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R —— Daily Alaska Empire ’ Published every evening exeept Sunday by the EMPIRR PRINTING COMPANY | Seeond and Main Strests, Junesn, Alasks. EELEN TROY MONSEN - = = President | R L BERNARD - - Wice-l President and Business Manager Speaking before a large group of sportsmen and conservationists on the occasion of the annual din- the Outdoor Writers' Association of America declared that if he could have his every man and woman on the war production line would be compelled to spend every seventh day in the out- doors, hunting or fishing preferably, but out in the {open where they best can recharge their mental and bodily batteries He also charged that much of the present day {absenteeism in war production plants is directly due ‘Bubscr il oot ’ ‘u‘:or 1 \.h;y will ’lr‘omln.ur'.:nllh to a failure of mental and physical energies brought e Busiaees Office Of Any failure o irreRuiity % |on by too many hours and too many days spent on livery of their papers. ‘Telephones: News Office, 603; Business Offies, 3. ‘lhn‘ job without the proper kind of rest. MEMBER On ABSOCATED PRES | He declared that there was actually a-very small The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for |Percentage of willful absenteeism in our war produc- :"'_“‘:'r?d‘l‘;'; 1;‘&;':.‘;:“’_‘;;"::_""'&“"1‘“""1 ‘:_'g.';‘u."u';‘;‘ {tion and that this kind of absenteeism can speedily Berein. be checked by prompt measures such as immediate discharge following due warning and the turning over of the names of such men to their re- draft boards. Getting back to the greater problem, that of keeping men and women on the job and at the top of their production energy, he declared that for the long haul no war worker should be permitted to re- main at his job more than six days a week and ex- cept under very special conditions should not be per- mitted to work on that job at a maximum of more {than 48 hours a week Only under such a top production of war | country. | Explaining further why absenteeism is sure to result if such a plan is not followed, he said that if men on the production line be allowed to work for many days on a stretch, they finally reach a point | where neither mind nor body will function properly {and as a result you can expect both mistakes, some |of them costly to effort, and accidents ner of he way Entered in the Polt Office ia Juneau as &lonfl Class Matter. UBSCRIPTION RATES: .dl'-‘l by earrier In Juneau a: v By mail, postage Daid, et the following ra | One year, in advance, $18.00; six months, in advanss, $7.00; sue month, in edvance $1.38, ber: Seesis tor 410 per menth. | and drastic ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARO THAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. | spective NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1011 | American Bullding, Sesttle, Wash, plan, he asserted, can the materials be reached in this | the war brought on by reflexes that have been slowed up by | | fatigue. pLs 3 { « Such men, he explained, must then take a day The Territory of Alaska suffered a distinct loss | loff and too often they use this period of freedom, with the passing of Grover Cleveland Winn {not seeking renewed energies out in the open where He was in every sense an Alaskan pioneer. He they best can recharge both mental and had not only lived in the Territory for upwards of energies, but in places of amusement where not only fifty years, but he had the peculiar qualities of the |1S the air far from pure, but where overindulgence | pioneer. Having arrived here, with his parents, |iS brought on primarily by the very exhaustion of | when he was a little less than eight years old, he |their mind and body grew up on the frontier. When Grover Winn arrived Too often, he explained, when their day of lib- in Juneau, Juneaw was the furthermost limit of the erty is over, they unfit in either mind or body frontier. JHe@he imbibed the rugged virtues of the to return to the job. Not only do they fail to do a pioneer, ‘and he never ceased to be a pioneer full job of work on the production line, but they Straightforward, sometimes blunt, he lived a life |actually become a menace to their fellow workmen that was utterly devoid of pretense and sham. He|and the whole war effort was a good lawyer, gifted with a wit such as few Because of this break-down in energy, GROVER C. Wlf\'N——l‘i(mv:er are the next He made a good United States Commis- |step is extending their absence from the job to first, more than two days and then three and soon they are wholly Legislature as speaker was city he served as school trustee for twenty years; and he was elected to the twice—during the second term he served of the House—and for many years magistrate. As a public servant, he was loyal to his trust; and as a lawyer, he was equally loyal to his clients It is not easy to fill the place of a man like that duction at which they work. In closing, Mr. Martin declared that forced to| take each seventh day as a holiday from their war| job and taught how best to utilize their time away from the job to keep them fit, these men would soon be hanging up new records for war production in their plants and absenteeism would cease to become a factor in war production. Mr. Martin concluded his remarks OUTDOORS ND WAR by has gained a great Glenn L. Martin, well-known sports- man and. war industrialist and head of the Glenn L. Martin Company, manufacturer of bombers for the U. 8. Army and Navy. Washihglon The recreational outdoors champion in machinery of the country had not yet learned- this , but that they must speedily do so if they are to see their manpower geared up for duction over the long period .