The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 14, 1941, Page 6

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- — LOOK AT OUR PLAY? POLLY AND HER PALS ALL THAT OPEN NEXT NEW SCENERY, 0 MRS. BONSON. i 1S IT FOR ) VES, DEARIE\ You SEE WE | Yulton Is Now Juneau Bound Oct. 14 Alaska for Alaska fonday afternoon and 22 steer- ge aboard sencers booked f Yukon SEATTLE Steamer n of the ailed class aboard the includs F. L Bloxham Homer C. Nordling Mrs. Mary Sweet H. L. Faulkner e - B. (. PACKING FIRM REPORTS 600D SEASON Nelson Bros. Fisheries, Ltd., Can- adian packing company which bought fish in Southeast Alaska this summer, had a successful season and plans on extension of it operations next year, Al Weather, Kuiu Island guide, who served as field man for the company, said today. eathers packed fish for the com- pany in his own boat, the Guide, although the firm also opzrated several of its own vessels. President of the firm is Norman Nelson of New Westminster, B. C. Accompanied by his wife, Weath- ers came to Juneau yesterday to await the arrival of Dr. Charles Brown, Great Falls, Mont., phy: cian, and a party of Dr. Brown’s friends who are planning a bear hunt on Admiralty Island. Oscar Oberg, Juneau guide, will also ac- company the party. e Andrew Erickson, and wife, Mrs Sara E.Sharpe W. B. Converse, NOTICE AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv BUY DEFENSE BONDS . GASTINEAU HOTEL ,\\ Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information » © Columbia . NORTHBOUND e North Coast scheduled to e rive at 4 o'clock this after- . ar- noon, bound for Sitka en- e route to Seattle e Yukon due Thursday. Steamship @ Princess Louise due Thursday ports ® afternoon or evening. . SCHEDULED SAILINGS e Alaska scheduled to sail from e Seattle today. scheduled to e from Seattle October e 9am. ® Tongass scheduled to e from Seattle October 16. e North Sea scheduled to sail e from Seattle October 17 at . 10 am. . . ° sail 16 at sail SAILINGS arrive SOUTHBOUND Northland scheduled to morning. southbound tomorrow ¢ Tyee scheduled e Thursday. © Denali scheduled e Friday © Aleutian e bound Friday. . LOCAL SAILINGS ® Estebeth scheduled to sall e every Weanesary at 6 p.m. e for Sitka and wayports. & Dart leaves every Wednesday southbound scheduled south- e at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Port ® Alexander, e ports. P Kake and way- October 15) 29 feet. (Sun time, Low tide—2:10 am., . ° . . . . . . L] . . . . High tide—8:43 a.m., 13.0 feet.” Low . tide—2: High tide— 50 pm. 54 feet. 39 pm. 133 feet, >o— Maxwfiells Are ta Visit in Juneau Mr. are coming to Juneau on ISREALLY WILD LIFE By JAY VESSELS AP Feature Service MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 14 — The Canadian border country of Minne- sota is having its final fling before winter's icy fingers close~over the lake-studded country and drive out all but the hardly denizens. ! In one weekend, news (chronicled that: Richard Janes, 25, hunting grouse on the American side of the border, |was attacked by a large buck deer. |Janes stooped to pick up a bird he had shot. He whirled in time to see the buck chrge but too late to |defend himself, - Janes grabbed the \besst‘s hornstand screan®d for help. His brother, Frank, tryving to end the | death struggle, fired at the deer, (killing it, but_ the charge sprayed reports d Mrs. Harry Maxwell, Jr, | janes. He was badly gored and the | wounded by shot in the head and southbound steamer Aleutian from|nhand, {Anchorage for a visit, Mr. Max- |well is with the Alaska Game Com- mission. Mrs. mer Sybil Godfrey. BUY DEFENSE BONDS Killed in Hawaii PHONE 10 or 20 P i meees TRAVEL CANADIAN ona PACIFIC "“PRIN- CESS"” LINER JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Loulss October 19—October 28 V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, CPR.