The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 15, 1932, Page 6

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PARK PLl‘ BARNEY GOOGLE AND S G YAH.. THAT SULLY'S A BIG hidlog FAKE _... B J0 HE COULON'T RuB OUT HIS OwWN HANDWRITIN'.. HoUS! AW . DON'T PAY NO ATTENTION TO THAT GUY... MOVED INTO THE NEIGHBORHOOD --. HE LIVES IN THAT \ CORNER HE 3 L N THE MIDDLE oF THE NIGHT FOR SALE—In Douglas, 2 lots on | \L\CKI"I\'ON Apmtments— ouble south side Fourth St., between n H and single apartments available oo Ry Fhon: Doug-‘ at reduced rates for permanent las 18. a i guests January 1. TE° e e s 16T ToR nERy double, 1 single s g 5 N ceping apartments; above FOR SALE — China closet; small ~Capital Electric. - ol e SLUfci?hf?EI?_z_v SEAVIEW furnished apartments. Two modern ones available; pri- FOR QUICK bALE — Brass bed,' mattress, all double; p. D. M. Bothwell, Phone 122. EGR RENT—Furnished apartment; vate bath, electric range, etc. FOR SALE—Victor piano, walnut 3-rooms; kitchenette and bath; [ excellent condition; very| Fhone 227. T reasonable. Brice Howard, Phone pop RENT—Completely furnished i apartment 3-rooms, bath, steam heat. Apply Nugget Shop. A SMITH - CORONA L) »w colored models now| FOR RENT — 3:x'oommf\;'1'1rished‘ Easy terms. Frze| gapartment. CIiff Apts. tr J. B. Burford & Co. i LA = FOR REN1—v-room house, com-; MORRIS'S hemlock wood.| pletely turnished. Phone 183. | S RALE N rner| FURNISHED 3-room, 5-room apart- radio, $45. 3 € rner con-| ments, elecuic range. Phone 2004. B. Burford FOR RENT— Complelexy “furnished living room, Knight Apts kitchen- Phone ment, bath. apa tte, 517 FOR SALE—E-flat alto saxophone; I b-flat soprano saxophone. J. B i | | | Burford & Co. | | FOR SALE — rot house, -room partly furnished, with bath. Ba: ~‘ MAGAZINE renew \15 Munlu Jar- gain. Phone 114. man, Phone 488. FOR SALE — cacrifice; 7-100m) WANTED_PIANO; excellent care futnished house; kitchenette bath; 18x26 double garage; 10x 26 drying shed; 40x90 lot, =all taken in Phone 163. exchange for storage. ° ° i'® ° . ® 0 0 0 0 00 00 00 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Northland scheduled to arrive 4 o'clock tomorrow after- noon. ® Admiral Watson scheduled to arrive Sunday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS © Northwestern scheduled to sail from Seattle Dec. 17 at 9 e a m © Norco scheduled to sail from ® Seattle Dec. 19 at 9 p. m. e SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS @ Admiral Evans scheduled to e arrive at 6:30 o'clock tonight e southbound. e Alaska is scheduled to arrive e at 8 o'clock tonight south- e bound. e Princess Norah due in port at 3 o'clock tomorrow after- noon and sails south at midnight. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thurs- day night at 6 p. m., for e Sitka and way ports. ® Pacific leaves every Thursday e at 10 a. m, for Petersburg, ® Kake and way ports. BOTTLE COMES ACROSS OCEAN Currents of il Carry,| it Distance of 4,- 500 Miles ¥ you nave prumping, eicctric wlr ing, snow shoveled, windows or woodwork cleaned, washing, iron- ing, sewing done, dishes washed, children cared for by the hour, catering, quilting, call 436. We'll send someone quickly. fenced; fire insurance paid 2 Years advance; apply Mrs. H. C. Gorham, 9th Street at Ball Park; P. O. Box 952. IT is golng fa FOR SALE — Cut nemiock and| spruce wood, $7.50 a cord. Phone QL y “ 7} ’ MISCELLANEOQUS TU7RN your old golu 0 value. Cash or trade at Nugget Shop. PTIANOS, Radios, EXCEPTIONAL bargams In used cars now. Good selection. Con- nors Motor Co. Sewing Machines, CALL Service Transter Phone 528 for forest wood, any lengths. FOREST WOOD at shed, $4.00 SEATTLE, Dec. 15—The cur- rents of the North Pacific brought a bottle from the coast of Japan to Vancouver Island,a distance of 4500 miles. The trip took two years and ten days. The bottle belongs to the United States Hydographic Office was thrown into the ocean. Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun-| Charles Woolings and sent to ing. Radio and phonograph re-| Washington. pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. —————-—— — | ° L BOARD and room, or board only, Marshall House, 6th and Frank- lin. Phone 3902. cord; delivered, $6.50. Cash. Ches- ter Barnesson. FOR SALE— g electric range; large size suitable for restaurant or boarding house, also slicer and grinder at sacrifice prics. LOST AND FOUND LOST—Gold stick pin heart shap- ed ivory mount striped brown; reward. Apply Empire C-2414. = e | T 7)-‘;17(1 coupe! cheap. Phone SALE—Model A-1 condition; 3441, JUNEAU SAMPIE | SHOP ‘ | McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY The Little Store with the BIG VALUES 1 JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1861 Day Phone 12 e L R R o - Saloum’s Seward Street, mear Second | . " | | | L C. i%]r'l‘fl and ;:gmmu j DON'T BE TOO B. B LIBERAL | A te| if 1t comes from our customers” | coal goes farther and | o . satistying TIDES TOMORROW High tide 3:08 a. m., 139 feet Low tide 8:42 a. m, 53 feet High tide 2:30 p. m, 15.7 feet Low tide 9:17 p. m., -03 feet Hoover Suggested as President of Harvard *— WASHINGTON, Dec. 1»—Presi- dent Hoover's name was advanced today for the presidency of Har- vard. ‘His name was suggested by Ches- ter D. Pagley of Peekskill, N. Y., in a letter to Henry L. Shattuck, treasurer at Harvard on the basis that Hoover is an honerary alum- nus of the institution. SERIES 222 THE NEW CARL JACOBSON JEWELER WATCH REPAIRING SEWARD STREET Opposite Goldstein Building Bergmann Hotel R Dmu.li oom Mrs. Hilja Johnson, Mgr. Hupmobile et IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor B e — IN TWO YEARS and’ gives the date and place where it The bottle was picked up on! the West Coast of the island by| e Marme News CAPT. WILLIAM JENSEN PASSES AWAY, SEATTLE Steamship Company on Last Voyage SEATTLE, Dec. 15—Capt. Will- iam Jensen, aged 72 years, veteran Alaska Steamship Company skip- per, He retired four years ago, due to illness, and was a painter of clip- per ship canvasses, achieving wide recognition for | of sea life. Capt. Jensen is survived by his widow and a brother, both in Se- attle, and three sisters in Norway. On Coast in 1895 It was in 1895 that Capt. Jensen landed in San Francisco, a com- paratively forlorn, unknown Nor- weglan seaman from the decks of a sailing ship. He decided to stay on the Pacific Coast, and shortly afterwards came to Seattle. 1901, after he had acquirsd a navi- gator’s license, he joined the deck officers mess of one of the units of one of the predecessors of the present Alaska Steamship Com- pany, and remained in the service until four years ago. In the ca- pacity of pilot and later master, ; Capt. “Bill” Jensen commanded ev- ery unit of the Alaska Steamship ) Company’s fleet, but principally Ithe steamers Northwestern and | Alaska. | He enjoyed the utmost popular-| ity among the patrons of this serv- Veteran Sk@r of Alaska . died yesterday evening here.! authentic pictures In s THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. 15, 1932. By HOPE WE AIN'T DlSTUQGlM Sm_\_v S LooKin' For HIS STICKPIN --- SIX' I]AYS MAIL, SIX PASSENGERS COME ON NORAH \cssel Wnl Be in Juneau! Tomorrow on Return to Vancouver With 370 sacks of mail a gers for Juneau, the ip Princess Norah, Cag Imer six B. C. this forenoon. She iyed only half an hour, and then roceeded to Skagway. She will back in Juneau at 3 o'clock to- row afternoon, and will sail on return voyage south at mid-/ ght tomorrow night. First Mail in Six Days The Norah's mail is the first to be received here from the south 1 six days. The passengers for Juneau were jeut. D. M. Morrison of the d States Coast Guard cutter apoosa, and Mrs. Morrison: C. Whipple, Gus G. Brown,| W. Mathewson and J. Simpson. Threugh List Is Light The through passenger list way is light. The ves scharge at the Lynn Canal Much of the freight of Christmas which will b& taken to Upper Yu- kon River destinations by train and automobile stage. GHAMP STEER IS PRODUGED, TEXAS RANGH nij Un for I eam- |y con- | commodities, | BILLE DE BECK LEGISLATION WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—Legis- lation to authorize veterans to seli their bonus certificates, pro- |viding the buyer pays off the ‘lo.m» advanced by the Govern- |ment, is proposed in the House by | Representative Bachmann who said the measure will give the veterans | immediate benefit. The sale will o stop agitation for cash pay- If certificates are sold on |the plan suggested more than one billion and one half dollars will te returned to the.Federal Treas-| ury. “Texas Special” right back int: the cattle business to help rais even better cattle.” In addition to the $675 prize imoney won on “Texas Special” the |Largent farm received $1500 for the animal at auction. It was sold slaughter for $1.25 a pound, thfl price being five cents higher| ‘lthan the prize steer brought a year ago. Herefords Come Back The comeback of Herefords to ithe grand and reserve steer cham- pionships of this, bunal of all meatdom, after a three year lapse celebrated the fif-| | tieth anniversary year of the gL Cargo‘foundmv of the American Here-| ford Breeders' association. Adding to the jubilation of Willi Joe was the fact that this is th first time Texas, although a pre- |mier fat cattle raising state, has ‘" tured the grand prize in this show, although the Largent Here- fords have won three steer grand | championships at the Royal shows in Kansas City. Plenty Of Room The C. M. Largent farm at Mer- | kel, Texas, provides plenty of room | on its ZADO acres for the families | ©f C. M. Largent, Sr., most of his time now to his bank- | ing business, and of William J. and “C. M, Jr.” ice, for he was most genial, 2 com- Sells for $| 25 a Pound“ Much of the vast acreage is in petent navigator, and always look- ing out for the interests of the passengers and his employers. “Bill” ,Jensen though he attributed star, ncver experienced a disaster at sea. PACIFIC TAKES DEPARTURE i | Bound for Port Alexander and !way ports, | departed this forenoon from Ju- {neau. She carried almost a ca-| ] pacity cargo, which contained a| llnrge quantity of Christmas goods. BALD? CONSULT NU-LIFE METHOD Valentine Building Room 6 | L ¥ | 1 st | simply to being born under a lucky | the motorship Pacific| Hereford Jubilee Is Success CHICAGO, Dec. 15—A speak- ling Texas farm housing its third | generation of Hereford cattle breed- | €rs has done its share to make the | Hereford’s “jubilee year” a success. And so far as W. J. “Willie Joe” Largent, shower of champion steer at the 33rd annual international livestock show here, s concerned, the year is a success in more ways than one. “Crops are good, we have plenty | to eat—food we. raised ourselves— |we have all the automobiles we Ireed and all the women in the | | family have fur coats. So we are! gomg to put the money we won on the grand; {cotton and maize, while the blue- blooded cattle are fed on rolled oats, rolled barley, ground -corn and cane molasses. There are 80 | head in the Largent fullblood herd. This year's appearance at the In- ternational was the Largent farm’s fourth in a score of years. Tts en- tries had taken their share of sec- ndary ribbons in those previous appearances but the supreme hon- or kept just out of reach until this year. . i | WE HAVE IT at the Right Prico | Harris Hardware Co. i Lower Front Street | FOR NEXT CHRISTMAS BEWARE? ~ Cold "weather will soon be here. Let us protect your car against freezing and prepare it for winter, JUST TELEPHONE We will call for, and return your car at mo extra cost. Service Rendered by Experts CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. for Christmas next “Mh mean a | KOLSTE KOLSTER %BIOS | CAPITAL ELECTRIC 1 " CARBAGE HAULED | Reasonable Monthly Rates 0. DAVIS 584 'y =——open an a Our Services to You regularly —apd make next "THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS . THE GASTINEAU mmaqmywwuht CHRISTMAS MERRIER —by mrtlng NOW to accumurate the funds you will need! You can do it easily duflng the com- ing twelve month weekly deposits J an Interest Bearing bank will provide m. For instance, QIIY $1.00 in cr.nunt ot this ore than $50.00 year. And larger lorger ‘fund. Start ceount at this bank Begin and End at the T0 AID VETS - the final high | American | who devotes | STEAMERS s D\ REDUCED ROUND TRIP FARES Juneau to Seattle and Return Lower deck, $65.50; upper deck, $73.50 ' Trckets on sale until Feb. 28; return portion limited to March 25, leaving Seattle SAILING SCHEDULE eave Due Juneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Dec. 9 Dec. 16 Dec. 20 Dec. 28 Jan. 3 Jan. 11 Jan. 7T Jan. 10 Jan. 18 ..Jan. 21 Jan. 24 Feb. 1 Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines,” Skagway, Cor- dova, Valdez and Seward. North- bound and southbound. *Also calls Latouche north and southbound. Southeastern and Southwestern Route (HE ALASKA LINE W. E. NOWELL, Agent Steamer *ALASKA .. N'WESTERN *ALASKA N'WESTERN *"ALASKA .. Port of Call: ..Dec. 17 Dec. 31 PHONE 2 SEATTLE NORTHBOUND SAN FRANCISCO Leave Leave LOS ANGELES Seattle Juneau *Watson ..Dec. 14 Dec. 18 SAN DIEGO Evans ...Dec. 20 Dec. 24 NEW YORK iEvans ...Jan. 14 Jan. 18 SOUTHBOUND Leave Juneau 1 Evans Dec. 13 “Watson . ....Dec. 21 Evans ... . Jan. 3 *Calls at Haines, Skagway and BSitka. tCalls at Sitka north and south bound. JACK KSARNEY Agent Admiral Line Dock PHONE 4 | | i D. B. FEMMER| Frt. Agt. Ph. 114! J. B. BURFORD & CO. Ticket Agent Phone 79 | " Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Juneas M. S-“Z—APORA” Dec. 14 Dec. 21 Dec. 22 Calling at Funter, Chichagof®, Hoonan, ‘Tenakee, Port Alexander, Kla~ wock, Craig, Ketchikan. *Calls first trip of month only. Round trip to Seattle, $50. Low auto rate. WILLS NAVIGATION CO. Phone 3 THOMAS A. MORGAN, Agent SAILING - - &% TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, dnd SEATTLE Leaves Douglas for Juneas From' Juneau 6:30a.m. PRINCESS NORAH 8:30a.m. | 9:30a.m.1 December 17 | 12:45pm.t January 1, 19 :513-‘“-, T | February 2, 16 Jyistpae. e -ROUND TRIP $6650 it Good Till March 25 1= t wili be g x,-—*;‘hm onlym Tickets, reservations and full particulars from Junean Ferry & Naviga- V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent JUNEAU . tion Company ] iy g : M. S. “PACIFIC” Yteaves City Dock iay at 10 am. for v ‘“&M Alexander and 9 3. B. Burford & Co., Agints Phone 79 alentine e SEAPLANE MITKOF = FOR CHARIER to Anywhere Southeast Alaska Based at Juneau PHONE 194 5 V. HICKEY, Owner

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