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| HAVE THE ADDRESS OF THE SCHOOL- HOUSE HERE N PHILADELPHIA WHERE | CALLED ON MY SISTER WHEN | WAS A LITTLE GRL- BE - WONDER 1= THIS IS THE'SITE ¢ DERBLAYIS SCHEDULED, ALASKA TRIP HasHeavy load of Machin- inery for Interior-Load Lumber in Juneau Steamer Derblay is scheduled to TR ISR I NORTHBOUND Tongass scheduled to arrive at 8 o'cock Sunday evening. ® North Coast due Tuesday SCHEDULED SAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver at 9 o'~ clock tonight. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 a. m. tomorrow. Taku scheduled to sail from Se- attle January 16 at 9 p. m. Northland is scheduled to sail from Seattle January 19 at 10 a. m. Mount McKinley scheduled to sail from Seattle January 20 e et —— sail from Seattle scmetime today at 9 a. m. for Southeast and Southwest Al- SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS aska ports No steamer north, west. Th Derblay has been to Alameda, LOCAL SAILINGS Cal. to pick up important freight o mstebeth scheduled to sail eve: for delivery in Alaska—1500 dead- Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- weight tons comprising the ma- ka and wayports. chinery for a glant gold dredge. This cargo is for delivery to the United States Smelting, Refining Company of Fairbanks. At Eeattle the Derblay loads sup- Dart leaves every Wednesday at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way ports. e e oo b0 o0 0o ..--.-..ooo-tu;oo.u- 'ITHE DAILY AIASKA EMPIRE FRIDAY, JAN 12, 1940 By G I'LL. ASK THAT COP-MAYBE HE WASN'T BORN HERE AND KNOWS SOME - THING ABOUT THE CITY- Here is bridge over the Seine River in Paris, one of which collapsed after a river barge crashed into an abutment. Cars and pedestrians passing over the bridge were thrown into the water. Three were reported kllled in blast which followed. i pliec for the naval base at Kodiak, now under construction, as well as general freight for Alaska ports. Ameng important ftems in the cargo will be about half a million feet of Alaskan lumber to bé used in connection with the work at Ko- diak. It will be stowed at Ketchikan and Juneau, being cut in Alaskan mills from Alaskan grown timber. | The big dredge is to be used in the Ester District near Fairbanks and when put in service will be one of the largest in the Northern ter- | | ritor Its pontoons, numbering | forty-cne, went north on Alaska ' The metorship Noruuand, Geat. L. Line ships last summer. Their Williams, sailed south from here last | weight is 700 tons. night with 33 passengers from the Discharzed at Seward, the ma- Capital City for Seattle and points chinery will go to Fairbanks via the R route. government railroad. | For Seattle passengers were: R. e J. Sommers, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph —— - 4 Merrill, Mrs. Dorothy Vollert, Henry | {Green, Mrs. Henry Green, Denny l TIDFS TON © ‘?OW } Green Mrs. W. Davis, Mrs. H. Rea- S ™ ber, Donald Reaber, Frank Beals, 3360 OUT FROM HERE; NORTHLAND High tide 3:20 a. m., 15.6 feet |Martin Kursut, Mrs. H. Zehm, Low tide 9:08 a. m, 32 feet 'Stanley Zehm, Arlie Lawn, A. Arger, | High tide 3:03 p. m, 155 feet | B, Pisareff, E. Harrell, Ernest Wiita. Low tide 0:27 p. m, 04 feet | For Keichikan — Charles Gold- | b gt 43 stein, Dr. Perry Smith, Neil Andef- NOTICE TO AUTOMOBILE son, J. J. Meherin, Lawrence Kerr, OWNERS K. Azzinaro. All night parking on the stri For Petersburg—Mrs. B. Marshall, ely prohibited as it with snow plow and operations. DAN RALSTON, | Chief o Police. | in Mrs. Helen Zamora, Rosita Zamora, other H. LeBlanc \bigas and C. Cruz. Pmnlrn an Ads Bflnl)mlu. Rcfused Date, Shoots Girl Pending recovery of Edith Balcom, 18 from a bullet wound infilcted by Richard Valentine, 18, prep school football player, Valsntine was held without charge at Reading, Mich. The youth shot the girl, a school superintendent’s secretary, when she reportedly spurned his uleas for “a date.” SRS SRS S Sy IT'S TIME TO CHANGE YOUR THINNED - OUT LUBRICANTS! {Moral: The Proof Verne Hoke, Sam Ca- | { Juneau, { have the story happened. | holiday season, dding, they also received a lette o W | 20 pASSE“GERS lin which Jack's mother explained she had lost the wedding ring, that had nevr before been off her fin- | ger and she could cnly surmise that the ring must have fallen into-the FOR TH'S poRI pudding which she hated to tear “xpwn_ perhaps needlessly. Fond of his mother's pudding. and also not strong on marring its SEATTLE, Jan. 12—Steamer North Coast sailed for Southeast Alaska at 10 o'clock this morning with 67 passengers, including the following for Juneau: took the gocdie to Dr. L. P. Dawes and his X-Ray machine. ' f of the pudding lay in very definitely in it. The ring, wiped off and securely wrapped, is now in the mail on the steamer Northland, on its long jowr- ney home to Old Greenwich, Con- Dorcothy Rhodes. Judge and Mrs. George F. Alex- ander, Rohert Janklin, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Andersen, Mr. and Mrs. Earl D. McGinty. Miss Louise Pat- terson, Mrs. Crystal Snow Jenne, iD. L. Green, Don Klovdahl, Thomas Hall. Ed Baaden, Ray Smith. - e left in over fifty years. B Party at Baranof For Shirley Tripp Girl friends of Shirley Tripp will pather in the Iris Room of the Baranof Hotel this evening for dessert and later will attend the movies. The affair is in compli to the honoree on her twel birthday. Favors and decorationt for the occasion will be carried in red and god. Guests for the evening mclude Margaret Femmer, Doris Graves, Jennie and Ruth Larson, Colleen and Aileen Hellan, Norma Barek- sten, Lanore Olsen, Helen Ander- son, Aileen Maloney, Antonétte Spendlove, Ramona VanOzzle, Pearl Swenson, and the guest-of-honor's Swenson, and the guest-of-honor teacher, Miss Helen Webster 0f the Pudding Is in an X-Ray little story, but s newspapermen This is a g how to “lead say, is a problem It might be said, “Dr. L. P. Dawes sterday took an X-Ray of a plum pudding—", or it might be started off, “A wedding rinz that hadn’t been off Mother Hawkes' finger in Old Greenwich, Connecticut, in over fifty years, turned up yesterday in Alaska,”—but there you so we'll tell it as it Mr. and Mrs Jack Hawkes of Juneau every year receive a twenty pound plum pudding from Jack's mother in Old Greenwich. This on receiving the [ e g —The Sign of Dependable Service Juneau to Fairbanks: Tuesday and Wednesday Fairbanks to Nome: Monday and Thursday Fairbanks to Bethel: Wednesdays ® U. §. Airmall—Express Service [ Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. PHONE 106 Sales Representative LOUIS A. DELEBECOUE sclid beauty needlessly, Jack Hawkes | Txxfsdilirn;:tn' \'H‘REoimth‘ ::)r::::: g Z-Tiav DCRECeY > 43 * los twedding ring from Connecticut, Mrs. George F. Freeburger, Mrs. g d | necticut, to the finger it had not) YEH - BUT IT WUZ TORN DOWN FIFTY YEARS AGO - | BT fon an interesting trip to the Tread- NEWS | DOUGLAS HI MEETS JUNEAU HI IN DOUGLAS TONIGHT One of the games of games for Douglas High School will oceur to- night when the powerful Juneau High School squad invades Doug- |las for their second match with the local school scrappy five in| the Channel’s interscholastic con- x ference. Fresh from victories over Hen- ning’s team of Juneau and the strong Metlakatla team, the visi- tors tonight heavily outclass the Douglas lads but nevertheless they will be given a battle that fans| all over the channel can not af- {ford to miss. { In the opener the hundred-pound | grade school Husky pups will, tan- jgle with the Juneau Cubs in what may be the most exciting game of the evening. i Between the games, Warner's, |Douglas City League champions, will be presented with a beautiful trophy. Placed in competition this year for the first time it will be awarded annually to the team win- ning Douglas city basketball cham- pionship. The games are scheduled to start at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Nat- atorfum. Opening lineup for D.H.S. is: forwards—Dan Krsul and F.