The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 15, 1945, Page 4

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PAGEFOURi e : Daily Alaska Empire Published every evening except Sunday by the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY Second and Main Streets, Junezu, Alaska, HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - - President DOROTHY TROY LINGO - - - Vice-President WILLIAM R. CARTER - - Editor and Manager ELMER A FRIEND - - - - Managing Editor ALFRED ZENGER - - - - Business Manager Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Douslas for $1.50 per month; six months, $8.00; one vear, $15.00. , postage paid, at the following rates: advance, §15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; one month. dvance, $1,50 Subscribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notify the Business Office of any fallure or irregularity in the de- livery of their papers. Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 37 EMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- pise, gredited in this paper and also the local news published heréln. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIV. Alaska Newspapers, 1411 Fourth Avenue Bidg., Seattle, Wash, THE PERPETUAL DANGER Perpetual danger frem the “legion of the quis- lings” is cause for a warning on the editorial page of Knickerbocker Weekly. “There is no doubt that when the war is won there will remain the invisible legion which will not have given up: the legion of the quislings. These traitors form an international evil. The most danger- ous Nazis and Fascists will have disguised themselves into harmless-looking characters under new aliases. They will need time to create new positions, very probably much more diffused throughout both hemi- sphere than before,” says this weekly Netherlands Magazine, published in New York to keep the world | informed about Holland. “People who honestly think that at the end of this war every German conspirator or German-minded collaborator will cease activity, people who are con- vinced that the postwar world is necessarily safe for democracy—these people make an error which in its consequences is very perilous,” Knickerbocker warns. A contributor to the magazine comments on the tendency of Hollanders abroad to feel sorry for the Dutch traitors rounded up by their patriotic country- men as their country was released from German occu- pation. “Sure enough, they had hated and condemned the quislings as long as the latter were free and could commit their crimes with impunity; but as soon as some of the guilty had been caught, these far-away bystanders became victims of the sentimentality.” *The chief argument of those who felt a sudden weakness in their hearts when they thought of the fate awaiting the fettered quislings, was that many of the gang had acted in good faith, believing they ged with collaborationism were being held, inter- ! views revealed only one self-confessed Nazi who be- lieved that “Hitler would make a better world.” An- other woman stuck to her pre-liberation principals and said that she was a Nazi because her fiance was a German soldier and she loved him. Most of the claimed that while they were good democrats at heart they had joined the Nazi party or had aided the Germans for financial profit rest So the people that there are quislings throughout the world as well as in their own country, quislings in peace as well as war. They will help the Nazis prepare for a third war, they will Knickerocker warns HAPPY BIRTHDAY | \ D e e ] e e et et JANUARY 25, 1925 JANUARY 15 Betty McCormick Susan Ay Williams Mary Fitzgibbon Bernhart Savikko J. R. Gilbert Kenneth McGowan Clarice Edw M. M. Evan - Mrs. is - 20 YEARS AGO Gov. Scott C. Bone was to make | Commerce at the meeting the next day | deny collaboration; if they escape, Keep in the DACK- powoooeooeeee e s 9 | ground ‘War must be waged against this pestilence. The day after peace is signed, the day after the guns are | silenced, the quislings—and the completely unknown {and unsuspected ones—will be available for treachery. Now, this very moment, we must know how we e going to handle them. We must be prepared.” A bitter warning, but one made by a country ¥hat knows its quislings. Forgotten Fronts (New York Times) Disclosure by the Navy Department that since last July four Coast Guard cutters have been waging a successful but unpublicized war in the icy sea wastes |around Greenland, to prevent the Germans from 1 up stations there, reaffirms setting weather the | seldom realiz |surfact that is free from the possibility of becoming | a battleground, even at this stage of the war. This is | particularly true of the seas, which cover three- quarters of the earth, and that part of the land touched by the oceans. It will be true as long as Germany and Japan have access to blue water. There are few sea areas where Japanese or Ger- { man surface ships still can operate. They are limited | to certain fog-covered stretches of the North Atlantic, | Nerth Pacific and the Bering Sea, where detection is difficult. There is no place, however, that is safe from submarine penetration even though that has been are in both the western Atlantic and the { Pacific for many months because of the heavy losses taken by the Japanese and German submarine fleets. Disclosure of the Greenland activity, which re- sulted in the sinking of two armed trawlers, capture of a third and the capture of sixty men, also calls attention to the many forgotten fronts that still exits in Europe and in the Pacific. The Germans still hold the Channel Islands. With no announcement | to the contrary it can be assumed they also still have isclated pockets of resistance along the Biscayan Bay ccast of France. Many islands in the Aegean and Adriatic s also still are held by German or Italian sarrisons., In the Pacific there are hundreds of atolls far east of Saipan and Leyte over which the Rising Sun flag still flies, among them what once were some of the strongest enemy bases, including Truk, Rabaul, Ponape, Jaluit, Wotje and Maleolap. The men who keep the air and sea patrols, who their little cutters off Greenland, Alaska, Aleutians, the Marshalls, the Carolir the Mediter- ranean, the Indian Ocean, the South and North Atlantic and the great reaches of the Pacific, who are | blockading the Channel Islands and containing the ride | enemy forces in the French ports, suffer many of the | | discomforts of war but experience few of its satisfac- ed fact that there is little of the world's | tern | | There is no telling, though, when they may return.| T the | the | { HOROSCOPE “The stars incline but do not compel” | TUESDAY, JANUARY 16 Mingled good and evil planetary fluences are active today which |should be favorable to national spirations and stimulating (Government plans. HEART AND HOME: Women jare under promising aspects that jencourage their important activi- |ties. The impulse toward the sta- 'bilizing of interests should be strong. The wise will follow regu- llar programs of work and play. to {times will continue for an extended |period, it is forecast. Labor turn- Jmm in war indust will dim- inish as workers ize that the {prolonged conflict requires their {unabated efforts. NATIONAL ISSUES: Strain of work and heavy respon- and high Government from service. Deaths jmen and women n |fore the close of spring ERNATIONAL AFFARS: As- | trolog predict that the Nazis' desperate fight to delay final irender will be an aid to her fu- lture collaboration with Japan in ja plan for Greater Asia. Secret transfer of arms and machinery to the Orient is indicated Persons whose birthdate lhave the augury of a which good fortune may pected but there may istrain and overwork. Children born on thi should be irtensely active mentally, ambi- tious and energetic. Successful careers are foretold (Copyright, 1945) | HAIR STYLED executives of s is in ex- it year be be BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Prosperous | | i |A | Public | health will invite special attention | through the reminder of the winter. | |sibilities will remov e statesmen | famous | be many be- [ U as in CUBE, S as in SO (ot | the heart, nerve | | daughter-in-law to friends? | datghte | practically the same as for a luncheon? Admiral Watson arrived in port fre of a broken propellor blada necessitatin Rupert for repairs. Misses Irma and Margaret Petersc Pear] Harbor, i Metcalf, Lavenik, Bavard, Darby a to meet the bowlers of the Elks on thei Information was received in Juneau 1 man, had been married in San Lillian Lucille Metz Mrs. A. Van Mavern arrived from hd the newlyweds were from I THE EMPIRE | a talk before the Chamber of regarding his trip to Washington om Seattle, two days late because 1g the steamer to put into Prince m arrived on the Estebeth from and Barragar left for Ketchikan r home alleys. 