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g | Y'MEAN TSAY 3 THIS'LIGHTNING HAIR-GROWER™ ACTUALLY STARTED SOMETHING ON PAW'S wm" e o eo ob ITAINT EXACTKLY & IR, 4 OF INVISIBLE RAIS. A HAIR, HANG IT/ YOUu'D BE SURPRISED, AUNT SUSIE: © 1034, King Fearures Syndicare, loc, Grene Brcan cights reserved FOR RENT—Apts. Apply 209 Oliff Apartments. FOR RENT—Furnished heated apt. | Inquire Bishop Apts. Mrs. Jen- sen. FOR HENT Small furnnhed apt. | with bath. Good location. Phone | 3753 or inquire Gatsineau Gro- cery. FOUR rooms and bath, heated, nicely furnished, electric range, Frigidaire. Windsor Apts. 4-ROOM “furnished house on Gas- tineau Ave. Reasonable rent. Phone 561. Inquire 306 Front St. FOR RENT—Four-room furnished house. Phone 187 after 6 p.m. FOR RENT—Three-room furnished | steamheated apt. Telephone 5601. FOR RENT—Housekeeping rooms with range. 2 rm. apt. Phone 436. FOR RENT -~ fFurnished 4-room house. Phone 1472 FOR RENT — Two large house- keeping rooms; dishes, linen in- cluded, $s«v monthly. Apply 207 2nd St., near Seward. FOR RENT Small furnished apartment. Telephone 3753. T-ROOM house, nicely furnished. 4 bed rooms. Oil heat. Fireplace. Call Windsor Apts. FOR RENT—Gabe Paurs residence on Tenth Street near Fair Build- ing. Hard wood floors, automatic oil heat. Fine neighborhood. Call Gastineau Grocery. Phone 37. N R R 2 “VANCACY. Nugget Apartments. FOR RENT—Furnished. “three-room office suite. Heated. Apply Juneau | Melody House or Telephone 65. FOR RENT or sale tanos, radios “sewing machifis. Expert plano ~tuning. Phonograph repairing Anderson Music Shoppe. Telephone | 143, steam- | 1FOR SALE or lease—7-room un- karat man’s diamond ring, blue, | perfect, reasonable. Telephone 318. F()k éALE’—One and une-f_o_urch | FOR SALE—3-room house on Fritz | | Cove Road. Situated between | Mrs. Parker's and Mr. Skinner's. ;YUKBN LEAVES s Inquire at Jensen's Apts, C. C.| Rudolph. Phone 262. s ‘FOR. SALE—Des\rable corner l'ESl- dence lot 60 x 90, Shattuck Ad- FUR WESTWARD | dition. Call Sperling. ‘e P e SR e i & ‘FOR SALE—1931 Standard Ford LA s T EvEN'NG | Coupe. Good condition. Phone 2952. | | At 6:30 oclock last eventng me]. steamer Yukon, Capt. H. Anderson,; o | commander, and M. J. Wilcox, pur- |ser, left the Standard Oil dock |FOR SALE — Gas boat, for sale bound for the Westward. cheap. Call Third and Main Sts. Those leaving here on the Yukon | ——_ were: for Valdez — Joe Skomish, | NICE LEVEL LOT, cheap for cash. George Kilmer, William McGaughy; Inquire 132 6th St. {for Latouche—K. B. Sather; for FOR SALE—A cook stove. Phone ;::lx;dova—Damel Morris, P. M. Ar- 1. ford, ”W. W. Montgomery, FOR SALE—16 {t. outboard motor- boat and 8 h.p. Johnson motor. | Phone 2052. |® Charles Femmer, J. B. Craw- | ¢ Amos | ¢ _| FOR SALE—Electric washing ma- Bourden, Fred Pognant, Ben Wil- ¢ Silvertone son, and for Seward—E. R. Stivers, e R. W. Mitten, Ernest E. Olsen, e |William H. Bitter, K. O. Scribner, e trolling_ boat. J. L. Lucky, J. B. Gottstein, George o Enquire Empire Gilbertson, Carl G. Robinson, Ced- !ric M. Davis, A. Korol, Jeanettc o Heabst, Roy R. Oxman, Robert D. o Livie, T. A. Reeder, A. Ritea, Ben ' e C Goebel, Henry Unoinos. NEGOTIATING chine, twelve - tube radio. Enquire Empire H 3662. FOR SALE—30-ft. A-1 condition. J 3659. FOR SALE—Gooa heater with hot water coils, $20. Juneau Frock Shoppe. furnished house on Basin Road. Phone 330. )uu‘ See Harris, the Sign Painter. FISH STRIKE ,—iNning room set. Als 50 cel spring. Phone 1423. i e oy ~ogeg wenipeel m—— ASTORJA, Oregon, FOR SALL — Columbia bicycle. Cheap. Enquire Emplre D 5000 - forence: between the striking - fish- and packers were under OHILDREN carea for oy day, week rmen oo _Pl—agn_: ended on the Columbia River with APARTMENTS. Tel. 2004 421 E.Tth FOR 637, REN1—=uespiu ; room. Phou e 1 Marine News ® 000000000000 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND | ® Victoria due Saturday. North Wind due Saturday i 8 ight. CHEDULED SAILINGS ® Zapora scheduled to sail from Seattle May 2. Princess Norah scheduled to sa at il from ‘Vancouver May 3 9 pm. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle May 5 at 9 am. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle May 7 at 9 p. m, Northwestern scheduled to sail from Seattle May 8 at 9 am. SO Yuk UTHBOUND SAILINGS on schedulgd southbound next Monday. Estel day night at 6 pm,. LOCAL SAILINGS beth leaves every Thurs- for Sitka and way ports. Pacific leaves every Thursday at 10 a.m., for Petersburg, Kake and way ports. ® ® 0 ¢ 0 00 0 0 0o | SEATTLE, May 2—Halibut ar-| Electra 40,000 pounds, nts. From the May 2—Ne- 17,000 pounds, Mining Location Notices at Em- | way as the first day of the strike pire nn,w FOUR HALIBUTERS SELL AT SEATTLE 1% and 9% .- local banks—Oceanus and 6 cents; gotiations to settle the price dif- Merit 9,000 pounds, 9 and 6 (’enba FORMER CHIEF, ARMY STAFF IS [Major General Hugh L. | Scott Passes Away After Two Months’ Illness (Continued from Page One) i, e0ce v e . . . . . ° . . . e o . o . . . ASSOCIATED PRESS. ‘FC:}?(hSA‘l“;llll}g:gl;g;e;:;rog:rhg;i;’. SEI ILEMENT rivals, catches and selling prices | HUGH L. SCOTT $ Will sell for cash or zoday follow: superintendent of the military gasboat. What have the western banks— Atfu| Academy, as head of a special, 40000 pounds, 7% and 6 cents; | mission to New Mexico and Ari- 6| zom to adjust Indian troubles, mmander of the troops along the Mexican border, and as head of a which pacified the na when war with them seemed inevitable Was Diplemat ment won the attention of Wood- | TURN yow olc guia Int value empty fishing boats as the season i Cash or trade at Nugge: Soop qpumd | WANTED WANTED House cleaning work by hour or dny Phone 349. flANTED — To buy used SLudlo Couch. Must be in good con- “dition and clean. Phone 2703. WAN"nm—au-os Sprmgnem spon- er. Must be in A-1 condition. ‘Write F. J. Hong, Kimshan Cove. WANTED — Work by unlversity: graduate, electrical and mechan- | ical inclined. Driving, clerking or office work. Empire D 3668. WANTED—Young lady will care for children by the day or hour. Phone 194, WANTED — Woman wants house work by day or hcxu Phunc 4“4 I - PIGGI.Y T . CAPITAL Beer Parlors and Ball Room J uneau lce Cream row Wilson, then in his first term as President, and a warm friend- eee 0 o000 sconooe TIDES TOMORROW . ee0eovreroeosoe | ss | & i i { Jones-Stevens Shop High tide ,2:49 a.m., 173 feet. LADIES'—~CHILDREN'S Low tide, 9:36 am. -20 feet. BEADY-TO-WEAR High tide, 4:06 p.m., 13.7 feet. Beward Btreet Near Third Low tide, 9:41 pm., 38 feet. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” - Parlors p b Exclusive Dealers HORLUOK'S | | o0 ™300 him assistan Ghief of i1 | DANISH ICE CREAM | |ooaff of the Army in g N _'”ew months later elevated him to THE i B Chief of Staif. But even in that| ) PATCH || R post he was not exempt from per- i ARDI-‘E?SHL?I‘C l\ ALWAYS forming special missions. He set-/ | tled again, by diplomacy, rather ® Fruits and Vegetables 35 £ gk CHARLES i i the la‘e‘“ at l{ than by armed force, an impend- ) , Louisiana, COLEMAN’S ing border conflict at Naco, Ariz.|$= 2—Murphy Humfrey was wounded « |Then, at the President’s request,i G__D_a 2 when 300 doxil: “;;rker& ‘?150“:;:8 nl"'z lll he acted as peacemaker between | the Texas ngshoremen’s strike, ' the government and the Piute In-| MEN‘%“!}E‘ 5o | were fired on from windows of a | PAINTS—~—QILS | |dians at Bluff, Utah, and later, b | mearby house after a fist fight had Builders’ and Shelf | | went to the Mexican border and! | s4.50 | occurred in the street. Seven ne- HARDWARE was successful in recovering prop- | groes have been arrested. i erty of foreigners in Mexico which | — - — i { see Blc VAN R { nom Hardware CO. had been confiscated by the bamm { w o Villa. tended from November, ed the statuteiy retirement age of 64. He actually remained in service in other capacities, however, for a year and a half afterward. On Commission After returning from Russia, where he went as a member of the Root investigating commission, General Scott proceeded to Paris to study operations on the west e, 1T°’S IMPORTANT TO BANK FUNDS PROMPTLY— —yet, a trip to the bank is not al- ways convenient — BUT, when you bank at the Fijrst "National Bank of Juneau! distanee from the bank, un- pleasant weather, or other duties, need not interfere — you can bank promptly and conveniently by mail + with the same safety as when you bank in person. Avoid the risks of having large sums about the house or on your person— bank promptly by mail—at this bank. £ [ ( ! fsg The F lgs; N atwnal Bank Juneau, Alaska H 2N = 2 ™ W Scientist, Three Fold Responsibility humanitarian, economist , . we.are bound to be all three. We are charged with keeping abreast with advances in a science made necessary by a mod- em spcial order. We must exercise tact and sympathy. And we must keep the cost wit ithin the means of those whom we serve. The Charles 'W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 ‘The Last Service Is the | Graatest Tribute” * BEER of Guaranteed Qualities! The assurance that you are buying the purest and BEST BEER is yours when you pat~ ronize this establishment! Rhinelander and Alt Heidelberg ON DRAUGHT The Miners Recreation Parlors BILL DOUGLAS - DEAD IN EAST | This long record of accomplish- ‘ ship sprang up between them. Wil-, His service as chief of staff ex-' 1914, to. September 22, 1917, when he reach- ! front. He was with a British divis- ion in the front line at Arras and with a French division at the front at Chalons. He was present at the battle of Passchendal Ridge and later made an inspection of Allies’ line from Verdun to Ypres. Returning to the United States in December, 1917, he was appoint- ed commander of the 78th division, then in training at Camp Dix, N. J. He was relieved of that com- \mand in March, 1918, and when the | outfit went overseas General Scott was appointed commander of Camp Dix to supervise the training of recruits. For his service he was |given the distinguished . service medal. It was while he was chief of | staff that the United States en- | tered the war. In that capacity it | fell to him to advise the Secretary | of War who should be selected to ‘command the American forces in | France. He himself would have | been willing to give his life for |such a command but he recom- | mended instead the selection of | General Pershing. What his decis- ion cost him in price and ambition cannot be told. Retires in 1919 His name finally was placed on the retired list on May 12, 1919, and he became in his later years head of the New Jersey state high- | way commission. His decision to make that state his home arose from associations while he was in command at Camp Dix, for his native state was Kentucky, where he was born on Sept. 22, 1853, a de- scendant, on his mother’s side, of Benjamin Franklin. The biographer of another Ameri- can ‘soldier, General Winfield Scott, | wrote of him that the end of his career came just at the moment ywhen a great war broke out, “and when the veteran had to make way for young men who soon filled the public eye to his exclusion.” , The same comment on the vagaries of fate might as fittingly be in- cluded in the epitaph of the Gen- eral Scott of a generation later. | In June, 1880, General Scott married Mary Merrill, daughter of General Lewis Merrill. They had five children. | ———-—e NOTICE Applications zor the position of City Assessor will be received by the City Council up to 5 p.m., May 4, 1934. | A. W. HENNING, . —adv. City Clerk. i Shop 11 Juneau : ITS Wise to Call 48 1 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal .y 4 Transfer — In the BAG! Pack your clothes and | linens in the laundry | bag, send it to us, and you'll smile! That's what | thrifty women do! TELEPHONE 22 ALASKA AIR EXPRESS FOR CHARTER Lockheed 6-Passenger Seaplane J. V. HICKEY FINEST SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound *ALASKA ... Apr. 30 TN'WESTERN Apr. 28 Apr. 30 “YUKON ... May 1 May 7 fVICTORIA . May 5 May 17 *ALASKA .. » May 8 May 14 tN'WESTERN ..May 8 May 12 May 14 *YUKON ....May 12 May 15 May 21 fVICTORIA .....May 15 May 19 May 21 *—Southwestern Route. f—Southeastern Route. For all travel information Call THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McKanna, Agt. Phone 2 flgj’uwelmd i Pl NORTHI.A MOTORSHIP NORTHLAND Lv. Seattle Ar. Juneau Lv. June; March 12 16 18 i March 26 30 Apr. 1 Aprii 9 13 15 April 22 27 29 May 7 11 13 May 2! 25 27 June 8 10 June 18 SEATTLE AN‘D RETURN—‘SODO STEAMER NORTHWIND Leave Ar. & Lv. Leave Ar. & Lv. Leave Ar. & Ly, Seattle Juneau Seattle Juneau Seattle Juneau 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 J. B. Burford & Co. D. B. Femmer Guy L. Smith Ticket Agent Freight Agent ll,Azent Phone 79 Phone 114 Donuglas mvesuulo Arrive Juneau Leave Juneay M. S. “ZAPORA” 1<jte Ses May 8 May 9 Calling at Funter, Chichagof* Hoonan, Tenakee, Port Alexander, Kla- wock, Craig, Ketchikan. *Calls first trip of month only Auto Rate—South, $1.00 per 100 pounds. Wills Navigation Company Phone 3 Juneau Commercial Dock, Agent Alaska Southern Airways SAFE! FAST! PROVEN DEPENDABLE! Sixth Consecutive Season of Suceessful Operation Weekly Service to Principal Southeast Alaska Towns ALSO PLANES FOR CHARTER For Reservations—Call or See A. B. HAYES, Manager GASTINEAU HOTEL PACIFIC ; S LEAVE JUNEAU 6:15a.m. 14:00p.m. 7:15a.m, 6:15p.m. SAILING o TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA bt b and SEATTLE 12:30p.m, 11:15p.m. 2:00p.m. 12:00 Midnight From Juneau 3:30pm. *1:00a.m. PRINCESS NORAH LEAVE DOUGLAS - 1 May 8—17—27 :;:»m. 5:00p.m. 1z :30a.m. 6:30p, June 5—15 8:30a.m. .-,;w: 9:30a. X PRINCESS LOUISE lz:fip: :gm: June 22 2:15p.m. 12:158.m. 3:45p.m. *1:15pm. | Tickets, reservations and full . 3 L particulars from 1—Goes to n"fl‘l.m- 1 ¢. W. MULVIHILL, Agent e JUNEAU S Juneau Fer i M— e ry & Naviga. tion Company Flooring Contractor Hardwood Flooring—Laying, Sanding, Finishing Phone 552 Pacific Transportation Conipany “PACIFIC™ Leaves City Dock every Thurs- day at 10 am. for Petersburg, 4 GARLAND BOGGAN | | \ TIME. SCHEDULE CHANNEL BUS LINE mve Juneau Kake, Port Alexander and way points. J. B. Burford & Co., Agents Phone 7 Valentine Bldg, Motorship —— “ESTEBETH” | LUDVIG NELSON ||} &5 ¢% s e Watch Repairing mvnwxousn." Mum Brunswick Agency Phone Single O FRONT STREET \ . T ” ” a »