The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 22, 1944, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR T ~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—-]UNEAU, ALASKA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1944 . . | even another 24 hours s ettt e | ————————————————————————————— D(",l’V Al(ls’i(l Enll’lre When peace comes there will come with it a ! } 5 LUC'LLE,S BEAUTYSAL“N 4 sense of security which is priceless. The ideals for \ f’om Published every evening except Sunday by the v H E E M P I R E SPECIALIS' o - rErQ EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY | which we have struggled will have been saved, at }_ TALISTS IN ALL TYPES OF PERMANENT WAVES e TROY SONERN e e, lleast for the moment. Millions of young men and|{ . -—~»~--4 e it TRt e A AND ALL TYPES OF HAIR DOROTHY B ~ - Vice-Prestdent | young women will know—and their loved ones will ¥ i b | FULL LINE OF DERMETIC CREAMS WILLIAM R (mnk - - Editor and Manager | SEPTEMBER 22 SEPTEMBER 22, 1924 PHONE 492 ELMER A, FF - -7 - - Manasing Editor | know—that theirs will be no violent deaths on bloody | s i O siness Manager | pe)ds of battle, That knowledge, in itself, is beyond T. J. Selby The World Series was to open on Saturday, October 4, in the American = r L npigh g b i e UL “‘;’A“:"“’“d Class Matter. | price. It cannot be measured by any economic rule Thomas A. Morgan League city winning the pennant unless there was a tie in either league Silver Bow L;dll': MOUNT nggégnl[‘)opfinggh“7 Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Doulas for S1.50 per month; America will pay; certainly. War knows no Frank Maver | necessitating a play-off. No.A210.0.F i TH six months, $8.00; one year, $15.00 budget: ki , h word as extravagance. But M ~ MeNut 'Meets each Tues- Monday of each month 35 Sl aetae pei ot the following shtes: hudget; knows no such word as extravagance. i Mrs, C. F. cNutt i day at 8:00 P, M, 1. O.O. F. HALE In Scottish Rite Temple g Qe sear, in advance, §15.00; six months, in advance, $7.80; | the dollar price of victory is so small when compared Margaret Femmer | The gasboat Cycan, Capt. Halverson, which was used by the prohibi- | 87 RS v Watsote bebIAtAE of 7800, b Subseribers will confe favor if they will promptly notity | with the costs of defeat that few will begrudge their Lorraine Carlson | tion enforcement officers, ran on a sand spit at Rocky Pass, resultin 4 the Business Office :0(“ an fallure or irregularity in the de- | } ¢ o 5 g i Mrs. Charles Fox b 3 : e s * | Forest D. Fennessy ....Noble Gran WALLIE 8. S8R lvers e thetr DRDers. hare of the expense. The resources we possess in IS el {in a small leak. The Cycan was the largest boat to have ever passed|g v Callow ... .Secretan | Worshipful Master; JAMES W Telephones: News Office, 602; Bustness Office, 374. nature, in man power and in concepts of government Dorothy Thibodeau through Rocky Pass. —_ e | EIVERS, Secretary. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS lare so tremendous that we can overcome without D““"‘Ig ’:“_’"“ | e & B k A A AL D e o dirts . or mot sthers | AN Breat suffering all the expenditures which the Mis Bt | P. W. M. Colburn was leaving on the Yukon for Anchorage where The Sevml! aske wise credited In this paper and also the local news published |conflict has placed upon our shoulders. We can do rn-,n»»—.lfll - |he was to be associated with the Alaska Railroad. He had been employed BABY HEADQUARTERS warfields’ Drug Store | KA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER ‘ hat, and easily enough, i “.‘ will remember 1‘. our 7 lat the Governor's Office Infant and Children’s Wear (Formerly, Guy L. Smith Drugs) | "HAN THAT OF ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. present accomplishments have come through a system ! ! B e - - g 2 5 i ! | X LD T 3 3 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska | NYAL Family Remedies | pou NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES ‘Alaska Newspapers, 1411 |of free enterprise; if we guard closely that § z‘ Jack Woodard and “Doc” Sweeney left in a small boat four days prior | HO K'S DANISH Ser AT T ey Paie AT | through the future years. ! “The stars incline :'m this on a hunting trip to Point Arden and were expected back two| = e R R:(!