The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 20, 1943, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire | Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alasks. HELEN TROY MONSEN R. L. BERNARD Entered In the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. - p, |intensified Third War Loan Drive to raise $1,750,000 SUBSCRIPTION RAT! Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Dougiss fo) By mail, postage pald, at the following rat One year, n_advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.80; one month, in advance, $1.25. Subscribers will confer & faver if they will promptly notity | the Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the de Mvery of their papers. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use for republication of eli news dispatches credited to it or not other- | people wise credited In this paper and also the local news published here NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Fourth Aver tle, Wash Prestdent Vice-President and Business Manager yhnnd~ Eleanor, Maggie, Clara, Regina McCarty bought $25 bonds. Twenty-five dollar bonds were lalso purchased here by Louise, Franklyn and Marian | Albert | At Holekachuk James, Gregory and Wilbert Nicholas all bought $25 bonds. The steady buying of war bonds by Alaska's Indians and Eskimos will help greatly in the coming !in Alaska, September 1 to 15. Young German Martyrs | (New York Times) When Germany arrives at the cross-roads where Italy stands today she surely will—some of her may be able to find words for what they in Munich last spring. What is believed to be the authentic text of this document has just been pub- |lished in this country by the International Student |Assembly, on the authority of Paul Hagen, research STE Al)\ Bl \ El War that in but .are fine, anyone can tell the ones that the Govern- drives are ady pure money loan you the bring the mos ment's war effort The Indians of Alaska have shown a remarkable interest in repeating their purchases of the bonds, While no total figure of the amount of such purchases is obtainable, Fred R. Geeslin, Assistant Superintendent of the Alaska Office of Indian Af- fairs, reports that recent sales through his office of war bonds to Indians and Eskimos amounted to some $21,000. And this is only a small part of the total The community of Gambell on St, Lawrence Island has been a steady purchaser. A glance at the records show fifteen $25 bonds and three $50 ones in These include a $25 bond for who earns his money sted es finance to the latest purchases. 11-year-old Tommy through wood carving The natives aren’t head of a family buys Tatoowi ones to figure that if the a bond or two, that's enough. Reports {rom King Cove show us that Marion Bernt- |, "4y o name of principles which Hitler thought he| NATIONAL ISSUES: ‘ Despite| sen buys a $50 bond, but Margaret, Ronald, Donald ;.4 killed forever. In years to come we, too, may |tenacious hold upon Army and, and Gordon Berntsen each buy $25 bonds, also. honor Sergeant Hans Scholl, Sophia School, Chris- Navy traditions the overpowering Four $1,000 bonds were purchased at Klawock by |tophe Probst, Alexander Schmorell, Karl Huber and might of air forces will place the Mrs. Alice Kathlean and Clifford, Ruth and Ken-|William Graf, slain in Munich for a cause that is|newest arm of defense and offense neth. The money was compensation paid for the also ours. | belonging to the nation av the top| death of Mr. Kathlean. i ior our combat strength. As air- The McCartys of Kokrines came through as a| A saving nation does not invite inflation. Buy‘plflnes continue to perform wonders| Jr., family also. William McCarty, a front in took out two $50 North idirector of American Friends of German Freedom. After a bitter attack on Hitler's generalship and Nazi methods of education the manifesto declares: “Honor and liberty! For ten years Hitler and |his comrades cruelly twisted, distorted and ridiculed those two fine Gérman words, as only unscrupulous men can who throw the highest values of a nation |to the swine, What honor and liberty mean to them |they have demonstrated clearly enough ‘in the ten years in which they have destroyed all the material and spiritual freedom and all the moral substance of the German people. The horrible bloodshed in which they, in the name of the liberty and honor of the German nation, have plunged all Europe, and |which they daily perpetuate, has opened the eyes jof even the dumbest German. The name of Ger- many will be shamed forever if German youth does not finally rise to take revenge, to destroy its tor- mentors and to create a new Europe, a Europe of the spirit. “Students! The German people are looking to us. They expect much of us. Just as in 1813 Na- poleon’s terror was broken, so in 1943 the National Socialist terror shall be broken by the strength of | the spirit. The Stalingrad dead implore us! it |our people are rising against the enslavement of Europe by National Socialism, in a new break-| through for liberty and honor.” Six Munich students, one of them a girl of 20, |are said to have been executed following the issuance of this manifesto. If it is genuine, and there is no |reason to doubt that it is, we can see .in it the be- | | ginning of the end of the nightmare period in Ger- | many itself. It was natural that the older genera-| tion, growing to manhood in a civilized coumry,f should be at least lukewarm toward the hideous nonsense of Nazism, but there was doubt as to what| could be expected of young people who had never | known anything else; An animal brought up in a} |w THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU-ALASKA. - HAPPY BIRTH AUGUST 20 Alice Swap Mrs. T, J. M Henry Harmon Mrs. O. Moody Ove Hansen Bob Keaton Mrs, Orrin Edwards Bernard Aiken Eske Eskesen Mrs. C. L. Neiderhelman - e ul think of Nazism in a manifesto issued by students| peeeeereecrseeresrsreases HOROSCOPE “The stars incline. but do not compel” ) | SATURDAY, AUGUST 21 Good and adverse to rule through the busiest inate in the evening, HEART AND HOME: As the week ends women may feel de-|Se pressed and frustrated, due to war| work. Nervous anxieties and war aspects seem | hours today but benefic influences dom- Besse bt o e 120 YEARS AGO AUGUST 20, 1923 th the mercury standing at 86'. at 155 p. m,, all previous local heat records for August were broken and a new hot weather record for this summer was set, according to a statement made by M. B. Summers, Meteorologist, in charge of the local Weathet Bureau station. T b e o from THE EMPIRE A play hour, beginning at 10 o’'clock, was, to be held at the Juneau Public School grounds for small children from 6 to 12 years of age by Miss Mary Chorn, advance agent for the Ellison-White Chautauqua. A delightful entertainment hour had been planned. F. L. Gibson succeeded E. V., Beaudin as clerk in the men’s furnish~ ings department at Goldstein’s Emporium. Mr. Gibson had previously worked at Ketchikan. For Mrs. M. B. Summers, who was to leave Juneau, Mrs. Katherine Hooker entertained with a sewing party at her home in the Spickett Apartments Mrs. George Anderson, wife of George Anderson, piano dealer, and their four children, returned to Juneau on the Queen after having spent some time in the South. A Juneau number of the Pacific Coast.Elk, the only journal of the B! P. O. E. published in the West, was to be issued shortly, according to cretary J. A. Davis of the local lodge. | The Pacific American Fisheries had a total salmon pack of 110,000 strain may be widely prevalent as|cases at the two plants in this district, according to F. H. Bailey, Super- a result of unacc! is a day to find rest and solace in the home where every unnecessary | stomed tasks. This | intendent, who was in Juneau. | Weather report: High, 86'c; low, 64. activity in housekeeping should be| eliminated. This is the time make the simple life more than a mere catch word. The introduction | of every obtainable labor-saving de- | vice is now -economy. BUSINESS HEADS: big who see the continued prosperity | of the United States in a period Heads |when every able-bodied person is| employed, realize postwar economic perils unless wise planning is made | and put into operation. Millions of men and women who are drawing high wages must not be made idle | when present work in the war in-| dustries is suspended. Those who read the stars know that revolu- tionary influences are prevalent in the changing aspects and those who depend upon material indi- sty may be expected to behave like a pig. But these | cations realize that economic ad-| Munich students, few or many, representative or otherwise, rose gloriously out of the mud, protesting More War Bonds to assure a prosperous peace. Africa, that we There all sides agreed in principle | recognized justments must be made long be- fore victory is won. |the Government will make sweep- ing readjustments by which are the changes brought {about in the greatest war of his- to| of | business and financial experts| | b Daily Lessons in English % 1. corpon R WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not sé | men, “Stop bothering me.