The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 7, 1940, Page 6

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1'M GOING O YOU STAY IN AND PACK - WE ARE GOING_TO ANOTHER TOWN - L] WHAT'S THAT ? THE CFNSLJS TAKE WHY - WE DO 5 | LIVE HERE* THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, WELL-WHAT DO YOU WANT ? YOUR pon AR SreEaMER MOVEMENTS YukonAmves‘._m.m” In Juneau on:....omm ka in port bound west and rhl‘r!\lll’(l to sail at 5:45 o'- clock this afternoon from Ju- neau Lunmber Mills. Nn'!h S!nl due at 1 pm Nineteen F al prisoners de: tined for Seattle were aboard the thbound Yuken last night when he whistled out of the port of Juneau after a trip to Westward The Yukon docked in Juneau st 4:30 p.m. yesterday, discharging 29 pa and leaving five hour later picking up ore concen- trate 51 passengers Pa arriving Wed- I.u\nnn duo Wednesday west bound. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle 9. tonight. Baranof «cheduled to sail from Seattle 9 a.m. tomorrow. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle May 10 at 10 a.m Yukon scheduled to.sail from Seattle May 11.at § am Mount McKinley scheduled to sail from Seattle May 14 at 9 am, Taku scheduled to sail Seattle May. 14 at 9 p.m SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Loulse scheduled to arrive at 7 a.m, Thursday and sails south at 9 am. night engers after 1 from the . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ore Fred Crane, C. Hagen Roy Hoffman rge Mathews, J M. Nicherson Everett Nowell, F. Sjursen, R. C Vogel, V. J. Fanent, E. B, Fuller William J. Parker, H. Rutland and F." Vitch From Valdez—Fred Caldwell and Irving From Skagway—Mrs. H, G. Ask, Jerome Ask, Charles Ask,” Mrs. Louis Rapuzzi, H, Sterling, and Dr E. Steves From Haines Phy Jackson, J Charles Hohanson Passengers leaving Juneau for Se- attle were James McNaughton Chester Zimmerman, Mrs, B. L Blomgren, Mrs. Hector McLean, R G. Maynard, Axel Edman, John Kioik, W. Williams, W, Balackley, W. Kangak, Charles Jack, Stanley Russell, L. C. Doheney, William Wigger, Mrs. L. Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. Julias Moeller Bess Cross, Patricia Cross, R C Walsh, Mrs. George Grigsby, J. Sommers, Mary George, Plusxy Doolan, George Getchell, Mike| Pusich, Mrs. A. F. Ficken, Mrs.| Charles Bayer, Frank Hansen, Dick| The Tanana of the Alaska Steams: Johanson, M Amun Dick Ford, A.|ship Company is due on the channel Marston, C. Throndale, F. P.Smith,| tqmorrow mnight. The ship has W. G. Nicholson, Charles Bayer,| freight for local docks and after Mrs. H. A. Masher, Miss Nell Mec- mschmgmg sails for Westward ports. | Closkey, Joan Sabin, Mr. and Mrs, - ‘ | PICNIC DINNER| June Meltzer, Kaj Lf)urm" McEachren, Lilly Ferrell B. Fuller For Petersburg — Mr. and Mvs. Jehn Cabo and Jane Pickernell. A pienic dinner o celebrdte’ n{' last get-together before the sum-| mer vacation, was held last night at the Auk Bay Recreational Area| by members of the Couple Club. Those furnishing cars were mw {Rev. John A. Glasse, R. B. Lesh- ‘ er, Ted Austerman and Walter| Butts. Seward Hagen, Mrs, E Hambright Mrs. Dorothy Irving, C. Moiyneux Lioyd G. H from <tebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Jart leaves every Wednesday at 1 p. m. for Petersburg Port Alexander, Kake and way ports. e e 0000000 0. - TiDES Toumonn—o-w ; G "0 0 0000000000000 000000c000000 080000 a0 Charles Clayton G. Benson and (Sun Time) High tide—1:06 am. 175 feet. Low tide—7:30 am., -18 feet. | High tide—1:49 p.m, 158 feet. Low tide—7:35 p.m., 21 feet. S o * TANANA IS DUE i HERE TOMORROW' - Island—which was to have been one of the landing places for Amelia Earhart's ill-| fated flight—was uninhabited un- il 1935 Howland TIME TO CALL 717 FOR YOUR CAB, BROADWAY CAB CO. e — - SAVE THE DATE May 13, Juneau Woman's Club's PRI ol Today’s news t.cd.ly in The Emplre P e e e e s M‘ : 'wi, | —The Sign of Depemhbla Service Juneau to Fairbanks: Tuesdays Fairbanks to Nome: Mondays and Thursdays Fairbanks fo Bethel: Wednesdays ° U.S. Aimail—l:xpms Sfiice | Kelchikan‘ IM THE CENSUS- TAKER -WHAT IS| HOUSE WORTH? Anne Morgan and Statf of Debs Ald t'rance This beautiful French chateau (top) has been sister of financier J. P. Morgan. With a staff of society debs, Alsace. Lower right, Elizabeth Adams, of Providenct for France. Miss Morgan has been decorated severa JQI\J “ converted into a haspxtal e, R. I, reconstruction period and the new war. HALIBUTER IS AGROUND Revilla, wnh 10,000 Pounds Aboard, Re- ported Raised Again KETCHIKAN. Alaska, May 7. Halibuter Revilla which grounded | Sunday on Annette Island, about eight miles south of Ketchikan, while enroute to Prinee Rupert with 10,000 pounds of halibut aboard, was raised yesterday and part of the cargo saved. The 44-foot craft, owned by Cap Pel,e Holmberg, carvied three othecs, | orge Northrup and Bill Horn of | and Cecil Wheat, for- They were | ! merly of Santa Monica. | rescued. 18 MINERS FOR POLARIS-TAKU ABOARD LOUISE e \ Northbound with '35 passenge?s aboard for Juneau, the Princess Louise arrived here last night at 7 o'clock and sailed for Skagway at midnight. Eighteen of the pas- | sengers arriving here were Cana- | dian miners for the Canadian| Polaris-Taku mine at Tulsequah. | Passengers for Juneau were V. Scott, Jack Lang, William C. Sax {born, Mr, .and Mrs. F. E. Healy 4F. D. Fletcher, Miss F. Healy, R. | Dickinson, Glen Ford, James Hap- ina, C. C.-Campbell, George Soggie, Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Lontz, Mrs. J. B. Bernhofer, G. Holmes and| Mathew Norem. For Pelaris-Taku—B. H, Scott, M. W. MacSavanoy, S. Rebagliati, T.| Stalker, J. Campbell, A. F. Roberts, | 41@G. Phillips, P.' Adolph, Joe Leni- ham, S. Oarlson, A. McLellan, E. Green, Philip Bard, Robert Ma- whinnie, S, Szelas, P. Vogel, Stan- lleyt E. Wellman and A. Burk. Miss Healy Here To Become Bride 0f Dr. Gibson. her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. E Healy, arrived here last evening on the Canadian Pacific . Princess| Louise. She will become the bride of Dr. John Gibson, associated with the | States has been Miss Freida Hralv, acénmpnhied oY Reporis War To Undle Sam From 'There’ "Madame Mmlsier Har-| riman, Got a. Nice, Quiet Pasition By SIGRID ARNE AP Feature Service Writer x I WASHINGTON.— “Madame Min- ister” Daisy Borden Harriman,' Minister to Norway, is r’\lllngl around somewhere in Scandinavia She's 70, and trying to keep up a line of communication between this country and the fugitive Norwegian government, It's the first time the Uffited] represented offi- cially in a war zone by a woman She's “Never Felt Better” She missed death at one spot by half an hour. She fled down roads under bombardment by Ger- man planes. She got over the Swedish border just long enough to phone news to our Minister in Sweden. Then she popped back into the danger zone, after as-| suring Stockholm in her Park| Avenue voice, “Never felt better in my life.” That rings two loud bells for all the women in this country who want to hold public jobs. First, the State Department never has {liked women in diplomatic. posts. | Second, there is still apprehen- |sion among men politicos over |the way women will react under fire, Mrs, Harriman's appointment to Norway was really a sop thrown | to the thousands of Democratic wo- imen who worked through the '32 and '36 campaigns. Oslo Was a Quiet Spot | When her friend, Ruth Bryan |Owen Rhode, then our only wo- | man diplomat, resigned her post in Denmark, Demacrats cast around | for another woman to appoint. The OSlo post fell vacant. It was a | quiet, safe spot. The Scandinavians|the last ®ne she got together lhave no prejudice against women | executives. So Mrs. Harriman was {nppoinmd, ¢ i : “Would you consider the post?” she was asked. “Certainly,” wouldn't?” The Norwegians — fact is, the whole diplomatic corps in Oslo— | were soon revolving around Daisy, | Just the way Washingtonians have for years. She went to palace din- | ners; acted as hostess, for bachelor diplomats from other countries; she said. “Who she is caring for thousands of ev. and Susan Hammond, of Boston, { times for her service | for any diplomat, ‘| Flint's captain, Pacific Alaska An-wap. Inc. PHONE 106 LOUTS A. DELEBECQUE s learned the language rapidly. And Polaris Taku Mining Co., who came pidly. to Juneau by plane a few days ago. |2t 67 decided to take up skiing. The party is stopping at the Bar. | HET Drogress was watched -affec- anof Hotel | tionately. aisi AT diiee | lobby one night, and said, lower left), acuees from do their bit to France in the World War. by Anne Morgan ( after she was sworn in here, Just the sort of thing that suave men diplomats tremble over, Started With Faux Pas | She was asked: “Will you nego- tiate a trade agreement between Norway and the United States?” “That's been done,” she Said. It was the first any one knew of it. She must have been cha- grined. But she didn't do any| back-tracking. Just took the gaff, and sailed for Norway. Her first test under fire is the| kind in which you need friends. She came through with flyhg‘ colors.. That was the “City. of F‘lmv, incident. Remember ' the| boat the Germans captured, —took to Murmansk, Russia, and then | tried to run down the Norwegian| coast? From Russia we got np clear reports of the Flint's crew. Then the Germans put in at a Norwegian port. It became Mrs. Harriman's task to remind the; Norwegians that the Germans had| forfeited the boat by docking in| a neutral port—a delicate' sput The Norwegians| decided to return the boat to its| American crew. Mrs. got an immediate report from the;| and was the first to report to the State Departmentl what actually had happened. Came the Invasion Then came the morning April 9. About three o'clock Mrs. Harriman’s phone rang. The Brit- ish Minister was calling to ask if she'd take over his duties. The Germans were invading. He was leaving. She rushed .into her clothes and to her office. She called the:Nor- wegian Foreign Office, ‘¢onfirmed the story, then cabled Washing. ton. The arrival of her wire here was. the first the rest of the.world knew the. war had broken. out in earnest. There’s- no way of kncws ing yet why. other offices. didn't have messages as quickly. Maybe it was. because. Mrs. Harriman sent a straight wire stating t.he, facts in regular .English—no. code. By five she had her whole staff and their. families. around, hery eating breakfast, and ready. to set out across country to safety, It| was. some days later. when she was heard from . again—on. the Swedish border phoning . to re= port. This is her second war. O(i ‘During A corps of 300 women volunteers and took them to Framce as a Red Cross motor corps. She's a rich womah, prmma! school graduate, had ‘'her. debut| at Delmonico’s. At 19, she mar-| ried the banker, J, Borden Harri-| man. She had a daughter, and for years lived a protected. life. Then she began reading social prcbfi; lems. One day she startled her Republican family by saying that from here on she was voting Democratic. Her = husband, now dead, used to laugh and say, “It's fine. It makes our dinner conver- sations so interesting.” Washington Liked Her Dinners By GEORGE McMANUS DON'T KNOW _MAKE ME : N O | tion | tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau, Harriman |, ' MINE FOREMAN HERE | FROMHIRST- CHICHAGOF Mrs. Gruening At Home' After 3:30 Tomorrow Mrs. Ernest Gruening will resume her Wednesday ‘afternoons at home tomorrow at the Governor's House An invitation is extended to call after 3:30 o'clock. - news today in The Empire, ER— | W. A. Gallemore, roreman at Hifst Chichagof, is in Juneau from Kim- sham Cove and will return by plane tomorrow. Arriving on the Princess last night was George Seggie, brother of Mrs, Gallemore, who will visit his relat- ives at the mine. While here, Mr. Gallemore and Mr. | Seggie are at the Baranof Hotel. | Todey: has run the only true salon in Washington. She gathered for her Sunday night dinners 32 guests— | the cream of the day’s leaders. Historic debates were held. She | had two rules. No one could get angry. No one could repeat what they heard. | Shell hate all the hullabaloo about her now. But no story about| Daisy. Harriman is quite complete without mentioning something about her appearance. She hates | that, too. She argued with me once that she certainly was not handsome. But she is. Her height and her erect carriage does it. Sof up comes the story about Charles (Hell 'n Maria) Dawes. He saw her back across a Parisian hotel | “Well, ) h_____, Lol Leave Seattle Due Juneau Northbound May 3 May 17 May 11 May 11 May 14 Due Juneau Steamer Southbound MT. McKINLEY *ALASKA DENALI BARANOF *YUKON MT. McKINLEY May 14 May 18 May ALASKA May 18 May 21 May *—Connects with S. S. Cordova at Cordova for Seward, Kodia Seldovia FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. O. ADAMS- Agent 4 7 May May May May 11 May May May May 13 13 17 20 8 20 27 k and there’s Mary Garden.” “No, it isn't, That's Daisy riman,” said a friend, “Nonsense,” said Dawes. only one back like t But it was Daisy whose busy these days proving that her back- ight both literally and Har- “There’s figuratively >oa New Appointive Officers for Local | o= =~ DeMolay Named { MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radie Communieation Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 ! | ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes 2-Way Badio Equipped A]aska Steamshl Company SERVICE -ON-ALL" RLQSKR ROUTES . Harry Watkins, recently elecwd Master Councillor, and Claud Helge- sen, elected Senior Councillor for the DeMolay Order, have appointed their assistants, who will be installed Saturday evening at a joint installa- | ceremony with the Rainbow Girls at the Scottish Rite Temple. Appoeintive officers include Dick Jackson, senior deacon; Clifford Furuness, junior deacon; Bob Scoti, chaplain; LeRoy Vestal, senior stew- | ard; Paul Coke, junior steward; Fred Sorri, marshal; Hallie Rice, sentinel; Griffith Nordling, standard bearei: Charles Porter, alminor and Dallas | Weynnd orator. - e Daily Empire classifieds pay. Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER §——— | & V.M BOGERS | av & pmiG-up subscriber to 3 The Daily Alaska Empire ; is Invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: “LADY OF 'rm: TROPICS” “Aim 'rms 'SPACE Your Name May Appear! PHONE 612 — HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. U. S. Mail Carrier M. S.DART Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneau every Wednesday at 7 am. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS Special Weekend Trips Arranged For Information—Haugen Transpor- Phone 123 ALASEA Transportatios * Company ® P . e e ———————— —*— -COLUMBIA LUMBER cn!m\ll! OF ALASEA Lumber and Building Ialamh' © PHONES 587 OR 7‘7—Imu SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under. Tifla LF H A —_— HOTEL GASTINEAU ' Every:EHort Made for-the Comfort of Guests! GASTIIIEAII CAFE {m cannectian Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle 8. S. TONGASS ... ATOP. M. PABSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION AGENT D. B. FEMMER CANADIAN PACTEIC ¢ Seattlé No.Bound So.Bound ..May 3 May ‘7° May 10 NORTHLAND May10° May 14 ' May 17 NORTH COAST .. May 11 May 15 May 18 HENRY GREEN, Agent ..... CITY: WHARF ......... NORTH SEA . .Phone 23 Sales Representative g — 1 ] She made one amusing diplo- Daily, Empire classifieds pay. matic faux pas just ten minutes They must have been interest- ing. Since the 20's Mrs. Harriman

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