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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 15, 1940. By The AP Feature Service ¥ ~ What if pro ional baseball players did exactly what sports writers say they dy for the fun of it San Francisco and "ollvlmml Pacific coast league players decide to act out literally the familiar phrases used in describing games. This is thé resuli: FISHERMEN 1 EEE " ORDERISPLACED FISH STRIKE FOR 627 LIGHT ALL ALASKA oes poceime 0o 10CAL MAR‘: in Nation's History- i Cost 11 Million Only Four Halibut Vessels i Left fo Come in : from Banks - No Salmon fo Be Handled by Storage Workers After Wednesday Army today order from the American Car and Foundry Company. It was the largest single | ? 3 9 i ith the halibut season in this Southeast Alaska trollers cease apk purchase in peacetime U. 8.| ’ RIS WRGRR. RABHL SWedutadBy neiht; aceoraing | nithiay ares haviog resched s oloes Sel- b eie Sotelyed hicre Youay, Denc: | \InelbIIEREL filbe. Nes ‘BpuFOxL: .u-:l‘):;\)x\“;:’ncl!‘ :’r::::m?dmg ufmnrmcx‘fi ing settlement of ‘a dispute between mately $11,000,000, sAlinon. (Lises. 8 coinc trellers and fish buyers over ),,.,,. EES SRRy to a Sitka dispute on prices, the lo: cal fish exchange was busy over the A dispute, which arose at Sit few days ago, was sanctioned Sat | weekend. ARED: il ok - ad sheekin Z BRITI H | Ten halibut vessels sold yesterday Maritime Fed i Bub D and today, and but four of the local Council and as a result, cold stol fleet remain yet to come in workers have been instructed handle no fish after Wednesday 4. n. | Selling at an average price of 8% and 6% cents a pound were, Lou- | helen, 9,000 pounds, Vivian, 8500, ,“"l;l:lll:\: . nal\r”’:::..:.mlj.vl|' ;:,, 0 Bib Emma, 12,000, Tundra 7500, 14 cents 8 pountd:-for large ved ki T'helma, 8,000, Spencer, 5000, Hy- 10 oarite o maediiaes. wnd 8 « HIT BOMBS g uim:r. (I])lxnn 13,000, Diana | z +, ot OF 3,000 Frord 50 | 5 g Ao R e Among salmon sales over the while cohoes are bringing 4 cents | — \wmn were, Lynn Fleteher, 1,100 pound. S k S n AS( ndl’] xmvmds. Bill Moringside 500, Tam| This is the tragic result of an explosion of & bomb | others were injured when the bomb let go after Sanction of the strike from Ketchi- moke ,ee enc g Miettenen 1,300, Elmer Lindstrom,| planted in the British pavilion at the New York I they had removed it from the building and ex- kan _apparently makes the troiler| Cruiser Hood and 500, Howard Kriski, 800, Walt Rob-| world's fair. Two detectives lic dead and several | amined its contents. tioup widespread over tho entire| HOM LIUISEr 11000 an |ertson 1,000, ;e;-li:m Hmmp&m‘: 1,000, - . . p illis 1,5 e SR | Aircraft Carrier Afk |w PR 2.uou“p‘f: l(uf lg:uwmq u‘:o "IPPON PUPpET Erocx Quomations | WARDEN SMITH IS T0 RESIGN | [mixcd halibut and salmon, and pack- | LALINEA. . July 15—Col- er North Light 5000 pounds of | | ORDERS ARREST {from the British battle cruiser Hoc Halibut boats yet unarrived from 0} sin, S : : " and aircraft carrier Ark as bombs|their last trips to Area Two this af- ion u \'\v\ Ql‘ ll.‘\ 0 >al J}(I. 15. — | ding anes fe ear their | U oon werc the Fremont, Avona, today is 4 ican Can K Warden Court Smith of Sin Quen- from raiding planes fell near their| s o A e a' ea'lle anchorage at Gibraltar, il\ argaret and Little Emma | American Power and Light | tin pri indicates he will soon re- bl ¢ LTI o G ,ee—— | Anaconda 19%, Bethlehem 'sign. He has been a storm center of e | ‘Newspapefmefl, Member 75's, Commonwealth and'a controversy for months, AL st T — i mu[v PICKS CUTTER IN PORT of Shanghai Council g i S Mo e St s 2 | ; - AFTER PRACTICE toBe Deported 'z, iy . v i ODUNA PASSES 40,000 pounds, 10 end 9% o | | SHANGHAL July 15—Immediate 770 Vo o) IHRQUGH pOR]‘ pound; Tvanhoe 31,000 pourds, 107 N v YANKEES‘ |arrest and deportation of five Am- y Eouad il and 9 cents. o B The cutter Haida returned last| erican newspapermen and an Am- _ : The steamer Oduna, Alaska Steam- 3 £ . . ? b : DOW, JON X From local bar" .1 vessels with night from battle practice and a|erican member of the Shanghai e | fallowing - ad ship Company freighter, was in port 278,000 pounds soid an average ruise of this division. Municipal Council has been ordered |~ = = o here today. taking on lumber foi of 9 7-8 to 9% cents « pound Syndl(ifle '0 UOS& Four After taking soldiers back lo1 by Wang Ching Wei, head of the 'J‘l‘lf ‘(:‘WH ‘:“h“‘f' I“.,z». shipment south. _ Million Deal Within | Chitkeot Barracks, following the| Japanese-dominated puppet gov- e ey T Captat of the Oduna is Gus Goetz PRICES ELSY WHERE | Fourth of July celebration here.‘ ernment at Nanking, as a result and Purser is Clayton J: At Prince Rupert today 318,000 TWO Weeks the cutter put out for its battle|of a cafe scuffle last night involv- 5t & VR pounds of halibut v sold at 9.80| practice, went to Ketchikan anding several Japanese 8 ARE DUE ON GRIFFIN HERE and 7.50 cents 2 pouund. i then made a trip to Metlakatla e e - | C. R. Griffin, well known Trick At Ketchikan the prevailing price| CHICAGO. July 15 Attorney | where Dr. Brown, ship's doctor, and Murray representative, arrived is 9 and 7.34 cents a pound {Jeremiah Mahoney of New York|effected a number of tonsilecto- in town over nd and is a iy P 2 |said today he expected the New |mies. | s st at the Gastineau Hotel. York Yankee all club, world’s | ; : ;s - i | it we flying in here || | champions for the past three years \ R 1 | thi te arrive about four ; ] [to be sold by the Jacob I(HI)[HIU : i e e Ponein n engineer who lestate to a syndicate headed by { €A Junior Inspector AlHornin, % (4““;“‘ ‘,““ ‘ U' B. terry e ] i' s been studying the Jualin lodes ¥ |ley “within two weeks al a price | ,rn«l \\1\1! a new Fairchld 24 on Jr‘ M mhm } M o, M. ,\“"“ | visit to town and is at the Gastineau t“prylv ROUIE of $4,000,000, fo | | floats !mAlr:lv u\:‘ u: th;:l it Aero-| Ly g Yeon iu‘-ml A o 14 [l e | 3 D Smta s ateaiuih nautics Authority in Alasl | 54 4 E I '”.h:ln, ':,‘.‘:‘:"x, ; IS"lk‘\"v.‘i"fi‘."f“‘ Horning planned to tike > the o T3 b N Sat AR s e Tal Stk e Lol B e 5 and fly another MRS. WERNER. LEAY | puppet show, were marioneties rep- : ¥ Sask it voassisere out next boat south and fly anot 2 o the | PUPE Plan fo Be Carned Qut if S enliy Ty similar ship north. { Mis. Joe Werner salled on hejoconting Franklin D. Roosevelt, & | AT AL (Mo aRd 3 PO | Alaska for Petersburg where she | jopn 1, Tewis, William Green, Jim- . l-f’auk Richards were booked to 4 JFOLIS BA will spend a week visiting her hus- | o purante, Beatrice Lillie, Greta apan il dee Sitka and Mrs. O. G, Hill 1 MRS. SOUFOLIS BACK . ‘ P | itka an rs. O. G. Hillman and op. band, Forest ¢ ice Clerk, who 15| ;arho, the big bad wolf, the Emper- R808 o Boanak Mrs, Soufolis and her two children, | 08 W ' Hpenak, | e in that town for a month. | or “Jones, janitors, organ-grinders eace { The Taku is expocted to return|MATY and Jenny, refurned here on | nders, T { |the steamer Alaska after making T e ol qhorus gypsich and Snow | southbound through Juneau Wed-| Shell i’lmlnous flew teast this morning with three pas- and Lake Bennett.' Try a classified ad in The Empive. | White. 1 3 mp to Skagw ‘! st Submarine in World Taken by Brmsh LONDON, . July 15.—Authoxitative | British circles said that Britain told nesday morning. out to . the v & ———— Japan she would close the only -3 W MO i o R route by which war syppliesmainly Sengers, while this afternoon, Alex 5&&. M.Mq Amerigan, could reach the Chinese Holden was to fly to Ketchikan central government for three months O the reglar clipper mail flight, | if Japan would use that time to taking three passengers from here| seek peace. with mail, and plapning to pick These circles « up several inter-port Mine; Five Saved id that the Uni- passengers. ted. States government would be kept| Simmons flew Russell Clithero | informed of, the offer to clese the 0 Sitka and Don Robinson and 2 PLIE pply route. !John Antonesen to Hoonab. JOHNSTON, Pennsylvania, July The Burma road has thus far, Mr.and Mrs. Les Elkins were to|15—PFive grimy and slightly burn- made flo objections to China's pro- fly o Petershurg with Holden and test of Great Britain's proj Welsh was to_ fly to Ketchi- (.psm; ‘» a “mest friendly ed miners taday were brought out of the blast-shattered Sonmen Mine |o{ the Koppers Company. The suryivors smd they . believed LEAGUE MIGHT Ggld bk Mail “”W@fi MOVETO U. S, Camier Inompson | : Dies af BelheliBaseba" TOdaY; § D Pmucmu, July 15.—An invita- BETHEh All.\ 0 JuJ.\ 15.- —Tun- The louwim @re , scores of tion has been extended the League per Thompson. 72, veleran mail| games played this afternoon in of Nations to transfer the work of and gold carrier and one of the|the two major leagues: | three non - political departments original stakers in the platinum National League stampede, died Sunday at a Bethel | hospital of heart disease. Thomn-| son came to Dawson in '98. | D Subscrive for The Empire. Brooklyn 10; Pittshyrgh 1. American Lepgue St. Louis 6; Boston 10, Chicago 3; New York 2. Detroit 9;° Philadelphia 8. Geneva tc here, ‘was officlally anpounced that *e three sections invited here are Pinance, Economie, and Inferpation- | al Bfllfll and Opium Control. Surcouf, 2,880 tonl, the largest nubmarme in the world. Among French naval units seized byothe Brm:sh {0 keep them out of Nazl hands is the suhmulu_g DEI’AR’I‘M} T OF COMMERCE, WEAT III'R BUREAU THE WEATHER $ (By the U. 8. W ather Bureau) Forecast for Juneaw and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 pan., July 15: Fain' tonight, . cloudy Tuesday with occasional lighit rain and slivht cooler . afternoon; minimum temperature tonight 50 dezrees; sen- tler to moderale westerly winds tonight, southerly Taesda Forecast for Southoast Alaska: nerally fair tonight, mostiy | clougy, Tuesday with. probable occisional light rain and slightly | coaler in aiternoen ie to moderate westerly winds tonight, be- | coming .southerly Tuesday. cept winds northerly over Lynn Canal Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaskas Moderate westerly. winds tonight, becoming south and southwesi- | ‘erly Tuesday from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook modegate south and southeastexly f.om Cape Hinchinbrook to Kodial except fresh near Kodiak. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer ‘lemp. Humidity Wind Velocity | . 4:30 pm. yest'y 30.22 74 39 w 13 | 4:30 am. today 30.18 53 88 w 1 Clear | Nocn today 30.05 i 49 w 20 Clear | RADIO. REPORTS | TODAY 'Aux tempt. | Lowest 3:30am. Precip. 3:20a.m. | Station last 24 hours ! temp. temp." 24 hours Weather | Barrow 40 H0 0 | Fairbank 52 0 Nome 50 32 Dawson 0 Mayo 0 Anchorage T Clear Bethel 04 Cloudy Paul 06 Rain | Duteh Harbor 05 Rain | Wosnesenski | a Rain | Kanatak [ Clear Kodiak 54 0 Cloudy Cordova 67 0 Cloudy Juneau 7 0 Clear Ketchikan 73 0 Jlea Prince Rupert . 62 53 55 01 Cloudy | Prince’ George . 69 | 53 55 10 Cloudy | Seattle 8 54 0 Clear Portiand 85 58 58 0 Cloudy San Francisco .. 74 | 59 60 [ Cloudy WEATHER SYNOPSIS Moderately high pressure was charted this morning off the coust California and over te Interior of Alaska. nded ac of A ridge the Gulf joining the two areas of high pressure, and modera low pressure area was centered in the Bering Sea F weathe: prevailed during the past two days over most of Alaska and th Juneau Seattle Airways. Light rains occurred over the Bering Sca and the Bristol Bay regions. Juneau, Jul) 16.—Sunrise 4:16 a.m., sunset 9:51 p.m, pelicies, low farm income, loss of farm ownership, exhaustion of n | tural resources, state trade bar | tailure of Congress “to develop |lorig-range public works program, and to establish a naticnal old m ])"lhxoxl system pro; ‘lhe (unimvncc for \uf unemployment UNEMPLOYMENT REPORT IS MADE BY CONFERENCE Sixteen-Point Program Is| ba m proposed by the elimination inclpded legis lation for the following: monetar |reform, a national old age pension Submitted by Over 60 |35stem “vicorous prosecution ot H M b lanti-trust laws and concerted at- ouse Members ack on monopoly control of price — {and output. tax reform; parity for WASHINGTON, July 15. — The | agriculture, a broad program of soil final report and sixteen-point pro-|and water conservation., a long gram of the Congressional Confer-|range ‘public works program, the ence on Unemployment has been elimination of interstate trade bar- made public by Congressman Jerry ! riers, and the ation of a regu- Voorhis (D. Cal.), permanent Chair- | lar standing eémmittee of the man of the Conference. Signed by!House on employment. over 60 members of the House, this| report and program is the l’esult‘ of some four months’ work on the| part of the conference members. Twenty-one Republicans joined|: with 38 Democrats, one Farmer- Laborite, and one Progressive in endorsing this non-partisan pro-, gram for dealing with the all-im-} portant problem of unemployment g in the United States. Considering the progressive nature of.most of the conference proposals the pro-; gram as a whole Tepresents a re- markable area of congressional | agreement. The preamble of the Report and Program reads: - “The conference » takes the position that unemploy- Monr-DriVOn Brush ment is the ‘central and typical problem of the twentieth century, €leaner Complete that there is not an unlimited time With Attachments ielt in which tp effect its solum)n,s Yourself « that the future of individual free- gfl, rugs oney. BUY . NOW. dem and of constitutional govern- ment depend directly on its solu- tion, and that we should proeeed at once to a consistent, determined and coordinated attack upon unem- picyment.” The report then lists some twelve causes of unemploy- ment, ameng whieh are: failure of the Nation to maintain a scientific Alam' 'mmi'c Light |balance between the increase in production of goods and services and the expansion of the volume & Power co' and velocity of its medium of ex- hone p |change, idle money, . technological - P -616 ‘l(hunge without compensatory price reduction,, Monopoly, UNSOUNA 11X | g snroe