| Cashen; center — Robert Fleek; | guards—Jimmy Devon and Glen Kirkham, The return of Glen Kron- | quist to the Douglas squad will be| additional reserve strength for the team. George Willey and Claude Erskine will be the referees. N - S, MRS. COCHRANE IS NEW ! LEADER, FOUR-H CLUB The 4-H Club girls will hold their weekly meeting tomorrow evening at the home of Mrs. H. L. Cochrane | Who has taken over the Club lead- |ership during the absence of Mrs. Clyde Bolyan. Last week Mrs. Cochrane accom- panied the members of the club SAN FRANCISCO'S iFinest Moderately Priced Hotel b 5 evRy o0 Witk TUs & ! Unéasen 290250 300 | 2.50 3?0 3.50 & CocKTAlL LOUNGE BROADCAST JOINT FEATURE SERVICE ON THE AIR! By The Daily Alaska Empire and KINY |] © days every week at 12:30 p.m. 9:45 pm 8:15 am. 7:00 p.m. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL WORK or WELDING REC. U5 PAT. OFR QUAKER OIL RANGE PHONE 34 ‘him the middle of the week. | Haugen Transportation Co. Red 611 EORGE McMANUS well foundry where they witnessed the pouring of the hot metal. - — AUTO LICENSES Car owners of Douglas have done pretty well in securing the new 1940 licenses, according to figures on the Island, according to the Clerk, Tuckett, 29 have the city and Territorial licenses, which cost a total of $15 each ——— PUSICH ILL Fire Chief Mike Pusich is con- fined to his home on account of the flu which got the better of Jack Warner was able to gel down to his business for a short time only this morning after his bout with the same affliction. . C.D.A. CARD PARTY The Catholic Daughters of Am-|{ erica will hold a card party in Parish Hall Friday evening, Janu- ary 12, at 8 o'clock. Bridge, whist and pinochle, adv. - >ee - Empire Want Ads Bring Lesults. e Today and Everyday the Better Foods Are Served at the BRUNSWICK CAI‘E Ski Instrution Saturday, Sunday There will be ski instruction in the second meadow tomorrow afternoon it was announced today by Ralph Moreau of the Juneau Ski Club. The outdoors committee has planned a program of instruction and slalom racing for Sunday start- ing at 10:30 o'clock in the second meadow. Coffee will be furnished by the clubs and a big turnout is | expected during the day. ) ' Chinese and American Dishes Special Breakfasts, Lunches, Dinners -3 Leave Due Juneau Due Jurieau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound ALASKA Jan. 13 Jan. 16 Jan. 22 FOR OTHER INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS ————CALL—— PHONES H. O. ADAMS, Agent Ticket Office................... 2 Freight Office ... .. . Al‘l‘?kréSt("lmShlp Company LL-ALARSKAR*ROUTES FAMILY SHOE STORE “Juneau’s Oldest Exclus- sive Shoe Store” MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier ] SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE i o o ......-.,1 SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 e - - e 0 ) | Seward Lou Hudson Street Manager | - ———1- - ——— —4 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” [y m— HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. M.S. DART U. §: Mail Carrier Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneaun, every Wednesday at 7 am. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS For Information Freight must be on city dock not later than 4 P. M. Tuesday ALASKA Transporiatios Company Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle Leaves Seattle ...Jan. 16 ...Jan. 23 S. 8. TAKU .. 8. 8. TYEE AT S P M PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION AGENT Phone 114 Night 313 e ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER 6 AR A\ ' PHONE 612 l-le K. G. MERRITT as a palé-up subscriber o The Daily Alaska Empire 1s Invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the — CAPITOL THEATRE and recelve 2 tickets to see: “THE DUKE COMES BACK" wWA1CH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear e e e ] COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ‘ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modemize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comiort of Guests! GASTINEAU CATFE m connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION CANADIAN PACTTIC CESS” T ERae wmsm.m?s—amuum fieave" ‘Ar.Junesu Lv.Juneau Beattle No.Bound So.Bound NORTH COAST .......Jan. 12 Jan. 16 Jan. 18 NORTHLAND ... Jan. 28 Jan. 25 HENRY GREEN, Agent CITY WHARF . GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent e