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THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 26, 1940. POLLY AND HER PALS WHY TELL ME ABOUT LUDWIG MYHRE as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the — —_— L[ To BE FrANK, SAMUEL , THAT NEVER OCCURRED TOME. 4. o YUH KNOWS RIGHT WELL A SHIRTS ESS WHEN TH’ COLLAR'S IN SECH CONDITION 7 — ~—— THEN, DARLING, THERE'S NO REASCN WHY YOuU SHOULDN'T PLAY WITH THE REST OF THE ANSEL / You SHIRT, TOO! ; 06N o YUKONIN PORT; 27 DISEMBARK steamer Yukon brought 27 here this morning from Seattle and Southeast Alaska ports Skippering the Yukon is Capt. O C. Anderson, and Purser is Dave Doran, both of whom have gone over to the Yukon with a larce art of the crew from the Alask From Seattle passenge neau were Donald Ba Boyle, Miss G. Chinnelli, Mrs L. Fereuson. R, C. Haydon Hillmann, Mr. and Mrs Jones, Elizabeth Linna, Trma na, C. C. Rulaford Reuben bi The passen, Patt w. Lin- Rob- ard From honey, J W Mr From O. Bratt Lila Marti From F g Powers, Wickes, C: Heintzleman, E. D ailing to Seward th were George Lang, Steve W ald Dodge, James Kane, For Valdez—F. A, Iv For Cordova—J. Mus e 10 ARRIVE, NORTH SEA Ketchikan—William Ma- Barseth, A. Severs, T. G and Mrs. William Grant Wrangell-Mr, and Mr: Mrs. M. L. Miles, Miss Paul Senior, Saison afternoon wrd, Ger G. Kezak sON rio. Tveten B F Ten passengers arrived here on the steamer North from Seat- tle and Southeast Alaska ports this morning and the vessel was booked to sail for Sitka at 7 this evening Arrival € Judge William A Mrs. K. Lour- Henry Littl field Moorst, Mzs. and Oscar Capt ATRMAIL ENVELOPES, showiny &ir route from Seattie ic Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. ady GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Servce Information PHONE 10 or 20 e s | Juneau Clothing Store| | MEN'S and LADIES’ READY-TO-WEAR 336 So. Franklin SCHEDULE JUNEAU TO SEATTLE MARINE NEWS emergency ‘ Ngus_ prill A}Iong E_ngiish (hgnnel (oqmsl_‘ r - STEAMER MOVEMENTS NORTHBOUND Nerth Sea in port and sched- uled to sail for Sitka at 7 oclock this evening SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tongass cheduled to sail from Seattie today Mount McKinley scheduled sail from Seattle at 9 a tomorrow North Coast scheduled to from Seattle November 29 10 a. m. Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle November 30 at 9 a m Tyee scheduled to sail from Seattle December 3 at 9a. m SOUTHBOUND BAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to rive tomorrow morming at 5 o'clock and sails south one hour late Yukon scheduled Sunday LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sall every Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 7 a. m. for Petershurg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports. e ceo0 00000 to m il southbound rTIDES TomoRrRROW -‘ (Sun Time) 4:41 16 feet 19.2 feet -24 feet 188 fee am ide—10:5 tide—5:28 p.n 11:46 pm - MARSHAL O'LEARY VISITS EN ROUTE Low High tide T0 FORTUNA LEDGE Christian J. O'Leary, Second Di- Marshal lower S, Ledge vision U Fortuna Deputy on the while the Yukon was in. port. O'Leary has been on vacation th last two months‘in Seattle., He i - - coMmP. Y CU%?. MELON The Trading Unicn of Peters burg paid a stock dividend of percent last month NEW STATION Glenn H. Neitzert, of the headquarters at Anchorage, gone to Kenai to get work start on a communication station landing - field ST Empire Classifieds Pay! IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO DRESS SMARTLY AT DEVLIN'S and FARES TUESDAY FiBRL DX (Airmail and Express Only) FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU MONDAY. THURS- DAY, SATURDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS TUESDAY YRIDAY (qusenqer%AAmdl and Express) Jun- Fair- eau banks 82.00 Nome F 14900 1 74.00 Juneau Fairbanks . 82.00 —Via Fairbanks #~Via Fairbanks LESS 10%FOR ROUND TRIP. Mc- Ohpir Grath 125.00 *120.00 4800 44.00 Ruby 15.00 39.00 Bethel 151.00 76.00 "lat 132.00 56.00 Passengers — Airmail — Air Express Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. Pan American Airways System TRAFFIC OFFICE L. A. DELEBECQUE District Sales Manager s PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE.-SEATTLE Yu- kon, was a visilor in Juneau today 100 CAB an. 2 41 A G English Cha 1 of Britain marks time. el c vasi German army oceupying the BEER BARREL ROLLED AWAY, GERMAN DOORS Former lahdrc‘;f Foaming Steins Climbing Onto Water Wagon Now BERLIN Germany land of foaming steins, climbing onto the water Nov is siowl wagon ar-beer, becoming dominant in German restaurants, was demanded by Supreme Youth Leader Baldur von Schirach, Labor Leader Robert Ley and Reichs Health Leader Dr. Leonardo Conti . Tt is intended to | | preserve the health of Germany's young men In their appeal to German youth to abstain from alcohol, the leaders often referred to Fuehrer Adolf Hit- ler as a shining example of new German simplicity. Hitler and Ru- S dolf Hess are teetotalers. accompanied north by Mrs, O'Leary and their two children, Richard and Youth was quick to respond. Brew- eries understood tt s of the || times and were equ: tick. They have submitted eight different non- alcoholic brews to the health depart- ment for approval. One brewery claimed a record sale of 387,000 bot- tles of near-beer in one month. The basis of the new brew is bar- le cept in one case, in which St -beet chips are used. Officials say that compared to ordinary beer 5 the quantity of barley used for this new brew is considerably less, and | this will result in a saving of raw materials The new brew has all the qual- ities of real beer except that its alcoholic content must be below 0.5 per cent. It looks like beer, tastes like beer, foams like beer and is wholesome, an official description stated. ! S R T Rebekah Roll Call Will Be Tomorrow Rebekahs will meet mrnorrow‘; evening at 8 o'tlock at the Odd Fel- lows Hall for a roll call meeting to which every member on the channel is urged to come. Mrs. Ruth Blake will preside in place of Elsie Blythe. Following the meet- | ing thera will be a social. | ————— TERM, CORDOVA There will be term of Court Cordova early in January for the trial of cases which have ac- cumulated in that district. Among these scheduled to go on are seven ol secretly indicted by the Anchorage grand jury. for alleged larceny, forgery and kidnaping. The latter case is charged Lo persons with holding a man so he could rot give testimony against them. - CHARITY GOAL COURT in Anchorage has set to work v raise a Community Chest fund of $5,000 for the care of emergency relief cases : o - WORKERS' HOLIDAY The workers at the Anchorage air base of which there are up- wards of 2,000 had Thanksgiving ,day off, the first holiday since July 4, illery tractor, its cleated tread g inding through the ies its complement of men and guns through mane According to German censor annel coast and the mon are becoming acquainted with the Japanese Are o HE QST SAID2 i i St nd of the French coast of the ers as’ Germany’s proposed in- aptien, this is a new unit of the crrain. pproved from Germany, wiile since, we have 6,163. Most up received only of the difference was made by trip- Get One Cofion Towel Each Year One) ling our imports from 1.600,000 and getting anoth 000 from China and Switz The accordion and concertina business wasn't so bad for a while, but it's getting worse. Imports of piano accord- ions with less than 120 bass keys Japan to 100,- nd. (Continued from Page by in wems ere: The trade 8,306— but than 7000 Italy of \s reviewed to plied more thesc. d note. before the war most mouth eame from s ihat of the 12,000 accordions with mor¢ In an eizht-month period than 120 bass keys which were im- 1 Wary ported in the eight-month pericd 5,611 That was before Italy was in the war, these It begins.to look as if there i Hollywood Sights And Sounds | By Robbin Cnu————-——-—) HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Nov. 26.—This department (and you might as well know it now) belongs to the Frieda Inescort cult There’s nothing mysterious about it. Our platform is simple as a fan ciub's. Why, we ask, doesn't this actress get better breaks in the A league? “Too intelligent.” is one member’s explanation. Maybe that's right, because besides being a very good actress, and very strik- ing if not beautiful in appearance, she has one of the sharpest minds and most gracious personalities in town. We don't ask that she be starred, for we doubt that she'd like that. We doubt, in fact, that she ca very much, one way or another. Really intelligent people probably don't — especially if they have as many outside interests as Frieda. Here is Frieda on the B's, as she maki another one with John Litel. It's “Father and Son.” a high-grade B — the sort of human story that can be told on a B budget and would be ridiculous as a “colossal.” Frieda plays the mother, John the father, and Billy Dawson (Frieda says he's fine) is the bhoy torn between them. This is Frieda: “John Litel and I were talking about it just this morning — that making quickies is the closest thing to the theatre in the movies. “Everybody on the set is ‘in’ on a quickie, the prop men, ihe clectricians, everybody. That'’s the way it is on the stage. In a big A, unless you're the star, you never get so close to the ERCY’S CAFE [ ] sTOP AT PERCY’S CAFE Breakfast, Dinner or Light Lunches ® DELICIOUS FOOD © FOUNTAIN SERVICE © REFRESHMENTS production. Eve vbody works hard all the time — to finish on schedule, of course because the sooner you finish the sooner you go home. o “you don't get second takes on the stage — and in a quickie the fi takes is usually it, or ought to be. “It's more like stage repertory than anything else. One show this week and something entirely else after that.” Frieda is quite happy when she gets another B. And I know she means it. She's good about the war, too. Although long an American citizen, she is British-born. Her parents live in London now. We were talking of Britain's current stoicism and high morale under bomb fire, and she had an illustration for it: A letter from a 7-year-old girl who said, “the raids are nasty, but we have a nice shelter at school and we're having a party tomorrow.” Frieda little girl in London during the first World War. “Then," she says, thing than America, and Paris was calmer calmest of all were the men in the trenches.” was a “London was much calmer abaut every- than London, and dropped 65 percent in the period ximior over his sup- ponent, Forrest Ttaly also supplied more than 11,000 go' HEARD WHAT q ; good opening in the harmonica and accordion business over here. Medernization - of - Laws Note: The statute books of the United States carry laws forbidding either the photographic reproduction of coins or stamps, except in the case, respectively, of numismatic (coin) and philatelic (stamp) journals. In order to publicize their wares prop- erly, the Treasury Department, on the one hand, and the Postoffice Department on the other ruled that all newspapers are numismatic and | philatelic journals, SRR A, Wins in D f1ssour rapidly | AL Forrest C. Donnell Democratic ~op- Donnell (R.) of Webster Groves, Mo., is the new nor of Missouri. Donnell defeated Lawrence McDaniel of of St. Louis. Buhseribe for The 2mpire | HAUGEN TRANSPORTATION CO. | U. S. Mail Carrier M.S.DART Leaves Ferry Slip, Juneau every Wednesday at 7 a.m. ALEXANDER and WAY.PORTS Special Weekend Trips Arranged For Information—Haugen Transpor- tation Co. Red 611—or Hotel Juneau. | Phone 123 ATCO. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY L] bailings from Pler 7 Seattle Leaves Beattle §. 8. TONGASS . Nov. 26 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION » " D. B. FENMER AGENT Phone 114 PACTFI( ILWAY CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: "IRENE" Federal Tax—5¢ per Person WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! 3 Leave Seattle Nov. 23 Nov. 27 Nov. 30 Dec. 7 Dec. 10 Dec. 11 Dec. 14 ——Connects with S. 5. LAKINA for Kodiak and Alaska Peninsula Points. S. S. TANANA sails from Seattle November 15th, 9:00 P. M., due Juneau November 19th. FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—-2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. O. ADAMS Northbound Arcive Juneau Nov. 26 Nov. 30 Dec. 3 Steamer YUKON McKINLEY BARANOF YUKON McKINLEY Leave Ju; Dec. Dee: Dec Dec Dec. Saturday Wednesday Agent Alaska Steamship \SERU’!CE-ON'RLL:‘RLRSKR'ROUT‘\E»'?' e o MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communicatior Author'zed Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA QUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 Bouthbound eau Company: 6 i | ? e e ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes 2-Way Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER PHONE s12 Equipped NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve .and Modernize Your Homws Under Tite 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 Window Cleaning PHONE