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HULLO, MRS, LY PE- WAD. 15 YOUR HUSBAND GETTN ANY BETTER? WELL, HE WAS--+ UNTIL 1 HIRED THAT TRAINED NURSE. §SCOLUMBIA DOCKS FROM SOUTHPORTS 'n round trippers engers from the south the Alaska Steamship Carrying 42 pa Juneau for vessel Columbia, Capt. A. A. Ander- son and purser Paul Coe, doc in Juneau shortly before noon to- day and is scheduled to sail from the Alaska-Juneau mine dock at 4:30 o'clock for Lynn Canal and Westward ports Passengers arriving from Seatt were Mrs. Ned Albright, Steve Ben- son Eugene Crammer, Emmett Douckers, Bob Dennington, J. G Ellson, C Garfield, J. Garrett C. S. Ge Mr. and Mrs. Zalmain Gross, David Gross, Dorian Gros: Col. E. R. Harris. Harry L. Hood, Ralph B. Houser A. M. Knudson, Mother M. Law- rence, Lillian Maher, George Mel- bo, Jack Meyers, Marie R. Nestor Mrs. H. G. Nordling, Betty Nord- ling, Mrs. R. C. Paxton, L W Roehm, Mrs. William F. Smith Pauline Teeter, George Usher Charles Waynor, Virginia Worley Burr Hagarty, Fornis Hamilton, Alf Jensen, William Johnson, Matt K vala, James D. Lemon, Leonard Makko, J. C. Massey, H. S. Mik- kelson, Frank Nelson, and Art Westerburg. P; rs arriving from South- east Alaska were Paul W. Gordon R. Blenkinsop, C. R. Chittick, Jack Watny and Lambert Ratcliffe. P Ay TIDES (Sun time, May 21) Low tide—4:05 a.m. 28 feet High tide—10:16 a.m., 1238 feet Low tide—4:08 pm. 33 feet. High tile—10:20 pm. 153 feet -~ BUNDLES FOR BRITAIN CONTRIBUTIONS HERE PASS THOUSAND MARK Juneau Chapter ccniributions 1o Bundles for Britain this week passed the 81,000 mark since the local Chapter was orzanized in February, Treasurer John Cauble announced today The total sent from Juneau to New York headquarters to help supply equipment needed by the British end to keep hospitals oper- ating in ‘London is $1,019.90. Chairman H. L. Faulkner urges that all persons who agreed to make monthly donations pay in- stallments now due, as the need is greater than ever. e e Manufacturers of non-alcoholic beverages use more than $20,000- 000 worth of sugar annually I STEAMER MOVEMENTS ! Lo S8 5 NORTHBOUND . Columbia in port and sails west ® at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon Yukon due late Friday or Sat- urday SCHEDULED SAILINGS Baranof scheduled to sall from Seattle May 22 at 9 a.m. Tyee scheduled to sail from Se- attle May 22 North Coast scheduled to sail from Seattle May 23 at 10 am Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle May 24 at 9 am. Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver May 26 at 9 pm Denali scheduled to sail from Seattle May 27 at 9 a.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Northland scheduled to arrive southbound about 10 o'clock tomorrow morning. North Sea scheduled south- bound Thursday evening Taku scheduled southbound 10 a.m. Friday LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 1 p.m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports o o NORTH SEA IN . * . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 ° . . . . . . . ° . . . ° ° @ o o 0 0 o o FROM SEATTLE Northland Transportation Com- pany vessel North Sea, Capt. Leon- ard Willlams and purser C. D. Lit- tiehales, arrived in Juneau from Se- attle at 11 o'clock this forenoon, with 33 passengers for Juneau and also with 20 roundtrip tourists. The vessel was scheduled to sail for Sit- ka and will stop at Excursion Inlet end Tedd enroute. The North Sea will return to Juneau southbound Thursday evening P: ngers arriving were, Mrs. L. Haines man, J. W. Locke, Mrs. H. J. Butch- er, Mrs. Hal Kimmel, Denny Kim- mel, Sharin Kimmel, Kathleen Vick- from Seattle Allen Sher- ers, Mrs. Bessie Axton, Mrs. J. E. Eoyle, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Ross, H McLean, Helen Davis, Helen Geedrich, M Foresman and Mrs, Kenneth R i child, Ruth Cowles, L. D. Geno and Carl Bromber Frem Petercbur Mary K. Caw thern, R. W. Hubbard, and J. W. La- orce. From Wranzell — Jack Gucker,| Tom Sawyer, E. Prescott and John Smith. Frem Ketchikan Strodhoff, J amy and P. G. Lewis, W Boyle, Ben Bel- ¥ MRS at 3:30 o'clock this afternoon| Mrs. H. G. Nerdling and daugh- | ler Betty arrived home today from 'the States aboard the Columbia. PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 J | | Round-Trip Fares: { [ || 10% off twice one-way | _ =% ol ,, fares, when purchased @ & 8| &1 8 ol @ in advance. £ 52| 2|EB 1218 |% ] R!ls 2lzl2] 8. Fairbanks, Alaska $ 6 Flat, Alaska .. 31 $56 Golovin, Alaska 141 67 $118 Hot Springs, Alaska 88 15 65 Juneau, Alasks 151 82 132 McGrath 44 44 18 $120 Nome, Alaska 149 74 126 149 $112 Nulato, Alaska 21 50 99 127 83837 Ophir, Alaska 39 48 116 § 88 Ruby, Alaska 108 39 47 15 Seattle, Wash., U. 5. A. 236 170 234 212 $202 Tanana, Alaska 94 24 60 33 20 $191 Whitehorse, Y. T., Can. 144 75 125 26 114 142 119 109 120 su. Mo Mo. Tu. We. Fr. Th. Sa 8:00 Lv SEATTLE, WashUSA. PST Ar 18:55 14:10 Ar JUNEAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 Mo. We. Sa. 14:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska PST Ar 12:15 16:15 14:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. . 135° Lv 10:15 15:00 Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T. 135° Ar 9:55 16:55 Ar FAIRBANKS, Alaska . .150° Lv 6:00 10:00 . DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager 135 So. Franklin St. PHONE 106 e ee—————————————————————————eeeee .} PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE.—SEATTI SHE DON'T KNOW HER BUSINESS, EH, 7 MRS, TYTEWAD? T 8 While Lord Half organizations to keep the U. S. out tured. In DOUGLAS NEWS BREEZE ANNUAL IS COMING OUT Final issue of the Gastineau| Breeze, as an annual for the school term, is due off the presses tomor- row, Miss Warren, staff advisor, vs. Dedicated to the seniors who are =oon to leave the school, the edition features them particularly, accord- ing to the custom - e PLAY CAST COMPLIMENTED Miss Eleanor Warren feted the| entire student body and members | ~f the faculty, Douglas high school, ! in the assembly room yesterday af- ternoon honoring the player cast of “Inner Circle,” given last week. | ‘luded a certain appropriate line| taken from the part vortrayed by ch on MISS LUNDELL TRANSFERRED Miss Lundell was an arrival | were by plane from Fairbanks Sat- of visit with her parents expected to| 1:"‘_"9 the same way again today en-|ynited Lutheran Church in Am- ' (OLISEUM-DOUGLAS Tuesday—Wednesday “A CHILD IS BORN” | | Tlsmes sweep a row of buildings on the Pimlico Race ‘Track, Battimol fer Cil to their Seattle CONGREGATIONAL DINNER IS SET BY | LUTHERAN CHURCH |Members and Guests Wil Honor Choir, Teachers Members of Resurrection Entertainment included refresh-|eran Church and invited guests will | ments of ice cream, cake and cof-| meet | fee. Invitations to the players in-|o'clock for the annual dinner which | is held in honor of the church choir and Sunday school teachers. The committee in charge of the | | affair is headed by Mrs. John Low- | ell. Mrs. B. F. McDowell is in charge NO, IT AIN'T ‘Women Picket Outside aera]ifaX Makes Speech 18 0 DIE FOR RITAIN the British ambassador, spoke inside, this group of women, representing various of war, paraded outs speech, the first he made on a seven-day tour of the midwest, the British envoy said that Germany's domination of 164,000,000 people “carries within it the seeds of its own destruction.” route to Seattle. She is being trans- red by PAA from the Fairbanks office. £ - M'BRIDES RETURN i Mrs. Ralph McBrige ay moved to Juneau where Tomorrow Night Wednesday evening at entertainment A special guest will be the Rev A. M. Knudsen, D. D, Divisiona! viay and afler a couple of days'|secretary of English Missi erica. All members of the congregation are urged | congregational to be present for t-together. -, — The nickel with the Indian head |on one side and the buffalo on the » other first was minted in 1913. As Flames Raced on Pimlico Track section. As far as could be ascertained there were no horses in the had W work fast to keep the fierce blaze Luth- ns, of the | Board of American Missions of the 7 e sTAYS UP ALL NIGHT TO SEE THAT 'SHE DON'T SLEEP WHILE HE'S PAY- ING HER! tection of convoys, and concentrate German submarine bases and [ty than to incéréase the, | nuniber 91 targéts for Nazi torpedo | tukes. i | AC Lond - suggested this | method in a few days after the British government had sent 4| special mission to Washington to urge more ships. 1 | | It was only after the American| patrol system was announced that| the President decided to form the| shipping pool. It is assumed mI ! many quarters that the British did| | their part by guaranteeing larger protection in waters close to the' British Isles. | If the Germans continue to sink| British ships at the rate of 5,000,/ 000 tons a year, as they now seem to be doing, it is apparent to ship- ping experts here that (1) the 2- 000,000-ton shipping pool, (2) our | 0il tanker shuttle service from | South America, (3) this year's mil- | lion tons of new British shipping, | (4) the American Atlantic patrol end (5) a tighter British convoy system all add up to one aim.That |is to keep the efficiency of the | British merchant fleet where it is | for 1941—the year of the Battle of I'the Atlantic .- — D THE £ BRITIS GENERA WIFE HERE Mrs. Simon B. Buckner, wife of the General in command of the Alaska Defense Command, arrived in Juneau this afternoon as a a Chicago hotel, carrying the banners pic- passenger on board the steamer Columbia, Mrs. Buckner boarded the vessel in Ketchikan and is r turning to the Westward after tour of Southeast Alaska. ‘Shipping Pool Plan . 0f Roosevel Helps d Beleagggzd Isiands (Continued from Page One) NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL ACCOUNT, REPORT AND PE- TITION FOR DISTRIBUTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that ‘'on the 29th day of April, 1941, NELL McCLOSKEY, executrix of the Last Will and Testament of JOHN McCLOSKEY, Deceased, made and filed in the above-en- titled Court at Juneau, Alaska, her Final Account, Report and Pe-| tition for Distribution, and that| on said day this Court made and entered its order directing that al hearing be had upon said Final| Account, Report and Petition for| | Distribution, before it on June 28,/ | Many experts say this Is an ir-|jpg gt 10:00 o'clock AM. in the reducable minimum A rur_zhcr office of the said United States| cargo §)?1p reduction would pinch commicsioner, in the Federal-Te:- | the B_nush people and reduce th“‘ritorinl Building, in Juneau Pre-| | munitions of war to the danfz":r‘cmfll Territory of Alaska, and | point. That, however, is debatable, ypat an persons then and there ap- although few experts doubt that pear and make their objections, if the danger point is near, any, thereto or to the settlement! thereof, and to the distribution of | This background from the ship- all of the residue and balance of ping experts not only explains why the assets of this estate to NELL the President suddenly asked Ad- McCLOSKEY, the sole beneficiary miral Land of the Maritime Com- under the Last Wil and Testa- mission to scrape together 2,000.-|ment of the Deceased. | 000 tons for the British and their (SEAL) - allies, but also explains the hulla-| FELIX GRAY, baloo about conveys and the Brit-! United States Commissioner 60 perc That reduces the present British merchant fleet, for all stical purposes, from an ac- tual 15,500,000 tons, to the equiva- lent of 7.200,000 pre-war tons—lit- tle more than half the tonnage at the start of the war. 6:30 ish pressure for more ships. It may and Ex-Officio Probate also explain why we suddenly de- Judge. cided to exfend our sea patrols. | First publication, April 29, 1941. And — more important perhaps' Last publication, May 20, 1941 than all these —it might reflect a adv. this | new policy on the part of the Brit-| ish navy, in the view of some ship-| SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION plag ten. In the Distrig,oé;fizfior the Terri * Many American naval men are i o known to feel strongly that it| g’;g "’Jin‘:l::k“’ Divisioh Number would be better to increase the pro=| o SU" C JACKSON, Plaintite, vs. NONA JACKSON, Defendant. /TO THE ABOVE MAMED DE- { FENDANT, GREETING: | IN THE NAME OF THE UNITED |STATES OF AMERICA you are | hereby commanded to appear in the |above court, holden at Juneau, in said Division and Territory, to an- . |swer the complaint of plaintiff filed 1 |against you in the above entitled | cause, within thirty days from the || |date of service of this summons and | |a copy of said complaint upon you, | if the same is served by publication, {or within forty days if the same is | served personally; and if you fail to ! |so appear and answer, for want ! | thereof, plaintiff will take judgment |against you for dissolution of the | |bonds of matrimony now existing | |between plaintiff and defendant, {and will apply to the court for the | relief prayed for in the complaint, a copy of which is herewith served, and to which reference is made for a complete statement of the relief ' demanded. The date of the order : |for publication of this summons is | April 28, 1941, the period of publica- | tion is four weeks, and the date of | first ‘publication is April 29, 1941, |and of the Tast publication, May 20, |1941; and the time within which | deféndant is required to appear and ! |answer is thirty (30) days after com- | | pletion of last publication, if service e e e MARINE AIRWAYS——U. S. MAIL | is made by publicatton, or fotty (40) ]dlys after service, if same is served personally. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, April Pian "ROBERT 5. COUGHLIN eal) . COU N -~ “Clerk of the District Court, re, hia., sompletely destroying thé ! -swept block, though the fire fighters | Bprewding. JOE REIDE as & paid-up subseriber to The Daily Alaska Empire 1s invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and fecelve TWO fickets to see: "SOUTH OF PAGO PAGO" Federal Tax—5¢ ver Persoa WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Northbound Northbound Southbound COLUMBIA ... Sat. May 17 Tues. May 20 Mon. May 26 YUKON Tues. May 20 Sat. May 24 BARANOF ......... Thurs. May 22 Sun. May 35 Sat. May 31 ALASKA . Sat. May 24. Tues. May 27 Mon. June 1 DENALI .. Tues. May 27 Sat. May 31 Fri. June 6 ALEUTIAN ... Thurs. May 29 Sun. June 1 Sun. June 8 YUKON .. Tues. June 3 Sat. June 7 BARANOF ... Thurs. June 5 Sun. June 8 Sat. June 14 ALASKA Sat. June 7 Tues. June 10 Mon. June 16 DENALS Wed. June 11 Sun. June 15 Sat. June 21 ALEUTIAN Sat. June 14 Tues. June 17 Wed. June 25 YUKON ‘Tues. June 17 Sat. June 21 Fri. June 27 H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 KA THE YEAR ‘'ROUND ING ALAS 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier Scheduled Passenger Airline Service SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Headquarters Juneau——PHONE 623 ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. g i e sugen eave | PHONE | 612 Raclio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU Equipped Seaplanes for Charter NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY N e gm— 4LASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER 5 VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise May 19—May 31 V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alhska CANADIAN PACIFIC WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Hauling —Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 sailings from Pier 7 Seattle