‘.uetchmg ahead. |press kept the secret and most of|and hardware stores handle arms |the American public was in the and ammunition. |dark. But not the Mexicans, | ful of the shaky road-bed of the | camacho's public request for Con—‘der on . Monterrey. & gressional penmssmn to leave the| Every mile of the liné was care- ¥ e * (Continued trom Page One) {hours." was not gaing to Washington. And for “the to fecl!it was not hard to guess that if | found that hardware stores, they had been dry- he crossed the border, he would be| cleaned by the Mexican Govern-| % met by no less than his opposite | ment after bo;: u:r;:fgmt: u;loc;:no’s:é:za::::i;‘uumbfl. the President of the Unit-| war. : z ) the AFL, he used the good offices|€d States. In making inspections, Reilly of Big Bill Hutcheson, boss of the ~Another tip-off was the fact that| worked closely with General Eulo- Qarpenters Union—and herein layXAVIh Camacho arrived in Mon-‘glo Ortiz, former chief-of-staff for the greatest irony of the entire|terrey three days in advance of | Pancho Villa, and a great admirer operation. For it was Hutcheson, ! the meeting, while Mexican news- | now a willing emissary for John,|papers were allowed to speculate who fell flat on his back under a|freely. blow from the fist of Lewis at the| No wonder Aflantic City convention in 1935. |ried. Reilly, his coal strike, and also the weakness of his position outside (Copyright, ture Syndicate, Inc.) e YOUR BROKEN LENSES Mike Reilly was wor- chief of the White| | House Secret Service detail, had| gone to Monterrey in advance, to street | SMell aut any danger spots. He had |a tip that certain hardware firms|Examined, Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson. | Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. adv WOOBEN MOSQUITO Ask the man in the ::;t;e’xsn ?‘;;ue';:"::]s;mtggidoe;\ iin the city were run by Ge)maus, planes made of wood, guns; and accompanied fighters. His answer: False. answer: True. The RAF is now using such a! % plane, and most successfully. It is| the new Mosquito bomber, made of | spruce ply-wood, and using speed instead of armament for its pro-| tection. Persons who remember the fam- ous air race from England to Aus- tralia in 1934 know how the Mos-| quito got its star. Winner of that race was the DeHaviland Comet. | Only two planes of this type were ever built, but they served as a model for the devastating Mosquito which is dodging the fighters and | anti-aircraft fire over Germany to- day. | The Mosquito operates on wholly different theory of attack and defense from the big four-| engined cannon- and- machine- gun | jobs that have done most of the | RAF bombing. It has a top speed | procession of '400 miles an hour, which means | 7 g Exoiud the fighters can’t overtake it. It| Sy:’!;‘y::l:t dodges into a specific target, such | 7 Title of & monk as'a railroad yard, drops its small . Mud load of bombs with deadly aim,| 'g]"n"::'“‘“" dodges out again | Blgn ar ad8ition At present the Mosquito is made | Orahid meal only in Britain and Canada, but| Kind of duck its performance has so deeply im-| Aynospherie pressed U. S. Air Forces that plans[ < e are on foot for its production in the United States. carrying no by no Correct | Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1. Vigor: slung . Disgard . Moccain . Congealed water . The ofies here . Gone by Sin A L.ulao s lowest Rewumuonn Greek letter Dispatched Pronoun Carry out . Female horse 50. Pufrpose 61 Biblical mountain . Temper . Unit of wire measure- meot . Fast Measure of length Stupid person 4 anu . Cn‘w In Oklahoma Departs secretly . Large plants 81. Cereal grass Ardor . Turt . River: Spanish . Poem Weird Mountain in Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle 65. Eccentric rotating plece DOWN 1. Mottled IHE%IIIIE%E a dEN JNEEE Pale brown . Flawless . Long fag . Burn . Corded tabrio . Apart One_who shows oft his Prepare for printing learning Marched in & | goose | . Ran sground | Mezlcan dishes | ilifll 3 Obfilarl(ed NO SECRETS IN MEXICO Fl% 's argan It can now be revealed that Se- s cret Service agents had a lot of‘, . Small case trouble keeping the President’s visit | 4 gf'c'fm.a to Mexico a secret. In fact, prac-‘ { ks tically every literate Mexican knew| o s Qeotae or thought he knew what was| 88. Portlon of & going to happen. The American Yo curve / physical | @ undependable and of little actual worth to the pro-| declaring | that the Congress of the United States and the war| full pro- | Also he was fear-| The, tip-off was President. Avila|Mexican railroad between the bor-| country “for’ not more than 72|fully checked by an official of the | This made it clear that he|Missouri Pacific Railroad, and as ! Reilly offensive should be accepted as due Mexico's declaration 01" of General MacArthur. It is Gennh""e the augury of a year of pro- eral Ortiz’ ambition to be sent to|STess through extraordinary experi- Australia to serve with MacArthur. 1943, by United Fea- Replaced in our own shop. Eyen THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIREAJU\IEAU ALASKA HAPPY BIRTHDAY | | 20 YEARS AGO ¥%% gmpire B e e e TN JUNE 4 JUNE 4, 1923 The Navy Band, stationed at the navy yard, A. E. J01"M°fle imusic on the Presidential trip to Alaska. Harvey Clark | R. M. Alexandgr Tillie Helge Mrs. Joseph Henderson Aimee Meyers Fred Larsen Edwin F. Pearce D was to furnish Mrs. | Off in a cloud of dust, Juneau Boy Scouts left town for their camp, | Glacier Glen, at the head of Auk Lake road, near Mendenhall Glacier, on ;-‘. two weeks' camping trip. Those making the trip were Assistant Scout- | masters R. F. Redlingshafer and M. S. Whittier and Scouts Ed Garnick, | John Rundall, Clayton Polley, Clarence Dunn, Judson Whittier, Winston Cheaham, Henry Pigg, Curtis Shattuck, David'Ramsay, Harold and James { connors. e HOROSCOPE { “The stars incline but do not compel” SATURDAY, His reappointment as register of the U. S Land District with headquarters at Anchorage, municated to Frank A, Boyle, 1d Office for the Juneau was officially com- Missions had Alaska church Catholic he the where Bishop J. R. Crimont, |returned to Juneau from { business. head of in the south ben on JUNE 5 | Miss Minnie Field, cook at the Federal court in| 1 This is not an important day in|princess Louise after having been on a vacation in planetary direction. There is a good | sign for understanding between | workers and those who employ them. HEART AND HOME: Now that victory gardens are beginning to pay for themselves, Wwise house- Mrs. C. Oakes, wives who were guided by astrolo- |Mining Company, gy will rejoice. It will be remem- b Ibered that for best results crops . |that produce their yield above the Mrs. Livingston Wernecke, wife of the engineer soil should be planted when the Treadwell Company properties in the Mayo district, Moon is new or in the first quar-|Princess Louise in port the previous night ter. Crops that produce their yield | in the soil and grow from bulb| weather was fair with a maximum temperature of | formation should be planted when|,m of 41 the Moon is full or in the last quarter. Many skeptics regarding |astrology may learn much - about| e s | Daily Lessons in English W, 1 corpon |the manufacture of certain eivilian | commodities, especially refrigera- | A |tors and washing-machines, will WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not write, appear imperative this month and | Write, “Your letter has been received.” [the stars presage limited supplies|] OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Attache. Pronounce a-ta-sha, first and of a number of things necessary to|second A's as in ASK, final A as in DAY, and accent last syllable {the American household. June OFTEN MISPELLED: Campaij AIGN. Champagne AGNE Ishould be a time when it is pos-| ~ SYNONYMS: Mysterious, mystical, inscrutable, inexplicable, sible to ease many pinches due to|abstruse war conditions. Adjustments will WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours’ prove that certain Government|increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today sures were too extreme to be|SEQUESTERED; secluded; isolated. “Along the cool, or practical of life."—Gray. NATIONAL ISSUES: Astrologers !have emphasized the element of surprise in events connected with \\\axums developments, Many unex- |plainable things will happen this Summer and there may be a sense|} ________ it of confusion in the public mind R |The need of preserving a positive Q. What | point of view which supports Gov- |Paper? ernment policies with unflagging | A patriotism is imperative. house, returned on the the State! S. L. Carter, of the Alaskan Engineering Commission, returned to his {headquarters here on the Princess Louise after spending several weeks |in the States on a vacation trip. mother of Glenn Oakes on the Princess Louise Jof the Alaska Juneau Gold arrived here to visit with her the the in charge of was aboard 54 and a mini- I s “Your letter is at hand.” mystic, Let u sequestered vale | MODERN ETIQUETTE ™ gopprra e is the correct way to write a two-page letter on note- The first pages, and third pages may be used; but if the letter is three There will |or four use the proper sequence, one, two, three, and four ( be revelations of mismanagement| Q. What is the best rule to follow if one isn’t sure of the right choice land mistakes affecting our part in|of silver? United Nations' offensives, if, the A. Take the piece farthest from the plate for the first course, and |stars are rightly read, but they!work in toward the plate. {must - stimulate future efforts to-| Q. Whose name is spoken first when introducing ward victory. |a woman who is much older? INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: A. The older woman's. :Ccrtniu of the seers attribute to| LOOK and l.EARN A. C. GORDON a young woman to the square of Mars to Saturn the careful balancing of offensive plans against obstacles of many sorts, for |this aspect stresses the value of |timing. Criticism of the retarded | to lack of knowledge regarding the | many obstacles in the way of suc- |cessful mobilization of our millions at battle fronts thousands of miles \d“m“t Victory will prove how wise | How many square miles are there in the Pacific Ocean? ‘was the plan “to make haste slow- What metal is used in the manufacture of pen points? y.t* 5. What mountains in the United States are always covered with Persons whose birthdate it is eral Government? 2. At what speed do electrons inside a radio tube travel from filament to plate? ANSWERS: One-fifth. 600 miles a second. 70,000,000 square miles. Iridium. |ences. Happiness is indicated. Children born on this day prob- lably will be gifted in the arts. {Actors and painters may be among |today’s newcomers. the | 1. What fraction of continental United States is owned by the Fed- | Mt. Whitney, and some portions of Pike's Peak and Mt, Rainier. 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 9—Valentine Bldg PHONE 762 ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt.D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Frankiin Sts. PHONE 136 FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR Parker Herbex Treatments Will Correct Halr Problems Sigrid’s Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISBES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third JAMES C. COOPER C.P.A. | Business Counselor | COOPER BUILDING | L. C. Smith and Corons | TYPEWRITERS Bold and Berviced by J. B. Burford & Ce “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” DR. H. VANCE OBTEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 16 to 12; 1 to §; T to 8:00 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Anmex South Franklin 8t. Phone 177 “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists Phone 311 lCopyrlght 1943) , HELPING CUPID ALONG HEALTH OFFI(IMS G0 T0 ANCHORAGE, FAIRBANKS, NOME Dr. Paul A. Lindquist, acting As- sistant Commissioner of Health, and Richard Stedman Green, act- ing director of sanitation, left Ju- !neau today by plane for Anchor- age and Fairbanks. | Included in their duties will be the establishment of a health cen- ter for the Territorial Dept. of Health in Fairbanks. For some time negotiations have been going on to make available for use quarters in |’ the public library. Tentative agree- ments have been reached and ‘the two officials of the Territorial De- partment of Health will work out details of the arrangement for quarters. Clinics, health conferences and health council meetings will be held there, and space is also provided for installation of the new X-Ray equipment just pur- chased. Local health authorities and the military have requested that a san- itary inspection program be insti- tuted such as that now going on in Juneau, Ketchikan and other Southeast Alaska cities. In initia- ting the program there, the Health Department officials will put on the same course of instruction for enlisted men to be trained as in- spectors, as was given in Juneau. John Hall, public health engineer, a2y join the two men later. When this work is completed, Mr. Green is expected to go to Nome| to confer with local authorities h regard to water supply and se disposal problems. —— BUY WAR BONDS hmsfl SAII.OR locks on as Ns American hfide-to-be fills out an application at New York’s marruge license bureau. Regulations have just been simplified for service men. They pay no fee, their service blood tests are O.K. and they can marry unmedutely. (International) There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! Rice & Ahlers Co. PLUMBING HEATING Arc and Acetylene Welding Sheet Metal PHONE 34 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company "Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK'S DANISK ICE CREAM Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repalring PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” COMMERCIAL FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1943 o Professional nmEcmRY r"‘"fl“fl Sgd-!h- hann ey MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTR 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 2nd and 4th Wednes- days at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers welcome. N. FLOYD FAGER- SON, Exalted Ruler; ‘M. H. SIDES, Secretary. PIGGLY WIGGLY Fer BETTER Groceries Phene 16—34 ) "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG €0. ] HARRY RACE Druggist Marlin Doubledge Razor Blades 18 for 25¢ “The Store for Men” SABIN°S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. | ¢ ‘ You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP | Watch and Jewelry Repalring ! at very reasonable rates | | Paul Bloedhorn S. FRANKLIN STRRNT | Juneau Melody Shop FRANCISCAN DISHES RCA Victor Records RING OLD RECORDS INSURANCE Shattuck Agency | CALIFORNIA | Grocery and Meat Marxet 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 CALL AN OWL Phone 63 Stand Opposite Colisewm Theatre Juneau Heating Service B. E. Feero 211 Second St. INSTALLATIONS and REPAIRS | Heating Plants, Oil Burners, Stoves, Quiet Heat Oil Burners Phone 787 or Green 585 [ 4 BUY WAR BONDS 1891—O0ver Half a Century of Banking—1943 TheB.M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska SAVINGS