1 that Walter B. King, prominent Francisco on Jinuary 7 to Miss to arrive here February 1 the South on the Princess Mary The Masons and Eastern Star held a tion at Douglas. Among those installed by the Stars were Lenora Edw Fraser ie Gair, Jane Cashen, Elvera Spain, Beatrice Guerin, Elizabeth Sey, Una Crowe, Marie Weschenfelder. Among the Masons inducted into office , F. A. J. Gallwas, Glen Kirkham, William Spain, Charles Goetz, E. E. Weschenfelder, W. F. Feero, Alex Gair, Edward , Jessie were Alex Sey, A. E. Sutton The Martha Society was to meet at the home of Mrs. W. Cheatham. The A. B. Hall had been tendered for rent for the coming session of the Territorial Legislature. Weather report: High, 33; low, 30; 1z fo——— o e e S R Daily Lessons in Engiish ¥, 1. corpox | i e i i i WORDS OFTEN Do not say, “You are apt to get in trouble.” Say, “You are LIABLE to get INTO trouble.” OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Delubive. Pronounce as Z), accent second OFTEN MISSPELLED: Palate (the roof of the mouth). painter's device). Pallet (a small bed) SYNONYMS: Explanation, justi WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: PENURY; absence of resources; destitution. “Chill penury weighs down itself, and thought metimes be endured with calmness the calmness of despair the E as in ME, lable. Palette (a tion, vindication, | excuse, | et us | | it it is but Mrs. Jameson. ettt A e i MODERN ETIQUETTE *4 'ROBERTA LEE ———d Q. What would be the best way for a woman to introduce her new A. A VEry appropriate 1Ir could give an afternoon luncheon and bridge would be n-law does not play bridge, one tea, | or a party in the evening Q. Would it be all right to have the menu of a wedding breakfast | A. Yes Q. Does etiquette require that a girl give her fiance an engagement MONDAY JANUARY 15, 1945 TRIPLETTE & KRUSE BUILDING CONTRACTORS EXPERT CABINET WORK OF ALL KINDS 20TH CENTURY MARKET BUILDING SHOP PHONE 96 ’ Silver Bow Lodge @Nn. A210.0.F. Mects each Tues- day at 8:00 P. M. I.0.0O.F. HA Visiting Brothers Wel GEORGE CLARK, Nobl e T -~ Warfields' Drug Sioze (Formerly Guy L. Smith Drugs) NYAL Family Remedies HORLUCK’S DANISH ICE CRE!/ e The Sewing Baskel BABY HEADQUARTERS Infant and Children’s Wear 139 S. Franklin Juneau, Alaska B —— DR. E. H. KASER DENTIST ! BLOMGREN BUILDING { Phone 56 HOURS: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Dr. A. W. Stewart ENTIST 20TH CENTURY BUILDING Office Phone 469 Dr. John H. Geyer VENTIST Room 9-—Valentine BEldg. PHONE 762 Lo R B ROBERT SIMPSON, Opt. D. Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and Opthalmology Glasses Pitted Lenses Ground “The Rexall Store” Your Reliable Pharmacists BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. RE— " FLOWERLAND | ! 2nd and Franklin ———— After 5:00 P. M. PH( | MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 SECOND and FOURTH Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Temple ¢ beginning at 7:30 p. m. E. F. CLEMENTS, Wor- ul Master; JAMES W. LEIV- Secretary. SAVE THD PIECES of your broken lenses and send them to Box 468, Ketchikan, Alaska. They will be replaced promptly in 1d well equipped labora- «A 1. and R. L. Carlson, our lar tory. C. = pnrire | B. P. 0. ELKS Meets every Wednesday at 8 P. M. Visiting Brothers wel- come. A. B, HAYES, Exalted Ruler; H. L. McDONALD, Secy. CUT FLOWERS—POTTED PLANTS—CORSAGES For those who deserve the best” Phone 557 ASHENBRENNER’S HEW AND USED FURNITURE Phone 788—306 Wu_.lnnlhh' Ave. LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Jones-Stevens Shop 11 Seward Street Near Third _— “The Store for Men" ‘ SABRIN’S - Front St.—Triangle Bldg. . S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNEa & MARX CLOTHING | tions. They seldom see an enemy face or an enemy but they must be forever on the alert for him. often are accused by the front-line soldiers and sailors of enjoying a soft life. Few would not trade their routine, tiresome but important patrols, I \ ! gift? i A. No. D e e LOOK and LEARN ¥ ¢ corpox - e 3 more than doubled in size and population after | served some sort of “ideal.” They weren't really bad, they were just foolish misled people. To the excuse of “idealism” the contributor has an answer. In the camp Washingfon Merry- GO'ROlllld ‘ On the whole, Judge Marvin Jones {and his War Food Administration aids have done a good job with .4 said, “It’s a |food production, but warehousing | Lo a temific dressing down—because |looks like a weak point in their Hartselle. i WFA . officials were “working on a setup. “That happens to be my home deal” to sell the powder for animal | Loai Bharkman . replied: feed. It could be used for animal| STEVE EARLY S U e feed, but that was all. PROTECTS PRESS “Horace Orr," replied the soldier e 0 ACME 10 Gl ME Part of the wastage undoubtedly! TIt's not known outside the White | “Do you know My rtle Orr, is due to the natural wastage of House, but Steve Early threatened Sparkman asked. [] war and may be unavoidable. But!to resign last month in a friendly | “Yes, sir. She’s my stepmother. in addition War Food officials have but firm disagreement with the,She married my pa” was the re- Baranof i i failed' to make inspections and do | President over two newspapermen.|Ply. “Do you know her?” | not reject a lot of poor quulu'h When the President returned: Sparkman then a\.slged if the lad | oo, e e e ™ nad any mesage for nis sien. | | IBCOAAEY Salon} OPEN EVENINGS BY -ases, the Government |the first things he did was call in mother. Myrtle Orr, now a widow, In many c d 0 bought millions of pounds of eges, Early and propose that the press is cook in Sparkman’s home in Washington. paying good prices simply on pres- credentials of Patterson-McCormick entation of a shipping receipt. The ' columnists John O'Donnell and, (Copy’ warchiousers who had agreed to|Frank Waldrop be taken up. “I| (Bell store thcse eggs until WFA could don’t want them at my press con- | RS get than to drying plants immedi- | ferences any more,” Roosevelt tnld! ately hegan to howl. | Early. | ] cder of a few rotten eggs| “But every paper in the country | can cintaminate all the eggs in a|will be hollering about freedom of | warehcuse—including those stored [the press if you do that,” Early | for private concerns as well as replied. | WFA. So the strage people began| The President teld Early it was| writing WFA urging disposal of not a case of freedom, that the| “these putrid eggs.” For instance, same papers could assign other men ! the Rainier Fruit Co., of Yakima, to the White House. He has long | Wash.,, whote that “practically all suffered from the vicious pens of | the cases in its shipment contained | these two whose isolationist anti- | maggots or cockroaches.” British, anti-Russian pens furnish | The.. New Haven, Conn., Cold many quotes for the Axis radio. Storage Company reported it had| FEarly then said he would do as| receivéd a shipment of eggs which the President asked—but that if| had been without refrigeration for he did so he would then resign as| from four to six weeks. One ('0m—|pl’vs:i secretary. And he could not | pany reported receipt of a car of be talked out of it. So President | colored Easter eggs more than a Roosevelt yielded to the judgement month after the holiday, another of the man who has guided his| company reported receipt of a ship- press relations ,for 12 long years.! ment of putrid duck’s eggs and He wanted Steve around the White | there were constant complaints of House more than he wanted| ipadequate shipping containers. O'Donnell and Waldrop kept away. | Some ‘cases were made of fibre]! NOTE—The President once be- which frequently collapsed when a'stowed a German iron cross on second case was piled on top. O'Donnell. Warehouser James Ronin of Al- bany, New York, wrote Andrew IT'S A SMALL WORLD Current, WFA warehouseman now| While in Rome during the trip resigned: “These eggs are coming he took with other members of the in lousy condition and the smell House Military Affairs Committee, | from some of them in the box Representative John Sparkman of cars (eggs should be shipped only 'Alabama visited a base hospital in refrigerator cars) would almost Arriving there he was delighted to knock you off your feet, tind that the nurses had moved all The result is storage companies, the Alabama bc into a single though anxious to aid in the WFA ward so that their likeable Con- egg-drying program, can't con- gressman might talk to them. taminate other food in their plans,| Sparkman chatted with 0. many have simply refused to group, asking their names aceept shipments from WFA. home towns in turn. Finally he In eastern Maryland recently came to a colored soldier who 150,000 cases of canned tomatoes seemed embarrassed at meeting a went bad after being kept too long. full-fledged Congressman. In New Bedford, Mass, 200,000 The soldier mumbled his name . 1 HARRY RACE ||| CALIFORNIA 1 : H Druggist 478 — PHONES — 37) | { High Quality Foods s} ¢ “The Squibb Store” Moderate Prices by Experts WE SPECIALIZE n “Ti What country | World War I? How many children did Johann Sebastian Bach have? How is the pretzel twisted? Pygmies are native of what continent? What is a “ghoul”? ANSWERS: Rumania. Twenty. By hand. Africa. A robber of the dead. at Maastricht where 1500 people for more active assignments. s cases of pork and beans were going and home town. Sparkman asked bad in the Stokely warehouse, but him to repeat and the colored boy most of the lot was lost when the | .. New England hurricane hit last |°* fall. ably | town.” But Sparkman Cold Waving The Charles W. Carter Moriuary Pourth and Franklin Sts. FHONE 136 “Mr. never Congressman, you prob- little PIGGLY WIGGLY For BETTER Grocegies Phone 16—24 of heard my inalsted and the| { Fermanents little town called (Continued from Page Omne) Slyling Shaping e WINDOW WASHING RUG CLEANING SWEEPING COMPOUND FOR SALE DAVE MILNER Phone Red 578 town, too,” “What did JUNEAU - YOUNG |+ Hardware Company | PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition - W. W. ROFF as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE | JOREN AHLERS CO. and receive TWO TICKETS to see: || PLUMBING, HEATING and ”THE FIGHTING SEABEESM SHEET METAL SUPPLIES 0il Ranges and Oil Heaters Federal Tax—11c per Person PHONE 14— THE ROYAL BLUE CAB C0. : and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Youw'll Find Food Finer and Service More Cemplete at THE BABANOF | COFFEE SHOP | —— JAMES C. COOPER, C.P.A “ BUSINESS COUNSELOR Authorized to Practice Befcre the Treasury Department anéd Tax Court COOPER BUILDING R ight, 1945, by the Syndicate, Inc.) Alm[<[>] ACROSS 1. Valley 6. Sailor 8. Sea in the Ant- artic 3 . Point 3. Edible tuber . Send out Aromatic berb Score at crib- o 4 34. Flowering plant Army olficer Unexpected result INSURANCE Shattuck Agency n 0| |—{D|mD = Nourished Branches ot learning . Small stream - L. C. Smith and Corona J TYPEWRITERS Bold and Serviced by, 3. B. Burford & Co. || “Our Doorstep Is Worn Satisfled Custome! Duncan's Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaumg—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness In An Asset” . Tributary of ¢ the Colorado . Artists’ stan Eloquent <[>/o/>z[>lo /mr o [m/ > O ster, City in Nevada Mountain in Crete . Another city in Nevada Insects Nothini 2> ">l «/mm[x) LERE REDE Solution Of Saturday’s Puzzle DOWN atron amoan seaport " . Prevaricator . Debatable Jewel . ‘Appointment Not at home River duck Ang; . Con . Optical glass . Degree : Upper parts Playing card Stew alling races ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 Alaska Laundry “Say It With Flowers” but “SAY IT WITH OURSI” Juneau Florists Phone 311 odder pit terisk . Behold . Smallest abbr, . Altercation . Oftend state: THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The smfety of depositors’ funds i our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to s maximum of $5,000. DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED . Cowe in 1891—0ver Half a (enfury of Banking—1945 The B2. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS the and First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION l m

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