The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 20, 1939, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

company comes to W. U. STRIKE MAY SPREAD =~ - Company Refuses fo Bar- MRS. KARNES 1S gain with Employees DINNER HOSTESS Who Walked Out N building n quit ympathy Anthony will be tonight E. Kar to Hotel attend are Supr n hoste ix Telegraph to bar- A eme J In- who will f Tacoma D s MAanY JOYCE Joyce made lau: Taku but urn HERE Mary J after seas for to re- ral forced Lodge stormy and w wrn to se days her 1 her to re it more is urn making to he today 1vorable 1| another Taku Lodge on high t - MOVES TO BARANOF Mount take the Baranof ociation ees S Vir istm residence in San Francisco t ril threatened o other t Hot citie at Advance SALE Quality ANOF HOTEL Open Evenings 7-8 B/ In the States, modern bus lines offer you more for your money! o more frequent time-saving schedules daily. lower fares| to more points, more sightseeing opportunities along optional scenic routes, the luxurious comfort of streamlined Super Coaches. Inguire for full information, too, on liberal stopover privileges and the generous baggage allowances. Sample Low Bus Fares from Seattle In Juneau See J. B. BURFORD & Co. ONE WAY $33.50* 15.50 12.00 41.85* ROUND TRIP $56.10* 27.40 21.30 73.20* CHICAGO SALT LAKE CITY SAN FRANCISCO NEW YORK LOS ANGELES 16.50 29.20 NEW ORLEANS 40.10* 65.90% *Also applies from Vancouver, B. C. For complete information, consult your nearest| bus agent in Alaska, or write the CENTRAL TERMINAL, Eighth and Stewart, Seattle. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WED . Submarine Wartare in Atlantic Shown on | liquor legislation for Alaska. This Where attacks took place This excellent map shows the beginning of submarine warfare in the Atlantic as German U-boats continue their attack on British craft. Capt. Giles Stedman of the United States liner Wns_hington rescued 33 persons from the torpedoed British freighter Olivegrove off the Irish coast. While 54 German ships were said to have taken refuge HOME MISSION COUNCIL WILL VISIT ALASKA Methodist Superintendent Outlines Program of 1940 Gatherings of Alaska mar- riage laws, “better” liquor legisla- tion and an interdenominational \pproach to education at the Uni- versity of Alaska will be among fundamental interests of the Home Missions Council of America when it visits Alaska next year, Dr. Wal- er Torbet, Superintendent of Al- aska Missions for the Methodish Church, announced here today Dr. Torbet is on his way Out- side to his home at Piedmont, after a tour of missions in Alaska. He said three gatherings will ne held by the leaders of the denom- inational bhoards when they come {o the Territory in 1940. One proi- ably will be at Ketchikan, nnm!n-z-i at Juneau and the third at either or Fairbanks | Four Objects | Leaders of the Home Missions | Council are interested, said Dr.| Torbet, in the following things: “1. A provision for scholarst for Alaska's brightest and best Na- | tives. | - — “2. An mu-rdr-n_ominmm\z\] ap-| a5 well as could be expected” He | proach to the Unn’e.r\uy ‘n:u fenis | expressed surprise at the vastnum- and, faculty at Fairbanks, UB>|pe0 o geres sown to wheat and Council believing such an apyg ch | cats with cowpeas mixed for for to be vastly beiter than a sectarian | age crops. A month ago the crops | o RS i | witn | looked fine and if the wheat ma.- | 3. Rewriting, after eounsel With| ¢res yhich it probably will, the the leadership of Alaska, of the|ormers winl have a large crop. The marriage laws 50 as to better Pro-| cannery is just beginning to run tect: Wamaphood and child life. |and the creamery is turning out 4. Cooperating with the best|g,. piitor and other dairy pro- | brains of Alaska and men and| g5 The colony has three prin- women of moral sense to better| ..} chyrches, the Catholic, Lu- theran and Presbyterian (known s the Community church), Dr.| Tobert said. | He will remain here over Sun- Visited Shumagins day and will preach at the local Dr. Torbet has been to the Shu- Methodist Church at 11 o'cloc_k on magin Islands on his present trip. |the theme “The Rainbow-Circled His organization has been working | Throne,” at 8 o'clock on “Kingdom Interest First.” One of the basic there for five years planning Sun- day schools and has now stationed | thoughts, Dr. Torbet said, will be | that even national prosperity is Mrs. Hazel M. Paramore, a trained P religious and social worker, at Un- |dependent on the sky-line. that ga to definitely establish a Shu-|OVverhangs the nation and that | prices are fixed from the angle of magin Tslands parish and next year | Prices : put in a medical missionary. | the sky rather than from the angle |of the dirt. “This field” Dr. Torbet said “is| one of the most difficult and needy | | of all Alaska fields. In all the vast| The 48 states collected $527,000‘-| territory from Seward to Unalas-|000 in revenue through motor fuel| ka, a thousand miles, there is no|taxes in 1937. doctor, except in the cannery sea- | son.” | Matanoska \ Dr. Torket Jooked over the Mata- nuska colony and says that “on the Uncle Sam Seward will need careful study and re- quire the best statesmanship th: Territory and denominational lead- ers can afford.” | | - PRSI M AS Next best to an ocean voyage for a true taste o’ Scotland is a sip o’ gude auld Johnnie Walker. Try it and see! RED LABEL, 8 years old BLACK LABEL, 12 years old Both 86.8 proof BORN 182 IT'S SENSIBLE TO STICK WI still going strong whole, it appears to be prospering 0... TH Mother, Divorcee, Heiress— 18 SDAY, SEPT. 20, T BEWEDE N Capt. Gil in the neutral port of Vigo, tinued to come in. The Britisl marine attack off the Portuguese coa ton was sunk off Lands End, Englan had been detected off Cobh, Ireland, Guards Canal With hostilities in Europe, the important Panama canal has become ever more important to Uncle Sam. ward over every foot of the great waterway for 24 hours a day and visitors are not encouraged. Sentries now keep watch and RAIN, COOL WINDS BREAK HEAT WAVE SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20. Showers and cooling winds have broken the California heat wave after the mercury climbed to new record highs in many sections. In San Francisco the tempera- ture reached 88, equal to yester- day’s mark and a high for the year. Then light rains drove the mercury downward. Los Angeles sweltered at a 105-degree tempera- ture, the highest in more than 22 years, until a sudden drenching, rain dropped the thermometer to 85 degrees. i A dozen deaths in the state dur- ing the past several days are; blamed on the heat. AL OO T Of the more than 14,000 banks | in the United States, only 6,338 be- long to the Federal Reserve s tem. But outside banks hold only about 17 percent of the total de—! posits. Empire Want Ads Bring Results. his New Map es Stedman Spain, reports of torpedoed ships con- h steamer Manaar was sunk by a sub- 1939. st. The freighter S. S. Pukkas- d. Reports that 40 submarines were received in the U. S. 'WARNER FREE SAN JOSE, Cal, Sept. 20. — The| veteran football coach “Pop” War- ner is free on probation today af- ter pleading guilty to speeding char- ges. He is now backfield coact d | advisor of San Jose State College | after forty years of directing such teams as Carlisle, Pitt, Stanford and Temple. He admitted driving 58 miles an | hour in a 25 mile His cuse: tice.” zone. H. L. FAULKNER'S MINING (ONGRESS EFFORTS REVIEWED | H. L. Faulkner’s efforts on behalf | of the Alaska mining industry at| the American Mining Congress | western meeting at Salt Lake City | last month are described in the Sep- | | tember 15 edition of The Mining | and Contracting Review. | Faulkner took part in discussion | of both the Wagner act and the | wage-hour act, giving what the Re- | view describes as | seription of Alaska’s seasonal and “a very clear de- resulting high wage problems.” | “Alaska may be congratulated | upon its choice of its quiet, effective | mining representative who seems | not a day older than when we last saw him in 1916,” the report con- | cludes 3 - e — | BASEBALL TODAY The following are scores of games played this atfernoon in the two major leagues: National League Philadelphia 2; Cincinnati 3. New York 4; Chicago 2. American League St. Louis 11; Boston 8. Cleveland 7; Washington 2. Chicago 4; New York 8. Detroit 4; Philadelphia 5. S R DIVORCE CASES Suits for divorce have been filed in District Court here by Vernie Nelson Crowe against Alfred Wil- liam Crowe, Eva Seevers Beierly against Peter Beierly and Marie Henrickson Mahera against William “saac Henrickson Mahera. -—ee— PRINCE RUPERT PRICES At Prince Rupert today 133,000 a«) | collision on the Glacier Highway | | has left for Seattle for treatment “I was late for foctball prac- | FOR MEDICAL CARE | pounds of halibut were sold at 9, 10 and 6 cents a pound. Charles Morrison, CCC enrollee | i injured last week in an auto-truck | o 000000000000 CANADIAN DISCOUNT 12¢ L) at the Marine Hospital. G B. M. Behrends Bank. The Book ALASKA. Revised and | adv. First National Bank. ® 0 ® 8 0 0 0 0 0 00 0o \ \ EURY ROUND-TRIP TICKET FROM SEATTLE TO NEW YORK with option of refurning via San Francisco EFFECTIVE DAILY TO OCTOBER 28, 1929 B\ B\ § $ \ COACH % go "lman Car cha¥ges in additicn Liberal revurn limits and stopover privileges 3 FAMOUS AIR-CONDITIONED TRAINS EAST STREAMLINER— ciTY OF PORTLAND 5 Sailings monthly from Portland, 6:30 p.m., on the s, IN DELUXE IN STANDARD PULLMAN - e — BRANT LEAVES WITH MOVIE PASSENGERS Furnishing transportation to Pet- | ersburg for Motion Picture Producer Ira Genet and party, the Bureau of Fisheries vessel Brant left Juneau today. With Assistant Agent J. Steele Culbertson in charge, the Brant will make a stream inspection trip along Frederick Sound and Stephens Passage. [ | LA S S B R Veal Fricassee and EGG DUMPLINGS | Baranof Tomorrow ALASK ELECTRICLIGHT & POWER CO. 00000000 T $10.00 REWARD for the return of CHENOA. Keith Wildes® White Siberian Huskie dog . . . . All white, with one blue and one brown eye. 7th, 13th, 19th, 25th. 39% hours to Chicaco. Mo extra fere. Other Stroamliners westbound from Chicago to Los Angeles and Sen Francisco. PORTLAND 1'OSE-- Lv. Portland 9:35 p.m. daily PACIFIC LIMITED-- Lv. Portlard 8:00 a.m. daily Easy connections from Sesttie -Lv. o 8:20 am, g ot Poriland with St regut 0 pm, connecting with Portland Rose; with Pacific Limited. For Infermation ond Rezervations— ket Office, 1403 4th Ave., ELio! dat connect Sestile Otfice he Or Union € WORLD'S FAIRS New York San Francisco on, 4th and Jacksen, Eliot 6933 “Seattle Prices Are Our Prices” A ALWAYS A LIBERAL TRADE-IN [F KEITH WILDES A mother at thirteen, a divoreee at 17, Mrs. Juanita Deere McClish has, at 18, become hei to nearly a half million dollars. The fortune was left her by her mother, Mrs, Woosie John Deere, Creek Indian. Mrs, McClish is shown with son, Buster, 6, at their Sapulpa. Okla., home. JOHNNIE [/ ALKER BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY N. Y SOLE DISTRIBUTOR SR 0000 A INC., NEW YORK A AR A DRY GINGER ALE Bl

Other pages from this issue: