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6 [ CONGRATULATIONS, KID, CONGRAT- TIoNs!l Marine CHARLOTTE HERE YESTERDAY WITH 10 FOR JUNEAU Princess Vessel Has New Jersey Shrine Party on North Tour Ten persons arrived in Juneat last night at 6:30 o'clock when the Princess Charlotte, Capt. William Q. Palmer and Purser Arthur H. o Bird, berthed here from the south o 220 passengers aboard. PS Coming to Juneau were: Miss g Amy Barlow, Mrs. Florence Good' and her children, Janice and Neal o Good, Mrs. Norma Homme, Parmiey, A. Tomich, T. Basich, Tanton and H. Ireland A total of 187 persons Charlotte were round these 69 persons are on a cennection with Salaam Shrine of New Jersey, under the dircction of e . . . . . . . . . . . le . . ° . ° . . . She . . . 87 on the o Of o . POLLY AND HER PALS N (WOt FeR. M ) (\\ 1AST? ~— P | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1937. By CLIFF STERRETT IGHT ) s [T HEARD YUH RESCUED [VERA LA VAMMP, TH' _ MOVIE QUEEN, FROM J( | DROWNIN IT O BRING YUH BOTH BIG PUBLICITY= SH-H-H-H-LET'S SWIM OUT A WAYS AN' TLL TELL YUH! ;/\{\w | YACHT PARTY " ON CAROLINE News ] 0 e 0 e e 0 000 00 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Prince Robert jn port and sails for Skagway at 11 o'clock to- night. Prince George scheduled arrive tomorrow evening. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Mount McKinley scheduled to sail from Seattle this morn- ing at 9 o'clock but probably delayed until afternoon. Northwestern scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow at 9 Five Guides Go Aboard To- day as Fishing Cruise Be- comes Hunting Party to A fishing cruise through South- east Alaska aboard the Campbell ® |Church yacht Caroline will be con- ® |verted into a hunting party Friday ® las five guides joined the party to- ® day ®| Aboard the yacht are Rudolph ® | Schilling and his sons, August and ® |Rudolph, Jr., of San Francisco; F. ®|Bain, M. Drury of New York and ®|Joe Donohoe of San Francisco. ®| The Caroline left Petersburg on ®|August 1 under the command of am Dorothy Alexander to sail from Seattle 20 at 9 a.m. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle 10 a.m., August e |capt Jim Sande 20. ® lof the crew are Tom King, mate; Yukon scheduled to sail from @ |art Matland, engineer; Jack Ross, Seattle August 21 at 9 am. @ |chef ;and Joe Griffin, cabin man Princess Louise scheduled 0 ® | 'The guides who boardec it 1 from Vancouver August ®|i,qay are Ed Jahnke, Di 21 at 9 pm ® | Hal Hibbs, Jim Lov Prince = Rupert inney party will engage in | from Vancouver {zoat hunting starting Friday soufh 33,8t 8, pam. ®lof Juneau on the mainland, and Aleutian scheduled to sail ® {1 40 will try its luck in bear hunt- from Seattle August 24 at 9 ® ;" Aqmiralty and Baranof Ts- scheduled August scheduled to August The am BERTHS HERE Other members| lands They voyage will end in THIS HEROIC ACT YUH REFERS TO, 15 SOMETHIN®-=- AT TO FL T0 SEATTLE ON SATURDAY A flight to Seattle is scheduled by the Alaska Air Transport Sat-| urday, Agent Russell Clithero an- nounced today. Chief AAT Pilot Sheldon Sim- mons will be at the controls. The| return trip will be made the fol-| lowing Tuesday, Clithero said. | Several reservations for the trip have already been booked. ALASKA SAILS ~ FOR WESTWARD Leaving Juneau on the Alaska for the Westward Tuesday were Baxter Felch, L. McFarren, J Green, F. Agoff, John Clark, El- | mer Logan, Pete Kesovi, O. Sliper IMiss E. Thomas, Miss M. Kirby R. E. Schmidt, A. E. Congdon, H F. Kennard, Je Gaunatis, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lovold, Murs. |ora Nichols and Jane Mills. Coming here earlier were: From Seattle—Doris W. Davis, Mr. and Feenaughty, Mrs. N. S Mrs. W. O. . % “=-- SCHEDULED FER TOMORROW!! [Coor. 1937 e Beatuces Swmdicne. Tac. World rihts reserved R FOR SEEKS.TO Mrs. Anna Hahn ' STILL TORIES | Pleads Innocent * BY DEMOGRACY ... 12-Year-Old Son— Claims Not - President Declares He| Guilty CONT < Wants “No Change ‘ CINCINNATI, O., Aug. 18.—Mrs. in Government” |Anna Marie Hahn, pretty 31-year: jold former housemaid, kissed her MANTEO, N. C., Aug. 18.—Pres-12-year-old son today as she plead- ident Roosevelt today declared |°d innocent of indiciments charg- “Democracy and more Democracy”|ing her with the poison murder of is the answer to the “Tory insistence | {Wo elderly Germans. ihat salvation lies in vesting power| Mrs. Hahn has been indicted by in the hands of a select class.” |the Grand Jury on two charges, He speaking at the celebra-|one for the slaying of George Sell- tion marking the 350th anniversary man, 67, and the other for the death of the “Lost Colony” of Sir Walter 0f Jacob Wagner, 78-year-old team- Raleigh ster. The President said: “I seek no| The unexplained deaths of four change in the form of the Ameri-ielderly German men with whom can government. Majority rule/Mrs. Hahn admitted being friendly must be preserved as a safeguard are being scrutinized. Police have both to liberty and to civilization.” inquired into the deaths of eleven The Chief Executive renewed his Persons from mysterious illnesses. griticism of tke Liberty League —E and others whem he said “thunder oday.” SRS A T Sl TIDES TOMORROW * MARINE AIRWAYS 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE AUTHORIZED U. S. MAIL CARRIER *WEDNESDAY, A. M. — 2 Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitka and return. *WEDNESDAY, P. M.— Juneau to i‘unter Bay, Hoonah, Port Althorp, » Kimshan Cove, Chichagof and return. *Frequent Nonschedule Trips—10%off Round Trip. SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA Telephone @2 ALEX HOLDEN Chief Pilot- B e e P ——) T T T GASTINEAU HOTEL ® THE CIVIC CENTER OF JUNEAU [ Travel Information Headquarters Call the Gastineau Hotel for detailed information regarding all scheduled and charter plane trips; ARRIVAL and DEPARTURE times; schedules for all Southeast Alaska airplanes and Juneau-Fairbanks flights. Also STEAMSHIP SCHEDULES and TIMES. Phone l 0 For Information On All Plane Service and Steamship Movements Low tide 5:23 a m., 08 feet High tide 11:46 2. m., 13.8 feet Low tide 5:30 p. m., 3.7 feet High tide 11:27 p. m,, 155 feet , - - High Diver Lucky UNION CITY, Ind—John Synder fell 40 feet from an elevator into| | a wheat bin—and got off with a| Lode and placer location notices i | et et Juneau—ONLY 2 HOURS—Ketchikan ~OUTHBOUND SAILINGS North Sea scheduled to arrive Wilson Cee Jr, of Metuchen, NJ. e Petersburg September 10. Fulford, Nathaniel Fulford, T. A. sprained foot. Officers were Major J. D. Leonard e The Caroline berthed at the Ma- Haigh, Mrs. B. Henry, Alice Jamie for sale at The Empire Officec. of Deal, N.J,, Temple Poteniate, and!e H. N. Petty of zabeth, N.J., Shrine! e Recorder. A Burlington Tour of 30 e persons also was aboard, The Char-| Iotte carried approximately 70 tons e of freight, only five of which were for Juneau ° She will return Skagway e Friday morning. —t——— ELECTRA NORTH Oscar Olson, Territorial Treasur- er, was the sole passel on the Pacific Alaska Airw lectra when @ it winged away from the Juneau ® airport for Fairbanks this morning ® at 9 o'clock, with Pilots W. S. Rob- ® bins and Walter Hall at the con- trols. The flight was postponed from vesterday because of heavy fog - o o | ROBT. MORRIS ENDS VISIT WITH FORMER | CLASSMATES HERE from | Visiting in Juneau for the first | time since his graduation several years ago from high school, Robert (Brick) Morris ended a short stay |y here today when he left by planc for Sitka to board the southbound | Mr. Morris, accompanied by Wil- | liam Wright of Fresno, Californ [ was the guest of Dan Rus-2l his stay in June Wright Standard O 2 e o and Mrs. J. B. Mrs. Earle Hunter, Mrs. Harold Campen, Mr. and Mrs James Orme, Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Blake, Mr. and Mr Roy Mrs. Eva Mackey, S Orme; Miss Harriet Barragar, Dan Russell and Everett Nowell | and i3 |William McChord, “Smiling Service” e Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery | Juneau Ie | —t: Chatham Straits Transportation Co. “M. S. DART” Leaves Fem Dock every Wednes- day at 7 am. for Petershurg, Kake, | Port Alexander and way ports. Freight received not later than 4! p.n. Tuesday. 4 R INFORMATION E C. REABER, Phone 4622 < 4 MAUR! C L IL; Guy Smith DRUGS P RICHBUILDER Aleutian | tr. jon construction jobs. yed to make it his summer home. | ed, |one 2 ARMY MEN Army Air Corps, wer killed today in a erash near Boghland, enroute from Bolling Field to At- CHANNEL BUS LINE| | Leave Junea 10:15, 11 Leave Douglas A.M.—7:40, 8:40,9: tomorrow morning; was in Sitka at 3 p.m. this after- noon Princess Charlotte scheduled to arrive in port Friday morning at 5 o’clock and sails south 3 hours 5 Baranof scheduled south- bound next Friday or Satur- day. Ala 1 scheduled next Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Wednes- cday night at 6 pm, for Sitka and wayports. Dart leaves every Wednesday at 7 am. for Petersburg, Pcr Alexander, Kake and way ports, e e 000000000 midnight rd er |rine Airways dock at i then switched over to the Stanc | Oil dock this morning and I berthed at the upper City Float 3 HALIBUTERS SELL. SEATTLE SEATTLE, Aug. 18—Three hali- |buters arrived here today from the | western banks and sold their last catches. The Neptune brought in 39,000 pounds, selling for 13% and 12% cents a pound; Atlantic, 32,000 pounds, 13 and 12% cents; Adding- ton, 25,000 pounds, 13% and 12% cents. USE OF COLD DENIED NUNS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Aug. 18.— The Carmelite nuns, a Roman Ca- tholic cloistered order, devoted to prayer, were notified by the Fed- eral Treasury that they cannot use approximately $1,800 in gold, prin- cipally gifts of keepsakes that have been converted into bullon, to man- ufacture a sacred vessel for the cha- pel in the Carmelite convent here. According to a ruling of the treas- ury, the gold must be surrendered to the mint under terms of the Gold Reserve Act of 193¢ and the gold recall order of December 28, 1933. The money that can be real- southbound e | LIKES LIVING IN RAIL CAR PITTSBURGH, Aug. ang, wealthy Pittsburgh contrac- or, lives down by the railroad | acks in summer—and likes it. His home is a one-time army ospital car which he purchased | 1 1914 as his roving headquarters | 18.—George Vang liked the seclusion of the ailroad car so well that he decid- | he “house,” luxuriously furnish-| is flanked by a rocky hill on side and a small lake on the! ther. ury will amount to $600, although the metal at the eurrent price is worth $1,800, said Sister Agnes, sub- prioress. SEREEL R There is a4 burying ground near Webster, Mass., in which the graves are marked with field stones, large ones indicate old men and the smali ones young men. ~ HOLLYWOOD | SHOE SHOP 174 Fronklin St. The Home of Modern Shoe Work HENRI MAKI, Proprietor ARE KILLED WASHINGTON, Aug. 18. — Col. and Staff Ser- eant Michael O'Connell, of the| Va,, anta. T wHITE SPoT LIQUOR STORE Phone 655 Prompt Delivery Phone 105 Juneau or 71 Douglas A.M.—7:15, 8:00, 9:15, P.M 5:15, 6:15, 7:15, 8:15, 11:15, 12:00 midnight. :15, :45, 0:40, 11:40; P.M.—12:40, 2:10, 40, 5:40, 6:40, T7:40, 8:40, 11:40 Glacler Highway | .eave Auk Bay: AM.—7:00, 8:15; P.M.—12:30, 4:15. Saturday Special 6:45 p.m. Leave Juneau: AM. — 7:30, 9:30; "M.—2:30, 5:15. Saturday Special 10:00 pm. Pirst Bus Sundays and Holidays Leaves Juneau at 9:30 a.m. FEMMER’S TRANSFER | | PHONE 114 Call us for all kinds of Trans- ferring, Rock and Gravel Hauls ing. We also sell Cement, Coal, Kindling, Feed, Hay and Fresh [l Dressed Poultry. D. B. Femmer PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY OCOMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery | PHONE 36 | —e=-2l Ien HOTEL JUNEAU Formerly Hotel Zynda CLARENCE WISE Manager For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY e s ] | ized in selling the gold to the treas-| son, N. Kashevaroff, Billie McCloud, Verna Morke, F. Radomske, V. F. Ratay, B. F. Raymond, Mrs. W. M {Wood, J. Egan; from Southeast Al-| !aska—M. Raymond, Billy McLeod, E. A. Thatcher, Mrs. R. W. Mondy, | {Mrs. E. B. Sayla, M. D. Williams, W. Hedrick, L. Winfard, Fannie: Wirth, Hazel Coffin, B. Mallam,! J. Considine. - -+ PWA Allotments .~ Made for Pair of | AIas_lgSchnuls Contracts for Douglas Con- struction to Be Let Sept. | — Anchorage Later | 1 | 1 | WASHINGTON, Aug. 18—Public Woerks Administrator Harold L. |Ickes has announced that Presi- |dent Roosevelt has approved allot- (ment$ of $116,085 for a school | building at Anchorage, Alaska, and $29,250 for the new Douglas, Alaska, seheol. | |- Local PWA officials this morning jconfirmed the appropriations, which are maximum forty-five per cent grants, and must be earned by the supplying, by the communities of |the remaining fifty-five per cent. A call for construction bids on the new Douglas school building is being published today, with con- tracts to be let September 1. Plans for the Douglas school have been prepared by the H. B. Foss Com- Plans are now under preperafion for the school at Anchorage. et s e Nearly 200,000,000 fish have been planted in forest streams and lakes by Civilian Conservation Corps Travel on a “PRIN- CESS Liner CANADIAN PACIF L {Juneau to Vancouver. Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS . Princess Charlotte—Aug: 20 Princess Louise—Aug. 27 Princess Charlotte—Sent. 3 Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental Trans-Atiantic Trans-Pacific |pany, Juneau architectural firm./ Alaska Air Transport, Inc. SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER 7-Place Lockheed Vega 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket 4-Place Stinson "Patco” U. S. MAIL Juneau Hangar, 612; Night and Day Office, 587 SHELDON SIMMONS Chief Pilot RUSSELL CLITHERO, Agent L. F. BARR Pilot Due Juneau Southbound Aug. 20 Aug. 23 Aug. 27 Aug. 23 Aug. 24 Aug. 30 Aug. 27 Due Juneau Northbound Aug. 14 Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Leave Seattle Aug. 11 ..Aug. 14 Aug. 18 Aug. 19 Aug. 20 Aug. 21 Aug. 24 THE ALASKA LINE' M. J. WILCOX, Agent—Phone 2 BARANOF ALASKA ... MT. McKINLEY NORTHWESTERN DOROTHY ALEXANDE! YUKON ALEUTIAN R . SERVICE-ON-ALL-ALARSKAR-ROUTES Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R. Junean Alaska CANADIAN ‘ PACIFIC Pt i Alaska Transportation Co. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Evelyn Berg from Seattle .... Evelyn Berg from Seattle ... D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 Night Phone 312 ESTABLISHED Passenger and Air Express Schedules KEI'CHIKAN—WRANGELL— PETERSBURG—]JUNEAU Monday—Thursday 9:00 AM. Lv. Ketchikan Ar. 6:45 P.M. 10:15 A.M. Ar. Juneau . Lv. 3:30 P.M. Planes in Continuous Two-Way Radio Communication with Ground Stations ® L:tercoastal Airways, Inc. TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque, Gestineau Hotel PHONES—106, Office; 1652, Residence B | NORTHILAND TRANSPORTATION CO The only iine serving Alaska that maintzin, a regular weekly service throughout the yaar Arrive Leave Leave Juneau Juneau Beattle No. Bound So. Boid Aug. 13 Aug. 17 Aug. 19 .Aug. 20 Aug. 24 Aug. 26 Aug. 27 Aug. 31 Sept. 2 Sept. 3 Sept. 7 Sept. 9 Sept.10 Sept.14 Sept.16 -.Sept. 17 Sept. 21 Sept. 23 Monday—Thursday Northland . North Sea Northland ..... North Sea Northland . FRED . CHARMAN, Agent .. J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Ageut. CITY WHARF GUY SMITH; Douglas Agent. Juneau ONLY 5 Houns Faitbemks Via Picturesque Whitehorse Route Modern twin motored aitliners have been flying on regular schedules for over two years between Juneau- Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- og:t_two-way radio communication with eleven ground stations. Phioné 109 Phone 79 Arrive Fairbanks Juneau Fairbanks Juneau Wednesday ... Flat-Ruby-Nome and re- turn same day. *—All year round schedule. /—June 1 to September 1, 1937. Flying time between Juneau and Fairbanks ig ap- proximately four hours. Passengers view sceni¢ wone ders that would take weeks to see from the ground. All schedules subject to change without notice and slight changes to make best steamer connections, Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel Phone 106 Office—4652 Residence *Fairbanks