The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 30, 1934, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1934. FOR RENT’ FOR SALE — Merchandise display | VACANCY, Seaview Apts. ReNtS| ™o "es 0 each, See them. Bon V' greatly reduced. Lights, water, i ? 0 etc., furnished. ¥ FOR SALE—Large choice tomato plants, 50 cents per doz. Pansy plants 50 cents per doz. GARDEN | i PATCH. |FOR SALE—New 8-tube all-electric Silvertone Radio. Long and short wave. $40. Phone 5201. NT—Cabin, $9.00, includ- light, water and garbage. "ing Phone 2343. FOR RENT—Two and three room steam heated apts. with private bath. Telephone 5601, Vacancy. McBride Apts. Phone 5701. FO—R SALE_—Summer home, Goa‘l buy. Phone Apartment 9, CIiff Apartments. FOR RENT — Summer home at Eagle River Landing. Phone 4751 THREE-room apt. MacKinnon. i ki Eints |FOR SALE—2 lots, good, location, | also six-room house and Ilot. Phone 330. !'_OF;EENTfmrnished apartment. Apply Zynda or Phone 123. _|FOR SALE—16 1. outboard motor- boat and 8 h.pp. Johnson motor. Phone 2952. FOR RENT—One large room $12 single room $10, two large rooms $20. Furnished. 20 7Second near !seward. |FOR SALE—General Electric Sun | Lamp, large size, $18.00. Call R. F. Taylor. —sieep;;{é ro;J; $10 315 Gold St. monthly. FOR RENT—Store room formerly " occupied by Jarman’s on Second | Street. Also four-room partly Cove Road. Situated between Mrs. Parker's and Mr. Skinner's. Inquire at Jensen's Apts, C. C. furnished apartment. Will alter| Rudolph, Phone 262. to suit tenant. Apply San Fran- cisco Bakery. | NICE LEVEL LOT, cheap for cash. Inquire 132 6th St. CHILDREN cared for oy day, week or month. Phone 28532 VACANCY in Jensen Apts. In-| quire Apartment One. Phone 5151. SIX-room furnisned modern house | on 6th Street. Piano. Enquire 306 Front St. or Phone 561. TURN yowm ola guia Into value. Cash or trade at Nugges 8bop OR RENT—Peterson House, 3rd | and Dixon. Address P. 0. Box| LOST AND FOUND 1852. R b T s i sl - | LOST—Rowboat about 4x14, green 3JANOS rented, tunea. Phone paint, red stripe. Complete with' Anderson. hand trolling outfit, with four fish and $7 cash aboard. Adrift _| | it | from Shelter Island May 25. Noti- POR RENT—Apts. Apply 209 “Apartments. fy Box 398, Juneau. Reward. R RENT—Furnished heated apt. | OST_Keys In leather folder, be- Inquire Bishop Apts. Mrs. Jen-| tyeen Union Oil Dock and garage ssen. | Reward. Phone 297. UR rooms and bath, steam- | ‘heated, nicely furnished, electric range, Frigidaire. Windsor Apts. Mining Location Notices at Em- pire office. FOR RENT—Four-room furnished ~“house. I aone 187 after 6 p.m. “The Ot ¢ Man" Home of BHart, Schaffner and Marx Clothing t—--ii FOR REN: — BSmall furnished apartment. Telephone 3753. ;:ROOM nouse, nicely rfurnished. 4i bed rooms. Oll heat. Fireplace. Call Windsor Apts. l vgfcm. “Nugget Apartments. || R RENT—Purnished three-room syite. Heated. Aprly J 3 House or Teephone 6, |B— APARTMENTS. Tel, 2004 421 E/Tth RO FOR HENT—Sicopui; réom. Phone B\ — H.S. GRAVES | | | JUNEAU SAMPLE ‘WHOZME? YER COO-COO, e e 0000000000 Steamer Movements * NORTHBOUND No steamers - northbound. SCHEDULED SAILINGS North. Wind delayed in freight loading, scheduled .to sail tonight. Prinless Norah srheduled to @ sail from Vandouver May 31 at 9 pm. Other, sailings subject to con- ditions present Longshore- men's strike. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Cordova . scheduled . to . arrive tomorrow afternoon about 3 o'clock. & LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thurs- day night at. 6 pm, for Sitka and way ports, Pacific leaves every Thursday at 10 a.m., for Petersburg, . Kake and way ports. e e 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 00 @0 0000000000000 00000000 00 s .o S0 s0 0 o0 ssrenscoe . TIDES TOMORROW - 0 o000 go v High tide, 1:58 a.m., 186 feet. Low tide, 8:41 am. -3.6 feet. High tide,.3:10 p.m., 154 feet. Low tide, 8:47 pm., 26 feet. Fox Caught by Hand MIAMI, Fla., May 30.—J. . Jacks caught a fox with his bare hands— and came off with nothing worse than a few bites and scratches. His automobile struck the beast on a highway, knocked the breath out of it and Jacks seized it before it had fully recovered. ST GRANDFATHER AT 29 BALTIMORE, May 30.—The earl- lest known age at which any hu- man being ever became a grand- father is 29, says Dr. Raymond Pear], biologist of Johns Hopkins university. - IT’S Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. * whén 1n need of * £ - . SHOP MOVING or STORAGE % WANTED The Little Store with the Fuel Oil Coal P _ BIG VALUES Transfer NTED — Woman for genera! , shousework or girl to assist. Ap- ———— Q@ Py ly Nugget Shop. énmn — Woman for general ‘fiLxfi?sa' l l\ PIOIEEE&S‘A FE i b ork. Apply Mrs. J. F. - “THE HOME OF e | COLEMANS || GOOD RATS" : ?AMED—-WWK wanted by man - nd wife. Woman excellent cook. i ';:an _geperal work. Go anywhere. g iSee Hermle at Gastineau Grocery. WANTED—Experienced ‘housekeep- er. Must be good cook. Address by letter to G 1000 care Empire. WANTED — Woman wants house ;/work by day or hour. Phone 4" “Old new#pupers Tor sale at Em- pire Office. ] Handling tinances on a See BIG VAN i MODERN BEAUTY :SHOP || 403 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 357 AN S (WD oG provides the accuracy [paying by check affords. household, and business BETTY MAC | - o i HAVE A CHECKING ACCOUNT, L5VE for PERSONAL T Gm—' T HOUSEHOLD MENS lggtll.gll'(:l or BUSINESS g FINANCES! atic basis requires accuragy, safety, convenience and simplicity. A Checking Account at this bank eqplpment. the safety of this dependable bank, and the convenience and simplicity The First National Bank invites you to have one or more Checking Aeccoupts here for personal, our seryice—we will enjoy serving you. ® The F, lrst National Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA 2 businesslike and system- of modern bookkeeping that only fipance. You will enjoy nY 7 & x Marine News NORTH WIND TO CALL AT SITKA [Strikers Agree to Loa Materials for Home ‘and Foodstuffs for' Fown Threatened suspension of work on the new Pioneers’ Home at Sitka and a possible food shortage in { the ‘community was averted when the Seattle longshoremen. yesterday agreed to load on the North Wind building materials for the Home and also foodstuffs for the.com- jally scheduled to have callediat | Sitka. | Early this week Gov. Troy ‘in- formed of Sitka, telegraphed Frank A. Boyle, Territorial Auditor and Secretary of the Home Building Commission, at Seattle, asking him to get in touch with union leaders and present the matter to them. The telegram was forwarded to | Portland. Mr. Boyle immediately went to Seattle and entered nego- tiations with the longshoremen's officials. He wired the Governpr |late yesterday as follows: “Long- | shoremen officials have agreed to | take all materials for the Home on | North Wind, also foodstuffs for | Sitka.” | | ® 0 v 900 e .. [o AT THE HOTELS . ® 0 0 00 0000 000 | Zynda J. H. Sawyer, Windham; 8. E. |King, Windham; G. A. Westcott, | Seattle; C. W. Bragan, Seattle. Gastineau Bob Ellis, Ketchikan; Alice M. {Loomis, Juneau; Mrs. William Grossman, Sitka; E. Martin, Prince Rupert; A. H. Herrold, Excursion Inlet. SRS T AR Daily Empire Wan: Ads Pay —————— VISIT THE Salmon Creek munity. The vessel was not origin- | the conditions facing | PHONES 83 OR 85 CORDOVA DUE 'FISH MARKET |ship Company, is scheduled to ar- ihEa !rive tomorrow afternoon, Seattle a : |bound, from the westward. The Buyers Will Take Only One More Catch from Cordova sailed from Cordova short- |1y after noon yesterday and has & Trolling Vessels many passengers aboard, including eral local boys who have been jattending the Alaska Agricultural' |College and School of Mines at Fairbanks. Due to the unsettled condition of the shipping tie-up, and to the ex- haustion of local facilities for cur- e 'ing and storing salmon brought in ‘WR ANGELL leTlTUTE | here, local salmon fishermen will be notified not to bring any more fish HEAD GOES TO N. MEX-‘ in, according to an announcement | TGS made this morning by Wallis S. (Wrangell Sentinel) | George, manager of the Juneau Leroy F. Jackson, director of the Cold Storage company. | Wrangell Institute, has received] During the next week, all fish word of his appointment as super-| Which have been caught previous |intendent of Charles H. Burke to first motification will be pur- 1school at Gallup, New Mexico, and i chased, but as fast as trollers come Ispecial disbursing agent for the in, they will lay their boats up in Navajo Indian reservations. the harbor to await settlement of He will leave Wrangell with his the longshoremen’s strike. family in about two weeks and will | { report for duty a month later. Gal- | virtually the last fish market in | lup is about seventy miles from Al- Southeast Alaska to remain open,| This action marks the finish of | ™ Lv. Seattle Ar. Juneau Lv. Juneay March 12 16 18 March 26 30 Apr. 1 Aprit 8 13 15 April 22 21 29 May 7 11 13 May 21 25 27 June 4 8 10 June 18 22 24 P SEATTLE AND RETURN—$60.00 STEAMER NORTHWIND Leave Ar.&Lv. Leave Ar.&Lv. Leave Ar. & Lv. Seattle Juneau Seattle Juneau Seattle Juneau Mar. 19 24 Apr. 30 May 5 Jun, 11 16 Apr. 2 1 May 14 10 Jun. 25 30 Apr. 16 21 May 28 Jun. 2 July 9 14 J. B. Burford & Co. D. B. Femmer Guy L. Smith ‘Ticket Agent Freight Agent Agent | Phone 79 Phone 114 Douglas 3 SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Steamer *“YUKON. {VICTORIA, .....May 18 May 22 May 23 “CORDOVA" due Juneau Southbound MAY 30 *—Southwestern Route. t—Southeastern Route. For all travel information Call THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McKanna, Agt. Phone 2 TRANSPORTATION CO. MOTORSHIP NORTHLAND ¥ In the BAG! Pack your clothes and linens in the laundry bag, send it to us, and yow'll smile! That'’s what thrifty women do! 5 buquerque, Ketchikan fishermen having been The Charles H. Burke school has aid up for the past week or more. {an enrollment of 600 boarding stu-| Two boats sold salmon here last dents and a staff of over fifty night, the Sadie, Capt. Sandy Stev- teachers. John Collier, United,ens, 6,000 pounds to th> Alaska States Commissioner of the Bu-;Coast Fisheries; and the Thlinget, reau of Indian Affairs, has chosen|Capt. J. Martin, 6,000 pounds to this school in which to start the the same buyer. E. E. Engstrom new program which he is undertak- | bought two small lots of 400 pounds ing in the reorganization of the €ach from local trolling boats. Indian Bureau, giving a great deal | bt i ) of initiative to the various Indian groups. decentralizing the Indian‘GRIn sTARs Bureau as far as possible and at- | tempting to set up a self govern-, ment among the Indian nations. N ‘The commissioner is making the Navajo program to a considerable | extent a demonstration of his new| principles of Indian administration,| TUSCALOOSA, Ala, MBy 30— Mr. Jackson’s time will be divid- | For the second consecutive year it ‘ed between school supervision and looks as though football play"ers traveling about the Navajo land.s.fwm get a monopcr]y on the outfield { Preparatory to the organization and 'JODS in Alabama’s varsity baseball holding of Indian conferences at| eam. Two of the numbers are the school to get ready for the Moseley and Hutson, whose names time when the Navajos will ;were household words during the largely independent of the Bureau, | football season. The appointment came to MI. | Jackson through his being ranking man at a Civil Service examination conducted last. November for In-| dian school superintendents, in' which around 300 school men were entered. Musk-Oxen Back f i f 3 . | On Aldaskan Soil ! | ‘. After 100 Years ! FAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 30.— | The shaggy musk-ox, hardy denizen {o!_ Arctic snows, is re-established | in Alaska after a lapse of 100 ' years. | Birth of two young musk-0x |calves in a herd brought to Amskx{ |in 1930 indicates the experiment of | | transplanting the animals from| Greenland was a success, the Bio- | |logical Survey reports. It was at 1 first uncertain whether the herd {would survive. i- Musk-oxen disappeared from Al- iaska about & century ago, accord- 'ing to natives, but nobody knows why. In 1927 the Territorial Legis- lature asked Congress for money to | reestablish the animals there. ' Congress acceded to the request FC. H. Keil—Phone 10, Gastineau Hotel—<Chet McLean Cable address*PATCO—Junea '/ ALATKA AR EXRRESS : Lockheed:.6-Passenger, Seaplane whoade ’VA'BICKEY ANITARY G iasd M. S. “ZAPORA” Calling at Funter, Chichagof*’ Hoonan, Tenakee, Port Alexander, Kla- wock, Craig, Ketchikan. Wills Navigation Company SAFE! A. B. HAYES, Manager CANADIAN and in 1930 a herd of 34 young Alaska - May' 8—17—27* 1 musk-0: were shipped half way - ‘ June 5—15 around .world from Greenland. 4 E PRINCESS LOUISE fl:ld newspapers for sale at Em i Jane 22 . > A BT € 3 : T Py S Panhandle Air Tra’nslmrt Co. | ' wwmommns,apm | (SO e L it Faidiagenm {7 JUNGA! ey “PA TCO’ 5 Juneau Ferry & Naviga- 4-PLACE CABIN SEAPLANE FOR CHARTER JUNEAU ‘tion’ Company* . 3 4 P | RESTAURANT | —————=—===ss———— Most Economical Air Transportation' it Alaska | Chas. Peterson , R C. V. KAY—.Telephone 4954 i | “THE HOME OF GOOD | """‘""'“ “"""W:” | FOOD". I M. S. “PACIFIC Leave Auk Bay R ] *7:00 am. *7:45 am. SRS - IS T 5L 0 Feseyipnrs, - 12:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 4:15 pm. 5:30 p.m. iD Leave Auk Bay—&6:45 pam. 3 99 Leave Juneau—12:00 Midnight EgrEBETH Special Trip—Sundays Leaves Juneaa Every Thurs< Leave Auk Bay—6:45 p.m. day at 6 P. M. for Sitka and Leave Juneau—9:45 pm. Way Ports A ol - & P C I Fi - LEAVE JUNEAU § § P ——— 6:15a.m, Mfoop.m. I SAILING .::Hp.m. bt TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA D:ump.m. & G ey 11:15p.m. . 12;00 Midnig From Juneau *1:008.m. Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Juneat May 16 May. 23 May 24 *Calls first trip. of month only Auto Rate—South, $1.00 per 100 pounds. Phone 3 Juneau Commercial Dock, Ageni . Alaska Southern Airways FAST! PROVEN DEPENDABLE! Sixth Consecutive Season of Successful Operation Weekly Service to Principal Southeast Alaska Towns ALSO PLANES FOR CHARTER For Reservations—Call or See GASTINEAU HOTEL FERRY TIME CARD PRINCESS: NORAH Leaves City Dock every Thure- day at 10 am. for : TIME SCHEDULE || Kke, Fort Alcxander sna wag CHANNEL BUS LINE Three Trips Every Day ! Leave Juneau|

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