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HIS TOM IS BACK FROM THAT DUDE RANCH WITH THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 194 ARM IN POLL | MARINE N EWS Yukon Leaves For Westward Sailmg o the Westward, the northbound steamer Yukon left Ju- neau at 4:30 o'clock yesterday after- noon with 39 passengers from Ju- neau. Passengers sailing for Seward were Mrs. G. E. Krause, Ruth Carol Chambers, Mrs. Oren Wildeman, Emma Neilsen, Wilbur Wester, J S. Bright, James Edmiston, William W. Renfrew, Mrs. Art Beaudin, Ruth Coles, Mabel Poquette, J. R. Will- iams, J. H. Herron, H. B. Brown. William S. Karki, John Menorich, Byron Martin, Gerald W, Hudson Richard L. Malloy, Carl H. Schmalt. Bill Jensen, Walter McKinnon, Pat Robinson, Dennie A. Sheppard, Rod- ney L. Johnson, Richard L. Schultz Martin C. Thompson, Elmer J. Jac- chsen, Leslie D. Cashen, Morton M Mason, Ralph E. Parmeter, Carl J. Hagerup, Eli Tanner and G. R Lecklider. For Hoonah — D. V. Robinson Frank Wright and Harold C. Jones. | For Kodiak—Robert D. Johnson | and John K. Griffith. -> NORTHSEA DOCKS HERE FROM COAST : Returning to Juneau from Sitka and hound scuth to Seattle, the! steamer North Sea, Capt. Leonard Wwilliams and Purser C. D. Little- hales, docked here at 5 o'clock this morning with 19 passengers from Sitka for Juneau and sailed two hours later with 15 passengers from Juneau for the south. Passengers arriving were B. F. Kane, Mrs. Walter Scott, Mrs. Vic- tor Ross, Mrs. Jack Mutch, Mrs. I. Homstad, Alvin Larson, Roy Got- nieff, Ken Edwards, Robert Colcord, Mrs. Erling Berg, Resa Gonnett, Mrs. Ruby Hazelwood, James Car- penter, Conrad Anderson, Harry Smith, Clifford Shea, K. P. Samp- son, C. W. Hall and Mike Haniog- lou. Passengers sailing for Seattle are Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson, E. F. Clements, Mrs. Frank Hennessy, Jchn Hannessy, Norma Barekstein, H. M. Hunte rand Fred Jensen. Passengers for Ketchikan—H. L. Paulson, Wellman Holbrook, and Bob Ridley. Passengers for Petersburg—E. C Stevenson, Dorothy Larson and Jul- ian Vellamar. ! Passengers for Wrangell—T. Rob- | erts. - e WESTER LEAVE Wester, manager Gastineau Hotel, left. for the West- ward on the steamer Yukon for a short business trip to Anchorage, connected with the construction of the new Westward Hotel, Wilbur of the BUY DEFENSE BONDS | ® Aleutian scheduled southbound STEAMER MOVEMENTSI A L] NOR’I‘HBOUND 4 | ® Baranof is scheduled to arrive @ e tomorrow morning but indefi- & ® nite at.1 p.m. today. ] # North. Coast due Tuesday. . . SCHEDULED SAILINGS . ® Princess Charlotte scheduled to @ e sails from Vancouver al 9 ® ® o'cleck tonight. (] Colvmbia scheduled to sal from e e Seattle Sunday afternoon at e ® 5 o'clock. L] ® Prince George scheduled to sail ® e f{rom Vancouver, June 23 at e 9pm . ® Alaska scheduled to sail from e e Seattle June 24 at 9 a.m. . ® Northland scheduled to sail ® e from Seattle June 25 . ® Taku scheduled to sail from e |® Seattle June 26. ® North Sea scheduled to sail ® © from Seattle June 27 at 10 @] e am . ® Princess Louise scheduled to sail ® e from Vancouver June 28 at ® 9 pm. * SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Prince Rupert scheduled south- bound midnight tonight, o Denali scheduled southbound ® 10 o'clock Sunday night. ® June 25. ® Tyee scheduled southbound on ® Thursday morning. ® Yukon scheduled southbound ¢ ® June 27. . LOCAL SAILINGS ® Estebeth every Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. ® Naha leaves every Wednesday scheduled to sail e . ° e at1pm. for Petersburg, Port ® ® Alexander, Kake and way- . porLs e o o ® 5 0 0 0 o (Sun time, June 22) Low tide—5:40 am. 0.2 feet High tide—12:03 p.m., 138 feet Low tide—5:39 p.m. 39 feet. High tide—11:44 p.m., 16.4 feet JUNE 23 Low tide—6:i¢ am., -0.7 feet High tide—12:41 p.m, 145 feet. Low tide—6:18,. p.m. 36 feet. 'CAROLINE ENDS 10 DAY FISHING TRIP ‘The Caroline, pleasure yacht own- ed by Campbell Church, Jr., of Ket- chikan, arrived in Juneau at 1 o'clock this afternoon with chart- erers C. Rice and his son, J. Rice of | Louis on board. The pair has | St. J ended a fishing and hunting trtip in Southeast Alaska. The tour, which lasted ten days, took them, among other places, to Kasaan Bay, | Wrangell, Petersburg and Tracy Arm. The younger Rice managed | to shoot a small black bear near Wrangell. Capt. Jim Sande is in command of the Caroline . — e Ireland is planning a gigantic! harvest of peat to forestall possible | fuel famine in 1942. LODESTAR [N BOUNDSOUTH '3 Leaves for Seaftle with Two ]i from Juneau-Elec- | fra Due Here ‘ Returning to Juneau from Fair- banks at 11 c'clock last night, a southbound PAA Lodestar landed at the airpert with two passengers for |Juneau from the Interior and left Juneau this mornng with seven throuzh passengers and two board- ing the plane here Passengers arriving from the North are Foster McGovern and Dar- | win Meisnest. Passengers leaving Ju- neau for Seattle are Howard Ore- baugh and M. L. Dezvies. Through passengers are Miss M. Willey, Rus- Mr. and Mrs. Haakon |sel Wilgres, ® | >hristianscn, Arthur Pitz, Ross Grid- {ley and Lon Brennan. On2 electra is scheduled to arrive | here this afternoon from Fairbanks. ——— BUDDY SUBS FOR HAIDA The U. S. Coast Guard Res € ‘boat Buddy, whichh bas arrived in | the small boat harbor, has been zom- | missioned to take over the duties cf |the Coast Guard Cutter, Haida. | 'The Buddy, 40 footer commanded |by Guy Waltiip, Chief Boatswai Mate, U. 8. C. G. S., will carry mail twice a month to lighthouse stations at Eldred Rock, Sentinel Island, and Peint Retreat, in addition to the \othen routine work, | The beat will leave next Wednes- qay on its bi-monthly mail rcute |with A. Iverson as First Mate and |R. Wallace as Second Mate. The | Buddy has been commissioned for A year's active ser 'WILDES TO DIRECT " NOME FIELD WORK | FOR R. J. SOMMERS | | . Gordon Wildes will leave by PAA | | plane fomorrow’ for Nome to be- | come superintendent of construction ' on the R. J. Sommers contract o4 | the Nome CAA airport. Wildes will work on both Lhe Nome and Ruby fields. The con- | |tracts are for $115,000 and $450,000 | respectively, | Wildes resigned a position ab‘ Planning Technician for the Na- | tional Resources Planning Board in | |order to ta.ke the Sommers job. H B e e |BRANT LEAVES ON - ! FISHERIES PMRO[ | U.S F. W. 8. Brant left Juneau‘ ‘enrly today on salmon patrol. The ‘scnson in Icy Strait opened yes'er- day Aboard is Assistant Fisheries ' | Management Supervisor J. Steele | | Culbertson. : —-——————-—-——r-—q—qflr—i——w—-q-—-w-—— PAN AMER'CAN AIRWAYS EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 Round-Trip Fares: 2 5 10% off twice one-way | __ | & 3| % ° o fares, when purchased |2 |8 | |§ £ R s in advance. 2izla g‘g‘c‘::,: g plglglslslzlz!@ o Fairbanks, Alaska $ 76 Flat. A]R.\Ka ; 81 $56 &olovin, Alaska 141 67 $118 Hot sprmgs, Alaska 88 15 65 Juneau, Alaska 151 82 132 McGrath .. 44 44 18 $12y 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 30 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 20 $191 Whitehorse, ¥. T, Can.. 144 175 125 26 114 142 119 109 120 Su. Mo. Mo. Tu. We. Fr. Th. Sa. 10:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash US.A. PST Ar 18:55 g 16:10 Av JUNEAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 Su. Tu. Th. ) 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 10:00 135 So. Pranklin St. PHONE 106 Ly e A DELEBECQUE;-Dhtrld Sales. Dhm‘u PAN AMERICAN -ATRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE.—SEATTLE e——————————————————————————————————— . MRS, JOHN WILLIAMS " DIES THIS MORNING, | Ada Williams, 48, died suddenly | |this merning at 9 o'clock at the | ‘Government Hospital. She was the } wife of John Williams, of Sitka. The | Williamses have been the guests of | Jake Cropley of Juneau for the last |few days. Mrs. Williams is survived by nine | ‘chudrcn living in Sitka and also | by her husband. The remains will {bc taken to Sitka for burial. 'WELFARE OFFICE NEARS COMPLETION The Territorial Department of Welfare offices in the' Territorial | Building at Seward and Third Sts., |which have recently undergone | renovations, are near completion. | e | |~ Canadian farmers increased pur-| chases of farm machinery and | equipment last year by 40 percent,| the Department of Commerce re- ported. | —— | Sunlight penetrates water only| a few hundred feet, leaving the bulk of the ocean's depths in darkness. | | | | S D — BUY DEFENSE BONDS l MY GOODNESS, ~— WHAT HAPPENED? DID HE FALL FROM i By CLIFF STERRETT NO, THE DARN NITWIT BOUGHT ONE OF THOSE CIGARET-MAKERS AND TRIED TO WORK 1T WITH Another Super Dreadnaught foL U: c "The U.S.S. South Dakota, sister ship of the North Carolina and the Washington, is shown sliding down the ways at the Camden, N.J., shipyards after Mrs. Harlan J. Bushfield, wife of the governor of South Dakota, broke the traditional bottle of champagne on its bow. Immediately the huge dreadnaught hit the water, the keel was laid in the spot she had vacated for a 10,000-ton cruiser. Main armament of the South Dakota, nine 16-inch guns, gives her longer range and greater striking power than any ship afloat. She is four months ahead of s(‘h(‘dule. Torpedoed—6 Days in Boat ARRESTED ON | CHECK CHARGE william A. Davis was arrested today on his arrival here aboard the North Sea. He is held under a tLngraphlc warrant from Sitka charging him | with issuing checks without funds. .o - labama, Arkansas and Geor- gia are the chief domestic sources of aluminum. CLARK BASSETT as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire 1s invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and recelve TWO tickets to see: “DESTRY RIDES AGAIN" Federal Tax—5¢ ver Person WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! PASSENGER IS MARINE AIRWAYS——U. S, MAIL Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Northbound Northbound Southhound DENAYY ........ Wed. June 11 Sun. June 15 Sat. June ALEUTIAN ... Sat. June 14 Tues. June 17 Wed. June 25 YUKON Tues. June 17 Sat. June 21 Fri. June BARANOF ... Thurs.June 19 Sun. June 22 Sun. June 2 COLUMBA Sat. June 21 Tues. June 24 Thurs.July ALASKA ... Tues. June 24 Sat. June 28 - E DENALI Thurs.June 26 Sun. June 29 Sat. July McKJINLEY Sat. June 28 Tues. July 1 Mon. July ALEUTIAN Tues. July 1 Fri, July 4 Thurs.July YUKON . Thurs.July 3 Mon. July 7 BARANOF Sat. July 5 Tues. July 8 Mon. July H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 G ALASKA THE YEAR ‘ROUND 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier Scheduled Passenger Airline Service SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Headquarters Juneau——PHONE 623 ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, lnc. All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical 2-Way Radio Station KANG PHON E Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 Equipped Seaplanes for Charter TERRITORY OF ALASKA Office of the Auditor JUNEAU CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION I, FRANK A. BOYLE, Auditor of the Territory of Alaska, and custod- ian of corporation records for said Territory, DO HEREBY CERTIFY that there has been filed in my of- fice on this, the 12th day of June, 1941, the written consent of the [ stockholders of the SITKA WHARF & POWER CO., INC,, a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the Territory of Alaska, to the dissolution of said corporation, written .consent to such dissolution having been executed by all of the stockholders of said cor- poration on the 10th day of June, 1941. WHEREFORE, in view of the above premises, I DO FURTHER | CERTIFY that the SITKA WHARF & POWER CO., INC., a corporation, is dissolved, pursuant to Section 924 of the Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933, upon the filing in this office of the proper proof of publication of this. certificate. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand, and affixed my official seal, at Juneau, the Capital, this 12th day of June, A.D. 1941, (Seal) e . ] After six days at sea in a lifeboat from the torpedoed British freighter, Marconi, surviving seamen lpproxh the U. S. Coast Guard cutter General Greene. The cutter made the rescue about 270 miles south of Greenland after picking up distress signals broadcast from a portable sendine set in oneiof the two lifehoats it found. A Seztbass Out of Water ’ FRANK A. BOYLE, Auditor of Alaska. First publication, June 14, 1941 Last pubication, July 5, 1941. NOTlCE OF HEAIIING ON FINAL REPORT | In the Commissioner’s Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Num- ber One. Before FELIX GRAY, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- | bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Last Will and | Testament of AUGUST LINDELL, | nee AUGUST ANDERSON, de- ceased. NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN, |that Olgat Anderson, executor of | the estate of August Lindell, nee | August Anderson, deceased, has fil- ed his final report and petition for Decree of Distribution herein, and | the hearing will be held on the same | before the undersigned at Juneau, | Alaska, on the 15th day of August, 1941, at ten o'clock A. M. at which time all persons having objection to the administration of said estate or report, or the distribution of the estate as prayed for in the Petition !for Distribution, may appear and } be heard and file their objections. WITNESS my hand and official seal the 12th day of June, 1941, (Seal) FELIX GRAY, |U. 8. Commissioner and ex-officio | Proate Judge, Juneau Precinct of | Alaska. | First pubucatlon, June 14, .1941. J‘l.ast publication, July 5, 1941. Mrs. David Bass, of New York, and her son took a nap in their cabin cruiser, Seabass, when the tide was high.. The tide ran out and they were marooned hlgh and dry on a rock. The boat is shown in the back- ground. New York harbor police took mother and son ashore, but they had to wait for the tide to refloat their boat. | Therc is ng substitute for Neiws pa er Adverusmg CMABIAI PACIFIC R NS NORTHLAND T L?AN SPORTATION COMPANY. — Jjupeat W JLINGS WEEKLY A Seattle un. Lv. Jus teave AL U g Seattle North Ccoast North- 1and 26 June 20 June2t 9 une 25 June 30 June 1 July 3 __June21 Ju¥ Agent _gENRY GBEEN: e frrrrrrrrr e THE ATCO LINE Alaska Transportation Company L] SAILINGS FROM PIER 7 SEATTLE EVERY THURSDAY 10:00A. M. 8. 8. TAKU TRAVEL on a “PRIN CESS” LINER JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise June 10, 20—July 4 Princess Charlotte June 27 v. W. MULVIHILL t, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alasks June 12 » §. 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 % TSteuge aak Genlen D. B. FEMMER——'\(.EN CALL US! PHONE M NIGHT 3 Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 &mpire Classitieds Pay! m 5.3, :