The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 7, 1939, Page 8

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8 Juneau Sees Gianf Liner HereSunday Several Hundred Visit City —As Many Go Aboard Steamship lift and permit a nearby peak but told of ol nobody greete front ent Juneau’s App: ppar r-dog probably Ric Juneau youngsters Duchess anyone. Pa- he of Canadiar D d such large r an, elaborately fur four bars aboard ree operating this operates decks, and a room th trip) be- autiful be orciestras aw the dining deck above deck 260 pas- Two Passengers from the rough windows to tt e tables accom T in true prepared appeal palate, and a five-pie chestra playing from a lof above. There is also a 6-pic chestra for dance music Also interesti to Jur familiar with the easter T the Canadian and Er the diminuitive “Bel boys that seemed to be eve at once with smart The little lad from fourteen to eigl ige, dressed in tight serge suits, leaped like little when a bell was ssed “Bells” On Toes Although in America the known as “boj their C: lish nickname Bel ant something, press a buttor and shout “Bells!” If youre ¢ titled to what you are will get it. The youngsters were disappointed here, being unable to go ashore reconciled themselves to the tion with the observation that they will “do more what they want to do when they “get to be stewarc Passengers report the trip been a “big success” from the start on July 1 when the Duchess of Richmond sailed from Montre: down thé East Coast and throu the canal. Everywhere, special ¢ tractions have filled shortime, with a native feast at Honolulu the highlight—although the native food ittin ask has raw"” in most dish- the vessel sailed down Frederick Sound, heading open sea on the way to nd Victoria and so back where ki From hrougt for Vancouver Montreal nd September to officers say the will probably make the hbor” cruise Ship y company 20,000-mile yood Neig an annual 63 Executed, Murder (ase Slaying of Spanish Official and Daughter Causes Many Executions MADRID, Aug. 7.—Nine men were > today to bring to a the number of persons 1t to 1 in the past three days for complicity in t assination of Military Police Inspector Isaac Ga- baldon and his daughter, aged 17 years, rd and four women fac the firing as the Spanish ‘Government “leanup campaign in ele- considered subversive. - o ROYAL COUPLE (OMING HERE; - ON GAME HUNT Duke and Duchess of Suth- erland fo Visit Capi- fal City Soon according to word received at the f of Gov. John W. Troy he royalty to come here th Duke and Duchess of Sutherland who will visit here in their yatcht speur (French for fearless) en- on a big game were among those squad. pushed ment a it Ju will hunt in and possibly at i Aleutian Island points 2 to the Governor's received from E. t. Governor in Victoria, wa Hamber, Lieu B. C N GLEASON VISITS JUNEAU BRIEFLY the cruise will w. | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 7, 1939. : |BUDGET BUREAU |NLRB Rules TALLIES HEAVY | . 2 WASHINGTON, Aug. 7. Treasury Must Dig Up Nine w.onai tanor etntions Hli ruled today that a large San Fran- Billion Dollars to cisco bank had violated the fair la- . |bor provisions by discharging an Finance Year |empioyee 3 —_— The Board denied the claims of WASHINGTON, Aug. 7. — The |the Bank of America National Trust Budget Bureau today figured that and Savings Association that it was Congress had appropriated ten bil- not subject to the rulings of the lion hour hundred and seventy- National Labor Relations Board. two million three hundred and fif- | The ruling ordered the bank to re- ty-four thousand- dollars, for the|instate with back pay, clerk Edward current fiscal year. | Washer. Figures show that this sum is| It was claimed that Washer had tw ohundred and sixty-one million |been discharged after trying to or- dollars more than the budget esti- |ganize a union among the bank's mates were for the 1940 appropria- numerous employees. The bank | tions total, exclusive of contract au- |claimed to be the agency of the thorizations, reappropriations and |Federal Government because of its unexpended balances in.other funds membership in the Federal Reserve made available for spending. System and the Federal Deposit In- In addition, Congress appropriat- surance Corporations. ed one billion, thirteen million dol- R R lars for deficiencies of ]71‘0\')0\15‘F After deducting postal receipts and err ommu ers District of Columbia revenues, the H i Py i e 1o s oive| DEMand Arbitration billion six hundred and ninety mil- | lion dollars to finance these appro- SEATTLE, Aug. 7.—A committee g el il e of angry commuters demanded last thiese fibas Awm iy x'équ;"eé “‘m night that ferry service on Puget Year, » | Sound be resumed immediately and 3 that the Inland Boatmen’s Union pute | The boatmen’s strike, the third in four years was called last Tues- OF I.Yso‘. FA".S About 10,000 persons depending T0 DO THE JOB, . . Joe Puizel Recovering in | | priations, but Budget Director Har- pr - = |and operators arbitrate their dis- "SUICIDE’ DRINK day lis on ferries for transportation ace affected. A delegation of patrons will call on Gov. Martin today to demand that the service be re- sumed. A county operated ferry serving patrons in a limited fashion. Otherwise the islanders would be marooned. I Hospital-Note Found in Rainier Rooms | Joseph Putzel drank half a bot of Lysol Saturday night at t Rainier Rooms in an unsuccessful .« FEDERAL COURT he He was taken to St. Ann's Hos- [E— pital where he is recoverin . . . . A “sulcide note" found in Putzel Final Vl(fory n Reorganl- room attributed the deed to des- 5 &, was zation Plans Finally Accomplished pondency, thought the note scrawled so poorly it was all but illegible. e BODY FOUND NEAR WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.—Presi- dent Roosevelt has signed a Federal Court reorganization bill today while Attorney General Murphy and ~ CHICHAGOF; DIED ‘ IN SEA IS VERDICT sormer attorney Generar cummin P st | watched with admiration Against Bank you = but | | e L S The pen used by Mr. Roosevelt 2 AOMEL prowning A5 4, sign the measure was presented the verdict of a coroner’s jury which - - >, g 9 " to former Attorney General Cum- Pacific Alaska | investigated the body of an un- . i = rrived here aboard an s mings., SAid Gumaying " | identified person found on Outer “Every objective the urday for a short visit.| Harbor Island, near Chichagof, 1ast 1.4 in mind has now been accom- wson, who has been kept “on ! Friday plished i 1 )" most of the summer| U. S, Commissioner L. H. Smith Murphy concluded: “This com- from one radio station of | of Chichagof notified U. S. AULOrNeY | jiotes the 1037 court program.” ystem to another, will prob-| william Holzheimer today the man go from here to Whitehorse | was believed to be John Larson, lost eason Superintendent of for President | rrow on the Tuesday schedule| five weeks ago off Kalinen Bay. A He the Hotel is guest at Baranof R PIONEER DIES David T. Ceraner, 77. oldtimer of the Fairbanks district, is dead of general paresis terior in 1904, brother believed to be at Elfin Cove | was to be notified | The body was buried near where | it was found. | Helium ranks after hydrogen as the lightest gas, but outranks hy- drogen for ballooning because hy- He went to the in-|drogen is inflammable. Helium is not. Nt e EMBEZZLES §5,000 SANTA ANA, Cal, Aug. 7—The former City Treasurer of Anaheim, California, Charles Boege, was un- der a prison sentence today for the embezzlement of funds under his care. Boege pleaded guilty to steal- ing approximatley $5,000 from the city. | New Fordham Dean Miss Anna E. King Fordham university, a Catholic Jesuit institution in New York | City, now has a woman dean— | Miss Anna E. King. She was named head of the university's school for social service by Rev. Robert I Gannon, president, and | is the first woman to hold such a position there. Fordham has 3,000 women students. Geo. Alexander, Jr. | South to_Eqir, School George Alexander, Jr, son of Judge and Mrs. George F. Alex-| ander, sailed south this morning on | the steamer Aleutian enroute to the | fair at San Francisco. | Young Alexander, a graduate of the class of '39, will be joined at| the fair by Ned Rowe, formerly of | Juneau, now living in Sacramento. | After his visit in California, the popular Juneau youth will return | to Seattle and enter the Univer- | sity of Washington for his first year | of pre-law. | FVEGOSOUTH ON PR, RUPERT Five passengers left Juneau aboard the steamer Prince Rupert for Van- couver early Sunday morning, They were Mrs. G. W. Devine, | Mrs. Nattie Smith, Ben Adair, Rich- | ard Charles and Edward Loomis. e ,.———— REVEREND MOTHER VISITING BRIEFLY Reverend Mother Leopoldine and Mother Mary Lois are stopping briefly in Juneau at St. Ann’s Hos- | pital before returning to Victoria, | B. C. The Reverend Mother, ac- ! companied by Sister Mary Lois, is making her annual visit to the] Territory and arrived from Seward |today on the steamer Aleutian. | R CANNERY CALVERTS | SOUTH ON ALEUTIAN| Star Calvert and Loren Calvert, | principal owners of the San Juan Fish Company, left on the Aleu- | tian today after spending a month | in Alaska and a week in this dis- { trict. The cannerymen came here re-| cently from Bristol Bay and went | to Todd with Nick Bez to spend | four or five days. Bez remains in the City e — | Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. tors Corporation strike. TAFT CLUB FORMED WARREN, Ohio, Aug. 5—Ohio’s| first Taft-for-President Club was established here today by a group of Marion County Republicans. A| Marion attorney, Lewis Francis,| was named President of the club. The Taft-for-President club was formed shortly after Senator Taft announced his willingness to ac- cept the Republican nomination for President in 1940. STRIKE ENDS DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 7. — The CIO United Auto Workers have an- nounced the union membership has voted virtually unanimously to ap- prove the terms of the agreement; ending the month long General Mo- | IMMIGRATION CHIEF f KNIGHT IS VISITOR Dewey Knight, District Dtrectov} of Immigration, arrived on the steamer Alaska from Ketchikan on | official business. He is staying at| the Gastineau Hotel i SUNDQUIST RITES ‘: WILL BE TOMORROW Final rites for Hjalmar Sundquist will be held tomorrow afternoon at |2 0’clock in the Chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary and the eulogy will be delivered by the Rev- erend J. Edward Knight. | Pallbearers will be members of the Juneau Min eand Mill Workers Union. Interment will be in the Evergreen Cemetery. | e For 36 consecutive miles, the Great Smoky Mountain Range in North Carolina is more than 5,000 | | teet in altitude. Florida Couple Sees City : Affer Long Time Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cummer, of Jacksonville, Florida, were pas- sengers on the Duchess of Richmond visiting Juneau yesterday who were i y & seeing the Capital City for the first | time in 20 years. The Cummers, who made an ex- cursion north on the Princess May in 1919, expected to find “board streets” and “a rather ordinary vil- lage,” but after going over the town again yesterday, agreed that Juneau is “a regular little city.” Cummer is a lumberman in Flor- ida, cutting cypress timber. - The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. (Stole Curtains [From Hotel Is Accusation Charged with stealing curtains from the Gastineau Hotel, Axel Johnson was arrested Saturday night by city police. Johnson faces prosecution for larceny from a dwelling, a felony. He is alleged to have taken the bundle of curtains from the hotel's laundry room and to have tried to sell them along Willoughby Avenue. »> . . GOOD OLD FASHIONED ' BEEF STEW for Your Lunch Tomorrow at the BARANOF L SR Sy | | NOT ICE!? Juneau Miners and Mill Workers LOCAL 203 will MONDAY 7P.M. AUGUST 7 SHARP Hereafter we will continued to meet each Monday at 7 P. M. Sharp — PIONEERS PICNIC TREADWELL BEACH Tuesday % ® CUPS. will he FURNISHED. August 8 BRING YOUR OWN LUNCH and COFFEE and TRANSPORTATION BUSSES leave 0dd Fellows’ Hall at 5P.M.and6P. M. ALL OLDTIMERS are invited. PIONEERS and FAMILIES be there! om . See this SensélinalNe 1939 FRIGIDAIRE ¥it the Mefer-Mise World's First "'Cold-Wall” Refrigerafor Built on an Entirely New Principle Now, For the First Time THE NEW “DEW-FRESH SFAL"—A SOLID GLASS PARTTTION- DIVIDES THE CABINET INTO TWO COMPARTMENTS, AND THELOWER COMPARTMENT IS REFRIGERATED DIRECTLY THROUGH THE WALLS BY CONCEALED REFRIGERATING COILS. Come in. See proof that this foods naturally moist and vially fre it provides bl Temperatu Y. tion ... All HAs 17! That's why it's y “first line” refrigerators. ( Demonstration before bu CONVENIENT TERMS w‘ mazing new P. JOHNSON “THE FRIGIDAIRE MAN" “Cold-Wall” Principle keeps sh longer than ever before, use — er food preservation. 1. Uniform Low 3. No Moisture-Robbing Air Circula- e moving part! AND ONLY FRIGIDAIRE cad. Yet it costs no more than ordinary See our Proof yoursclf in 5 Minutes. ng any refrigerator! AS LOW AS 25c A DAY See Frigidaire’s other advanced new models,too. For every need and bnd‘n. New low prices for 1939. TELEPHONE 17 ARE INSURED, ARE I " AND EARN GREAT- URNS WITH THE ALASKA FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assn. of Juneau TELEPHONE 3 _—_ ALASKA’S SHIPS CAN KEEP RUNNI good transportation, regular mail service the year around. That’s because 75% of Alaska’s steamship revenue is paid by the Canned Salmon Industry for shipments of salmon, building materials, cannery supplies and transportation of crews. It’s another way in which the Salmon and give Alaska’s people Industry helps to promote prosperity here.

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