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Marine News 3 P 9 $LO. B U, QP 0.8 @ HALIBUT FI_EET ¢ Steamer Movements . NORTHABOUND v ® Princess Louise ccheduled to e arrive Friday afternoon or o evening. May have 3% days ® mail aboard. ® Baranof due Saturda; . b EDULED SAILINGS - e Northland scheduled to sail f . I o o from Secattle at 10 a.m. March Union-Buyer 1rou ble m § it Seattle May Hold Up o 1 Do S l A e from ailings e freight only i ® Yukon scheduled to sail frem Twenty-two trim halibuters and o Seattle at 9 a.m. March 26, five times s many fishermen will o SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS tiead cul to sea from Juneau Aprl o noith Sea scheduled to arrive 1 or shortly thereafter to fish In ¢ a4 4y giclock tomorrow morn- Areas Two and Three—if a 1eport~ ¢ o ang salls south tomorrow ed disagreement between buyers and o ipnt following the U, of W ‘the union over prices is settled by ¢ Glee Club concert. then ® Alaska scheduled southbour Ecene of much activity these hec- ¢ next Monday. tic days of last minute preparations o LOCAL SAILINGS for a summer of hard driving seas e Estebéth scheduled to sail ev and long hours of fishing, is I. e Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Lit- Goldstein’s store, and Swanson Bros. e ka and wayports on South Franklin Street “r Dart leaves cvery Wednesday Long coils of line of all weights,'s at 7 a.m. for Petersburg. Port S 8% - n0NeNa"00000000006060-00000¢9 0 bundles of wicked looking steel @ Alexander, Kake ant was- hooks, glass baii floats—a jumbled e ports. mass on the floor around the knees ¢ @ o & o ¢ o o . of laughing and swearing men of Viking stock. A jumbled mass to the * TR e TR layman, but each bit of line, each! | TIDES TOMORROW hook, every bit of sundry gear, on *— = gt e which the fisherman whose liveli-! hood and perhaps his life depends, is an integral part of his existence— the hooks to be bent to light weight line, the short length of that line to a long and heavy line, weighted with lead and buoyed at the ex- tremities with kegs or masses of varicolored glass floats--a fisher- man’s tools. Early in the morniny, a weck from Friday, eleven craft will start out to sea—if the difficulties in Seat- tle do not prevent. The following official sailing list was released to- Low tide-—0:07 am., 6.7 feet. High tide—6:13 am. 119 feet. Low tide—1:29 p.m., 39 feet. High tide—8:26 p.m.. 10.6 feet. oo - BARANOF HAS 16 PASSENGERS | FOR THIS PORT 1ws: Area Two, April 1; Fern, John SEATTLE, March 23.—Steamer Lowell; Lou Helen, Rnute Hildre: Baranof, of the Alaska Steamship Margatet T. Pete Hildre; Marle, Ppeter Oswold; Missgure, Ole Jack- ¥on; Oceanic, Ole Westby; Spencer, Buseell, Elliott ;Thelma, Bernt Al- (steag; Viviap, Charles Larson; Lit- " tle Emma; John' Wihther; and the Tern Andrew Rosness. Leaving in the secohd fHght on April 7 for Area Two also, will be the following' nine boats: Avona, Olat Larson; Dixon, Emil Samuel- :8oh; Elfin, ‘Nils Bjerkfies; Emma, 13 Ness; Ford, Ole Brensdal; Fre- nionif, Olaf Winther: Hyperion, Os- &ar Oberg; Ida 11, John Sonderland; 1t J., Ole Hinson. Two schooners will leave a few dayk later for Area Three to the Westward, the Norland, Tom Sand- vik; and the Explorer, captained by Magnus Hanson. There will be services for the fish- ermen next Sunday in the Resurrec- tlon Lutheran Church with Rev. Oauble bestowing on the twentieth century Vikings of the fishing fleet Company,. inaugurating the short call service to Southeast and South- west Alaska ports with sailings on Wednesdays, left fot the north at 9 o'clock this morning with 146 first class and 87 steerage passengers aboard. Included among the passengers are the following booked for Juneau: Miss J. White, Mrs, Ralph Potter, and infant, Sig Wallstedt, John Rapo, Mr. and Mrs. E. Clements. Mrs. J. Roma, Florence Syverud, Gus Gisberg, L. Thompsoh, M. Pet- erson, M. Hoffman, Eugene Baker, Robert Davis, Fred Robinson. NORTH SEA IS DUE THURSDAY Steamer North Sea is scheduled by Agent Fred C. Charman to ar- ghe blessings that have grown mel- rive from Sitka sometime tomorrow Jow with time—Godspeed to men forenoon. The steamer will not sail yhme families await and pray their South until after the concert to be Bafe return from a bountiful but given in the evening by the Univer- fickle dnd dangerous Mother Sea. S$ity of Washington's Men's Glee DRY CLEANING ° Soft { Water Washing balth Foods Center BATTLE CREEK, HAUSER AND OTHER DIETETIC ¥YOODS 230 Franklin St Telephone 62 Juneau club. The North Sea sailed from Juneau last night for Sitka with eight pas- sengers from here. Those sailing were A. Van Mavern, Ray Peterman, F. A. McCleod, Dan Noonan, Ben Grimes, Jim Carp- renter and Mr. and Mrs. J 8. Jef- frey. - D SRR Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. St Empire classitieds pay. T SRR MR e * THIS FAMOUS HOTEL is close to theatres and stores with magnificent view of mountains and har- food, perfect convenlence and E ROOMS, From ‘2 all with Specisl Rates to bath ALASKANS LIRE Fiiz ¥ THE DAILY ALASKA® EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1938. GIT MAGGIE BACK N THE OLD NEIGHBORHOQD - WE WUZ ALWAYS VERY HAPPY THERE- HAIDA SAILS ON EMERBENCY CALL IN GULF Will Pick Up Sick Man on Tanker 250 Miles from Spencer The Coast Guard Cutter Haida left late yester afternoon on an em- ergency 0 miles out into the Gulf of A a west of Cape Spenc- er. A man is reported to be danger- ously ill on the Standard Oil tank- er H. T. Harper and that vessel, bound south, has altered her course to meet the Haida on the 59th par- allel, approximately 250 miles out from Cape Spencer. The Coast Guard Cutter Spencer at Cordova was going to make the call, but did not have a doctor aboard, so the job fell to the Haida which is expected to be back here Thursday night or Friday morning. ——— 1,280 ACRES NEAR FAIRBANKS AGAIN OPEN TO ENTRY Order revoking the withdrawal of 1,280 acres of land near Fair- banks which had originally been withdawn for the Happy Station townsite was issued by President Roosevelt on March 11, according to notice to the Federal Register. The area will now be open to entry under the usual land regulations. The withdrawn land was made in 1915 for a townsite in connection with the railroad development but was never used for that purpose, according to District Cadastral En- gineer George A. Parks of the Pub- lic Survey. It lies adjacent to the experimental station at Fairbanks and covers an area six to seven miles from the city proper. - Shell Tgl_(_es Hop Four went out with 8hell Simmons today in the Alaska Air Transport Bellanca for Sitka and Angoon, making a number of stops enroute. Charles Burdick, W. A. Chipper- field and O. Olson went to Sitka and Miss Erma Parr went to An- goon. passengers ol S Alex Holden took the Marine Air- ways Bellanca out this morning with two passengers aboard for Sitka and ait express for points enroute. The passengers going out were Jim Judge and Dave Femmer. e Try The Empire ciassifieds for results. | { UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE | District Land Office | Anchorage, Alaska. | December 13, 1037, |a | Rasmussen have applied for a trade |and manufdcturing site under the Iprovlmms of thé act of May 14, {1808 (30 Stat. 413) for land includ- |ed in . Survey No. 1530 situate on |Qlacier Highway 14% miles north- west of Juneau, Alaska, Anchorage 08153, cofitaining 40, acres, Latitude 58 degrees 23’ 40” N. longitude 134 degrees 33’ 35” W. and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claims ad- versely any of the above mentioned |land should file their adverse |claims in the local land office, An- ichon’gt. Alaska, within the period of publication or thirty days there- ‘l.uer or they will be barred by the | statutes. | GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, Jan. 26, 1938. Last publication, March 23, 1938. | Chatham Straits Transportation 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 BRINGING UP FATHER | WONDER IF | COULD | e Notice is hereby given that Olaf wanson, John Lowell and Wallut | g i . S ——————— TO MOVE I'LL TALK TO HER-DOWN IN HER HEART SHE MUST HAVE A YEARNIN/ TH GOOD OLD DAYS- - ( FOR Southern Grads Show Promise, Training Camps Bunch of Rookies Being Worked Over for Ap- pearance in Majors By DILLON ‘anuhm AP Feature Service Writer U» from Dixie for jube in majors come the Southern a tien’s batting champion and a clus- ter of other promising pr t e The slugging king, F Coaker (Trip) Triplett of Memphis stands a good chance of lugging his 356 average right smack into the Chicago Cub outfield. Skipper Charles Grimm will stop his bar playing any day to greet a who can sing the hickory so Cleveland locks to New recruits to help revamp its v infield. A classy second- or thi baseman can write his own ticket with the Indians. Oscar Grimes, Tom Irwin and Bob Shilli re the lads to whom opportunity beckens. Twirlers Tom Drake and John Humphries and Outfielder Roy Weatherly are others with the In- dians. Humphries was the only Southern association flinger to win 20 games. Drake notched 14, Weath- erly was with the Tribe before and is returning for another shot Detroit needs pitchers. Al Ben- ton and Willlam ©Carl Doyle of Memphis may fill the bill. The Red Sox all but transported —— i R Little Rock, franchise and all, to Boston. They lassoed seven Travel- ers: Pitchers Emerson Dickman, Willlam Humphrey, Dick Midkiff and Lee Rogers, Outfielders Fred Deal and Leo Nonnenkamp and Infielder Jim Thbor. | Dickman and Humphrey won 16 games each, while Midkiff and Rogers copped 13 each. Deal's bat- ting average was a juicy .340, while Nonnenkamp was close with .332. Tabor may be the utility infielder Joe Cronin needs. Washington likes Emil Leonard, whose knuckle ball won 15 for At- lanta. Cleveland also has Infielder Lloyd Russell from Knoxville and Wash- ington thanked Chattanooga for Infielder Jim Bloodworth, Catcher Tom Livingston, Outfielder Taft Wright and Pitcher Ray Phebus. e ATTENTION REBEKAHS Meeting at 8 pm. Wednesday March 23, 1.0.O.F. Hall. Meeting and initiation under direction of Past Noble Grand. Social and refresh- ments. Visitors welcome adv. BETTY McCORMICK, N.G. —————— ® 0 0000 0000000 L] NEWS L. Q. ANSWERS S ® 1. Premier Metaxas of ® Greece. 2. False. He said he was ® not a candidate for any office. 8 3 Under the new farm law & he may set limits on certain & crops. ¢ 4 Budapest. ® 5. Measure proposing strict ® re; 060000 ccscccscccos | | {8 PRIN. {Juneau to Vancouver, f Victoria or Seattle | SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS PRINCESS NORAH March—27 April—s6, 17, 27 | Connections at Vancouver with i Canadian Pacific Services: ‘ Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic \ Trans-Pacific | Tickets, reservations and full | particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R. Juneau Alaska CANADIAN _PACFIC Skippy, a scraggy, white mongrel dog, took honors at the Oakland, Cal., dog show when he was presented with two medals in the “Loy- alty” class. Skippy stood by the frozen body of his mistress, Mrs. Wi- nona Ferris, for 12 days in the bitter cold of the High Sierras, where she died of exposure. Shown with the dog are Mrs. A. W. Robb, who made the presentation for the American Kennel Club and the Latham Fcundaticn, and Karl Fereman, 17, son of Mrs. Ferris by an earlier marriage. | Long after that handsome cup becomes a receptacle for used razor blades, this lad will remember the handshake that went with it. The handshaker B George VI of England, pictured as he presented prizes in the Albert' Hall Boys’ Boxing championships in London, N e 3 %a‘g\). R VR SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound *ALASKA 7 Mar. 22 Mar. 23 BARANOF Mar. 23 Mar. 26 Apr. 1 {YUKON .. Mar. 26 Mar. 29 Apr. 4 MOUNT MCcKINLEY Apr. 2 Apr. 8 *ALASKA ... 2 Apr. 5 Apr. 11 tBARANOF ... Apr. 6 Apr. 9 Apr. 15 YUKON ... ....Apr. 9 Apr. 12 Apr. 18 CALLS INTO LYNN CANAL—tNorthbound; *Southbound. THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—Phone 2 Freight Office—Phone 4 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent ca Steamship Compan CE~D APLLEALRESKHR = g T - OH- YES-MRS. CORAL ISLE -1 MET MISS TURTRAIN AT MRS - OT TO FENDER'S TEA AND SHE SAID MRS WILL TELLUM TOLD HER THAT- OH- YOU KNOW HER- SHE'S THE DIVORCED WIFE OF MRS. DUWED'S THIRD HUSBAND - | | ) | RUSSELL CLITHERO IT'S A CINCH | WON'T* GIT A CHANCE TO BRING UP TH’ SUBJECT TODAY- THAT CACKLIN’ 15 GONNIA' LAST FER HOURS -~ JUNEAU—-PHONE 41 Connors Motor Co., Inc. ‘ Alaska Transportation Co. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Evelyn Berg from Seattle ... March 25 D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 Night Phone 312 Alaska Air Transport, Inc. 3 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER 4 PHONES 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket JUNEAU HANGAR 7-Place Lockheed Vega Night and Day 4-Place Stinson “Pateo” 612 U. S. MAIL Office 587 Operating our own aero- Chief Pilot— nautical Radio System— SHELDON SIMMONS 3 KA J Pilot—L. F. BARR Station NG Agent— Planes are TWO-WAY { RADIO EQUIPPED ErsTaTEsTes = g5 LY ¢0Y | oo ONLY 5 rsuzes® ATRFIREEREENREIRSNPNS) MARINE AIRW AY 2-Way Radio Communication E SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE £ Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier - *WEDNESDAY H Juncau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitka, Chichagof, & Kimshan Cove, Hoonah, and return. E *Frequent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Round Trip. £ SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA E TELEPHONE 623 ] ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pllot C. V. Kay, Traffic Representative PR LTI E TR MEETTTIT R TE T PR PETT EETREF P BT M O TR i i) LAND WEEKLY Leave Ar.Juneav Lv.Juneau SAILINGS Vessel Seattle No.Bound So,Bound NORTH SEA . Mar. 22 Mar. 24 NORTHLAND Mar. 29 Mar. 31 NORTH SEA ... . Apr. 5 Apr. 7 FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent . ' 4 } J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF ... GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent SKA SERVICE Via Picturésque Whitehorse Routé Modern twin motored airliners have been & regular schedules for over two years between Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Plan:& in ous two-way radio communication with - t! ground stations. {15 *Fairbanks ... Sunday ... *Fairbanks ... Wednesday.. turn same day. *—All year round sch 3”.“ JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS LESS !.% ROUND TRIP Pacific Alaska Airways, ite, Lotls A. Delebecqtie—Gastineaa Hotel Phoié 106 OFfioc—idsz" Mesitiabd