The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 27, 1941, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAY 27,.194I.. [eihrdnts YES DEAR:- YES DEAR:- CERTAINLY, DEAR- NS YES, DEAR- Charl offe To Make 3 Exira Tnps Speuallimerary Announc- ed for S. E. Alaska- j Here on July 4 Canadian steamer Princess Char- lotte will make three special itin- erary tour trips to Southeast Alas- ka this season calling at Sitka. Ad- vices received here are that so far accommodations are well taken. The Princess Charlotte will sail from Vancouver on the first trip July 1 at 11 o'clock in the fore- noon, calling at Ocean Falls, Ket- chikan, Rudyerd . Walker Cove, Behm Narr Wrangell Narrows, Taku Glacie nd arriving at Ju- neau July 4 at 2:30 o'clock in the asternoon and remaining until 10 o'clock at night. From Juneau the steamer goes to Sitka, Skagway and then south direct to Wrangell, Retchikan, Prince Rupert, Alert Bay, Comox and Vancouver, arriv- ing there at 4 p.n. July 11. ‘The second trip is scheduled from Vancouver July 22, arriving at Ju- neau at 2:30 p.m, July 22, and leaving at 10 o'clock that night On the third trip, the Princess Charlotte leaves Vancouver August 12, arriving at Juneau August 15 at 2:30 p.m. and remaining in port| until 10 o'clock that night. A Halibuters Sell, Seattle SEATTLE, May 27.—Halibut ar- sivals, catches and selling prices to- day are as follows: From the western banks—Sunde 40,000 pounds, 10': and 9's cents a/! pound; Venture 36,000 pounds, 10%: and 9% cents. From the local banks—Desliny, 20,000 pounds, Sanak 20,000 pcunds, AT BARANOF A. B. Elrath of Montgomery Ward and Company arrived in Juneau today and is staying at the Barannl Hotel Juneau Liquor Store Space Will Remodel to Suit Tenant, ee0e 000 cvoeeces e !'... BEATS. ALL HOW SOME HUSBANDS TAKE IT LAYIN' DOWN, EH, SAM? NORTHBOUND North Coast scheduled to ar- rive sometime early tomorrow merning. Nothing definite at 3 p.m. teday. Princess Louise scheduled to arrive Thursday afternoon or evening. Ut‘nali due Saturday. _ SCHEDULED SAILINGS Notthland scheduled to sail from Seattle at 10 a.m. to- MOrTow. Aleutian scheduled to sail fmm Seattle May 29 at 9 a.m. Taku scheduled to sail from Seattle May 29 at 10 a.m North Sea scheduled to sail from Seattle May 30 at 10 am, Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle June 3 at 9 am. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Tyee scheduled southbound tomorrow evening Baranof scheduled southbound Saturday. Ala scheduled southbcund late Sunday or Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS istebeth scheduled to sail every Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 1 pm. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- 28) 169 feet. -16 feet. 15.1 feet. 34 feet. (Sun time, May High tide—1:44 a.m Low tide—8:17 a.m. High tide—2:37 p.m Low tide—8:23 pm., New C. of C. Head Albert W. Hawkes 'nu board of directors of the /Chamber of Commerce of the \‘!;md States has elected Albert Hawkes of Kearny, N. J., as pruident of the chamber. . The followed the final business of the chamber’s 20th an- STEAMER MOVEMENTS! | | | | | | against the Vichy | | \ | g leeceeeccocscccccescscccsensccccssccccccces I ‘nual mesung An ‘Washington. PAN AMEnii:AN AIRWAYS EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 Raund-‘i‘rip Fares: 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased in advance. ks [Fairban! Fairbanks, Alaska Flat, Alaska 3 Golovin, Alaska 141 Hot Springs, Alaska 88 Juneau, Alaska 151 McGrath 44 Nome, Alaska 149 74 Nulato, Alaska 121 50 Ophir, Alaska 39 48 Ruby, Alaska 108 39 Seattle, Wash,, U. 8. A. . 236 170 Tanana, Alaska . 94 24 Whitehorse, Y. T, Can.. 144 75 Su. Mo We. Fr. 15 82 4“4 125 [Flat 67 $118 65 132 18 $12v 126 149 $112 99 127 83§ 37 12 125 10 116 § 88 85 115 71 47 15 217 95 207 234 212 $202 71 102 59 60 33 20 $191 26 114 142 119 109 120 Mo. Tu. Th. Sa. 10:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash.US.A. PST Ar 18:55 16:10 Av JUNEAU, Alaska Su. Tu. Th. 10:00 10:00 10:20 12:15 16:40 16:40 17:00 18:55 Ar FAIRBANKS, Lv JUNEAU, Alaska Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T PST Lv 12:45 PST Ar 135° Lv 135° Ar Alaska . 150° Lv L A D!LEBECQUE—DI’triM Sales Mana(er 135 So. Franklin St. PHONE 106 PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE.—SEATTLE TAKE ME. 1 AINT AGREED WITH ANYTHING MY WIFE SAID FER liner No® randi, (Continued from Enge One) | tablish a “private wire.” | Postal Telegraph recently has been granted permission to put al | special leased circuit from Joliet, |1, to the United States Army | ordnance depot near Elwood, TIL.| | The same company has been is- |sued a permit to connect a Sf. | Louis wire into the offices of the Atlas Powder Company plant at | Weldon Springs, Mo., and Western Union has been authorized to es tablish a wire from Los Angeles linto the Interstate Aircraft and Engineering Corporation offices at El Segundo, Cal The chuckle is that in these na- tional defense plants, where se- crecy ch that you can't stick your toe out Four-A-1 Credentials, the | Federal Communications Commis {sion order reads: “Granted, with | the understanding that the service |is to be made available to the pub- is s And den't think for a | that the message carriers abide by this. sents himself and says simply, a telegram,” they him in—or else—or has been violated and the vate wir won't be there any more. Thats democracy with a Capital-D. minute don’t to the front dol “I want to send had Dbetter else the la KNUDSEN, THE WIZARD about next year's allotments for new automobiles, they came out this way: “This year, 5,289,972 c: next year, 4,224,152 cars; reduction. 1,057,994 cars.” |add . error was relayed to homes, junior officials swarmed out like flies. | Knudsen’s .own . private | figures. Were next year’s quotas | wrong by several thousands or were | the reduction figures wrong? | About midnight (after five' hours of combing work - sheets| | with plant quotas: in OPM files) everybody gave up. Knudsen was attending a private party at the Mayflower. He walked out to find a bevy of his junior exécutives. They explained their dilemma Knudsen adjusted his glass glanced briefly over the figure- mazed work - sheets and said: “Somebody made an error on the adding machipes. The correct fig- ures are, 1941 production, 972; proposed allotments, 4,224,- 152—reduction, 1,085,820 cars.” It’s that makes tive that “Bill” all the answers. - STEP to Health with Better Feet. | Phone 648. Chiropodist Dr. Steves. | —adv. Knudsen MIELKE & COLLEN Painting—Paper Hanging Decorating Service 407—PHONES——Red 232 lic.” | If any person pre- Tet | It didn't take someone very long| to discover that these figures didn't jg59 there was a huge run of red - but OPM already had shut oo, i santa Monica Bay. This |up Sh"p for the day. When the oo they came back again, When recent figures were issued " 5,289,- | kind of thing that! Washington folk so posi-| knows | i | | { | Liner Normandie in New York harbor Coincident with a warning to France by President Roosevelt government's moves toward a closer tie with | the Axis powers, the U. 8. coast guard took into protective custody 13 French ships in U. S. ports, including the gigantic $60,000,000 [ The Normandxe, lccond lnrgest ship in the FBI, ICC, Even Knudsen Get Mixed Up in Deals That Bring Ouf laugh " GIANT SHIP _ OF GERMANY. DESTROYEL Craft that Sent hrilish Bat=, fle Cruiser Hood to Bof- tom Is Blown Up (Continued from Page Ope: the front door with- ————— measures are being taken in re- spect to the “Prince Avgen, one of Germany's most powerful cruisers.” The official British statement discleses that the Bismarck eluded her pursuers once last Saturday night during extreme- ly bad weather but the United States-built Catalina plane picked up the trail again Sunday before midday and the chase was en again. - - - TWO HALIBUTERS SELL Capt. Mack Lopp of the halibuter |Sea Rose docked in Juneau this nmnlm, with 3,500 pounds of fish | nd Capt. Ed Hansen of the Carol H unloaded 2,500 pounds, both sell- . ing to the Alaska Coast Fisheries at | pr ices of 9 and 7.55 cents per pound. ' CRAB COMEBACK SANTA MONICA, Cal Ing i e it Subscrme w the Daily Alaskq SeCretary | gmpire—the paper with the larges | even joined the chase for missing nglr clxcuhtll:)uw o . | Rambow Bndge HAN Workers are fast closing the gap between the Anferican and Cu-mn ARTHUR KUNNAS $ Well known Juneau Car- at Sitka of word received here today. ® 1885, he came to Alaska and had been engaged in carpen- n" BUT FER GOSH SAKES, SAM, DON'T EVER J. S. Baylis world, has been tied up at the Hudson river pler since August, 1939. Coast Guard Commander J. S. Baylis, shown telling report- of the U. S. move, said the ships “are not seized” but that an “adsqualc guard” had been placed on them “for adequate protec- tlon {rom any outside mfluence been working at the air base Sitka for the past year. Besides his widow, he is survived by a daughter, Ruth. Both DIES AT SITKA LAST EVENING ing in Juneau. The remains are being here by plane this afternoon will be taken to the Charles Carter Mortuary until funeral ar rangements are made. - DOUBLE CAPTAIN COLORADO SPRINGS, May . —Tom Pelican must be ularity” at Colorado College, The Tiger basketball team elected him captain for next season three months after he was voted captain of the 1941 grid eleven. an all-conference end last season. penter Suffers Heart Attack away resuit to Arthur Kunnas, 55, last night heart attack, passed as the a according Born at Abo, Finland, October 7, in 1905 work in the Territory. He had Ends 87-Day Sail from China Arriving under its own sail after an 81-d|y voyage from Shanghai, the Chinese junk Amoy is shown as it reached New York to aid the Chinese relief drive. The craft was commanded on its'long, perilous trip by Capt. Alfred W. Nilson. - at Nlagara Nearmg Complenon uofionlo!tbenew bridge at Niagara Falls, which will Yeplace the “honeymoon” bridge, 4am three years ago, The arch b 15 950 feet long, It will b at, Mrs. | Kunnas and her daughter are liv-| brought ! and | w “Kid Pop-| He was| WADIAH PACIFIC s ————e—— " JOHN WALMER ; as a patd-up subscriber to The Daily Alasia Empire 18 invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and recelve TWO tickets to see: "LUCKY PARTNERS” Federal Tax—35¢ ver Persom WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! Leave Seattle Northbound Due Juneau Southbound May 26 Due Juneau Northbound Tues. May 20 Sat. May 24 May 25 May 27 May June Steamer COLUMBIA. ... YUKON ... BARANOF ... ALASEKA .. Sat. May 17 ‘Tues. May 20 Thurs. May 22 May 24. Tues. May 27 Thurs. May 29 Tues. June 3 Sun. sat. Tues. DENALI Sat. ALEUTIAN . YUKON BARANOF ... ALASKA ... Sun. Sat. June Thurs.June 5 Sun. June June Sat. June 7 Tues. June Mon. June DENALI ... ... Wed. June 11 Sun. June Sat. June ALEUTIAN YUKON .o H. O. ADAMS AGENT June 14 Tues. Wed. Sat. June 21 Fri. June PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 Sat. June June Tues. June 17 KA THE AR 'ROUND o ————————————N MARINE AIRWAYS——U. §. MAIL 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. All Planes | Operating Own Aeronautical PHONE 2-Way Radio Station KANG Racio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 6 l Z Equipped Seaplanes for Charter NORTHLAND TRA;NSPORTATION COMPANY CANADIAN PACTEIC JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise May 19—May 31 V. W. MULVIHILL t, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska §. 8, TYEE ... 8. 8. TAKU s. 8. TYEE

Other pages from this issue: