The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 11, 1937, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1937. 1 stops were was th Capt. Lewis s accompanied by his ward. Enroute to June: v of Southern California are| Capt. Lewis claimed his vessel igned ¢ engers | first in Kotzebue and first | ! er He also has ab tranger for tranger B(" nd 11 reinde t had been Thes >oe l('rl with Th anger will leave la v before the al of | lnnil\‘ ;ymwwk$fwwwwm”fihflwmflm - Washington,.C. before the return to Cali- the command of Captain Pre the for the became acquainted | Sea Scouts is to develop potential Following nineteen years with the Forest Service in Alaska | mariners, Capt. Lewis said This no trip for a fellow I pleasure trip or all the boys work like an \ mu of them spent at Co crew.” he declared {dova, Lee C. Pratt, Fiscal Agent, has To Pribilef Tslands { been x.mmm of his elevation to a nger. which has a 34- |post in Washington, D. C.. where ytn and hes & gross tonnage will serve in the Office of Fiscal tons, left Los Ang on | Contri for the Forest Service. The voyage took the vessel| M t is to be succeeded in' he Fiscal Agent’s post here by Ray | Ward Lincoln, Nebraska. Mr. Ward is e: Outside to the Pribilof TIs- From there it went to King pected to arrive in Juneau Septem- ber 1. Mr the Arctic Ciréle” had the pre: A dual function of the journey is;two ye s, but prior to tt Diego 700 With [to Alaska in other vessels Lewis procured 8| also named Stranger north, | present boat has a twin-screw diesel 69 de uppermost point on ship’s | motor and can .develop 1000 horse- m.«pwvv. Dual Function et were grec the ard Motor \I)l]! comes Acquat Juneau Fri- as the Arctic voyage today Juneau 35-foot-long Norwegian ly resembles ard cutter, bert} E oast docks at 1 o'clock this who a vacation,|U. 8 motorship, a freighter The officers and men man | oot Iy the first ship| 0 ear to h.n; sailed beyond the 10 Circle. Members of the A on the . drawn by high rating from rts of the United States, re-| ning for sea by working members of the crew. Stranger had returned 00-mile voy to the of ."') wl el he hich is lan: to from | 7 South » Diomede Island, thence to Xot- before making the Arctic ming south the vessel stopped; Mr. Pratt is just completing his thence the Prince of Tslands. thence the Lit- bue, thence to 69"degrees north, ! for the National Capital about Sep- thence back to Point Hope tember 10. Capt. Lewis, who also owns ller, Nome, St. Lawrence, Nun- | twenty-eighth year sel, said ivak, the Pribilofs, Kodiak Service for nine years outside the Territory. He expressed at having to leave the Territory where he has so long made his home, but is looking forward to his new work in Washington. HE[NTZLEN’IZE ON ROAD BACK HERE FROM WASHINGTON B. F. Heintzleman ester for Alaska, is now enroute to s headquarters here from Wash- on, D. C., where he has been in conference with Forestry Offi- I} ciais for the past month 1| Wellman Holbrook, Assistant Re- ; gional Forester, received a wire here } ~ Mass Meeting! FOR THE A. ]J. EMPLOYEES AT THE UNION HALL (the former Moose Hall) ON FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, AT 7 O'CLOCK P. M. The expl onir purpose of the meeting is to ain and discuss the situation 1 confronting labor at the present | time. ! this morning from Mr. Heintzleman, ating the latter had left Wasl ten last night and expected to rive in Portland, Oregon, Monday. Mr. Heintzleman is expected to come directly north from Portland riving here the end of next week the first of the week following - DEPUTY MARSHAL OUT TODAY AFTER INSANE CHINESE All sincere labor men should be present. Juneau Mine and Mill | Workers Union No, 203 | 20 oo comvisint rdioed o W} ‘'morning from the Fidalgo Island j Packing Company cannery at Pillar - Bav, Deputy Marshal Willlam J Markle was to fly to Pillar Bay to- day to take into custody a Chinese reported insane there. — e TALLAPOOSA DUE TO ARRIVE HERE LATE TONIGHT The U. 8. Coast Gusr(l cutter Tal- lapoosa, returning from her jaunt through the Aleutian Islands this summer, reported her position this ning at 2 o'clock as off Dry in a report on weather condi- s to the U. 8. Weather Bureau ice here. It is expected that the Tallapco 1 arrive here late to- night. , | f FOR HOME OR BUSINESS REFRIGERATION SERVICE and REPAIRS Phone 34 JOHN HOUK, Efficient Service Our Refrigeration Expert, cquipped to give you Quick at reasonable cost. - e At the outbreak of the World War France and Germany each had an air force of about 600 planes. 4-DAY SALE-4 WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, Aug. 11,12, 13, 14 -—GOING OVER BIG— CANNING APRICOTS. box 95(: PAY CASH! PAY LESS! TOMATOES, Firm 2 Ibs. 27 3 for 25 LETTUCE -39° Rice & Ahlers Company BARTLETT PEARS, dez. EVERYTHING THE MARKET AFFORDS AT PAY'N TAKIT CASH IS KING PRICES! FREE AWARD AUGUST 20—Ticket given away now with every $1.00 purchase. Pay'nTakit GEORGE BROTHERS more ! | who is being transferred from| and Mrs. Pratt will leave) spent in Forest, and Se- |Service work, having been with the| his regret ! Regional For- ¢ BUREAU VESSEL BRINGS INDIAN OFFICERSNORTH North Star de Group of|* Teachers, Medical Of- ficers as Passengers ] | y Passengers aboard the Indian Bu- | jreau motorship North Star which Dr. James F. Worley, new Med- Director for the Juneau in Alas- ka, coming to Juneau, Mrs, Worley and their daughter; H. M. Critch- field, Credit Agent for the Wheel Howard Administration, and Mrs. ‘Clllthtlr‘l(l | Dr. R. Edward Smith Indian Bu- ‘x eau physician returning to Kotze- I,m‘ after leave of absence in the arice Kerr, Bureau nurse ransferred to ‘Barrow from the 'States; Bertha M. Leake, Bureau nurse returning to Nome; Mr Swanson. \ Miss Luella King, coming to Ju- neau to replace Mrs. Martha B. |Refsland as supervisor of elemen-! tary education for the Bureau in| Alaska; William M. Hemsing, rein- deer unit manager at Kotzebue; Mrs. Hemsing, Indian Bureau teach- Salmon Marketing Activities Told by Official of SPSU ‘I Like Humpback™ Is Not| Only Song Theme But Earnestly Meant The salmon “caught by Alaska fishermen” not only pays the fisher- sailed north from Seattle Monday, man’s bills, but a good portion of yr.. vena 1. Crone during the stay| the canned product ends on the fisherman’s plate, Joe F. Jurich, Secretary-Treasurer of the Salmon Purse Seiners Union of the Pacific ecently pointed out in discussing |salmon marketing activities. “The theme song of the Alaska coast is “T like humpback salmon,” Jurich said, “and it is not just a song. Alaska people know how nu- tritious and economical salmon meals are, and they know how im- pertant it is that the pack ef sal- mon move into consumption in an orderly manner. The fishermen know that the advertising campaign for canned salmon is making mofe people in the States eat salmon. They hope that some day the people outside of Alaska will know the salmon as well as Alaskans do. “Many times I have seen as much er at Kotzebue; Mr. and Mrs. U C Connelly, Indian Bureau teachers at Savoonga, St. Lawrence Mrs. Gordon C. Bettles, teacher at Chanega; Mr. Ethel M. Klem, teacher going {Kotlik; Miss Minnie G. Knight,! teacher for Notak, Flora Jane Har- | {per, teacher for Eklutna; Mabel Iv-i ].AX\UIX l("él( her for Unalakleet; Mrs. Andy in, teacher at Solomon; | Mr. I\\. n. Mr. and Mrs. teachers transferred another Alaskan post; Mrs. teacher returning to Golovin; Mr. and Mrs, S. A. Wid- ener, Indian Bureau teachers for Shungnak; Mr. and Mrs. Henrv Wilson, Bureau teachers for Elim; Mrs. Willlam E. Thomas, teacner| at Atka; Mr. Thomas; and th: Indians returning to their vil from the States. i SHFERE N. J. McMillan, to Noaktak | —— HosPITAL NOTES Mrs. L. E. Iverson, who recently underwent a minor operation at S Ann’s Hospital, was dismissed with her infant son from $t. Ann's Hos- pital today. Beulah Hicicey, a surgical pa- is to be dismissed from Hospital today. Mrs tient, St Ann’s : Mrs. Tony Ch from St. Ann’s Hospital last night fcllowing surgical care. Mrs. Charlotte Amlaw was ad-| mifted this morning to St. Ann’ Hospital for medical attention. op was dismissed | | 1 = “”“,mum " A. Jackson was brought in from the Polaris Taku mine where he had | en injured, and is now conval- escing at St. Ann’s Hospital. 1 Oscar Ueland, who received a leg injury in the Alaska Juneau mine, was admitted to St. Ann's Hmpnafl this morning. Elmer Whealy was admitted for a minor operation at St. Ann's Hos- pital this morning. William Yamaguchf, a medical patient, has been dismissed from St. Ann’s Hospital and sailed for the scuth on the Northwestern. Charles Johnie was dismissed from St. Ann’s Hospital and has been taken to Hoonah by Marine ! e TWO HOLMQUISTS WIN PIN PRIZES, BRUNSWICK ROLL Winners in the regular Mondayl prize roll at the Brunswick Recrea- tion bowling alleys were Leonard | Holmgquist and Mrs. Holmquist. Mr. Holmquist topped the men’s divis- | ion with a single score of 230, while his wife led the ladies with a 201 score. The prize roll is a regular Monday evening feature at the Brunswick, and is open to all. Next Monday will be th®d in the series of special award nights. Emilio Galao, Brunswick director, has announced that organization is/ now under way for the regular Commercial League bowling season, o.| e | | s a dozen cases of canned salmon loaded onto a purse seine boat at |the cannery after the close of the son before the fishermen leave home. Virtually every fishing B > Iboat buys a winter's supply of sal- mon before ]na\mg the cannery ywhen the year's work is finished. “The men who cate} salmon {know that canned, this fish is good food for the winter. I have heard \that the consumption of canned sal- mon in the United States is beiween ltwo and three pounds per person per year. At that rate one purse |seiner worth as much as about twenty-five ordirary customers to |the industry. here has been a good deal printed about the worker as a cus- temer in the last few years. Henry labor policies are supposed ve been established because he |regarded his workers as customers |and wanted them to drive Ford cars. “I don't believe there is another industry anywhere in which the pro- ducers use more of the product than |the Alaska Canned Salmon indus- v.” Jurich concluded, “The fisher- men don't work on the same basis as the workers in Mr. Ford's factories, but they are engaged in producing canned salmon for the world’s tables. And they eat a great deal or it lhvmsolvm a]l durmg the year.” MRS CRONE WILL WRITE ARTICLES ON ALASKANFOOD/| Known as “Aunt Susan” to thou- sands of families in the middlewest, Mrs. Mart Adams, home economics director of The Daily Oklahoman, |The Oklahoma City Times, and of} \hl(]AU station WKY, visited with BARR BACK WITH 3, SIMMONS OUT TO PILLAR BAY AAT Pilot L. F. Barr arrived here at noon today with George Cloth- ier, manager of the Apex EI Nido mine at Lisianski, A. Van Mavern from Sitka and Matt Nivola from Hirst-Chichagof. He was flying the Bellanca. Pilot Sheldon Simmons at 1 p.m. today hopped off in the Lockheed for Pillar Bay with Deputy Marshal Bill Markle who is seeking an al- |leged insane person. Last night Pilot Simmons re- turned from Gypsum with Dave Housel, Frank Metcalf, Paul Sulli- van, John Renfrew and Orville An- |derson. FEDERAL EMPLOYEES LUNCHEON IS MARKED BY LANTERN SLIDES Colored lantern slides of Alaskan scenes were shown at the luncheon lof the National Federation of Fed- eral Employees this noon at Per- cy's Cafe, with Harry Sperling in charge. Mrs. Sally Shafer, President of the organization, presided at the meeting, which assembled 43 mem- bers and guests. B DAN PUTNAM IS TO SAIL SOUTH |of the Aleutian in port here over the week-end. | Mrs. Adams, who is sent by the homa papers to a new country each year, where she collects recipes of favorite menus, came to Alaska this year, gathering news of unique dishes enroute. She called upon Mrs. Crone, well known in Juneau for the recent cooking demonstrations, and en- gaged her to write a series of ar-} ticles on Alaskan food, specializing in wild game. Mrs. Crone and Mrs. Adams are also to exchange their collection of recipes covering the past few years. Last year Mrs. Adams traveled to France where she collected hundreds of new recipes for her columns and cooking classes. Supplied with one| of the most modern and complete laboratory kitchens in Oklahoma ! City, she holds weekly cooking class es with close to two hundred in at- tendance, and each year holds a| ON TALLAPOOSA week of cooking school, assembling over 5,000. , Dan_Putnam, assistant disbursing - - |clerk with the U. S. Treasury De- BRISTOL FISHERMEN |partment in Juneau, has received COME THROUGH WITH {word that he is to travel to the GOOD AVERAGE PAY| |States aboard the U.S.C.G Talla- »poofia instead of aboard the North- Reporting an average payday of western, as was his original plan. $1500 for the season, Harry West Mr. Putnam has been transferred to and Billy Burns flew to Seward re-' Salt Lake City. cently from Bristol bay, passengers; PR T 1 OIS on the Woodley Airways plane, pil- BETTY GOODMAN LEAVES oted by Roy Dixon. There were three' Miss Betty Goodman, who was other fishermen going to Cordova. graduated from St. Ann's Parochial Two fishermen returning by train School last May, left for the south from Anchorage were Allen Guest aboard the Northwestern for Seat-! and Amelio Essua. They, too, had tle where she will enter busxnessK a successful season. college. West fished with Walter Wassen-| The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.| kari, the Graveyard Point cannery A. J. Goodman of Juneau, she will packing 106,000 cases. | spend several months in the south ! The last few days fishing atoned before returning to Juneau. for earlier short hauls that made T e things look dubious for a time. | Indian corn, or maize, has been - e ‘used experimentally as a source of Today's News Today.—Empire. sugar. I | ON THE SIXTH Budweiser’s KING OF B AbAA which is to open earlier than ever this winter. Any Juneau or Doug- las merchandising or other com- mercial establishment that has three pinmen ready to toe the mark are asked to sign up for the tour- ney right now, with Director Galao. Free Cut out this coupen now. you cne of cur new genuine DRINK Budweiser FOr FIVE DAYs. A SWEET BEER » YOU WILL WANT ANHEUSER- a, mmh'm Lucky Polar Bear in bis arctic bhome! All around him is the purest air in the world. Lucky BUDWEISER! Fermented in sterile air in spotless, glass-lined tanks...in new and ultra modern buildings fortified by costly filters against the intrusion of impure air. No microscopic organism present in ordinary air can interfere with the work of our priceless, pure-culture yeast. Expensive? Yes, but our ideals demand it—and every sip of BUDWEISER proves its worth, Lucky you! No effort is spared to give all of you BUDWEISER. ~ THIS TEST! DAY TRY TO DRINK FLAVOR THEREAFTER. Order a carton for your home NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED ST. Lo Ul OTTLED BEER BUSCH This Coupon Worth $4.01 TWO DAYS ONLY Factory Advertising Demonstration FIRST TIME IN OUR CITY SOMETHING NEW Bring it to our store with only 99c. During this sale we will give $5.00 Combination Fountain Pen-Pencil Sets to introduce this New Two-Tene Featherweight 14-k Lifetime Per. Point with a lifetime guarantee. This new set must be ¢ this new Steramline Pen. If you one free. ceen and used to be appreciated. Here is the pen you have been waiting for. See you can buy this pen anywhere else for less than $5, we will give Here is one sale you can’t afford to miss — something different, entirely new. Never before has there been a sale like this. These sets will sell at regular price, $5.00, after this Intreductory Sale. Ncne sold to dealers, only two sets to a customer. Never before have cu bad this wonderul opportnity at this price. Please understand this is NOT a cheap, make- ift set, but our regular $5 outfit. Comparable to any $5.00 to $10.00 set on the market, and iz fully guaranteed by the manufacturer. Come in and inspect it carefully before you buy! This unbelievable offer is ma de by cne of the largest manufacturers in the world. This adver- tising cffer is good for TWO DAYS ONLY and will not be repeated again. Customers must sign here. Name If you can't attend the sale, bring the coupon in before the sale. THURSDAY and SATURDAY ONLY JUNEAU DRUG CO. Mail Orders Add 5¢ Sale Conducted by Remington Pen Co. 2 P.M. to 6 P.M,, August 12, 14 Free TONIGHT August 11 AT 9:30 RANDS’ Orchestra UNION HALL (Former Moose Hall) JUNEAU MINE & MILL WORKERS UNION

Other pages from this issue: