The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 9, 1929, 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)

| % § H 'RARNF\ OOFLE AND SPARK PLUC HELLO . HaM WHATS AEW /% LK I IR R RS R -: Steamer Movements L] NORTHROUND % Admiral Rogers scheduled to # atl o'clock tomorrow morn- & ing. Has 7 days’ mail # Alameda due Sunday night. # Pnincess Mary due Sunday % mnight. % Quéen scheduled to sail from # Seattle Feb. 13, at 10 a.m. # Northwestern scheduled ta # sail from Seattle Feb. 16, % at9 am # SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS # No steamer Lo Weslward. LOCAL SAILINGS # Margnita scheduled to leave ® for Sitka and way ports at ® 8§ o'clock Thursday night. #1to a score of physiological ail- # Virginia IV sails for Chicha-« ) ments. & gof and way ports at 6 o- 4| Mr Anderson did not treat on clock every Wednesday % he doctoring or preventative meas- & night. % lures of the plant G but con & America First leaves every + »d himself to exp the ® Wednesday at 1 pm. for | haracteristics of the diseases, the & Petersburg and Kake end #{y,.m that cach worked and how & wayports. : the garden layman could define PRSP EFE PR PLANT DISEASES LEC ON BY J. P. ANDERSON R An entertaining and instructive An-| lecture was delivered by J. P derson to the members of the Ju- Club and a score of | neau, ‘Garden mopsmember garden growers last evening in the Legion Dugout. Mr. Mdersonw talk had to deal in par- ticular with “Diseases of Plants.” At the start Anderson classified the main plant ailments in three divisions; by the various fungi growths, the mematode worm disease and physi- ologieal diseases. These ailments were covered in the order given, and these diseases, Mr. Anderson explained, are the chief causes of plant disorders not only here, but in the South as well. . Plant parasites were not touched upon ;as these were explained as being not a disease but a foreign agemey which attaches itself to all .plants and works its destruc- - - - * * L L 4 . 2 o+ 4 L] SCHEDULED SAILINGS * - * * L * - * L - + + diseases that are caused | I WAS OUER To THE CLUB THIS AJOON . BARNEY ., AND ALL The BOYS wswe SANING THAT YOu COULDN'T BE BROKE OR NOUD TRy T6 LAND LONG A SOB OF SOME KIND = IF T HiM WERE NOL I'D GET SOME- = THING To DO RIGHT AwAY. Ll NQu CAN CHUCK \'T AFTER THE $ P GENEFIT stated, confine their ties to the roots and to t attributed a nu each 4 other, and eac mor largely can be plant disorder ent from the be laid to one of the ous species of nematode worms, Methods of distin shing the worm diseases were told Physiolo 1 disea are qu milar to orders in animals; ly due to some improper condition, such as poor poor light, which both impart a weakened condition tc of plants ey are most ZTOW ject to other ailments. Plants are planted in the wrong cl or are in other ways subjec conditions not suited to that ticular spec re easily subje o8 lorders will be covered at {lecture by Mr. Anderson. —————— TIDES TOMORROW h. The treatment of plant dis- High tide, 1 Low tide, 7 HMigh tide, 1:19 p.m,, tide, 7:51 pa., ' Low <19 feet. TIDES MONDAY High tide, 2:10 a.m., 16.1 Low tide, 8:01 a.m, 1.8 3 High %ide, 1:5 » 17.1 feet. Low tide, 8 -1.5 feet. BLAZE AT WRANGELL A fire that was prevented from spreading by the timely work of garage and a truck belonging tc |Clarence Bradley at Wrangel {last week. R s S ! WED AT WRANGELL Miss Laura Ronning, has lived all of her left excep h can | numer- tend to the growing plant and make it sub- that a later the fire department destroyed the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jorgen Y Ronning of Wrangell where she cently of pneumoni i I JHONT I TELLNOU THAT ALL HE DOES 8 LOAF ALL DAY LET'S GO DOWA AND TELL HE'S MO GOOD AND —~, DOSSNT DESERVE L ~ BENLFIT I | \WHAT D8 You MEAN - FIND A JOR 2 Tt WORKING RIGHT I GET Two-Bits FROM A Su{ FOR MINOING THIS ICAF‘.' | | | ) “Miss Texas” in 1918 beauty contest, has filed suit for divorce against Emanuel Kraus, of New York, a wholesale meat dealer. (International Newsreeld. chorage, w ecently married to n|Gene Miller, well known Fair- ¢ |banks business man and promin- ent Fairbanks mus! The ,|bride had been atte the ||college since last fall. —_——————— PIONEER DIES John P. Richardson, Kunt, died mining man of Fairbanks re- aged 69. He and t[was a native of Michi tive jharm living off the plant| o, yytending college in . the|tame to Alaska :nrmto:n?ntfl::l;tx:::h“roolu“vn?l?;:é‘Smes' and Carl Bradley, a resi- SRR gvon s R dent of Wrangell for many years, GRANDMOTHER AT destructiveness. Parasites will be | ore married in their home town FAIRBANKS covered in a later lecture by Mr.| ocently, —_— Anderson. B Charles Daugherty, 12-year-old i #As a disease, the different funsl Npyw PAGTOR INSTALLED |Scattie boy who was drowned Bi ‘Work the greatest harm,” “ithis group. th, tain if the ailment was fungi tode worms and physiolo-| i Points of United Various Routes said Mr. nderson, who went on to ex- plain that the blighted potato, mils dew on living plants and all of smuts, and in particular grain .' were the most harmful un- Plants in the CANADIAN PACIFIC . _FAMOUS— Princess Steamers TO PRINCE RUPERT, VICTORIA VANCOUVER AND SEATTLE Direct Connections at Vancouver to all Eastern Visit Banff Annual Winter Carnival February 2 to 9, 1929 Tilrol‘tgh kaéts Sold to El[ro;;; and the Orient W, L. COATES, Agent Rey. John E. Youel, Presbyterian pastor age, was recently lat Fairbanks. Rev. diseases comprise a 'large the Alaska College and dfughter|55, M The worms, Mr. Anderson 'of Mrs. Fred H Coney at An Round-trip Winter Excursion Fares States and Canada Stop-Over Privileges JUNEAU formerly | Youths ‘when at Anchor- installed as pastor of the Presbyterian church Henry W Griest, Moderator of the Presby- such as potatoes and other |tery of the Yukon, ir vegetables, are an easy prey i and to enable the grower inguish this disease, Mr. An- gave several pointers to that would enable them to assisted by Monday in Seattle with two other the ice on Green e broke beneath their weight, was the grandscn of Mrs. 8. B. Linley of Fairbanks. N Finley last saw her grandson two years ago.—(Fairbanks News-Miner.) % DD PROMINENT ANCHORAGE Rev. E. L. Winterberg of An- chorage, conducted the installa- CITIZEN PASSES AWAY|_. tion. o RGN AT S 1 Carl Bolte, for many years a COLLEGE GIRL MARRIES prominent © hardware merchant i and leading property, owner of Miss Edith FHurtt, student at|Anchor died recently, aged of diabetes. ber of various Masonic bedies and had been prominent in Anchorage activities. He was a mem- e Old papers for sale at The Empire. & s B Dy T TR Subscribe to The Empire. 1. W. WOODFORD Representing the Northern | Life Insurance Co. | Investigate our new Tower | Policy, also accident and | | health insurance. Phone 2 | rings on Salmon Creek. Even-| ings by appointment. COLD WET FEET | Causes Colds and Sickness | AVOID THIS | Have your Boots and Shoes repaired at WIDE-AWAKE SHOE SHOP High Quality Workmanship | | | x & % £ [ e i 1 The Arcade Cafe | Special Dinners on Sundays and Week Days Sofa Fountain in connection. Come in and listen to the Mary Young, Prop. Phone 288 Mrs. Jeanette Kraus, who was | By BILLE DE BECK SeessrsssssssssseseI=sy) THE EMPIRE = H H H H Is the Medium il Through which the general ilpublic can always have its t| wants supplied. il ‘Closing time for classified fladvertisements: 2 P. M. il Closing time for display ad- Hl vertisements: 11 A. M. #l Ten cents per line first ln- il sertion. f Five cents for continuour ; subsequent insertion. !l Count five average words tc il the line. i Minimum charge, 50 cents FOR SALE Jelly LOOSE LEAF y FUR RENT 85. | H gl — Home made : | and Jani’. Addréss Fourth | SUPPLIES | Street. | 3} : —— | OFFICE EQUIPMENT i I-(Hl \\IJ' — b0 laying hens. il g them 20 blooded Rhode Stationery, Hi r»l‘mnl |I-Iv|»-. \\)nu roos fr luyou Printing and Bli old. Selling because of illness YR ;{ of owner. Wm. | Blndlng il FOR SALE—19 foot Eastern Cy- ! g-: dory and 1928 model 6 | GEQO. M. SIMPKINS i power Johnson ‘outhoard > M Dory has well built in COMPANY #! for motor. Telephone 3: i Home Cabine Good condition. Phon Vhittier 4103, ach- ‘ Rellable Transfer Phone 149 Res, 148 COURTESY and GOOD SERVICE Our Motto t| | | e ! ‘MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT — 4-room furnished | | FERRY TIME CARD house. Apply J. C. Lund, Fifth| R R ST and Kennedy fortune told from your haad.| Lcaves Jnnenu for Douglas and i3 s Work, business, marriage and) Thane FOR “Tiiree Toom the future foretold. 302 F’ron!‘ 6:15a.m. 6:15p.m. ished apartment. 6th anc Street. | *7:15a.m. $7:30p.m. Telephoné 436. Chann A b ‘ 9:1a.m.t 9:40p.m. ments. > 12:30p.m.+ §11:15p.m. - — HELF WANTE i 2:00p.m. 12 midnight % N 1(»@11 10N WANTLD—Fully com- | 3:15p.m.t 31:00a.m. ¥ Orr,{,nll”:;;ul mq.‘:‘c‘ ‘:f:\'l‘ ':u.:::,[r” { petent blacksmith and horse- | *4:00p.m. Mrs. B. Schwarzenberg, Doug-| Shoer wants stecdy place any-| Leaves Douglas for Juneau Phone 14 where in Alaska. Address 1059 | 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m. e care Empire. | 8:30a.m. $7:45p.m. T— Ap.nr(nwnt 'vlny e 2l 9:30a.m.t 9:56p.m. R. P. Nelson’s Statianery Store, | one way to convince other peo- | 32:45p.m.t §11:30p.m. - - ‘ple you are weak in the upper| 2:16p.m. 12:156a.m, Furnished apartments B story is to try to impress them ! 3:30p.m.{ $1:05a.m ;fi“fl“» 2040311'~ Tth St with your supormruy 5:05p.m. hone ‘ g ¥ . Thane. e EhE 5 t—Freight will pe accepted. Fonr !:E:\l\-f' ;i]:‘“'nm\' e e MIDGET LUNCH t—Saturdays only. ments. Mac on Apartmen ‘|| The HOME of the Square | §—Effactive April 1st. FOR RENT—Apt., 6th and Gold. | | Meal | . Phone 5701. I open ¢ FOUL Bits Up | Junean I‘ecrry & Naviga- pen a. m. ti p. m, | 3 FOR RENT --. nice:y furnished |5 1 ton: Hompany room. 819% Gold Belt Ave 5 Near Dixon St. { NOTICE! i LJ.SaAarick Plane, Victor urtuopnonic Phono- | ] Jeweler and graph, sewing machines. Rent| | —_— i Optician or fale. Anderson Music Shoppe. | 1 Rt Watches FOR RENT — ruily furaisned| | After Friday, February Ilst, | s&hsgivggggg apartments, single or double.| a o | | preerree. Newly painted. Baths and hot| Dr, W. W. Council will be | | T J Ii ‘water furnished. Furnished| HE JUNEAU UNDRY cabins $5.00 per month. Apply | located at 109 Front Street. : Seaview Apts. ranklin Street, - between ; \ SEVEN room unfurnisned nouse . . Telephone No. 382. | Front and Second Streets with two bathrooms and hes A(-‘ | PHONE 859 ! ing plant. 132 6th St i i | e WANTED A MAN with §1,000.00 | | | | | w hu knows how to work to join me| in establishing additional Your own boss and inve fully secured. Practic ain can double mon Answer 1093 care Daily Empire. \‘\l\ FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin ¥ront and Franklin, Front, near Ferry Way Front, opp. Film Exchange Front, opp. City Whart Front, niear Saw Mill Front at A. J. Office. ‘Willoughby at Totem Gro. ‘Willoughby, opp. B. P. R. ‘warehouse and garage. Front and Seward. Front and Main. Second and Main Fifth and Seward. Fire Hall Gastineau and Rawn Way. Second and Gold. Fourth~and Harris. Fifth and Geld Fifth and Bust. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. back ot Ninth, house. Calhoun, opp. Juneau Apts, Distin Ave., and Indian St Ninth and Calhoun. Seventh and Main Twelfth, Northern L'dry. 8 Twelfth and Willoughby, 4-9 Home Grocery. power nt r- Banks Poo stead of idle. “This is co-operation. A e e e e Uity - Resourees In this way these resources become canstructwe in- This is why modern business must have banks. Make this one more useful—to you. First National Bank “There Is No Sllllfllnh for Safety” | l Community i This is the meaning of modern progress. way ports. FINEST: STEAMERS SAILING SCHEDULE Boat Alameda ... Nortnwestern Alameda Northwestern Aleutian Alaska Yukon Leave Due Juneau Due Juneaa Seattle Northbound Southbound RE o g Jan, 20 Jan. 26 . 26 Jan. 29 Feb. Feb. 10 Feb. Feb. 19 Feb. Feb. 26 Mar. M: 5 / W. E. NOWELL, Agent KN\ Winter in CALIFORNIA Low winter ex- § cursion fares now in effect from Seattle. Feb. SERVING ALASKA Regularly and Dependably Leave Arrive Seattle Juneau Jan. 30 Feb. 3 Feb, 7 Feb. 6 Feb. 10 Feb. 25 "eb. 13 Feb. 17 Feb. 21 Feb. 27 Mar. 3 Mar. 7 ..Mar. 6 Mar. 10 Mar. 25 Mar. 13 Mar. 17 Mar. 21 ...Mar. 27 Mar. 31 April 4 Lyv.Juneau Steamer South Queen .. Queen Queen Ship and traver via tke green boats. INFORMATION and TICKETS: BRICE H. HOWARD, Agt., Phone 4 GUY L. SMIFH, Agent, Douglas FOR PRINCE RUPERT, VANCOUVER, SEATTLE Leave Juneau Southbound PRINCESS MARY 12, 26, March 12, 23; April 2 ROUND TRIP WINTER EXCURSION FARES Tickets to or from all Eastern points of United States or Canada and to Europe or the Orient. Various Routes—Liberal Stcpovers W. L. COATES, Agent. COASTWISE TRANSPORTATION CO. MOTORSHFP MARGNITA Leaves City Dock every Information A. F, McKinnon, Reliable Transfer Co., Phone 149. " Alaska Meat Company PHONE 39 Fresh Local Dressed Hens, Roasters and Broilers. Milani’s Chicken Tamales, Chili Con Carne, Crabs, Oysters and Fish Thursday evening at 8 o’clock direct to Funter Bay, Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Hoonah, Pory Althorp, Chichagof, Sitka, Chat}nm, Killisnoo, Baranotl Leaves every other Tuesday at 11 P, M, fox Haines, Skagway and Lypn Canal ports. WARM UP WITH Diamond Briquets $13.00 per ton at bunkers Pacific — e i Coast Coal Co. H. G. WALMSLEY, Agent Phone 412 . NOTICE We have received: a large shipment of 4 HOUR and 'Chichagof. Carry to be on City Dock at Phore Sing! " ""fiiE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS ——} THE GASTINEAU Servleesto month and Ip—-dm- ENAMEL in all s_hades at JUNEAU PAINT STORE MOTORSHIP VIRGINIA IV. Bay, Strawberry Point, Lemesurier Island, Port Althorp, Soapstone Point, Apex-El Nido, Hirst-Chichagot, Falcon Arm All freight Alaskan Hotel, : O, Agent. evening for Passengers and Freight. 1 o’clock Wednesday. Juneau Motorship Company. Ywmchndluatth Gang Plank of Every Puuuer-Cu-niu NORTHERN HOTEL mfl—um;«mfit Public shower and tub baths 50 cents. m-—mtnmundwtlnnmwn and up; $3.00 per week and. Ray 0il Burmer Salls every Wednesday Funter

Other pages from this issue: