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THE DA!L‘) ALASKA EMPIRE, FR[BAY DEC.- 6, 1940: [/ I'M BUYING A L ILOVE A | ( eiFT ForR 2 MOTHE - POTTED PLANT. | ~{ BIRTHDAY " | | E?;aie;vz:;m . HROUND o F h ceheduled to e arrive at 5:30 c'clock this e afterncon, docking at the ° Wharf . due Tiesday . SCHEDULED SAILINGS ® Tyee scheduled to sail from e Seattie late today disem- ® Yukon scheduled to sail from Thirty-eight passengers barked today from the stcamer ® Seaitle 9 a. m. tomorrow Mount McKinley, coming in from ® Tongass scheduled to sail from S Weabwird Cite mons. Seattle December 10 at 9 a From Seward passengers wore i, William Austin, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Mount McKinley scheduled to Dorsh, Vern Gorsline, Virginia &l from Seattle December Lechlet, N, A. Lonseth, Conrad Luft, LAl ae North Coast scheduled to sail Frances Mackey, Mrs. Ida Niemi, J from Secattle December 13 at Earle Monagle, Thomas Morgan, R J. Bruce, James Carney, Jim Fry b s ol $ Dana Jewell, Robert Mackay, An-|® SOUTHBOUND BAILINGS Baranof scheduled southbound 'rew Pearson, S. Scott, Fred Spauld- 3 unday $000c000c0rss0cs00c0s0c0rcsretsnr ng, Frank Suggitt, Herbert Turner rom Yakutat — Mr. and Mrs LOOAY: BAIMNGS M. J. Baas, Sidney Banks, Fred Estebeth scheduled to sail every Brakke, Doris Clark, Mr. and Mrs Wedneaday at 6 p. m. for Sit- o, F. A. Clark, John Kobek, Eli Tan- ks pand WS pcIes) ner, H. M. Tullis J. M. Atrington.|® Naha leaves every Wednesday From Haines—Mrs. J. E. Gra- at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Port ham, Victor Powers, Joe Thomas. &oxander, TEake pudl- vy From Skagway—B. F. Kane, Mr POFSS. and Mrs. F. M. Kardanoff ot o A B Sailing to Sealtle were: S. O EFT Schmidt, Mrs. T. Vernon, Hans Jen- | _ %0, A, Ziber, Fred Patrick, Mrs,| | Tines ToMORROW H. L. McDonald, S. Jeffries and Mrs. McDonald, J wife, Carl Sirass, Carl Dahl, L Glaaman, W. Covey Andy Kun Sun Time) Nick Barbeu, Ben Wilson, H. R.. Low tide—0 am, 37 feet Ray, C. Nerland, J. C. Smith, D. Mc- High tide—7:22 am, 143 feet Donald, Audrey Loftus, Sam Baker, Low tide—1:40 p.m, 49 feet Mary Brown, N. Snyder, W. E. Carl High tide—7:38 p.m, 120 feet ack Henderson, B. Gomez, J -— rington, Col. Carl Hoag, Bert Faulkner and Carl Hall - NORAHHAS SEARCH FOR LOST DOUGLAS INDIAN BOY ABANDONED pEs R gx'* } r@ Fourth Roat ?.’,eports No ) - Do t } Cropl hoa 11 Y hie NG wward v \ > p bin al Hilda curred b, n er nter -/ ) ; 1 p ; 1 : last Salurday hound 1 hunyry for several da 5 .li.\ z Shertr failed to return. Jan ./ ACK manag o get back to Douglas Conrad Luft, who has been to search. He and a the westward all summer, is back of Shartridee made the first He came in on the Mc- altempt tinard cutter Haida and the North Light searched unsuc- ully Later a launch from the Klnlm —_————— ; | boat Empire Classifieds Pay! | ce SCHEDULE and FARES TUESDAY JUNEAU TO SEATTLE FRIDAY (Airmail and Express Only) MONDAY, THU FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU YQ)PAY, Tauss (Pasgsengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS UYESPAY FRI (Pagsengers—Airmail and Express) o Jun- Fair- Mc- eau Janks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ohpir Grath Juneau 8200 149.00 11500 *151.00 *132.00 *125.00 *120.00 Fairbanks 2,00 7400 3900 7600 5600 48.00 44.00 *—Via Fairbanks, % 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 PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324 -4TH AVE.—SFATTLE 135 So. Franklin St. PHONE 106 | thetic to the British, and capab!’ JDOLLAQS ONE. PLEASE DELIVER. BUT MOTHER'S |[FOR THE IT ON MY MOTHER'S BIRTHDAY IS \ |86 onE L BIRTHDAY — HERE'S FOUR MONTHS FROM ) |AND Two L ( THE ADDRESS AND-- TOMORROW / AN |BITS FOR , | [THE SMALL |PLANT? - ( TLL TAKE THE LITTLE By CLIFF STERRETT I KNOW ~ o R Here is the first built at thue Douglas plant at Struggle for Oil Chief Phase Now group of the new type Douglas Santa Monica, Cal, Government Junk | The bombers are shown at the Santa Monica airport, poised for a flight to New York. A bombers for sale to Great cleaned out until the property section found that Bureau 1z about 50 tons of vey of Biological sur buyi worse Sio Men Going fo Town OIE w nure a year for its work in mush-|palls turned over to NYA; % The .0 that, obsolete Army parachutes went to G N St : room growing. That ended that. O 3 p (Continued from Page One) | R il ih ) survey gets its the forestry service; confiscated fertilizer for the mere cost of|trucks and automobiles are shuf- (Continued.from Page Ove) Ing’ sohool “ for“hoys | transportation fled around to the various depart- Surplus property recently got a ments at a dizzy rate other 15 million barrels from shale TO NYA SCHOOLS $28,000 replica of the 93-dial clock! And every year now, the Inter- and coal. But that's much less opeolete airpanes and mdtors|in Liers, Belgium, It came through national Boundary Commissiongels than half enough ofl for a Year rci tho Army and Navy have the Customs Department, as many 8bout 100000 burlap sacks to keep 9 jaxinggriare peon transferred o the. National|of these things do. The clock'the Rio Grande from: shilSie i The peprest. additional oll’ for the I Administration forraining | now is one of the treasures in the course and giving part of the Unii- AR 36 it el NPT Enst. The Bril- : nal defense. Smithsonian Institution Museum. €d States to Mexico o It's probably the greatest junk fields in Iraq and Iran produce ¢ to 100000000 barrels @ Year iy have been turned over to Y AND NARCOTICS business in the world under forced draft. And that’s just (ne gureau of Indian Affairs all of surplus property’s —— e ~ b what u.»nn,m)v ;.||1(1 Haly oo, were ripped &p and’ catalog for even a few ks would need'in ition to what they have. nade lay suits he chil- » a volume. Thousar of grain: l b C B Hene attempted drive r]‘ ‘. ) and of narcotics and about 100,000 gal- a or amps elng RS g, That could ogen vernment used v i lons of whiskey a year go, to the ’:: the eastern end of the Mc Army and fapm *stables government hospitals and eleemo- Bul" ln Denmaf rTanent - N Next best would be to persuac COPHENHA . Dec. 5. — Den-| i A e TR and get | mulrk has uw»uxlvvn :Il; ~Hn<1 cight {6 %0 thr SR . million kroners for the erection of i o e vt o | | Mg lywood Sights And Sounds | | o o o peonie In view of a well informed ex- | Any youth in pursuit of gainful BRI Gk Nl e | By Robbin Coens | occupation who has been without countr Rus objec | HOLLYWOCD, Cal, Dec. 6.—It was a beautiful idea, and & ‘crpplm-mr\nt for 100 days or more the pr ce I or Traq of ful fl but the clever exploitation man who planned it |will be sent to such a ]ahm'_ camp. izt ) | belie oats were fond of weird edibles. He will be fed, clothed and hous- | 1 ecrot £ | It v what b 1 a . this scheme for dra ed, and given pocket money. v jeal- | p ) cof wnna Durbin’s “Spring Parade. D & ¢ | opet equences, you know, feature D and The Lally Alaska Empire guaran. e e : s, AR R oS tees the largest daily circulation of wer. i I « ) marketplace The exploitation man found B MlAS nevare w 14 Ie” fc nna, borrowed Deanna’s peasant costume from il o EpBRRT: the heart § wdio, renied a pedigreed goat (not the trained oue of the ; le. 2 Gk 1 ensconc nem all upon a traveling sound truck, ) g AR L with reeordings of Deant \gs amplified by loudspeaker. 15 b RO «You're right, folks the truck’s barker. “This isnt { LA ol Dean its ju of her songs from the picture t ( to oust in case of i 0 go to the Pay Theatre Lo sce Deanna.” Eicetera A C“, t i 1 o1 , songs. The goat had eaten ¢ ] of the recording. And ALASKA TRANSPORTATION Harddy 1o p \ there wasn't any ant < on the little set they'd COMPANY he Ru buit on ihe truck the goat eaten that. And just before not allow any power and {hey called the whole (hing off, (he goat had started to make a e ;"“‘"_“H“‘!‘V hant Jpe. IR Ry meal ef the sash of Deanna’s costume . Saflings from Pler 7 Seattle My friend, the exploitation man, doesn’t understand it. He Leaves v L knowse as well 25 you co that goats do NOT eat tin cans, for Seattle “,0{‘}1'(', L‘,‘,:\LQ:;‘ ’:mfi:)" 'L;: (u}%fi,‘;;; he's read (Just as you have) that‘it’s just the paste on the label 3 Hemisphere, if not from the Unit 8. 8. Dec, 3 ed States. from the Latin Ameri- ] ) 2l 7e : 3 S. 8. “NGA‘“’ -------- Dec. 10 can producers, sich as Mexico and ' E " (/ ‘ S C A F E Venezuela, That entails an attach & on Gibraltar to open the we [ ] PASSENGERS FREIGHT Axis ships, or a route REFRIGERATION North Africa. S T 0 P i Standing in the way, in cithe event, is the United States, and the AT PERCY'S CAFE 21 American republics, symp: Breakfast, Dinner or Light n_ B, rmfln of intensifying their aid to the ! British Empire All of this adds up to the fa that mighty Russia and the mighiy, United States, both now at lea pon-belligerent, stand in the way of lubrication and power for the Axis war machine, But the Axis must sooner or later seek oil in one divection, or the other. Which .way will it turn? e i LAIBLIN SQUTH Georgs L.“b]lh former Repre- sentative ;mm Nome and W known Seward Peninsula minirz !man, passed through Juneau on the Mount McKinley today, going out for o brief trip. ., | ——— | Ill,"'fi sSoLp MEM’P}IIS Tum--w L. Sump- ‘l.ex city fireman, is no friend of ‘lhe cobbler. He's still wearing ¢ ‘weddma shoes he bought 22 years | 4O, } FOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | MUST SELL furniture, sonable, complete furniture | livipg yoom, bedroom ard ) chen, Phone Red 440. Lunches ® DELICIOUS FOOD ® FOUNTAIN SERVICE ® REFRESHMENTS AGENT Phone 114 " Night 312 B ey that whets their appetites. But here’s his stunt, shot to pieces by a goat. ( ;\N‘\I)lv\AN PACIFIC( There are a couple of headline dancers in “The Road to Zanzibar” that won't see. Whitey Roberts and George Boyce, from vaudeville e there to help LeRoy Prinz work out Gance utines for Bing Crosby and Bob Hope. “The boys work ‘em out,” Prinz explains, “and then Bing and Bob have to try to top ‘em.” you “The Sea Wolf” was Edward for a dramatic What you missed on the set of G. Robinson’s cigar. There just wasn't any — reason. Wolf Larson, in Robinson’s estimate, was “a lost soul, hold- December 8—18 t ing all human beings in contempt, and aware all the time of his Connectinns at Vanchu with Canadian Pacific H own isolation.” And “lost souls,” especially when they ate withoul nerves, don’t =moke ciga: anything else. For the Robinson eigar, when he smokes it, is always @ character touch — reserved for his liard-bitten men who use it has a means of expressing jerky nerves “A cigar 128 a chavacter secms to need or enjoy it. w-n would § , or is no good,” says Director Michael Curtiz, “un- | The only thing Wolf | | b o] 2 | surplus synary institutions; 80,000 packs of customs-forfeited wheat straw cig- was arette papers went to Federal pris- ons where the boys delight in roll- e 0 cartons of tea- M. B. COOK as a paid. up subscriber to foreer e Baily Alaska Empire i« invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office the — ——— of CAPITOL THEATRE ' and receive 2 tickets (o see: H ”, I 4 1 CONVICTED WOMAR" Federal Tax—5¢ per Person H | ) WATCH THIS SPACE 1 Your Name May Appear! 8| ¢ ] i i Leave Northbaund Bouthbound Steamer eattle Arvive Juneau Leave Juneay McKINLEY Wednesday Nov. 27 Nov. 30 Dec. 6 BARANOF Nov. 30 Dec. 3 Dec. 8 8 YUKON ..Dec. 17 Dec. 10 Dec. 15 : MOSINLEY Dec. 11 Dec. 14 Dec. 20 4 BARANOF ..Dec. 14 Dec. 17 Dec. 22 Connects with S. Peninsula Points. S. LAKINA for Kodiak and Alaska FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE-2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. O. ADAMS————— Agent i ‘_r Alaska Steamship Company N\SERVICE-ON‘RLL-RALRSKRAR-ROUTES L e | MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communicatior Author 'zed Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 P P e . b, . S S i S 300 e - 73 ALASKA AIR TBANSPOBT Inc. ? s 7 Al Planes i Operating Own Aeronautical V, ‘ iy Radlo Station KANG PHONE | Bedio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU s12 i Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER | r————{ o T NORTHLAND TRAN SPORTATION COMPANY -+ SMART WHITE SHIPS - - - | P e R e e ' COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY 1 OF ALASEA Lumber and Building Haterials f PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To !mprove and Modemni%e Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. CALIFORNIA GROCERY i and ... MEAT MARKET ’ 487. TELEPHONES ~—371 i FRESH EVERY DAY — Local, Home-Grown VEGETABLES | FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY 1 (FROM OUR OWN FARM) TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY Window blecming PHONE 485