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e —— 2 U. 5. FACING FATE WORSE THAN IN 76 Matanuskans Have Bright- Governor Asks Rewaken- ing fo Freedom’s THE DAILY ALASKA £MPIRE, FRIDAY, [FLANKE FINDS " RAILWAY BELT BROTHER OF Baseball Today WI ll K I E IS The following are scores of games EN BOOM SIA‘!F played this aftérnoon in the (wo . major leagues: National League Philadelphia 2; New .York 15. IN ALASKA Libby Camfi@ Exe(utive} Through Juneau for Pittsburgh 4: Cincinnati 5. Chicago 11; St. Louis 5. American League St. Louis 8; Chicago 10. Boston 9; Washington 4. TRUCK RUNS er Outlook as Base Work Gains Speed and Fair on the Anchorag © JULY 5, 940. ST I RIS e TR e e SHIP IS OVERDUE, MISSING Liner wifhrforgmer French Officials Aboard Is i i,l FAFIGHTS | TAKEPLACE ON 3 DAYS | Vessels Boffled Up With | . Ultimatum Facing Them X Responsibil‘ies (,;;,‘X,‘;‘ah, Bristol Bay Being Hunied 3 -Three Alternatives & ment J. T. Flakne, who re-f . — . g | ; o (Continy age One) | here on Edward Willkie, brother of the| g " LONDON .yuu 5—The German| = (Continued from Page Ore Dl | from a brief trip to the Interior and |Republican presidential nominee, | controlled Brussels radio station. s - - Westiird was a vasitor to Juneau last night ! lin a broadcast heard here, reports|African port of Oran six hours to | clation’®. ol our e GOl s \pproximately 800 and this morning, stopping over he 15,000-tori frénch liner ' Msa-|8gree to fight, sail to British ports W S o s priceless..n are king on the Fair jeen the arrival of the Alaskan sila that left Bordeaux on June 16,{0r beiscuttled. He said that when heritage is now U banke p \ 500 at An- | Cl vesterday and departure I'with former Premiar' Ddladier |the ultimatum expired without Our freedc 15 been taken | ., f the PAA Electra for Fairbanks | avoard, s overdiie 'and is' miss-|French. complianes, ; three ' -Brllish | for nted, as SOME~ | \wpije at Ancho today Pt baitleships, cruisers, aircraft an air- hing which here aud would tting under w Willkie, a “ringer” for his broth- "¢ broAdeast sald fofmer Frenoli| CTafbscarriar ang otiet Hghk R always be he 800 scldier v, is manager of the Fish Can- w d -l- I’S H 'd \intater. of Haseation Delbos, -aud opened fire and inflicted heavy the Governor bed Amer e ehoamped 1n tesits| Aiug Tndustey, of Gibby, MeNGir ava| VW OOUEOW. FEEE e On\ nér ADsister of Tniériof Mandel| USHEEG Al 1 0l L il cans of tod asy ar the town. |Libby. He is going to Bristol Bay aboar g Y The terms of the armistice w going, forgettul, soft. peopl [pomrfie W s e L By ooty B e Bu| . CPOLOE OT NEEING [ A e s nucq| Pratoeifmis, wiL SO kg Declor o Read ct booming, with the Fairbanks rcpean manager of Libby, McNeill . | e A S 1| Ttaly, called for tHe surrender oy Plechails ernor’s add , ¥ s ¢ {5 ‘fiow a. Viee-presi- | Whlle thmk | former officials left France in-|g,. nect for disarmament and in- recedir ¢ erngr’s addr Exploration Company employing | #nd Libby and is now a vice-presi- | tending to continue French resis- e Richard ckson, valedictorian of |elose to 1,000 men, more than ever |dent of the company | b vauuinsL eI | oane ternment. £ Ty | the 1940 Juneau High School ¢ , | befor>. Willkie was in Philadelphia last | Woeodrow Tarr was under arrest Junction ”\vnh P o pl-emm_ Rey- Vice-Admiral Elm]n Musler T,om- read the Declaration of Indepen- In the Anchorage district, Flakne |week when his brether was nom- [bere today as the result of a Fourth i Y= mander of the free French Nln\ \1:d’ dence. found a op! nated at tne Republican conven-|of July accident in which he drove| 'rh.u ahip: Nak Doen Solgnt un- Air Force cooperating with the Brit- Acting Ms Henry Messer- at Matanuska tile ticn, He flew from the East Coast!a garbage truck into two soldiers _u“(““,’,“,\, ,”“ \(.‘i‘,,.wl' ports -m(l'bh' «a\s‘(h‘a‘( bl Clm“‘-‘] ‘shxp f” o cchmidt introduced the speakers. | getting work on the air base pro-|to Seaftle before boarding thejon the Douglas Bridge approach it haaey i ‘.