The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 25, 1939, Page 6

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JUST THINK-OUR CHILDREN ArzE MARRIED- AND WILL OON BE LEAVING US — | CAH HARDLY BELIEVE ARE YOU CRYIN' BECAUSE YOU ARE SAD OR HAPPY ? 1T MARINE NEWS LOUISE SOUTH WITH 37 FROM JUNEAU TODAY| The steamer Punmss Louise wmv. southbound through Juneau eariy this morning, coming in at 6 o'~ clock and sailing at 8 o'clock, tak- ing 37 passengers from here south Those leaving were T. Balnave, Mr. and Mrs. A. Wells, Miss R. An- drews, ‘Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Craw- ford. E. T. McNuity, Mrs. E. L. McNulty, B. Bonner, R. Bench, Miss J. VanderLeest, Mrs. A. G. Reynolds, J. H. Breight, J. Schweppe, J.Goodwin, Mrs. L. P. Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Per- soneus, Miss A. Personeus, B. Per- soneus, Miss M. Taylor, L. E. Evans, E. Hautala, J. B. McCroskie, Miss A. Atkinson, Miss J. Wells, T F. Field, Miss M. Thompson, J Thorncroft, Dr. J. M. Swartz, Mrs. A C. Congdon, 8. Congdon, E. Congdon, T. E. Congdon, Miss M. M. Congdon, P. Adolph and A Roan, ONE HALIBUTER SELLS AT SEATTLE : SEATTLE, Aug. 25—Only one halibuter, the Chelsea from the western banks, arrived today. The vessel brought in 40,000 pounds of halibut and sold the catch for 105 and 10 -cents-a pound From the local banks, lance brought in 12,000 pounds of sable, the Aegir 15,000 pounds, both | s 9 e s 0000 6090 BY GOLLY-THIS IS THE HAPPIEST AN’ SADDEST HOUSE | EVER SAW- n!!flr PRINCE GEORGE ~ - - HERE; LASTTRIP Canadian National's Prince George, on her last trip of the sea- son, arrived in Juneau at 6:30 o’- clock yesterday afternoon with 130 round trip passengers, and four pas- | MEGhAD MAGGIE CtviL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS BLAND TELLS PURPOSES OF FISHSTUDY The United States Oivil Service Commission has announced an open competitive examination.for the po- | sition of Jupior Public Health Nurse, in the Indian Field Service, the Re-! I+ |sengers who disembarked at Ket-i chikan and one at Juneau. The pas- | senger alighting at Juneau was Mrs. | Veta McIntosh of Tanacross, Alaska. The ship sailed for Skagway at 11 o'clock p.m. and will be back in Juneau on the trip south at 1 o' |clock a.m. Sunday. J. W. Watt is master of the Prince George, and other officers are W. E. | Eccles, first officer; A. 8. Munro chief engineer; N. A. McLean, pur- ie NORTHBOUND [‘ Yukon scheduled to arrive at 8:30 o'clock tonight. Should have three days’ mail aboard Tyee scheduled to arrive: at 9:30 o'clock tonight. Mount McKinley scheduled to arrive tomorrow night. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Taku scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 tonight. { eccsessene ® Aleutian scheduled to sail from ® | ... 5 Ginap assistant purser, and |® Seattle 9 a. m. tomorrow. . J. M. Kerr, chief steward. ® North Coast scheduled to sail i ¢ from Seattle 10 a. m. tomor- L] e sail from Vancouver tomor: { e rowat9p m | NEWS e North Sea scheduled to sail ® \: ;roz»s»ame August 28 at 10 ® A S 0 : | ® Alaska scheduled to sail from & IS ROBBED OF CASH ® Seattle August 20 at 9 a. m. 8 The Feusi and Jensen store wul | ® Princess Louise scheduled to ® | the scene of a robbery last night' e sail from Vancouver August ®|according to Tom Jensen, clerk, who S 2 gt8p.m. upon opening for business this ® Northland scheduled to sall ® moming found a door between the | ® from Seattle Sepl. 1 at 10 a. ® warehouse and grocery room broken Bl ® |open and about $75 in cash missing ® BSOUTHBOUND SAILINGS @ |grom the register. He immediately ® Baranof scheduled to arrive reported the matter to City Marshal |Schramm who called in Deputy U. south one hour later. ® 8. Marshal Walter Hellan of Juneau ® Prince George scheduled soouth @ |to assist with the investigation ! bound 1 a. m. Sunday. ® | Apparently the intruder had gain-' Columbia is scheduled scuth- ® .q entrance through the street door tomorrow noon and sails ® rin all parts of the United States ' conditions in the industry, {lief where needed, to remedial leg- Congressmen—Here fo Be Helpful fo Alaska’s Fishing Industry (Continued from Page One) mittee’s plan to make a compre- hensive study of fishery matters with a view to rehabilitation of the industry, to the improvement of to re- islation where found to be neces- sary, and to correction of evils, df any should be found to exist. I wish to emphasize that the