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AILY ALASKA THE D EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 19, 1938. | By GEORGE McMANUS | - HAUGEN TRANSPORT M. S. DART BRINGING UP FATHER — T gy g | ' T W Y- H- DEAR-ALL OUR BAD m n OH- MY POOR a%%—'EQ 9!35 S_,ICK SEEMS TO COME “i | E COMES JIGGS: | -YES-MAGGIE-ITS || HARD-WORKING JUST AS SOON_AS GOING TO LOOK AT _ONCE -- MY POOR i SPE HE HAS FOUND JUST A MATTER || LITTLE DANNY- HIS BOSS KIN FIND U. S. Mail Carri HARD=-WORKING BROT HER “\‘ OUT WHETH TS OF TIME --YOUR [| WHEN WILL HIM AWAKE SO HE . e (il carrier DANNY 1S GOING TO ,‘ TRUE OR NOT= IBIZOTHEQ gfoNv T HAPPEN? KIN TELL HIM- R g SE & —— -4 o er ock unean, | LOSE HIS JOB | — S (?:(?IIQI\'IEGD_O BE Ut g iy { For PETERSBURG, IZAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS. For 0 rFEMM hone 114 on dock not FOR HEALTH AT THE BRUNSWICK RECR TION ALLEYS . IN CONNECTION, Spec- GREEN TOP CABS—PHONE | McNamee, George Hoover To Ketehikan—J. Pan, L. Christa, BN Y 9T long passage of time, show almost| What the troubled Democrat 1. Zog 1. Albania. p V. E ! 5 = e 2 sre Seel o ving g 0 . o ” 5 W. H. Baum, Dr. J. W. Edmund ‘THIRTY i SIX GU el lacabid - oiveish g6 i deal- | Hers seent 'to-bp: sbudying hard to /]2 Subsidizetasies abrosd sponso ’m I ALASKA possibly incomplele because of ' { - izing in Chine .. American i Copr, 1938, King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights 1 6 7 8 Dishes—TRY US ONCE: | g DI e | | - 3 | B - o — | : | tused with a secondary al i : i = | Inside S!ory of nx"xj ; when \ix(‘? ‘:1‘11”;!) ':::m:x” DDLLAR DUWN ?Ag‘ss ectm’ 0"1 | BUY GREEN TOP RIDE | Audit—Tax and System Service | . Alaska Purchase riginal Italian fascist purge, had i COUPON BOOKS: ! JAMESCC.PCPOPER, . resort to castor oil treatment. The A R - 2 arlne e S Is Now Disclosed | (7. 0 e method, and e “H' " t' L) $6.25 in rides for $5.00 | 303-05 Goldstein Building | (Continued trom fage One) yide attention and associat- i ¥ RIS B ARRSRETR. b it & i % d the word with dictatorship. e : AC ‘f'“‘: 2 _5“1‘" k”’ '0“‘&"\'* - { ropean power would take it over Then came the no less famous W Y ) ie hills "ol Morrs WL dieve ey ‘ s s e e v o0 oe e e o TRERL L Proposition Giirger o Nt ORIy i o o e a5 | came Jim Hodges, ¢old prospect | [: * Steamer Movements °| <cicckl & ereat realist ever wes, Tollowed nY. ROBIMIIAF |r s Tethediof esdtibing A sAtel T ook thie TEAW, DU LR H. B. Foss A ol . 4 o the bscrsased Sdvemons| ¥ ORGSR ¢ ng a Wile ',y peard and told a weird tale of g NORTHBOUND . ed the harrassed Mormons | : at Was|_or wives—these days among the (po joneest “hibernation” he we P : would cast their eyes northward ir ntify a purge Wwith jen of the scattered Zande tribe | E e ® Columbia due sometime tomor- @ | tyeir search for a home, thus fore- nd, for this genera-|or afpican bushmen ever forced to spend on his wooded ’ e row. Should have 3% days’ ®|ing Russia to “the alternative of flicn at , to brand 1t as their i@l o 0 anerican 4 A o e mail aboard © | providing an army of defense o | instrument, their weapon and their| SOW the gaod D€ STH rican in-| “Spow piled all aroind te pines : cuM'NG HERE e North scheduled to arrive ® | .ouncing a part of our territory.” | method stallment plan has entered the Hodges recalled. “Toward the end | ® Wednesday o/ His