Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA | 8. ‘Bstablishment of an organization to adapt the treaty structure to changing conditions, 4. Autonomy subject peoples. International control of armaments. Religious and intellectual liber! Mr. Dulles called these proposals “six pillars of {peace.” He said it was premature and “not within | the competence of commission” to go into de- 8 ed that the proposals were sufficient T B e ,..'._':f;.. “to force an intelligent and significant decision on SRR S R T ouths. ih advance. oo | the part of the American people.’ Subscribers will confer & favor If they will promptly nowfy 10 Bouase Offion ‘of Was fallare oc NTepulbtiiy ta the" G6. | Uvery of their papers. “Telephones: News Office, 603; Business Office, 374 i i (New York Times) MEMBER OIAllmm PRESS { vervwher: chure! . re Tha Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for Evoljwhfllc in England the church bells are ringing again. In bombed Canterbury and all the blication of all news dispatches credited to It or mot other- | E eredited in this paper sad also the local news published | ;\cient towns built about the medieval cathedrals: lin Westminster and the leafy squares of ravaged | London; in the cloistral quadrangles of Oxford and IC:\mbridge. in the steeple-topped villages of the |South Downs and the Great North Road, the MATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1811 | familiar chime of bells, so long unheard, falls on the . g < e |air once more. As much as France or Italy, England {is a land of churches. For centuries the English thave lived to the sound of bells, hoarse or mellow |in the oldest belfries, sweet and solemn as they sing ‘across the fields, but always as constant, as charac- teristic of life in that island, as the fog or the thedges or the cheerful lilt in the voices of the ‘penplv.- For three years the English have missed the clangor and melody of Bow Bells and the bells of | St. Martin’s and the great bells of Durham and York land Lincoln. The silent belfries have béen a heavier reminder of war than the dark streets at' night | There must be a great lift of the heart as the bells {ring again, for the sound is not just a special con- |cession for Holy Week, or another signal of victory. |like the peals that rang out for El Alamein. Mr. | Churchill has announced that henceforth the bells Daily Alaska Empire 'ublllh:d-;'f-l'.i evening I;.;;:I:"l; by the ‘ Seeond and Main .‘!‘fil M‘. Alasks, EELEN TROY MONSEN . L. BERNARD < AR for 5. 6. President | Tice-| m-fil lnfl Business Manager Botered in the Post Office im Juneau as Becond Class Matter. bk ON RATES: The Bells ng' in England gt ALASKA CIRCULATION QUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. Pt will sound as in pre-war A JUST AND DURABLE PEACE iment believes the danger of invasion is past. |ordinary citizen, working and praying and gritting his teeth month after weary month, will feel as he listens that the worst of the war is over. In the voice of the bells this week he hears not only the program announced by the Federal Council of the promise of Resurrection, Easter's eternal pledge that Churches of Christ in America. The program was|life triumphs over death. He hears the beat of tem- the result of a two-year study by the Commission|poral victory, the clear intimation that the end of to Study the Bases of a Just and Durable Peace, the fight may come sooner than he thought. More | consisting of eighty-seven members appointed by the | convincingly than any other voice the old bells tell Federal Council. him that England is saved John Foster Dulles, chairman of the Commission, s T in announcing the program, warned that the war may be greatly prolonged and its outcome may be| doubtful unless the United States decides immedi- | (Philadelphia Record) ately on its future role in world affairs. He empha- | Item from the Wall Street Journal: sized that a decision must be made now, the alter- native being that the “opportunity for such colla-{vocates expected. Tests of a few samples from two boration will inevitably disappear and the world will | plants show them capable of 25,000 to 50,000 miles. be doomed to continuance of the war system.” Five years ago the maximum was 3,000 miles, but The six-point peace program, for which the Fed- | better compounding of materials has brought these | eral’ Council plans to obtain nation-wide publicity near-miraculous results with a view to having it adopted by Congress and e it the Administration as the official policy of the Unit- éd States government, stipulates the following: 1. International political collaboration based on the present unity of the United Nations. 2. Control of economic and financial acts which may -disturb international peace. American participation in an international poli- tical alliance of all nations of the world to preserve the peace after the war was urged in a six-point Add Good \ew Add Age of the Animals (Philadelphia Record) A"member of the WAAC in Corpus Christi, Tex telephones regularly to her home in Athens, Ga., to talk to her luncsomc Skippy, a white Spitz. ment representatives in Brazil are continually fighting against each |other, I am no longer worried.” If the British Ambassador had really made this statement it would have been absolutely true. For it so happens that various representatives of Jesse Jones’ Rub- ~ |ber Reserve and the Boaid of Eco- he con-|nomic Warfare and other war agen- “will [cies, have been so bitterly opposed but{to each other, especially in Bragil, that they have actually appealed to Brazilian officials to help iron “I call upon you, Dr. Butler,” |out their own American disputes. he said, pointing to Dr. Nicholns‘ NOTE: One man working be- Murray Butler of Columbia Univer- {hind the scenes to iron out these sity, “to substantiate this.” personal jealousies in Washington —_— 'is ex-WPB Vice Chairman Ferd The President of Columbia was Eberstadt, who persuaded Under- fast asleep. |secretary of War Patterson and — Rubber Czar Jeffers not to wash WHAT WE'RE FIGHTING FOR |their dirty linen in public. Eber- Most historians agree that what|stadt believes that Administration the governor of North Carolina said officials should “lay more bricks to the governor of South Carolina|and throw fewer.” was: “It's a long time between —T drinks.” However, the ex-governor! JAPAN WORRIES CHILE of North Carolina, Max Gardner,| pow closely the United States is had something different to say '°‘,nm\ coopemung militarily with La- the present governor of South Car-| olina, Olin D. Johnston, when they met the other day ‘ The occasion was a meeting of | big cotton manufacturers in Green- ville, S. C,, men who for the most part are anti-labor and very much opposed to pro-labor Gov. John- ston of South Carolina, Called upon to speak, ex-Gov. Gardner of North Carolina said: | “There has been lots of talk| about what we are {ighting for "’i this war. But I say to you that| here is one of the greatest things| we are fighting for—the right of | 1z piorc " Olin Johnston, born in'a cotton| % Mwrty == mill shack, to become governor of Anger Soputh Carolina. i ‘,;'r',‘l“‘l’;;f:x" “You may not agree with Olin| And not Jolnston. You may not think much 1\-12;{;\'11:0 of him as governor. But you and| ¥ R’r‘v’- I would fight and die for the principle under our democratic 8ystem which permits him to rise from the ranks of a mill worker to become governor of this state.” The big cotton manufacturers, who had opposed Johnston politi- cally, rose and cheered to the last man. tin American Good Neighbors is indicated by the allocation of U. S. are used to patrol Chile’s 3,000 miles of coast, longest in the world, | against possible Jap attack. One of the things which made Chile hesitant about breaking re- lations with the Axis was the dan- ger of Jap attack against this long stretch of undefended coast. But since Chile has made the break, the | United States is sending lend-lease ! material to Chile, including the big flying boats for comstal patrol. sb-lo;m (Continued trom Page One) “The American people,” tinued with considerable vigor, be glad to ration themselves, they won't be regulated by bureau- crats. MERRY-GO-ROUND Republican Representative Dit- ter of Pennsylvania is twitting the Administration on the fact that it 'rates tongue ahead of brains. Tongue brings six points under OPA’s food ration, while brains require only three points. . Friends of Wendell Willkie recall ‘that when he lived in Akron, Ohio, many years ago he announced the birth of his son with ,this l.ele- gram, “Seven pound Democrat just arrived.” Ambassador Joe [aTu]A] IDIBI o T [L[O/POITIAIR]Y] [AlslPIMP | R ACROSS . Insect 5. Refuse matter left after pressing grapes Steep 12. Century plant 13. Declare 14 Hewing tool 15. Be afraid 16 Long sticjc 17. Disease ¢t 8%..8alt water 38, Dude Conjunction Daliie allied . Nothing more than Pose for a painting Inhabitant . Vast treeless plains of [EINIJIETIMEWIE S IMIA [N] LleFjL'lqu [L]Y] [UINIT] L IE]S) llflll:lll. [SITINDIEPI ICITHlEIDE [EJAIR]L] EE]E EIG [HIEIA IRITI FIEIE] I[ZiflEi= Eummumm [OITENLIVINGIENNST | [AlS|HEMAISIS[E[T] E!'d[] [YIAIMERSTE[EIDIS I SIA] Solution Of Saturday's Buzzle 2. Argentina East Indian weight . Tropical bird Short for a man’s name Conductor's stick . Nothing . Russian czar Low haunt . Greek letter Rail bird Genus of the olive tree 63. Not strict €4. Kind of rock 65, Hire DOWN 1. Cause to float gently Opposite ot aweather . Fly high . Continug it Gongedly Chart Acknowledge openly Rent agaln . Belier . Feneing Weapon “'v'.m Vedtibule Fis) o nn'x in patriot THROW FEWER BRICKS Lotd Halifax, the British. Embas- | ly-slyl, never made this statement. | being a gentleman and a| .ou diplomat, undoubtedly he didn’t. However, the remark, now golng the rounds of Washington, | is repeated here only for one pur- | pose: for the effect it may have on officials who fight themselves | moare than they fight Hitler Lord = Halifax ~was mistakenly unud as saying: “I used to worry | over ‘our future trade in Laun America, But when I see the jeal- | ousy between American agencies | and how varjous American govern- | nta covering P fl 7 ll ) 4 i sover' 42. Delicate twin- plant X‘m Tarsioe m nine name llollhl Irish ade of nhu , and this means for| |the English people an assurance that the Govern-| The | Catalina flying boats to Chile.’I‘hes&a ;{ably will be emotional and ambi- [, HAPPY BIRTHDAY Beatrice Primavera Margaret Pearce James A.. Sofoulis John Anderson W. C. White Mrs. F. H. Hempleman Genevieve T. Elkins | Hazel Gorham H | Roy Andrew Peratrovich | D : HOROSCOPE “The stars incline o but do not compel” || B e 1 | is TUESDAY, MAY 18 it | Adverse planetary aspects dom- inate today which may be disturb- |dc ety among the people is probable under this configuration. are well directed today which seems | of to presage for them the duty of demonstrating courage and spiri- tual strength. There is a sign read | as indicating marvelous results | American wives and mothers. Today fortunate for girls who! are engaged in romance that sus- {tains high hopes for the future.| Remarkable escapes of their flance»i {in the armed forces are forecast |Over many homes this month,| however, there will be shadows cast| | from battle fields and ocean depths | BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Men who| seek profits as a by-product of war| {come under evil portents which are| |read as presaging grave scandals and serious reverses. Until the busi- | nessmen of the nation can be re- leased from greed, war progress will ‘m- retarded, astrologers declare. | | There is a sign indicating a de- !mand for economy and thrift in| |the management of the biggest| {should be m i Synthetic tires are proving better than their ad-|business in all the world, the United recognize States Government. | NATIONAL ISSUES: Since we \entexed the war unprecedented ef- fort to promote every branch of | {our armed forces has been made by the people of the United States.| {While there has been a unity nf; spirit, equality of sacrifice has not| 'been possible to attain. Although !certam families give husbands and {sons to the armed forces others con- {tinue tHe usual way of life with| little change*because they have no| |relatives on the battle fronts. The |stars are read as indicating drastic |restrictions on wining, dining and | entertaining. |C | INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: |The map for the winter solstice | ‘shnws evil portents for India which will continue to be torn by oppos- |ing political factions. In the war,| |splendid companies of well-trained (natives will continue to fight val- iantly with the United Nations. The stars are read as presaging sur- lpr(smg results from this year's| | British policies, The Summer is| to bring about conditions favor-| lable to the future peace and pro- gress of the millions of inhabitants whose diverse religious views will| become less potent in preventing national unity. Persons whose birthdate it is have initiative, Engagements and mar-! riages ‘will be fortunate. Children born on the day prob- |tious. Good fortune through suc- ‘ceusfu] industry is foretold. (Copyright, 1943.) i 3 |Davies' ‘film “Mission to Moscow" (has been welcomed by the State | Department as one of the most im- | portant movies which could have |been made at this time to help the American people understand Rus- sia. . . . Dictator Trujillo of the Dominican - Republic is so bitter against Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles that he will not permit Welles' name to be men- tioned in any Dominican newspaper. Welles' speeches are published but |the name is omitted. (Welles, for- merly High Commissioner of the Dominican Republic, opposed Tru- jillo when he started the revolu- tion to become president.) | (Copyright, 1943, by United Fea- ture Syndlcuw Inc.) B HOSPITAL NOTES Chris Marklkls and Ralph Bruin antered St. Aun’s Hospital Satur- day as medical patients. Mrs. Olaf Peterson and baby boy were dismissed yesterday from St. Ann’s Hospital and returned home. Medical patients W. B. Litchfield and Willam Dailin, surgical, were recent. outgnmg patients at St. Ann’s Hospital. Mrs. C. Arger. at St. Ann's Hos- pital for medical care, has been discharged. Mrs. Martha. Nelson and baby boy were outgoing patienis at the| Government Hospital yestemay H e A house fly moves' its wings back- ward and forward 330 times per second. ivw of Interior anngunced arrangements had been made for filming a com- prehensive series of motion pictures of Alaska during the summer, |ing the development and the upbuilding of the cities and commercial |advantages. |formation received by Postmaster Z. M. Bradforg. visit with their aunt on a ranch in the Hood River district in Oregon |according to Arthur ing to the average American. Anxi- ma HEART AND HOME: Women (5 pe used by him in connection with his hunting lodge here, who had been seriously ill from the faith and the prayers of|expected at his office in a few as in Juneau on business D e | succeeds.” ME, increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. the greatest possible complexity.’ way with the monogram in the center. from the opera Lohengrin is the most popular. to make artificial ponds? the augury of a year of successful‘mnm 20 YEARS AGO %' empire MAY 17, 1923 A special dispatch from Washington stated that the Department show- Special postal facilities were to be e big convention in Washington, D. C. extended to Shriners attending next month, according to in- Ben and John Ste t left Juneau on the steamer Alameda to The big Jualin tunnel was advancing at the rate of 15 feet a day Riendeau, .contractor, who was in Juneau during 1e week E. M. Polley, Representative to the last session of the Alaska Leg- lature, from the First Division, was appointed Territorial Tax Collector, was announced by Territorial Treasurer W. G. Smith George A. Parks of the General Land Office Juncau, was a Cor- »va visitor, and while there, as trustee of the Cordova townsite addition ade the final arrangements for the granting of deeds. in DeVighne and which was mouth The seasled Mud Hen, owned by Dr. H. C. at the the Taku River, was in fine running order S. Forest Service office reported rapidly improving and was H. L. Redlingshafer, Fiscal Agent for the U was Capt. J. H. Cann, President of the El Nido Gold Mining Company. Weather was unsettled with 46 and a inimum of 40. a maximum temperature of Daily Lessons in English % 1. corbox WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not sa Omit A. Say, "] t kind of m: OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Piquant. Pronounce A as in CAN unstressed, accent first syllable OFTEN MISSPELLED: Parallel. Observe the L's. SYNONYMS: Discern, distinguish, - ‘That kind of a man always W pe-kant, E observe, perceive, see, behold WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let II\. Today's word: | 'OMPLEXITY; “The objects of society are of intricacy; entanglement Burke. MODERN ETIQUETTE *¥ ROBERTA LEE | Q A How should the napkins for a luncheon party be folded? They are folded like a handkerchief in four folds, or in any simple Q. What music should the bride select for her wedding? A. She may select any music she wishes, but the wedding march Is it correct English to use the phrase “As far as I know.” “SO far as” is the correct phrase to express limitation. 1. What is an archipelago? 1 2. What North American animal cuts down trees and dams streams | Q. A 3. What was the name of King Arthur's queen? How many octaves has a standard piano? Of what country is the maple leaf a symbol? ANSWERS: A term applied to such tracts of sea as are interspersed with islands; also any such group of islands. ‘The beaver. Guinevere. Seven. Canada. 4 5. 1. 2. NEW GUINEA CLUBHOUSE — a Papuan native, E.yln: an informal call, squats before American guests at the rst American Red Cross Service Club in the NewsGuinea theatre o ‘of war—a converted grass-thatched native hnlldml. ». There IsNo Subshtute for - Newspaper Advertising! — Y, MAY 17, 1943 Pm!onlcnul Fi tcn-nml Socleties Channel DIRECTOR , MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTE 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. N. FLOYD FAGERSON, Exalted Ruler; M. H, SIDES, Secretary. Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS Blomgren Bullding Phone 56 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING PIGGLY WIGGLY Fer BETTER Groceries Phene 1834 Dr. JO.P.?.TI.{.} Geyer Room 9—Valentine Bidg PHONE 763 | i o e “The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG €0. i —_—— HARRY RACE Druggist Marlin Doubledge Razor Blades 18 for 25¢ ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt.D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR Parker Herbex Treatments Will Correct Halr Problems Sigrid’s “The Store for Men” SABIN°S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP — 8 FINE Watch and Jewelry Repalring at very reasonable rates Paul Bloedhorn 8. FRANKLIN STREET e ———————————— RCA Victor Radios and RECORDS JUNEAU MELODY HOUSR Next to Juneau Drug Co. Beward Street Phone & INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third JAMES C. COOPER C.P.A Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING L. C. Bmith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Bold and Serviced by J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” DR. H. VANCE OBTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:00 by appointment. Gastinean Hotel Anmex South Franklin 8t. Phone 177 =57 8=y g s | CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Marxed 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods a4 Moderate Prices “Say It With Flowers” bui “SAY IT WITH OURS!” -Juneau Florists Phone 311 H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING o ——————— ZORIC SYBTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry Rice & Ahlers Co. PLUMBING HEATING Arc and Acetylene Welding Sheet Metal PHONE 34 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company CALL AN OWL Phone 63 Stand Opposite Colisewm Theatre "Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family Remedies Duncan’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” 1891—O0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1943 The B.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS