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Marine News KON BRINGS SIXTYPERSONS THIS MORNING Rails Lined with Passengers Heading for Westward and Interior The steamer Yukon, Capt. C. Glasscock and Purser Larry McNa- mee, docked in Juneau this morn- ing with 60 passengers for Juneau and the rails lined three deep with passengers to the Westward. From Seattle passengers were— A. F. Allard, Jeanne Anderson, W. T. Burwell, N, J. Bavard, Roberta|® Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- Dooley, J. Ferguson, George Hen-| ® ka and wayports. dricks, A. W. Hartford, Lyle Keune, viart leaves every Wednesday J. W. Keller, W. P, Manley, F. J. + at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Pert McHugh, C. H. Metcalfe, Louise ® 4lexander, Kake and way- Moody. Ed Olson, Mrs. Ed Olson, ® ports. s 0 e e . Mrs. Oscar Olson, A. M. Plummer, J. Retzu, Bella Shurtleff, Ruth Sui- livan, Gus Uotilla, Mrs. G. Uotilla Camille Webb, Fred Welch, A. K Akin, E. Amelung, Angelo Apeivo, James N. Barrie, W. Bartlett, Fred Beck, O. W. Fitzgerald, J. Gloaman L. Gloner, J. Hudson, T. Kuhn, M Lovejoy, G. Martin, W. Meech, J. J Ptan, H, Quackenbush, L. Swartz J. W. Beott, C. W. Sphrig, J. Stoner, W. J. Vivian, R. Wood, P. Yabuc- can, R. Zell. From Ketchikan—Earl Thatcher Eddie Nelson, Axel Antonesen George Knutson, C. C. Personeus A. Diaz. From Petersburg—B. F. Heintzle- man, G. D. McDonald, L, W. Vaerst From Wrangell — Oscar Osborne and Frank Williams. The following passengers booked from Juneau on the Yukon to the Westward: For Seward—Frank Clark, Sam Berger, Pete Lucy, Mrs. Chris Han- d, B. Pollard, 8. Story, George g0, Mrs. George Lingo, O. 8. Sullivan, Howard Lyng, Henry ‘ornos, J. W. Scott, F. Marquarat, . Kyros, Joe Smith, Roy Smith, D. Sechkovich, Ed. Rogers, Rom Doulos, E. Blackburn, Isaac Hend- rickson, H. Zuba, 8. W. Spung. For Valdez—Mrs. Robert Livie, Leonard Mohs and Helen Mohs. Fot Cordova—C. Milovich, D. Van Buskirk, A. Bloom, Emil Hietala. Fot Skagway—Ed Waltonen, Mrs. T. Dahl, M. G. Evans, A. C. Amund- sen, ¥. Buffecoll, R. C. Allee, Mrs Allegy Mary Sutherland, Jerrie Day. For Haites—Mis. E. E. Zimmer, EIGHTEEN €0 o LY LR g BRINGING UP FATHER MAGGIE - REMEMBER WHAT FUN WE USED TO HAVE IN THEM OLD DAYS DOWN BY TH' GAS-HOUSE WHEMN THE BOYS AND GIRLS USED _TO DANCE ON THE SIDEWALKS TO A HURDY- GURDY-AN' YO WUZ THE BELLE OF DUGANS ALLEY?| |* Steamer Movements . |o NORTHBOUND ® Yukon in port and scheduled | ® to sail for the Westward at ® 3 o'clock this afternoon. | ® Northland scheduled to arrive ® at 9 o'clock tonight. e Evelyn. Berg, with freight only, ® due tomorrow. Il SCHEDULED SAILINGS | ® North Sea scheduled to sail | ® from Seattle at 10 a.m. April il 4 o 1 ,4 N1 | @ Princess Norah scheduled to [V e mnminil ® sail from Vancouver at 9 p.m. April 1 | ® Alaska scheduled to sail from o Seattle at 9 a.m. April 2. ¢ SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS ® Baranof scheduled southbound next Friday. LOCAL SAILINGS . ® Estebeth scheduled to sail every TIDES TOMORROW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . ° . ) . . . . . . . . . +* * ad Low tide—6:01 am., -04 feet. High tide—12:12 p.m., 16.3 feet. Low tide—6:49 pm., -0.5 feet. PAA ELECTRAS Two plane loads of passengers went to Fairbanks with the PAA this morning. With Al Monson and Murray Stu- art went Mrs. J. Kellar, John Rapo, T. Bennett, G. Uotilla, Mrs. G. Uotil- la, Nancy Moran, Anne Dwyer, C. Kirkebo and Charles Brower. With Joe Crosson and Walt Hall went J. Ferguson, M. Manley, A Kelly, Mrs. J. W. White, E. Olson, Mrs. Olson, Mr. Thompson, A. Hart- ford and W. Burwell BUREAU OF FISHERIES T Bembs and terpedos have done their work. Only an oil vatch remains to rescue survivers. Canaries, another Insurgent cruiser. MINE CREWS "%t Suneku Home, John Kelly, Juneau resident for ra | 68 years, died at his home in the, Many small crews of various min- | Indian Village last night from tuber- In the rear, the H.M.S. Brilliant, which came up la te, stands by. The small boats are 'oaded with Baleares seamen, to be picked up. fated warship were saved from the first major sea battle of the Span ish war.—A.P. Photo. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1938. AN’ WHEN YOLl WORKED IN CASEY'S LAUNDRY-| USED TO CALL FER YOU AN’ YOUR FATHER WUZ THE BEST HOD -CARRIER IN THE SIXTH WARD- AN’ YOUR MOTHER'S COOKIN' OF CORNED BEEF AN'CABBAGE WUZ KNOWN FOR BLOCKS -AN' YOUR BROTHER WAS A GOOD BOY COl PARED TO THE REST OF TH'GANG ON THE RIVER FRONT= i to mark the fate of the Baleares. Hammon Manager Is Enroute Home M— / A Baleares Gone - Nothing Left But to Rescue Few Survivors Mrs. Ted Price, Mrs. Frances MEN ARRIVE ing properties in the interior and | culos - From California AN"HOW WE USED WE WUZ IN LOVE British and Spanish boats move in In the center is the destroyer Bereas, and at right ihe Only 200 of the 800 on the ill- night in Fairbanks, so you can fig- ure on two days going from Nome to the territorial capital “But when I went up there, oh, boy! From Nome to Fairbanks by dog team tock 21 days if you were lucky; it was hard going, and the ho! and inns nd camps along the way didiit have as fine beds and meals as I get here at Portland. THE BACK PORCH CN SUNDAYS AN’ LISTEN TO MRS. MURPHY SING WHILE SHE HUNG UP TH' CLOTHES AN’ KIDS MADE FUN OF US BECAUSE THEY KNEW ’ J TO SIT ON \ WHAT'S \ THE MATVER? | N { | i i ) { JUNEAU—PHONE 411 S Connors Motor Co., Inc. Alaska Transportation Co. SCHEDULED SAILINGS ! S. S. Tongass . _...April 8 & S. S. Chatham ... April 15 D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 Night Phone 312 L3 - Alaska Air Transport, Inc. A 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. MALL Office 587 Operating our own aero- e Chief Pilot— nautical Radi6 System— / i SHELDON SIMMONS ] Piloi—L. F. BARR Station KANG Agent— Planes are TWO-WAY ' RUSSELIL CLITHERO RADIO EQUIPPED MARINE AIRWAYS Young, Harry Jimmy, Chet John- | westward are aboard the steamer | steamer after having spent the | Yukon. Operators are also on the | for many years. He is survived hy Born here, Kelly was a fisherman | Hartford Stresses Advart- Not e his sister, Mrs. Jenny Manning, 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE by a darn sight! hen from Fairbanks you took railroad train son, H. Bain, William Hillard, Mar- . fuiettte Kianoot, william Hollana. J- Steele Culbertson, J. T. | Barnaby on Way e - ENTION ODD FELLOWS . to Kodiak Surprising friends, Steele Culbertson of the Bureau of Fisheries, accompanied by J. T. Baranaby, assistant biologist for the Bureau, visited here during the stay N of the Yukon in port. NI‘:I:? Hawalian Holiday, 9““‘;"::’3 Culberston and Barnaby are en ‘|route to Kodiak for the summer and will carry on scientific investi- |gation in the Karluk river district. Barnaby is connected with the red salmon investigation in Seattle. Returning to Alaska from Wash- ington, D. C., where he has been stationed for the past several | months, Culbertson will remain in ATT! ' Special meeting Thursday night. District Deputy Grand Master Charles W. Carter to make Visita- tion. All Odd Fellows welcome. BERT LYBECK, . Acting Noble Grand — e - adv. ZORIC| DRY CLEANING [ ] |the Kodiak district, where he is Warden, until October. He is well known in Juneau where he was sta- Soft tionied for some time last year. Water e - - Wasning | FLAT OPERATOR [ 2ahe Your | LAUNDRY Gus Uotilla and wife, who ar- | Pairbanks aboard a PAA plane. Mr. | Uotilla is one of the veteran mine |operators in the Interior and fis | Warden J. BOUND INSIDE |rived aboard the Yukon, left for | }returnlng to his property at Flat.| winter in the States. | e PASS THHUUGH} Ted and Bill Strandberg of the mining firm of Strandberg and Sons were passengers on the Yukon today, going to Anchorage to plan opera- tions for the ensuing year. The Strandbergs are operating | draglines on Candle Creek, near | McGrath, Cripple Creek, at Folger, |and in Goodnews Bay. Bill Strandberg manages opera- tions at Goodnews Bay with the platinum dragline and Ted handles ‘operamms at- Candle Creek. | Mr. and Mrs. Dave Strandberg | are due north on the next boat with |another son Odin. Harold Strand- | berg, oldest of the brothers, went | through Juneau to the Westward a |short time ago. e JUNIOR PROM TO BE HELD FRIDAY The junior class of the Juneau | annual prom to be held in the High The affair, of which Eckley Guer- in is chairman, is formal and invi- | High School is entertaining at the| School gymnasium, Friday evening.| and a brother, Jim Jack. Funeral | services will be announced soon by STRANDBERES | the Charles W. Carter mortuary. >, - ian Holiday, Saturday| adv. 420's Hawai Night. NOTICE TO PAY SCHOOL TAX All male persons between the ages of 21 and 50 years, wh2 are not “Sailors in the United Sictes Navy |or Revenue Cutter Service, volun- ‘teer firemen, paupers or insane persons,” are required to pay an | annual School Tax of $5.00. | This tax is due and payable after | the first Monday in April and shall | be paid before May 1, providing you |are in the Territory on said first | date; if not, the tax is due thirty days after your arrival in Alaska or within 10 days after written or| |oral demand is made upon you by | the 8chool Tax Collector. Taxes not | | paid in accordance with the fore- | | going requirements shall become de- | | linquent and each person delin- | $2.00. | | All persons subject to, and refus- | |ing or ‘neglecting to pay said tax,| |are subject to a fine of $25.00 or| | imprisonment in jail for a period ! | of one month. H. I. LUCAS, City Clerk, ‘ School Tax Collector for | | Juneau. } | Publication dates, March 28-29-30.| { 1938. | PHONE 15 Every Effort HOTEL GASTINEAU Comiort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection RVICE INFORMATION Empire classitleds pay. tational. CANADIAN PACIEIL( Hotel Juneau “Where Living Is Pleasant” B Nearest Federal Bldg. B Elevator Service. B Beauty Shop. B Reasonable Winter Rates Cheerfully Given. CLARENCE WISE | Owner-Manager | ;Iuneau to Vancouver,| Victoria or Seattle | SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS | PRINCESS NORAH | April—$, 17, 27 | PRINCESS LOUISE | May—s8, 19, 31 { Connections at Vancouver with | Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Chatham Straits Transportation Co. | “M. S.DART” | Leaves Femmer Dock every Wednes- ‘ day at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, | Agent, C.P.R. Port Alexander and way ports. | Juneau Freight received not later than 4 | | FOR INFORMATION PACIFIC Made for the | J | - f 8 ages of Air Travel in North on Trip Outside A. M. Hartford, Manager of the Hammon Consolidated Gold Fields, arrived in Juneau on the Yukon this morning and took a PAA plane for Fairbanks en route to his home in Nome. He has been on a vacation in | California. He was a resident of Sacramento prior to 1922 when he came north. In an interview in Portland, ap- pearing in the Oregonian, Mr. Hart- ford praised air travel in Alaska. He | was quoted as saying: “It takes hardly any time to get from Nome to Juneau now, but it certainly was a long trek when I first weir% north. There are regular air lines now operating between Nome and Fairbanks, and Fairbanks and Juneau. | “A fellow can make the trip by plane from my home to Fairbanks in about four hours, and then from hours. The way the planes oper- ate, a person usually stays over-| a ‘galloping goose’ down to Seward; this generally took two days, then the boat trip from Seward to Juneau was another two days, four days to make the run that I now make in little over four hours.” “Do you still have a dead man for breakfast ev morning in Nome?" he was asked “Oh, no. Nome is a tine, orderly town now,” Mr. Hartford replied, “We have between 1100 and 1200 people there in the winter time, up to 1500 in summer. It isn't a wild frontier place any more. “There’s only one Japanese liv- ing in the town. We are away from the fishing sections, so don't come in contact with the orientals. There are five general merchandise stores, three liquor stores, four pool halls, two hotels in the town.” R T MRS. OLSON RETURNS Mrs. Oscar Olson, wife of the Ter- ritorial Treasurer, returned on the quent shall be subject to a fine of Fairbanks to Juneau in about five Yukon today after having received medical care in the states. | “Alaska”..by Lester D, Henderson. | SAILING SCH i EDULE Bteamer BARANOF tYUKON *ALASKA . fBARANOF .. YUKON . DENALI MT. McKINLEY Leave DueJuneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Mar. 26 Apr. 1 Mar. 29 Apr. 4 Apr. 5 Apr. 11 Apr. 9 Apr. 15 Apr. 12 Apr. 18 Apr. 16 Apr. 18 Apr. 16 Apr. 22 Apr. 16 Apr.'19 Apr. 25 CALLS INTO LYNN CANAL—{Northbound; *Southbound. THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—Phone 2 Freight Office—Phone 4 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent N LL 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 SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN, ALASKA TICKET OFFICE, TRIANGLE PLACE—PHONE 623 ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pilot VIC ROSS, Traffic Representative | WEEKLY Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau | Vessel Seattle No.Bound So.Bound * NORTHLAND Mar. 25 Mar. 29 Mar. 31 NORTH SEA . Avr. 1 Apr. 5 Apr. 7 NORTHLAND Apr. 8 Apr. 12 Apr. 14 .Phone 103 Phone 79 .Phone 23 .Phone 4 FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent . J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent . CITY WHARF GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent . Juneau QNLY 5 HOURS 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- ous two-way radio communication with thirteen ground' stations. Leave ' *Juneau... | *Fairbanks . Juneau *Fairbanks ....Wednesday..... Flat-Ruby-Nome and re- turn same day. *—All year round schedule. NEW REDUCED RATES s,o. JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS ‘ Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel Phone 106 Office—4652 Residence