The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 26, 1939, Page 6

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&b fHL DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, bEPT 26, 1939. BRINGING UP FATHER |SNT THAT SILLY.OF THOSE GROWN = UP PEOPLE TRYNG TO GET AUTOGRAPHS OF THE MOVIE STARS @ NORTIIB()"VD Aleutigh sthaduled toartive at 10, oiclock tonight and sails westward at 4 o'clock tomor- row morning. Should have four days’ mail aboard SCHEDULED SAILINGS Taku scheduled to 'sail from Seattle 9 tonight. North, Coast ‘scheduled to sail from Seattlé' Beptember 29 at 10 a. m Princess Lyoise scheduled to ¢ shil, from Vancouver Sep- ¢ tember 29'at 9 p/m & Alaska scheduled to sail from & Seattle Septémbér 30 at 9 a ¢ m & Tyee scheduled to sail from Se- & attle October 3 at. 9 p. m ¢ SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS # Columbia_scheduled southbound ¢ North Séa’ s¢heduled to arrive & southbound on Thursday ev- é ening. LOCAL SAILINGS Estébeth scheduled to scil every Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- ka and wayvorts. Dart ledves every Wedn-sday at 7'a.m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way Borts. s e ese st reee o L) v « . . . Crowd Sails South Today . . . YOU_SAID IT- JESTERDAY GUY | STEPPED ON HUBBY ME HAKD WHEN | WERE HERE TO-SEE |_TRIED TO LV HIS GET ONE- I WISH MY By GEORGE McMANUS MY-I'M TIRED OUT- 'M GLLAD OUR SON- | IN -LAW - LORD WORTHNOT TEN- DIDN'T SEE THAT SILLY CROWD TRYING TO I GET AUTOGRAPHS — North Sea; Sitka Trip Bringing 25 p: from Seatile and Southeast ports this morning, the steamer North Sea continued on to Sitka with 20 boarding the vessel here for the Historic City Arrivals here were Nowell, Sylvia Nowell, ell, Roger Nowell, Louise Hyde. and Mrs. J. V. Davis, Damaris Da C. J. Bergstrom, Mrs. Jacob Karfus, ‘Lois Mae Karfus, Jacob Karfus Jr | Harvey J. Smith, George Raguse. | Percy J. Shanks, Gordon Muma, Mrs | B.'W. Wallace, M. Santos, Jeanette Ringstad, Susie Shorty, Lloyd Sheets, F. Aviles, G. Debara, J. Gabrielson Frank Jodnie Sailing to Sitka were Baxter I'vh h, Arl Franklin, H. C. Nunan Walter Bacon, Miss McNulty, {Jamison, H. R. VanderLeest Peterman, Harold Foss, James | Cooper, Spike McLean, Frank Foster. Lew Hansen, George Takenaka, M J. Younger, George Rague, Teddy | Milton, Percy Shanks, Harry Brem- | ner, Ole Hansen. MANY PASSENGERS KBOARD COLUMBIA FROM FAIRBANKS rs to Juneau Alaska Mrs. Everett Phillip Now- Mr. Over, fifty passengers aboard the | Columbia are from Fairbanks, some catching the steamer at Seward and others coming out by busses over the Richardson Highway to Valdez and boarding the steamer there. Passengers on the buses were Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Herning, Cecil Barlow, O. Kilgren, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. McCarrey, Lawrence Neilson, W. L. Carpenter, F. C. Bleecker, R. L. Squire, Genevieve Hautala, H. M. Tucker, Stanley Carpenter, Fred Brent Elden Green, George Mar- tin, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kapusta and two children, Barl Larson, Kenneth O'Hara, and Harold Flynn. “OnColumbia The steamer Columbia passed through Juneau southbound early this morning, crowded with outside- headed passengers from the Interior and the Westward. Eighteen pas- sengers arrived her and 46 left. From Seward, passengers arri ing were Mrs. J. D. Butts, V. L. Hotler, B. F. Kane, John McCullough, J. C. Mellquist, Einer Neilsen, Robert Sea- man, Charles Burdick. From Valdez—O, Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lerdahl, George Parks, Ike Taylor, A. Emerson, Harold Han- sen, A, Blackburn, Frank Winchest- er, A, L. Vaughn. Sajling to Seattle, were Chester Tripp, Mrs. H. T. Tripp, Mrs. E. L. Payson, Alfred Talbot, Mrs. Robert ‘Wakelin, William Nickinovich, Mrs. E. Codling, Mrs. L. C. Sturevant, J. G. Givans, Mrs. R. M. Akervick, Phil McKenna, Louis Kelsey, Major L. W. Amis and Mrs. Armis, Doris Amis, Miss Charlotte Amis, Seton Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Stanberg, Henry Sorstad, J. Mc- Intyre, Mrs. J. McIntyre, H. H. Stephanus, Audrey Click, James Hansen, Gordon Gray, George Stew- art, Mrs. F, M. Sargent, H. Jager, Dr. Walter Torbet, W. L. Everett, A. E. Emerson. To Wrangell—R. J. Williams, Ole Lillegraven, Jerry Desmond, Mike Lynch, Williain Stokes. To Ketehikan—W. Burgiss, G. De- bera, F, Avile, Gil Rich, T. Buckin, E. Langille, Sam Ducker R. G. Sunderland, H. J. Schaub. R Storeys Parents 0f 8-Pound Boy Mr. and Mrs. Dean Storey of Skagway are the parents of an eight pound baby boy born Sunday morn- ing at 1:30 o'clock at St. Ann’s Hos- pital, The young fellow has been named Dennis Michael. Mrs. Storey is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Markle of Juneau. Mr. Storey is' an employee of the White Pass and Yukon Route. Dennis Michael has the unusual honor of having. three living great grandmothers, Mrs. Katherine Nye of Juneau, Mrs. Gegrge Wilson of Victoria, B. C., and Mrs. Storey, Sr., of Skagway. - FRANKLIN RETURNS HOME Art PFranklih, former resident of Juneau, who has been visiting here from Sitka, a guest at the Juneau, returned home today, leaving aboard the North Sea. Franklin is now with the Ganty Mercantile Store in Bitka. Interiorites also sailing from Val- dez were Olaf Larson, Mr, and Mrs. Earl W. Herning, William Grant, Albert Fleischman, Charles Stoner, F. C. Blegcker, Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Carlisle, H. M. Tucker, Mrs. S. L. McCandlish, Mrs. Rhea Fellman and infant, John Meibas, Lincoln Snider, Arthur F. Wood, Harold ‘C. Flynn, Jay Molin, Charles Fattig, Alvin,-R. Johnson, Denna Walker, Eva Bilyean, George Martin, J. D. Roughgarden A, R. Somerville. Mrs. Leslie McDonald, Genevieve Hautala, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kapusta and two children, Paul Fuchs, Malcolm W. Ross, Roy E. Kasnoto, Charles Phillips, Earl Lar- son, Kenneth Davis, George Andler, J. A. Orton, Alfred Angevine, Fred A. Brent, Stanley Carpenter, Elden Gren, Richard J. Pincomb, Lavito Nielsen, W, C. Chisney was bound for Ketchikan, and Harold Hansen had reservation for Juneau. Out of Seward were Mrs. Albert 0. Johnson, Walter McLeod, Lester N. Merritt, Heeln E. Tupper, Olive M. Allen, Mrs. Irene Noyes and two children, arld J. C. Milquist. S e e | Tipes Tomenrow 0:02 am, 155 feet 6:07 a.m, 08 feet. 12:21 p.m., 163 feet. 6:27 pm., 04 feet. - 0.E. S. Will Have !mhahon Servuces Fastern Star WllI Scottish Rite Miss Gladys will pre- High tidc Low. tide High tide Low tide r. of t in the 8 o'clock. Forrest, Worthy Matron, side. Following initiation services, re- freshments will be served by a com- mittee in charge of Mrs. Ruby Coke. Special entertainment at regular mesting, Wednesday, Sept. 27. All members urged to attend, adv. | Germany's counter-attack Wacosta (above) by a Nazi Announcement of the inc: t clo: to prevent war materials and food stuffs from r contraband was found. against B ub off the Irish u-x~L and followed the Re wching Britain 'LEGION JOINT INSTALLATION T0 BE MONDAY E. M. Polley, Mrs. Nordling fo Preside for Post, Auxmary Mail Leters for Northland Line . At Poslofhte Although the Northl taticn Company steamers are carrying mail for the \‘H]\ll months, ship's officers remind that mail is not accepted at the gangplank Mail, to go south on Northland line vessels, must go through the postoffice, and if taken to the ship, will be put off at the first stop which is Petersburg | 1A R G SUPERVISOR OF NURSES LEAVING ANspor- now Officers of Alford John Bradford Post of the American Legion and Auxiliary will be installed at a joint ceremony at the Dugout next Mon- day night. E. M. Polley will be installing of- ficer for the Legion and Mrs. Homer DON‘T THINK WE SHOULD TELL l%_NM <h blockade opened with stopping of the American freighter a three-hour search for contraband cargo, ich’s announcement it would use “every means” The Wacosta was released when no It was bound for New York with a cargo of whisky and general merchandise. FOR WESTWARD Miss Bertha Tiber, Supervisor of Nurses in. Alaska for the Office of Indian Affairs, is leaving on the Aleutian for the Westward. She will visit Kenai, Kodiak, Anchorage, Ek- | lutna and Chitina. ———— DUKER GOES TO KETCHIKAN Attorney Sam Duker is a pas- senger aboard the Columbia for Ketchikan. e e The Book ALASKA. Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. — e Empire classifieds bring results. Nordling for the Auxiliary. A social and feed will follow the | installation. A Legion refreshment committee consisting of Frank Met- calf, John McCormick, Dave Daven- port and Fred Cameron was ap- pointed last night to confer with | a similar Auxiliary committee. | FELCH LEAVES Baxter Felch sailed for Sitka on | the North Sea to call on the His- toric City trade. e, — FALL DANCING vzA S Now enrolling. Phone Dorothy Roff, Red 119, 315 Third St. S. adv. Launching of Sea Arrow R With gaily flying pennants and an American flag on her bow, the U. 8. Maritime Commission’s new C-3 type ship Sea Arrow is pie- tured as she was about to take to the water for the first time re- cently at Oakland, Cal. She was the first large vessel to be launched on the Pacific Coast in 17 years, Jobs for 