The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 16, 1938, Page 6

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O N ! Seeds, i mordy,” C. Bedson, n-‘ e o o THENTY-THREE N NOSTALAND Tha Novthland threu acsording to / Fred C man Passengers for Junce m Seat tle were: Atthur Reed. Georac Strugeon, D. H. Mo Jacob Fuehsy J, F. Kelly, Mis. J. F. Kel- ly, John Townsend, Mrs. J Town- gend, James Duncan, Ed Hanson Toek Howe, W: F. Kelly, Mrs. H Lay; Mrs. F. Cowell,'T. A. Jones, 2 . Goorge Caesar, and Alaska. points C. Harnum, num d Fathe \hmx leaving fo ¢ld Curtis, Qscar Mangsol, E Braden. - > - 60 WEST ON # 8.8, YUKON C/\ Chn\ Lee, Mrs L. Braden The steamer Yukon, Capt. Glasscock and Purser Larry Namee, sailed for the last night with 45 passe Juneau as follows: For Skagway For Yakutat — John Novatney, Joe Zuboff. For Cordova — John Braudoick Ben Lowell, W. A. Rasinussen, J Hill, E. Penanen, D. W. Phillij J. ‘B. Meyers, John Matila. Jack Biermala; Gust Carlson, Bill Hal- pin, Charles Roemola, S. D. Slagle ' For Valdez—W. G. Painc. For Seward—Thomas McDonald H. O. Shippey, Les Johnson, Cyril Pearl Seeds, Buxter Felch, Rath Narvon, Bill Taroff, Mrs, De- Lane, Robert Gooper, Mrs; Robe Cooper, Joc Jean, Fred Mur William Fogg, John Watts, Re Allen, John Novatney, Ray De- George Moore, John Guiitman, J. Clark, A. Foy Malotte, C. J. *John Thompson, Wayne McLeod. FLIGHT SURGEON VISITS IN HEALTH DEPARTMEN TODAY Da‘ D C. Oadd: flight surgeon nI the’, Japonski dsland naval base ear Bitka, visited offices of the Ter- Fgorial Department of Health dur- ,ing the stay of a U. S. Navy bomber +in Juneau today. Dr. Gadde was taken on a tour of inspection of the Health Depart- ment. offices. \This was his first visit_in Juneau. DRY CLEANING @ Soft Water Washing Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 SO SoR | | Health Foods Center .| BATTLE CREEK, HAUSER AND OTHER DIETETIC ¥OOD§ ° 230 Franklin St. Marine News "HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made f #Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU GAPE * “in‘connection Alk SERVICE INFORMATION THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRL Wi BRINGING UP FATHER DADDY- DID YOU KNOW THAT SIR WELL- VON PLATTER IS DOWNSTAIRS MIND AND WANTS TO SEE YOU ? SINCE GOT YOUR HAT OF ED. LSDM MARCH 16, 1938. NOW WHAT'S ON YOUR IF ANY T HING- YO HAVE 5 B TS Steamer Movements NOWITIBOUND No. sicamers nox SCHEDULED North Sea: scheduled from Seatile March m scheduled to ¢ > Mareh 10 DO YOU THINK I'D BE HOME IF | HAD KNOWN HE WAS GOING TO CALL? ail. from ). 4y A {(( L7 " I /. BARR FLIES Scattle at & am. March Evelyn Berg scheduled to from Seattle. March freight only. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS ail % ]nsurgent Crusser Sunk in &oz p— 2. - MY GRACIOUS-THIS 1S SO ANNOYING -1 HAVE THOUGHT OF IT SO MUCH -1 HAVE LR e FORGOTTEN & COME HERE -~ [/ NBOUT 17— (R AT HINC WHAT REOET ME OR ABOUT YOuU WOULD Northland ~ scheduled south- bound tomorrow night Yukon scheduled- southbound Monday, March 21. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled tosail ever Wednesday at 6 pm fm Sit ka angd wayports. TEN IN FROM OVER BORDER . 3 . . L] ° o . . ° 3 ° . . . . . . . . » ° . . [ . . . [4 . . ° . * Dyt leayes every Wedne: I Barr brought the Barr Air- at 7 a.m. for Pelersbur P n from over the In- Alexander. Koke and ot his morhing with ports ht o ! » trunk LRI I I B wnd o number of suitcases 5 Prem Atlin were Mrs. O. Skalle + 1 San Fland two chilc Al Sands. TIDES TOMORROW From Tulsc h L Shy * va £d hail, . High tide—1:26 am., 185 feet iy d-Gordpn e Low tide—7:34 am : B High tide—1:49 pm., 17 t TRADING PnsT Low tide—7:45 pm., -1.1 feet SN OPERATOR ON WAY OUTSIDE, - Program Takes On New Angles (Continued from Page One) $70,000,000 apiece naval battle off Cape rmm in t BERG BRINGS GENERAL LOAD The steamer Eldred ‘Hans Swordmak night with Boris Magids Reports Poor, . Catch of Fur on Be- ing Sea Slope in Juneau of general and i Channel wharves. g Boris Magids, wellknown trading The Berg was to sail this after- $22.000,000 gach, I k noon for Sitka via Tenakee and DOS' OPerd b e nd| ¢ hese four, it is inore than 1 Hoonah and then continue south "”"“‘"‘ Jioier with hendquartersiigii sl lags- $10,000,000 will from the Historic City. it D rw:/.m»!' m.n‘d ' pe appropriated this sea to Officers of the Evelyn Berg in Juneau yesterday by PAA| g, {hem—even if Cong au- ported that the steamer Tor ”1"";““ fur caten, thorizes” the program recenily added to the Alaska Ti portation fleet, will be ready service April 6 - FOURTEEN OUT 1) £ ard Peninsula ’\nll Kotzebue country, with the take lower than it has been in many years. 1 haven't seen the fur caich so poor in 25 years,” said Magids today Magids has trading posts at Sh BUILDING GOE Now while it is lion dollar” program i “paper program,” don't into believing that th marking time with its n; for il just a de country 2l build- rel P o Zewal ' . ing i) G gt - i Sdie Since 1933, appropriations (not Kcizcbue, Kiana and Selewik. He = oL T goes Outside each spring about this po p oo ; tme of year and returns in June. who oo eq He will take the Northland south Many rest are ‘THIS MORNING $1,443.643,280. built and the That is more than temorrow. under the President way. UNITED STATES Fourteen passen(ms embarked on o o o - asked on January 28 in his “billion DEP. 0 E INTERT B the Princess’ Norah 'this morning ”(’:l':::';f:l‘:;g"o;‘gcé OR i lar” - program. Among the 119 from Juneau, bound south, as fol- R «hips are two 35,000 ton battle- District Land Office lows: AfcH A ships costing $61,000,000 each. Mrs. M. Moody, Miss. B. Moody. i gt ;‘“"’ A o carry on that construction Lois Taylor, Mrs. M. C. Harris, D. December 13, 1937, |14 yequired appropriations of Thinpeopi 4. Beater, MK B R iice. 1t *;e’e"& “]Vf“ that Olal apou( $183,000000 a year. That is Pope, H. Witter. P. Reinhart, Fred SWanson. John Lowell and Walluf| 4ynosy, exactly the amount asked Rasmussen have applied for atrade j, (he regular naval appropria- and manufacturing site under the ion pil this year. If Congress au- provisions of the act of May 1% thorizes the two additional battle- 1898 (30 Stat. 413) for land includ- | ghips and two cruisers, about $10,- ed in Survey No. 1530 situate On | 040,000 will be added. Glacier Highway 14% miles north- aptually then, this “billion dol- west of Juncau, Alaska, Anchorage jar: program amounts mainly to 08153, containing 40 acres, Latitude | 'his..— the President asked Con- 58 dflfl‘fies’”' 40” N. longitude 134 | gyess to continue for the next five degrees 33’ 35" W. and il is NOW | ycars or so what'it has been doing in the files of the. U. S. Land|for the last five ybals Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Haines, E. Norris, James Dunlop, Jack Littlepage and Frank C. Mul- ford. In order to handle the *large volume of traffic offering for Al- aska, the Princess Louise will take the sailing from Vancouver on March 22 in place of the Princess Norah, the Norah returning to serv- fee April 1. D SEEDS SAJL Any and all persons claims ad- Mr. and Mrs, Cyiil Seeds sailed Versely any of the above mentioned cm"mma sme“ for the We ¢n the steamer land. should file their adverse Yukon. T claims in the ‘local land office, An- | .~ 1 were making the trip to Fairbanks for the chance to “look around.” chorage; Alaska, within the period of publication or thirty days there~ - after or they will be barred by the Statutes. © 0 |2 QEORL:E A. LINGO, Register. Fivst publicauon, Jan. 26, 1938. Last publication, March 23, 1938. UNITED STATES Dispute Settled Loncvmw' Wash., March 16— Settlemeéht ofthe jurisdictional dis- |pute between Kelso and Kalama fishermen’s’ Jocal unions has been reached when the board of trustees | of ‘the Columbia River Fishermen's FAMOUS HOTEL' ix close to the theatres and stores, with magnificent view of mountains and har- bor. Splendid food. perfect : ik ivice, convemtence and P ARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | Protective Union granted the Kelso Frr o l::::: $0).50 | GENERAL LAND OFFICE dipnet loeal the right to control all with Special Rates to District Land Office smelt fishing in Washington tribu- bath Permanent Gueats. ‘Ancnorage, ‘Alaska « | taries of the Golumbia Rivery ALASKANS LIKE THE December 20, 1937 g e g Notice: is hereby given that Archie | . Try ‘the Empire clasqheds for M. Chase, entryman, together .with results. his witnesses, Albert: F. Parker, and | —'_ tavus, Alaska, has submitted final proof on his homestead, Anchorage Jarman' s-Fnendly {07649, for Iot 3, sec. 7. T. 40 S, R 80 E. and the S%NEY%, SEUNWY, sec, 12, T. 40 S. R. 58 E. CR.M. con- taining 151.24 acres, and it is now | in the files of the U. S. Land Of- fice, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of publi- cation or thirty * days thereafter said final proof will be accepted and final certificate issyed. ' GEORGE A. LINGO Register FORTUNE ]unou'u 1o Vancouver. Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Date first publication, Feb. 9, 1938 PRINCESS NORAH | Date last publication,” March 16, 1938, March—16, 27 ! R R S A April—6, 17, 27 | 1‘(y the Empire classmed.s for | resiots. | Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: 1 Transcontinental | Trans-Atlantic | | i Chatham Straits Transportation Co. | { Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and full particulars from | V. W. MULVIHILL | Agent, CP.R. Juneau Alaska CANADIAN PACIFIC = the A government announcement identifie |Leslise Franklin Parker, all of Gus- m 3 ,.but a British announcgment saic \leares. Loss of life s aboard the ship was be AT SCHOFIELD BARRACKS near Honolulu is concentrated the army’s efficient soldiery, whose maneuvers ine clude anti-aircraft drill among cactus-studded mountains. A Sfory Without Words 2 SR (RN LlNu SC‘nEB LE Leave Due Juneau- Due;fl"meau 4 Btfi‘m«‘ Seattle .. Northbound Southbound 1YUKON .. Mar.12 Mar.15 Mar. 21 *ALASKA Mar. 19 Mar. 22 Mar. 28 BARANOF Mar. 23 Mar. 26 Apt., 2 1YUKON Mar. 26 Mar. 29 Apr” 4 MOUNT MCcKINLEY Mar. 30 Apr. 2 Apr. 9 *ALASKA ........ _Apr. 2 Apr. 5 Apr. 11 CALLS IN’IO LYNN CANAL—'{Northbound *Southbound. THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—Phone 2 Freight omuhl‘hone 4 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent OH- NO-MR JIGGS 'VE HEARD WOULDON'T REPEAT ¢ Author By GEORGI IGRY= WILL YOU L.ET ME HAVE SEVENTY-FIVE DOLLARS 2| THINK THAT HAS SOME- THING TO DO WITH MY VISIT HERE- DO You Mle? 2 S\ MR JI665 BEFOQE You YO JUNEAU—PIIONE 411 Connors Motor Co., Inc. E McMANUS Alaska Transportation Co. HEDULED SAILINGS March 25 D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 Night Phone 312 Evelyn Berg from Seattle 3 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER PHONES JUNEAU HANGAR Night and Day 1 612 Office 587 Chief Pilot— SHELDON SIMMONS Pilet—L. . BARR Agent— RUSSELIL CLITHERO 7-Place Lockheed Vega 4-Place Stinson “Patco” U. S. MAIL Station KANG RADIO EQUIPPED 6-I'lace Bellansa Skyrocket Operating our own aero- nautical Radio System— Planes are TWO-WAY ETRTRIEYNERIRSRRNFRTRLY I*iIARlNE AIRWAYS 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVIC ed U. S. MAIL Carrier u to Hawk Inlet, 1an Cove, Hoonah, and return. Frequent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Round Trip. - SE/ \PLA"IE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA " 1 q : TELEPHONE 623 2 o & ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pilot C. V. K raffic Representative s sEssREDERAR £ Eh ErEY3ITRAR 'E"i!"!i!i;l.l-l E Tenakee, Todd, Sitka, Chichagof, Alaska Ajr Transport, lnc. N pEpzEsEa 4 | Lv. Juneau WEEKLY ¥ Leave Ar Juneau SAILINGS Vessel Seame No. Bound - So. Bound NORTHLAND Mar. 15 Mar. 17 NORTH SEA Mar. 22 Mar. 24 NORTHLAND ..Mar. 25 Apr. 1 Apr. 3 FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent ... J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent ... Via Picturesque Whitehorse Route Modern twin motored airliners have been flying ground stations. Leave *Juneau.... *Fairbanks *Fairbanks ... urn same day. *_All year round schedule. JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS LESS lo% ROUND TRIP ¢ \ TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel Phone 106 Office—4652 Residence Juneau QNLY SIHOleS Fairbanks on regular schedules for over two years between Juneau- Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- ous two-way radio, communication with thirteen Flnt—Ruby-Nome.and re- NEW REDUCED RATES 193 9 2 e | Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc.

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