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THE ‘DAILY ALASKA EMPiRE. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1931. THANK YE, SAM'L. 1 SLEPT LIKE SOME DAY { OUT. ANT “l II“‘L. I"l:! N Empire Classified ads have proven unus- ually resultful because The Empire is read daily by many subscribers and is the great meeting ground of the buyer and seller; em- ployer and employee, property owner and tenant, It it’s results you want then call Empire Classified, 374 and tell us your wants. The cost is very low. { The Daily Alaska Empire B | FOR SALE i FOR SALE—Will sell cheap for cash or trade for cabin or house good strongly built trolling boat, 35% feet long by 10 foot beam; 10 h.p. Imperjal engine, together with fittings, gurdy, shafting, belting, poles, tools, spotlight and box compass. Could be used for trading, logging or fitted for hali- but fishing. Also high class elec- trical radie, tall console, cost ANTED—Bourd, room and cave| hew $250.00. Savage 30-30, Win- 5+ 1 chester 12 Ga. Blankets, sheets, rpished children. Day or menth. P. O. Box 166. FOR RENT FOR RENT- Large furnished room. $12.00 per month. Phone 2551. FOR RENT—-Single furnished room. Apply Finn Hzll back of Nugget Shop " WANTED war ED—Furnished apartment or , suitable for small family. ress 671 Empire A Alstrom’s News Stand, Juneau. WORK wanted as bookkeeper, wait- ress or in home. Competent, best of references. Telephone 472. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE — 9 room farnished house, garage, on 45x90 lot. Fully furnished. Price $3,000.00. Terms. Allen Shattuck, Inc. Phone 249. crockery, cooking utensils. Apply' Marine News i YUKON TAKES Peee e 0000000 o o Steamer Movements . L4 NORTHBOUND . !® Northland duc Friday. L3 31 PAssENGERs © Admiral Farrzgut due Satur- o | e day night or Sunday. o ) . SCHEDULED SAILINGS 0! ® Alaska scheduled to sail from e { ® Seattle March 14 at 9 am. e} o © Norco scheduled to sail from o | — | ® Seattle March 16 at 9 pm. e V i |® Princess Norah scheduled to e essel Resumes Her VOyage,; e =ail from Vancouver March o to Seward and West- i ® 16 at 9 pm. ° g Y | o Northwestern scheduled to sail e | ward Way Ports | e from Secattle March 21 at e: e e |® 9 am. ° S ers s SOUTRBOUND SAILINGS o |for the Westward, the steamship | |e Quecn duc in port at 8 o'clock o | Yukon, Capt. H. Anderson, wmchi T 5 " o arrived in Juneau yesterday after-| IS lonight and salls sOUh tNO % noon from Seattle, -left last night | | Yuken scheduled south about e |{OF Seward and way ports. Per- 1% NeNTal AT o 5005 Who took passage on the vessel| . LOGAT sATLINGS o from this city were Mr. and Mrs. | |'e Estebeth leaves every Thursday e |3: O Black, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. | | o |Venberg, William Haskins, John| |® night at 6 pm. for Sitka and e : o % s . Coats, R. J. Shepard, George Am-! SRR ner, O. Quisthey and G. Austin for| e Pacific leaves every Thurs- ® o ;o .. apo 0nd Mrs ootk 4 |® day at 10 am. for Peters- ® gu.; George Anderson, M. C. Ed-| ® burg, Kake and way DPOrts, ® |, nqs Arthur Viier, Fred De Zelle, | sececccocecscnoce | |M. S. Wilson, William Patterson, |F. J. Hart, Frank Nash, Frank | Scully, Andrew L. Ice, William H. I‘P,n:zlvy. C. E. Marlatle, Mel Grigs- by, Henry Wuornas, G. S. Alexan- |der, Richard Thompson, P. H. Ring- jsted, John Mannaick, and H. B. | Crewson, for Seward. | FRESH HERRING REPLENISHES - SUPPLY OF BAIT {Norland Re!ul‘n_s from Se‘l MELBOURNE, March 7. — The | attle and Will Leave |disclosure st American_ater- oy Banle Tonighl | proof ink was used in preference | to domestic or British inks to in- ! _ |scribe the names of Australian | Halibut bait which was approach- | soldiers at the war memorial here, |ing a shortage here, was replen-|has created a mild political storm. |ished by the receipt of 150 bar-|_ Councillor Luxton, Lord Mayor of rels of herring today brought by Melbourne, replying to critics, said |the Wilson, Capt. Martin Holst, t0' American ink was superior to all |the Juneau Cold Storage Com-|others and was used because the pany. The catch was made off| inscriptions were to last as long | Shelter Island. | as le. Herring runs have been scarce| iso far this season, and frozen bait |in all Southeast Alaska ports has| |been reduced almost to the point of exhaustion. The schooner Norland, Capt.| Thomas Sandvik, returned to Ju- |neau yesterday afternoon from Se-| |attle, where she disposed of her first halibut catch of this season| |to the United Pacific Fisheries. She {took ice and bait today and will leave for the banks tonight. > | American Ink Puts Mark On Australian Politics ? ek HARRIS Hardware Co. CASH CUTS COSTS Open until 9 p.m. i & . | TIDES TOMORROW . | i Low tide, 1:03 am., High tide, 7:12 a 12.8 feet. Low tide, 2:38 pm. 28 feet. BAI lERlEs High tide, 9:28 p.m., 11.2 feet. AUTHORIZED SERVICE 7.0 feet. FOR SALE—Furnisnea house and lot. Apply 3rd and Gold. Tele- phone 2254. LONESOME—JOIN Ohio’s largest correspondence club. Members ev- erywhere. 150 ladies names, ad- dresses and descriptions $1.00.! FOR SALE — will sacrifice Mink (ladies 50c) Give age and occu-| ranch on Alaska Railroad. 100 pation with remittance. J. E.| pens, 40 breeders of quality, con- Donald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. | sisting of 168 acres with ‘good salmon stream. Completely furn- ished. Wire or write Bowman and Huslik, Mile 221, Alaska Rail- road, Fish Lake. { { { | | ) i | | ‘WILL buy, sell or exchange cnhins,} lots or platforms. See Lee Rox,| PO. Box 2214 or Tel. 59. Down-| town headquarters, New York Ex-| ey change. | FOR SALE—Will sell or lease the | Golden Gate Hotel, Fairbanks, Alaska, containing thirty-two completely furnished rooms. Ad- dress Mrs. C. McLean, Fairbanks, Alaska. CLUB Cafe for lease to responsible parties or for sale. Apply Robert; T. Kaulman at Gastineau Cafe. | ) FIRST class boar@ and room, cen-\' tral location. Single rooms with | board $45.00 per month. Double| rooms with board $40.00. Maki| Boarding House. | RAY LARSON WESTBOUND Ray C. Larson, prominent busi- s man of Anchorage, is a pas- enger aboard the Yukon bound PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, | " mong;%mgrixfigznfifi;h’rfljwest. He visited the Legislature ¥ ' (yesterday while the steamer was pairing. Anderson’s Music Shnppe.( g SEE THE MEDIUM that tells you| before you ask a question. Juneau HOTEL ZYNDA LOST AND FOUND | FOUND—Two short handled round point shovels. Owner may have same by proving property and paying for this ad. Apply United!’g Food Co., Goldstein Building. e An ancient Roman flour mill un- covered near Pompeii has been re-/ 'stored and placed in the Fleld Mu- seum, Chicago. ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. The Florence Shop | “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- anent Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone fl'l_ for Appointment A | e STATION | ALASKAN SNOW COVER CAPITAL ELECTRIC COMPANY SECOND AT SEWARD The following amounts of snow, in inches, were reported on the ground at various Alaskan statio Monday, March 9: Barrow 7, Beth-| el 8, Cordova 15, Eagle 24, Fair-/ banks 10, Fort Yukon 24, Tanana 16, Juneau, Ketchikan and Sitka none. This is a decrease at sev- eral stations. Ice on Chena Slough| at Fairbanks increased two inches; to a thickness of 365 inches. 1 IF A FELLOW TELLS FISH STORIES TO HIS SWEETHEART HE'LL TELL HER A WHALE OF AYARN wWHEN THEY GET — MARRIED ! Old papers at ‘I'ne £mpire office. FERRY TIME CARD weaves Janeau for Douglas and Thane . | 6:15am. 6:15 p.m. 7:10am. $7:30 p.m. 9:15 am.t 0 p.m. 12:30 pm.t §11:15 p.m. | 2:00 poa. 12 midnight be rair and square as to our 3-15pm.t $1:00 am. weights and measures—to be *4:00 pm. | polite and painstaking as regards Leaves Douglas for Juneau | our service, have built for us a 6:30a.m. (grocery trade of which we are ! 8:30 a.m. Jjustly proud. Our foods ar¢ of a | 9:30a.m.t standard excellence that make a 12:45 p.m.t | wonderful appeal to the discrim- 32:16 pm. 12:15pm. | inating homsewife. 2:30pm.t 1:15am. = O — ay | Ry 1—Preight will be accepted. t—S8aturdays only. H §--Effective April 1st. SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83—85 “The Store That Pleases” IR R aannnm s s R Juneau Ferry & Naviga- | tion Company g 1 DO BELEVE THE OLE GALS BEGINNING T'SHOW HER AGE, By CLIFF STERRETT WHISPERIN' LET ME IN TRADE BEATING! IBACK TO NORMAL HOWARD SAYS Pacific Skeamsilip Compa- ny's Agent Tells of | Conditions in States “Business conditions in the States | are rapidly beating back to nm’-‘ maley,” is the gist of the con-| clusions of Brice Howard, Juneau| agent of the Pacific Steamship | Company, who has just returned| from a leisurely trip that took him through Washington, Oregon, Cali- | i and into old Mexico. “Com- medity prices are low throughout the country,” he added, “and frans-| portation rates in instances have) fallen beneath the point of munerative return on the Pacific Coast, but goods are moving—mov- | ing in greater quantities now than | as the case a year ago. | Increase in Volume “Our company, for instance, in January this year handled 8,000 more tons in cargoes than it did| in January, 1930. “Inquiry and observation con- vinced me that reports circulated in Alasks about the industrial situ tion in the States have often becn| exaggerated. There is an indus- trial depression and there is an un- employment problem, but neither | is of such magnitude so frequen‘ly set forth by persons who come North. To the casual visitor in| the Pacific Coast cities, unemploy- | ment is scarcely noticeable. In Southern Califorinia n Diego and Los Angeles—it does not ob- tain to such a degree as it does in San Francisco. Many cn Publie Jobs “San Francisco has met situation effectively. There publi works—street, park and the like| improvements—are in pro ss and | take care of 40,000 persons. Not all these work at once. They| alternate in groups on the jobs.| Seattle has not been so affected| to the extent that the California| cities have. “Retail stores in all the coas! cities are as numerous and seer busy as ever. Motion picture e [f OLE GAL? AGE? SAY! WHO YOL TWO IN SEVERAL STYLES JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDW ARE CO. O O ROEEECOEOAREO ABOUT ? ON T/ Youngest General ¢ Assvciated Press Photo Brig. Gen. Thomas E. Rilea of Salem, Ore., is believed to be the youngest general in the army. Hs has been assigned command of the Eighty-second Brigade, co:aposed entirely of Oregon tioops. houses and amusemen- recorts have large patronage. Highways are crowded with automobiles. “At Agua Caliente, the Mexican Monte Carlo, the spendthrifs and the curious abound in large num- bers. The palatial®hotels are filled with guests. Gambling games in the Casino are thronged. Big Sums Risked “Stakes are high. Gamesters risk large sums of money on the whirl of a wheel, the cast of a dice or the turn of a card with a non- chalence that would have been envied by the Swiftwater Bills, Nig- ger Jims and other plungers of the Klondike in its hurrah days. “Inquiries relative to Alaska | travel are numerous, but bookings the | @ not abnormal, However, the t trip of the Dorothy Alexander to Southeast Alaska this year will tax her accommodations. She will come through from Mexico, and has ' made attractive round-trip rates for Pacific Coast ports. She will be here the forepart of June. Mrs. Howard and I had a pleas- ant time. We motored frequently to interior places. Naturally we re glad to be back. Home is best.” T (LT T LU LT T T T T T T T T T T T =i FINEST" * STEAMERS: SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seatlte Due Juneau Isue suneau Northbound Southbound Feb. 24 Mar. 3 Mar. 10 Mar. 17 Mar. 14 Mar. 17 Mar. 24 Mar. 21 Mar. 24 Mar. 31 REGULAR PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Juneau, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. S.S. NORTHWESTERN and S.S. ALAMEDA will call at Petersburg northbound and southbound. All sailings subject to change without notice, Information and Tickets W. E. NOWELL, Agent “ceamer Yukon Alameda Northwestern Yukon Alaska . Northwestern Feb. 21 Feb. 28 mar. 7 Feb. 24 Mar. 3 Mar. 10 Leave Seattle Arrive Southbound Juneau Lv.Juneau Mar. 14 Mar, 24 Mar, 22 Mar. 25 Mar. 29 April 2 April 4 April16 April11 April 23 April13 April 16 REDUCED RATE ROUND TRIP SEATTLE AND Farragut .Mar. 11 Queen Mar. 18 Rogers Mar. 25 Watson Aprii 1 Evans April 8 Rogers .. April 9 Vislt Calrtornta wis winter, low round trip excursion fares from Seattle ta 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. Sailings from Seattle on Wednes days and Saturdays of popular coast- wise liners Ruth Alexander, Emma Alexander, Dorothy Alexander and Ad- miral Peoples, GUY SMITH, B. H. HOWARD, Agent, Douglas, Agent, Juneau ' ADMIRAL LINE | | FOR PRINCE RUPERT, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA AND SEATTLE CANADIAN {PACIFIC. B.C. COAST STEAMCHIPS Leave Juneau Southbound PRINCESS NORAH March 10, 21, 31 PRINCESS ALICE April 11, 21, May 2 Tickets sold to or from all Eastern Points of United States or Canada and to Europe or the Orient Various Routes—Stop-Over Privileges Travel via the Scenic Canadian Pacific Rockles . 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., See agent for Petersburg, Kake and Way points. for ports of call during winter schedule. Passengers must obtain tickets from agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. - MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co." LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY THURSDA{ AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For Skagway and Way Ports—Every Other Tuesday For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION CO. WINTER SCHEDULE—Sallings every Monday night at 9 p.m. from Pler 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 March 2—9 P. M... M. S. NORCO March 9—9 P. M. M. S. NORTHLAND For information apply to. D. B. Femmer, Juneau Agent. J. B. Burford & Co., Ticket Agents. Telephone 114 “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST"® *!