The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 10, 1943, Page 4

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Daily Alaska Empire Seeond and Main Streets, Junean, Alseka. ENLEN TROY MONSEN - = President & L BERNARD - - Vice-Prosident and Business Manseec muutmomulnmu-nmdmmn«, RATRS: anh:m-nlmmu—m By mail postage paid, st the following rates: Oue yuat, iu advance. $18.00; eix months, {n sdvanes, $7.00; nth, in sdveace, O ubeerivers will confer & favor if they will Dromptly notify | r Business Office of suy feflure or irregularity ia the de- very of their papers. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 3. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associsted Press ia exclusively entitled to the use for | pepublication of a1l news dispatches credited to 1t OF %ot other- | Wise credited in this paper snd also the local news published | Beremn. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER THAR THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. S i s e iy S sivics oo duintsnaui S TR | | | NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1011 American Bullding, Seattle, Wash, | | | SABOTA Out of 7477 pases of reported sabotage investi-| gated by the FBI from January 1, 1940, to Februar 1, 1943, 558 inst es of technical sabotage to our in- dustrial facil disclosed. Strikes weren't| included It is surprising to note that personnel failure, not the agents of the enemy, was behind most of these acts of sabotage. The FBI groups the majority under | carelessness, industrial accidents, malicious mischief and personal grievances, all problems which are pres- ent in normal times But since the lives of members of our armed’| forces are dependent upon our production, these acts constitute a blow struck for the enemy. When a perpetrator of an act of sabotage mu-nd\l to damage a machine or facility and thereby is con-! scious of his acts, he is guilty of a crime. And 425 individuals have been sentenced for such crimes to prisons for terms which total almost a thousand years It is this type of crime which is check—Americans acting against their country. In no case was the sabotage committed by any individ- ual acting at the direction of or under the from any enemy nation. The enemy agent of the first World War so far has been unable to n;mnw in the United States to- Washinglos X Merry- Go-Round (Continued from Page One) ies were difficult to orders dent taries’ of the Club made Capitol newsmen | Dobbin one in Congress. . | bit simply didn’t have enough ra- ‘ tion points to go around | POINTS is that} ration | have | NO MORE RATION And the amazing thing instead of running to the board—and no one would blamod her for that — she managed somehow.” She managed famous The Alaska Te journal try anc fish, as any houscwife does|Army these days, and by saving as many | the beef Lcints as possihle to serve to|1865 the Prime Minister's party “be-| This Engineers, Telegraph Tr {and wilder | the hope |said to be shaking the whole of Hitler’s Europe.” ‘Congressionul of the ( Cop) T lL,hl MUSEUM HERE TO RECEIVE COPY OF BULKLEY JOURNAL announcement |@ay thanks to two things: The preparatory work done by the FBI in its 2,286 war plants prior to our entrance into the The over constant vigilance exercised by the men of the FBI constantly examine all reported sabotage, ferreting out would-be foreign agents sent to our shores before they have survey of some war to cases of a chance to organize While we can never relax our vigilance, it is heartening to realize that the recent landing of Ger- |man agents in this country had one thing in tnind— to organize a program of destruction against Amer- ica’s production centers. The agents, quickly appre- |hended, were well supplied with cash and weapons |for the purpose of attempting to organize a sabotewr | ving It is logical to presume that if there had already {been organized groups in the United States upon which Germany could have depended, she would not have been forced take this risk, “Fortress Europe” l (New York Times) | Along thousands of miles of Atlantic and Medi- | terranean beaches the German patrols today move | restlessly |strengthens what he calls his “PFortress Europe.” | Though he cannot in this way make invasion impos- {sible, he can make it hard. But inside the fortress {he has millions of enemies against whom he cannot |fortify, He cannot kill the hate that grows deeper with each passing day. He cannot kill a proud Axis Army in North Africa, Recently the voices of its garrison were heard around the world. President Eduard Benes of Czecho- He spoke as the head of a living Republic, just as! | Thomas Masaryk, in October, 1918, spoke in behalf | of a Republic about to be born. He recalled that | | this country recognized Czechoslovakia at that time {and that in March, 1939, it refused to recognize the insulting and lawless act of violence” by which Nazi| Germany pretended to wipe out the freedom of a nation. He spoke in well-justified confidence in a free future, Even while he spoke the principles for which he stands were being upheld in the very power. An Associated Press dispat¢h reported “reverberations of the Allied victory in Africa were On Wednesday the Netherland Government in London called upon its people home to defend themselves against arrest and enslavement. A few days ago many were doing so. From Norway to Greece came news of revolt spreading “like wildfire,” of trains derailed, Nazi military material destroyed, Nazi vio- lence resisted. There are 'no words in any language to do justice ' to this heroism of martyrs, in lands infested with a hateful soldiery and foul with spies. It occurs. It cannot be killed off. Czechoslovakia lives, in exiles like President Benes, in the hearts of its own people on its own soil. Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium France, Denma Poland, Greece, Yugoslavia, all are living nations and the more alive because Adolf Hitler tried to kill them. They are the true fortress of F\nn)u‘ Secre- a big hit with They consider topnotch aids guished figures as Mackenzie King, Prime Minister, of Canada, and Ian Mackenzie, Canadian Social Secur- ity Minister, Colonel K. B. Bush, chief of staff of the Northwest Service Command, will come to Juneau for the presentation, which will take place the afternoon of June 18. On the following Sunday, June 20, Colonel Bush will present a coy of the famous document to Gover- nor Ernest Gruening. In Washington several months \.\go General O'Connor gave & copy | 1943) rritorial Colonel | of Alaska’s most historic souvenirs.” The maps made by Colonel Bulkley were on the desk of Secretary of State Willlam H. Seward when he purchased Alaska in 1867. These when he blazed ail to Alaska in was made and there is the clang of metal as Hitler) that has flamed anew after the crushing of | following so soon | |after the destruction of another in front of Stalin- igrad. There is more than one Fortress Europe. There |is a fortress in the hearts of Buropean humanity. that | Musoum'nx the journal to Delegate Anthony | “just|will receive a copy June 18 of the J. Dimond, who described it as “one kept hy by bearing down hare on the poul-|Charles S. Bulkley of the U. S. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA HAPPY BIRTHDAY JUNE 10 Mrs. V. F. Williams Ada May Burns Eugene Chase Joseph P. Donahue Mrs. Leonard Williamson THomas W. Bennett Mus. Ella Dailey Christine Neilsen R HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” SRR Y FRIDAY, JUNE 11 | Advetse planetary aspects are ac- tive in the morning of this day but later, benefic The evening should bring reassur-| ing war news. HEART AND HOME: Hundreds of families” will be affected this {month by changed draft regulations |which take many on deferred lists into active service. This means| that increased numbers of . women Imust be self-supporting and that |the economically independent ‘will |be counted by added millions. A&- trologers have predicted a long war | slovakia spoke to the Congress of the United States.iand have warned women to prepare | rm their part in it. The seers prophesied five years ago that| many American girls would wem‘{ |uniforms. Recruiting for all the auxiliary services will be intensi-| \fied by the end of the month. ! BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Practical | men and experienced specialists in/ |the commercial world will replace | lacademic theorists in directing| seats of Nazi|business affairs for the government | the road.” land by midsummer civilian food |problems will be wisely met, astrol- ogers predict. The machinery of supply and demand will be repairul] and set in motion. Although there | may be numerous kinks and even a | breakdown now and then, the stars 1‘ presage plenty of food for civilians as well as for men in uniform. Re- tail trade will continue brisk. NATIONAL ISSUES: Sanitation now should be the chief concern of |the people of the United States.| Cities, towns and all centers of| |population should be safe-guarded | against disease as never before Important of strange maladies is { forecast as soldiers return from| foreign lands where they have peen !exposed to infection of many sorts.| Drinking water should be carefully | protected and all green vegetables| washed with meticulous attention. Astrologers discern signs which they interpret ‘as warnings. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Jupiter and Venus in conjunction in favorable aspect to Mercury and | Neptune presage good fortune in| the close bonds linking the United Nations. Full agreement on ‘war plans will prove most advantageous this month. This conjunction which falls on the birth Sun of King George of Greece seems to foretell improved conditions for the fering people of the nation of an- cient culture. Mussolini continues under evil portents. Persons whose birthdate it is have Ithe augury of a year of ups and {downs with changes and travel Financial and social interests will |be satisfactory to many. Children born on this day prob- ably will have keen minds and | tired four auf-[ 1 20 YEARS AGO ™™ curize JUNE 10, 1923 Repairs to the local U. S. Court House Building costing approximately $6,000 was expected to be given authorization within a short time, accord- |ing to announcement by U. S. Marshal George D. Beaumont, who had just returned from a four weeks' trip to the States. | | Donald MacKinnon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Juneau, joined the U. S. Geological Survey party and enroute to the Arctic. Young MacKinnon had been University of Washington during the winter and spring MacKinnon of left for Nome attefiding the Lockie Stanley K. Jorgenson returned to Juneau on the steamer Queen from |Portland where he had been attending dental college Frank H. Foster, member of the recent Legislature, and associates | had contracted to have the Yakataga oil fields drilled in two places by two different outfits, of Juneau the the Public West- of K. Keller, appointed Superintendent |Schools, arrived in this city on the Admiral {ward, coming here from Fairbanks, where Schools the previous year. [ w. Evar from Superintendent influences dominate. | = TEaE as he was shooting another, George most thrilling of his many exciting adventures in bear hunting. Folta ran onto one grizzly, a female, at the junction of McGinnis and Montana creeks, near Auk Bay and shots, killing it. He fired his last shot at the other |male, and when the animal dashed through the brush, Folta \llp)wtl another clip in his gun, just before the big fellow returned to charge He fired again and the bear fell dead at his feet. Attacked by a big grizzly at Folta experienced one of the moments bes B. B. Green, for Fleichner | rived here on the Queen from the south representative Mayer and Company, ar- Weather was cloudy with a of 66 and a minimum of 61. maximum temperature Daily Lessons in English % 1. corbon B e U U USSR | WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “PROBABLY passed him.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED OR, U as in US, accent first syllable OFTEN MISSPELLED: P SIS. Paralyze; SYNONYMS: Memory, remembrance, reminiscence, | trospect, retrospection. WORD STUDY: “U and it is yours.” increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word FIXATION; act of fixing; state of being fixed. “An unalterable fixation of resolution.”—Killingbeck MODERN ETIQUETTE * gopgrra rEw Q. Should the hostess pay ment, if a guest has some sort of A. No; the Q. Should a woman thank a man who holds a door open for her if she is behind him? A. Certainly. Q. Is it necessary and there is no maid? A. No; they can be omitted. LOOK and lEARNA C. GORDON 1. What canal has been the subject of more painters than any other canal in the world? 2. What is the literal meaning of the word “sinister”? 3. Who were the first people to worship one God? 4. What is the famous poem by Byron that is incomplete? 5. Which six States do about half the manufacturing in the United States? ANSWERS: Grand Canal, Venice On the left hand. The Hebrews. “Don Juan.” “You likely passed him on Tortoise. Pronounce tor-tus, O as in YZE. recollection, sis; re- se a word three times Let us the expenses, such as medical accident while visiting? treat- guest should pay any such expense. to use service plates if the dinner is informal 1 [ ow 4 DIRECTOR Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS Blomgren Building Phone 56 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer Room $—Valentine Bldg PHONE 7t ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt.D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 13¢ FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS FOR ABUSED HAIR Parker Herbex Treatments Will Correct Halr Problems Sigrid’s Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—~MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Near Third JAMES C. COOPER C.P.A. Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Bold and Serviced 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 5; 7 to 8:00 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Anmex South Franklin 8t. Phone 177 “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists Professional Fraternal Societies Gastineau Channel 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 2nd and 4th Wednes days at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers welcome. N. FLOYD FAGER- SON, Exalted Ruler; M., H. BIDES, Secretary. PIGGLY WIGGLY "The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG €0. HARRY RACE Druggist Marlin Doubledge Razor Blades 18 for 25¢ “The Store for Men” SARBIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Cowmplete at THE BARANGF COFFEE SHOP FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates Paul Bloedhorn 8. FRANKLIN STREET Juneau Melody Shop FRANCISCAN DISHES R.C.A. Victor Records BRING OLD- RECORDS INSURANCE Shattuck Agency CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Marxet 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods s} Moderate Prices H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man" |maps are part of the Bulkley Jour- \marked talents, They have .the Service nal. forecast of happ. s £ ¥ get mucn‘cmnmand headquarters at White-| Gojonel Bus ) he aon pan»{ P RPy, Successtul car. 5. New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, and Nz-w’ Jersey. cause rverybody kno the British |yesterday by Northwest like beef and they don't of it at home these day Phone 311 HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING |horse, Y. T. Already Brigadier Gen- ied to Juneau by Lieutenant Rich- But there is some comiort in me‘»m fact that, tired of chicken and fish by nobody “upstairs” Even chicken is difficult to get. Mrs. Nesbit finds you can't wait} until the day you need :t and ex-| pect to get an order filled WEK-EOLD ICE CRFAM To be sure of having ice cream for any occasion, Mrs. Nesbit keeps 4 féw gallons on hand. Refrigera- | tion in the White House kitchen makes it possible to keep ice cream | for a week, or even two weeks if necessary And if ice cream can't he bought, | she can always get cream—though | not whipping cream—and inake the ice cream at home, | by e Ly It’s also a good thing to keep a Oil of rose back log of sugar to meet a sudden | pats, demand for punch for a garden | party. But here is where Mrs. Nes-| hit made a mistake. Befure sugar| rationing, she had a suppiy of 300 pounds on hand, and deciced to be virtuous and turn it in. Leter she| had urgent need of it “Sometimes when I get in a jam, I wish 4 hadn’t been so neble,” she| says now, ‘Bulkles has cormplained. | Journal ACROSS 1 Gaiter 6. Protective tence . Genus of Al . Incidents . Asiatic pative English ietter . Scraped iinen . Like a cloud Fall into disu . Masculine name . More piquant Shrub formances Pronoun . Commenced: archaic MERRY-GO-ROUND Patehes of paint are Leeling off the White House . . . Because of the war the executive mansion has | not been painted for some time . .| . Vice President Wallace picked the hottest day of the spring to open his private tennis season, playing | with his sister, wife of the Swiss| Minister . , . Hard-working Repre- sentative Francis Case of South Dakota reads and digests every bill that is introduced in the House . - Senator Jim Mead of New York and his office staff have gone on a seven-day weék for the duration . The election of Gerard Dob- bin, secretary of Represeniative Al- bert Engel of Michigan, os presi- | James A. O'Connor and though they must be staff have presented copies of the|2'd L. Neuberger, aide-de-camp to| Crossword Puzzle rican trees 3 musical . Individual per- his | to such distin- | Gen. O'Connor. [AICTETRINE [P[1 IC ISTO/P] (L [OIVIERENIAINIA] 21 Machine for compressing, into large bundles Aulomobile Exclamation Desire wrong- fully Flows Animal ures Swarm Asserted 0. Greek letter Natural sweet Irregular 4. Armadiilo ulpy frut Weary 48. Iterated Egg-shaped . Having no @ual 2. Hire DOWN enclos- se § Solution Of Yesterday's Puazie 2. Minute . Nut . Mimie . Recline . Exists . Comforts Pertaining to fatty sub- stauces . Thick Etbereal salt 19, Ingredient of varnish . Toll . Rent again . Traditional ead metrically tale . Western state 5. Parts in a 3 Tbndlnl to meke well Purveyor of 0 . Serewlike Tt of & ship’s log . Relish Pronoun Keen 39, Pith_hetmet Smiall nails Preceding % ARRIVE HERE = FROM SOUTH | (Copyright, 1943) ! —o— ‘FORTY SIX Arrivals from Seattle yesterday Pifching for Uncle Sam afternoon were Ralph S. Henry, Allen Langlois, Miss Ella Lee, Henry {McConnell, V. R. Farrell, Miss |Martha E. Goodman, Miss Jane Whitehurst, Miss Angela Hudson. Miss Irene Sasse, Miss Doris E Swap, Miss Alice Swap, Earl C. Brown, Mrs. Gladys D. Brown, Mrs Bessie Ninnis, Alexander Fowlie, T. J. Brignole, George Marcum, Mrs. Mary M, Marcum, Harry Murphy, Mrs. Ada B. Latham. Jack Gus Zavodosky, McClellan, Mrs, Ella L. Gihlstrom, Miss Pauline Roach, Miss Alyce Dalziel, Mrs. Alma Sully, Mrs. Dorothy Lingo, Mrs. Hilja Sherrif. Mrs. Josie Butkovich, Joel John- son, Mrs. Hilda M. Johnson, Robert Johnson, Joseph Ellson, A. A, Graber, Mrs. Alma Graber, Miss Myra Ann Graber, Miss Patsy Lee Graber, Miss Margaret K. Graber, Thomas M. Brennan, Mrs. Alma G. Decker, George Guerraro, ROy Guarraro, Frederico M Illicito, Cayo P. Pishang, Francisco Punay, Pedro P. Tolentino. Taking passage Sitka this merning were Thompson, 8. Danoff, Eddie son, Mrs, Ray Peterman, I'vete, Phyllis Rasmussen Rasmussen, Lena Helkkila. - > P YOUR BROKEN LENBES Repleced in o4r Own shop. Eyes Examined. Dr. Rae Lilllan Carison. Douglas from here to Anne Nel- Arlon E | Bob Shawkey, former star hurler and manager of the New York Yankees, has closed his Canadian gold mine for the duration and is building radios for the army in a Syracuse, N. Y., plant. He also pitched for the Athletics. Rice & Ahlers Co. PLUMBING HEATING Arc and Acetylene Welding Sheet Metal PHONE 34 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company i Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition “Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) U . Duncan'’s Cleaning ‘and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry CALL AN OWL Phone 63 Stand Opposite Coliream Theatre Juneau Heating Service B. E. Feero 211 Second St. INSTALLATIONS and REPAIRS Heating Plants, Oil Burners, Stoves, Quiet Heat Oif Burners | Phone 787 or Green 585 | BUY WAR BONDS 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1943 TheB.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS

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