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3 i ; - * — ey — z S Ak ¢ o Foreign Trade |9 Halibuters orelgn ra e Del. Atty.Gen. H . v U| @ | w Policy Given Sell, Seattle = [ ¢ i: ! g g1 8| 8/° 5 al & ' FDR, SEATTLE, May 20. — Halibuters oos y | selling hiere today are as follow | ' From the western banks—Om {e | B ‘] oL aney, 40,000 pounds ;10" and 9% : | AR . Cat cents a pound; Seymour, 40,000 juneau No. 1 || 381]| I { —PI’eSIdem Thfl’) \’VS .7<nhre'1pmmd.s_ 10% and 9': cents . B. Juneau No. 2 || 247 1::: ::; ?’?fi 5 . . e § Edwards. 40,000 pounds, 10% 9% | Juneau No 3 137/| 58/ 72 o Weight Behind Hull's Joos Thane || & i i 1200 o From the local banks- rn, | Juaipa R Great thi 12,000 pounds, Viking, 14,000 pounds, Balbicieel ;: ::\ 2:81" :‘!g} al ” hoth at 9% and 9'%: cents: Ideal. 16~ [ynn Canal 29/ 11l 151 18 i< 000 pounds, 10 and 9% cents; Aloha, Mendenhall 231 11| 11| 21| % W JINGTON, May 20.—Pre 17,000 pounds, Irene J, 14,000 pounds, pouglas 90|| 22| 58/ 77 dent Roos iid 1ast ncht that 1000 and 8% cents; AL“Jr, 7.000 Ketchikan—1 || 290f( 119} 147| 200} only a liberal foreisn policy | pounds 10% and 9': cents Ketchikan—2 104/| 35/ 56/, 85 Ly Will cnable the Unitec - d Ketchikan—3 | 108 26/ 68/ 69 ' cont to reconstruction of the | PRICES AT RUPERT haviinn, & 1 @l s U, werld when the wgr is ovel At Prince Rupert today 259.000 wacker City 201 100 T 16 1 I'he Presid statement was | pounds of halibut were sold at 9.20 | geyjjja 3/ 8 26/ 28 ox Tead by -Sec of State Hull [to 980 and 750 cents a pound. Wards Cove 51 of 11 11 ~% 'in an addre or foreign frarc | - | 2 o el e : i — | Hoonah 40!/ 18/ 18/ 35 the President’s messaae ‘ o | Sitla 205! \ 108]| 1 “The promotion of liberal economic | STOCK QUOTA.NQN“ | Haines 35 g 1‘:‘1‘ ; 4 !policies has been, and will con-| — Metiakatla 9% 73‘,‘ 24 9 Sitsqis linue o be a vital part and an| NEW YORK 20. — CI8ME | \wyangel] w7 ee) 121] sisqd important purpose of the foreign | quotation of Alaska Jnuxgau mine | geivine 51/ 26 19( 36 ,,,, 1 policy of the United States. stock today is 4%, American Can Patersburg . .; 178/ 604 102} 127/ #o The President put his full weight ) 92, Anaconda 22%, Bethlehem Steel |0 Bay 2 7 18 17 :bvhmd thé present reciprocal trode | 76 Commonwealth and Southern ! W. Petersburg 12 0 0 8 policy of the Administration under | 15/16, Curtiss Wright 9%, General |, o10e Bridge! 104 3/ 8/ 6 8- (he wuiding hand of Secretary Hull | Motors 43%, ternational Harvester |pe, gy e, < BIZU0 and further said 47, Kennecott 28'y, New Yn:k oen- e der 0 3 33 38l Our Nation cannot cnjoy sus- | tzal 11, Northern Pacifi 6%, Ufited { g qe e il 27 4i| 41 l“"“y Jined and satisfactory prosperity | States Steel 30, Pound §: 2. Kimshan 18 6 14 16 | unle dequate foreign marscts Vo Pl ¥ | Oray, 68/, 311 34| 4% | _oxist. for our, oxportable SuppIus ~_DOW, JONEB. AVERAGES K]nsnck 00" 53 38 491 and unless our. necessary imports| The folowing'are tollay's Dow, ey, 38| 200 10 33 | are unhampered by adverse devel- ""“"'\, ‘:‘“ ages: Industrlals 12243, | g oo g, 0 5 P T (| | opments at home and abroad» | fils 23.98, UGl “‘5’ i Tenaket I 381 6 23] 24 { Secretary Hudl also stressed tre | Port ‘Alexander | 28i| '8 16| 19} | importance of continuing the lib- | Jamestown Bay|| 18} 1] W 7 | eral {rade policies and present wa (AIADA“ BOAI Hood Bay % N 1 3 time trade dislocation in a pefut A Angoon | 251 8 1% 19 tion of the isolationist trade poli DO(KS HERE Io Rake | M 12 13 Said Seeretary Hull: “The dffi-| b Chichagof | 1% 8 ‘®] M ___culties which we now experience in Windham & of B 2 securing some of our essential im- pl(K Up ElEVE Fanshaw a8 B 8 ports can be removed.” f ¥ Baranof 4 3 B 4 Oe The Secrets dded that “suc- Funter Bay 6| 2| 2| 8 cesses as have already been accom- | Retwrning from Skagway, the Myers Chuck 22 1§ @ plished by the reciprocal trade | Ganadian Skeamship Princess Louise | Klnkwan 6 u 2| ® :)EI“'\"‘ stand as an ,unanswerable docked in Jurcau early this morn- ChiKat - 8| 6 o & refutation {0 those who indulge | ing to pidk «p eleven passengers Lisianski 31 12 2001 28 in reckless ertions that our|apd contindieg to Seatte. Goddard 23| 14 Al 17 ng‘-mmm can solate itsclf from the | passengehs leaving ‘Juneau were ;(:]l;:;“,/:ht . : 'a; ;;: g rest. of the world and prospe: 1. Mosrison, & W. Peterson, (A, Dan- | pee, (J'"“ T Y I > e ialson. Migs M. Hayes, Miss D. Pentz, Y,k‘ o o s il | e U Marco Polo s supposed fo have Mrs. §. Hellenthal, Miss O. Hellen- | xo &1 o s Dl introduced ice cream from’ the cast |'thal, ¢ JiiBFetz, Mr-sihd Mrs W |25 s3lli 18 i;l‘ to the west ing and E. Oberg Total: 8 s B 2] | IhIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIlIIIIIIIIIlliilllllllllllllllullllIIIIIIIIIIIIII : Hollywood Sights)And, Sounds Delerse AG. T Bnginoe S, Geponie o 9| © e} (-t £ | p-) Bl By Robbim Coom—— | 3 Bl [ g 8 g g [ % 2 g g S é g £ 7 | Bl lal 81 & ) sl z 5 HOLLYWOOD, Cal., May 20.--John Ford has launched another a e (R 4 & - v glg 2 2 of his polite little ‘@awing room dranimys. |G | A il :,4‘ | e The launching was successful. Within the first three days | | fiiad 1 the director had filmed three roaring fist fizhts on the deck of g J 2 RS the British tramp <‘camer S. S..Glencairn. His captain (Wilfred § h KLl J | Lason) was haviug a mite of trouble with the boys, & bunch of N juneau No. 1 | 167 53 105/ 80/ 189) 64 58 20| 137 93| 49| 75/ 35( 106/ 39| 33| 133 exquites whom you will recognize as Thomas Mitchell, Ward Juneau No. 2 | 83 13| 78I 57| 28|/ 78| 34/ 37| 13 69 40 8 17 190 41/ 20/ 11| 68 Bond, John Wayne, Berry Fitzgerald, Joe Sawyer and others of Juneau No. 3 98 36| 102 63 48| 101 5% 38 12| ‘01 48] 26 41 23 47 20/ 13 97 their hulking type. The lad; were weary of the sea, and surly, Thane {1 1o10] S5 4| e 1 5| g o8 @ W M % e 0 9 and in this Caribbean port the cap'n, hungry for a cargo, had not ‘J‘mlpfl R . 