The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 14, 1944, Page 4

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TUESDAY, N()VI:VIBI:R l4 |944 PAGE FOUR {invaston of the British Isles In the Pacific, Australia and New Zealand are now safe from attack and beyond further damage.| The British, of course, will want back Singapore mx\ Hongkong, but they figure that when the Japs are defeated they’ll get those back, anyhow. | NOVEMBER Of course, we can and will de Japan if the American people sustain their full.war effort for as| H. L. Faulkner long after the defeat of Germany as is necessary. But | William Haynes not defeated Japan so far in spite of naval| Walter A. Soboleff victories. Japan can never be defeated from the sea | Mrs. Stanley D. Paris es .. alone. Even the regaining of the Philippines will not Mrs. Frank Henderson g <l PR Such key bases exist only in China and| N Ui promptly notify i AR L E R. M. Campbell g \ \e Japs still are winning victories daily. Akt ) to celebrate will be when both wars are | SO Lot Japan is just starting i e e ee ‘GIVE A PERMANENT WAVE FOR CHRISTMAS—GET YOUR GIFT CERTIFICATE AT rom YEARS AGO Tifs mupire LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON —rrrrrssrrroroooeeeeee=3 11 A Special Reduced Price On All Permanents for the Holidays 1 B NOVEMBER 14, 1924 PHONE 492 estimated attendance of between 700 and 800 was reported by Bazaar officials at the opening the previous night. There were Silver Bow Lodgt ked booths, a tea garden furnished beverage and little Caroline No.AZ%T.0. O.E @Meets each Tues. day at 8:00 P. M. I. O. O. F. HALkK Visiting Brothers Welcome fter delighted with entertaining dances. Dancing for adults was in the billlard room. post office and | Forest D. Fenfiéssy .....Noble Grand ; did not divulge [H- V. Caliow . Secretar to Juneau and il —_— Warfields' Drug Stoze | (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedics HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CRE!/ : . Daily Alaska Empire ¢ EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main HELEN TROY MONSEN DOROTHY TROY L WILLIAM R ELMER A. FRT ALFRED ZENG Entered in the i HAPPY BIRTHDAY the President e residant d Manager ging Editor Business Manager we feat MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 SECOND and FOURTR Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple beginning at 7:30 p. m. WALLIS S. GEORGE Worshipful Master; JAMES W LEIVERS, Secretary. in Juneau as Second Class Matter. su N RATES we Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douglas for $1.50 per month; six months, $15.00 By have Rev THo Indians, believed to have robbed | the Hawk Inlet | store yere reported seen on Kuiu Island. The authoritie their hames. The Indians are believed to have comé swiped a boat from Douglas and made their way down the channel ailure or irregul Telephones: News Off 1siness Office, 374, MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoctatea tress is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news ¢ redited to it or not other- wise credited in this papc o the local news published herein total war agains SAVE THZD [ VUSSP S POy H 0 R O S c 0 P E Ceach Baker planned to have a big squad out'this night for the first ame of the Junmeau High School &gainst the Kooties from Chilkoot y e On to Berlin PIECES of your broken lenses and send them to Box 468, Ketchikan, Alaska. They will be replaced promptly in pur large and well equipped labora- tory. C. M. and R. L. Carlson. ncinnati Enquirer) There will be no repetition of of 1918—the failure to occupy the of Germany. | For that we now have the word n s an authority than Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who says the Allies strategic plan calls for a march all the way to Berlin to overcome and seize the capital Our task in this war is fiot merely to fight Ger-| 1411 “The stars incline but do not compel” {| Y Allied blunder The school orchestra of 20 pieces was to give a concert on November 23 in the Elks Hall. Rehearsals were being held nightly. B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- come. A. B. HAYES, Exalted Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15 | e The Sewing Baskel BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children's Wear 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska the meeting construction The Juneau Chamber of Commerce was informed a planetary | {his day that the Juneau Lumber Company planned ¢ In the|rogram, enlarging the mill to at least double the present capacity. place of Until late today the |aspects are unimportant afternoon Jupiter is in a ;“fi’;;_:};‘_’;“f;n PR A “Hook and Ladder” feature was to be shown at the Palace Theatre | 7 OME: Geography, |, g the members of the Juneau Fire Department were to be guests of which has been the chief study in | s |familtes that followed the move- |Menager Spickett. GRIYG Y. Kaiser's Germany was not actually beaten. ments of armies, will continue to ¥ This time the war already has come home 10 absorb attention. The Pacific now Germany oh a vivid scale in one respect. The wide- |will focus the of Ameri ranging American and British air fleets have left feW | cans, especially who ‘live’ in | ) German cities without their blackened piles of Tubble | western states. From How oh east- where factories, railway stations, bridges and Ware- |y residents are to learn much i B many until she says she’s had enough, but to defeat in such a way that a to be undertaken to Germany, their talk that the the «and Hitler the | her third effort to rule world is not likely Last time, war never really came home and his ilk found credence for Weather report: 43; minimum, 40; misting ettt e et 4 ) Daily Lessons in English %. 1. corpon § e e ittt} Maximum, . B K FLOWERLAND CUT FLOWERS—POTTED BLOMGREN BUILDING PLANTS—CORSAGES Phone 56 “For those who deserve the best, HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. PACIFIC WAR 2nd and Franklin Phone 557 |' — e e \ houses once stood. But we still need the ImPIESSION |ypout the Orient which s to be ‘ that only the Allied armies can give when they P g Unter den Linden. The present generations | T oikhs Tiave. bean raised o Rdmite RN TEADRCE| o mrs. COLIIer08, L8 L r. §0/a firsbhant demiorEbANoN Of Girs | oo oS CAFRAIRS. Hankers | might vividly impress them with the military strength :‘:“' n}-)xl-:}‘('»‘]\\[\\‘f{ri”.“l;l"t this month ik the | that the peace-loving nations of the world can sum- | sl g Yeisirgmio “kr"‘;mt g '€ | mon when occasion demands United States Government and little the | phe long-nurtured German love of militarism can't {felations with foreign countr war from here In the war against Ger- | pe cured with an application of taloum powder. It [Pear to be removed the English were faced with the probability | must be excised and cauterized with an example that of international ba unless Hitler was defeated there militarism is a sword that cuts two ways. satisfactorily |dicated Americans are busy planning cele- brations to mark the end of the war in Europe, others are thinking about the war in the Pacific and what effect the end of the war in Europe will have in the conflict against Japan We s d Britisn Pacific While man; down of G milifary powe ED: Do not say, “Did you e Niagara SEEN Niagara Falls?” y 2D Pronounce naf-tha second A as in ASK unstressed ; IR, not ER WORDS OFTEN MIS T see 1s?” Say, “HAVE you ¢ ()FTLN MISPRONOU! p-tha), first A as in AT, OFTEN MIS ELLED: E SYNONYMS: Robust, V. WORD STUDY: © neredse otr vécabulary EXPEDITE; inning the Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST aphtha (not | ASHENBRENNER'S HEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 7 -306 Willoughby Ave. That is interest face that have comparatively one 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 = , hearty Let us word: by on three times and it you word each day. Tod f We can expedite matter many, vocs that by mastering o achieved in- Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ om 9—Valentl READY-TO-WEAR | 1dg. RTA LEE Room 9—Valentine Bldg. ‘ PHONE 762 Seward Street Near Third | — [r———eeey Dr. John H. Geyer DENTIST would be an to hasten the work immediately.” % Py R R TR | NATIONAL War Production Board Chairman, for Roosevelt behind the scenes|yog security but made an effective radio speech, temarked after it was all over more ‘dlscissed, with promiss of by worked hard backstage for FDR. | “T've gone down the line in 1936, Jasting - peace. Thosd Who' tead | MODERN ETloUETTF Y Secretary of the Interior Ickes— in 1040 and in 1944. This time Iitho ctars, however, foretell recu J ROBER Those €lose-up to the Cabinet knew want to be paid off. And I want rence of war in which the "mlpu‘l»“”“— e TR Wl e o i how many times FDR has given just one thing” he States again will win victory at| the cold shoulder to various Ickes Want Roosevelt to begin great cost | Q B ; projects; has sided with palace build up some real men capa INTERNATIONAL AFFAIR she remain seated? favorite Harry Hopkins in the taking over his mantle. He 2 {The New Moon of this date has| A ghae 8 b )w\“'\‘.