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

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SPARKY ! PONY BOVY! STOP L09\5\N' DAGGERS SELEVE ME, TM SICHK AND TIRED O' SPARK PLUG BuULL-DOZIN' THIS LITTLE HOSS.... \_T'S GaTTA SToPY mh e ““‘_'. ? Lo R, @105, King Fealires Syndicate, Ine THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 2, 1931. By BILLE DE BECK VELLMEESTER \ | GOOGLES --- T viLL GEEF YOU [ bt | TASNECY 2 at Britain rights resc rved. The Daily A laska Empire PHONE 374 FOR SALE FOR RENT FOR SALE — Fada T7-tube battery set with new A and B batteries; cone speaker. Phone 4043. ‘ FOR SALE — At a bargain, fox ranch known as D. H. McDonald ° ranch, near Juneau. Fully equip- ped and stocked. Inquire of John Reck. 'FOR SALE—New Style WEDDING RINGS. ENGRAVING FREE. See E these at the Nugget Shop. FOR SALE—2 Snzw Waiker filing Zabinets, 4 drawers each. George + Brothers. A T T B ESRE ER FOR SALE—One choice residential lot. Inquire of D. B. Femmer. it | FOR RENT — Six-room furnished house, with bath, furnace. 6th St., between East and Harris Sts. Phone 257. FOR RENT—The Saloum residence. Six rooms fully furnished, auw-‘ matic oil burner heat, electric range, large basement equipped with electric washing machine, hot and cold water, stationary wash tubs. Phone 292. FOR RENT arge, furnished room, $10 per month. Phone 2551. FOR RENT—Completely furnished apartment. Steam heated, 4| rooms, bath, fireplace. Apply Nugget Shop. FOR SALE—Fve room house with| 4 bath, largé lot, in Seater TPract, . & bargain. Phone 202. FOR RENT — Masquerade suits. Costumes made to order. Phone Douglas 143. ' FOR SALE—Plate Glass Showcases. Various sizes. Juneau Young H Hardware Co. ] PLAY BILLIARDS | J BURFORD'S l € e FOR NEW WOOLENS Fall and Winter SEE JACK, The Tailor B Lausanne Barber Shop at Ploneer Pool Hall Specializing in ladies’ and children’s hatrcutting ROBERT LIGHT, Prop. JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE CO. Phone 79 Tubes Service Open Evenings i : e } crica’s sweet tooth is catered 'A’l:ly.the sale of 12 pounds of ‘candy- @ -person annually. WANTED WANTED—Lady’s bicycle. Phone l 254. d o | WANTED—Work by week, day or hour. Phone 254. MISCELLANEOUS UONESOME—JOIN Ohio’s largest pation with remittance. J. E. Donald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. pairing. Anderson’s Music S8hoppe. Penton, Goldstein Building. | Quartz and placer location no- jtices at The Empire. g ESTEBETH GOES WITH BIG CARGO Marine News § PASSENGERS DEBARK HERE FROM NORAH [Vessel Calls at Juneau on | Way from Vancouver to Skagway [ A ® 0000 00 000 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND No steamer northbound. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle Nov. 2. at 9 p.m. Admiral Evans scheduled to sail from Seattle Nov. 3 at 10 a.m. Norco scheduled to sail from ‘Seattle Nov. 9 at 9 p.m. Alameda schedule dto sail from Seattle Nov. 10 at 9 a, m, SOUTHBOUNG SAILINGS Princess Norah due i nport at 5 o'clock tomorrow morning and sails two hours later. Alaska scheduled southbound November 8. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Saturday night at 6 p.m. for 8itka and ‘wayports. 1 Pacific leaves every Satur- e/ day at 10 am. for Peters- .‘;:1"1::1 ;i:te:tmed for upper Yukon burg, Kake and WAy ports. ®| 1,coming passengers for Juneau @0 o000 a8 B, mbered six. They were: Mrs. C. Willlamson, Mrs. K. A. Connors, Nels G. Nelson, E. F. Jessen, Lois Jessen, E. E. White- sel. Eleven persons were booked for LSkagway. and most of these are § bound for Atlin, Mayo, Carcross land other parts of the Upper Yu- | Xkcm. The through passengers were: ‘ Mrs. Livingston Wernecke, whose R Al ¥ husband is superintendent of the FlYSt Mat_e nnaerson IS I“|Tr(-zulwell-Yukon mining company and His Place Taken {wife of an aviator who makes his |base at Carcross, and their in- With a capacity cargo and ninelof a clergyman; Mrs. W. I. Little, passengers, the motorship Este-|Mrs. Phoebe Epton, Mrs. E. Capell, |at Mayo; Mrs. D. A. McMillan, by Claire Krough |fant son; Mrs. A. W. Metcalf, wife beth, Capi. Zdward Bach and \miss E. S. Seale, Walter L. Shee- Stormy weather was buffeted by ithe steamship Princess Norah on ymost of her voyage north from | Vancouver, B. C. She called at Juneau last night on her way to ‘Skagway. She is scheduled to be back here early tomorrow on her {return trip south. | The vessel carries a cargo of | 130 tons, part of which is com- prised of coal and nearly all of e 0000000000000 g000000000000 00 | Purser Robert Coughlin, departed jer a mining engineer; A. G. Cum- last Saturday evening on her reg-.mings J. Campbell. ular weekly voyage to Sitka and| capt. W. Q. Palmer is skipper, way ports. First Mate E. C. Ander- anq p, A, Hole, purser, of the son is lying in this trip with & princess Norah. severe cold, his place on the boat — e is being taken by Claire Krough. |, 4 Cargo consisted of parcels of| | TIDES TOMORROW | general freight for the varlous|e. - . ports of call. Outgoing passengers were: Low tide 0:19 a. m.,, 2.1 feet For Funter—Harold ~Tipton. High tide 7:00 a. m, 124 feet For Tenakee—J. Smith, Mrs. J.| Low tide 12:50 a. m.,, 6.8 feet Smith, Robert Farrell, John Wil-| High tide 6:32 p. m, 133 feet son, T. Rullo. - S i e " ° E:";)r Hirst Chichagof— Stephen HALIBUT PRICES ! e |® L] For Sitka—William Hawkins and | Thomas Tilson. — .- VICTORIA REACHES . SEATTLE FROM NOME From Nome, the steamship Vic- —_— toria, on her last Bering Sea voy-| PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., Nov. 2. age, arrived in Seattle yesterday,| —Forty thousand pounds of hali- according to advices received to-!but, all from Canadian boats, sold SEATTLE, Nov. 2—Eight vessels |arrived here last Saturday with 115,000 pounds of halibut. The fish |was sold for 11 and 16 cents a pound. House here. i cents a pound. E. R. Stivers, deputy United| States Customs Collector at Nome, | was a passenger on the vessel. He! will leave Seattle tomorrow on the: steamship Admiral Evans for Ju-| FERRY TIME CARD Leaves Juneau for Douglas and reau. During the winter, he will' Thane be attached to Customs headquart-; 6:15a.m., 6:15p.m. €rs in this city. 7:10a.m. $7:30p.m. - : 9:15a.m.t 9:40p.m. R A S 12:30p.m.t 11:15p.m. Juneau Public Library e Dmet 1 :30p.m.t $1:00a.m. Free Reading Room }| ‘*4:00pm. | Leaves Douglas for Juneau City Hall, Second Floor ! 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m, Main Street and Fourth | 8:30a.m. 17:45p.m. 9:30a.m.t 9:55p.m. RAntieg it O 1 12:45pmt 11:30pm. Sa m to10 p m Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.~T7:00 to 8:30 12:15p.m. 1:15a.m. t—Freight will be accepted. t{—Saturdays only. Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company o D Shep 1 ’ LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency | FRONT STREET {| ORDWAY'S | {| PORTRAIT STUDIO | : i Portraits of Distinction [ X l RINGLETTE and NAIVETTE | HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP } m:‘:mlfl SPIRAL { - l Besauty Specialists .' OTEL . gYNDA Al - o Ny o ! ELIVATOR SERVION Harr?? U8 "’:::‘ s | ¥ . | Lower Pront Street day by the United States Customs here last Saturday for 5 to 9.6‘ DIRTY WEATHER, CANNED SALMON DELAY ALAMEDA 29 Passenger to Ju- neau, Takes 47 Dirty weather delayed the de- parture of the steamship Alameda from Cordova Thursday and made her heave to in tne Gulf of Alaska 12 few hours Friday night. Her be- lated arrival in Juneau was caused principally, however, by the loading of canned saimon at ports to the | Westward. | 'Scheduled to reach here at 4 a m. Sunday morning, the vessel, Capt. Charles A. Glasscock and Purser Joseph L. Large, bound from (Seward to Seattle, docked in thi city just 24 hours later. ‘‘cok Aboard Fish On arrival here, the Alameda moored at the Juneau Cold Storage Company's wharf, where she re- ceived a shipment of fish. She moved to the Municipal dock, at which she remained a few chiefly for the purpose of taking on baggage of passengers that had been booked here for the South. Mining Company’s wharf, at which sh_ eloaded gold ore concentrates and from which she departed for Beattle at 9 a. m. ‘The vessel brought 29 passengers and took away 47. Incoming passengers who dis- embarked at this port were: Mr. and Mrs. E. Erickson, Mr. and'Mrs. G. R. Gelletly, Lt. and |Mrs, A. S. Brackenridge, Miss C. Peterson, Mrs. J. G. Benson, May ‘Chovin, Dorothy Wells, Sam Baker J. H. Clausen, J. F. Chamberlain, |H. C. Dunlop, J. Gindrina, Carl F. Hahn, M. G. Kelly, J. Lempinen, J. Lund, J. J. Meherin, O. Momyes, V. B. McDade, Matt McGlade, J. Vessel Bound South Brings hours | |She drifted to the Alaska Juneau | |Mrs, J. R. Noyes, Mrs. J. Aden, | | R. McDonald, O. Olson, H. A. B.