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Ultimatum. Pronounce ul-ti-ma-tum, |U as in UP, T as in IT, A as in MAY, last U unstressed, accent third | syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED: Hysteria; HYS, not HIS. | SYNONYMS: Soothe, quiet, calm, comfort, compose, pacify, miti- gate. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: PERVERSION; a turning or applying to a wrong end or use. “Violations |and perversions of the law."—Bacon. “Leave me alone,” when you | MODERN ETIQUETTE * roprrra LEE e e e ] - Q. If relatives and friends live in distant cities, should wedding invitations be sent to them even if it is known they will be unable to attend? A. Yes; they are as much entitled to invitations as if they lived in one’s neighborhood. Q. What is the correct manner of eating an orange at the table? A. Peel the orange, and then pull it apart. At breakfast, the orange '\ is often cut into halves and eaten with an orange spoon. Q. If one is making a call on a friend and a second caller arrives, should one remain or leave immediately? DIRECTOR FRIDAY, AUGUST 20 Prolusional Frmumal Societies ecu Channel 1943 Drs. Kaser and Freeburger DENTISTS Blomgren Building Phone 88 Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUTLDING Office Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST Room §—Valentine Bldg PHONE 762 ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground [ The Charles W. Carter 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. Bold and Serviced by MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 14} JOHN J. PARGHER, 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 For BETTER Groceries Phone 18—346 "“The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmscists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG €0. b J HARRY RACE Druggist Marlin Doubledge Razor Blades | 18 for 25¢ “The Store for Men” SARIN’S Front St.—Triangie Bldg. } You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete a TEE BARANOF | COFFEE SHOP | —r— -8 | |DR. D. W. KNOWLES Osteopath and Chiropodist | Baranof Hotel—Lower Lobby | | ! PHON PHONE )Office 38 Heme, Red 669 [ FERERAE RN O L LY Juneau Melody Shop FRANCISCAN DISHES R.C.A. Victor Records J. B. Burford & Ce. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batistied ‘Customers” on a second front in France, but| A. Remain for a few minutes, and then leave. . tory. In the future the seers prop- when it came down to practice the‘hesv that each arm of e(l"g ;;r?;t moot point arose as te what pro-| 2 ? s e |machinery of combat and, protec-| ties. To the latter Russia has re- portion of British troops, whatiuon will yhave equal rank "‘Otfl:e' plied: |proportion of American troops | w ' others. . “Of course it would .¢ost casual-|should make up the invasionarmy. o h i INTERNATIONAL IRS: ties, but ‘what do' yow,think we| Churchill has always opposed alAs the strategy of th:f‘hl:it:d };E_ | have béen doing, attending a tea mass sacrifice of British manpower,; iy “ritions is put into operation its fore- party? This is war, we bhave lost has pointed to the cream of Brit- sight anl:j wisdompis reven:d D:_ were beginning operations in Sicily, |that a second front across the Channel would cost terrific casual- BRING OLD RECORDS INSURANCE Shattuck Agency D e e e e e e e LOOK and LEARN l:;y C. GORDON 1. Would it take less time to run a hundred yards or less to run a hundred meters? (Continued from Page One) DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH is my own personal diagnosis of what has taken place regarding more than four million men.” ;Ls‘hlyaut;!; l;;lst in the lzst war. Has trologers - point out: Accoredng to 2. Are any of the Seven Wonders of the World still in existence? Consultation snd examination each: So last week, as the tide’ of vic-|diplomatically suggested that Am-) e 2 i 11 - o : free. Hours 18 to 12; 1 to §; 3 ' past predictions which are provin 9 ' 3 e ——————————————— Ml e ians . Rhows tory began to. turn decisively inerican manpower, with a popula- depen}:‘lable e Nais will bz cum% i. 30:::::?:;2?::2;22; to the credo of Roman Catholics? 