The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 2, 1940, Page 6

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~ BRINGING UP FATHER m ’l 7 { N BY GOLLY-I GUESS 'M LICKED -ME NERVE TONIC IS ALL GONE AN'HERE COMES MAGGIE AN’ DALGHTER - | KNOW THEY ARE GOING TO MAKE A TOLICH-I'LL PRETEND I'M ASLEEP- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, NOV. 2, 1940. OH!MY-YES -HED BE CROSS AS A BEAR-I CAN"T UNDERSTAND HIM LATELY- I'M ACTUALLY AFRAID OF HIM- WE HAD BETTER GET OUT OF HIS ROOM BEFORE Hg DOES WAKE JUST HAVE TO WINDOW-SHOP- WELL-| GUESS WE'L L MRS. E. 0. DECKER as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to prvscht this coupon this evening at the box office of the —- CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: “CAREER" Federal Tax—5¢ per Person i . o WELL - GOT OUT OF THAT- WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! ol et e S, - S| Pt B ) MARINE NEWS 19 ARRIVE; || STEAMER MOVEMENTS b4 NORTHBOUND L e Mount McKinley in port and is ® o ® scheduled to sail for west- ® . ward at 3 o'cleck this after- o e noon . ® Tongass due Monday a. m ° ® Princess Norah scheduled to ® . rive Monday afterncen or e ® cvenin . 2 ® North Coast due Tuesday . Nineteen passengers came in on| g sy v o S oo s the steamer Denali from the West-| o * gopprna St ivGs o ward last night and 32 passen-|e mouo soheduled to sall from e g's embarked here for points o seatt] Nov. 5 at = & outh e Denali schedulzd to <ail from o Arrivals from Seward were Doug-| ¢ ‘seattle November 6 at 9 a. ® las Colp, L. A. Dauphiny, E. 8.|¢ m o Donovan. A, W. Douglas, Willlam ¢ North Sea scheduled to sail ® June, Lee Lawscn, Dewey Lons, e from Seattle November 8 at ® John MecLaughlin, L. F. Taylo:, ¢ i . Alfred Beyer, Joe Donohue, Hans! ¢ 'HBOUND BAILY . Gunderson, Willam Hyder, Danicl| e cheduled southbound » Jame M. E. Schoener ° t Monday b From Hoonah—Luella King, Mrs. @ LOCAL SAILINEGS . John Marvin, John Marvin, Charlic e Estebeth scheduled to sail every ® Sumdum ® Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- e £ ng to Seattle e ka and wayporis. . Hayden, Mrs B ® Dart leaves cvery Wednesday @ 5 Mrs. W Mr ® at7a.m. for Petersburg, Port e Robert [ r. ® Alexander, Kake and way- ® and Mrs, Edwin Kraft, Adelenc @ ports . Stone hell Simn - PLE i el e i s Bl S, BT B e 1wettker F P. Bonnell, Mr oo M. D. Pearl, Janet Kraft, Marian PLANE MOVEMENTS Kraft, W. Byington, L, Aarbu E. Kremling, A. H. K | R e £ TSI, gar Beatty, H. C M. o Alaska Clipper scheduled to ® i Eustus, John Charest, Troy Nichols,|o jeave Seattle Monday morn- ® Louis Croci, Robert McCullough,ie jng for Juneau and return- e Magnus N Marie B. McFarland. ¢ jng south Tuesday morn- e Mrs. M. Coyne e ing from Auk Bay. Mail ® To Ketchikan -A . closes at 5 a. m. Tuesday . McCann, Mrs ® PAA Elect scheduled south e e from Fairbanks today. . ® Planes scheduled to fly every e (oMB'NA"oN (OAST e morning at 9 o'clock for Sitka, ® . weather permitting: . GUARD, LIGHTHOUSE « « « c o e oo eevwee CUTTER IS ORDERED e ) Al e Bids will be opened in Washingt Tipes TomorrROW ’ Nevember T construe O | Y L ey o ot a specially designed vessel wvhicl — will be equipped both as a Coast (Sun Time) Guard cutter and a lighthouse ten-, High tide—3:15 am., 16.7 feet. der. It will be the first craft of it Low tide—8:57 am. 24 feet type in the United States, is com- High tide—3:03 p.m. 18.0 feet bination facilities alting from Low tide—9:35 p.m., -1.4 feet. the recent cons on of the R Coast Guard and Lighthouse Ser- TIDES MONDAY vice. High tide—4:08 a.m, 15.7 feet. i The new v 1, to be called the Low tide—9:49 am., 3.6 fect a Cactus, will carry two machine guns High tide—3:53 p.m. 165 feet E . and an ice-breaker bow. Seailie Low tide—10:27 p.m. 01 feet. Y shipbuilding companies have receiv - I ed specifications for the vessel. P - Trevor Davis to Show : Juneau Clothing Store Slides ai Evenservice MEN'S and LADIES’ 2 READY-TO-WEAR Davis will Trevor show colored o 338 So. Franklin slides of Juneau and vicinity, the iy o, Mendenhall Glacier country and 4 i scenes taken on a trip between here ' r————A0d Sitka, at the Evenservice to- ! morrow evening at 7:30 o'cleck at IT COSTS SO LITTLE 8 i T St A Lo ; TO DRESS SMARTLY the Northern Light Presbyteria a AT Church Congregational singing of favor- - . ite hymns will also be held. : DEVLIN'S el ke i i ‘ Empire ciassifieds biing resulta g i ! SCHEDULE and FARES 4 z 5o L Tuesday i Juneau fo Fairbanks and Seattle B Monday, Thurs- a . Monday, Thurs: | Fairbanks o Juneau o etietd ! M onday i Seattle fo Juneau k- G i i il 3 Jun- Se- Fair- eaw attle banks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ophir McGrath Juneau 0500 K200 11900 11500 £I50L00 13200 $125.00 $120.00 Seattle 95.00 170.00 230,00 202 £217.00 2210.00 £207.00 Fairbanks 00 LESS 10%FOR ROU 2—Via Fairbanks. Passengers — Airmail — Air Express Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. Pan American Airways System « TRAFFIC OFFICE L. A. DELEBECQUE District Sales Manager 135 So. Franklin St. PAN AMERICAN ATRWAYS [ s PHONE 100"~ 13-4TH AVE—SEATTLE e S B S et P. J. MULLEN UCCUMBS AT HOSPITAL HERE . Well Known Jfineau Man Passes Away. at St. Ann’s This Morning 3, Alaska Juncau pasied away this Ann Hospital W he had boen a'patient sirtee October 27 Born I 13, 1835, at Ban- gor, Maine > to Alaska dur- ing the G 1. After o Interior to I ¢ Bay in 1914 chagof in 1917, wherc ployed: at mili work ssidés his' wif<'he is survived daughter of A Mullent, M A Penney' of Seatile, who h becn - visitmg i Junzau for th wo wel 1 th eral arrangcien Many Planning To Attend Shrine Dance Tonight The first Shrine dance of the sea- son will be held this cvening in the ballrcom of the Scottish Ritc Temple, with dancing from 10 to 1 o'clock Music will be provided by We Barrett and his orchestra and re- freshments will be in charze of Mrs. Katherine Hcoker. The dante is invitational and 2 number of informal parties have been planned to proceed tne aisu HOYSE LEADER_Rep. | John W. McCormack ‘{above) of Massachusetts has been elected House majority leader by a Democratic caucus. He succeeds Sam Rayburn, new Speaker, The waly AIASKx cnpire has the | largest paid circulation of any Al 1ska newspaper )TICE OF HEARING ON FINAL | ACCOUNT AND REPORT AND PETITION FOR DISTRIBUTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on October 7th, 1940, JOHN CURRIER. as administrator of the estate of THOMAS COX, deceased, made and filed in the above-entitled | Court at Juneau. Alaska. his Final| ' Account and Report and Petition for | Distribution, and that on said day the sajd Court entered its order di- recting that a hearing be had' upon said Final Account and Report and Petition for Distribution before it " on Saturday, December 21, 1940, at 10:00 o'clock A. M., at the office of ' the said United States Commission- er, in the Federal-Territorial Build- ing, in Juneau Precinct, Territory of ' then and there appear and make F Alacka, and requiring all persons to their obfections. if any, thereto and to the settlement thereof and to the final distribution of the assets of this estate, share and share alike, to the surviving children of de- ceased, namely: Margaret Cox Reed- er, Thomas Cox. and Frank Cox. FELIX GRAY, U. S. Commissioner and Ex-Officio Probate Judge for Juneau Commis- sioner’s Precinet, Territory of Al- publication, Oct. 19, 1940, ast publication, Nov. 9, 1940, V India iy SOrTow 19, \ letter 15 Ren 1oy #%. Subsequently 18, Distar 49. Rich nutlike und 3. Mint camphor 4. Diminished 5. South Amerl- can Indians wless crowd 1-dried brick 3. Cell phe 9 Means ¢ portation 10. Myihical Swain 3. One who does 1 of striped tton fabric Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal. Nov. 2—It may sound a little wacky, but T've just taiked to an or rejoicing over a failure. “If T had been a success in that,” he fairly gloated, “today I'd be back in New York, maybe on the stage, maybe just look- inz fer a job. Instead I'm here and The actor wa liam Gargan, redheaded con of Brooklyn at s a picture called “Rain rd esome ten years ago and still a bit of a headache to Je wiord, its star, as well t as his 10 years L picture aseigr nent. after “Rain” pitter-pat- tening tunc the box cffice. Gargan is here “They Knew What They Wanted,” even has landed him two fat jobs with more st is “Cheers for Miss Bishop,” in which he's oppe nswer to Helen Hayes, our Martha Scott To be cast in movie with he today like hitting the jackpot. ‘When a leading man says “Great Scott!” he’s thinking of Martha. as to Gargan, who ¢ v much here in before its general rele The f seree in the cifing “When T came but to make ‘Rain’ I knew everything,” says Bill C an. “T cculd heve told everybody in Hollywood how to make pictures. Maybe I did. But if ‘Rain’ had been a hit, 1'll et it would have gone straizht to my head and there'd have been no living with me. “Fortunately for me, Rain’ died. It collapsed and I stumbled with it. So I had to de it the hard way. You know how many pictures I've worked in since then? Exactly 66 good., indifferent, B's and A-minuses, and some C's and Z’s too. If handing out credit to others for his own good fortune is a clear sign of being able to “take it.” Gargan can. He tosses PERCY’S CAFE e bad, STOP AT PERCY'S CAFE Breakfast, Dinner or Light Lunches * DELICIOUS FOOD ® FOUNTAIN SERVICE © REFRESHMENTS his own work ‘i “They Knew What Th “There,” the bouquets for Wanted” into the lap of Garson Kanin, the director. reports’ Bill Gargan, “is a sweet guy, and a smart one.” But a better sign of a level-headed Gargan is the fellow him- are uncertain, even after seeing their pictures, Bil, after seeing it, was self. Most actor: as to what they've done on the screen. He was perplexed. “I can't get any idea,” he said. “Been too close to it all along to get a clear picture how it lodks. Al T can go by is what they tell me and I hope it's true. One thing worried me — the way some peoplé laughed during that ‘love scene I had with Carole Lombard. My wife tells me it was just kid who laughed, and not to mind ‘em. You think so too? I hope it's true. I don't believe Eill realized it, but this picture does for him what has already been done for few others, mainly Gable. In “Thev Knew What They Wanted” he steals his best pal's girl. What they've given him that he did’t have before is MENACE. They have hung a danger, sign in his eye, so that it lights the otherwise affable and matter-of-fact approach. There’s something about that mixture that gets a ladies’ matinec, or times have changed since King Gable took the threne. In “A Free Soul” it ‘gave Gable a city-slick character and tacked signs all over him reading more than uncertain at '10:00 a.m., paid circulation. P e ) NOTICE IN THE COMMISSIONER'S COURT FOR THE TERRITORY kB OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUM- 'A a_ BER ONE. B Before FELIX GRAY, Commission- 7 1 er and ex-officio Probaie Court, . Juneau Precinct ' In-the Matter of the Administra- tion of the Estate of Fred Eng Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that' a hearing will be held before the undersigned Probate Judge 'on the 12th day of Novémber, 1940, | in the office of t United States Commissioner - ex-officio” Probate Court for J neau, Alaska, Commissioner’s ' Pro- 1ef, upon the petition of Gordon Bliaince }*‘uve Due Juneau l.)m; Juneay i Gray of Doug Alaska, for his| | St Seattle Northbound Southbound appointment administrator of 4 s Oct. 26 Oct. 29 Nov. 3 te estate of Fred Engel, decedsed, MT. MCKINLEY Oct. 30 Nov. 2 Nov. 9 and for the issuance of letters cf ALEUTIAN Nov. 2 Nov. 5 Nov. 10 administration to the said Gordon LANANA Nov. 5 Nov. 12 Gray. DENALI Nov. 6 Nov. 9 Nov. 13 All persons interested are hereby| YUKON Nov. 9 Nov. 12 Nov. 16 required to appear and show cause, MT. McKINLEY Nov. 13 Nov. 16 Nov. 21 at said tim they have, w and place, if any said petition shoul Connects with S. . Cordova at Cordova for Latouche, Seward, Women'’s Bay, Kodiak and Seldovia not be granted as prayed for. i—Connects with S. 5. Cordova at-Cordova for Homer and Uzinki, Witness my hand ' seal at Juncau, Ala FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING FORTS day of October, 1940. FELIX GRAY, U. 8. Commissioner officio Probate Judge for Juneau, Alaska, Juneau Cemmissioner’s Precinct. Date first publication, Oct. 31, 1940, Date last publication, Nov. 11, 1910, adv. OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LIN TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. O. ADAMS— Agent and ex- Subscrine Empire w ine 2ailly Alasks the paper witr: the larges e s e - -t 5 GASTINEAU || MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL ! HO 2-Way Radiv Communicatior Authotized Tarrier Every comfort made for our guests SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Air Servce In{ormation SEAPLANE OHARTER SEKVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA PHONE 10 or 20 | HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 e e S R HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION 00.‘ B e i U. S. Mail Carrier ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. i AR B Operating Own Aeronautioal M . S . n A R T way Radio Station KANG PHONE Leaves Faery Siip, Jukenn Badio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 > Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER every Wednesday at 7 a.m. For PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS Special Weekend Trips Arranged For Intormation—Haugen Transpor- | tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau, | Phone 123 NORTHLANDJ TRA;NSPOR ATION COMPANY i 5 __ juneau to JLINGS . WEEKLY SATE itie > ¥ y ‘,u“,_LV--’““- Leave Al E A C“o Seattle N. B | [ .31 | ALASKA TRANSPORTATION North oct. 25 Oct- 20 Ock } COMPANY sea ! g North . 1 Nov. 5 . . Crasy. 20V R .12 Nov.14 Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle > Nm:‘\: Nov. 8 NOV o Leaves se : Agent H Seattle | | : JENRY GREEN. Mo 1o S. 8. TYEE ..............NOV. ' § Freight Phone L §. S. TONGASS .........Nov. 12 S. S. TYEE Nov. 19 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION { o ———————————— D. B. FEMMER COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY AGENT , OF ALASKA Phone 114 Night 312 D v | Lumher and Building Materials PHONES 587 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modemize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. CANADIAN BYCTELC CALIFORNIA GROCERY and ... MEAT MARKET 487— TELEPHONES ————~—371 FRESH EVERY DAY — Local, Home-Grown VEGETABLES FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY (FROM OUR OWN FARM) TELEPHONE Window Cleaning | PHONE 485 UNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE' SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah- November 6—17—37 Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: TRANSCONTINENTAL TRANS-ATLANTIO

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