The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 8, 1935, Page 6

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Logan y 3arba; White, SAILINGS Eli Maki, A White. Ketchikan—M: tp...,----,”,,,-,,---_,“----,-N”,--,--,-_----.( \ | \ i > N . \ / [ o A 2 4 " [ Q)] { o Viarimme 'NCws | | i B R el s s st Ui son saiioded Seeeveesoe o0 - . - 11 PASSENGERS ¢ Steamer Movements ] : 2 r 2 23 . . Apfi@l i VEHH’;HW o NORTHBOUND . gunily [ORUN by TS A led- @ = SRR o N BT p B ] L 4 i vth ¢ M iilie 1 Uh ¢ o ¢ * Steamer Arrives from Se- » vrED " : o ; 1e attle This Morning ¢ Krsrertiond Leaves for West 2 Sea € « it e > Seattle Noverm W Bt 7ukon from Seattle e ® perth ¢ Coast Dock at 9 .z o sail e with 27 © 14 at 9 p. ® 2d ailed t o 2 yelock from the B m ® The Yukon is A 2 Capt. A. An > ¥ o Larry McNamee 4 ks Funeau w From Ayl 2 e—Ca n, M. W. Evan: o SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS e nv‘..‘ ”:_‘_\ o 7 ‘!m‘y“::l oA reduled southbound e poC sspbisr re- ® . o ° . . . N . . « eecsseces s on, R. H. Stock, B! € A g > cMayburn From Wrangell—Charles Ness Fre 1 Petersbhu se 00 ves v 00 00 rbs T S TOMORROW e \ Wi o.o....-.;.. e 2 n, Jno. Wa cobson son, H. Pet- - COURTESY TEST R ' BE LONG NOW! and a represen- IT WON Phone 8’ ill show you samples of " e t creations in be Chr Cards at painless prices for any purse. 4 -oe A ie win- SPECIAL DELivEZ. TO DOUG- of 1 have LA Daily at 10:00 a.m. 2 p.n. "elly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442, adv. il i Prisoners in Michigan’s jails and prisons will be paying their own board from now on. That i4, those that can pay. According to a statute passed by the last legislature, whenever a person is admitted to a prison, the attorney general may file in the sentencing court a claim against the new inmate’s estate. Upon a court order, the estate or property becomes liable to levy. Those prisoners who have small estates or dependents are exempt from this statute, however. 4 Phone 58 PEACHES DEL MONTE Large No. 2V%4 Cans Hilves or Sliced Joune . . 65¢ PSRRI TR ORI T S BRI TOMATOES WITH PUREE—Large No. 214 Cans cans, 3% 6 cans, 75¢ S O M T SR Y™ S S YA B SO L X S MILK PUMPKIN Darigold. Carnation Del Monte or Bordens No. 2V Case Each, 14c $3.19 3 cans, 39¢ . e cans | or four yea Miami s Youngest ‘Tupboat Annie’ Prefers Deep Blue - toCareer in Movieland 1 Kasi, who piio 1 weighed only Capt. sdys: “Last ye her claims to distinetion is that of cver landed by a woman. By J. P. McKNIGHT You can keep your movie contracts, so far as Miami’s “Tugboat Annie” is con- cerned 11 stick to her life on the briny deep icity brought pretty 32-year- ian Rast, Miami's and | Florida’s only licensed haps per t, many leiters, an would pilc intim: But V't interc he likes her trim Sea Bird *“T've Uk Ind, on e kids ecanoe River, and to play in its waters al “Then my father started coming to Mi i to fish in the winters. I with him. About three 1 began spending here, going out nearly all tk the “See Bird” in Florida 5 pounds. Now lcok al me.” Amsng catching the largest leopard shark tove and all the comfort vanity, o of home. Hates to Dress Her favored garb is shorts and hirt—*“I do: ven go to Miami any more,” she admits, laughing, “be- cause I hate so to put on a dress.” The brown - haired, brewn - eyed ea-woman, whose further claim to stinction includes catching rgest leopard shark woman, recom- to those needing to he said, “I weighed Now look at me.” ight r Miss Rast hopes for n aboard her boat. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY NOV MAYOR CHARGES CUMMUNISTS CAUSE STRIKE Radicals: Also Said to' Be Active in Bremerton Navy Yard SEATT! L. Smith a secret informatio: Francisco, that a plot to foment a 1 strike is brooding here. Aly ' Kitsap County leader, charged that rad- active in Bremerton Navy Yard. oo GROP DAMAG ONE MILLION High Price;r;May Balance Losses Caused by Cold CORVALLIS, Ore., Nov damage caused by unse: in Oregon may range as high $1,- 000,000 if estimates of Department of Agriculture experts are borne out Higher prices for shortened crops will do much to balance the damage. Coins Tossed to Divers Form Honolulu Treasure HONOLULU, Nov. 8—Silver ¢ ure, perhaps upward of several th cand dollars of it, lies at the of Honolulu harbor. It's in dimes, quarters, haif and even a few silver dollars overboard from the decks ¢ to Hawail diving boys who s alongside. Thousands of coins are each year by incoming it »stimated, and not all are 8.— eas- Charles jon, owner of the Juneau Resaurant, will close his res- taurant Sunday night and tak vacation for about four months. The ley Steffey, of Knox, restaurant will be reopened about two sisters Mrs. L. R.| the last of February or the first of the Wallace Ranch, Oil March. ity, Pa, and Mrs. Joe Wilson, ———— — Tulsa, Okla., all may come down to| MINK FARMER IN TOWN Miami, she says. Charles Olson, mink farmer of -~ Pearl Harbor, arrived in Juneau this SEINEBOAT morning for supplies. main here several days. Olson reports a good season. will commence pelting his shortly after his return. He will re- He mink LARSEN IN SAN JOSE fishing on oth finally I «sk one of your is it.” own? A former rum-runner's boat con- myself: Why not b ople’s boats. And So I did. This 1S MISSING fiscated by the United States Coast Guard in Prohibition years and used to patrol Flonda's shores, the «Sea Bird” is trim, roomy, powered by 90-horsepower motors, E hing aboard it is ship-shape Its neat, picture-hung cabin, the tiny, spotless oil stove, the shining glasses show its owner is no mere man. Miss Rast, who resided in Fort Worth, Texas, before she came to Miami, lives near the boat in an automobile trailer, furnished in mod- ernistic style with studio couch, ered by Indians “ KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Nov. 8—The | New England Fish Company is se ing the seir St. Nicholas. The seiner was chartered by an Indian crew at the opening of the fall h)h-: |ing season and disappeared when| the fishing season closed some time ago. “ | Franklin Larsen advises Juneau | friends that he is attending the Ketchikan Company Hunt-| roosevelt sunior High School in San ing for Vessel Chart- { Jose, Cal, and that his address is | 354 North 14th St., San Jose. SRS Tl R A. N. B. CONVENTION Cyril Zuboff, President of the Al- aska Native Brotherhood, is leaving for Wrangell this evening to make preliminary arrangements for the annual convention to be held next week, starting Monday, in that city. > IT WON'T BE LONG NOW! Phone 374-2 rings and a represen- 8, i GEOGRAPHIC EXPEDITION SHOOTS RAPIDS R The National Geographic Society’s expedition down the Salmon river is nearing an end and the party expects to reach Lewiston, Idaho, about Oct. 28. The trip was made down the “River of No Re- turn” to obtain geological data. The expedition’s barge is shown shooting over Bailey's rapids on the vittle Salmon, 200 milss above Lewiston. (Associated Press Phoi2) BRITISH GOVT. _Italian Tanks Lead Advance URGED EXPAND [ e HAVAL DEFENSE [ Stanley Baldwin, Ramsay 1 MacDonald, Earl Jellicoe Court Sea Strength (Gontinued 1rom Page Onel time. Who cares whether it is a good ery? It is a great call!” Naval Building Fund Asked A nation-wide appeal for funds to build up Brit: s once mighty but now antiquated navy further drives ne tk ning of potential da ger. Your fleet is still your life s the Navy L the facts. In our ba teen capital shiy ver-2ge « mber 3 were e then, our sailors weuld have to fight in ships 20 years behind an enemy | “For the support of our battle- fleet and the defense of our com- merce there are only 50 cruisers, of which, 14, by the same date, will be cver-age. Through lack of nav strength, we can:no longer be either for koeping thé peace or de- § fending ourselves in war.” ¥ s MacDonald Joins Chorus Primitive defens Earl Jellicoe, World War Fleet Commander, at the Trafalgar Day dinner said: “The British empire is absolutely dependent upon the sea for exist- ence. Now, to a very large extent, it is defenseless.” And MacDonald, the apostle of peace who suffered years of Coven- try rather than yield to the 1914 war fervor, said: “For some years this nation, under whatever party has been in pow: has been reducing armaments. The | Government now has concluded that we have gone too far and has de- cided that our defense equipment must be made good.” - - STOCK COMES NORTH vading troops into the Et JOLLAR LINE ASK CREW FOR $.5, HARRISON Seamen’s Labor Relations | Petitioned by Company —U. S. Mail Aboard R. H. Stock, of the firm of Wright | | and Stock, contractors, arrived from! SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.,, Nov. 8.— | Ketchikan on the Yukon. ~ | The Seamen’s Labor Relations Board | - > | was today petitioned by the Dollar Sl’l'?_Clr\L. DELIVERY TO DOuG-| tative will show you samples of the | SPECIAL DELIVERY TU DOUG- Steamship Line to provide a crew LAS! Daily at lc‘:oo am. znd 2:30{ latest creations in beautiful Christ-‘LAss Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 for the President Harrison, tied to pm. Kelly Blake's SPECIAL DE-|mas Cards at painless prices for any| .m. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- the dock since its scheduled sailing LIVERY—Phone #42. adv. | Juneau Cash Grocery This Store Will Be Fancy Maine 3cans,49¢ CHICKENS Blue Ribbon Hens Pound, 24¢ American Legion at CANNED FOOD SALE Stock your Pantry NOW for the long winter months with these fine quality canned foods. —CORN - A L5 N S S Y Be sure and attend the show sponsored by the MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 11 Closed Armistice Day Yellow Bantam 6 cans,95¢ SPINACH Del Monte Large No. 2Y5 cans 3 cans, 49¢ the Coliseum Theatre purse. PINE A 3cans . . . GREEN Fancy Green 3 cans, 35¢ SWEET POTATOES Del Monte Fancy Pack, No. 214 cans 3 cans, 63¢ Phone HAWAIIAN—Matched Slice Large No. 215 Cans adv. | time last Saturday, due to the walk- {out of its crew. Demands of striking workers that the chief steward be discharged have been refused by the company. Action was held urgent today, since the boat carries United States mail as well as 70 passengers and a long overdue cargo for San Pedro. RY—Phone 442. LIVE 58 Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! e weapons of Ethio against these Italian tanks, shown y hiopian 'interior after the fall of the holy city of Aksum. LIVERY—Phone 442. pian forces proved of little avail as they led the advance of in- 203 WALKOUT - FROM FERRIES Five of Nine Routes t- ating on Puget Sound Reported Tied-up SEATTLE, Nov. 8—Striking for union recognition and higher wages, %05 ferry boat employees walked out last evening, bringing to a halt traf- fic over five of the nine routes op- erating on Puget Sound. Picket lines were immediately form- ed, but no efforts were made to oper- ate the boats with non-union crews. A conference is expected during the day. —_— . NOTICE If the party that took the bicycle at Moose Hall Thursday night re- turns it immediately, no questions will be asked. —adv. el |SPECTAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- |LAS! Daily at 10:00 2.m. and 2:30 p.m. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- adv, PPLE 59¢ BEANS Cut Beans 6 cans,65¢ i'l(r)ri;lafipresénts F ootball in Style of “Mauve Decade” GAINESVILLE, Fla., Nov. 7.—Here's a “new” wrinkle! Between halves of the Florida-Maryland homecoming game here Octo- ber 26 spectators saw how football was played in the “gay nineties.” Edgar Charles Jones, Director of Athletics, developed the idea. The presentation portrayed, as completely as possible, football uniforms of COFFEE Schillings minutes was on display. Drip or and bustles, everyt among the feature displays. The occasion not or Percolator Pound,29¢ many former There were tamdem bicycles and other old-time vehicles. 40 to 50 years ago; game plays of the gas-lit era and costumes worn by men and women at the contests of the '90’s. All the atmosphere of four decades ago that can be packed into 20 Umbrellas ng that was stylish nearly a half century ago, were y turned back the pages of football history, but served as an occasion for the University ©f Florida to pay tribute to all-American football stars living in the State. former captain of the "Gators was invited. Every

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