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~5 POTLY AND HER PALS YOou WOULDN'T uKl-DERSTAND LT, POLLY, BUT IT'S SO TIRING, TO BE RUSHED WITH SO MANY' DATES. MARINE NEWS | STEAMER SAILING NOBTHBOUND Alaska due late tomoirow or carly Saturday ass due Sunday iD SATLINGS (HAN cheduled to sail fiom Seattle 10 a. m. tomor- fective now steamers of Lhe Aleutian scheduled to sail from Seattle October 5 at 9 a. m. v Transportation Company yee scheduled to sail from leaving Secattle on Tuesday Scattle, October 8 at 9 a. I norning 9 oclock instead of 9 SOUTHBOUND BAILINGS relock * Tuesday | evening Nerthland Js scheduled soth- It is also announced that freight bound late tonight or tomor- for Alaska will be veceived at the Tow. morning McCormick Terminal Dock at Ta-| e Princess Lo Schedidlad to coma up to 5 o'clock on Monday arrive tomorrow morning at 7 afternoons o'clock and sails south two Steamer Tongass left Seattle yes- hours later. terday noon for Juncau and s Baranof scheduled southbound cheduled to arrive here on Mon- Saturday. day Yukon scheduled southbound > -4 Mongday. R T R R RN LOCAL SAILINGS CLIPPER OF FOR JUNEAU ka and waypaorts. Dart leaves every Wednesda Alexander, Kake ports. ® @ o 0 0 0 0 0 0 Estebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p. . for 8it- % at 7a. m. for Petersburg, Port and way- |sTeaMER MOVEMENTS’ The Alaska Clipper is due at Auk : » Bay this afternoon from Seattle, | oy ANE MOVEMENTS [ weather permitting, with nine pas- | s aboard for he ing in are Ward Griphaiy, e Alaska Clipper scheduled tn Paul Sorensen, Gearge Parmenier, o arrvive this afternoon from Mrs. Carrie Wold, Miss Efta An-le Seattle. Leaves Auk Bay tu- dersen, Peler Wold, Miss Nellic' @ morrow morning at 8 o'clock Crossman, Mrs. Ralph Savory and e weather ermitting. Mail clos- J. S. Robbius, # esabt 5 a. m. tomorrow. » - # ® Two PAA Elegtras due in Ju- ® neau this afternoon from AMUNDSEN oN ® Fairbanks. Both Electras will e [fly to interior tomorrow, it FREIGH]’ RUN ® is believed. Mail closes at 6 . a. m. John Amundsen flew to the Po- 5 Flanes .“"""l‘"le‘f ltokr}y S laris-Taku mine today with 1000 3 . "OTEINE & 992‘” R, 1 pounds of meal and fresh produce. weather permitting. while Shell Simmens flew three pas- © © © @ L sengers to the coast. Flying to the coast with Sim- mons were Rad Mitrovich, to Hirst; Mike Monagle and Herb Redman to Tipes ToMORROW { Sitka. GIANT SUB IS (Sun Time) Low tide—8:31 am., 0.1 feet. ' High tide—2:40 p.m., 196 feet. 4 SENI To WAIER Low tide—9:06 p.m. -2.6 feet. > NORTH STAR IS : ! VALLEJO, Cal., Oc The new ! six million dollar submarine Tuna, the first of six being built at the High tide—2:38 a.m., 179 feet. Mare Island Navy Yard, was Gomfis‘(“lo launchel yesterday The specifications of the Tuna A“"‘AR("( Soo" were kept secret, but she is be- . lieved to be pessibly the largest 7 4 submarine ever built for the Navy. The Office of Indian Affairs ves- H No spectators were permitted Sel North Star, now headed south ! ¢lose to the craft when she was OUt of the Arctic, is scheduled to leave Seattle turn to the supplies for Th2 Nofh Si Decemper 1 Antarctic the Bryd will m: launched to TIME TO CALL FOR YOUR CAB BROADWAY CAB CO. one south. > | guaranteed _circulation. SCHEDULE and FARES Juneau fo Fairbanks and Seattle :ileY Fairbanks to Juneau Fairbanks #2.00 LESS 10%FOR ROUND TRIP. =Via Fairbanks. Passengers — Airmail — Air Express Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. Pan American Airways System TRAFFIC OFFICE L. A. DELEBECQUE * Distriet Sales’Manager 14.00 re- Monday, Thurs- day, Saturday Monday attle 1 3 Seattle to Juneau Thoraiay Jun- Se- Fair PR = i eau attle banks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ophir McGraih Juneau 95.00 +131.00 125,00 £120.00 Seattle 21000 §207.00 PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE—SEATTLE Ocean with edition, more Alaska voyagze before the long haul }Snbarup« to The Dally Alaska Em- | pire —the paper with the largest 100000000 ccs0c000000r00000 00300 C e it | VERNON, HARRY, FRANK , . PRED, GEOREE "OH,DEAR, @\ WHEN I RRY, I 7 \WONDER HOW MANY = ’(4) MEN WILL BE MADE z }’3'3 UNHAPPY 2 ' THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 3, 1940. HOwW MANY DO You INTEND TO MARRY 2 By CLIFF STERRETT | 1. Crippled Swedish Ship Rides Out Hurricane 1 Battered by a tropical hurricane 300 miles off Cape Uzlt(m‘;ls, her steerin, Swedish freighter Laponia struggles to keep afloat. The ship was enroute York when struck by the storm. The U. S. liner President Roosevelt stood b g gear disabled, the 4,609-ton from Rio de Janeiro to New vy following her distress call, but the Laponia was able to proceed toward port after emergency repairs. 1 Vice President Gar- ticns of humanity him the bill didn't have a cha has jumpad the fence many before election. Several na- tir He was a bitter opponent of tors told the e the Sup: Court battle, fought Senator Burke went (o work measures but has strung along with Burke fought bill -t )y the New Deal on just as many and the i on { coluinin 1 more hardly be dry befor 1 measure Senator Burke hasn't decided is plu 1 400 n yet what he will do after Janu- sleeve ary, but whatever it is he thinks e he will = continue to be a Iuv.”\(:): P Rl e SAYS 1IE'S AN AMATEUR by profession and ‘an “amateus heavy fog and with a strong tide| Hu thin-haired, cigh ki e R N - - wunning Tunesday on the north-| in in his 50 itor Bi bound trip, struck Polewy rock,| do exactly why' al ADJUDGED INSANE necking the 50-foot high concret happened. He refers {o himself George S one of Wrangell beacon off the rock as an amateur in politi Hi oldest residents, a son of form A survey made found no into the Senate (he scxved ob2 Ghief Shakes, has been adjud damage was done to the st r. term in the ~ House. 1932-31) insare. The beacon was built at a cost|staunch New Dealer. It was he who PSS of $75,000 and weighed several hun- | formulated that definition of the UNDERGOES OPERATION dred tons. Shipping men say the New Deal which still is President Robert Rossiter was admit- beaton will either have to be re-| Roosevelt’s favorite, the one that ted io St. Ann's Hospital for surgi- placed or the rock blasted out of | starts “The New Deal is an old cal carc this morning and under- the channel, | deal—as old as the earliest aspira- went an operation. >+ First Peacefime Draft Law Will Stand Out Now (Continued from Page Ore) municipal bonds. As one of the sponsors of the propesed bill to make the presidency a single six- year term, he held hearings be- fore the sub-committee which gave the ardent New Dealers several headaches. He bolted his pariy and announced that he would cam- paign for Wendell L. Willkie 5 i 3 Mrs. Margaret Rudkin, Fair- i field, Conn,, socialite, started ' baking wholewheat-milk-but- ter-honey bread to help her little boy's rundown health. He liked it, others liked it— now . it's big business. THREATENED F He dropped a lew du t the Senate didn’t bring up the House-approved Logan-Walter bill (to permit appeals to courts from rulings of government administra- tive . agencies) there might be a filibuster. For, all of these things, the Gon- tleman from Nebraska would be well, remembered. But he has done more than that. He has written his rame in history by being onc of the sponsors and the chief Sen- ate . ramrod of the precedent- shattering . Burke-Wadsworth biil. which for /the. first time in th history = of the United States brought ' peacétime conseription to the young men of Ameri It was this that sent me knock- ing on the Senator's door to find out_what manner of man was this who weuld. go flailing the legis- Jative bushes after lis electorate had informed him that the hunt was gver On as ':U. S Embass% NEEDED SFRONG ARM ‘The “Platsburg ecrowd,” as they jare sometimes calizd (a group thal has censtantly advecated military |itraining for defense purposes), had \drawn up the military sevvice bill | Rep. Wadsworth (R.-N.Y.) was in Lthe fpld and a natural sponsor for ‘ithe bill ;in the Hguse. But they needed a strong arm-n the Senate. They found it in Senator Burke and only a few days after he had been defeated for renomination back home. The Senator says mow that it looked like a lost caus hut he believed in it. As a Wol. Wa _veteran, he believed iy defense: ) 1 This is the U. S. embassy Marie Pouliot of Hamilton, t., got a job at a filling sta- tion because the proprigtor couldn’t keep men on the job. They were joining the army fast as they learned the work. in London in ‘London, which was reported’ endan- gered by a delayed action bomb dropped in'or near the grounds by a German raider. The embassy, which is located at ritzy Gros- _venar Gardens, is the home of.U,' S, ambassador Joseph P, Kennedy, NOTICE ¢ No. 76 of the City of Juncau provides that no BOY OR GIRL under the age of 18 years shall be upon the streets, alleys, | or public grounds of the City of Juneau after 9 o'cleck P.M,, after October first until April 30 of each year unless accompanied by some grown person having such child in charge or unless upon some errand by direction of his or her parents or guardian. From now ocn curfew will ring at 9 o'clock and this Ordinance will be strictly en- forced | Dated this 1st day of October,| 1940, (Signed) DAN RALSTON, Chief Police Oct, 2-3-4-5, 1940 adv of | Publ icn dale: NOTICE AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seat.e to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. | - Empire casstieds oring resuits {,, { ' ZENITH RADIOS 1941 Models Now on Display REPAIRS and SERVICE JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE Phone 464 Bill Hixson e S N The Working Man’s Store Phone 519 ‘ SU_?ER MARKET | GASTINEAU | HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Servce Information | PHONE 10 or 20 | T T e PR ) . HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION oo} | ! U. S. Mail Carrier M.S.DART Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneau every Wednesday at 7 a.m, | For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS Special Weckend Trips Arranged For Information—Haugen Transpor- taticn Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau, Phone 123 ATCo. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle | Leaves Seattle S. 8. TONGASS Oct. 1 S. TYEE Oct. 8 . TONGASS ... Oct 15 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION L] D. B. FEMMER AGENT Night 312 N » Phone 114 CANADIAN PACIFI( JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise “ . “Sept. 13, 23—Oct. 4, 16, 27 B frsrrcrsrrirrech oo GEORGE PEARCE as a paid-up subscriber to g The Daily Alaska Empire { is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of thes - CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 lickets to see: "THE BIG GUY" Federal Tax—b6c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! Leave Due Juneau Due Junes, Steamer Seattle Northbound Southboung *BARANOF Sept. 25 Sept. 28 Oct 4 YUKON Sept. 28 Oct 1 Lo/ A § *ALASKA Gct. 2 Oct. 5 Oct. 11 DEPERE Oct. 5 3i—Calls at Yakutat southbound. 1~Oalls at Yakutat northbound *—Connects with S. S, Cordova at Cordova for Seward, Kodiak ang Seldovia. FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICK®T OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES —4 H. O. ADAMS————Agent Alaska Steamship Company N\SERVICE-ON-ALL-ALRSKA*ROUTES" ¢ !} | MARINE AIRWAYS—VU. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 e maem g ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. Al Flngs Operating Own Aeronautical L oid Badio Station KANG m HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER VS | = PHONE 12 H x99 ek [ i 1(1SPORTAHTIUIN WEEKLY SAILINGS—Juneau to Seattle Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juncau Seattle No.Bound So. Bound NORTH COAST Oct. 4 Oct Oct. 10 NORTH SEA Oct. 11 Oct oct. 17 NORTH COAST Qct. 13 Oct Oct. 24 NORTH Oct. 25 Oct. Oct. 31 HENRY GREEN, Agent Phone 109 CITY DOCK . Phore 23 " GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent Phone 18§ /EAR_'ROUND ALASKA SERVICE B PHONES 5%7 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve “‘and Modemize Your Hon.e Under Title I, F. H. A ——w CALIFORNIA GROCERY 487 s TELEPHON FRESH EVERY DAY —— Local, , Home-Grown VEGETABLES i FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY (FEOM OUR OWN FARM) TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY 371 ndow Cleaning | e |