The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1941, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT 21,1941 1 ONE OF THE PICTURES BEN ST GAYE ME - STEAMER MOVEMENTS Mdinleyin NORTHBOUND Princess Louise Stheduled to From Soulh arrive tomorrow afternoon or evening. Yukon due Saturday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Bound West Ala scheduled to sail from attle today. 2 | ® North Sea scheduled to sail With 190 pass aboind: 2 from Seattle at 10 a.m. to- cluding 38 who boarded the vessel morrow 1ere he steam Mount McKinley Columbia scheduled to sall . . ° . L4 . o [ . . L4 . L4 . b4 . b4 . L . b . » . of Steamship Company ® from Seattle September 13 o 4 e Westward at 7:30)® at 9 am ° o'C last night, bringing 15 pas- ® Denali scheduled to sail from e i from Seattle and 11 from ® Seattle at 9 am., September o Ketchikan to this port v 16 . Master of the McKinley is Capt.'® Toneass scheduled to sail from @ Ryning. William Hickman @ Seattle September 16 . f purser amd Jack R ic is(® Ty scheduled to sail from e pur . attle September 18 . ‘u'r"!, om Seattle who dis- ® North Coast scheduled to e embarked h included Althea Bar- ® sail from Seattle September o rett, Mr Florom, Bert Hut-|® 19 at 10 am . chinson, Roger D. Johnson, Herbert| ¢ SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS e C B. F. McDowell and | ® Northland due southbound e childr and Peter; Helen ® early tomorrow, but hour e G ™ n, Charles Martin,|® indefinite, . Katl )e O'Brien, Jes Potter, | ® Aleutian scheduled southbound e and Mr. and Mrs. A, P. Wolf e Sunday noon . Com fr Ketehik ® Mount McKinley scheduled e Sam Baker, 1 Blak e southbound September 19. e hurst, Gertrude Lawre . d LOCAL SAILINGS . Gun . Katherine Nelson, B. F.|® Estebeth scheduled to sall e McDowel Mrs. Har william : ;‘\'mé;&'emujmy at ip.m. : R e O and Gedra or Sitka and wayports. :1::0)“1“1”, e, Arthur Orrand George & o2 (008 i LR Leaving Juneau on the McKin-|q 3 LP-{or Petarsbuig, Pork o i Alexander, Kake and way- e ley were Jack ©. Wilson, Farl E.\g pone p Slements, Arthur H. Emerson,Doli- (o o o o o © & o o o o ald E. McLane, M. T. McMahan D 28 oS 57 A William "'O. Peters H. L. Stroup; 1, Karl E. Ashe Joe Mackinen, TIDES ’\:/ High tide—4:46 a.m. 127 feet Low tide—10:40 a.m. 46 feet High tide—4:46 p.m., 14.1 feet Low tide—11:81 pam., 2.6 feet. brenner, Anthony Wukich, Victor A Willilam A. Sneller, Earl L. Koppzn, Thomas Martin, I. B. Firestone, W. H Freston Keathly, Stephens, Jr., John M. Doogan, Charles J Jenne, Tom Martinson, Lilliam Low- Henry Roden, James Aubert, Come to the Olympic—enjoy ” delicious foods as praised in / Bertha M. Tiber, Anthony J. Di- “Advemures in Good Eat- mond, L. E. Witt, L. E. Witt, Jr., Mrs. Peter J, Mueller, Prentice Lowery, L. E. Witt, John G. Nichols Herbert J. Huben Sam Rabatich and Jack Boyer, all for Seward To Cordova—Mr. and Mrs. A. Nicholson and James Ryan. - ing." Seattle’s Olympic Hotel is world-famous. Subscrioe to the Danly Alaski Empire—the paper witl. ({5e larges ) CUCULH UL COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS malll EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 Round-Trip Fares: % ™ 10% off twice one-way | _ | B PR - o fares, when purchased | £ |2 | |8 5 E & | l = | B in advance. |8 ]fi s E| 2| 8|=/8|¢% '@ g | sl8lzlz @ 'd 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 $120 Nome, Alaska 149 74 126 149-8$112 Nulato, Alaska 121 50 99 127 83 $ 37 Ophir, Alaska 39 48 12 125 10 116 $ 88 Ruby, Ala: 108 39 8 115 71 471 15 Sealtle, Wash., U. S. A... 236 170 217 95 207 234 212 $202 Tanana, Ala: 9 24 71 102 59 60 33 20 $191 Whitehorse, Y 1' 14¢ 75 125 26 114 142 119 109 120 8Su. Mo. Mo. Tu. We. Fr Th. Sa. 8:00 Lv TTLE, Wash.,US.A. PST Ar 18:55 14:10 Ar EAU, Alaska PST Ly 12:45 Su Mo. Tu. Th. We. Su 10:00 14:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska PST Ar 12:15 16:15 10:00 14:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T 135° Lv 10:15 14:15 10:20 15:00 Lv WHITEHORSE, Y. T 135" Ar 9:55 13:55 12:15 16:55 Ar FAIRBANKS, Alaska 50° Lv _6:00 10 UU L. A. DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager 135 &n Beanklin St, PAN AMFRICAN ATRWAYS PHONE 108 1324—4TH AVE—SEATTLE -+ AND THIS ONE - ) PAW TOOK O HIM TEN YEARS AGO---4 BEFORE HE WENT TO SOUTH AMERICA ——————— ‘52 GoSouth | | ~ On Baranof | 1 Fifty-two persons sailed from Ju- |neau late yesterday afternoon on the steamer Baranof, which ar- rived here at 8 o'clock from the Westward. Going to Southeast ports aboard the Alaska Steamship Company vessel were William Steadman and Mrs, Elvira Steadman, to Peters- burg, and Henry L. Jenkins, R Abrena, Joe Hansen, A. Van Ma- |vern, J. C. Koek Mr. and Mrs Harry Larsen, D Pyle and | Roger Hadland, to n To Seattle were Mr, and Mrs. J. L. Erwin, Mrs. J. S. Bailey, Bort Wheeler, John K. Br urg, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Jacc T Pendry, Mrs. H. A. Fowler, Jens Satre, Harry Stonehouse, G. A. Mc- Hardy, Mary Sweet, Robert 8. Moeller, Al E. Miller, Colvin John- son, J. C. B. Haw Catherine Gray, M J. Harrington, Pauline James, 'L. Beverly Birkland, A. Raymond Powell, Janice J. Ervin, Justin J. Ervin, ilyn Jacobson, Bertie Jacobson k Lopp, Fran Hanson, Edward Hanson, Charles Hanson, W. L. James Terrel Lee and R Hunt x Na: Paul August, Frar McCarty -+ STEAMER TVEE TAKES SEVENTO SEATTLE TODAY The steamer Tyee Juneau yest which arriyed day afternocn the south followingz passengc: William Pay Lind, Geraldine Haydon, Ms Mrs. Carl |in !safled this morning for with the for Seattle Haug, Mrs. Albee, Mrs. A. R. L M Ritter Schmaltz. For Ketchikan the following were booked: Mr. and Mrs. Sigurd Had- land and their daughter Patricia. Arriving in Juneau on the Tyec were Mrs. A. E. Goetz, master Billy and ! Goetz, Miss Lucille Goetz, Mrs. Richmond, Miss Elsie Collins, Miss Maryl Kirsky, Ken Edwards, Mel Hiatt, Jack Graham, Mrs. Harry Young. — .- L. F. BLAKE HERE Representing the West Disinfect- ant Company of Seattle, L. E. Blake | arrived in Juneau last night on the | Mount McKinley, after a short busi- ness visit in Ketchikan. | = g Motorists or bicyclists are warned not to follow fire trucks as provid- ed by city ordinance. KENNETH JUNGE, Chief of Police. | ! adv. 1 B R el ‘ | | | | STEP tv Health with Better Feet Phone 648. Chiropodist Dr. Steves. —adv, —————— | BUY DEFENSE STAMPS Fine Printing We do all kinds of print- ! ing; we don't specialize ; in any form, but we do ‘I specialize in fine work. | The finished job is per- | fect in detail and layout. We try to have our cus- tomers really satisfied. Phone 374 For Free Estimates | EMPIRE ; e "By CLIFF STERRETT &-GOSH, MA !/ ONE OF THEM MUST BE AN SAM BAKER IN TOWN HARDWARE MAN HERE ARRIVE McKINLEY Sam Baker, Seattle wearing ap- parel salesman, arrived in eau Hal Fairhurst, who covers the Al- [ I 1 {ravall last night on the steamer Mount aska sales area for the Seattle § McKinley on a business trip Hardware Company, came to Ju- 1 in Ju-} hrough the rritory. He boarded neau from Ketchikan last night on j, IMount Mc. the vessel ‘lhe Mount McKinley. Kinley D . | ! 2 Empire Clazsifieas Payt Port Wrecked as Nazis Take Over ! BUY DEFENSE BONDS BUY DEF E STAMPS Russian Radiophoto According to the official Nazi caption with this photo, transmitted by radio to New York from Berlin, German soldiers are shown walking past bomb-wrecked street cars in the Russian Black Sea port of Nikolaev. Meanwhile the Nazis and Reds engaged in bloody hand-to-hand fighting outside nearby Odessa. Nazi Cavalry Enters Burning Red Village if L L. N. Radiophcto Flashed from Berlin, this radiophoto shows a German tavalry unit passing through an unidentified burning Soviet village, The. official German caption did not state which side started the fire, wl-uch seems to be destroving the entire town. " Red Shlpyards in Ruins Atter Nazi Capture this hot llfiled by “radio ix‘ou Berlin to New, Sy upt‘km b eor,lfinr Odessa. The Nazis failed to state,whether-- ed earth” policy caused tke damage, ’ Radiophata ork, According to the.official D wrecked Nikolaev shipyards, Russian naval i Germnn bombardment or the Soviet “scorc] Steamer Northbound Northbound Southbound * | MCKINLEY Sun. Sept. 7 Wed. Sept.10 Wed. Sept. 17 YUKON Wed. Sept.10 Sat. Sept.13 Fri ept. 19 ALASKA . Thurs. Sept.11 Sun. Sept.14 Sat. Sept. 20 | coLUMBIA . Sat. Sept.13 Tues. Sept.16 Mon. S 22 DENALI Tues. Sept.16 Fri. Sept.19 Thurs. ¢ ] ALEUTIAN Thurs. Sept.18 Sun. Sept.21 Sat. Sej McKINLEY ... Sat. Sept.20 Tues Sept. 23 Mon Sept. 29 YUKON . Tues. Sept.23 Fri. Sept.28 Thurs. Oct. 2 J. J. MEHERIN 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 snd recelve TWO tickets to see: "BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID" | Federal Tax—3%0 ver Pervon | | WATCH THIS SPACE— ! Your Name May Appear! Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau These sailings have not been changed from those listed on the however, they were included to complete the revised sailings for entire week. the H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 o —————r e e A AR TN MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier Scheduled Passeriger Airline Service SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKa Headquarters Juneau——PHONE 623 ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. Operating Own A tical it P Hadie Station KANG PHONE Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 612 Seaplanes for Charter NEAU 1o ,—JUN ILINGS: WEEKLY SA S t Leave AT Jun. 1V .{auln seattle ¥ NDS‘;: sept. 12 sept. 16 N Sept. 19 sepb- 23 Ceast JREEN, Agcnt HE;l‘I};‘e(;;flal‘ ‘l‘a,ssengcm 109 Freight CANADIAN PACTELC LINE Alaska Transportation Company- L BAILINGS FROM PIER 17 SEATTLE JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise September 15, 26; October 6 V. Wi- MULVIHILL Agent, C.EX;—Juneas, Alaska 'mmml PACIFIC EVB_BY THURSDAY 10:00A. M. 8. . TONGASS TYEE . Sept. 16 Sept. 18 | PASSEN_GE‘.RS FREIGHT . REFRIGERATION L) D. B. FEMMER—AGENT PHONE 14 -~ NIGHT 312 } ; THE : ATCO ey WHEN IN NEED OF Juneau Transfer Phone 43—Night Phone 481

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