The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 2, 1938, Page 6

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. ' Marine News THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1938. WELL, DADDY, I KNOW YOU WANT TO MOVE BACK IN THE OLD NEIGHBORHOOD, BUT MAMA 1S DEAD SET AGAINST IT BUT NEWS ITEMS New Snowfall FROM SITKA Means Skiing WOULD JUST AS SOON LIVE THERE AS ANYWHERE . ., By: GEORGE McMANUS \ N Im FéR YOU AND L \ \ i SHE THINKS 1 DONT I WILL TRY AND GET MAMA TO CHANGE HER MIND. DONT WORRY - EVERY THING WILL. COME CUT ALL RIGHT KNOW THAT THAT LLOOKING MULLIGAN BoOy STILL LIVES IN THE OLD NEIGHBORHOOD s Copr. 1938, King Features Syndicate, Inc., World rights reserved: oo 0 0000000 00 1 P A s s ENGERS ¢ Steamer Movements . NORTHBOUND - ALASKA ® Princess Norah scheduled to e e arrive Monday afternoon or @ ® evening. . | ® Alaska slue Tuesday. . e North Sea due Tuesday. L] | SCHEDULED SAILINGS » —_ ! e Baranof scheduled to sail from e SEATTLE, April 2 Steamer | @ Seattle 9 am. April 6. . Alaska sailed at 9 o'clock this| ® Northland scheduled to sail @ morning for Southeast and South-|e from Seattle at J0 a.m. April west Alaska ports with first (@ 8 . class and 129 steerage passengers | ® Tongass scheduled to sail from e aboard e Seattle April 8 at 9 p.m. . Juneau passengers aboard the|e SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS o Alaska include Hans Tilleson, N.| ® Yukon scheduled southbound e Jacobs, Marian Roberts, James ® next Monday. . Hansen, Tony Lindstrom, Mr. and |® LOCAL SAILINGS . Mrs. J. Devine, Mr. and Mrs. C.|® Estebeth scheduled to sail every ® Rodman, Mrs. J. Roberts ® Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- e Mr. and Mrs. J. Houlton, Betty ® ka and wayports. e Ross, Mrs. Issackson and infant, |¢ Dart leaves every Wednesday ¢ L, Dowall, R. Sommers, Mr. and|¢ at 7 am. for Petersburg, Port ¢ Mrs. A. Brown, Joseph Yolo, Mr.|® Alexander, Kake and way- ¢ ahd Mrs. Frank O. Farrell. ® ports . J. “B. Bernhofer, Joe Erickson./® ® ® & & & 6 ¢ ¢ o o ¢ Charles Tucker, John Carlson, Ed. & Fusly, Charles LeFebre, Ruth Greg- [ Kravochuk, Mitchell | TIDES TOMORROW + I -+ ory, Ralph . | Dabo. i pEre AR e High tide—2:05 a.m., 184 feet. Low tide—8:33 a.m, -28 feet. High tide—2:46 p.m. 15.9 feet. | UNITA TAK ' Low tide—8:39 p.m., 0.9 feet. | TIDES. MONDAY High tide—2:43 am. 179 feet. | Low tide-—9:17 am., -2.2 feet. | BEFURE FIHST High tide—3:31 pm,, 149 feet. | 23 pm. 21 feet. | Haida Returns from Halibut Patrol—Leaves Again on April 20 (Continued from Page One) | The Coast Guard Cutter Haida, | returned to port this morning after five days of pre-season halibut pat- rol to report that the Cutter Alert, ot of Ketchikan, had apprehended the Bonita of Hydaburg for fishing before the season had opened and not clearing port. But he died in bed. Yet there he . It was learned the Alert had taken is, in the middle of the square, the vessel Bonita into custody near riding a horse with two {nn‘fet't‘ Craig with 400 pounds of halibut hoisted high into the air in a aboard, caught before the season Prancing gesture the Low tide— Pestering Equestrian | Statues in Washington Are Wrong in Design} Lafayette square, rightacross Penn- | sylvania avenue from the White House, is a statue of Andrew Jack- son. Now Jackson was shot in bat- | tle and wounded in duels no end.| | that gives operfed. The Bonita was taken to starlings one of the best roosts in Cralg and the case turned over to the city. | the United States Commissioner Now go out Pennsylvania ave- there. nue a dozen blocks to Washington | circle. In the center is George | Washington, riding a monstrous bronze stallion whose two fore feet | are fairly pawing the air. And any | one who wants to argue that Wash- ington died in battle is free to do so. ‘The Haida reported no violations in her sector, but boarded the vessel Norland, foupd her papers in order ind 'gear dry, and identified three other vessels. Thelma George and Jones Milton were ‘brought down from Yakutat with the Haida for hospitalization at the Government Hospital here . Alert Coming The Haida also reported that the ULPTORS’ CHOICE | Turn about and go along Penn- sylvania avenue, past the White Cutter Alert, Lt. (J.G.) Carl Stober,| House, around the treasury build- woul? arrive in Juneau Tuesday ing and to a point opposite the new night to begin firing on Mendenhall |Post Office building. There, on a Rifle Range Wednesday for rifle,|little square which he shares with pistol and machine gun practice a public lavatory, rides Kasimir Seal Patrol | Pulaski, doughty Polish soldier who Seal Patrol will call the Haida brought both social prestige and to séa again late this month. It is military skill to the American revo- scheduled to meet the Cutter Red- lution. Calmly along the pedestal wing at Cape Ommaney on the 20th strolls the horse, three feet firmly of April and convoy the seal herdiplanted in bronze and a fourth from there to Unimak Pass. The!striding out over a row of bénches. Redwing will follow the herds from| Yet Pulaski was shot down by | Cape Flattery to Cape Ommaney.|the British during the siege of | The Haida "expects to leave the Savannah. He didn't die instantly, seal herds May 5th and return to S0 the horse, seeming to under- Juneau and thence to Seattle for stand, lifts up one foot. But Pulas- battle practice with the big Runs||“ did die while the battle was still for two weeks. She will return|in progress, so in all fairness he the end of May. Ishould be credited with dying in - battle and be entitled to two lifted feet. No less an authority than H. O. Caemmerer, secretary of the Com- mission of Fine Arts, says the dis- puted tradition is somebody’s men- tal fancywork. “It keeps coming up,” he says, “but leadifig sculptors say there is no basis for it.” DRY CLEANING . If a sculptor wants his horse to 4 |have two feet off the ground he sofl has it that way, and the rider, be he Sherman or Zedekiah Doakes, Water can take it and Ike it. i e e ki wa’hlng Jones Milton and Selma George e of Yekutat were gdmitted for medi- cal care at the Government Hospi- tal yesterday, - ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 Jarman’s-Friendly Van’s Store i o HOTEL GASTINEAU i Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection SITKA, Alaska, March 31.—(Spe- cial Correspondence)—A group of thirty young people have organized a Sunday Evening Club, the activi- ties of which will be devoted to so- cial and religious purposes. At the first meeting, which was held at| the home of Miss Ruth Wittmeyer, Miss Alice Curtis was elected Presi~ dent, Miss Wittmeyer Vice-Presi- dent and Miss Edna Drake, Secre- tary and Treasurer. The Executive Board includes the following mem- bers: Miss Ada Sears, Miss Laura Adams, Howard Estelle, and Erlund Hagestrom. The five groups into which the organization is divided gre missjonary, refreshment, social | and devotional. Meetings will be held at the homes of members from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. each Sunday, and | it is expected that 50 members will | attend following the completion of the organization. | The annual city election will be held April 5. On the ticket for mayor are Arthur Silverman and Charles | Wortman. Tom Daine and Peter| Kostrometinoff, who were nomin-| ated for the office at a caucus, have | withdrawn from the race. On the ticket for council are Harry | Hagan, Frank Oja, G. E. Banvard| and R. N. DeArmond, Jr. Jack Cal- vin and Oscar Tilson have réquested their names removed. Don McGraw is the only candidate for school board member, and will succeed himself. The dramatic group, under the leadership of Miss Esther Olson, will furnish the entertainment at the regular monthly meeting of the Women’s Friendly Club to be held the second Priday evening in April at the school gymnasium. The an- nual election of officers will also take place at this meeting. Oscar Olson, Territorial Treasur- er, was a visitor here one day last week. Mrs. Charteris, wife of Dr. Wil- liam Charteris, returned to he: home here this week after a threc months’ visit with friends and rela- tives in Seattle, Great Falls, Mon- tana, and Minneapolis, Minn. She was accompanied by her sister, Mist Nan Goring, of Minneapolis. Miss Dorothy McNulty has re- turned to her home here after an extended visit with relatives a! Olympia, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Conway re- turned on the Northland from a three weeks' vacation trip to West- ward Alaska cities. Dr. R. L. Carlson, of Juneau, is a business visitor here this week. Word has been received from Mr. and Mrs. Neil Anderson, who have been spending the winter at Long Bedch, Cal, that they are enroute to Beattle, where they will spend a short time with friends and reld- tives before returning to their home here some time in April. An enthusiastic audience attend- ed the performance of “Enchanted Isle,” an gperetta based on music of Chopin’s melodies, whi¢ch was pre- sented by students of the Sheldon- Jackson school, Saturday evening, March 26. The scene of action was 4 fishing village on the island of Mallorca, where Chopin was sup- poséd to have visited and written several compositions. Those who took part in the iproduction were Norman Lott, Harriet Young, Anna Beyer, Ernest Johnson, Cecil Tor- gremson, Marie Sondermann, Vir- ginia Lott, Nana Paul, Richard King, Edward Sheek, and Romey Atkinson. . Four smugglers were Jackson Sookum, Raymond John- son, Lawrencé Demmert and An- drew Jones, with a chorus of village youths and girls, sophomores and Juniors. Mrs. C. G. Stewart, of the school faculty, directed the per- formance and acted as accompan- | ist. | | U.:S. Deputy Marshal Henry | Bahrt has been confined to his Chatham Straits Transportation Co. Ag_@ Sunday Skiing is on the week-énd' sched- ule again. despite poor snow con- ditions for the earlier part of the week, for according to reports from the CCC department of the U. S. Forest Service, several inches of fresh snow now cover the Douglas trail. The snow in the first and second meadows is reported in good con- dition, and many are expected to gather there tomorrow. A large number also plan to make the trip to the cabin. > Insurance P'lhéil For R.R. Workers Is Now Proposed WASHINGTON, April 2—Chair- man Wheeler of the Senate Inter- state Commerce Committee has in- troduced a bill designed to set up a National Unemployment Insurance system for railroad workers. The bill is opposed by rail man- agement on the grounds that the States now administering unem- sloyment insurance to railroad workers might discontinue these senefits if a national law were enac- ted. home with illness several days this | week. The high school students of Sitka territorial school spent Wednesday | as clean-up day «at the high school, | cleaning and beautifying the grounds. Following completion of | the work they enjoyed a picnic at| [ndian River Park SLEEK AND SAUCY Scl pink satin. the sleek swirling coiffure. B | months in_jail and given a fine Alfred M. Jones, Indian, was ar- | $300. Mrs. Esther Simpson was sent rested early Saturday morning at|to jail for three months on a charge arelli designs an evening gown of navy blue crepe on sleek slim lines and brightens it with spangle-embroidered cap sleeves of Long gloves of hand-tucked pink satin go with it. Notice of , day morning. Mrs. R. M. Tate left on the North- an attempted burglary as the Alas-|0f being drunk and disorcerly, and land for Petersburg. ka Grill and Fountain. Jones gained | Frank Brojac, for a charge of being | entrance to the building by remov- | intoxicated in a public place, was A. B. Swenson, of Wright & Stock, | ing boards near a side entrance. 