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ALASKA HAS SIXTY - NINE FOR CHANNEL ixt -nine passengers arrived Juneau from Seattle and way points this morning on tae steam- er Alaska, Capt. O. C. Anderson and Purser Dave Doran. Heavy list- ings are noted for Westward points with many mining and cannery men returning to the field. The Alaska was delayed several hours northbound from Petersburg on ac count of heavy ice and ran under slow bell for some time Passengers arriving were: From Ketchikan — Mrs. W. T. Mahoney, W. Torbell, J. Newmark- er, J. Clark, H. Holden, R. Holden. From Wrangell—Lyle Hebert From Petersburg — Sam Baker, Pan Noonan, and F. Murphy. From Seattle—George F. Alex- ender, Mrs. O. Alta, Olaf Aase, Mis. George F. Alexander, J. H. Biddlesome, Mrs. J. H. Biddlesome, Richard Brown, Doris E. Brown, Jacqueline Brown, Frances Bing- ham, Paul Deines, Carl Edison, si Mrs. H. L. Fisk, 1. Goldstein, Mrs.‘ 1. Goldstein, E. Hoopet, Mrs. E. Hooper, Martin Hanson, Miss Mary Joyce, George Jorgenson, Mrs. G. Jargenson, Gertrude Jorgenson, Os- éar E. Johnson, R. W. Kransi, H. K. Larsen, Alex Mathison, Mrs. A. Mathison, Wm. McMullen, Mrs. Geo. Skuse, K. C. Spaid. Eleanor Swanson, Thelma Thomp- son, K. H. Triplett, Louls Thomp- son, Roy Uotila, Charles Uotila, Huge Wade, Mrs. Carl Weidman, Carl Weidman, Fannie Weiss, Viv- fenne Waters, Diana Wright H. Olterman, E. L. Wheeler, R. I. Cook, John La Force, Geo. Moore, Jas. Hunter, Martin Brandall, M Metcalf, Ernest Swanson, S. Star, A. Turingley, G. L. McParfon, D. R. Ludington, Ned Doyle, Joe Mal- Iott. Thirty-seven passengers went to the Westward on the Alaska, as fol- lows: For Seward—Steve Uzeldc, Harry Lundell, John S. Adams, Fred Spach, John Coots, L. J. Palmer, B. D. Stewart, D. S. Hostettor, Mrs B. D. Stewart, B. D. Stewart, Jim Picken Georp Heéinold, Fred Kraft, B. Aney derson, BiI Russell, H. Cox, J. An- dérson, Wayne Dilion, George Phil- lips, R. C. Ingram, M. C. Edmunds, William J. Neimi, H. A. Gerstman, Mr and Mrs Jack Conway and Cecil Wells. For Cordova—William Shay, Anna Stevens, R. J. Shepard, J. Husko- loski, A. Barvi, Y. Merodis. For Valdez—Jack Gucker, Cecil Stalder, L. Ryan, Charles Mohr, John Rhind, T. H. Huddleston. e ELWELLS THROUGH Mr. and Mrs. Luke Elwell were passengers on the Alaska through Juneau this afternoon for Seward. Mr. Elwell is a well-known big-game guide. - T ZORIC | DRY CLEANING ® Soft Water Washing Your LAUNDRY PHONE 15 NEW ALASKAN HOTEL So. Pranklin Street JUNEAU—~——Phone Single O Every Effort fier Marine News Comfort of Guests! GAST%EAU CAFE " in'connection i o e o e 0 0 0 & o 0 Steamer Movements . . . . NORTHBOUND ® North Sea in port, Sitka bound . SCHEDULED SAILINGS e Northland scheduled to sail e from Seattle March 11 at e 10am. . incess Norah e =sail from Vancouver . > ° . . . . . . scheduled to Mareh 11 at 9 pm Evelyn Berg scheduled to sail from Seattle March 11, with freight only Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle March 12 at 9 am. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Mount McKinley scheduled southbound at 5 o'clock to- morrow afternoon. Alaska scheduled southbound next Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth schedhuled to sail to- night at 6 o'clock for Sitka and wayports. Dart leaves every Wednesday at 7 am. for Petersburg, Pert Alexander, Kake and way- |® ports. ‘Oooooooono. ——————— sceveveescrno0csescesess e o . ° L] . . . v . . . ° . . . . . S ‘ TIDES TOMORROW ~— — | " High tide—5:44 am. 147 feet. Low tide—12:42 p.m,, 4.7 feet High tide—7:13 p.m., 11.6 feet. | o | ESTEBETH ~ BRINGS 10 T0 JUNEAU The motorship Estebeth, Capt s Gus Gustafson and Purser Dave Rams: docked in. Junean last night with 10 passengers from island points Passengers arriving were: fr n Hoonah—Mus. J. M. Parker, - ette Parker, Tone Felton, Carl Sw son and J. E. Morin. From Chatham—Richard Unkle. From Chichagof — Anard Run- quist, Lane Jomes, Fred Haines Tom Surga The Estebeth will leave again on its regular run tomorrow night at 6 o'clock ->>o Royal Pair Plans Honeymoon in U.S. BERLIN, March 8—Grand Duch- ess Kira of the Romanoffs and Prince Louis Ferdinand of the Hohenzollerns plan to go honey- mooning to America after their marriage May 5 at Doorn, the Netherlands. The thirty-year-old grandson of the exiled former Kaiser Wilhelm and the daughter of the pretender to the nonexistent Russian throne expect to go on an extended trip abroad with the White House at Washington as one of the first places to be visited. — - EXTENSION CLUB MEETS Members of the University Ex- tension Club met last night at the home of Mrs. Peggy McLeod for their regular gathering. The next meeting of the group will be held at the home of the president, Miss Clara Walther. P Hotel Juneau “Where Living Is Pleasant” B Nearest Federal Bldg. B Elevator Service. B Beauty Shop. 8 Reasonable Winter Rates Cheerfully Given. CLARENCE WISE Omr-Mnnager 4 Van’s Store 8 e —— { HOTEL GASTINEAU Made for the INFORMATION WOT'S TICKLIN' YAT'TANTRUMS, ot 05 ASH'S GOT ME FED-UP--- FRIGHTENIN' TH' FAMBLY WITH ARTIFICIAL ANIMALS FROM THAT JOKE SHOPPE. Delegates from the George Washington Masonic Memorial Association are pictured at the tomb of George Washington, in Mount Vernon, as they placed wreaths there on his birthday. Washington was a member of the order. Left to right in the picture are T. W. Pennington, Kentucky; Jehr T. Rice, Texas; Arthur E. Delmhorst, New York: W. M. Robertson. Nebraska. and E. W. Risine. Idaho. Baleares Stood InFirst Ranks Rats MenacingL.A. 0f Spanish Navy ' T'he a LOS ANGELES, March 8 pizd piper of Hamlin can have X 5 jch if he contact George Pa First Class Cruiser Sunk |)_\ rish, Los Angeles, ¢ Loyalists in Bat- Shortage of men in the Health tle Sunday Department is causing rats to in- | 4 crease in such numbers in thes city The Baleares, Spanish first class that they present a serious menace cruiser, sunk by the Loyalists in 0 public health the Spanish naval battle off the The withdrawal of seventy men coast of Spain last Sunday was de- assigned to the rodent division by signed by Sir Philip Watts, ana the Works Progress Administration, laid down at Ferrol, August 15, Doctcr Parrish pointed out, has 1928 left only sixteen men to combat the increasing swarms of rats in Sistership of the Canarias, the vessel was completed in 1935 and was one of the most powerful cruis- ers of the Spanish navy, now con- trolled by the Insurgent forces Standard displacement, 10,000 all parts of the city. - PRINGESSES tons; full load displacement, 12,- . 230 tons. Length, 636 feet; beam, 64 feet; draught (mean), 17'2 feet; comple- ment, 785. Guns, eight 8-inch ; eight 4.7- Queen Ma],y Taking Royal inch anti-aicraft; eight 2-pounder . : anti-aireraft; tweive 21-inch tor- Grandchildren to Many pedo tubes (above water) tripled. Each cruiser also carries two air- craft with catapults. Machinery, Parson’s geared tur- bines, 90,000 shaft horsepower; speed, 33 knots per hour. Radius of action, 8,000 miles at 15 knots. Maximum elevation of guns, 70 degrees. Crippled Youth Places of Interest LONDON, March 28 Queen Mother Mary is smoothing the road to learning for her granddaughters, Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose. Eager for them to know their London, Queen Mary guided them to various spots of interest last fall and now she plans visits to Broad- casting House, the J post office and a fire station The young princesses zot a taste 8-inch 1 . Ma“ thhl sm Shakespeare recently when their mother, Queen Elizabeth, took them to a performance of “Midsummer Night's Dream” at the old Vie. And whenever they go motor- KENDALLVILLE, Ind, March 8. —Although Jack Preston, 20, was given up as ‘jdcnd" seven times and ing these days, they are covered has been crippled 13 years as a with a new lap robe which bears result of arthritis and complica-|an outline map of Australia tions, he has become a manufactur- er of model airplanes, stamp col- lector and inventor of living room games. Construction of model airplanes, Preston says, “has become mere play.” Some time ago he build 37 planes and sold each for $1.50. His collection of 10000 stamps has been valued at more than $300. He Ihas invented such games as table backetbafl, table hockey. table trdck and table softball. i HEADS FOR EEK Heading for the Eek River coun- try, about sixty miles from Geod- news River in the mining area of that name, Al Jones, on the Alaska, “PRIN- CESS” Liner Juneau to Vancouver, Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS PRINCESS NORAH is planning extensive development March—16, 27 on placer property there. April—6, 17, 27 Rkl 0 < AR by Lester D. Henderson. Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL * Agent, C.P.R. Juneau Alaska CANADIAN - .PACIFIC . ‘Alaska” ‘hatham Straits 'i’t-nouhfln Co. “M. S. DART” Leaves Femmer Dock every Wednes- day at 7 am. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. Freight received not later than 4 pm. Tuesday. FOR INFORMATION JM.AURWE C. REABER, Phone 4622 Paging Pied Piper; BRIT. PREMIER MAKES REPLY T0 OPPOSITION health of- ]) ec Ifl re Shlwfip(‘flce 'Idlkfi Fail, Rearmament Pro- gram to Be Speeded LONDON, March 8. —British Pre- mied Neville Chamberlain told the House of Commons today that if peace talks with Germany and Italy ailed, Great Britain will speed up the already gigantic rearmament program | The Premier said if negotiations succeeded, disarmament will fol- low in due course . The Prime Minister gave the an- swer to the opposition charges he desired a dictatorship. Chamberlain said: “I have to deal with the world in which dictator- ships exist. I have no interest in other systems of government except insofar as they react on other coun- tries. I have no bias in favor of Nazi or Fascist isms or even Bol- shevism becaus I seem incon- sistent with what is all import- ant to me because it is the root of my political creed, and that is individual liberty.” SIMMONS ON SITKA TRIP Shell Simmons hopped to Sitka this morning with three passengers for Sitka and one for Tenakee, as follows: J. B. Warrack, Elroy Nin- nis, and Royal Shepard went to Sitka and Alice Hill went to Ten- akee SRILING SCHEDULE Steamer tMOUNT MCcKINLEY . *ALASKA 1YUKON .. *ALASKA BARANOF {YUKON .. AT THAT GAME | T JESS SLIPPED A FROG AN' A COUPLA LZARDS N HIS BED! FORMER EDITOR TESTIFIES IN TREASON THIAL Soviet Probes Palace Revo- lution Plot " Start- ed in 1929 MOSCOW, March 8.—Nikolai<Bu- charin, one-time editor of the Gov- ernment paper, Izvestia, testified to- day at the tréason trial on the idea of the Palace Revolution, born among his so-called rightests about 1929. Pirst to suggest. the plot, Bucharin said, was Michael Tomski, former president of the Soviet Trade Union, who died mysteriously two years ago. Bucharin said he sent men into provinces to organize peasant upris- ings in 1931 He refused to admit personal share n espionage for foreign powers, but epted responsibility for spying subordinates Stalin’s forceful collectivation of peasants to which was attributed tl ands of deaths by starvation Wi rted by Bucharin to be the main cause for opposition to the So- viet program © 000690000000 NEWS L. Q. ANSWERS . — . 1. The Rev. Martin Niemoel- ® ler. For preaching against Na- e zi doctrines. . ° ling airplane wings and rud- ders, Supreme Court has ruled that in using it on World War planes, U.S. patent 3. True. ® 4. A measure providing that @ women shall have equal rights ® with men. e 5. Singapore. 200000000000 ° ° . ° ° ° e 2 A mechanism for control- ° ° . © infringed a French ° ° IN BANKRUPTCY No. 110 NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING OF CREDITORE In the District Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, Division Number One, at Juneau. In the Matter of LARS J. TJER- NAGEL, Bankrupt. TO THE CREDITORS of Lars J. Tjernagel, of Juneau, in the Divis- ion and Territory aforesaid, a bank- rupt: Notice is hereby given that on the 5th day of March, AD. 1938, the said Lars J. Tjernagel was duly ad- judicated . bankrupt; and that the first, meeting of his creditors will be held at the office of the under- signed referee, at Number 268 South Franklin Street, in the City of Ju- neau and Territory aforesaid on the 6th day of April, 1938, at the hour of 2 o'clock in the afternoon, at which time the said creditors may attend, prove their claims, appoint a trustee, examine the bankrupt, and transact such other business as may properly come before the meet- ing. H. B. LE FEVRE, Referee in Bankruptcy Publication date, March 8, 1938. Leave DueJuneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Feb. 26 Mar. 1 Mar. 7 -..Mar. 5 Mar. 8 Mar. 14 ..Mar. 12 Mar. 15 Mar. 21 Mar. 19 Mar. 22 Mar. 28 Mar. 23 Mar. 26 Apr. 2 Mar. 26 Mar. 29 Apr. 4 CALLS INTO LYNN CANAL—{Northbound; *Southbound. THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—Phone 2 Freight Office—Phone 4 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent SN B it ] Alaska Steamshi 1 e p‘ WALTWO' KIN PLAY) YUH DUMB DIoDY ! HIM WORKIN! [N A i By CLIFF STERRETT LIKE HECK THEY WON'T! THESE 1S REAL | MARINE AIRWAYS i RUSSELIL CLITHERO JUNEAU—PHONE 411 Connors Motor Co.. Inc. Alaska Transportation Co SCHEDULED SAILINGS Evelyn Berg from Seattle ... March 11 D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 Night Phone 312 1 Alaska Air Transport, Inc. 3 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER PHONES 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket JUNEAU HANGAR 7-Place Lockheed Vega Night and Day 4-Place Stinson “Patco” 612 U. S. MAIL Office 587 Operating our own aero- Chief Pilot— nautical Radio System— SHELDON SIMMONS 3 Piloi—L. F. BARR Station KANG Agent— Planes are TWO-WAY . RADIO EQUIPPED 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier *WEDNESDAY Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitka, Chichagof, Kimshan Cove, Hoonah, and return. “Frequent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Round Trip. SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVIC ANYPLACE IN ALASKA TELEPHONE 623 ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pilot C. V. Kay, Traffic Representative Juneau QNLY 5 HOURS Foirbonks WEEKLY Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau SAILINGS Vessel Seattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTH SEA . Mar. 8 Mar. 10 NORTHLAND Mar. 15 Mar. 17 NORTH SEA . Mar. 18 Mar. 22 Mar. 24 FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent J. B. BURFORD,. Ticket Agent CITY WHARF .. GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent Via Picturesque Whitehorse Rouge Modern twin motored airliners have been flying on regular schedules for over two years between Jureau- Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- ous ‘two-way radio communication with thirteen ground stations. Leave Arrive *Juneau... Tuesday. Fairbanks *Fairbanks ....Sunday . Juneau *Fairbanks ....Wednesday......Flat-Ruby-Nome and re- turn same day. *—All year round schedule. ¥ o NEW REDUCED RATES 890 & JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS ' Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel 1 | |