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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1941. JAPS AFRAID U.S. YACHT Aerlal Bronco Busler FRANCO PARDONS WAR PRISCNERS 'SWIMMING PCOL IS DEDICATED THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. 8. DFP:\IKTMEN’! OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, bezinning at 4:30 p.m., July 18: OF NA"ONA”SIS THIS AFIERNOON tly cloudy and not much chanac temperature and urday; lowest temperature tonizht about 51 degrees, highest S urday 67 degrees, light to gentle variable winds IN PACIFIC CANADIANS TOKYO, July 18—The Japanese Cruiser 0" Prin(e Ruper' caused by BIO(kade | Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Moderate west to northwest winds Foreign Office controlled i i becoming south to southwest Saturijay, partly cloudy; Cape Spencer Times Advertiser said today Sfopped by Shof MADRID, .Jul\ 18—1In a blaze of Before almost 200 adults and! to Cape Hinchinbrook: moderate south to southwest winds, becom- Roosevelt wall is being built and red and gold bunting, General Fran- chikdren, the Junéau Municipal| ing moderate to fresh southeast Siturday, mostly cloudy -with local strengthened about Japan astern Over Bow cisco Franco today gave wholesale swimming pocl in Evergreen Bowl| rain; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resu rection Bay: moderate east to front nd threatens the safety « & § pardons to political prisoners of wag dedicated and officially opened | nortl t winds, becoming modera ¢ to fresh southea: Saturday, this Empire. It is time for Japan 'TCHIKAN. Alaska, July 18 Nationalist Spain, celebrating the 'today by Mayor Harry I. Lucas. cloudy with rain by Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: moc to take forceful measures in h AK‘I“LI““,”“ Mo s patrol fifth anniversary of the start of the gganding outside the wire enclosure| ate south to southeast becoupiig ‘modisate Wi fENh csBt to own interests now before the throt-1, = "oy 1oq0q too close for com- | CiviliWar. of the pool, a short address was| southeast Saturday, rain tl circle ‘becomes too strong and - 7 the" Sattle $abh B(m“h‘ | In th‘ speech, Franco de-_durgd made hy Secretary of Alaska E. L.| LOCAL DATA % 10TL V0. WSSO e £ that United States intervention inj o .t and this was followed by i ke dangerous yesterday afternoon. s A s N | Bartlett a 5. Was Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Veather od S s the European war would lead to a A 1 o iRk 3 Referring to recent United States| ™ o - Di Pisher the | 4 a few remarks by Superintendent' 4.3p pm. yesterday 30.03 60 9 " e E il 1dana: B Skipper Dan R. Fisher of the universal conflict Jasting years, and Rl A B, TR where: 30 pm. yes ay 30.0: 6 8 W 16 Shdves 40 _"".““]' aper in an Fisher Flouring Mills, and his son ending in the ruin of all nations. | '~“"- gt I ARy 4:30 am. today .. 30.09 51 94 cam 0 Cloudy in_the Pm;u(.“tlr”]»ltu :d in A% pennett; Clyde Stromberg and H.| } | “'But to Spaniards, the chief inter- | UPOn Mayor u“ sl II"R 1ed ! Noon' today 30.08 58 64 w12 Cloudly editorial sald: “In these "de hine | B Jamison, Seattle newspaperman, [ est in his speech lay in his attention | With the keys of the pool by ‘_"1‘"‘1 RADIO REPORTS ments there can be seen nnl‘mi‘ Sl T shat e hreehis | to Spain’s post-war domestic prob- | ational Superintendent Harold R ss than an attempt to establishi .., prince Rupert with Strom- lems and her efforts to get food | Roth. Max. tempt. Lowest 4:30am. Precip. 4:30a i an American empite over the aD-|p. o cooveq in the cockpit in the| | | from abroad. | Bartlett pointed out that the| gapon jast24hours | temp. tempt. 24hours Weath [ aches to and the exits Uf‘-’d‘ bow watching for driftwood when Speaking at Villaverdd, near Mad- | finishing of work on the swim-| po .00 36 30 30 0 Slbu | If the U. S. secures Asiatic a shell exploded right'in front of rid, Franco said the government| ming pool was the 17th Pub: Fairbanks n | 43 45 13 Clou the interlocking system will| oo { hoped that Spanish workers might | Works Project to be completed in| wone 63 | 54 54 “r Clo present a first class problem of in- niisoh Siia ‘He . understobd” the gain a living wage. He said 800,- | Juneau under the Works Progress Bavion % 2 0 (;lmr 4 ternational encroachment requiring' . oo supposed to fire’ fi 000,000 otner Europeans were threat- | Administration, the other projects| apanoimpe 64 | 50 o1 'I' in i an international protest degrees off the bow, but “this was| Y A ened with starvation due to the war ' ncjuding improvements on the ball Bethel 61 9 02 Glot The editorial said the wall jo 0 hore s degree Flying Cadet Victor Woodrick, 23, of Three Oaks, Mich., shuws how | and blockade. park, building of roads, and'sewe St. Paul 52 . 43 B c : + " putis 1 S | 3 PR 6 s e et {The cos p o] state " o stretches from the Aleutians south “. . "peosga fajled to see the pa- | he landed on the tail assembly of a training plane affer he was thrown f | The cost of the pool, stated B Atka 1 s m Drieie i and west, divides the P“"‘“rj ('m‘ and didn't know they were out of the rear cockpit at 500 feet at East St. Louis, . The plane fott, Was $9.900 of Which $2700| Dyen Harbor . 55 | 50 10 Rain § encroghes;, o Western i) Fa »posed to stop. They were pro-| was landed safely by David J. Mattis, civilian instructor, with Wood- HSHERMAN DIES was paid by the city. i | Ccordova 55 | a7 114 Cloudy § HbEEie eding 22 knots and they believed | rick in this is position, p Supt.” Phillips addressed his re-; jynean 67 | 51 47 Cloudy the Canadian patrol boat misjudged Al 22t FROM BAD BURNS marks to the children of Juneau,| gju, 59 | 49 0 Cloudy their speed. N | asking them to cooperate, with Ro‘h | patehikan 79 | 58 0 ot Cldy EARBRET S eI in the maintenance of the pool| prince Rupert . 67 54 0 Fog or oas s rennan ere NIGHI OF N'NIHmnd showing them the importance| prince George 102 68 o Driszle BlA(K lISIS IN | o LAy ‘l)ll abiding by the Lrulm: and regu-| posland 100 68 0 pi.caly 4 & 3 i ations governing its use. San Francisco .. T4 55 T Clondy H | i The ceremony was completed P Achiglal Juneau Bound FOREIG“ lA “DS i n a n n e ry Peder Amundsen, Oldtim with the dedication of the pool by | 2 wu:’mzu SYNOPSI‘SI : ! H . i A % N Partly cloudy to cloudy skies prevailed generally over Alaska Mayor Lucas as he received the ’ ~ . ) SEATTLE, July 18—The North 'N pREpmATloN Away a' Hosp"al sy dedicate this municipal outdoor the northern Iumunn of S(xrmhe‘mh. Alaska to Cook Inlet and S at- Coast sailed at 12:15 o'clock this| n s p e c I o n i wimming pool to e betterment L..»z‘l llu,hl nv)({‘“['lr\ r};::d “..:]hn ‘n nl}(;: ‘,,l(cl':mn n(ll Alaska. T “(i o k o | greatest amount of precipitation wis 1. nches which w: recordec afternoon for Southeast Alaska WA%HINGTON July 18 — Plans Peder Amundsen, 89, died last|of the health of the children of | * g ! i i o 45 W ports with 146 passengers aboard, o extend the U. S. black list of | T L, | night at St. Ann’s Hospital as a re- | Juneau.” | ;‘l:;“i::d(xi-ch"lx; \\;;;’!;t;'d ';:m; :r‘vx‘::fiflu’\,lu':u;(l;:;. }\““ e r:vl»:l‘ \\I;;;‘“": including the following booked for| firms deemed helping Germany| E.M, Brennan, Vice-President and i S sult of burns he received whea his| This is one more milestone in| 98T b s s mor 2 5 3 sl d P r | ing 3 2 PS @ arrow. I 1 clouds ¢ vercast with moder- Juneau: and Italy to countries outside the General Manager of P. E. Harris and Councilmen fo See Mayor small fishing boat, the Buzzie,|(he increase and improvement of '_“tj ig]]fi:ffepz,(?t((x,;:l]m\v:mufi::-l:e Kvtiad r;:«-x’";l’u‘Jul‘ll\r'll\lhl i B Miss Agnes Graham, Oscar western Hemisphere were disclosed Company, one of the large salmon Lu(as' Apporfionmen' caught fire in a gasoline explogion | recreational facilities provided so l\:m '\irua‘v (‘““ x‘l‘mr‘"m“ ety S £ e Bergseth, Mr. and Mrs. L. Puustin-| today by Dean Acheson, Assistant cannery operators in Alaska, arrived July 9. that there might be an appropri- 2 troiebai: 0 i en, Miss Edith Birkeland, Miss Secretary of State. in Juneau on the Aleutian today Plfln ThIS Evenlflg He was born in Norway August|ite outlet for the children of the i Audrey Treu, Mrs. Lillian Helin| The Department expert on eco- during an inspection trip of all of 25, 1871 and had been in the Ter y to participate in good, clean Mt(ORMI(I( GOES NORTH | and son. nomic questions said lists are al- the company’s Southeast Alaska it Al eyl | T ritory for many years. ports activities, stated Lucas. . Rod Darell, The Rev. John L. ready being prepared of firms and Plants. . il $9A01888.00" bucigdt K. City |t et sursives .| ohatwil| LR e G A A INSTRUCT DRAFT BOARDS { Cauble, Dean Counter, Fred R. jndividuals in countries other _Five canneries are operated by P e v.<xp s e l(“flvo ;: ‘»JJ"(‘:‘:’? l“"}:- hf’l‘i“l“" :ation, the doors of the bath| /i GOES WESTWARD < 2 is year, a eX el 2 e | Jea or 1eau to make burial ar- ¥ Spaulding, Mrs. W. C. JOhnston, than Latin America. These, he said, B Harris Company this veat, at)l S0t 0808 ol Gouncil | rangements on the. first available | 0USeS Were imic | 1 Miss *Marforle Johnston, MIss include virtually all countries ou- False Pass, Hawic Inet, Kakh, SAROY | 358 0 <50 O A C K iy | steamer, ! i mble of ck Henry M. Baker, Assistant Man- | John McCormick, Director of Se- Juanita Johnston, Mrs. T. S. Oain-| gide the British Empire, such as Point and Rose Inlet and Mr. Br apr ; e 1 3 ushed to entor the pool, One small ager of the American Red Cross, lectice Service for the Territory, left ider, nan is calling on this trip at all | Fathers meet at 8 o'clock for their Amundsert worked for the Alaska| i ineau for th t Jun today Lodestar L ter and baby, P. N. Schneider, W. japan, Spain and Portugal. B, rerit Palse Pass RUTAT tWite minthly. mheetig Juneau Gold Mining Company for hild, having forgotten his I who has been in Jnr?enu or the past Juneau today on a Lodestar bound R. Gay, M. H. Jackson. P e RE N D o iie alinon Asason 86|l o bigat Eoraicie. ealelB Hhiicw | ALY years us & Dii: tediier: e nMMIHRt Saniing Sl week, left this morning on the Aleu- 19}1- Inu‘;‘{lm' and Western Alaska. He R R ’ Hnwfilln]ot%Mr. Brennana sald that | {he anticipated tax and license rev- | Was a member of the Odd Fello EAMBIUR dove dndo At :\:larl‘xraoqlicg? I’S‘l%‘i:;ssc‘ghvl:;i:::xs"hzot\ll[;; Z\ififizeepfi?{) :{Sltco:a%??}:‘flh"r{:::: 1 it is too early to predict the final|.nne expected for the coming year.| The remains are at the Charles [nothing oh but his underwear. . °r /B0 B850 Foty Cmi lds A R A A RnaY. and BELLAMY AND PARTY pack with any degree of accuracy | getimated income from the City W- Carter Mortuary pending fun-| The pool is 75 feet long and 30 o oq with Jocal Red Cross mem- probably a few other towns to in- MAY BE (HA“GED but' that indications are favorable >f Juneau in taxes and licenses eral arrangements. eet in “’“d"h with a dej bers. struct draft boards. HERE 0“ P“o‘mkAp“I( for a better than normal pack for is set at $243,750. | = fi at its deepest points. Res [ | an odd-year cycle. The proposed budset, subject to] THROUGH ON ALEUTIAN ses for swimming will be s ; C D- F srving . soners s morsing] | ALASKA INVOLVED ™30tk st an porh e provosed e, st s ed Iater and T Crote 3 Hurt as Car Dives 40 Feet at 6 o'clock aboard the luxury yacht | Althorp is being operated from Hawk | o "5 ' T s ss0000 |, Miss Marjorie Dougl sister of | ming and life saving tests will be [ Photographic were Mr. and Mrs.| WASHING ()Nv July 18—Legis- Inlet this year, and the company pigeon-holed for City administra- illiam Dou ¥ Trepr conducted in the latter part of S a party of fou : P has no immediate plans for rebuild- % 3 sentative for Alaska, s in Ju-| August. Ben Bellamy and a party of four lation designed to expedite trans- ceq tion, bond retirement and insur 8 merl : ing the Port Althorp plant destroyed . |neau briefly tod: while the Aleu- which included A. M. Coon, oWnEr|portation of strategic materia by fire last year. ance; $3,675 for City Hall expens-| ;. was in port. She is making B at; Mrs, Coon, Duane; f aska 3 i . _ i ok 8 ) S aking ‘é‘n( ““‘nn'(’l“iv‘x; T ’f““" ’t‘(‘*‘k‘.(‘;’t “l“ ’{"'"‘;‘1 States | "y the southern district around s; $7.200 for City Clerk's office; \in. tin to the Westward and will D O vy, ‘which | 1s Introduced tofay by Represen- | gochikn, /bty 'ndications are (#3230 Inr the cometory; ko6 485 S el R it bt ) 196 20400 il o tative Bland of Virginia. promising for a good pack and the | education as called for under the|gouiniouna Miss Douglass will stay b was chartered by Bl’“dn:) in Sitkal The legislation would exempt| gaimon run in the Frederick Sound |school budget; $12405 for the Fir: lin Jyneau for about a week A last Monday, has taken the party|shipments from Alaska. area is favorable at this stage of | Department; $14,560 for the Police g Y B = el resdien oar ng RS S oL ol i oy p 1 -~ LONDON, July 18.—A German on an extensive trip throug! The law now prohibits transpor- operations. Department; $3.900 for the libra | TO BE MARRIED ThilD hrcadeast micked: sio have ta east Alaska waters which has in-|tation of merchandise in the coast-| The run of red salmon on the|g5670 for Health and Sanitati | g TR "2 s " G P . luded stops at Elfin Cove, H00-!| wis de except A i i south sid f Alaska Peninsula. , | Mildred Zelene Maxson and Erling | night from Berlin s the German g ']) e ‘L’,‘ Rt Rl AWarm il WRLSISANDL ) apienipan, e :’f"‘".‘ :ll @ ol ;s B GEeniay v $1,000 for the boat harbor; $1,500| Berg Onsoien received their marrage | High Command announces the cap- Dok, JEnpxee,. ANgAOD. 0 L1 el . where the False Pass cannert IS| gor the swimming pool; $25,000 fo; | license today, and expect to be mar- | ture of Smolensk on the main road Springs Bay. ! The legislation also provides that | operated, has been disappointing, a streets, sidewalks, and sewers, and | ried this evening. to Moscow. Bellamy, brimming over with er-!the Maritime mmission would | condition which may be accounted, several other miscellaneous items. thusiasm for the sights taken in on the trip stated, “the trip was essary on account of insufficient i ades of fieh, | foF the coming year, it is expected | extremely enjoyable, and we saw| facilities of American ves: Ferobpects S erlg'; es of Tish. 1, at $134,000 will come from taxes | Alaska’'s most beautiful scenery e however, are normal, the cannery- R Wilanee fEon Tidehses: ‘ when we arrived in Warm Springs Bay.” Although the trip was ostensibly a business trip for Bellamy, who End t'l' k { d said that the 230,000 cases given as e o Potbie the pack of the Nakeen cannery as is nnected mlh. the National | a a u 0 ge of last Saturday should have been IRA"SFERRED Soul“ Grof Company, it was more or — Ten people are leaving this after- (o figures for the Naknek district | less. of a continuation of a long noon with Mary Joyce aboard the and the' 600,000 cases predicted as honeymoon for Mrs. Bellamy and ims 5 e. couple w Miss Joyce's Taku Lodge. o - " Y 4 himself, said he The’ 0 .] e 35 Bl it s *[M i cannery should have xeferrcd 10 | were in Juneau this morning while married here in Juneau last May aking the outing are Mrs. Ralph | pyistol Bay. thie Alkaka was in port. They hath Coon, who will remain in Ju-| W. Dusenbury, Mrs. W. W. Council, | prennan will leave tomorrow by . : 4 neau for several days, stated that IM“A Sally Ingram, Dr. Helen Gib- piane for Hawk Inlet and call at | he was considering the possibility PODS Miss Lois Perrelet, Mr. and gake before returning to Juneau. Mrs. John Williams, I. Stockerand He will visit Rose Inlet and Sunny + Point on his way to Seattle. of opéning a photographic studio here, He is a prominent photogra- pher of Southeast Alika who at present resides in Sitka. D CORPORATION FILES Corporation articles haye been filed with Auditor Frank A. Boyle for J. T. Thorpe of the State of California. Capitalization of the; Commander J. R. Tate of the corporation is $60,000. R. E. Ro-) Sitka Naval Air Station arrived Rnnkheads cre:ary. mtondlcch bemz ex vnbed 1orlconnechng hlzhwly. s bertson and M. E. Monagle are the in Juneau from the Coast at 2| representatives for the First Di-| o'clock this afternoon, flying a' vision. - > BUY DEFEN>r STAMPS determine if such a move is nec- Ten Leave for Week Mary J. for a weekend of fishing at and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Heller. Mr. Stockerand is a representative’ of {magazine, and Mr. and Mrs. Heller e tourists from Filer, Idaho, who have been spending some time in | South America. Alaska huntmg and fishing. R TATE HERE FROM SITKA | Vought-Sikorsky observation plane. Hu was in town for only an hour "and returned immediately. Look: Here, Folks!? OPEN Al Percy Has f”u-own the Key Away.' It's m the Channel L NIGHT Efl ALL NlGHT—Every N;gml CAFE Tield and Steram, national sports | for by the unfavorable weather dur- he $243,750 estimated revenus frig" thie® flrst Ykt Gt0the seaborit | ayine #289,150 e = man said. Correcting figures in a story in yesterday’s Empire, Mr. Brennan .- | TEACHER AND FAMILY Mr. and Mrs. George S. Fleisch-‘ an end of the season pack for.the | . ny 4ng their daughter Marilynn | been transferred to Tuba City, Ari- zona, from Tanacross where Mr. | Fleischmann was a teacher with the Office of Indian Affairs school and his wife was special assistant. They will be working with the Navajo Indians of pure blood still form |agency in Arizona. a large share of the population in — .- | Emplre Classiieas ray Draft Evader Gets Five Years General's Speech Calls Al- tention fo Food Problem ‘Carter Manasco (right) of Alabama House Sam Rayburn after Manasco it left vacant by death of Speaker William B. Bankhead. Manasco was 200 Peopléian Hand to Witness Ceremony by Mayor, Others Representative from Alabama ngratuiated by Speaker of the oath of office to fill the seat 4 Forecast for Southeast Alaska rtly urday with local morning fog in channels perature; gentle variable winds. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaskw cloudy tonight and ; not much change in tem- were levqrely injured when this sedan swerved off Astorin. Boulevurd in Long Island City, N. Y., and dropped forty feet OLON. annephotq Sentence of five years ln priutm for not registering for the draft was Street scene in Reykjavik, capital of Teeland extend next to the Azores and the Cape Verde islands. The espit‘al PERCY’S PHONE 94 Criticized by uolafloniats as 'an unauthorized action taking the V. S. into the war by the bick door, the U. S. occupation of Ice- jand is the talk of the world today. As units of the U. 8. nnw bagmuklx\goverthedcmnnt!oflnnd.nnlybmmflu B_c_r‘en. Norway, it w: meted out to Merrit E. Garst in FPhiladelphia court, one of the stiffest sentences yet imposed in connection with the draft law, Garst, shown with his wife, pleaded nolle contendere (no defense). In court he read a three-page statement urging disobedience and non-uon against the conscription act, > SR of lpellnd is Reykjavik, which was raided by German planes last emw: Jalumn, prlme minlner indej t Ice: ks pagr-