7 to 8:00 by appot t. c A L l r n l I!‘ . " favor of the Allies, Stalin. gently tion of 130,000,000 was much great- pletely defeated within the ®6ming u G u Hotel Russia has been asking the United .opinded us through “Pravda,” his er than Britain’s 30,000,000. Heavy 5. What building in the United States is known as the “Cradle of Grocery and Meat Marset i States and Britain repeatedly f0r|.,;iyo116q newspaper, that we had British losses, he has reasuned.':l‘;::;'t svl:':g;sng::,n?h;::ai ;rh:% Liberty”? Soyts Brsnkiin 5. . Phoos 171 478—PHONES—371 t a second front in France. Each po" ver warted a second front, would set England back a Whole|ng for a af“ St “" !g';‘ | ANSWERS: High Quality Foods at time we have sidestepped. In JUne tna¢ ‘Churchill and Roosevelt had generation. Therefore, Churchill at|ols Japan is to feel the concen.| 1 LeSs to run one hundred yards, as they equal 9144 meters. Moderate Prices l 1942 when Foreign Minister Molo- | poi violated their Casablanca pro- Casablanca undoubtedly wanted the|(sated might whioh follows the| 2 Yes but only one, the Pyramids of Egypt. “Say It With Flowers™ toff came to Washington we told yiseq for a second front, and im-|invasion army to be about 70 pef-|thorough heating of Germany. !L; 3. No; it is a panacea. b:‘“ ~ him the United States had onlY|pjeq that since we hadn't done|cent American troops, 30 percentnas peen prognosticated that vic- 4. Concrete which is strengthened by embedding iron or steel bars “SAY IT WITH OURSI just come into the war and Wasn't|,ucp fighting, Russia intended to!British, subject to shipping U. S.ltory will be attained in 1845 but|in it. J‘ Fl 0 Pa“l Bloedhorn ready. Molotoff sympathized. He gyt the terms of peace. This is|troops to England in large enough|iwo more years will be.yequized t 5. Faneuil Hall, Boston uneau Florists nad pointed out that Britain had groGie 'Vt "o the problem Roo- | quantities. Roosevelt Drobably|iing snont noredl sonst | e T T e Phone 311 : a large army in England. We had gouep gand Churchill face in Can-'agreed. However, the submarine| persons whose birthdate it is JeWEh’Y and Cllrlos demy early this summer, received by Anton Suijan, and the Reli- tests and passed them . satisfac-|ance, 'captained by A. Sesmonis, torilly as well as other examina-| whistled their goodbyes to the com- tions, Roger has earned his own | munity early this morning, and tuition fees during this summer’s headed south. vacation, working with the Army| .- Transport Service. : OPA MAN HERE | Guy Green, Jr, with the OPA, to reply that the United States could not dictate what Britain did with her troops. Several times since then Russia has asked us for a second front in France. We have given different| sonal diagnosis is my opinion of| excuses: that we were setting up|what happened at Casablanca. > - | | |situation all last winter was not |as favorable as today, so obviously i 4 it was impossible to ship all the CASABLANCA DECISION | troops we wanted to England. 2. The second phase of this per-| ada. have the augury of a year of ad- | vancement and good luck. Love af- fairs will assure happiness. | Children born on this day prob- ably will be clever, talented amnd in- dustrious. Musicians and. artists will be numerous among them. South Franklin Street Rice & Ahlers Co. PLUMBING HEATING Bheet Metal PHONE 34 H. 5. GRAVES “The Clothing Mas” | SECOND FRONT—WHERE? 