é CRE ‘}" | o } but do not compel”’ { |days from this time. Owing to the wind storm off Taku, they had not DH E H KASER . i | Lynch Law 3 P { | been reported. Jack Lund left on a gasboat the same day enroute to o Lo 13 | - PUSSSEEUSUY ~ | Grand Island and he was another who hadn't been heard from DENTIST 1 o | (Washington Post) SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER:' 23 ‘ e BLOMGREN BUILDING B. P. 0. ELKS Some ugly pictures—literally—have been coming The Norton homestead at Mendenhall, owned by Mrs. Roy Norton, Phone 56 : 2 i L4 | Meets every Wednesday at 8 out of France. They show men who have been mauled | - Neptune dominates the planesary | been sold to J. P. Anderson of the Juneau Florists. HOURS:9.A. M.t 8 B-M.. |1t Jests e WL Eas & by mobs and women whose heads have been shorn |influences today, when the rule is S e || B Y s because they were believed to have been too friendly |benefic. There should be keen fore-‘ h & come. A. B, HAYES. Exalted ‘s :l‘ '”‘ o ;( Vad ¢ Al . St o [sight and good judgment in im-| Mrs. Harry J. Fisher, who had been visiting in California for Several | —————— Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. with the Nazis, is hard to undrstand and to sym- |SI& a | PRI s tias. i & ke 4 ! | pathize with the hatred for collaborationists felt by [portant matters while this con-|Wee ks, was a x):«a»mul North on the Admiral Rogers which left from Dr A w Slewari »: | all loyal Frenchmen. Everyone must hope that these |figuration prevails | Seattle this day. . 2 raitors will be brought to stern justice. But justice! HEART AND HOME: Women | oo o DENTIST n never effectively be administered through lynch [are under rather an adverse sway| R. W. Mize, son of Weather Man R. C. Mize, left on the Princess| | 0 oo o e “ FLOWEBLAND [ law today which ma r ) rvallis, Oregon, er the A ; 3 | law A oday which may be depressing and | Alice for Corvallis, Oregon, to enter the Agricultural College there, taking s o -y CUT FLOWERS—POTTED There are grave dangers when an infuriated |nerve-racking. Recreation should be |, course in electrical engineering. . Office one PLANTS—CORSAGES ‘;.n pulace uu".l‘mn.\ uT take ?u.\m-v into its c\\'u.hund& sought after a stubborn effort lo}‘ g “For those who deserve the best” | Innocent persons are all too likely to suffer along)keep a domestic ship on an even Weather report: High, 44; low, 43; cloudy 2nd and Franklin Phone 557 WHAT COSTS WAR? with the guilty, and innocent persons include pro|keel. This is a time to look for forma collaborationists, who kept things going in|ward, not backward, Regret Over| feeeee——ee o it e i Dr. John H. GEYET —_—m DENTIST | ASHENBRENNER A 2 A silenced France. Personal vengeance may be inflicted | o5t joys should be overcome by 5 Inevitably the United States, when the war ends, |j;, tho name of popular retribution. To be sure, the | qetermined will. Dail Lessons in En IlSh by 2 will begin o count the cost of converting surplus | maintenance of order and the establisment of judiclal | BUSINESS AFFAIRS: waga! y g W. L. GORDON Room 9—Valentine Bldg NEW AND “szn | war materials into ordinary commercial channels, |Processes is not easy in such turbulent times as|eqmers should practice thrift for £ig | PH 762 g $ - | France is now experiencing. Nevertheless, these are | 1.« remainder Pl e s s s s S e | G O o e One Congressman, we note, warns that losses will be the remainder of 194 er months e Pong A, \ : essential if the real culprits are to be brought to book. | SNENIE L b ee should| WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “T shall do it the same as great; that while a B-24 bomber costs millions, its { Each person accused of having betrayed his country- \bo careful survey of postwar con- I did before.” Say, “JUST as I did before. Phone 788-—306 Willoughby Ave. peacetime worth is almost nothing, since it cannot be | men should be brought to trial, confronted with the | ;i * The seers predict many OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Falcrum. Pronounce ful-krum, first| | ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. 1esses agalnst g E: 3 y converted to peacetime work. The same rule applies | oo 28, e A O ordancs {0 Lestify | pnonths in which numerous war in- | U’ as in UP. not as in FULL. Graduate Los Angeles College to thousands of items which have been manufactured |law, recelvé hi¥ deserts, - \d‘hlll(‘s must maintain the highest OFTEN MISSPELLED: Asphyxiate. Observe the PHYX, pronounced of Optometry and ] S Sh for military purposes The sooner General de Gaulle's provisional gov- ernment can establish this sort of law and order, the evitable postwar conversions will SYNONYMS: Implication, inference, allusion, intimation, innuendo, | | G)asses Fitted Lenses Ground LADIES'—MISSES' | Monetary losses which will come with peace must, I oinga ” azards | iS00 05 onded BUL thes can !f‘l ‘ "¢ | sooner will its authority come to be respected and |bring vt"ll)lo_\m?l:l hazards hint st b S B (O SR READY-TO-WEAR B it s tiats EH a3 B ' be measured | oo ded. One of the dread consequences of lynch law | NATIONAL ISSUES: An acce WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us s & | iadna bk ey ‘!““ it ]'““ cents. Let's turn | js » total breakdown of authority, a destruction of the [0f patriotism will 3" evident in 4111 laciias i JobiAiaY b8 Hasterlin anesword each.day. Todave wardifll L ward Street Near Third - | or a mom to this more cheerful aspect of the |yery system of self-government which men have de- \|;axl~ of lth un)n:e ‘:;Im;su:“mxw SERENITY; quietness; stillness. “A general peace and serenity newly DB A E i vised for their own protection. And an even more |lons realize the e i ; bl i % —_ succeeded a general trouble.’—Sir W. Temple. . H. new and unused, represents a far greater | fearful effect is a debasement into savagery of those |which men in the service have suf- g “The Store for Men" loss to the people of the United States than the same ) Who participate in the mob spirit and its bloody fered and sacrificed in wmmm. T LTS OSSP SO ,,,,,,v,,,,,,,,,,_? OSTEOPATH Every day of flight requires thousands of dollars; | France would be tragic for its survivors as well asjof the globe. 4 | MODERN ETIOUETTE { Gastineau Hotel Annex s for its victims, It is greatly to be hoped that eve INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: | ROBERTA LEE z | S. Prankiin PHONE 177 \ L might cost precious and irreplacable American lives. oy 1 ; erican 1Ves. | oec)3 will be made by the French themselves to bring | Hungary continues under evil por- Front St.—Triangle tldg :\i;’l""b(*:i:)i‘;“"[htl“”""“_:; 'l‘y‘m";;"““;“_‘:_ll‘v‘l"\““”v’; l'l’”" their country swiftly under a rule of law. General tents, presaging great discontent in == SR % L, S TR e S DR B e woultl have bees b ! great as | gisenhower’s Allied forces should lend all possible |the nation's postwar position. There Q. Is it proper to drink consomme from a cup or to use a spoon? hey w K n had the fighting continued, | gssistance toward this end. is a sign warning of more tricky, A. Tt is proper to use a spoon for the first few mouthfuls of con- - : - —-——— |secret methods of the Nazis Who somme. One may continue to use a spoon or may lift the cup and sip its " S " waShin fon fects of intelligence work inside the | Allied occupation. |will introduce barbaric devices of contents. | The Rexall Store H. S GRAVES g Reich, are now finally awinced | Just what efforts have been!defense as they fight their last Q. Upon which finger does a man wear a wedding ring, when thewl Your Reliable Pharmacists “The Clothing Man” there is no chance of an honest | made by the Allies to contact the battles. o = e i od? MFHY' anti-Hitler revolt by the German | millions of slave laborers remains Persons whose birthdate it is ""‘“2" ’;’m e Wb ) BUTLER-MAURO HOME OF HART SCHAFFNEN e i % secret, whi ay N 5 iy e e man wears a wedding ring, as a woman does, on the finger DRUG CO. & MARX CLOTHING Go_Round people. What's more, efforts to a military secret, which may make |have the augury of a year of g et Ul i ATt a B 1%k bavia i ; spawn a pro-Allied underground in | exciting reading as soon as it canfortune, satisfactory health and "% " P50l L ke in the room of a convalescent? Continued pesed Page One) Germany have met with failure. |be revealed. 