The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 21, 1940, Page 2

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KUNTER PERET ~ RETURNS WITH . AFRICA STORY $portsman Prefers Alaska ' as Place to Seftle Down for Good EDUCATION BOARD TO CONVENE HERE lation Will Not Work Hardshlp Back in Alask after 12 vears ir Next meeting u( the Territorial cother parts ef e world,” Gus Pore Board of Education will be held Remington-Peters Arms represents- | in Juneau next Febru accord- tive, tadag came nort ing to H. L. Faulkner, a member pick out a place where he can who returned this week after at- in his old a tending the 1940 sessions of the I want be cl the be Board at Anchorage huntit iid Peret, a widely know Discussing the new regulation of portsmar he Board giving preference t Peret exhibited a double barre graduates of the University of Al- elgphant gun and told about @ hu ka for teaching positions in Al ing exped in ka schools, Faulkner said the ruie T yill have no effect until nextyear t un, yo cause teachers have already been els you sai employed for the 1940-41 schoo et said ths capitalized yegr Any objections to the new handscmely on its game. A huniing regylation may be made at the trip there costs ar ything from $10.- Board's meeting here next year, 000 to $20,000. A neral when | he sajd { he went to Africa cost $i50. with 43| There are only 11 -graduates o additicnal $250 charge I he first (a4 University of Alaska available elephant shct. Game . vabi’ (o1 teaching positions out of all plentiful, Peret £aid, with the classes in the institutions his 10,000 head bein € Ir 1 Faulkner said. day on the plains. The bu James C. Ryan, oppointed mos(, dangerous animal i Attica, M| oommissioner of Education startin Peret’s estim 1 next Febtu R Faulkper @8 'p very Iid oo - PETERSBLRG FLIER HERE AS VISITOR BIOLOGIST BARNABY GOES WEST 10 TAG Arnold Enge of l”l":‘l!‘?l‘ flew are yesterday in his perso plane. F'SH AI U"AMSKA pringing Hack White of Petersours FERREEE I CE Associate ' Aquatic Biologist I NEW CORDOVA PASTOR Thomas Barnaby of the Bureau —_— of Fisheries was a through pas- The Rev. David Crawford, from |senger today on the steamer Al- Virginia, has been appointed min-|aska, enroute to Unalaska to con- . ister of the Presbytertan Church| duct salmon tagging experiments at. Cordova following the resigna- Barnaby, a member of the Sci- tion of the Rey. Ralph S. Peter-|entific Division of the Bureau, has son who is in-the States to locate been coming to Alaska each sea- because of illness, son for many years. Recently he >~ has been doing scientific work at Today's news today m The Emplre. ! Kodiak O Hollywood Sights 4And Sounds By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, C: asking for no higher than third billing on . May 21.-—Today's smart boy: Joe Penner “The Boys From Syra- cuse,” in which he ranks under Allan Jones (top) and Martha Raye. Joe; minus barnyard accompaniments including ducks and biack sheep, looks very, very cute in a toga, but not so cute as Afib#* Jones. " Penner figures he's not tiie one to “carry” the picture or even lead with his chin on his first venture out of the B's. Rodgers and Hart have written a new song, hit- bound, for the picture. Listen for “Who Are You?" As a correspondent in comparatively peaceful Hollywood, I've always wondered how it revolution. at all Miss Morales (“The Primrose Path,” “The Long Voyage Home’") is a Spanish , born in the Canary Islands, long-time resident of Mexico, educated in the U. 5. midwest She dancing areund Europe and happened to be in Barcelona, shopping. one day when a great quiet broke out It was like siesta hour, the merchants having drawn down their iron blinds and retreated inside their shops. One of them hailed her, would feel to be in the middle of a Carmen Morales, who was, tells.me it feels like nothing was invited her in, warning, “There’s going to be a demonstration!” Then' there wis pandemonium In half an hour The shops opened, the people came out—and saw Miss Morales continued her shop- Protesting, she followed him outide, shouts and shots and missiles crashing. all was still. the wreckage of a street brawl /COME! T™at's the receptien charming hostessess giwe thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delictows Van Duyn Candies. mun tentions make you & ust ca-‘ guest. Ty it anDuy ' VAN DUYN QOOCOLAYI suon NOW AT Perey’ exclusively ping, unconcerned. . . . A short time later, Barcelona and all Spain were embroiled in eivil war. Martin Krosleck (“Foreign Correspondent™) is a young German who left Hitlerland a eouple of years before Adolf took over. He is slight, ascetic, nervous-looking—an artist. He was painting pictures before he was discovered, on an eastern stage, for “Con- fessions of a Nazi Spy.,” in which (because he had relatives in Germany and also because he thought not too much of his role) he used an assumed name. He played a Goebbels-like propa- ganda official, so sinisterly offensive as to inspire an audience desire to punch his face in. He never had seen Goebbels, en- joyed creating the character from imagination. His roles since (in Espionage Agent” and the present) have been cut from the same eloth. In Germany he uséd to play juvenile roles (with Albert Basserman among others), and he would like to bring to pictures a characterization of the dancer Nijinsky—an ambition held, I hear, by John Garfield also. Great Events Department: Paulette Goddard chosen as “most beautiful figure.” Albert Dekker chosen as the “grveat profile” b in succession to John Barrymore. Anna Neagle chosen for smart dressing. This is all very well. Miss Goddard has a beautiful figure— but Lana Turner Betty Grable and Carole Landis can equal or out-curve her. Albert Dekker's profile is all right, but the Great Undiscovered Profile in this town is Victor Mature’s. Miss Neagle iean: ‘take the cake for Uréss ¥or anything else) any day. A !w Dilemma W All’red Hitchcock (“The Blimp") having to direct ¢ mmfiewithout:foxum TR I LU FOR 1941 SESSICN Faulkner Says New Regu- ARG LA WORK ORDERED . ONSWIM POOL {ity fo Complete Projed,}( Mayor Announces- | 5 Forms Next | 5001 in Evergreen Bowl, a WPA pro- | wet, was ordered today by Mayor | | Harry 1. Lucas. City Engineer Frank Metealf will arrange for resumptio: »{ work on the project The excavation has been made he pool. Forms will next be tructed for: the eencréte tan - CANNED SALMON MOVEMENT WiLl BE SPEEDED UF | . Efforts Are fo Be Made for Deliveries Disrupt- ed by War SEATTLE, May 21.—Steps design- d to keep Alaska's canned salmon neving into consumption in spite of { tossible disruption and reduction of | ‘hipping service as an effect of the | var have highlighted the marketing \ctivity on canned salmon during | the past few weeks, it is revealed at 1« meeting of the Pacific Canned Sal- nen Distributors Association, | Aetivity looking toward keeping {4p a normal movement of the yet o be produced 1940 canned salmon »ack into consuming centers has seen in tvp phases The first program now apparently uccessfully completed, was concer.l- »d with assuring shipping space it ntercoastal steamers during the fal nonths, when a movement of ap- proximately 60,000 tons of canncd salmon to Guilf and Atlantic coast ports is anticipated. The second phase is an effort to secure lowe: | carload weight requirements and o rate reduction from the transcontin- mtal railroads. Cenditions Faced The salmon industry united wit! | representatives of Iumbcr,'pu]p, W00, flour, and other important Pacifi: Northwest products to draw atten {tion of the Maritime Gommission to the condition facing Northwest ship- pers resulting from withdrawal of | many intercoastal ships during the past few menths. Tonnage serving this area has been drastically re duced because shipping companies haye sold or chartered boats for | cther routes. | With the withdrawal of Norwegian |and Danish ships from. traffic, ship- pmg space on all routes has been reduced and many American carriers have been diverted to other routes. As a result of the action of North- west shippers and other !Coast interests, the Maritime Com- mi; n asked Congress to pass the Buck Bill which authorized the Cemmission to sell or charter old U. 8. ships which had been laid up. Thes2 ships are all over 20 years old. Adequating Shipping This bill passed Congress and has RESUMED HERE . | railrcads in an effort to secure a re- | duction ef the minimum car load | quirment of the railroac | Cempletion of nn City's swimmitg | points, and a reduction in the r Pacific | been sent (¢ the President for sig- nature, It will pave the way for re- ation of more adequate shippis t the move and other vice this fall tc ment of canned salmon Pacific Coast products The. Pacific Canned Salmon Dis- tributofs Association, aided by the Association of Pacific Fisheries and salmon packers, are now the transcontinental individual werking with on hauls to ssippi val eastern and upper M rate to Atlantic seaboa “At"tne present ume, W d points, holesaler; in'the Great Lakes area are having almon shipped to them by water > the Atlaniic Coast and by rail ack-haul from there or by barge p the Mississippi from Guif por costing them ‘more than di but they are able smuiler his is ect rail shipment » buy in more convenient uantities THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1940 . (1 S. DEPARTMENT 'OF AGRICULTURE, W v ] Al 7] ol | THE WEATHER { (By the U Weather Bureau) ¥o ast for Juncau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 p.m., May 21: Light rain tonight and Wednesday; minimum temperature tonizht about 46 degree moderate southeasterly winds. t for Southeast Alaska: Light rain tonight and Wednes- day; sl y warmer in the northeast portion tonight; moderate south to southeasterly winds ept fresh over sounds and strait and Lynn Canal 3 Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate to fresh south and southeasterly winds from Dixon En- trance to’ Cape Spencer: and moderate to fresh southeast to casterly from Cape Spencer to Kodiak LOCAL DATA Time Barometer ‘lemp. Hmmdny Wind Velocity ‘Weather 4:30 p.m, yesty 30.07 52 w 4 Cloudy 4:30 a.m. today 29.88 44 w 3 Cloudy Noon today 29.87 49 I 1 Rain RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. tempt. | Lovest 3:30a.m r p. 3:30am. tation las¢ 24 hours | temp. 24 hours Weather Barrow Cl ¥ airbanks Pt. Cldy Nome 46 29 Pt. Cldy Dawson 64 37 38 T Cloudy Anchorage 54 43 43 Clovi Bethel 61 E 40 St. Paul 40 34 Pt. Cl Duteh Harbor .. 45 3¢ 39 Clear Wosnesenski 51 10 42 Cloudy Kanatak 43 10 40 Cloudy Kpdiak 45 36 10 Rain Cordova 48 42 43 Rain neau 52 3 16 Cloudy Stka 54 44 Cloudy Kechi 60 31 Cloudy nee ‘Ruper A7 Cloudy Prince Grorse 34 Clear Seattle 48 Clear Porthind 55 Cloudy San Francisco . 60 54 Cloudy WEATHER SYNOT The -moderate disturbance in the 'Gulf of laska has moved slowly castward with center situated this morning about 300 mile th of Kodiak Island A ridg: of high pressure extended fror the coast of Washington southwestward to the middle Pacific Ocea Curing the past 24 hours scatte'ed showers occurred over Soutly- east Alds and heavy to mod e rains occurred alpng the coa of the Gulf. from Cordova to ‘Dutch Harbor. Mostly cloudy weath- er prevailed over the rest of Alaska. Juncaw,. May 22.—Sunrise 4:21 am 9:33 sunset pm FBHERIES VESSEL Engineer of the Cr » is Ben Bur- « W | tord, brother of Jack Burford of Ju neau b AP EEATURE SERVICI (RAKE STOPS HERE Ksatatant Miant & 1hiea theé Burcau pressntative in Bris- e o ENROUTE TQ WEST « ; Xy . (ol Bay was aboard, as was Mark A : 2 R pumber of temporary Bureau cim ; 2 4,:1i\ll candidate bt o TS perta ployees were passenger F'or 4 years belore . h ar {'v ‘“‘ i “" 1“1)1“1“ “]“‘ the season’s work in Bristol Ba - - Lo ashington with F 4 arle; | b Wy i A e \lm]»' passed thtough Junean today on the | Lioyd Morley, Sanitarian of 5 State’ Athets Commilea which | o5sel Crane. ‘Capt. Georze Skarbo.|Territorial” Department of Hea LTt Bt T S e e S L THE CEANE abrived hete ) 1asi | left today on the steamer Alaska lates boxing and wrestling, H¢ | pjppt. and-sailed-at noon today Kodiak. During the trip he will ma knows most of the ring champions.' gugol Bay via Kediak and 3 {6 thspekiion bf Bristor T Farley he can't remember 3 ¢ i et S e T when od a championship TR prize Kentucky Derby, | He's enthusiast, = too, tSon PRthpkion a5 A CLOTHES that are CLEANED player in his youth, the finest first ort Wear Longer! | baseman., Haverstraw, N Y., ever Bt SOURBARMENTS | had. " Nowadays he contents him- oo i b S | If with an occasional swim or T’ ’/‘er ne Tom Dewey, youngest of those A NF «ad who would be President, bowls Thoroush Workmanship and olfs and play He won't Modern Methods Produce . win any prizes but plays a fair i, i i weekend brand of golf and tennis. BANKER—When J. P. Mor- Summer, for Burton K. Wheele an & Co. incorporated, forsak- o : neans golden hours of trout fish- Because water shipment space 1,.“:: ,‘l'.":’w;“fl’{“,“’{n"’;:)"‘ft“;a'l::"‘,’c‘)' ng in Montana's Glacier National xpected to be ree even with the pecame vice chairman of the ’ark. When there “he frequently PHONE 'assage of the Buck Bill, this reduc- | board, in New York, dlays nine holes of golf before : on of rail rates and weight mini- | ! reakfast with “the side kick," as va being sought so that “.umn’ e calls his wife, Like the others i'-7 mon can be moved into consum- Aheeler is a bascball fan. He once g markets with the least amount AlASKA HARBOR ecommended a rookie to. the Sena- f inccnvenience and ors. Kid didn't stick. xpense. pROJE("‘S Blll |S John Nance Garner was quite a ¢ A ] T . Costs’ May Advance saseball player back in ‘the old B Whils war conditiens are apt 1 @ays. He says the Texas leaguer > ring about higher costs of trans- loST BY VEIO vas named after him because he MODES / MOMEN i ] ertation on canned salmon, the Dis- it so many short safe pops out tne ributors A<;l7(|'|ali011 unr‘! the indus- N il ‘——A 5 'I““' b;:k ‘i"f‘";l:l-h:(‘l-‘;l i pm}';ibiy by Adelaide Kers ~———————————- ry as' a whole are endeavoring t: - € shington fan. Hank v onmiliiary APpropria-| .o i i wis rvorice player. Gar- oo — eep transportation costs as low as Jossible in the domestic market, & eo White, President of the D ators Association said in ¢ rit heir activities. “Because higher trar rtation costs will have to be reflected it igher retail prices which weuld cer ainly slow down family purchasc f salmon, and turn many bu o ather competing foods, we are wratified that Congress has grante 1‘ sdditional ships to relieve the ship- | jects atready authorized supplied »ing shortage. We are also hopeful [t ey, om0 JOTER I 06 * 1 s in golf and croguet. Golf is the | that the railroads will ant the Vbl ‘other’ consideratic RO 1ajor sport for Robert A, Taft. D e e oyt | War Department should give way ¢ P TR, s fond_of| salmon and transpor N thethesd for m orepar v D sea fishin likes other | costs willf mot .curtail consumption A dozen Alask g ports but rarely goes to games of canned salmon" he suid i i ap o e b it S A cluded. very spring, though, he officially .- - I BIRD WINS TROPHY FROM UNIVERS!TY Best Indepéndéntly Print- ed School Newspaper in Temtory The J Bird J\mv:m High Scho newspapers has been adjudged by the University of Alaska as the best in- iependently printed school news-. Japer in Alaska, according to word ceeived by Superiniendent of 3choels A. B. Phillips from Everott R. Erickson, Assistant Professor ef Education at the University >f the Juneau High School will be- come its permanent property yar’s award for the ment to a local newspaper and Nome High School's North Star s ad- i)udged the best mimeographed pa- per. supple- | The trophy now in the possession | fishes Vandenberg evel Tk tions in Disfavor Now | «x bunis ana Arthur to play £ in Washmg'on roquet, swim and fish. : Yachting and golfing interest WASHINGTON, May 21— Pi rank Gannett. He plays a pretty| |/ dent Roosevelt today vetoed a bii | “n. Bume on the links, { 000 for river and harbor improve e Hiok kl»;m\_“ -l ra va_v and ment surveys 1 o play softbail| [ In a m to the House, th: | M. occasion. i President said he believed the pre Sports don’t interest Cordell Hull ery much. He occasionally indulg- g: pens the baseball season by toss- | - e - TRIA[ A.I. SITKA :; ,\(m;i]alszm{:]?l ball at Washing- Joe Martin is a baseball fan. - < 'TANDARD OfL C0. . CALLS HOlZHEIMEF L5 01 taiee s of Sitk on a charge of “.~\|.1!l and bat called 17 Attorney William [ | | | i i i Holzheimer to Sitka yesterday. | Duker flew to Sitka as defense a plANS S]so m torney. The e Wil | men on ftrial liam Zook, Edwar gan Adams Annie Lydal and Martha Maquive Baden and Du ALASKA PROGRAM have been arrested at Sitka on andrew, e, vae siven o o 0. | ‘Will Build Four New Planis sentence for larceny - oo CAB CORPORATION Three residents of Anchorage Mar- ion E. Nichels, Madge ‘Nichols and’ Ralph O. Nichels, have liled witl the Territerial Auditor papoers of incorporation for the Yellow Cab Company, neorporated in Westward, Says Engineer A $750,000 expansion program for | the Standard Oil ompany in Al-! aska was “announced today by| Claude Davies of Seattle, company | Anchorage High School won this | | INFORMATION WANTED—as 1 | TOO LATE TGO CLASSIFY industrial engineer, who is spend-l |ing a few days in Juneau. | \‘,o‘ Davies said the company wouid | i o St Michael,| | ’ X Edward H wi::I ;;;:;ruc‘; etg:nt:nd“m:ch H:.rbcr,f Afswer to the demand for an all-around hat is this one of black Milan ton, formerly of Seattle, | straw. Walter Florell designed it with an irregular brim and added Kindly communicate with his| to serve the vast Westward terri-| Y ; son, John W. Sutton, General|tory, and would build a new plam‘ allure with a black veil. It tops a black and white print frock ready o for bridge parties or a hot day in town, Delivery. Bremerton. Wash, at Fairbanks, Y whereabouts of | ;

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