3. The third chapter came dur- HOMER OF HART SCHAFFNEh ling the May-June conference be- (Copyright, 1943) iy |is registered at the Baranof Ho- 'Ol‘d Pu;’zle |tween Roosevelt and Churchill. By aPyms Havlnguosl::t ltfie’l‘ll::;ts several“tex' e by s MARX CLOTRING = ‘:t.l_ns time we had al! of North Af-|Ghurchill has talked about inva-|weeks with the Juneau Packing B IR 52 - BRI JUNEAU o YOUNG ACROS ST s rica and had, to decide whether to|sion when the leaves fall. Today|Company operations at Idaho In- DODGE AT BARANOF B 7 Bl a:l:h ;23?: :ai;*;;; second front o the Allies are far ahead of sched-|jot, Al Gioetz returned yesterday for| T- C- Dodge of the Continental Hurdware Company z o RI C ) 4. Measure of ery | el or a second(ule. That is reason No. 1 for the |# shorf |Can Company is a guest at the v T ] 5 4. ucx:;:rl:l. of |front in France. If in France, it|Churchill-Roosevelt meeting. A new fln: 302,‘::‘;:';:53::5: fl:;;}:rshzgflaaranol Hotel, npm—o“ il-—GLAS SXRERI CLEA SING f 15 BoVETARS ctes 4L Clty in Bel- jwould be necessary for the Alliesicourse of action must be charted.|the company. | SR e T e e aad ’hfle 15 | . Turkisn o g _tohuse a lar:er proportion of Brit-|Reason No. 2 is the desirabllity at J CANNERYMAN HERE Guns and Ammunition Al : al . Puts into type {ish troops than American. Because|last of meeting the d d G F S " again ; g emands of H. G. Heaton and L. P. Calla ask Bmave ©'" 4. sateilite we had not been able to shipRussia on opening a front in|CrADIATOR, RELIANCE sourn han of Libby, McNeill and Libby, gLaundry J Fre'l 4G Cotton fabrto enough to England, probably the|France. Df“;‘;le:fi‘“;h;“ C.h*‘"‘ef‘;s - d‘he}are at the Baranof Hotel. - o Concerning ratio, instead of being 70 percent| Several things have happened|-C % isheries in effect dur-| RIS ith— " 1 i . Tolerable American and 30 percent British,|since June. The political morale of jie the: Uaie sehsan;, i eons ! Guy sm Dmgs eAu AH OWL | Smell tylana {Would have been nearer 30 percent|thie Axis is shattered. Its industry,| oY ‘enders Gladiator, captained| F. ok CARIN L Piyaeriggonkey P : g 3 4 io, i American and 70 percent British. DT | RS Fongess? WO NYAL Family Remedies Pll 6 K AT dan- g7, el © dalution D Yestinday's Puzsle | e et satored|cnattesc, 1+ mint e’ il o HORLUCK'S DANISH one G3 . i B e alcal entered | shattered. It might be possible to ~- Stand Opposite Colises: ' Bk otihe . o D0 hedhd i Lt B L the June picture. Until then, the(win a victory by continued air . 5 ICE CREAM oA PITE I 8 L s 5 Smaiation | Allies had not had sufficient bomb-|pounding without the loss of lives F 0 y A I | . R e in % Pasullar 1. Month e eiters | ¥ Strength in England to really|from old-fashioned land warfare, E i & Juneau Heating Service B. E. Feero punish enemy industry. We were just beginning to go to town. So, . Bibilcal char- or on the other hand the moment may have arrived for .a land inva- Duncan's Cleaning | . Musion aires- 211 Second St. ton not to after prolonged debates, thelsion which will tip the scales and | and PRESS SHOP INSTALLATIONS and REPAIRS ng W % cheese | Churchill thesis finally was adopt- |bring victory in Europe this win ‘ S peesy e, Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing Heatin, 'Lx&efl;"“ | ed—striking at the “soft under-|ter. These are the -difficilt deci+ PHON] % s‘::"' :::":v :)" "B;"‘"" . Serpent belly of the Axis" through the|sions awaiting tHe President and ONE. e el ik . G'{‘g‘e‘gu’g};"‘ Mediterranean islands and waiting|the Prime Minister. “Neatness Is An Asset” | Phone 787 or Green 585 | ,’ffl;',‘.‘” for an invasion through France un-| = (Copyright, 1943, by United Fea- | Shoestring |til (1) we could really blast Ger-|ture Syndicate, Inc.) ¥ . Bodles of as- many from the air and (2) build 34 Kind. of pastry A épl.le up U. S. troop reserves in England. s's - Slien | U. 8. war chiefs have never been —0 ' P Bugics m;"" |too enthusiastic about the ~*“soft 1801 Oyer Hell & (eflmr' of Bekng 190 - One who frosts |\ nder-belly” approach. They think 2. Evolved it nibbling at the fringes of the (ONVEBS ) SCHOOL . Youthful years jenemy instead of striking at the Zgg.e ’;nn blows |Deart. However, they probably| Roger Connex‘s. 17-year-old son w' BN 3 G"M“s Epaes uvnderesumnmd one thing—the x_x:ll- of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Worobée ¥ wl R e e et ettt | Alaska Electric Light and Bank wil//an PRSIt . [ottor thar, th ity What thefaenont lecsids . DG Ok POWQI’ Qompqu Oldest Bank in Alaska % _Eoqullllohl effect would be of overrunning|Roger, who has attended Douglas N7 Y 7 0 prnglonallen S oy g dr e Juneau Telephone No. 616 COMMERCIAL SAVINGS R T L T R L L i [ e s st s st & oL, vorks o |

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