The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 26, 1941, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1941. POLLY AND HER PALS DO YOU THINK SYOUR DAD IS REALLY GENEROUS ENOUGH WITH You, PoLLY?2 S 4 WELL/FOR INSTANCE, MY DAD IS GIVING ME €10 IF I DONT SAY ANYTHING UNFAVORABLE ABOUT ANYBODY FOR | MARINE NEWS LOUISE SANLS FOR SEATTLE e ISTEAMER MOVEMENTS’ . NORTHBOU . © Yukon ¢ Saturda . FROM SKAGW!“Y & SCHEDULED SAILINGS . 5 s To duled to sail from e . y ° sian Pa . Coast o ,(Capt. S. K.' ® from Seattlc © « P Ti 1 . 10 an © e L » scheduled to sail from Se- © v { . 1 ° 3 bith alght ® ah scheduled ) P s Eity e from Vancouver April 1 e Woda o 9pm Ruth Rey- ® Northland i e i ed. H. ® from Se ° y Rich- | ® Mount McKinley scheduled to ® o ' sail from Seattle April 3 at e > e 9am ° e SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS © North cheduled south- ® ® Columbia scheduled southbound e w‘NGS NOR]’H e Monday ° 5 LOUAL SAILINGS . o Estebeth scheduled 1o sail every o e ka and wayports. . i e Naha leaves every Wednesday ® ol Lockhiced Lodestar deft | o gt 7, m, for Petersburg, Port ® attle this morning scheduled to 11y | o Ajeyander, Kake and way- rect o Fairbanks on a cl ight| ¢ ports o with CAA officials aboard. The ShiD| , ¢ o & 8' @ » o $ 6 8 e & will return to Seattle tomorrow via s X Juneau >se NOTICE TEXAS WOMAN TO NORTH —— Enroute to Fairbai from El. AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing Paso, T s, Mrs. Beulah Holcolmb air route from Seattle to Nome, on was a Juneau passens the sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. northbound steamer Nor ar - riving in Juneau Subscrine tor The Emplre. Supply thp for the Navy Officers of the Castor, new stores supply ship for the navy, salute the colors at the commi ioning ceremony in.the Brooklyn, N. Y., Navy Yard. The Castor, which is of a new type, will be commanded by Com- mander Felix L. Johnson. SCHEDULE and FARES JUNEAU TO SEATTLE . IUESPAY FAIRBANKS TO JUNEAU MONPAY and (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS TUESPAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU---SEATTLE $95 One Way; $171 Round Trip 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. Pranklin St. PHONE 108 Three hundred members of the crew of the scuttled German liner Columbus are pictured as they left San |and that longshoremen should have | |"Francisco for a concentration camp in New Mexico. Several hundred persons saw them off, includinse. Phonephoto Fritz Weidemann, Nazi consul general in San Francisco. TIDES (Sun time, March 27) High tide—0:45 ‘a.m., 17.0 feet. Low tide—6:47 am, -04 feet. H tide—12:57 p.m., 16.6 feet. Low tide—7:00 p.m., -0.5 feet. North Sea In From Seattle Seventeen passengers disembarkec from the steamer North Sea at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon when the vessel docked in Juneau from Seattle. The vessel, commanded by | Capt. Leonard Williams, Purser C.| D. Littlehales. had aboard 70 pas- sengers for Sitka, more than hal! of which were destined for Japonski Island and work on the Naval Air| Base there, | Passengers for Juneau were Ben Bellamy, J. N. Conrad, Steve Vuko- | vich, A. J. Mayer, Harry Williams, | Beulah Holcolmb, J. C. Michaelson Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Wakeman, Mary Wakeman, D. E. Strong, Charles Sid Benson, Ben You, Chris n, E. Stockton and N. Gart- n the vessel sailed at 10; o’clock last night there were 43 pas- | s aboard from Juneau for Sit- were Birdie Gilkison, G B. Phillips, Fred C. Lewis, C. Neff, | Mr. and Mrs. V. R. Farrell, Dr. Rnri Lillian Carlson, T. R. Curtis, Elmer | Seery, Ora Schoonover, Jack Clark, Lawrence ck, Joe Rogers, Mrs. J. Klaney, J. J. Merhein, Ed Shaffer, Mrs. B. Byrnelsen, Mrs. Shelby Tucker, A. L. Vaughn, H. A. Gerst- man. | Del Fett, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Wil- liamson, Jack McInnis, S. L. John- son, Sergey Tavisiff, Otto W. Bro- | man, H. R. Hall, Hazel Zimmerman, H. S. Graves, Max DelSanto, Harold | Zenger, Waldewar Jones, Sam Hill, Tom Fravier, P. L. Cooper, A, V. Lenville, R. Robillard, Ed Ratzow, Donald Thompson, Lester Thompson | and Paul Liberty. The steamer will return to Ju-| neau southbound Thursday evening, | REDAIR WORK | ON COLLAPSED Thev section ¢ Ecodhing water belew. The we finished today. accordir Dav- | Femmer, and the dock wijl be rebul | after the next Congressional apprc- | priation The in July. oil truck which the ' dock “when the fell thre planking pavel wav, vesterday, is now being repaired and will be in service Monday. The eht s raised from the Channel lay afternoon by a piledriver, before the incoming tide could do more damage to the already dam-| aged machine. Except f6r crumpling the cab and breaking windows, little injury was received in the 15-foot fall, WORLD TRAVELER HE BELLAMY ARRIVES Edith C world traveler bot Maine, is a rounc on the steamer iN Juneau from the South on the lcaded with Miss Cabot is making 1 spring round trip to|8t the Baranof Hotel. aska e R i | Subscribe t tic Dafly Empire—the paper with the larges ibseribe fer The Empire. paid circulation. Hoilywood Sights Aind Sounds BESSS———— T T S HOLLYWOOD, Cal., March —One of the reasons, admit- that Clark Gable and Carole Lombard get is that both see eye to eye on the matter of “dressing up” and putting en the rit Farmer Gable goes for those rusty old trousers and sweaters in his real farm life as well as in the still pictudes, and Carole, he says, will have no part in that general feminine conspiracy which aims at getting male into white-tie-and-tails at the slightest provocation. Gable’s new picture tedly a minor one so famously aleng the with Rosalind Russell, i§ “The Uniform,” but the title doesn’t mean hell be duded up any more than usual. Gable is not one of our clothes-conscious stars — “Don’t have to be,” he says, “with the kind of parts I play.” This relegation of drobe to the minor matters file in zable’s life impressed Walter Pidgeon on- their first meeting some years ago. Gable had been instrumental in having Pidgeon cast in a leading role with him, and Pidgeon — who has worked with clothes-conscious stars — sought him out to confer on wardrobe. & “Tell me what yeu're wearing,™ said Walter, “and I'll pick out suits that don’t conflict.” “You name it,” said Gable, you choose.” ¥ “and T'll steer clear of what oceasions Gable compromises on a tuxedo when- He has an old suit of ‘tails — bought. as he mey_’s CAFE For “dress” ever possible. recalls it, for the academy award dimner in 1635, the year he won his Oscar for “It Happened One Night.” “T've had the thing on about three times since,” he grinned witly an air of minor triumph. “Once the vest ripped on me as we were leaving the hcuse, and Carole found a safety pin to hold it together. Gable's quite a farmer out lhcre in the valley — with his alfalfa, his citrus frit, his avoeados. “That's the way it goes,” he said. “A kid works his fool head ‘off to get away from a farm, gnd then he grows up and works his fool head off to get back on 6ne.” A young movie swain was ambitious to escort Linda Darnell to a film function and tried to telephone her on the set. He was unsucessful. Miss Darnell was in school between love scenes ‘with Tyrone Power. Pupils at their studies .cannot be interrupted even for the important matter of date-seeking. Added romantic note: Carole Landis, whose divorce becomes final ,in November, Century-Fox, under which the studio promises not to interfere nor to offer suggestions of gny kind ‘regarding any future matri- monial plans. Consternatior department: The sequin costume designed Aor Anna Neagle's underwater dance-in “Sunny” had to be abandoned in favor of a substitute. It was discovered — just in time — to be soluble. { | i gy 1Al e By CLIFF STERRETT Traveling man Ben Bellamy of the |it was the right of the I National Grocery Company arrived steamer North Sea. He is stopping |lumber and other cons AlasKa|ng. The has an agreement with her employees, 20th - AND WHAT WOLIL.D YO HAVE BOLIGHT WITH IT? £0AST GUARD as & paid-up subscriber to JOE PARENT The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this ‘evening at the box office of thg —mMm8M8 ——M CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO tickets to see: “PRIVATE AFFAIRS” Federal Tax—5¢ per Persom WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! } % CuHeerfl%mAflWes: from Sitka-Captain Talks | wi?h longshoremen | Coastguardsmen of the Coast Guard vessel: Alder “were loading | ‘S smum, scHEDiJLf their own vessel at the Alaska | Steamship dock this morning arm‘ la cne-day delay caused by the claim of Juneau longshoremen that only LEAVE UE JUNEAU DUE JUNEAU members of the Longshoremen’s Un-| STEAMER SEATTLE ORTHBOUND S(\\v'rn]{n ND ion could load the craft. McKINLEY . Wed. Sat. Mar. 22 NO CALL Shortly after a radiogram to Ket- Sat. Tues, Mar, 25 Mon. Mar 31 chikan Coa: Guard headquarters | Wed. Sat. Mar. 29 Th\x.«: '\I;!' ‘-; was sent Capt. A. L. Joanson of | Al ASKA sat. Tues. Apr. 1 Mon. Apr. 1T the Alder asking for 5 10 sel-| DENALT Tue Sat. Apr. 5 VO CAIL tle the problem, the Coast Guard e e cutter Bonham arrived here. The FOR INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL Bonham tied up at Femmer's dock at 14 ccleck yesterday afternoon from | Sitka. Although Capt. J. W. Malen of the Bonham, claimed that the stop at| {Juneau was merely a part of a re-| gicnal patrol, he admitted nllm\:i |the situat over with the long- | shoremen.” He said that the crew of the Alder was loading their vessel | |taken the mat up h the “‘prop- er authorities.” He said that Coast rdsmen would continue to load shoremen. | Alder was being plate glass, plywood, | ruction ma- terials for the Sentinel Island Light- | Meanwhile the (house. The ves morning for Sentinel Is- | Bonham was scheduled to {leave Juneau this afternoon. | — - Subscrive o tne Dally Ax:uz, | Empire—the paper with the Iargm | temorrow el is expected to leave | | AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE TICKET OFFICE—2 FREIGHT OFFICES —4 H. O. ADAMS————Agent Alaska Steamshxp Compan \S.ERVICE - QN-" RLL ALASKA-ROUTES paid circulation. Y §* N\ 5 SEATTLE | ® Perfect comfort ® Splendid food ® Centrally located ' | targe Rooms ¢ pery convenience Rl i and service bath. Special Rates to Permanent Guests ALASKANS LIKE THE | | | I NEW WASHINGTON ALASKA Sallngs from Pier:7 Seattle Leaves S. S. TONGAS.. S. S. Tyee T Prinoess' Norah VAT April 618 Princess Louise Avril 28 TRANS-ATLAN ATRAWN_SFPACM 4 wAak NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Mar. _Mar.28 Apr- Sea - North Coast North- 2 3 ApT- t \land EEN, Ager! b mENRY GRERC ngers 1 CMIIBIA LUMBER COMPANY “"OF ALASKA “Lamber and fii‘fildmg Materials PHONES 587 or 747——JUNEAU SECURE-YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. Put a-EoviijjgsgfiifYour Boat If ?nu ‘Want YOUR non ‘Ride t Instantly Starts Trips MORE fi!’ofll w ble eeeoetos b s o s ; MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL | 3-Way Radio Communicatior Authorized Currier i SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE | BEAPLANE CHARTER SEEVICE——ANY PLACE IN ALABKA HEADQUARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 ; ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Iuc. Al Pianes i Wndio ] HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 113 Equigped | SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER J’

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