The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 12, 1932, Page 6

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I'D WEAR MY HON. PUMPS, SIR. EVEN |F THEY DO PINCH ! POLLY AND HER PALS NONSENSE, SON! WHO'LL EVER NOTICE THAT I'VE GOT HAT 2 FOR SALE—Singe 'wing machine, in excellent condition, $14, Phone 1101, | FOR SALE — Buick sedan $100. Good condition.! McCaul Motors. | FOR SALE—5-room ‘house.’ Furn. ished with —modern oil burner, hot water heat, large basement. West - 8th St. Cash. or terms. George Bros. FOR 'SALE most new, Main Street. Wardrobz trunk, al- $25.00. Inguire at 210 r coat. Miss A. - Ol Gastineau Hotel. FOR SAL Hamilton, EXCEPTIONAL bargalns in used, cars now. Good selection. Con- nors Motor Co. CALL Service Transfer Phone 528 for forest wood, any lengths. STAMPS, albums, packeis—ior be- ginners and advanced collectors. Famous Poole looseleaf U. 8. al-|_ pum; International Junior, “Mod- ern,” Approvals man, 11 MacKinnon Apts LOs Phone AND FO leather keycase con- John H. New-| WHERE TH’ HECK IS MY SILK 1 Marine News : NORGO CARRIES : BIG CARGO AND ® 0 00 00000000 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND ® Norco in pert and sails south e ® at 6 o'clock ten ® Admiral Rogers ® armrive at 10 o' m-"hu ® Should have 4 days' mail STEAMHEATED sleeping room; bath. Mrs. Steinbeck, 3d and Harris. FOR RENT — 4-room furnished house. Phone 187 after 6 p.m. FUH'\IASHED heflt apt PhnneS'?Ol COMFORTABLY furnished heated © room; private home. Phone 330 FURNISHED %team hented apart- ment. Inquire at Nugget Shop. SINGLE apartment. McKinnon Apts. | MODERN omce< nrrmw"” for your | requirements, in Goldstein Build- ing. See Geo. Baum or C. L. Anderson, Suite 401-3. apartment, with bath. Phone 3404. i w AN"‘ED é WAN 0 hungry men at 418] Franklin Street. WANTED—Work of any kind by| day or hour, by good, handy man. Phone 436, YOUNG MAN wants work of any kind; restaurant job preferred. Address C-2310 Empire. | COLORED woman wants gay work " Black 4 eral keys. Finder please 04. fl t‘bncca crop flbout 30 per c»x‘ ~Inz!,:fl’ than in 1831 is fore- cast for ICentucky in 1832. The lake to be formed by the Honver Tsm in the Colorado Rive il be the largest artificial body of water 1n the world. 3 | Juneau Beauty Shopp SYLVIA BRUMBERQ 1 | Specializing in Permanent and | 1 Finger Waves—Facials | Telephone 384 | . or housework of any kind. Phone | 802, WANTED—A J men to room and + board. Phone 436. CLEANING, sewing, cooking, nurs- ing, catering. Ora Turner. Phone 436. COLORED woman wants day work or laundry to take home. Special family rate. Phone 576, MISCELLANEOUS mRN )"our old gold into value, Cash or trade at the Nugget 8hop. — PIANOS, Radios, sewing Machines, g Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- HOTEL pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. PR e 1 73 ZYNDA BOARD and room, ¢r =oard only, ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. DON'T BE TOO + LIBERAL the coal if 1t comes frond ofir . For our coal goes farther and a more ‘I your coal bir is running have us send you & new supaly to prove our statement. Our flr Tvice is always the best e specialize in Feed. Nith Blyes heat. low, even and satistying 3 East St. and Phone 2201. CALL 22 for a YELLOW Marshall House, Gastineau Ave. CAB 7L C. SMITH ana CORONA I TYPEWRITERS J. B. Burford & Co. | “Our doorstep worn by satistied 1 customers” IE‘EI DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS Telephone 49v RUTH HAYES -——e CARL JACOBSON JEWELER | WATBCH REPAIRING il i SEWARD STREET Opposite Goldstein Building Bergmann Hotel Dining Room || First Class Home Cooking Mrs. Hilja Johnson, Mgr. The Florence Sho, | Permanent Waving a 8| Prop. 5 PASSENGERS ©® Zapora scheduled to arrive e the evening of Nov. 16 or o o ey morning Nov. 1. e \Motorship Wlll Sail at 6 SCHEDULED SAILINGS o Northland scheduled to sail o | This Evening on Re- . turn to Seattle from Seattle Nov. 14 at 9 e. L p. m. ® Princess Norah scheduled to e sail from Vancouver Nov. ® 14 at 9 p. m. . o Alaska scheduled to sail from e e Seattie Nov. 15 at 9 a. m. e o SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS o @ Northwestern scheduled south- e Bringing a large cargo and five| passengers, the motorship Norco, Capt. A. Eckholm and Purser H. Knight, arrived in Juneau from Seattle at noon today. She moored first at the Femmer Wharf. She o bound Nov. 15. ® | shifted to the Juneau Cold Storage | o Admiral Evans scheduled e |Company's dock this afternoon to| ® southbound Nov. 18. ® |load fish for Puget Sound dis- . LOCAL SAILINGS ® | charge. Sails at 6 Tonight { She will sail on her return voyage south at 6 this evening. Much of the vessel's freight con- sisted of perishable food commodi- | ties. They were quickly put ashore and given rapid transfer to stores for the Saturday trade. Incoming Passengers | Incoming passengers were: ® | From Seattle—Dorothy Wells, H.| }R\chard‘! T. B. Setzer. From Ketchikan—Al Riedy. From Petersburg—John Vatney. —— . 1S SENTENCED | day night at 6 p. m., for e Sitka and way ports. o ® Pacific leaves every Thursday e e at 10 a. m, for Petersburg, ® Kake and way ports. . TIDES TOMORROW High tide 0:50 a. m., 14.7 feet Low fiide 6:31 a. m., 3.7 feet | High tide 12:37 p. m,, 16.8 feet 02 p, Low tide 7:02 p. m, -1.2 feet TIDES MONDAY i High tide 1:25 a. m,, 145 feet STOCKHOLM, Sweden; Nov, 12. LAST HAL[BUTER :-Sven Huldt, one of the Kreuger REACHES SE A'ITLE & Toll directors, has been sentenc- d to twelve months of hard lnborx SEATTLE, Nov 12—The Tiene, xar the part in the Kreuger de- orivad day with 38,000 pounds bacle, and ordered to pay 237~ of halibut and sold for 6% and|000,000 francs, equivalent to $18,- 5 cents a pound. 1480,000, to the Continental Invest- All halibut schooners are now mMment Company. in port. Huldt acted 'as director of a pupp:)t company, the Nederfausche | Bank Veer Scandinavenschen Han-: DELEGATE ANNOUNCES |del He was sald to have con-| NAVAL' ALTERNATES| fcs5ed_that he issuca faise " cer- |hfica,tes of -deposit; stating ‘that Announcement was ‘made today {French government bonds worth by James Wickersham, Delégate to'ififlfgoNfi,mmefiw Congress, of his sélections as alm--lcw,‘m of - the O i1 : nates to take examinations for en-| G Wiyents trance as midshipman to the Unit- rmem Company. ed States Naval Academy at An- o i 10 e LOTS OF DOINGS, ON ' OLD POMONA CAMPUS and Donald A.: Fowler of Nenana, second alternate. Selection of Harry Lundell o:» LOS AN'GEDES Cal, Nov, 12.— Douglas; principal, was announced'If Pomona college got credit for by the Delegate a few weeks ago. ‘an the thrilling plays which have |been made on its dootball field its O et e e | LUDWIC NELSON | ‘o, mar i e han o mam‘m i I But most of these dazzling grid- . m jiron performances alas are cellu- I m loid epics. The secret is, there _Iam but few plam trees on the Po- + {mona campus hence the moving nlmcture industry ‘van shoot itypi- |cal autumal ‘football scenes there. | Pomona foothallers are obligingly {blocked out Of the path While the {Red Granges, Bd Bénsons and the .\Four Horsemen @llop from goal ;:‘ 80al to maké last minute touch- lowns. Dorothx flm‘ Roff | | sometimes punts stiet on Atamni |field and are in front DA_NC]NG of crowds of 100000 on Bavard ' TELEPHONE 5451 ’Field in Los Angeles, '8 mere dis- tance of 35 miles. Al!hflldnhlu mfi'fit Street SCHUMACHER ; Plaster W allboard FOR BEAUTY, COMFORT, PERMANENCE AND ECONOMY, . . . Will not warp, expand, shrink, crack or buckle. Takes any kind of covering — paper,nzn kalsomine, The Cash Bazaar :Open Evenings Famoue Candies ’ 6 Thomas Hardware Co. |hold and the boat started to drjft pitched into the water free of the| |capsized skiff, swam ashore with-| ELECTRIC Low tide 7:02 a. m., 41 feet | 1 . High tide 12:57 p. m., 16.6 feet | To HARD LABDR e reached the beach. Hanson and Low tide 6 p. m., -11 feet I’ I SiLLY, UNK! GASBOAT 10T ZAPURA ISON BUT 3 INDIANS | WAY T JUNEAU REACH SHORE Mototship Has Two Pas- sengers Aboard for This Port The motorship 2apora sailed | from Seattle last Wednesday at ' midnight bound for Juneau ac- Driven on the rocky shore of cording to advices received by Foint Arden on the northerly end Agent Thomas A. Morgan. |of Admiralty Island Thursday even- craft is scheduled to reach here ing the gasboat Three Bishops is R}next Wednesday evening or early total wreck. Her company of next Thursday morhing. three Indians — Stanley ‘Sutton,| Two passengérs are aboard the William ianson and Harry Sum- Zapora for this port, O. J. Webber dum of Juneau—reached land in|and Sylvia Brumberg. safety. They were brought to this! - city yesterday by the powerboat . Pheasont, Capt. Bert Maycock. The Three Bishops left Juneau Monday afternoon for Twin Pomts,x where the occupants of the craf', planned to hunt deer. Repairs Encountered Strong Wind | f CAPITAL ELECTRIC | When off Point Arden at 6<><:lockI L Thursday evening, the little vessel| encountered a veritable gale. A/ defective coil in the engine put it! out of commission. An anchor was put over the side, but failed to | | Hunters After Night at! Point Arden Brought to Juneau KOLSTER RADIOS [ Electrioal Appliances, e rrbs rooos rapidly toward the rocky beach. The three men, hurriedly taking théir blankets and a loaf of bread, lowered the powerboat’s skiff. They got into it but it capsized when it reached the surf. Hanson and Sumdum, who were| GENERAL out delay, but Sutton was caught! under the upturned boat and had’ great diffiulty in getting from under’ it and in making his way to land. | Was Almost Exhausted J He was almost exhausted when; HEATING PADS {Sumdum had been able to bring | ‘the blankets and the loaf of bread‘ ashore. | With clothing soaked, the men’s matches were wet, and three hours ‘elapsed before a fire could be start-| ‘ed.’ The thre: hunters spent Thurs- dey night drying their wearing ap-, parel. Friday morning, they Ileft their fire to go to the edge of the; water in the hope of salvaging ef- fects from the wrecked Three| Bishops. ¢ Blankets Were Barned They got two cans of pork and beans, a can of milk and some cof- | fee. When they returned to their fire they found it had started a. brush blaze that had burned their| ‘blankets, which they had been trying to dry. The men then walked to Doty Cove. They were sighted there hy thé Pheasant, which brought them to Juneau without further adven-| ‘tute. They suffered no physical lailment from their experience. ! The Three Bishops was built last| summer by Woodman and Berntsen' of ' Juneau. She was valued at $1,600. She was 30 feet long, 83’ feet wide and 34 feet deep. She| was equipped with a 6 horsepower[ engine $4 Guaranteed Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Junheau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 ———— | SPORT BRIEFS 4| —— { In the first time games of hhe, 1932 season Coach “Hunk” Ander-' son at Noire\ Dame employed 21| backfield men, Robert Holmes, triple threat/ “rainers estimate 17500 feet Edison Mézda Lamps tape, 85 gallons of alcohol 000 feet of gauze are used autumn by Kansas City School - football teams. The | W. E. NOWELL, Agent FINEST REDUCED ROUND TRIP 'FARES Juneau to Seattle and Return Lower deck, $65.50; upper deck, $73.50 Trkets on sale until Feb. 28; return portion limited to March 25, leaving Seame SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Reattle *N'WEST=RN ..IMov. 5 Nov. ¢ ALASKA .....Nov. 15 Nov. 18 *N'WESTERN ..Nov. 26 Nov. 29 vdE ALASKA LINE Due Juneau Due Juneau 7 Northbound Southbound }~ Nov. 15 Nov. 24 Dec. 6 Southeastern and Southwestern Route *Will connect af Seward with steamer Starr. PHONE 2 Rogers Rogers Buy Round - Reduced Rates. Juneau te Seattle and Return, $65.50— return limit March 25. TICKXET OFFICE: B. H. HOWARD, Agent Admiral SEATTLE SAN FRANCISCO NORTHBOUND LOS ANGELES SL:.Z:l JL“"’E attle 'uneau $AN DIEGO Rogers Nov. § Nov. 13 NEW YORK Rogers Nov. 23 Nov. 21 SOUTHBOUND Evans uine Dock M.S.“ZAPORA” Calling at Funter, Chichagof*, Hoouah, Tenakee, Port Alexander, Kia- wock, Craig, Ketechikan. *Calls first trip of month only. | WILLS NAVIGATION CO. Nov. 9 Nov. 17 Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Juneau Nov. 17 Round trip to Seattle, $50. Low auto rate, Phone 3 THOMAS A. MORGAN, Agent. Juneau Ferry & Naviga: tion Cqmpcny a i Kake, Port osoints. Phone 79 iay at ?o"unn:&. ‘Patersurg, M 1nd way .l.l.m-ao-.u-h CAHADIAUN] PACIFIC 70 'mpam"‘“‘“'-“wmm dnd SEATTLE From Juneiu PRINCESS NORAH Nov. 19 { Dec. 3,17, Jan. 1 Winter Excursion Rates Now in Effect—ROUND TRIP $65.50 Good Till March 25 Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent JUNEAU vmiu "GOOD EATS | Quwkservwe némm CAFE . Low Prices 114 Front St. NEVER CLOSES ' Phose 137 'Om:e Tried, Always Patronized.

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