The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 2, 1933, Page 6

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R DA woT ;' POOR SULLY... HE'S GETTIN' MOBBED ---- AN’ (SNiF - SNIF) IT'S MY FAULT --- SNIFY ... WHERE-ARE-THEY = '?s H?APPENED WHERE'D THEY GO 27 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 2, 1933 }-ov-o-ocoooo-u + Steamer Movements . ‘NORTHBOUND L ® Alaska scheduled to arrive o e tomorrow hut no report e| e from Ketchikan at noon to- ® e day. . . SCHEDULED SAILINGS hd — - e Zapora scheduled to sail from e KIMBALL gran no; apartment S ~|e BSeattle Jan, 4 at midnight. e size, new. John Rustgard. Phone| FOR RENT — Mrs. Baker's little| o Norco scheduled to sail from e | 309. apartment house in Casey Sha‘'-{e Seattle January 3 at 9 p. m. ® TR e ‘ubr;k Addmon Phn{\i isi i :Nm‘hwcmm s',(]:hedujed b‘; of tobacco and mahogany| COZY warm furnished apartments.| o :atllgfx:mmSeM ATy % finish, 8 ft. long, 5 ft. high. A| Lights, water, dishes and cook- ? & ot bargain. Cash or terms. George| ing utensils. Close in. Special § (o o P:"”hvzf:;zd:frd: Brothers, Phones 92-95. winter rates. One, two, three or ° J:n 4 & r:r: . o . BEE MORRIS for nighland forest ouorco™ Gpartments at SEA-, SouTHBOUND SANINGS wood, any length. T ,® Northland in port and sched- e — - uled to sall south at 4 e F‘f:e ?Al‘;ho(ggn‘;‘z’y camphorwood * oy " electric range. 3 and Gold. ® d";lWi‘ thif afffl;]“w"ved ¥ohe " o s L0 . | ® Admiral Evans schedul . L ol = PURNIEHED apmtment rox rent.|® arrive tomorrow but no re- e WILL SACRIFICE sixth interestin Inquire Bishop Apartments. le port received. ° 30 mineral claims, gold property a3 s LOCAL SAILINGS . bonded to Alaska Juneau Mining SHED apartment. Inquire|y peteroth leaves every Thurs- e Co. Several thousands spent, good at Nugget Shop. day night at 6 p. m., for @ program outlined. Box 648, Ju- er———mmmie ¥ Sitka and g &l nead MACKINNON Apartments—Double . and way ports. TR i ond single apartments available : P'::fllco 1;“’: e;/:rry Th“;:::gy EXCEPTIONAL bargams in used| @t Teduced rates for permanent| ] w0 ong way ports. s cars now. Good selection, Con-| Buests January 1. sesmonsosniess DoRk Aeor. Oo. . | FURNISHED 3-room, 5-room apart- FOREST WOOD ai s 54.00| ments, eleetric range. Phone 2004. '—Comp! e;ly rfamlshe:‘l apartment, Uving room, kitchen- ette, bath. Knight Apts. Phone cord; delivered, $6.50. Cash. Ches-| FOR ter Barnesson. | | Pave the Path to Frosperity With| 577 Printing! | WANTED Mu}lél‘ Jar- | MAGAZINE renewals; | man, Phone 488. McCAUL MOTOR | COMPANY || MISCELL/ \‘\I‘,OU\ TURN your old gnh_ 0 value. Cash or trade at Nugget Shop. BALD? ! l PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, ' CONSULT NU-LIFE METHOD | | | [ Phonographs, Expert Plano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. Valentine Building | Room 6 | - - | BOARD nnd”—room, or l;o;rd' only, Marshall House, 6th and Frank- lin. Phone 3902 LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Open speed boat, 18 ft. long. H. R. Rasmussen, Willough- by Ave. opposite Eureka Apts. LOST—Black leather purse. Finder plcase notify Empire, C-2452. CALL 14 FOR A Royal Blue Cab CITY RATES 25¢ and 35¢ M.N BEWARE! - Cold weather will soon be Here. Lot us protect your car against freesing and prepare it for winter. JUST TELEPHONE We will call for, and return your car at no extra cost. Service Rendered by Experts CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. 'THE EMPIRF a‘thhwu- g-mu-:r. time for ELEVATOR SERVICE H(YI'EL ] 8. ZYNDA, Prop. | ,wfi-ul.l. 3 : oents per me frst inser: | JUNEAU-YOUNG | Funeral Parlors . EAcensed Funeral Directors i and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone'13 | r— % PAGIFIC S TRIKES ROCK: DAMAGE TO HULL SLIGHT Vessel, After Repairs at Petersburg, Will Be Back Thls Week Striking ‘& rock off Whitney Island north of Cape Fanshaw last Friday morning, the motorship Pa- cific bound from Juneau to Port Alexander, was sufficiently dam- aged to compel her to interrupt her voyage for repairs. After the accident, she continued under her own power to Petersburg, wher2 she was ‘put on the marine ways Saturday. Work of mending her| will start tomorrow and she Is| scheduled to return here late this week. Spends New Year's Here Capt. Paul Kegel, master of the craft, arrived in Juneau from Pet- ersburg Saturday afternoon on the motorship Northdlnd. He left for Peétersburg this afternoon on the’ same vedsel, making the round trip to spend New Year's Day in Ju- neau. He would have been unable| to accomplish anything in the wav of repairs to the boat during the double holiday. “The Pacific struck at7:15 o'clock Friday morning,” Capt. Kekel said today. “A blinding snow storm prevailed at the time, and observa- tion of the shore beacon light was impossible. A strong tide carried the vessel somewhat toward shore. Immediately after the mishap, we went to Petersburg, getting there early Saturday, but had to wait for high tide Saturday afternoon to get the boat upon the ways. Damage Is Slight “The damage to her hull is slight. It Will be repaired with a couple of days’ work. The vessel will then resume her service. She will be i back here this week.” There were no passengers on the craft at the time of the accident. | The three men ocmprising her crew xu-e at Petersburg with her. | The Pacific left Juneau last Thursday forenoon on her regular | weekly voyage to Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. ——— L] . | AT THE HOTELS i | - L] 5' Gastineau | John Olsen, M. O. Le Blanc, | Juneau. Alaskan S. Hansen, Petersburg; Wick, Nick Lucian, Juneau. Samuel J. F. Keegan, Fred Dougall, Will- iam Zwlcker, Seattle. ! Read the ads as carefully as you. ‘rud the news articles. [ "KOLSTER RADIOS | Electrical Appliances, Repairs Marine News { Van Mavern, Alvin Bloomquist and | light will be restored as soon as | Reef Beacon, CAPITAL ELECTRIC | OH - .- \N EVERY DIRECTION, MR. GOOGLE ... By BILLE DE BECK ™M JUST TRYING TO FIND MY OWN HAT--- : STORMS DELAY NORAH COMING AND DEPARTING Vessel Bool:s_.;:i ght Pas-| sengers on Leaving Here for Vancouver, B. C. | | Stermy weather delayed the; steamship Princess Norah on her| voyage between Juneau and Skag- way and then after her return here prevented for several hours her de- parture for Vancouver, B. C. The vessel arrived in Juneau from Vencouver Friday evening.| Leaving here that evening for| Skagway, she was scheluled to be, back in this port at 11 o’clock Snb-1 urday night. Most of her delay| was experienced in going from Ju-| neau to Skagway. She returned| here at 2:30 o'clock Sunday after-| noon. Got Away at 7 A. M. She was scheduled to depart from | this port for the South at 1‘, o'clock last night, but did not get| away until 7 this morning. She booked eight outgoing pas- sengers from Juneau. All were for Seattle, namely: Outgoing Passengers | Mrs. Robert Simpson, Miss An-| nabelle Simpson, Mrs. M. H. Sides, | Miss Viola Riendeau, H. Selby, A.| E. A. Robinson. Among the through passengers) from Skagway for Vancouver and| Seattle were: Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Gaudin, Mr.| and Mrs. C. MeKittrick, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Mulivihill, all of Skag- way, and Rev. and Mrs. O. W. R. Hughes of Carcross. INFORMATION FOR MARINERS Dixon Entrance — Tree Point Light Station—Light changed tem- porarily to acetlylene, flashing ev- ery six seconds, duration of flash 0.6 second, candlepower 130. Red sector has been temporarily dis- continued. Normal character of practicable. Tongass Narrows — East Clump reported destroyed will be replaced as soon as prac- ticable. Tongass Narrows—Tongass Nar- rows Buoy 8 was changed Decem- ber 15, 1982, to a first class nun. No other change. Behm Canal—Bluff Point Light, established November 12, 1932, fixed white, of 60 candlepower, 16 feet above water, mounted on small white house. Light is obscured from 6 degrees to 165 degrees. Wrangell Narfows—Upper North Flat Buoy 32, was changed Novem- ber 29 to first class nun. Peril Strait—Rose Island Rock Buoy 5 was pérmanently discon- tinued November 18. Sumner Stralt—Helm Rock Light- f#iphy to the Dominion for the first| Yankees and Stars Feat Continued from page four) '1cceptmg a more profitable job as head football coach at Temple Uni- versity, Philadelphia. Along the international fronts the American emblem seldom has flown more consistently at the front of the parade. This country’s athletes beat rivals at their own games in the Winter Olympics, at Lake Placid, winning the team title for the first time, with Norway runnerup. At Los Angeles the home guard reached its peak, winning 11 out| of 23 Olympic track and field avents for men and five out of six| for women, besides taking the ma-| jor team henors in women's swim-| ming, rowing, boxing, equestrian| sports, yachting and gymnastics. Califernia’s Unbeaten Crew The California crew, for the sec-| ond straight Olympic year, swept all waters with a brilliant succes- sion of performances, marked by fifth-second margins over the Penn A. C. in the final American try-| outs as well as over Italy in the Olympic 2000-meter final. On the links Sarazen captured| , the British Open with a record score of 283. An American women’'s team triumphed abroad and our Walker Cup team overwhelmed the British challengers, 9% to 2%, at Brookline. Enid Wilson's second straight bid for the American wom- en’s title was repulsed but Ross (Sandy) Somerville, Canadian who| has played so frequently and so well in American tournaments, took | the classic national amateur tro- | | time. The Davis Cup was the only big tennis prize the U. 8. A. failed to grasp. Jean Borotra’s manificent| come-back trustrated the gallant| bid of Ellsworth Vines and Wilmer| Allison to regain the trophy froml France and kept it in Paris for| the six straight year. Helen Wills Moody led her countrywomen to| triumph at Wimbledon, including| the Wightman Cup Contest, but| she did not defend her national championship at Forest Hills. Vines. also was a victor at Wimbledon and clinched his place as No. 1 tennis star of the year by trouncing Henri Cochet in the final round of the United States championship,| tne of the season’s outstanding up-| sets. Our polo forces, led by Wmstom Guest and Elmer Boeseke, con-) Tnum phs of Gene Sarazen, NORTHLAND IN | Union Oil )‘)fi' 3 YES . GEORGIA DEAR.. THINGS HAVE BEEN VERY QUIEY LATELY ---- U.S. Olympic ure Year of °32 'ducted a successful campaign in | the Argentine, winning the open ‘champlonshlp ifrom the crack Santa Paula four and taking two out of three matches in an international! series for the “Cup of the Am- ericas.” Wood Supreme on Water { Gar Wood reached the heights of his brilliant career as speedboat king by repulsing the c¢hallenge of Kaye Don for the famous Harms- worth Trophy, besides shooting his Miss America X to a new world record of 12491 miles per hour. Th2 prospects for color and a consequent boom on the turf was abruptly ended in| tragedy when the Australian “won-| after winning the $50,000 Agua Caliente Handicap. It was a bad| year for horse-racing, on the whole, | although Colonel Edwin Riley Brad-| ley had the satisfaction of seeing| his Burgoo King ridden to victory| in both the Kentucky Derby and| Preakness on successive Siit.urdstys‘l PORT; SAILING SOUTH 4 P. M. Motorship Northland arrived in port at 11 o'clock this forenoon from Sitka and docked at the. Station. At 3 o'clock the vessel is due at the Juneau! Cold Storage plant and is sched- | uled to sail South from there at 4 | o'clock this afternoon. Twelve paswsngers arc bcoked‘ south and frozen salmon was load- ed for Seattle discharge by Northland. i ,Outgoing passengers are: Outgoing Passengers For Petersburg—Miss Impi Aalto. | For Wrangell—Douglas Gray. For Ketchikan—Mrs. E. Went- worth, Donald Armour, 'Mr. and Mrs. George Folta and baby. For Seattle—Mrs, Paul Schnee, Mrs. Robert Bonner, Sr., Charles| Halsing, Mrs. George Comstock, H. | | L. MeCormick. | | The fish shipment consisted of 54,000 pounds of salmon in boxes { from E. E: Engstrom to the Sebas- tian-Stuart Fish Company of Seat- tle. ,' WELCOME —~19 33— In the year ahead, cordial, ed and White Buoy 2, reported ex- tinguished December 28, will be re- lighted as soon as practicable. | Chatham Stralt — Warm Springs Bay Light, reported extinguished| December 25, will be relighted as soon as practicable. | B — s | TIDES TOMORROW . High tide 6:07 a. m., 14.8 fee! Low tide 12:33 p. m., 4.0 feet High tide 6:25 p m, 118 feet The ndvenlumenu are your guide w efficient spending. ‘ L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS | J. B. Burford & Co. | “Our doorstep worn by satisfied | customers” and capacity willing, helpful banking ser- vice, backed by-our strength to meet the needs of our community will assure you of banking sat- isfaction. We invite you to make this bank your bank. HAPPY N EW YEAR! First National Bank THE SANITARY GROCERY “The Store'That Pleases”PHONES 83 OR 85 OF JUNEAU international | der horse,” Phar Lap, died shortly | the| ! | wock, Craig, Ketchikan. REDUCED ROUND TRIP FARES Juneau to Seattle and Return | Lower deck, $65.50; upper deck, $73.50 | Tickets on sale until Feb. 28; return portion limited to March 25, leaving Seattle SAILING SCHEDULE weave DueJuneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Dec. 31 Jan. 3 Jan. 12 Jan. 7 Jan. 10 Jan. ‘19 Jan. 21 Jan. 24 Feb. 2 Jan. 28 Jan. 31 Feb. 8 Feb. 11 Feb. 14 Feb. 22 Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines, Skagway, Cor- dova. Valdez and Seward. North- bound and southbound. *Also calls Latouche porth and southbound. Southeastern and Southwestern Route HE ALASKA LINE W. E. NOWELL, Agent Steamer *ALASKA N'WESTERN *ALASKA N'WESTERN *YUKON Port of Call: PHONE 2 SEATTLE NORTHBOUND SAN FRANCISCO Leave Leave Seattle Juneau i LO:NA::Z“S Ad. Evans..Jan, 14 Jan, 18 S. o Ad. Evans..Feb. 4 Feb. 8 NEW.YORK ad. Evans..Feb. 25 Mar. 1 SOUTHBOUND Leave Juneau Ad. Evans Ad. Evans Ad. Evans ... Calls at Sitka north and south bound. Winter round trip rate, Seattle, as low asg $65.50. JACK KmARNEY Agent Admiral iine Dock J. B. BURFORD & CO. Ticket Agent Phone 78 D. B. FEMMER| Frt. Agt. Ph. 114 Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Junead Jan. 4 Jan, 11 Jan. 12 Hoouan, Tenasee, Port Alexander, Kla« *Calls first trip of month only Round trip to Seattle, $50. Low auto rate. WILLS NAVIGATION CO. Phone 3 THOMAS A. MORGAN, Agent M.S.“ZAPORA” Calling at Funter, Chichagof®, FERRY TIME CARD ] Leavea Juniean for Douglas and | Thane 9:1%a.m. 6:16p.m. C W PACIFIC . SAILING | 10 VANCOUVER, VICTOR2A | and SEATTLE '4 00p.m. | Leaves Douglas for Jumeam ! Frem "un 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m. PRINCESS NORAH 8:30a.m. $7:45pm. 9:30a.m.t 9:55p.m. i January 1, 19 1:::::.:10 g:m.m‘ | February 9 gt Ty ! March 2, 16, 30 B:00pm. | Wintesr Excursion Rates Now i1 o_‘Mane, Effect—ROUND TRIP $65.50 t—Preight wili be accepted Goog. ThManer t—Baturdays only. Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MOLVIHILL, Agent JUNEAU P Juneau Ferry & Naviga | tion Company Pacific Transportation :.Company M. S. “PACIFIC” S I0 am tor Potembs am. for Kake, Port Alexander and Way } Motorship *“ESTEBETH” Leaves Juneau Every Thurs- day at 6 P. M. for Sitka and Way Ports »mu. J. B. Burford & Co., Agenir DAVE HOUSEL, Agent . Phone. Bigls O Phone 70 Valentine Bldg. SEAPLANE MITKOF FOR CHARTER to Anywhere Southeast Alaska Based at Juneau PHONE 194 J. V. HICKEY, Owner

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