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: THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1939. R R e e BRINGING UP FATHER YES-MRS. UPPENAT T LIM-~ MY MRS, JIGGS-] THINK YOL! HAD DAUGHTER-LADY WORTHNOTTEN- AND HER HUSBAND ARE GOING TO LIVE IN ENGLAND - AND MR JIGGS AND | ARE GOING TO JOIN THEM LLATER ON - JIGGS IN THE CELLAR-HE 1S DOWN THERE IN THE PITCH DARK-WALKING ALL AROUND WITH AN UMBRELLA - BETTER SPEAK TO MISTER JIGGS - WHAT IN THE WORLD ALS YOU ? IN L WHEN s I:ighthouse Ship Rams Bridge : ® 0 & 8 0 0 00 8 0 00 . NORTHBOUND . e Taku scheduled to arrive at 6 ® . p. m. tomorrow . | ® Alaska due Saturday. May | v e have three days’ mail . ¥ e North Sea due Saturday o i . SCHEDUL) SAILINGS . e Princess Louise scheduled to | The steamer North C Wesi- | © s;ul] from Vancouver at 9 to- e sard bound, dockad in Juncauearly |8, night . Tx;l:l ::w:y:lyynix:;“ (\\}n;; P ‘m;u st }- Baranof scheduled to sail from e | aboard for this port e Seattle Sept. 1 direct to Cor- ® From here the vessel was to sail|® dova, but calls at Juneau o to,Maku Glacier for the benefit of |® southbound. oy & @ik Foundiripr thence tc|® Northland scheduled to sail e| Port Althorp and to Sitka, across the : :'X]Hm Seattle Sept. 1 at 10 a : 3 3and Point and directly - f:‘.’,ll‘,, ":: ;'::“, ol i e Tyee scheduled to sail from e Arrivals from Seattle and South- | ® Seattle September 1 at 8 p.m. o4 el iiakn ar i ® Columbia scheduled to sail ® W. L. Jahn Dryden, Mrs |® from Seattle Septmeber 2 at ® T. P. Dryden, Mrs. J. A. Thibodeau, | ® 9 8. m . Cedlila Thibodeau, Dorothy Thibo- | ® Yukon scheduled to sail from e | deau, Mary Thibodeau, Mrs. K. F |® Sealtle September 5at9a.m. | Hager, Mrs, E. Erskine, Claude Er- | * SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS e skine. Janice Erskine, Mrs, H, Stra. | ¢ Mount McKinley is scheduled o gley, Miss Doris McEachran e southbound Friday. . Betty Rice. Margaret McFadden, ® Princess Charlotte scheduled to e Malk Kalich, Mrs. W. Kaljch, David|® 8rrive at 6 oclock Fr o Kalioh. Margaret Colwell, Robert|® mMorning and sails south at 8 [ v y Satrici L4 a.m M s X WatkPu paie @' Aleutian scheduled southbound § I. 1. N. Phonephoto VR Miro, 0. B, Lat E. Line & Sunday fhe United States Lighthouse Service tender Ilex is shown hors de com- By Lane s LOCAL SAILINGS bat after she rammed her stern against the toll bridge spanning the F. Collins, K. Hutchins, Miss M. 2 o o e every «'| Kemmebunk River at Bath, Me. The Ilez was coming down river at low Mills, Bruce Bower, Mrs. D. Rosen- | 600U sehieduled 1o 5/ €90 %,/ tide when, unable to get in position for passaga through bridge, it | off, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harmon, 2 \R€WGECRY B 0 F g Attempted to swing around and came to grief. Miss Paulin, Dean Morgan, Don Y Branson ® Dart leaves every Wednesday e Wir passengers left Juneau this| * At 7a.m. for Petersburg, Part affarnoon aboard the North Coast|%- Alexander, Kike and way e | BAKER pRoMOTED for Sitka. % s i a I u Ve e e s es e e e were, Howard Morlander Julia Milton They Daphner Morlander, angd Dave Orlofsky - PLANES GO 0UT Cfmmstonamon | ON Aleufian . | ToWestward High tide—1:32 a.m., 163 feet. 0“ THREE RUNS Low tide—7:41 am., -02 feet, High tide—1:56 p.m., 166 feet. B Low tide—T7:58 p.m. 04 feet. | When the su‘amcx Aleutian puued Three Juneau seaplanes began a e SR gl |out from Juneau last night enroute! busy day this morning, one ship &—— | westward, the ship had taken aboard flying to Atlin, another to the is- | HosPITAL NOTES ] 18 passengers from Juneau for Sew- lands, and one to the Polaris-Taku g - - —_— 4 |ard and Valdez. mine. Admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital to-| For Seward passengers were Lil- Alex Holden flew to Atlin with day, Mrs: Fred Buchser received sur- | lian Anderson, A. E. Karnes, Charles a load of freight in a Marine Air- gical attention. Forward, Norman Connors, Frank ways plane, and one passenger, ik =% Béen, Bernie Hulk, R. Robinson, Walter Johnson Gar Kennedy was brought in from | Florence Van Wyck, John Newman, Johnny Amundsen flew a Marine Echo Cove and is receiving medical | Steve Vukovich, Tom Petrich, Keith Afrways plane to Tulsequah with care at St. Ann's Hospital. Petrich, Willlam Cashen, ‘Charlotte A. Utz and C. McClellan, bringing Schnee, J. F. Chamberlain, back Thomas Wilferd John Brynel- For Valdez—Jack Gucker, Axel Antoneson was a medical ad- | Dan sen, Peter Holloway and Vernon mission last night at St. Ann's Hos- | Noonan, C. R. Huber. Johnson. pital. Shell Simmons in the AAT Lock- heed, flew Hughes Protzman and| John Peterson entered St. Ann's| H H. O. McCullough to Kimshan Hospital today for medical super- a I u ers Cove. vision. Yesterday afternoon, Simmons + flew M. Pagaran, Robert Eames, Admitted to St. Ann's Hospital| Tom' Cusick and Paul Malachoff this morning, J. Tenseion is a sur-| { sell Sea"'e to Sitka, while Johnny Amundsen gery patient. | 7 returned from a Polaris-Taku mine £ Wl flight with A. Forsberg, Winston l.‘ E. Hughes was (Ilsm‘mwd from | SEATTLE, Aug. 30.—Halibuters Jones ‘and Joe Mclag surgical care at St. Ann's Hospital| conino pere today are as follows: this morning. Celeb;ate Aif_ Corps’ Birthday From the western banks—Liberty, 40,000 pounds, selling for 11% and ' 9% cents a pound; Vansee, 42,000 pounds, 10% and 9% cents. From the local banks—Maddock, 16,000 pounds of sable, 4% cents a' |pound straight; Alitak, 17,000 | pdunds of sable, 4% cents straight; | Pierce, 12,000 pounds of sable, 4% cents straight. | PRINCE RUPERT PRICES At Prince Rupert today 227,000 | pounds of halibut were sold at 8 m 8.20 and 6 cents a Dound RANGER VI ENROUTE T0 KETCHIKAN BAS| The Forest Service launch Ranger for its base at Ketchikan after hav- | ing been detailed for the past 30 } days to Frank Been, Superintendent of Mount McKinley National Park, |and Earl T. Trager, Chief of the, | Naturalists' Division of the National | | Park Service, for inspection work | in Glacier Bay National Monument and Sitka National Monumeny. Been and Trager left on the steamer Aleutian yesierday, headed for ! | Mount McKinley National Park. i — - SYLVIA ARRIVES l One halibut landing was made today at the Juneau Fish Exchange, the halibuted Sylvia, Capt. | Anderson, bringing in 10,500 pounds of halibut from Area Three. The cargo. sold to Alaska Coast | Fisheries at 7 and § cents, The-huge pombers here look like the steps of a gigantic staircase as the Fifth Bombardment Squadron of the U. S. Army flies in formation over New York’'s midtown area enroute to Dayton, O. There the bombers joined in the elub orate program marking the thirtieth birth- of the U, 8. Army Air Corps. [V Vincent | . T0 BIG POSITION | L. W. Baker will be general man- ager of the Alaska Steamship Com- pany, it was announced yesterday by Lawrence Bogle, vice president. The appointment is effective Sep- | témber 1, says a recent issue of the SP;\LU(‘ Post-Intelligencer. Which means that a Seattle steamship man through 25 years of quietly efficient service has culmin- ted a series of promotions by taking over one of the most important posts in Pacific Coast shipping circles. He also has won the distinction of being the first man who ever rose from the ranks to chief of the Alaska Line, the largest steamship company in the Northwest and one of the largest on the Coast. Employees Pleased And there is a lot of unobstrusive rejoicing among the employees of the company who through years of association with Baker know his capabilities and appreciate them. | Shippers and other business men | who deal with the Alaska Line also | will be pleased with the selection, as he has won many friends in many lines during his 18 years with the company. Baker first entered the steamship business in 1914 with the old Pacific Alaska Navigation Company, the progenitor of the Admiral Line and later the Pacific Steamship Com- pany, remaining in this service until 1921, when he joined the Alaska Line, His promotions came regularly, for in 1922 he became assistant general freight and passenger agent; gen- eral freight and passenger agent, four | years later and traffic manager in| 1633. Last year he was named assist- /ant general manager. Baker succeeds Charles R. Bock- ! ing, who resigned. ., i NEW DOCTOR, FAIRBANKS Dr. Paul Haggland, who passed through Juneau last week, leaving | herer aboard the PAA plane for ‘Fuhbanb is to become a member {of the Fairbanks Medical and Sur- gical® Clinic, replacing Dr. A. R. VI, Capt. Allen Sallee, left today | Carter who leaves for Philadelphia! to take an extended post-graduate course. Dr. Haggland, before he took | graduated from the | up medicine, | Unlvermy of Washington at Seattle, | | Y * THIS rAMolm HOTEL Is elone’ (to the theatres and stazes, -,nu manificent ¥iew of mountains ‘and har- dia find;" | | * vae.. ' Splen ;- porteet’ B comfort, convenience ARd | service. LARGE Rates $9.50 ROOMS, s“"::‘ i vect " ol whth Permanent Gueata. bath. ALASKANS LIKE THE PNEW WASHINGTON| "By GEORGE McMANUS IVE BEEN READING ABOU'T' TH’ FOGS AM PE‘ACTISIN HOW TO GIT AROLIND NDON - AN WE ARRIVE- |Popular APurser Gets New Job; Northland !‘ Kon _Eriksson, popular Northland Transportation Company man who has been purser aboard the com- pany's North Coast since that ve: sel's commission in the Alaska servs | elevated to Traffic ice, has been Representative, it is learned today. | Eriksson is a passenger on the || North Coast which was in Juneay | this morning, He is going to Sitka, | making a circuit of Southeast Al- | aska in_the.interests of the ,com- pany. Walter freight clerk, sson’s post as Taylor, North Coast | has assumed Erik- | Purser on the ship S i "HONEYMOON PAIR BACK FROM TAKU! Mary Joyee .came n trom her Taku Lodge yesterday afterrioon in| her launch, the Mary J., bringing in Mr. and Mrs. Don Hammond, The Hammonds have been spend- ing a honeymoon at Miss Joyce's. He is manager of the Baranof Hotel Cocktail Bar. This afternoon for the lodge Don Holden, " Fi mmsll Sleam Bath | OPEN EVERY DAY | 10 a.m. till midnight Soap Lake Mineral Baths DR. E. MALIN, D.C,, Prop. Treatments and Massage 142 Willoughby Ave. Phone 673 Weather Stripping SOLD and INSTALLED by LOCAL DEALER ! FREE ESTIMATES | | | | Mary Joyce left| again, taking along| Phone 123 Victor Powers + R R R [ S P GREEN TOP CABS—PHONE 678 . | BUY GREEN.TOPRIDE || COUPON BOOKS: 98.25 in rides for $5.00 $3.00 in rides for $2.50 !‘ORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES Foot of Main Street GAS — oIS Junean Molors " FAMILY SHOE STORE || “Juneau’s Oldest Exclu- sive Shoe Store” i Seward Lou Hudson Street Manager - | | THE SIGN OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE | U. S, AIRMAIL AIR EXPRESS SERVICE ! Juneau-Fairbanks | Bethel-Nome | (Summes "denéiule—nnmm June READ DO READ UP | Tuesday ang “Thursday ane Saturday £ % saturday . 10:00/Lv. Juneau X | 11:00{Ar. Whitelio¥ae" v.l 11:20{Lv. Whitehorse 1:30|Ar. Fadrbanks .J.' | Thursday abid Monday 8: inks Raub Sioolte. Buby s —— 11:00jAr. Nome — _____ lLwi lu‘ | Wednesday We S:00/Lv. Paltvanks _fig":" 10:4B(Ar. Flat —_ Lv) I;E B 1 |n 00[Lv. 1 12:30Ar. 1:00 PACIEIC ALASKA' ATRWAYS, Inc. PHONE: 108 l Traffic nepruenuhve v It JAMES C. COBPER ROOM 1 SHATTUCK BUILDING — AL wpen Evenings Phone 907 AL THE SHOE DOCTOR Shoes, Clothing, Guns, BAILING SCHEDULE Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound MT. McKINLEY Aug. 23 Aug. 26 Sept. 1 ALEUTIAN .. Aug. 26 Aug. 29 Sept. 3 ALASKA Aug. 29 Sept. 2 Sept. 4 BARANOF Sept. 1 Sept. 8 COLUMBIA Sept. 2 Sept. 5 Sept. 10 YUKON Sept. 5 Sept. 9 Sept. 11 MT. McKINLEY Sept. 6 Sept. 9 Sept. 15 ALEUTIAN Sept. 9 Sept. 1 Sept. 17 ALASKA Sept. 12 Sept. 16 Sept. 18 FOK OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS —————CALL——— s | THE ALASKA LINE PHONES Ticket Office Freight Office. |!H. 0. ADAMS, Agent Ammunition 278 'So. Franklin 8t. Juneau, Alaska i FOR BEN'!' CARS DRIVE-IT-YOURSELF Reasonable Rates—Gas Included LLOYD REID 323 Distin Ave. Phone Blue 27 o SANITARY PLUMBING and HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worry.” Phone 788. = e g Treat Your Battery RIGHT! BRING IT TO OUR BATTERY ROOM FOR AN OVERHAUL NS AND RECHARGE It you need sulphuric -cld or Edisun Battery Solutlon, HAVE IT. Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. D S HOUSEHO APPLIANC L f ES || Harri Machine Shop “Try Us First” e E “AUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. M. S. DART U. S. Mail Carrier Eeaves Ferry Slip, Juneau, every Wednesday at 7 a.m. For PETERSBURG, KARFE, PORT | ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS For Information Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 Freight must be on oity dack not later than 4 P. M. Tuesday ALASKA | Transprhlm ; Company ' Sallings from Pler 7' Seattle Leaves Seattle S. S. TYEE .Sept. 1 S. 8. TAKU e Sepl.. 8 AT O P. M. PASSENGERS _ FREIGHT REFRIGERATION { D. B. FEMMER CANADIAD PACTHI( Alas k‘l S’thms}up (.ompanv SERVIC ol ol 3 LA.S K — o ] IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY DEVLIN'S Case Lot Grocery “LOWEST PRICES BY FAR" Phone 704 240 So. Franklir ————— e MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Commumication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 as & pala-up subscriber The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the “THE STORM" and receive 2 tickets to see: “FOUR FEATHERS" ALASKA A IR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical PHONE 2-Way Radio Station KANG 612 Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU DAY or Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER NIGHT WATCHR THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials * PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve .and. Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort oi GuasuT GASTINEAU CAFE : h:nl oonnpg:flon 'SERVICE INFORMATION EEKLY BAILINGS—Junean to Seattlo L;. Juneau J&&m TO VANGOUVER, 'ORIA° OR SEA'CTLE %omm SAILINGS Princess Charlotte + - September 1 “Princess Louise September 5 Connectivis wi* Vascouver with Canadian Pacific Services: LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE B e rae Leave Ar.Juneau Besattle No.Bound 8o.Bound NORTH COAST .....Aug. 26 Aug. 30 NORTH SEA . Aug. 28 Sept. 2 NORTHLAND ....Sept. 1 Sept. 5 Sept. 8 NORTH SEA ... Sept. 8 Sept.12 Sept. 16 HENRY GREEN, Agent ............. CITY WHARF .. GUY SMITH, Dougias Agent oy 2 P o,