The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 19, 1939, Page 6

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BBINGING ‘UP FATHER REMEMBEQ< WE MLIST HAVE THE VERY BEST. RATHER NICE HOTEL HERE IN DETROIT- LL BE MARINE NEWS YUKON HERE | srenn Movesemes TODAY WITH MUCHCARGO e s e s e e e NORTHBOUND North Coast in port and sails for Sitka at 8:45 o'clock to- night SCHEDULED SAILINGS Taku scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 tonight, Northland scheduled to from Seattle December 22 at 10 a. m. . . . . . sail ® . . Mount McKinley scheduled to ® . . . . . . . . . Over Thousand Sacks of Mail Are Put Off- 55 Passengers sall from Seattle December 23 at 9a. m Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle December 26 at 8 p.m. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Decem- ber 28 at § p. m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS southbound The steamer Yukon arrived in Ju- neau from the south this morning, bringing in 45 passengers from Se- attle, ten from Southeast Alaska ports, most of them coming home © for Christmas, and a heavy cargo of mail and Christmas freight A few minutes after docking time, R R R R R I ST A APPSR Sy Yukon scheduled next Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every . . over 1,000 sacks of mail were being ® Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- e transferred to trucks, and a great ® ka and wayports. . pile of crated flowers for local flor- @ Dsrt leaves every Wedn=sday ® ists wes growing steadily, | ®# &t 7'am. for Petersburg, Port e | Arrivals from Seattle were Harold ® Alexander, Kake and way ® Aase, Helen Beistline, Mrs, Howard | ® ports. . Button, Vernon Colton, L. Eldridge,(® © @ ® ¢ ¢ ¢ @ @ ¢ ¢ o - Mrs. 8. Fein, Mrs. J. M. Felst, ’*~—-~4 Charles Goldstein, Vivian Gruber, ' R Heyeer, Mrs. R, Heyser, Tom Hey-| | TIDES TOM@RROW | ser, Mrs. Wellman HoIbrook, Mrs, & —w=ttm——qy R. 8. Jacoby, . Johnson, 8. Jorgén- dan | Low tide 1:27 4. m, 49 feet Marget McCay, J. 8, MacKinnon,| High tide 7:55 a. m., 143 feet S. R. Meacham, J. J. Meherifi, J.| Low tide 2:36 p. m, 38 feet Mullen, Andrew Nerland, Olga Paul,| High tide 8:37 p. m, 116 feet Bib Phiilibe Ak G B -PHMD. | et Clyde Poulton, Mrs. Clyde Poulton, Dorothy Ryan, with stopover at Mrs. T. J. Pyle and ‘¢hild, H.' C. sSeward; Mrs. W. P, Rodigkeit, Mrs. Redman, Mrs, L. Reinke, Stanley Annabelle Feley, Roy Bender, W. J. Sny B. W. Spear Forman. Jeanette Stewart, Charles Tal-| Irma Wahl, Mrs. Chas. Wahl, Mrs. e, Jean Taylor, Katherine Tor- H. Sherwood, Mr. and Mrs. John Pauline Franz Metz, Stahler, Jake Stahler, Alex Stahler, Mrs. Leif Strand, Mr. and Mrs. Don R. Innis, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Nelson W.B R. Roa and Fredo; Joseph Puzzo, Evan Per- as Ste Roger Erickson, Leo Ilg and From Ke 1 M N. I A T [e] I n, George Loveless, M eless, O. G. Olsor J : ¢ V 1 D : AT w N. Park Sailing from here to Valdez, Mrs H. Burch, Virginia Burch To Cordova—Ronald Olsen, Phil Lydick, Fred Garbin, O. Wilson. |% = —% To Yakutat — A. F. Novatney, HOSPITAL NOTES Martha Frank, Thelma Edwards, Walter Hellan, Jennie Jernberg, Ted Strand To Kodiak—Phillip Torsen, - Mrs. Mert Benedict and her new baby daughter have been' dismissed Johnson, Dora Torsen, Melvin Rock- | {rom St. Ann’s Hospital and are stad, Oscar Fohr, R. L. Townsend, &t their residence in 'the McCaul Passengers aboard the Yikon with | Apartments, reservations for Seward are as fol-| 2 o lows | After receiving surgical care, J. ley Snyder with stopover ai J. Newton was dismissed 'today Phillip McDonald, Blake from St. Ann’s Hospital. Iver Johnson, Mrs. C.| Plorence Endler, Albert| Ronald Olson was dismissed from Dr. and Mrs. Wallace Haley, St. Ann’s HoSpital today after re- etty Lee, Ray Holmes, T. w | ceiving medical attentjon. m, C. R. Brooks, -Mrs. n | TR Mrs. Fred E. Peterson | CHRISTMAS . GIFT 50c Lois Price, Earl Johnson,! “Alaskana” by Marie Drake. A. 8. Juneau adv - > { —The Sign of : { Dependable Service e i e SO SIS ——d, Juneau to Fairbanks: Tuesflay and Wednesday Fairbanks to Nome: Monday and Thursday Fairbanks to Bethel: Wednesdays U. S. Airmail—Express Service e Co: Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. PHONE 106 LOUI§ A- DELEBECQUE Sales Representativ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, DEC 19,:1939. e amara -t By G ON THE FLOOR WITH WELL- | HAVE SOME ROOMS CHRPALOT- THE GREAT TENOR-AND MADAME DORA MEE -“THE OPERA STAR — r/‘\ND A SUITE-NEXT TO IVAR REKEYS -THE GREAT PIANIST- AND ON THE THIRD FLOOR- A SUITE BETWEEN MADAME MR VIOLA CELLO AND MISS CLAIR A VACANT ANNET -EVERY EVENING WE ROOM 1N . HAVE A CONCERT IN THE HOTEL= 4 — THE MA - = MAIN FOYER ELECTRA TAKES RE(ORD CARGO; ‘lnauuural Day Record Is Broken by Heavy i Xmas Shipment {{ A pacilléjAiaska Alrways /Electra took off from here for Fairbanks this morning with six passengers (and the heaviest load of mail vvt' | to be carrjed over the route to date. |’ "The Electra, piloted by Bill Knox and Walt Hall, took 472 pounds of Imail, 179 pounds” of express, and 362 pounds of PAA express. The mail. Which arrived on the Yukon, weighed heavier than the inaugura) load of May 3, 1938. Passengers to Fairbanks were, G. Jacobsen, Andrew Nerland, Franz| Zallinger, Mrs. Fred Milligan, and | for ‘Whitehorse, Mr. and Mrs. D. Dickson. HEAYY AIRMALL IS BROUGHT HERE FROM | INTERIOR BY PLANE What is the heaviest airmail éver to leave Fairbanks was brought’to | Juneau last Saturday by Pacific | Alaska Airways and was dispatched |aboard the Princess Norah for ‘the INTERIOR MAIL | Frank Rouze, Hard, W. Johnson, Mrs. Eric Hard, |Pltas Fred Ball | Mrs. W. Gragen, Charles Ulsh, Paul | SRR s { Dryden, Robert Maddox, Mr. and NOTICE usually airmail. Included in the 194 pounds were |not a few packages. Inasmuch as there are about 45 letters to a pound, | the mail was equivalent to'8,730 let- ters. constitutes the volume of Many Arrive Early Today, North Coast The steamer North Coast brought in over thirty passengers for this poort from Seattle and Southeast | | Alaska ports this morning, and is booked to sail for Sitka at 8:45 o'- clock tonight. 'TWELVE COME IN " WITH MCKINLEY " FROM WESTWARD | | Twelve passengers came in_ from | the Westward on the steamer Mount McKinley this morning and the ves- | | sel was posted to sail for the South | at 2 o'clock this afternoon. Holgan, Fred Paddock, W. L. Paul, B. F. Kaane, A. Horvanty, Mrs. Rob- B. F. Kane, A. Hovant En?‘:“g;]iwue Alce Christofferson, A;( Bengu Mr. nnfi Mr,‘s James_v stofferson, M. O'Donnel] | D2Vis, Dr. and Mrs. Leslie White, | Mrs. George Lingo, Joan Lirgo, Maz- Patsy White, P. Congdon, John Co- | saret Lindsay, Weliman Hoibrook, | V' TIipk Spinslla;; | Mr. and 'Mrs. Jack Boyle, Florence | * ok Boyle, John McCormick, 8. Syverud, T. J, Pyle, Matt Warden. W. Swanson, George Danner, R.| Showers, Mrs. Gail Liston, Mr. Bnd; ‘|Mrs. W. C. Jackson, Evelyn Bailey, | Grace Purdue, Mrs. Mattie Baldwin, { Alma Tice, Mrs, H. C. Rudo]ph Mrs. V. V. Thambitus, V. V. Tram- Sailing to Seattle, Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Peckovich, Peter Waltz, Mrs. Lois Jacobson, Mr and Mrs. W. O. Carlson, Myrtle Moe, E. P. Pond, John Smith, Eric I'M_SORRY- MAGGIE- BUT THERE ISN'T Arrivals were Ben Bellamy, George | Mrs. Rob-| EORGE McMANUS SEAPLANES MAKE IWO TRIPS TODAY | \ } Two local airplane flights were |made out of Juneau today, Alex lHolden flying to Tulsequah with |three aboard, and John Amundsen | flying to Hirst with nree. Holden took R. Vinblad, A. Cruick- shnnk and T. Ristvelt to Tulsequah, 4WhflE Amundsen took John Haynes, | Albert Buhl and Fred Strasser to imrsc gl | Empire Want Aas Bring Results. | i GREEN TOP CABS—PHONE 678 BUY GREEN TOP RIDE COUPON BOOKS: 98.25 In rides for $5.00 $3.00 in rides for $2.50 ¥ t | : l Mrs. Tom Dyer, J. W. Gucker, J. C. Molyneux, Mrs. Molyneux, Stanley Thompson, Mrs. A. S. Thompson, Wilma Price, Geraldine Tnompsen; A. O. Holly, H. Bowdish, A. Shaffer; Joe Skarik, Bert Anderson, S, .S. Visiting days at the Minfield Home will be on Sundays only, from now on. adv, MINNIE FIELD. FAMILY E SHOE STORE | | “Juneau’s Oldest Exclus- sive Shoe Store” Seward Lou Hudson Thompson, Don Bradley, Pearl B. Haynes, William Tate, Frank Huff- man,” G. Martin, Glenn Newton, William Priestley, Frank Parsons: To Ketchikan—V. Lindholm, Mrs, | South. | The weight of Santa Claus mail | was 194 pounds, which is almo:t\ Lwice the weight—100 pounids—that | | H. L. Woods, John Theodorsen, Mrs, John Theodorsen, William Elsm-.r Pauline Wiseman. To Peteraburg—dohn Hlmard Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Dec. 19—They're remaking “Bill of Di- » vorcement.” New faces, new director, new treatment. Katharine N ! Hepburn is a stage star now, John Barrymore is disporting him- JAMES L. UOUPER | self in Chicago for a seemingly indefinite run of his play. Billie C.P.A. Burke, who was very serious in that old picture, has returned Business Counselor to t v flutters for the screen. Shattuck Bldg. Phone 183 he opening of the old “Bill of Divorcement” was a movie Room 1 X thrill somewhat comparable to the raising of the first curtain > s ol on a hit play. It was just a picture until suddenly the screen - - was taken over by a presence, a personality. A slim, raw- boned | EXPERT 1 metallic-voiced girl came bounding down a high strway calinz | | SHOE REPAIRING | Father, father!” I believe those were the words, but they 3 | . . ; Years in the Business didn’t matter. The thrill lay in the electric power of her :res- J. G. OBERG | ence. We all knew, immediately, that a new star was born. Ehithatine HepbuA’ THE SHOE HOSPITAL - Formerly Al—the Shoe Doctor | It is thus that most real stars are born. instantly, and all the ballyhoo in them public. Ingrid Bergman did that to us in “Intermezzo.” first scenes, she moved steadily up front, ground figure in her and she held the screen whenever she was on it. and more—she was an actress. personality, none too interesting, was Bette The roles count heavily, true, age. Are Not Alone.” Jane was no unexpected. From her first bit What she had done until then was of no consequence, because the Davis of that picture was a brand-new “discovery.! Jane Bryan scored somewhat the same bull's-eye In “We Ik 3 * Street Manager SANITARY PLUMBING and HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner “Let your plumbing worry be our worry.” Phone 788. — HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES Harri Machine Shop “Try Us First” * HAUG!N TRANSPORTATION 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 Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 Freight must be on city dock not later than 4 P. M. Tuesday The public knows town won’t fool the A back- NEWS BROADCAST JOINT FEATURE SERVICE |, ON THE AIRI ! By The Daily Alaska She was a Davis until “Of Human Bond- Just another ingenue, and new face, nor was her triumph role to this, her step to star- See Our Selection of Gift Boxes TODAY! Empire and KINY 6 days every week at 8:15am. 7:00 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 9:45p.m Perey’s exclusively WHEN YOU NEED dom, she had been advancing as an actress. She has been on all the lists of “starlets to watch” since she made “The Old Maid" she justified expectations. a dramatic, emotional banquet like “We Are Not Alone” on which to feast, he registers freshly and importantly—to those who have not seen her work before, she, too, will give the “thrill of dis- had,” and in covery.” The apparition of Hedy Lamarr in “Algiers”—so frought with’ promise as yet unfuifiiled“was the same old story with unhappy varmqous a. public e)u:nement so great, and so over- féd on Lamatr ]okex that her eventual new appearance needed ta be a hundred times more satisfying than “Lady of the Tropies” (Private theoty: Hedy took another lopk at “Lady” and decided to call off her strike.) Luscious Linda Darnell was another fir No great shakes as an actress' yet, she has a head-start on many another hetter perofrmér by virtue of her arremng ta save her from.panning. out. beauty. She’ll need more than start for her 16 years. There’s no movie thrill quite like it—this sighting of new personality or talent. And that i a liftle girl who sings and becomes famous as Deanna Durbin; of |} a brat with bangs who can be identified as Jane Withers; or of a personable rodent billed as PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL WORK or “Kid Gala- Given Rice & Ahlers Excluslve Dsulem © for y R > - Burners QUAKER OIL RANGE PHONE 34 -class picture knock~ looks, ‘but she's making & good goes whether it's a first view of Mickey Mouse. ALASKA Transportation Company Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle Leaves Seattle 8. 8. TAKU . Dec. 19 S. S. TYEE . Dec. 26 AT 9 P. M. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION [ AGENT Phone 114 Night 312 “PRIN CESS” JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VIGTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah | January 2, 17 { Connections at ‘Vanconver with i 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 CANADIAN PACIFIC I(EIMI DRILLING River country wtil an eye on gold | the Bek-River headwaters, has been drilling most of the season on the KenaL He did not say whom he was MANIS THROUGH |5 e vos o wim WITH MKINLEY | o "ok “or ‘i ‘Fusmari v ploration Company in the Fairbanks rea. Norman (. Stines, mining manl ho has been prospecting the Konal| WEATHER MAN 1AROUGH O. K. Anderson, in charge of the dredging possiblities, is southbound TFairbanks office of the U. S. Weath- = \ on the cteamer McKinley. er Bureau, was a through passenger . i | Stines, wh oalso has been oper- on the southbound Mt. McKinley, : ¢ ating a dragline on Rainy Creek in headed Omside on annual leave. I, Il h ll 'y CHEDULE ST SAILING 5 Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound YUKON Dec. 16 Dec. 19 Dec. 26 MT. McKINLEY Dec. 23 Dec. 26 Jan. 2 YUKON Dec. 30 Jan. 2 Jan. 9 FOR OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS CALL \ THE ALASKA LIN PHONES H. O. ADAMS, Agent Ticket Office 2 Freight Office. i "ER‘ ICE:ON-RLL" RLQSKP | MARINE mwmrs—u S. run. 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIBLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 O et e ) ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical 2-Way Radio Station KANG PHONE Fadio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER ‘r WALTER BINDSEIL i as a pald-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire 1s invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the — CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: “HUCKLEBERRY FINN" SPACE WATCH THIS Your Name May Appear COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 587 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. "HOTEL GASTINEAU EvaryEfloflMadsior'heCom!oflo(Gusshl GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION L ot D beave Ar. Juneau Lv.Juneau Seattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTH COAST .....Dec. 16 Dec. 19 Dec. 22 NORTHLAND ... Det. 23 Dec. 26 Dec. 29 NORTH COAST ....Dec.30 Jan. 2 Jan. 5 HENRY GREEN, Agent ...............c........Phone 109 CITY WHARF .. GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent

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