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PRINGING UP FATHER CANNED SALMON ADVERTISING IS SELLING AGENCY Industry Give}l High Praise for Putting Product Before Public ‘)—Fr‘ll' wing the Canned and warm s, a num- y organizations industry adver- congratulate the on the selling ef- advertising pro- five years. the advertising man- and White Stores, one of the nation’s largest cooperative groups of independent retail grocers SEATTLE. Nov successful cenclusion of the Salmen Industry Summer early Fall drive to promot weather sales of canned s the naticn's retail g the past from work that the done has eve that the almon Industry st three or certainly proven ber to the istry as well as to the retailers salmon 1y there is tremendous com- petition among foods for the con- It is meat versus cer- eals and fish preducts, or it's frest fruits and vegetables versu fruit n egetable Selling Factors pr be home eriodical ad vertising i ¥ her with the importan dietetic value of salmon upon her arrival in ti store through attractive banr#, and displays 3) rewarding the gro- cer for tying up with your pro- gram. The merchandising head of a large wholesale organization sup- plying 16.000 independent retailers in middle western and southern states wrote of the salmon promo- ticnal program: “Of the many co- operative plans of this kind in ex- istence, it has always seemed to us that yours has been one of the very best. It is complete in every way in that it covers wholesale and re- tail outlets, ccnsumers, point of sale display material and general trade promotion Benefits terial IT COSTS 80 TO DRESS nurn.! AT DEVLIN'S | ISTEAMER MOVEMENTS! N'ORT"B()('NI) hr dul to arrive a vhh afternoon Vestward. Should mail aboard arrive at afternoon then Se- to Ju- enroute ve feur day scheduled to 2:30 c’clock this e o Sitka not returning neau Yuken have three day: Tuesday Should ' mail North Sea due Tuesday SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle November 12 Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Novem- ber 12 at 9 p. m. Mount McKinley scheduled to sail from Seattle November 13 at 9 a. m North Coast scheduled to sail from Seattle November 15 at 10 a. m, Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle November 16 at 9 a m SOUTHBOUND BAILINGS Aleutian scheduled to arr southbound at 2 o'clock Sun- day afternoon LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Dart leaves every Wednesday at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports. e e eo0 0000 ) Tipes ToMoRrRCW B due 500000000000 0000000000000000000000006C0E OGS Low Lide am., 36 feet High tide—10:00 a.m 4 feet Low tide—4:14 pm. 28 feet High tide—10:27 p.m., 13.6 feet TIDES MONDAY Low tide—4:16 am. 3.4 feet High tide—10:37 a.m,, 16.1 feet Low tide—4:55 pm., 1.6 feet High tide—11:11 p.m., 14.3 feet. actual selling hzlp of the point of sale material.” Mrs. R. M. Kiefer, secretary,man- ager of the National Association of Retail Grocers declared: “Consum- ers generall; are anxious to know abeut food values and health val- ues of the product, together with new ways of using it, along with suggestions for combination uses of salmon with other foods. “Retail dealers are anxious have the same information to p: to their customers, and they like » have store lay material which hey can feature with displays show- a tie-up with the consumer ad- ertising to I have followed your consumer dvertising, your trade advertising, nd vour promotional work with a great deal of interest, and it seems 1o me there is little we can suggest 1o improve it except ‘more of the same’” >se The Uaily Alasks mmpire has the largest paid circulation of any Al aska newspaper. SCHEDULE Juneau fo Fairbanks and Seattle Fairbanks io Juneau and FARES Tuesday Friday Monday, Thurs- day, Saturday s Monday ealtle fo Juneau Thurdey e ; 7 Jun- Se- Fair- eau attle banks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ophir MecGrath Juneau .. 9500 8200 9.00 115.00 $151.00 #132.00 2123.00 3120.00 Seattle . 95.00 17000 234.00 202.00 $236.00 3217.00 $210.00 3207.00 Fairbanks 82.00 1% 7.0 ulfl 76.00 56.00 18.00 41.00 LESS IO%FOR ROUND TRIP. $—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. " PHONE 108 PAN AMERICAN ATRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE—SEATTLE around a trai the Army Al Cadets in the initial class of U. ing plane for instruction from Lt. R. Corps’ drive to produce more than 7,000 of “the finest combat fliers in the world” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, 5 SATURDAY NOV 9, 1940. Mrs. C. B. Holland Entertains Today Mrs. C. B. Hel Pwelfth Stree hree tables cf brid The {rey, Deen mick, William P. Bl Clark Bassott, Joe Neate and Everett Hamlin 3c Bre Nowe —— e Traveling J. 8. Jef- hn McCor- on, Don Able witt, J. E il came in on the McKinley and'is stopping at the Baranof Ho - Sealed bids will be received by the Office of the Alaska Aeronaut- ics and Communications Commis sion until 11 A.M. November 1940, and then be publicly property Stock Room, used G on the following in the AA&CC neau: 18 only opened located Ju- lobe Power & Light, 2 volt glass jar type bat- and the teries, jar for above one only replacement (Signed) ERNEST GRUENING, Publication dates, 1940. Nov. Goverr 9-15 adv, —————— In these times of uncertainty the Red Cross must b any eventualities e in ready to meet the year to come. Join and keep your Red Cross prepared. NCTICE OF DIS PART 15 NOTICE SOLUTION OF RSHIP HEREBY GIVEN that the partnership heretolore’ ex- isting between Williamson L. Nance and Robert M stores at Juneau, the name of "€ Stoft, conducting under Sitka, Alaska, un(lm the same name and also under the name of “S&N Shoe Store” has been dissolved at the close of business on October 13.! 1940. All assets of the Juneau busi- ness. have son L. Nance, including accounts receivable besn transferred to William- who will from the date aforesaid assume all debts, li- abilities and connection with U ness heretofore partnership; counts receivable aceounts he J of payable in uneau busi-| conducted by all the assets and ac- the the partner- ship at Sitka, Alaska, and the bus- iness theretofore conducied by the partnership . at Sitka wansierred to Robert M. Stoft, who have will hereafter conduct the same; The Sitka October 19, business 1940, be conducted by will after Robert M, Stoft in his own nam>, and the Juneau business by Wil- liamson L. Nance in his name; All accounts payable on account of the Juneaun business will be paid by Williamson L. Nance, and all accounts payable by the Sitka bus- including bcih stores ot , will be assumed and paid |by Robert M. Stoft. Dated October 19th, 1940. WILLIAMSON L. NANCE, ROBERT M. STOFT, | By HELEN STOFT. Attorney-in-Fact His DON'T WORRY- | FIXED YOUR BROTHER CONVINCED HIM TO SELL ME THE HORSE AN' PLOW-SO IT'S ALL Army's West Coast bas * and at| . His native city, been By GEORGE McMANUS T ABOUT -HE JUST PLOWED LIP THE SIDEWALK- g school at Moffet Field, Cal., (second from left). gather M. Wray The school is part of cach year. There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising Hollywood Sights And Sounds Bv Robbin Cooms 1, Nov. 9.—Kurt HOLLYWOOD, Cr Bernhardt is a young man, & young 40, with dark hair and laughing eyes, a sense of humor, and notions about how to make pictures. The laughing dark eyes fit in well with the notions, which in his first two films here he has justified amply. He justified them, that is, in his first “My Love Came Back,” and nobody seems to be worrying about the second, “The Lady With Red Hair.” Nobody except Kurt Bernhardt. “I do not know,” he says of that. “To me, all ‘my pictures are bad unless the preview Nobody really can tell until then.’ To a director who made his reputation abroad in films of realism, it must have been a shock to be handed the seript of “My Love Came Back” when he arrived in Hollywood It was a shock, Bernhardt says, but he was grateful for the chance to do something different. He made of “My Love Came Back” a farce with and swing music, something very different. proves them good terrible classic His approach to jnovie-making is fhrough characters rather than through plot. He would rather have a few good characters to develop than the most intricate plot imaginable. Characters developihg in situations which oppose them fo other char- acters, he feels, work out their own best plots. And despite his European reputation, he likes comedy. He believes the picture he wants to make is a drama good solid stuff — in which natural comedy crops out of the characters. He loathes conven- tional “comedy relief” dragged in mechanically Bernhardt is, an exile from Germany, But he is not PERCY’S CAFE [ ] STOP AT PERCY'S CAFE Breakfast, Dinner or Light Lunches ® DELICIOUS FOOD * FOUNTAIN SERVICE © REFRESHMENTS speaking, a refugee. He had been making movies in Paris and London for seven years when he was brought here. “I left Germany twice in 1933, the second time running,” reports. “The Gestapo .. ." he In the World War, as a boy of 17, he joined the German army. the time he was at the Verdun front, the Armistice came. Worms, was not far from the birthplace of the poet Goethe. Kurt learned by heart a lot of Goethe, Schiiler and Shakespear During a barrage once, he 'memoried ‘Julius Caesar.” Maybe that made him an atcor, for after the war he became one — in the provinces and finally in Berlin. When a movie man asked him if he could make a picture for 5000 marks (around $3.2000 he became a director and spent three times the budget Two of his later pictures were Rebel.” One day, By “The Last Company” and “The after Hitler's rise, Goebbels called movie makers into “conference,” decreeing all pictures were to follow the Nazi party line in the future. The Fuehrer, he said, approved of five classic films as models: a saga of the old Norse gods, “Potemkin,” “Anna Karenina,” The Last Company,” and “The Rebel.” “It is obvious,” Bernhardt quotes Goebbels, “that none of these magnificent films eould have been conceived in the degen- erate brains of Jewish directprs.” Kurt Bernhardt, who has a sense of humor, just: grinned. VOUR AUNT JUST ‘PHONED -YOUR BROTHER JUST BOUGHT A BIGGER PLOW AND IS PUSHING p. 4 'M s Lo NOTICE IN THE COMMISSIONER'S | COURT FOR THE TERRITORY | OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUM-| BER ONE. | Before FELIX GRAY, Commission- ! er and ex-officio Probate Court, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Administm- tion of the Estate of Fred Engcl.‘ Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN; that a hearing will be held beforc| the undersigned Probate Judge on | the 12th day of November, at 10:00 a.m., in the office of the| United States Commissioner and| ex“officio Probate Court for Ju-| neau, Alaska, Commissioner's Pre-| cinct, upon the petition of Gordon Gray of Douglas, Alaska, for his appointment @as administrator of the estate of Fred Engel, decease: and for the issuance of letters administration to the said Gordoa Gray. All persons interested are hereby| required to appear and show cau at said time and place, if any| they have, why said petition should not be granted as prayed for. Witness my hand and official seal at Juneau, Alaska, this 3lst day of October, 1940, FELIX GRAY, U. 8. Commissioner and ex- officio Probate Judge for Juneau, Alaska, Juneau Cemmissioner’s Precinct. Date first publication, Oct, 31, 1949, Date last publication, Nov. 11, 1940,/ ady. Subscrive w ine 1y Alask. - ! Empire--the paper witr. the larges paid circulation. GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Seryce In{formation I PHONE 10 or 20 | AUGEN TEANSPORTATION CO. | U. S. Mail Carrier M.S. DART Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneaa | every Wednesday at 7am. | |Fot PETERSBURG, KAKE, PORT | | ALEXANDER and WAY PORTS | Special Weéekend Trips Arranged For Information—Haugen Transpor- tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Junesu, i Phone 123 | AT | ALASEA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY | . | Sailings from Pler 7 Seatile Leaves Beattle §. 5. TONGASS . Nov. 12 |1 8. 8. TYEE .. .Nov. 19 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION D. B. FEMMER AGENT Night 312.) | Phone 114 JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, | VICTORIA OR SEATTLE | SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS | Princess Norah November 6—17—27 B. L. HOLBROOK as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire i= invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the — —_— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: "FLYING DUECES” Federal Tax—5¢c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! e D i e I e e 1940, > >, Leave DueJuneau Due Juneag p Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound 'MT. McKINLEY Oct. 30 Nov. 2 Nov. 9 ALEUTIAN Nov. 2 Nov. 5 Nov. 10 WANANR Nov. 5 Nov. 12 ; DENALI Nov. 6 Nov. 9 Nov. 13 YUKON Nov. 9 Nov. 12 Nov. 16 MT. McKINLEY Nov. 13 Nov. 16 Nov. 21 —Connects with S. 8. Cordova at Cordova for Latouche, Seward, Women's Bay, Kodiak and Seldovia. f—Connects with S. S. Cordova at Cordova for Homer and Uzir FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICK®T OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. 0. ADAMS———Agent Alaska Steamship Company \SERVICE QN RLL LALASKA*ROUTES - | o e e t MARINE AIRWAYS—VU. S. MAIL 2-Way Radiv Communicatior Authorized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASEA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 . s 51 o s - s e ) P e P ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical 2-Way Radio Station KANG PHONE Badio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER NORTHLAND TRA;NSPOR ATION COMPANY GS — Juncau to LY SAIL‘N Seal Leave Ar.Jun. LvéJ\;;. geattle B SMART WH ITE SHIPS ) ! COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY 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. CALIFORNIA GROCERY and ... MEAT MARKET 487. TELEPHONES —~—371 FRESH EVERY DAY — Local, Home-Grown VEGETABLES FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY (FROM OUR OWN FARM) TELEPHONE 478 - -PROMPT DELIVERY