The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 20, 1941, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE- - JUNEAU, ALASKA B ——— POLLY AND HER PALS ¢ - [THE THEATRE OWNER [On ANOTHER BUNCH 7 WELL, HERES BUT HE OF FLOWERS / WHAT GNQ‘MER SURPRISE.| |HAS RENTED OUR CAN‘T/ | A PLEASANT WE'RE FIRED... PLAYHOUSE TO A MR. BONSON SURE “THE SHOW IS BIG MOVIE HAS A LEASE COMPANY/ ON THIS CLOSING ! MARINE NEWS VALUE IN ALASKA NEAR $150,000,060 Gov. E. Gffiéning Makes (CLUMBIAON | . NORTHBOUND . 3 i . SUND AY ( AI.I. + Nortn Sea scneauica to ur- o | Brief But Pointed Radio e rive sometime tomorrow e | . e morning but nothing defin- o | Talk Samrday nght e ite at 3 p.m. today. . _— GOING WEST e SCHEDULED SAILINGS @ o ® Denali scheduled to sail from e e i e Seattle 9 am. tomorrow, e | P¥ n e it part 13 — o Aleutian scheduled to sail e |poiOne COROID b e Twenty- persons disembarked | e from Seattle 9 a.m. October ® | lest Gr from the steamer Columbia when it ¢ 93, e vl iy ived here yesterday”noon. The o orthland scheduled to' sail ® |pac”iiaio add ssel took persons from Juneau {0 o from geattle October 23 . Ly “‘"‘“"I ADE W"*‘“’“é"‘]‘"“!’a“‘kc ® Tyee scheduled to sail from e| here were Carl Ba 03 ¥op o Baker, Ronald Baker, Mrs. | 3 , Seattle Deonx e ma | Margaret Beach, Mrs. Bessie Farlow, { 2. ©' 0eS W OCP0 PR g jng de . With this Increa 2 Joe Franich, G E. Goudie, John C R TG e R £ 1 R S Territor s | Hawkes, Lillian Hein, Edward Hein, ® October 23. ; has come a closer phy::-al linking } Mrs. Car! Hendrickson, Howard B. ® North Coast scheduled to sail ® [of Alaska with the States by com- | Largent, Jim Nicolo, Dr. and Mrs,| ® from Seattle October 28 at ® mercial air routes. He prophesied i G. H. Quillan, Mr. and Mrs. E. S. ® 10 am ® that Alaska will shortly be con- | Smith, Vivien Thompson, Fred Web- (¢ SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS @ nected by a single day's air travel { ber, Juanita Wood, James Lantry, @ Alaska scheduled southbound ® with the Atla seaboard, Wash- & Andrew Stephens, all from Seattle. October 22 e lington, D. C., eastern industrial | . Carter, N, Noritake, Henry | Yukon scheduled southbound e center | from Ketchikan e October 23 . | Boyle and A. R. Cramer, e Columbia scheduled south- | anzell e bound Saturday . 3 Leaving were Mrs. Valerie Red- | ¢ Topgass due southbound Sun- ; Benedict, Sam Hen- | o ds ° | Hazel Englund, Elmer J i ! ' . Jr,, Mrs. N. L. Troast, B. F. | § evefy w';‘:‘memny at 6 pm. e in the present national emergency . e for Sitka and wayports. o the Governor said: § o Dart leaves ‘every Wednesdsy e ‘Let us highly resolve and © at 7 a.m.for Petersburg, Port e N'OW, to lay aside petty diff 1ces, ! e Alexander, Kake and way- e local disagreements, inte dis- & ¥ cord, factional strife.” ; e ports. . iy W O e o e o 5 0 0 0 0 o 0 time, October 21) R AR W K $ H Hig 1:02 am., 180 feet. HA[UE KE IAKES A VS nlflerS ear Low tide—7:00 am. -05 feet. : High tide—1:05 p.m., 20.0 feet. I p { U S f . o ANNUAL CLEAN-UP Written by Children NOTICE AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv Among Reed College students faculty members who gave annual demonstration that educatien can get down on it in the mud and do a first cla of grubbing and digzing weeds and ppie week's knitting meeting of the AWVS members will be held in the home of Mrs. B. D, Stewart on Calhoun Avenue on Friday even- ing at 8 co'clock. Members are urged to attend. to work on Red t higher es job as Campus Day, as the occasion 'is @ Centrally located Calhoun Avenue. Bpecial Rates to Permanent Guests 'lege goes to work on the grounds. {two of the first English children evacuated to America during the present war. The writers are Nancy David A. Hoffman, sales mana- ger of the Alaska Mine Equipment Company, returned to his head- quarters here this morning on the steamer Aleutian after an extended siness trip to Interior and West- ward ‘cities, He is staying at the Baranof Hotel old children of Profe: Eallicl Collegz2, Oxic - ssor Bell of England. Empire Classifieds Pay! TROOPS CROSS RIVER TG BT A g, JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah November 6 October 28 V. W. MULVIHILL | Agent, CP.R.—Juneau, Alaska | CANADIAN PACIFIC TR S 100 SR 0 055 S [ THE ATCO LINE Alaska Transportation Company * SAILINGS FROM PIER 17 SEATTLE EVERY THURSDAY| , 1000A.M. | S TONGASS S. TYEE Oct. 3 Oct. 2 S. PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION Ny L 7 it L4 German soldiers, using rubber boats, cross a Russian river, ace ng, in. B. FEMMER—AGENT te German sources, at the start of the new German offensive on the PHONE 14 NIGHT 312 central front west of Moscow. Picture radiced from Berlin to New York. ey 'FEDERAL DEFENSE was held at the home of Mrs. Mel any designated, has been an annual f n of a sma fal P b 50 E Martin on Gold Street, and the The son of a small-time Buffalo, s S T 3 r. cwe. n leave fi Large Rooms o Splendid food affair "since Reed’s founding in A o . o ) b ian i 2k the members of his 1eg1‘m(~m. once Mr. Maxwell is on leave from Al- i evening meeting w held in the N. Y., poolitician who had come to | told me: nstead of being one of aska Game Commission and wi | all ‘with and service Portland, Oregon in 1012. Olass®s poye or Mrs Courtney Smith on ‘this cquntry from Countyshibork,| thioss oMficers who . said. ‘Now. go|go. to Bullerign’ Gl ascompert bath. are called off, and the whole col- " i 5 54 W g0 g erton, Cal., accompanie and Eddie Bell, the 12 and 10 year| ———;T WHEN HE LEFT LAST NIGHT SEVERAL PEOPLE ASKED HIM FOR HIS AUTOGRAPH / REMEMBER 2 WELL NEITHER DID HE HE SIGNED A LEASE CANCELATION / YES --- BUT IT WAS SO DARK 1 DIDN'T SEE LD U. S. Navy Gets World’s Largest B Phonephoto Pictured after a tes ar K-3, world’s largest non-rigid airship, dhteh the U. S inder C. V. S. Knox described the tests as i with torpedoes, depth char; machine guns. General by Presi- of Her- At tant dent Coolidg Meel "WildBill” Doovan, ° COi Boss; His Job Now Is - orney He was one ba Hoov Conservativ | for . rhor- e Ing e roa | s Hd. Lehman. o e | t time' until he W ; __ lnearing and g for etary «Continuea rom rage One) me from the right side of the Bros h“_ bk N“ ‘he’ Wisieton 2 G, scene, e when s big law ¥ rac but so far over that she was practice’ brou hin her cesn't talk much and, when nela member of one of Buffalo’s very i he doesn't talk abotf’him- | first families L oHes paral Ghow 1 johe JBE SHe (big offices in the guarded halls of by o | the triangular Apex building— more rock-ribbed Republican As a matter of fact there s nojra {may become one of the import mystery about Donovan, unless it|out i N ¥ 4 15 how he got that monfeker “Wiid : stones in the foundation of nation- Bill” He doesn't even know him- seriv| k. getense, self. It popped out about the time|b ‘ i o RS he was playing football at Colum-|sion. He did join his company later | bia Univ nd m 1[and demonstrated at once that ‘M 3 “ merely a sports writer's T | tary leader | & axwe S f a nickname commonly ‘gpplied HE | to a big league pitcher of that day| He ¢ out of the World War ,|‘ J named Donovan whose control | jjeyten: of tamous uneau | wasn't that it should have been. | Fight; with three \\onntis.‘ i Bill Donovan is a big, square-|nd dec ons for bravery, to| | headed Irish Catholic, whose life|yh SEar wan: added “the. igh | R Mr Hallie Rice, son of Mrs. G. B. Rice ¢ ang British War Relief gar- 5 oh€ of those success stories that | est of ‘all our hon the . Con-| 4rrive, . 2 : of Juneau, who took part in the has :been warmi the ~heart of| arrived on the Aleutian from An- ® Perfect comfort i, Sy ;o AT S been warming the heart ol gresslonal Medal of Honor. The|chorage and during the brief stay Ay ek e | Last week’s afternoon meeting Americans ever since there were|stories of his courage and calm- in Juneau are the house guests of ness under fire are legion. One of Mrs. Mae Godfrey at the Hil st Bill spend his early years on the|out there, boys, and give ’em hell’ |by Mrs, Maxwell, where the elder ALASKANS LIEE THE This year 400 “laborers” expended »Wmle{ n\rxnbebr()sokwgi;-h lr()zutmr; wrong side of the tracks, He|he was the kind who was always Maxwell is not in the best of health. 2 total ‘of 800 man hours to save the oo, k) i b worked his way through Colum- | glancing back and saying ‘Come| Notwithstanding the very en- Hotel R cellitaten 4000, Twice gr H(;l“ We kaebAr:erica bla Law School, went back §8 Buf-|on, men, a little bit further and|clement weather the Aleutian ar- W WASHIN ON silisy 4 s el ‘;\ha's :::fl to them. ’lrh.e ootgiv&: falo and set up a practice which | we got 'em on the run.” rived early this morning, many | HOFFMAN RETURNS pressions of this country of soon was proving that Bill Dono-| Four years after the war, Dono- iriends were at the dock to greet {Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell. van wasn't just another guy with|van a shingle. He then wooed and won! Attorn, who not only s appointed New he wa United States York, and two appointed As in s T ooy 3 ter year Subscribe for' The Empire. FiME FOR MONKEY BUSINESS_To take their minds off war's Australian soldiers staticned in the Far East make friends with a jungle ‘. o grim business, some inhabitant. 116~Car Train Crashes in Baltimore 2 ¥ S 3 This wreckage resulted when ;,tnin of 116 loaded iron ore cars piled up in the Baltimore yards of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Cyashing through a switch, the locomotive struck a high tension pole and sevem ?:;e cars rammed into the engine, killing the engineer. of ! and Mrs. Harry Maxwell, Jr., W. C. JENSEN 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 and receive TWO tickets to see: "“COME LIVE WITH ME" Federal Tax—>5c¢ per Pérson WATCH THIS SPACE Your Name May Appear! ey ” Due Juneau Leave Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound EPBON i Thu. Oct. 23 | ALASKA Wed. Oct. 22 COLUMBIA - = . e Sat. Oct. 25 DENALI Tues. Oct. 21 Fri. Oct. 24 Thu. Oct. 30 ALEUTIAN Thu. Oct. 23 Sun. Oct. 26 Sat. Nov. 1 YUKON 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 NORTHLAND TRA;NSPORT TION COMPANY UNEAU to i ATLINGS WEEKLY SATL e Jun. Ly, Jun Ar. Leave geattle N 7 ] { ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES | Serving Southeast Alaska———Passengers, Mail, Express ! * SCHEDULED DAILY AT 10:00 A. M. \ Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- ! Inlet Hoonah gcon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Sitka P Juneau ..$ 8 $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 $18 t‘ Sitka 18 18 18 10 18 18 10 10 \ Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 \"4' Kimshan 18 10 18 10 18 10 Pelican 18 10 18 18 Todd 18 18 10 10 Tenakee .. 10 10 10 Angoon 18 18 Hceonah .. 10 E 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 Petersburg 18.00 18.00 7.50 Wrangell 15.00 15.00 Kasaan ... - 10.00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 FOR INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, Phone Glz HASSELBURG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, Less 10% An additional charge will be made for single passengers to flag stops. PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS EFFECTIVE MAY 16, 1941 paA Round-Trip Fares: 10% off twice one-way e 3 fares, when purchased g 8 B = in advance. 8 21318 Fairbanks, Alaska 6 Flat, Alaska ... 31 $56 Golovin, ‘Alaska .. 141 67 $118 Hot Springs, Alaska 88 15 65 Juneau, Alaska . 151 82 132 i MeGratk .. 4 44 18 $12v | Nome, Alaska .. 149 74. 126 149 $112 Nulato, Alaska 121 50 99 127 83§ 37 Ophir, Alaska .. 39 48 12 125 10 116 § 88 . Alaska . 108 39 8 115 71 47 15 E ?l:lx:a].le‘ ‘Wash., U. 236 170 217 95 207 234 212 $202 L Tanana, Alaska ... 94 24 71 102 59 60 33 20 $191 [ ‘Whitehorse, ¥. T., Can... 75 125 26 114 142 119 109 120 * Su. Mo. Mo. Tu. We. Fr. Th. Sa. . 8:00 Lv SEATTLE, Wash US.A.PST Ar 6:55 g g 210 Ar JUNEAU, Alaska PET Lv 12450 .. LT We. Sa. 8:30 2:40 Lv JUNEAU, Alaska ... PST Ar 12:15 2:45 8:30 2:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. 135: Lv 10:16 12:45 8:50 3:00 Ly WHITEHORSE, Y. T. . 135° Ar 9:55 12:26 r 10:45 4'55' Ar FAIRBANKS, Alaska ..150° Lv 6:00 8:30 \ L. A. DmCQUl—DfiIG:sSIh ‘Manager i " 135 So. Franklin St. » - PAN AMERICAN AIR! PHONE 108 1334—4TH AVE—SEATTLE e e e

Other pages from this issue: