The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 22, 1932, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1932. POLLY AND HER PALS s S'POSE MA WOULD MIND | F I ASKED SPIKE TO SUPPER? T'LL ASK HER, HONEY/ e. Call EXCEPTIONAL bargains in used cars now. Good selection. nors Motor Co. PUPS CI young. for sale. Cross between sapeakes and Husky; 5 weeks See Lee Rox. CALL Service Transfer Phone 528 for Mill and Forest wood, any lengths. A baby bed, sé;‘ 50; 10-gal. gran- | old trunks, 50c. e Du‘ Shop, 113 Main St.| | FOle RENT — P\lrmshed heflled . IH-(I b!)al‘ 5500.‘ n, Box 1104, Ju! H ts—for be- and a collectors. | Poole looseleaf U. S. ’\1-‘ International Junior,* Vlod- John H. New- Famo l,un man, 11 MacKinnon Apts Phonei 339. FOR SALE—For c'\s‘!l ch p 1929 Model Ford light delivery truck. 2206 Empire. ORDER modorn Chrilstmas cards, stationery, at Nugget Shop. At-| tractive pxlces LOS1 ’D FOUND FOUND—Wedding ring. Apply ot | Empire. AL NOTICE Notice f§ hereby given for James V. Davis, Administrator ef the es- tate of the partnership consisting of James V. Davis and H. C. Davis. deceased, will sell the property belonging to the estate consisting of the following: 1—Floating trap frame 6—5-ton cast iron anchors 24--400 1b. cast iron weights 8380—ft. of cable (The foregoing property being used in connection with the Bendal Floating Trap). 1 only cotton spiller for pile trap 40x160. The estate’s right to one permit to maintain a floating trap near Cape Bendal, which trap was op- erated under Territorial License No. 31-507. The estate’s right in a certain permit to operate and maintain a pile trap at Naked Island, which| frap was maintained under Terri- torial License No. 31-508. I The motor boat “ROEDDA,” and equipment. at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash at the front entrance to the Federal and Territorial Building, at Juneau, Al- aska, on Wednesday, October 26, 4032, at 2 o'clock P. M. of said Con- ¢ | WOMAR wants wark of any kind.| | FOR RENT—Furnished three-room house with bath. Inquire Mike POLLY WANTS TASK HER PAL FER MY STARS, SUSIET T THOUGHT ,Y0U waS ABOVE SECH SILIY suuspsrlTaONs 1 NUTHIN' DOIN'! HE'D MAKE THIRTEEN By CLIFF STERRETT SUPERSTITION, Marine News eeeevoecccccese Steamer Movements °| NORTHEOUND Yukon due Tuesday. . SCHEDULED SAILINGS ® Zapora scheduled to sail from Seattle October 22 at mid- night. Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle October 24 at 9§ p. m. Vagge, near Native School. ment. Ban Francisco Bakery. HO' for rent. ments. Inmnr; 7B hop rent—Ir-arity furn- modern house in Phone 202. FOR SALE or ished 5-room Seatter Tract. FURNISHED nouse, apts, house- keeping rooms. Channel Apts. Phone 436. \ room for gentleman. 115 W. 6th.| Phone_330. | |TOR RENT — Faniisned 3-room| | apartment, with bath. Phone 3404, F'URNISHED 3- room anartment 421 E. Tth St. Phone 3201. i W AN"‘LD Steady; will go where there are children. Telephone 396. 1\!/ANTED ~ Position as cook for | hospital or private home. Famous for world's delicacies. Box 2438, Juneau. MISCELLANEOUS 1 | | 1 OR RENT—Heated 5-room apart-|® Admiral Rogers scheduled to sail from Seattle October 26 at 10 a. m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Admiral Evans scheduled to arrive at 5:45 o'clock this afiternon and sails south at 8 o'clock tonight. Princess Norah due to arrive at 2 o'clock in the morning and sails south four hours later. Northland scheduled south sometime tomorrow morn- ing. Alaska scheduled southbound October 24. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thurs- day night at 6 p. m., for Sitka and way ports. Pacific leaves every Thursday at 10 a. m, for Petersburg, Kake and way ports. eevescosmncoe — .o Be Back Tomorrow on Way South With a large cargo and 17 pas- ® sengers for Juneau, the motmmp Northland, Capt. Leon: ® liams and Purser E. P Wchh ® |arrived here late yesterday a{ter« -inoon from Seattle. Se left last ® jevening for Sitka and will be back | e at this port tomorrow on her re-| .‘tum voyage to the Puget Saund o | metropolis. The vessers 1reignt was of gen- exal character. Tt included con- | siderable amounts of fresh fruits, | lgreen vegetables and flowers, both | cut and potted. Incoming Passengers Incoming passengers were: From Seattle — Mr. and Mrs. CGeorge Bebeau, James Bebeau, Mr: Monte Salisbury, Mrs. L. Pereles Miss Florence Deshon, Miss Evelyn M. Houston, Gus George, O. K. ‘Carr, Charles Oland, H. Asselm,| Arthur Watkins. From Southeast Alaska ports— | Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Brown, Miss Bertha Putman, O. B. Halvesen, |G. H. Bach. Nine Through Passcngers There were nine throy cengers aboard the vessed . . e . . . ° TIDES TOMORROW Low High Low High tide 0:58 a. m, tide 7:46 a. m., tide 1:33 p. m., tide 7:15 p. m., 3.0 17 70 125 TIDES tide 2:09 a. m., MONDAY 2.6 25~ Low des- 'DIESELS new economy creating big demand. Part pay after em- ployment plan makes it easy, more employed graduates more engines to learn on than all other schools combined. Writz or call for a new booklet and 50c per hour Spare Time Work plan, day, night school. Hemphill Diesel Engineering Schools, 503 Westlake North, Seattle, Washington. SPECIAL Xmas Scholarship offers, all magazines. Muriel Jarman. TURN your old- gold into value, Cash or trade at the Nugget Shop. PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe BOARD ana room, cr moard only, Marshall House, East St. and Gutimau Ave. Phune 2201. Wants All Sufferers . To Know of Sargon “Health Now Better Than in Thirty-five Years® *“1 don't belleve would have ever gotten rid of constipation 1if it had not been for Sargon Soft Mass Pills. I tell every sufferer 1) meet about them. and day. The administrator will offer said! trap equipment for sale \Lpumu and apart from the permits and| the boat; and will offer said per«{ mits for sale separately and separ-) ate and apart from the other prop- erty; and will offer said gas boat! for sale separate from the other personal property, except the per- sonal property belonging and used in connection with said gas boat; and will offer all of the property for sale as a whole; and will sell the same so that the estate will} Tealize the most. Notice is further given that the administrator has been allowed to/ bid and purchase said property, the same as any disinterested person. JAMES V. DAVIS, Administrator of the partnership i eonsisting of James V. Davis and ' pos! H. C. Davis, Deceased. { Fiest publication, Oct. 14, 1932, Last publication, Oct. 25, 1932 | NOTICE i From this day forward I will| not be responsible for any debts' ted by my wife, Mrs. Will-! iam Anderson, without my consent. #mmmzmxm My entire system was run-down. [ was ter- ribly weakened. my nerves were on edge and my liver was out of order. I suffered with constipation almost as far back as I can remember. I just can't say too much 1n praise of this wonderful new treatment.” —irs. Rechael M Sk, 4056 Green Strest, Deaver, Colo. For Sale by BUTLER, MAURO DRUG CO. BELIEVE IT OR NOT! | You can ride on the new 21-| passenger de luxe bus to Auk Lake, Auk Bay, Mendenhall Glacier and way points cheaper than yon can operate your own car. | RATES: From city terminus, Ju- | neau Drug Co., cormer to: 12th! Street, 10c; 1-mile post, 15¢; 2-mile | post, 20c; 4-mile post, 25c; S-mile post, 35¢c; 12-mile post, 50c. Ask about special monthly md spectal trip rates. DAXuY SCHEDULE Lv. Junean Lv. Auk Bay 9:30 a.m. 8:00 am. 3:30 pm. pm. 6:15 p.m. 5:00 p.m. CHANNEL BUS LINE | tined for Sitka. They were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Power, Mrs. J. R. Beckwdith, Mrs, Mich- ael Haruska, R. H. Stock, L O. High Low High tide 8:47 a. m,, tidé 2:27 p. m.,, tide 8:36 p. m., TALLAPOOSA DUE SUNDAY EVENING The Coast Guard Cutter Talla- poosa, on fish patrol, will return to headquarters at Juneau, arriving sometime tomorroy evening, ac- cording to radio advices received this afternoon by, Collector of Customs J. C. McBride. ————— JOINS TAXLESS TOWNS ATTICA, Ind.—Attica has joined the list of taxless towns. Although the corporation had a budget of $28591 for this year and $16,796 for next year, it is drawing on a waterworks surplus and gasoline and license taxes to dispense with a tax levy 129 55 132 C. Risner. ed passage at Juneau for Sitka. e e, — HALIBUT SEASON CLOSESTONIGHT; ‘With the halibut fishing season closing at 12 o'clock tonight, the five Juneau boats on the banks All of them are in Tcy Strait waters, They are the Addington, Capt. Arne Sehold; Louhelen, Capt. Knute Hildre; Tern, Capt. Andrew Rosnes; North Pole, Capt. I. An- Covers Area No. 2 No. 2, which includes United States and Canadian waters from Cape Fairweather in Alaska to Willapa | Harbor in Washington State. 10,000 Pounds of Salmon Ten thousand pounds of king salmon constituted fish receipts in Juneau today. Five thousand pounds’ were unloaded from the| ‘Hyperian Capt. Oscar Oberg, and 1,000 from Ida, the Second, Capt. John Sunderland. Both trips were from Icy Strait and were taken by the Juneau Cold Storage Com- pany. BREAD without BAKING IT YOURSELF! TRY IT TODAY! Ask Your Grocer For It ———— SA VE HALF WOOD CLEAN HEMLOCK 14 in., 16 in., 24 in. Single Load, $4.25 Double Load, $3.00 A discount of 50 cents per load is made for CASH LEAVE ORDERS WITH Teloplenss 92 or 95 CHESTER BARNEsson ummlhxau ha NEW JUNEAU BAKERY Henry Survy, Prop. Next to Juneau Drug Co. Your Grocer Has It : NORTHLAND HAS BIG CARGO AND 1T PASSENGERS yVessel Goes to Sitka and ¢ Berg, O. H. Brougher, F. Hansen, | ‘One person, Herb Coleman, book- | FIVE BOATS OUT are expected in port by morning.| derson; Fane, Capt. Ole Johanson. | The halibut closure covers Area 114 PASSENGERS ABOARD YUKON FOR THIS PORT iled for Alaska Dol this morning with 42 first and 10 steerage passengers. | Passengers aboard the Yukon ed for Juneau are: A. Mansfield, W. J. Lagus, B. Peter Sokinoff, Thomas Ru- Mrs. Rudolph, Miss Minnie ein, P. J. White, James Har- Mrs. Carl Weld-| man and baby, A. Hakonen, H. A.! Gibow, A Tom ALASKR COAST TOHAVE NEW Flashlights FLASHLIGHT } BATTERIES THERMOS BOTTLES Juneau Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY” Pest Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 | T o { - LIGHT TENDER nghlhome Craft to Be | Named Hemlock— Call for Bids j‘ WASHINGTON Oct. 22. — The Lighthouse Service has called for bids to be opened November 29 for he construction of a mew light- house tender to be named the | Hemlock, for service on the Alas- kan Coast, with headquarters at Ketc'mknn The new vessel is to replace me | tender ®ern. The Hemlock will be a twin screw craft, 175 feet long with engines developing 1,000 horse- { power. SEAS FINISHING DESTRUCTION OF STEAMER NEVADA (Seattle Times) | Storm-swept waters of the Pa- jcific will be the permanent grave of the thirty-four. men of the Portland freighter Nevada who lost their lives recently when the vessel was pounded to piece on the rocks of Amatignak Island on the West- ern Aleutians. This was the word brought lo Seattle by officers of the United States Coast Guard cutter Haida, which has arrived from Western Alaska. | Lieut. Comdr, Rae B. Hall of the Haida with a crew of ten |plck‘-d men made a trip in a surf !boat to within 200 feet of the | Nevada and along the shores of Old papers tor sale at Empire SPECIAL for ONE WEEK Faries Flexible Study Lamp Don’t strain your eyes doing home work. YOUR CHOICE in mahogany or green $1.75 | Amatignak Island. P Complete “We saw no signs of bodies of |the men lost in the wreck,” Lieutenant Commander Hall. “Al- though there was a terrible surf at the island, we made a search of much of the beach. It is prob- ably none of the bodies will be recovered. | | “We went within 200 feet of the | wreck. The heavy seas are finish- {ing the work of destruction. The bow of the Nevada is on the beach. | The amidship section is broadside' to the island. The stern has dlsn appeared. A few pieces of v(reckaze have been washed ashore and n‘ |iew Japanese squares, part of l;he | vessel's deckloa-d are floating .m‘ | the se: | The Haldn was nearly an entire day at the scene of the wreck‘ Heavy seas were running and white- | fringed combers were brenklnm completely ovér the amidship sec-| tion of the ill-fated freighter. ————— To clean an enamel stove wash | 1% well with warm water and soap | then wipe dry and polish with a soft cloth. l INSUR FIRE | @ MARINE Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 Edison Mazda Lamps CASUALTY Juneau Insurance A H. GAFFNEY, Mansige LDG. SURETY geney NE 258 ALASKA MEAT-CO. QUALITY AND sEnvxcE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Dalivefiu_—m :80, 2:30, ¢ JOHN GOLDSTEIN B FINEST S SAILING S Lower Deck $65.50 Leave Reattle ct. 15 Ketchikan, Juneau, C ! *Also calls at Latouc W. E. NOWELL, Agent Eeduced Round Trip Fares: and Return ..Oct. 22 .Oct. 29 ——q LARGEST CHEDULE Junean to Seattle Upper Deck $73.50 Return portion limited to March 25, leavihg Seatile Due Juneau Due Juneau | Northbound Southbound } Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 , Wrangell, Petersburg, ordova, Valdez and Seward, both directions. ‘he, both directions. For Information, Reservationists and ‘1ickets call THE ALASKA LINE PHONE 2 SEATTLE NEW YOR J. B. BURFORD & CO. Ticket Agent Phone 79 M. S. “ZAPORA™': ® Calling at Funter, Chichago:*, wock, Cralg, Ketchikan. Frt. Agt. 22 WILLS NAVIGATION CO. FERRY TIME CARD | Leaves Junean ror Douglas and Thane 6:15a.m, 7:10a.m. 9:15a.m.1 lf t ;' m.t *4:00pm. Leaves Douglas for Junews 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m. 8:30a.m. $7:45p.m. 9:30.m.¢ 9:56p.m. 13:45pm.t 11:30p.m. 2:15p.m. 12:15p.m. 3:45p.m.t 1:18a.m. 5:00pm. *—Thane. t—Fréight will be accepted $—Saturdays only. Junean Ferry & Naviga- | tion Compmy 8:15p.m. :30p.m. :40p.m, 11:15pm. t 11:00a.m. 12 Motorship “ESTEBETH” Thars- and Leaves Junesu day at 6 P. M. for Way Ports DAVE HOUSEL, Agend: Phone Single O - VEAN FRANCISCO ) Los ANGELES SAN DIEGO NORTHBOUND Leave Leave Seattle Juneau .9ct. 26 Oct. 36 Nov. 2 Nov. 6 Rogers Evans .. K SOUTHBOUND Rogers Evans .. 3 Buy Round - Trip Tickets af Reduced Rates. Juneau ta Seattle and Return, $65.50-+ return limit March 25. TICKET OFFICE: B. H. HOWARD, Agent Admirar zine Dock N PHONE 4 b, W) P D. B. FEMMER Ph. 114 Leave Seattle arnve Juneau LeAve- Jumeaq Oct. 30 Oct. 30 Hoornah Tenawwe, Port Alexander, Kla- *Calls first trip of month only. For Tickets and Information see Phone 3 THOMAS A. MORGAN, Agent Pc'm,‘c‘ TO VANCOU"%T“(’!M From Juneau PRINCESS NORAH Oct. 23, Nov. 1, 19 Dec. 3, 17, Jan. 1 ‘Tickets, reservations and full particulars from I'Jl-"m Agent JUNEAU Pacific Transportation Company M. S. “PACIFIC” ’muoxtowa far 8t .m. Rake, Port Who wasical led the FATHER o7z AUTOMOBILE GDSINLLI? DAIMLER of S has been given this for the construction of the first (u.wbm en- nu -unwhh.

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