3| 13| 8 6% 1 4 4 6 6 13/ 5 6 0 5 b 0 6 wilh baskefs of fruil incuding spirituous fruit of the vine, had - ! ]‘ if 30l A ! | s o -8 ended in a brawl. Very polite, yknow. Kotehikan No. 1 || 96 20|| oI/ nf 105 115]| 24| 15/ 3¢/ 76/ 33 15| 35| 82 32 34| 24| 44| Tt was a typical bezluning to a typically Fordian drama—burly, Ketchikan No. 2 || 47| 12| 47 5| 58| 52| 6 13| 6 32| 15 2/ 14 39/ 22 10| 14/ 19 hairy-chested four-fisted. Ketchikan No. 3 || 26/ 2| 26 4 aiff 7| 5 14{ 2 18 4 2. o 21 6 17 5 1l e Gravina Moo d) g)] 2 al o8l gf.a 1 af 6o o 1f 4 o ‘3f 1 3 The picture is “The Long Voyage Home," first offering of ||| Wacker I8 | ey of .8/ 4l -0 a{ o 5 o 3 .3 4 2 I 2 Ford's Argosy production unit, Dudley Nichols, co-worker with Revilla I R oLAsl sl 1 o Yoy 4 oM M 9 & 4 6 1 Ford on “The Informer” and “Stagecoach,” whipped up the script Shads: Gove % A e 01 L (6 | S| T . . . R [ from four of Eugene O'Neill's one-act play: “Phe Moon of the |f| g™y 1{ 1 ] B e e B R B84 R o2 el Caribees,” “In the Zune,” “Bound East for Cardiff” and that whose Sitka | a9 ‘,'ii ‘:(' “i 581 1«!“\ 19 10 131 “; 5 8 63 26/ 53| 28/ 19| title 15 the film’s - ; Haines “ 18 3| 28 18] 30| 19 17| 7| 3 a8 1 4 17 2 5 10] 13 Like “Stagecoach,” the new effort is a story of characters Metlakatla {8 I 14 3 14 1n 2 5 3i Bl 4 6 8 10 5 2 1 I revealed in peril. O’Neill’s people and his ship face up-to-date dan- ‘Wrangell Il 67 13}| 68} 30| i| o4]l 12/ 23] 4 53] 12| 14 43 34| 36/ 18 16 32| gers, for the S 8. Glencairn's cargo, ultimately, is ammunition Stikine H .8 3| 8| 2 -3 1| | 5 2| 3 4 s ORI T | i 3 for the current war zone. Petersburg || 22 14{ 30 13) 19)| 38]] 6 10/ 2{ 18 13f 2| 15) 13] 17| 15| 5/ 19| The Gast of ‘any Ford ploture s likely to. bring together o Scow Bay | -8l o 3 of el gl of o 1 <2 & o o Y o o 1 1 West Petersburg || 1] 1]| 2| o ‘dlf a1 1 o 3 o 1 3 1y o o o 0 | Douglas Bridge | 5 0/ 4| 3 1l . 6} o X 3 2 5 2 0 of 2 0 0 5| | Pennock Island [} 5/ 1 5 o 6 (3 - | | | T R T (U W B SN 0 | Hyder Y .8l 0l ¢8| 8| <1y 8 6. 3 1 < o AR | O | M | | TS | - | 2 Hydaburg i|-28) "3 W o ‘@oi[ 20] of & 3 ‘19 2 5 31 13 4 3 of 7 | Kimshan fl oo 8 # 61|l 9| 4 6 3 4 3 ¢ 2 2 2 1 2 6 i Crailg 18 2 16 s|‘a8l(;14{ 0 3 o 10/ o 4 13( 13 5 of 3 10 | Klawock 200 6/ 28! 3| a8l 3kl 8 3} 3 ‘2| 3 8 2 14 1 5 ‘4 9 | Kasaan I8l A 9 T W O 3 o W 1 3f 3| 2 2 o O 1} | Tenakee I 6 ajf 8| 1 48]l "ot 3 8 e 4 32 3 3 1 3 o 0 4 hestessess otve |Port Alexander || 4 tI| B 1 b 2 % B 2 0 R T T (I | 1 1 3 vl guests who | | Jamestown Bay 2 9| 9| 3 .0 2| o 1 2 3 1 e | 1 3 0 o 0 bring gifts of deliciows ' |Hood Bay o9 08 B U4l Wi 3t o o '3 3 o o o o 1 0 2 mmflw‘l‘:-- Little L) | Angoon {119 6| 28| e 126j| 201 4 7 3 18 6 1 20 5 10 3 8 9 iyl {"".‘. ercy s Rake {| 15 53(| 68! of 55| 56 10 13 4 47 7 7 4@ 10 14 2 6 45/ X Chichagof I 8y aef) Hooakidals a4 1 6 N 3 3 3 4f 1 4 1 Wwindham Il 0 e a3 R Al a8 e s b Eeohoek excluswely | Fanshaw: 0o 2 1111 Y| :11 8 W o1 9 0‘ 1 o o o o o 2 Baranof | 2| off of Yol 2. o o 2 2 o o a9 o o0 .2.0 2 il o | Funiter Bay WMo s 1 af ol of 1] 1 | 1 o 1 ef 2 e o 1 Myers Chuck .|| 4 of 3 ol M| -8 o 3 2.2 o 1 3 2 2 o 6 0 Klukwah i| 33 3| 28 W oAl 19| & 13 o a2l 5| 3] 32( 2{ o 20| 1] 9 | chilkat IR | R L L 2| rjl-relhoof 3|0 of 4leof a4 .o ob a2} Al o g ’ ; | Lisianski sl W of] ol of % ®i Al o o M. 0 O ¥ o a o 0o 1 ock company.” people who play inevery film of his in | Goddard 1| 8 @ ‘off i Gl 2 e M 3 o (g1 & 3 O o 1 1} which he can spol them. Wayne and &md |whu has his best, | Gustavus Booat--ett 4 2 1] 38| 9 3 1 o o Ln ST T Rl Gl L 6 role yel) are the director’s closest actor friends. ‘John Qualen was Jf Point Agassiz . || o0 -2/! & 2 o 2/ 2| o 1 2 1 2 o o o M 3 o o0 asnatural addition after “The Grapes of Wrath." Joe Sawyer's ||| Elfin Cove f~ 3 4~ 8if 4] «Qf-¢Bil- 4 24 1 -3 4| -0f- 1-- 4 -of- 6} & 1] 0 first for Ford was “The Informer.” Barry Fitzgerald’s was “The ||| Yakutat [f 3 AT 901) A5k AR S} 20| 0.5 21| BAM 6L Al 3V iof 48f 9 i@ S Plough' and the Stars.” Jack Pennick, here pilaying a big slow- iAbeenien... i fl, 0' n“‘ “ e ‘i R 3: ok O B R » e o e} — - witted Dutchman is a Ford trademark. Francis Ford, John's brother, is among the missing, but there are several roles to be filled. "Thomas Mitchell, of course, was an Oscar- wmnm because of “Stagecoach,” and J. M. Kcrngan is an “Informer” veteran. Missing are (hose ofher Ford favorites, Donald Meck and John Carradine, but this is surely an oversight on Bugene O'Neill’s part, not on Jack Ford's. That actors such as these seem to gravitate naturally to Ford productions (and vice versa) is a curious fact. Curious, that is, unles you've followed the Ford career and realize ‘that his best works—"The Informer,” “Stagecoach,” “Lost Patrol” and most notably “The Grapes of Wrath—have been peopled by rugged I/ he-men, by earhty, whiskery luggs, by “characters” with inter- | | utln( qu!.rlu of one sort or another, Hijs best heroines (he has ) {frequently. dispehses %ith |theih altogether). are [} g g Totals Jumau Cha Iludltor bnllnecr \ AT sTieing o o B0 i fw £1F |2 BB BRI S e el Rlg| B | »| & o | 89 | 279( 104|| 105 91| 164} 67 36/ 81| 1720 79/ 61| 86 98] 44 34 32| 92} 461| 34| 51 52/ 33 15 af o % & a3 7 #0 7% 19 6| 18] & 7 1 3 10| 23) 12)| | 18 10{ of 1 9| 1% ny ® 100 100 ¥ 7 3| 13] off 5| 4 12| 3 1 6|| 52| 36( 14| 35| 33 12| '8 69 | 186/ 82i| 71| 38 174!/ 30 165 11| 61 30| 44/ 12 49 17 6 27/, 66/ 28{| 20| 20/ 60/ 11 59 3| S d ¢ 1| 3 1,3 4| 15 8| 15/ 1| ‘of 413 of| 26 8| 7] 11| 204 2[ 22 off 121 off 1| of ;M 6 4 21f[ 76| 32|| 26/ 40| 31| 33 15 5! 20} 101 F 1 17| O N 45/ 127 664 46y 47| 98| 166/ 23 af| 26} M| W B 18 o 8 18 414 58/ 29 15| 54l 6 70 23| 40] 100|| 49| 29 64/ 21 35 8| 27 16/ 14 15 14/ fo| 13 24]| 56] 97|| 51 74 28| 37 19 M- 13} ej| 11 5 3| @8 1 f: 8] 7 3/ 8 of w 1 sff af 4. U 3% 9 Bl 6 off & M 1 & e 11 4. 3 51 24| 8 127 ‘5| 27 10 32 1w | o @ 21 4 3| ) 2| ‘o % 18 1 1 154 36{ 28l 12 38 i 7 24 401 280 s8] 31} 20/ 38l 8 43 6| M 1M 14 18) 2| o 37 6 &5 0o U M 4 0 0 gl 23 1 8 100 14| 8 8 2| 18 6| 12 4 9| 5 6 @ 10 2.3 # 4 7 0 off # 6 o 1 1 3 .0 st 190 9 2 1y 14 18 8 B s 6 9 51 8 4 ¥ g s 8 6 ‘4| & o 2 5 W &% o 3 o 2 o 8 A ;. i & o 1 O 1 a1 2 1 8 1 W oo 3 4 o 2 O 0 g 1o @ 1] 4 6 4 3 H 8 2 2 3 € 2 1 8 o 3 2 o 3 2 2 6 220 8} 4 26 1 8 10 of 9 | e ¥ 3| 11| 3 off & 2/ 2 5 1 2 @ of ® 4 0 s 6 o ‘0 119 3] 8 8- O} MG w2 9f. 18] 10/ 14/ 2{| 5L 12" 28] 31| 13| 18 27f 127718 ‘ it | g 1316011315(16262337} 663] mz[mw: xmfl;m n{x ((OMPLETE UNOFFICIAL RETURNS — REPUBLICAN RRIMARIES — FIRST DIVISION bl sugs safign gl THE DAILY LASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY MAY 20, 1940. U. 8. I)LPAIITMbNT OF |[AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER ltrprcsenlnllvcs r = & (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) 8 ,9 19|88 E gIEIBIZ| RIR 2|2 Forecast fur Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 y 29: Eleglgltlg|*|Elg|2|8 lg{s|B|&8|8 Intermittent light rain tonight and Tuesday, not much change in 3 Bl Fg| B a|® -] 2.8 18 g 2|5 SiEre e g temperature; minimum tonight about 44 degrees; moderate southeast- I 5 L) B I | erly winds. jad ! | Forecast for Southeast Alas Intermittent light rain tonight | | and Tuesday; not much change in temperature; moderate south and ‘ IR southeasterly winds, g g RS ! [ Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. | 74t 58) 03| 33| 57| 66| 185 18| 10} 16%) 24| 16| 19| 24| 2| 190| Mogerate south and southeaSterly wiiitis: over the Gulf and along 65/ 28| 116/ 39 105/ 29| 89| 13 13| 125/ 46| 16 6 105/ 2| 105/ the coast from Dixon Entrance to Kodiak. 23| 214 49| 16| 22| 13; 60| 11 6 18 21| 17| 10, B 2| 76| LOCAL DATA L, SRR P s B R S Barometer lemp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~ Weather 7 8 5 of o 3 ® 3| 4f 1% 8 5 0 4 1 13} 35 pm yesty .. 3017 50 & A% i1 Noiri 3 4 15} o 6 4 18 2| 2 :st 8 '11: Brswl 0 W ..% axd todsy . 1.5058 au Pt s A Bain BORur Ly DA Tl TSN e - S SR TGRS iy R 10{ 4/ 29] 6 22| 5| 30| .1] -7} 76|'-16] 18 3 43| 0] 37 RADIO REPORTS 28/ 34 86 23 33 91 76 2662 64 25 44 86! 5 51 | i TODAY 8 535 1 17 43 41| 4 M| 23 13} -8 32( 1] 16 tempt. | Lowest 3:30am. Precip. 3:30am. 20 16/ 20 9| 9 46 44 7/ 20| 20| 4| -5 3 31 1] 1 Station | temp. temp. 24 hours Weather 3 o 2 20 2 2/ 2o ® 3 1f i 2 0 0 1| parrow 19 e % 20 7| o 3 e+ M 4 % 3 W7 8 0 6} smavik i 25 N 3l 4 120 3 3 17] 8 ep11f 18f 4 1 14| 7 2[ 3| maghanks ‘ P b, o 4 i 8 1 @ a3} & & 1 M o 0 A “9f 0 Nofme Pt. Cldy 19{ 13| 70| 7| 10| 23| e1| 4 5| .21 10 7l S| 47 4 aih { g 3t o 19 425 3 9 10{ 3 81 2 8 -3 -1} 0 s il 15 24 90) 6| 22} 11/ 43| 10/ 13| 63| 22| 62{ 5 79 18 Nohovase e ah 3 184 of 8 @ 104 2| 5 21 3 3 4 18 o0 Hattial | i, b £ 2/ 3 12| 4 14 29 60} 10/ 19| 58/ 7 11 37/ 211 3 ool At ! r* il 15 27| 41) *3| 18/ 183 32| 9| 6 24/ 5| 8 4 23 1 Htieb CHarbor | b 9554 st 1wé 9f 1 T 568 4~ 31 2" 14 O N T 2 Wosnesanski | T Clear 7140 24) 4 12| 45) 44 42 7 55/ 26/ 240 3% 6 N 55| o | lear | . ! H B2 atak | 05, Clear of d0f 9 2 rf e 8 13 7 e 4 A O W o A gl { ) . i o 3| o 3 4 5 o kS, G K I G M w 12 Pt. Cldy 4 4 i ' | Cordoya 2.65 Rain of Moo 4 3 ap 3 o 3 M & K 0 4 0 s L 2 i Noof a4 af N1 af o Ee- N cdl W e M B o o . Rain s 3 o 6 20 23 121 o 2 # 4 3} of & of 2w WhAe i | 30 Cloudy 8 2 s 6 19) 15/ 16/ 11} 1) 8 6 4 6 3 & Ketchikan 4 | Cloudy o 2 Y o3 20'1 o of i ® . ob 14 3 14f Hebbeifupert .. 5 2ar 12| 2 4 12 16 18 21 14| 23 7 100 W 13 o 1n| Prisos Gieotge . 66 % 2 2l 5\’ 40 11} 33| 13} 54 34 10y 250 Ay 1 10| Seattle i | o1 a 111 6 2516 o 2 o o 5 H 6 Pou}u}ul : 74 | 99 Cloudy of of 4 o o 3 0 o of of of S .8 & 0 O San, Frapcisco . 67 { Cloudy 12/ 121 5 6 4 6 10/ 2| 3 1% 4 6 6 1 o 109 f WEATHER 6 17| M % N 4 9l 3 2 2 4 '3 0 % o 6 A noderate, disturbance wh 3 large area was cen- 0] AT 1 3l 7 9 2 & ¥ WG § A 5{ teped this; morning about 300 miles southwest of Kodiak Island o o0 2 o o0 0 2 o o o0 0 1f 0 2 0 0 and appears o be remaining stationary. A weakening ridge of high 0 ¥ 13 9% 8 7 6] 4 8 5 9 @ X 5| pressuré extends northward from the coast of Oregon to South- 3 7 3 1 3 1 2 I 6 5 I 1 5 0 2| east Alaska, Considerable eloudy weather prevailed over Alaska over 1 4 5 1 1 1 2 1 1 9 2( 2 0 5 0 3 the weekend with light to moderate rain over the coastal areas of 4 of 3 o o o 1 o 1 M of o 1 R 6 2 the Gt and, Southeast Alaska. 4 6 o o 1 o 4 -0 o 5 of 3 of .3 of 0f K *‘zln-dwhse 4:23 am., sunset 9:31 pin f1 1 of ff o 2 B of of Bl % M N G X = ol of 2 1 4 o 6 o o 5 o -6 o 3 6 4 2l s 4 2/ 6 5 7 3 10f 14 & 6 u 4 o I ‘Imkmw tlm( “'AI.MN SCHOOLS of 1) o ©O ‘4 o 4 2 1 W B W H o H wH of 2 5 o ¥ o 5 oo 6 o o 32 ¥ o sflfiwub WEDNESDAY L ) e P Z S : :f: 3: g 3 : e Immunization. of children agaimst Z : g fi 2 [1’ N 2‘ 2‘ 8 0 o 3 o 2| wphiheria and smalipox will be ROME, May 20-—Talivi scioo 3 o P - M- 1 S B B (6 IO R 3| conducted at the Junpau Health | were today ordered to close on Ma S 3 0 18 16l 10] ef sjcaal 368 el wefhas] o) s SeBser nWednesday from 1 1031, This is a fortnight earlier. (i b 2; B sl a4\ 8| 5| 38| o A —8F 166 1F|d-0ckcln. fhe afiermon, accord- | intended. b ] ot | fsndt] ot o ! Zoni}s ! | idg to- a annomncement by the e 406 TH65111301 225 567, 900/1061| 3341 3391204 35 377 474 1087) 45/ 976 | Public Health Nurse. Today's news today in Ti pler Lt A Ay »un.symml minm 793 1353, e REDCROSSORNE FOR-EUROPE WRL BEGIN WEDNESDAY $1200 for Relief of Low Counfrios The Juneau Red Cross Chapter’s drive to raise a-$1200 quotatowarc " |Davis in_ announeing the drive for 473, 387 229 993| T a war relief fund for. Holland, Bel- gium < and: Luxembeourg will begin Wednesday under the direction of | the Rev. G. Edward Knight, Chalr« man of the campuzn About ten percent 0( the quo(a;hul been raised . already. according ‘to Chapter Chairman John Newmarker'. ‘The Juneau Chapter cousists of 13 towis of. Soitheast, Alaska from Pet- eraburg: to Yakutat. National Chairman Nciman H. 416,000 European relief fund statéd thdt the fnvasion-of the three small neutral nations and the spread "of death and devastation among eiy= 10’1 283/ 696/ 488 519 395 301 741 iltln populations required large re- lief funds. “The hour has struck,” Davis said, “with a threat of ensuing suffer- ing and horror to be endured by | women and children and the aged such as the human mind never has conceived: 1 -urge- all -sympathetic Americans to respond quickly and generously to this appeal.” 4 The salary of the Prime Minister of Great Britain is 10,000 pounds (about $35,000 -at present rates of exchange) per year. L e Daily Empire classifieds pay. Supply System Bogging Nazi Advafice Slowed Be- cause Lack of Gasoline, | Ammunition . PARIS, May 20. — The French High Command announced early | Sunday that the crushing German drive into France was slowing down, The High Command said | that the Nazi push reached its| 1|apex Saturday at Guise, only 12 | mfles beyond the center of Fri-| | day’s fighting. | Military spokesmen credited the | effectiveness of the famed French 3| 75's with helping to stop the Ger- man. drive. Shells fired by the 75's | at point blank range were said to | be wreaking havoc among the big advance. The small | were rushed to the front in large | numbers as the Allied troops hurled | heavy reinforcements into the bat- | tle line to' halt the drive of Hit- |ler's war machine. The French High Command said |that the Germans also are hav- ing trouble keeping their advance | motorized units in ga.oline and ammunition, It was believed that | the German supply system was bog- ging down, as it did when the Kaiser's troops drove the closest to ‘Patis durmg the World War. M AMUNDSEN FUES 51K 10 AND! FROM MARY JOYCE'S TAKU 100GE Six passengers who were flown to Mary Joyee's Taku Lodge by Johnny | Amundsen yesterday will return to- night to Juneau when pilot: Amund- sen flies a acheduled teip -to Taku Inlet. Passengers returning from the | weekend trip are Alec Holden, Lor- raine Holden, Mrs. Helen Bender. Al:Monsen and Mr. and. Mrs.-Robert | Schoettler. ; | In a flight today from Juneau o the Coast, Amunasen flew Les Flor- ence and W.-H. Finson to Hoonai Elmer Osborne and William A. Holz- heimer to Pelican City. Yesterday's fligh's carried Duc Day, W. A. Jones and Sid Goetiei | fo Sitka and Richard Olson fwm Chichagof to Hoonah. Simmons carried two miners ax'd a load o! freight to Polaris-Taku. .- Durlng the Civil War, $450,000 in, Uniited States notes were issued. They were popularly known as “Greenbacks.” | armored tanks leading the Navi| mobile guns | and Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Horton to] Hawk Inlet. Shell Simmons piloted | (USSR S S S S ITSTIME TO CHANGE YOUR THINNED - OUT LUBRICANTS! CONNORS MOTOR COMPANY e e e et e : [N ) \ \ )\ N N \ \ Alaska . Savings i | 1 | Commercial Safe Deposit Banking by Mail Depariment SO o s 0 | The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska P “”-,-fl,-vm-.‘k--m”-“-»-------,,, 5 { NEWEST IMPROVEMENTS IN KITCHEN EQUIPMENT i Murphy Cabranette Kiichen office at Radio Engineering and Manufacturing Company Phone 176 Box 2824 | '"“:c"rg:‘;:::'r‘”*“"““"“""“'""‘ Yo [ - | COMPREHENSIVE AGTTHD 1 1 AUTOMOBILE - " - INSURANCE coverage ever offered the public... If You Don't Have COMPREHENSIVE You Don’t Have Modern Insurance! ‘ ASK ABOUT IT. { SHATTUCK AGENCY Office—New York Life Telephone 249 i 5 4