Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18. 1931. — g FISHIN® FER ? POLLY AND HER PALS YOU BEEN SETTIN' THERE FER HOURS, PAW. WOTCHA FOR SALE nAnD rui RENT FOR SALE—Eight horsepower gas engine, cheap. Enquire Alstrom’s News Stand. FOR SALEThor Health Motor and Electric Washer, cheap. Phone 2553. FOR SALE—Two automatic shot guns, 12 gauge, Winchester and Remington. Bargain for cash. See FOR SALE—Five room house with bath, large lot, in Seater Tract, a bargain. Phone 202. PIANO for sale, cheap. Apply J. Beach, 888 West Oth Street. FOR SALE—Household Fi very reasonable. Phone 166 : FOR SALE—Franklin sedan, fine running gear, engine, good rub‘—‘ ber. Bargain $250.00 Will make | dandy light delivery truck. In-;| quire Nugget Shop. FOR RENT—Four room furnished house near Wireless Station. Call 67 after 5 p.m. FOR REN1-—runished two room apartments, also cabins. Newly finished. Close in. Apply Seaview Apartments. FOR RENT—Room suitable for one or two persons. Single or twin beds. Furnished, steam heat, close in, reasonable. Phone 62. FOR RENT—Large furnished room for rent. $10.00 month. Close to Capitol Building. Telephone 2551. APARTMENTS ror wansients and FOR SALE—School, Bus, used bwo| seasons, cheap.. Inquire Walter | Hellan, Box 1142, Juneau, Alaska. | FOR SA Jight draft power | boat for river'srvice. 31 ft. long, | 7 ft. beam. Cheap for cash. Jas.| Hill No. 2, Harris Apts,, on Gold Strest. ! ’ FOR SALE — Radiola Model 60 | Superheterodyne with Dynamic | Speaker Apply 1256, care Em- pire. i | 0 FOR' SALE—Slightly used Piano- Accordion in good condition. | Worth $25000 when new. Inquire | Box 1586, Juneau, Alaska. | POR SALE—McGregor and Gard- ner high grade Ship's Chrono- meter. See it at Juneau Paint Store. "OR SALE—Plale Gass Showcases. Various sizes. Juneau Young Hardware Co. : MISCELLANEOUS WE carry large stocks of auto- mobile motors and automobile parts at low prices. Ballard Bridge Auto Wrecking Co., Inc, 1451 Leary Way, Seattle, Wash. BAFETY INSURANCE, be SAFE: Equip your car with Pathfinder Glare Shields. See J. W. Wood- ford, Agent. [ONESOME—JOIN Ohlo’s Ilargest correspondence club. Members ev- « srywhere. 150 ladies names, ad- dresses and descriptions $1.00. (ladles 50c) Give age and occu- pation with remittance. J. E. Donald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. —_— PIANOS, Kadios, Sewing Machines, Pbonographis, Expert Piano Tun- | { | | » LOST — Spare tire and rim for Ford car. Probably on Willough- + by Ave. Reward. Telephone 2323. The Best Laundry At a Fair Price WHERE? LAUNDRY Franklin St. | . | CAPITAL Phone 355 “l o | 1 LUDWE% NELSON YOU KNOw HOW TMAKE TLRTLE. SOUR-DON' TCHA? © 9 0000000000000 0000¢ 0 8 frrrorcecooos | ® Princess Alice ( OH, SURE/ SUTTINLY/ ® & 00060000 000 Steamer Movements NORFHBOUND Princess Charlotte in port. Princc Rupert due Aug. 20, evening. Nerco due Aug. 22 forenoon. SCHEDULED SATLINGS Prince Rupert scheduled to sail from Vancouver Aug. 17 at 8 pm. Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle Aug. 17 at 9 p.m. Alameda is scheduled to sail from Seattle August 18 at 9 pm. g Princess Louise will sail from Vancouver Aug. 19, 9 pm. Prince Henry will sail from Vancouver Aug. 20, evening. Queen scheduled to sail from ® Seattl2 Aug. 20 at 10 am. ® Aleutian from Seattle 9 am. e Aug. 22 . . o . . ° . . . ° . . . . ° . to sail from ® Vancouver Aug. 26, 9 pm. permanents. MacKinnon Apart-|e SOUTHEBOUND SAILINGS ¢ ments. ® Admiral Watson due south- e Furn. sh. rooms, newly renovated; | o A;:-Alil:::: ‘;{bfi‘:i\“‘g“:it slgéx'h— : reasonable; oy. Gastineau Groc.| J Dolra. Sably’ Anist 86 A FOR RENT—Two room furnished |® Dorothy Alexander due south- ® apartment. Single furnished sleep-|® bound August 22. . ing rooms. - Phone 173. . LOCAL SAILINGS . e ® Estebeth leaves every Thursday e FOR RENT—rurmisned, Sveam-|q niohg gt 6 pm. for Sitka and ® heated sleeping rooms, suitdble * wayports. . for mcn;&c),etse in. Call at 326, © Pacific leaves every Thurs- ® Jocend, Apret: ® day at 10 am. for Peters- $ FOR RENT—Purnisned, steam heat- | ® burg, Kake and w3y ports, ® ed sleeping room; close in. Phone (®» © © @ ¢ @ @ 06 0 ¢ » & ¢ ¢ 537. —_——————— = . . FOR RENT — Comfortable heated | TIDES TOMORROW | furnished apartments; $50.00 and| o Py $60.00. Nugget Apartments. 1 abad. ted. Tel oi0L.| High tide, 4:50 am., 147 feet. 436, Fregished. Henjed /el Low tide, 10:44 am., 2.0 feet. NTE High tide, 4:57 p.m., 169 feet. A WAA D il Low tide, 11:39 pm. 07 feet. WANTED—Will purchase 1000 Eagle | e T SR tail feathers at five cents each.|® " The Nugget Shop. | HALIBUT PRICES . . GOOD pusiness proposition to right party. Box 952, Juneau, Alaska. STENOGRAPHER = (Male) wishes position, mechanical experience, references, P. O. Box 661 City. MEN USING SCENT BUT LIKE IT MILD WASHINGTON—Men are using the “mild” powders and toilet wat- ers, a leading department store re- ports. i | A certain brand which is not| cloyingly sweet finds many mas- culine patrons. They purchase tal- cum powder, scented soap andI toilet water. Women sometimes buy the same brand for their husbands that they do for themselves. o R e VEST-POCKET “MIKE” DENVER—Relief for radio suf- ferers is promised in an invention| recently exhibited here, which is intended to do away with micro- phone panic. pocket “mike” which is so. small that the speaker is. not aware of its presence. It fits into the speak- er's pocket and catches the vibra- tions from his chest. Only the high notes are caught from the air, The vest pocket “mike” will be used at numerous public gath- erings in Denver during the next few weeks. 12:30pmt §U:5pm. 2:00pm. 12 midnight L.m, $1:00 am. It consists of a vest || SEATTLE, Aug. 18.—TWwo hun- dred and twenty-three thousand pounds of halibut were received in Seattle yesterday. The fish sold for 7 % cents a pound, first grade, and 4 cents a pound, second grade. PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., Aug. 18.—Halibut receipts in Prince Ru- pert yesterday totaled 220,000 pounds. ' American fish broughs 6.9 and 2 cents, and Canadian fish 5.1 and 2 cents. il PSS NORCO LEAVES SEATTLE SEATTLE, Wash,, Aug. 18.—The motorship Norco sailed for Juneau and wayports at nine o'clock last night with two passengers for Ju- neau: Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Har- grave, Old Papers ai ‘The Emplre. g o FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Third and Pranklin, 1-4 Prcnt and Franklin, 1-5 Pront, near Ferry Way. 1-6 Front, near Gross. Apts. 1-7 Pront, opp. City Whart. 1-8 Pront, near Saw Mill 1-9 Front at A. J. Office. 3-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro- cery. 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Barn. 2-7 Pifth and Seward. 2-9 Fire Hall. 8-2 Giastineau and Rawn Way. 3-4 Second and Gold. Marine News ROGERS BRINGS 11§ STUDENTS ON U. CRUISE Pupils from Many States Attend Classes in a ‘Floating College’ “Don’t ask us what we think of Alaska, because we've run out of superlatives.” This reply from a student who is seeing the Territory from the deck of the Admiral Rogers, under; special charter to the University of Oregon, may be accepted as a criterion of what most of the pas- sengers thought' upon their arri- val at Juneau last night. This is the third annual cruise of the “floating college”, under the direction of W. G. Beattie, of the S P e S SEEMS T'ME YOU'RE PUTTY POSITIVE ABOLUT SOMETHIN' By CLIFF STERRETT —— SEEMS T'ME YOUR ME PUTTY POSITIVE ABOUT SOMETHIN' Y'NEVER ~& KETCHED!) WITH BIG LIST BIG LIST OF OFPASSENGERS ~PASSENGERS . Weather on Trip Up— 30 for Juneau | The steamer Yukon, Capi. H. An- ployees Crowds West- ward Steamer The steamer Aleutian arrived deyson, arrived from Seattle and from Seward and other westward wayports at noon today with a ca- ports at 5 o'clock this morning | pacity passenger list, 20 of which were for Jungau. They are as fol- lows: From Seattle—George Baggen, D. L. Crawford and Mrs. Craw- ford, W. A. Eaton, R. E. Henning, Sigrid Johnson, G .W. Nostrand, Doris Oeander, O. M. Olson and Mrs. Olson, Viola Ott, Mrs. Bessie with a capacity passenger list, in- cluding 36 round trippers. The following passengers disembarked at Juneau: Sam Boudrye and Mrs. Boudrye, Charles - Boudrye, Louise Boillin,! Anne Boillin, Clause Brunes, Mrs. H. B. Crewson, Charles A. Dev- lin, Mrs. James R. Crawford, Wm. Rowe, H. A. Sabin, Mr. and Mrs. Flannery, E. Gmeiner, Mr. and| Peter Schmitz, Elsie Schmitz, L. Mrs. Harry Hill, Jack Irving, L. J.| G. Smaby, Susie White. Jewett and Mrs. Jewett, James| From Ketchikan—Mrs. Valeta Johnstone, €. Larson, Howard Leify, Kayatt, Miss C. Halverson, Joe Mary Nevitt, James Swan, Jr., Chapek, Willie Thomas, Mrs. Bert Mary Swan, Mrs. J. T. Swan, Mrs. Miller, Laura M. Hudson, A. C. Francis Taylor, Barret Taylor, Wm. Thompson, E. F. Zuern. Worm, Malcolm Wilson and Mrs. From Wrangell—John H. Clau- Wilson, son, H. D. Campbell. Passengers boarding the Aleutian here were: | University of Oregon. Mr. and | Mrs. Beattie were greeted by many. friends at the dock, and later, as: the students thronged the eurio store on Front Street. Mr. Beattic is somewhat of an oldtimer 'in Alaska, having had charge of the work of the Bureau of Education Southeast Alaska. “Fleating University” :Visitors .aboard the Rogers Tast night were struck with amazement upon passing the observation room} up forward, for the entire compart- ment has been transformed into a classroom, with blackboards and maps on all sides. ‘There are 116 passengers on the reruise, many of them from eastern and southern states#'but Pacific {coast students predominate. Cal- ifornia is represented by 49, and Oregon by 40. “We hold classes every day Iwhen we are not in port,” Mr. | Beattie said. “Our faculty is com- |posed of some of the most disting- uished scholars in America. Dr. Alexander Goldenweiser has - the chair of Anthropology, Dr. E. A. Packard teaches geology. Mr. An- drew Vincefit is instructor in art. the Rogers arrived in Juneau at 10:45 o'clock Monday ‘ night. As the boat is under special eharter, no passengers boarded the ship at| these perts. Exception was made in the case of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kirberger, of Kake, who were given | passage to Juneau. Due to the late arrival of the ship here, the trip to Mendenhall Glacier had to be -deferred until the return of the Rogers in Friday. Arrangements have been completed for cars and the trip will be ‘made in the daytime, Mr. Beattie said. Sailing from Juneau at midnight, the Rogers was scheduled to remain in Skagway long enough for the pasengers to make the Tail trip over White Pass to Lake Bennett. From Skagway the Rogers will con- tinue the voyage via the triangle Iroute to Sitka and return. —e———— | For fallen arches or aching feet (see DR. FENTON, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING. —adv. e e e e e FOUND A GOOD $6.00 Man’s Shoe “It neither crimps your ., roll_ner . cramps your, style” DEVLIY'S 1 in] & To Visit Mendenhall After touching at Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg and Kake,|% ! | | | | | | | For Ketchikan—R. E. Wilson, R. B. Oxrider, Fred Walles, Mr. and | Mrs. R. D. Baker. For Seattle—C. G. Sullivan, K. | Krauzinas, John Malvern, Oscar | Hawn, Mrs. Goldoff. Aleutian sajled south at SAIL TODAY ON =2 B { H. A. Sabin, Chief Truck Driver | 14 PASSENGERS of the Juneau Fire Depariment, re- | Canadian National Steam- turned home today after brief | . . jtrip to Seattl> and Portland + «ship Sails for Vancou- |sememceeeea- ety ver Early This AM, | FOR RANGES 5 Fourteen passengers boarded the HEATERS AND Canadi ational steamer Prince Hcfi:;mr(ltalgh.t fia:l'ry t'eNoddLmP and FIREPLACES i Purser Jack Crawford, here last HEMLOCK ! night for Seattle and Vancouver. The steamship arrived from Skag- way at midnight and sailed for Vancouver at 1 am. today. Passengers leaving Juneau were: for Vancouver, Mrs. W. S. Timmons, Mrs. A. A. Pare; for Seattle, Mrs. Joe Short, Mrs. Ella Rrueger, Billy Krueger, Miss Ma- tilda Thordorson, Mrs. M. A. Cool~ baugh, Mrs. E. L. Knapp, Mrs. J. P, Williams ' and two sons, Dean and Donald, H. 8. Judd, Miss Mary 'son. 3'COMING HERE ON PRINCESS CHARLOTTE On the steamship Princess Char- lotte, which is due to arrive in Ju- | néhu this evening from WVancou- | ver,, B. C, three passengers are booked for this city. They are Mr. | and ‘Mrs. A. Van Mavern and Richard McGinnis. BRANT ARRIVES FROM SOUTH EARLY TODAY _/The Brant, Capt. E. L." Hunter, - —— United States Bureau of Fisheries || m———— flagship, returned to port today nn-‘ er a irip to Seattle. It arrived at 8 am. and was due to‘have sailed/ for the south at 4:30 pim. ) It will have aboard Congressman /1 ‘Robert G. Simmons and family, and | Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, | R. W. Dunlap and his daughter. ' The party will stop at Anan Creek ' and spend a few hours at Ketchi- | WOOD Telephone 92 or 95 and leaye your order with GEORGE BROTHERS $4.50 per Load Chester Barneson ——— FHONE 487 MARKOE STUDIO Photographs of Quality Portraiture, Photo Finish- ing, Cameras, Alaska Views, Ete. First National Bank Bldg. JUNEAU, ALASKA® | { | kam, ‘proceeding direct from the .y t, the latter port to Seattle. l I‘LASHLIGHTS et FIND LASTING PAPERS For every purpose and purse. { Broad beam and focusing types. For short or long range use. From 40c¢ to $2.00 Juneau Drug Company | Free Delivery * Phone 38 Post. Ofice Substation 3 Neo. 1 WABHINGTON.—Tests by~ the bureau of standards in studying the preservation of written and (| printed records indicate that there | are papers made both from rag and wood fibers suitable for any re- quired degree of permanence, pro- vided the papers are stored under favorable conditions. RS WASHINGTON. — Raw cabbage is rated by the bureau of home ecopomics as ranking with orange juice .and tomatoes as one of the richest sources of vitamin C, the antiscorbutic vitamin. Round Trippers Enjoy Finc‘Ex odus of Cannery Em-| i LARGEST ” FINEST S N\ SAILING Leave Seattle SCHEDULE Due Juneau Northbound Due Juneau Southbound Aug. Steamer— *ALEUTIAN TALASKA . TN'WESTERN *YUKON FALAMEDA *ALEUTIAN Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. 2 Aug. Aug. 25 Aug. *Southwesvern tSoutheastern Route. All sailings subject to change withoat notice. INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 LOW ROUND Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau TRIP FARES Watson ... Aug. 1€ SEATTLE Evans Aug. 12 Aug. 15 Aug. 26 Rogers ....Aug. 13 Aug. 17 Aug. 2C Dor. Alex. Aug. 17 Aug. 22 Aug. 22 Queen ....Aug. 20 Aug. 24 Aug. 27 Watson ...Aug. 26 Aug. 29 Sept. 9 Rogers ....Aug. 27 Aug. 31 Sept. 3 Intormation ana tickets furnishe on Seattle-Cafifornia service. Callfornia-New York via Panam Canal and return. Round the world, Trans-Atlantio Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one way wat- er, return by rail), $350.00. B. H. HOWARD, Agent. ADMIRAL LIN TRAVEL BY AIR AGENTS Juneau Fred Hanford ... Wrangell Orin Hill .. — T P. Kostrometinoff ... Sitkal R. P. Peratovich Klawock| J. B, Burford & Co. Gastineau Hotel Larry Parks . W. T. Farwell, = A. B. Hayes, Manager, ALASKA w,\mv\p}.nw AIRWAYS PHONES—Office, 79; Hotel, 10; Hangar, 435 | w Northland Trafisportiitioh Company s SERVING ALASKANS Sailing from Seattle every Monday Night at 9:00 P.M. for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Peters- burg, Douglas and Juneau. Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau M/S “ORCO Aug.17 Aug.22 Aug.22 M/S NORTHLAND Aug.24¢ Aug.28 Aug.28 M/8 NORCO Aug.31 Sept.5 Sept.5 FOR INFORMATION APPLY TO D. B. FEMMER J. B. BURFORD Juneau Agent Ticket Agent Telephone 114 ‘Telephone 79 MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co." LEAVES JUNEAU EVERPYo THURSDAY AT 6 P, M, FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For Skagway and Way Ports—Every Other Tuesday For information apply Dave Housel, Ageng Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Thursday at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and Way Points. See agent for ports of call during winter schedule. Passen- gers must obtain tickets from agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. Pove TAXI SERVICE y i DAY AND NIGHT *.* Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce /Booth