 87, Stuck In mud Seaweed de- rivative Town in New Jersey Charge with gas sgm\gfl Of Yesterday's Puzzle 50. Wears away 61. Crossbeams 63. Slackening bars in & loom DOWN . Nature movies . Integrity . Seaweeds urn . Harbor boat . Divided into small ar . Withdraw . Fragrant . Allowance f the weight of a contal 10. Corroged 11. Pertaining to lockjaw - 12. Hermit . Iniquity 32 Natrow arm of 2 Z4 7 7 " /AR /AR aEn] JESES JEEEE n Y&‘ 'E.fl?m. | 7 I’//”fll= Wl / ,g'. . // Precodo in time 7] | CLOSE FRIEND STIMSON ‘The three key cabinet members indebted to Frankfurter for their jobs are Attorney General Biddle, Secretary of War Stimson and Sec- retary of the Navy Knox. In ad- dition, Frankfurter put Dean Ach- eson in as Assistant Secretary of State with an eye to taking Hull's place when he retires Knox was urged on Roosevelt by PFrankfurter as a great political stroke to swing the Republicans into line and also the Middle West. the sea wrmy Bring into & YV row crlnd tonthor w 32. Brndles of . Style . Brazillan macaws TH!:.DAU. HAPPY BIRTHDAY { | 20 YEARS AGO %, JUNE Mrs. A. E. Johnstbne Harvey Clark Mrs. T. F. Clarkston H. Amos Clapool Mrs. T. F. Stevenson H. R. Ward Mrs.H. F. Shonberg F. T. Clayton HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” -3 HE EMPIRE | i JUNE 4, 1922 Simpson MacKinnon, Ensign in the U. 8. Navy, was to 1éave Seattle on the steamer Spokane for Juneau to visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lockie MacKinnon. He expected to be in the city about two weeks. Mr. MacKinnon had not been to Juneau during two years, since he visited for a short tine following his graduation from Annapolis. 7 Mrs. Grace Bishop, who had been librarian of the Juneau Public Library for the previous two years, had resigned and her successor, Mrs. W. C. Mayburn, experienced librarian, had been appointed. The resignation of Mrs. Bishop took place the first of the month. Jack Burford, who was interested in the H. F. Dott Co., was to leave Juneau on the Princess Louise for San Francisco, where he was to take a course in the mechanical department of Burroughs Co. He was to be Gl away two months. Mrs. L. L. Harding and Mrs. Hector McLean entertained at bridge in FRIDAY, JUNE § |{he afterncon at the home of Mrs. Harding in the Spickett Apartments. This is not an important day in planetary direction. Labor comes inder an adverse influence which may cause only temporary diffi- culty. HEART AND HOME: Women are under the most pleasant direction ‘hrough this day which brings them :onfidence and inspires them with 1ew ambitions. Girls may not fear Miss Dorothy Stearns had announced the opening of a dance studio, formerly the Rosselle Studio on Main Street, where she was to hold classes for aesthetic and modern dancing. She was to make a specialty of children’s classes for aesthetic dancing. Miss Stearns was a former pupil of Mrs. B. A. Rosselle, local attorney, accompanied by little Miss Polly left on the Alameda for Seattle where Polly Grover C. Winn, Ann, niece of Mrs. Winn, Ann was to join her mother. She had been visiting in Juneau for several his Friday as an unlucky wedding months. day, for the stars smile upon ro- mance and wartime brides will; multiply. Under this sway those who provide entertainment for our| oldiers and sailors should be most fortunate in music or drama offer- ings. Motion picture actresses who nake personal appearances e un- der a lucky sway. BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Improve- ment in relations of capital and| labor will expedite plans of major T importance for next month when To meet Mrs. A. H. Bond and Mrs. Pearl Cheney, Mrs. H. H. Post the united power of all the people |entertained with a tea at her home on Calhoun Avenue. Mrs. Bond was )f the nation will prove effective in|the wife of Capt. Bond, Disbursing Officer for the Alaska Road Com- the war. Major changes in wurld‘missiun, and Mrs. Cheney, a former resident of Juneau, was the house Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Cann arrived in Juneau in the morning from the Apex El Nido mine on Lisianski Inlet and were staying at the Gas- tineau Hotel. Col. Frederick Mears, head of the Alaska Rallroad, announced that lonly American citizens and those who had declared their intention to become such since 1915 would be given employment on the road in (he future. affairs which were felt in April gm;fl of Mrs. Z. M. Bradford. ind May should be encouraging. The | L;;:: :;f:kl;i; Z‘ljl‘l)ppo;z: ‘Towrz‘:’]t;b;z' H. L. Rowley, manager