Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA-EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 194}. - YUH SHOULD B A NEVER AL A ) ( QUY LIKE THAT GUY DOFOR \ VING, X Ly Q\mvt\u)‘ Y 5ECUZ PAWS PROBLY 7 R 7 SHOWIN'HIM SOME N SUPER-DUPER \ 1 SAPE: ‘%‘:_ MCKinley in lSTEAMER MOVEMENTSII v NORTHBOUND . e North Sea due Tuesday . . Y on due Tuesday. "} = 3 SCHEDULED SAILINGS e . Northbound ka Steamship | ¢ opgass scheduled to sail from e vessel Mount McKinley, Master o ' gaattle March 11 . Arthur Ryning, and Purser Paul Coe. | o princess Norah scheduled to sail e a rcau at 7 o'clock this | ¢ from Vancouver March 11 at ® : wnd was in port for 4 hours | g g pm . te d freight, mail and 21 pas- | ¢ Baranof scheduled to sail from ® o1 ef ailing for the West- | o geattle March 1 9 am. e B 1 the A-Jdock at 11 o'clock. | ¢ SQUTHBOUND SAILINGS o ers from Seattle were—G.|q Northland in port and . fcon, Perry Huff, R. D.|g yleq to sail south at 9 o'clock ® Kclly, Harold Kn v Neck, | o . Dirante L. Ols Mrs Wiiz, | o Al scheduled southbound e Paul Wilson, C. Alitab, I y Beh- e jate Sunday or Monday. ° rends, Robert Cunningham, V. Mag- | o LOCAL SAILING o aeey, Bob Martin, O. Palen and Paul | o pstebeth scheduled to safl every | arke ® Wednesday at 6 p. m. for Sit- e From Ketchikan — H. Anderson,!e kp and wayports. . Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Dishaw, Mrs. H. ¢ Naha leaves every Wednesday C. Miller, Mrs. W. R Simon &nd e = at7a.m. for Petersburg, Port ® | poy order of the United St Robert Young ® Alexander, Kake and way- ®| (g Jiner, George Washingt e TR e por ® | across the Atlantic before and immediately after 2 0 0 e 0 0 0 &0 0 9 s armistice in the signing of the >-ro o 1 out of retire TIDES North Sea ls ; Real General Is Now luneauBound .. . v Low tide—3:47 a.m 5.0 feet L] o v s am oo o Press Agentfor Army; st N ’! i 1 Low tide—4:24 p.m. 06 feét . Steamer orth Sea now bounc o tide—1 9 1 97 vef steamer orn sen s now vound g e 10 v, 137 e (MOWS His Stuff, Too ing sailed from Friday TIDES MONDAY ! —_— morning at 10:1; with 121" yoo siae 438 am. 34 feet (Gontmuea from Page One) passengers aboard, including the gigh tide—10:41 am., 156 feet following fc au Low -0.7 feet. | of the problems of writing the news George C K Ma h tide—11:27 p.m., 15.2 feet than Major General Richardson. sen. Lew Lov Fitz- - the second (and more im- patrick, A, G ! portant) place, the Army had Mrs. Harold Gaither ar Bu 3 lEAvES come 1o re that what its press Hamm } drew . Jornsbon: informatior. needed was a man Cora C to the department H. A. Hermar W. Parkix E 1 sayi and Fred Swanson, William Brown SR o E svery object g 2oy Ten passcngers left Juneau this to every objection that morning & Fairbanks on the | 2 neral raised to the prob- ms of press formation. In other PAA were Mrs. NEMAHA BA(K Nack, Raymond ords, the Army needed a man Hufi, W. P. Wilson, | Who could push over the needs of M. and Mrs. Harold | the newspaper reading public, wit} FROM ELDRED Frank Karabelnikoff and|Out kowtowing—because of Army Louis henweng. ;uun!nucm— to the whim of every- ROCK (RUE E Nc Electra movements were ,\(-hp,u‘fn«!:l,\'-dud(i_\'. who might be tops in uled today. It was announced. how-|his job as general, but a scared which | rabbit when it came to letting the thin- ng in, ever, that the PAA Lodest has been in i e waiting | taxpa know what their for weather for has left ! ning pce tbooks were bri the Canadian airport and is bound in terms of national defense ter Nema late yest v short trip ‘o for Whitehorse. It was not known| As We say in this business, it's ve »f if the ship will come tc Juneau from|a tough assignment and Major Warrant Boastswa Whitehorse. General Richardson, the one-time scn on 1 I and - B S Charleston, S. C., boy who had ailed this morning for Sentin 'ION MASO! glory by the tail as a commander and with a radio operator for Stat Communication Monday|©0f our first great unit of mech- Lynn Canal lighthouse. evening. Dinner at 6:30. Past -|anized cavalry, ought to get some Nemaha will continue on ters' Night. Visit from D.D.G.M. Kind of a medal for taking the job lizhthouse repair and maintenance Locken. Quiz program |at all. If he makes a big go of 1it— duty and on a libut patrol on J. W. LEIVERS, jand first guessers are guessing he i to its ho port of Ket- ady. Secretary. | will Congress ought to shovel chik: The vessel was in Junesu ~_ ithem out by the carload Thursday to e on and LIKE FATHER . . . upplies after a trip to Yakutat. ! WIlEN IN NEED OF | HOW - TIME - FLIES - DE- - Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your || PARTMENT—The Army Times re- e e A Coal Choico—General Hauling “u,m that James H. Doolittle Jr. TR b T B = Slorage aud Crating son of Maj. James H. Doolittle— World War ace and now one of shal at Kod is a through passen- aboard the steamer Mount Me- Kinley. Herring is returning to Ko- after a trip Outside R Try a classified ad In The Emplre v g SCHEDULE and FARES JUNEAU TO SEATTLE ~ TUESPAY FRIDAY (Airmail and Express Only) FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU Q32X ruRoAy DAY, SATURDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS [%55°2 7 d FRIDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) e = Jun- Fair- Mec- eau Lbanks Nome Ruby Bethel Flat Ohpir Grath Juneau 82.00 149.00 11500 *151.00 *132.00 *125.00 *120.00 Fairbanks .. 82.00 7400 39.00 7600 5600 4800 44.00 %—via rairbanks. 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. | the advisers to national defense— has been placed on the eligibility list for appointment as a flying | cadet, James Jr. is 20 years old, a junior at Purdue University (L ayette, Ind), and thinks the only thing in life worthwhile is to “fol- low in Dad's footsteps. Not that it matiers, but the Army's best “dog” story is that the quartermaster corps has 90 shoe sizes in its regular stock of “brogans.” The lengths range from 15 to 12, the widths from A to EE. You figure it out. In the “tramp, tramp, tramp” corps, a pair of sk (with two repairs) lasts an average of 270 days—and the’ Army now has approximately 2,500,000 pairs “on order.” - ->e - ARMY D0G MUSHERS TO QUIT TRIP (Continued from Page One} | Burwash, will be flown here. Charles Morgan, free lance writer |from Anchorage who has been with the party on the mush, lost one of his dogs. He is now at Burwash and it is believed he will also be [lown s navy, the 34-year- which made 18 trips 1918, to serve in the navy's t | By CLIFF STERRET REV. JOHN CAUBLE The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE . and receive TWO tickets to see: “ISLAND OF DOOMED MEN' Federal Tax—5¢ per Person J --DEMONSTRATIN HOW HE. 4 BREAKS OUTA TH' HOUSE ON POKER NIGHTS ! s | v ‘WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! View of the liner Washington growing transport fleet. The liner was built in Germany, seized by the U. S. government at Ho- boken, N. J., on American entry into the World war and converted into a transport. It carried Presi dent Wilson to France. The ship was laid 11pin 1931 has been There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising Hollywood Sights And Souxds { m— e = PRESS—— T T e — - HOLLYWOOD, Cal, March 8.—“BACK STREET. play by Braec Manning and Felix Jackson from novel by Fan- nie Hurst. Directed by Rebert Stevenson. 'Principals: Charles Boycr, Margaret Sullavan, Richard Carison. Frank McHugh, Tim Holt, Frank Jenks, Esther Dale, Samuel S. Hirds, Peggy “t, Nell O'Day, Kitiy O'Neil, Nelia Dalker, Cecil Cun- ningham, Marjorie Gateson, Dale Winter. Sereen- Stu; If the Smith givl: hadn't been delayed that day in Cincin- nati ren Wal €axel was waiting to marry her, the women cf Amer 11d have been denied a renewal of .the good cry they had over k Street” several eyars ago when Irene Dunne and John Bol ved it The new version - paperman Bruce Manning feminine handkerchief. Ray Smith (£ an) was a free spirit in the Cincinnati of the early 1900's. Working in the family department store, she met and played with the jocund “drummers” who came to town, and she knew how to keep them at a proper distance. She could have married that nice Stanton boy (Carlson), no drummer but a mechanic interested in horseless carriages, any time she said the word. But Ray didn't lose her heart until Walter Saxel (Boyer), the handsome financier, came into her life. When she fell, she fell hard. Ont Ritch in their idyllic romance was Waltcr's already-an- nounced engagement, He was ready to chuck that and marry Ray but Ray missed the boat. Hurt, Walter married the other girl. Five years later, in New York, Walter and Ray met again by PERCY’S CAFE SsTOP ® DELJCIOUS FOOD © FOUNTAIN SERVICE © REFRESHMENTS AT PERCY'S CAFE Breakfast, Dinner or Light first production of ex-New Orleans news- is no less tough on the collective chance. Neither had forgotten. With her eyes wide open, Ray took up residence on the “back street” of life. Tastefully presented, the immorality involved makes for one of the screen’s most moral tales for “back street” life is a heck of a life. Ray suffers and suffers, gives and gives, asks nothing and gets nothing more than fhe occasional spare time of her charming heel. Her one rebellion, when she is about to marry the nice Stanton boy, is quelled by his frankly selfish plea. He needs her, ergo and therefore — and so it is at the end, years later, when both are old and gray. “Back Street” is a well-made picture, with distinguished per- formances by the stars s especially appealing is Sullavan — and ingratiating work by Carlson, McHugh. Holt and Jenks. The women should love it, the men should get an extra kick from the itch to punch the charming Mr. Saxel in the nose for treat- ing our Nell thaf-a-way. “MEET THE CHUMP.” Screenplay by Alex Gottlieb. Di- rected by Edward Cline. Principals: Hugh Herbert, Lewis Howard, Jeanne Kelly, Anne Nagel, Kathryn Adams, Shemp Howard, Richard Lane, Andrew Tombes. Very little about this wacky piece, including the title, makes sense - wherein lies its wallop. Herbert plays a philanthropist who has embezzled his nephew’s five millions. Faced with a pay- off, Woo-Woo decides to go insane, changes his mind and has the nephew declared insane instead, finally joins forces with the nephew against a gang plot to horn in. With gge nnd‘wu;‘k‘}ncss showering all 60 minutes of the film, “Meet the (?’hgunp “hits high fer its type. s | In the Matter of the Last Will and | H. L. Faulkner, executor of the estate | the same, before the undersigned, at | | Juneau, Alaska, at 10 o'clock A. M. NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL REPORT OF EXECUTOR ‘4 In the Commissioner’s Court for the | bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. Territory of Alaska, Division Num- + 7 - ber One. Before FELIX GRAY, ' - 2 ‘ & SERVING: ALASKA Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- Testament of LENA PERELLE, | Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that | 3 of Lena Perelle, deecased, has filed | herein his Final Report of the admin- istration of the estate of deceased, | and that a hearing will be had upon on May 1st,'1941, at which time and place all persons interested in the | said estate may appear and file ob- | jections, in writing, to said Fina!; | Report, and contest the same. LEAVE DUE JUNEAU DUE JUNEAU GIVEN under my hand and the| STEAMER SEATTLE = NORTHBOUND SOUTHBOUND seal of the Probate Court this 28th | ALASKA .. Sat. Mar. 1 Tues. Mar. 5 Mon, Mar. 10 & day of February, 1941, | MCKINLEY Wed. Mar. 5 Sat. Mar. 8 NO cALL ! | (Seal) FELIX GRAY, | YUKON Sat. Mar. 8 Tues. Mar. 11 Sun. Mar. 16 Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- | BARANOF Wed. Mar. 12 Sat. Mar. 15 Thu. Mar. 20 bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. | ALASKA Sat. Mar. 15 Tues. Mar. 18 Mon. Mar. 24 First publication, March 1, 1941, | MCKINLEY Wed. Mar. 19 Sat. Mar. 22 NO CALL publication, March 29, 1941, v - - FOR INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL * THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 H. 0. ADAMS NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a hearing will be held b(‘fi)l’C; the undersigned Probate Judge on | | March 17th, 1941, at 10:00 o'clock, | |A. M, in the office of the United States Commissioner and Ex-Officio Probate Court for the Juneau, Al-| |aska, Commissioner’s Preeinct, upon | {the petition of JAMES YORK Ior[ his appointment as administrator of the estate of FRANK ROBERTS_; |deceased; and, upon the petition of | MILDRED R. HERMANN for her| appointment as administratrix of | the estate of FRANK ROBERTS, | deceased; and, for the issuance of | Letters ©f Administration to one of | said arties. All persons in interest | are hereby required at said time and | place to appeal or show cause if any | FREIGHT OFFICES —4 Agent Alaska Steamship Compan \SERVICE-ON'ALL*ALASKB ROUTES ;M '| MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL they have, why said petition should | 2-Way Radio Counununicatior Authorized Carrier niot: be granted as prayed for. \ SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Witness my hand and Official Seal | BEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE——ANY PLACE IN ALASEA | First publication, March 4, 1941, at Juneau, Alaska, this 3rd f! : S Ty UARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 i (Seal) FELIX GRAY, | United States Commissioner and Ex- ‘ R Officio Probate Judge for J""pa“.} B e Alaska, Commissioner's Precinct. }l A L A s K A A l n m“spunr, lnc. 3 " | | Last publication, March 14, 1941. All Planes Operating Own Aeronsutical & BT T T | Radlo Station KANG - e il D s Madio | HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 112 TALIFORNIA || —— P i 5 NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices | 1 {i ATCo. ALASEA TRANSPORTATION | COMPANY 1 [ : i i * 1 {1 ®amtmgs trom Pier 7 Seattle Lesves Beattle S. 8. TYEE ... March 4 S. . TONGASS March 11 49 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION ;& SMART WHITE SHIPS - - - . T R e R T T D. B. FEMMER : Fhoso 114 Nignt 12 ' COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY 1 OF ALASKA 2 Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 587 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US: To [mprove and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. ic Diesel in Your Boat If You Want MORE ROOM IN YOUR BOAT More Miles for Your Money JSUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE BSOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Put a Cov! Princess Norab : A Comfortable, Quiet Ride An that Starie AR by Batn 46 Ancaranos of Sate Totpe.| e CANADIAN . PACIFIC | There is no substitute for Newspapez Advertising