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- ¥ I § THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1940. By GEORGE McMANUS WOW -IT LOOKS LIKE THE CENSUS LIST- I'LL. COMPLAIN ABOUT THIS- YOUR HOTEL BILL, SIR- ITEMS ON IS THIS THE MANAGERPWELL - YOU OVER - GONNA COME UP AND FIX IT- T CHARGED ME NINTEEN THIS BILL - OH-YOU'RE \'M GLAD YOU CALLED MY ATTENTION TO THE BILL,SIR- THERE ARE THREE MORE ITEMS TO GO ON IT~- 1 WON'T PAY IT = 'M GOING AH-YOU'VE COME BACK- 1 JUST PAID THE HOTEL BILL Ea L) MARINE NEWS PAA'S SEATILE- ALASKA SERVICE DUE IN 2 WEEKS T | STeamER MOVEMENTS schedul- h Sea ir ed to sail for Sit o'clock tonight. Tapana due Wednesday west bound, Denali due Saturday Baranof due Saturday. CHEDULED SAIL s scheduled to tle 3 p.m. today scheduled port and a at sever nignt Delebecque Will Be South- east Alaska Traffic Man- ager, Juneau Office To St Northland to sail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . R sl : e from Seattle May 10at 10 a.m. e PATTLE, May 8—Funnide 10/ ¢ yygon scheduled to sail from e tart Pacific Alasga Alrways Soattle|g gegiile May 11 at 9 aum. . Alaska air service in about WO g nrount MeKinley scheduled to o wecks, Robert O. Bullwinkel, traffic| g "5y rom geattle May 14 at @ manager, t announced that W.|g %0 o e £ ““"“;”‘“‘;‘“'m"’("m‘”’_“‘,“]‘“'}"I'\ l““' ® Taku scheduled to sail from e A headquarters in Fairbanks I - T I U Hearing, 5,539 names of San Fanelscans, a petition hasbeen filed qualifying J;P;ngdgzzxe\fir(alzfc;még:g Leuis Delebecque will be Southeast| o piioese Touise scheduled to o for the Democratic Pnesldcnunl.‘nommntmm The legal process was handled by , A Traffic Manager with head- 3 | ones, C. J. Collins and Sydney C. Legare. : e arrive at 7 o'clock tomorrow e | quarters in Juneau, assisted by John o pioming and sails south two e | b Gilweels, fromerly fraffic ggent, in|q . noyrs 1nter, o ploit resources in the northernseas|nery method aims not only at fis b A."”' e ,T:.fl,"M“mm“"m ® Alaska schedulde southbound e | and southern waters. Today, ing, for ‘mothership’ is completz chi for PAA. Bullwinkel an-|® .., LOCAL SAILINCS . mon and crab and floating fac- ded in a sense as an extension nBiRed ¢ Estebeth scheduled to sail every o | tories for fish meal in the Okhot f land and what is caught has B gt ® Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- e | x a | n and Bering seas and off Alaska iternational commercial objectives, ® ka and wayports o “Japanese fishermen are neither is a particular feature of the AlASKA lEAVES ® Dart leaves every Wednesday e reckless catchers nor lawless tres- floating cannery and no system e at1p. m. for Petersburg Port e ] ] passers, At the time, we firm- his kind can be maintained as ¢ Alexander, Kake and way e Flshln y believe that the marine re- an industry if it aims at fishing JUNEAU wITH 33 L * ces of high seas are endowe or home consumption only. This ve e cceo00 00 0. ! who exploit and utilize is because more than a sulficient GolNG WEST " o AR RN g ¢ useful purposes cupply of fresh aquatic products | 4 3 of fishing areas can be obtained, making the float- IR Tipes Tomorrow Infention fo Send Vessels i, \gquire interna- | ing cannery system a decisive fac- The rer Alaska which doi | 0 S tn. fonal cooperation, Japan has read- tor for turning deep sea fisheries passengers from the south, lelt, High tide—1:35 am. 174 feet lY lndi(ated accordance with the principle of | try.’ port last evening with 33 Juneau| Low tide—8:06 a.m. -1.8 feet give and take. " st i s e passengers aboard for Westward| High tide—2:23 pm. 155 feet TR e R otiites: S R e stops. Low tide—8:10 p.m., 2.5 feet. | SEATTLE. May 8—One of the 5 15 B Bt PR Tl gxO Passengers for Seward were Dr P | most. illuminating books on the| In discussing the ocean fishing | another Japanese Fisheries Bureau J. F. Pyle, K. WeWhinnie, P. Bird world’s fisheries resources recently by Japanese, a section contributed official, writes: “Of all the canned| e Ivle, Steve Vukovich, J H issued is “Japan's Fisheries In-|by the Oceanic Fisheries Associa-| goods packed in Japan, more than McNicholls, H. Davis, J. Donelson a I u ers dustry—1939,” published by the ton says "T}H‘ spheres of loeal | half is repr ; H. H. French, J. H. Dolphin, J | Japan Times and Mail, copies of | fishing activities have yearly been and .',E" . 80 percent or more Macek, E. Douglas, J. Lindsley, W | which have just become available| increasing the total area now cov- u.l which is If)r exportation. Among E. Chambers, J. Skarrak, H, H. Wil- |in this country. ering, besides all home waters, the the canned fish for export salmon cox. A. K. Richards, and Mis e ea e This book is printed in English Okhotsk and Bering seas, Bristol | takes the predominant position. Jack Warren I |and presents authoritative discus- Bay in the north and south sea| “Salmon is caught and packed For Cordova—S. Graner, A. Betts |sions of the Japanese fisherics 1°8ions as far as the Antarctic 0| apoard floating canneries which Mirs. M. Kennesling, Steve Harn-| SEATTLE, May 8.—Three halibut- | written by government and indus- | the south.” ate along the coasts and on yak, and C. Tiperon ers sold here today as follows: try officials Emphasizing the export impor-|the high seas. The annual sal For Kodiak—E. Olson, Mershon From the western banks—Tatoosh The book sketches the importanze tance of Japan's fisheries, this mon pack is between 230000 and Kesslei, C, L. Kallen, K. F. Mc- 75,000 pounds, 10% and 10 cents a|of fisheries on the economic life cdcn says, “The floating can-| 2,4000,000 cases. Some 87 percent Leod and J. Mellquist pound |of Japan, and the importance of For Valdez—A. D. Bello, A. Cre-| Frem the )aeal honks—Geebig 4,-| fishery products in the export do, W. Perez and A. Rebon 000 pounds, Enterprise 7,000 prznds, | (rade of the country. AS D A R Congress Convened For Seldovia—Mrs. A. R. Hay- both selling for 11's and 9 cents a| [t also makes clear the Japanese don pound. intention to send their fishing -t | ST vessels' and floating canneries and PRICES ELSEWHERE At Prince Rupert today 100,000 pounds of halibut were sold at 9.70 to 9.80 and seven cents. Prevailing price at Ketchikan ! INSPECTORS RETURN Steamboat inspectors J. M. Clark J. Newmarker returned from 1 today on board the North £ The inspectors have been in Wrangell for several days on a|8't @nd 6.90 cents. business trip, | 1 TR | L. B. FITCH HERE L. B. Fitch, assistant traffic TIME TO CALL 117 FOR YOUR CAB BROADWAY CAB CO, manager of the Northland Trans- portation Company, is in Juneau | today on board the North Sea. He| |1s accompanied by his wife and is| {on a vacation trip, taking the North | | Sea on the trip back to Seattle. - | ‘Today's news today in The Empire. | oo frrrr e e | M‘r —The Sign of i o T Dependable Service | | | e SR Juneau to Fairbanks: Tuesdays Fairbanks fo Nome: Mondays and Thursdays Fairbanks to Bethel: Wednesdays L J U.S. Airmail—Bxpress Service Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. "PHONE 106 ' LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE ' ' - Sales Representative | packed |dian and American fishermen and | gard | even | riches hidden in the sea. For many reduction plants to our side of the Pacific Ocean. It makes clear that hese fish caught in North Ameri- -an waters are not for Japanese iome ccnsumption but are to be put on the world market in com- petition with fish caught and by the better paid Cana- aborers. The chief of the Fisheries Bu- reau, Mr. Senkichi Awaya writes that one and a half million peopie |in_ the fisheries indus with 364,000 fishing vessels bringing in| catches valued at 400 million yen. (Equivalent to approximately 100 million dollars.) Japaaese Attitude The book contains innumerable | sidelights on the Japanese attitude regarding off-shore fisheries which make interesting reading for Am- ericans. One government official | writes: “The Japanese people indeed re-! it their inevitable fate or/ sacred mission to develop years past it has been the motto | of the ananese flshenes to ex-| Clalm ThlS Sub Sank Four German Transports‘ Triton, pictured above, torpedoed According to a British claim, the British submarine man trogp ships-in_the Kattegat, after which Congress at Washington, D. C. Britain’s submarine Tritom four of 10 Ger- | recovered 3,000 Triton’s te.t NDI! Nl- e Farade of flags highlights a session of the 49th D. A. R. Continental More than 4,000 delegates attended. Swedish and"Norwegian boatmen were said to nn 'nunnumeowwm of the total annual pack of canned salmon is ‘exported to Britain four percent to France, while the remainder goes to other European nations.” > DELAYED NORTH SEA DOCKS WITH 33 PASSENGERS Arriving almost a day behind the regular schedule because of extra stops at canneries in Southeast Al- aska, the steamer North Sea docked in Juneau this afternoon with 353 passengers disembarking, Passengers arriving in Junean W J. H. Mosely, Robert Moch: nes, Ethel Ott, Anne S. Caltleberry, Mrs. Emma Andrews, Marlen Parker, Mrs. Paul Parker, Tom McCaul, Mrs. Wanda Leveque. Chester K. Tripp, Mrs. H. T. Tripp. Mis Mrs. Fred Tiedt, Baby Tiedt, James Norton, J, H. Cosper, George Chr: Arvid Isaacson, Rhoades Loel Kahle, Thomas P. Devine, Don Carling, R. W. Castleberry, Nor- man Maki, Shelby Tucker, A. Van Mavern, C. J. Johnson, F. K. Bourg- bois, J. M. Clark, J. Newmarker and F. Crawford. - The North Sea will leave the port of Juneau at 7 o'clock tonight bound for Excursion Inl(‘( and Sitka ore mm ® Periect comfort ® Splendid food ® Every convenience and service ® Centrally located Large Rooms all with bath. Special Rates to Permanent Guests ALASKANS LIKE THE | kel | NEW WASHINGTON ented by canned fish HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. U. S. Mail Carrier M.S. DAIIT 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- tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau, | Phone 123 Transportation Company Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle PASSBNGEES FREIGHT REFRIGERATION D.B. FBMHEII AGENT Night 312 Phone 114 i ANADIAN PACTFEI( Connectjons at V. with Canadian hdnnm | TRANSCONTINENTAL | TRANS-ATLANTIO | TRANS-PACIFIC = | Tickets, mwrnflom “and full l’n hy and | Olney Webb, Olney Webb, Jr., | S. R. Butcher, E. H.| Sitka. Alex Holden flew four passengeis to Polaris-Taku this afternoon. They were B. B. Neiding, Mrs. F. H. Mc- Pherson, Tom Dyer and R. Holmes. MRS GRIGSBY CALLED SOUTH BY ILLNESS Called south by the,seriolis iliness of her /other, Mrs. Irene Paterson, Mrs. George B. Grigsby left on the Yukon Monday to be with Mrs. Pat- 'AIRWAYS MAKES - TWO FLIGHTS T0 COAST AND MINE ngers flew out of Ju- neau today with Shell Simmons, two to Hirst-Chichagof and one to Sitka. Pete Sulich and W. 4. Gal- lemore were taken to the Chichagot mine, and Jerry McKinley went o Three-pas: going “erson at her home in Seattie Leave DueJuneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound MT. McKINLEY May 3 ALASKA May 4 May 17 May 13 DENALI May 17 May 11 May 13 BARANOF May 8 May 11 May 17 1 YUKON May 11 May 14 May 2 MT. McKINLEY May 14 May 18 May 20 *ALASKA May 18 May 21 May 27 *—Connects with S. S. Cordova at Cordova for Seward, Kodiak ana Seldovia, FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES —4 H. O. ADAMS Agent Alaska bteams}up Com ;y | i SERVICE-ON-ALL- RLASKA-ROUTES U e 500 O VO G B A | MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL | 2-Way Radie Communieation Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED, PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE i SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS ]'UN'EAU—PHONE 823 i ALASKA AIR TRANSPOBT Inc. AN Planes Operating Own Aeronautical \ 2-Way Radio Station KANG PHONE Rudio HANGAR and SHOP In JUNEAU 612 Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER — | | I | | GROVER C. WINN s o palG-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the e ——————— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: “MIRACLES FOR SALE" TWATOH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! o 3 ' ST R 11N COLUMBIA LUMBER COHPANY OF ALASKA Lumb d Building Materials flaf;ma; 587 OR -,¢7E;uh‘mlu SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH WS. To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A, HOTEL GASTINEAU ** Every Efiort Made for ihe Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE AfR SERVICE INFORMATIUN + R nGRTHLfinD . Leave Ar.Junenu Lv. Juneau " Seattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTH SEA .......May 3, May 7 May}0 NORTHLAND ......May 10 May 14 May 17 NORTH COAST .. -.May 11 May 15 May 18 HENRY GREEN, Agent Phone 109