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P PERBSEERS S A A A o 2 2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1934. Co RS B EUR R N POLLY AND HER PALS n | | | } TO FIND OUT [ HE REALLY IS A MEDICAL 3 STUDENT, MAW/ FOR RENT—Five-room furnished | 1 »om apartment Three-room partly for 2 109 FOR RENT — Furnished 4-room house. Phone 1472 Parily furnished du- , automatic borhood. Call Phone 37 Hard w at. Fine ne Gastineau Grocery. on 9th St. Tom McMullen. ment le Apartments, ACY. Nuget €t Apartments. VACAX\C. MficKmnon Apts. Anqur.c Buhop Apts. HOUSE. R R FOR RENT-—Furnished three-room office suite. Heated. Apply Juneau Melody House or Telephone 65. anos, ra Expert piand tuning. Phonograph repairing Anderson Music Shoppe. Telephone f"()R RENT or 11!(‘——v sewing machines. 143, “Tel. 2004421 E.Tth APARTMENTS. bath, THREE-room furnished apt, electric range. Corner 3rd and Gold. Ellingen Apts. FOR RENT—eepiu; room. Phou: 537. | Dr.A. W. Stewart | DENTIST | Hours 9 am. to ¢ pm. SEWARD BUILDING | | Office Phone 409, Res. | Phone 276 State Forester Fred Merrill of Mississippi says more than a mil- lion acres of land in that state “pave been devastated by erosion resulting from improper agricul- tural practices and forest fires. Salmon Creek Roadhouse [ ANTON RIESS ‘FOR SALE OR SALE %‘V‘OH FOR SALE > FOR FOR SALE — Full FOR SALE—Hudson Coach, $175.00 cash or terms. In good condition. Enquire George Bros. One man Piano, first class condition. Also one wicker set, setee, rocker, table and fern Also other articles of Inquire at Empire Of- including stand. furniture. fice. SALE‘F'P 'our-room house St. Phone 1804 Spot Cafe.| - \\'hAlL‘ Phone 29, Case: Willoughby Day Optical Co., Ave 326 | | ot adjoining Moose Hall, assessed for $2,000,( but will sell for $1,000. Apply at St. Ann's Hospital. J FOR SALE—Seven-room furnished | house. Seventh Street view loca- | tion. Leader Department Store. ‘ Cash or terms. Inquir(-; FOR SALE—DIning room set. Also spring. Phone 1423. CHILDREN cared for oy day, week or month, Phone 2552. TURN Cash or trade at Nugget Shop yow ola gula inte value. WANTED—Bouaraers. 3rd and Maln \ | -1 WAN’HD—Yuung lady for children by the day or hour Phone 194. WANTED — Woman wants house care may become full time later. Give bookkeeping _experience. application to § 3599 Empire. | WANTED— Pmnu‘v WANTED — Position s cook, in work by day or hcur. Phone 44 WANTED \ HELP WANTED—Woman for reg- | ular part time work in well | known business office. Position | shorthand, typing and | Address erences, ainter, must be me- | chanic. No other need apply.| Call at Ideal Paint Store. city, camp or cannery. Room 208, | Zynda Hotel, WANTED- | = WIREMAN wanted. Used electric ranges in trade on new Hotpoint Super- Automatic Ranges. Get the most| for your old range now. Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. See Smith Electric. Mandarin Dance i Studio Under supervision of GRrACE V. Davis Private instruction or class lessons available “BUT I'VE PAID THAT ALREADY— AND HERE’S THE PROOF!” When you can produce cancelled checks as receipts for payment of obligations, you have proof of payment that will stand in any court in the country. protective feature alone is sufficient rea- son by paying by check. Yet, a Checking Account provides un- tion, limited convenience, guards your funds until they are needed, immediately at a stroke of your pen. and makes them Have a Checking Account at the First National and pay by check it’s convenient—it's shall be glad to open an account for you TODAY! A g 241 The First National .Bank Juneau, Alaska 4 This in addi- saves time, safe- available It’s safe— business-like. We N3 upright Heintz- furnished {® and lot on 6th and East 5 /e from Seattle April 5. { ® Northland scheduled WHY--ER-- CERTAINLY, Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND ° deom scheduled to sometime tomorrow. Norco scheduled to Saturday night. ' SCHEDULED SAILINGS ® Kirkpatrick ' scheduled to sail arrive arrive ® Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver April 6 ® at 9 p. m ® Alaska scheduled to sailsfrom e Seattle April 7 at 9 a. m. to sail April 9 at e from Seattle e 9 pm. @ Northwestern scheduled to sail e from Seattle April 12 at 9 ® a m ¢ SOUTHBOUND ® Victoria scheduled southbound SAILINGS |® at 5 o'clock tomorrow after- | e moon. . . . ° . . . ® Yukon scheduled southbound e e April 9. . . LOCAL SAILINGS L4 ® Estebeth leaves every Thurs- e ® day night at 6 pm, for e e Sitka and way ports. . Pacific leaves every Thursday e at 10 am. for Petersburg, ® Kake and way ports. . e o e co 0000000 NORTHWESTERN IS OVERHAULED Owing to extensive overhauling and repairs, the Northwestern, of |the Alaska Steamship Company, will not inaugurate the Southeast Al SEattle on April 12. The original scheduled date was April 10 but |this has been slipped back two days in crder that the steamer will be thoroughly ready for the season of 1934 —-e 000000 e>0000 . TIDES TOMORROW . e o000 c 0000000 High tide 3:44 am, 159 feet Low 10:39 am, 02 feet High tide 5:00 pm., 120 feet {Low tide 10:39 pm., 51 feet Farm Equipment Is Badly Needed DES MOINES, Ia., Apri} 4. — | {Prof. J. B. Davidson of Iowa State college engineering school, estimates that three-fourths or 150,000 of Towa's farmers need $1,000 of new farm equipment each. Equally dis- tributed, it is declared, this would {mean $15,000 worth of business for each farm implement dealer in the state. e ———— Daily Empire Wau. Ads Pay [ S PSR AR FIRE ALARM CALLS 3 Third and Franklin. 4 Front and Franklin, 5 Front, near Ferry Way. -6 Front, near Gross Apts. 7T Front, opp. City Wharf. 8 Front, near Sawmill 9 Front at A. J. Office. 1 Willoughby at Totem Grocery. Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Garage. Front and Seward. Front and Main. Second and Main. Fifth and Seward. Seventh and Main, Fire Hall. Home Boarding House. Gastineau and Rawn Way. Second and Gold. Fourth and Harris. Fifth andd Gold. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house. g Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. Distin and Indian. Ninth and Calhoun. Tenth and C. Twelfth, BPR. garage. Twelfth and Willoughby. -9 Home Grocery. -1 Seater Tract. T YOU SAY YOU HAVE INSOMNIA,, EH 2 By CLIFF STERRETT ’uzéFr :3-23- Marine News [Proposed U. S. Ship Subsidy Resembles Italian “Bounties” (Continued from Page On‘e) give fast regular mail and passen- ger service. By are able to require regular sche uled sailings regardless of the size of the passenger list or the cargo. When sailing dates are left to t exigiencies of commerce the mail service is likely to be irregular and unsatisfactory. such subsidies government mand for regional shipping service from smaller ports. The receiving in a year has led to the complaint that such government aid is un- Jjustified, although the shipping lines may claim the amount of commerce justifies maintenace of the service. The new subsidy would be on an economic rather than a mail basis. Direct Subsidy Held Likely The third subsidy would recog- nize the difference in the costs of building ships here and abroad Heretofore the only government aid has been a revolving loan fund administered by the Federal ship- ping board. But this is of liftle aid to shipping companies if they have to pay interest on a largér construction cost than their foreign competitors. This Subsidy, author- ities hold probable, would be direct 7 YUKON ARRIVES FROM SOUTH AT 11:30 TUESDAY Steamer Has Largest Pas- senger List from South of Current Season Bringing 26 cabin passengers to Juneau from Seattle and 18 age as well as 10 Alaska ports, the M. J. Wilcox, purser, at 11:30 o'clock last night. With a heavy cargo of freight it was 9:30 "morning before steamer got away for the West- The second woul@ meet the de- ward by way of Skagway d for this city, o'clock this Haines. The Yukon left Seattle with 287 by some lines of subsidies of as cabin passengers and 135 steerage much as $300,000 or $400,000 for, carrying perhaps $25 worth of mail | est number any steamer has car- aboard for Alaska ports, ried so far this year. From Seattle Arriving here from Se: Dorothy Aalbu, Louis solacion, Mike Divyak, Mrs. Ellingsen, Mrs. F. McLeod, J. C. Michael A. Morley, W S Pekovich, Oscar Shirai, iams. # Those who arrived from South- east Alaska ports were: Ketchikan, B. E. Congdon, Gucker, Odin Jensen, Mrs. son, Mrs. William Falconer Wrangell, R. Carter, A. B. Ander: Petersburg, G. Riley on; to the shipbuilding companies with | Erickson. a view to bringing down costs bf ships to operators. ANNOUNCING THE INITIAL OF THE ° KIRKPATRIC FROM SEATTLE TOMORROW Outbound Passengers OCutbound vl e iy e e e S O S R 3 S. The departure of the steamer KIRKPATRICK is the first of a new steamer schedule which will be maintained to Alaskan points by the NORTHWEST ‘Steamship Lines from Southeast steamer Yukon,| Capt. A. Anderson, commander and docked here the larg- attle were: Anderson, | Thelma Archambault, A. H. Br ant, Arletta Carter, Margaret Con- J. W. Gucker, S. Pekovich, Mr Quistberg, H. L. Swank, James Truitt, Fred F. Volk, J. E. Will- E. Ma- Russell F. Pedersen, W, and Verner passengers were: Skagway, L. L. Trimble, Mrs Katherine Hooker, F. 8. Scobee; for Haines, L. M. Berlin, Floyd G. Betts, John N. Hylen, Severt Jacob- sen, Eugene Osborn, Dave Dishaw | George P. Kern, Vernon Rollins; for Cordova, James MecAllister, Charles Cook, Sam Arnmess, Jr., Dave Kassar, Paul Fritz, John An-| derson; for Excursion Inlet, Wal- lace Simonds; for Seward, Lester Jones, J. E. Wilson, Guy Terrill,| Carl M. Rogers, C. G. Morgan, W. B. Kimbell, Jr, R. C. Ingram, G. H Black, Alfred Havelin and Mat| Bilsnick. | The steamer Yukon is not stop- | ping at Sitka on this voyage, and| | bassengers who left the Yukon in| Juneau to take passage for Sitka on the Victoria are: Mrs. Ella| Barbeau and Mrs. George Colc::e‘ BIG BARN DANCE TO BE HELD SATURDAY | Women of the Moose v.mu"ht up something entirely dif-| ferent in the way of dances, and| invite the public to attend thel! “Barn Dance” to be held at the| Moose Hall on Saturday night. } Everything to carry out the ldea of an old-fashioned barn dance is| being done by the committees m‘ charge, and the same feeling of| good will and merriment that pre- .| vailed at the get-fogethers previous | years will add to the enjoyment .|on Saturday night. In addition to prizes for appro- riate Barn Dance apparel, there are to be several special dances,| schottisches, quadrilles, barn dances| i for which prizes will be awarded. The Haymakers, who will provide | the music, promise plenty of rythm and syncopation to satisfy the! most energetic dancer. i Tickets for this affair are on sale at the Butler-Mauro Drug Company, Light's Barber Shop, Ju- neau Sample Shop, in addition to se being individual of sold by SAIL BY WOMEN OF MOOSE == have | = FINEST Steamer *VICTORIA DERBLAY. Leave SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seattle Northbound Southbound Mar. 31, April 3 April 9 April 7 April10 April 16 LApril12 April16’ April 18 Aprilld April17 April 23 - fVICTORIA April 17 April 21 April 23 April 20—Freighter *—Southwestern Alaska Route. i—Southeastern Alaska Route. For All Travel Information THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McKANNA, Agem Thavel znd A ORTHLA “’- TRANSPORTATION CO. Due Juneau Due Juneau April 5 | CALL PHONE 2 ND MOTORSHIP NORTHLAND Lv. Seattle Ar. Juneau Lv. Juneau March 12 16 18 March 28 30 Apr. 1 April 9 13 15 April 22 21 29 May 7 11 13 May 21 25 27 June 4 8 10 Jume 18 22 24 SEATTLE AND RETURN—$60.00 MOTORSHIP NORCO Auto Rate—S Wills Navigation Company Phone 3 Ar. & Lv. Leave Ar. & Lv. Leave Ar. & Lv. Seattle Juneau Seattle Juneau Seattle Junecau Mar. 19 24 Apr. 30 May 5 Jun. 11 16 Apr. 2 7 May 14 10 Jun. 25 30 Apr. 16 21 May 28 Jun. 2 July 9 1 SEATTLE AND RETURN—$48.00 J. B. Burford & Co. D. B. Femmer Guy L. Smith Ticket Agent Freight Agent Agent Phone 79 Phone 114 Douglas .‘VI. S e %> Leave Seaille Arrive Juneau Leave Juneaw = S ZAPORA March 26 April 1 April 2 Calling at Punter, Chichagof*’ Hoonah, Tenakee, Port Alexander, Kla- outh, $1.00 per 100 pounds. Juneau Commercial Dock, Agent and SEATTLE From Juneau March 28 April 11, 25 May 8, 17, 27 particulars from JUNEAU PACIFIC | SAILING TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA PRINCESS NORAH Tickets, reservations and full v. W. MULVIHILL, Agent FERRY TIME CARD LEAVE JUNEAU 6:15a.m. t4:0% m, 7:15a.m, 6:13p m, 8:00a.m 9:15a.m. 12:30p.m. [ 2:00p.m. 12:00 Midaight 8:20p.m. *1:00a.m. LEAVE DOUGLAS | 6:30a.m. 5:00p.m. 7:30a.m. 6:30p.m. 8:30a.m. *7:45p.m. 9:30a.m. 10:00p.m. 12:45p.m. 11:30p.m. 2:15p.m. 12:15a.m. 3:45p.m. *1:15p.m. *—Saturday only. t—Goes to Thane. mnc Floors —& Flooring Contractor Phone 582 B TIM:. SCHEDULE } Sanding, Finishing Leave Auk Bay ALWAYS the latest at COLEMAN’S Parlors 1 = umbing Estimates Free '| GARLAND BOGGAN Hardwood Flooring—Laying, ! CHANNEL BUS LINE Leave Juneau Juneau lce Cream | Exclusive Dealers HORLUCK'S DANISH ICE CREAM CUT YOUR FUEL BILL! Let us clean your fu TORNADO FURNACE VA Gets the soot and dirt in every nook and corner Ham Machine Shop Heating Sheet Metal Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company % Pacific Transpertation Company = M. S. “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock evéry Thurs- day at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way points, 7:00a.m. 7:45a.m. 12:30p.m. 2:30p.m. J. B. Burford & Co., Agents 4:15p.m. 5:30p.m. Phone 79, Valentine Bldg. Bundays and Holidays Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau 8:00a.m. 9:15a.m. Motorship “ESTEBETH” Leaves Juneau Every Thurs- day at 6 P. M. for Sitka and Way Ports | DAVE HOUSEL, Agent .l Phone Single O i Daily Empwe Want Ads Pay now with the M CLEANER