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SO THAT WAS YOUR LATEST RAVE, THE @OR GEOUS BONITA, YOU HAD AT THE DANCE LAST NIGHT. T N VER SAW SUCH A SKINNY CREA- S TURE IN MY BUT SHE'S A SWELL DANCER AN' A MARVEL AT eved, Synbate oc | MARINE NEWS | MAIL GOES SOUTH ON NORTH SEA Mail will the steamer to Postmaster Albert Wile. The North will be the only ship mail until the southbound MeKinley, scheduled for Word e 1941 Kige Feat NOBTHBOUND Yukon due Saturday SCHEDULED BAILINGS o Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 a.m. tomorrow. Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow North Coast scheduled to sail from Seattle April 11 at 10 am. Princess Nerah scheduled to sail from Vancouver April 11 at 9 pm Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle April 12 at 9 a.m. Denali scheduled to sail from Seattle April 15 al 9 am. . Northland scheduled to saile from Seattle April 16. . Taku scheduled to sail from Seattle April 17 SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Nerth Sea scheduled to arrive from Sitka at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening and sails south at 1 a.m. Friday Mount McKinley scheduled southbound Saturday. Columbia scheduled southbound Monday LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every o Wednesday at 6 p. m. for 8it- e ka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 1 p.m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports. e o south on according be carmea North Sea HUTCHINSON, K Hutchin- | son reformatory parole violator says he was motivated by a report that| his wife was planning to take him back. That was the t thing| ed. So he robbed and sur Iceland ment in years old the oldest world. It called has the and is parlia- " o e e 0 0 o -ee— - TIDES (Sun Time—April 10) Low tide—5:46 a.m., -13 feet. High tide—11:54 am., 176 feet. Low tide—6:01 p.m, -1.7 feet. ————————— | i | | NORTHSEA LEAVESFOR COASTPORT Eighteen passengers sailed from | {Juneau to Sitka at 4:30 o'clock yes- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL: 9, 1941 AND BAND WHEN THE = PLAYED THOSE CASTANETS.. ISTEAMER MOVEMENTSI | Soldiers of Company climax to nine weeks of training i :(onlrads OnFishing BeingMade SEATTLE, Apul 9—The Alaska Salmon Industry, Inc., announces |two eontracts have been signed by [the United Cannery Workers gov- {erning conditions of employment and wages of resident Alaskan workers employed as inside cannery labor. One agreement is with the Ko- diak Isiand section where the wage scale is the same as in 1940 ex- cept there are three classifications that will receive an increase of five cents an hour and put them on an equal basis with the wages paid in 1940. The Southeast Alaska provisions; governing union recognition in em- ployment of its members are re- written so as to provide a basis B, Fifth Enginee A C.LO. striker, with a placard in ! one hand, expresses his feelings as A.F. of I, workers enter the Inter- mational Harvester Company plant | in Chieago. |Lloyd Ritter, |terday afternoon on the steamer for employment satisfactory to North Sea, Captajn Leonard Will- | both the industry and union 5n iams, Purser C. D. Littlehales. The ' rights of resident Alaskan work- vessel is scheduled to return to Ju- | ers and preference of employment Ineau southbound Thursday night. |to be given to them. Passengers leaving for Sitka were| The industry also announces tha‘ John H. Perry, Cecelia Gamble, | the contract signed with the United Irene Jacobs, Pearl H. Ackerman, Fishermen of Alaska fixes the price Mrs. Donald Smith, | . ush i the Kodiak Island area at | Lois Wood, Miss D. A. LaFurge, Sid | an increase of one quarter of a cent ® Perfect comfort ® Splendid food ® Centrally located | Large Rooms ¢ pyery convenience all with and service bath. Special Rates to Permanent Guests | ALASKANS LIKE THE | Hotel W WASHINGTON |Ea Smith | bekah Lodge. Thompson, S. T. Zern, P. G. Kem‘-'ta be paid both independent and ney, Mitchell Dabo, Steve Vukovich, |company _fishermen for red and S. W. Taggart, Mrs. E. R. Stevens, | pinks. Mr. and Mrs. John McCormick and | The agreement affects nine oper- |ating companies in the area, S ' | NOTICE Empire Classitieds Pay! | which he This is a olifical Career 0f Will Rogers Is Belleved Near End ' (Continued from Page One) n battle tactics. ‘P ( erms. RAN A POOR EIGHTH Then came the 1940 census—and Oklahoma lost population and ex- pected to lcse one congressmgn. Anticipating that the state legis- lature- would do away with his job as congressman-at-large, Rogers jumped into the middle of a special congressional district election, re- sulting from the death of Rep. Sam Massingale. It wasn't the district in which he resided, although it was the cne in which he was born and reared. He had been away 13 years. He was an outsider. And iso, while still serving as a state- ide elected congressman, Will Rogers ran a poor eighth Sitting in his office at the rear of the big suite’set aside for the Cemmittee on Indian Affairs, of is chairman, Rogers flashes a grin and takes a page of homespun philosophy from that | other Will Rogers. | “Politics is like poker,” he sa; “You sit and win all evening and then along comes a hand on \\mch you lose everything you havz won.” HAS YEAR AND HALF \ Remebering the phenomenon of | 1932, Td be the last to predict that| I{n political career is over. He, still has more than a )r‘\l-‘md -a-" Regular meeting Perseverance Re- Please bring White | Elephants wrapped. ‘Wednesday, | April 9, 8 pm. —adv. ED!TH TUCKER Secy. SCHEDULE JUNEAU TO SEATTLE FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU and FARES TUESDAY FRIDAY MONDAY and THURSDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAG TO FAIRBANKS (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU ~SEATTLE $95 One Way; $171 Round Trip Passengers — Airmail — Air Express Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. Pan American Airways System TRAFFIC OFFICE L. A. DELEBECQUE District Sales unnager 135 So. rranklin St. PHONE 108 ————————— T ————— AN AMERICAN AIRWAYS uu-fl'n AVE.—SEATTLE day strike. However, P——R e L85, k, Bethlehem | versely any of the above mentioned Bethlehem Steel Workers Parade as Strike Ends , Fort Belvoir, Virginia, 3o in tor some strenuous maneuvers as the 15-foot jumn. ‘ half to serve as congressman-af- iarge But hé is faced with running 1942 in his own district m,, A. S. “Mike” Monro in two terms, has stamped him-| self as one of the most popular congressmen that district has had —or trying to wedge into another district in which he is not a resi- dent. | It begins to look Rogers of Oklahoma to spin more ropes, than ever Will Rogers, more, did on’the stage. | as if Wil at large has politically, | of Clare- UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE lVTFRIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE { District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska February 25, 1941 | Notice is hereby given that Wil- liam McKenzie, entryman, together. with his witnesses, Peggy McLeod | and John R. Langseth, has made ap- plication for a homesite under the act of May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) | Anchorage Serial No. 09931, for a tract of land described as Lot C of Tract A of the Tee Harbor Group of ; Homesites situated near Juneau, Al- | aska, Plat of U. S. Survey No. 2388, | containing 4.74 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- land should file their adverse claim in the district land office within the | period of publication or thirty days | thereafter, or they will be barred by Lhe provisions of the statutes. | GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. | First publication, March 9, 1941, Last publication, May 14, 1941 Snbscnbe for The Empue Steel workers of the Bethighem, Pa., Steel Corp. march u:rouzh the streets, celebrating end of their four- a3 these men went baek to workers strike on same issue, ‘election by E went on {| at the GUY SMITH DRUG Grover C. Alexander Pictured in a veterans’ hospital in New York, where he is recuper- | ating from a recurrence of a war injury, Grover Cleveland Alexan- der, one of the greatest pitchers in National league history, remi- nisces and tells his listeners that “I had a lo. of fun in the big leagues . , . I wish I could fling in | a few agaln . But the old soup- bone is like nn old auto, still good, | but out of gas.” 878 games while pitching for the | Phils, Cubs and Cardinals. “ NOTICE DOG OWNERS All dogs running at large will be| picked up by the Police Depart- ment. DAN RALSTON, ! Chief of Police. | adv, “HORLUCK’S DANISH” Ice Cream Flavors Peppermint Candy, Fudge Ripple, Rum Royal, Cocoanut Grove, Lemon Custard, Black Cherry, Caramel Pecan, Black Walnut, Raspberry Ripple, New York, Rock Road, Chocolate, Strawberry and Vanilla— | 1 d 1n The Empire | A Co. ALASEA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY S. 5. TONGAI S. §. TAKU ___ §, 5. TONGASS PASSENGERS FREIGHT ‘Alexander won | &} 1 2T Bt 0.1 " P STERNIG The Daily Alaska Empire this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO tickets to see: ‘GIRL FROM GOD'S COUNTRY" Federal Tax—5¢ per Person WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! * WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Hauling —Storage and Crating CALL US! Junean Transfer Phonhe 48—Night Phone 481 SANITARY PLUMBING and HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner *Let your plumbing worry be our worry." PHONE 788 e B, IR ARk The Dally Alaska Emplre has the largest paid circulation of any Al aska neéwspaper. A SQH.WC SCHEDL - A Leave Seattle Northbound Due Juneau Northbound Due Juneau Steamer Southbound MCcKINLEY COLUMBIA YUKON BARANOF ALASKA Apr. Apr. 12 14 Apr. Apr. Apr. 12 13 15 10 12 Apl‘.r Apr. Apr. Apr. 19 21 H. O. ADAMS, AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFICE 4 L2 Ot — Alaeka Stpamshlp Companv BN le-r»[ RLI'TF" RS K | MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 3-Way Radio Communicatiox Authotized Currier SCHEDULED P. IGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE TER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Al‘l'm TUNEAU—PHONE 628 | ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Iuc. All Planes B-Way Wadio Equipped | Upersting Own Acronsutioal Zadle Station KANG ‘Mommsmm;umu‘ { SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATICN COMPANY "OF ALASKA Lusber and Bailing Materials PHONES 587 or 747—~JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and quernize You_r Home Under Title I, F, H. A. i Y T Put a Covic Diuel in Your Boal If You Want .oofi IN YOUR BIIA'I'