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YOUNG LADY ---WE WANT YOU FOR >\PAQT IN OUR sHow/ A CHARACTER BIT. YOWLL PLAY THE PART OF A LSOQFTY GIRL WE ALREADY HAVE A LARGE WARDROBE FOR THE WHAT KIND OF A PART2 A MARINE NEW®S 18 (ome Here Aboard Alaska; 31 Sail South Passengers from Seward, | Valdez and Cordova | Arrive in Port After bring 28 from Westward ports and up 31 others here, the steamer aska of the Alaska Steamship Com- pany sailed for Seattle at 9 o-| clock this morning. Arriving on the following From Seward—Mr. and ritz, Ruth Coffin, Mrs e, R. Zell, J. J. Dierney Whitaker, T. Simpson, C. Lavoy, R. J. Somm Dr. A Laszlo, W. A. Bourne and D. Bostwick From Valdez—B. Haggerty Kirschner, R. Baermar lier, I. D. Harrison Ellers, J. Gunn, R. Pear From Cordova—F. ( M. Mongales, J. Damano Bergman. Passc passenger picking | Al- | vessel were the M R Col Sison, B nd rs leaving wer lowing For Petersburg Margaret Charle Mr. and Mrs. Dan man Holbrook, Sam Hoeson, Edward Strir R. Ha Jr., Edward For Ketchikan—S. Amby Frede w. John ) For Seattle—Mr. liam Taylor, Mr Weitzel, Peter C, bert Booth Smith, Everett B.Kir John Winther, Mr. and Mrs. Frec Weston, William Taylor, Bennic J Melvin, Dawson Muggy, Al Berg and Charles Hansen - - Hoeson Baker er Sar Pet Andre and Mrs and Mr Warner, Dr. H (Sun time, High tide— September 24) 48 a.m., 174 feet. -0.2 feet , 189 feet. -2.0 feet. ——eee LAGUNA BEACH, Calif —Just as 14 student ‘life guards lined up on the beach for tests, Captain Roll Beck was interrupted by a call for help from two men far out in the surf. While the tyros looked on, Beck and an assistant pulled them to shore and revived them. Sept. 23. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS From Alaska | Ports Arrive '5.5. Denali Brings 48 Pas- sengers from Seattle, Panhandle Towns | Bringing eight passengers from Seattle nd 40 from Ketchikan, gell and Petersburg, the steam- er Denali of the Alaska Ste: ship Company arrived at 2 o'clock this morning and sailed for the West- ward at 10 o'clock. Most of the westward passengers are listed for Kodiak and Womans Bay, joined by a few from Juneau. Disembarkifig. here were the fol- ) lowing: From Seattle—Mrs. man, Betty Goodman, William Knudsen, Mr. and Mrs, Edward Lincoln, Patrick Paul, Albert Wile and George Hansen. From Ketchikan Mrs. L. W Card, Gilbert Cooke, Gilbert Cooke, Jr., Rose Foraberg, R. E. Hardcastle, Thomas Naughton, Frank Zamore. From Wrangell—O. L. Brattebo, Reginald Chuck, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Halvorsen, Joan Halvorsen, Shirley Halvorsen, Mr. and Mrs. Richard King, Mrs. D. L. MacKinnon, Lorna Dee MacKinnon, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Neal, F. J. Ba Alfred Gordon Alfred Grant From Petersburg—Judge George F. Alexander, Mr. and Mrs. Newton Cooday Robert Coughlin, W. A. Holzheimer, Lawrence Kerr, June Kito, Sally Krisoof, Mrs. R. Meek, Dolly Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Elias Reyes, Elsa Reyes, May Reyes, Gil Rich, Mrs. A. Watson, A. Romero, Willis Skeek. Leaving Juneau were Leola Babbe, Dee Hightow: and H. F. Carter, Sewa and M R. M. Stoft and Mrs. D. Kr Jewski, Koediak. — e 19 Halibuters Sell af Seattle SEATTLE, Sept. 23. — Halibut receipts were heavy again yesterday as the following vessels came into W. Petre, H. J. |port and sold their catches: and Mrs. Dahl, | From the western banks—Eagle, Mrs. Gunderson and two sons, | 40,000 pounds, Polaris, 40,000 pounds, Eugene Nelson and wife. | Lloyd, 32,000 pounds, Zenith, 40,000 Mrs. Mike Pusich, two sons and | pounds, Sitka, 40,000 pounds, Colum- daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Watson, |bia, 40,000 pounds, North, 40,000 A. Wiiliams, John Homme, J. Mc- | pounds, Nordby, 48,000 pounds Tor- Donald denskjold, 40,000 pounds, Betty, 36,- 000 pounds, Arctic, 36,000 pounds, REALLY, A SWELL GUY ‘()cmmls, 22,000 pounds, Aleutian, MT. OLIVE, N. C. Sept. 23 | 40,000 Dpounds, Majestic, 44,000 When an automobile struck Na- |Pounds, Sanak, 32500 pounds. {aniel ! Hohiat e The average price paid for the and took Hobbs to a hospital, | Vestern bank catches was 13% and uffering from a badly fractured |- St & pound. hip. Hobbs said he just didn’t think | ATFiv8ls from the local banks P s R T 11‘ | were—Sonja, 1,000 pounds, Bergen, g ¢ il add- 15200 pounds, Merit, 800 pounds, F.