The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 11, 1943, Page 4

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Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Maln Streets, Juneau, Alaska. HELEN TROY MON: R. L. BERNARD THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA THAPPY BRTHDAY || 20 VEARS AGO i nrrns | THE EMPIRE s AUGUST 11 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1943 E Prolessional I'I “ CTOR Fraternal Societies Gastineau Chanuel MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. ity SECOND and FOURTR Monday of each month line and refinery until after the war, at which time they will be offered for sale with the Canadian gov- ernment given the prior right of purchase the one the United States will get me money back out of the investment prove valuable in peacetime to Canada as it is valu- able in the prosecution of the war. But on the other United States gets nothing back except a In instance, i z WL 100 R, i AUGUST 11, 1923 The greatest opportunity for immediate development in the Terri- ! tcry lies in its scenic, game, fishing and climatic attractions during the which will s President Vice-President and Business Manager Mrs. H. R. VanderLeest Mrs. H. L. Faulkner Drs. Kaser and fntered 1n the Post Office in Junesu as Second Class Matter. hand, the SUBSCRIPTION RATES: i by s el anF NSRS, sids ol lafiu. (Promilse’sl no discHiingtion In BRnE the road. Virginth Zund summer and fall seasons for tourists in the opinion of Gov. Scott C. s By mail, postage pald, at. the following rates: —— e — 5 one. WHE WaS B itie Anta: for “His P, ' % F Bcottish Rite T Onp oo, s, postase P S A8 Lol S teasios, B100: | = : Ralth Bpaulditg | Bone, who was gathering data for his annual report on Alaska to the reeburger i sl gt ‘emple one month, in advance, $1.25 | Trail of the Big Inch o , | Department of Interior. . DI ng :30 p. m Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notity s, Stan Grummett ENTISTS JOHN J. FARGHER, Office of any fallyre or irregularity in the de- o R Eugene McRoberts e Bl W 1 ¢ ! : New York Times) B! . i A ‘ lomgren Building Phone 84 orshipful Master; JAMES w their papers. o N i TaeTe K Sr e | . % ‘Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. Lonaview. Tex., where the Big Inch hegins, is on Helen Miller : Alm(}st entire albstfxxcle of L\"']]xa“] in _”“ ln;lnx)tu:j mining districts was LEIVERS, Secretary. TS s o iceah L bt it e bl Gl s R R Mrs. Mary Holmquist threatening to materially curtall placer gold production, according to TR S James G. Steese, Chairman of the Alaskan Engineering Commission and President of the Alaska Road Commission, who just returned to his headquarters here { John Satre, Jr. Fred Schindler William Hibler Mrs. Clarence Wiitanen John Holmquist - - MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to 1t or not other- pie, cre ed in this paper and also the local news published erein. there are or have been more than 25,000 producing oil wells, Over a route by which many pioneers went down to Texas, in the days when petroleum |was used almost exclusively as a liniment for rheu- matic disorders, the oil comes back, in a twenty-four- inch pipe. It crosses the rivers the pioneers had to |cross, the Red, the Arkansas, the White, the Missis- B. P. 0. ELKS y Meets every 2nd and 4th Wednes- :days at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers ywelcome. N. FLOYD FAGER- }SON, Exalted Ruler; M. H. SIDES, Secretary. Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BU'LDING Office Phone 469 Hawley Sterling Superintendent of the Alaska Road Commission, had been transferred from Fairbanks. Superintendent Ike P. Taylor was to have charge of the Fairbanks office. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Pourtfi Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash i sippi, the Wabash, the Scioto, the Ohio and the g A0 o -~ |Delaware. The West pays back, in a way the pio- i Ensign J. Simpson MacKinnon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lockie Mac- D |neers never could have foreseen, dividends on thejy % Kinnon, left Juneau on the Alameda for Scattle where he was to g h , innon, Ala a for Sea as g0 r. Jo Isweat, the tears, the blood that they invested. \ “The stars incline to Bremerton Navy Yard to report for duty aboard the U. S. S. Ney John H GeYer PIGGLY WIGGLY | The trails they followed westward and south- ol d DENTIST For BETTER G |wird e I pers the. séme a3 this new ‘n-:::r; oree) § but do not compel e Room $—Valentine Bldg roceries pastwar rthward, They crossed the Penn- : "\“;‘t:.:,ld i{“&n::f:‘x:\:“ ”"l‘h( v l.‘p(:\un-nmd soitharn] """ L O T T Mrs. E. Gruber, wife of an electrician at the Alaska Juneau mine, PHONE 762 Fhone 0 | Ohig’s forests on foot or floated down the Beautiful THURSDAY, AUGUST 12 and her two daughters left on the Princess Alice for the South. | River, as some of them poetically called it, to inter- P e Yt e ———————————— |sect the Big Inch's future line at Cincinnati. The| Astrologers find this an unimpor- | H. VanderLeest, of Butler-Mauro Drug Company, left on the Princess|| ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt.D. "Th. Rexan SIOI o lw.\ugvurs came down the Mississippi, the New Or-ltant day in planetary influences|on a business and pleasure trip to the States. He expected to return in Graduate Los Angeles College (] |leans traders came up, the river pilots, young Sam|put certain aspects are adverse.|two months. of Optometry and Your Reliable Pharmacists |Clemens among them, scanned the surface of the|snipping is subject to threatening| A L Opthalmology BUTLER-MAURO |water for snags and sawyers and for shifting sandconditions. Grace Vivian Davis was aboard the Alaska for Juneau after having bars, where now the Big Inch makes the crossing. | HEART AND HOME: Weather spent several weeks visiting yelatives and friends in the States They took the journey to Little Rock, and|and delayed letters from loved ones| ? i e somewhere on that trail they found the Arkansasiy uniform may cause nerve strain Miss Alva Sidler, who had been visiting in Juneau with Mr. and | Traveler, playing on his fiddle for a host in a cabin|{oday which should be as bUsy 88|yn.g Hans Berg, left on the Princess Alice for her home in Oregon jwith a leaky roof They went down into Texas|possible, even though the thermo % r |when Texas was still Mexico, crossing the Sabine | meter reaches the nineties. Acei Canadian Prime Minister Mackenzie King in a|poundary, and jn due time they came back driving | gents should be watched, for quar- Giasses Fitted Lenses Ground DRUG €0. HARRY RACE Druggist : Marlin Doubledge Razor Blades | i The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. CANADA-L RELATIONS | Mrs. George and her two little daughters, Matilda and Lilly, left {on the Princess Alice on a trip to the States. PSS USSP S 4 S S > » » ) there shall at no time be imposed any discrimina- Front St.—Triangie Bldg. didn't die. Building the Big Inch was a different| i, kind of problem from the ones they we { the war, prosperity will be|t= e used {0,lepjoyed by the millions of workers| fecent session of the House of Commons clarified nomed cattle in clouds of dust. They swore, they| may be easily started. The the -ement between the United States and Cana- | drank and they fought, they lived like Bedouins and |stars seem to promise that tms‘} it Hiemnn ey PHONE 130 18 for 25¢ da concerning the operation of the Alaska Highway.! the wandering tribes of northeast Asia, but in_time ponth's hopes may be rewarded Weather report: High, 56; low, 53 At the cohclusion of the war, that part of the they brought their wives, raised their children, fenced py happy homecomings in many ; vy happy IS s FIR/ 5 \ 1 highway which lies in Canada shall become in all | tracts of land they learned to call their own, found-|amilies ! % Sr'l;.An;n!ulsAll:’QUums “The Store for Men” | ] tespects an integral part of the Canadian highway|ed towns, built churches and schools, all along the, BUSINESS AFFAIRS: While D I L E | h Y : system, he said, subject to the understanding that|Foute the Big Inch was to follow. {men, women and even children are| al y essons In ng IS W. L. GORDON l’l"d‘;f;‘m Treatments Will AB'N’S | | They were a hardy and ingenious race, and they pysy helping the United Nations to| Halr Problems ! ] | Sigrid’s t rela ? use ¢ road a . tory conditions in relation to the use of the road as WORDS | OFTEN MISUSED: Do nét say, “I saw a couple of girls between Canadian and United States civilian |yt they managed it. Under the ranch lands, past|who fail to realize that they con-|in the car.” Say, “I saw TWO girls.” % ; i i the fields of cotton, of wheat, of corn, of t0bacco,’tripute to inflation by their gen-| OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Due. Pronounce the U as in USE, not You'll Find Food Finer and ‘ In other words, the United States furnished the among the fattening cattle, past towns and cities,'erous spending, much of which I8!, Do, Service More Compiete af money and fen and the Canadians furnished the over the rivers and through the lands of coal and'ue to previous money limitations.| " OpTEN MISSPELLED: Presentment (presentation. Presentiment Jones-Stevens Sh.p THE BA land |iron, they worked their way east again, welding the | prade and commerce will continue| . . emonition) LADIES'—MISSES’ BANDF The agreement between the two countries on the|Big Inch together as they came. They 1ngnxauod fost active as this country pours' - leNONYMS Sl xvivby; pertilex, mystiier BESTIEE READY-TO-WEAR COFFEE Fort Norman oil line, however, s a different picture. | it; and behind them comes the oil, three miles anigyg jts seemingly limitless resources.| wopnh srupy: “Us i ree MR g e ot ug|| R SHOP ©Oh this project the United States is paying the|NOUF now, about four miles an hour soon, .Well|aqyance in the cost of living WHHL R N e S L e i Ga g gl 45 A — o 3 3 FARRTHAR g | they could walk that fast, some of them, by night,|pe accepted good-naturedly ~by| ncrease our voca bulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: cost of the project and the Canadian government is | DILIGENCE; perserving application. “The expectations of life depend | through the woods. !those whose wages assure plenty| g The old stock didn’t die and the new stock|pu( a large class dependent uponupon diligence. essential for the project and is also making oil rights | ., % = 9 ; : {but a large class der H Rroj g 8hts | walks pace by pace with it across the countryside.!yer incomes now will foresee seri=| .. U aan ol Confuciu DR. D. W. KNOWLES | Osteopath and Chiropodist | providing sites for structures and the right of way JAMES C. COOPER available under proper regulations. Rovalties on the | 1f there's a job to be done it will be done. S0me|guq financial problems with the C.P.A iz | oil produced is waived for the duration things are wrong in this big land, but here's some-{ cnine of autumn | by . Baranof Hotcl—Lower Lobby J ] The United States retains ownership of the pipe-| thing that is all right. | NATIONAL ISSUES: As the last| E ROBERTA LEE Business Counselor PHONE PHONE | | i, , e — g | H COOPER BUILDING Office 387 Home, Red 669 | |harvests are gathered and reports, are received the food question will lorrrrrrrsrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrroressess become the most discussed of all! Q. Is it proper to say, national hazards. Astrologers warn an acquaintance that is met by accident? SUSSR that this warned Mussolini was not ready. By | campaign, the army |time, also Badoglio’s latent hatred Nashiitos BOOKED 31 ARE “I am glad to have seen you” when leaving L. C. Smith and Coroma Juneau Melody Shop ’ |of Fascism, deluged under all his 'I'o Sou"'H POR'S that unexpected shortages will be| A Yes rxrEwh e sfl'noun‘ ‘l"usvm honors, had come to the discovered and that the co;m;\';’ Q Is it all right for a girl to make “repairs” in her make-up on 8old and Berviced by FRANCISCAN DISHES ore again = o |winter will present serious diffi-|y o gance floor? 4 e Seven passengers disembarked' culties to residents east and west.| J. B. Barferd & c.. R.C.A. Victor Records | Friends say that he resented both the back and But he did % 4 A. No; if this is considered necessary, she should do it in the here from Sitka this morning. g i i i ’ Y, Restricted transpertation will con | aresstng-room. They were Charles Wortman, Lil- tipute to the discomforts of count-| BRING OLD RECORDS (Continued from Page Ome) {the PFrench stab in {the attack on Greece. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfied Customers” Q. Should one ever make a great show of tipping? battieground of Itallan soil. But not protest publicly. Finally he was lie Darlin, Esther Bailey, Mrs. M.jess families who must face the| 18° & 4lso he knew that the invincible yanked back from the Greek cam- C. Hagerup, Gail Hagerup, Dallas gajly marketing with anxiety. This A. No; tipping should be done as inconspicuously as possible. IN might of Allied air power could|paign, discharged by Mussolini,and Black, and Mrs. H. Winberg. is a time to study scientifically-| S G R N D Siln s s SURANCE make mince-meat of Italian cites|for a time friends feared for his| Taking passage for Seattle were prepared menus and to provide for| > DR H VANCE H. E. Jacobson, W. A. Palmer, A. dieting that will be troublesome but | P. Foote, Mrs. C. M. Williams,|nealthful, Sigrid Dull and two children, Liz-| INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS:| zie Davis, Bertha Veinola, Albert Ccanada is to undergo great expan-| Swee, G. E. Hanson, Julia Rian, sion in its many industrial centers| Belva Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.'in the next few months. Although | and that the Allied armies, already life. It was then that his old friend in their stride, were sure to over-|the King held out a sheltering run Italy wing and invited him to live in the That moment of hesitation jmay|imperial palace. mean Ttaly will be an even blood- S ier battleground and that the surge A TIMID STATESMAN Shattuck Agency CALIFORNIA :; Grocery and Meat Marxet OBTEOPATH Consultation and exsmination free. Hours 18 to 13; 1 to §; 7 to 8:00 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Anmex 1. Where in the United States do the heaviest snowfalls occur? 2. What is the doctrine of diabolism? of Allied victory may be slowed. What transpired between these Watson and two children, Carl the Dominion may be pressed by 3. To what country do the Fiji Islands belong? H 3 3 A y i S s ? th Pranklin St. { But Badoglio, hus spent his life|two close friends during the three Foreman, Ellen Eikland, Mildred financlal obligations it will find| 4 What shot was said to be “the shot that was heard around the Bguth St Fiitag Wi 478—PHONES—371 | as a professional soldier and L'au-;}'?ill‘s that followed may never be James, Capt. C. H. Jones, USCG,|that through war emergencies it| worqie High Quality Foods st tlon is his watchword, even when known unless some palace chroni-| Commdr. J. J. Kimberly, USCG, has developed marvelously for al 5. What is a larrikin? Moderate Prices | empires are at stake. ‘x :;:Y \:'l;xlu:al:u-“:;;z_x'a dB\lxxz) l‘tml«-akold k'us}l{{nMém](‘:ngM?hrHiBELE;V t,At-ekLwnumrc- in* which it is uf) c;:anslpla:tg ANSWERS: “Sery It With Flowers” but — an vas 15] s col- LS » 3 3 y . ) N 5 s 4 . A 1€ o o ! a,|branches of many of England's| ; gjo1re Nevada Moutains of California. 'SAY IT WITH OURSI umn that Badoglio seethed with always | hatred against Mussolini, even °.|hoped to lead the regular Italian army against him. Two weeks ago, the time finally HUMAN “BOMBS” Just as Mussolini was sticking out his chin, Badoglio has always pulled his in. As Governor| of Libya in 1929, he stood by while | : Marshal ziani, the rabid +Fas-|came. Badoglio and the King, to clst, subdued Arab natives by tak- | Whom he haq always been so loyal, fhg rebel chilettaing up. in 8n air |struck their first independent, cour- plane and tossing them out on the|38€0US blow for, .1_“"3’- But Badog- T vaow |lio, a good soldier, but a timid By this time Badoglio had swal- |Statesman, struck out. lowed his early revulsion against| Faseism, and, following his King,| had accepted Mussolini’s tempting offer of field marshal of the Ital-| ian army. | Q Crossword Puzzle best possessions in the way of in- dustries and population. Because of | the great power centered in the Western Hemispherge, Canada will Glen Bush, A. L. Cohen, M. S.| Abriam, and Mrs. E. E. Engstrom| and son. To Petersburg Mrs. Frances Nore and two children and Charles be the magnet drawing distin- Greena. 5guished Englishmen to the new To Ketchikan—Harry Sperling,|world. It has been prognosticated Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Moore and|that after the war Winston Gerald Moore, and Anna Peterson.|Churchill may become Governor- A e i General. BUY WAR BONDS Persons whose birthdate it is have the augury of a year of|’ changes and extraordinary experi- ERE [STPJATRINA[L[O]P] lences. Guarded policles should mark [PlO|S|EMMPIE [POJNE GIO] |business dealings. OINE]S] Children born on this day prob- ably will have careers in which Inside the Italian army there has| ACROSS B Bolabiions bis always been jealousy between the| 1. Nourlshed 35 Mother success comes through unusual political Blackshirts and the non-| 3 Canine animal 40- Pertaining to channels. They have the forecast Fascist regulars. So when Musso-{ it brick 42. e of brilliant possibilities. lini launched his armada of tanks Preceding night 43. Vehiclo oa run- (Copyright, 1943) and airplanes against defenseless B ethaua- :g ;-:]q':mrfin'v i £ 2 gk gy i tion . Mythic X Ethigpia he_placed one of his| g5 ol $thical mon B! { “osp"‘l "om Blackshirts, General De Bono, in| I8 Lores 41. Quoted - | chathan | 30 Colony of bees 40 Mountain tn G| . 22 e POS| T A { De Bono was a complete flop and| 23 Handls 50, Stage plaver [T|AIR[ANN INTi | ,Butil Erickson, & medical patient, Badogl s recular army | 33 Wind of eoll . 53. Medicai anti- ITIE[RIINIOIRIM | was admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital oglio, from the regular army,; 27. Female sand- septic [EINDISIEIAN was called to the rescue. In thel g5 p2aPeTo., 55 PUed grass = 3 INBIAINITIE] | vesterday. field of battle, Badoglio does not| 31, Kortune . Garde le- ¢ ’ fWa of bass, ¥ A:mcm"cm ol wfi’:{“ p i Htaple Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle | 1. yred Henning entered St. y Ak | 35. Derived from 61. N 63. Pronoun DOWN Ann’s Hospital yesterday for medical dier. He cleaned up the Ethiopian 61. Nut ; s 4 | the maple 62 64. Body joint 1. Charges care. war in short order—and he did not tree 65. Rodent 2. Formerly | hesitate to use gas to do it 3. Uninhabited Charles Heath, a medical patient, w.fi:.(,“‘”“d-!-3‘:“»“%1“) \hn‘ quite + mflm_fl.f:& entered St. Ann’s Hospital Aug- g to receive from the hands Totrane ust 10 of Il Duce the title of Duke of - 2 Addis Ababa with the lush salary . Negro of the Mrs. Val Poor, of Douglas, gave that went with it. Badoglio also, Mowger delta | irth to a son yesterday afternoon swallowed his pride and his anti- at St. Ann's Hospital. The baby weighed five pounds, seven and one- PFascist leaniigs sufficienfly to be- | eome chief of all the armies. | ARMY UNPREPARED | As such he was supposed to pre- | pare for war, which any one could | se¢ from the rantings of Italy's Axis partper in Berlin, was just arptind the corner. But the Italian army lapsed into such a state of wiipieparedness and poor morale that when Mussolini finally did de- cide to stab France in the back, Italian troops made only minor gains against an already defeated French army. Badoglio has been both blamed and exonerated for the Italian fi- asco in Greece. The truth is that he did not want to undertake thi half ounces. Gahbino Oloressisimo was dismissed all stops | from St. Ann’s yesterday after w Choking medical treatment. . Spanish title In that place Edward Rodenberg was dismissed Performed iKiller whals . Wirelesy . Harvest . Fastener from St. Ann’s Hospital this morn- ing after medical care. g bz - 3 2. Doctrine of devils; especially a perversion involving the worship of devils. 3. Great Britain. Revolution. 5. A row street loafe CLERKS UNION WILL MEET THIS EVENING Following a short meeting of the Retail Clerks Union tonight, Ed Jahoda will show a technicolor 4. The shot that was fired at Concord at the beginning of the !tra‘/elugun of Alaska. | Al retail clerks are asked to attend the meeting at 7:30 o'clock |at the Moose Club and an invita- | tion is extended to remain for the {entertammem afterwards. .- ‘ Empire Classifieds Pay! orlginal FEET HURT? Poem The water pi l‘.lheS(nul If so, see Dr. Knowles, latest s clentitic method of foot correction . Sunken fences . Ready money . East Indlan Lower lobby, Baranof Hotel. Office Shone 387, house phone 669. adv.| < cifosdy viga . City In” Kansa, 5. Orderly . Mopntalin; Scotca Small quantities of quinine come from wild and uncultivated fores of South America. Fet United ‘Gibson, is treated for an ugly head - {hg raid on Rendova in the central Solomons, seized June 30 by the Allies in their drive on Munda, J ‘G-2 in the Solomons is Private Albert S. Tamorria, of Washington, D. (Colonel Gibson’s home is in Brattlebore, Vt. «C. Ex-Senator Shot af Rendova States Senator from Vermont, Colonel Ernest W. | wound suffered during a Jap bomb- ap airbase. Treating the chief of ~ Juneau Florists Phone 311 Rice & Ahlers Co. PLUMBING HEATING Sheet Metal PHONE 34 [ JUNEAU - YOUNG | Hardware Company "Guy Smith-Drugs” (Careful Prescriptionists) NYAL Family HORLUCK'S D. ICE CREAM ’ Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cléaning—Pressing—Repalring PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” 1891—O0ver Half a Century of Banking—1943 Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL Paul Bloedhorn Jewelry and Curios South Franklin Street “The Clothing Maa" H.S.GRAVES | HOMR OF HART BCHAFFNRK & MARX CLOTHING | Phone 15 Alaska Laundry | CALL AN OWL | Phone G3 Btand Opposite Colisrem ' —— L Juneau Heating Service | B. E. Feero 211 Second St. INSTALLATIONS gnd REPAIRS Heating Plants, Oil Burners, | Stoves, Quiet Heat Oil Burners Phone 787 or Green 585 ) TheB.M.Behrends | i SAVINGS

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