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DEAD END HIT | IN PROPOSALS STINSON PlANE’ FOR LABORERS Making Week - Long Tour AFL Hod Carners Will Not of Southeast Alaska Accept CIO Men Free Flying Cenfers of Charge A snag was struck last night in negotiations for building and con- struction labor peace in Juneau when the A. F. of L. laborers’ union issued what CIO laborers called to- day a “rejection” of -the peace pro- posal offered by George Lane of the | Maritime Federation of the Pacific. AIR INSPECTOR FLIES HERE IN has over 170 airplanes | today, according to I. K. \ms, Inspector of Aeronaus the Civil Aeronautics Auth- with headquarters at Anchor- d McWilliams evening from the W flew to Juneau yester- tward and da plans to spend about a week con- In a release from the Interna- tacting Southeast Alaska flying | tional Hod Carriers. Building and centers | Common Laborers’ Union, A. F. of Jying his Stinson Reliant, Mec- | L., signed by H. Lester Rink, Secre- Williams plans to hop to Skagway, |tary, a “cordial invitation” was is- to Sitka, Petersburg, Wrangell and | sued to CIO members of Industrial Ketchikan, making a general survey | Labor Union 882, to “become mem- of flving facilities. bers of our union (AFL) through | McWilliams said work is progress- | the regular channels.” ing on the large scale communic In the proposals, under which ' tions development program for Al-|CIO carpenters and CIO laborers aska and that John Beardslee, from | would relinquish their charters and Washington, D. C., passed through |go over to the AFL, it was provided | Juneau this morning on the Yukon, | that the CIO laborers be taken in bound for Anchorage to make pre- without payment of initiation fees liminary surveys relative to expan- and also turn over their | union’s | S sion of communication facilities. | funds on hand Planning to get away from Ju-| The invitation of the AFL laborers to “come in through regular chan- neau on his Southeast Alaska tour tomorrow or the next day, McWill- nels,” puts the labor question in jams is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. | Juneau “at loggerheads” again. ac- cording to George Ford, CIO labor- er's negoliating committee member. The A. F. of L. carpenters had ac- cepted the proposal and the prosi- tion of accepting into the AFL all | present CIO carpenters who were in good standing in the old disbanded AFL union. Also, the CIO carpenters | dn(i CIO laborers had agreed to the . | change. Skagway Marshal Makes Trip Here In (hns Craft Accompanying Dt‘puls U. 8. Mar- Members of the AFL Hod Carriers shal Louis Rapuzzi, of Skagway, to say they cannot take in the CIO this city - last Sunday were Pat | laborers without payment of initia- Farwell and Edgar Rembusch, mak- | tion fees, hence the invitation to ing the trip in 4': hours from the join through x\n"mal channels. Klondike Gateway in a trim Chris Craft speedboat The three Skagwayites saw their team lose to the Juneau All-Stars in Sunday's games, and after at-| tending to business in Juneau yes- | terday and today, planned to return | home this afternoon. { - BASEBALL TODAY MARK SELLS ON WAY HOME FROM HONOLULU, ETC. Fairbanks Taiior Enjoys frame schecl at Barberton, O. scheol. Three children wer: critically hurt. ESEAITLE FIRM'S " BID LOWEST ON SEWARD TUNNEL Alaska Trip Is Postponed By President May Come 1o Paific Coas and Then On fo North But Not in June WASHINGTON, June 6.—Presi- dent Roosevelt said he has decided against starting his proposed trip to the Pacific Coast on June 15.| At a conference with newsmen Job Is $25,000 Under Engineer Estimate - contractor M. P. Butler, Seattle the for construction of 1 $214.884 cerding to information - received from Col. H. J. Wild, U. 8. Dis- ct Engineer, As the figure less than the engineer's almost $25,000 estimate, is THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1939. hool Blast I njures 42 Chlldren, Forty-two young grade children and two huht'rs were injured when a gas blast shattered the two-story One of the collapsed floors, down which children slid to safety, GIVESHINT Tender on Lowell Creek Says Socialized Medicine this weel: submitted a low bid of ized medicine would materially af- | Lowell Creek tunnel at Seward, ac- come of private physicians in the Two Teachers REED WILL DO GEOLOGY WORK ON (HlCHAGOF Geological Survey fo Con- finue Mapping of West Coast Geologic survey work will be con- | | tinued this .summer on the west | eoast of Chichagof Tsland, @ccording’ to John Reed, geologist with the U. 8. Geological. Survey -whe ar- rived in Juneau today on the Yu- [ kon. i | ‘Lost s@mmer, Reed did ‘unders | ground ore surveys in the Chichagof mining district, while another sur-| }\PV man did topographic survey | work in the same immediate area.| ‘. This summer, Reed will take his| ']nrl\ out on the Bureau of Public Roads motorship Highway, map the | geology of the section surveyed mpn-? craphically last summer, then con-| | tinue in a northerly direction up the | coast to the Apex El iNido mine on Lisianski Inlet and Yakobi Island, where large nickel lodes have b(‘cn’ reported. | Reed is especially interested in al | number of fault zones that show up | rather definitely between Chicha-; |gof and the northern end of the lisland. It is these sheer zones that | the Chichagof and Hirst mineralized zones occur, giving rise t othe prom- ise that other highly mineralized | | zones may be found in the vicinity. | The result of last year's studies in the Chichagof area have been| compiled, Reed said, and will soon | appear in print, the map to be | known as the Chichagof Mining Dis- trict on an inch to the mile scale. Robert Coates, from the staff of the University of Alaska will ac-; company Reed as an assistant this summer, and is due to arrive here the latter part of the week. Reed will be in Juneau for four| Glorious New PRINTED CREPES Exciting new Rayon Crepes — Lovely prints for handsome afternoon frocks— or informal fashions—erisp, fresh and decidedly new. 6G5¢ Beautful florals = soft. monkitones — prints — pastel backgro s — Ten different colors — Make a lovely dress for a tiny price indeed. Washable — Easy to tub — Tested for fabric slippage — Rose, royal, dawn. blue, aqua, lavender, lime, white and straw- berry, B M. BEHRENDS COMPANY, Inc. QUALITY SINCE 1894 Rescue workers are shown at the is in blck;ronnd T0 DOCTORS Announcement! Will Not Hurt Nation's . | PhYSI(IaI'IS ior five days before going into the | field. He is a guest at the Baranof BEcAusE MEMPHIS, Tenn.,, June 6.—Social- | Hotel. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calomel=And You'll Jump Out of Bed Full of Vim and Viger. Your liver should pour out two pints of increased space has hecome nec- essary for the mainienance of my standards of optometry service— fect neither the number nor the in- opinion of Dr. C. W. Hyman, dcu\n; of the University of Tennessee Medical College. It would be so “perfunctory and inefficient,” Dr. Hyman says, that| The following are scores of games played this afternoon in the two major leagues: National League New York 17; Cincinnati 3. The Giants set a new home run record Fair, Other Sights in Western States Back in Alaska after four months over the leading -Reds with five of travel through the Western states homers in one inning. a major league record, it is said Chicago 8; Philadelphia 9. Pittsburgh 2; Brooklyn 5. St. Louis 2; Boston 0. American League Philadelphia 4; Chicago 7. Boston 7; Cleveland 8. - RAYNOR ILL Al Raynor, oldtime Alaskan who triod unsuccessfully to promote a Territorial exhibit at the San Fran- cisco Fair, has been seriously il from pneumonia at Seattle, but is recovering, according to informa- tion received by friends here. SALES Every Month in the Year AUCTION SALES DATES 1939 June 7 September 6 July 12 October 11 August 9 November 8 December 13 Special Sales Held Gn Kequest of Shippers Advances will be made as.usual when requested. Transferred by telegraph, if desired. THE SEATTLE FUR EXCHANGE 1008 Western Avenue Seattle, Wash. This breaks and to Halali, SN ith those who belittle the — e Steaks.... ARE JUICIER at the ROYAL CAFE they're cut from finest steers. - i T CTTT P T OTTTrroroore ) Mark Sells is on his way home to Fairbanks by PAA plane this afternoon | Sells, widely known Fairbanks tailor, visited the San Francisco fair (marvelous), Boulder Dam (they've changed the desert into a beautiful garden), and Honolulu (warm but very nice.) In the Islands he visited William ! Glasgow, formerly with the Signal Corps at Fairbanks. for three weeks. Another old Alaskan Sells visited | | Was Fred anRaes, who was a lino-| type operator at Fairbanks and |, a printing shop foreman at Ana- heim, California Sells said he had little patience San Francisco fair, saying he visited it “fourteen times” and was fascinat- ed each time by the demonstration of what modern science is doing. Many thousands of miles of, travel by steamer, train, bus and automobile leave unchanged Sells’ attitude 'O\Nfll’d flying: “It's the only way to go.” D e IS BOUND FOR NOME Muys. H. F. Harper, who arrived on the Yuokn from the south, is a passenger aboard a PAA plane for Fairbanks on her way to her home in Nome. Summer Saddles Are Cool Cotton S:ddle Oxfords are favorites with sports clothes. p2. 25 Now they're in gay colors to suit your most frivo- lous moods. Surprise! They're washable! FAMILY SHOE STORE LOU HUDSON—Manager “Juneau’s Oldest Exclusive Shoe Store* this afternoon the President said he wanted to remain in Washington and keep check on legislation pass- ed by June 30, providing for more relief funds and extending the ex- piring “nuisance taxes. The President erted that he would review the situation again around June 24 or June 25 and he might make a trip t othe Interna- and on to Alaska “It looks like legislation may take until fall,” the President said with a smile. .- DRIVER FACING TRAFFIC CHARGE Charged with driving recklescly into another automobile on the Glacier Highway at 11 o'clock Sat- urday night, Clarence Geddes was arrested today and will be tried in U. S. Commissioner's court within | the next few days. Assistant U. 8. Attorney George Folta said the only person injured in the headon collision was a wo- man companion in Geddes’ car. She | |was cut about the face Geddes was released today on $500 bail. Pete Hammer, whose aulomobile | Geddes’ struck, occurred near the old Auk Bay can- | headed out the | nery when Geddes, highway, swerved out of his lane and ~hit Hammer's car, which had come almost to a stop. B MARINE AIRWAYS Hirst with Marine Airways morning with pilot Alex Holden. Two were for Sitka, Irl Thatcher | and Everett Nowell, while W. A Gallemore and Mrs. LaForce we.xL to Hirst. the Seattle contractor is believed to the demand for private medical m»l be in line for the award. The tun- tention would be little diminished, liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile isnot flowing freely, your food doesn’t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You get constipated. Your I have moved my office fo the said the accident| TAKES FOUR OUI e Four passengers tiew to Sitka ;md this nel will control flcods cn the creek to prevent further damage to Sew- ard T property vo other firms were under te of $239,660, Sims asking $220,634 Construction tional Exposition in San Francisco $222316. R. J. Sommers of Juheau crease in the total number of doc- | BLOMGREN BUILDING on FRONT STREET, where I am if at all If it should come, he continued, | “there are likely to be as many whole system is poisoned and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement doesn’t get at the cause. It takes those famous Carter's the doctors in private practice as now,| Little Liver Pills to get these two pints of % S ks | dolte less woek. for Abith the sume | D SeRSRIIeNG Aidpaka o 1o Ceo now installed and ready to serve and' the average income. There will be a| Lnnh-n hLRt?:‘l’A'VY::'PHIB ok t('::er ::'j ,::;v].‘: Comphny sharp demand for substantial in- | e Refese snything else. Pricc: 254, your eyes. was slightly above the estimate at|tors in order to staff Federal | — $246.929, followed by the Morrison- |clinics.” | Knudsen Company of Boise, Idaho, e A NEAT | i at $296,1 Centaur Construction § S | n B L ll c l T0 | ar Company, New York, $342,742, aud | At i { APPEABA“CE i I. iiae Lilian son L. Romano Engineering COrPOra-| ey Sorensen, brother of Paul| | | e soeer, e o vl GOPS A | . OPTOMETRIST | Figuring the various units of the | gipqt Chichagof mnie, arrived inl‘ project, Butler figured low for dig- ging the 2058-foot tunnel at $82,320, | [for 390 cubic yards of dry rubble | I masonry at $1950, for 100 linear feet of 12-inch culvert pipe. at $170 and | 300 feet of tile and iron drains at| $420. For the tunnel lining, his fig- | ure of $53664 was underbid o'll"\ by General's $51,600 proposal Other major quantities ineclude | 2800 cubic yards solid rock excava- tion, 5400 cubic yards common ex- | cavation, 3100 cubic yards rock em- bankment fill, 1200 cubic yards of grouted rock fill face, 96,000 pounds l1-e1nrorclng steel and 52,000 pom\ds railroad rails. NO FARM INTEREST MARGATE, Juxw 6.—Because I)O).\ are no longer interested in farming. | the Royal School of Deaf and Dumb children here has closed its model dairy farm. The land will be turned into playing fields and a course of | engineering instructions started for | ! | | " Fresh Shrimp l.nms Served with 1000 Island Dress- ing to tempt your Luncheon Appetite Tomorrow— A'l' THE BAIANOI' PO | | % | | | | \ ELECTRIC RANGES REFRIGERATORS LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT WATER HEATERS at Rice & Ahlers Co. Third and Franklin B e T e ] PHONE 34 | | | | i | Juneau on the North Sea and will | g0 to the mine to spend the sum- | mer working. LONG WAY! Telephone 636 > | All motor buses in Holland must BeiAN.G E have a door in the top as an emer- CLEANERS | \ommm— gency door in case the vehicle should | ff= PHONE 501 There is o suhsmute for Newspaper Adverhsmq slip into a canal. SULLY’S Rt BAKERY RE-OPENS Tomorrow MORNING — bright and early! o8 All repairs to our dqmuged oven will be complete and we wdl again be ready to serve you with our complete assm‘tment of delicious bakery goods on Wednesday. —HENRY SULLY