in charge of the qo_nsumers‘ Store, was to at this time. The year 1942 is dom- ©OPen the Alaska Business College on June 12, with temporary offices over inated by a cycle caused by the|the Consumers’ Store. The school was to be open during the summer conjunction of Uranus and Saturn, mmnlm on three evenings of the week from 8 o'clock until 10 o’clock. »oth making a trine to Neptune. e e NATIONAL ISSUES: Changes in/ The Juneau Ferry and Navigation Company boat Alma was to leave he attitude and the aspirations Ofmt 10 o'clock in the morning for an excursion to Taku Glacier and re- labor leaders will be manifested |yqin there for some time, returning to Juneau at 4 o'clock in the after- hrough the Summer. Cooperation oo, Tickets were on sale at the Juneau Ferry and Navigation Com- and sacrifice will be evident among | workers whose patriotism will v.riv.eip“ny Htipea pud Gastineat L 4 memorable chapter in United 3tates history. From 1928 Neptune has been passing through the sign Virgo which rules labor and ser- vice. Between 1942 and 1956 Nep- | tune will be in Libra, the sign of | activity, which is idealistic and | progressive. Astrologers forecast a| | eading part in government for rep- | esentatives of organized labor. | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS:| Occultists have predicted a long| war. One of the noted seers declares | that there are no indicatfons of‘ when the war will end, owing to| Weather was fair with a maximum temperature of 64 and a mini- 1mum of 56. Daily Lessons in English %5 L. GORDON WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: “Do not say, “She seldom or ever sings.” | Say, “She seldom IF ever sings.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Negligee. Pronounce neg-li-zha, E as in EGG, I as in IT unstressed, A as in HAY, accent last syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Calf (singular). Calves (plural). conflicting trends up to 1952. How- | SYNONYMS: Coagulate, clot, curdle, congeal, thicken. ever tangible results of our part in, WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us the conflict will be apparent in increase ur vocabuiary by mastering one word zach day. Today's word: .1943 In August 1943 and July 1044, | TRIBULATION; distress or suffering, as from oppression, persecution, e Axin WE dacet zoverses leatilng | letc. “Give us the strength to be constant in tribulation.”—Stevenson. The President, according to White , Fish eggs House intimates, did not want Knox | Epoch" to the fall of Hitler, this seer proph- MODfRN ETIQUETTE K ROBERTA LEB asies. In any case it seems Jmper-' itive for us to prepare for a pro-, tracted period of effort and sac-| rifice. | Persons whose birthdate it is havel the augury of a year of pleasant | X i 2xperiences to which family and‘ Q. Does a woman who is attending a tea remove her hat? frlel':ds contribute, but there may A. Not as a rule. If the hostess, however, should suggest that her ..Junidess dlsnppomtmem.s | guests remove their hats, it s all right to do so. Q. Who is considered to be the most important servant’in a house- © hold where several are employed? should be highly - intelligent, Lire‘ #. ‘Wb buger b should bring them much happiness. | Q. What is the meaning of the term “officially engaged” when (Copyright, 1942) | speaking of a man and a woman? | A. It means that the public announcement has been made. lOOK and l.EARN ably will he exceedingly sensitiv but charming in personality. They State Department for him. So it 1s not surprising that on occasion, cabinet officers have walked in on the Secretary of War | unannounced, and found him with || a little pad of paper taking down‘ notes as Frankfurter talked. C. GORDON 1. Which exbends falther snuth Africa or South Amerlca? | 2. What Persian king gathered together the largest army ever | assembled in ancient times, for the purpose of subduing Greece? 3. What is the average life of a robin? 