The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 26, 1935, Page 12

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POLLY D HER PALS I HAD LUNCH‘W!TH MRS. JONES THIS AFTERNOON . TERRIBLE DRINKS UNCOUTH . HE| TEA OUTA A SAUCER! SEVEN WANT AD POINTERS produce, IR REN = | LARGE i dishes | room $15.00. Entrance City Float | over Juneau Cabinet Shop. | room apv. Light, {ree linen Your want-ad will radio,. $20.00. if you Think carefully your proposition Direct your selling efforts at the individual. Be specific. Use colorful words. Avoid generalities. Tell the whole swory. | Emphasize the best fea~ ture of your offer. | Mention price. Make answering as possible. about | 4 ROOMS s ished, electric range, Frigidaire, new oak floors, washing machine. all Windsor Apts. er, dishes, cooking bath. Reasonable at Seaview. as easy i S FOR RENT—TW 4754, FO;I RE:N‘f—éle])ll]g room in pri- FOR SALE—Davenport $12.00, li- brary table $8.00. Both in first class conition. Telephone 2343. FOR SALE—Wood or coal burning range with coils. G condition. Reasonable. Phone 517, FOR SALE—Sevemteen room oOm- BIANOS renea—iuned. Phone 143. ing house; good income; Will PAY George Andezson. jtself off. A real bargain, Empire — i FOR SALE—Three-room house with & " bath; Ninth Street on tide flats. — — Inquire of Lee Rox at Rainier Club, FOUNI - ” case. Phone 318. FOR RENT — Seven-room, parl furnished house, 5th and Gold. Mrs. Anna Winn. shed cabins. at residence on FOR REN Tom McMullen 9th Street. air of bifocal glasses in — — - — Owner may have same by PORTEATH-New .Silvarfiatic ‘renge | oil burners, 150 gal, welded tanks, $65, installed. Fully guaranteed ALASKA WELDLERS. Tel. 441, this ad. FOUND — Single, new, auto-skid- chain. Owner may recover by iden- FOR SALE—Northera Hotel ‘prop- | erty. Ofe of the best buys in Juneau. Priced low for quick sale. See owner on premises. | tisement, at Empire office. LOST — Diamond-stuaded platinum wedding band. Call 50. FOR SALE—Coal and Pres-to-logs. See Juneau Commercial Dock or Phone 3 | e e Compounded FOR SALE—Upright plan> Rea- | sonable. Phone 357. | o PRESCRIPTIONS exactly MISCELLANEOUS | as written B — by your CHIMNEY sweeping — Also expert furnace chipping ‘and scaling.! Prompt service. Phone 639. ' doctor. Juneau Drug Co. 4 oy iy | PIPE THAWING ! Day Phones 441 and 4504. Night| Phones 436 and 4504. ALASKAl WELDERS, Jack Silva, proprielor.‘ TIME SCHEDULE CHANNEL BUS LINE LESSONS in Hardanger, crochet- |yero p i —Douglas 71 ing, etc. Phone 3282 ve Douglas 20 minutes before each hour, starting 20 minutes before ~ |8 am.; last trip 20 minutes before 12 midnight. m’m Leave Juneau—15 minutes after tach | | I' i hour, starting 15 minutes past 7 a.m.; | last trip 15 minutes past 12 midnight. Glacier Highway Leave Juneau Leave Auk Bay to Auk Bay to Juneau : 7:00 AM. 8:15 AM. 12:30 P.M. 4:15P.M. Sat. & Sun. Sat. & Sun. 10:00 P.M. 6:45 P.M. 10 P.M. each evening to Salmon Creek Power House CHANNEL TAXI COMPANY In connection with the Bus Service at all hours | CALL 108 for TAXI or BUS Service W. H. BACON, Operator CHANNEL BUS LI WANTED — Nursing or housework Ellen Isaacson. P. O. Box 1859. WANTED—Carpenter wants work | by dw or contract. Telephone| 2551, | WANTED—Will care for white chil- dren. Reasonable. Mrs, Lyle John- son. Phone 98-2 longs and two shorts. | TURN y(‘)urri‘;la' goid into value.| Cash or trade at Nugget Shop. TSHOP IN JUNEA (S WAVING A Specialty Peter Pan Beauty Shop MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. VIOLET PETERSON, Operator Front Street Phone 221 )\ Cardinal Cabs also one- -am heated, niceiy furn- { = | COzY, warm, furn. apts. Light, wat- utensils and oom house, part- ly furnished, $15 monthly” Whites only. See W. H. Robinson or Phone vate home for refined young lady. | PHONES: Juneau 108—Douglas 71 | i | | ACROSS 1. List of actors. in a play 5. Da:ly Cross;t;;ord szzle et AUSINESS AnonoTyiTirs 8. Given and received 9. Meaning 10. Al Mimie S N Philippine Negrito Implement Twisted Salutation 1L 17 <> . Measure of superficial surface . Rescue 3 At present . Footway 16. Plaiting ate | tachment ta a sewing m | >[0]Z] (O™~} [PIE3\ EJLIRH 0]u] 19, 31 22, {34, Gatherers Mix circularly Sea bird One who so- licits from house to house >N ojr | machine 18. Frozen water 20, Brisk 21. Divisions of a . Glutted . Player at children’s games i military front 25, Writing implement 26. Drag loosely 27. Manner 29. Not bright 32. Tavern . Game of chance 35. Mountain in Crete . Minister's title: abbr, . English river . Law . Part of a curve . Wet and soil by 57. dragging on 68. the ground 59. [mi<>]r| H[>] Im| o[>/ 0] 44. Having a handle 47. Mexican rubs ber tree 8. Gave back 0. Jules Verne character Anger Rend asunder Animal's stomach June bug Prophet Story: collog. 4 o b4, 65, 56. proving property and paying for tifying and paying for this adver- Reward offered. Cruisers of Japan Setting : | Naval Pace, Battery Power | By GLENN BABB TOKYO, Nov. 26.—The Japanese navy has introduced a new, highly destructive type of fighting ship to | the world. | The 8,000-ton cruisers, Mogami and Mikuma, first of the swift and heav- gunned B-class cruisers in the, {building of which Japan and the United States are competing, have joined the empire’s sea forces. These vessels, each carrying fif- teen 6.1-inch rifles in five triple tur- | rets, represent naval architects’ ef- |forts to obtain the last ounce of power, - efficiency” and destruction | within London naval freaty limits. Lessen in Sea Tragedy Their armament is the maximum | permitted by both the treaty and the laws of naval design. Naval experts of other nations have expressed doubt that such heavy ar- (mament could be used with safety ~ | on such small displacement. The Ja- | panese too had doubts after one of {their torpedo-boats, the Tomozuru, carrying three 5-inch guns on omly 527 tons, capsized in a storm in March, 1934, with the loss of 100 |officers and men. | There was then a thorough over- {haul of the designs of cruisers and 1 destroyers under construction. In the | completed Mogami and her sisters {the lesson of that tragedy has been | heeded. Year Ahead of America | .The addition of the Mogami and {Mikuma to the fleet means Japan is more than a year ahead of the | United States in ships of this classi- | fication. The American navy is building four cruisers of 10,000 tons each, also to be armed with fifteert |6-inch guns. These are the Savannah, ville, Brooklyn and Philadelphia, but the. first of them will not be com- Ipleted until late in 1936. Before jthen the Mogami and Mikuma will| be joined by two more of their class. | In the Mogami class the Japanese ot . Pagan god Hair _covering certain ani- mals' necks Draft anima) . Instrumen- tality . Rodent 43, More dis- courteous . Dry and barren . Roman tyrant 6. City in Penn~ sylvania 19, Period just preceding an event 1. Age 52. Disfigure 53. Possess Headpiece . Southern cone stellation Series of tennis Islands 6. Turkish unit of money 6. Crony . Malign to take full advantage of the Lon- don treaty's limit on displacement of 10,000 tons. These ships were kept to 8,500 tons each, because at that figure Japan could build six vessels within the 100,450 tonnage allowed her at Lon- don for this subcategory. She could have built only five 10,000 ton ships. BSRRRAE nd Ry lGrid Victory Celebration Makes Tram a Police Car DENVER, Col, Nov. 26.—Because of an over-enthusiastic high school | football celebration, a street car was |turned into a patrol wagon here. | More than a hundred students, | jammed in the tram after a night | football game, began smashing win- | dows and lights and rocking the car | from side to side. | Police, nastily called, ordered the | motorman to make a non-stop run | direct to police headquarters, where |Capt. Frank Campbell gave the | young celebrants a stern lecture. } : Enrollment U “ AUSTIN, Tex.—University of Tex- |as enrollment went to an alltime ‘high at 7.650 students this year, a | gain of 9.6 per cent over last. There |are twice as many men stude; | nts as women. i Poultry “Big Business” RALEIGH, N. C..—The poultry in- gz___ dustry in North Carolina has grown Finto a $13,000,000-a-year business. | Roy S. Dearstyne, State College poul- fry head reported that last year | poultry was raised on 241475 farms in the state. AT e P R S AR THE SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83 OR 85 Lost Wallet NU! THANKS Is Returned By Flood CHICAGO, Nov. 26.—Dudley Crafts K Watson, extension lecturer of the Art Institute of Chicago, has received many invitations in his day, but he’ll ever forget the recent one to spend of his life in prison s invited to address inmates | of the Minnesota state reformatory * n art Before him were more than 1,000 prisoners, many of them bitter, sul- len, h But he launched into his subject, talking to ti men as though they had a connoiseur’s ca- pacity to understand. When he finished the audience - rose and gave him an ovation, Then| Only cne person has been arrested | the Warden rushed up to him and | for violation of the ordinance forbid- | |exclaimed: | ding persons to hitch-hike in Ath- “Why, Watson, you should spend: ens, Ga., since it was passed in 1928. the rest of your life in the peniten- The case was dismissed. tiaries!” PHONE 36 For very l)l‘Ol'flllt LIQUOR DELIVERY SCANDIA, Kas., Nov. 26. — Hugh | ser lost his wallet «last April. ods eame in Jur Rummaging by the | Fraser found the mxs;m;4 ontaining $3. ~a - Grade A Stude;lt CULLMAN, Ala.,, — Jane Dodson, i5-year-old sophomore at Cullman high school, made A’s (90 to 100) for eight succe: Mr Chatham Stratis Transportation Co. | M.S.“DART” | Leaves Femmer Dock every Friday it 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port | Alexander and way ports. | Pre.ght recelved not later than 4| p.m. Thursday. FOR INFORMATION TYPEWRITERS RENTED $5.00 per month J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep is worn by watisfied customers” [ { SABIN’S “Everything in Furnishings for Men” ot N ; ’! o o - WARRACK Construction Co. Juneau Phone 487 b Ludwig Nelson JEWELRY and WATCHES S COLE TRANSFER We deliver Standard or Union Diesel Oil from a clean tank, strained into your tank. Baggage, Drayage, Crating, | Storage | PHONE 3441 CASH COLE | Night Phone 1803 | | | | CONSTRUCTION CO. ‘Phone 107 Juneau H. S. GRAVES ‘“The Clothing Man” HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. ' | Home of Hart Sehatfner and Marx ~'~thing B PAY'N TAKIT Groce‘ries. Meats, Liquors BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 12and B Streets / PHONE 547 CANADIAN PACIFIC SAILING TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA and SEATTLE Leader Department ° Store JOE GEORGE and GUS GEORGE, Proprietors ~ e —— “THE REXALL STORE” MAURICE C. REABER, Phone 4622 _ SERVING ALASKA THE YEAR ’ROUND SAILING SCHEDULE Leave DueJuneau Due Juneaw Seattle Northbound Southbound 16 19 Nov. 27 23 26 30 3 ;i 14 21 28 Steamer YUKON VICTORIA ... N'WESTERN * ALASKA ... VICTORIA N'WESTERN ALASKA Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. -..Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 13 . 18 . 26 3 8 THE ALASKA LINE Round tnp fare to Seattle—$65 M. J. WILCOX. Agent—Phone 2 D. es TRANSPORTATION €O s Thavel znd shi RNORTHLAN - The only line serving Alaska that main- tains a regulsr weekly service throughout the year. Leave | Juneau Leave Seattle Agrive Juheau Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. -..Nov. 2y Northland ...Dec. 2 North Sea ...Dec. 9 Northland ...Dec. 16 Nerth Sea ...Dec. 23 Northland ...Dec. 30 29 6 . 13 20 27 3 Nov. ROUND TRIP SEATTLE Dec. Dec. S. S. 4 8 S. Dec. 8. $65.00 Phone 109 79 23 18 HAROLD KNIGHT, Agent J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent Navigation Co. PIER B—SEATTLE ! I Ports of Call ‘Tenakee Hoonah | . | Ketchikan I Hydaburg Craig | Klawak | Por. Alexander JUNEAU COMMERCIAL DOCK—Agent PHONE 3 Main and Willoughby Ave. Seattle Sailings S. S. BANDON NOVEMBER 30 an@ every 16 days thereafter Juneay Chichagof ALASKA Transportation Company Next sailing Zapora from Tacoma, Wash., Nov. 27, am., and from Bell Street Terminal, Seattle, Nov. 28, at 9 p.m. Calling Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau. Next sailing Evelyn Berg from Tacoma, Wash,, Dec. 4 am., and from Bell Street Terminal, Seattle, Dec. 5, at 9 p.m. Calling Ket- chikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau. For general miormation call Agent — D. B. Femmer—Residence Phone 312, Office Phone 114. Weekly Service trom Seattle and Tacoma D. B. FEMMER AGENT Alaska Air Transport, Inc. FOUR-PLACE STINSON SEAPLANE At Reasonable Charter Rates PHONES: Juneau Hangar, 612; Nights, 5604; Office, 587 SHELDON SIMMONS, Pilot From Juneau PRINCESS NORAH December 4, 18 January 1 January 15 Round Trip Winter Rates now in effect to Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle $65.00 Tickets, reservation and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent JUNEAU Butler Mauro Drug Co. " The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street between ! Front and Second Streets | | H | | L PHONE 358 | IDEAL PAINT SHOP | If It's Paint We Have It! | FRED W. WENDT | PHONE 549 - “The Store Thas Pleases” R I T — DON’T WAIT TOO LONG! Drive in today and let us give your car a complete winter overhauling. Shift the worry to our shoulders! Full Anti-Freeze Service Connors Motor Co., Inc. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat

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