The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 30, 1930, Page 2

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2 Sale of housekeepers should this special sale. For 7 his Sale, $2.40 Double Part Wool Plaid Blanket > Peach, Regular . $3.25 Size 66x80. Colors Green apd Lavender For This | B. M. Beh Juncau's Leod ng Department Store filIHIHIllllll!!|!"lllllllll!!!iiliillllhr R U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUL' The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Bureaun) URE, Forccast for Juneau an¢ vicinity, bezinning at ¢ pm Rain tonight Wed rate easterly win LOCAL DATA A, WirE- SPILLERS Pre-laventory BLANKETS Even though you paid regular prices for such good bed cover as these you would be buy- ing wisely—but at these SPEC- IAL PRICES — ail economical consider replenishing blanket supply at i Double Cotton Blankets |y, Sfseds Smain White and Grev, with colored borders. Size 11 o w,,::;,::ewf{h “::y o 70x80. Reenlar $3.00 value. trap is prohibited.” Blue, Rose, 50 value. onds Co., Inc. Deptmbez /50 “ Lectures with Mo- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, DEC. 30, 1930. IN FISH TRAPS ARE FORBIDDEN ify Kinds of Gear to Be Used in Fishing 1 a death blow to the e spillers in fish traps, a fy in detail the types of gear hat may be used in commerecial almon fishing, it was announced v by N. O. Hardy, Acting Asst. nt in charge of local headquar- ers of the United States Bureau of Fisheries. | In the past wire spillers have |been in common use throughout S Alaska; heavy hemp being rial used by some 1! trapmen. The regulation in which the types of gear are enumerated reads: “In commercial fishing for sal- = |mon, all forms of gear other than |drift gill nets, stake nets, set nots, Idriven and floating traps, purse| |scines, beach seines, fish “wheels,| trolling apparatus, hand lines, rods, | spears and gaffs are prohibited at times. ) The use of any other form of r including trammel nets, divers’; TR HY bs trawls, combination nets, ham- merhead traps or any modmcmnon( | thereot, is prohibited at all times. No gill net shall include any webb- {ing other than a single shest hung ctween the cork and lead lines. No | !I‘,Jll net shall be used in any other| i form of seining operations.” R ALASKA'S WILD | "~ LIFE DELIGHTS FOLKINSTATES William L. Finley Illustrates| i i tion Pictures | Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity . Weather | WARD — “Wild Animal Out-| 4 pm. yest'y 20.98 40 04 SE 3 cldy | p is the title of a seriés of! 4 am. *today 37 100 Cldy | motion pictures How being cxhlb-‘ Noga today 37 100 4 Rain mel throughout the United States ¢ " . - b | together with leetures by Willlam el CABLE ANR BADIO BEFURTS 4’]. Finley, Oregofilan, who has S\“ & TYESTERDAY | TODAY | Ao = i ighest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. | | | . temp. | temp St. Paul 20 04 Dutch Harbor Trace K 14 30 C 8 38 Ju 37 0 02 5 - 28 kan 44 14 150 Rupert 44 4 70 monton 3 014 0 Seattle 0 Portland 10 0 San Francisco 0 Spokane 0 Vancouver, B. C 0 0 s than 10 miles. Pt. Cli l"i Snow | cldy | Rain | Cldy | The in Bris Pacific the Gulf of vails in th pressure is rose ghout Alaska and is lowest!| n. It is high in the| Rain fell from| weather pre- | at Fair- | reporting ‘The Raccoon has no business,” Puffy s high-hatting me-—= isn't true his father went |1t Miss Gertrude Lamont, daugh- ter of the Secretary of Com- merce Mrs. Robert P, ‘ment to (inset), | nounced. Charles E ?flumn son of Major-General and Mrs. Charles Saltzman, has been an- nounced. The date for the wed- | ding has not yet been an- through university; That is, he was no student, though he did—alas, alack! Spend four full years in college on a campus hero's back.” frrrrrrrrrr s LADIES’ HOSE A very good ‘chulationsif;;m?'l Spec-|” |on lecture tour, | and Afognak, the haunts of the | est |lions in the north, and lastly the T ALL-AMERICAN AIR MEET AT MIAMI TO ATTRACT OUTSTANDING AVIATORS | | ‘Col. Eddie Rickenbacker, American “ace of aces” (left), and Al Williams, former Navy flier (right) autcgyrag, similar to the type above. ist, author and lecturer as weil as tan Miami is seeking recognition as|gay flying will be given prominence a most successful photographer of the scene of the worlds largest fIy- | in the program. This feature of wild animal life. With Mrs. Finley 102 pament as aviation en-|the schequle will be headed by & he traversed a large part of the Uhus prepare for the third All- {500 the first attempted, between Westward coast and Interior of American air meet here "a““‘“y!autcgyws. Beermance said 140 en- Alaska some time ago. 8-10 | trants have already signed to par- They went to the States after a A ticipate in the meet. long cruise in the Bering Sea and Cen Dedication by Rear Admiral Wil- along the Alaska coast where they di cipate in the 1931 air |liam A. Moffett, head of the na- exposed nearly 20,000 feet of mo- carr nsored by the city of jval burcau of aeronautics, of the tion picture negative, besides hun- Mia | new naval reserve flying base in! dreds of still life negatives. P Having Large Audiences According to word recently re- ceived from them by the Seward rec Gateway they are now in the East mod and are meeting the with large and appreciative aud- in c fences everywhere. They will be e Smembered in Seward because of Se vlslT IN JUNLAU their Kenai trips. Two cub bears gon to forcizn aviators to take part | which they picked up in the North - mest, Andrew Beermance,| C. C. Karels, of Los Angelcs, a:-| aro apparently the life of the lec- city aviation director, announced.