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2 THE DAILY ALASKA LMPIRh THURSDAY JUNh 15, ‘)39‘ . VINES AL | | sy T T G - HRE DESTROYS ! Confeé on .Squalus Ralsmg KING, QUEEN THE W{?fl!jfi" MONTANA CREEK n ast for Juneau and Vi ty, beginning at 3:30 p.m. June 15: 29 1 ner i nigt wnd Friday; gentle to moderate northerly winds, (' ' ml HOUSE South Alaska: Generally fair tonight and Friday, ' € "o yrobably with showers over extreme southern. portion; v 4 entle tc rate northerly winds, except fresh over Dixon Entrance. | Fire which started mysteriously at J Forccast of v m:h .Inm the Coast ¢f the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh | the Montana Creek CCC camp yes- northerly winds tonight and Friday from Dixon Entrance to Cape 'frdfly m‘}m;nt]ifi ;EW;nil:xt;:‘M‘;: m Cape Ommaney to Cape Hinchinbrook. |the crew had left for Au rsh oyed an oil storage house and 15 Farewell Mesage Is Given ; _ rocat pama [ Baels of iésel, N Time ter Temo Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weathe The fire was discovered at 8:45 QOut by British Monarch - 7 2 5 Glolly | o855k by James Gerard, samp cook, § | 2 S 2 Pt. Cl'dy | Who, with a clerk tried to put it out Ty > 5 3 3 with fire extinguishers. By that time, | on Depal hflg ; s however, it had reached the oil drums & I RADIO REPORTS which exp]Dde, one by one and HALIFAX, June 15 — King ot e R s George and Quecn ¥ Vax. tempt Lowest 3:30am. Precip. 3:30am | Fire was confined to the one TP SO UM Y, S 0 st 24 ho iemp. temp. 24hours Weather building. "mvl st Pt on b 42 42 0 Clear Loss was estimated by the Fmr\n i - s i G | 48 48 0 Clear | Service at approximately $400. istoric visit. ¢ 4 British Monarch said: y : :: i;: :" g:::: g S Wers visis o 1 it 0 w0 o Clouiy ) SUGGES“ONS ty of war betw neigh- an i a6 46 L i C:ea'r 1 . by Ged's grace and yours, AWSC 40 40 Pt. Cl'dy may it yet be an example . ) 36 38 Cloudy which ail the world may fol- Hi ) 40 40 Cloudy | Tow.” o4 56 Cloudy | % 46 46 Clear | EKLUTNA, Alaska, June 15. z e sl 52 Pt. CPdy |Some record-seeking colleze high | Sit 48 % ..~ ‘{jumpers and pole vaulters might NAZI TERRORESM ¢ 48 48 Cloudy | try. the Eskimo sport called “nal- y S4inc ; nlaticatuk.” It's like blanket-toss- ] \'J T o g6 88 T4 Mogieo Moving swittly, the Navy High Command in Washington rushes plans 7 g Y ! 44 46 Clear (N8 s X T 4 3 L ) B tor 4 : A ‘Pepular game, the boys stretch | to raise the Squalus twelve miles off Portsmouth, N. H. Pictured in con- Seattle 34 ._,4 : Cloudy Riaitis <Eil ugk{t #nd Johnny, or ference are Rear-Admiral A. P. Fairfield, seated, and standing, 1. to r.: o R i = r Portlan 4 54 54 Drizzling | # 5 0 O+ Commander A. I. McKee, Capt. Henry Williams and Commander A. R. DR 2 i . : ? : | A it 54 54 Cloydy maybe a girl, steps on it By McCann, They are ook § harts of ‘Squalis’ position: ng on the spacious portico of the British Embassy in Washington, : 3 %0 64 g Clear . |Successive tosses, Johnny is thrown 7 J. P. Morgan, international financier, and King George VI of England 62 70 Clear {higher and higher into the air. ged in conversation while the latter sipped his tea. With his Twe X v He always has to land on his OFF FOR BRISTOL B, WEATHER SYNOPSIS ; nother player s 5 s o £ torm area noted yesterday morning as being centered over xegfsh;::t S B0 o Baver Many Wrangentes have iy | Arola, Arcla, Edy - tours of the garden during which he shook hands with Senators, seribed 1o ; 3 3 el im r 3 left for Bristol Bay for the seas is Stone and F presidential possibilities 2 ‘ong n pits 1 1 portion of the Gulf of Alaska has moved southeastward| “aApother jumping game is the Attt ks e . wv‘:- Vel # v | GBS e Presidential possibilities and Congressmen, this morning a short distance west of Langaraligherakauk,’ in which the players 3 I t reported pressure being 29.50 inches, = High har- kick high in the air both feet at ic pr : prevailed over the Aleutians and the Bering Sea re-lonce They reach unusual heights <o - SHINGTON, June 15 tea, the King took cream and one lump of sugar. He made several observer ire ttee ar which th re, although abhorred by ) large majority of the German peo- Anctorage, intend fly e Gran, Laurie 1 Jenkins, 5 bay are James Berkeley. Pet Lyie Hibner r | Anderson, | Desert cactus Arizona is pro-| A recent survey disclosed 11.159 son, James Martin, Peter Charles J nd Elmer Roed. tected from d n by state ajrcraft and 22,983 pilots in this Former Gov. Philip LaFollette of 1as been general from the west coast of s°‘f"§“"“‘ l”'_"“ :{‘d from}, John™ McCullough, Henry Wi iihs ook ALASKA. Baehbd sta - g were 221 gliders and 172 glider Wisconsin and D. Robert Yarnell ephens Passage southward to Oregon, followed by clearing tl smorn-‘ Albert Rinehart, Parry TI | DS gy 7 The Empire classifieds for |piotg Philadelphia manufacturer, gave r most of Southeast Alaska. Local scattered showers were re- " 0 art, Parry Thomas,| Enlarged, Now On Sale; g alts. ; of non-Aryans” which they attrib- wer prevailed from the Aleutian Islands eastward to the Gulf of m e 3 re E : R AR uted to the dread “Gestapo,” Germ- 4 ; LaFollete, just returned from Eu- S R LA S O MOSCOW Muy 2. — Further de- rope, and Yarnall, who served on a velopments concerning the prod joint committee studying legisla Sofly | Soviet Government. proposals which would permit 20,- DEES SUDDEN[Y S ! "The growing demand for rubber 000 German refugee children to en- (himneys | has arisen from the rapid expansion e the crest being 3042 inches at St. Paul Island. Precipitation > Henry Bradley, Jerry Des i - .~ law country. At the same time the gsober-faced accounts of “persecution the interior and southwest portions of Alaska, while fair fi h 3 : ubber, an secret polic Juneau, June 16.—Sunrise, 2:53 a m.; sunset, 9.08 p.m. Quaker relief mission to Germ RAI.pH PUI.”ZER way |° Bel' tion of synthetic rubber in the U. S. last December, appeared before S. R. are to be accelerated by the ter the United States in the next |of the Soviet automobile industry, bl 5 NEW YORK, June 15—Ralph which, started under the first five- Outbreaks Understated Pulitzer, aged 60, retired newspaper P {year plan in 1929, is now turning The two witn agreed _ that | ¢ditor, anid son of the late Joseph |,. CINCINNATL ‘une 16ciBhower| e} s e 600 oars: dafly; is] 3 t anti-Se! 5 .| baths” for industrial stacks that published accounts of anti-Semitic pyiitzer who founded the newspaper | On the basis of methods elabo- and her threa in Germany p belch too much soot and smoke are | and other v n Germany dynasty, died suddenly late yester-| ‘= 20 C | rated by Soviet scientists, the pro- had been “understated,” rat i day following an abdominal oper- | P! = | duction of synthetic rubber has FRRRIRN o lwaca il | ation. A perforated brass ring, connected | been organized on a large scale g lllvu“‘\)”‘“w“: d).v‘"\: :\;‘ I,],’.“,-‘;‘,l:, '“ o | to the water supply, has been in- throughout Soviet territory. fiis & Gatnollo, nroplem “La¥ol- PROUD ANGLERS stalled at General Hospital, a city- | e P Notimbay DORENA. Mo, (AP)—Ruth Ben-|run nstitution. Whenever soot and| Poultry ‘producers will buy about ;U( :“lll'l( ,(‘.' of 1 : l“, e Bt _g”'"_ nett and Katherine Bayssee are|ashes are blown from the boilers, the 'eight per cent more hatchery chicks itic dl.:rn‘i‘:;.~ in Gi o m,n‘ m'l»(‘lhwd two of the proudest little girls in|device is turned on and the water in 1939 than in 1938, says an es- 4 lasting and terrible effect on the 811 Missouri. They hooked and|causes the flaky particles to “con-|timate by the federal bureau of (A E ¢ : 4 2 4 ° ‘,Upum;“ not only because of open |1anded, unaided, a 79-pound cat- [ geal” and fall to the bottom of the agricultural economics. : i - (]fi ! E" l S E | 4 h " ' brutality but because the youth of ! stack et {eence. 2 e : T the country was used primarily in 3 : s ; [‘“ QEPLEE(‘EA E E_AJ carrying out these acts ; St “If you could have a secret, free . z ¢ and untrammeled vote in Germany S8 This Sunday you'll want to make probably 75 per cent of the people F - g L ~ § / a special point of pleasing Dad. gime. 5 St him a smart gift of clothing from roperty Destroye ty & 1 our selection. He'll like them and Narrating tale after tale of the C 0 M P A N Y wear them often. Come in now! destruction of Jewish property and 2 Jewish synagogues, the imprison- ment of Jews and others who had " ncurred the wrath of the Nazi A horized government and the exportation utherize of property, Yarnall said “fear of the G A P B T B gestapo and the . Boncentration Applicators camp” hung hourly over the heads i : of hundreds of thousan v Yarnall said there was “absolutely . no reason” to the operation of g : ad will like the clean tz apo against Jewish families. “They are utterly merciless” he added “Fear permeates the lives of all i 1 b 5 Btttern aad stxde £ these pepole and will continue.” v n = 3 b ——— g i i B tripes, Now g [irde Reg'en IS a i “ hecks, Solids €] v}' up Scene of Activity these shirts. You can Mining work is going ahead full blast in the Circle district, says the Fairbanks News-Miner. Duane Bush of California, ad- " ¥ N E w P A \I A M A ministrator for the Berry Estate i Holding -Oompangil. e b, Ariiles You can be sure of Dad’s sincere thanks if House having come by way of q ] | = you give him a pair of these smart pattern- way and Dawson. He was a pas- i ¢ f ed and plain pre-shrunk pajamas up nger on the first boat of the sea- son down the Yukon River. Mr. Bush is accompanied by Monte Wild of Fresno, Calif,, an attorney. Berry Dredge Doing Fine On Mammoth Creek, the Berry dredge and the thawing plant are working in fine shape, Pietro Vigna who returned Monday from the Cir- cle area, reports. On Upper Eagle Creek, the Berry hydraulic outfit is operating to ca- pacity. At Miller House on Mastodon creek, the Berry estate is working the hydraulic outfit On Upper Mastodon m ’ ‘I d 4 Give Dad a tie he can wear to On Upper Mastodon, Adlcic Laird Yo ‘ % cee and business and for the night “out.” Joe E. Crosson and Don Gustafson Complete Newest Colors are. bydraulicking and operating give your ‘home a new appearance. their dragline | On Independence Creek John Choice of New 'll in Smart Frasco is working his property. to Patterns New Shades advantage, and so is A. A. Zimmer- man, Also on Independence Creek, the Bartlett Y is going ahead \“ g B e with its operations, Mrs I1da Bartlett is on the ground, ————————— OLD STUF) & oo 'Sl - - repeats in Westerr ew York: A truck driver, passing the E. P. Ald- rich farm at rid; 3 am BB poves e Ty Ask Us Aboiit Financing? afire and called the years ago, at approxir same time of day, the same tru driver noticed the Aldrich home flames and called authorities,