The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 28, 1939, Page 6

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THERE'S A GUY WHO THINKS HE IS A DIRECTOR- CROWD ON HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD- THERE'S A RUMOR WRITE-GIVE A MOVIE ME _YOUR AUTOGRAPH- L {8 [ G SCHEDULE | BAILING Effiflml Leave Seattle Sept. 13 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 17 Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbounid Southbound Sept. 16 Sept. 22 Sept. 19 Sept. 24 Sept. 26 Oct. 4 Oct. 2 Oct. 10 Oct. 10 Oct. 16 Steamer DENALI COLUMBIA ... ALEUTIAN ALASKA YUKON (o Cope. 1939, King Features Syndicate, Inc., World rights re v e = [ TAMESC, COOPER A R I N E N E W S Sllat?l:zfnifii'.;.?éon‘;n;;m 182 'HIRST T0 GET FIRST MINING COURSE, 1939 Wilcox Says Extension! | Class Coming fo Ju- ~ neau in December 1 FOK OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS ——— CALL—— THE ALASKA LINE PHONES Ticket Office ..... Freight Office..... PAA Elediras To Mainfain Ma! Flights Two Trips Weekly This Winter - Sixteen Pas- sengers Due Today Open Evenings Phone 907_‘ || AL—THE SHOE DOCTOR ! Shoes, Clothing, Guns, ’ Ammunition ’ 278 So. Franklin St. | i | STEAMER MOVEMENTS e e s 000009 00 NORTHBOUND Taku due Sunday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS North Coast scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow at 10 am. Princess Luoise scheduled to sail from Vancouver at 9 p.m. tomorrow. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle September 30 at 9 a m Tyee scheduled to sail from Se- attle October 3 at 9 p.'m SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS H. O. ADAMS, Agent Juneau, Alaska * + “ Mining extension courses of the University of Alaska will begin this| week in Southeast Alaska, accord-| | ing to Howard G. Wilcox, who re- | turned on the last steamer from the | Kuskokwim country where he had been putting his teachings into prac- tical application on placer ground he is developing. b i Wilcox said he will leave today . | for Hirst by plane, weather permit- FOR RENT CARS | DRIVE-FF-YOURSELF | Reasonable’ Rates—Gas Included LLOYD REID ' 323 Distin Ave. Phone Blue 270 IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY Case Lot Grocery | ska Airways busi- Fairbanks route With Pacific A ness on the Juneau holding up beyond expectati was announced today by Louis Dele- becque, agent of the company here that the company will maintain summer schedule through the winter without change. Delebecque said passer freight and mail traffic has be: good this summer and the prseent sched ule will be held to, giving Interior residents twice week airmail service from here instead of the once a week schedule of last winter Mail poundage per trip has aver- aged around 175 pounds each flight each way, Delebecque said. The current schedule calls for a plane from Fairbanks and one to Fairbariks on Saturdays, one in from Fairbanks on Tuesd and one north again on Thursdays. ¢ Today, with the annual heavy southbound traffic getting into full swing, 16 passengers are due here from Fairbanks. Al Monsen and Gene Meyring were to come through today with C. El- lingen| B. D. Ellingen, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Rainey, 8. Watson, J. L. Wild- ing, Mrs. A. Anderson, and P. Huff. After bringing that load in, Mon- sen and Meyring are to double back to Whitehorsé to pick up another '+ of nassencers from Fairbanks with. pilots Murray Stuart and _ciiph savory, who will return the ship empty to Fairbanks. Those in the second section due here this evening, weather permit- ting, are R. McCullough, F. Fenton, J. Peacock and infant, J. M. Laf- ferty, L. D. O'Connell, S. W. Ro- berts, G. E. Goudie. The - Monsen - Meyring plane is expected to return to Fairbanks to- morrow ‘morning instead of Satur- day to expedite traffic movements in the Interior. However, there will be a regular scheduled flight to Juneau from Fajrbanks on Saturday, and an extra passenger load will come down either Sunday or Monday. ———— FIFTEEN ARE ARRIVALS ON WHITE UNe Pifteen passengers came to Ju- neau this afternoon from Sitka on the stéamer North Sea which is scheduled to sail southbound . from here at ten o'clock This evening. Arrivals were Baxter Felch, H, R VanderLeest, Ray Peterman, Harold Poss, James G. Cooper, Frank Fos- ter. Dr. Rae Carlson, Joe Green, J. F. Dennis, Art Nyquist, Mrs. Grace Sabanoff, Andrew Zingeres, Mrs s Dmitres, Ronald Thomp- son and M. J. Younger. a a -—— CLARK CREEK REGION REPORTED T0 BE BUSY North Sea in - port and sails south at 10 o'clock tonight Mail must be in post office p.m. n scheduled southbound October 4 LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth schediicu w suu every Wednesday at 6 pan. tor 8it- ka &nd wayvorts. Dart leaves every Wedn=sday at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake wnu way ports. es 0 e 0000000 - High tide—1:10 am., 160 feet. Low tide—7:10 am., 08 feet. High tide—1:18 p.m., 17.0 feet. Low tide—7:32 p.m, -0.7 feet - eee NORLAND SELLS HALIBUT (ARG NIGHT CLASSES The first halibut arrival here in | several days was the schooner Nor- | land, Sapt. Tom Sandvik, today. The Norland brought in 20,000 pounds that sold to Alaska Coast | Fisheries at 8 and 6 cents & pound. | Mail for North Sea Closes af 8 Topighl_ : Mail going south on the North Sea tonight ‘should be in -the Post | Office not later than 8 o'clock.:’ At that hour the mail will close, ac- cording to post office announce- ment. ONE HALIBUTER TSRS, SEATRL ¥ Soc o e SEATTLE, Sept. 28.—One hali- buter sold here today, coming in from the western banks. The hali-| buter was the Grant with 43,000 pounds, selling for 12% and 12%. Sable boats selling were: C. F. Hergert 12,000 pounds, Mary R 6,- 000 pounds, Libanon 12,000 pounds, Wesley 7000 pounds, all selling for 5% eents'a pound straight; Faith 5,000 ‘pounds, Blanco 12,000 pounds, 5% cents straight -ee - MISS ROBERTSON “WILL 6O EAST 10 " BUSINESS SCHOO, Miss Carol Robertson was hostess to @ group of friends last night at the Robertson residence at Seventh and Gold for an evening of cards | ard rafrashments, Extensive mining operations in k the platinum area of the Goodnews ' ”l Bay region are reaching the mid-| way point in seasonal activity, ac- cording to Jack Perram of the Clara Creek Mining Company Perram revealed that 100 men were employed on the dredge and two drag lines being used in the platinum area ¥n the Arolic area, gold mining operations employ similar equip- ment and a like number of men Working set-up in both instances ¥s substantially the same as that of last year. Miss Robertson is sailing south evening on the North Sea, en- to Washington, D. C., where e will enter business college, re-| siding in the Nation's Capital with an aunt Duncan Robertson, a brother Miss Rohertson, is also in ten, attendine Georze Wast University in modical stugy. - GRIDDERS DOWN HELENA, Mont., Sept. 28.—Planes of flying the University of Pittsburgh 1 footbgll squad to Seattle for a game BEFORE the-World War, former with the University of Wasm:gtcn Kalser Wilhelm II of Germuny on Saturday, were grounded here held. the post of colopel in every yesterday by a severe storm but Wn army - gxcept that of are expected to get away today, if France. | weather permits, - - @ v s escece0000000000000000 00000 Considerable Interest in | ANCHORAGE FEDERAL | tion Company, a Missouri corpora- | tion, qualified taday with the Ter- | ritorial Auditor to do business in STILL BURNING KEROSENE_At the 85: kerosene lamp. of Point Concepcion light near Santa Barbara, | ting, to open the first miners’ short ! | course prospecting instruction of the winter season. From Hirst, Wilcox will i ‘. go to | Petersburg, then to Juneau, Skag- SANITARY PLUMBING and HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worry.” Phone 788, | ‘ear-old Cal, Assistant_Keeper Charles Hellwig. Point Concepcion sheds its faithful gleam over those waters often called “graveyard | ‘, one of the few remaining lighthouses not electrified, stands First | | \ Pacific” because here seven U. S. destroyers piled up in ls* }:‘: BEING OFFERED BY SCHOOL HERE Subjects—Information from A. B. Phillips Considerable 1interest is being shown by Juheauites in night school classes offered. this fall by the Ju- 1eau Public Schools, Superintendent A. B. Phillips said today. No classes will be organized with less than ten students enrolled. Courses offered include Unitec States citizenship classes for for- eigners, beginning typing, advanced typing, beginning shorthand, ad- vanced shorthand, hookkeeping. public speaking, trigonometry, col- lege algebra, solid geometry, U. S. history, U. 8. civics, beginning French, beginning Latin, advanced French, advanced Latin. Cost of each course is $10 for 36 lessons, which are given two nights a week. Registration may be made by mail only. Informaton may be obtaned also by mail from A. B. Phillips, Ju- neau Public Schools. e BUILDING CONTRACTOR FILES QUALIFICATION The McCarthy Brothers Construc- Alaska. The Alaska office of the) firm will be at Anchorage, where | it holds the contract on the new Federal Building. Roy Bunn of An- chorage was appointed Alaska agent D - FELCH BACK | Traveling merchandise broker Baxter Felch came in from a Sitka trip today on the North Sea. —— e g e e 'TUROFF, LOCAL ELKS GOING ON 5. . VISITATION ok 4 | District Deputy Is to Visit Wrangell, Pefersburg -Movies Shown District Deputy Grand Exalted Ruler L. W. Turoff will pay his of- ficial visits to the Wrangell and | Petersburg Elks lodges next week,| he announced at last night's Ju- neau Elks meeting. | It is planned that the officers of | the Juneau lodge will accompany Turoff on his visitation. Two reels of Alaska Game Com- mission motion pictures, showing brown bear and moose, were shown last night by Executive Officer Frank Dufresne, who also spoke briefly on the Alaska game situa- tion. Elks asked that more pictures be shown at later meetings. A spaghetti feed was served later. The program was arranged by Earl Hunter. - o SEAPLANES BRING SEVERAL ISLAND PASSENGERS HERE Two planes brought passengers to Juneau yesterday afternoon from island runs. Alex Holden flew in Mr. and Mrs. Jack Littlepage and Howard Coke from Chichagof, and Dr. John Reed from Hirst. Shell Simmons flew in with Will- iam. Smith, Thelma Gregor and ‘William Boren from Sitka, and Ruby | Bennett from Tenakee PO L . XY S | Pot Roast of Beef | | Braised Noodles . | Baranof Tomorrow: - —\ “uh e IT'S TIME TO CHANGE YOUR THINNED - QUT LUBRICANTS! CONNORS MOTOR " COMPANY ) way, Ketchikan and Wrangell. The Juneau course begins De ber 13 and ends January ? in each city being five wec For the first time since the ex- tension courses were beaun, two new instructors have been added to the service, putting three teachers in the field, covering Southeast, Cen- tral, and Southwest Alaska John Dorsh will teach Southwest Alaska courses, Robert Lyman, Cen- tral Alaska, and Wilcox will handle classes in the Panbandle - B.P.O0. ELKS, ATTENTION! Special entertainment and Italian paghetti feed tonight at regular meeting. Be there! adv. R Empire Want Ads Bring Results. m- YOUR SAVINGS ARE INSURED, ARE INSTANTLY AVAILABLE AND EARN GREAT- ER RETURNS WITH THE ALASKA FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assn. of Juneau TELEPHONE 3 ‘THE SIGN OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE U. S. AIRMAIL AIR EXPRESS SERVICE Juneau-Fairbanks Bethel-Nome .| (Summer Schedule—Effective June READ DOWN Tuesday and Saturday 10:00|Lv. Juneau 1 00|Ar. Whitehorse READ UP Thursday and Thursday and 'PACIFIC ALASK AIRWAYS, Inc. PHONE: 106 Traffic Representative LOUIS A. DELEBECQUE —_—— - — | Treat Your Battery RIGHT! BRING IT TO OUR BATTERY ROOM FOR AN OVERHAUL AND RECHARGE If you need sulphuric acld or Edisun Battery Solution, WE HAVE IT. Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES Harri Machine Shop 'HAUGEN TRANSFORTATION CO, | 'M. S. DART U. S. Mail Carrier Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneau, { every Wednesday at 7 a.m. For PETERSBURG, KARE, PORT | | ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS { For Information ;lhllgen Transportation Co. Red 611 | Freight must be on city dock not | later than 4 P. M. Tuesday | — | ALASKA Transportatior e Company | ® Sallings from Pier 7 Seattle Leaves Seattle ....Sept. 19 Sept. 26 8. 8. TYEE TAKU AT 9 P. M. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION A . Ay D. . FEMMER Phofie 114 8. S. CANADIAN PACIFIC "PRIN. CESS” LINER JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEALTLE: SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise September 25 October 5, 16, 26 Connectivns ut Vawcouver with Canadian Pacific Services: TRANSCONTINENTAL TRANS-ATLANTIC TRANS-PACIFIC Tickets, rese ns and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, CP.R.—Juneau, Alaska Baranef Hetel CANADIAN PACIFIC # DEVLIN'S “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 All Planes 2-Way Radio Equipped LASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. PHONE 612 DAY or | NIGET Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU ‘ SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER [ Operating Own Aeronautical ' | | P SUER JAMES SNELL & a paid-up subseriber to The Daily Alaska Empire | is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: “FISHERMAN'S WHARF" WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear B .| L ———————— 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 of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. WEEKLY SAILINGS—Juneau to Seattle A Lv. Juneau So. Bound Sept. 29 Oct. § Phone 109 Phone 23 ..Phone 18 Leave Ar.Juneau Beattle No.Bound Sept.22 Sept.26 ...Sept. 29 Oct. 3 NORTH SEA ... NORTH COAST . HENRY GREEN, Agent CITY¥: WHARF. . GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent

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