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JF SHRINERS FOR JUNEAU | Csremonial Will Be Held Tonight-Banquet for Nile Temple Group Last Night PAA on, six m Lodestar bers for an informal the el, Rob D H.| | <enzie van ””"i Elec- | .o REERBEER HEADIS | HERE TO CONFER, WASHINGTON MEN | 5. sidr neral Rein- | o the Office of | ; d in Juneau| i weekend and | i | Claude Hirst, | of ti oOf com D.C.| in the head- to this | Sika Woman Pleads Guilfy of laueny Hanson, -or Sitka ty to a charge of la. jay in Sitka @nd was a ter mof six months in Fuuu Jail, or to have the sentence spended. Mr was arrested here #4st E she passed| and. She was the ship on 1 Mrs telegraphic | Bredvik, 01‘ Hanson of ilverware when sl arding house, 1 living | U. 5. Marshal William A. Ma- | Kk Hanson by plane yesterday for arraignment - o STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Aug quotation 19. — Closing Juneau mine 4 American Can 28%, Bethlehem monwealth and Wright 9% 3's, Ken- Centra 7%, Unit Pound $4.03 iss 1 56 7/8, DOW, JONES AVERAGES ndustrials 12: utilities 18.33. R BUY DEFENSE " BARNEY GOOGLE » WL,NBRD BIRD - oW MR DO 2 Nt AN EONDS TGS \NWZ GO { under | pire Sam Sturgeon in their e BONS THOWGHT WE'D DROP OMER &Y' SEE \—\()y ment offices. a 260-foot statue of Lenin reathmg lo a height of more than 1,350 feet, higher than the E. IL DUCE BURIES HIS WA FRD Approves Wildlife Act In Territories Alaska fo GeI §25, 000 Under Bill-Will Mean New Tax Levies WASHINGTON, Aug. 19--Legis- tion extending the Wildlife Res- tion Aect to Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the Virgic Islands was approved by President Roose- s authorized to be allocated the bill would be derived; from special taxes levied w'ih equ force in the territories and prsses- sions which previously did rot sharz in wildlife restoration projects. ‘The annual apportionment limited to $25,000 for Al D e was | Man Plays Sailof; Gefs Info Trouble Wearing a U. S. navy uniform when he is not a member of any |ot the U. S. armed forces yesterday alias Alfred with the got Alfred M. Hamre, M. Webster, in trouble law. Arraigned before ioner in Sitka, Hamre pleaded uvilty to impersonating a member f the navy and said that he had clothes with a sailor as U. S. Commis- ha i lark Hamre was given a siz-months ail sen suspended, anua it was nderstood a naval court marshal al with the sailor vi.o wore re’s clothes in a Sitka cocktail SIGN LANGUAGE 4P; = KINGSTREE, S. C., Aug. These Kingstree ball players are the ones. When they disliked a decision .of Palmetto League um- game they didn’t go racing bats and hurling with Sumter out brandishing invectives, They slipped a “Help the Blind” sign on the ump's) back BUY DEFENSE BONDS 'MissouriMan Here s THE KREMI.IN* 2 'LODESTAR LEAVES '! FOR BOEING FIELD Northbound Eleclra Takes Passengers fo White- 1 horse and Inferior | Landing in Juneau from Fair- | banks, a southbound PAA Lodestar | unloaded two passengers this noon, and took aboard four passengers Lefore continuing on to Seattle. } Passengers arriving were Charles | Watson and Ruth Cooke. | Passengers leaving Juneau for Seattle were Dale Danielson, Mrs. Frieda Danielson, Willlam Short| and Lee E. Tucker. | Through passengers from the In terior bound for Boeing Field wer Avis Blake, Marjorie Barber, Wil- liam Barber, Harry Webh, Ben Gel- lenbach, Margaret Strandbergand Emma Henderson. | A northbound Electra left Juneau this morning with Mr, and Mrs. Charles Goldstein bound for White- rse and Major Jesse E. Graham | and Warrant Officer Hamilton H | Bond bound for Fairbanks. - e M E PARSONAGE IS NOW NEARLY READY TO OCCUPY The parsonage of the Methodist Church, on Fourth street, opposit2 the Federal and Territorial Build- ing, will soon be ready to be oc-| capied by the Rev. W. H. Matthews, new pastor here. The parsonage has been pla.stered by Dave Burnett and his crew and | this is ne.s\rly dry for additional | work ; | To Visit Mike Haas Paul Urich, who arrived in Jun- cau on the Alaska, is visiting with Michael J, Hass, Territorial Com- missioner of Labor. Urich is from Maplewood, Mis- souri, and he and Haas attended school together in Staunion, Il Urich will be in Juneau for an in- definite time. .- About 850 air pilots will trained in Argentina during next 18 months. be the | | Any German bombs landing in the Kremlin will be hitting the Moscow bulls-eye beth literally and figurativel ed Kremlin occupies the center of the five concentric circls, marked by boulevards, w buildings crowded irito an area of 63 acres make the Kremlin the most concentrated scat of government in any of the maj housed the czars and the patriarchs of the Greek church until Peter the Great mcved the seat of governm ernment to Moscow in 1918 and restored the Kremlin to its traditional importance, though the old cath Just outside the Kremlin are such famous places as Red Square, the tomb of Lenin and th ire State Building. Premier Muss procession at P lini THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUG. 19, 1941. ch from the air give the Soviet cap (center) fellows the casket conta cn the way to Predappio for bu in-law and (extreme right) a brother, Vittorio on whese ri where Former Court of Justice, once used as study by Lerin and as former Pre- mier Molotov's residence. I3 The Soviet of Nationali- Great palace, Stalin resides. St. Andrews Hall, former throne room of the cza now serves Supreme So B Imperial Troasury Polace, now a museum. viet. [ Ol Alesander Gardons. tics formerly the Little oid B ¥ Palace. Cathedr, he Annun- arracks, now a 1 athuddlhe Aoen R DL The Spasski Gate & trance to Kremlin, be [ Cathedral of the Arch. i} Arsenal uted as munitions which eriminals once w & angel, where 47 czars fio dump until 1917, now res- publicly beh buried. idence for government R X 5 workers. [ St Bosil's Cathedral, Bell Tower of Ivan the 1 Moscow Historical i of nine separate 3 Museum. chapels. [i§ The Czer Bell, cast in 1735 and found too big for bell tower, Kromiin Quay. Moscow River. B Red Square. m Lenin's tomb. ve center of all Russia, the wall- rget face. Its 50-odd Besides | carance As the ci it to St. Pete s were site of the pre w Lening cums nts workaday gov- Hoviets, to be tepped by nd the pa onver 1 skyscraper Palace of the RRIOR SON ng the bedy « al services. Others, left to right, the mother, a sister- 3ht is the widow. The 23-year-old Bruno was killed in the crash of an experimental plane, Russ Prisoners in Finnish (amp Soviet war priscners eat their meal spread upon the greund in a front. AND-SNUFFY SMITH BNER THING'S FNERN TN FNZZ W A WTTEN'S EAR ,PODNER - HERE \N BERRNVIWLE THESE FOLKS DOWN “TOOK 1O ME \\KE } PG 7o CARRATS THRT'S & AR QLARM TesT- T GOTTA &T ON Tet J08 — TINE'S A-WASTIN' ¢ DURN THEW 5 0'CLOCK FRCKRY WHWSSLES Y. THER ORTER SE B LAW [ | | 3Halibuters THE WEATHER (By the U, S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 p.m., Aug. 19: Increasing cloudiness tonight, mostly overcast with slightly cooler temperature Wednesday and with liklihood of very light rain lale Wednesday afternoon; lowest temperature tonight about 58 degrees, highest Wednesday 65 degrees; light to gentle variable winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Increasing cloudiness tonight, mostly cloudy with liklihood of local ' light rain Wednesday; cooler Wednesday afternoon; gentle to moderate variable winds. Forecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Moderate southeasterly winds, in- creasing cloudiness tonight, rain Wadnesday; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: moderate easterly to southeasterly ‘winds, increasing cloudiness tonight, local rain W .dnesday; Cape 'Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: moderate northastérly winds, ‘mostly cloudy with local rain; Resurrection Bay tc K.diak: moderate northerly winds local sho LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 4:30 p.m. yesterday 30.20 68 53 s 3 Clear 4:30 am. today 30.19 50 97 Calm 0 Cloudy Noon today 30.17 65 60 Calm 0 Cloudy RADIO REPORTS TODAY \ Max. tempt. Lowest 4:30am. Precip. 4:30a.mn. Station last 24 hours temp. tempt. 24hours Weather Barrow 44 | 36 42 46 Rain Fairbanks 70 49 49 0 Pt. Cldy Nome 50 K 47 49 T Rain Dawson 67 | 46 48 05 Foggy Anchorage 65 | 50 50 0 Pt. Cldy Bethel 65 | 52 52 i Rain St. Paul 55 | 45 50 0 g Atka 53 36 48 0 Dutch Harbor .. 57 | 51 51 0 Cloudy Wosnesenski 62 | E 55 0 Cloudy Cordova 67 51 52 0 Pt. Cldy Juncau 68 50 50 0 Cloudy Sitka 67 | 49 49 0 Pt. Cldy Ketchikan 70 | 54 56 0 Pt. Cldy Prince George .. 85 45 45 0 Clear Seattle a1 | 60 61 [ Pt. Cldy Portland 86 54 65 0 Clear San Francisco .. 68 | 59 60 0 Cloudy WEATHER SYNOPSIS Clear or partly cloudy skies were reported this morning at most places over Alaska but overcast sk s prevailed over the western por- tion of Alaska and rain was falli ig this moruing at scattered points from the Kuskokwim Valley to Barrcw and at Kodiak. The great- est amount of precipitation durng the past 24 hours was 46 hundredths of an inch which wa; reported at Barrow. The high- est temperature yesterday afternjon was 70 degrees which was re- corded at both Fairbanks and Ketchikan. The lowest temperature th_is morning was 36 degrees at Burow. Scattered to broken high clouds with good visibilities preva ed over the Juneau-Ketchikan air- way this morning. The Tuesday morning weathe chart indicated a center of low pressure of 29.87 inches was locat:d at 53 degrees north and 150 degrees west and was expected t move about 400 miles northeast- ward during the next 24 hours. Ah zh pressure center of 30.35 inches was located at 40 degrees north and 140 degrees west and a high crest extended mnorthward over so.theast Alaska. A second hign center of about the same pressur was located in ‘the lower Bering Sea. Juneau, August 20.—Sunrise 5: 9 am., sunset 8:32 p.m. SIMMCNS FLIES TEN TO COAST Sell Sea"le Pilot Shell Simons rparea out of ‘wwtineau Channel on two trips |i0 the Coast today carryivg pass- SEATTLE, Aug. 19. — Halibuter engers to Sitka and other island Radio arrived from the westem‘wwns and returning with ten from banks today with 40,000 pounds of |.be Coast. halibut and sold for 13 cents n Passengers for Sitka were Virgil pound straight. ieath, Norman Flook, Leona Scott, same and Mr. and Mrs. Georze Ieall on sold for 14 and 13% cents a'Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sterie and cound. Alex Adoff for Sitka and Leo Young cal banks with 700 pounds of hali- returned with Mr. aud Mrs, but and sold for 17 cents a pound D2'® Fenton, M. and Mrs. Wil- ihe first trip and is scheduled to return with five passengers on the RE(REA"O“A[ | Alex Holden took off on a flight & um' 3 MED |to Petersburg this morning with A. bE . | Molyneax and Jim Boyle for Peters. |burg. He returned empty to take uuuy, Kake and Ketchikan. Fire ;, 03 um Dean Goodwin is on a charter -abin built ‘and uwneu by the NaVJ ceived from Sitka today by Harold Smith, Admiralty Division Super- | r a erna injuries’ have beer 'reported aad ! no details as to the origin of the | Ba“e"es At the time of the fire thé'cabin was being used by the Forest Serv-| ing' on'a trail to the’Fish Bay|Valdese Textiles of the Blue Ridge Hot Springs.’ The maximum num-|baseball league have three sets of would be eight, according to Mr.! Smith. with 40,000 pounds of halibut and one irip and H. Paulua for Todd, The Pierce came in from the lo- 'Cf Chichagof on the second Tight. straighlt. liam Mahoney and W. De Haas on second flight. |van Mavern for Wrangell and J. mw BYNAV ;] |a charter with D. E. Davis to Sec- with cannery man Neck Bez. at Fish Bay, according to word re- | visor in the Forest Service. No fire have been 'received. ice as a cook house for men work- VALDESE, N.-C., : Aug 19.—The ber of men' possible at the camp | brothers who form batteries. Look What’s Growing Here' BUY DEFENSE STAMPS