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OH-1 THINK IT'S LOVELY HERE | N SALT LAKE CITY-BUT, I'M | KNOW. HE { GOING_TO LET YOUR FATHER LIKES THIS DECIDE HOW_LONG CITY -AS HE k WE SHOULD REMAIN- TOLD ME SO i orid nights roerved S MARINE NEWS S i Denali Here THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRI: SATURDAY MAY 25, 1940 FIND GROGAN - HEARD HE WUZ IN TOWN - IF | FIND HIM I SPEND AT LEAST FOUR DAYS HEAFZE- By GEORGE McMANUS | YES-HERR WIGG-THE HOTEL MANAGER HAS ASKED ME_TO cnvé A CONCERT HER| THE HOTEL TONGHRE CHRIS SENDO - HFIZE- WILL SING ~HE WIL NOTIEY THE GLESTS THIS AFTERNOON — 26 Aboard | Yukon lor SEATTLE, Ma; kon sailed for Southeast and South- west Alaska ports at 9 o'clock thir meining ing 64 steerage Passengers booked for Juneau in- e the following ¢ ® 0 0 8 v 8 " e s e e Bound Norfh ¢ " “oriei” " " - e Tyee in port and posted to sail e | e south tentatively at 7:30 o- ® : e clock tonight. . Northbound, the steamer Denali|g yykon due Should e whistled into Gastineau Channel at|q ~ pave three days’ mail aboard, ® | midnight last night with 16 round | 4 Aie. Thissay. ® trip tourists aboard on the tri- DULED SAILINGS | angle run. The vessel had 24 pas-| o princess Louise scheduled to sail ® ’]“ S _",']“‘j ‘I“‘_'V“'“‘““,‘ e from Vancouver 8 tonight. @ o s fretaht and il and|® Taku scheduled to sail from Se- ok i o naers fonlgC (@ attle May 28 at 9 p.m. . picking up, 15 passengers for Skag-| g ajovian scheduled to sail from @ | ey e Seattle May 29 at 9 am . Passengers arriving on the Den-| o noip geq scheduled to sail from @ ali from Seattle mxj Frank Heint-1 g a0 it1e May 31 at 9 p.m. e deman, Mrs. J. Hickey, John Fndi-| ¢ “SoUTHBOUND SAILINGS @ ”",' 1: McNe {11 P. Nose, Rex l‘_fl' e Denali scheduled to arrive Sun- e bell, K. B. Wakefield and J. Wil-| ¢ * gav m b 30 i0\lock, | @ kinson n e going south ~ia Sitka . From Ketchikan—J. MolyneauX.| ¢ North Coast scheduledto arrive ® Frank G. Smith, A. B. Cain, P.l¢ gt 11:30 am. tomorrow and e Fitzsimmons, Dan Noonan, E. ¥ south 2 or 3 hours later. e Riley, Harold Metcalf, Frank Cro-|e Alaska scheduled southbound e 1 moton, Chester Scott, Sammy|e Monday . Slaughter, Bennie Borsald and A.le Baranof scheduled southbound e Schwab. e next Friday. e From Wrangell—George Blake,| o LOCAL SAILINCS . Maurice Nelson, Eileen Nelson and|s Estebeth scheduled to sail every o M. Richard |» Wednesday at 6 . m. for Sit- e P engers leaving on the Dend e ka and wayports. L] w £ ay were C. W. Davis, il-| ® Dart leaves every Wednesday « liam Elsner, Q. St. Antoine, J. J.|® at1 p.m. for Petersbur; Port @ Hillard, A. Sohlinger, R. Town-|e Alexander, Kake and way send, Waldo Anderson, William|® ports. . Mahoney, Miss M. Martin and/> ¢ @ @ ¢ 0 @ @ ¢ @ ¢ & = Grace Pusich, 1 For Haines—Mr. and Mrs. Joht ! G. Shepard and Joe Green ‘NORIH SEA oll"I For Seattle by way of Skagway Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Harton ENROUTE SEATTLE Returning from Sitka with 23 passengers om board for Juneau, the steamer North Sea docked here late yesterday afternoon and left at 8 o'clock, picking up 29 passen- for Seattle and way ports. assengers arriving on the North The Denali will return from Skag- | way on its southbound trip at 10| o'clock tomorrow morning, She will | be in port for several hours (o nnv\’ load lumber before proceeding to| Sitka. e i TipEs ToMORROW Sea were Clarabel Messerschmidt, Francis Nerderhel, William Ma- =3 honey, Dr. O. H. Armstrong, Ben (8un Time) Benson, Fred Dolphin, Violet Jack- High tide—3:43 am. 156 feet. |son pillian Jackson, Winona Jones, Low tide—10:13 am. 03 feel. |peying Demmert, Tina Chickenoff, | High tide—4:48 pm. 143 feet. |ponald Apland, William A. Holz- Low tide—10:32 pm., 45 feet. |heimer, J. S. McQuiston, Lillian 3 Martin, H, Frederickson, Mrs. H. : TIDES MONDAY Frederickson, D, V. Robinson, Mrs. High tide—4:30 am. 142 feet. |paul Morgan, F. W. Downes, Titus Low tide—10:50, agn., 17, Defidoff, Andrew Johnson and High tide—5:40 pm., 136 feet. | rnomas Andrews. [ Low tide—11:32 pm., 52 feet BB ANy TEAVIAL " 108" SR Py % were Yvonne Williams, Allen Wil-| ATTENTION MASONS Stated Communication of Mt. Juneau Lodge Monday evening at iams, Mrs. Ken Williams, Mrs. Han- nah Erickson, Mrs. Florence Ro- berts, William Lindley, W. C.Swan- 7:30. Work in the M. M. Degree. |son George Endrea, S. W. Hanson, . L o LF;(YFRS-’ Hartman Dick, Paul Larson, Er-| _ Secretary. | nest Daniels, Lewis Pallin, Kendall = — Jackson, T. N. James, Ernie Wasell, | TIME TO CALL Stan Gustafson, Bob Rucker dn(l‘ R. M. Hunt. For Petersburg—Jim Boyle, Frank | Crawford, Hosea Sarber and Henry | Roden. FOR YOU'R CAB For Ketchikan—J. C. Roehm, Dgogan, Harry Turner, Joe Pal- ‘ BROfiDWAY CAB SO mer, Walter Fuller and Lyl(- Hebert e e eeee —The Sign of Dependable Service S e SO Juneau to Fairbanks: Tuesdays Fairbanks fo Nome: Mondays and Thursdays Fairbanks to Bethel: Wednesdays (] u.s. Airmail—Express Service [ Pacllic Aii;mkgmflui;rways, Inc. tfififl L meCObE " “Sales Rér;;eseniuti‘;o and Mrs. Don Morse, A. L, Pot- ter, Mrs. D. R. Gustifson, Mrs. P. | W. Talkington, Mrs. E. J. Eatcn Axel Edman, Wesley Edman, Wes- ley Monsen E. F. Woodward, Mr. and Mrs | T. Weaver, Betty and Shirley Kee A. E. Russell, Cas , Byron Penney, M Lancaster. John Giliwee, W. S. Burton, and Mrs. C. C. Wan , Mrs, Andejso ancis C. Hy enrich, Pauline Mogseth. - RATS RUIN WRECKING BY RUNHING AROUND A newly forming junk and salvage business teetered on its foundations last night because of— When Lou Liston and Monte Gri- slram, local business men, w the | 18 tons of scrap iron lying near the | Nerthland deck they saw what they thought was a possibility to turn the junk into cash. For four hours be- fore the arrival of the southbound crth Sea yesterday they labored rats. {and perspired, carrying the scrap to the face of the Northland dock, in- |, tending to ship the metal to Seat The work was hard, but more dif- ficult still ause of the numerous ing place of their former homes. his proposed cargo, emphatically said so. Passengers leaving Juneau for So, unabashed, the new junk deal- gaward: Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Van w I l K I E RAPP'NG ers intend to try to send ‘their first A¢a Jerald Hawkinz, Eric Eng- chipment out on the North Coast gtrom, L. R. Monamker, H. Gorham DEFENSE pROGRAM tomorrow—ah, rats ! Oscar Jensen, Michael Reddy, Fran- R < SO cis Lass, H. O. Sanders, L. Dick, K 4 Jackson, E. E. Bayer, C. E. Gillham | IN HIS (AMPAIGN Juneau Visitor Is Greeted at Parties Pnorto Deparlure i nine years of Mrs, Knowiés; who has been year with her daughters, Harriet Mrs. Lydia plans to return to her home in Au- gu%ta Maine, Monday on the steamer | | | Alaska. During the past week she has been | the incentive for extensive entertain- | ing, with Mrs. John Walmer as luncheon hostess Monday afternoon, and her daughter, Mrs. Rosness hostess with a dinner party Tuesday evening. Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Hans | Berg entertained with luncheon at { her C Street residence, and Thurs- day afternoon Mrs. Henry Hanson gave an informal luncheon at her | summer home on the Glacier High- | way. ! Mrs. Knowles was also the hon- {ored guest at a luncheon given y !terday by Mrs. R, Keeny, and this ;L(Tll*rnnun Mrs, O. Oberg was hostess. | Tomorrow she will be entertained by (Mrs. C. A. Bloomquist and Mrs. George Osborne, at the latter’'s home on Harris Street. | Last week, Mrs. Knowles was also {guest of honor at several informal | affairs. ;Trinily Women : Meet Yesterday Carloads of Trinity Guild mem- | bers journeyed to the Wellman | Holbrook summer home yesterday afternoon for a last gathering un- {til after the summer adjournment. A luncheon was served and the day was spent informally. PASSENGERS AND 249 KILLED Fred R. Geeslin, | And they did so—all at once. When George McMurchy, the captain of the North Sea saw qpy the migrating rodents scurrying into p;wson he decided he 'y didn't want that cargo after all, and p g and J. w a light load of 134 passengors and only fou 1 trip touri 3 Steamship vessel Bars 1o 1 in Juneau this forenoo: —_— aareing 21 passensers, o aione: Three Thousand, Mostly] PPEAL TO BOMBERS-—With this huge cross on the ground near a military hospital do the French appeal to enemy bombers, lest a rain of bombs bring death to already-in- } jured men. Picture passed by the French censor. | A FREIGHT ARRIVE ner onsaranor IN PERUVIAN EARTHOUAKE | ean H. MAGGIE=I THINK WE- S| LEAVE TODAY=-AN" TOI?AOHé-g SURE -1 GOT TH' TICKETS- "DEAD” YOUTH IS~ DECLARED INSANE Walter Swirsky, Michigan yeuth who was taken into custody here several weeks ago when he said he was dead and that he had fallen! | off a mountain, was committed | | v Morningside asylum today by a | jury in the Court of U. S, Com- | missioner Felix Gray. S ky continued to claim was dead, even before the at the insanity hearing today. Serving on the jury were Mor- | Truesdell, James Monagle, Thomas J. Ryan, Owen Hales, Wil- liam Bosch and Walter E. Bathe -es lEONARD BERLIN WRITES LETTER FROM ANTARCTIC A letter written by Leonard Ber- lin of Juneau from the cutter Bear in the Ross Sea Ice Pack of An arctica was received this week by George A, Parks, head of the Pub- lic Survey Office in which Berlin worked The Juneau man writes that the Bear was: nearing Little America at that time (January 12) and that the sled dogs in Berlin’s care .had been kept in fine condition. Not a single dog was lost enroute south, Berlin said, which is much better than the record on the last Byrd expedition. he jury | SANITARY PLUMBING and HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worr PHONE 1788 HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. U. §. Mail Carrier M.S.DART families of rats and mice who had e tho. swashs . been making their homes in the |, & ,,,‘,,z‘n to S(hoo' Childfen, ln- jurk heap for several genera- | yunaan southbound, on May . . ke g R Bt Ml el e MR AL jured at Lima bachelor rats were forced out of their | . 1 terior are two horses and one il homes by the removal of the iron. ., gestined for discharge and LIMA, Peru, May 25—Two slight Even so the junk might have been ;anchipment from Seward earth tremors brought new panic to ! shipped. Passengers arriving on the Bar- this section of Peru early today but But after the arrival of the North' ¢ were Harry Bowyer, Dr. and added little to the destruction ap- Sea, the rat population decided that n carl B. Buck, Dr. W. W. Coun- parently of yesterday’s severe eart they should move into the new rest- i Ajjan Easton, Mrs. A. Fitzpatrick, «;u,«k«- and there are no new casua ties. | The dead as the result of yester- day’s earthquake is placed at 249. three thousand are reported in- jured, “mos school children.” - Kermit McMurchy, 3race McMur- K. McMurchy Jeanne Leeria, Ray Jack Gusta vy and T. J. Maho Mrs. M Iy J. Lynch. Passengers leaving Juneau for Cor- cons it momuee e wowe Ministration NotCapable ek B el R VLT (1 00 siting in Juneau for the past ! Ted | wepber and Mrs, Andrew Rosness, | | { age. | KANSAS CITY, Mo, May 25.