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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY * Becond and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska. SELEN TROY MONSEN - = - - =~ President R. L. BERNARD - - Vice-President and Business Manager Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. < - BUBSCRIPTION RATES: 5, ‘mm’(mg such attacks—and especially in the Pacific —were “too little and too late.” In the last analysis, the responsibility for Pearl Harbor must rest on the lack of two elements es- sential in all warfare—a carefuly study of enemy psychology and a well-developed military = intelli- gence service. No successful military operations are possible without them. But our studies in enemy | Psychol even within the armed forees, were rudimey before the war, and are even now pur- | = Rl LT S g Lol |sued for the most part in the hardest way possible | | | Defivered by on By mall. postage pal rates; , 10 advance, $7.60; Subseribers will.confer a favor if they will promptly netify —namely, through actual contact with the enemy; the Business Office of any faflure or irregularity in the de- | rtually non- Uvers of. their papers, : jand hErogr Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. | existent, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS For the sake n.l our own morals and ideals we mu’mz Assoclated Pross is exclusively entitled to the -:hn‘:xmy be loath to adopt a general study of the men- ation of all news dispatches credited to it or not ather- | 5 . . 0o + colleges wise. credited in this paper and also the local mews Dublished | VAlity of our enemies in our schools or colleges. But | berein. it should be an integral part of the military curricu- llum. And the establishment of a permanent military | intelligence service is a matter of funds, for which | . NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1011 CODETess is responsible American Bullding, Seattle, Wash. | _— - | Buffalo Over the Counter (Portland Oregonian) Two buffaloes came into town the other day slaughtered and dressed, all the y from the Yel- lowstone, to be featured in the markets of a chain store organization. These are a novelty as well as | contribution toward solving the meat shortage. | Doubtless there are many westerners who remember when buffalo meat was the common fare of the | plains, in times when the herds spread like dark | seas over the limitless prairie. In those times the| hide hunters and plainsmen utilized little of the, great carcass except the tongue and the hump, which | they 'lowed to be the choicest portions. The plains | tribes, whose tenure of a fierce freedom ended with | | the disappearance of the buffalo, never abused the | | gift of providence as did the casual, bloody-handed { white man. But there is no need to mourn the We have generally been behaving as adults so|buffalo, for the decimated species of great game in this war | animal somehow survived—and that is another story. We haven't heard of saum'-‘ 0. M. Plummer: 0, by the way, wasn't al kraut “liberty cabbage” or “victory iplmnsman—sn that buffalo steak is comparable to| steak.” I beef, but not to the best beef. To raise buffalo for But there is a movement under the market is profitable because of the universal| ate the word “kindergarten” | re to sample the meat which was the stout px.'o- cause it’s German. vender of the Sioux and the long-haired scout. The | That is silly | way Mr. Plummer looks at the 'mnucr is that range We won't & o T AR : ik | for buffalo is range for heef eritters—so why bother : n't became better Americans or more anti- | yith puffalo? But the hide of the buffalo would be Nazi by taking words of German origin out of our ,qmirable for troops in winter service in cold cli- language. If we heard of Hitler doing something mate. A great many people remember when every like that with American words we'd laugh out loud. | third citizen had a buffalo overcoat, and every sleigl ,Let's stay sensible, and stick to the main point land pung was equipped with a buffalo robe. Upon of beating the Axis. Ithis reflection Mr. Plummer somewhat modified his = e | dubiety. Considering the meat and the hides, there J\ e b e | probably 1s a considerable future for the buffalo- We Were Unprepared | ralsing industry. (New York Times) | Between the The American “White Paper,” summarizing ten ! there has l'?r years been a buffalo herd, the property years of patient but in the end futile efforts