The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 12, 1945, Page 5

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1945 ARCTIC KING BROWER DIES AT BARROW Famous Character Is Last of Old Line Tundra Trad- ers of Far North POINT BARROW, Alaska, Feb. |years ago at Kotzebue, Paul Davi-| ldovich. roadhouse ~operator, Wwho used to run the dog-team mail to | Brower and Allen, died. | — 'NIPPONS SEND WARPRISONERS TOMANCHOUKUO Lt. Gen. V“V;nwrighf Is| Among Number Trans- | ferred from Formosa | WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 — The War Department discloses that Lt. MANPOWER |BATTLE OF MANY LOCAL PROBENOW KLEVE IS BOYS HERE UNDERWAY ABOUTOVER ON FURLOUGH Congressional Committee| Pruem Is Also Reported |cmme: -oose-swe n Juseas, arei- Investigating Funds | Beaten-Floods Do Big Strike Damage !ing Saturday, on furlough from (Army bases to the westward asefar DETROIT, Feb. 12—Representa- {Continued from Page One) las Attu, They are visiting their {home for the first time in over 18 tives of the Senate War Investigat- | ——= e | |months. Among those on furlough here are in Juneau, arriv-| MISS DUTRA IS BRIDE OF PFC. ROMANO Miss Florence Shirlee Dutra, of ed the Ketchikan Elks Bowling|Concord, California, became ‘-hv’ team, currently playing here in Ju- bride of Joseph Anthony Romano, of | neau, at their regular luncheon !n-}Clumuo. 111, Pfe. U. S. Army, 269th | day. |Subport Division, at a ceremony at Lion Milt Furness introduced the 6:30 o'clock last Satur evening, | speaker, W. E. Crouch, Chief of the | February 10, at the Church of Na- | Division of Fish and Wild Life, with the Rev, Edward C. Budde| | headquarters in Chicago. Crouch reading the vows. said he had been coming to Alaska| Mrs. Lorraine Becker, of Pittsburg, ! {the last ten years, and likes it bet-|California, was maid of honor, and| |ter each time. He felt that there|Lawrence Baldino, of Chicago IIL,| | would be a real increase in sports|Corporal of the U, S. Army, 269th Subport Division, was best man LIONS ENTERTAIN BOWLERS; OTHER LUNCHEON GUESTS | The Juneau Lions Club entertain- | families and friends, many of them ing Committee, charged with de-|pjjeq from the Rhine River city of {now are Lt. Elmer R. Benedict, 1st.|hunting and fishing in the Territory 12—The King is dead—Near-1egen- |, “jongthan Wainwright, com- iSgt. John Satre, S/Sgt. George An-|after the war, and said that pl:\nsi The bride wore a tan two piece | | and by these routes the early set- PAGE FIVE NOTE~— From timetotime, in this space, there will appear an article which we hope will be of 1nterest to our fellow A merican: This is number thirty-eight of a series. SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORP., NEW YORK Geography Most of the distilling in America is concentrated in the States of Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ken- tucky, Indiana and Illinois. This is not accidental. Let’s look at the map. Draw_a Jine down the coast from New England to Phila- delphia, then westward through Pennsylvania and along the Ohio River valley to the Mississippi, and then let’s follow the Missis- sippi down to the Gulf. Here is an area of great fertility, fed by innu- merable streams and waterways, natural routes of communication, tlers penetrated the hinterland in termining Whether Detroit areas|g pjan; are using their manpower to the American occupation headquart- fullest extent, arrived here to x_md‘m were in Koblenz after the last approximately 13,600 workers idle | |ders, Sgt. Alfred Zenger, Sgt. John |were being laid to cope with the prob- dress trimmed in brown veivet and| |Kasko, John Mills, Bob Pasquan, lem this would entail. ldark brown accessories | Bill Spaulding, Robert Snell, Dick| Lion Don Foster was reintroduc-; Mrs. Becker wore a light pink two; the pionecring days in America. Along these important rivers and their tributaries, settlements dary Charles Digory Brower, per- haps the most colorful figure the Arctic has ever known. mander of the American-Filipino |forces captured in the fall of the | Philippines, was transferred, with Long known as the “King of the Arctic,” Brower, who had resided at Point Barrow for the past 55 years, passed away yesterday of a heart attack at the age of 82. Born in New York in 1863 while his father was serving in the Civil War, Brower followed the natural course of many youngsters of his time and followed the sea. While a sailor he first saw the Arctic on a whaler and returned a short time later, never to per- 17 other Generals, 119 Colonels and six Navy Captains from the Jap iprison camp at Taiwan, Formosa, (to Hoten Camp, Mukden, Man- chuokuo. — e, — CONTRACTOR SELLS FIRST OF 15 HOUSES First of the fifteen dwelling units | war. ¥ Sagneh s | Flooded By Nazis Employees of the Briggs Manu-| pgeyyeen the two focal .puims of facturing Company are out and|, ... ) 5 S ‘ #io | battle, floods loosed by the German f;\e .omex !’la}:"\ r‘(llx;v:ll:’::d‘)m;':‘bx'enchmg of the Schwammenauel B R mueadny, | |Lam flood gates immobilized the 985 thi malh Mack plm‘\l 3 oo United States Ninth and British |Second Army lined up along the pute over wages and rates for 15 g b o % Socker Ted (b ikl Thaybidad | oot T IEL. THE TSt 18 4 THIHDEC to go back to work but stipulated| % T today, two miles wide at § Sl . jone point, the WPB is to have representatives | “yo, . "t qam was breached, the at the plant to hear grievances.| g e Z i The WPB did not reply to this d‘»_‘uatn level behind it sank 45 feet manently leave the country. For many decades Brower has run his trading post here, the focal point of all Arctic activities. He was nationally known for his book, recently published, “50 Years Below | Zero.” His favorite hobby was his garden, in which he grew 33 varie- ties. of Arctic flowers. Two. sons are in the armed forces, Major James Brower, and Pvt. Arnold Brower, the latter a paratrooper now training at Fort Benning, Georgia. | Brower’s death almost wipes the | slate of the Arctic's famed char- acters. Preceding him in death last year was polar bear hunting trader Jim Allen at Wainwright. Three 'JAPAN'S ARMY OF SPOOKS Don’t Look Now — but There’s a Ghost From Tokyo Spying on Your War Effort! approved for Juneau by the Federal Housing Authority was sold last weekend to Harold Gun- | derson, Contractor Walter J. Stutte announced. | The house will be completed in |the next few months. It is located on Spruce Street, in the Waynor | | Addition. The sale price was not | | disclosed, Stutte merely saying it |department in ;was sold below ‘the $8,000 ceiling. |Store at Palmer, is WELL BABY CLINIC A Well Baby Clinic will be held at the Government Hospital to-| mortow afternoon between 1 and 3 o'cleck. Dr. H. F. Kaack will be in charge, it was announced. mand. The rest down when stopped. They had been parts for B-29's and tanks. - of the plants the flow of FROM PALMER the tineau. DEWEY KNIGHT HERE Dewey L. Knight, Inspector, Ketchikan, Baranof Hotel. [ . By NORMAN J. MEDRECH Central Press Correspondent JAPANESE BELIEVE they're ; winning the war because their “invisible” forces are “working miracles” on all fronts and at the same time “striking terror inside the United States and Great Britain.” “Train - wrecks, floods, fires and other disasters in America are at- tributed to these “invisible forces™ by the Japanese peasant. Achievement of the “ghost army” is often mentioned in Nip- ponese communiques but are more common in Tokyo broadcasts mon- itored by experts of the Federal Communications Commission and réported through the Office of War Information. ’ In America the news of Japan's “ally” is received with a smile and | i3 “buried” on back pages of news- papers or used as “fillers.” More often, the Japanese claim—made in all seriousness—is displayed as a humorous item, i But in Japan it's a different story. The “news,” authorities on the far east agree, receives solemn and prominent treatment in the press, wider circulation by radio and is beamed to all parts of the globe by Radio Tokyo. The latest report of the “ghost army” was given to the Japanese péople by Lt. Gen. Yasuapi Tom= = closed parts | making | John Long, manager of the meat Which binds Kleve to Cooperative | four miles north. visiting in Ju-! neau. He is staying at the Gas-|Nep was captured Immigration |of Kessel, visiting in Juneau. He is registered at me{cenm of Goch. and deflated a five-mile long reser- | voir, flooding the Roer Valley. | Allies Gain Control | British and Canadian troops under General Henry Cregar's command took control of three-fourths of the Reichswald thickets or fir trees and crcssed in force over the Spoy Canal the Rhine ‘The Dutch border town of Gen- and the Niers | Rivir to the east was crossed. Van- 'guards passed through the shell splintered Reichscwald a mile north | which lies four miles |northwest of the West Wall road . . The prisoner bag rose to 4,000 ,Nazc soldiers, most of them teen age youths or inform old men. ! Oberhoffen Cleared | The United States Seventh Army in the Alsace sector have virtually | cleared Oberhoffen, eastern anchor |of the German Moder River line, | striving to push the Wehrmacht line back to Drusenheim between the | Hagenau Forest and the Rhine. | The French First Army farther south is credited with destroying seventy-five per cent of the German Nineteenth Army in clearing up the Colmar salient. | Scattered showers along the whole | front handicapped air support and | kept most planes on the ground. Sodden troops of the Third Ar- imy invading the Saarland captured |ancther block of buildings across the Saar River from Saarlautern in i ¢ |a limited attack. RESIGNS OIA JoB \Brophy of New Mexico Moves Up from Post in Islands Office WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 The Presi- ident has nominated Willlam Bro- phy of New Mexico to succeed re- signing John Collier as Commission- er of Office of Indian Affairs. Brophy has served as chief of the Puerto Rico section of the In- Dalzeil, Laurence Larsson. | Duane Haffner, Leroy Brown, | Walter S. Martin, Glennard Kirk- |ham, Ray Clemens, Milo Kapp, Jack |Gucker, Jr, M. Ingbord, Wademan |Jones, F. Goodman. | Gieene Wald, Novil Nelson, Ed- {ward Nielson, George Stevens, Ein- lar Smith, F, Swanson, Leo Huston |George Kane, Thorn Thoren. (boys will report for future assign- ment GAME COMMISSION " SITTING ON RULES | With all seats at the table filled, |following the arrival Saturday after- inoon of Andrew A. Simons, Commissioner for the Third Division, the Alaska Game Commission im- mediately got down to full week end lof worl its annual meeting. | Consideration of regulations was the first order of business and they are still under discussion today, it |is reported. | e ————— — 'SKIERS GREETED . BY BEST SLOPES 1 OF THIS SEASON | Half-a-hundred skiers took to the \hills here yesterday as slopes deep | with new snow afforded some of the | best conditions of the year. A dozen ‘or so of the hardier slat-riders ‘went all the way to the Upper Ski Bowl, scme of them going Saturday even- {ing, but the majority confined their lactivities to the Sladom hill. Concerted co-ordinated activity |by nearly all early arrivals at the !8econd Meadow broke up the crust on the lower reaches of the Slalom 'slope and packed the snow to a really excellent sliding surface. Ju- {neau Ski Club members and most leveryone elsc turned to with their \efforts before individual skiers ad cpportunity to cut up the course {,with solo runs in the new snow. | ski Club prexy Bill Hixson stok- ied up the fire and had a constant |string of hog dogs available to be |washed down by coffee. It was all |“on the house.” | Eric Sundsten and Joe Werner de- voted their efforts to instruction of | beginners and reported that several newcomers to the sport had made excellent progress by the close of the day. | A brief series of time trials was. run over a short slalom course in! the afternoon and a demonstration of mountaineering first-aid was put im: by members of the Ski Patrol iwho have completed a course of five |lessons under Joe Werner, instructor. |Those who have completed the |course are: Art Kassner, head of the | Juneau 8ki Club’s Outdcor Commit- tee; Leon Alexander, chief of the Ski Patrol; Bob Thiboudeau, Miss Gayle Tomlinson, Buddy Hunter, A the end of their furlough, the' | ed to the club and tetd something of this recent trip to the “outside.” He | was present at the President’s in- | auguration in Washington and also|ner party at the Baranof Hotel. | suffered through some Chicago win-| Shirlee Dutra is the daughter of| | ter, and said he was mighty glad to|{Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dutra of Con- be back in Juneau. |cord, California. She same to Alas-| Among the guests from Ketchi- ka in May, 1944, and is employed in | !kan on the Elks bowling team were the U. S, Indian Bureau | | the Ketchikan Lions Verne Sted-| Pfc. Joseph Romano is the son of | man, Gay Helland and Cort How- Mrs. May Romano of Chicago, Ill.| \ard. The others on the team and| The newly-weds will make their| guests of the Lions were Vic Peter- home in Juneau. piece dress with brown accessories {and a gardenia corsage. After the wedding there was a din- | U. 5. Merchant F | son, Harvey Iffert, and John Halm.| | Other guests were Ole Westby, | Clay Seutter of Juneau and K. G. | Merritt and Claude Carnegie, Ju-| | neau Rotarians; Lion Earl Cooper| |of Anchorage, Capt. A. J. Alter of | Ketchikan Health Department. i JLion Harold Sverdup was ap- | Red Cross Council. meeting Wednes- day at the City Council Chambers |to plan the Red Cross drive. Lion Doc Rude, Tom Hutching, and Fred Henning were appointed by {the President, Lion Frank Hermann, as the program committee for next week, | —————— rieelv After War fo Present Complicated Problem (Continued froin Page One) | this appears, on the surface, a tre- mendous advantage. The United| States, say some, will become the greatest distributor, by sea, of world supplies. Having + most of the world’s ships, it-sounds that simple. But some shipping men, mer- chant marine executives and State Department officials are looking be- yond that. With lower wages paid merchant seamen of other maritime | nations, and ships built more chenp-‘ |1y and better than those turned out | lon our wartime production lines, | how long would it take competitive nations to put oyr Liberty ships in- to dead storage and our merchant marine on the breadline? That, at least, is the question that is being asked in some circles. The answer they're giving is to let| some of the stripped maritime na- tions like England, Norway, Hol-| land and others have a portion of | |our shipping for what we can get out of it. | This, they argue, will bolster the econcmies of nations which are our Lest consumers—will, in other words, Aol JWC TO HAVE RADIO INTERVIEW ON WED. ‘ | ! “The Present Organization and| Immediate needs of the Health De-| Game | pointed as Lion representative to the partment” will be explained by Dr.[ | George Hayes during his radio inter: view with Mrs. Burras Smith on | Wednesday as a part of the progrnml pianned for February by the legis- lative department of the Juneau Wo- | man's Club co-operating with Mrs. A, E. Glover, radio chairman On the following Wednesday, Feb- ruary 21, Mrs. Robert Sanford will ‘(Iis."uxs the proposed . national | amendment on equal rights. The| third radio program for the month | will be given by Representative Alaska Linck, as guest speaker for| the organization. BERG HAUG PASSES ON THIS MORNING Bert Haug, 82, of Elfin Cove, died | at 2:30 o'clock ,this morning in St., Ann’s Hospital. He was a native of | Norway. Funeral arrangements are pend- ing word from a sister, Mrs. Chris. Christopherson of Everett, Wash- ington. The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. AR A e HELLAN RETURNS U. S. Deputy Marshal Walter G. Hellan returned to Juneau Sunday from Skagway. He had in custody an insane patient who has been committed to Morningside Hospital. ! | was_considel | modity. It was non-perishable, KELVIE'S ANIMAL HOSPITAL 808 FIFTH STREET Phone Blue 168 Phone Red 115 Office Hours 9 to 11:30 A, M. DR. W. A. KELVIE 3oarding Kennels sprang up; settlements of English, Irish and Scotch immigrants. Later came Germans and Scandinavians; and still later came immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe. And, along with these pioneers, came the arts and crafts such as weaving, tanning, blacksmithing, candle making—and distilling. Let's look at the map again. Louis- ville, Kentucky, is on the Ohio, as are Cincinnati, and Lawrence- burg,Inditna. Frankfort, Kentucky, is on the Kentucky River, a tributary of the Ohio. And Peoria, Illinois, is on the Illinois River, a tributary of the Mississippi. The famous whiskey counties in Ken- tucky, namely, Jefferson, Frank- lin, Bourbon, Mason, Mercer, Nel- son, etc., all are close to the Ohio and its tributaries. This uaccessibility to transporta- tion and communication routes, more than any other one thing, contributed to the establishment of the distilling industry in these areas. Here were the settlements; and here began the first social life ilderness. | in what had been a wil Here the distilling industry was ea~ tablished, and here it is today. Plenty of raw materials; grains, fuel, sparkling spring water, as well as accessibility to new markets which were constantly being opened | up by the ever increasing trek of immigrants westward. So (he distilling industry in Amer- ica dates back historically to the settlement of the regions west of the Allegheny Mountains, Whiskey an essential com- | easily transportable, and not too bulky. Its manufacture helped the early settlers to become self- sustaining, and to erect a stable cconomy. Today too—the Alcoholic Bev- . erage Industry is playing an im.. portant in the economic life of - the Nation. Besides being the N tion’s number one tax collector, through the sales of its products, the distilling industry is one of the most important producers of war- time alcohol, necessary inthe manu- facture of smokeless powder, syn- y thetic_rubber, chemical warfare . material, and a host of other essen- tial products vitally needed in the 4 prosecution of the war. MARK MERIT of SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORP, PREE—A booklet containing. repri of S ler s i e R sent you on_request. Send a to i care o Schaniey [nernational Corg | 560 Fifth Avenue, New York 1o N ¥- ] Veterinary | Empire want ads get quick results, - put them back on their feet more rapidly than any other thing we can do except outright extension of credits and :vain To put it simply these officials argue that the best thing for the United States to do from a purely selfish standpoint will be to give up part of the vast merchant marine fleet we have and still are building. There is, of course, another side to the argument and some shipping oriago. _In a broadeast Nov, 17, heard by the FCC, the general seriously an- nounced that the Japanese ‘have a secret tactic of projecting spirits at"the enemy before battle and thus destroy the enemy's warrior's entire will to fight." The broadcast was reported to American newspapers by OWI but the item skipped the attention of most readers. In fact, the Japanese believe that three “honorable invisible arniies”—their ace cards—are bat- tling for their country. Ogami Are Tops Each of these “armies” has a specific sphere of influence and none ever conflicts “with the august work” of the others. There’s an elite corps, the Ogami. A vast army of invisible agents—the best in the business, the Japanese say—is headed by Hachiman, the Nip's god of war, while another army of “invisible shields” protects and inspires fighting men. The Ogami are the ancestral spirits of Emperor Hirohito and they occupy the No, 1 place in the life of Japan. They are kept in- formed of the country’s plans and the son of heaven makes trips reg- ularly to the shrine of the Ogami to “report” on the affairs of the nation, affairs that are none too bright these days. ‘The ancestral spirits are sup- posed to guide the imperial family and no decision affecting the royal household or nation is made until the Ogami are consulted. “What other nation in the world could boast of celestial consult- ants?” the Japanese ask. Hachiman, as the national god of war, is “brainier” than the gen- eral staff of all occidental powers. At least, that is his rating in Japan. The generalissimo of Japan's military effort, he is sup- Nips’ war god, who, Jags bolieve]) | erior Department's Division of|Jim Klein, Bill Carlson and Jim BOSS SPOOK—This®is Hachiman, leads their spirit army in war upon us. Gosh, aren’t you skeered?/ posed to be a’super patriot, and the' busiest of Nippon’s invisible allies. = War and diplomacy, too, are in- separable to the Japanese, and Hachiman is recognized by them as their smoothest diplomat. The Japanese also say that their nation can never be defeated as long as they have “the only competent war god in the world,” Hachiman paved the way for the war with the United States and Great Britain, the Japanese be- lieve. Much of his activities dur- ing the peace years between the two World Wars, they say, were centered on “weakening” western powers for the benefit of Japan. Hachiman, the Japanese credit, was responsible for the ineffective- ness of the League of Nations in 1931 when Nipponese soldiers took over Manchuria and created the puppet state of Manchukuo. It was Hachiman, the Japanese reason, who created the cabinet crisis in France that permitted Adolph Hitler to march into the Rhineland in 1935. The Japanese say the Allies won the first World war only because Hachiman directed the strategy “for the glory of Nippon.” Even now the Japanese believe that every war in the world is “honey- combed” with the spirit of Hachi- man, These agents have been on their jobs for a long time. They are sup) d to be in Washington, Londor!, Paris and everywhere in the world where there are forces “conspiring” against Japan. Being invisible, they have survived the changes in government in all coun- tries and have managed to *“send back” the most confidential of secrets. That to the Japanese must be the reason for their success at Pearl Harbor, their conqrest of the Malay States and Singapore and their early victories in Burma, Dutch Indies, at Hong Kong and Shanghai. The third force is made up of the spirits of all dead warriors. Dead warriors occupy a place of honor in the Japanese way of life. That accounts for the fanaticism of Nipponese and their unwilling- ness to surrender. Only Three Smiles A story told by Americans who have lived in Japan for many years is an example of the affec- tion placed on a soldier. The Jap- anese mother, the story goes, smiles only three.times during her life, The first time is when her son is born, the second when her son goes off to military service and the third, when his ashes arc returned after he had been elimi- nated in battle, It is then that the spirit of the dead warrior becomes “a shield” and _“an inspiration” for other fighting men. Do you remember the Aleutian campaign? Approximately 2,000 Japanese were killed when Ameri- can forces reconquered the island of Attu. When the Americans landed at Kiska several months later, they found the Japanese forces there had escaped in the dense Aleutian fog. It was then that Radio Tokyo boasted of a “major triumph” by a “ghost army.” The spirits of the Japanese dead at Attu, the official radio announced, formed “a wall” around Kiska and “hid” the Japs from the Americans. Do invisible weapons work? The Japanese still think they do. But Uncle Sam'’s victories tell a differ- ent story. . Territories and Island Possessions since 1943, Secretary of the Interior Ickes said he was “extremely sorry Mr. Collier found it necessary to retire after he has served with such dis- tinction.” Born in New York City in 1903, Brophy attended the University of Mexico and later graduated from the University of Colorado. Collier had served in his capacity as Indian Office head since 1933. ———————— OWENS HERE A. E. Owens, Ketchikan, is regis- tered at Hotel Juneau. Lo o ] HERE NO FURLOUGH T/Sgt. Milo Kapp arrived in Juneau over the weekend to spend a 30-day furlough. This is Kapp's first visit to his home town in 20 months. ——ee - FLETCHER SOUTH Jack Fletcher, manager of the Baranof Hotel, flew south over the weekend, enroute to San Fran- cisco, on a buying trip for the local hostelry. He expects to be gone only a few weeks. e Paul J. Wingren, Xetchikan, is staying at the Baranof Hotel. He and his brother, Al, who worked for the old United Food Company and operate Wingren's Food Stores in the First City. e A Pan American Airways plane took the following passengers to Whitehorse from Juneau today — Stanley Estensen, Robert A. Cruzen, Virgil Bruck, Finis R. Hamilton, Erick Beardsley, Robert C. Affler- back. Juneau to Seattle—Dr. C. C. Carter, Mrs. Margaret Carter, Har- old Foss, C. Don Miller, Mrs. Jessie Miller, Sgt. William Richard. in Juneau several years ago, own | Rude. | Despite al the snow that fell |last week, the Douglas Ski Trail was yesterday still closed from the Treadwell Ditch down to the High- way. ———eto——— | FROM WISCONSIN F. S. Gombar, Broadhead, Wis., is staying at the Hotel Juneau. g i FROM COLORADO Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Sherry, of Denver, Colorado, are staying at Hotel Baranof. —— —————— FROM SITKA Orville Paxton, William Rands }nnd G. Whitcome, Sitka, are reg- istered at the Baranof. ASBACHS HERE Mr. and Mrs. William Asbagh |of SKigway are registered at the Gastineau. e, — | WADE RETURNS Hugh Wade, Territorial Director of Social Security, returned over |the weekend from an official busi- ness trip to Sitka. ——————— 1 MRS. AHLERS OUT Mrs. Lorene Ahlers, Juneau busi- {ness woman, left over the weekend |for a combined business and vaca- tion trip in the States. S WELCH LEAVES F. E. Welch, construction man with the USED, left for Seattle on {the North Sea, after visiting in Juneau for the past several weeks. S e —— MINING MAN HERE C. R. Burley, of the University of Alaska, at Fairbanks, is regis- tered at the Gastineau Hotel. Burley teaches mining extension courses throughout the Territory for the School of Mines. men, government officials, and poli- THE NEEDLECRAFT SHOP Will Be Closed a Few Days for Renovation. ticians already are squared off to fight for maintaining our more than half the world’s shipipng in post- war times and seeing to it that the United States becomes the No. 1 shipper in both hemispheres. Its just another of those worri- some postwar problems but it may be one which will determine whether the United States dips into another world depression or emerges into peace with a sounder economy than JUNEAUCAMPSNO.2 A. N. B. and A. N. S. Meet Each Monday-7:30 P. M.-A.N.B. Hall followed World War I. e e o 06 0 0 0 0 0 0 WEATHER REPORT (U. S. Weather Bureau) e o o Temperature for 24-hour period ending at 7:30 o’clock this morning e o o TODAY'S TEMPERATURES In Juneau—Maximum, 38; minimum, 31. Precepitation, 20 of an inch. At Airport—Maximum, 38; minimum, 29. Precipitation, .06 of an inch. o o o TEMPERATURES SUNDAY In Juneau—Maximum, 40; minimum, 33. Precipitation, .19 of an inch. At Airport—Maximum, 39; minimum, 31. Precipitation, .19 of an inch. e o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOMORROW'S FORECAST e o o Partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Clear and cold Tuesday and Tuesday night, temperature dropping to 14 Tuesday night. Gusty winds Tuesday, ranging from 25 to 30 miles per hour. Seats 300. This NITE CLUB in the @0 eceeccccvccsvccoe ©eeceeccccccccscce ALL TYPES OF MAKIS VISIT Mr. and Mrs. Harold Maki, of Wrangell, are staying at the Gas- tineau Hotel. |} PHONE 433 FOR SALE Graehl Circle Bar Fairbanks, Alaska New building — sunken dance floor — is the largest and finest Fairbanks district. FOR FULL INFORMATION WRITE GRADELLE LEIGH REALTY CO. FAIRBANKS, ALASKA FIXTURES 1.G.FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made 149 So. Main Street

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