work is to be constructive and informa- tive and not destructive. “I dislike the word investigation as applied to the work which we| are undertaking. Where investiga- tions are factors in the problems outlined we shall make them to the extent our time will permit or conditions may warrant. The im- portant feature to be emphasized | is that the Committee is trying to be helpful to all branches of the \industry and in all of its phases “We began our work last year in Maine. We have heard from those engaged in the industry in North {all 40-8ers are requested to turn selling for 5% cents straight, and| the Repeat 7,000 pounds of sable, selling. mr 4% cents straight | {3 I Tioes ToMoRROW , Low tide—4:51 am, 14 feet. High tide—11:20 a.m,, 13.6 feet. Low tide—5:01 p.m., 4.1 feet. High tide—11:08 p. 14.8 feet. T @AY (CANOE TRIPPERS » ports 2 068 0 6 00000 0o DAVIS REPORTS DEASE COUNTRY LOOKING 600D Jack Davis is back in juneau aiter a month in the Dease Lake country in connection with mining interests there, reporting considerable acuvny uuo m D Awso“ in placer and lodes. Davis said he apd his nln.neu have staked. about five miles of a’ romisog nickel lode that has o | Repod Trip Down Yukon Is loned ueh - interest th costoned mueh - st in whe | |Ingyentful-Make 462 nickel producing world. Miles in Six Days While in Juneau; Davis is a guest Juneay’s two Capital-to-Cirele | at uuom;mu glbtel canoelsts, Bert HopKins and Jake FOSIER SA“'S Jaderholm, write The Empire that | | bound Sunday ® to the warehouse room where most 3 | » LOCAL SAILINGS ® of the heavy hardware supplies are Qeadiin. We Sipe SRS O » Estebeth scheduled lo sa1! every ® kept, Jensen said. The bar usually Stid7 until we have covered the n- e Wednesday al 6 p.m. for 8it- ® placed on the inside of the door at duptty 1) alt i 18 rosiusc) * ka and wayports. night had been inadvertently left| Problems for Study f | ® Dart leaves every Wednesday ® off. The usual custom of taking the o} “In Alaska, there will be in-! » at 7am. for Petersburg, Port ®cash out of the register had likewise volved in our studies: | ® Alexander, Kake and way | been overlooked when the store was| “(1) The controversial® guestion closed after the day's business, et | JUNEAU ALL-STARS ARE i WINNERS AT SOFT- BALL | The first game of the softball | season played on the Douglas dia- | mond 1ast evening resulted in a 9 {to 5 score in favor of the Juneau | All-Stars over Warner's Grocery team. A number of spectators were on the sidelines to watch the game which extended well into partial darkness. The lineup follows: J.A.8—Herritt ¢, Lewis p, Bensoh | 1b, Kronquist 2b, Whitley 3b, Fer- guson ss, Duckworth rf, Whittier If, Hildinger cf, Burk rf. Warner's—Erskine c, Andrews p, | Nelson 1b, G. Stragier 2b, Warner |8b, A. Stragier ss, Gulhaugen rf, yVicklund If, Feero cf, Mesojedic rf. T VICKLBLUNDS TAKE KILBURN APARTMENT Mr. and Mrs. Elwin Vickerlund | ON McI(INlEY Wilson “Bud” Foster, baseball star, basketball referee, radio com- mentator, and recently Forest Serv- ice gmployee, .one of -the most pop- | ular. young men of Juneau, is leay- ing aboard the steamer Mount Mc- Kihley tomorrow for Fairbanks. Foster is to assume the position of nt Manager for KFAR, Capt. A. E. Lathrop’s new farthest not radio statipn to be opened poon in Fairbapks. Mgs. Foster will follow her hus- | band about the middle of next| month, ‘The couple will Jeave a ’osl of mends in Juncau Miss: Benholl Feted With Kitchen Shower Miss Prances Newman was hos- tess last evening at the family resi- dence in the Coliseum Apartments with a kitchen shower given in com- pliment to Miss Dorothy Bertholl whose marriage to Mr. Harry Stur- rock will be an event here Septem- ber 2. Guests spent the evening playing games, honors for which were won by Mrs. Roland Lindquist, Mrs Clifford Berg and Mrs. John White- ly. Those invited for the occasion included Mrs. Frank Behrends, Mrs. Clifford Berg, Mrs. Robert Gordon Mrs. Roland Lindquist, Mrs. John Whitely, Miss Corrine Duncan, Miss Merifm Lea, Miss Virginia Lund Miss Ellen McKechnie, Miss Jane Blomgren and Miss Esther John stone. — oo Enfpire Want Ads Bring Results, trayeling down the Yukon is ea.w, arrived here on the Northland from but. expensive. | Hoquiam, Washington, have taken A letter posted in ‘Dawson oh opne of the Kilburn apartments ! August 21 said the pair had arrived which they will occupy after on that day after six 11-hour days | the Gertz's