8 |generous financial returns b 1l e oo o ol L . (contin : ) | Brincipat reashn s that the: Ges- ey | Children born on this day prob- | . o, unless the convalescent himself is smoking. c A l. l r o n n IA po controls everything—including MERRY-GO-ROUND |ably will be gifted and ambitious | « e HARBY nAcz I and no necessity for sailing in slow the Army hierarchy. The commun- | Several Congressmen peeking in|but sensative and quick-tempered g Grocery and Meat Market convoys, officials are confident that jg; ynderground has been com-|the House restaurant last week | (Copyright, 1944) [ I-O 0 K d LEA RN Druggisl 478 — PHONES — 37) | all except the Army of Occupation pletely liquidated; also all rem- | thought they saw Governor Dewey | - —— i an A. C. GORDON Foods in Germany will be back within pants of the Socialist and social- lunching w re » Har- i % g s ‘ ants alist and s - g with Representative Har- | ! “The Squibb Store Moderate Prices a few months. Democratic parties old Knutson of Minnesota. It| "DES TOMORROW s SRS RO NOTE—Greatest complaint againt. The only real hope Allied mili- wasn't Dewey, however, but Dana 1. What per cent of the world's automobiles are owned in the United the Army point system is that it tary leaders have is that the eleven | Bennett of Agriculture Service As- no allowance for men over million slave laborers brought to sociates. ‘A d High tide—5:11 a. m,, 13.6 feet. ndent of James' y.y iige 1106 a. m., 4.4 feet Is a naturalized citizen eligible to the Presidency of the United | 35, who apparently have to sweat Germs e e 3 Ssdon Benna g as | | f o v the wna Gt the Jape- Ramia. Prence, sBelgtum. Holland|sfe. wrkter,, wes cHant weleed| LN ALeTR8 B m 106 foet Bt o Mortuary nese war, unless the War Depart- and Norw puse gEn s, i ;4 e 3 | Low tide—11:51 p. m., 2.1 feet. | 3. Which is the more formal “Dear Mr. Jones,” or “My dear Mr. For BETTER Grocerles and D y, will conduct an in-| when he entered the Stevens Hotel -, . ment makes new allowances for creasing campaign of sabotage, per- during the Chicago Republican | { g e A : FuihiniSad “‘“;;’"‘ g, Phone 16—24 them haps giving heart to large groups Convention last June. His resem- | RUMMAGE SALE [ & ‘a.ghat bvo Staies ave most, of our oranges grown? o g : of Germans to join them. blance to Dewey is remarkable . . .| By Methodist Ladies, Sept. 2| 5. Where is.Columbus now buried? ETTINIUS MUZZLED A year ago, Hitler and his hench- | When the Translux newsreel thea-!10 a. mm., in. basement of Church. | ANSWERS : One of the saddest sights in the men kicked these slave laborers| tres decided on their lobby poli-|Leave Rummage at basement or| 1. 72 per cent. WINDOW WASHING nation’s (;"del is flmmhl;‘ ;\L'H- around at will, fed them poorly, | tical poll, they ordered twice m;Cau 238. | 2. No. RUG CLEANING A JUNEAU' YOUNG meaning Undersecretary of State worked them brutally under a whip | many Roosevelt pins as Dewey | D - | 3. “My dear Mr. Jone: | Edward R. Stettinius plodding jash. Of late, this pressure has | pins . Before he came to Con- B 4. California and Florida. it i Hardware Company along the rough roads of diplomacy peen eased. In some insta Senator Wallace White,| (PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY 5. Seville, Spain gt PAINTS—OIL—GLASS | wearing his daddy’s size-12 boots. Nazis have reportedly given special Mot e Republican, three times ran} Have. & portrait artist take your DAVE MILNER Shelf and Heavy Hardware | Real fact is that, though Stet-ireatment to their captives on the |for Mayor of Lewiston, each time |Picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite SE R e = Phone Red 578 I Guns and A:m-nlu-u | tinius has now b}l‘t'" Undersecre- |chance that they themselves will!being soundly trounced by Demo- |Federal Building, Phone 204. Adv. tary for a year, he is still belng