—| Republican presidential hopeful| Wendell L. Willkie, told the Na-| tional Republican Club last night| that the New Deal was not capable of carrying out the new National Defense Program. | Wilkie charged that the New| Deal has already wasted $60,000,- | 000,000 without building strong de- fens 'Thysscn in Exile a coalition government, and auto- matically giving President Roose- velt a third term, was ridiculous. - - - TAX COLLECTOR Joe Green, Tax Collector in the Territorial Treasurer's office, was a passenger to Haines on steamer Denali. He further declared that the id-‘n\ of the Republican Party joining in| the | | For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ! For Information—Haugen Transpor- | | Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneau | | every Wednesday at 7 a.m. ‘; | ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS Special Weekend Trips Arranged tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau, | Phone. 123 Leave ' DueJuneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbouno | *ALASKA May 18 May 21 May 27 DENALI May 21 May 24 May 26 BARANOF May 22 May 25 May 31 *YUKON May 25 May 28 June 3 {ALEUTTAN May 29 June 1 June 9 *ALASKA June 1 June 4 June 10 TANANA June 5 June 10 SARBER LEAVES ‘Wildlife Agent Hosea Sarber of the Alaska Game Caommission, re- turned tg, his Petersburg headquar- ters on .the steamer North Sea - - DALE DAY WORKING | AT PIONEERS' HOME Lale Day, who recently spent some time in Juneau, has obtained employment as an orderly Pioneers’ Home at Sitka. There are more than 100,000 in the softball teams listed 'in the United States. i—Aleutian May 29—(Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Cruise) calls at Skagway northbound, Sitka and Metlakatla southbound 1—9-Day Totemland Cruise. ~Connects with S. 8. Cordova at Cordova for Seward, Kodiak Seldovia. FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS any OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. 0. ADAMS— Agent =L == Alaska Qteamsh:p Company SERVICE ON-‘ALL-ALARS'KA: ROUTES} MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MA IL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 i i e ——————————————————————————————— .} ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. : ,..:‘.’.‘:,.. Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU ! SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER PHONE 612 D e e § A. B. PHILLIPS as a paid-up subscriber to 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: “STAR OF MIDNIGHT" “WATCH THIS SPACE i | Your Name May Appear! —— P DR 00 L S5 el - B e ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY e Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle $ S. TAKU .... S. S. TYEE 8. 8. TAKU S. 8. TYEE .. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION L ] D.B. FEMMER AGENT Phone 114 Night 312 o I COLUMBIA LUMBER connm OF ALASEKA Lumber and Building Hmnah PHONB 587 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To timprove and Moderize Your Home Under, Title I .F. H. A HOTEL GASTIREAU Evmfllort Made fyflnConioflolGumT GAS'HNELU CAFE ‘ m cmnocnon AlRt SERVICE INFORMATION BROADCAST JOINT FEATURE SERVICE ON THE AIR! By The Daily Alaska Empire and KINY 6 Days Every Week at Fritz Thyssen Once Germany’s leading indus- trialist and “angel” to Adolf Hit- | ler in the latter's ecarly days, Fritz Thyssen is shown in his Paris hotel room shortly after his : i arrival from Switzerland , where S am, 1M na. he found refuge after his flight 7:00 p.m. 9:45 p.m. from Germany. JUNEAU_TO VANOO‘IV"-. . VICFORIA OR SEATTLE | 80 JOUND, SAILINGS Princess Louise May 31 Connections at Va with TRANS-ATLANTIC ¥ 1 TRANS-PACIFIC. Tlckeh. reservuuau and full hm 4 5 i Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Jt Seattle No. Bound So.Dound NORTH COAST .. May 11 Al May 25 NORTH SEA . May 17 May 21 May .24 NORTHLAND ....May 24 May 28 May 31 HENRY GREEN, Agent ... .Phone 109 CITY WHARF Phone 23 GUY surm, Dougtas Agent ___...—.-fllne 18