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PAGE SIX ™% THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-- JUNEAU, ALASKA POLLY AND HER PALS b LIZA HAS BEEN SICKAND TVE BEEN DOING HERE FORAMINUTE"‘ o 4 {E COOKING AT HOME! IT'S BEEN A GOOD 1 HAVE A DATE FOR AN 3 EXPERIENCE,BUT-~ INTERVIEW! > DOME: EMPLOYMENT AGENCY P ) MARINE NEWS Broadway 4 Has Girl BARANOF s SAILING ———— Shorfage 10 SOUTH Steamer Held at Ketchikan Finally Casts Off-Dis- pufe Nol Settled Oct T ‘3\! enroute Nome, sailed south settlement of h the stewards ly if a ce behind bars The dispute was the outgrowth of fist fights ashore, the last on: at False Pass e company agent said th stewards walked off but some re turned to help serve breakfast {0 330 passengers. Later all, or most of the Steward’s Department re- turned to negotiate for a settle- eutian scheduled to arrive @ at 6 o'clock this evening ol North Coast due Saturday SCHEDULED SAILINGS Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 o'clock Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle October 30. Princess Norah scheduled to Vancouver Novem- Not Enougll_lg;elly Gals to Go Around Now Says Professional BY GEORGE TUCKER | NEW YORK, Oct. 28-—There is as all America knows, a shortage of silk stockings. The price of cheese is soaring, lamb chops are out of |sight and. from the way things llook, at least alomg the eastern seaboard, gas may soon be doled out to motorists in half-pint bottles. | But the worst is yet to come. For here comes Billy Rose, who ows whereof he speaks, with the dire tidings that there aren’t !enough pretty girls to go around Mr. Rose, of course, is talking ks | purely from a professional point D5aly BaiEsan lof view. When he says that there's Estebeth scheduled to 811 |, goart of lovely lassies, he means every Wednesacy &t 6 PM. ® |, (heatrical producers can't for Sitka and wayports. @ |png 5 sufficient number of comel Dart leaves every Wednesday ® | ,orines with whom to embellish at 7 a.n. for Petersburg, Port .t:hmr diical AHBWS . ° . . . B . . . . . . . . nbia scheduled to sail . from Seattle November 2. e North Sea scheduled to sail e from Seattle at 10 a.m. No- . vember 4. . . ° . . . . . . . . . . . ° . Seattle fro from here wi SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Northland scheduled south- bound tomorrow afternoon. Denali scheduled southbound Saturday. Tyee scheduled southbound Saturday. the agre sailor was p . . . . . . . . . | ment. Alexander, Kake and way- ®| .yt wouldn't surprise me says Meanwhile the Coast Guard .po. PRSIl (R Billy, with a scowl, “if the situ T rds @ c |ation got so bad that we'd have to agreed to post guards and to tow 2 i g oAy o e the Baranof into the channel so {adopt some .s]o}( ]nllm!;nmil \XL it would not block the oil dock! '"DES {tem. Seriously there a shol where it was laying in, refucling {8ee: Suddenly the captain ordered the T lines cast off, the sailors complied (Sun time, October 29) and the vessel left for Seattle with| Low tide—2:25 am. 23 feet. negotiations uppm'emh going on. High tide—9:00 a.m. 14.7 feet. — — | Low tide—3:09 p.m. 39 feet. High tide—9:13 p.m., 138 feet Time was, and not so very long |ago, Billy recalls, when all one had jto do to recruit a line of charmers |for a revne, musical comedy or |night club entertainment, was to _|issue a ‘chorus call"—insert an ad in the papers and send notices to lou'se Sa'ls be replaced by the Princess Norah.|the am‘usement editors—and the which has been on the west coast| beauties came trocping tc your of Vancouver Island run for thelstage door. H H | past six months | “In the spring of last year,” Billy n Ina rlp Fifty-one passengers from Ju-‘repml& “‘when I had a call at Mad- neau sailed south on the Princess lison Square Garden for my Aqua-| Louise as follows: cade at the World’s Fair, 15,000 | J. Boshche, A. Bergen, J. Pocsik, | | voung people showed up. More than! o ancouver R. Standvick, M. Savinkoff, M. Ma- 10,000 were girls, and naturally we sonvich, Mrs. J. Tresierra, J. Tre- |had no trouble whatever in getting e A |together a very decorative dancing plegge. OBRE, A d. Dre |and swimming chorus. This spring, H 'a o harwi Princess Norah to Replace " whiucon™ s arocsemmrms, - 3| ¥hen I started producing the cur- ‘0 Williams, nt show at my Diamond Horse- .Vessel on Canadian ~ |Lwminen, W Martineau J Anctll,| £8P %ad another call, and be- |5 Gray, R. B. MeBride, Mrs. R. |fween 400 end 500 girls answered | Pacific Run B. McBride [the ads J. M. Westfall, Mrs. J. M. West-‘ “But a few weeks ago, I had to| fall, Mrs. M. Upper, Harry Mfl""rephce a couple of girls who were | well, Jr, Mrs. H. Maxwell, Jr, E |getting married. I issued a call, | Making the last trip of the sea- son, the steamer Princess Louise B | i # left Juneau at 9 o'clock this morn- 2 YOU®: i Pellgy B CHOHRON. HTRL IS guite: 50, girld tesponfad ing for Vancouver. The vessel will Mrs. A. Henson. |And I had a dickens of a timel _ | R. J. Dunnington, J. Korsnes, J.|picking out two attractive young-| |Hopen, O. Larson, Mrs. O. Larson, sters.” e TRAVEL D. Kinney, Mrs. D. Kinney, G. E.| — ANADIAN ona Sehnabel. | Every producer of musical shows, D. Heath, J. L. McCarry, Mrs. J. ys Mr. Rose, is in the same pre- upm L. McCarrey, Miss A. Neville, J. dicament. Day after day, ads ap- ( 2 i Baldridge, Miss Diana Baldridge, ‘pt"u for chorus girls needed for the! Ess" Mrs. B. Baldridge. Inew fall shows, but very few lovely | —.- c |G, Lawson, C. Webster, C. Mc-|damsels show up at the calls. In| | & 2 o) i order to pretect lis group of hand- | LINER i:l.?:‘;:{::uDM?:‘m(l? i B(r,llp'::;"(‘" ;:"pirkr(l honeys at the Horsoshm" | from being raided by other predu-| | cers, Billy recently placed all his| JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER |girls under run-ol-the-play con | VICTORIA OR SEATTLE (h traets. Until then the impressario| { an es a e and his chorus had got along nicely | SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS | J |with the conventional two weeks’| Princess Norah H . arrangement | | “What are the causes of this| November 6 November 16—26 Slea mer R u "s |strange and unprecedented short- | age? Billy believes that the de- | V. W. MULVIHILL Nlense industries have something to | Agent, C.P.R.—Juneau, Alaska —_ do with it. The plants have of- | uuanm‘ nmc Several important changes in | fices; the offices need receptionists, | steamer sailings are announced to- | secretaries, stenographers. A num- | S | 2y by the Alaska Steamship Com- | ber of pretty girls have become | pany and also Northland Transpor- | airplane hostesses and a good many | 1‘l'ully. | tation Company. | real “lcokers” these days prefer THE | The Alaska Steamship Compary | modeling to show business. | will have two steamers sailing from “A pretty girl is still like a, A T C n | Seattle this week, the Yukon to- melody, but getting her today 1! | morrow afternoon at 4:30 o'clock More like‘a pain in the neck.” L l N E :and Alaska on Thursday. The Co- { i bt ey - 2 lumbia, now southbound, will sail o Alaska Transportation | from Seattle next Sunday, accord- prov pradi(e Company |ing to the announced schedule. ma ° The North Coast is scheduled to { R i T sall from Seattle today. The North Does Make pe"ed ! SEATTLE Sea is scheduled to sail from Se- :flLLXe November 4 and Northland LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Oct. 28.-- | November 7. The Seventh Army Corps produ'-rdl EVEBY THURSDAY Geo B makes better combat engineers. | lfl:flfl A. u. rge rysons The 110th Engineers of Kansasl o e SR M figures as proof that practice | City constructed a 775-foot pontcon | Have Boy Baby bridge across the Red River in 11| 2 Lours and ten minutes uiider ‘the| §. S TONGASS (;".L 30 | mMr oana Mrs._George Bryson are Critical eyes of the 108th Engineers S. TYEE Nov. 6 {| e parents of a baby son born last ©f Chicago. The Chicago troopers | night_about 11 o'clock in St. Ann’s | then laid a 648-foot span in five | PASSENGERS FREIGHT | Hospital. The infant weighed 8 hours and 15 minutes. The w”\\dl REFRIGERATION pounds and 101/2 ounces at birth, Engineers of New York, who| P and has not as yet been named. watched both jobs, erected a 659- Mrs. Bryson is the former Isabel [foot bridge in four’ hours and 15 D. B. FEMMER—AGENT Deobson, and Bryson is employed minutes ¥ PHONE 14 NIGHT 312 a mechanic at the Forestry 2 i e ey LHIAZE FUY DEFENSE BONDS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28 ‘)4] YOU'RE READY TO TAKE UP COOKING AS A i i CAPITOL THEATRE % & | i Taken recently after returning from a is believed to have torpedoed The Kearny, althoug Weary Na71 Troops Battle Ru351a s N'ud anra tmop- are shown in this censored photo as they dragged a zun According to Berlin, German through heavy mud up to the P, Russians had blown up all lnulgu over Jv attitude vf the soldier in fo 1 front in pursuit of the retreating Reds. n azi pioneers constructed a foot bridge. round indicates the strain being imposed on the German army. il Train Wrecked by Nazis Russ1an azi bombers orj the eastern front, accord- rted to be concentrating on lupply These tank cars formed part of a Russian oil train destroyed by N ing to the official German gaption wi lines and communica hoto, , The Nazis are repel tions in their new s o [ e S A IR - 4 B . 9 M S SPORTSMAN RARBER SHOP | SPSCE RIS 1 A o SRR B as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the—— and receive TWO tickets to see: “MR. AND MRS. SMITH" Federal Tax——5c¢ per Person ———WATCH THIS SPACE——— Your Name May Appear! Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound " | DENALI . Mon. Nov. 3 ALEUTIAN . Tues. Nov. 4 | YUKON Wed. Oct. 29 Sat. Nov. 1 Sat. Nov. 8 | ALASKA . Thu. Oct.30 Sun. Nov. 2 Sun. Nov. 9 COLUMBIA Sun. Nov. 2 Wed. Nov. § Wed. Nov. 12 FOR INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL THE ALASKA LINE PHONE 2 H. O. ADAMS, Agent HE YEAR OUND ‘SERVING ALASKA NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY \A I\(.\’-JL‘NE:\U to X WEEKLY "" EATTLE Ar.Jun Lv. Jun. Lea wB. SB seattle Vi & North A TN Coast North Sea Nortid- land oct. 28 Nov. Nov. 4 Nov. 8 Nov. & Nov. 1 Nov. 12 Nov. 12 llE\R\ (xl{kb\;’, A..Engers e Freight PHone { ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES ! Serving Southeast Alaska——Passengers, Mail, Express { SCHEDULED DAILY AT 10:00 A. M. 1 Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- § Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd iean shan gof Sitka ) Juneau ..$ 8 $10 $18 $10 $18 $18 $18 $18 $18 | sitka R R R T 18 10 10 { Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10 5 | Rimshan 18 10 18 10 18 10 \ Pelican 18 10 18 18 Todd 18 18 10 10 s Tenakee .. 10 10 10 Angoon 18 18 i Hoonah .. 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 12,50 Petersburg . . 18.00 18.00 .50 Wwrangell ... 15.00 15.00 Kasaan e 10,00 Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 FOR INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO HAINES, Phon slz HASSELBURG, SKAGWAY, TAKU LODGE: e Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, Less 10% An additional charge will be made for single passengers to flag stops. P L0 EFFECTIVE G i’ MAY 16, 1941 m 5 10% off twice one-way Round-Trip Fares: fares, when purchased E é ] @ in advance. Ruby eattle Fairbanks, Alaska Flat, Alaska Golovin, Alaska . Hot Springs, Alaska Juneau, Alaska . McGratl .. Nome, Alaska Nulato, Alaska Ophir, Alaska .. Rupy, Alaska Seattle, Wash., U. S. Tanana, Alaska ... J Whitehorse, ¥. T., Can... 83 5 31 10 116 $ 88 T 207 234 212 $202 59 60 33 20 $191 25 26 114 142° 119 109 120 Mo. Tu. su. Mo. Wwe. Fr. Th. Srn. 8:00 Lv SEATTLE, Was h.US.A.PST Ar 6:55 2:10 Ar JUNEAU, Alaska ...........PST Lv 12:45 = o We. Sa. 2:40 Ly JUNEAU, Alaska ... PST Ar 12:15 2:45 2:40 Ar WHITEHORSE, Y. T. .. 135° Lv 10:15 12:45 3:00 Ly WHITEHORSE, Y. T...135° Ar 9:55 12:25 4:55 Ar FAIRBANKS, Alaska ..150° Lv 6:00 8:30 10:45 L. A. DELEBECQUE—Diswict Sales Managee = So. Pranklin St. PAN A Tepn. ,mfimflnm o PROR