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! ; 1 PAGE TWO Few Changes In"42 Fishing Requiai {5008 29 Major Mine Operators Fisheries Heafings Open Certified for Ratings in Seattle-Bristol Bay SIX ALASKA MINES | UPRISING OF DRioR MuMaees. GREEKS HAS - BLOODY END 115,000 Reported "'Massa- cred”’ by Bulgars After Brief Revolt - by Stewart Six Alaska mines have already re- |ceived serial numbers for use in | cbtaining mine supplies under the | { present pricrities order, and B. D.| ' SEATTLE, Oct. 20—Alaska figh- F., :'11”‘ T'."r"r?:rl::.‘TdCflT;?;sTg'.m:» LONDON, Oct. 20—A Greek gov- ery regulations in 194 5 A “-‘w ”‘;: OIS [ernment exile said here today that isfactory with cannery = vl ot 15,000 Greeks dx:d in a “series Of and fishermen in alme:t all in- \Fria brutal massacres” at the hm.lds of tances that few changes are con-|" oo . o4y o Wi, the Bulgars in Kvalla district of tempated next year, Dr. Jra Gabriel- | 4 nojoon adami ¢ tho the province of Drama, son, Director of the Fish and Wild- 1\ 0 ities in the O f Pr .| The Greek government said it life Service, said here today WIen | ... nfanac ¢ tr ;a1 | eceived information by cable from public hearings were open ke number: % i g nfficial sources’ that the Greeks, 1942 regulations. stors N ¢ @lthough virtually unarmed, killed One speaker suggrsied 1 were & 'nee Bulgars and seven Germans. flexible rules bé adopted regar o A v I''e cable, dated Sunday, said closing dates and Dr. Gabriels Greek uprising in the Drama | responded that in almost evéry casc foh whils Peported recently during the past season local inte Y drubiiba. were asked to make recommenda tions regarding closiug dates and ——————— w2y had | the clnd- | the six iver ritory are niso furnishing Stewart's ing erial | requests were :‘flnlt“d. j”\""bers Arsoc ning ”‘;\l- : he l{,l.x:k:.gm‘d'?[m‘}]_’c Seattle Bear | gineers of the Tewitoria m'p&rt-iEAGlE CUSIOMS | g 3 i m & iR rta e arorind fihtig dn Bidf BALLE Tty | oriL O SUnse tfrobe hodl Lk eri] | T | Deputy Colléctor of Customs Spfifihfi (lASS John J. Hillard has closed his of- ! 2 & ;‘rice at Eagle for the winter and | wt |gone to Cordova, to relieve Col- !lector L. J. Childerg, it Was an- a ou | 2 yiE |notinced here today. | mm' S(Hooll Childerg, now on annual leave, v b | Will résign from the service on Nov- | | S mrvrd (ember 15 to enter private business, The southbound stenmer PTIncess | A glass jn Spanish will be taught according to word received at the Louise arrived here frun 51‘“"“:‘3" |in the Juneau Night School it was Juneau Customs Service office. o'clock yesterday moming and | apponnced today by Superintendent | e at 7 sailed for Vauconver at & 0'clock [or genceri A, B. Phillips. Enough | after picking up following 2* | ctydents have registered for the class | passengers: t0 make it possible, and enrollees \ \ area. Other hearings have aready 2 b : a office wii imes of small been held at Ketchikan, wrangell, |2 s of smaller mines, Cordova and Anchorale. | now n a t.\ e operation under thc‘ | priorities act. | ————- | Louise On SH CLASS Juneau. A. McDermid, A. Davidsou, 1. C. | witt et in the higi: school Wit Holmes, J. Stal T. Cooner. A.|Mi; Helen Hendricks for the Tues- | Page, J. Krugness, D. Schuidt, A.|agy o1id Thursday night classes from | ‘White, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Williams, | 7 v0'9 ‘orelock. | S, Fatland, My Enrolled in the beginning short- | Mr. and Mrs. D. Snedaker, B. B.\nang and beginning typing classes Griswold, T. Smith Ito daic are thirtly-two students. Wl H. Hutchinson, . Tate, E. MC- | yese classes are being instructed | CHICAGO, Oct. 20. — The Pres- Coy, Miss K. C. Little, Mrs. L. V. iy Miss Rallicryn Mitchell and Mrs, |ident’s emergency fact finding Fernald, Miss Syi Fernald, H.|gopert Rice. board today notified five big op- Harnes, V. Alderson, G. Garrico, Mr. | = and Mrs. G. Phippi, H. G. Gingris, B. Cedarbahn and 1. Olsen. ——— = CREDIT BUSINESS TOOK HIRST AND WOLFE 10 SITKA t .le on/ Claude - - erating union, embracing a mem- | bership of 360,000 men, not to ac- cept arbitration in the railroad ‘WEIJ[-ARE SEAFF | wage di§puw. MISSBROWNLEE |wm™ o i srase i ENTERTAINED and today railroad management of- | Miss Aleta Browniee of San Fran-! agreed to place their case/ board’s hands. ARG cisco has been the incentive for a number of parties since her ar- rival here recently to attend the annual staff conference of the Di- ision of Child Welfare of the Ter- torial Department of Public Wel- fare. Miss Helen Junes Arrives Here for | Visit: Going South Miss Helen Elizabeth Junes ar- rived in Juneau aboard the Aleu-} It was just credit matters w! Hirst, superintende: ska of| the Office of Indian Affuirs, and Raymond J. Wolfe, credit super- visor for the Indian Office, to Sitka for several days last week, Hirst said today. and Mrs. Russell Maynard entertained at a cocktail party Sat-| Wolfe, newly appointed to the|urday evening in her honor, and credit post, did not return here|Other members of the staff were i . o o short visit with friends with Hirst yesterday but intended [also present. Following the party, . . perore continuing south for to go to Angoon on further credit(Miss Brownlee entertained staff fisr metriage on. Noverter 1 4t business today members at dinner. Sunday night| 3 gL o !members of the staff were guests MI. M. L. Laney. While here she of K. Foresman, Director of child is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. welfare for the Territory, and Murs. | William Hixon. an | Miss Junes is the daughter of ith will enter- Mr. and Mrs. Hans Junes of Fair-| vain for Miss Bro: tonight at banks, and resided in Juneau for A v l A T l o “ a0 fnformal dinner. and tomorrow|several years, where she met Laney, night the staff members v the who was employed with the firm of » | |guests of Govern Frnest|N. Lester Troast and Associates, ARE YOU PREPARED? | |Gruening for dinmer in the Gover-| Architects, At present he is with NOW, as never before, portunities in AVIATION nor’s Manslon |the architecural firm of Naramore await trained pilots. { { j | VR T S R land Brady in Seattle, | { SKAGWAY WOMAN TR e Men, properly trained, can | gain higher rating and ) EVANGELISTS RETURN pay in armed forces of the rhomas Roberts and P. Blake, vangelist missionaries, who have United States and in Com- mercial Aviation. AMPS BUY DEFENSE M Courtne op- Mrs, S Do chant | toda, 1y vesident and | there, arrived in | the steamcr 1friends here. - - Empire Classifieds Pay! - nl ) in Yukon Territory for the “yisit | Past iwo months, arrived in Ju- [neau today on the steamer Aleu- |tian, which they boarded at Skag- way. Applications for a number § | of students are being ac- {| cepted today for flight { training. S et NOTICE TO TELEPHONE SUBSCRIBERS The Revenue Act of 1941, which was placed in effect on October 5, of 6 per cent on amounts paid by subscribers for local “The Juneau & Douglas Telephone Company is telephionie s S 3 i |§ requived to collect this d therefore the proper amount will be 3 '.:?'Affef?.. the x»:gtuxr:r"zt;n:s: ‘;nsdee;ey otl:e company on all bills paid Prepare Today * AFTER OCTOBER 10TH ; |} Regular Rate Less Discount Tatal with Tax Added CONSULT i $2.50 $2.25 $2.38 ! 3.00 235 2.91 Alaska School of b 528 4 - 1 4.50 425 450 Aeronautics, Inc. 500 e 503 \ b 2= of S5 h will be notified P. 0. Box 2187 Plone Black 769 fubseribens waing Jn g M;’"fi:ifi“;;;:‘“ po JUNEAU i i JUNEAU & DOUGLAS TELEPHONE COMPANY P B et P e |day alone, Russian forces destroved "pu]led his first “job.” | job. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA RECAPTURED |QUIT SOVIET LONDON, Oct. 20.—Reuters this| afternoon reported the Moscow | broadcast announced the recapture | of the village of Pogostie near Len- ingrad. I —tebe NAZILOSSES HEAVY SAYS RUSS RADIO Nearly 43&)000 Nazis| Killed or Wounded Al- ready on Red Front LONDON, Oct. '20.—Pravda, ficial Russian news agency, de- clared today that German losses on the eastern front até now ap-| proaching 4,000,000 killed and wounded, but “still these accursed locusts come on,” according to a| Moscow radio broadcast received here. That the Germans are payinq! dearly for their gains was indicat- | €d by the Soviet Information Bu-| | of- | reau, which said that in the Bry- ansk and Kalinin sectors Satur- ‘about 445 German tiucks loaded With ‘men, fuel, and munitions, 25 tanks and 70 canhon. Minor blazes Saturday and Sun-l day gave the Juneau Fire Depart-| ment thiee workouts, although little darage was done. | A curtain in a ‘third-story room at the Hotel Jtmean caught fire {rom a smoldering cigaret Saturday '2fternoon, resulting in smoke dam- ge to the rooM. Yesterday morn- ihg a blazing mattr~3s in the Key- | stone Rooms was extinguished firemen, with a brush fire on Wil- loughby Avenueé calling the truck out later in the day. Sees Bank Bandif's De‘b!ll Then His Exit CULLISON, Kan., Oct, "L W Stotts was in a Byers, Kan., bank in 1926 when a young_,‘obbfl.r The other day he was in Macks- ville, Kan., when the same bank robber was killed pulling his last | PRSI T A R ARMY OFFICERS VISIT Enroute to the Westward to take up new assignments at Al- askan army bases, five lieutenant colonels visited in Juneau yester- day while the steamer Columbia was in port. They were C. C. Dusenbury, Ed- ward Kiel, Zim Lawhon, James Tully and Nels M. Walker. AETRRELE TENAKEE NATIVE DRUNK David Howard, Tenakee native, pled guilty to the charge of drunk- | en and disorderly conduct ‘today when he was arraigned before U. S. Commissioner Felix Gray. Sen- tence will be deferred until Thurs- day, Commissioner Gray declared. e ———— MINE CHIEF LEAVES J. A. Williams, General Superin- tendent ‘of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company, and Mrs. Willlams left Juneau yesterday morning on the steamer Princess Louise. They will spend a month vacationing in San Francisco, ———.——-——— TRAVELING MEN TRAVEL K. Louring left on the Aleutian for Ketchikan and B. F. Kane' went to Skagway and Haines on the Co- lumbia. Both are well known travel- ing men. _ ¥ —— % LOUSSAC WESTWARD 2. L. Loussac, pjominent mgness man of Anchorage, formerly of Ju- neay, is a passenger for the West- ward aboard the Columbia. 4 HAINES MAN HERE J. H. Chisel, businessman of Haines, arrived in Juneau this morning on the Aleutian. — -t Subscribe for The Empire. —— e BUY DEFENSE BONDS 'STARLING GETS __MONDAY,OCTORER 20, 194 THE WEATHER ' SCONBON GOOGLE,” THAT'S E Y MY SHP SHOVED OFF COR \CELAND TH\S MORNAG ITHONT ME - DYA TARK THEY'LL FIRE NE 2 (By the U. 'S. Weather Bureau) s APPO'NTMENT Io U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU CAPITALCITY ~ | B P"DIAN sERvI(E Juneau and vicinity: Light showers tonight, mostly cloudy with 2 . an occasional light shower Tuesday; not much change in tempera- ] SRR B ture, lowest tonight about 41 degrees, highest Tuesday about 50 de- Many cO”espondentS and Named Superwso[ Of Ar's grees; gentle to moderate southerly winds. | L Southeast Alaska: Showers and not much change in temperature D]ploma's l_O(a'ed and Crafis '0 SU(- tonight and Tuesday; moderate south to southwesterly winds but & winds of 20 to 30 miles per hour are expected to continue in the ‘ at KUIbYSheV | (eed Fa"e" channels tonight, and gradually decreacing Tuesday. | o Al | R Wind and weather along the (ivlf of Alaska tonight and Tues.: § (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) W was réceived from Wash-| Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: southwesterly Winds 20 to 40 miles = M A group of American correspon-|ington, D. C.. this morning of the} per houry showers; Cape Spencer tow'Cape Hihchibrook: southerly | dents leaving Moscow last week |permanent 2 of Harvey| winds 20 to 40 miles per hour; rain; ‘Cape Hinchinbrook to Resur- have arrived &t' Kulbyshev, 550|W. Starlin supervisor of arts} rection Bay: south to southeasterly winds 20°%o 40 miles per hour; miliet east of Mbsow. R ts ir Office of Indian| Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: noriherly winds 20 ' to 30 miles per | Although the ~dispatch did not 'm‘\;‘a ‘\I"“"“” was SMarradiy hour, partly cloudy. \ mention United States Ambassa- Farell, now supervisor LOCAL DATA dor Steinhardt, it appears most| ' iycition in the Office of Indian Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather likely he joined the Americans at |, r i 4:30 p.m. yesterday 29.89 43 82 ESE 14 Rain Kuibyshev, formerly knowy rling came here to take the| 4:30 am. today ... 20.69 44 87 ESE 16 Rain Samara. osition from his former post of| Noon today 29.70 47 84 SE 14 Showers The dispatch also indicates that ,rincipal at the Nome school. He RADIO REPORTS at least part of the Soviet Gov- i, a former teacher at Koyuk: and | TODAY ernment has also moved there Kotzebue and, has been in the Max. tempt. | Loviest ‘4:30am. Precip. 4:30am 'The ' Japanese Ambassador and [ndian service in Alaska for the Station 1ast 24 hours temp. .Wmi:t‘ zchour‘s Wealhe Gen, 'Tatekawa previously reported past six years Previ:ml to thlat Bagit 5 104 18 "y 0 PtiCIa in advices from Tokyo that he he taught in high schools in the i) , E has reached Kubysev with his state of Washington and was a| Iairoafiks 23 { 12 1 R ouay statf. W ocial welfare worker. g 2 = 2;’ g Bl Henry Cassidy and Robert Magi-| As supervisor of arts and crafts,| Da%son s 1 n % o doff. of the Assoclated Press Bu-|he will aid in the distribution of| Anchorage - 2? 0 pcar reay at Moscow are also in the new | Indian-made art objects to dealers.| Bethel 28 12 20 0 gy Jocation of part of the Soviet Gov-|The Indian Office does not sell St. Paul 45 42 45 Trace Cloudy ernment. The remafder of thelthese articles to the retail trade' Atka 42 34 4 Trace Rain AP group remain at Moscow distributes them through !i-= Dutch Harbor .. 42 35 40 06 Rain, Snow A censed dealers | Kodiak 40 38 34 1.44 Pt. Cldy - >+ Cordova 43 40 44 Trace Rain 3 Juneau 46 19 @2 1.14 Rai (HANGE |N e Y 4 0 4 136 Pt.Cldy |} | e ;“2;’}‘}";1‘;“::“r;“‘;x;‘d \-| Ketehikan 50 43 50 157 Rain ; Tl trom. the. Vwestward ttg| ETHice Rupert . 50 43 46 46 Rain [ R e e, T S N . O 26 30 0 Cloudy (oMMAND | morning on the steamer Aleutian. | EamONtoR 60 ™ 26 0 Bléar [ b A vl | Seattle 56 41 44 0 y — | Portland 58 44 41 0 San Francisco .. 59 | 49 52 01 i A low pressure area of modera‘e in/tenslty whimh moved north- | eastward into the Gulf 'yesterda’ and centered this morning just BERN, Oct. 20—A radio broad- soutll of Coérdova was causing mo ‘erate to heavy rain over most nf ;;::a j’m:“:‘sk“;:;,":}:""““l':f\’*w“(’r\;"’aq | the Gulf région from Kodiak to Dixon Entrance. Partly cloudy s 3 b sdeflnts S : | weather prevailed over most of th: rest of Alaska. The greatest R HAPPY BIRTHDAY amount of précipitation during th: past 24 hours was 157 inches re- usian Armigs on the Central | Hallowe'en candy, emblems Of| jquq n¢ Ketohikan, however, se‘eral other stations in Southeast front has been dismissed. There is| Hallowe'sn' in the fori® of caps,! T . k. T) i however no confirmation of this. favors and skeletons, with ‘deHeious | Alaska reportéd ‘amounts in exces: of an inch. The coldest tem Other sources however said|refreshments of various goodies in-| perature was one degree above ze'o recorded at Barrow. Stalin’s order of the day, broad- cluding a candle-lighted cake fol-| The Monday morning weathe ' chart indicated a weakening cen- 28st from Moscow, said General|lowed by a show for the children at, ter of low pressure ‘of 29.20 inche: was located in the Gulf of Al- Zhukoz, hitherto chief of the Gen-|the Coliseum, celebrated the sév-| aska at 59 degrees north and 14! degrees west. A center of high ioral Staff and Commander of > enth birthday of Aleda Lee Warner Dpressure of 3040 inches was situ ted in the northeast Pacific Ocean Western Army, is held respons Saturday evening at the home of | at 37 degrees néorth and 140 degr:es west. A large area of high for the defense of Moscow’s west-|her parents Mr. and Mrs. Jack| pressure was situated over the Aleutian Islands. ern approaches. | Warner. - st En]oyipa‘ the e\'m}l with Alcda: INVITATION FOR BIDS " were Shirley Ann Edwards, Phoebe s - Y DARI PARTY REPORIS Ann Logan, Elizabeth Ann Rekosh, (Hllb WEI-FARE | Sealed: bids will ‘be received by 4 GOOD HUN“NG 0" Beth Fleek, Bonnie Wagner, Paul- | ' the City of Juneau at the Office ‘melsonnfl'. !;daril.vn VI:}M“fi. (i';\rol SIAFF M mfi of the City Clerk until 4 p.m., Fri- | Cechrane, Catherine Valeson, Bev- b AT Ap-Ana : ‘g _ g GAMBIER BAY IRIP erly Erickson and Toni Warner. 4 }da). STy 45, 204h Jur the pui- £ y | Pt s | chase and removal of the house weather was re ay by 12| Mrs. H G. Fishter and two sons A . WL s, ' S ) e Tt o ™ i are nouse guests of wre. w. pice, CONSUIfANt of Children’s o suneau. wurther particutars may Dart during Saturday and Sunday |SiSter of Mrs. Fisher at her home B P ‘ 'P b lée't Yol;;a r;ed a§ the:of ficé:"of Itk'le' for & hunting trip to Gambier Bay. |\ the Baroumes apartments, hav- ureau Present at Fron- ‘J” ng| "ee; n the City Hfll‘ ay The Juneau Nimrods didn'f mind | D8 recently o v heey, drorp I A D' d e R e the choppy weather which rolled ! Scattle. The visitors AT ems Are Discusse g w}:gjm el g the Dart around quite a lot on the !, . 1 & 0 o m"\ g Ladv 2 G‘.RICE' Hiss bo'-dind frdns Gambier, w]mfl"mband and father in Seward. The annual staf}' conference of: g City Clerk. they were able to bring back 10| spec e the Division of Child Welfare Ser-| oo bl geese, about 50 ducks and a deer. | MOVING s vings SOl o EtloEh) span) Ambher . Gunddir— bogk dtmsny] . T Anderson =nd family:areiment of Public Weltars opeied’ {ik1 Under New Management 2 ’ Y I moving to the L. B. Nelson house peti Saturday morning to be- Connor's Betsy Ross, pulled into|aqiacers ot ovh meeting Saturday g €0 ! JUNEAU £ adjacent to their present residence oin discussion of activities of the | i Gambier Bay yesterday ‘evening onon I street. They expect toiremali| ace ' veas “aiidi outiine \plars for Day and Night a hunting expedition, just as the|in Douglas all winter having aban.ifit ezsumg Sear | NURSERY ?:r:tge,‘vaspolleiz:ln%hgl;‘oalshl‘)vas(’l::l?‘é:):‘llj: their plan to return to the‘ During the sessions Saturdayand | Mrs. E. L. Hopper, Mgr. in the season proved himself a| SR g il {today, ‘the group has been .cqn-‘ 315 Third St. Phone Red 119 handy man at blasting ducks om} HOME FROM TENAKEE |cerned with a review of activities, of the skies. | After a couple of months’ vaca-|2ccording to K. R. Foresman, sup- ___ % —————— |tion at Tenakee Springs John G.‘ervl'sor. In particular, the mem- »u. | Johnson arrived home Saturday bers'of the: staff are covering the jumu"ES ARE !m;;m on the rester. He reports | Problems created in Alaskan towns general improvement in his health. by defense building and the prob- LT vaTED To HMR ' o !lems created by defense in rela- ‘_’ ; HUNTERS IN AND OUT tion to the children in the com- ’, ADDRESS THURSDAYI A party of six hunters with Ar»“munme& The workers are attempt- NSURED g thur Ladd, including Calvin Pcol ing to ease the situation by es- v 3 4 All people interested are invsted!““d Arne shudshirt_ -of Douglas, | tablishing recréational ‘ facilities. % to attend an address given by Miss| VDt out Saturday night in Ladd's| - Administrative problems’ are also S Aleta Brownlee Thursday afternoon | 204t Cheechako for some hunting |peing discussed by the staff, and ® at 2 c'clock. Miss Brownlee, who| (Urning Sunday night. Leaving|ihey are reviewing procedures #nd ] is Regional Consultant of the U. §.|[00aY Were Jin and Jake Manning tormulating new rules, instrictions 2 ] Children’s Bureau, is in Juneau| (0" & Several days trip. |and’ forms: to facilitate work of the By o l; ] | attending the staff conference of y AR R | Diviston. 3 t - o) with« ] the Division of Child Welfare Ser-| PATE ADVANCED | The- statr is meeting in‘the of- | vices of the Territorial Dmm‘tmenl] _ FOR SEWING CLUBifige, of Russel G, Maynard, Di- lns"ed ’salely > Public Welfare, | Meeting of the Monday night|, ot "or ke Departitient: Present (B " ot The address is being planned un- | SCWing Club rezularly scheduled for| 155 Afetis’ Browilée! Feional | ; 1 dér the auspices of the Juneau|'DiS evening will instead be heig [Are s A . Un‘i‘d g Leagtie of Women Voters, and will| Mcnday November third with Mrs, [CouSUltant of ‘the United “States | iake place in the American Legion| 10Mas Cashen the hostess. CHINISS Han IHE S o Dugout on Second Street. | —————.——— Kctdfflhn. Miss 'Eleanor Oman- of | ] Subject of Miss Brownlee's ad-| MRSJ KIRKHAM RETURNS Anchorgge,'t’!!as i { dress will be the laws governing| ATFIVINE yesterday on the Aleu-|of Juneau, George Luden of Fair-|j » ¢hild welfare and the activities of |31 ¥as Mrs. Glen Kirkham, after banks and Foreésmai. - : the social wotkers of the division IS¢ 0 tWo months visit in An-l' e : in_coping with problems coming|°0¥28€. The trip home was very| .o under the supervision of such laws,| *.0'mY particularly while ‘crossing | the Gulf, Mrs. Kirkham reported. | S X i During her stay at Anchorage! 3 E . CF?&L&:ngxsi:k:N\?ho e she visited over quite a large section i e % o o | i s 145 of that surrounding country and| 34 a‘fm" (Iafl‘ i U been in Skagway superintending |had a very fine time. She brought| What wilf bly “the > the construction of the new Gross greetings to all their channel;'ey trip of the season from the 2 theatre there, returned to Juneau friends from Mr. and Mrs. J, o, Public’ Survey Office here Ileft § E A BN ' “ s on the Aleutian Kirkham, she said. © % 7lJuneau yesterday when F.'W. Wil- Ry ey O ANy 4 e e e liamson, associate cwdn.;zmenhr:- . 55 i cor, and BiS: ' principa? ¢ assistént, £ h By BILLY DeBECK | Eimer 3. ety toesaen he o1 On Savings Accounts umbia, - bound for’ Skagway.: i @ Accounts o RTINS Y WY SHOR, | | e cow o e et 6 fomn iy = \! oo ! | |canal; the' two will ‘do" is0 Mok 3 s E\é\\.\. R\%HT \© T AN \& T | hemestead surveys, and-atter their (f © 2,;;‘“.’ avillable ai any CELL'EM 1 UORMINTS G\T vk ot Skagway is/compieted.they I TELL'EM T 1D | MOeBLSERpTRY o e ® sfart a i I ‘to- Petersburg for® séme St an account with $1 TO GO To WY @DRC\Q“G g r Mitkof Tsland.. - i or more. GRONDWOTHER'| TELLIEW THEY CN 1"‘??‘ e ' N T ke “ YapROL W DRNS ! | MOTOR REPAIR. CLASS Current 4% Rate SHOWED 1P WILL MEET TONIGHT : MIsSt . ‘Members ' +of * the: mioter repair h b T4 ¢ cass wil meet for ther zesunr |l Alagkea Federal class tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the AT R A. B. Hall to continue their work g in learning the rudiments of auto- || mm‘ Lm mobile repairing. The class is, P .nb T fitHeced by the American. Wo- m of Juneav men’s Voluntary Services as a part %409 o 5t the ‘civil training. i ‘Phone 3 Subscribe for The Empire. m