The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 7, 1931, Page 2

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10 for (*r()r It takes touch of smartness to be for sports, street, a the se: ent choice il our showing of offers excell suit most any outfit. We B 5 o Gloves Women’s double wo fancy 4-inch Slip-c assorted colors MISSES’ SINGLE SLIP-ON—Assorted Price, 7 “Juneau’s Leading lnvxtallon for Bids Un .d States Denartmont of Ag- riculture, Bureau of Public Roads Juneau, Alaska, July 3, 1931. Seal- ed Bids, subject to the conditions contained herein, ‘will be received until 9 oclock AM, August 1235, “oajongar days after date of 1931, and then publicly opened, for s Ty aha” il e furnishing all labor and materials | completed within One Hundrad and performing all work for con-|pin MGl (I e from structing and improving the White |3 0™ 0™ ive of any time Pass Highway, Skagway River|; .4 v ené between the Bridge, National Forest Road pro- ject, located adjacent to the Ton-| s National Forest, First Judicial of Alaska. The 2th of the project to be con- strucjed is approximately 0409‘ Miles and the principal items of | work are approximately as follows Structure Excavation 600 Cu.Yds; Finished Earth Road 0318 Mile: Unclasssified Borrow 5,100 Cu.Yd: Untreated Timber 52 M.Ft. BM.; Treated Timber 9 M.FL.BM.; Class A Concrete 154 Cu. Yds; Class S Concrete 92 Cu.Yds; Reinforcing Steel 11,000 Lbs; Caqrr. Met. Pl])? Culverts 60 Lin.. Treated Timber Piling 98 LinFt; I B spans com-| plete 6 Spans; Rock Fill in place |pidder will be reguired to execute | 150 Cu. ¥ds. The contract form the Standard Government Form of | and the plans, specifications, spec-|contract for Construction. The right ial provisions and estimate of qu: tities may be examined and the Standard Questionnaires a&nd Fi- nancial Statement for Bidders se-| cured by the prospective bidder at the following addre: : U, 8. Bll-’ reau of Public Roads, Federal & ‘Ferritorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska U. 8. Forest Service, Commer Bldg., Ketchikan, Alask ssociat- ed General Contrac , Mulinomah | Hotel, Portland, Oreg: 1, Associated General Contractor de Bldg, | Seattle, Washing Ass ucmm(l General Cont 0 Spokane, Washington. Each bic must submit with his bid, or pr iously, an attested staement of his| business and technical organiza- tion (of the bidder) on forms to| be * supplied by the® District En- gineer, which is ‘avallable for th conterhplated work, including financial resources and his high- cons‘ruction ruction expe pared h the project The United States .e serves the right to reje in which the facts as to L and technical organization exp , coms ! bid finan- cial resources or cons tion ex- | perience, compared \nm the projeci bid upon, justifies such rejection Where copies of plans ed, a deposit of $10.00 quired to insure their re within fifteen (15) days aft ing bids, plans are not are request- | il be re urn op n- | )\th(]‘l New Gloves well gloved hands to add the final ason’s best glove styles Chamoisuede 1.25, $1.75 pair NCY B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. the Government | upon h- i {ed, (| Bergman Hotel Dining Room Board by Week or Month EMMA GRUNNING his}! ;‘ | Hollywood Style Shop bl costume any outfit, whether it fternoon or evening— and in color range to It Hi Kid Gloves | ymen’s 4-inch Doeskin Slip-on lack, Beige, Eggshell and White 2.75to ven, n CHAMOISUEDE patterns and colors. | 5 cents Department Store” FCOTUB deposit will be forfeited to the Guarantee will be re- with each bid as follows Five (5%) per cent of the amount of the bid. Performance bond will be required as follows: In amount of 100% of the total contract price. Performance will begin within ten quired date of order of the Gov- ernment to suspend operations on account of weather conditions and | the effective date of order to re- “.x.nr work. Liquidated damages for delzy will be the amount stated in | the Special for each calendar day ay until the| werk is completed or accepted. Par- tial payments will be made as the work progresses on work and ma- terial delivered if such work and material meet the approval of the contracting officer. Article on pa- tents will be made a part of the contract. Bids must be submitted the Standard Government of Bid and the successful | effective Form served, as the interest of the overnment may require, to reject | any and all bids, to waive any| informality in bids received, and to accept or reject any items of any bid, unléss such bid is quali- fied by 8 limitation. Envel- opes cdntaining bids must be seal- marked, and addressed as fol- lows: Bid for Road Imp*ovement. White Pass Highway, Skagway Riv- | (er Bridge, To be opened August | 12, 1931 at 9 o'clock AM., Federal | & Territorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska. | /M. D. Williams, District Engineer, | 3. Lureau of Public Roads. LUDWIG NEL VELER Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET \ COLEMAN'S | “Ome of Alaska’s” Dlstlncllve Shops” First and Main WiceLy | e | | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU , Our Services to You Begin and End at the Plank of Every P { (B { assenger-Carrying Boat | trade for furs. day he had to release three of them on their own recognizance. The capacity of the jail is four. A. H. Anthony has left Dawson for Fort Yukon. There he will embark in a gasboat and go up the Porcupine. He is headed for the Bear Lake and Mackenzie kiver districts, where he will trap and Anthony first went into the Mackenzie River country from Edmonton in the early 80's. Mrs. aught Emily Hull school Redding, who at Fortymile, and Willard D. Hansen, formerly of Eagle, but now with the Alaska Road Commission in the Livengood district, were married at Fairbanks. Miners returning to Fairbanks from the Koyukuk say that the shallow gold diggings in that dis- trict appear to have been worked out and that while there is gold in deep ground operators with limited means cannot afford to work it. Bear Creek in the Kuskokwim district will be entirely dredged over, it is reported by the Kusko Times. The Bear Creek dredge did not work last summer. Wild cattle on Chirikoff are not to be slaughtered, as has been re- ported. A 20-year lease on the island is held by the Chirikoff Is- land Cattle Company, in which C. |H. Frye, Seattle, is said to be heavily interested. He plans to cross the wild cattle with sturdy |stock imported from Washington tate and thus build up a beef herd. Arvid Benson drowned himself in Noyes Slough near Fairbanks. He tied a 12-pound sledg ehammer to his neck. Two deer swam from Hawkins Island to Cordova and played around the” City Wharf several hours, 3 om the east shore of the Cop- per River at Chitina a mother moose swam to the west shore. Her calf was drowned trying to follow her, says the Chitina Herald. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Ammann | recently returned to Chitina |doing assessmient on their copper |claims 20 miles from there. have performed the same task l 30 years. This year, the three hors- e |5 they took with mem got awp.y and the husband and the wife haa to walk the 20 miles over a Tough country back to Chitina, Bach of the couple is past 70 years old: Fur-bearing animnls in the Chit- ina district were very scarce last winter, having migrated to the coast, it is believed, to get fish for food. Birds and rabbits were few in the district last summer. They are beginning to make their ap- pearance again. With their return if is thought, fur-bearing animals will be more plentiful next winter. “Time,” the ntional magazine re- cently printed a letter recelved from the boy. editors of the Chitina Weckly Herald, a few news articles taken from the publication and one of its jokes. As a result the lads have received 50 subscriptions and many letters from all parts of the United States. The Herald is a yer-Reynolds Loggmg Company. BERKMAN TO BE DEPURTED PARIS, July 7.—Alexander Berk- man, deported from the United States with Emma Goldman in 1919 for radical activities, faces ex- pulsion from France after three | months here. The Government is- | sued an order for his deportation | but granted him a suspension of duct. Berkman denied he has be"n dabbling in political affairs and Xn- sisted France has no reason to or- der him out. - CONCERT ‘(0 BE f GIVEN THURSDAY BY TWO ARTISTS Next Thursday evening at 8 tha Society will be given by twi wellknown artists, Miss Gladys Sandberg, pianist and Nicolas Furjanick, violinist. Both artists have appeared abroad and in the principal cities in the central part of the United States| where critics have given them | praise for their exceptional ability as ‘most capable musicians. What is better yet, both artists are Am-| ericans and their work abroad has been given as much unstinted ap- preciation as in their own home- land. The program will be one that| should delight all classes of music lovers. TWO RELEASED FROM ROBBERY CHARGE BY | FEDERAL OFFICIALS George Bavola and William Lahti, arrested Sunday by Federal officers on the complaint of Fred: Erickson, suspected with implication of rob- bing Erickson of $965, were releas- ed yesterday after an official in- vestigation had failed to substanti- ate Erickson’s charges. There was nothing to connect either man with the reported rob- bery, it was said today at the Unit- ed States 'Attorney's office. Matt NIVJh and Emil Hakemaa, alias Ed. Stevenson, arrested with Savola and Lahti, were still being detained today but no hearing had been held. ———————— Old papers at =ae Emplra Of- tice. 6 FERRY TIME CARD deaves Funcay for Douglas and Thane 6:15 pm. 9:40 pm, §11:15 pm. 2: o,nj.u. 12 midnight 3:30 pm.t $1:00 am. typewritten newspaper. Only 17 adult fur seals and two pups were taken by Sitka Indians from the herd migrating to tbe Pribilofs this year. The natives |recelved but $8 for the pelts. About 175 pieces of real estate at Valdez are advertised to be sold for taxes at public auction next August 8, i Juneau Fu'ry & Nnvlgl ‘tion Company the order to investigate his con-| iWaters ¥ lan Church, | : §°'&°:éei'§ ':;fi:g‘fy o Mar.jomenal year of 1928 in the waters $7:30 p.m. } U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AOR!WLTUR!. ‘WEATHER BUREAU . Al | Daily Cross-word Puzzle The W eath ACROSS . Itallan river eat er i 3 | K ,;,’:'; Garers W] 15 Mens (By the U. S. Wezther Bure»u) | . Scene com- \ | b | opome s 3 2 ;;gfi:fl,". Forecast for Juneau and vicintty, beginning at 4 p. m., July 7: On Manzanita Lake, 25 minutes| Striking a submerged log off orchist 2. bersieen tree | Probably showers tonight and Wodnesday; gentle westerly winds. i {from Ketchikan by airplane, a bird [Ushagat Island, in Cook Inlet, the| ‘7 Old exblosiva T| 2% Malicious LOCAL DATA ; that looks like a cross between a|North American Fisheries' gas boat | 19. English cathe- | RE] A goose and a seagull, colored like a|Delaware, 56 feet long, sank an SR 20. Discharges Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather Plymouth Rock chicken, is report-[hour and 25 minutes afterwards Providea that N} 81 gmay Omoe. e pm. yest'y .3028 54 90 s 4 Misting ed to have been seen by Ray How-|The four men aboard reached shore 11 \ndersinnd D] §i: ixciamavon [4 am. today 3017 52 100 Calm Cldy rd, Pilot of the Plonder Airways, [safely in a skiff. . Flowerioss S| it hncient siaves |Noon today ...3015 55 ® 8 Rain | who recently made a flight to the 6 Ad HEtE bord 40 Every other | lake. Mrs. Edith Rochesterf Unalaska | 27, Cauterizes S A IR VABLE AND RADIO REPORTS and Gardo Webb, fur farmer, of | 2% Defere all A] 45 Touch tiently | YESTERDAY ~———ropRr————— Ed Horton, who arrived in Ket- |upper Kachemak Bay, were mar- | 89. Propsi a boat £y} ~k:;;': dealers | Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am.dam. Precip. 4am. chikan in July, 1903, has never[ried at Seldovia. The couple will| §} I [4yor °f D L| 55 Menttow | _Station— temp. temp. | smn. temp,. velocit.y 24 hrs, Weather i ‘))v‘n far from there since then. He | make their home on the Martin | 3 _l{:v‘?em;\:ih 4 1rkaa 18, Pedal digit _'-l,-},?f',fie,, wheel Barrow 32 32 | 1 8% 0 \Cldy has not been farther south than|River Fox Farm on Kachemak Bay. | i¥ parent 62 Provide with 179, Sand nilis: 5%, Crimped tabric | Ncme ... 48 48 | 45 44 g L0l Reln |Foggy Bay or farther north than i1 ‘That man weapons Easion Wit Sos * | Bethel 52 62 |".40 "B TTMB Tgee . Ol Arthur C. Zimmerlie of the Upper| 46. Note of the y:!l 3 P R | 1 (L SR YR 52 48 | 4 a — 70 Cldy Ther¢ arc 151 Indian children en- [ Pelly River recently arrived in| , pcile 83 The Greek N & Steep fiax Play o worde | Fairbanks % M P AT R ¢ Sid d at the Sheldon Jackson|Dawson with large collections of | 4 Flaxen fabric 69. Monkey 4 Lalbetions of Mefnin, 3t | Eagle 60 56 | e 4 10 C,dy School at Sitka. furs, which had obtained by trap-| & BIMS wey Tl Actoor rencn- 6 woads 10. Adult boy St. Paul B a2 B, g d Rain ping and trading. % Side of a tri- ing a “destl- g lliyminant 1L Gonsumed S Habor . B 88 4 Sl SRR 08 s + Sty With an eight-ounce bamboo rod, e 1. ‘Boney sathe 78 fAiop. 8 Christmas " “wagon Kodiak 54 54 e S 0 0 C'dy C. 8. Kellison, of Seattle, Pacific| Mary Ella Larson, Seward high| _ erer 6. Puff up carols o R Cordova 50 50 4 4 4 102 o Northwest manager of A. G.|school graduate, and George A.| 58 Pal 11 Gerogo Ty 9, Fay Ul Fitoan F-S B B v % le’" || Spaulding and Company, caught afRace, Seward fisherman, were re- | Sitka 64 —- B - oy 0 '01 glg’, 50-pound king salmon near Ket- |cently married there. { Ketchikan 68 68 | 48 50 4 ‘0 Clea} | chikan. Forty-five minutes were - 1 Prince Rupert 63 66 52 52 0 0 Cldr required to play the fish and bring | Erected in 1868, the year after | Edmonton : 64 62 s 48 % 0 Pt, Cldy it alongside the boat where it was|the purchase of Alaska by the| Seattle 8 8 } 64 66 ® 0 .Cl ‘y | | gaffed and then taken aboard. United States from Russia, a log | Portland 92 90 | 64 64 P 0 ]e:“ building in Wrangell will b made | San Francicso 66 62 56 58 A 0 b -] Axel Jensen, oldtime prospector, (over and used as the home of the *—Less than 10 mil Cidy died recently at Cordova. Wrangell American Legion Post. = | & 5 i The pressure has risen slightly in Northern Alaska but remains | Mrs. Mary Bayless, 84, died at| On Prince of Wales Island, Dan moderatley low in the upper Yukon Valley. Tt has fallen slightly |the home of her son and his wife, | Brown has a beaver colony. Three | and remains moderately high in Southern Alaska but is higher over Mr. and Mrs. Otto Bayless, at Fair- |years ago he started with one pair the ocean to the southward. Showers have fallen over most of the banks. Mrs. Mary Bayless and|of adult beavers. Now he has| Territory and conditions remain unsettled. Temperature changes have her husband, Willlam Bayless first |30 animals, | been unimportant during the past 24 hours. came to Alaska in 1897. They land- ed at Skagway and went into Daw-| Seven hundred thousand feet or % il son the next year. Willlam Bay-|spruce logs in a raft were towed | et emo less died 16 years ago. from Dall Tsland, Alaska, by the —_ fug Inverness to the Big Bay Lum- i Phone TAXI SER VICE When the chief of police at Fair- |ber Company at Prince Rupert, B. { banks arrested seven men in one|{C. The logs were sent by the Saws-| 7 DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Booth HERRING RUN - TO WESTWARD . | IS LARGE ONE FOR SALD MABRY'S CAFE CASH OR TERM: Adj;c;fl to Unal- “aska and Dutch Harbor Teeming with Fish INQUIRE | FIRST NATIONAL BANK adv | 4 i | i ; DUTCH HARBOR, Alaska, July 7—From present indications the ihérring run this scason will be more than the cqual of the phen-| R AR A S L Dutceh | | jadent to Unalaska and \Harbor. ‘The herring are larger and of better quality than usual and the ‘'run is earlier. Fishermen large catch. e EYE EXPERT COMING! DR. J. W. EDMUNDS, prominent Seattle Eye - Specialist, will again| visit Juneau on his annual va-| cation in Alaska, and will be at| the Gastincau Hotel July 9th to| 14th inclusive. Dr. Edmunds desires the most difficult cases, double | vision, muscular imbalance of eyes, St. Vitas' dance, headaches, neu-| ralgia, nervousness, eye-strain.' Crossed eyes straightened without ) operation. Dr. Edmunds will be glad to see scores of former Juneau pafients, who may need a timely re-test for glasses; and many new onés. Dr. Edmunds will be busy!| Phone for appointment for day| or evening testing. Consultaticn and Examinaticn Frec! Your credit is| Gocd, for part ‘payment. Seattle | offices at 703-704 Liggett Bldg., 4th | Ave. at Pike Street. —-adv.“ | are anticipating a| “Tomorrow’s Styles Toda;” Rayon ! Underwear Shown in Non-Run Featuring — Vests, Bloomers, Slips and Fitted Brassiere Top ---Combination Suits. Pleasingly Priced X ————— NOTICE A regular meeting of the Legion] jof the Moose, No. 25, will be held | at Moose Hall tonight commencing ! at 8 pm. sharp. Entertainment and lunch to follow business meeting. G. A. BALDWIN, Herder. ‘WATCH GEORGE BROTHERS Phone 92—§5 WHEN YOU WANT IT ]uneau Lumber Mills, Inc. . Phone 358 —adv. Five Fast Deliveries SAVING EVE HAVING WHAT you HAVE in the future depends upon what you save in the present. There’s no escaping that rule. Fortunately, it is both easy and pleasant to save, once you start. Tt becomes a game. Watching a Bank Account grow is like watching a garden grow, only much more thnl]mg. HAVE A GOAL IN MIND Make Retirement in 15 Years your goal,. or Travel, or a College Education for your children. Then you’ll enjoy saving. First National Bank [ Ss——" ELECTRIC SUNLIGHT MACHINES '~ UNIVERSAL AND EVER READY TYPES s Sold and rented—rentals can be applied on later purchase if desired Alaska Electric Light and " Power Co. JUNEAU Phone 6 DOUGLAS Phone 18 JUST ARRIVED Another New Stock of WALLPAPER . Juneau Paint Store PRINTING AND STATIONERY Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— ffice. Supplies . Simpkins Co. Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS. FISH AND POULTRY mn-w-m—-un—- “r +

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