1,500 coast shipbuilding warkers were assured as seven additional vessels were ordered built in San Francisco Bay yards at a cost of some $16,000,000, ships were sunk in the first eight LOOK=-VVE GOT. AN AUTOGRAPH BOOK- AND SEE -V'VE GOT TEN MOVIE STAR &' NAMES IN IT ALREADY- JAMESC. COOPER | C.P.A. Business Counselor Shattuck Bldg. Phone 182 pen Eve Phone 907 AL—THE SHOE DOCTOR Shoes, Clothing, Guns, Ammunition 278 So. Franklin St. Juneay, Alaska " FORRENT CARS | B DRIVE-IT-YOURSELF | Reasonable Rates—Gas Included | LLOYD REID | 323 Distin' Ave. Phone Blue 270 BAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seattle .Sept. 13 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 30 - Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southboung Sept. 16 Sept. 22 Sept. 19 Sept. 24 26 Oct. 4 2 Oct. 10 10 Oct. 16 Steamer DENALI COLUMBIA ALEUTIAN ALASKA YUKON Sept Oct Oct. Sept Oct. FOR OTHER 'ORMATION AND RESERVATIONS —CALL—— THE ALASKA LAINE PHONES H. O. ADAMS, Agent Ticket Office Freight Office. QFQ\/IC‘ ON n(L'HLQSKHRUUIF SANITARY PLUMBIN HEATING COMP. W. J. NIEMI, Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worry.” Phone 788. | orpedo-Conscious | mm——————— Treat Your Battery RIGHT! RRING IT TO OUR BATTERY ROOM FOR AN OVERHAUL AND RECHARGE If you need sulphuric acid or Edisun Battery Solution, WE HAVE IT. Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. e e s e s HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES Harri Machine Shop | “Try Us First” B st - - | HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. | M.S. DART | U. S. Mail Carrier Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneaun, every Wednesday at 7 a.m. For PETERSBURG, KARE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS 1 For Information Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 | Freight must be on ecity dock not | later than 4 P. M. Tuesday | e Winston Churchill Grim-faced, with a bulldog-set to his jaw, Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty in Britain’s war cabinet, is pictured as he left the Admiralty Building in London to attend a cabinet session. The British navy bottled up the German fleet but twelve British merchant ALASKA Transportation w Company ‘ ® Railings from Pier 7 days of the war, Seattle Leaves Seattle Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Baked Pork and Chicken Noodles Baranof Tomorrow S. 8. TYEE .. 8. 8. TAKU AT 9 P. M. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION AGENT D. B. FEMMER Phone 114 Night 312 AIR EXPRESS SERVICE Juneau-Fairbanks Bethel-Nome (Summer “Schedule—Effective June READ DOWN READ UP | Tuesday and Thursday and | Saturday . Saturday 10:00/Lv. Juneau A 11:00{Ar. Whitehorse == 11:20!Lv. Whitehorse 1:30|Ar. Fairbanks ________Lv.| 9:00 | CESS” LINER JUNEAU TO VANLOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEA1TLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise September 25 October 5, 16, 26 Connectiuns ux Vawcouver with Canadian Pacific Services: TRANSCONTINENTAL TRANS-ATLANTIC TRANS-PACIFIC Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska Baranof Hotel | Thursday and Monday and | Monday Thursday | 8:00|Lv. Fairbanks . Ar.| 6:00 :30fAr, Ruby — _______ Lv.| 4:50 :B0jLv. Ruby — “Ar) 4:10 11:00jAr. Nome _______Lv. 1.00 ‘Wednesday 8:00|Ly. Fairbanks 10:45|Ar. Flat 11:00{Ly. Fla 12:30|Ar. Bethel PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS, Inc. Wednesday | | 5:00 PHONE: 106 Traffic Representative LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE CANADIAN PACIFIC M | y IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY DEVLIN'S Case Lot Grocery | “LOWEST PRICES BY FAR" Phone 704 240 So. Franklin MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 A l. A SKA A I B TBANSPORT Inc. All Planes i PHONE 2-Way I 612 | 1 Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER Radio DAY or Equipped | NIGHT P e TCM RAKICH s 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 reccive 2 tickets to see: “STAGECOACH" WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear D ] e ———— e S NS COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASEKA 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 of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION WEEKLY SAILINGS—Juneau to Seattle Leave AriJuneau Lv.Juneau Seattle No. Bound So.Bound Sept. 22 Sept. 26 Sept. 29 Sept. 29 Oct. 3 Oct. § HENRY GREEN, Agent .. ..Phone 109 CITY WHARF ... ..Phone 23 GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent ............... Phone 18 NORTH SEA NORTH COAST .. Al

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