The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 20, 1941, Page 6

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THE -DAILY ‘ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 194}. LESSEE — $130 PLUS 60¢ PLUS #1145 MAKES T’ BlLL $3.35:-RIGHT, WAITERZ PRINCE RUPERT SAILS NORTH ON : . INAUGURAL TRIP ® North . SCr © Baranof due [ MARINE NEWS | 'STEAMER MOVEMENTS! — NORTHBOU Sund: Coast due Tuesgay. TEDULED SAILINGS e Princess Charlotte scheduled to At 7 oclock last evening, the © »;:1]9 from Vancouver June 21 Prince Rupert, Canadian Natiopal ® 8t 9 p.m. . : steamer, docked in Juneau, bring-| ® Cm”,mm"‘ .:rthuw; m!:““vl ‘3"?‘ ing 172 round trip passengers. The : §2”d”'" 5 p.n. Sunday, July i;\l::fif Ru‘fi:h’ v;::firr‘nis lzou_‘,fi]::‘: ® Prince George scheduled to sail Saturday midnight on its way back : (’]“;"”‘“ Vancouver, June 23 at to Vancouver . Of the 172 roundtrippers 38 are 5 A3 !““‘”i‘y:];"'(f".,‘; to s TH members of the Californian Broth- o Nun‘hhnd ~<-h:=d|;lvd o erhocd of Railway Clerks and their &~ " %0 A0 o familles who for themfEkiPArt, o rayy. scheduled: to sail from have never before visited Alaska. o = goaile June 26 Among those aboard is Geor8¢ e Prinoess Louise scheduled to sail A. McNjchll, Chief, Passenser o rom vancouver Junb 28 at Agent for .the, line, wno is making o ¢ p. ; his annual trip on this inangural o SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS JUST A MINUTE, SIR, AND TLL SEE, SIR- 400 ABOARD FROM SEATTLE Carrying almost 400 passengers and three round trip tourists the ® northbound steamer Yukon Capt. ® C. A. Glasscock and Purser Leigh ® Runge, docked in Juneau at 11:30 ® o'clock this forenoon with 42spas- | ® sengers from Seattle and Southeast ® Alaska for Juneau. The vessel is ® scheduled to sail for the Westward @ lat 4:30 o'clock this afternoon. ® passengers arriving from Seattle ® were George F. Alexander, Jr., Lydia ® 'Black, D. I. Breneman, Annie Bren- ® eman, Mr. and Mrs. Hollis E. Chat- win, Leretta Gaynor, Marian Harris, | !Mrs. C. C. Harris, Walter Johnson, Lew G. Kay; George A. Meagher, ® Ethel May Meyers, Ellen Rice, Rup- ® |ert Rock, Ruth F. Sheppard, B. D. ® Stewart, Jeanette Stewart, Sue Stew- | ® lart,.Mary Winters, Harold Brandt, ® | Robert D. Brown, A. Carlson, Will- voyage of the company season.Mc- o nNowth Sea scheduled south- ® fam Honold, Jack Klingbud, Jack ! Nicholl stated that he thought this|g * poung sometime early tomor- ® | Hardsug, Buel V. Rees and Frank year would bring yp. record-break- o . row morning. o | Winters, ¥ : ing passenger receipts and that he o prince Rupert seheduled south- ® . From Ketchikan—W. B. Wood, H. had every hope of making this sea-| e bound midnight Saturday. ®|B Gustafson. H. H. Bond, Herbert son. the. most successful. ever. He o Denali scheduled southbound |Cole and Louie Wersen. added, also, that he was grateful|e sometime Sunday. o rom Wrangat ats. and Mrs. Hik that, yet, none of the com- e Aleutian scheduled southbound ® |v. Nelson, H. M. Olson, G O. Mc- pany's West Coast ships, excepl|e June 25. ® | Guire and Ken M Nelso’n. the Prince Robert, had been called o yukon scheduled southbound ®| From Petersburg—Earl Neuru; A. for Atlantic naval duty e June 27. ® ! van Mavern, S. J. Herrala and Wal- The Prince’ Rupert sailed atmid- e LOCAL SAILINGS ® ter Taivola. g night. ® Estebeth scheduled to sail e ———e— — Capt. N. MacLean is master of the |® every Wednesday at 6 pm. e TTE. ship with E. W. Gray acting as Chief | for Sitka and wayports. [ B '{,’;;:]'"Li::‘: (:E:‘;‘" hali- Officer, G. Davidson s Chief En-|e Naha leaves every Wednesday |, ol S0 o000 B 0 e gineer, N. A. McLean is Purser, D.|e at 1 pm. for Petersburg, Port ®| "o D 1 Cold s('n,.‘,,:. dook M. Jenkins, Assistant Purser and A.| ® Alexander, Kake and way- ® | o e A S Drummand, Chief Steward. o ports; .‘tchol;’lml;\‘;ll}::;ic‘:(‘”::”l)t!:c("'\'uvf 9 g i 4 £ s s X 75l ® ®®® 2.9 ® ® ° ° °N.nd85 cents per pound. Capt. Ole "DES | Westby of the 31-D337 sold 2900 I_OUBE DO(KS | | pounds to the Alaska Coast Fish- kS, St B | eries. at prices of 9.5 and 85 cents FROM SKAGWAY Low tide—5:00 am, 12 feet. |Per pound. High tide—11:22 a.m., 131 feet. PRy i Low. -Fidncdibn, D, ack: RINEHART LANDS HERE On a southbound trip, after re- High tide—11:07 p.m., 158 feet. Petersburg pilot Jimmy Rine- turning to Juneau from Skagway, - > the Canadian steamer Princess Lou- A a velocity of 231 miles ise, Capt. 8. K. Gray and purser wipd pelocty (8 o an hour was reported in 1934 hart arrived in Juneau last night |on a flight from Petersburg to Ju- neau with James Boyle. He expects td return today, weather E. Cornelius, docked in Juneau at =l perm 7 o'clock this morning and sailed :::;p::‘f:,m Jaubington, New ting. two hours later, taking 19 passen- FSERI e s o gers from this city for the south e | P . Passengers sailing - are H. J. 3 DOUGLAS Friedman, N. L. Towers, N. Gun- | 1 o T ther, G. Sullivan, E. Earlandson, O. Heitsed, C. Berg, G. Moun, B. Keenan, J. Peterson, E. T. Keenan, J. C. Sullivan, L. Lawson, E. J. Johnson, Mrs. A. Buchanan, Mr, and Mrs. J. T. Troicano, Miss G. McLynne and L. Paulin. —————— — i Louisiana expects to produce pa- NEWS FORMER DOUGLAS GIRL TO BE MARRIED IN SEATTLE Miss Marguerite Michael, daugh- ter cf Mr. and Mrs. Clark Michael |of Seattle, and granddaughter of | Mrs. Gertrude Laughlin. nioneer resident of Douglas, will become & S5 YUKON HAS prika commercially; California is experimenting with caraway, poppy | o The German censor-approved caption on this picture states it was snapped from the cabin of a German pitfi Heinkel 111 bombing plane as it e this photo the British plane sec ms to be getting By CLIFF STERRETT G- ght with an RAF e worst of it. The Br ged in a dog », somewhere over Greece. In h, however. say they todk a ter- rific toll of Nazi ships in the Battle of Graece. : Draiting Women for Nafional Defense Has (Contivied from Page One) ily for 43 years and then De- h died. ber: “And here's how we got the story. Gannett, the widower of a soldier who had been pensioned for years, petitioned Ceong —with all the evidence—claiming that he was en- titled to the same consideration as |the widow of a pensicned soldier |and that the pension should be | continued. “It took an act of Congress to do_ it, but darned if Congress| {didn't act. Come on out to the| | files. I've got the minutes of Con- !gress right here and all the docu- ments in the case.” i And darned if Jim hadn't. There| it was, in flowing script, setting corth that since the annals of this | cow and celery seed. FOR RENT | Junean Liquor | Store Space p i STOIM._[,, center of radio Will Remodel to. Suit | ch-“ ownership furore is James ‘Tenant. - - { L: Fly, Federal Communications Commission chairman, seen giv- | ing. his. views on' the F.C.C. suthority, at 2 sgenate hearing. et 1o " - EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 Round-Trip Fares: } % 10% off twice one-way | _, = ‘é o fares, when purchased | 2 % 5 G| g g ° in advance, |8 |3 & | o o4 EAr AR S5 g Fairbanks, Alaska . $ 76 Flat, Alaska ............ 31 $56 Golovin, Alaska . 141 67 $118 Hot Springs, Alaska 88 15 65 Juneau, Alaska . 151 82 132 McGrath - 44 44 18 8120 Nome, Alaska ....... 149 74 126 149 $112 Nulato, Alaska 121 50 99 127 83 $ 37 Ophir, Alaska 39 48 12 125 10 116 § 88 Ruby, Alaska ...108 39 8 115 71 47 15 Seattle, Wash., U. S. A.... 236 170 217 95 207 234 212 $202 Tanana, Alaska 94 24 71 102 59 60 33 208191 Whitehorse, Y. T, Can.. 144 75 125 26 114 142 119 109 120 Su. Mo. Mo. Tu. We. Fr. Th. Sa. 10:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash U.S.A. PST Ar 18:55 5 16:10 Av JUNEAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 A su. Mo. Tu. Th. We. Sa. 10:00 16:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska PST Ar 12:15 16:15 10:00 16:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. ..135° Lv 10:15 14:15 10:20 17:00 Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T. . 135° Ar 9:55 13:55 12:15 18:55 Ar FAIRBANKS, Alaska ..150° Lv 6:00 10:00 L. A. DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager 135 8~ Pranklin St. PHONE 106 PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE.—SEATTLE osi = s ns s e PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS | June bride at 8 o'clock tomorrow eve- country “furnish no other similar| | 4 example of female heroism, fi- 0~ . | !::f,"g' in the Puget Sound metropO-) ;o0 anq courage” as displayed 1 a i by Deborah Sampson, her wid= Mr. Olvde Dpstgeey 53 08 ower, Benjamin Gannett should ;and Mrs. E. A. Dearinger, is groom |to be and his twin brother Claire: |is to be married at the same time| for a double wedding event. The| | ceremony will | Dearinger heme, No. 4411, Francis | | | avenue. i | receive a pension of $80 a year for the rest of his days. | Congress has never granted an-| take. place at the other “medal” like that. ! S ve—— — ‘POSSUM HUNT 1 Although she was born in Seattle, the bride-to-be lived in Douglas for | a few years when a small child. When of school age her parents had | 2gain removed to Seattie and thereia storehouse on his property, &' §hc attended public s(;honl, complet- ' oiher 'possum and eight young ng her juniof year in high school 'possums were found, | this spring. Clyde Dearinger is em- Gt |ployed at the Boeing plant. e FIRST AIDERS MEET Rezular meeting of first aid for| | wemen class will be held at 7:30 o'clock this evening in the city hall. C. OF C. MEETING . Meeting of Douglas Chamber of icunmm':e is scheduled for this eve- |ning at 8 c'clock in the city hall.| |General invitation for attendance! is extended by the officers in charge. | S e MRS. LOGAN HOSTESS ’ | Complimentary to Mrs. Leo Mac- | Greanor, who leaves Sunday for a| vacation trip to Canada, Mrs. Grant Logan entertained at her home last | night with a surprise bon voyage shower. | An evening of binge and pinochle | | was enjoyed by the Mesdames Tauno | | Niemi, B. Stewart, Clancey Henkins, | Gus Erickson, L. B. Nelson, Mike Deseko, Clyde Bolyah, A. R. Edwards, Verne Hodges and Miss Astrid Ladd. Following serving of refreshments by the hostess, appropriate gifts were presented Mrs. MacGreanor, EMPORIA, F. D. Mitchell | bagged nine 'possums without dog or gun. During the cleaning-up of | | * (OLSEUM-DOUGLAS THURSDAY-FRIDAY JONES FAMMX in " "YOUNG AS YOU FEEL" e r——— | entirely Rev_figaled Strange (ase ANDRAES, WRIGHTS BOUND FOR HOONAH ABOARD S. 5. YUKON of the And ¥ Iey Straits Salmon Company, Mrs. Andrae, Mrs. Frank Wright and Pa- tricia Wright are passengers aboard the Yukon enroute to Hoonah, where they will visit for the summer. The party was jeined in Juneau by Frank Wright, superintendent of the company's cannery. Wright has been in Juneau several days and is returning tc Hoonah aboard the Yu- kon. sresident Peter J a LA e POLICE WORK IS CHORE A pair trailed a and con To- stolen led a TOPEKA, Ka peka policemen to a pasture th elves in brush to wait thief. Occasionally they had to up their lurking to feed and water of ior the ccw. This went on all day long, up to milking time, when they quit. The thief never did show up. - El Salvador’s henequen, formerly exported, is now consumed almost by the dome: coffee b industr ording to the Dep: ment ¢f Commer —,———— The Daily Alas! mpire has the largest paid circulation of any Al o ‘ oska newspaper. What Flames Left of a Fé;{ofy PLED G E_To clear “his boys™ ~numbering 1,013,000—of sus- picion of sabotage along rail. road lines, Jeff Davis (above) hobo king, says that “in the in- terest of national defense” he’s ordering them off the railroads during the crisis. BACK FOR VACATION George F. Alexander, Jr., son of | Judge and Mrs. Alexander, arrived on the steamer Yukon today. He | will spend the summer vacation with his parents before returning to the University of Washington. factory IM a $3,600,000 fire. The company manu- ; nafns of an Elicott, Md. - This wrez:'g:t i& l&::fi: rémains of an Four'hllndl‘ed gt ithout intem “DESTRY RIDES AGAIN" s a paid-up subsertber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invitea to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO tickets to ;ee: Federal Tax—5¢ ver Persom ) WATCH THIS SPACE— . Your Name May Appear! ¢ | | Leave Seattle Due Juneau Steamer Northbound Northbound by DENALY 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 BARANOF ThursJune 19 Sun. June 22 Sun. June 29 COLUMBA Sat. June 21 Tues. June 24 Thurs.July 3 i | ALASKA‘ - Tues. June 24 Sat. June 28 ] DENALI Thurs.June 26 Sun. June 29 Sat. July 5 Wy McKINLEY Sat. June 28 Tues. July 1 Mon. July 7 ALEUTIAN Tues. July 1 i, July 4 Thurs.July 10 YUKON . Thursguly 3 Mon. July 7 i BARANOF ... Sat. July 5 Tues. July 8 Mon. July 14 H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES--TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 ! g “leb 2-Way Radio Communication Scheduled Passenger Airline Service SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Headquarters Juneau MARINE AIRWAYS——U. S. MAIL | , Authorized Carrier PHONE 623 ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. NORTH Operating Own Aeronautical All Planes 2-Way Radio Station KANG Radio HANGAR and SHO! Equipped Seaplanes for Charter | PHONE L 613 LAND COMPANY P in JUNEAU 24 June26 P TRAVEL ona "PRIN- CESS” LINER JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Prineess Lounise June 10, 20—July 4 Princess Charlotte June 27 V. W. MULVIHILL. . ! Agent, C.PR.—Juneau, Alaska CANADIAN PACIFIC CANADI/ PACIFIC Phone 48—Night Phone 481 Window Cleaning Nn(l;tu\:xs June 20 June sy June 25 June 30 June 27 July 1 July 3. P Agent AENRY GREEN, Alaska Transportation Company . SAILINGS FROM PIER 7 SEATTLE EVERY THURSDAY 10:00 A. M. PSS SEIT IS TTTNSTUTTSSI sSSP ST SUS S USSEA | LEER. et 2 g Y ) — ./ ot RTINS Sl v BTSSR AR 8. §. TAKU _June 12 - S. 8. TYEE June 19 S. 8. TAKU June 26 WHEN IN NEED OF PASSENGERS ~ FREIGHT Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your REFRIGERATION Coal Choice—General Hauling = =fitasago 484 Evativg D. B. FEMMER—AGENT ' CALL US! PHONE 14 NIGHT 312 H sf Juneau Transfer Smpire Classifieds Pay! ’ T

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