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membranee . . . gratitude—all 1 inadequate words when applie the service of 1 ns of men their cour you and Il sacrifices made by this great ageou rmy ve far the natior ing both the ing and dead lcy: 1 1 only on one for that peace 1€ fr B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” A R R P R R A.MACHINISTS LOCAL 514 ODD FELLOWS' HALL ln. MEETS MONDAY 7:30 P. M. b Low ! CIEE L R e SN B RO P SRS WEEKLY Steamer ALASKA YUKON ALASKA 1YUKON ALASKA BARANOF MT. McKINLEY BARANOF MT. McKINLEY Leave Ar. Juneau Seattle No. Bound NORTH siua Nov. 11 Nov. 15 HAROLD C. KNIGHT e J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF - GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent SERVICE SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seattle Nov. 5 Nov. 8 Nov. 12 Nov. 15 Nov. 19 Nov. 22 Nov. 26 Nov. 29 < Dec. 3 Dec. 6 Dec. Dec. 13 Dec. Dec. 20 Dec Dec. 27 Dec. Jan. 3 $—Calls at Yakutat Northbound and Southbound WINTER ROUND Effective November 11 THE ALASKA LINE Ticket Office—Phone 2 Freight Office—Phone 4 TRIP FARE- Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. B. 0. ADAMS, Agent Return ticket must be used by March’' 25 25, mship Compan LASKRA-ROUTES 14 21 28 5 12 19 Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound $74.00 1939, 1 4 Every Effort Made for the ] % 714 SERVICE INFORMATION Comiort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection -, ,’.....W....;.m-_ ‘HOTEL GASTINEAU THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 11, 1938. NORTH SEA IS - JUNEAU BOUND | Steamer Sailed on Sched- uled Time Today for Southeast Alaska ATTLE, NmT 11. — Steamer rth Sea of the Northland Trans- | portation Company, sailed for | Southeast Alaska porls at 10 o'clock |this moming with 25 passengers 1board, the following booked for Juneau Thomas A. Haigh, Mrs. J. E. | Meser, Mrs. Cora Bostrom and son, Mrs. Carl Adams, Mrs. M. J. Rogers nd children, S. P. Schoonover Robert Burke, Walter Maki, Mertz | Maki R ] | TipEs TOMORROW High tide—4:00 a.m, 15.1 feet. tide—9:46 a.m. 3.7 feet. High tide—3:48 p.m., 165 feet. Low tide—10:26 p.m., -0.6 feet i i JUNEAU WOMAN'S CLUB | RUMMAGE SALE Corner of Seward and Front Sts., Saturday, Nov. 12. adv. Get Comforting Relief from RUNNY HEAD COLDS DO THIS: Put some Vicks VapoRub up each nostril and sniff well back. ! NEXT, melt a spoonful of VapoRub in a bowl of bolling water; breathe in the | medicated vapors for scveral minutes, | This Joosens phlegm and further clears | the air-passages. AT BEDTIME, rub VapoRub on throaf chest, and back so 1ts long-contin double action can re~ lieve the misery of the cold while'you slecp. Tever—then you'll /LN know why VapoRub is & standby in 3 out of 5 homes, VAPORUB | THE SIGN OF | DEPENDABLE SERVICE REGULAR [ U. S. AIRMAIL | Service Every Trip | Juneau-Fairkbanks ‘ Bethel-Nome Re | Read Down Lv. Juneau A1 |Ar. Whitehorse Ly Lv. Whitehorse | [ MARINE NEWS o oroere] ) i . . . . . { The Transportation {in Juneau at 3 o'clock this morning with a general cargo of 610 ton. for Juneau. The steamer leaves tomorrow for Skagway and Haines to dischargc cargo at those points, Henry Roden, made the trip from Seattle aboard the Tongass, the only passenger {or Juneau. SIeam-sI;fil}arés Effective today, Juneau to Seattle and return, @ 0o 0000 v e e NORTHBOUND North Sea due Tuesda SCHEDULED SAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver at 9 o'- clock tonight. Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow, 9 a.m. Cordova scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow for South- east” Alaska and Southwest Alaska Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle November 18 at 10 a.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Tongass in port and schedul to sail south tomorrow night Alaska scheduled southbound next Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduied to sail every Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- ka and wayports, Dart leaves every Wednesda at 7 am. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way ports. 020 ceesc0ceeeoe00e0e o . . ° . . . . . o 0 0 0 00000 @ Tongass in Port With Gargo for Juneau Firms Alaska arrived of the Company, Tongass, Juneau attorney’ Are Reduced Now fares, are passenger reduced by the Alaska Steamship Company. The winter round trip fare is §74 beginning today, but the return ticket must be used by March 25, next year. Iceland is an_ independent coun- try, the sovereignty of a common king.! Tho united to Denmark only M. Northiand Takes 33 Out, Brings 12 Here Motorship Northland, under Capt eonard Williams, sailed at 12 noon tcday with 33 passengers from Ju- neau for Seattle and Southeast 2 ska ports. The Northland docked aré football - schedule t games throughout the tomorrow: Far West Washington vs. So California vs. Or Stanford vs, Ores Puget Sound vs ing F of imp States California n State Portland. (Nov at 4 ovclock this morning with 12| St Mary's vs. Santa Clara aboard for Juneau from Sitka 13) Following is a list of passengers U:C.L.A. vs. Wisconsin. oute Washington State vs. Idaho. For' Seattle—Mrs. C. C. Watson, Margery Watson, John David Wat- Amherst vs. Williams, son, Geraldine Watson, I. R. Morse, Army vs. Chattanooga T. W. Nicholson, Willian tt, Carnegie Tech vs. Duquesne Walter Elliot, LeRoy C Jd-| Columbia vs. Navy, Storm, Ellen Mathews, 'A. B.) Dartmouth ys. Cornell Hall, A. W. Goebel, Williax Ford} vs. North Carolina. John Hopen, Elmer Carrier. West vs. Georgetown ard Cramer, Mons Be Kansas vs. George Washington on, L. A. Dauphiny, Jack Harvard Virginia For Ketchikan—Ole Osbers Penn State vs. Penn U old Redcliff Harold Fos Pittsburgh vs. Nebraska baby Princeton Syracuse. Temple Yale vs. Duke vs Villanova v ll-J. R M Huntley, I C. Buchanan anc W. Hanson baby, Charles Larsc Mid West For Petersburg—Eva Charles, Le Chicago vs. College of* Pacific ter E. Elkin Creighton vs. Loyola (New Or- Inbound passengers from Sitka | leans) for Juneau were Mary Metcalf, Detroit vs. North Carolina Frank Metcalf, H. L. VanderLeest, J.| Tulsa vs. Drake. J. Conway, Mrs. W. H. Carter, G. Ohio State vs. Tllinois H. Peterson, Mrs. John Ne Towg v, -Indiatis Frank Day, Dolly James, A Towa Stale vs. Kansas Slate cnce, Ben Bellamy, N. A Marquetts Michigan Staf¢ iy Northwestern vs. Michigan AT Notre Dame vs. Minnesota % Oklahoma vs. Missouri Washington U. vs. Butler ntre vs. Ohic Wesleyan Kentucky vs. Clemson Davidson vs. V.M.I Accepts $75,000 for Fifty-| agaryiana vs. Fiorida Match Tour, Mostly South Carolina vs. Furman seuth with Ellsworth Vines il (f\',(:f:"“im“ Sy » Centenary * v Mississippi State, NEW YORK, Nov. 11. — Walter| vanderbilt vs Tennessee Pate, Captain of the United States| washington & Le William & Davis Cup team, announced today | yp.. that Don Budge has turned profes- SO sional i 5 Budge will g on a tour for pro 'm"“ :‘:‘/‘\“\ 0 moter Jack Harris, having accepted : s an offer of a flat guarantee of $75.-| T¢Xas vs. T.CU 000. Rocky Mountain The tour will open January 3 and Brigham Young vs. Colorado. will consist of about 50 matche Colorado State vs. Utal Budge will play mostly with Ells Whitman vs. Colerado College worth Vines, former champion ama- Hawaii vs. Denver teur of the net Montana vs. Montana State — e Wyoming vs. Utah State. Russell Tex Nordling, i Leonard and Ralph Martin h e »r members of the Legion and the Tomorrow night the annual Ar- | Legion Auxiliary, in charge of which mistice Day event given by the Am-|is John E. Pegues and William O. Elks Ballroom, with dancing start- - ing at 10 o'clock. Trv the mmpire in charge of the affair to-' esults. " g i cl will be held at the Legion Dugout erican Legion will be held in the Johnson classitieds for Lv. Junen: | T So. Counc | Th-1WedL, _ 0 5 s 00N, Entashy e 7 & - Ruby _ Lv.| 6:90] ___ Nov. 18 | . Ruby Ar. 0| 10:30 Lv. McGraih ___|Ly. 30 - {11 30Ar. Fiat fi: 0 — Phone 108 | — [11:45|Lv. Flaf r,) | T:00 Ar. Bethel [Lv.| —| ~Phone 75 | 1Al Vel —— Phove 23 SE ok s g 2 Phone 1t | | PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS, INC. Tralfic llepi'elenh“"q LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE GASBINEAU HOTEL PHONE: 108 ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Sailings from Pler 7 Seattle | Leaves | Seattle S. S. Tongass .......... Nov. 4 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION [{. D. B. FEMMER | AGENT \ Phone 114 | CANADIAN PACIFI( JUNEAU' TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah | November 16, 27 | Connections at Vancouver with Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W, AR 4ll_avska’s Biggest Pay Master R W 7 Z \\ W N \ N S EVERY FAMILY IN ALASKA is supported wholly or in part by money the Canned Salmon Industry brings here. It pays the wages of over 11,000 local workers and fishermen. Its purchases of coal, lumber, wire, many Alaska products help: other industries to meet their payrolls. Its territorial tax payments help to provide salaries for Alaska’s school teachers and government officials. In other words, the Canned Salmon Industry is actually the Territory’s biggest pay master. GRID SCHEDULE FOR SATURDAY U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weatlier Bareau) Forecast tor Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Nov. 11: Rain or snow tonight, Saturday rain; moderate southeast and south winds. Weather forecast for Soutbeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Satur- day, except rain or snow over northes portion of Southeast Alaska tonight, moderate southeast and south winds, except moderate to fresh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence, Strait, Chatham Strait, Frederick Sound and Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh southeast winds tdénight and Saturijay from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 3:30 p.m. yest'y 30.25 28 56 S 4 Cloudy 3:30 a.m. today ... 30.07 30 80 S 14 Lt.'Snow Noon today ... .. 29.83 35 87 s 14 Lt.R.Lt.S RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. tempt. Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weathe: Atka 38 —_ —_ - — Anchorage 36 36 18 19 Clear Barrow 14 | 14 22 0 Cloudy 26 26 10 09 Snow 38 28 26 63 Cloudy 28 24 6 01 Snow 14 14 4 10 Snow St. Paul 40 32 12 12 Pt.Cldy Dutch Harbor 46 34 4 10 Cloudy Kodiak .. 48 38 12 09 Clear Cordova 36 36 10 93 Rain Juneau 30 3 14 05 Snow Sitka 42 b - 36 Ketchikan 38 32 4 0 1Coudy Prince Rupert 40 32 4 0 Pt.Cldy Edmonton 14 8 4 06 Cloudy Seattle 42 30 4 16 Clear Portland 48 36, 4 05 Cloudy San Francisco 54 46 6 0 Clear New York 60 42 4 0 Cloudy Washington 62 40 10 4 0 Cloudy WEATHER C WODITIONS AT 8 AM, TODAY (airport), clear, temperature 25; Bellingham, clear, 27; Victoria, clear, 34; Alert Bay, clear, 30: Bull Harbor, clear, 32; Triple and, cloudy; Langara, raining, 39; Prince Rupert, partly cloudy 34; Ketchikan, cloudy, 32; Craig, cloudy, 39; Wrangell, cloudy, 33; Petersburg, snowing, 32; Sitka, raining, 42; Hoonah, snowing, 32: Hawk Inlet, snowing, 30; Tenakee, snowing, 34; Radloville, raining, 42; Skagway, snowing, 28; Tulsequah, snowing, 19; Cape St. Elias, clear, 44; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 40; Cordova, partly cloudy, 33; Cop- per River, snowing; Chitina, snowing, 32; Seward, clear, 30; Anchor- age, clear, 35; Fairbanks, snowing, 22; Tanana, partly cloudy, 15; Nena- na, snowing, 20; Nulato, snowing, 25; Kaltag, cloudy, 26; Ruby, snow- ing, 20; McGrath, snowing, 24; Flat, snowing, 26; Stuyahok, cloudy, 22; Crooked Creek, snowing, 27; Bethel, cloudy, 26; Platinum, cloudy Juneau, Nov. 12.—Sunr! 7:40 am sunset, 4:47 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The storm area that was centered over the Alaska Peninsula and Bristol Bay region yesterday morning has moved northward and cen- tered this morning over the Seward Peninsula, the lowest reported re being 29.14 inches at Nome. Snows have been general over from Wrangell northwestward to Fairbanks and Nome, fol- by clearing this morning ove: the northern portion of the Gulf Seattle of Alaska. Generally fair weather prevailed this morning over the Pacific Northwest states. It was warmer last night over all of Alaska, except the Aleutians and cooler over the Pacific Coast today at the Seattle airport wa: tates. The temperature at 8 5 degrees. am (5" A MAN'S WHISKEY - OLD COBWEB | TRAIGHT BOUKDUN WHISKEY 3 YEARS OLD GREATEST VALUE IN ALL WHISKEYDOM At Your Favorite Liquor Store W. J. LAKE & CO., Inc. Seattle, Wash. Quiet and unassuming but none the less effective is the work of the Red Cross. In matters of National Emer- gency the Red Cross is first to answer the cry of distress. Your local chapter cares for hundreds of needy cases each year, distributing food and clothing through honest and efficient executives whose services are absolutely free of expense. Red Cross Drive commeénces November eleventh and con- tinues until Thanksgiving Day —The dollar you pay is: the best investment in humanity which you have ever made: JOIN THE RED CROSS There; is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising il ‘1 & b v