initial discussions were encour-| The fundamental correctness of [marital ‘"‘“‘,"‘I f“‘\ Belg o Congo |of winter it got so deep I had to| i e Tongass scheduled to arrive ® [ ocq bu Senator Gwin of California | the word in the present instance|TAS Fe€v e By M S L. build more than fifteen feet of i 2 o lana 18] ly Thursday mornin, ® [ Lut before either country could get[seems a misfortune of the first s misionery WA B R BDYCnine OVeD Y icai O handle | | Twentygfour came in and 16/ SCHEDULED SAILINGS |down to bartering the Civil War was | magnitude to some Democrats be- African Inland Mission, at Dangu,|the si:aation. | went out on the M n'l(T\IIlJA]\ Sat-! o princess Lowse scheduled to | on'ang the Alaskan deal was off. | cause of (he pecuilisr um- |0 the Congo, for the past twenty I didn't go outside very often. urday night when that vessel Pass- ¢ gafl from Vancouver tomor- ® | with peace, however, Stoeckl was|stances of the present efforts at years. But to be able to do so, I had to| Sl o b, Junsell (le: 3EN ety pm ® [ quick to ¢ again. He went tc|party purification. EUb e ecenlly board the|dig an inclined tunnel almost 70| From Seward, passcngers were— e slaska scheduled to sail from o | Bick 10 O o 3600 and, through| It just happens that persons|Dollar liner President Harrison, enfect long before the cabin door to| ?m fi \Id)uxm- : “I 111‘*\41"“1 * e Seattle Sept. 21 at 9 am ®|his continued pressure, the czm.;»nm.k‘,d for party discard are pe:- :'O:JIIO to Muncie, Ind., to visit her|the first peep of dayli | ranck, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight, | ¢ Northland scheduled to sail ®|pincelf called a secret meeting.|sons who opposed the court bill f&EEH - - | o bt v i i himself ~ca a s ing. | sons W et cns IR AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER | ‘ :vm j‘lL :u-;nh;vm \xj‘ L 11.1 J6h- | o from Seattlc Sept. 23 ab 10 ®| Rugsian interests had clashed again |and the reorganization bill, two ‘l"f“ln 2 6-fl-<1“]"wk putire TAKES YUKON | a 8 To Bt Joht Telander, Vidjor =OWOT e ®| with the British and the Russians|measures concerning which the|Pride on the installment plan” Miss| A p. Allard went to the West T’ D l 41 k F H | LlJ (m{m:h_. 1, Bdward Eupl e Acutian scheduled to sail ®|were in a mood to welcome any-|cry of dictatorship was raised (,iv: son said, ”1“ deal i VIHUaly | warg on the Yukon Saturday night e vany aASKkd J"ll)lrl,’ From Yaldee—C Jartholomae, | @ from Seattle Sept. 24 at 9 ® | i o olieve their problems in|such an extent that the President|the same as the purchase of an g, i pooked for Valdez. ; i > C. G. Armistead, D. Colp, Ingram e am 8o par s |‘h)ms£-l[ saw fit to disclaim either |automobile here. If the husband ¥ : is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of Varnell, Robert Whilthorne, Henry o SOUTHBOUND SAILI | Stoeckl dwelt upon this. He alsc | fosire or qualifications for dictator- |fails to meet the payments the | th John Cani, James Libkie, Harry e Thursday. ® | relations resulting from Russia’s ( The Republican party chairman around anl reclaim her” % i Ev J. McDonald % LOGAL ATLINGS ® | neutrality in the Civil War. Curious- | lost no time in tying the Old World A wife usually brings $4.50 in the i FAMOUS HOTEL is AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE From Cordova—W. J. McDonald, | e Estebeth scheduled to sail every ® |ju 1o thought whatever was given|and New World situations to- CODg0, payable in cash or its equiv- Ye¥ith LRRNLICST S i ” C. Carlson. e Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- ® | ()" alaska having any minerals. Her | zether. John Hamilton accused the &lent in ho ades, cotton, | har. THE LAST GANGSTER Leaving for Seattle were ka and wayports. ® | only resources di sed were coal,| President of “adopting the Rus-|fishing te anything that perfect Tour P on 5 5 S { a I g w d Name May A pAL— Dl S| :: Hill .E. §. Brines, Aage Westerso, | Dart lcaves every Wednesday ® | forests, furs, shipping and ice for [sian technique of the purge” in an happens to be lyng around handy. LARC g L Famoay VATOD THL) BTAGE Steve Gutiana, Henry Osterman, e at 7 a.n. for Petersburg, Port | . rriseration. | etfort to “divert our attention from Lange Kates 5050 I, = S et T e 4 ; ARder, s Unbelicvable Carefessness ailures v al.” | ann with Special Rates to 3 F. Dyper Gecii Dalsanto e Al xander, Kake and way o i the failures of the New Deal g, T Jonios, s e The papers on this conference.| bath brmaneniCuoiih j6 000000 oo e th¢| WHEN WILSON SPOKE News I. Q. Answers || Ng hagn THE I8 O e |ing with sssh an impartant mate (do i 10 conviges the public tiat| | Jalr, .oy s gen feans o the LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS i\\hut is happening is not Russian ». Very casu- German coast. | ter only 70 years e Sv— — ded the min- |not German, not Italian, but 4. Republican rally to launch the PHONES 587 OR 747—JUNEAU ally, the conferees de t g TEN Gfl SUUTH - v 9 re 3 v 3% ty’'s effort to fight the New Deal | ister should get no less than $,-|ally nothing more than what Pr B e Teon Beit el afflc COURE YOU s = et | SUUTH ABUARD 000.000. Boundaries were only vague- | dent Woodrow Wilson had in mind wz:hinmon,n::?.w” il u'r A L A K 3 “:f l\]Rl“_"Ql,'lgvl‘OAI‘I 1'":‘" ('_",,.l S IU“Iml)rOve {when he said at Indianapolis on || g3: 34549 miles an hour, on Utah's and Modernize Your Home Under Title 1, I. H. A. ‘ | he was, he forced Seward to pro-| 8Ny party that can not do continu- ‘ THls MuRN‘NG pose the purchase. The negotiations| © 1d consistent teamwork. If |3, & . . COMPANY ¥ v ! Twenty-four passengers arrived treaty text|20y group of men should dare to Idrmcm s-Fnendly PS H | | Stoeckl was sent off to conclude Januaxy 8, 1915 { [ i |the deal and, shrewd trader that| “The country is not going to use nt swiftly, and the | break the solidarity of the Demo- lin Juncau on the Aleutian this|as so brief that it could be cabled ing through | morning from the Westward and|; si Petersburg on the newly per-| Cratic team for any purpose or FORTUNE 136 sailed south. | tected transAtlantic cable. The im-|from any motive, theirs will be a 3 rom Seward passengers were W.| nationt Seward footed a stiff cable | most unenviable notoriety and _a ailings from Pier 7 Seattle EVERY FRIDAY AT 9 P.M. The steamer Denali, Juneau Saturday to Skagway and |36 F returning south this morning, took! 15 passengers n her for the|A. Castleton, C. Hawkesworth, H“bIH Alexander 1T gave I approval responsibility which will bring Leaves | head of Lynn Canal and returning W. Jewell, V. Lyman, H. Magnuso and Alaska was ours. Only then dia | deep bitterness to them. The only Seattle l e boumy took 10 passengers from|W. A. Shields, C. Hill, B. A. ROML|the storm break in Congress, be-|Party that is serviceable to a na- s Dot £ 4 here for Sitka and Seattle | From Cordova—H. C. Dunlop, Mrs. | cause the deal was one of the most| ton is a party that can hoid abso- S. S. TONGASS Sept. 2 I Roundtsippers to Skagway were Jane Phinn, A L. Vaughn, D. Do-|gecret ever conducted in history. | lutely together and march with the PASSENGERS FREIGHT | discipline and with the zest of a REFRIGERATION CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc.——Phone 411 - A. Van Mavern and John Doe. | vich, C. zamps, W. B. Metz, J.| ynearthing the documents in ‘ Sailing |to Skagway were Maggie|€hort, E. Stallings, Baxler Felch,|poscow was no small diplomatic conquering host.” Kadnaha, Shirley G Black, Ken Grav Hunter, C. Henry, D. Brown, A.,J. R. Eagle from — e e e orge, A. C.|Jack Mellquist. | feat itself. The embassy obtained| Wilson was not accused of dic- 2 [ ] 3 g er Rhind, R.| From Valdez—Mrs. E. D'Armond, | permission to see the papers oniy | tatorship inclinations when he said $4 Al k Ai T ln | D. B. FEMMER aska Air Transport, inc. MacGowan, G.iafter a year's repeated requests,|that. The modern dictator had not Jackson, :C Albert, P. P. Ja~pnr“;me1ds. Beatrice Washburn, B. Els-| quring which time no one knew yet bvk(;n invented and the old ones an’s or AGENT | Dave Hemminger, Sam Hemmin-|ner. {\What was contained in them, Most Were buried with the Cacsar v st i ger - | Sailing to Seattle were J. L. Gray, | of the documents were in French,| §F g steron g oo e Phone 114 Night 312 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER ‘ | Sailing go Sitka were Mrs Charles| Arthur Ficken, Lewis Taylor Jr.|ihe court language of the time. P George | 4 4 P Dick, Mfs. Peter Williams, Peter|Mrs. S. P. Whitely, Mrs. ————————— Frequent Flights to All Points in Southeast Alaska | AUTHORIZED CARRIER—U. S. MAIL | 4 Williamsgy J. F. Chamberlain,| Matthews, E. L. Gruber, Mrs. Gru- 2 Charles Dick, Peter Williams, J. Pe-|ber, Roy Rutherford, Mrs. H. O.|“Pypg e” Joins | '{)‘::IIE‘ES;‘?:BSE lander. | Arend, Edith Hopkins, E H L;\-: “M d t I N o E 1 For Seattle — H. Franck, H.|tham, M. Powell, Dr. W. A. Bell, andate ow, NN ‘ Franck J}, Carl Hall Mrs, J. E. Musser, Mr. Royse, Mrs. Embattled Word| REGULAR } PHONE 612— Day or Night ey |Royse, Dorothea McHenry, Pma;\-l U. S. AIRMAIL Hangar and Shop in J ! . Huff, Mrs. M. Larsen, A. Lyman, - ) 2, : op in Juneau i + I‘\\:'kiu F“o\rd(- lh"‘;l\:-\' Feltas, Ma-| (Uonunuea irom Page One) Setyice Hivery, Trip 3 { th Johr i SHELL SIMMONS—Chief Pilot | | RUSSELL CLITHERO — Dispatcher l T'D.E§ TOMORRF?!V thilda Holst, John Knapp, Mrs. John | | Juneau-Fairbanks < | Knapp, Jeanette Moses, Mr. .m(llcm)tmn writers. “Purge” has only | Low {ide—3:43 am, 03 foet. |Mrs. Louis Norvell Ken Gallagher.|five letters. It fits so well into 1im-| Bethel-Nome High tide—10:13 am., 116 fret . {ited space. The urge for shortness | fesdDows o T i Read op All Planes 2-Way Radio Equipped Low tige—4:10 p.m., 2.6 feet | OUT TO COLLEGE | and explosive brevity which led head :ue . Jurieau . T ‘ High tide—10:19 pn., 15.0 feet | writers to make “probe” a crude | Whiteiorse {Ar.\an, Th | Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG | : 4 - > > George Troychek is a passenger|journalese equivalent of “investiga- . Fairbanks __|Lv./Sun, Th. | . BACK FROM VACATION couth on the Princess Louise for) tion” was certain to push “purge” TE AT (wek | - Seattle where he will enter the Uni-| into the headlines. - Fairbanks —(Ar.| 8:00) 7:30 | Miss Betly Haviland, with the!versity of Washington. | Probably no o;w \:'mrl)d :;fi cti)m; | E McLean Insurance Company, who - g plaining were it not for the fac SAILING S M A R l N E A l R w A Y s has been south on a vacation, re-| Statisticians estimate that 90 m-r-\nmz. in the history of recent years, - 8! G Nfling sl s furned home on the Yukon, accom- cent of the polo ponies used in the|the word has takm;nn.)nladd:gonali i | Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound 2-Way Radio Communication panied by her mother, Mrs. Viva United States are raised on Texs lm\pll(‘xnm\s. or pol ical purposes, -——— b s — YUKON TEDRE e T ) Sept. 17 Sept.22 | SCHEDULED PASSENGER Al S Haviland. farms. its primary meaning became con-| +COLUMBIA. Sept. 1 g | > RLINE SERVICE b > - PO ST 5 N VT PACIFIC ALASKA | avaska L Zi‘;fij 2‘;323‘1 Zfifit?f; Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier SOVlet Smpers ot the Future AIRWAYS, INC. | ALEUTIAN Sept.a Sepla oot 3 *TUESDAY—Subject to arrival of mail boat from South. ] | il Bk Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitks, Chichagol *ALASKA Oct. 8 Oct. 11 Oct. 17 Kimshan Cove, Hoonah, and return. ArafGo Represeniative | *YURON Oct. 15 Oct. 18 Oct. 24 *Fre N LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE T e B0 a0 . 2 quent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Reund Trip. ; g S et ?\;' % Oct. 31 BEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA GA%II:EAU HOTEL ALASEA N N:’,‘é & ‘;g‘v' 1Z TICKET OFFICE, TRIANGLE PLACE—PHONE 623 BBONE:10 £ “Galls at Yakutat Northbound and Southbound, - 14 |} Alex Holden, Chief Pilot A. B. (Cot) Hayes, Traffic Representative *_Connects at Cordova with S. S, CORDOVA for Prince William‘ Sound ports, Kodiak, Uzinki, Port Bailey, Iron Creek, Port Vita, Uganik Bay and Seldovia, also Port Wakefield. THE ALASKA LINE 1 Ticket Office—Phone 2 Freight Office—Phone & L H n D K B. 0. ADAMS, Agent | Bl R o } R0 | JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, T R RS o a o rad YICXORIA O DEATILE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY | 8 Princess Louise | ) } Sept. 26; Oct. 6, 17 I WEEKLY Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Junead . Connections at Vancouver with | fe————romm | SAILINGS Seattle No.Bound So.Bound , Canadian Pacific Services: | | NORTH SEA . Sept. 16 el | HOTEL GASTINEAU Sy o lag E:-::‘:l;(h e NORTH SEA ..Sept.30 Oct. 4 Oct. 4 -] ic “ S Every Effort Made for the ‘ HAROLD C. KNIGHT ... Phone 108 particulars from Comfort of Guests! J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent Phene 19 i [ CITY WHARF honind ; Yo ReBMTIILL GASTINEAU CAFE TR | Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska rs, which Soviet Russia is going in CAN ADIAN An important defense measure fora beleaguered town is the use of snipe B A g e K [ . in conn ion . R 2 £ bi way. Pictured 9bove are me_mberl :ll tlrlc: lS:cletyr of Air m' anne At M | eCtl TI N ! : - O P S L E LR ) (<1 R SOV LSS | VERR ROUND ALASKA SERVICE ! B) GUY SMFTH, Douglas Agent ... _Phone 18 H