8iven a six months’ sentence in ad- is a passenger for Ketchikan aboard After ransacking the business prop- | dition to a $300 fine plus the costs. orty he made his way upstairs to he residence of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Funeral services were held Wed- | the Northland. | Nine prisoners were removed to Anderson, which is occupied by Mr. nesday afternoon for David Law-] the Federal jail at Juneau on the \nd Mrs. Will Bawden, who are Son who committed suicide by hang- ' Northland in charge of U. S. Deputy managing the business during the ing himself at his home in the In- Marshal Walter Hellan, who came absence of Mr. Anderson. Mr. Baw- | dian village, sometime early Tues- here from the Capital City. den was awakened by the intruder and battled with him for several minutes before overpowering him.| As a result of the scuffle, Bawden received a broken nose and severe bruises. After a hearing in the com- missioner’s court here, Jones was sent to Juneau to await trial and grand jury hearing. A. Strand is a passenger aboard the Northland for Seattle. In the U. S. Commissioner’s court which convened here Monday,! March 28, Peter James was given “The Talk of the Town” —Sold Exclusively léy‘— Rice & Ahlers Co.~Phone 34 a 30-day sentence and a $30 fine| on a drunk and disorderly charge. On a similar charge, Mrs. Elizabeth | 5‘\3“ /h James was given six months sus-| STA | j pended sentence. Alex Didricksen, i‘ | a also charged with being drunk and . l disorderly was sentenced to three| CANADIAN PACTEIC A ts {Juneau to Vancouver.,| Victoria or Seattle | SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS PRINCESS NORAH April—e6, 17, 27 PRINCESS LOUISE | May—S8, 19, 31 Connegtions at Vancouver with Capadian Pacific Services: ” Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and full particulars from | Ticket Office—Phone 2 | Leaves Femmer Dock every Wednes- day at 7 am. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. pm. Tuesday. FOR INFORMATION AlK SERVICE INFORMATION (MAURICE G- SBOR Yo “‘wl Preight received not later than 4 | | V. W. MULVIHILL | i Agent, C.P.R. | | Juneau Alaska CANADIAN PACFFIC [ \ CALLS INTO LYNN CANAL~—{Narthbound; -*Southbound. THE ALASKA LINE H. 0. ADAMS, Agent Freight Office—Phone 4 5 't Leave Arrive SRILING SCHEDULE P o i : Leave DueJuneau DueJuneau *Fairbanks ....Sunday . Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Souuzboundi *Fairbanks ...Wednesday......Flat-Ruby-Nome and re- Mar. 29 Apr. 4 | - turn same day. Apr. 5 Apr.11 | *_All year round schedule. Apr. 9 Apr. {: | - o * ¢ %% NEW REDUCED RATES Apr. 16 Apr. 22 Fe ALASEA .. ..Apr. 16 Apr. 19 Apr. 25 JUNEAU—PHONE 411 Connors Motor Co., Inc. | Alaska Transportation Co, SCHEDULED SAILINGS S. S. Tongass ... S. Chatham ... PHONE 114 April 8 April 15 Agent Night Phone 312 —-——E—-——'——fi Al aska 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 RUSSELL CLITHERO e IMARINE AIRWAYS 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier *WEDNESDAY Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakce, Todd, Sitka, Chichagof, Kimshan Cove, Hoonah, and return. *PFrequent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Round Trip. SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKEA TICKET OFFICE, TRIANGLE PLACE—PHONE 623 ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pilot VIC ROSS, Traffic Repfesentative NORTHLAND of g FIEAVY FURL OT. AND o i LI 7 DIESEL OIL BURNERS i NORTH SEA . o 5 NORTH SEA . Apr. 19 J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF .. GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent .......... ND ALASKA SERVICE Juneau QNI.Y 5 HOURS Foirbanks Via Picturesque Whitéhorse Route Modern twin motored airliners have been flying on regular schedules for over two years between Juneau- Whitéhorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- ous two-way radio communication with thirteen ground stations. s,o'u JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS LESS lfl% ROUND TRIP Pacific Alaska Airways, fic. TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel Phone 106 Office—4652 Residence

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