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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1939. | WANT TO PLAY WITH HIM_ NOW - PAW ~THE LITTLE DARLING LOVES HIS PAPA- YOU CAN PLAY WITH HIM LATER- ! R 1 S T Copr. 1939, King MARINE NEWS 27 Come in Today with : North Coast Twenty-seven passengers disem- barked today from the steamer North Coast, bound for Sitka from Seattle. Arrivals for Juneau were M. Sim- mons, Miss J. York, Mrs. W. Hill, Miss M. Wright, L. Allen, Mrs. L. Allen, Miss E. Allen, H. Allen Mrs. A. Weiss, R. Cable, Mrs. J Wehren, Mrs. P. Schmitz, P, John- son, G. Bassford, Mrs. J. Mills, V Bingham, Louise Holt Holt, Alden Holt, W. KK. Thomp- son, C. A. Warmker, Dr. Elizabeth Arthur, James Arthur, Ann Ar- thur, Mrs. J. Frank Supplee Jr, Miss M. Supplee 16 PASSENGERS ABOARD LOUISE | e am |'® Taku scheduled to sail from . Katherine | . s e 0000000000 NORTHBOUND b ® Princess Louise due to arrive ® at 6:30 this evening. e Tongass due Thursday. e Prince George due to arrive ® Thursday evening. ® Yukon due Saturday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS e Mount McKinley scheduled to e sail from Seattle at 9 a. m. e tomorrow. Princess Alice scheduled to sail e from Vancouver at 9 p. m. e tomorrow. ® North Sea from Seattle July 14 at a. m scheduled to sail 10 Seattle 9 p. m. July 14. Prince Robert scheduled to sail from Vancouver July 14 at 9p m Aleutian scheduled t osail from Seattle July 15 at 9 a. m. ® Princess Charlotte scheduled to . sail from Vancouver July 15 e at 9 p. m. Prince Rupert scheduled to sail from Vancouver July 17 at 9 s pm ® Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle July 18 at 9 a. m. e SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS ® Baranof scheduled southbound e Friday. ® Theodore F. Avery, Angeline Chopp, ®|John Jones, Clarice Maki, Selma lieutenan: May ® | Maki, Ben Mangalso, Mrs. Ben Man- commander January G North Coast scheduled south- Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- e bound Friday. cess Louise will arrive in Juneau|e Columbia scheduled south- this evening at 6:30 oclock with e bound on Sunday. ,many tuorists aboard and also the | » LOCAL SAILINGS ! following passengers booked for Ju-l * Estebeth scheduled to ssil every neau: ® Wednesday al 6 p.m. tor Sii- Arlo Anderson, Mrs. Arlo Andm'-} ® ka and wayports. son, Russell Bartell, Anne Golden,| e Dart leaves every Wednesday Sidney McCune, Joseph A. Williams,{ » &t 7 am. for Petersburg, Port Mrs. Williams, Irene, Donald, Mar-| ® Alexander, Kake and way Jorie and John Williams. |® ports. For Tulsequah—Miriam Bowman|» ¢ o ¢ e e ¢ ¢ @ & o o and four miners, | > ELECTRA Ssecocscsessceoccocsoce =3 | | | | | WILL ; | - FLY TOMORROW With a few passengers in Juneau yet to be flown to Fairbanks with PAA, a special Electra trip is sched- uled for tomorrow. The plane will fly down from Fairbanks in the morning and re- turn immediately. It will carry mail. FIVE FLOWN FROM TIDES TOMORROW Low tide—3:04 a.m. 24 feet. High tide—9:15 a,m., 11.5 feet. Low tide—3:00 p.m., 5.1 feet. | High tide—9:07 p.m., 148 feet. [ELECTRA GOES | NORTH TODAY | Eight passengers flew north with Pacific Alaska Airways pilots Bill Knox and Gene Meyring this morn- ing for Fairbanks and other In- BY GOLLY- THAT SON OF MINE 1S PROUD. OF HIS BOY AN' | DON'T BLAME HIM — MANY ARRVE ((OMMANDER | ™ty ook THOMPSON [ The steamer Colimbia brought HERE TODAY' in a long list of passengers from [ Seattle and Ketchikan this morning | on its way to the Westward. | (Continuea rrom: I’cge One) From Seattle passengers 7 i i g were At ik iy i | Rose Conhors, Mrs, rank of lieutenant, junior grade, H. K. L. Johnson, in the same year. He became a 31, 1920, leutenant 12, 1923, and commander July 1, 1929. i /neaux and daughter, Mrs. Moly- On Special Duty { neux, Beatrice Mullen, Mrs. Henry During his career in the Coast Parrish, Henry Parrish, Ina Peter- Guard he has served eight years son, Nels Peterson, Miss Madeline in special duty, four as personnel Taylor, John White, Mrs. John Officer at the Coast Guard head- White, Barbara White, J. Collins, quarters in Washington, D. C. He A. Foster, J. Gray. has served on the Atlantic Coast, From Ketchikan—I. A. Thatcher, both north and south of Cape Hat. Gus Bostrom, Charles Homan, Gor- teras, in the Great Lakes, and has i don Strang, R. O. Wilson, Joe Kin- been on the Pacific Coast for the Iney, Jack Patterson, Ronald Meor- Past ten years. He was assigned den, W. B. Hedrick and Oscar Ped- to command the cruiser Ingham erson, in 1937. } Sailing for Seward from here Commander THompson Was a‘ were Livingston Wright, H. A. Bauer, Werld figure in the search for miss- Dorin Mason, Hazel Zachary, Mrs. g Amelia Earhart, premier Ameri- J. D. Butt, Gordon Wildes, Ethel can aviatrix whose plane was lost| Woolf, M. R. Thillman. in the Pacific in 1937. To Valdez—Charles Brake. Thompson was then in command — - of the cutter Itasca at Homolulu| and was ordered to proceed to How- | | d ' JAPANESE SELL |Mary Colten, Marie Hobbs, | galso, Miss L. Marfon, J. C. Moly land Island specifically to aid Miss Earhart in case she encountered | difficulty. Ironically, it was the| Itasca which received the last dra-| matic radio message Miss Earhart | sent out to the world before mys- tery enveloped her fate | A veteran of Alaska, Thompson | comes to his new post with a genu- | ine love for the Territory. | b the most beutiful country in the world to me,” he said. “And the prospect of making my home here for at least the next three years is an enjoyable thing.” \ — . | Empire Want Ads Bring Results. ' TO BRITISHERS Cash in Over Eight Million as 1938 Output Near- ly Disposed Of SAN FRANCISCO, July 11. i The Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce has reported that {Japanese salmon packers sold vir- | tually all of their remaining stocks |of their 1938 pack on Great Britain contracts signed with the Mitsubi- | hi interests ST | 'Three British firms took ‘657,000 With cases and deals with three other | firms made by Mitsui Bussan dis- | posed of 230,000 cases with the total amount involved being somewhere | around $8,184,000. | — e — ! WAKE UP YOUR| LIVER BILE— out Calomel—And You'll Jump Owt of Bed Full of Vim and Vigor. Your liver should pour out two pints of liquid bile into your bowels daily. 11 this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. 1t just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You get constipated. Your 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 Little Liver Pills to get these two pints of | bile flowing freely and make you feel “up and up”, Harmless, gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow freely. Look for the name ‘Hatibut Skipper Bl"ns Hands Carter’s Little Liver Pills on the red packe | | age. Refuse anything else. Prioc: 25¢. {In Hot Tar | : | Olaf Westby, skipper of the hali-' EEEEEEEGEG——— AR NOW WHAT'S HAPPENED? NUTS POTATO CHIPS—CANDIES HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES O-KE-DOKES always fresh at ||| Harri Machine Shop Glover's-Phone 324 || "Try Us First a8 ;AUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. ‘ M. S. DART LIVE in Supreme || (. S. Mail Carrier COMFORT | | every Wednesd INSTALL A For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT +* & ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS Air Conditioning For Information Unit—NOW! Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 Freight must be on city dock not | MacLEAN METAL WORKS later than 4 P. M. Tuesday SOUTH SEWARD ST. tation Telephone 703 Transl’fl' Company HERE TO ISLANDS Outbound passengers traffic over| Juneau airlines to the islands was| light today. | Alex Holden flew to Sitka with | R. C. Chandler, Jerry Reiland and Bill Douglas, dropping Douglas Shaw at Tenakee. Shell Simmons went to Chichagof, dropping off Glenn Goudie there| and taking fresh meat and mail to Pelican City and Port Althorp. Yesterday, Holden flew William ‘Hesse from Sitka to Wrangell, and brought in Charles Sundholm from Sitka. Simmons brought in Vic| Bands from Gypsum. STEAMER YUKON JUNEAU BOUND SEATTLE, July 11. — Stearier Yukon of the Alaska Steamship Company sailed at 9 o'clock this morning on the Southeast Alaska Totemland cruise with 210 first class and 131 steerage passengers aboar Jupeau passepgers are L. K and Mrs. L. S. Hotsford DISAPPEARANCE OF TRAPPER 1S INVESTIGATED Disappearance of a man named Colby on a trapping expedition up the Thorne River near Ketchikan has caused U. S. Commissioner Ernest C. Austin to order a search for the man, U. 8. Marshal Wil- liam T. Mahoney notified his of- fice here tcday. Colby has been missing for more than twdo months, Mahone; wired The Marshal said he would assign a Deputy to the case if it appears there may have been foul play in- | yolved in the case. | terior points. They were Degborah Pentz, N. C. Stines, A. B. Lewis, J. S. Truitt, T. Avery, John White, Charles La- bowski, and. Harold Gallwas. FISH BUYERS SEND PRICES UP, HALIBUT This afternoon at the Juneau Fish Exchange, brisk bidding on halibut landings sent the price of halibut t oa still new high for the season, 7.25 and 5.25 cents a pound. The high price was paid by New England on the 14,000 pound cargo of the Arden and the 31A27, with 1,500 pounds: Earlier, New England had bought in the Spider's 3500 potind cargo at 7.10 and 510 while the Alaska Coas tPisheries bought that of the Fremont, with 17,000 pounds, at 7.15 and 5.10. -ee - EQUITABLE MAN HERE W. B. Hedrick, Equitable Insur- ance representative, making an an- nual trip to the North, arrived here from Ketchikan today on the Co- lumbia and is a guest-at the Bar- ancf Hotel. Come away Pleased and Satisfied . . . AFTER A MEAL at the ROYAL CAFE | buter Addington, suffered painful burns on the hands this noon when a pot of tar on the Addington galley | stove boiled over. Westby extinguished the flames, although a fire alarm had been | turned in. He later received treat- | ment from Dr. W. W. Council for his burns. - e FOOD SALE | By Catholic Lraughters of America, | Sat., July 15, at Bert’s Cash Groc- | ery. —adv. | $— e —i [ WEDNESDAY Biked Virginia Ham | Paquint Sauce | FOR LUNCHEON '|_a the BARANOF | * SOUTH ON PINCE SHIPS S.8. “Prince Rupert” and “Prince George” alternating, leave Juneau southbound every Saturday at midnight, “Prince Robert” August 5 and 19 at 9:00 a.m. ADIAN IONAL | MONO - MATIC | IRONER | The Only Portable offers: <+ ° ™ 20-inch Roll. Electric Ironer that Selective “Lag.” : Single iever action easily con- vertahle to Knee Action. World's Easiest-to-Use Ironer! Sailings from Picr 7 Seaftle Leaves Seattle ...July 14 July 21 THE SIGN OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE U. S. AIRMAIL AIR EXPRESS SERVICE Juneau-Fairbanks Bethel-Nome (Summer Schedule—Effective June READ DOWN READ UP Tuesday and Saturday 10.00/Lv. Juneau 11:00/Ar. Whitehorse Lv. Whitehorse 1:30{Ar. Fairbanks S. S. TAKU S. S. TONGASS AT 5 P. M. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION [ J AGENT D.B. FEMMER Phone 114 Night 312 Travel on a "PRIN- CESS” LINER Monday_and Thursday __Ar.| 6:00 —Lv.| 430 “Ar) 410 e Liv.| 100 Thursday and Monday 8:00|Ly. Fairbanks 9:30/Ar. 9:50|Lyv. 11:00(Ar. Ruby Ruby Nome Wednesday Wednesday 8:00/Ly. Fairbanks 10:45(Ar. Flat 11:00/Ly. Flat o ik r. 12:30/Ar. Bethel ________Lv. 1 PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS, Inc. PHONE: 106 Traffic Representative LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEA1TLE SUUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise July 14, 25 Princess Charlotte July 21, August 1. 11 Princess Alice July 18, 28 Connectlons =i Vawcouver with Canadian Pacific Services: TRANSCONTINENTAL TRANS-ATLANTIC TRANS-PACIFIC Tickets, reseryations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, CP.R.—Juneau, Alaska | Baranof Hotel CANADIAN PACIFIC SERVING JAMES C. COGPER C. P A ROOM 1 SHATTUCK BUILDING BN N _'ROUND 1Y i AL (:,[3‘ SRILING SCHEDULE LL"\ 56 SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound July 14 July 16 July 17 July 21 July 23 July 24 July 28 July Steamer BARANOF COLUMBIA YUKON MT. McKINLEY ALEUTIAN ALASKA BARANOF July 19 July 22 MT. McKINLEY ceuly 12 July 15 FOK OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS 15 15 18 July July July July 22 July July July 18 12 15 =——CALL——— THE ALASKA LINE PHONES Ticket Office ... Freight Office..... H. O. ADAMS, Agent B ————— Treat Your Battery RIGHT! BRING IT TO OUR BATTERY ROOM FOR AN OVERHAUL AND RECHARGE If you need sulphuric acid or Edison Battery Solution, WE HAVE IT. Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. CABS—PHONE 678 BUY GREEN TOP RIDE COUPON BOOKS: 8825 in rides for $5.00 $200 in rides for $2.50 IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY DEVLIN'S AMILY SHOE STORE “Juneau’s Oldest Exclu- sive Shoe Store” Seward Lou Hudson | Street Manager — F FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES Foot of Main Street GAS — OILS { Juneau Molors ; Case Lot Grocery “LOWEST PRICES BY FAR" Phone 704 240 So. Franklin 63 HARRY PATTERSON as » palé-up subscriber 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: "BOYS TOWN" WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPARY OF ALASEKA 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. C .ml."!‘!'p K HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER Frequent Flights to All Points in Southeast Alagka 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 Commeanication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERV!CE Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier *TUESDAY: ~Subject to arrival of mail boat from South. mn to. Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitka, Chichagof, Cove, Hoonah, and return. ¢ ..., *Frequent xgop;memfi;h Trips—10% off Round Trip. SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASKA TICKET OFFICL;, BARANOF HOTEL—PHONE 623 Alex Holden, Chief Pilot . A. B. (Cot) Hayes, Traffic _ RANSFORTATION COMPANY WEEKLY SAILINGS—Junecau to Seattle Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau Seattle No.Bound So.Bound July 14 July 18 July 2t July 21 July 25 July 28 NORTH SEA ... July 28 Aug. 2 NORTH COAST ....Aug. 4 Aug 8 HENRY GREEN, Agent CITY WHARF ... GUY SMITH, Douglas Agen NORTH SEA ... NORTH COAST ..