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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU ALASKA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1941 WOTSTHIST HEAR ABOUT YUH GITTIN'A OB ASH? FOREST SERVICE BOAT 10 SERVE DRILLING PARTY 2ves here ded for where he will take com- Forest Service boat has been leased of Mines as a boat between Juneau and yYakobi Island base where dia- work on nickel de- arried on would bring then take on the 6, which S. Bureau the mond drilling posits are b MeD 1 the 1alc the to Juneau the mining up- the boat plies 1o island base - . Snowbird Reporls Weather Condifions bird No. 26318, special winter The Emp fluttered oom | this morn- of toast and frem City Editor Elmer Friend cold reporters du montk and made the lowing snow r later corrobor- ated by the U. S. Weather Bureau ku Lodge, 9 a. m. today of snow lay on the ground and it v till snowing At banks this morning, 8:30 was pretty cold even for with the mercury at three degrees below zero. There were four inches of snow the ground At Anchorage this morning, was just a trace of snow. At Point Barrow two inches of snow lay on the ground At Nome, practically a paradise today, the w mild, no snow and the up around 41 degrees At Dawson, there ches of snow. At Whitehorse trace of After quick la no ccmment over the suet who the fol- o'clock nowbir on there tropical her was temperature were there was but a now breakfast the war news in pire, which brought the Snowbird flew out transom, promising - that 26319 would be in a fe 5 with the velopmen long the white and a bird around late b C e Subscribe for The Empire. s TRAVEL CESS” JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS® Princess Norah November 6 October 28 V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska CANADIAN- nclrlc‘ THE ATCO LINE Alaska Transportation Company L] BAILINGS FROM PIER 7 BEATTLE EVERY THURSDAY i 10:00A.M. S TONGASS S. S. TYEE Oct. 30 Oct. 23 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION C D. B. FEMMER—AGENT PHONE M4 NIGHT 312 -3 SOMEBODY'S KIODIN'YUH, * OAR! YUH AIN'T QUALIFIED! YUH HAS TBE A LAWYER BEFORE YUH CAN ITS ONLY TEMPORARY, NK-TM GONNABE A JUDGE FORA WEEK! ied NDELEYO sluys wnu 5 A NORTHBOUND | Floating Car{"néry Slids of Rock, Turns Turtle, Takes Salmon Pack Down P ————————————————— IsTeaAMER MOVEMENTSl Denali due possibly late " 5‘ morrow Princes arrive evening SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tyee scheduled to sail from £ e today. scheduled to afternoon or Louise Sunday to YER WRONG THERE, UNK! 1M JUST THE MAN FOR THIS JOB! AN'WOTS MORE,I AIMS TO DO MY DUTY FAIRAN’ IMPARTIAL== Tomado §preads Havec and werte . e to sail today. Aleutian scheduled Seattle 5 pm scheduled to sail October 28 at from North Coast from Seattle Alaska, Oct. 24- There is no possibility of salvag- ing the floating cannery Tonde- |leyo's cargo of 5,000 cases of Bris- KETCHIKAN, four in-{ |ester in | tol Bay red salmon valued at $50.- 000, the Coast Guard reports after the cutter Cy visited the scene of the sinking ® | vivors to Ketchikan ®| Right were aboard the Tondeleyo ‘“)n! the cook, named Cooper, who o boarded the ship at Cordova south- ® ' bound, perished early. last Wed- ® nesday morning when Tonde- ® 'leyo turned turtle. south- @ | Perishes in Swirl or e Arthur; V. Nelson, partner ® | of Lemuel G. Wingard, former Al- ® | askan’ agent -of the Bureau - of o . said Cooper, at the s cra was sucked down rl. Capt. Nelson swam ficy waters after water for more than He was h from exi 10 am North Sea from Seattle at tober 31 SOUTHBOUND Alaska scheduled at 3:30 noon. Yukon at sail Oc- cheduled to 10 am to bring seven sur- SATILINGS southbound o'clock this - aftel southbound tomorrow scheduled 2:30 o'clock morning. Columb: scheduled bound late tomorrow early Sunday. Tongass due southbound Sun- Capt day isheri nk- ing of the ®lin the sw |ashore in tF being in the an hour and a half. eduled outh- Sitka next Wed- Northland bound from nesday 6 c 69 0600C0CC00s 000 00ccsctssce®Roscc e LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth, scheduled to san every Wednesacy at 6 pam. ® |pitalized, suffering for Sitka and wayports. )Lmn Dart leaves every Wednesday ® | ne ship was carrying the at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Port @ |, pack when she struck a rock Alexander, Kake and way- ® . Tree Island, 40 miles north of PO ¢ |Retchikan at 2:55 o'clock Wednes- @ Al 8100 IR WP "duy morning, but most of the crew T e e | swam *ashore. while” the shlp: Bal= |anced on the rock. m T°-°-°' | Slides Off Rock Just before dawn, the Tondeleyo "Sun_ time, October 25) [slid off the rock, floated for a High tide—4:27 am., 155 feet, |{eW minutes, then turned turtle and Low tide—10:12 a.m., | went down, High tide—4:16 p.m James Corbett, chief Low tide—10:55 p.am., . us- sea- engineer, and swam 168 feet. | -03 feet and Wingard jumped - .o i | The group spent the day ana Fm;,m in an abandoned cabin. A |fish packer brought Wingard and " Cmbvu to Ketchikan to report the At Prince George . . .. .y s o B. F. Heintzleman, regional for-|60 fathoms of water and the Coas the Forest Service here, iS|Guard said the depth pressure at Prince George today, awailing|yoyid crush the salmon pack. bettar, | weatl to continue his| qpe survivors include Richard erican Airways Lodestar, according Wachtman of Port Orchard, Wash.; forwprd recelipcitis Walter Blackwell of Seattle, May- Heintzleman, who has been i ardy Boodesof dKenatonee; Wah.5 the v”m on bu.\.xm':\ I:,” the ])“‘“‘A. . Melaon;: Jamtes’ Corhett, T e six weeks, left Seattle aboard the uel Wingard, all of Seattle, ashore. . Heinizleman Now disaster. flight to Juneau aboard a Pan Am-|p. et of Los Angeles, Fred plane yester | CAPTAIN HOSPITALIZED | KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Oct. 24— Capt. Arthur Nelson, owner of the | floating cannery Tondeleyo which |sunk last Wednesday morning with |the loss of one life and complete |loss of ship and canned salmen | cargo, has been placed in a Ketchi-| ANl]THER M“ “‘“"““ i kan Hospital because of danger of pg !pntumnnia resulting from his swim- |ming for his life over an hour and a| half in, the icy waters which |claimed the life ‘of cook Cooper, | first. name unknown. . The crew 7 | believes. Cooper was formerly em- ployed by Morrison-Knudsen Con- tracting Company at Cordova, also , 1Pvt,ersburg. His wife is,in Kodiak The crew, brought here on the Cyane, purchased new clothing to- day as the members lost all personal | effects when they jumped: from the | sinking craft -and swam to safety jon shore, | The members of the crew said :thc vessel's keel and shoe were torn off when it hit the rock and the {woat took water through the port| holes, The hatches slid off and! the ship “also slipped and down it| went. | Lemuel Wingard today ommnted, the red salmon pack’s value at| $60,000. 30 PROOF ——————— Sons of Norway Meet Saturday Members of ‘the Sons of Nerway | are meeting tomorrow night for a regular session in the Odd Fellows Hall. They will gather at 8 o'clock | to take care of regular business. ! ——————— HOFFMAN GOES SOUTH | After a week's visit at head- Waterfill and Frazier Distillery Co. quarters of the Alaska Mine Equip- ‘Anchorags, Kentusky ment Company here, David A, Hoff- [man, sales manager of the firm, THIS WHISKEY IS S YEARS OLD ‘ ils south today on the steamer 4 Alaska. (He will visit in K Rest B " / . in Ketchikan Beil 2 Buy wn 730 7/2(‘/‘4 before going south to join-his fam- ily in Seattie. ‘There’s an extra year of mellow satisfaction inevery bottle of WATERFILL and FRAZIER..but there isNO INCREASE IN PRICE for this extra year. Little won- der that this fine American Favorite since 1810, is in- creasing in popularity daily. |for Atlin, where |to Sitka Employees of the Un Three persons were killed, SON ON DYEA PASS PIONEER VISITING HERE Pete Tegtmeler Ex- Husk Grid Star, Is Pow- < der Expert i If G. F. (Pete) Tegtmeier ever| gets to v he’s going to strike out for a Pass, Lake Bennett, Lake Atlin and all the other places his mother and father used to tell him nbuul Tegtmeie: Atlas P at the ‘98 when ompany. in Everett in joined the home his parents gold rushers to start one of the, first restaurants on the Dyea-| Chilkoot Pass trail. His father built | the first skiff at Lake Benn cleaned up several pokes of gold| from the re ant and headed | he staked claims| on the wrong bench and went back | to Everett without so many pokes! of gold. “I've hLea rush days,” today, thernmost member family 1 a lot about the gold | Tegtmeier explained | “but so far, this is my nor- | visit in Alaska. I re- when my father came| of that gold—it| was quite but he would | have had a lot more if he hadn’t known now n Pacitic construetion | circles as famous as a| gridiron star for the University of Washington in 1904-08, is. a guest| at the Baranef Hotel after a .trip He has supervised dyna-! mite work on almost all the big! construction jobs in the North-| west, including the Army's Mud! Mountain - Dam near Enumclaw, Wash 'hey had a huge canvas strung on heavy cables to keep the rair; off the project,” he said, “But] {that’s no lorger needed and I derstand - the canvas is being “é’ed‘ on an Alaskan project at pres After® screening, the earth for the> dam was dried in machine driers, leaving a very small percentagé of moisture. “The core of the dam is earth, with crushed rock protecting the sides. They work the rock in with a sheep’s foot roller and the re= sult is almost like concrete, -The project ought to be completed by August, 1942.” » Tegtmeier, who won his “W" ‘on four Husky grid under the late he was Dobie, in 1908, the year Dcbie first| coached Washingtons football team. Tegtmeier, a center, cap-| tained the 1908 team. { —_——————— NOTICE ATRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co, adv.| | | { | | | —<The ment. proposes a of AN'MAY THE BEST BATHIN/BEAUTY WIN! n Wire Rope Corporation surveyed the wreckage of enc wing of the plant, leveled by a tornado wind which swept a bouncing zig-z rjured, and hundreds of homes smashed. Propaganda Hunled | ag course across the southeastern section of Kansas City. against literature. Only \m Switzerland three years would | be permitted to sel books in small | stationers' shops and news stands, | flooded by large numbers of Looks| Oet, 244 | imported since the war. { govern- 1 | supervision —— e - te check Subscribe for The Empire. THE WEATHER (By the U. Weather u. S, DEPARTMENT OF FORECASTS: Juneau and vicinity: Rain and slightly cooler tonight and Snt- urday, lowest temperature tonight 37 degrees and highest Snun'duy‘ 43 degrees, moderate southeasf y winds tonight and Saturday ex-| cept fresh to strong norther in Lynn Canal Saturday. Scutheast Alaska: Rain tonight and Saturday with snow in the| connecting with the Interior. Little change im temperature| and Saturday except cooler north portion Saturday. Mod- southeasterly winds tonight and Saturday except becomirg| to streng northerly in Lyna Canal and Chatham Straits Sat- | propaganda librarians who have lived| In Svnss Libraries LUCERNE. Lucerne Switzerland, ntonal te circulating libraries Bureau) WE!/ crate fresh urday d and weather along the Gulf of Alaska tonight and Sat.: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer and Cape Spencer to Cape Hin- chinbrook: fresh to strong south t) southeast winds, rain; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: fresh east to northeast winds, shower Resurrection Bay to Koliak: fresh northerly winds tonight becoming southerly Saturday, fair tonight, cloudy Saturday. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity erday 30.04 42 9 SE 10 today 29.81 43 95 SwW 3 today 29.75 43 88 SE 12 RADIO REPORTS Time 4:30 pm 4:30 am Noon Weathes | Rain Rain Rain yes! TODAY 4:30am. - Precip. 4:30am tempt. 24 hours Weathe 1 06 Snow -2 1 0 Clear| 36 41 Rain 18 22 Cloudy 26 26 Pt.Cldy 36 Rain 44 Clear Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy. Clear Pt. Cldy Rain Rain Cloudy Rain Cloudy Fog Fog Fog Cloudy. Max. tempt. Lovest last 24 hours temp. 12 9 32 40 24 36 Station Barrow Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethel St. Paul Atka Dutch Harbor Wosnesenski Kodiak Cordova Juneau Bitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Prince George .. Beattle Portland San Francisco Trace 45 54 WEATHER SYNO! A weakening low pressure cen‘er had moved into the Gulf of Alaska this morning giving rain and snow from Southeast -Alaska | to the Prince William Sound ar:a, The greatest amount of pre- cipitation during the past 24 hours was 166 inches at Craig. Of the remaining portion of Alaski: fair weather prevailed in the interior valleys and from Anchorage along the Aleutian chain to the west, and overcast with rain and snow prevailed over Western Alaska, including Barrow, The lowest temperature this morning was minus two degrees at Fairbanks and the highest yesterday was 53 degrees at Craig. Rain, moderately low ceilings and poor . visibili- ties prevailed over-the Juneau-Ket hikan airway this morning. The Friday morning weather chart indicated a low pressure cen- ter of 29.30 inches was located at 53 degrees north and 155 degrees west with a trough extending t> the east thence to the.south into a second low pressure cente: of 2950 inches at 43 degrees north and 136 degrees west, Thi; second low was expected (o-dom- inate the Northeast Pacific and move about 500 miles north dur-| ing the next 24 hours. Low pressure continued over the Bering Sea. High pressure dominated tie chart south of Dutch Harbor with th¢ center at 35 degrees nor h and 165 degrees west. Juneau, October 25—Sunrise 7:55 a.m., sunset 5:28 p.m. WILLIAM ENGEL 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 TWO tickets to see: “SAN FRANCISCO DOCKS Federal Tax—5c per Person ----- —WATCH THIS SPACE——— Your Name May Appear! | YUKON ... | ALASKA . | cOLUMBIA . Due Juneau Northbound Leave Seattle Due Juneau Steamer Southbound Fri. Fri Sat. Fri. Sun. Thu. Oct. 24 Oct. 24 Oct. 25 Oct 31 Nov. 2 Nov. 6 Oct. 25 Oct. 27 Oct, 31 Sat. Mon. Fri. | DENALL | ALEUTIAN | YUKON .. 24 28 Oct. Oct. Fri. Tues. FOR PORTS OF CALL, Phone Local Office of Company. H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 G ALASKA THE YEAR ‘ROUND GS—JUNEAU to Leave AT Jun. LvsJun. seattle 2 % oct. 28 Nov. 1 Nov. 29 HENRY GREF Freight Phone - ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southéast Alaska ‘Passengers, ‘Mail, Express SCHEDULED DAILY AT 10:00 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Juneau ...$ 8 $10, $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 Sitka ... 13 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 Kimshan 10 18 10 18 10 Pelican 10 18 18 Todd ... 8 10 10 Tenakee .. 10 10 Angoon .. 18 Hoonah .. 10 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan Kasaan ~ Wrangell Petersburg Kake $31.00 $20.00 $18.00 $25.00 25.00 25.00 12.50 18.00 750 15.00 18 Kasaan Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 FOR INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, HASSELBURG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: Phone 612 Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, Less 10% An ‘additional charge will bexmade for single passengers to flag stops. Round-Trip Fares: 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased Fairbanks, Alaska Golovin, Alaska Hot Springs, Alaska Juneau, McGrat Nome, Al Nulato, Alaska Ophir, Alaska $ 126 149 $112 99 127 83§ 37 12 125 10 116 § 88 A5 115 217 95 71 102 59 26 114 142 119 109 120 8 00 'Lv SEATTLE, Wash,USA. PST Ar 6: 55 2:10 Ar JUNEAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 < o We. Sa. 2:45 12:45 12:25 8:30 PST Ar 12:15 135° Lv 10:15 135° Ar 9:55 150° Lv 6:00 2 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska ... 2: Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. 3:! Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T. 4: Ar FAIRBANKS, “Alaska Bumcqnn—nm Sales Manager WAN AIRWAYE L. A Pranklin