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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1941. PALS COME, PA---TM GOING SHOPPING. TLL NEED MORE MONEY THAN THIS POLLY AND HER TAXI, DOGGONE T/ WITH THAT BANKROLL ON YUHZz THANKS, PA- YOURE A DEAR NOW CALL ME A TAXI, WHILE 1 PUT ON A LITTLE EXTRA POWDER. Bv CLIFF STERRETT 'ISTEAMER MOVEMENTSI - 5.5. NORTHSEA BOUND SOUTH RETURNS HERE to Juneaulsouthbouhad from Sitka, the steamer North ‘Sen Capt. Leonard Williams and Purser C. D. Littlehales, docked in Juneau at 7 c'clock last night with 29 pas- cngers from the Coast city for Juneau and sailed shortly before midnight with 38 passengers booked from here for the south. Passengers arriving from Sitka vere J. J. McLaughlin, O. R. Hart W. L. Barton, R. L. Woll, George Anderson, R. G. Rudy, Annie An- ticquia, Lottie Dick, Mary Radick Mrs. George Baggen, Dorothy Lo R Swanson, Mr. and Mrs. F c le, Mr. and Mrs, C. J. 1l Mr M. Malloy, Mr. and Mry F. T. Barnekoff, Mrs. J. Collins, Marie Collins James Rolland Nichola Dixen William Peler William Watson, William Jone: Thomas Andrews, Sid Thompson and J. L. Pollock Passengers sailing for Seattle were Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Carlson, Lester Carlson, Mr.and Mrs. R. F. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. 1 C. Hill, Virgil Heath, Charles W. Carter, John T. Welch, Dale Hol- jand, Mrs. Bert Holland, Norine Springer, Mrs. E. Hillman, M James Larson, Grace Karinen, orge Emerson, Virgil Larson, Ro- bert Duncan and Bill White, For Petersburg—A. B. Elrath, N. McDonald and Hazel Coffin For Wrangell — Sharen Bakke, . HERE 10 TAKE LUMBER LOAD Mrs. Leonard Charles, Mrs. W. Robinson, Miss M. Elliott, Myren After arriving at Dupsnt to 1 o cad powdet, the Alaskd Steamship Christy, Charles Thompson, A. Vaughn, M. D. Willlams, E Conkle and Robert MeCann. e leaerrror Mrs, Russell Clithero, wife of the . ;‘::’ 5 (’f”“"", (;;',fi.'lif'l; ,‘\’;‘,:'::' manager e Sitka a o e 2 LR B anager of the Sitka Hotel, and junesy from the South at 6 o'clock her daughter, Laura Jean, whowas' i 35 his morning graduated last week from the Sit- % Bigh AR S The vessel will load lumber bere B! , Visited friends In ¢ tpe Westward and contiuue to Juneau last evening while the North e i B Seward and Seldovia. Part of the a was in port. They are bound cargg from the South for Westward for Seattle for a visit, R perts building materials for a %34l schosl at Homer and eight dissem- NOTICE bled flat cars.for the Alasl road ATRMATL ENVELOPES, showlng air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. ( boro housewife hurriedly seized her {grocery list and set out for the FOR BENT |store. At the store she found she g had taken, by mistake, the com- J“ea‘ qulllr plete roster of three major league Store Space Will Re 1t it | STEP to Health with Berter Feet. emodel to Su | Phone 648. Chiropodist Dr. Steves. Tenant. | pla s baseball teams—compiled by her See Percy’s Cafe | NORTHBOUND { heduléd to arrive | ek this evening | & Princess Leuise scheduled to ] arrive late fomorrow after noon or evening $ Baranof due Sunday North Coast due Tuesda ! SCHEDULED SAI ® Alaska schieduled to sail from Seattle 9 a.m. {otorrow & Princess Charlotte scheduled to ® sail from Vancouver June 7 . at 9 pm. ® Northland scheduled o from Seattle June 11 ® Taku scheduled to sail e Seattle June 12. ® North Sea scheduled to from Seattle June 13 at aam SOUTHBOUND SAILIN: utia nscheduled to arriva <outhbound at 8 o’clock Sun- @ day night . Tyce scuthbound Thursday e morning ° LOCAL SAILIN: . Estebeth scheduled to sail e every Wednesday at 6 pm. e for Sitka and wayports . Naha leaves every Wednesday ® at 1 pm. for Petersburg, Port e Alexander, Kake and way- ® ports. . ° o 0 . Yukoh at 8:30.0'c Returnir to sail from sail 10 S ® e 0000000000 o000 S . . . ° . . . . . . . . . . from Juneau o . . > TIDES (Sun time, “June 7) Low tide—5:06 am. -18 feet High tide—11:24 am., 158 feet. | Low tide—5:12 pm., 13 feet High tide—11:19 pm., 190 feet .- D, CLITHEROS THROUGH ' is eight-year-old daughter. -oo el | Empire Cluss R | ——r PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 P44 Round-Trip Fares: 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased in advance. Bethel Fa:r‘banks Flat Juneau Fairbanks, Alaska Flat, Alaska Golovin, Alaska Hot Springs, Alaska Juneau, Alaska McGrath Nome, Alaska Nulato, Alaska Ophir, Alaska Ruby, Alaska Seattle, Wash., U. S. A Tanana, Alaska Whitehorse, ¥. T., Can. W oisopnses. 2o L BRR Gt Bu. Mo. We. Fr. 10:00 16:10 125 115 10 116 § 88 n N1 % 95 207 234 212 $202 102 59 60 33 20 8191 26 114 142 119 109 120 Mo. Tu. Th. Sa. Lv SEATTLE, Wash US.A. PST Ar 18:55 Av JUNFAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 . Mo. We. Sa. 16:15 14:15 13:55 10:00 Su. Tu. Th. 10:00 10:00 10:20 12:15 PST Ar 12:15 135" Lv 10:15 135° Ar 9:55 150" Lv 6:00 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. 17:00 Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T. 18:55 Ar FATRBANKS, Alaska L. A. DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager 135 So. Franklin St. PAN AMFRICAN ATRWAYS PHONE 106 1324—4TH AVE.—-SEATTLE 16:49 16:40 | under S_inking . (1) Admiral Luetjens; (2) Bismarck; (3) Hood; (1) torpedoes being Ihousahds of Police and Sheriffs Work with FBi InInfernal Defense Plas (Continued from Page One) d above or in ity pianning will he e | accepted. For all but the FBI has 54 bureaus in the!giade professional experic States. Using these 8 pandscape archifecture is puciel ~the greater network,! pplications must be filed state or sectional conferences were n July 26, 1041 set up, aftended by officials from . gy he nesds in various tl police agencies who .\l\,;nlh("l( '(’:nn‘.onl.‘ aREncles R Ingness . LT Mprm v hospital and public health nurs- ing, medical technicians, @ lab- oratory workers, two new examina- ticns in these fields and a revised e of examination for junior graduate nurse have been nounced, They are: Public health nursing sultant, $2,600 ond $3,200 a year. Comple- tion of a four-year college course including or. supplemented by at least one year of study in public health nursing, graduation from an| redited school of nursing, andl xperience as public health nursing| pervisor are required. The clos-| ‘date is August 26, 1941. Medical technician, $1,620 to $2,-| 000.a year; junior laboratory help- er, $1,440 a year. The optional sub-| jects are general and roentgenology and in addition for some of the positions, surgery. Applicants must junior The i United red. not later TA The AN OATH first thing these police of- ficials must do is an oath, which, without calling for any alle- giance which would interfere v their obligations locall ends this note: “I will constantly strive to cooperate in the safeguarding of cur internal security and in the de se of the nation.” i This is “the tie that binds” and in the I quarter of 1941 it bound 8,357 police officials (and consequently the for working them) into the FBI's mo- plan. on, bilization As an example of now these conferences blanket a state, Caii- fornia may be cited. Quarterly con- have been held in San o Palo Alto, Stockton, Martinez, Sacramento, Napa, Oak- tice. of Bismarck Ends Great Naval Battle in North /idantic dropped; (5) Ark R Back From Greenland Patrol Coast Guardsmen {lower deck) returning from police work around the Greenland cryolite mines, arrive at Philadelphia on the Danish coastal wvessel Julius Thomsen. Cryolite is necessary in making aluminum. The ~ Guardsmen will report on alleged Nazi activity in Greenland, ‘ actual operation of card-punch ma- chines. Applications for the positions Tabulating, machine operator; al- land, Redding, San Rafael, Wat- sonville, Eureka, San Diego, El Centro, Fresno, Bakersfield, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino and Santa Barbar That is cover- | age. a. have completed at least 14 units of | card-punch operators and tabula high-school study, unless they pass ing machine operators listed below a written general test. Apm'upri.)(c‘;wfll be rated as received until fur- laboratory, clinical, or operating ther notice. Appointments will be room experience is required. { made in Washington, D. C., only. Junior graduate nurse, Veterang'| A written test will not be given. Administration, Public Health Serv-| Alphabetic card-punch operator; phabetic tabulating machine opera- tor; $1,260 to $1,440 a year. Appli- cants must have had appropriate experience in the gperation of elec~ tric tabulating or alphabetic tabu-|§ lating machines. Full information as to the re- ice, and Indian Field Service, $1,- 620 a year. Applicants are no long- | er required to take a written test, and the vision requirement has been modified. Applications will be rated as received until further no- (NEXT: What happens at a “FBI Law Enforcement Offi- ion Plan for Na- conference and what the results are.) ——————— Ci1vIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS civil service examinations for the positions described below have beea announced by the U.S.Civil Service Commission. _Applications will be accepted at the Commis on's Washington office not later than the closing dates specified. The salaries are subject to the usual 4 percent retirement deduction. Landscape architect, varions grades with salaries from $2.000 to $5,600 a year. Applicants must have completed a four-year college course with major study in landscape ar- ¢hitecture, engineering, or design. For the junior grade, a four-year general college course plus the com- pletion of the work leading: to an advanced degree ih''the fields list- l‘ under- card-punch operator, $1,260] a year. Applicants must have had at least two full months of paid experience in the operation of card- punch machines, or a training which included 60 hours in quirements for these examinations, and application forms, may be ob- tained at 311 Federal Building. | —— BUY DEFENSE BONDS LUDWIG NELSD as 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 receive TWO tickets to see: “L08T HORIZON"” Federal Tax—35¢ ver Persom WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! Leave Seattle Northbound Due Junean Northbound Due Juneau Steamer Southbound ITIAN Thurs. May 29 Sun. June Sun. June 8 YUKON Tues. June Sat. June BARANOF .. Thurs. June Sun. June June 14 ALASEA Sat. June Tues. June Mon. June 16 DENALY Wed. June Sun. June 15 Sat. June 21 ALEUTIAN June Tues. June Wed. June 25 Sat YUKON Tues. June Sat. June Fri. June 27 BARANOF Thurs.June Sun. June 2 un. June 29 COLUMBA Sat. June Tues. June 2 ThursJuly 3 ALASKA Tues. June 2 Sat. June DENALI Thurs.June Sun. June 29 Sat. July 5 PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 H. O. ADAMS AGENT MARINE AIRWAYS——U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communieation Authorized Carrier Scheduled Passenger Airline Service SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Headquarters Juneau: PHONE 623 Operating Own Aeronautical Radio Station KANG HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU Seaplanes for Charter RTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY All Planes 2-Way Radio Equipped PHONE 612 o — Juness W SATLIN geattle . Ly.Jun - 10 June 12 June 6 June 10 coast North- 1and North sea HENRY none 23 h June 16 June June 19 Jupe 13 June 11 t EN, Agen g pssengers 199 TRAVEL on a "“PRIN- CESS” LINER JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER . VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise June 10, 20—July 4 Princess Charlotte July 13, 27 V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska CANADIAN PACIFIC WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Dil—Stove ©il—Your Coal Choire—General Hauling —Storage and Crating' CALL US! Junean Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 CANADIAN PACIFIC ATCo. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Bailings from Pler 7 Seattle Leaves Beattle ...June 5 - June 12 ..June 19 S. TYEE .. 8. TAKU .. S. TYEE .. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION Y D. B. FEMHMER AGENT Night 312 Phone 114 ; | & i UST MASKS_sgt. F. J. Lewands tor on C Joseph P. Jury of Bal Corbin, Ky., and H. E. “ampire Classifieds Payl Window Cleaning é