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MANY TAKE YUKON OUT YESTERDAY The steamer Yukon Capt. C. A (lasscock and Purser Larry Me- Namee, docked in Juneau bound south late vesterday afternoon bringing seven passengers from nm Westward and taking 47 out. Passengers from Seward were H. N. Evans, Everett Nowell, A Nyquist, Mrs. A. Nyquist, Syd Den- nison. From Cordova—M. E. 8 Bl'\lncllu,‘ L. Hoke. Passengers out were For Seattle—J. P Tonkin, Miss Tonkin, ander, Mrs. S. Rosenburg, Clark, Mrs. Zalmain Gross, George Kozak, H. Belske, V. I. Krafft, F Thornhill, Henry Sully, Mrs. Henry Sully, Kathleen Wood, Mr. Hensley, Mrs. Armstrong, M. McDowell, R C. Cooke, Mrs. V. Rue, G. Boggan, Mrs. Sesenvine, T. Lorimer, Ellis Key, R. F. Coulet. M. Metcalf, Pete Turner, T. Hikalin For Petersburg—I. A R. Adams, J. C. Mellquist. For Wrangell—Mrs. B. Lenting John Lenting, Nellie Lenting For Ketchikan—Milo Clouse, Zal- main Gross, Floyd Betts, A. F. Al- lard, L. A.'Dauphiny, H. C. Tor- gerson, B. F. Kane, James Truitt, G. Boggan, H. Sharai, E. F. Clem- ents. v Tonkin, Mrs. Sofia Alex- Alice | > INIAN ISLAND FOX RANCHER RETURNING FROM TRIP OUTSIDE of Suilivan & F. R. Townsend Townsend, blue fox ranchers on In- 1an Island in Icy Strait, arrived in Juneau on the Alaska after a sev- €éral weeks trip Outside during which he went as far south as Los Angeles. He will take the Estebeth from here to Hoonah and there pick up the Sullivan-Townsend boat They took 208 pelts from the is- Jand this year, Mr. Townsend said, 4 slight increase over a year ago. Prices, though somewhat improved, are still comparatively low he found on his trip to the States. -o THELMA BRINGS HALIBUT CARGO , The halibuter Thelma, Capt. Bernt Alstead, brought in between 8,000 and 10,000 pounds of halibut shis morning, but at a late hour this afternoon had not sold. BRUNSWICK Tomgms games at the Brunswick powling alleys are between Percy's ¥s Boggan's Trio and Juneau Flor- Ets vs. Arctic. KRAFFT'S CABINET SHOP Glass, Moulding and Plyboard PHONE 62 B s e ZORIC DRY CLEANING Every Eiffort Thatcher, | ¥ _ | Edwards, HOTEL GASTINEAU Comfort of Guests! Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND No steamer northbound SCHEDULED SAILINGS Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 am. tomorrow. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle at 10 a.m. April 8. Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle April 8 at 9 p.m Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 am., April 9. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to arrive in port at 6 o'clock to- morrow morning and salls south two hours later. North Sea scheduled south- bound Thursday morning. Alaska scheduled southbound next Sunday or Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Dart leaves every Wednesday at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports o o0 0 0 0 0 00 F | — | | o, . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . P TIDES TOMORROW 16.9 feet. -1.1 feet, 36 feet 34 feet 3:27 a.m 10:07 am 4:26 pm 10:13 pm o NORTH SEA BRINGS 60 T0 JUNEAU High tide Low tide High tide Low tide The steamer North Sea, Capt Tony Nickerson and Purser B. R Gillespie, brought a heavy list of 50 passengers to Juneau this morn- ing from Seattle and Southeastern Alaska ports Arrivals were Mrs. J. C. Cooper, Rod Darnell, Mrs. Bob Walker, Bill Wilder, Miss Anna Thompson, Mrs Ida Thompscn, Dora Spaulding, Edith Spaulding, A. E. Zaworski Mrs. M. J. Bavard, Katherine Bav- ard, Zulberti Zulberto, Herbert Sav- ikko, Richard Wilder, Mrs. C. A. Wilder and baby, Austin Shelton, Paul Fretza, M Catherine Hulk, Miss F. Mesunstad, J. W. Liek, Mrs. J. W. Liek, Helen Campbell, Mr. L. Maki, Mrs. L. Maki, Roberta Evans, Miss B. Miller, Mrs. Garvin Taylor, F. R. Townsend, R. Collins, Mrs. R. Collins, Mrs. Emma White, Gi rude Rody, Gene Hulk, Rudy Hal zon, Arnold Muldoon, Forest Schauf, John Hayden, Donald Coffman, Mrs. A. Burke, Mrs. George Inman, Miss Blanche Smith, H. Allaback, Mrs. H. Allaback, Mrs. W. C. Bowen, William "ncr. J. H.Hopkins, T. Kuwamoto, Father Monroe, Thelma Edwards, A. E. Reed, A. Van Mavern, Joe! Smith, Allen Smith. Sailing from here to Sitka were Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Wilcox, Ken F. McGowan, John Lud- |den, Harry Powers, Charles Smith ‘Adich Silver. - Try an Empire ad. R e HOME BOARDING HOUSE UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT We serve MILK and BUTTER- MILK EVERY MEAL Our Aim Is—“TO PLEASE OUR CUSTOMERS” MR. and MRS. GEO. SALO e S | GARBAGE HAULED |Mahoney, W. Harshey, Jim O'Con-| BRINGING UP FATHER THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1938. DR S— RO NI, C PO R IR A COW G Tk By GEORGE McMANUS I SENT IKE DALV TU GET A JOB AT MALARKY'S MACHINE SHOP HE HA‘.‘:N';F/EWORKEP N HELLO, IKE, IT'S A GOOD DAY TODAY FORTY-SEVEN . BIG VOTE DUE COME INWITH AT KETCHIKAN s s ALASKA Twenty-two , Fhandied Reg- istered in Today’s passed through Juneau, bound for o |the Westward e this morning, ‘brmgm,z 47 passengers in and tak- KETCHIKAN, Alaska, April The city registration record set last year has been eclipsed by 500 wher ing 36 out 2,200 registered for the election to- Those arriving from Seattle were ' gay John Bernhofer, A. S. Brown, Mrs. city Clerk Van Gilder predict: A. S. Brown, John Carlson, Mitchell | that today’s vote will exceed all pre- Dabo, J. F. Devine, 8. O. Fanske, ' vious record Ruth Gregory, J. Hanson, Mrs. M PEFEALLL Isaacson, N. W. Jacobs, Charles Le Febre, Tony Lindstrom, Ray Moulton, Mrs. Ray Moulton, Frank O'Farrell, J. A. O'Farrell, Betty Ross, Marian Roberts, Mrs. 1. Rob- erts, G. N. Rodman, Mrs. G. N PLANES Tu GET Rodman, R. J. Sommers, Hans Tilleson, J. Yolo, Robert Hale, Wil- liam James, Robert Patterson, Ed Tn DISTRIGTS Haugen, J. W. Herndon, Paul Word, Walter Romanch, H. Waltham George Foss, Fred Kunkel, Ira ' g Tunnison, Everest Tunnison. _ANCHORA Alaska, April 5 From Ketchikan—S. G. Stevens, | SPring is here in this section of D~ @ sthatuttar. Vandt, Sister Alaska judging from the way miners Borromes, Sister Flavia, Sigurd Y€ flying out of this area. Wwallstedt. A dozen left here S|1x}da}' for From Wrangell_Mrs. W. L. Gris- Goodnews Bay to start mining op- erations and 40 others flew from here to various interior points Sun- day and Monday to start the min- ing season. ham, Frank Sjursen From Petersburg—Ben Bellamy. Passengers leaving were For Seward—R. Pusich, Mrs. J. HE e i D. Moore, Mrs. E. Ajaneumi, J. E. Peterson, L. Louck, James Lee, A Lindstrom, v. ¢, pingham, ¥ par- PIONEERS DISCUSS cich, Mrs. W. oNeill, sam Ritter, ALASKAN PURCHASE, Theresa Ccok, Mrs. D. Pentz, Rex ror. N, 1 troast, 7 gonnsione, WICKERSHAM BOOKS Gaile Wold, J. Shepard, Merle e Smith and Mrs. Smith, John Appointment of a committee to Chatles, John Harkin, J. D. Moore, See Judge James Wickersham upon O. Clausen, Den Dovich, J. B, Possibility of purchasing his library Martin, Miss D. Moore, J. L. Mc- ©f 6000 volumes to be kept in Al- Crary, Grace Paul, M. Coppinger. Aska marked the meeting of the - Pioneers of Alaska, last evening in the I.O.O.F. hall On the committee are H. R. Shep- ard, Lockie MacKinnon, and Joe Green. Guy L. Smith was initiated i at the meeting over which Cash | Cole presided. Refreshments were served to the large group present. The Auxiliary meets tonight at 8 o'clock in the I1.O.O.F. hall. e ee KATHLEEN WOOD ENDS VISIT HERE Kathleen Wood, eleven yecar old granddaughter of Mr a.nd Mrs. Al- army bert F. Bixby, and niece of Mrs. | Howard Simmons, sailed south on board the Yukon last night to meet her parents in Bremerton THROUGH KINY Broadcast Tomorrow Morn- ing Will Come from Pier Two in Seattle The Seattle Fort Lawton band will be heard over a Nationa Broadcasting Company hookup to- morrow through KINY, it was an- nounced today. In Juneau for the past two The program will come over from MOnths, she has been spending most 7:30 to 8 o'clock in the morning and | °f er time with the Bixby's aboard will come directly from Pier 2 in|thelr vacht, the Leota. Seattle, from which the steamer R Hiarks s Mdkvitig. SHELTER CABINS IN ARCTIC | Besides the army band, the oc- . Ine building of 12 sod igloos for shelter cabins has been started in the Arctic by Eskimo CCC crews, extending from Cape Lisburne to casion for the program being Army Day, several prominent army of- ficials and Seattle business men will speak, | the Noatak Rivkr, according to Charles G. Burdick, supervisor of !cCce for the Forest Service, The | cabins are along the Kivalina rein- CLAIMS RECORD NASHVILLE, Tenn., and caribou migration route . ————.ee— Spain’s American colonies | 1 | April 5. — already | Reasonable Monthly Rates | Lieut. Lewin Barringer claimed to- had established five universitios | E. 0. DAvls I “ri:‘y g“];:ie‘:gomcml American record when Harvard, the first in the Uni- | TELEPHONE 212 | ted States, was founded in 1636, Fhone 4753 Lieut Barringer soared Monday :Tg b | | over Monteagle, Tenn., to an alti- Jarman's-Friendly FORTUNE Made for the GASTINEAU CAFE in connection 'Am sz-:&vrcs INFORMATION | tude of 6300 feet. Officials of the State Aeronautics Bureau said the former record was 1 6200 feet. ———.e Empire chsslr)gds pay. CANADIAN PACTFIC * THIS FAMOUS HOTEL is close to.the theatres and Juneau to Vancouver, Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS | PRINCESS NORAH April—86, 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 Agent, CP.R. Juneau Alaska CANADIAN PACIFIC comfort, comvenience and service. .50 LARGE ROOMS, all with batk Chatham Straits Transportation C‘. “M. S. DART” Leaves Femmer Dock every Wednesr day at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. Freight received not later than 4 pm. Tuesday. FOR INFORMATION MAURICE C. REABER, Phone 4622 1 | L deer area and also are on the wolf | ) WiB5 TANOA WITH 4,000 MILES TO GO, Al Lastinger headed from Tampa for Genoa, Italy, in 18-foot boat. Cri , wife of Tampa mayer. tened by Mrs. Rel Chanc with a radio recel FAIRBANKS IS NOW IN FOURTH PLACE, RIFLE COMPETITION g set, Returns from the Fairbanks Rifle club were received today by Leo Jew- ett, Secretary of the Juneau ,Rifle and Pistol Club, in the competitive postal shoot now being conducted in the Territory. The Fairbanks @ score follow Prone St. Std. To. Deac Dillon 100 100 91—291 John Klapp 98 97 95—290 Barney Lashley .99 96 91—290 Lowell Hemen . 100 95 78273 Bob German 98 98 76—271 1411 The Fairbanks total for two weeks is 2,757, giving it fourth position in the League. Seward is in first place, Juneau second, and Anchor- age third. The third and last week of the league competition is being fired this, week. — - DENNISON FROM SEWARD S. V. Dennison, District Ranger in the Kenai Division, Seward, for the U. S. Forest Service, arrived inu Juneau on the Yukon and will be at headquarters until next week. Dennison was formerly located here.| e Empire classifieds pay. HOTEL JUNEAU “WHERE LIVING IS PLEASANT” . WISE Owner-Manager THEY WANTED D0 vou GET To PUT ME ON T,_AGEG:'-:-EOVEF.{-,Y THE JOB AT, A MACHINE EROUGHT ME MALARKYS 2 WITH A FOOT- RHEUMATISM LEVER To BAC u Feal . Warld nghts reserved ures Syndicate, In tures Syndicite, | JUNEAU—PHONE 411 Connors Motor Co., Inc. | Alaska Transportation Co. SCHEDULED SAILINGS S. Tongass ... _April 8 Chatham .. April 15 D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 ight Phone 312 Alaska Air Transport, Inc. 3 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER | 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket 7-Place Lockheed Vega 1-Place Stinson “Patco” U. S. MAIL PHONES JUNEAU HANGAR Night and Day 612 dft was chris- 1t is equipped Holden took the Marine i : but no sending apparatus. i ¥ L gt T { Office 587 Operating our own aero- HUI_DEN HOPS ! Chief Pilot-< nautical Radio System— SHELDON SIMMONS 3 R {L Piloi—L. F. BARR Station KANG ! FUR SKAGWAY i Agent— Planes are TWO-WAY : } RUSSELIL CLITHERO RADIO EQUIPPED ;‘ 3 Air vs Bellanca north to Skagw this morning with four passengers MARINE AIRWAYS going up were Dr. John . Irma Parr, Ben Grimes 2-Way Radio Communication Mrs. Dahl Chet; Johnson came back. B SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE 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 WORK STARTED ON WIDENING HIGHWAY, AUK BAY, PT. LENA Work started this week on widen- ing and straightening the Glacier Highway from the Auk Bay wye to the Point Lena wye, according to the Bureau of Public Roads. L. J.| Dowell, Inc, of Seattle has the| contract for the work to cost ap-/ proximately $85,000. In addition tc straightening and widening the road, five bridges are to be replaced in the section and an additionai| three bridges are to be replaced be- .| yond Lena Point. R | The imperial crown of India cost " about $300,000. | il Lbie A WEEKLY Leave Ar:Juneau Lv.Juneau SAILINGS Vessel Seattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTH SEA ... Apr. 1 Apr. 5 Apr. 7 B Nearest Federal Building. | NORTHLAND ... Apr. 8 Apr. 12 Apr. 14 NORTH SEA .....Apr. 15 Apr. 19 Apr. 21 BEEC N FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent Phone 108 J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent .. CITY WHARF . GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent .. B Beauty Shop. B Every Room a View Room. Steamer *ALASKA ... tBARANOF YUKON DENALI MT. McKINLEY ALASKA . CALLS INTO LYNN CANAL—tthbolmd' 'Eoumbmmd. THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—Phone 2 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent i By Ala SERVICE oA VY ON-BALL ska btcamsmp Comp'mv o = VERR 'ROUND ALRSKA SERVICE Via Picturesque Whitehorse Route Modern twin motored airliners have been flying on regular schedules for over two vears between Juneau- Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- ous two-way radio communication with thirteen ground stations. THE YEAR *Fairbanks *Fairbanks Leave DueJuneau Due Juneau Flat-Ruby-Nome and re- Seattle Northbound Southbound | turn same day. Apr. : :pr. 1 ‘ #__All year round schedule. Apr. pr. 15 Apr. 12 Apr. 18 | i i | NEW REDUCED RATES Apr. 16 Apr. 22 _Apr. 16 Apr. 19 Apr. 25 JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS $90. LESS ln% ROUND TRIP Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE Louis A. Delebecque—Gastineau Hotel Phone 106 Office—4652 Residence Freight Office—Phone 4 ASKARCOUUT