| Sneve, R. H. Stock. | Persons Booked at Juneau Persons who booked passage here for ports to the South were: For Petersburg—Andrew Olson. For Wrangell—Mrs. Sam Gaza- loff, Mrs. E. Estes. | For Ketchikan—Mrs. F. Fell,| Catherine Shields, Dorothy Nunan, Dorothy Dickinson, D. M. Bothwell, | Chet Johnson. For Seattle—Mr. and Mrs. T. J Jewett, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Nowell, | Mrs. John Laurie, Mrs. W. O. Carl- | son, Mrs. R. J. Sommers, Mrs. J. M. Davis, Cedric M. Davis, W. D.| Gross, Zalmain Gross, Charles Ot- | terson, H. M. Porter, G. W. Folta, | Robert C. Wakelin, R. R. Herman, | |'S. Wallstedt, ‘W. M. Bayers, A ander D. Berandin, Frank Mere |dith, Edward Cunningham, C. R | Crawford, John Carlson, Hugo A. Bergstrom, Harry Johnson, John | Pollock, William Keen, C. J. Sim- | mons, Alfred Willard, W. J. Mond- | lock, Henry Henry, C. V. Brown,| | Larry Jensen, Gust Juhnson, Rich- | ard Temeraeff, H. Price. |Barter Betters Price for Farmer’s Wheat LOCKNEY, Tex, Nov. 2—Here | is one local farmer’s answer to the question, “What are you going to use for money?” Guy Ramsay had an over-supply of wheat, but needed a good many other things. First, he traded wheat for a calf to be fattened and butchered for home consumption, and on the way | home exchanged some more wheat for barley, to fatten the calf. He later made a similar exchange for alfalfa. On the same day Ramsey u-adez.ll wheat for coal on a pound for pound basis, realizing 33 1-3 cents a bushel for wheat that was worth only 21 cents on the market. — - — ‘A new hat rack extends upward from a closet shelf to which it is clamped by a coiled wire base. —_—————— Floods have caused food shortages in parts of Burma. Edison They cost no more will deliver 1 Lamps | ABSOLUTELY THE STANDARD OF COMPARISON Our telephone number is Juneau 6 and we { Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA Mazda than the other kind any quantity ———. -as today “SURPLUS OF | =80 tomorrow IF YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU *MUST UTILIZE THE ——————————————————————————— THE CREATING OF AN “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING AND BUILDING A SUBSTANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK . First National Banl; TODAY” IN Harlan H. Gubser, Walter B. ng.f» FINEST STEAMERS SAILING SCHEDULE SPECIAL REDUCED FARES: JUNEAU TO SEATTLE AND RETURN Upper Deck $73.50 Saloon Deck $65.50 Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer— Seattle Northbound Southbound ALASKA .. Oct. 27 Oct. 30 Nov. 8 ALAMEDA -.Nov. 10 Nov. 13 Nov. 22 REGULAR PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wran- gell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines (Chilkoot Bar- racks), Skagway, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. All sailings subject to change without notice. INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 d Ala_ska Steamshin Co. e Leave Arrive Southbound Low nowD Seattle Junesu Lv. Juneau TRIP PARES Evans.....*Nov. 3 Nov. 6 Nov.17 BEATTLE Evans.. Nov. 24 Nov. 27 Dec. 8 TO Ports of Call: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Sitka, *Yakutat, CALIFORNIA Cordova, Seward, Seldovia, Kodiak. Intormation ana tickets furnishe on Seattle-Cafifornia service. California-New York via Panam Canal and return. Round the world, Trans-Atlantie Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one WAy wat- er, return by rail), $350.00. B. H HOWARD, Agents. SERVING ALASKANS Sailing from Seattle every Monday Night 9:00 P.M. for Ketcmll:.y o hh:f burg, Douglas and Juneau. Leave Arrive Southbound Beattle Juneau Lv.Juneau Nov. 2 Nov. 6 Nov. 6 Nov. 9 Nov.14 Nov.14 M/S Nortnland M/S Norco Schedule subject to change without notice J.B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER Ticket Agent Freight Agent Phone 79 Phone 114 ~ ; { MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” E (Davis Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY SATURDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION GOMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Saturday 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 ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. i TAXI SERVICE 7 DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Booth IS YOUR HOME READY FOR WINTER? If you are contemplating -any building or alterations, now is the time to do it. We'll be more than glad to sell you the LUM- BER, CEMENT, CEDAR SHINGLES, MILLWORK. USE ALASKA LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE 358 QUALITY and SERVICE WINTER DR[V?I.NC COMFORT GUARANTEED Let Us Overhaul Your Car JUNEAU MOTORS CO. FOOT OF MAIN STREET

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