| ed: “He was mighty nice to me. C. Hergert, 900 pounds. The average price paid for the! g | 4 i | Subscribe to the Daily Alaska ‘local bank catches was 13 cents a | | pound straight. ———————y STEAMER MOVEMENTS, NORTHBOUND Aleutian scheduled to at 5:30 o'clock this noon Princess arrive a arrive after- Louise scheduled to 8 o'clock tonight North Coast scheduled to ar- rive sometime tomorrow. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle today Mount McKinley scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 am. to- morrow North S sail am. a scheduled from Seattle at September 26. Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle September 27 at 9 am ka scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 a.m., September 28. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS ongass scheduled southbound t 10 o'clock tonight. Columbia scheduled 2 o'clock rning. scheduled southbound Saturday heduled to 10 A. J. Good- South- tomor- Tyee 1 pn Denali Monday LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sall every Wedanesary at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. Dart leaves every Wednesday at 1 pm. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports. e o o 18 Aboard Louise for This Pori Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- cess Louise, due in Juneau tonight f the south, has the following passengers aboard for Juneau: O. Anderson and wife, Hector Currie, Mrs. J. Van Gillder, Miss C. Hollis, John Reck, Miss M. Stew- art, R. Westover. William Ramsey Boyle and wife, Mr. southbound ©0 000000000 02000000000000000000000°30000O0CGS 0000000000 202000000006906200000000000000e00e60 on the vessel 1 -+ driver got out Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation. | PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS | EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 Round-Trip Fares: 10% off twice one-way fares, when purchased in advance. Fairbanks, Alaska ....... Flat, Alaska Golovin, Alaska .. Hot Springs, Alaska Juneau, Alaska McGratlh Nome, Alaska Nulato, Alaska . Ophir, Alaska Ruby, Alaska Seattle, W , U. 8. A. Tanara, Alaska Whitehorse, Y. T., Can... 144 2 RICE AHLERS (0. " OPENS SHOP IN ANCHORAGE NOW and Ahlers Company, one of s pioneer plumbing, heating, | sheet metal and air conditioning firms, with headguarters in Juneau, | today announced the establishment of an Anchorage branch in their newly-erected building on First Ave- nue between B and C, says the An- chorage Times of September 17. | The company came to Anchorage this summer to install the plumbing and heating in the New Westward | | Hotel, and according to Mac Met-: calfe, local representative, they have received so many requests for jobs that they decided to locate here. The firm only recently completed | | the installation of a new air con- | ditioning and heating system in the ° = | & McGrath 132 18 $12v 126 149 99 127 12 125 85 115 217 95 71 102 125 26 $112 $ 37 116 $ 88 47 15 234 212 $202 60 33 20 $191 114 142 119 109 120 Su. Mo. We.! Fr. 8:00 Lv 2:10 Ar SEATTLE z: JUNEAU Su. Tu. Th. 8:30 8:30 8:50 10:45 Ar Lv WHITEHORS Ar FATRBANKS Wash,,US.A Alaska Lv JUNEAU, Alaska | Empress Theatre and were awarded the $40,000 heating and plumbing contract on the new passenger depot. | Mr. Metcalfe stated that Rice and | | Ahlers among recent contracts in- | PET Ar 13:16 [stalled the plumbing, heating and ' Lv 10:15 P lair conditioning in the Baranof Ar 9:56 1 | Hotel in Juneau and the Sitka Hotel | Lv 6:00 8:30 in Sitka and their engineers are | Mo. Tu. Th. Sa. PST Ar 6:55 PST Lv 12:45 135 Ala 150 L. A. DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager 185 Sn. Franklin St. A —————————————————— ey | | 1115 fully qualified to advise anyone on PAN AMERTCAN ATRWAYVS :I N l)]ut‘s(io.n l_n. regard to heating, 192 TH AVE.—SFATTLE plumbinz or air conditioning prob- | 1 , either ! empire, but tr THE CLOTHES WILL BE ALL YOURS. TS THE CHANCE OF A LIFETIME BUT HOw DO 1 KNOW et t America’s Front Line in | | | MCKINLEY | ALASKA | COLUMBIA N ) { N N N N % ) \ 19 | | | | | | | e et i ED SKABAT as a paid-up subseriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and reecive TWO tickets to see: “ADAM HAD FOUR SONS" Federal Tax—5c¢ per Person ———WATCH THIS SPACE—— Your Name May Appear! e e e B i i i i P COMPANY = Due Juneau Northbound Leave Seattle Due Juneau Southbound Tues. Sept.23 Tues. Sept.23 Wed. Sept Mon. Sept Fri. Oct Mon. Oct. Tues. Oct Thurs. Oct. Steamer ALASEKA . . COLUMBIA . DENALI ... ALEUTIAN Tues. Sept23 Tues. Sept23 Sat. Sept 27 Tues. Sept 30 Wed, Oct. 1 Fri. Oct. 3 Sat. Wed. Sat. Sun. Tues. Sept. 20 Sept. 21 Sept. 27 Sept. 28 Sept. 30 YUKON PORTS OF CALL same as printed schedule regardless of sailing d | except southbound the Celumbia calls at Wrangell instead of Petersburg and the Alaska calls at Petersburg instead of Wrangell. America’s rising tide of fighting eraft is swelled by the launching of two cruisers, the keel-laying of a third and the reopening of the century-old Cramp’s Shipyard at Philadelphia. Left, the 6,000-ton Al}untu goes down the ways at Kearny, N.J. Center, Cramp’s workmen start work on the 10,000-ton Wilkes-Barre. Right, the San Juan, expected to prove one of the na A foreigner in J;pan Is Just a Spy Until He's Proved Otherwise s fastest ships, makes its baptismal® plunge at Quincy, Mass. - 3 i LIGHT TANKS SENT 10 FT. RICHARDSON A fleet of light tanks and armored cars sent north for experimental purposes, is at Fort Richardson for the use of the infantry in test maneuvers over the wilderness. The tanks are capable of a speed of 40 miles an hour. The armored cars have a tractor tread on the (Continued from Page One) [ ent situation. Tt e” or it is “tenseé of depressing warfare driven the Japa-| s which are ulkn{ They would pleasure-enjoyins | can't. Forces oul,| them on. r the pri Four years in China have nese to suspicio to their nature to be a friendly, of control drive Telephone Restrictions Latest manifestation of the s picion attached to foreigners c with the new telephone and tele- | graph rezulations. Inside Japan, | except with the limits of they city in which you are talking, all| | telephone conversaticns m L] in Japanese t This ratner keens newspaper correspondents in Tokyo, for few if any know Japanese wedl enough to dictate a story in tha' language. The moment a word is |spoken in another language the | eircuit is broken | Let a group of foreigners—Ge: |mans and Italians included—gath- er in the lobby of the once swank Imperial Hotel, and almost im<| | mediately an unobtrusive Japanese ! will be seated nearby, studyingthe | ceiling. i Spearhead of the anti-spy cam- paign, which was marked by a week of special lectures, pictures and posters, is the severe National Defense Security Law, which in-| cludes the death penalty for some violations of its provisions. It ap-! plies to Japanese and foreigners alike errectively Latest U, S. Sh Here is the 8. 8. Arkansan, gasg! ed in trade between U. S. ports and the Red sea, was hit and her plates pierced the Seot 11, according to a state: The Daily Alaska Empire has the | gear wheels. ¢ paid circulation of any Al-| newspaper. Empire Classifieds Pay! I RECEIVED 12,728 URR HELD OFFICE ‘ \50 YEARS AGOQ! LY ERTAIN AIR | IN BAD.WEATHER TO ESCAPE BOMBERS A letter addressed to Aaron Burr arrived in New York and was delivered to the present Attorney General.p The letter contained an advertisement of a hotel. Air mail planes in China fly in bad weather to escape Japanese bombers, ip Damaged in PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 H. O. ADAMS AGENT NG ALASIKAI THE P R T S R e R MARINE AIRWAYS——U. S. MAIL 2-Way Radio Communication Authorized Carrier Scheduled Passenger Airline Service SEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA Headquarters Juneau——PHONE 623 ALASKA AIR TRANSPORT, Inc. e | e el | MHORE Radio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU 6 1 Z Equipped Seaplanes for Charter NORTHLAND )' ION COMPANY y S \“JNGS—.‘UNEA‘X to Seattle . Lv.Jun. Leave AT - SB. seattle N(gct:s\. __sepb. 19 sept. 23 a Sept. 26 ks sept. 20 : - Passengers 109 \ ne 23 Freight FYAY GREEN. Agent 8. 8. Arkansan 1. S. ship to be damaged in the sea warfare. The Ar! en- ht of department announcement, Presumably, the damage was small, THE ATCO LINE Alaska Transportation Company L4 SAILINGS FEOM PIER 7 SEATTLE EVERY THURSDAY 10:00 A, M. S. S. TONGA:! S. 8. TYEE .. JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGE Princess Louise September 26; October 6 V. W. MULVIHTLL Agent, CP.R.—Juneau, Alaska | CANADIAN PACIFIC . 4 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION ey i 1 * : v '{D. B. FEMMER—AGENT Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing — Off Bumess Heating PHONE 14 NIGHT 312 Phons 34 ' Sheet Metal Sept. 25 Oct. 2 3 WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Ofl—Your Coal Choice—General Hauling —Storage and Crating CALL US! Junean Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising