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. K. C. TALMAGE as a pald-up subscriber to BEN MUST STILLLOVE Y YES, SUSAN . THATS WHY | |AND IM TO TRY IE YOU CAN.« BT ABOVE HUMPHZ IR T FLIRT WITH HIM, VOU TO COME ALL THE | T WANT YOU WITH ME, SO | | TO INTEREST ALL,DON'T LEAVE ME ALONE | |[YOULL HAVE TO STAY AROLND, WAY FROM SOUTH HE WONT HAVE A CHANCE| | HIM IN ME2 WITH HIM FOR A SECOND/ SO HE WON“T PROPOSE To ME/ AMERICA TO SEE > ; s (| The Daily Alaska Empire You, POLLY. is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and recelve TWO tickets to see: "THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED"” Federal Tax—Ye¢ ver Persom "MARINE NEWS |55 (OLUMBIA, DESTROVED ONEASTERNFRONI =<' 57 LEAVE rommnorme | e arrive at9:300o'clock tonight Returning to Juneau from e Mount McKinley due sometime Westward, the southbound stéamer e tonight or early in morn- ® Columbia docked here at 7:20 o'-| e ing. Nothing definite at 3 @ clock last evening with 24 passen-| e pm, today. gers for Juneau from west ports| e Princess Louise scheduled to ®|and sailed et 9 o'clock with 24 pas- | . . . Fifty-seven passengers sailed from 1 on the southbound steamer 1 Capt. O. C. Anderson and SCHE 2 SAILINGS were J. P. Anderson, Peggy Lou| - ’ 4 | ; et o SCHEDULED SAILINGS o] v P ‘RS 3 . . | Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Jumeau ser Dave Doran, when the vessel | o North Coast scheduled to sail ® |Butler, K. R. Foresman, Mabel A. - e Northbound Northbound Southbo sailed from the Alaska Juneau mine | ¢ from Seattle today o |Fair, H. L. Gowing, Pauline Gow-| [ ’ | v e dock at 4:30 o'clock yesterday after- a0 |ing AT e | E & : S ® Yukon scheduled to sail from e |ing, J. Hamman, James G. Lem- | * | BARANOF Al 6 5 noon after being in port from the| o =~ geattle today o|mon, Felipe Pete, Roy Ferguson, . - . . b g - M. Aug. Tues. Aug. Sun. Aug 17 “P ward four llmm.; o | @ Northland scheduled to sail ®|Oscar Katley, Raiph Pritchard, | . A ' | COLUMBIA ... . M. Aug. 9 Tues. Aug. Wed. Aug. 2 M e e e e | @ from Seattle tomorrow. o |Leonard Sampson, James E. Ter ; . @k . | ALASKA ; . M. Aug. 8 Tues. Aug. Thur. Aug. 21 » = i e P Ta sel sai ' 11, Dale Va & i Forde At o 4 | Mrs. Earl Boese, Capt. Jay S. Wan- | ® Taku scheduled to sail ffrom e|rell, Dale Van Ordal and Gordon| 4 4 2 a DENALI .. . M. Aug 12 Fri. Aug. 8 Mrs L Kern, Mrs. Leona | ® Seattle tomorrow. e | Wahto. vg d 3 + . *.g t | A 2 Contor, Sigrin E. Merritt. Jirdes| ® Princess Charlotte scheduledto e | From Valdez—Minnie 1 e g iy o - A :~4LbUT'l\N - / - Aug. 18 Thur. Aug. Sat. Aug. 30 Winther, Mr. and Mrs., Harry 1.|® Sail from Vancouver August e |David Morgan, Janett L o i A B* | MCKINLEY Aug. 18 Thur. Aug. Aug. 30 Mullen at 9 pm. ® |Frank Lanier and Douglas Wahto. | " s s SR IR ¢ 145 | . arrive late Saturday after- ® | sengers le y for the south . noon or evening Passengers arriving from Sewacd Virginia Smith, Mary V. Mmhnnoy_lo Prince Rupert scheduled to o" From C a—Louis Wexrsen and | - » : Al SRR, ) 5 * | YURON ... Thurs. Aug. 21 Mon. Aug. C. F. Troutte, Mr. ‘;u}d Mrs. J. F.[® sail from Vancouver »AUEUSL '\MP‘YHVYH‘-' AR SN = - R 5 | BARANOF ... Sat. Aug. 23 Tues. Aug. Tues. Sept. 2 Q’",‘”" Mx.:wChn':;{u:l~"']n\"n< Mrs at QIP““] gl e “'\““1' 4 “';(”“ w’“ 1' }é “] destruction was described by Russian sources as the result of German troop action when they re- Neal Elto, Mary Sawthorne. Alaska scheduled to sail from e |Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ward, Kaarlo ) Y e R RIS e G o el e * | e N B Raitad Seatile August 26 at 9 am. | W, Nasi, Sylvia Davis, Mr. ana| (Teated from the town designated as “R.” This picturs was radioed from Moscow o New York. : i H. 0. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 Mrs. Lou Scott, Mr. and Mrs. J. C.| e North Sea scheduled to sail ®|James Baroumes, Fred Flodin, Al- i FREIGHT OFFIC 4 (to pay any attention to whether Walthers, Mrs. Alva Blackerby, Dr.| ¢ from Seattle August 26 at @ [len, B. Sorcnsen, Mrs. Marie Han- FF i 1 ; : and Mrs. C. R. Lam, W. H. Dupera, | ¢ 10 am. son, J. W. Erwin, Ted Engstrom, ones iarmer S ow the car ahead is the Presidential) SRS RVAR N I T I S L 1 dT) ROUND Catole Pisher, J. Laurin Miller e Columbia scheduled to sail chard O. Mahan, O. T. Floyd, limousine or just another delivery e Hoses, . Nrande. K. M, from Seattle August 28 at ® [Sue Ward, Norma Ward, Amos urles R. Beechey, Charles L. Ma. oL Rreen. Bus B b & bt |2 LobTumoun sanavas 5 o e s o ReVealed: He Gives Qut gB AR Aidf N }W T T R T SNSRI, SNL TGRS, O] S Tyee scheduled to arrive ®| For Wrangell—Cecelia Gurr, L. Sunday. ® B. Chisholm and W. B. Gruet: 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier undstad, Sula Herrala, W. H. Smith | by . " Aleutian southbound about ®| For Ketchikan—Mr. and Mrs. C Dl r' I ! I r flin li i Scheduled Passenger Airline Service August 28. ® | A. Hookin. l Eer s ki a] Qrm FROM WEST SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA i truck. For Ketchikan—N. A. McEachran, Leonard Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. C. . . . . and Jack Contor. 2 . Copstead, Edna Copstead, Leif Cop- | : LOCAL SAILINGS b e il Headquarters Juneau——PHONE 623 . o . . . . . stead, Norman Ridley, Doris B. Gin- | ® Estebeth scheduled to sall - lian, Mrs. Ralph Bartholomew ana | ® every Weanesacy at 6 pm. o (UTTER ALDER Guntnuea trom page Oney |, L (g Edna Hand, | for Sitka and wayports. . “ g . " . For Petersburg—Mrs. Clara Mills, Mrs. Willlam Shirk, Ray Shirk, Laina Aalto, August Aalto, and J. M. | Olson. pur v vy Weanisdey & HEREONWAYTO e oo coore e gemoray = % % 58885 e up aic ot e countin | ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. at 1 pm. for Petersburg, Port S ithbound steamer Barsnof leak out of Germany, Italy, and PRESIDENTIAX ITE =g by Alexander, Kake and way- ¥, 3 PRESIDENTIAL SALUTE K call £ he West- All Planes Operating Own Aeronautical e v POINT. RETREAT | tcc *Anis‘ovnsetin. i 1 was{ s s of fe. Benoayivanin snds| ook 45 duneau idpo tha West ] Radls Station KANG PHONE S emE Ll L that we first heard of Soviet “kan- the half-moon driveway that|ing bringing 19 passengers here, and HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 [ N {.The sk, Ctard, outier shlder JEaRol ) bbke PDSLErs | encircles the White House groun led for Seattle at 10 o'clock with Equipped Seaplanes for Charter NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: ‘r"»mm.m!‘(-d by Jack Hall, tied up|which carried th y tanks” ghere is a stoj . It always has ne passengers from Juneau bocked '“DES at the Ferry Float this morning to = - - - That on August 19, 1941 in the Com- t in their innards and, having fascinated me, for I have for the South | missioner’s Court for Juncau Pre- take on supplies befcre continning| crashed the main lines, proceeded|geen any e r| * Passengers ving from West-| cinct, at Juneau, Alaska, Stanley eren cn to Point Retreat Lighthouse. The |t gisgors high-speed mid-| soing into e House rd ports were Howard Hayes, Nowicka, of Juneau, Alaska, was ap- ~(Sun time, August 22) vessel arrived from Ketchizan and|gets, whos ive was to shove yse of it. Its only purpose seems|[ecnard Johnson, Edward Jackson, pointed executor of the estate of High tide—0:16 am, 17.0 feet. |is on lighthouse service. 3 ure spearheads far back ©of vy he to bring Pennsylvania tra-|O. T. Floyd, T. C. Weinbrunner, M. 3 Herberi Lee, deceased. All persons| Low tide—6:39 am, -17 feet. | 7 v 3 ¢ to a Presidential standstill—a|B. Carry, W. Maki, ‘M. C. James,| ing claims against said estate are | High tide—12:57 p.m., 165 feet. | @ T an a : l ‘ st / | Reports fell in my lap the othei | ort of compulsory curtsy. A astleberry, D. W. Tate, Her- T requred to preent them, wih vert | Low tie—:53 pn. 10 et Billy Goal DifI@S as o two new saiseis which the | In oo cousse of a veur. T nave| SR Laweon. Rov Brown . Wi TRA;N SPORTATION COMPANY Germans already know all about sked 70 or 80 drivers for their S ?Tifi.,f?fc}’q‘fiai’é b sanier, enat- PILING BLAZE CALLS i 0n Aulo's Roos‘bnn which the British still insist( pinions on this sioplight. Al lcleary. Clvde Beee .. WS] ‘ L | tuck Building, Juneau, Alaska, with- | are secret. One is a new airplane| hough Washington drivers cuss Pabcbatr i ; i i e Pk 2 @ asseng! sailing for Seattle in six months from the date of the ouT FIRE DEP‘RIME“‘ and boat detector which picks up| ilmost every stoplight in town, wete Mrs, Florence Bragg; Mrs. John | {first publication of this notice. : Al : NEWTON, N. C., Aug. 21.—Po-|ijts i - o1 etr hnre = g its object at approximately 100| : never have found one—not even Powley, B. A. Royster, Abe H. Fris- STANLEY NOWICKA, Executor. Firemen roared down Franklinlice Chief L. B. Beal received an miles. The other is a bomber-borne | » Republican—who has ressed | con Virginia Hubbard, Peter B. First publication, August 19, 1941, Street to t!: Juneau Sawmill yards urgent call. searchlight which does the same y part ar wrath ow this ‘ uening and Elm LI Park g Last publication, September 9 1941 'yesterday evening to extinguish a A billy goat. perched on a fen-!thing for a covey of planes in the | dislocated light. | For Ketchikan—Os. ‘.' Ob;’x’ and —————— fire starting on the piling below |dcr, had dined on the fabric top air that earth-tied searchlights do| The answer almost invariably| Roy G. Rudy. % r————————————— . {he planking on the dock. The tiny ©f a Wwoman's automobile. |for defending ground forces. It|is: “Oh well, the President ought HELP AN blaze, which might have set fire| But the matter was settled ami- | “spots” the objective. Being mobile|fo have a green light once in ol | ! cably. The goat’s owner, another|at high speeds, they can cover|while—cven it it i oniy when ALASKA STEAMSHIP apparently started by a cigarette. | | I ALASK_4N l The Fire Department quickly ex- |Pay for the damage. ground searchlights couldn't probe| The funny part of it is that not (HAR“RS 2 SH'PS | | I I to the lumber stored nearby, wa 3 woman, said she'd sell him and|areas that a battery of a thousand|he is going out or coming home. ; tinguished the -blaze after tearing | —— in a week. And they have the fur-|once in his more than eight years Telephone 713 or write up the dock planking [ FLODIN LEAVES |ther advantage of having station-|in the White House, has the, The Alaska Steamship Company The Alaska Territorial R U e | » |ary objectives, President ever used the traffic- has chartered the steamships Of- Employment Service ; Fred Flodin, former night clerk, Wwhen this war is over and the|lighted driveway. He goes ar > ] 5 s 2 the | veway 20es 1d sega and Gen, W. C. Gorgas from for. this qualified worker. ."MMY RH'“H‘AR at the Gastineau Hotel, sailed for zymchair generals begin to get|comes by the cast or west drives,| Libby, McNeill and Libby, each s 38 a short vacation to his home inlgn eyefull and earfull of all that dipping into or turning out of fo i rell § R i ! | | 0 _ E: E ariy f & E g g r one trip to Alaska to relieve bAlflbeANfMdn. single, age 43, MNDS 0" (Hflmfl.m States on the southbound Co-|actually went on, their present traffic that is too busy watching the congestion in Alaskan salmon university graduate. Experienced in| petersburg flier Rhinehart arrived lumbia last night. Flodin will re-|comments on “how times have what is happening to its fenders canneries. real estate office as salesman and jn Juneau in his lizht plane last turn to Juneau in time to be in-| manager; also experienced Wwith jijghi with Knute Thompson. He is ducted into federal service with| — | finance and insurance company.|. heduled to return to the Shrimp the Alaska National Guard. SPceds Traffic | Call for ES 353. Capital today. | -+ SPGB e R - | BUY DEFENSE STAMPS ANADI AN THE PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS T ATCO EFFECTIVE V \ 3 ¥ i ” : L l N E i e . Alaska Transportation MAY 16, 1941 PAA | ‘~ i B & Company JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER e VICTORIA OR SEATTLE S FROM PIER 7 SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS SEATTLE Princess Louise August 26 Princess Charlotte EVEBY TH"BSDAY Fairbanks, Alaska .........$ 76 4 % August 29 Flat, Alaska .................. 31 $58 Princess Louise lnm A. H Golovin, Alaska 141 67 $118 September 5 4 Hot Springs, Alaska ... 88 15 65 . % : ” V. W. MULVIHILL Juneau, Alaska . 151 82 132 e Agent, CPR.—Juneau, Alaska McGr 5 4 44 18 s120 : ; ] q “ §. 6. TAKU .Aug. 21 Nome, Alaska 149 74 126 149 $112 v . . ’ CAMDI“ CIFIC b P Nulato, Alaska 121 50 99 121 83 $ W E . Ophir, Alaska . 39 48 12 126 10 116§ 88 " 4 _ | PASSENGERS ~ FREIGHT Ruby, Alaska 108 39 8 115 71 41 15 - - " —_— . REFRIGERATION Seattie, Wash., U. 5. A.. 236 170 217 95 207 234 212 $202 oy S5 . s : . . ; WHEN IN NEED OF o cx! 4 & Tanana, Alaska 9 24 T1 102 59 60 33 20 8191 . o Whitehorse, ¥. T, Can.. 144 75 125 26 114 .142 119 109 120 oed that the BRY e L : v _ Diesel :“—5“’""3’;""' D. B. FEMMER—AGENT : Coal Chilce—Gen g CHONE 14 NIGHT 312 s and S o ‘ : 1 Su. Mo Mo. Tu. ic cost X m 3 B e ; .—sm.um‘ We. Pr. Th. Sa. ith ba 3 - i i S ) 10:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash.US.A. PST Ar 18:55 .. Tiake the 0& : S . _ CALL US! T 16:10 Av JUNEAU, Alaska ........PST Lv 12:45 - i ; b _ J uTr r - iR Tu. Th. Wwe. Sa. £ - - . . : e ¢ jone 48—Night Phone 8t largest paid circZation of any Al 10:00 16:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska PST Ar 12:15 16:15 > ’ Filbate Sl 10:00 16:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. ..135° Lv 10:15 14:15 ; 1020 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 ok ; § : . : e rrrs oo AN Window Cleaning b By A < Something new in ways of speeding up traffic at main street intersections is tried in Atlanta, Ga., as: Az R 185 8o, Pranklin St. PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS L : h pictured. The experimental steel bridge is erected at the intersectaon of Peachtree and Wesley streets. J . Frank e PHONE 106 19%—4TH AVE—SEATTLE b Bt s The bridge was built in three sections at & cost of $10,000. It successful, 10 other. bridges of te PHONE 485 same type.will be set up at other intersections, 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased in advance. Round-Trip Fares: i | [Fairbanks Flat McGrath