The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 2, 1941, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURS HER PALS POLLY AND By CLIFF STERRETT COULDNT 6ET YUH ON TH” PHONE .- POLLY USIN’ TH’ CAR.-- AN’ I HAS T/ TRAMP FIFTY BLOCKS IN A STORM / THERE, THERE, PAW , TAKE IT EASY, LISSEN- I'M READING A RIOT ACT RIGHT NOW ./ You LEAVIN’ ME NO CARSARN CARFARE - - - | ! | (&3 QUEEN ELIZABETH VISITS SOUTH AFRICA e — | MARINE NEWS PAA PLANES ON WAY HERE Twelve passengers are coming south today aboard two PAA - tras from Fairbanks It is believed possible both planes would spend the ni at Whitehorse and come to Juneau tomorrow Meanwhile, the Douglas cancelled out for 24 hours iled Seattle to Jur due frol ‘airbanks Scott, Francis Hanson Paul Degen, O. D. Cochran, Maurice Webes Andrew Miscovich John Miscovich, Pete Miscovich, Bill Viu- cich, Sigrid Mjoen, Marshall Crut- and Al Corey - Salmon Packer Brings Cargo Winter trolling for salmon con- tinues at a steady pace in the Icy - . ts section, not to any great ports . QE&SK&"S KING fishing, the expedition worked the will report upon . e e e e - b ith constant success SR i waters south of the Alaska Penin- competitive phast H 1, Primarily, data were Other expert ear ucker Elfin IT came in today PG p I £ grat of ort on tt fizfis (AN“ED As : ; n:n migration ort the LIt L} th abs, k of capture canning in Cove with approximately ; TipEs ToMORROW 1 7 Sl g et 2000 pounds of salmon and dis- charged at the Juneau Cold Storage, met (Sun Time) /\llgufll 28, th —4:46 a.m o for tr I8 o Fish and Wildlife Service ™ e Expedition Refurns ‘ to Seatle prop— Pl AR T ISTEAMER MOVEMENTS, NOERTHBOUND me I CHEDUL Seattle today North Sca iled from Seattle tomorrow a am Alaska heduled Seattle January chedules t 4at 9 vee ¢ Seattle | Princess N sail from 10 at 9 pm SOUTHBOUND North Coast late tor airliner on it 1 flight N ° . . ° . . ° . ° ° ° . . . > . early tomo morning thing definite 3 pm. today. Mail dispatched scuth Baranof scheduled southbound M at will be @eeeveccsescee LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled o sail every e Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sii- & ka and wayports. . Naha leaves eve inesday o at 7 a. m. for Petershu Port e Alexander, Kake and way sh liner Queen Elizabeth, largest ship afloat, rides at d in grayish black, the 85,000-ton Bri sund-the-world Africa. This picture was snapped by a crew member of the he Queen Elizabeth 1eft New York for a secret destinaticn Ngvemtber 13, Cam a:cher in Capetown, South W nip President Ga all and hak WEAKER S TATION, Tex—The Texas A. & M. college extension /o' service estimates a housewife using High a six-pound iron lifts 1,200 pounds | and pushes the iron six miles while washing gathered 14.9 fect Weather 45 fe 13 22 feet High tid thence to th to the n the Shelikof otter crab pots to ob- 4:36 p.m 10:58 p.m oo -ee The Daily Alaska Empire has the paid circulation of any Al- pPr, ATTENTION. RAINBUW GIRLS Regular meeting of Rainbow Girls Satur Jan. 4, 1:30 pm. Ele of officers wholesale fc vere asked Government on the quality well it was resentative: tributors. port to ment their opinions of the product, how packed, whether it retained its color, its flavor, and how well it had been cleaned. Details for its wholesale and retail distribution la aska Back to Sea a three-month h with giant Kin of Alasl me ating can- N ad BURCRES “It is too early to say what the dey in the Gulf of Als be,” said Dr. Waldp L. Schml hing boat Clator of Marine Invertebratcs Y (he National Museum in Washing- cent north in ¥ t ton, who is scientific head of the on a pioneering deep A 4 - € At this time of year, e by the Fuh - and \re net present in com- will not be decided upon until after Vige, UpltefiBiples Doy abundance ‘il the area the expedition returns next year It is n at their with the prir 1l portion of the from the Alaska Penin Alaska and ing quantities up to the Bering In the latter area is where th should be found in reatest numbers.” the rospects nery Tondele; Vo of three of 1 iven wildlife e e mercial urveyed {i X catch d experimental purpeses, Sale of the product will be by public the proceeds turned United States Treas- Chief purpose of the three- >] venture, according to the vice, “to encourage the de- After ment of an American crab Christn season, the venture will by obtaining prac- again for northe s, s ation on production scon as weather permits, to con- cests, and scientific data on areas tinue exploratory operations north where Alaska King crab abound, of the Aleutians and Alaska Pen- determining the most efficient and insula eccnomical methods for catching Leroy S. Christey, formerly statis- and packing them.” tical and marketing agent for the Migraticn Studied Fish+and Wildlife Service's Divis- 1 by 40 scientists, econo- ion of Fishery Indusfries, is the and experts in the craft of chief economist of the venture, He Scientfists Honoretql; As Air Trophy Awarded t ast ex- Japanese Cash In yeers, this country h been an important user of canned crab meat. Importation has come mainly from Japan, whose fisher-| men have been taking King crabs from Alaskan and Japanese waters on a large scale for better than 10 years, while American ermen have virtually ignored this impor-| tant resource in their own waters. In 1939, the United States pur-| chased over $3,750,000 worth of the| Japanese exports, or about half their total preduction; and, up to| Ontoher 1940, we had purchased over $3,000,000 worth. This compares with total United States imports tend i1 3 For many Sea il Geing Back re-outfitting during the tical Dennis Cardinal Dougherty, archbishop of Philadelphia, in an unusual ceremony blesses the 17,500-ton motorship Rio Parama before her launching at the Sun Ship Yard, at Chester, Pa. Miss Kay Calder Lee, of Brooiiyn, N. Y., who christened the ship, is at left. The vessel will 20 on the South American run. SCHEDULE and FARES JUNEAU TO SEATTLE TUESDAY FRIDAY (Airmail and Express Only) FAIRBANKS T0 JUNEAU QY &Xrukbay (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU T0 FAIRBANKS IY5SPAY (Pgs senqsrs—inrmafl and Expres‘s) | G s N Me- Flat Ohpir Grath 132.00 *125.00 *120.00 56.00 4800 44.00 Jun- Fair- eau ) anks Juneau 82.00 Fairbanks = 82.00 *—Via Fairhanks, Bethel #151.00 76.00 Ruby 115.00 39.00 Nome 149.00 74.00 LESS 10%FOR ROUND TRIP. $—Via Fairbanks. assengers — Airmail — Air Express Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. Pan American Airways System TRAFFIC OFFICE L. A. DELEBECQUE District Sales Manager 185 So. Franklin St. PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS PHONE 106 1324—4TH AVE~SEATTLE ———————————————————— et The Collier award for the greatest achievement in aviation during the last year was awarded at the White House by President Roosevelt to the airlines of the Upited States with special recognition to Doctors Walter M. Boothby and William R. Lovelace, 2nd of {he Mayo Foundation for Medical Research and Edu- cation, and to Captain Ha C. Armstrong of the A ‘my Medical Corps, Wright Field, Dayton, 0. Left to right: Dr. Armstrong, Dr. Lovelace and Captain Arm stro WHY DON'TCHA JESS TAKE A LITTLE WALK AN’ COOL OFF 2 of canned crab meat last year dabout $4,500,000. The sporadic attempts by Ameri- can industry to develop this fish- ery in the past have been unsuc- cessful, This, Service scientists ex- plain, has been due mainly to lack of informaticn concerning the best fishing areas and.any know- ledge of a catching and technique. If the present venture proves successful, private firms in the United States may be encour- aged to enver this fishery (ORPSLS REQUIRE PASSPORTS NOW DERN, Corpres n gocd ord: vel according ed between the ¥ Egypt, nce, Germany and Italy Each corpse must also be packed in a metal casket " Made That Speech their wish Yo 8 ealy just sign- must passport to tra- rems e Ronald M. Crose Here is Ronald H. Cross, British nuinister of shipping whose sug- gestion that ships of Axis powers now in American ports be turned over to the British, has brougi: forth a German warning te the ,JU. S. that such a move would be regarded as a “warlike” act. ALASEA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY o Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle Leaves Seattle 8. S. TONGASS . Dec. 31 PASSENGEES FREIGHT REFRIGERATION D. B. FEMMER AGENT Phone 114 Night 312 P e o l cANADIAN PACIFIC JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah Princess Norah January 1—15—29 | Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: TRANSCONTINENTAL TRANS-ATLANTIC TRANS-PACIFIC Tickets, reservations and fyll particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL | Agent, CP.R.~Ippesu, Alaska Baranot Hotel ' CANADIAN PACIFIC ARNOLD MOGSETH as a paid-up subscriber o 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: "MY LITTLE CHICKADEE" Federal Tax—5¢ per Persom WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! e i L 3 SERVING Northbound Arrive Juneau Leave Seattle Bouthbound teame: Steamer Leave Juneay {BARANOF ALASKA *BARANOF Dec. 28 Jan, 4 Jan. 11 Dec. 31 Jan. 7 Jan. 14 Jan. Jan. Jan. 6 13 20 i——Connects with S. S. CORDOVA at Cordova for Homer and Uzinkie. FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. 0. ADAMS—————Agent Alaska Steamship Company \S‘E‘RVICE'DN'R‘LL‘RLQSKQ'ROUTES 4, « O A S B Y S e | MARINE AIRWAYS—VU. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Comnmunicatior Authorized Cacrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE——ANY PLACE iN ALABKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 e e e e e e ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes 2-Way Bndio Equipped Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER NORTHLAND PHONE b12 | ! ‘ N/ _ Juneau to WEEKLY SA“;:S‘SC Ju Leave Ar. Jun. LV: Jun. seattle N.B. c.26 pec.20 Dec:24 D° g Dec. 29 Dec. 31 Jan an. 3 COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lamber and Building Materials PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Hon.e Under Title I, F. H. A. PR ] . e o e, —.l—m and ... MEAT MARKET 487—— TELEPHONES ~—371 FRESH EVERY DAY — Local, Home-Grown VEGETABLES FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY (FROM OUR OWN FARM) "TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY s s e & s

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