The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 30, 1940, Page 6

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- e e e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1940. By GEORGE McMANUS WELL- | GOT AWAY FROM THE FAMILY - NOW TO TAKE A WALK BY MVSELF - ] | HOPE | ANY OF DON'T RUN INTO THEM TODAY - ] P ¢-19 Copr. 1or R Word « COME HERE, \/OU MLTT— YC'LI RE GOING GEE -1 THOUGHT THAT WAS MAGGIE~ MARINE NEWS Yukon Here WesiBound; Is Full Up Brings in 61 Passengers for Juneau-Takes Out 46 from This City o1 wer Yuken thi ed in Juneau discharged in the Ci morn 1 enteen local pa d from Ketchik and Wrangell as From Ketchikan (3 Donald Goette], and Billy Wrangeil John S 12ust Mr Simonic Rae Lilliar Thomas Sa kin Al Petershurg ak e Emil 1 Frem Seattle Seattle—E E. Clausen, Drange m n, Oliver Cash sen, ing [ Joe ton, Mrs. Haviland, H. Kirklin, E Lorssen, M. B. O’Donnell, H. L. Price, William E. Rice, Jr, R. Spall. A J. Atwood A. C! ro, J. Donel- on, A. Eld, J. Fitzgerald, M. Gervais, A. Swein, W. W. Hill, K. Hirsch C. Jackson J. E. Johnson P. Lulick, J Macek, J. L. Marten, W. V. Myron . E. Reilly P. Smoleick and S, 8. Warle; Many For No Forty four passenger. Yukon when it sailed noon hour as follows For Sew: 0. Englesvolc Drake, Mr (o] Englesvol Dishaw, J. Cleoudis, William Ruth Allen, V. Hansen, Molly er Mr. and Mrs. Harry Charles Hawksworth, N. L Clyde Ellis, Verngn Rogers Damitis, M. Garpt \’l Ary D. Goodman W G. E H. Grav- Mary Jane Harring- Haviland, Elizabeth J. Hoyle Jr., W. Mrs. H. Jack E. Price Smith Dori Green Vera J. Hoyle. Koskele, Mumford Mrs G R '; 1‘ or Jurir the Marie Snyd- Watson, Troast, John John Van Kirk R. Curtis, C. Glov R J. Evanson, J. Thorall L. Anderson, M. Leet, E Stout, Oscar Clauson, J. Furuness, >, J. W. Braddock and H A. CI TIME TO CALL 1117 FOR YOUR CAB BROADWAY CAB CO. e - | STEAMER MOVEMENTS | | L have three days’ n @ e s 00 00 000 e NOR'THBOUND . nd scheduled to arriv> @ at 7 ¢ k tomororw morn- @ in ° M McKinley due Satu ° . . . "HEDULED SAILINGS Taku s cheduled to sail from Se attle 9 tonight 1} v scheduled sail from Seattle May 3 at 10 am P Loui; ted to il from Vancouver May 3 at 9pm Alackas scheduled to sail from Seattle May 4 at 9 am Denali scheduled to sail from tle May 7 at 9 a.m Tongass scheduled to sail from attle May 7 at 9 pm che May ed (o sail from 4 at 9 am Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Yukon schedule outhbound Monday LOCAL sSal 5. 3 Estebeth scheduled ail every m. for Sit- rdnesday rg. Port Kake and way leaves ev at 1 p. m. for Petersh Jart ery Alex port ® & 0 00 @ 0 ¢ - oo ander . ° . ° . . . . . ° © . . ° . ° . . . s ° ° . . (Sun time) am, 02 am 3:10 pm., 9:46 p.m., - 5.0 121 3.5 138 Low tide 5 High tide. Low tide High tide— feet feet feet feet L. Fau For Kodiak — R. D. Russel, Kathje, L. Simmons, Douglas Keat- ing,- Mrs. A. Loney, E. K. Guerin Palmer Cougdon and Mr. and Mrs R. V. Wright. For Cordova—H. Jensen and John Anderson. For Sl'ln]m'i'}—~D'\\'«' - ' NORTH STAR T0 COME NORTH ON TRIP ON MAY 25 Indian Affalrs Motorship Covers 36,000 Miles in 7 Months SEATTLE, April 30.—The motor- ship North Star of the Bureau of | Indian Affairs, which has returned here from the Antarctic, will make | the first trip to Alaska leaving Seat- tle May 25. During the past seven months, i the North Star, with the Byrd Ex pn(lmon has covered 36,000 miles. Ler. Grant o | ~The Sign of Dependahle Service ———— Ve300l S Juneau to Fairbanks: Tuesdays Fairbanks to Nome: M ondays and Thursdays Fairbanks to Bethel: Wednesdays ® U. S. Airmail—Express Service Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. PHONE 106 LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE Sales Representative Rumaman Leaders Who Ban Wheat to Germany CHANGES ARE Prince Michael, King Carol and Premier Tatarescu Rumania and her leaders are thrust into the world following announc news spotlight country had banned temporarily wheat to Germany and other fore strengthe All wheat contracts the same time, Rumal viver police. CANNERIES TO RESUME OPERATIONS - Many Former Plants, Nof * Packing Last Year, Ac- tive This Season salmon canneries which wer ated last year avill pack fish during the coming summer ac- jcording to present plans of their operators, a prelimina seasonal operations shows. | The Ellamar Packing Company cannery near Valdez will be oper- ated under the supervison of M. G. Brown. The Glacier cannery at Cordova |which has been idle during recent seasons Wwill be operated this year {by Pioneer Sea Foods Company. | which have purchased the property | {from Capt. A. E. Lathrop. | | Pioneer Sea Foods old cannery at ' | Orca will be operated this season by {J. N. Gilbert, well known Alaska | canneryman | | Shepard Point Packing Company | will operate their cannery at Cor-' dova, according to present plans. ery was closed last season. | The company will also operate at i Port Ashton. | Albert Cael is understood to be {vlanning to can salmon at Old Har- {bor, Kodiak Island. 1 The Dominici cannery at Uyak, wwhich did not operate in 1937 -1939 will be opened this year |will be operated by Pioneer | Foods Company | ‘The floating cannery, “Retriever,” | will be operated in the Stikine flats by Burnett Inlet Salmon Company according to present reports. It is understood that several of the |canning companies have not defin- | itely determined whether or not they will be able to pack this season. | Final decision on packing operations | of several of the companies \\n” await the conclusion of laber agree- | ments with the unions by the Alaska | |Salmon Industry, Inc., organization | | now handling the collec ive bargain- | |ing of the industry with the unions, | ‘The costs of packing under new | | agreements as well as the speed with | which the agreements are reached | | will affect the plans of several can- nvm‘s to operate. - A. B. CAIN | Democratic candidate for Rpp-‘ resentative. adv. - Empire classifieds bring results. Flies Her | Lo - 32PASSENGERS L check of & senger roun | Sund, through & council headed b; many had expe Rumanian whea his son, Prince above reviewing that the all exports of ign buyers. At ned her Danube were voided ement ForSnoose snoose was 1 ing Tony Schwamm, daahmg pilot | f the Peters Air Servige, un- aunted by bad weather, climbed e Sunday and flew Juneau on an emergency flight elieve the situation in the Shrimp pitol City Petersburg Shrimp, as the merey” pilot is called in air arrived in Juneau at 3 o'clo decree of the | — B cir- | government economic y Premier George Tatarescu. Ger- cted to get a major share of the t surplus. King Carol of Rumania, Michael, and Tatarescu are shown erack troops in Bucharest. ALASKA TAKES Alaska ar d in Juneau yesterday, leaving .wo hours later for the south after scharging eight passengers and | picking up 32 for the south. | Pasengers for Juneau from the | westward were S. C. Hanson, A. T | Hucthinson, Pastor H. L. Wood. Mrs, | P. Wood, Warren Kerr, J. D. Petrie |and D. Kammer Passengers uthbound on the Al- aska were: For Seattle — Charles Beale, Marie Mor, Mrs. Dave Carlson, i |s. F. Fein, Mrs. S. F. Fein \n\ 1 made a spectacular for land- ool 1 ’:v' ():r:p;'(q‘:w-': “nfrm(_c‘,:(:c;:];;u‘Rnlph M“n‘;{ ‘\2\ B s SR e 3 i oe Crosson, 1€l, ‘acoosging to. ERAIL Sim"gm:gx‘:"lioum Puttr;u‘n Joe Cros-| nons. Rushing to the nearest store |son Jr., Frank McCafferty, Betty wamm hurriedlly bought a sup- Macready, F. S. Epperson. Maxine oly of 1Lr' precious commodity and her ok to the air and returned | I'\ t rsburg. haub into Juneau on the flight and carried one pas- | trip. When Schwamm returned to Pet- | sbur Copenhagen snoose was not ac - Air Flighls Alex Holden of Alaska Air Trans- | port Monday flew five passengers t Ketchikan in an They were R. O. Bullwinkel, John White, Herbert Hilscher, Ray Jscob- sen and J. J. Meherin. Johnny Amundsen, AAT pllot flew a scenic flight over Mendenhall Gla- cier in the afternoon with one pa: M. Gilmore of the Amer Airlines. Sunday Shell Simmong made cne flight for AAT taking six pas- sengers to the Coast and returning with four. Bruce Bowers, Buelah Helen Stoft, H. J. Friedman and L. De Long were passengers for Sitka and Max Rogers for Hirst. On the refurn trip Simmonhs car- ried Mrs. M. E. Tippetts, Mike Wall, W. H. Bacon and Mrs. M. Brennan. TELLIS MAKES AR FLIGHT 10 JUNEAU Robert E. E”h m the Ketchikan Transport w: te | Kete four passengers in Juneau for Ket- here from He picked up ikan via Sitka. ntly Schwamm flew Mr. and | AAT Lockheed. | in Juncau yes-| Jacobs, Delmar Green, Alice Braskat, ‘C larence Valencia, John Mulkey M | Freedman and L. DeLong. To Ketchikan—Mrs. E. J. White, \\1 D. Williams, B. R. Hughes, L. J. | Ratzow, P. J. Peters and A. Van | Mavern. To Petersburg—Alice Gray and B. | Marcos. I To Wmngell—H M. Acton. JNEW DEALERS . CALLED NAZIS BYREPUBLICAN Frank GaaneE Presiden- | fial Aspirant, Makes Political Talk | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 30. — Frank Gannett, candidate for the GOP nomination for President, to- day drew a parallel between the tyranny of pre-revolutionary days and the “stranglehold” hedeclared | the Roosevelt Administration Is “steadily tightening” on the coun- try. Ganaett addressed the Republi- can Lunchéon Club of Southeast Pennsylvania and the talk was broadeast nationally. | drawn up against George the Third by .Thomas Jefferson and said: “These acts he described as com- | mitted by Royalists, Tories and re- actionaries. We have new designa- | tions today for the people com- chikan and returned. Passengers| mitting the same acts. We call leaving Juneau w Edmund M. ‘Lhem Communists, Nazis and New O'Donnell, Hal Finch, L. DeLong | Dealers.” and H. J. Friedman. D Daily Empire classifieds pay. B In Scotland, the principal local court is the Sheriff’s Court. i Gannett discussed complaints | PROPOSED FOR LABOR BOARD Printed copies were recently re- ceived at Delegate Anthony J. Di- mond’s office, of the views of the minority members of the Special Committee of the House of Repre- sentatives appointed to investigate the National Labor Relations Board, The minority members consist of Representatives Arthur D. Healey, in Juneau aboard the northbound | Mr. Baker is stopping at the Baranof | Yukon and is stopping with his fam- Hotel. ily at the Baranof Hotel g - The practice of holding elections Pensylvania acounted for 1.808.- on more than one day was not un-| 000 bushels of America’s buckwheat |common in the early vears of the | production in 1939, which totaled | | United states. 15,739,000 bushels j . | - PIANO M HERE | GOETTEL HERE ) H. J. Baker of the Baker Piano Curtis Publishing Company re- Company of Seattle is in Juneau to- | presentative Carl W. Goettel arrived ’ day arriving on the Steamer Yukan. | Leave Due Juneau L«c suneaa Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbounn DENALI Apr. 23 Apr 7 Apr. 29 **BARANOF Apr. 2 May 3 YUKON Apr. May 6 MOUNT McKINLEY May *ALASKA May 17 Ms Stops at Skagway, Hoonah, Cc Juneau southbound. -Calls Northbound-—Wrangell, Petersburg C: with S.8. Cordova at Cordo Seward eliminating Sitka and Kediak and Calls at \ cutal northbound outheastern Alaska Route. and southbound of Ma. husetts, and Abe Murdoc! of Utah. The other three members, FOR OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS consisting the majority, are Repre- CALL sentatives Howard D. Smith, Chair- S man, of Virginia, Charles A. Hal- T’IE AIIJ/ISEQ/‘ ','N";' leck, of Indiana, and Harry N. Rout- SRR zohin, of Ol N et Anan FRGNES . O. ADAMS, ge T of e 9 While the ic~jority members of : il B g : the committee recommended far- Lo Sati i . reaching changes in the National & ff J Labor Relations Act, the minority ] members recommended only {(wo 4 TR AY = = such changes: (1) ‘an amendment gt g to increase the number of members Al % & of board from three to five; and as a teams lp Ompan » an amendment giving to em- | G REVA 5 o 4 ployers by statute the right to peti- C'E ON:ALE : Ln s SR BOWIES g ion for an election when the are l'&-.n-‘.o—--«-mc-_.a-u—n—-.n. - - — — - aught between the cross-fire of q sl unions. atousn o e o | MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL petition lm election by an employer | 2-Way Radio Communicztion Authorized Carrier the present practice of the board, SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE "u-hx’":)n:l"l(:l\l‘ .l‘::»':::fi:-‘: -(‘,;“"]:‘["flg“m SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA ial Committee to enact is specifically HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 g PG e e s sl s et 2, S 2 B « e 5 — = TR T g7 o _———-—-———— N 4 AIRBASENAMED | ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. | . HONOLULU, April 27 Luke Field, Army air base, has been turned over to an expanding Navy and is expected to be known here- after as Ford Island. Service peo- ple are looking for some other station to be named in honor of Frank Luke, who was a World War American aviator. Luke was in action after victories over German planes in 17 days. 18 HAUGEN. TRANSPORTATI( U. S. Mail Came'ru M.S.DART Leaves Ferry Slip, .hnaeiu % every Wednesday at 7 a.m. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS Special Weekend Trips Arranged For Information—Haugen Transpor- | tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau, Phone 123 ALASKA Transporfatios Company . [ Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle Leaves ' Seattle S. S. TAKU S. S. TONGASS .......... .. April 30 May 7 AT 9P M. PABSENGERS FREIGHT REF BleTlON mm D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 “‘Night 312 I/ TO VANCOUVER, - VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOl UND SAILINGS' rincess Laquise ‘May 9—20 Connections at Vancouver with CONTINENTAL mfim‘} PACIFIC Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, CP.R.—Juneau, Alaskn c;nflm . killed | Mrs Jo«- *“ All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical R 2-Way Radio Station KANG l PHONE Badio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU l 612 t Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER | - WHM. T. MAHONEY as o paiG-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITCL THEATRE and receive 2 tickevs to see: WHEN TOMORROW COMES” ¥waA10r THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! Ppss COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY , OF ALASEA 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. 'HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Etfort Made for the Comfort of Guestel GASTINEAU CAFE | m cannecton AIR SERVICE INFORMATION (% LS mfl BAEme to sun- Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau Seattle No.Bound So. Bound . Apr. 26 apr, 3 May, 3 3 May 7. May 10 May 14 NORTHLAND SERVICE

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