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THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1941, POLLY AND HER PALS _ HECK NO, SAM. M RIGHT UP TO DATE ON ‘EM/ 77 LISSEN, LUKE. YUH AINT BEHIND IN YER CLUB DLIES/ THEN MEBBE YUH DONT KNOW ,IT-- FILOT GROPSTIS I5 BOMBER FLIER STEAMER MOVEMENTSI NORTHBOUND . . e Baranof scheduled to arrive at @ FORBIG FACTORY = i i v o = o sails west at 11 o'clock to- @ . Yo e night. . Airman, Now in Juneau, s erincess atice scheduied to ar- o " e rive at 8:45 oclock, tonight. Averages 2,000 Miles @ |« worth const schedulod. i ax- e rive at 11 o'clock tonight and e Day Hymg Warcraft o saiss for Seattle via sitka at » e 9 am. tomorrow. . j On @ 30-day leave of absence o Pn;l\r‘v g:;:fd |.~;¢11A:}x:]1;;§1=‘1‘> R from the Consolidated Aircraft C TR NOUIEAY SR e v poration in San_ Diego, Charles| o Aliska due late Thursday or o Gropstis, veteran pilot, has arrived, o ;‘fl‘;-m",”;" SRt t in Juneau from Mayo, flying the g northiand scheduled to sail ® Alaska Juneat Gold Mine Bellanca ' g ©qron P o0 € e tomor- ® Skyrocket, s S o Gropstis, who ferried the plane, ¢ princess Louise scheduled to ® MANAGER UF OIL for the company up from the o gail from Vancouver July 9 at ® States and brought Livingston Wer- ¢ 9 pm. ADVER"SING necke to Jupeau from Mayo, will e ¢ Denali scheduled to sail from @ flying back Thursday fo pick up e Seattle July 10 at 9 am. . [ e e o Mrs. Wernecke and daughter Clair. ® Taku scheduled to sail from @ Gropstis, who's job with Consoli- ¢ Seattle July 10. of dated keeps him flyir e North Sea scheduled to sai] ® of 2,000 miles a d has been fer- ® from Seattle July 11 at 10 e rying the Consolidated B-24 bomb- ® a.m. (2 ‘ ers from the factory in San Diczo ® Princess Charlotte scheduled to to New York, where they are taken ® Sl from Vancouver July'12 ::(“z:"“h’\”f‘},.‘[X:;.“’:\X::_)('\“;l“dfi'f:&::(;] ® Prince Rupert scheduled to sail | These planes are of such spesd : ;I;)zllx]x1 Vancouver: July 14 at : that the fotal flying time for the s gUTHBOUND SAILINGS trip between California and ENg- ¢ mount McKinley is scheduled land approximaies 16 hours, e southbound at 7 o'clock this e | Gropstis, will resume. his duties s cvening, with Consolidated shortly. e Aleutian scheduled to arrive at T e 0 i e 8 am. Thursday enroute st 7 o) e south. SEREED I A Taku scheduled southbound on ® next Friday. ML, YRENON, N ¥ e LOCAL SAILINGS short circuited the feed ne of the!g miteleth scheduled to. &ail New Haven Electric Railrozd, burn- g Wednesdb lat s H ing out the line, sotting fire to thel o ¥e and @imacie ‘ ties, delaying nine trains nearly an o pant pt.67. i< LB 44 hour, and, incidentally, burning it:clf ¢ np 1 pm. for Petershurg, Port ol e ® Alexander, Kake and way- RN TG Y e ports., # BACK TO HOONA e o 0o 0 0 0 0 0 o o o & Frank Wright, superintendent of B i } Icy Straits Packing Company, re- | ; turned to Hoonah in his speed-hoat “DES | 7. L. Stromberger, (above), who ; this morning after spending sev- | has been appointed advertising i eral diys & Juneau on business, | | S | manager for the Union Oil Co. (Sun time, July 9) High tide—0:43 am feet. | Low tide—7:15 am. feet. [FORESI‘ SERVI(E 1 S”UTH | High tide—1:41 pm, 171 feet § | Low tide—7:25 pm. 12 feet. - e TRANSFERS MADE IN THIS SECTION - HARGE ELEREE | NORTH COAST ON :nd “l’l{l\(F (.h()l((.l“” NEW SCHEDULE | alternating, leave Juneau X hOlIT‘llBOUNl) Incréasing Forest Servi% work due Every Saturday at ! s | %0 defense activities in Alaska and Midnight | Steamer North Coast, scheduled|the transfer of some men to the nilitary branches of the Govern- ment have led to a number of reas- i Service person- ccording m announcement of onal Forester B. Frank Heint- “Prince George” arrives Juneau July 10 at 7 P. M. H.R. hHE!’ARI)‘ Agent PHONE !to arrive at 11 o'clock tonight, sails for Sitka at 9 o'clock tomorrow | morning. The steamer is on a new| !schedule now and no call is made s at Juneau southbound, sailing from for Petersburg, Wrangell,! g it g o an, then south to Seattle “ CRiRRErtinkd, T LB PR SR i ki formerly in charge of the orthern or Admiralty Division of he Tongass Forest and stationed in Juneau, will take charge of the im- ortant Petersburg-Wrangell Diy: on, with headquarters at Peters- jurg. He succeeds S. V. Dennison, vho been commissioned as an >fficer in the Navy. Harcld E. Smith is being trans- ‘erred frem the post of assistant di- ector of CCC activities to Division supervisor of the Admiralty Divis- on, with headquarters in Juneau nd offices in the Shattuck Bu ing. J. M. Wyckoff, who has been r . ing the past ce for airplane luction problems, FROM KIMEHAN COVE Mrs. Grant Evans of Kimshan Cove arrived in Juneau yesterday and is stopping at the Baranof Ho- jm NATIONA BUY DEFENSE STAMPS PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS EFFECTIVE i MAY 16, 1941 MA Round-Trip Fares: 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased in advance. nmhu |and the’ possibilities for peat pro- sarts, pr iucticn in Alaska, is given the job | of opening the new Forest Service field headquarters that are ts bo established in Sitk Fairbanks Nulato [Ruby Seattle Fairbanks, Alaska . Flat, Alaska ... $56 3 a. : Golovin,. Alaska 61 sm John H. Brillhart, who has been Hot Springs, Alaska 88 15 | >ngaged in field work in the Ag- Juneau, Alaska . 151 82 m niralty Division, will hercafter di- McGrath 44 18 $12v ‘ect the many activities of the For- Nome, Alaska T4 126 149 $112 o h ) Nulato, Alaska 50 99 127 83 $ 37 > the Gl & Ophir, Alaska 48 12 125 10 116 $ 88 i et BRbYRY ot Iy Ruby, Alaska ; 39 8 115 71 47 16 i Ao Sy Seattle, Wash., U. §. A 236 170 217 95 207 234 212 $202 | frrodnied K |AKR 0o heto Tanana, Alaska 94 24 71 102 59 60 33 20 $191 ! nd of the present month. Whitehorse, ¥. T., Can.. 144 75 125 26 114 142+119 109 120 || 7 Su. Mo. Mo. Tu. CARD OF THANRS We. Fr. Th. Sa. Our most sincere appreciation is 10:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash,U.S.A. PST Ar 18:5§ '\Ll‘ll(lud to our relatives, frier A 16:10 Av JUNEAU, Alaska ........PST Lv 12:45 nd neighbors for their kindn: A rsu'rh WMOSn |and sympathy shown to us in Y a 05! arly v sband 10:00 16:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska ... PST Ar12:05 16:15 ||'% hisr iy pploT Apeng ! 10:00 16:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. ..135° Lv 10:16 14:15 ||20d father g 10:20 17:00 Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T. ..135° Ar 9:55 13:55 | P. A. ANDERSON 4 1215 18:55 Ar PAIRBANKS, Alaska ..150° Ly 6:00 10:00 |} We are also grateful to the many 2 —— | donors of i ¥ L. A, DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager \(:;“lxuxfwl:x :m”::i. for the beaut] ¢ 135 So. Franklin St. PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS it S | ¥ 1324—4TH AVE—S MRS. P. A. ANDERSON, EROTEIE oty Lo TR R oo e o MNP AVRERATILE . | — Vv AND FAMILY. y Gasoline-less 'milk pails, marimbas and a thou- 'at 1400000 tons ang a deficit of Modern Limassol (above) isa leading port on the south coast of Cyprus. | - Heavy Nazi air attacks on the strategic British-held island situated at ~ Soviet River Boats Reported on the Dafiube LIFF STERBE T By C BUT IT ENTITLES YUH T/ TH/USE OF TH” FAIRWAYS / Lxmassol—Leadmg Port in Nazi- Blltzed Cyprus e © Frances Jenkins Olcott astern end of the Mediterranean indicate possibility it will be sjective of German forces working out of Crete. QA viet river boats, wide for shallow navigation and heavily armed, are shown tied up in a Red port on the ["ack Sea. Russian official sources claim these gun boats are being 7 th.xt prisoners have been captured and war equipment taken Sunday; Loom For Easterners ‘Continued¢ 1rom Page One) civi lh‘f longer and and plastics ir ian consumpt That me national defense will have to lip into that 75 percent to make the shortage. We'll have to drive the old car a few montt again take other me ad of steel. S, NOT “ERSATZ" search Institute of Am- tive order. erica recently made a survey of One great srtage ‘that is al= substitution possibilities in all ma- rezdy with us is in aluminum. eTials W hortages might de- There is NO aluminum available| VeloP. Rep. Homer D. Angell of for articles for civilian consymp-| Oreson filed report with the tien, we are told. But does that ‘Ouse. It i erything front| mean thare will be no refrigera- ‘o€¥ for 1 in football hel- tors, pots and pans, vacuum clean-| X6, and wi al for nickel in| bits and spurs, vacuum bottles, sand and one other aluminum things? No, it means simply that all these things will be made of scmething else — plastics, glass,| enamel-ware, porcelain—but mosily plastics. Gano Dunn, estimated the 1941 OPM expert, has steel shortage 6,400,000 tons is forecast for next year. But 75 percent of the 2 ticn’s steel consumption now na- is clarinets, brass doorknobs. The report vey of what done along t include teris of them are interesting: glass wool| in violation of the American Presi- for asbestos; for coppx men and fish net weights; for hottle corks; kers and hair for pig bristles. to glass and plastic qu also included a sur- Nazi Germany has line (t “ersatz” or simulated ma s—merely substitutes). A few| glass and porcelain in beer brewing equip-| pressed glass for washboards poplar wood and whale whis- does not| used on the Danube River to good in action on the Rumanian shore. The way shortages mean sub: the experts in this titution and ¢ tion, with good chances conveniences resulting latter will not be porary, if the cooperates. TOKYO, ROME IN COMMENT ONU.S. MOVE | (Continuea from Page One) sum it cou up, will va- in- try that from more than tem-| consuming public | the action in oceupying Iceland is | dent’s promises “not to send Ameri- | can forces or troops outside of the continent.” In 1939 United States farmers | harvested 88,803,000 acres of corn. New Mexico Indians Visit Old Mexico Neighbors y-three members of the graduating class of Traveling in buscs and siceping in the open B O ese meiahbors in old Mexico, The visit was made - the Albuquerque, N. M with the cooperation of the Mexican ~ Indians . Indian Service md-nbmfl wvernment and the U. soe a8 they toused the S. Bureau of Indian Afl'nin‘ Some of the Military. College. the| JAMES McNAUGHTON as & paid-up subserfber to The Daily Alaska Empire is Invitea to present tiils coupon this evening at the box office O The sl CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO tickets to see: “SPRING PARADE" Federal Tax—5¢ ver Person WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! [ Leave Scattle Due Jimean Due Juneau Steamer Northbound Northbound Southhound | MeKINLEY Sat. June 28 Tues. July 1 Mon. July 7 ALEUTIAN Tues. July 1 Fri. July 4 ThursJuly 10 | YukoNn ThursJuly 3 Mon, July 7 | BARANOF ... Sat. July 5 ‘Tues. July 8 Mon. July 14 | ALAsKa . Tues. July 8 Fri. July 11 Thurs. July 17 DENALI Thurs.July 10 Mon. July 14 McKINLEY Sat. July 12 Tues, July 15 Mon. July 21 ALEUTIAN Tues. July 15 Fri. July 18 Thurs. July 24 YUKON . Thurs. July 17 Mon. July 21 BARANOF Sat. July 19 Tues. July 22 Mon. July ? SKA Tues. July 22 Fri. July 25 Thurs. July 31 H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 NABINE 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 TBANSPOBT Inc. e s All Planes | Operating Own Aeronautical 2-Way Radio Station KANG PI‘IONE Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU B l 2 Equipped Seaplanes for Charter RTHLAND TRA)NSPORT ION COMPANY:! ! Gs — Junes® } ( YLIN w\?flflfl SAl Qeattle Leave Ar.Jun. L;"B“” Geattle N ; ;8 No(‘::]‘;s«, July 4 IO : July 14 Nana Au 8 huonh July1l Juy 15 CESS” LINER Alaska Transportation Company JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER . VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SAILINGS FROM PIER 7 SOUTHBOUND SATLINGS SEATTLE Princess Alice July 11—22 * Princess Louise v July 1525 Princess Charlotte EVERY THURSDAY 10:00A. M. . July. 18 . V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, C.P.R.~Juneau, Alaska S. 8. TAKU July 10 §. 8. TYEE . July 17 CANADIAN I‘ACII"IE §. S. TAKU ... July 24 = PASSENGERS _ FREIGHT : EFRIGERAT WHEN IN NEED OF PR R ON Diesel ()_fl—vae‘Ofl—Yvir D. B. l“EMME‘R—.- AGENT C“_l-?z':me .::"&I.t. PHONE 14 NIGHT m; CALL US! Junean Transfer |'. mne Doy ansa i 2 e Phose é8—Night Phone 41 | 1areest paid circuiation, of oflany Al aska newspaper,