|rived on the Queen for a T ture tour in the States and their (ol Eddie Rickenbacker, Ameri- | visit with his daughter, Mrs. L. C antics are a source of delight ta ¢a's foremost war time ace, has ac- | Suby. Mr. Karels was in Ju audiences. As one paper put it: eepted an invitation to act as of-|three vears ago and is Tel “Nine hundred people roared with ficia] starter at the meet. | acquaintances made at that laughter at the antics of two bear pplication of various safety | cubs, mascots of the Bering Sea geatures of ‘modern flying will be expeditioti, who during the meet, B roles in the illustrated lecture,"'Wild | pyance said. In addition, novel de ators from North, South and America and the West In- | al ep former navy flier, safety|during the meet. and distant events have been d on the program, as the | the race course. knights of the air enter | s in competition for $10,000 prizes. Invitations will be sent through | y of State Henry L. Smm-i C. C. KARELS ON SElas o i D. W. Kimple of Lem> d is visiting Juneau. tered at the Alaskan. will'pm'n'flncmly participate in the 1931 air carnival at Miami, which is to include the first race between): national reputation as a naturn!-l MIAMI, Fla. Dec. 30'_M“mp°“‘|pmures from the style of every-| % d races, headed by Al Wil- | Miami is expected to take pl:u:ei 5 OF.THE ! MOMENT | > PARIS . | Bushet weave navy bliz: woolen sul'/?m QUW%\ ¥ Searf collar and degp band. “ at Aipline of black., ; Bbrectschanz! : Radio-equipped pylons will mark | Animal Outpo: Crowded With Experiences | i The ‘TFinleys' summer in the North was crowded with exciting experienceés from beginning to end, especially” while exploring the vol- canic 1sldnds along the Aleutian chain. From the standpoint of a naturalist one good thing followed anothet;.‘the rugged country about ;. McKinley where mountain sheep amd caribou graze; Kodiak ELKS ANNUAL HI-JINKS Alaskan brown bear, which is the st of all living carnivorous ani- | Kenal, the home of the . where an old bull charged Wednesday, December 31st ers, where pictures of the whales were taken from the mast-head; Unimak, with its myriads of sea- fowl crowding the rocks from the | tide-land to pinnacle; Bogoslof, the Invitational Favors “Jack-in-the-box” of the sea, still steaming and hot with volcanic fires, and yet sheltering the great-| colonies of murres and the 1ssi 5 £ S8, B most extensive rookeries of sea ‘\dn" on 51 50 Pribilofs;, the island outposts of the Bering Sea, with their romantic story of foxes and fur seals. 0000000 AN UNITED FOOD (0. CASH IS KING WE WISH YOU A HAPPY NEW YEAR We are pledging ourselves to help make 1931 a £ | prosperous year by selling quality merch.a‘r.lfljsc FOR LESS CHICKENS, pound . . . . . . 29¢ MILK FED—For Your New Year’s Dinner DUCKS, tender, pound . . . . EGGS, medium size, dozen . . . STRICTLY FRESH PRUNES small size, 4 pound.fs .. 25¢ SANTA CLARA—SUN-DRIED DATES, fresh, imported, 2 pounds 23c WE DELIVER FREE ANY AMOUNT Lowest in Years = g = = = £ = = " - i | value at ! $1.00 } | 1gflilfllIIIIIIIIIlllIIIllIlllIllIlllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIlIIIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllIlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII L T A Our Insurance Creed “There can be no bargain sales for insurance. The law of averages has established that at least certain of the promises to pay must be met. The funds to meet these promises to pay must always be at hand. The risk to one company in a given promise to pay cannot differ sub- stantially from that of the other company. The rates for such risk cannot vary. They are based upon the same experience. They. both accept the same probability. When you pay you receive nothing.but a promise and this promise can be redeemed only if the prices charged are scientifically correct.” By JAMES A BEHA, Former Superintendent of In- surance, State of New York. ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. Established 1898 Telephone 249 Thomas Hardware Co. Old Papers for sale at Empire Office - e SCHUMACHER Plaster Wallboard R TRE e ECONOMICAL FIRE RESISTANT SOUND PROOF and % SANITARY PERMANENT ARTISTIC Schumacher Plaster Wallboard saves Lath, Plaster and Labor, and insures a permanent, substantial job that will give lasting sat- isfaction. -

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