The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 19, 1938, Page 6

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§pA \B0ARD ALASKA FOR THIS PORT thw & nyor Seconic passenger: Passenigers aboard the Aiaska Booked for Juneau include Mrs. Jack Cremint, Mis. M. Gresham. Wilma Siewden, Dan Haggerty, Mrs. Mary Watson, Frank Burns, Kenneth Martin, Mrs. K. Martin R s Will Rechristen "8, S, Evelyn Berg March ®.—The « the Alaska Transporta Company announced totay that stéamer F vn Berg, in freight se vice between Seattle and £ Alaska ports, will be rechy Chatham on April 15. Thi paying honor to Chatham - FOUR COMING IN PAR SHIP SATTLE cials of thon tened will & Strait Four passenger scheduled to come into Juneau aboard a P: cific Alaska Airways plane this a ternoon Passengers are Howard Thomp son. Mary Joyce, Mr J. G. River and T. Brady. Pilots are Jerry Jone: and Bill K - - e SIMMONS FLIES UP LYNN CANAL Skag- in the tak- four to Shell Simmons hopped way and Haines this morr Alaska ATr Transport Bellanca ing three north and bringing back Simmons took A. Van Mavern and L. Hebert to Skagway and D H. Morris to Haines Coming back from Chilkoot Barracks at Ha were Lieut. Rowan, Lieut. McPhe son, Capt. Bartz and Capt. Hoily. ——.ee HOLDEN MAKES SECOND FLIGHT Alex Holden returned to Hoonah yesterday afternoon in the Marine Airways Bellanca on his second flight there during the day, bring- ing in three passengers. Those coming in were Frank Wil- liams, Oscar Osborne, and Alice Os- borne. - -oa Lode and placer location nofices for sale at The Empire Office. B e ZORIC DRY CLEANING [ ] Soft ¥ Water ! Washing Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 the four passengers [} | | Health Foods Center | BATTLE CREEK, HAUSER | AND OTHER DIETETIC FOODS | 230 Franklin St. l Telephone 62 | Juneau So. Franklin Street JUNEAU———Phone Single O —————p e ——— ) l | 1 | e e 8 0 e o 0 duled to saii fron wftle at 19 &.m. Mad Ber Seattle only SOUTHBOUND SATL Yukon scheduled soutl Monday. March 21 LOCAL SATLINGS Istebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 pm. for Sit- ka and wayport it leaves every t 7a.m. for Petersht Alexander, Kake ports > e s 0 0 0 0 8 0 @ to cail Msarech 25 from freight GS bound rdnesday g, Port way - L3 B TIDES TOMORROW - Hig! 3:01 am., 164 feet 1 ide—9:26 am 1 feet High tide—3:44 pan 0 feet Low tide—6:30 pn fee TID! MONDAY tidg 3:35 aa 15.3 Low tide—10:07 am. 1.1 feet High tide-—4:28 pm., 125 feot Low tide—10:09 p.m. 4.3 feet - oo {IP STRIKES MINE: QUIGKLY SINKS AT SEA Captain 01;](‘}; All Mem- sers of Crew to Safety, Then Goes Down COPENHAGEN, March 19 German steamer Claus Ooeg gross tons, struck a North mine during the night and within 10 minutes The Swedish steamer S. Verre ued the crew of 21 but the Captain, still standing on the bridge, having ordered his men to safety in lifeboats, went down witn the ship AR S0 NS * : * | STOCK QUOTATIONS | NEW YORK, March 19. Closing tation of Alaska Juneau mine stoex at today’s short session is 10 Ameérican Can 83, American Light ard Power 4'i, Anaconda 307 Bethlehem Steel 55! Common- wealth and Southern 1%, Curtiss Wright 4! General Motors 33 International Harvester 62'4, Ken- necott 36%. New York Central 13%. Southern Pacific 13';, United States quo Steel 507, Cities Service 1%, Pound $4.96%. - > ERINGS PRISONERS HEHE Deputy Marshall Walter Hellan flew fo Hoonah yesterday and brought back three prisoners to erve sentences in the Federal jail They are Mabel Jim, sentenced to six months for drunkenness; Don- ald MacQueen, two months and $100 fine for being drunk and disorder- : David Howard, two months for wilt and battery ® 0 0 0000 00 0 0 1Q. 1. Charles Edison, secretary of the navy assistant a False. 3. A French organization. 4. Ozechoslovakia. 5. That German citizens in ® American refrain from joining € them 200000000000 revolutionar Jarman's-Friendly FORTUNE HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection © 0000000920000 0232806%00008na0ns000 ( THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1938. 1S GUY-SIR VON PL CAN'T REMEMBER AN FORG | il BRINGING UP FATHER TS EVERY THING | LL HIM TO DO - THERE THING SURE - HE WIL.L. Il (L i' ————— | AT TER- Y THING- SAY- CANT | | YOU EVER | | REMEMBER ] ANYTHING ? DO YOL KNOW WHAT DAY THIS 5% 1S (OH-YES-IT's PA | THE. HOLIDAYS - | WARD TO My DAY=~ AND | CAN PEMEMBER ALL IN FACT=- | AM LOOKING FOR — U, of W. Skylight Petty Wars and Shortage of Goi Crashies in Gale, Gutting Two Men Near !I.l:_’(‘t[:\' Shocks Crowd Between Halves of B. B. Game SEATTLE, March 1%—Gale winds last night caused the collapse of a section of 1w University of Wash- ingion Pavilior kylight during a i thall game and severely injur- ed two men The skyli o the floor in a shower between the halves of a gat n d in the State H col Basketball Fournament b cutting George Pease, Tac 1 paper man and Mavin Panlson udent Had the siorr i in its vie- iou work ooner or r, the fallin i have uck player ketball court cancelled rhe tourney m if the pavilion i postponed or held unsafc - MARY JOYCE RETURNING Juneau's comely usher-wil Joyce and hotel arrive Pacii Fair- doz prooriet rmes as scheduled to aboard a plane from raced in the Fairbanks the fiesta of the Joyce derby during 1tly dog SNOWS rec metropolis held ir 13,000 FANS in Hart- ford, Conn., signed greeting re- ceived by Uncle Bob Quinn, . grand keeper of the Boston Beey “who celebrated his 68th birthe 5 day Valentine day, J Fishermen’s DANCE Sponsored by SONS OF NORWAY ELKS’ HALL TONIGHT -THIRTY P.M. PETERSON AND CRANE Accordian Orchestra Adm. $1.00—Ladies Free Chatham Straits Transportation Co. “M. S. DART” i 7 5 uaVr mer Doek every Wednes- day at 7 am. for Pefeyrsburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. Preight received not later than 4 ' pm. Tuesday. FOR INFORMATION ( b Ethic By MELVIN K as possesser of and ten of gold re- Addis Ab tons tlown into cently was for medi Loyal to the Italians, he had been wounded by his countrymen in one little rebellions Italian with il treatment many are having of the torce This incident ilhouetied again- st a background of Italian effort to shift the new iopian rule from oue of purely military occupation to or f civil organization i de- velog f pia’s largely un- known economic wealth Military Still Needed Although ¢ivil governors recent- y replaced military : trea and Somalilar ts of the second Roman empire, military men still are much in de- mand in Ethiopia. Littie wars con- tinue, especially in the Amhara and Gogigan regions—the cradle of Hail assie ruling caste, Na- ives there have everytl to lose and nothing to gain by Italian cc- cupaticn so the re hanging on to the end Frequent mishes do not nee- essarily mean that Italian rule is threatened. It merely makes it un- pleasant and comparable to what all colonial powers have experi- enced when they took over tribal countries. The FEast African empire has been costing the mother country real gold. And Italy he ery little gold or its equivalent, N ex- change, to spend on empire, Marshal Graziani! former viceroy of Ethiopia, estimates that the new empire cost Ttaly $60,000000 in onée year. Aims At Self-Sujficiency To offset the gold drain, Mus- solini has decreed that the new empire must become seif-suffiei- ent % Export and import restrictions directed at bringing the greatest return in forei®n exchange are in effect. Hence some products cannot be sold even to Italy unless a lik"‘ CANADIAN Travel. | (FPACIRIC on a “PRIN- CESS” Liner Juneau to Vancouver, Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS PRINCESS NORAH March—27 April—6, 17, 27 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 e L ——— i 4 ramp Italians’ Si pians Read Newspapers a quantity is sold where Seventeen exploiting corpora- | Citizen are pushing developmer t m mineral resources, cotton, wool and |qualify a other products. But they have been | election 5th hampered by lack of capital voted at the last m Like the road-building Roman i Sk o B i of the first empire Mussolini's Ro- 57 ’:”‘“m’.' e mans are laying down hi s in v -cut Ethiopia. Tt rgest ot pURLC. B9 lection must Hess aeh Clerk promptly ufficiency. For the high from A Addis Ababa to Asmara on the .o Eritrea coastline is destined to car- e 1y traffic which now goes over the Freneh, - controlled Djibouti - Addis Ababa railr Whatever sent cver the rail must be paid for in foreign exchange. Colonists Hand Picked At home, meanwhile, Italians are being prepared as colonists. The first group of 150 hand-picked col- cnists recently arrived in Ethiopia Other are Demilitarized from the conquest campaign e been set- tled in government-built farmsteads near the capital .Their immediate task is to raise enough food for Italian incomers. A surpius for ex- portation will next Italy is striving to give the world a picture of Ethiopian serenity on the theory that this will bring full recognition from major powers which are still withholding it Along with military and economic problems, Mussolini 15 jockeying to have the second empire recog- nized by international law. D - SAVE THE DATE Rebekah Benefit Dance, March 26, Elks Hall. adv. ———— Empire classifieds pay. is gron being f soldie By GEORGE ) yle in Eth Gun REGISTRATION OF Empire classitieds pay NOTIC CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL SPECIAL MEETING THIS EVENING | 00 P. M. UNION HALL HELLO -HERE | AM - AND RIGHT ON TIME-BIG BO OH- | KNEW YOU WOULDN'T BE LATE AND I'M GLAD YOU ARE ON TIME AS | HAVE ORDERED A DINNER FOR _TWO > . AT TH GN’ I THINK LHE’S DUMB- iopia JUNEAU—PHONE 411 Connors Motor Co., Inc. | Alaska Transportation Co. Evelyn Berg from Seattle _.March 25 D. B. FEMMER, Agen Night Phone 312 R ~ Alaska Air Transport, Inc. 3 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER PHONES | JUNEAU HANGAR ! Night and Day f 612 I Office 587 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket e —— 7-Place lLockheed Vega 4-Place Stinson “Patco” U. S. MAIL Operating our own aero- VOTERS l‘;‘f | Chief Pilot nautical Radio System— e § SHELDON SIMMONS tation KANG ons wh 1 1011 o ol Pl o AR Statio Planes are TWO-WAY RADIO EQUIPPED Agent— SELI. CLITHERO 1in as then ity L FETRSRFRTRERINNETATRUIINRATNRE SENYEREFRISFEEI TN 2 ince las ] =00 MARINE AIRWAYS | L . 2-Way Radio Communication 5 : 2o B SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE ] Authorized U. 8. MAIL Carrier = H “WEDNESDAY g Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitka, Chichagof, = Kimshan Cove, Hoonah, and return. H P’ Frequent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Round Trip. - Y SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA @ TELEPHONE 623 i ¢ ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pilot . C. V. Kay, Traffic Representative ELEL DLEL B L a1 EIEES ESISHOREREREN WEEKLY Leaye Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau SAILINGS Vessel Seattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTHLAND Mar. 15 Mar. 17 [ NORTH SEA Mar.22 Mar.24 NORTHLAND Apr. 1 Apr. 3 FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent .. J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent .. CITY WHARF GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent . i4 SERVING Juneau ONLY 5 uouns Fairbanks Via Picturesque Whitehorse Route Modern twin motored airliners have been flying on regular schedules for over two years between Juneau- Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- = ".:_;.Ljv‘;' ous two-way radio communication with thirteen e “fl LD ground stations. Lo (:;\[‘i\ : 1 e, NG SCHEDULE ‘v.‘\ Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound vl e tYUKON Mar. 15 Mar. 21 g e *ALASKA Mar. 22 Mar. 28 —All i schedule. o1 'BARANOF Mar£6 Apr. 1 {YUKON A X Mar. 29 Apr. 4 TES MOUNT McKINLEY . Mar. 30 Apr. 2 Apr. 8 ! *ALASKA ... ....Apr. 2 Apr. 5 Apr. 11 ‘ CALLS INTO LYNN C‘,’A’NA‘L—?Normbound; *Southbound. "THE ALAS Ticket Office—Phone 2 KA LINE Freéight Office—Phone 4 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent Jtcam )N A ° ~ B 3 ship Company s,o W JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS ® LESS lo% ROUND TRIP ‘-1‘ t % Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. " 'IRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE =, Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel 7 Fi 1 Phone 106 Office—4652 Residence AR AR

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