The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 29, 1941, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 29, 1941. REFUSES ME, MAZIES MARINE NEWS Norah Takes STEAMER MOVEMENTS NOBTHBOUND 1 3 rom ere Baranof scheduled to arrive late tomorrow evening or early Fri day morning Y Tongass scheduled to arrive Whistling into Gastineau Chan- Sunday. nel this morning at 8 am., the SCHEDULED SAILINGS Canadian steamer Princess Norah, Northland scheduled to sail Master W. Q. Palmer, Purser E. from Seattle January 31 at Cornelius, was in port for one hour 10 am to take on 13 Juneau passengers Alaska scheduled to sail from e and sail for Vancouver, Seattle February 1 at 9 am. @ Passengers sailing for the South Tyee scheduled to sail from e were Mrs. A, Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Seattle February 4. . H. Bird, R. Wetterner, Harold Zen- Mount McKinley schdeuled to ® ger, P. Chapados, Max Dalganto, R sail from Seattle February 5 S. Taylor, W. Rue, J. D. Thomas, at 9 am N. Harris, E. Fauchan and W. Rude Princess Norah scheduled to e sail from Vancouver Febru- ary 7 at 9 p.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS North Coast scheduled south- bound tomorrow afternoon. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 7a. m. for Petersburg, Port > Tongass Now Northbound v . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SEATTLE, Jan. 29 Steamer Alexander, Kake and way- Tongass sailed for Southeast Alaska ports. ports early this morning. Frank e 2D R0 0P Kogler is the only passenger aboard who is booked for Juneau Officers | Flying fo Kvichak Everyfhinq_PFssible fo Be| (Sun Time) High tide—2:50 a.m., 164 feet. Low tide—8:41 am. 15 feet. High tide—2:41 p.m., 163 feet. Low tide—9:00 _pm, -0.6 feet. Vlslhmly Ior Alaska Flying To Be "Strefched” Starting February i5, Alaska Done fo Salvage Ground- | weuthermen winl cease tantatiaing [fliers with the mrormauon that | 'd U S Al'my IfanSpOl’i visibility is “ten miles and more"” LAl A and will begin giving the actual SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 29.—Brj- | distance visibility., gadier General John C. H. Le,[ Answering a petition of Alaska | Commanding Officer at Fort Mason, | {liers, the U. S. Weather Bureau and Major Robert H. Wylie, both IS making an exception in favor of of the Army Transport Service, will | Alaska, lifting a regulation that fly to Seattle tomorrow on their | Visibility shall be reported only for way to the spot where the trans-|len miles, Meteorologist Howard port Kvichak grounded. The army | Thompson announced. - officers hope to arrange for a Coast | The ten-mile - limitation is all Guard plane to fly them from Seat- | 'ight in the States, where stations tle to the scene of the disaster, 150 | are closer together and contact fly- | Gen. | ing is not so prevalent, but Alaska fliers need additional Lhcy argued successfully. miles north of Prince Rupert. Lee wil] see that everything-possible | is done to salvagc the Lranspmt GMC TRUCKS Compare Them With All Others! PRICE - APPEARANCE - ECONOMY DURABILITY CONNORS MOTOR CoO. PHONE 411 SCHEDULE and FARES JUNEAU TO SEATTLE TUESDAY FRIDAY (Airmail and Express Only) (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS [%ESPAY FRIDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) fmensonremin Jun- Fair- Mec- eau kanks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ohpir Grath Juneau 82.00 149.00 115.00 *151.00 *132.00 *125.00 *120.00 Fairbanks . 82.00 7400 3900 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 135 So. Franklin St. PHONE 106 | TipEs ToMoRRO I information, | By CLIFF STERRETT AT THAT, WOT TH’ HECK SHOULD PLENTY OF OTHERS/ | Sidelighis on the Legislature | | | Senator Hjaumar Nordal: is the Imud member of the family to | serve in the Territorial Legislature. | His father, the late A. J. Nordale, |served in the House, as did his | brether, the late Alton G. Nordale As we've probably said bvrov-c‘ there are but three Republicans lamong ‘he 24 members of the 15th Territorial Legislature. They are Senator Leroy M. Sull ) and Rep. Stuart L. Stangroom of Nome and Rep. Almer J. Peterson of Anchorage. They don’t make any |secret of the fact they are mem- bers of the “loyal (from a naticnal standpoint) opposition.” No «¢ppo- Territori sitien apparent, ing Rcp. Frank H. Whaley has been flying around Northern Alaska for the past seven years, most recently for Wien Alaska Airlines. He has just complet- ed in the States a pilot in- struction rerating course gual- ifying him to tcach fledgling fliers. “If the war situ gets any worse” he “somcbody's going to have to do scmething beside: talk, and I want to be ready to do part of it.” He was a flying instruc- tor for five years before going North. | Senator O. D. Cochran is cne | member of the 15th who has served |in both House and Senate. Another is Ed Coffey, who was in the | House two years ago and who was elected last fall to the full four | year Senate term from the Third | Division. Allen Shattuck was in the House in 1929 at which time he was | Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. He was in the Senate ‘ln 1931 and 1933 and during the |later term was President of the lScnale. Rep. W. Leonard Smith, field en- | gineer at Nome for the U. S. Smelting, Refining and Mining Company, is a two-timer. He rep- resented the Second Division n | the House in 937, skipped the ses- Ision two years ago and now re- appears for the 15th. The biennial reports are be- ginning to pile up on the desks of Legislators. A typical stack at this stage of opera- | tions includes reperts from the Auditor, Insurance Commis- sicner, Territorial Highway En- gineer and Superintendent of Public Werks, Board of Bud- get, Attorney General, Terri- | torial Library and Museum, and | a copy of the Alaska Planning | Ccuncil's new study “Alaska [ Dcvelopment Plan.” | The address of Gov. Ernest Gruening, running upwards of 15,- 1000 words, is by all odds the long- est in the history of the Territory. It is also the first Governor's ad- {dress to be broadcast. That “bar of the Senate” helorc, ‘which delegations from the lower| Ihouse appear to make announce- | ments isn’t what some of the citi- | zenry might have suspected it to| ‘ be. No glassware, no cup mat‘ ‘Lheurs. Just an expression. There | !isn't any bar that we can see.! What actually happens is that the delegation from the House comes| in and sits in three chairs in front of the gallery until it .s |recognized by President Roden | Then the Chairman arises to an- | nounce something that all the Sen- | ators knew already. If the Governor’s address isn't the topic of conversation at the re- | ception at the Governor's House to- | night it won't be because it isn't | uppermost in most minds there Federal and Territorial officials, |who don’t like to be seen dround the Legislative halls for fear some- body will get the idea they are | lobbyists, listened in droves to the |radio broadcast of the Governor's | message today. Paul Satko of Ark fame, sat in |the front row of the House gal- |lery to hear the Governor's mes- | sage this afternoon No prayer was said this afternoon for the joint session. as neither chaplain was present I I CARE? THEY'S Crossword Puzzle [L[E] : B G| ACROSS 34. Dry E L At or from 36 Small cube ] £ A disiance 37 rial 1§ Bl 2 s prugat 1] 12, Bottom of 41. Pigpen [PIR| €] the foot 42. Defled “ 13. Over 43. Exclamation 14. Behold 45. English letter m g 15. Become weR 46. Brave Trojan ENIRIRC] 16, Kingly warrior 17. Preposition 48. Take care [E[D E 18, Dug from the 50 Ascended = earth 51 Artificial R 20. Number waterway ) 22, Dealer in B2. Siberlan river foodstufts 53 Division of & 24. Large streams calyx 25. Artificfal 55. Large stove Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle 6. SymboiTor B8 Pinc Tres 26. Symbol for . Pine tantalum state: abbr, 61 Like L, L W 21. Couch 50. Desire dtrongly 62. Park fn the § Mo 28, Wonder and 60, Anclent £dokite 3 Bosioy fear bacchanalian & Survivor of a 0. Upstarts ery 63. Salamander episor of . Kitchen implement . In bed Record of a ship's voyage Not straight- %u lll//n . Pertinent . Change . Satellites | Lowest of the high tides . Places where trials are held . Seize . Oarsman . Rent asunder . Desiccated Eats away . Serpent . Compound ether . Fashion . Disappear like vapor . Laundry ‘machines . At that time Rouse from sleep . Fragrance . Taunts | Large bundles Animate Grotto Exactly suitable . Lacking helght Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbua Cowms. HOL‘LYVVOOD, Cal., Jan -There was quite a to-do a few years back over Hollywood's “discovery” of the astounding fact that actors and actresses long past the spring chicken stage had boxoffice pull. The “discove was prompted by the renewed career of Marie Dressler, a hopeless has-been who couldn’t get anywhere in Hollywood until Garob talked. The connection was not direct, only if Garbo hadn't talked in “Anna Chri: ' then Marie wouldn't have talked either, and Marie would have had to wait a few years before showing the locals when life really begins if your heart’s in it. About that time Lionel Barrymore, too, was picking up an Oscar, and Will Rogers was giving lessons in the art of being yourself to win friends, and pretty soon it looked as if anybody under 40 would have to be content with playing second fiddle to the oldsters, especially after May Robson, talked into it by her friend Marie, got herself a job with Frank Capra and renewed her career with “Lady for a Day.” 29.- Well, youth finally got a look-in again, aided by the Temple lassie and the Gable kid, and Eollywood got around to noticing how nicely Lana Turner wore sweaters. This put Hollywood ap- proximately back where it was in the beginning and where it had remained until Clara Bow and “It” left the movies al- together. With Mickey Rooney on top of the heap and Judy Garland PERCY’S CAFE [ J STOP AT PERCY’'S CAFE Breakfast. Dinner or Light Lunches ® DELICIOUS FQOD ® FOUNTAIN SERVICE © REFRESHMENTS in the leading ten, and Wallace Beery the only real old-timer in that select group, youth shouldn't have to lose sleep for awhile over another life-begins-at-40 peril. Yet, if you look around the sound stages today, yowll see the brigade of the elders hasn't been entirely washed from the important scene. You'l see, in fact,‘that the Dressler-Rogers-Robson school is still functioning. No boxoffice leads yet — outside of Beery— but they’re a threat Lionel Barrymore is still in there pitching, and his kid brother John (whom it’s now safe to call an ex-romantic) has joined the battle on the side of the characters. May Robson carries on with the verve of an ingenue tackling her first lead. And down “Tobacco Road” yowll find Marjorie Rambeau. If Miss Rambeau had been away somewhere, her “Tugboat Annie” could have been called a comeback. As she hadn't “Tugboat Annie” was merely a starring vehicle deserved because neevr, in a long series of supporting characters, had she failed to make herself memorable. : And some of the younger boys, as if to keep in step, continue to anticipate the years in-theid characters. Claude Rains is no youth, but he’s not the snow-haired eccentric of his Belasco impersonation, nor yet is he the cane-bearing music master of his Lemps. Ditto Walter Brennan. Not to be outdone, Orson Welles, and he only 25, fl hes h)s “Clumn Kane” as a doddermg antiquity. ————————— IN FACT, I ACCEPTED ONE JUST THIS Dr. Langdon Whife To Have Secrefary Miss Ruby Weinman, who has | been employed in the Washington, D. C., Office of Indian Affairs for “ several years, will sail from Seattle February 8 for Juneau. Miss Wein- man will be secretary to Dr. Lang- | don White, replacing Mrs. Dora Sweeney, who resigned recently to accept a position with the Territor- ! ial Departmenb of Health. UNITED STATES DEI’ARTMH\T OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska November 13, 1940 | | Notice is hereby given that Robert | E. Shelley, entryman, together with | his witnesses, Walter Bindseil and | Ethel Bindseil, has made application | | for a homesite, under the act of May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) serial No. 09890, for a tract of land described as Lot B of the Pederson Hill Group of Homesites situated on Glacier Highway, approximately 10 | miles northwest of Juneau, Plat of | | U. s. Survey No. 2386, containing | | 4.64 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- | versely any of the above mentioned | land should file their adverse | in the district land office within the | period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the Statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First puhhcauon, Dec. 18, 1940. Last p\lb]lcafll)n Feb. 12, 1941. ® Perfect comfort ® Splendid food ® Centrally located | Large Rooms ¢ pyery convenience all with and service bath. Special Rates to Permanent Guests ALASKANS LIKE THE Hotel NEW WASHINGTON } THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers | ! {1 l NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 767 | ATCo. | § ALASEA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Sallings from Pier 7 Seattle | Leaves Beattle S. 8. TYEE . ...Feb. 4 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION D. B. FEMMER AGENT Phone 114 Anchorage | Taim | | oo —— FRANK KARABELNIKOFF #s a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire 1s invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: "2 GIRLS ON BROADWAY" Federal Tax—5¢ per Persom WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! w | t—Connects with S. S. CORDOVA at Cordova for Homer and Uzinkie. FOR OTHER INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES—4 H. 0. ADAMS -Agent Ala)sk:i Steamship Conipany \SERV)CE-QN- QLL ALARASKA*ROUTES: Leave Northbound Bouthbound { Steamer. Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Juneay | *BARANOF 9 P M. Jan. 27 Jan. 30 Feb. 4 ALASKA A% Feb. 1 Feb. 4 Feb. 9 MT. McKINLEY Feb. 5 Feb. 8 Feb. 14 | tYUKON % Feb. 8 Feb. 11 Feb. 16 DERBLAY Salls Imm bcattlc Feb. 7 MARINE AIRWAYS—U. §. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communicatior Authotized Carrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SEHVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA 'UARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 NORTHLAND TRA)\N SPORTATION COMPANY | t SATLINGS — Junes® WEEKLY S50 te COLUMBIA :.mm COMPANY Lumber nll lluldmg Materials . PHONES 537 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. CALIFORNIA GROCERY and e+« MEAT MARKET TELEPHONES —~—371 TRY OUR PENGUIN FRESH FROZEN FOODS Practically Every Kind on the Market TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY Window Cleaning PHONE 485 —| ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. All Planes B-Way ow:::: s‘:::om“ PHONE | Badio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 12 ! Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER

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