4. What are the names of the two bones of the lower leg? 6. Which President of the United States was the great champion of “the strenuous life"? ANSWERS: South America. Xerxes., Six years. Tibia and fibula. ‘Theodore Roosevelt. e NO LOVE ON COURT Despite all these activities, Felix manages to spend some time ‘at the | Supreme Court; though his rela- tions there are not the happiest. His closest friend, strangely enaugh, is the Court’s only -remai con- servative, -Owen Roberts, who has he- come especially intimate - since Frankfurter got him the Pearl Har- bor assignment, Frank{urter also gets on reason- ably well with Stone, whose ap- pointment as Chief Justice he en- gineered with Roosevelt. He s also on good terms with Justice' Jack- son, ‘who would like to he chief Justice after Stone retires, and s fully aware that Felix could help get the position for -him. But with Justices Dnuglu ‘Black, engaged ' in so many backstage fights ' that they merely keep w the amenities. (Another column regarding JW tice Frankfurter’s contributions to the war effort and the W Court will: tollow sean.) : Josephus Daniels, World War I Sec- Government Hospital, went home retary of the Navy and until re-|yesterday. cently Ambassador to Mexico, . has loaned his gold-plated blnomlnrs{ to the Navy for the duration. The| Navy Jis very anxious to obtain as many binoculars as possible. The War Department soon will re- {vise its..daily communique systemj w»-pndm-m frequent reports. (Copyright, 1942, by United Feature' Syndicate, Inc.) Julius Hageman, a medical pa-| tient in St. Ann’s Haspltal went | home this ‘morning. Marleen St. Clair was admitted to the Government Hospital yesterday for medical care. TRIANGLE CLEANERS um-no-n.ounn Heard in the Navy press room: 80‘: Ann’s: Hfllm A sailor @ften 20'years service re-| " H tired with a -sizeable fortune of{ M Albest Withey and infant $60,000. He amassed this - sum|SO% Albert Lynn, have gone home/ through careful investment, enter- from St. Anp's Hospital. prise, initiative—and the death of | an unele who ‘left him $59,000. - « » “Badwara -Jahalke, who has been| medi¢ in St. The War Department’s Service of w wemcm?yut:day&m . Supply shortly will release & new| movie called, “The Army Behind ‘ugmon Reterson .hu entered St. the Army.” showing America’s vast Ann's Hospital for medical care. war production machine, The pic- ture will be shown in defense| Mrs. Eva Wilson, who has been re-! plants throughout the country. . . .| ceiving moedlul treatment in the S ? 44 —_—m ROBERT SIMPSON, OPT. D. 13 7 DL TR THURSDAY ]UNE 4 1942 | BIBECT(mY iw " Drs. Kaser and “Freeburger "DENTISTS Blomgren Building Phone 56 r___—_'l Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 [ Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room 9—Valentine Bldg. PHONE 1762 Hours: 9 am. to 6 p.m. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 First Aid Headquarters for Abused Hair Parker Herbex Treatments Will Correct Hair Problems Sigrid’s Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ " READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third JAMES C. COOPER C.P.A. Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING —eee L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Wornyby Satisfied Customers” DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:00 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 177 Archie B. Belis PUBLIC ACCOUN’LI'ANT' Audits Taxes Systems Bookkeeping Rm. 8, Valentine Bldg. Phone 676 _—_ V"VS;zy It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists Phone 311 RBice & Ahlers Co. W&mm _-‘ers Phone 34 Sheét Metal '"Gny Smith -Drugs" (Careful nists) HOF DANISH BUY DEFENSE BONDS Professional Fraternal Societies Gastineau Channel MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 1 SECOND and FOURT Monday of each mon in Scottish Rite Temp beginning at 7:30 p. 1 R. W. COWLING, Wo shipful Master; JAMES W. LEI' ERS, Secretary. B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers welcome. ARTHUR ADAMS, Exalted Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary. PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Groceries Phone 16—24 "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. e et 0 ] TIDE CALENDARS FREE Harry Race, Druggis| "'l:he Store for Men" SABIN'S Front St—Triangle Bldg. o e A e You'll Find Food Finer and | Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFEFE SHOP FINE ‘Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates Paul Bloedhorn S. FRANKLIN STREET RCA Victor Radios and RECORDS Juneau Melody House Next to Truesdell Gun Shop Secand Street Phone 65 INSURANCE Shaltu—c;l_&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 Rippl Rum Royal, Cocoanut Grovi Lemon Custard, Black Cherr: Caramel Pecan, Black Walnug Raspberry Ripple, New Yorl Rock Road, Chocolate, Strawber ry and Vanilla— at the GUY SMITH DRU H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCH. & MARX CLOTHING There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! lB"l-fl'a!f 2 gl o % el. M. Behremls Bank Oldest‘Bank in‘Alaska fl)lfllEHCIAL