—Juneau, Alasks CANADIAN PACIFIC TH ATCO LINE | | | | Maxwell is the for- Death of an army air corps offi- cer, Second Lieutenant Martin R. Connelly, 26, of Syracuse, N. Y., who was fatally shot during a scuffle with a customs guard in Alaska Transportation Company Honolulu, Hawalii, is being inves- tigated by island authorities. John - b K. Yuen, veteran customs guard, BAILINGS FROM PIER 7 is being held and faces a charge SEATTLE of second degree murder. Police say the two scuffled over the right to examine a package. Connelly was en route home from the Phil- ippines at the time. Yuen says the gun was discharged accident- allv. EVERY THURSDAY 1000 A. M. In the same general vicinity, Leonard . Dickenson was walk- ing thrcugh dense wcods at | night with Licyd Dawley when | a lynx leaped upon Dickenson. | Dickenson, who was unarmed, ! instinctively hurled himself to | the greund, turning a somer- | sault and disledging the cat which scampered away. His ! heacy clothing spared his body frem the cat’s leng claws. | Another pop-eyed person was 19- |year-old Richard Koehler, Chicago |boy scoutmaster and laboratory !Lechnicisn. Koehler, on an incred- {ible 12-wekk, 500-mile solo canoce {trip in' the wilderness areas, re- {lated how he saw a wildlife tradegy |of the first magnitude. His canoe slid silently along a narrow con- | necting river when a huge timber | wolf raced up to a deer and killed |1s by seizing its throat. | A settler crowded into this | amazing series of frontier incidents with a story -about picking up a | wriggling black bass from 4 field. | It was dropped there by an eagle | or large hawk after the fish, taken { from | too heavy for the bird's flight. || Hospirir Nor ‘ George Hill was .admitted to Si. | Ann’s Hospital ceive medical tréatment. William Graham entered St.| Ann’s Hospital yesterday as a med- ical patient, ‘A‘ Emil Wirtanen was admitted - this morning to St. Ann’s Hospital for | | medical atfention. Betty June Harris was, admitted to the Government Hospital yes- WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Oct. 16 -.Oet. 23 S. 8. TONGASS ... S. 8. TYEE ... PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION J P 4 D. B. FEMMER—AGENT uneau Transfer PHONE 14 NIGHT 312 Phone 48—Night Phone 481 e GaGaaaeeas -3 o | terday for medical treatment, Mrs. Lottie Jackson of Tenakee was admitted to the Government Hospital yesterday afternoon as a medical patient, —————— | Women of Moose regular meeting | Wednesday night, Oct. 15, 7:15. €ard 7, 8:15 — Bridge and pinochle. on 50 —adv. Em pfie. SAILOR GAFFS A TORPEDO IN | a shallow lake; had become - yesterday to re- | ST THAT'S BEEN PAID F?y RING TES CLERKS WANTED, FIELD SERVICE The United States Civil Ees Ccmmissicn announces the ing open competitive examinations: PRINCIPAL CLERK (FIELD SERVICE); SENIOR 'CLERK (FIELD SERVICE); ASSISTANT CLERK (FIELD SERVICE). These examinations are for the purpose of filling existing and future vacancies in the Field Service in the Territory of Alaska, Applications must be on flle with the Manager, Eleventh U.'S. Civil Service District, Post Office Build- ing, Seattle, Washington, not later than November 18, 1941 Full information may be obtained from the Secretary, Board of U. S Civil Service Examiners, Anchorage, Cordova, Fairbanks, Juneau, Ketchi- kan, Nome or Seward, Alagka, or frem the Manager, Eleventh U. S. Civil Service District, Post' Office Building, Seattle, Washingtan. A" L FLYING FISH SEATTLE, Oct. 14—Some 16,650 finny parachute “troops” recently tcok over barren and tiny Crater follow- Lake, lodged high beside Snow King Mountain in the Caseade | Range, An airplane dropped five heavily- |laden milk cans into the lake, with {billowing parachutes breaking the |fall. In those milk cans were 16.- /650 inch-long rainbow trout, which |three years from now should be fighting 15- and 16-inchers. - eee - ‘ Installment credit outstanding at midyear totaled nearly six billion dollars, the Department of Com- merce reported. | [ [ | }E | L | Told that the railroads could b within two weeks, a special senate threatened gasoline shortage would Co-Ordinator Harold Ickes testified daily excess of consumption over ;shi ve, a long tral a oil to 2o around this winter. Above, ukeng Hssrlabury, Pa: e iyl I'D RATHER HAVE e R S—A practice torpedo, loaded with air so it'll not sink after the propelling mechanism runs down, is lifted aboard a navy ‘“retriever boat” during torpedo-firing tests off Piney Point, Md. Ladb 2% e A GOSH - I'D THE MONEY THAT A2 LIKE TO STILL PUE ON.IT/ e S HAVE ALL J o THE MONEY \ 3 " AX1S PARTN ER S—Fall of 1941 finds these two, Mussolini (left) and Hitler, still busy remaking maps, the friendship that Slogmed about middle 1938 still flowering. Middle-aged and wanachy. they recently conferred at the eastern front. ‘ Senatc;. C?oupj iiolds Gas Shortage Can Be Avoide d - hauling 200,000 barrels of petroleum daily to the eastern seaboard 7 committee studying the oil situation reaffirmed its findings that a be avoided if, the proper steps were taken. Previously Petrolium that if something was not done to overcome the 115,000-barrel| ipments to the eastern seaboard area there would not be enough ' n of tank cars heads east with oil. The picture was | fi TOM RADONICH as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire evening at the box office of the— CAPITOL THEATRE { I and receive TWO tickets to see: N - "PHILADELPHIA STORY” | Federal Tax—5¢ per Person —WATCH THIS SPACE——— Your Name May Appear! ’ N is invited to present this coupon this f N ) ! § ¢} § \ \ \ | ) ) \ \ ) \ \ { \ \ \ Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound DENALI Fri Oct. 17 ALEUTIAN R e . PFrl. Oct. 17 YUKON .. Mon. Oct. 13 Thu. Oct. 16 Thu. Oct. 23 ALASKA .. Tues. Oct. 14 Fri. Oct. 17 Wed. Oct: 22 COLUMBIA . Thu. Oct. 16 Sun. Oct. 19 Sat. Oct. 256 DENALI Oct. 21 Fri. Oct. 24 Thu. Oct. 30 ALEUTIAN Thu. Oct. 23 Sun. Oct. 26 Sat. Nov. 1 YIIK()N Tues. Oct. 28 Fri. Oct, 31 Thu. Nov. 6 FOR PORTS OF CALL, Phone Local Office of Company. H. O. ADAMS AGENT PHONES—TICKET OFFICE 2 FREIGHT OFFIC 4 peave AT JB geattle y North Coast North- Jand HENR frrr e e e e 7 ) ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES | Serving Southeast Alaska——Passengers, Mail, Express = SCHEDULED DAILY AT 10:00 A. M. § Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- { Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Sitka; Juneau ...$ 8 $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 $18 : Sitka 18 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 \ Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 ) Kimshan 18 10 18 10 18 10 3 Pelican 18 10 18 18 PR T G T T { Tenakee .. 10 10 10 » 2 Angoon .. 18 18 : Hceonah .. 10 Express Rate: 10 cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan Kasaan Wrangell Petersburg Kake Juneau -..$31.00 $31.00 $20.00 $18.00 $25.00 Kake . 25.00 25.00 25.00 12,50 Petersbhurg . . 18.00 18.00 .50 Wrangell 15.00 15.00 Kasaan ... . 10.00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 FOR INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, Phflne Glz HASSELBURG, SKAGWAY, TAKU -LODGE: Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, Less 10% An additional charge will be made for single passengers PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS lonnd-rfi" Fares: 10% off twice one-way | fares, when purchased in advance. Seattle 18 $12v 149 $112 127 83 § 37 125 10 116 $ 88 15 M 41 15 95 207 234 212 $202 102 59 60 33 20 $191 26 114 142 119 109 120 Wwe. Fr. 5 Th. Sa. 8;00 Lv SEATTLE, Wosh US.A.PST Ar 6:55 2:10 Ar JUNEAU, Alaska PST Lv 12:45 Mo. § We. Sa. 2:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska PST Ar 12:15 2:45 2:40 Ar VJ_KITEHORSR. Y. T. ..185° Lv 10:15 12:45 3:00 Ly WHITEHORSE, Y. T. ..135° Ar 0:55 12:25 4:55 Ar FAIRBANKS, Alaska ..150° Lv 6:00 8:30 8y v . . =1 o L. A. DELEBECQUE—District Sales Manager NE 106 .. 1SUATHA ;

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