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AH-MY VISIT TO WASHINGTON 1S MARINE NEW®S ALASKA HAS [ srvea Mowmrss (ROWD FOR PORTS WES O C brought the Alaska port here this n with 47 passengers aboard 1(. this city and posted the vessel to cail for the Westward at 5 o'- clock this evening from the Alaska Juneau wharf [42] ——— s o e s 0. NORTHBOVND Alaska in port. Scheduled to sail westward at 5 o'clock this afternoon from A. J. Dock SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 tonight Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 a. m. tomorrow Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle March 20 at 10 a. m. Yuken scheduled to sail from Seattle March 30 at 9 a. m. jl - tc Purser Dave Doran reported his SOUTHBOUND SATLINGS passenger lists jammed almost to © Taku scheduled to arrive at mining men and fish- 6:30 o'clock tonight and will capacity ermen returning possibly sail south one hour later. north for the seg oooooconnco-.-a.'no--t'.o- son. Parsengers arriving from Seattle Princess Norah seheduled to were Martin And n, J. B. Bern- sail south at 8 o'clock tomor- hofer, Mrs, Robert Bruno, Robert row morning. | H. Davenport, Hazel Flinton, Mrs. North Sea scheduled south Pete Giavenalo, W. A. Graham, C: Friday morning Hallberg, K. D. Hauser, A. M, Hart- ® Mount McKinley southbound ford ® next Priday. Selmer Holte, Marvin Jordan,! e Jean King, Mrs, Otto Lieman, Mil-|® LOCAL BAILINGS . dred Maynard, Louis Mideke, Rob- ® Estebeth scheduled to sail every o ert Mize, Mrs. T. P. Morrisey, John |® Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- ® Russell, Karl Thelle, Mrs. A, S./® ka and wayports. B} Thompson, A. 8. Thompson, Gerald- ® Dart leaves every Wednesday © ine Thompson ® at 7a.m. for Petersburg, Port e John J. Wolfe, O. A. White, Hugo ® Alexander, Kake and way e Braden, O. DeSpain. Jack Flame, ® ports . % 0 0 000 0 & 0 0 4 - Robert Hansen, W. J. Hewitt, Harry Lundquist, Ray Martin, Nick Skoff, S. tanway, Jr., Thomas Varnson, J. — e W, Wilson. From Southeast Al 5— | TIDES TOMORROW Margaret Morris, Florence Echart Glenn Nietzert, R. J. Sommer High tide--3:00 am., 186 fect Louring, A. L. Vaughn, George; Low tife~D:28 aim. -22 feet. Phillips, E. A. Troberz, W. E. Vo- High tide—3:46 pam., 158 feet. gel, Ethel James. Low, tide—8:35 pm. 14 fect. - - 'LITTLE PORT WALTER (REW WORK FINISHED The Forest Service launch Ran- brought #€r IX left today for Oliver Inlet, last | St. James Bay and Little Port in | Walter. The boat will pick up a |12-man CCC crew which has com- The Sitka, owned by I. Goldstein, Pleted work on the new fisheries had a cargo.of fishermen's sup-|Scientific station at Little Port plies aboard for Goldstein, and | Walter. after unleading, will prepare gear T By for the coming fishing season, B P w PUB“C 0. . SCHOONER SITKA ARRIVES IN PORT Capt. Bill Doucett, well veteran halibut fisherman, the schooner Sitka to port night from its winter berth Seattle known - MANVILLE RETURNS M. V. (Vie) Manville, well known carpenter contractor, who has been south for some time, returned to i Juneau aboard the North Sea Bridge, pinochle and tripoley will D be played at Friday night's card TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Party which is to be sponsored by 1. Bill Bowling, will not be re- the Business and Professional Wom- debts contracted (ens’ Club, The affair will be held y./in the American Legion Dugout starting at 8 o'clock. There will be refreshments and pensible for e but myselr. ad TIME TO CALL | prizes are to be awarded at the close (of the evening. Reservations may | be thade by calling 547 or Red 206. . In charge of the party are Mrs. | John McCormick, Mrs. Lorraine Mrs. A, M. Uggen. R Today's news today in The Empire. FOR YOUR CAB | Johnson and BROADWAY CAB CO. of —The Sign of . 0'!micc Depen Juneau to Faitbanks: Tuenda Fairbanks to Nome: Mondays and Thutsdays Fairbanks to Bethel: Wednesdays ® U. §. Airmail—Express Service ® Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. PHONE 106 LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE Sales Representative MAGGIE - TI IE D/\ll Y /\L/\Sl\/\ FMPIRF,, TU FSDAY MARCH 26, 1940. By GEORGE McMANUS LIKE TO KNOW T)—J(‘u(‘ HTS = | IF | KIN GO MUST WRITE SOM ouT- LETTERS TO MY F:QIEND'_ %0 JUST THINK THE PRES I THQ)I_\_ (= K -1 SAW IDENT-AM LISTEN- DALGHTER-WILL YOU ASK MAGGIE IF | KIN GO OUT? SHE WON'T TALK TO ME — | MUST GET OUT-AS PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT REQUESTED ME TO CALL ON HIM AT THE WHITE HOUSE- 34 COMEIN - TODAY WITH NORTH SEA The steamer North Sea, Capt. A. W. Nickeron and Purser B. k. Gil- lespie, arrived in Juneau at 1 o'clock this morning with 34 passengers for | here and sailed for Sitka early tbis afternoon. Arrivals were Miss Lee Ellenwcod Mrs. H. H. Ibach, Mrs, Sarah Bar- ragar, F. R. Townsend, Mrs. Elroy Ninnis, Baby Ninnis, Massey War- wick, Garrett King, Sid Thompson Walter Hellan, Helen Withers, Fred Jaegei, Mrs. Fred Jaezel, Barbara Jaegel, Vernon Hodges, Mrs. Hodges. Joseph Brewitt, O. G. Hillman, M. V. Manville, Warren Bjorge, BEd Ehman, Edgar Nolte, G. Newton John Gerwels, Sam Luphenko, Paul Parker, Don Stroup, Anton Vokoser Reynolds, Louise Joseph f nison, N. H. Parke, A Gl~ver F. W. Delphin. Sailing from here to Sitka o'clock this afternoon were main Gross, John Perry, Mr Mrs. Jack Conway, baby Conway, Fred Piske, Mrs. C. L. Amundsen Luella Amundsen, Dr. J. Pyle, Mr and Mrs. Claude Hirst, J. McQues- tion, Carl Miller, Harold Foss, Wil- liam Gaunt, George Peterson, Her- bert Hunt, Elmer Woods, Gene Rippe, James Weathers, A. Day, J R. Desmond, H 1 at >oeo —— WOULD OUTLAW MARINE STRIKES OF LONGHOREMEN Plans Submitted for Long Term Contract on Pacific Coast SAN FRANCISCO, March 26.— Plans for a long term contract out- lawing longshore strikes on the Pa- cific Coast for three or five years has been laid before waterfront emloyers by Harris Bridges. Employers promise to make a re- ply. Informally they approved both the idea of a long term contract and the seven basic points of the union pro- posal. The plan was outlined at a re- newal of negotiations to replace the contract which expired last Septem- ber. Present waterfront operations are under an extension of that contract. Negotiations for the International " Longshoremery's and Warehouse- ! men’s Union, of which Bridges is President, proposed that seven fun- | damental conditions be guaranteed | in the long term contract. All other | questions would be subject to yearly negotiations. Disputes not settled by negotiation would be arbitrated. The seven points included preference of | employment, longshore hiring halls and the six-hour day. THEILE FLIES OUT WITH PAA, HEADED FOR KUGRUK RIVER Karl Theile, former Secretary of ! i i Alaska and prominent cannery man, | this morning and flew to Fair-| banks enroute to the Kugruk River in the Seward Peninsula country. Theile plans to enlarge the scope | of placer operations he is conduct- ing there, and looks for a good season with an early start of water flow predicted. | With Theile is his operations | superintendent, Carl Hallberg, who! 'also flew to Fairbanks . | - - For Want and For c]flsslfleds bring results. Sale Empire | | { Answers ToN 1. Dies proposed that his commit- meet _in secret until afi The To avoid charges that the ee was trying to influence the voting. 2. False. Germany has not yet de. clared war on anybody, 3. Sam Houston Jones. He defeat. 38, fusy Long's brother, Gav. Ear, 4. Approximately 450.Y azi economist. He went 1o’ Rumanis to bargain for 6. The plans of third-termers to' $2votes for the Presi sew up Ohi v {most. of |the winter pihhaleindiidas S9N Fanned by a stiff breeze, flames leap high in the air as Baltimore’s most spectacular blaze in years destroys the Baltimore Lumber Company plant and two freight sheds. Eight alarms were turned in as 80 persons fled to safetv. Damage was estimated at $300.000. GUESS WHO! female version of that spinache eating comic character, Mrs, Herbert Lehman, wife of N. Y. sovernor, made a hit at party in Albany, N. Y.~ Paisy Ann Is Again Greefing \Inbound Ships Winter—such small taste of it as Juneau had this year—is over, and one can bank on that, for Patsy Ann is once more meeting the boats. Patsy Ann, deaf canine greeter of all whistling steameys, a land- ! mark on.the waterfront, has spent in the long- shoremen's Hall, but with the ar- iarrived in Juneau on the Alaska) jo.) of the Princess Norah yester- iday, Patsy Ann padded over to the Alaska Coast Dock to locsen winter- stiffened joint. Tcday she was on hand again for the a al of the steamer Alaska and was given her regular handout through the galley porthole. Patsy Ann's season has begun anew and, as for hundreds of other sourdoughs throughout the norl.h she looks forward to one of Lhe biggest tourist seasons in history. - Daily Fmp:r« cln.«smed\ pay. ews 1.Q. Test dent in case he wanted them. The scheme called for Donahey to step aside if the President decided to run. 7. The House passed the bill. 8. Because Tibetans believe he was born at the instant of the for- mer Dalai Lama’s death in 1933 and thus is his reincarnation. sh seizure of the Nazi ip Altmark in Norwegian se. A proposed allotment to improve the harbor of the Pacific island was dropped from the U. S. budget by the House. Son of Wittanens 'FRITZ THYSSEN Baphzed Sunday GOES TO FRANCE; QUITS NAZILAND Steel Magn;t;Who Back- On Easter 'v\ll\dl\ afternoon, the apel-By-The-La Fred- erick Clarence Wittanen, - old n of Mr. and Mrs. n, of Auk Lake, was bap- 5 by the Rev. John A. Glasse i The child’s godparents are Mr edglfl%r' ChangeS' HIS and Mrs. F. S. Laughlin and Ly- man Elsworth, esidence Agam Billings, loo‘n’gilfifie Fiance, Wedded RENO, Nev, ch 26.—Warren K. Billings, 46, has married his lcngtime fiance, Miss Josephine Ru- dolph, 43, of San Mateo, Cal, at a ceremony here. The two met during one of many hearings before the Calif nia Courts on efforts to win a pardon following conviction of the S Francisco Preparedness Par- hing in 1916, BERNE, Switzerland, March 26.— ! Fritz Thyssen, German steel mag- nate who backed Hitler in the days of the Nazi ascendancy, and then came to Locarno last November be- cause he opposed the present war and blamed the Nazi regime for it, is moving to France. Thyssen declares he is “still Ger- man but no longel Nazi.” WANTEI) Small Children Cared For MRS. BROWN’S NURSERY 315 Third St. or Phone Red 119 | .;. his marriage took place because - of the peculiarity of the Califor- ™ | nia law under which he had his | sentence commuted, making the A L A s K A | legality of mérriage in California | doubtful. Billings now operates a H watch repair shop in San Fran- Transpoflafilfll cisco | L Company i Teday's new ay in The Empire. Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. Leaves . Seattle U. S. Mail Carrier TONGASS .. Mar. 26 Il ss. TakU April 2 M. s s DABT 5.5. TONGASS April 9 TAKU April 16 Leaves Ferry Slip, Juncau AT 9P M. every Wednesday at 7 a.m. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT|| PASSENGERS FREIGHT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS REFRIGERATION i For Information | Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 Freight must be on city dock not later than 4 P. M. Tuesday NEWS BROADCAST JOINT FEATURE SERVICE ON THE AIRI By The Daily Alaska| Empire and KINY 6 days every week at CANADIAN il PACIFIC "PRIN- CESS” JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise March 27 April 7, 17 Connections at Vancouver with 8:15 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Canadian Pacific Services: ¢ TRANSCONTINENTAL RS e TRANS-ATLANTIC TRANS-PACIFIC Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL SANITARY PLUMBING and HEATING COMPANY Ww. J. , Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worry.” Phone 788. eSS H. S. GRAVES [ '| TIMELY CLOTHES | | “The Clothing Man” | HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS & MARX CLOTHING QUALITY WORK CLOTHING - | | 1 FRED HENNING Complete Qutfitter for Men JAMES C. COOPER C.P. A. Business Counselor COOPER BUILDING | | | IR | 2 i | {1 - _— Empire Want Ads Bring Results. ki Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau eamer Seattle Northbound Southbound YUKON Mar. 16 Mar. - , Mar. 19 Mar. 25 MT. McKINLEY Mar. 20 Mar. 23 Mar. 29 TANANA .. Mar. 20 LASKA Mar. 23 Mar. 26 Apr. 7 FOR OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS ——————CALL~——— THE ALASKA LINE PHONES Ticket Office Freight Office ... H. O. ADAMS. Agent Alaska Steamshxp Company SERVICE-ON- QLL ‘ALASKA" ROUTES . 0 - - ) . 7 7 MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASK1 HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 u ! e ) ) - )~ < | R A e A St VT ALASKA AIR TBANSPDBT Inc. o All Planes Operating Own Aecronautical 2-Way Radio Station KANG PHONE Redio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 L Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER ? C. R. WILLIARD a> & palG-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office e e e CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: "WUTHERING HEIGHTS" WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! 0 v COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASEA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To I[mprove and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Eltort Made tor the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE m connecton AIR SERVICE INFORMATION TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. WEEK SAILINGS—Juneau te Seattle Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau No.Bound So. Bound Seattle NORTHLAND Mar. 19 Mar. 22 NORTH SEA % Mar.26 Mar.2zy | NORTHLAND Mar. 29 Apr. 2 Apr. 5 NORTH SEA Apr. 5 Apr. HENRY GREEN, Agent CITY WHARF . GUY SMITH, Dougias Agent