The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 10, 1949, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXXIIL, NO. 11,320 JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1949 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTi | Two Strikes Continue With More in Prospect N Y. YANKS | CHAMPS OF EBBETS FIELD, Brooklyn, 10—(M—The New York Yankees won their 12th World Series Sun- day by humbling the Brooklyn Dodgers, 10-8, in the first series contest ever finished under lights. A Sellout crowd of 33,711 saw Joe Page rescue a tired Vic Raschi from | a seventh-inning Dodger rally as|Hermanski. the Yanks closed out the National Leaguers, four games to one. The Yanks' 12th triumph in 16 series capped a brilliant season by 58-year-old Manager Casey Stengel in his first year with the club. The Dodgers never have won a series, losing all five. In 1916 they bowed to-the -Bespon.-Red- Sox, -in 1920 to Cleveland, and in 1941, 1947 and this fall to the Yanks. Raschi Weakens Raschi, working with only two days rest, weakened in the Séventh and was replaced by Page after Gil Hodges’ three-run. homer, but the Yanks’ bulging early lead against Rex Barney, Jack Banta and Joe| Hatten stood up. New York got to Wild Man Bar—; ney for two in the first and knock- ed him out during the three:run third. Gerry Coleman’s single with| the bases loaded, drove in two runs and flattened Barney. L DiMaggio Gets Homer DiMaggio, who had only one hlt| in 16 previous trips to the plate, hit a 360-foot homer off reliefer Banta in the fourth after the Brooks broke Raschi’s shutout bid with a run in the third. Gene Woodling, who laced Brook pitching for two doubles and a single set up another run in the fifth with his leadoff double. He| moved around on a sacrifice and Coleman’s infield out. (Continued on Pnu‘e 2) The Washington | | | {ica 1 (DiMaggio); Raschi 4 (Rob-| BOX SCORE EBBETTS FIELD,, Brooklyn, Oct. 10—P—Official box score of the fifth and last gamie in the 1949 World Series: A—Struck out for Banta in 5th. B—Struck out for Hatten in Gth.‘\ C——Singled for Palica in 8th. D—~Doubled for Jorgensen in 9th. E—Barney, Robinson, Mapes. RBI—DiMaggio 2, R. Brown 2, Coleman, 3, Raschi, Berra, Reese, PN—Robinson, Hodges 3. 2B—Campanella, Woodling 2, Sni- der, Coleman, Miksis. 3B—R. Brown. HR—DiMaggio, Hodges. S——Rizzuto, Mapes. DP—Page, Rizzuto and Henrich. ER—New York (A) 10; Brooklyn (0 1)) N Left—New York 9; Brooklyn 9. BB—Off Barney 6 (Rizzuto, Hen-| rich, Woodling, Raschi, R. Brown,; Mapes); Erskine 1 (Rizzuto); Pal-| inson, Campanella, Jorgensen, Her- manski); Page 1 (Hermanski). l SO—By Barney 2 (Berra, Mapes); ! Banta 2 (R. Brown, Raschi); Pal-| ica 1 (Rizzuto); Raschi 7 (Snider! 2, Rackley 2, T. Brown, Hodges,| Cox); Page 4 (Olmo, Snider, Robin- son, Hodges). | Hits and runs off Barney 3 and 5in 2 2/3 innings; Banta 3 and 2 2 1/3; Erskine 2 in 3 and 2/3; Hatten 1 and none in 1/3; Palica | 1 and none in 2; Minner 1 and ncne in 1; Raschi 9 and 6 in 6 and 2/3; Page 2 and mone in 2 1/3. Winner—Raschi; Loser—Barney. U—Hubbard (A) plate; Reardon (N) first base; Passarella (A) sec-| ond base; Jorda (N) third base;| Barr (N) left field foul line; Hur-| ley (A) right field foul line. Admission—33,711 paid. 1 Time—3:04. | Receipts—$167,165.45. | FINANCIAL |drew J. May of Reynolds-Page by which the federal government|the homer that won the opener seeks to establish its paramount right to oil-rich marginal lands off the Texas and Louisiana coasts. |It gave Texas and Louisiana one the two “Big” men of the Yanks’ more month in which to answer the federal action. Refused to consider appeals fil- ed by former R/wresentative An- Kentucky and Henry and Murray Garsson, war- time munitions makers. May wa$ wartime chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee. He and the Garsson brothers were convict- ed on conspiracy-bribery charges. Each was sentenced to 8 to 24 months in prison. Each has been at liberty under $2,000 bond pend- ing the Supreme Court’s action on the appeals. The Justice Department charged May received some $53,000 for.help- ing the Garssons get war contracts. After its opinion session, the court heard arguments on consti- tutionality of the non-Communist oath requirement in the Taft-Hart- ley Labor Act. That requirement is questioned by the CIO United Steel Workers of America and the CIO American Communications Association in two appeals. The Taft-Hartley act requires that union officials must file affi- davits saying they are not Com- munists, if they wish to use mach- inery of the National Labor Board. TORNADOES, RAIN, FOG KILLEIGHT Combinafion Given Big and Little Phil Rizzuto for his superlative shortstop play. But way out front there were 12th Series triumph in 16 tries— Reynolds and Page. Page, of course, ran true to form.I Hadn't he marched from the bull-| pen 60 times during the regular season, 20 of them to save Rey=- nolds? “OLD WAHOO" WORKS IT Reynolds’ brillfant performance of no runs and only two hits in 12 1-3 innings was a direct right- about-face. “Old Wahop” had com- pleted but four games in 31 starts. It was Page with a 5 2-3 inning “stopper” after Tommy Byrne went bad in the third game. Reynolds| bailed out Lopat by retiring the! last 10 men in succession in the| fourth. i Things ended normally at Ebbets | Field yesterday afternoon, with Page ambling in to finish what| Raschi started. Working with only| two days rest, like Newcomte in Saturday's sad effort, Raschi crumbled in the Doddger Seventh. A 10-2 lead melted to 10-6. | ‘There was nobody on when Page walked in. Normally the joint is| jumping. But Gil Hodges had just! unloaded a three-run homer as a parting shot to Raschi. The Fire-| man was all alone. Boss Burt Shot- ton sent up Luis Olmo. A right- handed batter, for Dodger Marv FOUR DIE IN TRAGEDY IN found on a bed in a well-furnished | east bedroom. She apparently had | been shot through the mouth. i A 22 Colt revolver was found abcut three inches from her bcdy.' Neighbors said the husband and | father had not been home for sev- eral days. He has been on leave of absence for two years from Amer- | ican Alrlines, with whom he was| a pilot. The airline said Finch was re- ported at the home of his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Finch, in Ann Arbor, Mich, An acquaintance of Finch's, Bill Wing, an American Airlines co- phiot, said Finch was a colonel with} he Air Forces’s Air Transport Com- mand during the war and was n top-notch fielr. | Finch raised chinchillas here. In Ann Arbor, Richard Finch's‘ father, a professor at the Univer- sity of Michigan, said his son was | leaving by plane immediately for Fort Worth. “He’s pretty badly broken up,” the elder Finch said. | o s S'Division Superintendent’s Office at, without detection and heavy losses. OF HIGHWAY | General in Paris forsook the Gov- California Sea Lion Shows Hum The entire staff of the National-! ist Chinese Embassy and Consulate ernment cause and declared itself in favor of Mao Tze-Tung's new Communist regime set up in Peip- ing last week. ' The only members who did nm' desert were the newly-named Charge D'Affaires, Tuan Mno-Lnn; and Ambassador Tsien Tai, who is{ i TRAIN HITS WASHOUT; 4 PERSONS DIE MEADE; Kas. Oct. 10.—(AP)— A Rock Island passenger train hit |a track washout three miles east ol' tion program must te labeled a here today, killing four persons and injuring approximately 50. ' O. K. Curry, Chief Clerk in thej Liberal, Kas., said 130 persons were aboard the Chicago-tound train. Heavy rains occurred in the area| NAVY CLAIMS ans How fo B-36 IS RADAR SUSCEPTIBLE I, PR BY DOUGLAS B. CORNELL | WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.—MP—A Navy electronics expert told House investigators today that radar can track rockets and reach the Moon, so it certainly can spot a big high- flying bomber like the Air Force B-36. Lt. Comdr. E. W. Harrison con- tinued before the House Armed Services Committee the Navy's at- tack on the glant, six-engine bomb- er that is the pride of the Air Force. Admiral Arthur W. Radford led off for the Navy last week with a contention that the B-36 construc- “billion dollar blunder” unless the plane can, as the Air Force con- tends, carry out bombing missions Radford said the claims are not true. Now other Navy men are giving yesterday. Ambulances from Liberal, | supporting testimony on the gen- Dodge City and Fowler, Kas., went cral theme that too much of limit- to the scene. Meade, in southwest-|.q defense funds are going into the ern Kansas, is the county seat of | B-36 and too little into Naval avia- ping fast balls and the side was| out. | Nobody knew it until Page told it| SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Oct. 10— | after the game, but Smoky Joe was | —Progress was reported today in throwing only fast balls because | the effort to form a highway link he injured his hand Friday. It|between the US. and Canada. didn't make much difference. The; A hundred miles of the 300 miles | high hard one was plenty hard.|between Fairbanks and the Al-| Pinch hitter Bruce Edwards singled | acka-Canada border has been pav- with one gone in the eighth. The|ed, Col. John R. Noyes, Alaska Rackley, a lefthander. Three hop-lkoAD’ AlASKA| Meade County. The overturned cars landed in a waterfilled ditch, The train, “The Imperial’, was easttound from California to Chi- cage. 4 At Fowler a small hospital and the high school were being used to care for the injured. Willlam R. Owens, Editor of the next batter, Pee Wee Reese hit a come=back ball to Page, who start- | Meade Globe-News, said a diesel lunit and four coaches left the | tracks. One of the cars was report- | Roads Commissioner, told the Na- | tional Association of State High- tion. Harrison, who is attached to the electronics divisions of the Bureau| of Aeronautics, told the, Commit- tec: | “We have, and can expect any| potential enemy to have, radar| equipment and interceptor air- craft capable of detecting, inter- cepting and bringing about the destruction of large, very heavy bombers regardless of how high 2 MILLION MEN SLATED 5 NEW YORK (A): ABRH OA ’ Rizauto, ss. . 203 3 ag 8 . M . e i redit in World Series| FORT WORTH wim English Channe BefTa, €t 0 011 0 | ~HEHES DiMaggio, cf .. 2800 - b ot o R ORI o v e T T S SO L e e R. Brown, 3b .. 2301 Y TEny | s BY JACK HANI | DOVER, Eng. Oct. 10.—(AP)— p— Defea' Brwklyn DOdgerS} X:Odhni' . f : f g Brooklyn, Oct. 10—D<AP)_The Mo'her, Gfafldmo‘hef, 2 Pierre Cilion, a California sea llon‘lF b . . I M SUI'IdaY by 10'6 Store fo Colre’:rsx'a:; " 50210 New York Yankees, ol' Casey Chvld M d d . 2 i with a sense of humor, has shown | @ "(a'mg P ams ay Be . Rascl p S 6vac 000 Stengel’s “Invalids of Destiny”, won| |ldren Murdered in the Human Race that it still has & c' d ”'l 5 w k Win 4 of 5 Games Puge; 3 S b the World Series yesterday from Suburban Home lot to learn akout swimming. 0se 1S wee . TdTALS 7' 361011 27 5 the startled Brooklyn Dodgers for u r In the most casual sort of way P d- c ' d AR A severa] reasons—but the most im- | Pierre swam the English Channel en Il‘lq oniracis SHORT S(mi | BROOKLYN (N): &7 | portant was the Reynolds-Page] FORT WORTH, Texas, Oct. 10.— yesterday in just over five hours. AT Reese, s8 0210 | bullpen combination. (P—Four persons were found shot That is approximately half the best| (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) Jorgensen, 3b 100 of MANY (ASES Because he had the right relief|{to death today at their home in I S 0 N S l I p-ume ever set by a human. The steel and coal strikes con- YANKEES D-Miksis . L0000 men when he needed them most,;suburban Oak Knoll. | Pierre—spurred on by snacks of tinued today and the prospect was DODGERS Snider, cf 4:3.50 " | stengel led his assorted cripples to| They were identified by neigh- Jherrlng——mnde his bid for fame and| for more widespread idleness this PR A gzs::g;;i 2;’( ‘1) ; : g — tthe winners' share of the jackpot—|bors as: R s o 5rndlu, television nndh movie €on- | week The nation's strike idle may | 2 ) | 195,884 for each Yankee. Mrs. Richard G. Finch, about 33; H | tracts on just about the worst pos- (oMPosI“ S(oRE lI;I::lEles, lll; ‘1) g : ;iRefuse Appeals 0' May! Pitching usually tells the story|Penelope Finch, 8, her daughter; Chma ce|ebra|es '911 Re' sible day for a Channel sw}l‘:."r:e re;i:ncw: x::lv?‘v:n p::::ne:“:o g0 (Five Innings) ey, of a short series. It was no dif-|Allan Finch, 7, her son; a Mis.| f H crossing was so rough that the e 1 & Sl 3 g Garsson Brothers; Com- {ferent in the five-game 1049 et Walker, identitied as the children's volt But in Paris Staff |55 e torrespondenta and photo- fi;zfflg,sch;e::;fi:;"zntfl;‘;‘fi YANKEES ............21 37 4 Alpanelia, c ... $ Only this time it was the reliet [maternal grandmother. H graphers who went along in two |, i DODGERS 5 | Bamey, p. o011 i€ Oath Arguments ok ¢ alie” Revnolds ana Fire-| A next door neighbor, Mss. T. C. Goes Communist Saotorbosta beckma. very seaslok | axs 1 SELGES b ath Barney, Lo.Liuo ! jman Joe Page that stood out after Hukill, discovered the bodies wheni Pierre’s swim was part of a stunt| "~ g+ there was no move toward SCORE BY INNINGS Sl DI . oo 1.0 0 0 0/ WASHINGTON; Oct. 10—(P—The | the Yanks and Dodgers swapped 1-0|she went to inquire about the chile| (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) for “Truth or Consequence,’— 8|.eithino the strike of 454000 CIO Y.;NKEES: 1234561789 ’I‘J:t. gx;stl:ler;e. pp g g g g nganme‘Cuul;t urlw)d xtstrirstth‘\;sl» _shutouts in the first two record-.drfin ‘whom :h' usuallfizu:rove 0| war-sick China celebrated w_'mdlo prgrln':; t;‘t:‘t"“ tg :1st:{nee: steelworkers. The two strikes have 5 ¥ & € ssion e T’ ay. . es. L s DO]‘SZ;ERS: B B-Cox 10000 ;‘: 52'155e orderz it tax:;:d et;lne (c)aseys:breakmgj-i’;:;s'sr,gac TOO BcMo:s. wl»‘{tl?kmers::in sche last saw dny.the. auniversgly 01. iig:1pi1. re- :-X:ed;hewhonmlssed a question in a Mm"?;l cu'i 0:(‘!‘ PAY ;hecn e Runs 001001400 6 | PFalica p . -0 0 0 0 1|on which it will, or will not, hear | Certainly there we;e other stars.|the family Saturday. Nelghbors'w“ against the Imperial Manchuslqmz' was required to assist n fore. Shiss SLUSIINE Snans: | C-Edwards ... 1 0 1 0 0farguments. g i Bobk of i rttlndleald | Ehe’ grandmother had’ come] Yith dragon dances and FAnrutark- aging the venture . Contrests Dasiawe, . smelWork B! Minner, p 00001 r: it S’ = Bobty Brown for his 500 battng 2 d lers. Across the world, in France, | Manasing the 3 ers and fabricating plants begin y JACK HAND TOTALS i imong its actions, e cour‘ 2 a?,'erage, qu-my Mize for his 1,000 | here recently from F!on a. Ithe slipping Nationalist Gevern- | expiring Saturday, and the Union's Oct. - | Refused to throw out two suits|pinch hitting, Tommy Henrich for{ The grandmother's body was ment suffered another setback. President, Bhilip Murray, has de- clared he wants these workers to have the free pension and insur- ance for which the other steelwork- ers are striking. This apparently means there'll be more plant shut- downs and more picket lines. ALASKAMAY GET ITFOR MILITARY WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 —®— An emergency $154,612,470 military construction bill for Alaska and Okinawa was cleared today by the House Rules' Committee for House action this week. The bill :would authorize the Ar- my, the Navy and the Air Force to undertake that amount of con- struction. The House Armed Services com- mittee said prompt action is needed “in view of the international situa- tion and the exigencies of national defense.” MRS. MONSEN NOW OUT OF HOSPITAL Mrs. Helen Monsen has been dis- missed from Providence Hospital in Seattle and is now convalescing in the Washington Hotel. While on a visit in Portland, Mrs. Monsen slipped on basement stairs and feil to the concrete floor and fractured her skull. 8he returned to Seattle and was immediately hospitalized, but is now recovering and taking a complete rest as ordered by physician. her ! Mel'l’y - Go = Round (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) |eq @ doutle play. | wezprotrsials; tHoy Ty B <y b By DREW PEARSON iCopyrignt, 1949, Py Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ASHINGTON— In the confi- dential files of Sen. Clyde Hoey’s investigating committee is a report on Gen. Harry Vaughan and his partner, John Maragon, in which they seek sunken treasure at the bottom of the sea. And as usual, they pulled a lot of political wires to get the treasure. ‘This is one part of the Vaughan- Maragon investigation which Sena- tor “Jugt-the-Usual Procedure” Hoey wants to suppress. It is also a chapter which President Truman is exerting pressure to hush up, de- { STATEMENT, BIG SERIES (By The Associated Press) Here is the financial statement regarding the world series: Yesterday's attendance—33,711. Receipts (Net)—$167,165.45. Commissioner’s Share—$25,074.81. Clubs’ and Leagues’ Share—$142,- 090.64. Five Game Totals Attendance—236,710. Receipts (Net)—$1,129,627.88 (does spite the fact that he made his|not include radio and television great reputation as a Senate in-|fee). vestigator. Most interesting phase of the secret Vaughan-Maragon treasure hunt is that they cut another com- pany out of the deal—despite the fact that the other company had a prior contract to salvage the ore in the sunken SS Edward Luckenbach. Vaughan’s friends got the con- tract without competitive bidding. This was the only case in history | where a salvage contract was let without competitive bidding, except one—where the commission did not own the cargo. The SS Luckenbach, sunk in 60 feet of water off Key West, Ph"}Pound $2.80%. Sales today were 1,020,000 shares. Averages today are as follows: industrials 185.14, rails 48.75, util- _ (Continued on Page Four) _ ities 37.93, , by a Nazl sub in 1942, was carry- ing a cargo of tin worth $2,000,000. The cargo, owned by the U. 8. gov- Commissioner’s Share—$169,444.17 Clubs' and Leagues’ Share—$469,- 327.96. Players’ Share—(First four games only) —$490,855.75. STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—®—Clos- ing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 3%, Anaconda 27Y%, Curtiss-Wright 7%, Interna- tional Harvester 26%, 47%, New York Central 10%, North- ern Pacific 14%, U. S. Steel 24, Kennecott | | Tornadoes, rain and fog combined !to kill at least eight persons and injure 54 others last night and | early today. The swirling tornadoes took one {life and injured four persons last {night in the Great Plains. A Rock Island passenger train roared off the rails at a track wash- out caused by heavy rains near Meade, Kans., killing four and in- juring 50. Near Cheyenne, Wyo., a Slick Airways plane diverted from its Denver destination because of lim- ited visibility due to rain and fog, hit a knoll, killing its crew of three. From the Dakotas southward in- to Oklahoma and Texas, the clouds { unlodded their moisture in thunder- storms. The bayous around Houston, though, were getting back to nor- mal as flood waters receded. In a suburb of Lincoln, Neb, a Sunday punch tornado dipped to earth and leveled a house. Mrs. Stella Morris, 78, was killed. Two | others in the house were treated for injuries. The damaging winds hop-skip- :und~jumped over Oklahoma. One woman was injured at Slapout, | Okla., a small farm community 50 | miles northwest of Woodward. In Russell, Kans, a small tor- nado ignored the outskirts—it lash- ed down Main Street. One woman was critically injured. | FROM ANCHORAGE | A. A. Lyon of Anchorage is / guest at the Baranof Hotel, a GOOD WORK IN NINTH Page didn't let up in the ninth. He ended matters with a flourish. Following a menacing pinch double by Eddie Miksis, he whiffed Duke Snider, the most striking man in the Series, and fanned Jackie Robinson. He lost Gene Herman- ski on a walk. Gil Hodges worked the count to 2-2 and beat the breeze on the next. That was all. It was all over but the post mor- tems, They were brief, too. “That last week was tough for both clubs,” said Stengel in the Clubhouse, “They had to beat the, Phillies; we had the Red Sox. We had just enough to last five games more, that’s all.” Shotton was philosophical atout the whole thing. Most of the Dod- gers seemed glad it was all over. “They have got a little bit more what you need in a World Series,” said Shotton, “But, we’ll be better when we meet them next Fall.” ‘The concensus was that the Dod- gers would have to be better by next Fall- if they're going to win. They gave it plenty of hustle, tut their pitching just wasn't deep enough. STEAMER MOVEMENTS Aleutian from Seattle due to ar- rive tomorrow afternoon. Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver 8 tonight. Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle Saturday. | The project is part of a 3100.000.-* ’000 Alaska road program also in-| cluding a 365-mile gravel road from | Valdez to Fairtanks and a road| connecting Anchorage and Seward | and on to Homer. Between Alaska and the US-| Canada border, Col. Noyes said, | there are still 1,700 miles north of | Edmonton to be paved, But that section between the border and Edmonton is paved. i "Joe Palooka” of | Movies Wedded . To Movie Adress LAS VEGAS, Nev., Oct. 10.—(®— | Joe Kirkwood, Jr., the *“Joe Pa: |looka” of the movies and pro golf | star, is honeymooninig today with actress Cathy Downs, much to the surprise of the couple’s Holly- wood friends. Quietly, and without a word to friends, the couple were wed here Saturday night by a Congregation- alist minister in a hotel chapel. He is 28 and Miss Downs 23. | i ROY ANDERSON HERE Roy Anderson, former publisher | of the Ketchikan Chronicle, is visiting Juneau this week from his California home. He is making a| |trip through Alaska writing some | | special articles for the Denver Post | 'and other papers. ed to have made a complete flip-| flop. INDUSTRIAL EAST FACES RIVAL IN COAST INDUSTRY BOSTON, Oct. 10—(AP)—The industrial east is facing a new rival in the Pacific Coast states and may lose old markets if it doesn't get on the tall, a western economist advised today. The confident warning came from Nathaniel H. Engle, Professor of Business Administration at the University of Washington. The economic dominance of the| east is not as unchallenged as n, was in prewar days, he said in an address prepared for the Boston conference o' distribution. Not only are the states of Cal- ifornia, Oregon and Washington depending less and less upon the east for manufactured goods, he said, but they are invading it in- creasingly with merchandise and branch plants. This trend is being aided, Prof. Engle declared, because national distributors have failed to eval- uate fully recent changes in west- ern population and income and consequently “have bheen slow to make necessary adjustments in quotas.” Rep. Bates (R-Mass) urged that | Johnson be called iefore the Com- mittee and asked to give his de- talled reasons for the cuts which Secretary of the Navy Matthews has said would damage national security. Chairman Vinson said that “of course we are going to get Johnson up here.” Harrison told the Committee that this country even has secret equip- & ment that determines whether air- craft is friendly or enemy. Radar, he said, is only one method for locating and identifying planes. TIDE TABLE OCTOBER 11 High tide, 4.:03 am., 142 ft. Low tide, 9:49 am., 41 ft. High tide, 15:42 p.m., 162 ft. Low tide, 22:29 p.m, 05 ft. e 0 0 0 v o 0 40 SUN RISE OCTOBER 11 Sun rises at 7:23 am. Sun sets at 6:03 pm. - SETS | | L. A. Wesson of Seattle is regis- tered at the Baranof Hotel, RESIDENT TO MEET An important meeting concern- ing resident and home-owners in the West Seventh and Eighth Streets District, is scheduled fo: this evening, according to the Rev. Walter Soboleff. . It will be at 7:30 o'clock in the Memorial Church building. WEATHER REPORT (U. 8, WEATHER BUREAU) (This data 1s for 24-hour pe- riod ending 7:30 a.m. PST.) In Juneau—Maximum, 48; minimum, 41. At Alrport—Maximum, 49; minimum, 39, FORECAST (Jumesu ana Vielnity) Mostly cloudy with occa- sionally light showers to- night. Partly cloudy Tuesday. Lowest temperature tonight near 38 degrees; highest on Tuesday around 48. PRECIPITATION (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today City of Juneau—.19 inches; since Oct. 1, 346 inches; since July 1, 24.75 inches. | At the Alrport—.03 inches; since Oct. 1, 171 inches; since July 1, 17.01 inches. ®0000000%000.. 3 . . . . 3 . . . o9 00 0 0 90 0 0

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