The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1933, Page 6

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?‘ § i | EXPERIENCED mald for general' ' - || housework. Apply by letter to' “Juneau Coffee Shop | @ 100 care Empie POLLY AND HER PALS TEVERY TIME ANGEL PLAYS WITH THOSE BABY PIGS, SHELL 11534 Tj“,), (BGT TVE BATHED ZATHED! TR\ HeR FOUR TIMES - S TDAY! AHM DONE PUTTIN' THE - - T TR———. YOUR FOR RENT b e A FOR RENT-Fiye-fogih - furnished | house. - Telephone 5204. | RADIO amd phgnograph - codsole radio, GM, all electfic. Alsy pland. Reasonable for cash. See Mrs. E. M. Bart or Phone 3924 FOR liENT;Four-roqm fiirnished SREPR TR x ey, Bouse with bath. Inquire 306/ FOR SALE_1933 Chevrolet coach,| Front St, or telephone 561. like ‘mew, just nicely broken m.‘Fén' RENT — i;ight, three-room See A R. Duncan at Alaskd " yinined apartment. Heated. Laundry between 8 am. and 5| Only $30 per month. Phone 18, pm. After 5 pm. at Tucker| poygias, Apartments. i P58 E e — - FOR RENT—One, two or three- FOR SALE — Ten shares capital| room cabins, close to Ball Park. stock of the First National Bank! gee Tom McMullen, on premises. for $2,500.00 cash. Inquire Alaska . S Personal Service Agents, Sewar'llFoR RENT—Four-room apartment Building. with bath. Close in, ‘moderate| - — - ~——| rental. Inquire at store, Second FOR SALE — Administrator must| gnq Main, sell to close estate the furnished| s Mot e ; five-room house formerly occu-| FOR RENT—Three-room furnish- pied by Edw. T. Ryan, deceascd.‘l ed house. Above Bergmann Hotel. This house located on Block 209,| Telephone 3373, Lot 2, near Tennis Court. Mod- ern, heated, concrete basement.| Apply Walter G. Hellan, Admin- istrator, P. O. Box 1142. A t o ——————="— | FURNISHED housy for rent. 8th FOR SALE—Tables, chalrs, dining| " ,n4 pixon. 3 rooms and bath, room furniture. Two-oven Lang $27. - Call 251 range, with NEW. RAY Q1L Burner attachment. Also dish-{ FOR RENT—Partly furnished five- es, kitchen equipment, knives,| room house. Basement. Furnace forks and, tableware. Frigidaire,| heat. Close in. Inquire St. Ann’s very reasonable. Telephone 107 or; Hospital. inquire Bergmann Dining Room. FOR RENT — The R. C. Peterson house near Third and Gold. In- quire First National Bank. Tuctonsuebimal 0 M e S i — | FOR RENT—Refinished four-room CHOICE level residence lot, 50x100, furnished house. $15.00 monthly. " &t bargain. Best location in clby.l Phone Douglas 394. il e | FOR RENT — Vacancy Marshall FOR SALE—Furnished apartment| Apartments. Four rooms, furnish- house must be sold to pay the| ed, beated, Frigidaire. Beautiful obligations of an estate. Apply| view. Apply 115 Sixth St. Tele- at Concrete Products Co. Wil-| phone 330. loughby Avenue. SACRIFICE 1933 Wiulys 3, 4-door sedan. Perfect condition. Priced for quick sale. Phone 4042. FOR RENT—Four room furnished apt. $25.00 monthly. Inquire John Reck. THREE-room furnisned apt. with bath. Phone 1005. §00 shares Hirst-Chichagof stock &t 60 cents. Inquire Nugget Shoppe. R SALE—Modern home for sale. Reasonable terms. Telephone 169. + Mrs. E, C. Guerin. POR SALE or rent—Planos and radios. Expert piano tuning. An- derson’s Music Shoppe, Seward Street. Telephone 143. FOR RENT — Large housekeeping room, electric plate, $15. Also 2- room apt. with range. Phone 436. 2 | FOR RENT—Four rooms and bath. Steam heated, nicely furnished. Frigidaire. Electric range. Call at Windsor - Apartments. FOR RENT — Furnished apart- ment, newly decorated, with bath. Also furnished two room houses and cabins. Apply Cash Grocery, Apply Kaufmann's Cafe. Willoughby Ave, or telephone| e i R 101-2 rings. | MISCELLANEOUS ‘I"‘Z)R RENT — Two-room Turnished = house or cabin on 9th St. Tele- COATS remodeled and linings re- phone 2654. newed. Phone 3801. Mrs. Bathe. : VACANCIES; reduced rates. Nug- FOR SALLCate Tmhures conslst ing of back bar, counter, stools and booths. Very reasonable ¥REE wood, dry. New Hospital| Building. ks P e " Sreping room. Ph FURN your oid gold into value.| " aag o ¢ CePmig Toom. Phione Cash or trade at Nugget Shop. » s o PERELLE Aparvmems. Phone 2004. | . i | ' AND FOUND HOST : WANTED - Marine News . Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Princess Louise Scheduled to arrive late tomorrow after- noon or evening. Northwestern due sometime. Zapora due Tuesday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Depere scheduled to sail from Seattle Sept. 16 at 5 p. m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Northland scheduled south- bound at 3:30 o'clock to- morrow morning, sailing @ south via Sitka. Alaska scheduled southbound at 6 o'clock tomorrow morning. Will remain in port about one or 'two hours. Yukon tomorrow scheduled southbound sometime tomorrow. No e word from Cordova. . LOCAL SAILINGS . day night at 8 p. m, for Sitka and way ports. . Pagitic leaves every Thursday ® 8t 10 a m., for Petersburg, ® seoeceocoscannseoe —_———————— S0 e0csgv-eveoooe L4 TIDES TOMORROW e Alaska Standard Time; add ® e 1 Hour for Juneau district. ® e0 o0 0ev0s0 o000 Low tide 0:17 a. m, 33 feet High tide 6:45 a. m., 10.2 feet Low tide 12:11 p. m.,, 7.3 feet High tide 6:17 p. m, 122 feet ESTEBETH BACK FROM SITKA RUN THIS MORNING Bringing six passengers and mail, the motorship Estebeth, Capt. Ed- ward Bach and David Ramsey, purser; arrived in port at 10:15 o'clock this morning from its reg- ular weekly mail, freight and pas- senger run to Sitka and wayports. Passengers aboard from Tenakee were, H. E. Phipps, Charles - Hall and S. Ask; from Chichagof, Vie- tor Koski; and from Hoonah, | George Jones and J. Davis. Deer are vel scarce and the few that have been seen are still way up in the mountains it was reported at the various ports of call made by the motorship, Pur- ser .Ramsey said. BILL FOLD containing keys, cur- rency and officials cards. Reward.| WILL furnish board, and room, i Return. to H. Regele, Apt. 6,| private family, $52.50 monthly. MacKinnon Apts. Telephone 29 after 3 p.m. TOST Ladys purse, colored blue.| BOARDERS wanted. A. J. men.| Contains keys, bank book, money,| Call at 3rd and Main, opposite etc. Finder please return to Ju-| 2Zynda Hotel. | neau Transfer. Reward. —_— —-{ BOARDERS, Room and board for FOUND—Elks' charm. Owner ma twa, Tele'ylione 538. have same by proving property| ¢ and paging for this ad. Address | CHILDREN ca for by day, week | No. K 3116, care Empire, or month. Phone 2552. | & | | HALF Soles Men's DRESS SHOES $1 to $1.25. Men’s heels &0c, ladies | 350. Saloum’s. -Seward Street. | COSTLY TO GIANTS NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—Bill' Terry's Giants, forced to play al- most the entire last month of |'the National League campaign on the road, received a hard jolt) {,fmm the schedule makers. Af- (ter playing to slim attendapce all season, they just had begun to' {pack in crowds of 30,000 and 40.- 000 fans when forced to leave the T Opposite MacKinnon Apts. Breakfast, Luicheop Dinner | Open 7:30 am. to 9 pm. HELEN MODER Smith Flectric Co. Gastineau Building EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL i SEE BIG VAN Guns and Ammunition | |Polo Grounds. | 204 Front St. 205 Seward St. e | GUNS FOR RENT i A patchwork quilt of 11,280 piec-! fl es, each no larger‘than a nickle, was pieced by Mrs. A. H. Elliston of Hereford, Texas. T LU peeap e N i resnaio e 1| | “McCAUL MOTOR i Fonsh i { ) AT A e .. —_— L] | { Juneau Ice Cream l . Parlors | Exclusive Dealers HORLUCK'S | DANISH ICE CREAM | A Bright Snappy Job e Old Bus Look Like New! Keeps tlwal;ew that $1.00 CONNORS Motor Co., INC. FRONT STREET Estebeth leaves every Thurs- ® Wash It Up! | ALASKA HERE SATURDAY P.M. NORTHBOUND On the way north, thé steamer Alaska, Cant. C. V. Westerlund, ,commanding and Dave Doran, purser, arrived here at 6 o'clock Saturday night and sailed = for morning. Leaving the ship in Juneau were C. A. Devlin, Erna Meier, Mrs. Henry Sully, Mrs. H. Meier and | Mrs. Pete Nordstrom, from Seattle; and from Southeast Alaska ports, F. Ertroda, J. H. Milkey, Grace Jackson, F. Thomas, Marine Blake, P Williams, E. W. Stage, H. B. | Crewson, E. Dudal. C. L. Irvine took passage from I here for Skagway on the Alaska. i Southbound the steamer is back |in Juneau at 6 oclock in the | morning and will sail two hours {later for the south by way of | Sitka. {LAST RITES FOR JOHN STEERS TO BE HELD TUESDAY Funeral services for John Steer, pioneer of Interior Alaska, whose death occurred last Friday morn- vim; at St. Ann’s Hospital, will be held at 9 o'clock tomorrow morn- ing at the Catholic Church of the Nativity. Mr. Steers, who for years was engineer and pilot on the various river boats operating on the Yu- on River, was well known through- !out Alaska, particularly in the Interior country. —_——o— A. F. GHIGLIONE ARRIVES HERE FROM PETERSBURG A. F. Ghiglione who has been working for the past season with James S. Truiti on the river and harbor project in the vicinity of ,Petersburg. arrived in Juneau on the motorship Northland, and is staying at the Gastineau Hotel. - Elevators in the Dade County, Fla. courthouse travel an average of 60 miles each 24 hours. Skagway at 11:30 o'clock Sunday 0 NORTHLAND 1N " ON WAY NORTH SHTURDAY PM. With ten passengers for Juneau jaboard the motorship Northland, |C Leonard Williams and E. P. | Winch, purser, docked here at 8 |o'clock Saturday evening ahd 'sail- "‘.‘d for Sitka at midnight. | Arriving here from Seattle on the Northland were Mrs. Edward | B. Wildt, Edward Wildt{, Malvina wildt, Jean Wildt, C. C. Garfield, | Ben Burford and Mrs. Rita McCaul. Those who disembarked from Southeast Alaska ports were Wil- liam Paul Jr, H. B. Carbray and A. F. Ghilglione. Sam Baker, N. A. McEachran, Mr. and Mrs. J. Cashen, Mrs. Rob- ert Coughlin and Amy Takesado took passage from here for Sitka. Through passengers aboard for Sitka were Harry McCormack, Mrs. H. McCormack, D: B. Jackson, Robert Ridley Jr., Julia Joe, Rosa Lanado, Mrs. H. M. Davis, Miss N. J. Bright, L. C. Berg, Mrs, L. G. Berg, Louise Berg, Dorothy Berg, Ella Berg, Carl Berg, Eve- lyn Evans, Sarah Dundas and Louis Minard. PROFESSORS LINE {. UP WITH STUDENTS ( FOR GOOD OF CREW | pib SEATTLE, Sept. 11.—Professors and athletes, who generally annoy | each other over scholastic stand-' ings, co-operated at the University of Washington when an instructor of history was made freshman | crew coach. | Or maybe it was the other way yaround when they made Tom Bolles, who has given the Huskies | five Pacific Coast " frosh eights and one championship, a member of the history faculty. The status of Bolles, who started coaching here in 1927, was some- | what in doubt, with at least two other schools offering him posi- | tions, but his ambition to teach turned the scales. He was a major in history in his undergraduat: days, and since that work does not interfere with coaching, the athletes cheered when the professors took him in. — - H. B. CREWSON RETURNS | H. B. Crewson, Schillings Pro- ducts gepresentative, arrived. on the steamer Alaska from a trip to Southeast Alaska ports. There's luxury and X\ comfort every minute “\J while on your way East on'this amazing new train. ., Stop where you like. s Write, cable or call ® gc?o‘?-'mh Tower, Seattle -RAILWAY Fares are lowest in history! {8 Representative NORTHERN PACIFIC | . A A By CLIFF STERRETT championship national' SN ————— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT..11,.1933. : TSRS S A RN ICAPTAIN INJURED; SLIPS, FALLS ON CANNERY TENDER (Wiangell “Sentinel): ‘1 Capt. Eugene Mason entered Wrangell: General Hospital Sunday afternoon suffering from an acci- fdem which occurred aboard the | Westward, cannery tender of the | Cook Inlet Packing Co. at Seldovia, ! owned by Captain Mason's father- in-law, W. E. Etes, of Seattle. The Westward was southbound | to Seattle with Mr. and Mrs. Es- | tes their son F. A. Estes and his | wife, Capt. and Mrs. Mason and little daughter and Thor Hofstad aboard. ~ The vessel had encoun- tered stormy weather and from the roll of the boat the engine floor was slippery with grease so that when Capt. Mason stepped |down from the stairway into the engine room, he slipped and fell into the clutch of the engine. Before he could 'extricate him- self the flesh had been badly torn from his right leg, a bone had been broken and he had suffered a severe blood loss. The boat was two and one-half hours from Petersburg at the time of the ac- cident. First aid was given to him until he could reach the hos- ital at Wrangell, where he will probably be for some time. | Thor Hofstad took the Westward on to Seattle and Mrs. Mason and daughter left the boat and will he guests of her husband’s | mother, Mrs. Josephine Mason, un- til he has recovered. —_——e———— | MRS. P. GANTY RETURNS X FROM SHORT VISIT SOUTH Mrs. Prosper Ganty visited with friends in Juneau while the steam- er Alaska was in port. Mrs. Gan- ty is on her way to her home in | Sitka after a visit with her family in Bremerton, Washington. She is accompanied by her . sister-in-law, Mrs. John Jessup, who will visit her in Sitka for several weeks. JORH B e WRANGEL INSTITUTE OPENS The Wrangell Institute has op- ened ‘in its second year with 82 students on the accepted list. | VISIT THE Salmon Creek "Roadhouse’* ANTON- REISS @ Oply a scrap torn from a letter —but it gave Caroline Leigh the clue that started her toward the solution of a problem on ; which her happiness depended FINEST {10 BAILING Steamer YUKON .. ALASKA . N'WESTERN Db. YUKON ALASKA N'WESTERN Juneau, each trip. - ® t1 - Sailing from S Erery Monday night 1. B. BURFORD & CO. WINTER SCHEDULE Sept. 16 -Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 3 Ports of Call: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, dova, Valdez and Seward. S. S. Yukon calls Yakutat both ways. S. S. Alaska calls Sitka both ways. S. S. Northwestern calls Seldovia and Kodiak 5 THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McKANNA, Agent @rh Wllouni Trip Rate D. B. FEMMER Ticket Agent Phone 79 Frt. Agt. Phone 114 'SCHEDUER | Leave * Seattle Northbound Southbound & : “Due Juheitr” Due Juneau Sept. 11 Sept. 12 Sept. 19 Sept. 10 9 Sept. 12 Sept. 29 Oct. 5 Oct. 14 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 Haines, Skagway, Cor- PHONE 2 M.S.“ZAPORA” Leave Seattle Arrive Junean Leave Junes( Sept. 6 Sept. 12 Sept. 13 Calling at Funter, Chichagof*, Hoonah, Teraxee, Port Alexander, Klm wock, Craig, Ketehikan. *Calls first trip of month only OFFICE JUNEAU COMMERCIAL DOCK Wills Navigation Company Phone CANADIAN PACIFIC SaTLING TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA and SEATTLE From Juneau PRINCESS LOUISE Sept. 6, 14, 23 Oct. 4, 15, 24 SUMMER TOURIST FARES NOW IN EFFECT Good till October 31, 1933 Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent JUNEAU . Fine Floors Estimates Free | Effective June ‘1, 1833 LEAVE AUK' BAY 7:00 a.m. / 12:30 pam. * 4:30 pm. LEAVE JUNEAU (Out Highway) 9:15 am. i i 2:30 pm, 6:30 p.m., _Special Satarday Trip Leave Auk Bay at 7:00 pan. Leave Juneau at . Harris ' Hardware €o. |, 1o prons e 3 Juneau Commercial Dock, Agent FERRY TIME CARD Leaves Juneau for Douglas axd Thane 6:15a.m. 7:10a.m. :30p.] 9:16a.m.1 9:40p.m. 12:30p.m+ 11:15pm. 2:00p.m. 12 midnight 3:30p.m.t $1:00a.m. *4:00p.m. Zeayes Douglas for Juneam 8:30a.m. 6:30p.m. 8:308.m. 17:45p.m. 9:30a.m.t 9:55p.m, 12:45p.m.t 11:30p.m. l 2:15p.m. 12:15pm. 3:45pm.t il:15am. 5:00p.m. *—Thane. t—Freight will be accepted. 1—Saturdays only. Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion .Company —— Pacific Transportation Company M. S. “PACIFIC” Leaves City Deck every Thurs- day at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way points. ¥ J. B. Burford & Co., Agents Phone 79 Valentine Bldg. | Motorship- “ESTEBETH” Leaves Juneau Every Thurs- day at 6 P. M. for Sitka and Way Ports DAVE HOUSEL, Agent Phone Single O Southern Airways ' “_‘_3.

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