to stop |Of O- D. Gibson of Yakima. The buffalo presumabls the aggressor nations by means of diplomacy and |2'e happy there, for the range is well suited, but it economic sanctions, has reopened the question of |1’ the intent of their owner to provide eleemiosy- responsibility for Pearl Harbor, and Congressional Dary conditions for his ruminant wards. Mr. Gib- | circles, while putting the State Department “in the |Son whittles that herd down regularly and judici- clear,” are inclined to put added blame for “tragic ’ously, and ships his buffalo beeves to Seattle, where negligence” on the Army and the Navy. That was | the meat finds a ready market. It being a logicai( inevitable. But irvespective of any individual negli- |ssumption that the Yakima buffalo breeder isn't gence, the “White Paper” also reveals in a wider in the business for his health—though where would and a deeper sense the responsibility for Pear] Harbor | ¥ou find a healthier occupation?—it should follow rests on the nation as a whole, and that the initial that there is money to be made in raising buffalo, disaster was the price we paid not only for material Indeer, another source of revenue suggests itself. but especially for psychological unpreparedness. As| Why not take a few of the herd on tour of the | the “White Paper” says, “Much of public opinion in Tndian re tions, and charge the redmen two bits | this country did not accept the thesis that a Euro- |a ticket to see them? One does not intend this as| pean war could vitally affect the security of the a crude jest. But perhaps it wouldn’t be advisable | United States or that an attack on the United |to exhibit the sorry remnant of their once tribal| States by any of the Axis Powers was possible.” | property to the Indians. Even a reservation Indian, | That opinion was prevalent not only in the country | we imagine, could stand only just about so much | But especially in Congress, where preparations for before we should have to call out the cavalry again. | our military intelligence was ALASKA CIRCUEATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. NONSENSE far restaurants calling hamburg steak way to elimin- from the language be- Yakima River and the Columbia | Hitler. | | The details by which Lemaigre-| THE FASCISTS MGVE IN | Dubreuil secured the cooperation Lemaigre - Dubreuil ~entertained|9f Gen. Giraud remain _secrct. beautifully, knew all the “best"|Some day they will leak out, and| people, and Murphy gradually found:""h"" they 'do, it will not be a himself swimming easily through |Pretty picture !this delightful upper-crust Frercn| But for the time being, it is| society, far removed from the real|sufficient to know that Gen. Gi- people of France. ‘mud, a man of the extreme right In fact, the last thing these who once said, “They (the Ger-| French fascists wanted was the mans) have not perhaps got liber-| return of real democracy. They no | ty, but there is certainly neither 3 more believed in the ideals of disorder nor anarchy,” was picked | _“Keep him and use him” was'Franklin Roosevelt than did the! by Murphy to appeal to 40,000,000, the reply i industrialists who put Hit'er| Frenchmen who once staged 4| Roosevelt reluctantly agreed, later |into power bloody revolution for Liberty,! issuing a statement explaining the yet, Murphy, the representative|Equality, Fraternity, and to per- | “temporary expedient.’ of Franklin Roosevelt, plus other | suade them to join the Allicd| _Unquestionably this temporary members of the American Embassy | cause. expedient saved American lives and ' and consulates, trusted them as (Ed. Note: A second column gii- was worth taking. Perhaps also it prothers and co-workers in the|ing more of the back-stage factors was worth the severe phychological | delicate problem of getting the in-!in North Africa will follow soon., | sét-back it cost vs in France, where |tensely democratic people of France| (Copyright, 1943, by United Fea- | e 40,000,000 people who hadipack into the trenches against| ture Syndicate, Inc Hailed Roosevelt as a hero, could . s e BELEE 1ot understand why he should now | » & work with tyrants. ! STATE DEPARTMENT'S CHAPTER | Then came the death of Dar- lan, and a new chapter. This new chapter, from the State Depart- | ment’s viewpoint, had every reason 0 succeed. It was the plan the te Department had nurtured so | earefully for months. They had never expected Darlan, had built their plans on Gen, Giraud. So | now came the big réally show that Secretary Hull's 10mg criticized policy of cooperat- | iflg with Vichy was justified. Gen, Giraud had been hand- pickeéd’ by Bob Murphy months be- | fore and groomed for the job of tking over in North Africa. But :x:nme:ms by which Murphy picked re significant | Giraud was picked for Murphy by Jacques Lemaigre- Du- breuil, head of Prench Association of ‘Taxpayers. - This is a reactionary Jobbying organization with not as much staiding as the National As- | sociation of Manufacturers in the U. 5. A, but with the same gun-" eral aim of reducing taxes to big business and keeping power in the | hands of the ruling families. | In addition, Lemaigre - Dubreuil belonged ‘to the fascist right wing. and 1éd the disastrous fascist dis- turbances in Paris in 1834. In other words, the naive and ‘charming Bob Murphy placed his trust, and the future fate of the French people. in thé hands of a man as resc- tionary as Tom Girdler, as fas as William Dudley Pelley, and as jsolationist as the Chizego A bune’s Robert McCormick. ilas_hir.qlon Merry- Go-Round (Continued from Page One) ported immediaw1y at the White House. The President’s reaction was explosive. He asked what we were going to do with that so-and- 0. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 24 . HMigh mountain 3% . Term of address 3g. . Floor covering " Coat of certain 41, animals 2. 3. Marble . Spenserian character Greek latter Citrus fruits Exclamation Mother of Peer 7] [EINISIBIAlY] Fam o NTAUTE - Meatedly [PISIATCIM S IA| 3 l‘IVY'IDekrlecl paper IH [ Ofw] 3 ‘orker in the nmr—!r sz IYIE[alS It [AlY] ¢:ne arts Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle 64, Vehis on DOWN 62, Stlicworm neta: 5 Corpulent 5. Hang down - Tha o thwgst . Turn_over a new leaf . Roatiof the 1 mou moment to | Pl Novel Kind of meat Dispatch boat ir up So_may it be 4 (:onnnd St Mark denoting . a long vowel . Kind of lizard . Oriental dwell- 8 | . On the highest | point . Black kind of garnet . Out of contre} Single thing | g (_l{nt!n wide . Town in Mal Allow o . American mauntain . Trite 1 Entertats | 8. Kind of plum | Coax -1 . Volatile ligufd 2. Personal trans portation charge Moves back JEEEN i Al R “li e o O O o e Zdun 77 4 destination 5. Swiss river . Young codfishes -:‘\_ll viated ke in safl . Feminine name Malign . Rail bira 3 imn\ll branch | T . Anger f | many offices in the national capl»;‘ Daily lessons in English bV% L. GORDON | gradually overcome the submarine | will |bably will be soldiers of fortune 2 | Lodge No. A2, LOOF., this eve- | Hall this' evening at 7:30 o'clock. lana interesting games are planned. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA HAPPY BIRTHDAY FEBRUARY 9 | OV RN | Ladies of the Guild of Holy Trinity Cathedral were giving a Parish Soonis BAE | supper in the hall of the church. Supper was to be served at 6:30 o'clock O | after which there was to be a program consisting of the reading of re- Goorge s TS ‘pcx'ls, and musical numbers. A. R. Hared | Mrs. R. L. Bernard Erwin Gubser Jeanne Jorgenson Ray Thomasen - 5 e FEBRUARY 9, 1923 | W. E. Dunkle, mining engineer with the Guggenheims, was a pas- | senger aboard the Alameda on his way to Seward and then to the Mt McKinley district. He was going into the Aitken and Price copper prop- lerty on which the Guggenheims had secured an option. The Douglas High School girls’ and boys' basketball teams were busy practicing for the second game of the inter-school series which was to | be played at Juneau. - HOROSCOPE = “ T T’;,thg:s ":chne l" | G. E. Krause, local concrete manufacturer, who had been in Ketchi- nav Comps |kan on a job, returned to his home on the Alameda. S | o £ | United States Marshal George D. Beaumont returned to Juneau on Lt b A | the Alameda from Ketchikan where he had been on official business. | Benefic aspects dominate this| ]md;l,)&,; ThI;s is a day which | R. D. Decker, Representative from the Second Division to the next should be fortunate for aviation. chrriwml Legislature, accompanied by his wife, arrived in Juneau. Dur- Labor is well directed by the stars.|ing his stay in the city he was to be i charge of pastoral affairs at the HEART AND HOME: Uranus in|Methodist Church. Gemini is believed to be responsl-} - ble for many changes that affect| G. W. Hayes, motion picture camera man, was a passenger on the home ‘and society in general. Ad-|Alameda for Seward to become connected with the Alaska Moving Picture vanced lines of thought will Sflm‘corpornloin which had recently constructed a studio at Anchorage for adherents and will alter Ed“w-‘nw purpose of making pictures. He was accompanied by his wife and a tional methods. Individualized in- |, operty man. struction will be advocated for chil- | S dren whose keen minds will reflect | 7,0 neeting of the Parent-Teacher Association held the preceding the vibrations of 2 world in chaos. | ., 1aq proved to be the most enjoyable for several months With a Homes are to show the Aquarian i § gt rowd in attendance. An in { rOgI'a Trfivence which. awill-5 B8 mwnrd-;;i;::;“d attend: nteresting and diversified program was | beauty in simplicity. Housekeeping | is to be an art that is largely au-| e e > tomatic since innumerable strange G. B. Stevens, of Fairbanks, United States Marshal, was aboard inventions will eliminate labor. | the Alameda for the Interior. Marshal Stevens had spent the past two BUSINESS AFFAIRS: By early |months on an official visit to Washington, D. C., and visiting relatives spring the United States Govern-|in the east. ment, which has become the big- gest business organization in the Weather was fair and colder. whole world, will have instituted minimum was 34 many improvements in the intri~| cate machinery of management.| foeTTT T Experts will replace politicians in Maximym temperature was 40 and al. Trade and commerce will benefit, for the United Nationswill| {._. e et et it retr) WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “The time is now a quarter ) R a et o of eight.” Say quarter TO eight.” A quarter OF eight would be two. l]}"l‘;:";;' t‘;:f';,;‘;‘,“;," ls;‘::ds at the| ™ " PTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Camera. Pronounce kam-er-a, three NATIONAL ISSUES: Reformers syllables, not kam-ra. will demand stricter regulations re- OFTEN MISSPELLED: Papier-mache; observe the PIER garding liquor sales and other mat- | SYNONYMS: Watchful, wary, wakeful, cautious, circumspect, vigilant. ters near Army and Navy centers WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours Let us of training. Those who read the increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Tod: word : stars wam of the futility of sump- | FORMULATE; to express as in a formula; state clearly. “Some speeches tuary legislation and declare that!excel in the precision with which they formulate their thoughts.” youth 1s to come under spiritual in- | fluences that will stimulate the de menace. Prosperity apparently will who meet many odd experiences 3. with courage. Ultimate success is! * 4. indicated. 5. (Copyright, 1943) | M. E. §. BRUNELLE M. E. S. Brunelle, Clerk of the U. 8. District Court in the Thitd Division, was in Juneau yesterddy on his way to his Anthorage hééd- quarters’ after a trip on official Bus- iness to the States. Mr. Brunelle, President of - thHe Senate in the 1937 session of the Territorial Legislature, gave a short talk in the Senate yesterday at the invitation of President of the Senate O. D. Cochran. He also visited old friends and conferred with various officials dur~ ing his brief stay here. ODD FELLOWS ATTENTION Regular meeting of Silver Bow e to live according to high prin- | MODERN ETlOUEnE b, to bé keen enough to cause gen- ROBERTA LEE cral rejection of Whatever IS €= | b oo ittt it} SRR At waeh: New frbrtsrs Q. When calling at a friend’s house, and a servant whom you know of und;rstandiug .which exmm‘l:opens the door, should one greet him? long to the Aquarian age, it is em- Q. What does it indicate when a person is constantly criticizing phasized. Extrasensory perception members of his family, when talking to friends and acquaintances? y i present. Q. Is it all right to refuse a certain dish at a luncheon? INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS:! A. The considerate person will not do so, as the number of dishes that this war was to come, repeat |if he is not partial to those particular dishes. their declaration that the conflict | and will not be fully settled unu]i b' the end of the decade. They pro- LO 0 K d l_ E A R N an A. C. GORDON will not be one dictator in power. | Mussalind, hey, Ba¥y . gannot | 1Agh 1. How does the light reflected by the earth compare with that early eliminated. Hitler's hold will | 3 . b " be. tenaploiis and his war ‘strength | 2. What was the name of the first white child born of English parents in the new world? Persons whose birthdate it is 4 have the augury of a year of many | 4. Who carried a lantern in search of ar honest man? | Which is heavier, milk or cream? nately overcome. Quarrels, changes| and accidents threaten. | The light reflected by the earth is equal to more than a dozenl Virginia Dare, born in 1587. Ten. Milk. | { m‘u wv Is idly learning-the fundamentals of i : his new duty. He will be instructed | |and immunized against disease. On FARRAGUT, Idaho, Feb. 9 — A|graduation, he, with his many com- now Joseph Donald Rude, son of}Nnvy service school for training Dr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Rude, of |in’ a specialized fleld or will join form of an apprentice seaman and | M o is. receiving his recruit training ati heré. | Philippine group; only 2441 have Dressed in the smart uniform of a names. s ciples. The sense of real values is structive to the best development beyond present apprehension be- | A. Certainly. One should say pleasantly, “How are you, Edward?” be less rare than it is at A. Ill-breeding is the only answer. Astrologers who warned the world served at a luncheon is limited. One can take small quantities even will, contitie wntll -3t Jeast, 14T} G e r et phesy that by the end of 1946 there many months and Franco is to be | . ooopeq by the moon? amazing. g 3. How many sided figure is a decagon? perplexities which will be fortu-| 5 ANSWERS: Children born on this day pro- | full moons. | Diogenes. | z 7 |U. 8. Navy Bluejacket, he is rap- 24 S ww m u“woRMm seamanship, toughened in the d {Navy's physical hardening program few days ago he was a civilian, but rades, will either be assigned to a Juneau, Alaska, is wearing the uni- | the fleet for early action at sea. the U. S. Naval Training Station| There are 7,080 islands in the ning at 8. All members urged to be present. Work in the Degree of Brotherly Love. M. L. MARTIN, Noble Grand. —— e adv. EASTERN STAR Tonight, Feb. 9,°at 8 o'clock, Ju* neau Chapter No. 7. Regular busi- ness theeting. Instruction work. ALICE BROWN, Secretary. - - adv. TOTEM CLUB MEETING The. Totém Club, members - and friends, are meeting at the A.N.B. o g 1 e 50 AR R ~ | Thils freak accident happened when a heavily-loaded bus, en route | from Boston to Brockton, Mass., plunged through a bridge into the The hall will y : e be sufficiently warm Neponset river, as pictured. Twenty-six pérsons were' injured. 120 YEARS AGO #%% pxpizs ||| DIRECTORY Drs. Kaser and - Freeburger DENTISTS Blomgren Building Phone 56 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room $—Valentine Bidg PHONE 762 ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Pitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Prankiin 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 L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS 8Sold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7'to 8:00 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Anmex South Pranklin St. Phone 177 “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists Phone 811 Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing—Oil Burners Heating Phone 34 Sheet Metal JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition "Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK'S DANISH CALL AN OWL Phone 63 Stand Omnm TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1943 Professional Fraternal Societies Gastineau Channel MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. JOHN J. FARGHER, Worshipful Master; JAMES W, LEIVERS, Secretary. B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- come. ARTHUR ADAMS, Ex- alted Ruler, M. H. SIDES, Sec- retary. B e eSS PN ] PIGGLY WIGGLY l For BETTER Groceries Phene 18—34 "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAUROC DRUG CO. HARRY RACE Druggist “The Squibb Store” “The Store for Men” SABIN’S | Front St.—Triangle Bldg. You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANGF COFFEE SHOP FINE Watch and Jewciry Repalring at very reasonable rates Paul Bloedhorn S. FRANKLIN STREET RCA Victor Radios and RECORDS JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE Next to Juneau Drug Co. Seward Street Phone 6 INSURANCE | Shattuck Agency CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry E.E. STENDER For Expert Radio Ser TELEPHONE BLUE 429 or call at 117 3rd St., Upstairs 15 Years’ Expericnce ® Perfect comfort ® Centrally located ® Splendid food and service ® Large Room all witi: Bath ALASKANS LIKE THE CNEW WASHINGTON ) 1881—Hall a Century of Banking—1941 The B.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS