The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 31, 1941, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA-EMPIRE,’SATURDAY|' MAY 31,'1941. " YOUR HUSBAND IS QUITE INFORMED, HE INSTANTLY KNEW THAT THIS VASE WAS HAND-PAINTED! §. 5, BARANOF DOCKS HERE Alaskp Steamship vessel Baranof, Capt. Joseph Romsauer and purser M. Keating, sailed southbound through Juneau early this morning after a short stop for little oyer an hour. The vessel docked at 3:30 o'clock this morning with 26 pas-| sengers from the Westward for Ju-,’ . neau and sailed at 5 o'clock with 45/ passengers from Juneau for Seattle and Southeast Alaska ports. Passengers arriving were—J. C. Molyneaux, Grace Molyneaux, Jean Molyneaux, Mildred Hermann, Rob- ert Thach, Mrs. C. C, Barrack, M Laura Hall, Mrs. 1. Fradenberg, M $. Buckner, Miss L. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Stahl, Miss G. Giverson, | David Dyer, Gene Dawson, Ivar Skarland, Sam- Baker, Mis. I Rein- ikki, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Dyer, Shar- on Dyer and Esther Rhind, Emmet Soldin, Sam Hill, Don Meisenzahl | and James 3antore. Passengers leaving Junecau for Se- attle were Beth Notar, Audrey Knight, Aleschi Romi, Oliver Jones, Edna Mae Erickson, Mrs. H. E. Sim- | mons, Mrs. Bernice Day, Harriet Shanahan, Tom Coulter, Mrs. John Coy, Shirley Bagby, Mrs. Martin: Kurset, Gladys »7augh, Roy Mans-| field, Bonnie Hansen, Mrs. W. T.| McCare, Charlette Stevenson, A.-La Chapelle, Violet Pane, W. D. Gro: Mr. and Mrs. Archie Shiels, Leonard Hanson, Chatfield Knight, Kath- leen Knight, W. E. Day, Dalton Bag- by, Eddie Bagby, Mrs, W. T. Mc- Clure, Leonard Hayn, Eleanor War- ren, Esther Boyd, A. Notar and P. Hanagan, For Ketchikan — Albert Lance,| Charles Hastka, Marie Marchant,| George Armstrong, Marlyn Arm- strong and Mrs. L. N. Armstrong. | For Petersburg—J. G. Ellson, Aud- | rey Rude and Grace Mortimer ————— (8un time, June 1) High tide—4:20 am., 143 feet. Low tide—11:02 am., 10 feet. High tide—5:30 p.m., 14.1 feet. Low tide—11:35 p.n., 48 feet. JUNE 2 High tide—5:20 a.m., 13.5 feet. Low tide—11:59 am., 1.8 feet. High tide— feet. | { | = | New Mexico's highway system is believed to antedate that of any other state in the Union, El Cam- ino Real from El Paso to Santa Fe is said to be America’s oldest road, having been blazed in 1582] by Don Antonip de Espejo, al Spanish explorer. ——— - Little pickled onions may he enticing partners for ~baked or STEAMER MOVEMENTS . Aleutian due tomorrow. No time ® NORTHBOUND of arrival given out at noon & today, North Sea due Tuesday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle June 3 at 9 am. Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 am. June 5. Tyee scheduled to sail from Se attle June 5. North Coast scheduled to sail e from Seattle 10 a.m. June 6. » SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS ® Alaska scheduled southbound 5 a.m, Monday. Northland scheduled to arrive next Tuesday, coming to Ju- neau via Sitka southbound. Taku scheduled to arrive and sail southbound Wednesday afternoon. Denali southbound Friday LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth 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- ® ports. - e o o 0 0 o o 23 Arrive On Denali From South Carrying a large number of pas- sengers for Womans Bay and Ko- . ] [ ’ diak, the northbound steamer De-| nali, Capt. Hans Odsen and purser Frank Roeder, docked in Juneau at| 7 o'clock last night with 23 pas- sengers for this port from Seattle and Southeast Alaska. | Passengers arriving from Seattle| were Dr. Ruth Gruber, W. G. He lan, Mr. and Mrs. Burton Holmes, Shirley Mae Kleweno, Mrs. W. P. Kleweno, Reggie Kleweno, Wally Kleweno, Emma Mayer, Miss M. L. Mayer, Paul Peterson, Mrs. M. B. Reeder, Mrs. K. Schumacher, Thayer Soule, William 8. Stolker and Harry Townsend. From Ketchikan—S. B. Renn, Mr. and Mrs, Roy Banta, Myron M. | Christy, Tom Dooley, Ellsworth Jea- sen and Ed Ridley. Eighteen passengers were aboard the vessel when she sailed for the Westward at 10 oclock last night. Passengers for Seward were Wil- liam Allen, John Keyser, Donald Hayes, R. N. Snell, M. Kurset, Wil- diam Johnson, Lee Miller, C. K. Lesher, James Ryan, Francis Mc- Dermott, Ailcen McDermott, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cropsdaill and Walt- er Cropsdaill. For Kodiak— Aldo Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Ross. For Woman's Bay—V. C. Marsolen. boiled hami or roast pork or veal. EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 Round-Trip Fares: 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased Fairbanks, Alaska . Flat, Alaska ................ PAN AMERICA gmplre Classifieds R R A R RS R R North Seals JuneauBound | | | SEATTLE May 31. — Steamer North Sea sailed at 10 o'clock Fri- |day morning for Southeast Alaska {ports with 137 passengers, the fol- Hlowing booked for Juneau: Harry Rubenack, Al Meyring, Lewrence Kerr, Miss Frances Smith, | Mrs. Agnes Adsit, James E. Chap- ados, Mrs. Garnet Button and son. Maud Wright, Willlam Garster, Miss Marianne Skinner, T. S. Paint- gr; E. G. Williams, A. B. Anderson, | Mrs. Harleigh Glass. | Tal!(jnd Out {Press Box Beals Pitcher's | Box Says Man Who % Has T@ Both ROMNEY WHEELER AP Feature Service MOBILE, Ala. May 31—Covering in baseball game is a perspiration- | provoking chore for Sports Editor | Pat Moulton of the Mobile Press | because Pat, in the press box, | pitches every ball to every batter. You can find the reason in the records of the Southeastern, Texas [ | | and Pacific Coast leagues, where Pat pitched from 1927 through 1933, |cause he decided there was 'money in minor league baseball. He's not sure there's a lot of | money in the press box than in the pitch-! er’s box. Signed by Sox Pat, a native of Mobile, signed by the Boston Red Sox in 11927 after a brilliant college baze- |ball career at Auburn, The Red |Sox management liked him, but |not as a big-leaguer, and prompt- ly packed him off to High Point, |N. C. Later he went to Selma, Ala., where he finished the season. | The next year he pitched for Sel- ma and Montgomery, Ala., and in’ 1929 was sold to Shreveport in’ the Texas League. He stayed there until 1933, when he went to Fort' Worth, and thence to Portland,! Ore. In 1934 he played briefly with Atlanta in the Southern Associa-, tion, but he landed a job as man- ager of Henderson, in the East Texas League, and wound up there. That, he says, was the end of his baseball. “I gave my shoes and glove (o the clubhouse boy,” he recalls, “and resolved to quit fooling my- self any longer about my future as a ball player, My arm was gone. I wanted to go home to Mobile.” ! Two Months' Trial { He tried selling cement, then |turned up one July day in the Press-Register office, asking for a;| job. Told there were no openings,| Pat replied: “I'll work for nothing if you'll let me hang around learn- ing how to write heads and re- writes” And he did, for two| months. | His first published story was an, interview with Branch Rickey of the St. Louis Cardinals, followed a little later by a feature on Dizzy | Dean, against whom he had, pitched. The Press - Register put‘v him on the payroll at $10 a week. | Now he's sports editor of | i | He became a sports writer be- | no | in newspapers — but he’s ; convinced you'll last much longer i was |peze and pedestal, she d . By CLIFF STERRET 1 KNOWED IT TH MINNIT T SAW A Chicago truck driver saw what he thought was a driverless auto speeding down a highway in suburban Des Plaines at 65 miles per hour. He curbed the car and found to his amazement a seven-year-old boy, Arthur Koester, Jr., at the wheel and his five-year-old brother beside him. didn’t show above the door window.) Authorities found that Arthur was driving a car owned by his cousin, (Arthur is so small his head Dr. Louise Koester, who had taught the boy to drive but gave him strict orders never to take the car out alone. Arthur, (r i By ADELAIDE KERR " AP Feature Service Writer When Antoinette Concello flies from a trapeze in her spangled tights, she stops the show. Thou- sands hush to stlence. Then, below the blaze of circus spotlights, the drums begin to roll. Antoinette’s pink clad body swings out, breaks sharp and full and flips into a ball. One . . . two and a half somersaults. Then she comes out of the spin and flies into the catcher’s hands, swinging to meet her high above the net. The gaping thousands relax—and get back the'r breath. Antoinette is billed as the only woman who does that two-and-a- half somersault trick. But it's pot her only trick. Flying between tra- s.me other difficult and dizzy spins. She came to the circus from a convent school. At vacation time, about 12 years ago, she went to visit her circus performer sister in winter quarters at Bloomington, Iil. There she met Arthur Concello. a young aerialist who was destinec to go places on a flying trapeze. They were married a few months later.| when she was barely 16. Arthur These bafind;Women of cws Flyi ng Trapeze g Antoinette Concello He's a wonderful teacher.” I made a rapid back-stage tour— past bareback riders in spangied gkirts, acrobats, elephant girls —to the dressing room of Russian-born Elly Ardelty, another star. She holds the spctlight alone in the ring with trapeze balancing tricks so difficult she is said to be the only woman to try them. She is a slim little blonde with sad blue cyes, fragile-lodking ©s a piece of Dres Her career jn the great European music halls came to a sudden halt several year: ago when her husbhand slipped fromn his trapeze in Berlin, and crasiied s father, mother and cousin had to appear in juvenile court to explain the incident. the crowd was pouring out, I stop- ped to talk to a showgirl in gold- | spangled yellow—one of the circus v chorus, “The circus—we can’t leave it alone,” she said. “I've tried ordinary jobs like modeling, but they always seem so dull. “If you can’t have a college edu- | cation, the best education is to join the cirgus.. .I've learned a lot from it, I can read a face now when I see it—tell in a minute whether a man’s a drifter or not. And seeing |50 many unexpected things happen I've learned not to stew and fret— to take it on the chin. And I've built up my body too. I used to be | a bareback rider, yuh see. “But I can’t keep this up forever. I figure if youre going to do any- | thing you gotta do it before you're 30. What I'd really like to do—TI'd like to write. . . ” - Australia has a new 600-mile the country its first modern north- ELMER CARLSON a8 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 recelve TWO tickets to see: "WOMEN IN WAR" Federal Tax—So ver Person WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! COMPANY Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Northbound Northbound Southbound | coLumeiA ... : Sat. May 17 Tues. May 20 Mon. May 26 Tues. May 20 Sat. May 24 | BARANOF .. Thurs. May 22 Sun. May 25 | ALASKA ... Sat. May 24. Tues. May 27 i DENALI .. Tues. May 27 S‘L, May 31 ALEUTIAN ... Thurs. May 29 Sun. June 1 Tues. June 3 Sat. June 7 . Thurs.June 5 Sun. June 8 Sat. June 14 ALASKA ... Sat. June 7 Tues.June 10 Mon. June 16 | DENALI ... Wed. June 11 Sun. June 15 Sat. June 21 i ALEUTIAN ... Sat. June 14 Tues. June 17 Wed. June 25 | YUOEON - ’i‘ues. June 17 Sat. June 2} Fri. June 27 ) | H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 | FREIGHT OFFIC 4 | “ SERVING ALASKA THE YEAR ‘'ROUND ;’_.——_——————_ \| MARINE AIRWAYS—VU. S. 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. | i [ A tical e P Radie Statlon KANG PHONE Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 6 12 Equipped Seaplanes for Charter defense highway which complctesj N O R H | AN D a rail-highway-rail route to give Lisnew south - transcontinental system. ——————— Florida, with 4,208 square miles, | has the greatest inland water area of any state. NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Joe White has applied or 1s about to apply for appointment, under the provisions of Chapter 56, Alaska Session Laws 1941, as administrator of the estate of Archie White, deceased, wherein the gas screw or vessel “Jericho,” Official No. 231980, nine net tons, is involved in accordance with his| petition heretofore or about to pe| filed in the United States Com- missioner’s and ex:umnlo probate court for the Sitka, Alaska, Com- missioner’s Precinct, and that all heirs, creditors, lienors, and other interested parties are required to file in said court and make their objections to his said appointment within thirty (30) days after the termination of the posting and|, publication_of this notice, namely: within thirty (30) days after June 6, 1941. Dated at Hoonah, 26, 1941. Alaska, 5 JOE WHITE. First publication, May 26, 1941, Last publication, June 4, 1941. NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN: That Ernest M. Polley, administra- tor of the estate of John B. Bern- hofer, deceased, has filed his pe- tition in the hereinafter .described sourt for judgment setting aside May | TRANSF COMPANY 1% % ! Golovin, Alaska 141 67 $118 the| " "~ i sls ¢ Hot Springs, Alaska 88 15 65 Press. trained her .for his pxo(exsxog\, and o“hls death. |and awarding to Helen Bernhofer, 1. Juneau, Alaska 151 82 132 Would he let his son become a ROW she is woman star of his ‘He was husband, father, mother, surviving widow and sole [ McGrath 44 44 18 $120 ball player? The answer is easy. troupe of 35 agnalht.s as well ‘as. a | teacher—everything tq me,” she told neir of the decedent, the entire es- ] Nome, Alaska 140 74 126 149 $112 “My boy would play basehall.u‘smr of the Ringling brothers amd|me. “After he was killed the worlk. B of decedle i fhe. maros Nulato, Alaska 121 50 99 127 83 § 37 he showed promise” he says, “but| BATIUM & Bailey circus. seemed stopped. 1 was alone, Sick .| % Of #e CREUERn L0 SCE Ophir, Alaska 39 48 12 125 10 116§ 88 h lan't stay in the minors| When the circus opened in Madi-{But I didn't lose my courage. After stiug o e yeNe WHEN IN NEED OF Ruby, Alaska 08 39 8 115 71 47 15 e wouldn't stay e minors son Square Garden, T went to See{a while I came back—and practiced 34,000.00. All persons concerned are 1 Seattie, Wash. U. 5. A. 2386 110 217 95 207 234 212 $202 more than three years if he dldn't $o% Suate GRGER | Fen. 1 B3 ST T lld come back to the| 20tifled to be and appesr in thell Diesel Oll—Stove Ofl-¥em i Tanana, Alaska 94 24 71 102 50 60 33 20 $191 flg:wcf; appreciably. Playing more; "y 00 00T g sing.” U. S. Commissioner’s Court for Ju-|| Coal Hauling I; Whitehorse, ¥. T, Can.. 144 756 125 26 ”f 7_142 1197 109 120 than five years in the minors is ik beside her dressing table Then she donned her shimmering | 2684 Precinct, at Juneau, Alaska, —Storage and Crating il merely wasting so much time — at 10 o’clock A. M. on the 24th day blue tights and went out to do her CALL US! H watched her trim the callousgs * ?n"lebl"? h’}%_ g‘; Lfi::ulsw:;::ss ope Wants o be 2 joquy g5 corns—from the psh;s act, Swinging high in her siver{f "““';'e l“‘ll'l and :I:"" ;":::'m:: . 10:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash,US.A.PST Ar 18:55 TR At oy |of her hands, { |trapeze, without a net below her.iny (hey nave, WAV I .IIIIIIITM . 16:10 Av JUNEAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 % : | “They get like this when we work,” she balanced perilously on her should not be so rendered. _’m| Phone 43—Night Phone 651 Su. % Azec Ruins National Monument She said. “Blisters first. And then|knees, bent and picked up with he: | Dated: J“n““vl Alaska, this 1 Tu. Th. . Sa. {|{in western New . co' embraces they harden. It takes worls veu|teeth a handkerchief hanging from lay of May, 1941. 10:00 16:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska PST Ar 12:15 16:15 & great 'E-shaped structure buily koW, cli bing ropes, chinnpg{the bar. Again she stood on her ERNEST M. POLLEY, R e e e == 7 517 ) S S e Rl 88 i & vemmionr Y ek 11 Sow A nier g T Joune s - v (YA pgn e o 1 TS W ouinp p ematizn | There 18 no substitute 5 G ¥ A & : o 4 o 3 have to be streng Before you ce. N £ AR 2. > Tker ‘is mbsm f 1315 108 AFRMEDNIES, Masks 1801 L. 6:0 ., 1909 it mm':w!_hi"go' | even try. tnis ok e She swipg- to edith to}-3hattuck /Bullding, - . i nere ! ,or L. A DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager = A : She shipped the negligee from |thynderous 8pplause and stood, a| Junesu, Alasks, B e 135 So. Frankiin St. PAN AMERICAN AIRWAY: TThe Daily Atasxa Empire Has thi |her siénder little Hody and fiexed{solitry litdle figure in_the spot- | Attorney for Administrator. . ¢ N oinsndaner Adv riisiy y 1324—4TH AVE—SEATTLE largest paid ciroulation of any Al- |biceps- that .woyld . have «dufe’ja f1ight's ybri “giare. Sublication. dates. . May umg‘-j;k B 2.2 abid whid & Ao Aski wrestler “credit, “+Art- tatikny <

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