The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 3, 1941, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, FEB. 3, 1941 WASN'T THAT A WONDERFUL DRESS MRS, SNERTS WORE 2 WHY, IT MADE HER LOOK FIVE YEARS YOUNGER ! A Holden Flies Coast Trips : In two trips to the Coast yester- | day. Pilot Alex Holden took Dr. Sayler and Erma Parr to Hoonah | and returned to Juneau to take Gust Niemi to Tenakee, Mrs. Jack | Kennedy and child and Maurice Powers to Hirst { On his return flight from the Coast three psasengers arrived here from Sitka. They were “Tip” ONeil, G. S. Redman and Russ Clithero. | o On an emergency flight to Tulse- | ¢ quah in the Fokker yesterday morn- | ¢ ing, Shell Simmons carried a load | e of mail to the mining town and flew | o back with an injured miner who was hurt in a small cave-in in a shaft. Mrs. Frank McPherson was also passenger from the Canadian mine, On a second flight on the mine run, Simmons flew in a load of freight. e S | TONGASS OUT WITH THREE FOR SEATTLE ka Transportation Com pany’s el Tongass sailed from i Juneau at 9 a.m. today bound for the South via Sitka with three | Low tide—12:52 p.m. neau passengers booked for Seat-| High tide—6:49 p.m,, tle. | e ‘The Tongass tied up at Femmor's dock at 6 p.m. Sunday and un- “«yr loaded freight including three au- To Head “Y L NORTHBOUND cl aled to arrive at ck tomorrow morn- ing bound west. May have 3% days' mail aboard Northland due sometime tomor- TOW. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Tyee scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow. Mount McKinley schdeuled to sail from Seattle February 5 at 9 am. North Coast scheduled to sail from Seattle February 7 at 10 am. Princess Norah sail from Vancouver ary 7 at 9 p.m. Tengass scheduled to sail from Seattle February 11. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Baranof scheduled southbound late tomorrow or Wednesday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 8 p. m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ' ports. | scheduled to Febru- || Tioes Tom (8un Time) High tide—6:05 a.m., The Al 136 feet 4.0 feet 108 feet tomobiles for the Connor's Motcr Company. After loading lumber at the sawmill dock for Sitka the vessel sailed with the following passengers for Seattle — George i Whitely, Belmondo Shumbata and 7 1 J. H. Duffy o D MUCH MAIL HERE FOR'S.S. BARANOF Mail bound for the States has | been accumulating in the Juneau | Post Office since the sailing of the North Coast last Thursday after- noon. The next southbound boat will be the Baranof due here late ‘Wednesday or early Thursday. The delay of the Alaskan boats and the fact that there was no sailing this | week of the Canadian Pacific has caused one of the longest mail de- lays in recent month. Airmail will go south on the re- turn trip of the Douglas D-C, which left Seattle northbound this fore- noon. Eugene E. Barnett Veteran of 26 years service with the Young Men’s Christian Asso- ciation in China, Eugene E. Bar- nett of White Plains, N. Y., be- comes national leader of the Y. M. C. A. Jan. 1, succeeding John E. Manley. The “Y” claims a membership of 2,000,000 youthse 8 1,200 branches throughout the United States. — e - MRS. McPHERSON VISITS Mrs. Frank McPherson, wife of the manager of Polaris-Taku mine, flew in from Tulsequah yesterday for a few days visit in Juneau, She is at the Baranof, >eeo —— Empire Classifiecs Pay SCHEDULE and FARES JUNEAU TOSEATTLE 1Y%SPAY FRIDAY (Airmail and Express Only) FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU YQYPAY, mums (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS IU%SPAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) | ISTEAMER MOVEMENTSI AND THE PRICE IT MUST HAVE COST--- Sectelary qf» (right), x.ew British Ambassador, a; the Presidential yacht Potomac. SR | G.E Vineent Passes Away ~ In New York Former Pr@ni, Rocke-‘ | feller Foundation, Edu- cafor, Is Dead (Continuea from rage One) Plainfield, N. J., Pingiey's Academy at Elizabeth, N. J., and Yale Col- |lege frem which he received bachelor of arts degree in 1885 In 1885, after a brief e ment in paper work in Nev York City and a tour of Eurcpe and the Orient, he joined the Chau- tauqua Institution as literary edi- tor later, in turn, becoming Vice| President, Principal and Presiden:,| holding the latter post from 1907 |to 1915, and being Honorary Presi- | dent thereafter. | w In Middle West | For 16 ears from 1894 he also| | Was a member of the University of Chicago faculty, serving dean from 1900 to 1911, He received a Ph.D. degree there in 1896. He was president of the University of Min- | nesota from 1911 to 1917. His teach- | ing specialty was sociology. Dr. Vincent's connection with the Rockefeller Foundation came in the midst of the World War when con- ! siderable of the Foundation's efforts — were being diverted to war relief at home and abroad. Under his leadership the Foundation contrib- ,uted several million dollars toward improvement of medical education through appropriations to several schools, including, in 1918, estab- lishment of school cof public health at Johns Hopkins Univer- | sity and it: transfer four laier to the univel H0.6CO for nts appropriations were made i, Columbia and the uni- of Chicago, Iowa, Toronts a bui versite: and Alberta Upcn his retireauent from the Me- Ruby Bethel Flat Ohpir Grath 115.00 *151.00 *132.00 *125.00 *120.00 3900 76.00 5600 4800 44.00 Jun- Fair- eau Lanks Nome 82.00 149.00 74.00 Juneau Fairbanks . 82.00 *—Via Fairbanks, Foundation in 1929 Dr. Vincent, 65, was frequently called to speak ing engagements. His home was at Greenwich, Conn He was married in 1890 to Louisa Palmer, daughter ‘of Henry W. Pal- at 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 1824—4TH AVE—SEATTLE 135 So. Frauklin St. PHONE 108 mer, then Attorney Ceneral Pennsylvania. They had three chil- dren. Dr. Vincent also was a men; the General Educaticn Bo: the International Education Board of the American-Scandinavian foun- dation, a former president of the American Sociological Society and author of two sociological works, one with Albion Woodbury Small The henorary degree of LLD. | was conferred on him by the Uni- | versities of Chicago and Michigan and by Yale, Col. Frank Knox (lcft), Secretary of the Navy, was ov Lord and velt, transferred from the battleship George V and wH 7, MR, SNERTS LOOKED AT LEAS: TEN YEARS [HELP AN | | ALASKAN Telephone 713 or write The Alaska Territorial Employment Service for this qualified worker. Navy Welcomes Lord Halifax SALESMAN—Man, age 26, mar-| ried, high school graduate and two |years of university. Three years’| experience as clerk in men’s cloth- | | ing store. Also has done common | labor and mining. Call for ES 252.| § [ ¥ - 3 ELDRED ROCK VISITOR | Robert M. J. Leeper, lighthouse | | keeper at Eldred Rock, is a Juneau | livisitor registered at the Gastineau | NOTICE IS5 HEREBY GIVEN| that on January 18, 1941, HER- BERT LEE, as administrator of the | | estate of ANNA W. A. HART, de- | ceased, made and filed in the| above-entitled Court at Sitka, Al-l |aska, his Final Account and Re-| | port and Petition for Distribution, |and that on said day the said Court ' | entered its order directing that a hearing be had upon said Final| | Account and Report and l’c'.l'.ionl for Distribution before it on Sat- urday, March 22nd, 1941, at 10:00 o'clock AM., at the office of the said United States Commissioner, deral Building, in Sitka | Territory of Alaska, ‘and/ requiring all persons to then and there appear and make their ob-| jections, if any, thereto, and to. the settlement thereof and to the| final distribution of the assets of this estate, to HATTIE FAULK, the daughter and only surviving heir of Deceased. | WILLIAM W. KNIGHT, | U. S. Commissioner and Ex-Officio Probate Judge at Sitka, Commissioner’s Pre-| cinct, Territory of Alaska. Publication dates, Jan. 20-27, Feh. 3-10, 1941. adv. | rflewing with good will as he welcomed Lord Halifax ashore at the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md., from x, greeted in Chesapeake Bay by President Roose- nd Lady Halif ady Hal e to shore o» the Potonac. On Tour of British Defenses ® Perfect comfort ® Splendid food ® Centrally located ® Every convenience and service Large Rooms | all with bath. | Special Rates to Permanent Guests ALASKANS LIKE THE I NEW WASHINGTON ATCo. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY . Sailings from Pier 7 Seattle Radiophoto Wearing an old naval peajacket and cap, ¥rime Minister Winston Churchill personally shows Harry Hopkins, President Roosevelt’s private envoy to England, how Britain will defend herself in event of invasion. They are shown at a northern naval station. Churchill told ‘Hopkins Britain will win the war if the U. S. provides the help she has promised. PASSENGERS FREIGET REFRIGERATION AG Phone 114 Night 312 i n.n.rslgfitn | ! | vears a gift and CANADIAN PACIFIC JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE BOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah January 28 WINE ON THE WING—Champagne flew high, wide and handsome when Mrs. James V. Forrestal, wife of the navy undersecretary, christened the U.S.S, Vulcan, a $13,997,000 ocean going machine shop for the navy, recently at Camden, N. J. J. P. WILLIAMS as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive 2 tickets to see: "“SUSAN AND GOD” Federal Tax—5¢ per Persom WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! Northbound Botithbound Arrive Juneau Leave Juneau Leave Steamer Seattle *BARANOF ALASKA .. - MT. McKINLEY tYUKON ... 3 Feb. DERBLAY Sails from Seattle Feb. 30 4 8 11 Feb, Feb. Feb. Feb. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. 9 P M. Jan. 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, an N\SERVICE-ON'RLL-ALASKR*ROUTES , There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising CANADIAN PACIFIC MARINE AIRWAYS—U. §. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communicatior Authorized Cuarrier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE C] TER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASEA UARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 ALASKA AIR TBANSPORT, Inc. All Planes 2-Way Badio Equipped Operating Own Aeronautioal | Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER NORTHLAND T A;NSPORT TION COMPANY PHONE 112 p) LINGS — WEEKLY s“g,fl\e Geattle 98 Jan. 30 North Coast - Jan.24 Jan. n.31 Feb: REEN, Agent passengers 109 4 ¥eb. T y Nortnland Ja : AENRY © greight Phove 22 COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA iunbn 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. A CALIFORNIA GROCERY and . . . MEAT MARKET 48 TELEPHONES ~—371 TRY OUR PENGUIN FRESH FROZEN FOODS Practically Every Kind on the Market TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY Window Cleaning PHONE 485

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