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BRINGING UP FATHER DY- DID YOU KNOW THAT] THER'S BROTHER xT'AY~ YES-IMPORTANT LONG _ENOUGH ED LERE LAST NGHT 2 || TO HIM-HE WANTS ZES R | 1o EeneEo TALK TO ¥ Al - s ETSNS%JMC’OQTANT WONDER THAT HE THS MORNING- || STAYED AWAKE TO TFELL YOu-< M _GONNA GITT UP AN GIT OUT BEFORE HE GITS UP-HE WON'T GIT_UP UNTIL SOME- ONE WAKES HIM - AN’ THEN HELL ONLY STAY AWAKE LONG ENOUGH TO EAT —— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1939 ILL OIT ME BATH AND BE OUT OF THE HOUSE BEFORE HE GITS A CHANCE TO WAKE UP- =3 NORTH COAST JUNEAU BOUND; 24 FOR HERE w e o o 0000 00 NORTHBOUND Princess Norah scheduled to ar- rive at 4:30 o'clock this aft- ernoon. SEATTLE, March - Steamer Northland scheduled to arrive North Coast sailed on scheduled time tomorrow forenoon this forenoon with 77 passengers Cordova due Sunday aboard including the following book- Tongass due Monday ed for Juneau North Coast due Puesday Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs. K. Mar- SCHEDULED SAILINGS tin, I. Martin, Mrs. C. B. Holland Mount McKinley scheduled to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Colburn, Carl sail from Seattle tomorrow Weidman, Fred Sherwood at 9 am Mrs. Etta Bringdale, Mrs. E. Rula- | @ Derblay scheduled to sail from ford, Alfred Brown, Miss Jean Wal- Seattle March 15 lace, Miss Mabel Pog Miss | SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Mabel Johnson. Mis Alice Johnson. | e Baranof scheduled southbound Miss Ruth Cowles, John Peake,| 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Gustaf Sanela, W. F. Markbe, Paul | e Yukon scheduled southbound Porie. Cecil Cole, Sam Stanaway, | next Monday W. Howell, R. A. Smith | LOCAL SAILINGS b s, T | 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 33 PASSENGERS ABOARD NORAH “e00cseectecessesesecsestoncennes FOR “Hls pon'l' :;i::mder, Kake and way 2 6 00 0 a0 . Canadian Pm\ln steamer Pnnuu Norah, scheduled to arrive in ]w'( at 4:30 o'clock this afterr 33 passengers aboard for as follows: TipES Tomonnow this port tide—5:43 Mrs. Lorene Ahlers, Mrs. Elizabeth | Low am, 0.1 feet. Bauer, Virgil Farrell and wife. High tide—11:51 a.m, 18.6 feet Thomas George and wife, Mabel| Low tide—6:10 |‘m -3.0 feet Rouze, Curtis Terrell and wife. 3 Dr. Richard H. Willlams, Mrs L. Batlett and daughter, Fred (‘Inl NORIHLA"D NOT man, Raymond Garrett, Dr. John o G o Geyer. Rayno Johnson and wife G '" ' S"KA Richard Lewis. Donald Martin, Iris Moore, Ernest Schwarz. Mrs. Louisa | Motership Northland, scheduled tc White arrive in Juneau tomorrow forenoon. For Tulsequah, via Juneau—Vern- | will eliminate the usual Sitka run er Anderson, Donald Erickson, Fred and proceed from Juneau directly Hartley, Samuel Helman, William | back to Seattle Gaschelr, John McCrary This is being done to pick up| o R e schedules disrupted by the recent | marine strike, -+ GOODIE SALE HERE TOMORROW ' Jumor Prom Is ~ Event Tonight at High School Gym o'clock members of the Lutheran Ladies’ Aid will sponsor a food sale | Members of the Junior class w at Bert's Cash Grocery. H As usual delicious home-made | “goodies” will be on sale, with a|nonor members of the Senior clas varied assortment of pies, cakes,|of the Juneau High School at the cookies, rolls, salads and hot dishes | annual prom this evening being appropriate for hurried Saturday | given in the High School gymnasium suppers | Invitations have been issued for S A R | the formal affair and a large atten- ]'wo DEN"S‘I‘S ARE | dance is anticipated, with dancin: ON PRIN(ESS NORA |lrl start at 10 o'clock. Wesley Bar I rett and his orches | the evenin, id during intermission {the coronation of the Prom Quecr Two dentists, who lost their of- will be exemplified fice equipmerst in the Goldstein| Entertainment will be presented Building fire, are returning to Ju- by Vern Hussey and his committec neau aboard the Princess Norah.| and refreshments will be served at Both have been south purchasing tonight's promenade, which promise to be one of the social highlights of | the season. office equipment Dr. R. H. Williams is one cof the dentists, with the Juneau Medical | ::'x:f. i\xg;:(ajo(’ii:nl(t}ullse other den- MRGE A]’iE“DAN(E ; AT CHOIR DINNER D STAG PARTY HELD FOR ROBER‘ s‘orr Approximately sixty-five guests were present for the choir dinner o last evening given by members of Honoring Bob Stoft, whose mar-|the Martha Society in the Parlors riage to Helen Campbell will be an of the Northern Light Presbyterian event on Sunday, Bud Nance, Mil- | Church. ton Daniels and Lou Hudson enter-| Novel place cards, off set by pussy- tained with a stag party last even- willows, blueberry blossoms and ing at their residence in the Assemby | lighted tapers were used as table Apartments decorations for the occasion. M Approximately twenty-five friends | Katehrine Hooker was in charge of the honoree were present for the |of the dinner, and Mrs. Ray Pel informal gathering man acted as toastmistress for >—ee affair the | | the chureh praised the choir, telling |of what it meant to the congrega- | |tions and to the church itself. FIREMEN GROUP HOLDS MEETING Juneau Firemen were entertained | with a two-reel movie of the Goldstein Building fire at | their regular monthly meeting held Stock QuoTATIONS NEW YORK, March 3.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 97¢, American Can 937%, American Power and Light 64 Anaconda 31%, Bethlehem Steei| 5%, Commnn\v(alth and Southern 1%, Curtiss Wright common 6% General Motors 50z, International Harvester 63z, New York Central United States Kennecott 38%, 20%, Steel 64':, Pound $4.687:. {in the Firemen’s Hall last night. Report of the dance committee DOW, JONES AVERAGES was read and the group expressed The following are today’s Dow, themselves as highly gratified for Jones averages: industrials 148.76,'the public sup given the an- rafls 33, utilities 26.05. nuai ball. Tt was a finan- —————— cial suceess . DANCE STUDIO Following the business session of Of Dorothy Stearns Roff has been the meeting further entertainment maved to new location at 315 Third |was offered before the meeting ad- St. Telephone Red 119, ady. | journed tra will play for | Various officers and members m‘ showing | | A KiSS FOR A LIFE! v Mussolini who thus greeted the orphan of an Italian soldier killed nish war. Kiss was given at Rome ceremonies marking | in the th :lnnn(‘r\arv of lhl‘ fo i DOLLY VARDEN BOUNTY MONEY IS GIVEN BOOST Appropriations Now Fig- ured at $4,234,550 by | House Committee | 2 | (Continued from Page One) | not go to Italy and get Mussolini on | it, or to Germany, and get Hitler | for the Council.” \ Eagle bounties, unrecommended in the Ways and Means bill (I|(|\0H¥hi the budget asked $15.000, received a 0,000 vote from the Committee of the Whole. { The Territoriai Health Depart- ment, getting less than was asked | | for in the budget, by a good margin, | |was mot cut in the appropriations b.‘.\ itself, however, and $5,000 \\n\, acked on instead; to pay for exam- | inations of food handlers, required by law, and heretofore paid by those | required to be examined for their work | Representative Howard Lyng, the | aker of the House, attempted to t a precedent in the matter of Lhe ‘5( iker’s overtime pay of $150 for | ten days of extra work after the ses- | sion is over, in connection with com- | piling the session's work by usklng‘ | that the supplementary appropria-! tion be stricken. [ The motion lost, with Reprexemd-‘ | tive Coffey, Speaker for the Commit- | | tee of the Whole, contending “it's no use setting a precedent,” and Re- )m sentative Rogge, Treasury keeper, eing “no I for not taking | Ason | Federal mon Figures so far cited, are by no | means final, with the measure still |in second reading and the amend- ment stage, and yet to finish its run of the gamut in third reading > going to the Senate for more ' parl .o —— \ELKS" CABARET For members of the Elk's lodge in good standing, and their ladies, an- other of the Cabaret Dances is to be held in the Elk’s Ballroom tomor- | row 1 Fea for re events have been planned € occasion, and Wesley Barrett | his orchestra are to play for the evening, with dancing starting at 10 o'clock. Rod Darnell, enterfain- | ment chairman, is in chaige of ar- |rangements for the ¢vent, ! TOMORROW NIGHT i | ‘Ben Benson To Get $1,000; No More son, the boy who designed s going to get the $1,000 fund set up for him by the 1929 Legislature but he isn't going to get $335.85 in interest which hi {bond on deposit in the Treasurer’s » has earned, the voted erday afternoon in show pénny-pinching Ben, it seems, has moved to Seat- { tle, is married and about to become a father and wants to study diesel | engineering, which isn’t-taught at the University of Alaska, where the Ben Benson fund was to be spent under terms of the passed by the 1929 Legislature. Ben wants his money. Senators, arguing that Ben “has not lived up to his part of the agree- enate a rare of act is being groomed to succeed Pres- “Why doesn't this boy come back ident Lazaro Cardenas as presi- and attend the Univers f - and autend Hhe e Ol . dent of Mexico in 1940. General T i 5 A Camacho recently resigned as lcally, “instead of going o SOME gocretary of national defense. An- other school other military man, Gen. Juan “Because he doesn’'t want to learn Andreu Almazen has flung his hat to play basketball; he wants to learn intg the ring as a candidate to diesel er ering. Senater Joe succeed Cardenas. Hofman quipped RUDYS ARE CELEBRATING WEDDING ANNIVERSARY ALASKANA, By Marie Drake, 50c Alaska Music Supply _Mr. and Mrs. Oharlie . Arthur M. Uggen, Manager dents of the Glacier Highway, Piancs—Musical Instruments ey celebrating theif forty-first wed- | and Supplies . ersary today. This Phone 206 122 W. Second | ey dinner at their home by t friend tion of the evenf. FRANK HELLER BARBER ' Temporarily located at a tu in commemo hat was the exchange made by \mdmg ul' Fascist militia. MAX MIELKE ‘MRS, GLENN OAKES ‘ IS BRIDGE HOSTESS PAINTING and DECORATING SERVICE | Mrs. Glenn Oaxes was#hostess Robert Xights Barber Shop, /| ittal) last evening at her residence with | NEXT TO ALASKAN HOTEL | et W S W a d(-«nn bridge part guests were present for lh(‘ afl’lll and each individual table | was centered with bowls of :.prmg PANKDIAN Travel A L A s K A flowers. PACIFI( on a Transportation Company Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle Leaves Seattle March 1 "PRIN- CESS"” News |. Q. Answers 1. Glenn S. “Pop” Warner, fa- mous football coach. By resigning Temple University Job. 2. Stanford University vacuum tube which made ultra-short radio waves by throwing bunches of elec- | trons to and fro in a rhumba-like | motion. i 3. Thirty thousand. 4. Prajadhipok, exiled Siamese king, accused by opponents of starting revoits to seize throne of bo; g, Ananda Mahidol, I. Sale of Tennessee Electric Power Company to Tennessee Val. ley Authority (TVA) JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah March 5, 15, 26 Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: TRANSCONTINENTAL TRANS-ATLANTIC TRANS-PACIFIC Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska . CANADIAN PACIFIC R SR R, 8. 8. TONGASS AT 9 P. M. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION AGENT D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 Night 312 — e — HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. M. S.DART U. S. Mail Carrier Leaves Femmer’s Dock, Juneau, every Wednesday at 7 a. m. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS For Information D. B. FEMMER—Phone 114 Freight must be on dock not later than 4 P. M. Tuesday. THE SIGN OF DEPENDABLE l it H SR AN < (115 5CHED U. S. AIRMAIL d Service Every Trip SAILING SCHEDULE 2 . St Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau 28 amer Seattle Northbound Southbound : Juneau-Fairbanks *BARANOF Feb. 19 Feb.23 Mar. 3 “ TYUKON Feb. 25 Feb. 28 Mar. 6 B,e!hel “me - MCcKINLEY Mar. 7 Mar. 13 Read Down B T Read®p | yygoN Mar. 14 Mar. 20 Whitehorse —ILv. Sun. MCKINLEY - Mar.18 Mar.24 . Fairba: *ALASKA Mar.21 ., Mar.27 BARANOF Mar. 25 Mar. 31 YUKON Mar. 28 Apr. 3 McKINLEY Apr. 1 Apr. 7 *—Calls at Yakutat Northbound and Southbound. 7Does not call at Haines and Skagway southbound. THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—PHONE 2 Freight Office—PHONE 4 H. 0. ADAMS, Agent 5 — |11 28 tv. 1iat Ar. Dethe PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS, INC. PHONE: 106 Traffic Representative LOVIS A DELEBECQUE GASTINEAU HOTEL L’ Aln k"i 'n'n.s‘h ip Compan L e e i 3 ment” which wa a d the Uni- versity of Ala rder to collect the money, voted five to three to Gen. Manuel A. Camacho pecket the interest on behalf of the Territory. Final vote on the propo- Among the best-liked officers in | o sition of paying Ben the $1,000 is the Mexican army, Division Gen- to be taken tomorrow eral Manuel Avila Camacho now GREEN TOP CABS--PHONE 678 BUY GREEN TOP RIDE J COUPON BOOKS: i $6.25 in rides for $5.00 o $3.00 in rides for $2.50 4 37 SOUTH FRANKLIN Juno Sample Shop ||, aegrestiox nsvrs, . LEOTA RUSSELL ializing in Chinese and American Telephone 133 Dishes—TRY US ONCE! Ve WALSTEIN SMITH a3 a pmxd-up subscriber 4o The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon < this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: "HOLIDAY" i WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear A & Manufacturing Co., Inc. RADIO ENGINEERIN Pl e Telephone 663 A TRANSMITTERS = Distributors for halllcraners and RECEIVERS ol EXPERT RADIO SERVICE BY ENGINEERS ONLY j ) | P ————————— COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 587 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. | SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER Frequont 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 MARINE AIRWAYS 2-Way Radio Communication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier *TUESDAY~—Subject to arrival of mail boat from South. 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 A.B. (Cot) Hayes, Traffic Representative WEEKLY SAILINGS Juneau to Suuk Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Jlmeull' N Seattle No.Bound So.Bound ' NORTHLAND i Mar. 3 Mar. 5 | ‘g NORTH COAST Mar. 7 Mar. 9 | NORTHLAND Mar.14 Mar. 16 x NORTH COAST . Mar.21 Mar.23 . NORTH SEA .. eL/ 4 There is no subsfitute for Newspaper Advenisi;;g