The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 28, 1930, Page 2

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2 } </ I‘LSL . USEFUL GIFTS IN DEMAND This will be the greatest season in many y for the giving of p : ILilC'll gifts, such as Blankets, Be d l‘mcns Towels, { Quilts, Table anc Gloves Ieather (m'n‘ things nec L‘c«i every with distinctly gift n Un suogestlons (){ naturally array. line be the ces Gifts may be s days before Christmas ra yer for C B. M. Befirends Co., Inc. Juneaw's Leading Department Store salmon actl SALMON OUTPUT IS DISCUSSED IN - ALL ITS DETAILS - 5 were e in Ce Governor in Annual Report Tells of Alaska’s Most | Popular Fish 1‘ | HE FIRST west Holiday Goodss ‘e invite vou to come and see the biggest and wssortment of Toys, Christmas Decorations and Holiday Goods that we have ey tr shown. | be pleasec hr ymmnonlonsendime es of herring , Which is WITH Jewelry, and L]\ wrellas day, werchandise. The Men's Department shows a great variety of useful things for gift-oiving and offer many 'he Toy Section is showing a very complete Toys, Dolls, Wheel (mwds etc., and will interest in its gala iter of clected early for delivery a few i t+ is largely because of the operators who tion to of the s for curing. The was more roatt ble however, by the decline in west- still the lead- in the salmon-pickling total output was 1925, Beven oporated, one less than ous year, of which 4 niral and 3 in Western | total production was is, valued at $73,020. (Continued from page One) Frech Fish Output o gt The output of fresh salmon in 1929 was 1 pounds, valued) at $110.673 Increase i As compared with fi preceding ye 1 for th 1928, incl in quantity b of the outpu 9. S gallon: 893, 1,164. The pa'k of mon consisted of kings, 1,007 tierces of comos 3 tierces of chums, or a toi 5,684 tierces, valued at $1241,723. The Southeast and Ceniral dis- tricts showed a gain over the pre- » ceding year in the output of pick- m Guy: 1o Vie de in So D. Gr on hikan., W, the output of froz- 4,395,169 pounds, The produc- mon was 1430900 t $128025; dry- pounds, val- Imon, 1,800 d beleke, ;. valued at $670. Bypro- he salmon industry 1,647,170 pounds of at $41413, and 73.- valued at $29- a to of oil e ot, local broker, returned calling on the laska towns. uthgast D 0ss, theatre owner, came the Victoria as far as will go hand in hand to wrap your packages mas mailing. the Long-Bell Lumber Company at(at St. Ann's Hospital this morn- | Longview, is in Juneau for a few |ing. |days. E. J. Bailey, formerly in business THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 28, 1930 U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU Millions in Loans | | The W(,ath(,r To Farmers Are to g i Be Asked Congress (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) A, Forecast for Juncau and viciniy, beginning at 4 p.m., November 28: (Continuea rrom Paze One) Rain tonight and Saturday; moderate southeasterly winds. - — LOCAL DATA | o ; Time Barometer ‘Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weather ponie s 4 pm. yest'y 29.72 40 84 )] 15 Rain ¥ ag ression 4 am. today 29.81 40 83 [ Rain ome effort may be made to modi- Noon today 29.88 39 97 6 Rain fy the rules of seed loan disburse- | CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS I ments. Heretofore, loans have been —YESTERDAY TOBAY { made only to farmers who were un- Highest 4pm. | Lowestdam. dam. Precip. dam. |2P1¢ 10 ;l C"‘ 2h DI.R l“‘;(‘l" Stati ___temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weath = :’:“-" ‘ll’_?" Ao Barrow o 14 CHB G TIifT 1 Bert . o }Tf"l’“‘ 13 lg | s ’ say th at which | PI,’)]‘,l”Yuk,m 50 e g loans have been repaid is remark- iy able. Tanana -2 -22 | — 0 8 v ety per cent of the & 0 T’I"/ T'airbanks -26 -26 | 0 0 ”“Yl\:f" ”_\ per cen roln:],l l:fifi% 000 Eagle -6 -6 | 4 02 | it 6 e 8t. Paul 8 98 %] 32 0 Pt C o Vel Tk sy TSR, Dutch Harbor 40 34 | 3 - 90 . . e Kodiak 38 36 30 4 “riase 1 akow Of $4,600,000 loaned in 15 north Cordova 42 32 | 30 4 56 cldy central and southeas Juncau 3 40 3 6 . 180 Rain d New Mexico from the Sitka 4 P 97 50 0 81 Cldy 146,000,000 seed loan appropriation Ketchikan 46 42 10 40 4 04 Cldy |Of 1930, more than $2,000000 has Prince Rupert 46 42 10 40 4 28 \b(‘*‘“ repaid. Edmonton 22 22 2 32 0 Of the unexpended balance $700,- Seattle 44 42 3 44 0 000 has been loaned in Florida, Ala- Portland 44 40 36 38 * 0 | bama, Virginia, Missouri and Okla- Ban Francisco 58 53 52~ b2 4 .06 {homa to help farmers plant pas- Spokane 30 30 26 28 . 0 ‘llil'e crops as a result of last sum- Vancouver, B. C. 36 36 34 34 0 O Pt. mer’s drought. *—Less than 10 miles. | SR s i R R S o I Play Indoor Golf et The Alaskan The pressure is low in Southern Alaska d lowest near Un- !potel, (adv.) alsaka. It is high in the Interior and northern portion of the | it gagiigal e Territory and in the North Pacific States. Moderate rains fell | Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. Southern Alaska and clear cold and north. Temperature changes NEWS GATHERED OF NORTHLAND Concerning Persons and Occurences >ars 18, Ketchikan 22, Emily O. Carlson, and Russell W. W. Simpson, Carnation, Wash,, censed in Seattle, to wed. Hosiery, U nd(.ru ear, all of those Miss Sadie Pratt, graduate of the Alaska College of Agriculture and School of Mines in the cla; of 1022, has been appointed clerk of the extension service of the insti- tutlon. Three tons of drill steel, wheel- barrows, tents and other equipment and supplies, recently arrived on a 'boat at Hyder for use in develop- ment next summer of the Melcal and Fendley mining property am. Banded Mountain. The materia will be freighted over the snow this ‘winter. Repairs have been made to the Nenana Presbyterian Church, rc |cently damaged by fire, and the edi- fice is ready for services again The repair work was done by vol- unteers. Fifteen mills, an increase of thr mills, is the tax rate on real and; the personal property fixed by council of Anchorage for the y beginning October 1, 1930. The crease is caused by the need fo ditional funds to buy the elec {and telephone distribution systems in the city of the Alaska Railroad. ad- Hundreds of ‘thousands of head m( cattle and sheep will be {to the Westward within the ne ten years, Fred C. Manweler, s man of Washington, told the Sew- ard Gateway. He was in Sew on his way to the States afier | visit to Kodiak and Sitkalidak TIs- | lands, where he investigated stock- yasing achlevements and po bilities. So as to benefit seiners, the Cor- dova Chamber of Commerce urges e R i e | the Bureau of Fisheries to close to traps all the fishing area commen: ing at the horthern end of Culc: Island and extending to Cape mantle with al its estuaries lets. AVIATOR OFF WITH WALSH, NEW SEARCH Flier Returninhto Scene of Frozen-in Plane on Liard River (Continued rrom Fage one) Thirty-four musk oxen in Fairbanks November 4 from way. When they were turne pens provided for them by Alaska Agricultural College and Bchool of Mires At was the first time they had been let out of their indlvidual boxes with crated fronts since the containers were nailed in Norway. v N intos Hiram Chadwick, 73, a resident of S SRR “{Alaska 32 years, recently died at “From an elevation of 800 feet|Fairbanks. it appeared the plane hall made —_— a good landing and nothing was| Telegraph Creek, B. C., opposes broken. No one was in sight. “We spotted a lake about 15 miles away as a possible future landing placé, then returned to Whitehorse to refill the plane's gesoline tanks.” It is understood here that Pilot| jyjiro Wada, “Wada, the Jap,” Wasson and Walsh intend to 1and | famous in the mushing annals of on the small lake about 15 miles| xacko' mas left Billings Mont from where Burke's plane Wa8|uhoro he nas been living for \Lm-:o. eighted and snowshoe to the plane,igime for the Norton oil fields in | picking up any information avail- Northern Cenada. able at the Indiam camps enroute. % ¢ i J. D. L. Drake, associated with winter air mail, preferring dog-team service. Residents between Tele- graph Creek and Atlin depend on dog teams to keep communications open, S eee— Fred Mattson, jeweler, successful- ly underwent a surigcal operation SRR Daily Empire want Ads Pay. in Ketchikan, is greeting acquaint- | ances in Juneau. FROM ALL PARTS - {Briet Items of Interest » were recently li- | a : L S R e ihed, weather prevails in the Interior have been all”hL near the coast SOVIET RU WASTE LE So- me and a o are involv sia nowaday yernment funds 2 a “wet” banquet tors of a newly aluminum plant, in recognition of r excellent work, seven mem- rs of the board of directors of Aluminum Trust including the erely reprimand- t Party Control | A quality you would he Commur on. names insis! were published in | as squanderers .u; upon if yeu Enew all il L0 ) RELIEF FROM CURSE | = A G OF CONSTIPATlON‘ A Battle Creex pnysician says,! Constipation 1s responsible for nore misery than any other cause.” But immediately relief has hecn; flosgo AR brek s aliihily. witho 2k otind. A tablet called Rexall Order- | ies has been discovered. This tab-‘ attempts to make a fins thing. The let attracts water from the system | into the lazy, dry, evaculating bow- el called the colon. The water |loosens the dry food waste and lcauses a gentle, thorough, natural movement without forming a habit “ior ever increasing the dose. | only.Th ; . filte o Yo ponstipabion | Y- ersarsnty Bod or 3ed grade ghew a Rexall Orderlie at night.| Schilling Coffees—no cheap blends Next day bright. Get 24 ror 25&:5 —no dual standards of quality. Itoday at the nearest Rexall Drug| | Store. :v There are many excelleat coffces Butler-1fauro Drug Co. Miriam McBride returned on oria after a visit in the es with friends. FACT NO. 15 The hand that makes a cheap (ling finest things invariably come from | those who make only fine thigs. | Schilling is the one coffee roaster ‘who produces one grade of coffee 24Y | __but, of them all, where is the finest apt to come from. | i : { p—— “Tomorrow’s Styles Toda;” Silk ngerie A R S R L Featuring the late: styles in holiday gifts. ‘win time s Only ad T aaty A complete line is E: ess pedestrian ot thought- | { now on display for child. Sce that those bakes of | | vour consideration. will stop your car QUICKLY | Priced to Please ,quences. If brkes in | good con le:mrd!.::e::ow with genuine Silver Edge Raybestos. JUNEAU MOTORS, I“C'E 'Juneaw’s Own Store' Authoriud Bmke Service P THEY’RE HERE! BRUNSWICK PERMO-POINT NEEDLES eedle plays 2000 or MORE records without attention One Nelson’s Jewelry Store | m"odl A NEW LINE OF Ladies’ Rayon Non-Run BLOOMERS .00 PER PAIR J.M.SALOUM SERVICE MOTOR CO. Keep your car warm in Juneau's Uptown Garage— Away from Salt Water PHONE 202 “WE NEVER CLOSE” Fuel Hints --and Helps A weak fire merely releases ignites the volatile matter—Iets up the chimney. 1 instead of | it escape 'A\‘o_id giving your stove or furnace in- digestion by smothering the live coals with a too generous helping of fresh coal. Fire from side to side. Pile the coal on one side, legving a flaming spot, then pile on the other side. e When you throw in fresh coal, help out temporarily with a little extra draft. Regulate your heat by the size of your fire. Do not shake the grate too often—and stop before you lose the live coals. Help the fire and save the grates by keeping ashes from piling up against them. . Close the drafts at night—a banked fire is the kind that keeps. Heat circulates best in a properly ven- | tilated room. A little fresh air constantly, ” beats bringing in the outdoors every once in a while. Pacific Coast Coal Co. PHONE 412 G. H. WALMSLEY, Manager WHEN YOU THINK LAMPS—THINK Westinghouse Mazdas Standard 115 volts—Farm Lighting 32 volts—Boat Lights 6-12-34 volts—Searchlight Globes CAPITAL ELECTRIC CO. Corner Second and Seward Streets BATTERY CHARGING REPAIRING WIRING T L L L L L L ATTENTION LADIES! TEN LADIES OF J FREE portrait sitting at our new Studio in the FIRST NATIONAL BANK buiild- ing opening November 24th. WHICH TEN? ST TR O O R LTI AR RN RN S | AU will be given, a ASK MR. MARKOE at WINTER & POND STUDIO Next to First National Bank APPOINTMENTS—Phone 487 T T T T 0Old Papers for sale at Empire Office T T T TR T L L TR TR D N = |

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