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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JAN: 28, 1941. BEACH SLACKS ! LAWN SLACKS ! Skl TROWSERS ! WOTS GALS COMIN’ To?2 MARINE NEWS| NORTH COAST [srer o] DOCKS HERE FROMSEATTLE Over 12 hours ahead of schedule because of a strong tail wind which veritably blew it up to Juneau from Portland Canal, the steamer North Coast, Captain A. J. Borkland, and Purser Paul E. Richers, docked in Juneau last night at 6 p.m. with 16 passengers from Seattle for Ju- neau As deck load on the vessel, which sailed for Sitka shortly before mid- night, was a large tractor and a power shovel for Siems Drake Puget Sound in Sitka. The construction machinery is to be used on Japon- ski Island for use in building the ka and wayports. Naval Air Station there Naha leaves every Wednesday Passengers arriving in Juneau at 7a. m. for Petersburg, Port were: Ted Leonard, U. S. Gregory Alexander, Kake and way- O. C. Wigmaster, Mr. and Mrs ports William Greig, Emma Crawford, » e o o ¢ « ¢ @ @ & = - | Ragnar Hansen, Fred Omar, W. _ . Wickstrom, P, Fegarola, H. M. Ac- ton, Mrs. E. G. Rude, Joseph Rude, Mrs. Joseph Rude, Donald Rudc TipES TOMORROW | Andrew Rude and Jimmy Rude. i ! The following passengers on the ship when she sailed for Sitka AT | £ Avcson, . Stewart Neely,| gy yide 2:14 am. 167 deet | Hugo F er on, Kenneth Schne- ¢ | Y -~ 3 Low tide—8:03 a.m. 14 feet. ckel, C. D. Swanson, Henry Bahrt i " ” 4 : - High tide—2:05 p.n. 172 feet. R. L 8000 Apen, Voo M| Do e TS S e Beauchamp, Mr. and Mrs, V. A e ) < L A A Soboleff, Amy Jackson, H, E. Green Art Franklin,- Mr. and Mrs.-Ray: ATTENTION EASTERN STAR Okerlund, Michael Okerlund, Wes Stated meeting of Juneau Chap- | Overby, Robert Jernberg, Martin ter No. 7, on January 28th. at 8| Wade, Violet ‘Beck, Winona Jones, pm, Cards and refreshments. { Lillian Martin, Mrs. Tom Sande HELEN WEBSTER, | and infant, Harold Bates, Ronald ady Worthy Matron. Search and A. A. Blando st - .o — NORTHBOUND Baranof scheduled to arrive late Thursday or early Friday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle today. Seattle tomorrow Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle January 31 at 10 am. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle February 1 at 9 am. Tyee scheduled to sail from Seattle February 4. Mount McKinley schdeuled to sail from Seattle February 5 at 9 am Princess Norah scheduled to arrive early tomorrow morn- ing and sails south at 9 am. North Coast scheduled south- bound Thursd afternoon. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every ‘Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- “00 00 c000ec00e00000000000000 00 C EQUAL O MEN I AGREES, SAM'L. WIMMIN GOT NO BLISINESS TRYIN’ T2 BE TH’ HONEST, SUSIE® By CLIFF STERRETT ¥ STERRETT MRS. ROBERT BONNER SUTTINLY; SAM'L * : US WIMMIN SHOULD BE A TRYIN’ T~ GO FORWARD , INSTEAD O’ us a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the and receive 2 tickets to see: “EDISON THE MAN" Federal Tax—5¢ per Persom WATCH THIS SPACE Shfls Iieudion ol Nati onsulalflj Your Name May Appear! tate—but then know that. CAPITOL THEATRE i I guess you | Frank Lloyd Wright—Of course| any history of architecture and | housing from now on is going to | include a big chapter on you and ‘your Imperial Hctel in Tokyo and | your cantilever houses. But did you | know that it probably won't be vey | Jcomplete if it also doesn’t include | something on Indian Head, Md.” i Out there the government is puild- | ing a naval powder factory and | they need 650 homes for workmen | | immediately. So they are making | | it the testing ground for pre-fabri- | | cated houses. Six or seven prefab- | | ricated house companies are going | [to toss up 650 houses (it takes | | about 24 hours to get one up after | | the sections are on the ground).| Leave Northbound Bouthbound | When the construction job is over, | Steamer Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Juneay | the houses will be pulled down and | 3 moved to some other project. No| ~BARANOF 9 P M. Jan. 27 Jan. 30 Feb. 4 more ghost towns for Uncle Sam. ; ALASKA Feb. 1 Feb. 4 Feb. 9 v —— MT. McKINLEY Feb. 5 Feb. 8 Feb. 14 NOTICE OF HEARING ON IINAL} tYUKON Feb. 8 Feb. 11 Feb. 16 REPORT OF EXECUTRIX | |IN THE COMMISSIONER'S| | COURT FOR THE TERRITORY | | OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUM-| BER ONE. | Before FELIX GRAY, Commission- er and Ex-Officio Probate Judge, Precinct. ‘ t—Connects with S. S. CORDOVA at Cordova for Homer and Uzinkie. FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL | Juneau | tnthe maer ot e mae of N HE ALASKA LINE |A. P KASHEVAROFF, Deceased. TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 Notice is hereby given that| | NADJA TRIPLETTE has filed H. O. ADAMS Agent | her final report as executrix of the | estate of A, P. KASHEVAROFF,| | deceased, and that a hearing will | | be held on the same before the | undersigned at Juneau on March | 8th, 1941, at ten o'clock A.M., at | which time and place all persons | | interested in the estate of decea: | may appear and file objections in e writing to such final report anr‘;o-..-m ; 1€Ska NS ER té;mship' Company: VICE-~ON-ALL-ALASKA:ROUTES i ‘mgx?/setnt:m;:rmxeny hand and the| i “ABINE AlnwAYs-—u . s . m A l L |seal of the probate court above 2-Way Radio Communicatior Authorlzed Carrier named at Juneau, Alaska, January| SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Tth, 1941. & FELIX GRAY, SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Commissioner and Ex-Of- i QUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 ficio Probate Judge, Juneau 4 | Precinct. | First publication Jan. 7, 1941. 1 Last publication Jan. 28, 1941. adv. ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. WEHY »surrkgRr wilh your feet? Empire Classifiecs ! Phone 648. Chiropodist Dr. Steves Rumanian Queen Spreads Cheer Harold Sturtevast, 22, xS 'DafiyBread | . At H. Lewis | ' Sixfeen Thousand Loaves | Are Turned Out Every 24 Hours fo Feed Soldiers FORT LEWIS, Wash., Jan. 28— een thousand doaves of bread 'daily is what it takes to feed the hungry mouths of about 22000 soldiers in the vicinity of Fort Lewi and Camp Murray. This will greatiy {increase when the selectees arrive. Bread-making to the twentieth century housewife is no doubt quite a novelty, but with some of their sons it may turn out to be a pro- fession, because a new class of boys Queen Helen of Rumania is shown visiting victims of the recent earthquake in a Bucharest hospital. The quake took the lives of =aany and caused millions of dollars of property damage. who said he was a-sailor aboard the U. S. destroyer Craven, slashes at a swastika flag as it flew from the flagstaff of the German Consulate, nine stories above a San Francisco street. A | huge crowd below watched the proceedings. | "The Laly Alaska Empire guaran- All Planes Operating Own Aeronautioal | tees the largest daily circulation of 2-Way Radio Station KANG PHONE | any Alaska newspaper. Badio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 2712 = ; RO b 11 -power d s preawe i manpover wnt wuce| ML) Excifement mand for bread. I | i ” ” Causedbyan 505" | To the casual thinker baking | bread might not seem to offer a | (Continued from waze One) bright future, but when considera- tion is given the milions of loaves of bread consumed daily throughout | the United States, it takes a lot of | “dough” to satisfy the Americans, | that after you made that money In civilian or military life there |in Wall Street, left the United are opportunities for bakers. In the States, became a citizen of Lich-| tensiein, bought an ectate in Ber-| mlida and sett'ed down to enjoy the rest of yours days . . . that the! United States should plan an air and naval hase on Castle Harbor on land including your 30-odd acres army promotions are possible to the grades of master sergeant, technical sergeant, and staff sergeant. During their sixty days of training the siu- dent cooks report each morning, sive of Wednesdays and Satur- for class room work. The re- | L3 o * ———|| THRIFT CO-OP | Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers | NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 767 ¥ -|~ ALASEA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY L] Sailings from Piler 7 Seattle Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER . SATLI WEEKLY SAL e Jan.30 North 04 Jan.28 s Jan. Coast - g1 Feb. & Fe 1 mainder of their days are spent in |On Long Bird Island? They tell Lanses Northland -J% practical training with organization | me that right now Army en- Beattle i NRY GREEN: Agent messes and in the bakery, where the | Sineers and appraisers are busy fE! Passengers 109 out there doing the preliminary work whigch may lead to condem-' | nation proceedings against your es- never ending, all-important job of producing 16,000 loaves of bread daily goes forward. ' oOSTAL OD -Jan. 28 .Feb. 4 S. S. TONGASS . 8. S. TYEE .. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION ° A AGENT 23 \-‘rel# non® b ol in Uncle Sam’s army from Fort sann“LE and r ABES Lewis, Vancouver Barracks, Fort b | Worden and Fort Stevens have just J“NEA“ To SEATTLE TUESDAY started a sixty-day course at the FRIDAY cooks’ and bakers' school. (Airmail and Express Only) FAIRBANES TO JUNEAU MONDAY, THURS- DAY, SATURDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS [3E5°5°AY FRIDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) Jun- Fai Mc- eau Lanks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ohpir Grath Juneau 8200 149.00 115.00 *151.00 *132.00 *125.00 *120.00 Fairbanks . 82.00 7400 39.00 7600 5600 4800 44.00 *—Via Fairbanks. LESS 10%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—SEATTLE And these boys are going to bake bread in what the army calls “sheat.” Not bed sheets, but great sheets of metal containers in which the loaves are placed before being shoved into the battery of great ovens, Ask any soldier, and see if he doesn't say that the army is famous for its bread; bread that is inviting and delicious and which makes rich light brown crisp toast Three shifts of bakers work about twenty-four hours each day supply- ing the demand, which is soon going to double as thousands of selectes begin to arrive here for their of active milit training. The bakery isn't large enough and military authorities at Fort Lewis know it. As a result plans are now | underway for the early construction of an enlarged bakery You ask: “Just how big is an loaf of bread?” Piping hot from the oven, it is about nine inches long and | inches square, weighing two pound |Pies and cakes are something un- four "heard of in the bakery at this time. { When Emmer R THom CALIFORNIA,RETIRED, HE RECEIVED A PLAQUE ® prawd 174 3’,}%‘ g, U. 5. Pal. Offico 334-566, May 5, 1936, by There is one country which h for adhesive postage stamps._ serve to carry letters outside its ow) of the few cewntrics not by MAIL CARRIER OF GLENDALE, APPRECIATION FROM E|GHTY/ OF HIS FORMER PATRONS! AER—— as.a postal system sufficiently devgloped 10 be used, but whose stamps will not n borders. This is Thibet. It is one clonging to the International Postal Uniogy COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials 'PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. Night 313 D e S ¢ Phone 114 { L CANADIAN PACTEIC WAS PROMPTLY RECEIVED// CALIFORNIA GROCERY and ... MEAT MARKET 487 TELEPHON! ~—3m TRY O JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE BOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah January 28 UR PENGUIN FRESH FROZEN FOODS Practically Every Kind on the Market TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY AS, Some sTaMPS, |SSUED BY THIBET, ARE FOR HOME OF 46 Window Cleaning PHONE 485