The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 8, 1938, Page 6

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i R S bt Marine News FOR NOME ARE TOLEAVE SO0ON - ports . 5 & & & 0 o 0 0 0 o EIGHT FLYING ° o Alexander, Kake and way . . The season on the Seattle-Nome route is nearing the end. Steamer schedules received today at the local office of the Alaska Steamship Company puts the Bar- anof as sailing from Seattle § - tember 14 at 10 am. for Bel Eight passengers aboard a PAA | §ed points | Electra are scheduled to come down “on October 15 at 10 am., the,from Fairbanks this afternoon with Mount McKinley is scheduled to Pilots Murray Stuart and Gene leave Seattle on the last trip to|Meyring Dutch Harbor and Nome. | The passengers are Mrs. Charles - | Hauttala and two children, H. G. NO SPEECHES ALLOWED Taylor, Harry Palo, Art Martin SAUKEVILLE, Wis, — Saukeville |O. Ames and Jack Eagan folk like their band concerts| . “straight,” so the village board has concerts and movies in the park. | o SN v s g | Miss Venetia Feero announces the opening of a Studio for piano and theory at 315 3rd St. on Sept. 6. A kindergarten for pre-school | TIDES TOMORROW e 2 High tide—0:25 am. 160 fect. age children will open on the same Low. tide » <02 feet. gate. Please phone Red 119 for High tide—12: 164 feet. 'yppointments. —ad Low tide—6:50 pm., 03 feet Pmmy Hero Given N(wy Medal! In a ceremony aboard the U.S.S. Mississippi in Los Angeles Harbor, Admiral Edward C. Kalbfus (leff), battle force commander, presented navy cross for extraordinary heroism to Lt. Arthur F. Anders, who was executive officer on the U.S.S. Panay when it was bombed by Japanne warplanes.—AP Photo. The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of “~CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE “EVERYBODY SING” Your Name May Appeass—WATCH THIS SPACE . 1 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT 8, 1938. [ BRINGING UP FATHER MAGGIE-I'M GO:;\JMA'PHONE YOUR DOCTOR TO 15 BEGINMNING TO COME OVE E FOOT ACHE AG madl ¢ { poNT vou DARE e a s 060600 c 0 0 o0 | e . BARANUF I_ETS ¢ Steamer Movements { " ‘ ThiEn, o . . NORTHBOUN®D e " B s e Alaska due Saturday. Should e X SEE ME LI e have three days’ mail aboard e f 0 \ e from State . e SCHEDULED SAILINGS ® e Northland scheduled to sail ® . from Seattle tomorrow at 10 e Lt . a.m. . flleven passengers came in from| e Aleutian scheduled to sail from e the Westward on the Baranof last| e Seattle Sept. 10 at 9 am. @ night and 17 sailed soutk ® Prince Louise scheduled to e JFrom the Westw passengers ' e sail from Vancouver Sept. 10 were Mrs. M. Blackstrom, Norton e at 9 pm . Brown, Mr. and Mrs. George Grigs-| @ Denali scheduled to sail from e by, Edward Hope, A. G. Hammer,| @ Seattle Sept. 13 at 9 am -‘EXPURTS MnUNT Jack Jensen, Isaac . on scheduled to sail from e | McRae, F . attle Sept. 14 at 9 am . Sailing to Seat Mal-| o h Sea scheduled to sail ® ginoff, Mrs. H. T. Becker, Violet| e from Seattle Sept. 16 at 10 e AS SALMUN PAGK Mello, Mrs. M. A. Mello, Myrtle o m . Mello, John Godfrey, Gers . UTHBOUND SAILINGS o “geérald, Mrs. H. F. Reed, H . ali scheduled southbound ® VES Tu SUUTH Fred Hallford, O. B. M e at 11 o'clock tomorrow fore- ® Baxter, Robert Dimler, C . noon . To Ketchikan—Mrs. A. Carter. P.| @ Columbia scheduled south- e | J. Fitzsimmons, Mrs. C. M. Tuckett.' ® bound next Monda ¢ Canned Salmon Valued at S . LOCAL SAILINGS . o Estebeth scheduled to sail every ® | $2|,803,463 Shlpped LAST STEAMERS : “Samitrtf¥nri 2 0ut During Augus e ka and wayports. . e Dart leaves every Wednesday e | at 7 amn. for Potersburg, Port ¢| Shipment of canned salmon| | mounting by more than twenty mil- lion dollars worth at the close of the season, sent Alaska exports o | the States during August to the high figure of $25,058,296, according to the monthly report of Collector of Customs James J. Connors. This| | compares with an export value of ! $3,773,127 in July. Value of canned salmon shipped | out during the month was $21,803,- v463 compared with $1,392,074 in | July. Gold also showed a small in- | crease, from $1,517,638 in July te $1,877,870 in Augnst. The complete report follows: Pish: | Fresh and frozen | (except shellfish): Halibut $ 23498 Salmon 49,4:»«' Other 659 | Salmon, canned 21,803,463 | Cured or preserved | (except shellfish) | Cod 704 Herring 12,620 salmon 328,084/ Shellf! | Clams 136 Crabs 5,610 Shrimp 15,251 Fish products Meal 118,093 oil 239,065 Other fish products 21,916 Furs and fur-skins: | Beaver 14,267 Fox: Black and silver 345 Blue 150 Red 259 | White 90 | Hair-seal skins 1,051 Marten 965 Mink 3,420 Muskrat 11.565 otter 1,309 All other 1,799 Fur manufactures 2,808 | Whale oil 5,216 | Ore, matte and regulus: Copper 2,463 Lead 4.803 Stone, including marble 12,514 Trophies, specimens, PERMANENT WAVE SPECIAL for AUGUST | PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOPPE Triangle Building PHONE 221 PAA — THE BIGN OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE REGULAR .. U. S. AIRMAIL Service Every Trip Juneau-Fairbanks Bethel-Nome : PHONE: HIM YET- I'M_A SIGHT- WAIT | WONT LET HIM | home. She will be accompanied here by a sister-in-law, Mrs. Edith Sund- sit here | plane | still indefinite but for the present Oy UP- KE THIS curios, ete *All other articles Total value of products of Alaska Value of United States products returned 473, 'fiJ_’ Value® of foreign mer- chandise 50 5 Total value of shipments of merchandise $23,174,755 Mu;e Reliahle TWO_HOURS LATER- BY. GOLLY =" MAGGIE MUST HAVE FALLEN ASLEEP - AND ME FOOT HAS STOPPED ACHIN™ 0fNew Drug Law WASHINGTON, Sept. 8. The Gold 1,877,870 new Food, Drug and Cosmetic Aci Silver 5,671 —which goes into full effect next ———————— June — broadens considerably the $25,058,206 power to protect the public by re- “Items included in “all stricting dangerous drugs, inform- other articles”: ing buyers of possible dangers, Beaver castors 20 and holding dealers more strictly K 1abit-forming drugs. The new law Platinum 18,000 to definite standards, thus making Paumng\ ¢+ 425 medication safer. The new law - —s— closes a lot of old loopholes which %0 30 years of experience had re- vealed. For example, the old law re- { quired a label statement of the ’ presence and amount of certain i 1' NEWS Gt MRS. KILBURN DUE HOME 2nd bear, in addition, the state- - : ;i ment “Warning — May be habit Improved in health, Mrs. L. W. forming,” when this is the case. Kilburn is expected to leave Seattle on Saturday for her return trip for a strom, who will time. SHITANDA RI “Slim” Shitanda returned here by last evening following a couple of weeks’ rest at Tenakee | Springs, feeling, he says, much bet- ter. His plans for the winter ‘are r he intends to look after his apmrt- ments and just take things easy. D LEAVES FOR S.J. SCHOOL Harriet Johnson, daughter of Mrs. Joe Marmalich, left yesterday , on the North Sea for Sitka wherejshe will attend .the Sheldon Jackson school this ‘wihter. .- MISS GRIFFIN TO RETURN HERE SOON Miss Helen Griffin, sister of E. W. Griffin, Secretary of Alaska, who has been visiting in the States for the past year, left Chicago last Fri- day for Bellingham, Wash., and after a week’s visit there with her aunt, Mrs. Harriet Griffin, will re- ALASKANS Prefer Our: B Low Weekly Rates— $6.00 with Bath $5.00 without B Modern ‘Conveniences L Cen‘tral Locstlon JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND, SAILINGS. Princess Louise Sept. 16, 26; Oct. 6, 17 Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental Trans-Atlantio | Trans-Pacitlo. . Tickets, reservations and full . particulars from VW MULVIRTLL Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alasks - CANADIAN tmnrs“sfi TREY PACI!'-‘IC ALASKA AIRWAYS, INC. | Traffic Representative LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE GASTlNEAU HOTEL PHONE: 106 Aum——'l‘u and System Service AMES C. COOPER Jarman's-Friendly FORTUNE ed |be sold if they did not fall below |the strength claimed on the label, but they they differ- from the strength named provisions were des: |medication more precise, and reliable, to aid the Food and Drug Administration in protecting |the public in a field where it has been impossible for buyers to pro- tect themselves. requires that the label reveal the —& quantity of these and other drugs Potent drugs must also bear ade- quate warning against overdosage. Nonofficial drugs—those not list- under’ official standards—could might be stronger. The new law says they are illegal if up as well as down in the an important distinction abel, according to officials of the Food and Drug Administration. many drugs essential in medicine —ergot and digitalis for example an overdose may be as dangerous as a preparation too weak to get results. With new protective ned to make scientific, These, and other e - PROSPECTOR STRICKREN Ed Mogle, prospector, while on a trip, was suddenly stricken on the trail on Quartz Creek and died, ap- parently from an attack of tig heart. turn to Juneau, according to word received by Secretary Griffin. Miss Griffin went south a year ago this summer and has spent much of her time in Chicago and Orlando, Fla. BUAT CAPSIZES, = Modiging Is Aim - DROWNING FOUR death from exposure, Holger son, rescued today after clinging to an overturned watching pear their slipped back into the water. miles north of the Hayward Bridge and called the conscious sized the boat Lloyd Hatl Everett Cole. —__— HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. WELL- YOU CAN 'PHONE THE DOCTOR GONE IT ISN'T NECESSARY- MAGGIE - THE PAIN IS ALL By GEORGE McMANUS WELL YOU JUST ‘PHONE HIM TO COME OVER ANY- wxm NOW THAT | HAVE INE THROUGH ALL THE T r\’ouBLE OF DRESSING- | WANT HIM TO SEE ME - DARLING=-— | NOW - - OF FIVE YOUTHS Surviving 19-Year-Old Boy Is Near Dead from Three P PRSI KR | | GREEN TOP CABS—PHONE 678 1 BUY GREEN TOP RIDE COUPON BOOKS: FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS ! 1 JUNEAU MOTORS g Foot of Main Street $6.25 in rides for $5.00 $3.00 in rides for $2.50 ALASKA Days on Overturned Hull 8.—Near Nel- was OAKLAND, Cal, ept. 19, of Redwood City, sailboat for 72 hours. Nelson told a harrowing tale of four companions disap- beneath the surface when grips became futile and they The five youths, all of them 19, ed from Alameda for Paradise in a 15-foot sloop Sunday. y were reported missing Mon- tender at the San Mateo rd bridge sighted Nelson two San Francisco air- Nelson said a sudden squall cap- Those lost are Stanley Norstrum, , Howard Larson and T iy Today's News Today.—Emplre. News |. Q. Answers 1. Admiral Nicholas Horthy. He reviewed German naval might at Kiel in a state visit as Hitler sought to draw Hungary into the Rome- Berlin sphere. 2. Slate-blue. 3. Queen Wilhelmina of The Neth- erlands. 4. Los Angeles to New York. New oxygen masks. 5. Twelve. M. S. DART U. S. Mail Carrier Leaves Femmer's Dock, Juneau, e N e e arr e e e S TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Sailings from Pier 7 Scattle EVERY FRIDAY AT 9 P.M. Leaves Seattle S. S. TONGASS Sept. 9 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION [ D. B. FEMMER FOR HEALTH AT THE BRUNSWICK RECREATION ALLEYS | | | ! port CAFE IN CONNECTION, Spec- AAGENT A rescue boat sped to the scene { ializing in Chinese and American and pulled Nelson aboard semi- | Dishes—TRY US ONCE! {|] Fhone 114 Night 312 COLUMBIA LUMBER CO. " ALASKA LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS PHONES 587 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Titie I, I'. H. A. ] CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc.——Phone 411 every Wednesday at 7 a. m. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT1 | ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS. | For Information D. B. FEMMER—Phone 114 Freight must be on dock not later than 4 P. M. Tuesday. Steamer {*COLUMBIA MT. McKINLEY tALASKA *ALEUTIAN DENALIL YUKON e *COLUMBIA ALASKA *ALEUTIAN i—Sails at 9:00 P. M., Ticket Office—Phone 2 SAILING SCHEDULE i—Calls at Yakutat Northbound and Southbound *—Connects at Cordova with 8. §. CORDOVA for Prince willlam Sound perts; Kodiak, Uzinki; Pért Bailey, Iror ‘Creek, Port Vita, |’ Uganik Bay and Seldovia, also Port Wakeficld. | THE ALASKA LINE ‘ B. 0. ADAMS, Agenf ——“—Wz‘;fl*’rfi_, HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIK SERVICE INFORMATION Alaska Air Transport, Inc. SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER Frequent Flights to All Points in Southeast Alaska AUTHORIZED CARRIER—U. S. MAIL PHONE 612-— Day or Night Hangar and Shop in Juneau . SHELL SIMMONS———Chief Pilot RUSSELL CLITHERO < Dispatcher { All Planes 2-Way Radio Equipped Operating, Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG | Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau | Seatde Northbound Southbound , .Sept. 3 Sept. 6 Sept. 12 Sept. 4 Sept.13 | Sept. 6 Sept. 10 Sept. 12 Sept. 10 Sept. 13 Sept. 19 Sept. 13 Sept. 17 Sept. 19 Sept. 14 Sept. 17 Sept. 22 Sept. 17 Sept. 20 Sept. 26 Sept. 21 Sept. 24 Sept. 30 Sept. 24 Sept. 27 Oct. 3 # | Freight Office—Phons & { MARINE AIRWAYS . 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE «~- Autherized U. 8. MAIL Carrier *TUFSDAY—Subject to arrival of mail boat from South. Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Si K"mmm ::o;e, Hoonah, and return. by W quent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Rcund Trip. BEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA TICKET OFFICE, TRIANGLE PLACE—PHONE 623 x Holden, Chief Pilot A. B. (Cot) Hayes, Traffic Representative WEEKLY Leave Ar.Juneau Ly.Jus . Junenn BAILINGS Seattle No.Bound So. B NORTHLAND Sept. 9 Sept.13 sem“}‘i“’ NORTH COAST -.(Southbound Only Sept. 16 NORTH SEA . Sept.16 Sept.20 Sept.20 NORTHLAND ___Sept.23 Sept.21 Sept 21 NORTH SEA .. Sept.30 Oct. 4 Oct. 4 HAROLD C. KNIGHT ... J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent i i 1;.’9 CITY WHARF ... YERR

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