‘ ae pitter Hopkins-Ickes rivalry. Yet that to us by this time Fiiter bonloted wilh M | to a man or a woman; also if the other person is elderly or disti Ickes whas the President's main s in an | b, aspect most promising is not ne Cabinet speech-maker, hurled to the| Otherwise, it ary United Nations, The chart is read| @ When one is at the table, how large a mouthful of food should pointed barbs which the White as indicating tial House couldn’t but definitely want- demobil one take? tion of our f ed hurled. ISSU will be Future | more and | z VTashingi;nfl o R Menry- Go-Round (Continued from Page One) continued. “I now to PSSR BL A My “The Store for Men" SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. Is it correct for a to rise when being introduced, or Shoyld | pe————————— ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground SRR TR R ARSI R oman ble introduced yuished should rise, whether being owes barnstorming trip, sometimes mak- ing 20 brief speeches a day, pulled votes for the man who didn’t want him. Wallace could have job as Secretary of a minute, if he we has indicated to “Also, Liberal-Democratic-Republican or- anization built up which can really take over the job of winning the peace. Roosevelt owes us that| too. That's the only pay I want, but I think I and a lot of others are entitled to it.” I want to see a strong ck his old | Agriculture in d it. But he| friends that he| Bob doesn’t want it. Also, friends say|War he is not going to be satisfied |Gen. Somervell and the Brass Hats with being Ambassador to China|didn't like him. He wo | or with some other “Siberian” as-|Henderson on the Independent| (Copyright, 1944, by signment | Committee for Roosevelt, raised| Feature Syndicate, The President, {thousands of dollars. hand, is profour grateful and| Sidney Hillman—Fired from the wants to give Wallace real recog- Office of Production Management nition. If Cordell Hull should re-|without warning by FDR. He regis- sign as Secretary of State, Henry,|tered more voters—and got them now recognized as a first-hand|out on Election Day—than any specialist on China, Russia and|other man in the United States. Latin America, would have first|A lot of people, including Hanne- call on the job. gan, looked upon Hillman with NOTE—At Bethesda Naval Hos-|mixed feelings, but without Hill- pital, 73-year-old Secretary H\lll‘a;man's stirring up of the vote, an‘ biy I JURBAD PRt STy | G, health is nhot considered good,|might not have remained in mt-i | Lewis Shoppihg Bervice, 901 Sixth though he’s no immediate | White House : Pt i B ek e e De.| Vice President Wallace—Ousted | o o partment [ast 'year, six fonths off |{OF renomination, but the Year before, Hull has one great/|the line as noted above ambition, extremely dear to m_\‘ NOTE- Meanwhile, others around the President who have received | Precinet, at Juneau ,Alaska, Joseph heart—to finish the Dumbarton 4 ? ) e Oaks peace machinery, This is now |femendous personal recognition | NDE | Riedi was appointed administrator of can manage easily if one is asked son try to talk with a mouthful ear ghters at an A. Only large enough so that one date. It is disgustin > a pe Persons whose have the ausury of fortune. Decisions in love and busi- ness should be made only after| careful consideration. 1 Children born on this day prob- | ably will like outdoor sports and | other recreatio; should be | |taught early 1f-discipline financial responsibility. (Copyright, 1944) 1. What group of American settlers decorated their household furni- ture with the pomegranate and tulip motifs? Venison is the meat of what animal? What is a whatnot? In what version of the Bible is the Apocrypha? Who appeared when Aladdin rubbed his lamp? ANSWERS: ‘The Pennsylvania Dutch. Of deer. An ornamental set of shelves for holding bric-a-brac The Douai ve! A genie. P ———— "“The Rexall Store"” a question. g to f food. Q. What should one do when in doubt as to requires a reply? Your Reliable Pharmacists A. When in doubt, it would be better to reply. i BUTLER-MAURO o R e e LR s B DRUG CO. '.OOK and LEARNA C. GORDO S e birthdate it is a year of good H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER | & MARX CLOTHING Nathan—Eased out of the, Production Board because her an invitation | United Inc.) on the other and | CALIFORNIA Grocery and Meat Markel 478 — PHONES — 37) High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices HARRY RACE Druggist SERVICEM “The Squibb Store” MEN, HOM OWNERS If you need something you can't i The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Grocertes Phone 16—24 in SR 8 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: | ( 4 That on November 13th, 1944, in the | Commissioner's Court for Juneau | HARRI MAC]IINE SHOP WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING JUNEAU - YOUNG virtudlly complete;-sifter! whieh Hui [did Httle ‘or mothing. Jease Jones NEW MANAGEMENT | the estate of NELS HALL, deccased. | may ‘step aside i made only one speech near the PF PNEED -end of the campaign. Jim “NEW YORK REBUILT" ‘F\.m stal, picked up by FDR from { Wall Street and catapulted into the Pilots of the Air Transport Com- allcitparty 4593 mand assigned to fly important|® '”"V'/"_”“”“ Job ?fbwuelaryn of Nazi _prisoners from Europe to the (56 Navy, mads i Specdlies. " Becs Uit States réport fhat the At~ | c>y of “War “Stimson Wouldn' titude of the prisoners varies from/|SVen 88y how he was going' to- vote. silent and resentful to openly glad and relieved. Invariably, American Army food is a constant source of astonishment—even to high Nazi| officers. Orie thing that usually happens as they fly over New York is a remark from the prison “Re- markably good engiheers you have in this count The pilots agree, remark New York is a miracle city word from the Germans is: "It is amazing how they could rebuild the city so quickly.” Almost without exception, pilots say, the Nazis have lowed Goebbel line ‘that other American were lor o reduced to by Nazi bombs. And almost out exception, they sit in disillu- | sioned silence for the last lap of the trip—from New York fo Wash- ington. WHAT ROOSEVELT OWES US One of those who worked . Tahle attendants Ol1d musical note Century plant Chinese pagoda . Dismounted 2000 pounds . Sealloped on the margin Type measure Chart ACROSS . Ingredient of varnish that Alack Daughter of Cadmus . Made into & ATC fabric swal- New cities rubble with- tl 1 covering Mediocre hard {Il Serving' CHINESE 1 and AMERICAN | DISHES DINE AND DANCE Open 24 Hours a Day M| Al per sons having claims against said estate are required to present them, with verified vouchers as re- quired by law, to said administrator | at the office of his attorney Howard D. Stabler, Shattuck Building, Ju- neau, Alaska, within six months from the date of the first publica- tion of this notice. JOSEPH RIEDI, Administrator. First publication, Nov. 14, 1944 | Last publication, Déc. 4, 1944. Close by: poetic . Disturbance WERE KICKED OUT Wondering fear . Learning ‘BUT HELPED When you call the role of those who helped re-elect Roosevelt, you { . Deciares Sob indrical nty in Colorado . Co can't escape ohe butstahding con- clusion: Men he ‘kicked out or around contributed a Hon's share to his victory. The professional politicians, with the exception of Mayor Ed Kelly of Chicago, didn't help too much. Likeable, energetic Bob Hannegan of Missouri was no great beacon tower. Actually the President him- self, as usual,. was his own best campaigner. He carried the chief load. But second to him, here is a roll call of the ex's ard kick- arounds who really went down the line for the man who kicked them: I Leon Henderson—Kicked out as, OPA Admunistrator, but organized the Independent Roosevelt Commi tee, raised thousands of dollars. Donald Nelson—Kicked ouf as AP Newslontuces Firearm Help Having feet © Witnessed Before Ignited again Kind of rock . Fragment feft al a meal . Irrikate Unaccompanted . Pouch . Worked out in detail Curve . Beast Bitter veteh Optical illusion Devoured O al Sweetheart . Genus of the clothes moth” Shrub wallan goose tute Gone by . Thing: law flJomens Appanet Baranof Hotel Building HAIR STYLED by Experts WE SPECIALIZE in Cold Waving Pe_r_mnnents Styling Shaping Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P Baranof Beauty Salon OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE 538 Acetylene Welding, " (Scott-Newcomb Systom Plumbing, Heating, Blacksmithing FRED HENNING as a paid-up subscriber 1o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "“GIRL CRAZY" Federal Tax —11¢ per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! TH‘E management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety d depositors’ funds is our rimary consideration. In .&Ififiofi the bank is 4 mem- ber of Federal Depasit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each of ‘our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. J DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED Tirst Qfimugnal Bank R FEDERAL DE SIT INSURANCE CORPORATION T T R e S SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone Red 578 JOHN AHLERS CO. P, O. Box 2508 PHONE 34 PLUMBING, HEATING and SHEET METAL SUPPLIES 0il Ranges and Oil Heaters INSURANCE Shattuck Agency Duncan’s Cleaning I COFFEE SHOP and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing * PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” ZORIC SBYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammanition M _— You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A. BUSINESS COUNSELOR i Authorized to Practice Before the Treasury Departtent 4no | Tax Court COOPER BUILDING L. C. Smith and Corona TYPEWRITERS Sold and Serviced b, J. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Batisfled Custorners” ‘1 Ai “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists Phone 311 1831—0ver Half a Cenfury of Banking—1944 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS

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