The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 5, 1931, Page 7

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(. FOR RENT — THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 5 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK LADN, THAT I CALL UNCEREMONIOL TREATMENT U I wWiSH NOU WOULD TELL Youk AIECE THAT I AM DEEPLY GRIEVED HAT SHE REFUSES To COME OUT GREET ME - ofF HER ROOM To THE EMPIRE fs the Medium Through which the general public can always have Its wants supplied. . Closing - time for classified «dvertisements: 2 P. M. Closing time for. display ad- sertiseme-its: 11 A. M. s Ten cents per line first in- seftion. i Pive cents for continuous Wubsequent insertion. Count five average words to the line. Minimum charge, 50 cents apartment with bath. Steam heat- ed. Electric range and Frigidaire. | Apply Windsor Apartments. rnished heated | rooms for gentlemen. Inquire 115 ‘West 6th St. or telephone 330. MUST SAY, MV DEAR PLUG I CANT Do A THIS VERY S Aapem! FOR SALE FOR SALEHouse suitable for two | apartments. House ntmber 952, Basin Road. FOR SALE—Chevrolet Coupe. Good | Bargain. Sce Daniels| o %, FOR SALE—2 rugs, 2 piece wicker | furniture, baby carriage and el-, cetric washing machine. Phone | | 2452, FOR SALE — Sawmil: wood. Call | Service Transfer. Telephone 528. | "OR SALE—Midget Lunch, Terms or cash. ~ WANTED WANTED—Man wants work, job or steady. Telephone 485. Night | or day. ! | WANTED—Girl for light house- work, See Mrs. Kaufman, Gas- tineau Cafe. o Fart 7 il e s v | WANTED -- Position as cook in| camp or on hoat. Address 768, | care Empire. VOR RENT—Steamnheated furnish- ed room, suitable for two. Board if desired. Upper floor over San Francisco Bakery. FOR RENT — 3 room furnished apartment, Cliff Apartments. { s"IANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, { t t 9 v Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. v LOST AND FGUND LOST_Brown male Chesapeake re- triever, collar bearing City license tag number twelve. Reward for information leading to recovery. Phone 4041. 3 b Second Hand Guns Bought and Sold New "Guns and’' Ammunition -SEE BIG VAN | THE GUN MAN | -~ Opposite _C:-usenm Theatre 1 | | [ | | P Y Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floot Main Street and Fourth Reading Room Opea From 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m—T7:00 to 3:3_9 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, A TS S ] The Florence Shop mnvo;:i -,dm&qv:u | Perm- BEA TS Phone 427 for A gpdintment ~ L RELIABLE GARAGE REPAIR SHOP. - H. C. SVHI.P"PEY. Proprietor A place where you pay for satisfactory service only. TELEPHONE 149 Rear of Reliable Transfer D ! FERRY TIME CARD gl i g 4 PRIy | .,nn; Junean ror ‘Douglas and Thane “g:158m. 7:158.m. 9:15am.t 12:30pm.t 2:00 p.m. 3:15pm.t *4:00p.m. Leaves Douglas for Junean @730 a.m. 6:30 p.m. 8: % 37:45 pam. .:fiflf 9:55 gn 12:45pm.t §11:30 p.m. 2:15p.m. 12:15 pm. 2:30p.m.t 1188 00 p.m. Y *—_Thane. 4—Preight will be accepted. Juneau Ferry & Naviga- v §12:15 pm. 12 midnight $1:00 a.m. As b 2 { | WANTED — Girl wants work in| private family or work by day or hour. Telephone 212. EXPLOSION ON STEAMERFIVE - MEN MISSING ’Captain Be@d to. Have | Been Drowned When ‘ Craft Sinks COLOMBO, Ceylon, Jan. 5.—One passenger and four members of the crew of the Norwegian motorship | Tricolor are missing after an ex-| plosion which sank the vessel out- | side of this port. | Messages said the steamer Por- i thos picked up some of the sur- vivors but it is believed the Cap- tain of the Tricolor was drowned. ‘The Tricolor was a 619-ton craft. MODEL SLAIN; | LOVE IS CAUSE Remarkable Statement Is ‘. Made by Dying Woman % ‘in. ~Brooklyn NEW YORK CITY, N. Y., Jan. 5.—An_attractive millinery model, Mrs. Yvonne Cassleri, aged 28, was found fatally “shot, lying on the porch of her Brooklyn home. Her dying statement led to the arrest of her ‘grocery clerk husband on a homicide charge. When 'asked who shot her, the ‘woman said: “My husband, because be'lcvéd me and 1 loved him.” ROMBAY RIOTS STOP TRAFFIC BOMBAY, Jan. 5.—Crowds ston- ed trams and busses today in an attempt to enforce a complete stoppage of work to mark the com- pletion of Mahatma Gandhi’s cighth’ month in prison. Shops throughout the city were closed by meang of coercion. Stone throwiné by disorderly ele- {ments was attempted to make the tie-up complete. Finally tram and bus service ‘was suspended. | 100th Anniversary Of Organization Was On Saturday } "NEW YORK CITY, N. Y, | cd States of the first building and : k un”suon The ;or- mnm;. was 'born In this city on January 3, 1831. The move- ment has \‘o"“’ from the origi- nal $244 %o nearly nine billin 2 : ¥ Mrs. J. H. Biges, wife of the owner of the Gastineau Hotel, has BLESSED THING WITH HER. SENATOR = CPAL CANT GIT THAT GOOD- FOR - NOTHIN® USHY OUT OF HER HEAD - AN* SHE BAWLS MosT Jan; 5—Last 8 y maried, TLL SEE TRAT SHE RORGETS Marine News ® 0 0 000000 0 0 00 * Steamer Movements . . NORTHRBOUND No steamer enroute. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle at 9 tonight. Queen scheduled to sail from Scattle Jan. 7 at 10 am. Princess Nerah scheduled to sail from ancouver Jan. 8 at 9 pm. Alameda scheduled to sail from Seattle Jan. 10 at 9 am. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle Jan. 12 at 9 pm. 2 Admiral Farragut scheduled to sail from Scattle Jan. 14 at 10 am. SOUTABOUND SAILINGS Nerthweztorn scheduled. south- bound about Janhuary 10. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thursday night.at 6 p.m. for Sitka and ¢ wayports. Pacific. leaves every Thurs- day at 10 am. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports, esececsceeccee 00 escecesoceccooc0e®eescc000e 11800 PGUNDS OF FROZEN FISH SHIPPEDSOUTH Halibut from Cold Storage Is Sent to Prince Rup- | ert and Vancouver | | One hundred and nineteen thou-‘ sand pounds of frozen halibut com- prised Juneau's week-end fish ship- ments. All the stock was with- drawn from the coolers of the Ju- reau Cold Storage Company and loaded aboard vessels from its wharf. Ninety thousand pounds were sent by the Marlyn Fish Company,| Elnar Olsen, representative, to Prince Rupert, B. C., for tranship- ment by rail to Eastern states. | Twenty-nine thousand pounds | were billed by the Juneau branch| of the New England Company, E.| Wentworth, representative, -to Van-| couver, B. C., whence 1t will be hastened by rail to the East. | ———————— FNIS ECHNE Treasfiry Balance on Janu- ary | Drops to New Low of $552,820.31 Showing a'loss of $114,428,53 from January 1, 1930, the Treasury's cash balance as of January 1,_phis year, was $552,820.31, according lo the monthly statement-of financial conditions of the Territory -iasuzd by W. G. Smith, Treasurer, and made public tcday by the Gover- nor's Office. On January 1, last year, the cash balance was $667,248.84. The cur- |rent_balance will be materially in- creased before the Legislaturc con- venes March 2, next, as most of the taxes on fisheries, particularly can- ned -salmon, are still to be Te- ceived. However, the Treasury will not be as well supplied with funds then as it was two years ago. Ii 1s" known"that the salmon :nxes,_‘fi)a.- 1930 will‘he, materially below nor- mal owing to the failure of the red salmon run and pack in Bristol last “season. It is believed that the” Feceipts may run as much'as $450,000 to $500,000 less than tha average. . —— Miss Dorothy Nunan, who is in the office of the Assistant District Attorney at Ketchikan, is greeting friends in Juneau. She is at ‘the £ < ‘rfllurn voyage to Seattle. | WM — T WONDER {F &Y DETECTVE FOLAMD OUT THE FELLOW'S WHEREABCSTS 22 N ) NORTHWESTERN BOOKS THERE FOR WESTWARD essel Is Expected to ‘Be Back Here Saturday ' | on Return to Seattle After having stayed five and a half hours at this port, unloading cargo, the steamship Northwestern, Capt. C. A. Glasscock, bound from Seattle to Seward, resumed her voyage to the Westward Saturday afterncon. She booked seven pas- sengers here for Cordova and Sew- ard. . They were Mrs. G. 8. Clare, Miss Marguerite Lyman, Pearl Pappos, H. B. Rineberg, Sam Christensen and Stanley K. Jor- genson for Cordova; Charles H. Flory, C H. LaBoyteaux and Leon- ard Berlin for Seward is scheduled to be urday morning on her | SHIP REPORTS oo BEORGE SHOTTER. MUTINY: CREW ™ oanan Dies: DESERT CRAFT 7 o7 ANNS HERE Captain, Officers Take Am-| erican Fr.eighter Into iWidow, Brother and Four Turkish Port ‘ Sisters Survive Prom- INSTANBUL. Turkey, Jan. inent Fur Farmer Mutiny oi the crew of the Am- - erican fréighter Hopatcong was| Ccorge Shott disclosed here when the craft ar-|Hocnah, died rived from Odessa with the Cap-|S$t. Ann's Hospital tain wounded. |in poor health The crew deserted the freighter took a severe c at Odessa and the officers navi-|dle of December gated the craft to this port. | pneumonia. He entered t The crew went ashore at Odessa |pital December 19 and and later returned shouting they|cince then could mu B G . ea years. t the mid- t turned into he hos- no t hope (had turned Communists. They|ecntertained for his smashed into Capt. Bergsten's cab-}m\ bédside, Mrs. Sho in and knifed him, then fled|ccnstant attendant. ashore. Mr., Shotter we Capt. Bergsten was ten days in|columbia, but. when. a little boy a hospital, then he and his officers | was brought to this part of Alaska brought the ship here. He is col-|py his parents. His father worked lecting Turkish crew and will|jn the Treadwell min2, a cail for New York City tonight. {family tor a long while 1 iy | Douglas. Of late years M I been engaged in fur f Hoonah. Arrangements initely made, TIDES TOMORROW t been have but it no SCHOD born in British | : | erected on the | each year likely 11 By BILLE DE BECK | | i | | 1 | | i \ Associated Press Photo The first link in a $100,000,000 chain of express liners for the | United States merchant marine was effected when Senators Jones, White and Morrow shot the first rivets into the kee! of the first 30,000~ ton vessel begun at Camden, N. J. Left to right: Senator Wallace White, ! Maine; Senator Wesley i. Jones, Washington; president of the United States Lines, and Paul W. Chapman, ator Dwight W. Morrow, remain r Mor- Mr four of Hoonah Shotter They Mr L. Kane, p na Thom Hc and y Evans of Los An- geles. i >+ —— L HOUSE FOR ATTU ISLE Boxer to Make Annual Trip There—Other Plans Announced SEATTLE, Jan Bureau Attu 5—~The nees that inécted with | and freight | sheol house will bbl Isla i The Bo ake one voyage Island. blans school | 3 at Cn nd a teach: The Bureau house: chimute heme at High tide, 2:21 am, 161 feet. | Low tide, 8:01 am. 301 feet. High tie 2:00 p.m., 187 feet. Low tide, 8:39 pm. -8.0 feet. et Daily Empire wunt Ads Pay. SEE THE NEW Ow% EIPS with the it PATENTED SHIELD * ide, € can of t intic Associated Press, Photo ! ya (F1ght), famed Canadian filer, dnd his Ameri- Pxf ator, Harry Connor, brought the monoplane Columbla, veteran crossings, back home to Roosevelt field; New Yorl, from ;3120 brought his wife and two-girls, Honor, 8 and Vir- T SAILING SCHEDULE Round trip winter rates in effect, Juneau to Seattle and return—$73.50 Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound 23 Dec. 30 Jan. 3 Jan. 10 Alameda Jan. 10 Jan. 13 Jan. 20 Northwestern Jan. 21 Jan. 24 Jan, 31 REGUuare PORTS OF CALL: Ketchigar, Wrangell, Juneau, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. S.5. NORTHWESTERN and S.S. ALAMEDA will call at Petersburg northbound and southbound. All sailings subject to change wmlout notice. Information and Tickets 'ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY PHONE 2 ey Steamer Alameda Dec. Northwestern Dec. 31 » Southbound Lv.Seattle Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau Queen ... Dec. 31 Farragut Jan. 3 Queen ..Jan. 7 Jan. 14 Farragut Jan. {4 Jan, 31 Queen ..Jan. 21 Jan. 28 WINTER REDUCED RATE ROUND TRIP SEATTLE AND Jan. 11 Jan. 18 Jan. 25 Visit California tuis winter, low round trip excursion fares from Seattle to San Francico and return $40,00, to Los Angeles and return $60.00, to San Diegc and return $65.00. All fares are firs class. Salilings from Seattle on Wednes days and Saturdays of popular coast- wise liners Ruth Alexander, Emma Alexander, Dorothy Alexander and Ad- miral Peoples. GUY SMITH, Agent, Douglas. B. H. HOWARD, Agent, Juneau ADMIRAL LINE FOR PRINCE RUPERT, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA AND SEATTLE Leave Juneau Southbound PRINCESS NORAH January 13, 27; February 10, 24; March 10, 21, 31. WINTER EXCURSION FARES ROUND TRIP—$73.50 Tickets sold to or from all Xastern Points of United States or Canada and to Europe or the Orient Various Routes—Stop-Over Privileges Travel via the Scenic Canadian Pacific Rockies FOR TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS W. L. COATES, Agent, Valentine Building, Juneau PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Thursday at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake and Way points. See agent for ports of call during winter schedule. Passengers maust obtain tickets from agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis ' Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY THURSDAY AT 6 P. M, FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For Skagway and Way Ports—Every Other Tuesday For information apply Dave Housel, Agen: Phone Single O [ ST NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION CO. WINTER SCHEDULE—Sailings every Monday night at 9 pm. from Pier No. 5, Seattle, for.the following Southeastern Alaska ports: Ketchikan—Wrangell—Hyder—Petersburg—Juneau. Prince Rupert, B. C., Vancouver B. C.—(South bound only when cargo warrants Dec. 22—M.S. Norco Dec. 29—M.S. Northland *Jan. 5—M.S. Norco Jan. 12—M.S. Northland Jan. 19—M.S. Norco . Jan. 26—M.S. Northland *Calling Hyder For information apply to: D. B. Femmer, Burford & Co., Ticket Agents. Juneau Agent. J. B. Telephone 114 LAUNDRY SERVICE” . far 1% Dry Cleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “YOUR ALASKA

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