The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 6, 1935, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, DEC. 6, 1935. ’? Marine News ; B . A AL S b G Db s b NURTHLAND IN E .. . . Gteamer Movements | NORTHBOUND . N 4 in port Sitka bound. ® E/-lyn Berg scheduled to arrive ¢ | gy i At 3 ) south of Petersbt HEDULED SAILINGS b4 | Aaks scheduled to sail from ® |t SR T oy HE Dedempie . ai ) | Gongers for Juneau. L. Williams i: | J a scheduled to . of the Ve and E. P. Win | fiom Seattle December 9 at 9 ® |\ "o | ® | passengers for Juneau are [ d to sail from | ol v il mber 12 at 9 p.m s Norah scheduled to sail m Vancouver December 13 9 pm YUTHBOUND SAILINGS ria schediled southbound 7 o'elock tonight. yrthwestern schetiuled south- bound about December 14. i, Miss a Whi A. Law Mrs. Kar i, Mr h Grah Lawrence Veni Mr Musgrave, dstein VanMaver ® P PP P00 00000000c000c000>00 000 LOCAL SAILINGS P stebeth leaves every Wednés- r. Alice Varney, Jer ay night at 6 pm, 0T ®|yni0n J. L. Miller, J. W. Gucke Sitka and wayports. L] e & Dart leaves every Friday at e ® 7 am. fcr Petersburg, Kake ¢ X A. W. Bates, $ . and waypord. * A. F. Bethe, 1. G seoe o s s s e | il e cescessses e 1z pas . TIDES TOMORROW o |H. H. Brand, e 600080 60 o o o o Fappas Mrs Gl Cozac 33 fee = t 180 feet a6 et |THIRD MATE JOB IS 7 y 14 OPEN ABOARD CEDAR; TAKE EXAMINATION STRATEGY IS Tie U. S. Civil & Commission | announcés an open competitive ex- Jil ) ination for filling a hey in| SHU ING UP ition of Third Mate in the! 16t1 U with | S. Lighth IN AAA MOVE HERBERT PLUMMER GTON, Dec. 6.—Politica and subsistence f bf)flrl vessel. R lose Janu applit B ir 1se a neat bit of stratezy ir move of the AAA o > Exam- four-year prod i ; P i armers before the & . Jurieau, or ll);qu.{( e o | C ules on the 1 s nage 8. C l2ral Of “| Cistrict, 450 Fe t to hear argu- | S*attle ments on the Hoosac Mills case until{~ REE 3 Da-ember 9 makes it highly impreb Hurt In Polo Fall ablé that a decislon will be had on the pr= =nt method of eollecting pro- « inz taxes until in January, 1936 at the ear 5t wi.l .‘n’ offered similar co: proposals will be submit- and corn-hog farmers 'nt plans. AAA officials would like to 3,000,000 individual farm- | ers sign on the dotted line as quick- | ly as possible, agreeing td gauge their production of various crops to the control prozram. A Powerful Weapon The r on, say those on the in- i is that AAA officials figure with this many signed contracts in hand t will have a powerful weapon with which to deal with Con- ' j§ gress in the event the Supreme Court | decides the processing taxes are un-| constitutional. | The Administration has insisted | all along that should the court rule| against the government in the Hoo- | olta und I"x pre In all, Gordon Westcott, 31, Hollywood sac Mills case, Congress would hBVel film actor was seriously injured playing polo and little hope was held for his' recovery. Westcott's mount wheeled, unseated the actar and then fell on him. (Associated and \ULB" Preu Photo) to find new taxes to replace the com- | mitments already made by the gov-| ernment to the cotton, corn-hog, rye, | wheat, tobacco, peanut, farmers. The huge favorable majority rolled | up by corn-hoz farmers for extension of contracts has encouraged AAA of- ficials to push forward with their plans. | Heads Legion Post Budget Preparations Refusal of the Supreme Court to grant the request of the government for hearing arguments on the Hoosac | Mills case on November 20 promises to make the job of preparing the | budget for the coming fiscal year one i of considerable doubt and uncer-| tainty. It is customary for the president to submit his budget message to Con- | gress immediately after he delivers | his message on the state of the union. | In all probability, this budget mes- | sage will be in the hands of Congress | before the Supreme Court acts on| the processing taxes. | President Roosevelt, in declxrmg‘ that he was relying on the continua- tion of the processing levies, estimat- ’ ed there would be a $670,000,000 in- ! erease in revenues during the current | fiscal year. An adverse ruling by the court not only would upset his pre- | diction, but necessitate drastic xe» vizions in the budget itself. Miss Cassie Holmes, former wat nurse, was elected commandner of the Kent, Ore., post of the Ameri- can Legion—one of the few women | in the United Sta honor. (Associate: ress Photed FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing | | Guid Tea, Trinity Hall, Satur- Al n |day, 2 to 6 p.m. —adv. PAUL BLOEDHORN | el DU at very reasonable rates | : £ Il sPEND (6 PHONT CTEERT ! END WHERE YOU MAKE IT! " H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing MMan” || SASH - DOORS * MILLWORK Everything for builders at | cask_prices! DUNN LBR, €O., P.OBox 1833 C, Seatsle, Wash, | chosen president of the National pounds and | Guard Association of the United its victorious game, Albany alway. {Hard Luck of Albany Col- to win such am g < LUMBER) lcnr-c scoréd a touchdown on an end | National Guard Head unn and kept us from winning. Handicapped by ‘Breaks’ | “With the exception of the Co! |of Puget Sound game,; our oth | this séason were o close that witl | any breaks at all we sheuld have wen. The ldrgest sdore agiinst us was 14 to 0." | | The *breaks” off the field as well as in the games To begin with, a two-year letterzd sackle counted upon failed to re- turn. Then Jeo2 Tercheria, all-conference enter and défensive key, developed a carbuncle which became infected | and narly cost his life. Thrzs teammates gave two blood tranzfusicns each to win the biz- 3est battle Albany fdaced all year | the battla for Tercheria's life. Ter- chéria apparent! out of danger now, and is still ambitious to become ’ a football eoach. es were nof num of one or two su# gap in a squad num- 7 25 * ny line averages 174 the backfield 160. Until 5 | | i | | | | | | | | TOus | Brig. Gen. Thomas E. Rilea of the Oregon National Guard was States at the organization’s con- | was a vention in Santa Fe, N. M. (A88& | man. ciated Press Photo) | outweighed 15 to 20 pounds A Ployer's Testimonial “Despite the handicaps, I don't believe that in any ball game have we ever thought it hopeless to win,” says the coach. When Albany finally tied a game and then went on to win its next | encounter, there was one person happier even that Coach Mack. He is Jack Nichols, veteran guard whe ed in each of the 28 defeats over a four-year period and was one who gave blood transfusions to his team- mate Was he disillusioned with football? Let Nichols answer: “Fcotball at Albany has proven a valuable asset to me. The most im- portant factor was not to win, but ying the game, and to build irit which will carry - LOSING TWENTY EIGHT GAMES IS DIFFIGULT TASK Iege on Grid Is Not Disheartening By JAM ALBANY, Ore., ne on fn life's struggle. ing its 28th conecutive Iou ball za “It hasn't been pleasant to play nd assuming the national n these losing games, yet I feel that hampionship® this season, AIDany|:ne bitter must be: taken With the ollege <till wasn't licked. ik B et 10k “And was it a LI"‘l]l to finally break that losing streal e — JUNGE APPOINTED CHAIRMAN ANNUAL FIREMEN’S DANCE| At the regular monthly meeting Sympathetic of the Juneau Fire Department in e were any “wolves” the Fire Hall last dight, Kenneth effectually muzzied, for Junge was appointed General Chair- not a one snapped at heels of man in charge of committees and Coach Joey Mack, whose teams had | arrdngements for the Firemen's 1ever won a football game Annual Dance to be held on Feb- 5 12. “heroes of d r spirit and the alumn he unw t x<m\.119uvm P‘ ific >ge of Newberz, Ore- on. But that was not until a week 'r homecoming. Returning grads »wed a string of 28 consecutive feats followed by a half-satisfying as solidly be- ruary it i the gradu-, J. L. Gray, Chairman of the ne well, tak- | Fitemen's Boy Scouts Commitltee, handicaps he reported that a banquet was given in the Fire Hall for the Boy Scout he alumni|trcop sponsored by the Firemen, to cooper-|on Armistice Day, and that during| tiract more the course of the dinner two fire students alarms were sounded resulting in b of howling Inztead iuthorized a committee it in a campaign to football players and other to the college whose enrollment is the firemen leaving the entertain- only 166 ment. The second alarm which oc- | Beating Knox and Hobart collzges curred near the close of the dinner, | sut for the national “defeat cham- called the fire department to the pionship” was no easy job, any way serious Boynton Apariments fire you look at it on Willoughby Avenue, Upon their “We had two very ck return to the Fire Hall after a con-| year,” h Mack explain: siderable absence, the firemen were one was inst Colleze pleased to discover that the Boy »f Idaho when we scored two touch- | Scouts had done theif godd it | lowns, but one was not allowed. Even | for that day by washing the dishes. | n we were lading 7 to 6 with ten| Minard Mill reported that there, ngle long run | will be a first aid drill at the Fire| Hall on December 9 at 7:30 pm.| the Pacific university game A new fire hydrant has been in- eading 7 to 0 with 18 seconds | stalled near the center of the In- y. After we held for three | dian Village, it was reported. ’I‘he‘. within the six yard-line, Pa- usual refreshments were served. minutes to play, but a beat us. “In 1 | were against Albany | ¢."R. McCullou EICHT HELD IN FEDERAL MAN CLUB SLAYING TULSA, OKla., Dec, 6.—Eight per- | sons are held for investigation in the | | night club slaying of Louis Pappan, Federal Revenue agent, and George | Steward, former police detective . J. McNulty, official of a large hospital and George Hurford, race bookmaker, were jailed after Ownee | Watts, Assistant Attorney General, | said they would not talk satisfactor- |ily to polite. More than thirty per: son’ have been interviewed. It is claimed by Tyree Parks and ard were attempting a holdup of the club at the time they were shot. PP s SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! e — SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! , employes of the | night club, that Pappan and Stew- | | | Highest Quality at Lower Prices Siwceet Potatoes 4 pounds, 23c Apples Fancy Faced and Filled box, $1.59 d STRING Beans 2 cans 25¢ BEETS, sliced, red 2 cans 25¢ DRIP or PERCOLATOR . ——ee PHONES PHONES Meat Dept. Grocery 24-2 rings l ; l Y Dept. 42-2 rings 24 or 42 : : b Sunset Gold PIGGLY WIGGLY PRiCEs PUT MONEY IN YOUR POCKET! Milk Butter & Eggs Prices are lqw.enough so that practically every purchase saves you Darigold something over what you would have paid elsewhere. White Star cans 25¢ cured, lb. tested, 2-1 1b. carton MEAT DEPARTMENT HAMS—Hormel’s Eastern—Skinned, no waste; half or whole, Ib. _BACON—Hormel’s Eastern—Sugar- LARD, Swift’s Silver Leaf—Pastry- COLORED ROASTING HENS, 'Ib. Young Tender Birds STEWING CHICKENS, 1b. DILL PI(}!{LES—Heinz Lauscious, 4 for 10c 1 case $3 19 Salad Dressing Kraft’s Miracle Whip uart, 43¢ Baking Powder Toilét Soap 5 bars 29c Pitted Dates Cellophane Wrapped 12 oz. can ----------------------- 33c Schilling ¢ ¢ @ 33¢ || 21b. pkg. 33¢ .............................. 38¢ : i We have a complete line of FANCY PEELS, ETC. .............................. 48¢ for your CHRISTMAS FRUIT CAKE """" 32Vl CIGARETTES! CIGARETTES! i Camels—Luckies—Chésterfiélds 1 carton, $1.13

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