The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 21, 1934, Page 6

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R0 i oot THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21, et R T S 1934, You may lose your head a course, it isn' anything to ple are alw FOR SALE — “The CHill Bowl ! equipment on Willoughby Ave. | FOR SALE condition ee Wm. Rudolph at the Sanitary Grocery. ‘ FOR SALE — Complete chicken ranch equipment capable of handling 500 chickens. Equipment includes Diesel oil Hoover burner, 260-egg incubator, waters, feed- ers, wire etc. Big sacrifice for quick #ale. Oall or.write Empire | 3490. FOR SALE — Baby bed, wicker buggy and swings. Phone 2901. FOR SALE — Leather-covered bed davenport and large easy chairs ta match. Reasonable. Telephone 109. FOR SALE—Oak dining room set; buffet $15, table $15, china closet $15, library table 15, chairs $1.50 each R FOR SALE—Dinming room set. Also spring. Phone 1423. ';OR SALE—Oale ana restaurant doing good business but owner must leave city to 100k after| other hunneu. Terms cash or part down. Communicate immed- jately 3181 Empire for personal interview. TURN your old gola into value Cash or trade at Nugges Shop. SRVSSRSRNS . SRR . L. O CHILDREN cured for oy day, week or month. Phone 2552, LOST AN FOUND LOST — One black camel's hair overcoat. Liberal reward. Robert Cockburn, Gastineau Hotel. UNITED STATES Depariment of the Interior GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. November 22, 1933. Serial 07681 Notice is hereby given that Frank Reeder, entryman, together with his witnesses, Byron T. Benson, and Clenna Franklin, McNutt, all of Juneau, Alaska, has submitted final “proof on his homestead entry for a tract of land embraced in U. S. Survey No. 2079, Mendenhall Valley limination, containing 87.76 acres, and it is now in the files of the JU. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Al- aska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the ‘Period of publication or thirty days thereafter, said final proof will be accepted and final certificate is- “sued. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. Ii‘lrst publication, Jan. 10, 1934, Laat publication, March 7, 1934, (e, BOWLING Nothing like the thrill of a ten-strike! Develop your game on , the finest alleys you ever played on. ‘Brunswick Bow]ips ) THE MORAL OF THAT IS: losing things and finding them by ad- vertising for Ihem in the ‘Lost and Found’ columns of THE DAILY EMPIRE TELEPLIONE 374 — | MAC MAYBURN runch on Shelter ‘| WANTED—First crass shoe repdr of peo- ny minute these day worry about, beca se s <3 ale—Pianos, radios, | sewing machines. Expert piano tufiing. Phonograph repairing. | 133 Nash Coupe, A-1|Anderson Music Shoppe. Telephone | o FOR RENT—Five room furnished | house with kitchenette and bath. | Call Gorham Coffee Shoppe. APARTMENT. Tel, 2004. 421 E. 7th | —1 FOR RENT—Seven room furnisned | house, four bedrooms. Firepldce! ©11 heat”Call Windsor™ Apart- | ments. ! VACANCY—2 and 3 room apts. and furnished house. MacKinnon | ‘Apts. ONE steamheated room for rent.| Phone 218. All equipped. Box 1658. | 2 room apt. range; nousekeeping room, heated. Channel Apts.! Phone 436. FOR RENT—Four-room furnished house. Phone 187 after 6 p.m. FOR RENT—Furnished two room apts. Apply Johnson's Apts. or telephone 5102. THREE-room furnished apt., bath, electric range. Corner 3rd and Gold. Ellingen Apts. FOR RENT—Sreepmu; room. Phone 537. { WANTED ; POSITION WANTED by couple, aged 40 and 45 respectively. Wom- an experienced cook and excellent baker. Man diesel engine and compressor operator and all daround mechanic; three years ex- perience as steam-electric power plant operator, has unligited chief engineer marine steam li- { Eklutna, Alaska, as compressor operator on the Anchorage hydro- electric power project. Sober and Please state particulars in first | letter. C. C. Jones, Box 465, Port Angeles, Wash. WANTED—Will furnish board and room and wonderful care for a limited amount of children in a lovely beach home near Leda Point. Reasonable rates will be glven on monthly basis. Tele- phone 732 or see Minnie Fields. | WANTED — Reliable experienced dry goods salesman to represent well known Seattle wholesaler. ! Address with references, and lines | carried, Mr. P. Silver care Barlin and Silver, | Seattle. 