\l‘“ e French Navy is in German or Ital- The program followed a dem-|ject and are Jooking forward fo an Clipper. | Lawrence McGuire and a com e om “stiil at se ian hands. enstration of close order drill by enlarged cutlet for their farm pro During his brief visit in Juneau, |panion named Chamberlain, who several days ago. Musler said that a number of oldiers from Chilkoot Barracks duc Wwillkie rencwed acquaintance with|came here with the continzent frow B o A French naval vessels had rallied to and was followed by the children's| While contacting Army officials Licut.-Commander J. S. MacKin- |Chilkeot Barracks, suffered arn ARMY (APIURES the cause of Geners (1 'lvw. De ¥ichts avbhl 2t the air bases, Flakne said he had | non, with whom he was a classmate | wounds when they were knocko Gaulle who heads a French com- B3 | been ured that Alaskans [at the United States Naval Acad-|down by the truck. McGuire is a wittee in London. | pessible will be used to fill jobs|emy in the class of 1921, . After|patient at the Government Hos- R”lf TROPHY pe S St la“en Say; on the bases.” graduation Willkie coached the foot- | pital. - ball team of Marfon Military Acad- ,\(Imil\ Drinking ( l N Snow Hit ]‘ ' i ‘Imm T. Mahoney, Tarr signed a Homef i s da 4 statement in which he admittec H[Am 'o BE {having been drunk at the time of the accident. Mahoney said Tar: Snow hit a home run when his TOMORROW “ERE d ““1'" him he took the truck, belong- clout bounced off the top of the ng to the Peterson Refuse Company ;uu nto the creek a few weeks N wAY To I A o" F'SH'"G (AS \\\lllmut permission. fence into k-8 = The accident occurred, at about dgo and Moose nosed out Douglas | 2 s [12:30 o'clock yesterday afternoor by one run. The steamer North Sea was in| Hearing on an orrlm to show cause |on the Douglas Island end of the Leo Lassen Seattle baseball | Junean Wednesday night from Se-|why a temporary injunction should bridge. broadcaster, and Pacific Coast|attle for , bringing in|not be granted to prevent Bureau| wmeGuire and Chamberlain, whe diamond league authority, wrote to |30 p and taking nine out.|of Fisheries representatives from |were sitting on the bridge approacl Everett Nowell, who requested the Arrivals were Joyce Kolasa, Del- |enforcing 1940 regulations will take | pajling, got, their feet hastily wher opinion, and which opinion, it is bert Kinney, Mrs, 1 A. Kinney,|place in District Court at 10 0'-|they saw the truck bearing dow: uiidérsibod; wilt be discusied at|GlAudia Kearney, He Riddon. | clock tomorrow morning |upon them ajong the rajiing. & meeting of league officials to- |Ms. G. Blomgren, C Christan- | The suit.was brought by the Cape| According to Witnesses the truck night |sen, Mrs, G. R. Reed, Morris Nel- | Decision Fish Company against Iralgtryck the railing, knocking the twe The letter from Lassen is as fol- son, Mrs. George Nelson, R. Part-| Gabrielson, Chief of the Fish and |scldiers down, id then smashed Towh: ington, Mr. and Mrs. Robert, Duck- | Wildlife Service, Clarence Olson, |into the roads bank 100 yard If the fence in question ,,“‘“ulllv Grace Ingle, Billy Ingle, Don- | Acting Alaska Agent, and other |farther on, catapulting 1ip the bank feet or more from home plate ”“JMSIH‘HU Mrs. Don Stroup, Charles | fisheries representatives in Alaska. Passengers Unhurt fs 267 feet) and the ball bounded |PErS: Mike Baviien, Hobert Wood, S — Riding with Tarr on' the truck ot the fence out of the ”"‘“n"‘()]tl(l‘?\ 1(W ‘I/\t“lyl o Arc ]I ‘2‘“‘“ were Arnold Amundsen and twc LROyC oyd, Mrs. L. Old- EARLY (AI(H m { youths, Bobby Conklin and John Ri- field without touching the ground | ooy p’ w' Bk T. R. Curtis, the drive was a legal home run. | RIS T. vera. None were injured. O MNET bAL Houtow rgl m;(nlixr“fi(':‘x‘:x'v }W‘a‘nkl:m\i"»‘-:w: Trene SOUTHEAST AlASKA McGuire and Chamberlain . werc a ¢ over ch a fence it is SaTT gy 2 ked up by a taxicab and yushec a player over such a fence it 15|amoot, Mrs. S. B. Whitchead, M o SEX([ “ !HP I . 14 J e VRILERE, (S {to the Governmer spital also a home run. D. Williams, Jim Boyle. Albert Gra- pk VE E lE ' Tarr was 4‘.,»,»((.2}(.:1“]”;“ harged It is only when a batted ball ham, Cliff Dawson, T. Demidofi b AL WAs ATONGCIONE KR ¥ v PSS ying and ' driving bounds from the ground over such|Farold Wittmeyer An 4~\m|lmt eally catch of sal- and Cal Johnson. while under the influence of liquor a fence that it is a two-base hit. | - men reported by Icy Strait and oy AR idents ¢ “Under the rules of baseball | Chatham Strait canneries to Ating | ) e 5 LT “Cfffl‘:”m"}‘]” ground rules cannot be made that | WERNE(KES F[ Alaska Agent Clarence Olson of the| w;.; ,.:,m :l",m‘”‘ ,“f“ iy alter any of the basic rules of the| Y Bureau of Fishe Olson returned | 4o SO ported to. the Mar- game. They can be made only Lo here on the patrol vessel Brant |~ iR S fit the peculiarities of the iu fividu- | '" 0" WAY ou]' vesterday after visiting all canner- les in the Icy Strait, Western and al park that do not conform with | the regular baseball cod - .- MT. McKINLEY i THIS MOZNING ONWLAY SOUTH Stopping bri in Juneau thi forenoon enroute south frem it westward run, the steamer NMount | | her | friends they lin six years today astern distric TRIP T0 COAST SLATED TODAY Three passengers were scheduled to fly out to the coast with Alex Holden today. They were Lee Grif- iIilh. Louis Taylor, both for Sitka, from |and H. Martin for Hirst. Yesterday, Simmons made a EXTRAGUARD FOR CAPITOL Sightseers,mer Visitors Required to State Business Werneckle and Claire are meeting have not visited here and marvellling at the growth of Juneau Mrs. Wernecke and Claire ar- rived here this afternoon from Mayo with Mr. Wernecke, consulting geol- ogist for the Alaska Juneau and general manager of the Treadwell- Yuken, and his pilot, Charles Grop- stis. The Werneckes flew San Francisco ear Mis. Living daughter north v last month and | McKinley brought in nine passeng- ars v ports and Feok 1|mave since been residing at their |roundtrip flight with clipper mail WASHINGTON, July 5. — The south froi here. |summer home near Mayo. T]\ey‘lo Ketchikan, taking Ed Riley to pohpe guard nbolft the United States Afrivals were A W. Dou; v_(r\qb‘iflre now on the way south, regis-| Petersburg and flying H. Croken | apitol has been increased and every Mrs. M Encland, J. T. Plakne |tered at the Baranof Hotel, and plan |and Bob Linquist roundtrip to Ket- sightseer and other visitors are re- Mauy Tioif. D. D Hull, Wilhan |0 Visit here a few days before con- chikan quired to state their business. A. Hesse, Margarc. Deshau, Gus|Unuing their flight. Holden yesterday flew J. A, Ford | One official said a stricter con- Piret ana A Althouzh Mr. Wernecke is a fre- | and Lola Hill to Sitka, J. Towell to | trol around the capitol has been put 2 Sailin Winston | 4uent visitor, Mrs. Wernecke and |Chichagof, and returned with Al into effect as the result of the { Jones er, . . Volk, melCLnrr have not visited here since | Hookstra, J. A_ Edwards and Fred [Pombing of the British pavilion at H Gorham, Mrs, E Gesberg, Mrs, 1934 when they spent the summer, Wendt from Sitka, picking up Bill the New York World's Fair. Chinihe Aventers, Mre 8- A Waak] e | Dodds at Hawk Inlet. e { ing, Mrs. W. W. Richelson, Mrs. J. el BTSN COMLETOR (OMORS X CARGOES Arms Found, . Hardy, L. W. Holmes, Isaac Pitt- A RETURNS BY CLIPPER i o . For Ketchikan—M. Kosoff, Charles FROM SEA'".E v’s"’ OF H u 0“ 3 Forward, C. E. McHuron, W. Scobey, R. Brown, Mike Orosz For Wrangell—S, Sarabia, G. F‘ul-’ zenco. Man A’nesled Still up in the clouds in cnthus- JUNEAU MART | S L |iastic praise for the new Alaskan NEW YORK, July 5. — Ces | Clipper Collector of Cus-| A total of 48500 pounds of hali- | Kroger, 38, described by the police as . |toms James J. Connors returned, but were sold on the fish exchange|a former member of the German STOCK QUOTATICNS | here by plane yesterday after spend- | here teday, all at 8% and 6% cents| American Bund, has been arrested month in Seattle on leave. 5. guotation of Alaska Juneau mine NEW YORK, July — Closing stock today is 4'2, American Can| 05, Anaconda 19%, Bethlehem Stecl 75, Commonwealth and Southern | 1%, Motors 42 7/8, International Har- vester 43%z, Central 11 7/8, Northern Pacific| 6%, United States Steel 51%, Pound | $3.81. Curtiss Wright 6 7/8, General | Kennecott 25, New York | a pound. on charges of violating the Sullivan | anti-firearms law. Detectives investigating the bomb | % explosion in the British pavilion at the World's Fair, reported they! found a loaded .32 and an unloaded | ing Cennors could not speak too high- | Arrivals were, Little Emma, 9,500 ly of the fine flight from Seattle to | pounds, Hyperian, 12,000, Sylvia, 9,- Juneau 000 Dixon 8:500, Reform, 8:500, 31427 Mrs. Connors is now in (,u]xlumm 100¢. visiting relativ e —— AFFAIR HONORS R. L. BERNARD BEZ FLYING NORTH; BRISTOL BAY BOUND Nick Bez, promiucent cannery man, ‘pflssed through Juneau this morn-| }in his apmm‘em '(OUPLE MARRIED ALL OVER AGAIN Harry C. Kinney and Lucile May | Kinney were married in Douglas by Mrs. R. L. Bernard entertained | informally with “open house” | .38, both revolvers of German mnke_“ |1 An Army team from Chilkoot Barracks defeated Juneau Rifle and ! Pistol Club marksmen by a single point yesterday to take away the rifle trophy won by Juneau last Fourth of July. The score was 908 for the and 907 for the Rifle Club. - IRLS TAKE OFF ON YUKON TRIP; PIPER AIRPLANE Army Two pilots, Alma young women Heflin and Margaret McQuin, were scheduled to take off late this af- ternoon for Whitehorse via Skag- way on their first leg of a jour- ney to Bering Sea in their. Piper Coupe wheel plane. Weather bound here for several days, the girls decided to take ad- Lvantage of lifting skies this after- noon and Ieave for Whitehorse from where they will fly on to Daw- son and down the Yukon to Ber- ing Sea, returning here in about wo weeks to crate their planc for hipment back to Seattle -~ CHICHAGOF MINING MAN DUE, BARANOF Lew Kay, President of the Chi- chagof Mining Company, is due in Juneau tomorrow aboard the steamer Baranof on a trip to the Chichagof mine, Accompanying Kay is his son| Wallace, and a director of the company, (-eury. Meagher. VISITORS SAIL ON NORTH SEA Mrs. S. B. Whitehead, mother of Dr. W. M. Whitehead, and Mrs\ irene Smoot aunt of Dr. White- head, sailed south via Sitka on the steamer North Sea Mrs. Whitehead is from Loving-‘ ston Va., and Mrs.- Smoot resides in Washington, D, C. They have| spent the past two weeks . visiting in Juneau - D JONES GOES SOUTH Winston Jones, Traffic Manager | of the Alaska Transportation Com- pany, sailed south this morning on the steamer Mount McKinley after a few days of business in the Capital City. -ee ! CARO CATCHES TWO | BIG KING SALMON Bert Caro reports catching two! nunl king salmon at North Island | a few days ago, one dressing 54 | pounds, and one caught a few| i minutes later, weighing 46 pounds dressed D DANNER ON BARANOF George Danner, - owner of the Mendenhall ‘Dairy, is returning to Juneau on the Ban\nux after a beief business u p Mo the States. ol Both were, caught on hand | IS CHAMP MUCKSTER Second and Third Places Won by E. F. Wouck and Bob Hamilton Strapping 200 - and - some-pounds Ed Lincoln bent his broad back and shovelled a yard of gravel from one ¢ 2 minutes and box to anobher in 37'. seconds to :win the first prize money yesterday in that big annual mucker event. Twenty-four men took part in the mucking, but only three muckers did the job under three minutes. E. F. Wouck won second spot with 2 min- utes, 54 seconds, and Bob Hamilton was shird with four seconds longer “Times' of other muckers were as follo George Brown, 3:54; James Cole. 2; Pat Ryan, 4 Jack Klingenberg, 4:07; Ernest Daniels, 3:33: Max Young, 6:05; O. Martin, 3:16; Harold Reichl, 4:30; Joe John- son, 4:07; Martin Thompson, 3:05; Albert Johnson, 3:54; Jim Thomas, 3:37; Dawson Muggy, 3:10; Yvall Moody, 3:04; John Vevalias, 3:56; Lloyd Garner, 3:05; Albert Davis, 3:41; Walter 3:06; Howard Dilg, Stephan,. 3:11;. Joe Kezele, 3:25; John Skok, 3:10. (OLISEUM THEATRE. BILLS TWO SHOWS STARTING TONIGHT Taking cognizance of the fact that| in this modern age the field cf ad-| venture is.no longer restricted to what was oncz known as the sterner sex, Warner Bros. has produced, lin “Women in the Wind,% which opens tonight on a double bill fea- ture at the Coliseum Theatre, a stirring. tale of the aglventures of wemen flie Kay Fran and William Gar- gan are the top-featured members | of a cast which also includes Vic-| tor Jory, Maxie Rosenbloom, Fddlt“ Foy, Jr. Sheila Bromley, Eve Arg den, Rosella Towne, Tla Rhodes, V{‘l(\ Lewis, Frankie Burke and Chatles | Anthony Hughes. Also billed is a rousing action story with a number of new twists, and| spirited performances by a cast of | familiar and popular players who put the new “Hcpalong Cassidy” rcmance, “Renegade Trail,” at the tep of the list- of range thrillers. | HELP AN ALASKAN Telepn-—e 713 cr write T™2 Ala critorial mimployment Service for this qualified worker. - | STENOGRAPHER—Married, age ‘, 22, high schéol and business eollege | education . Three yegrs full time | | experience in good positions doing | |sccretarial work, bookkeeping and . | U. S. Commissioner Felix Gray on | Wedn: 1 [ 3 Riggions | The following are today's DOW,|Wednesday evening., The marriage ZY\ dsn(;xsg? }1\;;1(;:“13%2&115: ;::xix%fn:i ing, fiying to Fairbanks aboard BACK TO JUNEAU |general office dutles. Espeolally fast Jones averages: industrials 12151, | was the second for the couple, who her husband’s birthday, which fs | PAA Electra. Mary K. Cauthorne, of the Ter- | (YPist, has won contest honots. Call : rails 2639 utilities 22.47. | were divorced several years ago. | July 4. Many friends of the honoree | Bez Will visit the Squaw " Greck | ritorial Health Department, is re- | f°F BS 131 - Wl | 3 ~~+00 - Mrs. Kinney arrived here on the | called dux-mg the party hours. | cannery on Nushagak Bay and re-|turning, here on the steamer Bar- | HOME FOR FéURTH | ¢ | steamer North Sea from Aberdeen, e turn through here in aboyt two |anof after a professional trip East. " < daug £ M | | TH N | ington. Witnesses at Wednes-| MISS MOLVER RETURNS | weeks. | A CRiOFABRR Sl CHOEENE ¥ b ) ay's ceremony were Mr. and Mrs.| Miss Randi Molver returned -on | 7 e CASH COLE ENROUTE Iamj l\r,l“fs (x?lscsflt1 f Ols}(;x; ‘;’L:; ;:: l mm(BS BOAI Epul Budop, the steamer North Sea from Péters- | .ALBERT WHITE RECURNING | Cash Cole is on the steam:r ‘t‘;:;:y oA 3t nc‘r‘:: lflm?ly my,mer ‘ s B burg where she attended services for | Albert White, delegate to the Re-|Baranof, returning from the Re-|o, seventh Street. HEA[TH PROG AM her cousin, Allen Lea, who was ac-‘publican National Convention, 1s|bublican National Convention at| £ The steamer Pflncess Alice sailed | mdentflll) killed in Juneau several |returning here on the steamer Bar-| Philadelphia. He is accompanied LEAVES HOSPITAL [ south tb}a morning through Juneau | days ago when hit by an airplane | anof. | by his young son, Jerry. Mrs. George Bell and baby bnv‘ and took six passengers out from | ADOPIED BY ((( propeller. STHE T TR, S R | were dismissed from the Govern- | here. _rey——— INJURED YESTERDAY HESSE RETURNS ment Hospital yesterday. Sailing ufl&h 'nre Charles Mor-\ RUPERT FISH PRICES A | Sven Hankola was injured yester- William A, Hesse, Territorial e - % rison, J. J. Dazell, D. Mc-| WASHINGTON, July 5. — The iday afterncon in a motoreycle ‘acci- | Highway Engineer, returned to Ju- NOTICE Mw Treste. | CCC has adopted military calis-| At Prince Rupert today 273,000 dent and was taken to St Ann's|Deau today on the steamer Mount| ATRMAIL ENVELOPES, Qhowmg‘ m. i thenics' a§ a supplement to its bounds of halibut were sold at 9| Hospital for medical care. Hankola | McKinley from his usual summer air route from Seattle to Nomey ;"' |to 9.90 and 7.50 cents a pound. suffered heel and ankle injuries, health program, tour of Alaska:roads, if sale at J, B, Burford & Ca. 1 0L 8. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU | THE WEATHER (By the U. s. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 pam., July Cloudy tonight and Saturd probably light rain beginning & day afternoon; minimum temperature tonight 50 degrees; gentle to moderate southerly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy tonight and Saturday with probably light rain beginning Saturday afternoon; “not much change in temperaturé; gentle to moderate south to westerly winds 3 tonight but becoming southerly Saturday, | Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alask Gentle to moderate west to southwesterly winds tonight, becomir southerly Saturday from Dixon Entrance to Sitka; and moderat south and southeasterly from Sitka to Kodiak. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer 71emp. Humidity Wind Yalocity Weather 3:30 p.m. yest’y 30.28 85 S 4 Cloudy 30 a.m. today 30.23 52 88 Calm Cloudy Noon today 30.21 55 8 E 5 Cloudy RADIO REPORTS it | TODAY Max. lempt, | Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30am. Station la | temp. temp, 24 hours ather Barrow | 39 39 0 Cl¢ Fairbanks 16 46 ] Cle Nome | 51 52 18 Clou Dawson | 417 0 [ Mayo | 56 Clear Anchorage [ 56 3o Bethel | 49 Cle §t. Paul b 48 Dutch Harbor | 45 ‘Wosnesenski | 41 Kanatak | 52 Kodiak | 46 Cordova \ 52 F Juneau | 51 Cloudy Sitka | 51 Cloud, Ketchikan | 51 0 Prince Rupert | 50 g Prince George 36 0 ‘Seattle | 50 0 Portland ‘ 50 0 1 ¢ San Francisco 54 0 Clear WILATIII'I( SYNOF This morning’s weather chart showed a large area of high pre sure situated off the Pacific coast with a ri extending northward into, Scutheast Alaska, and a low pressure area centered over the | Bering Sea. The weather has been cloudy over most of Al * except partly cloudy in the Interior. 'There was rain over the - kan Peni la-and over the Bristol Bay region, Over the Juneau Se- attle Airways this morning, it was cloudy over the northern half and partly cloudy over the southern half. Juneau, July 6.—Sunrise 4:03 am. sunset 10:05 p.m. FOUR leERS month, no persons not a citizen of | the United States may draw pay ADM“‘TED TODAY | in any of the armed services of the 4y nation. 10 CITIZENSHIP b fe o wor MAYOR HERE TOMORROW | Mayor Harry I. Lucas is a pas- Four soldiers from Chilkoct Bar- | senger on the steamer Prince racks were naturalized as American | Louise due here tomorrow. He wa citizens today in Disrict Court here. | called to Seattle to testify in a law They are Louis Joseph Cheyrion, na- | tive of France; Lawrence Shea, na- ———.——— tive of Ireland; Frank Wehrer, | NOTICE native of Hungary, and Adam | AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showil Schierman, ngtive of Russia. air route from Seattle to Nome. on sale at J, B. Burford & Co. adv. Undel a law ;,uing into (‘f[ect next - - Ah a senate finance committee hearing in Washington, U. S. Secre- tary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., told his listeners that he was cpposed to pay cuts among govcrnmcnf. employes to swell the U. S. defense fund. Morgenthau is shown exchanging quips with Senators Arthur Vandnnbcrg of Michigan (finger up) and John Townsend of Delaware. '\t _]umot Chamber Meetmg Miner Hudson (left), president of the Washington Junior Board of Trade; Perry Pipkin, president of the United States Junior Chamber of | Commerce, and A. Z. F. Wood (right), chairman of the 21st annual con-; ,Mfiom# the Junior Ghlm quu are shown at W opening ‘