departure Sunday. For nd one 4-hour day of paddling for |the present they are house guests he 462 miles from Whitehorse to|of Claude Erskine. it is much easler for us when. we can—even at some inconvenience Department of the Interior. Appli- cations must be on file in the Com- mission’s office at Washington, D. C., not jater than October 14. The salary for the position is $1,800 a/ year, High school education and certain nursing training is required for en- trance to the examination. Com- petitors are to be given a written test covering practical questions. Ap- plicants must not have passed their | 40th birthday. The age limit will not be waived in any case. Full information may be obtained at 311, Federal Building. 40-8 MEETS An important meeting of the 40-8 will be held tonight at the Ameri- can Legion Dugout. Delegates and alternates will be chosen for the big time at Faribanks next month and out by Jack Holler, big chief !‘mnkll Steam Bath | (OPEN EVERY DAY 10 a.m. till midnight Boap Lake Mineral Baths R. E. MALIN, D.C., Prop. Treatments and Massage 143 Willoughby Ave. Phone 673 Weather Siri SOLD and INST: un by lof fish trap operations; “(2) The problem of local ind loutsidie labor: in thes operations; “(3) The question of the extent 'to which the regulation of the fish- eries shall be transferted to ‘the | Territorial Government; “(¢ What, if any, restriction shail be imposed on the use of herring in the manufacture of oil and fertilizer or meal; The extent to which peml { legislation shall be .modified; “(8) The operation of the Ter- ritorial and Federal agencies, their respective work, and functions; “(7) Buch matters as may be| suggested, and deemed by the Buh— committee pertinent or appropriate to be considered now, or of such a nature that they may be rensanably' studied in the time at the Commit- tee's disposal. Here To Learn “These problems, in one form or anbther, have been before the Committee many times. Alaska is a long ways from Washington, and to ourselves—to go to Alaska than for ‘the people of Alaska to ceme ta us. “The Subcommittee, in -addition Phone 123 . YVictor, Powers GREEN TOP CABS—PHONE 678 | BUY GREEN TOP RIDE ] COUPON BOORS: |! 2625 in rides for $5.00 53.00 in rides for $2.50' FAMILY | Juneau, Alaska s ._._____—-——-—Al Dawson. Current, Hopkins writes, about four miles an hour on the average, although as high as eight and as low as two miles an hour. Mosquitoes - are | weather turning cold, but Hopkins had one complaint. He asks, “Did I {ever beef about Juneau prices?” and !,hen goes on to explain that White- { horse’ Coca” Cola costs 20 cents a bottle, and bread 25 cents a loaf. Five Finger and Rink Rapids were | both edsy, the canoeists ‘write, and also add that the only river run- {ning advice they have been given yet that is good advice, i8 hanging a bucket over the bow to keep you in the main current for drifting and | helping movement in a bad head wind. Wednesday, the two Juneau boys who started out from here in their 18-foot canoe, paddling to Skagway, runs | few and the| e e——— COMING TO DOUGLAS Mrs, Edwina Snethen and her | daughter Perry, aged 6 years, of Se- | attle, are expected to arrive in Doug- las aboard the steamer North Coast next week to spend the winter with |Mrs. Snethan’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, Bd Meztinsen,, NIPPON PLANE DUE AT NOME. SUNDAY MORN {May Go Direct fo Fair- | banks Says Telegram and then going across to tme ¥o.| 10 Customs Here kon River, headed up Hunker Creek to take out a pan for their prospect- | ing experience and then go on to Eagle and “the good old U. 8. A." From Eagle they go to Circle, then Port Yukon, Tanana, Fairbanks, truck to Valdez, and steamer to Ju- neau. - >ss MARRIAGE LICENSE A marriage license was issued today by U. S. Commissioner M. E. Monagle to Tony Tomatich and Harriet Averl Marie Mary West- ake, both of Juneau. | > [, Trls" The Empire classifieds for esults, Alaska will have its first look at the Japanese round-the-world plane Nippon J-Baci on Sunday, when the ship is scheduled to arrive at Nome at 10 o'clock in the morning, Nome time Collector of Customs J. J. Connors was notified today by tele- |gram from the Oska Mainichi, the newspaper sponsoring the flight. The plane will start from Sapporo, Japan, on Sunday, but because it crosses the international date line enroute to Nome, will reach Alaska | the morning of the 17th. | The Mainichi’s telegram to the Collector was as follows: | “Japanese Aeroplane Nippon J- ijci inted start - Sappora 27th, “ [come " from states engaged 4n the i|of, these men seek . information. || There Ns never been ‘4 oongres- A who urged that the study be made, SHOE STORE “Juneau’s Oldest Exclu- sive Shoe Btore” Lou Hudson Manager to the Chairman of the full com- mittee, Honorable 8. O. Biland, of Virginia, consists of Honorable Am- brose Kennedy, of Maryland; Hon- orable Monrad @ Wallgren, of Washington; Honerable Frank W.|. - Boykin, of * Alabama; Honorable Richard J: Welech, of Oalifornia; Honorable George N. Seger; of New Jérsey; ‘and . Homorable James OC. ver, of Maine. All of these men fisheries' and ‘are acquainted with the: problems of the industry. Al sional study of the fisherfies in Al- aska, and the Committee on Mer- chant Marine and Fisheries wel- comed the invitation of the able and zealous delegate from Alaska, Honorable Anthony J. Dimond, Saturda; 10:00|Lv. Juneau :00{Ar. Whitehorse L 11:20iLv. Whitehorse ________Ar. 1:80]Ar. Paisbanks v. and we were glad to urge that the Congress comply ' with the ' request of the Territorial Axsembly of Al- aska and of Delegate Dimond that such a study should be made, Thursday end Morrda: Mo e “We feel that when the study . Pairbanks shall be completed we shall be 45 Ruby better prepared to handle the |Ar. Nome oblems of Alaska and also to deal with our own problems.” | JAMES C. COBPER . ROOM 1 SHATTUCK BUILDING i oupen Evenings Phone 907 AL THE SHOE DOCTOR Shoes, Clothing, Guns, Ammunition 278 So. Franklin St. FOR RENT CARS || [ DRIVE-IT-YOURSELF Reasonable Rates—Gas Included LLOYD REID 323 Distin Ave. Phoune Blue m' e v i f.__..— B — SANITARY PLUMBING and | HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worry.” Phone 788. ———————— ¢ Treal Your Battery RIGHT! BRING IT TO OUR BATTERY ROOM FOR AN OVERHAUL AND RECHARGE If you need sulphuric acid or Edison Batfery Solution, WE HAVE IT. Alaska Eleciric Light & Power Co. AP !| Harri Machine Slmp “Try Us First” *;..__ HAUGEN TEANSPORTATION CO. M, S. DART U. S. Mail Carrier Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneau, AlmDm lnd WAY POBTS For Information Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 Freight must be on city doock mot later than 4 P. M. Tuesday ALASKA Transporiatiox Company .. Sept. 1 Sept... 8 8. 8. TYEE 8. 8. TAKU AT OP. M. A RTRIGERATION [.] Japanese date. Will arrive Nome about 10 morning 27th, Nome time, or might proceed direct to Fair- banks. Afrmen five, passengers two.” ‘ It is possible the plane may stop at Juneau enroute -from Fairbanks to Seattle, though the stop is nof listed™“in the cial itinerary. PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS Inc. m“""»mm"""""‘ tmmlmmc VEAR ROUND ALASKA SERUI[E ——————— THE YEAR 'ROUND BAILING SCHEDULE Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound COLUMBIA Aug. 19 Aug. 22 Aug. 27 ...... Aug. 22 Aug. 26 Aug. 28 Aug. 23 Aug. 26 Sept. 1 Aug. 26 Aug. 29 Sept. 3 Aug. 29 Sept. 2 Sept. 4 Aug. 30 Sept. 2 Sept. 8 FOK OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS ——taLL—— e THE ALASKA LINE PHONES Ticket Office .. Freight Office. H. O. ADAMS, Agent Ahckfl Stc'm\ shlp Com pany SERVICE--ON‘RAIL-ALASK B IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY DEVLIN'S Case Lot Grocery “LOWEST PRICES BY FAR" Phone 704 240 So. Franklin MARINE AIRWAYS—-U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 AL A SK A AIR TRA!ISPBII'I' Inc. All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical PHONE 2-Way Radio Station KANG 612 Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU DAY or Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER NIGHT MRS. L. BRESLICK as & palo-ap subsermber The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the “TARNISHED ANGEL" and receive 2 tickets to see: “Three Loves Has Nancy” WATCH THIS BPACE Your Name May Appear COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Tiile 1 F. H. A. HOTEL GASTINEAD Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in’ connection AIR smwcs INFORMATION TS WEEKLY SAILINGS—Juneau to Seattle i boatdl Leave Ar. Juneau Lv.Juneau S Beattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTH COAST ......Aug. 26 Aug. 30 NORTH SEA ... Aug. 28 Sept. 2 NORTHLAND Sept. 1 Sept. 5 Sept. 8 NORTH SEA ......BSept. 8 Sept. 12 Sept. 15 HENRY GREEN, Agent ... PhOnE 109 GUY SMITH, Dougias Agent ..o Phone 18

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