8th and Virginia, FOR expert 1_\pewr)m, trained nursing, Work by the day or hour, Phore 436 or call Channel Apartments, WANTED—Will purchase foot pow- er sewing machine. Must be in good for cash. Address T 1111 care | Empire. _—————————— WANTED—$5,000, gilt-edge secur- ity. ‘Will pay 8%. Address replies to Empire No. 3431, | today from the Kuskokwim District cense. Man formerly worked at reliable, couple will go anywhere. || child'’s care or house-|] condition and reasonable | {ATTA BOY! HOT DAWG! 900 0000000000000 000000C0000006086 8 00 . Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Neree scheduled to arrive at noon on Saturday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Zapora scheduled to sail from Seattle February 21 Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Febru- ary 23, at 9 p.m. Northwestern scheduled to sail from Seattle February 24 at 10 am. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle February 26 at 9 pm. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Victoria, scheduled southbound about 8 o'clock Friday morn- ing. Alaska is scheduled southbound March 1. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thurs- day night at 6 pm, for Sitka and way ports, Pacific leaves every Thursday at 10 am. for Petersburg, Kake and way ports. to sail ©00000000000000000000000000000000 0000000000 .- e 00000000000 . TIDES TOMORROW .| e e 00000000 Low tide, ©¢:38 am, 7.1 feet. High tide, 7:03 am., 12.7 feet. Low tide, 2:21 pm., 35 feet. High tlde. ., 103 feet. REINDEER HERD | STARTS TREK OF | ABOUT 100 MILES Herders started a reindeer drive| to Nelson TIsland, a distance of about 100 miles where they will be turned over to the local agent of the Office of Indian Affairs. The herd numbers about 1,000 head. The drive is being under- taken as a part of the govern- ment policy to place herds of deer in all parts of the country where grazing is good, for the benefit of the natives in the various districts. PRRIG 5. 3 MRS. W. H. CASE AND SON HOWARD ARRIVE TO VISIT MRS. HUGH J. WADE HERE Mrs. W. H. Case, former resi- dent of Juneau, and her son How- ard Case, arrived in Juneau on the steamer Alaska to visit their daugh- ter and sister, Mrs. Hugh J. Wade, here. They have been visiting Mrs. Case’s other daughter, Mrs, Donald MacKinnon, in Craig, for the last month, .- Marine News | Case, At 5 oclock yesr,erduy at‘te rne the steamer Ala;ka Capt. C. Westerlund, commanding, and Dav Doran, purser, docked here f the south with freight, mail passengers. It sailed at midnigh for the Westward, by way of Skag- way, Haines and Sitka. Arriving here from the south were: June Boggan, J. A, Briggs, T Cole, Mrs. H. Crewson, E. E. En strom, E. L. Everett, R Han: Mrs. R. Hansen, Mrs. C. Helge: F. Herger, Mrs. Dave Housel, Jensen, E. M. Kainlainen, T A Morgan, W. Moran, J. Morris, O M. Powell, R. E. Robertson, J. S J. B. Stam, H. A. Strueve, Mrs A Strueve, 8 B. Tatome, J. Ter- zick, Mrs, J. Terzick and J. Weil Frem 8. E, Alaska Those who arrived from South- east Alaska were, H. C. Dunlop, J Schroeder, V., C. Harrison, A. C Black, W. Hunt, A. E. Karnes, Mr Karnes, P. H. Adams, Mrs. G. T. Alexander, R Copeland, N. A. Mc- Eachran, H. L. Case, Mrs W, H Mrs. Jean Larsen, H. B Crewson, J. M. Spear, Mrs. E. Mc- Knight and H. Smith. For Westward Taking passage from Juneau f Sitka were, Ted Larson and Rich- ard Wakelin; for Skagway, Wi fred Goding, T. T. Nurn; dova, Pete Dragovich; for | W. O'Brien, Mrs. O'Brien, O'Brien, Betty O'Brien, Mr. Mrs. Theodore Loftus, George A.| Lingo, Mrs. George B. Moody, Col- leen O'Brien, R. Johnson, Bert Moody, Wayne Moody, Jean Moody; for Seldovia, J. J. Meherin, L. F. Hebert. Sew: Ha e — e 00000000000 . AT THE HOTELS . e 0000000000 Gastinean A. C. Black, Portland, Ofe.; Tatome, Seattle; attle; O. M. Powell, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. J. Terzick, Portola, Cal; Herb C. Dunlop, Seattle; N. A. Mc- Bachran, Seattle; V. D. Harrison, Seattle; R. C. Capistead, Ketchi- kan, ; S. B. Alaskan John Weil, Seattle; Einard Run- quist. Zynda Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Strueve, Min- neapolis; J. A. Briggs, Los Angeles; John M. Speer, Ketchikan; Mr. and North Carolina claims it leads all other states in number of children giveh free transportation to school. 4 ] 4 on to the best of our started—the : building I‘(’ no - business )‘3: Febuary 22, |9 anniversary Z % FheFis “work for* men, women and' dren at Saloum’s on Seward ashington’s Bzrthday : %éizk{mmr 22 As we pause in memory of a great man, let us renew our determination to carry This bank will transact ington’s: birthday. ® a"ik;; pug s ] Mrs. R. Hansen, Enumclaw, Wash- ington; Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Karnes and Carol Jean Karnes, Juneau. ability the work he of a great nation. Thursday, the 202nd of Wash- National SDUTH for /Cor- | J. B. Stam, Se-| By CLIFF STERRETT )Z'ZE'T' 2-!5- 5 »w.»;y. mx —— Phoete shews a giant plane which is usad in regular service beiween Tckyc, Japan, and Changchung, {he capital ¢f Manchukuo, for the purpcse of maintaining a speedy means of communication and travel between field hcadquarters cf the Japanese armies and the War Office in Tokyo. Three high military officials, one of them a Lieutenant Gencral, are shewn leaving the army transport plane on Manchukuo soil. CHANGES N NAVIGATION VORLITEMEN OBSLRVE ANNIVERSARIES OF | A program with the theme g B o & lorids Wrangell Narrov Eolarey night in the Northern Light Reef East Light 12, was temporar- 5. Sty i 1yl A B obriaty: 18 Presbyterian Church basement by by A e i y ' the Norlitemen at their semi-| structure remains standing. R 3 Stephens Passage—Duck Poing M2nny diner t ;f:p & S[ 'lA:i‘unx;('u' hed Febru The dinner was attended by A BIBOTICC, CX NGl AL about seventy-five members of the | ary 5, was found burning February 16, on and their friends. Cne of the f . X S atures of the evening was Stephens Passage—Whitney ISl . "pey gong used to welcome new and, Bill Point Li found e: tnd guebt x and guests. ‘;z\u.s).u (i' fj‘Lbl‘lh\.!} 17, was re! 3y om. Fletcher W. Brown, | e L Bl commander of the Coast Gu: Chatham Strait—Washington Bay Light, reported extinguished Febru- jary 12, will be relighted as soon as er Tallapoosa, was of honor at the dinner. the guest | practicable. O .. Se vy 5 Jorgensen, who read Lincoln’s| Stephens Passage— Wood Spit ast . t A A ‘Lxght reported extinguished Feb- oclyeDur Address, and H. L. Faulkner, who gave highlights on the lives of both Washington and Lincoln. runry 5, was relighted February 17. | Stephens Passage—Windham Bay | Narrows Light, reported extinguish- ed January 31, was relighted Febru- |ary 17. Chatham Strait—Hawk Inlet East Shoal Light, heretofore reported extinguished, has been destroyed {by ice. Structure will be rebuilt and relighted as soon as practi- | cable. Keku Strait— Information has been received that all spindles have been destroyed by ice. The numbers e of these aids are 2, 2A, 2B, 6, 6A, Beautiful 184, 194, 21, 23. Chapel Bucareli Bay, West Coast Prince at Your of Wales Tsland—Cape Flores light- Service ed buoy 4A, reported extinguished Feb. 11, will be relighted as soon as practicable. i Shelikof Strait—Noisy Islands 2 b Light, reported extinguished Febru- OPPORTUNITY ary 14, will be relighted as soon as Your selection of this | practicable. establishment gives us the opportunity of add- [T —— ing di hl!y and beauty to a 'cefemony of sorrow. Our services are priced to meet the needs of all. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” The' money you spend on a washwoman 52 times a year; t.haeonotsonpmdwuh ) ing utensils that have to be frequently replaced; the wear and tear on clothes far grealer by home methods; - the possible illness due to unsanitary processes or over- taxing of your own vitality + + . Just add these up and then compare the result with our low-priced laundry serv- Alaska Laundry ITS Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. i when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal TFransfer S [ e s ‘Illttar) Alrlme of J up W armen | Lincoln and Washington was hwen‘ rd | program were Martin | upper deck $71.00. Leave Steamer Seattle TVICTORIA - ALASKA Feb. 17 B NABESNA Feb. *N'WESTERN .Feb. 24 TVICTORIA Mar. 3 . 24—Explosives, freighter *—Calls Kodiak and Seldovia each trip, i—Calls Yakutat and Latouche. j—Calls Sitka northbound and southbound. For All Travel Information Call THE yALASKA LIN R. J. McKANNA, Agent SATLING SCHEDULE REDUCED WINTER ROUND TRIP FARES— Juneau to Seattle and return, lower deck $64.00; Return limit, March 31. Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound Feb. 23 Teb. 20 Mar, 1 cargo Feb. 28 Mar. 8 M 6 Mar. 15 | 3. B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER | Ticket Agent Phone 79 Frt. Agt. Phone 114 GUY L. SMITH, Ticket Agent, Douglas | M.S.“ZAPORA” Feb. Calling at Funter, Chichagof®, Hoonan, NATIONAL HEROES wock, Cralg, Ketchikan. | SEATTLE AND RETURN—$50.00 Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Junem ' 21 Feb. 27 Feb, 28 “Tenakes, Port Alexander, Kla *Calls first trip of month only Auto Rate—South, $1.00 per 100 lba Wflb Navigation Company Phone 3 Junean Commercial Dock, Agent | { ‘ SAILING 1 | | | To vANCOUVER, ViCTORIA | i and SEATTLE From juneau i ! PRINCESS NORAH February 28 | March 14, 28 Winter Excmsion Fares Now in| Effect—Round Trip Fare $64.00 Final Limit March 31, 1934 Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent | JUNEAU | Fine Floors Estimates Free | GARLAND BOGGAN Flooring Contractor Hardwood Flooring—Laying, Sanding, Finishing 403 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 582 | ! | TIMi SCHEDULE | CHANNEL BUS LINE Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau, 7:00a.m. 7:46am. | 12:30p.m. 2:30pm. | 4:15p.m. 5:30p.m. Sundays and Holidays Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau | 8:00a.nd. 9:15a.m. | the latest at COLEMAN’S ALWAYS ’ | Juneau lce Cream Parlors Exclustve Dealers HORLUCK'S DANISH ICE CREAM | FERRY TIME CARD LEAVE JUNEAU 6:15a.m. 4:00p.m. 7:15a.m, 6:15p.m. 8:00a.m *7:30p.m. 9:15a.m. 9: m. 12:30p.m. 11:15p.m. 2:00p.m. 12:00 Midnigh{ 3:30p.m. *1:00a.m. LEAVE DOUGLAS 6:30a.m. 5:00p.m. 7:30a.m. 6:30p.1a. 8:30a.m. *7:45p.m. 9:30a.m. 10:00p.01. 12:45p.m. 11:30p,m. 2:15p.m. 12:15a.m. 3:45p.m. *1:15p.m. *—Saturday only. t—Goes to Thane. | Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company Pacific Transportation Company “PACIFIC™" Legyes City Dock every. Thurs- day at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way points, J. B. Burford & Co., Agents Phone 78 Valentine Bldg. Motorship “ESTEBETH” day at 6 P. M. for Sitka and Way Ports DAVE HOUSEL, Agent Phone Single O ( LUDWIG NELSON .; JEWELER Daily Empire want Ads Pay. PHONE 549 | FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON * Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank- Bldg. IDEAL PAINT SHOP 1f It's Paint We Have It! Wendt & Garster TORNADO FURNACE ~ ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected l PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 Plumbmg CUT YOUR FUEL BILL' Let us clenn your furnace now with the Gets the soat and dirt in every nook and corner Hal'l'l Mac[\me Sll Heating smannu VACUUM CLEANER ( A -8 § -

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