not be too badly punished by the|crats. In the last election, he re- s 7 FE . led around by the hand, is looked Allies when Germany falls. | mained in Washington—and Lewis- SAVE THE PIECES CABL JonAHso" i You'll Find Food Finer and | | upon l\\nn disdain xb)\ many of l}n\ It is now even possible for a few | ton went Republican. “T guess it is|of your broken lenses and send| JOHN AHLERS CO Service More“ocdo-pl:k 4 underlings in the Departmer 3 SR TR i S o % Y e . " AQ 2 , | © el el B Tl S P forelgn stay out of Maine,” laughed Sen- | y 3 y EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this PLUMBING, HEATING and THE BARA"oF | X as petty Nazi police try to!ator White. jour large and well equipped labora- i t the b {1 f the——— r Department officials are seated by accumulate enough foreign cur (Cobon b I tory. s evening av e Dox Ol & SHEER MERALSUCFLIES a 8 1g - opyright, 1944, by United tory. C. M. and R. L. Carlson. 0il Ran d Oil Heate: cofl"EE anP hlL’ ‘-*“1" to give him the right yepncy to live safely dmmg, lhc‘ Feature S)ndmate Inc.) | e CAPITOL THEATBE gos An e answers. ikl . ¥4 7 : In addition, Stettinius' press ('0:;- il TELEP@E L oToRy and receive TWO TICKETS to see: erences are a travesty, due to the | Is to be published this month and " " JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. worried presence of press-relations | forms will close Oct. 10. For space, STAGE DOOR CM'TEE“ INSUR ANCE BUSINESS COUNSELOR | chief Mike McDermott. Actually f i listings and changes, please. call the Authorized to Practice Before | Stettinius is ready and willing to! L R ™ positions | Juneau and Douglas Telephone Co. Federal Tax —11c per Person \ the Treasury Department and | trust the press and public, but! © Sound of ¢ o RO tor & e iPhone 420 before the closing date. | WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Shanuck A enc Tax Court | Hull and McDermott won't let| 9 Allow 38. Shrill ba | —adv. [\a gency COOPER BUILDING ' Title of Athena Romantic fo el the rosults of the Dumbar.| 15 K (o keeo 47, Cookli for- Rara: Vi Duncan’s Cleaning e ErrEwRTER ton Oaks conference. As the meet- . Boy =;l\12"d4"! 4 an0 and PRESS SHOP Bold and Serviced by ing started in the State ment’s plush, pompous conference room, McDermott jumped up, said the meeting would be “off the rec- = Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset’ J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfled Customers” ries of a bridle ma donna ERSGR BERSE CERER oim| Reauty Salon ord.” Whenever Stettinius started f\r‘j};)\:»‘m - to answer questions, McDermott| 63. Spread loosely 65 ( stopped him. The only frank ans- L veyance z 0 R . C : ] wers came out when McDermott Century plant { ) “Say It With Flowers” but | left the room to answer a phonel : “:;[ZE‘S’;"CE" % SYSTEM CLEANING “SAY IT WITH OURS!” | call, | % Bloneun £ Phone 15 | Later, Stettinius pointed out that | &Sl , ! Juneau Florists ‘ if Dumbarton Osaks were a com utinizes Alaska Laundry Phone 311 ! | Heavy silk medieval [y bric 9. Heir . Flush with EXPERIENCED - 1 . OPERATORS > | IN THIS BANK pletely American show, the public might be better informed. McDer- | mott blew up at this, said, “The| State Department isn't trying to| pass the buck to the British or the | Russians.” Meekly echoed Stet- | tinius: “Of course we are not try- ing to pass the buck. We assume | the responsibility.” Many competent diplomatic ob- servers wonder when Roosevelt will either give Stettinius his head or ship him to an overseas diplomatic post. One wiseacre asked testily after a brush with Stettinius the other day, “When will Roosevelt stop sending out boys to do a man’s work?” | nals’ - 1891—0ver Half a Century of Banking—1944 ?,‘:x"hk SPECIALIZING IN: 1 ARE The B. M BEhrelldS Tiiong o ® Cold Waving ‘ I N S U RE D Bank 9A. M.TO € P. M. Flrst Naiififial Ballk SHOP HOURS ® Permanent Waving Oldest Bank in Alaska OPEN EVENINGS BY prlle s of JUNEAU, ALAS COMMERCIAL SAVINGS PHONE 538 . Bacchana- lian e Accomp! . ———— . S 2 ———S. INSIDE GERMANY Allied leaders, after surveying ef-

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