The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 14, 1936, Page 6

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‘BAN N —— SEVEN WANT AD POINTERS Your want-ad will produce, if you: 1. Think carefully about your proposition. 2. Direct your selling efforts at the individual. 3. Be specific. Use colorful words. Avoid generalities. 4. Tell the whole story. 5. Emphasize the best feas ture of your offer. 6. Mention price. 7. Make answering as easy as_possible, i FOR S5aLr — NOTICE OF AUC- TION: All the real and personal property of the Wrangell Lumber and Power Co. will be sold at public auction for cash ‘at the Saw Mill office on February 5, 1936, at 2 pm. For further par- ticulars write or inquire of the Bank of Alaska, Wrangell, Alaska. FOR SALE -~ Two, three-quarter, iron beds, complete. Inquire 421§ Seward St. | FOR SALE—Tnree-room house with | bath. Near Bridge, nice location Reasonable. See Lee Rox or tele- phone 436. WOR SALE—New Suvamatic ra:y oil burners, 150 gal. welded tank $65, installed. Fuily guaranieec 441 ALASKA WELDLERS. Tel. erty. One of the best i:9 Juneau. Priced low for guic sale. See owner on premise -logs See Juneau Commercial Dock o Phone 3 FOR SALE—Upright plan sonable. Phone 357. RICERENER2 WILL sublet nicely Iumlshed (oux room apt. in the Assembly for one month. Phone 4054. Rea 7-room house, nicely overstuffed furniture, FOR RENT— furnished, oil heat, 4 drooms, firepiace, new oak floors. Call Windsor Apts. FOR RENT — 3-room furnished cabin, also 2-room furnished cabin. Inquire Mike Vagge uear Native School. FOR EEI:I'!;—One-mnnT apar;.r;lcx;1 $20 monthly. Entrance City Float over Juneau Cabinet Works. FOR RENT—Choice office rooms over Capitol Cafe. Call at Capi- tol Cafe or McCaul Motor Co. FOR RENT—Smaii Smith. Phone 223. nouse. L. R FOR RENT -~ 3-room: unrurnishec house, Rawn Way, rear cf Sewarc Building. $30 per month. Phone 334. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, wat- er, dishes, cooking utensils anc bath. Reasonable at Seaview. | FOR RENT — Seven-room, partly furnished house, 6th and Gold. Mrs Anna Winn. | There are some 20 voluntary or-} ganizations of national scope in the United States devoted primarily to the education and welfare of vari- ous types of exceptional children. OUTH. WANTED—Will care for white chil- dren. Reasonable. Mrs. Lyle John- son. Phone 98-2 longs and two sh WANTED—General office work by lady. 6 years experience. Phone 3553 after 5 p.m. WANTED-—Maid for general house- work. Phone 361. NA'\I’IS responsible party to board and, rco:n grase school girl for about one month, Phone 4054, WIDOW lazry wants nousewwork by bhour or day. Needs employment badly. Best references. Phone 638. TURN your old goid ';mo 7vah; Cash of uafle nz Nugget Shoy ———e RICTHTIALS: FOUND—Picked up on nizhway. Lady's umbrella. Owner may have same by proving property and paying for this ad. Call at Empire. MISCELLANEOUS BAYDEN (or Baiden). A reward is offered by Messrs. Smith Son & Barker, Solicitors, Andover, Hamp- shire, England, for reliable in- formation as to the present ad- dress or whereabouts (or death if known) of Alfred Edward Bai- den (locally known as Edward Bayden) who in the year 1920 resided at 380 Pacific Avenue, Winnipeg, and then intended go- ing to Alaska; he was formerly a Bandsman in the 14th Battalion Canadian Regiment LOLA'S Beauty Shop, 50c, guaranteed permanent. $3.75 complete. Call 315 Decker Way or telephone 201 for appoint- ments. PIPE ’IH AWING— Day Phones 441 and 4504. Night Phones 436 and 4504. ALASKA WELDERS, Jack Silva, proprietor. LESSONS in Hardanger, ing, etc. Phone 3282. ¥ —#. s crRAVES | “The Clothing Man* crochet- Home of Hart Sehaffner and Marx '~thing ————= Peter Pan Beauty Shoppe PHONE 221 MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. HELVI PAULSON, Operator \ § ] \ \ § ) ) ) \ \ ) \ \ \ \ \ ) \ ) \ \ ) \ ) ) \ ) PHONE CARDINAL CABS 1 NEEDS TEN BUCKS, PAW. FORK OVER! . He played small-time baseball and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JAN. 14, 1936 " REMIND ME CF IT | WHEN I GIT HOME TTINIGHT, SUSIE. READWZUSE Mdrme News ; Steamer Movenents . . . b4 NORTHBOUND ® Northwestern scheduled to ar- e rive at 6:45 o'clock tonight. e Should have one day’s mail. e Zapora scheduled to arrive at © 1 oclock tomorrow morning. ® Northland scheduled to arrive e TFriday afternoon or evening. . SCHEDULED SAILINGS e Evelyn Berg scheduled to sail ° from Seattle January 16 at e 9pm. © Alaska scheduled to sail from @ Eeaftie January 18 at 9 am. ° ° ° ° ° ° . . ° . . > . . . B D |° Norco scheduled to sail from e | Seattle January 20 at 9 p.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to ar- rive at 5 o'clock this after- outh at mid- noon and sai night. Victoria scheduled southbound 4 o'clock Thursday morning. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth 1caves every Wednes- day right at Sitk« Dart leaves eveiy 7 am. fer Petershurg, and wayports. ¢ e 00000000 . . . . . . . . ° . . . - . . . ° . . . + . . . . . . o % | 6 pm., far e | ind wayports. .| Friday at e Kake ¢ e Schall’s Death Widens ‘Gap of ‘New Deal’ Foes (Continued from Page One) y . It was not generally known, but Schall had told friends he hop- ed and expected Long to go into Minnesota to help campaign for him. Just a few days before the< Minnesotan's death visitors to his| office might have seen a great pile| of the slain Long’s 'old pohucal newspapers. Concededly, the Admm!sbrauon was spared an arduous and perhaps | a losing campaign against Long. Schall's death left forever 'unan- swered the intriguing question: had both lived and had Long gone xmo‘ Minnesota for Schall would it not have been a hard task to dereau him, taking into consideration Lhe‘ fact that under those circumstances | there most certainly would have been a three-cornered race between | Schall, Floyd Olson, the Farmer-; Labor leader, and the Democratic nominee? A “CURIOUS AID” | Long and Schall alone of all Senators drew no line of restraint in their attacks on the Adminis- tration. Schall went beyond the President himself and sharply crm—‘ cized Mrs. Roosevelt—an almost un-| precedented procedure. Not even an enemy would have denied that Schall indeed was a “fighter,” as Mrs. Schall charac- terized him as he lay gasping torI life in a Washington hospital. He was three years old when his father died and, as a youngster, he black- | missing pair was found, upparently‘ ed boots. At 12 he was illiterate. | once won $25 and a cow in a prize fight. By extraordinary effort he! learned the law, and clients were coming in when blindness struck him, He wanted to give up, but Mrs. {Schall told him: “No, Tom, we're going to practice law. I'll be your eyes” Thereafter, all his lfe, she was his eyes. Schall learned then to regard blindness as a curious aid because, as he put it, “the passing show no longer intrudes.” “The blind man’s interest in me‘ glitter and show of things is gone.| -« . I live through my mind and,! like the much-used key, it must | extinguished ot ot e i (GHANGES IN NAVIGATION Navigation aids temporarily out of commission but to be restored according to advices received from the Lighthouse Service, are as fol- | lows: Eldren Rock Lightstation, ‘light | temporarily reduced in candlepower | to 2100 on December 14. Turn Rock Beacon, reported de- stroyed January 2. Tenakee Reef Light, reported ex- tinguished December 29. Deep Bay Entrance Beacon, ported destroyed December 14. Cape Edgecombe Light, reported extinguished November 18. Cape St. Elias Lighted Whitle Buoy 2, reported extinguished No- vember 29. Noisy Island Light, reported ex- tinguished November 9. Aids restored to service since {last report, January 4, are as fol- re- Vichnefski Rock Light, reported extinguished December 27, was re- lighted January 7. The Eye Opener Light, reported January 6, was lighted January 7 Cape Flores Lighted Buoy, re- ported extinguished December 21, was relighted January 8. Klawak Reef Light, was erron-' eously reported extinuished on No-| tice to Marines of January 4, 1936; light has been found burning. Klawak Island Light, reported ex- tinguished January 2, was relighted January 8. .‘ Cape Lynch Light, reported ex-| tinguished January 6 was relighted | January 10. re- TALLAPODSA ON DUAL MISSION """""'_§ The Coast Guard Cutter Talla- poosa sailed at 9 a. m. today for Sumdum and Woewodski Harbor. The vessel is bearing Deputy Mar- ! shal Judson Brown to the former | community, where he will mvesti- gate the death Sunday night of Mrs. Peter Sumdum. The woman was found Monday morning near her home apparently frozen to death | and word of the tragedy was brought to Juneau yesterday by Capt. M. C. Reaber of the Dart. | At Woewodski Harbor the Talla- poosa will continue the search for | Emil Hungerhuhler and Lloyd Fen- ton, Port Alexander hunters who have been missing for two months. the inland of that section, while line. The gas boat belonging to thel| deserted, several weeks ago. —_—————— George Gilbertson, police officer, is a passenger on the northbound Northland after, several weeks in the south. grow brighter.” e ——— IS COMING HOME Mrs. Olaf Bodding, wife of the wellknown transfer man, is a pas- states. ————— SHOP IN JUNEAU! | senger for Juneau aboard the North- | land. She has been visiting in the| L e Sy { SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT!| John and Richard Harris will comb | the cutter cruises along the shore- ! AUCINEST noDNo. JANT-ADS ] | 18 PASSENGERS ON NORTHLAND FOR THIS PORT AFTER WALKOUT Motorship Ij;—a—ves Seattle with Capacity List Aboard for North SEATTLE, Jan. 14— Mowrshm Northland sailed for Southeast Al- aska ports at 11 o'clock last night with a capacity list of passengers, the following booked for Juneau: M. Babo, Conrad Goldfield, John ' Vognild, George Gilbertson, Mrs. Halvorsen and baby, Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Carlson, Miss Carlson, John Jack Silva, Hal Windsor, J. Deanmeyer, Ivan Reppe, A. E. Run- | ning, Jack Batson, Matt Aho, Unr Linna, Miss Mildred Bristol, Mar- garet Peterson, Mrs. Fred Peterson Mrs. Olaf Bodding, Miss Grace Ne- ville, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Brown, Miss Marion Saundérs, Mrs. E. C Saunders, Miss Peggy Gehlen. e — HAIDA HERE LAST NIGHT SOUTHBOUND The Coast (‘nmrd cutter Haida arrived at midnight and sailed at 8 o'clock this morning, enroute from her station at Cordova to the States for a semi-annual overhaul at the Bremerton Navy Yards. | ————— ©6cvesosecensoesooes . TIDES TOMORROW » e 00000000000 High tide, 4: am., Low tide, 11:16 am., High tide, 5:14 p.m., Low tide 11:08 p.m., 14.6 42 122 4.2 feet. feet. feet. feet. Rice & Ahlers Co. HEATING PLUMBING SHEET METAL WORK PHONE 34 CANADIAN PACIFIC SAILING TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA and SEATTLF From Juneau PRINCESS NORAH January 15, 29 February 12, 24 Round Trip Winter Rates now in effect to Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle $65.00 Tickets, reservation and full { particulars from { V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent i JUNEAU CIIOCOI.A (i Ludwig Nelson JEWELRY and WATCHES. o BEITY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 12and B Streets PHONE 547 MARINE STRIKE TIES SHIPYARD 'San Pedro mn Demands 35-Hour Week—Hear- | " [ ing Set for Jan. 20 SAN PEDRO, Jan. 14. — Picket lines ringed three shipyard plants today after a walkout of 320 work-,‘ ers. | Officials of the Industrial Union ' o1 Marine and Shipyara workers said { 9> percent of the employees joined |in the strike, demanding a 35-hour | week and wage increases ranging | from 17 cents to 25 cents an hour. Dr. Towne Nylander, District Di- | rector of the Regional Labor Board, | has scheduled a hearing for January | 2v on the union’s charge that ship- | yards failed to engage in collective | bargaining. i |FORESTRY BOAT ON | | INSPECTION CRUISE The Forest Service flagship For- | ester, with Ranger W. A. Chipper- field on board, sailed at noon to- day for an administrative cruise of the Admiralty Island'division. The vessel’s first stop is at Oliver Inlet, where she will deliver sup- plies to the trail-building crew !there. A survey will be made of the portage trail and shelter camp. At Port Alexander, Gerald Banta, | CCC foreman, will disembark to | start trail work in that area. The crew will be enrolled from the re- lief roll there. The Forester will spend a week at Sitka viewing CCC work, and then will sail for Chi- |chagof and Hoonah. - Timber sales |wlll be studied at the latter place, !and the boat will return to Juneau during the latter part of this ; month. I P :RVING ALASKA T YEAR ROUNI’") SAILING SCHEDULR Leave DueJuneau Due Juneay St2amer VICTORIA Jan. 4 Jan. N'WESTERN Jan. 11 Jan. ALASKA ... -Jan. 18 + Jan. VICTORIA £Jan.25 ' Jan. THE ALASKA LINE 7 14 21 28 Round trip fare to Seattle—$65 M. J. WILCOX. Agent—Phone 2 Seattle Northbound Southboune Jan. 16 Jan. 24 Jan. 28 Feb. et T avel und RORTH LA f ',,—-f,-’ ROUND HAROLD KNIGHT, Agent a J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent ... CITY WHARF GUY SMITH, Douglas Amt 1IRIP SEATTLF $65.00 the year. Leave Boat Seattle M. S. Northland ..Jan. 13 M. 8. Norco Jan. 20 M. 8. Northland .. Jan. 27 S. 8. North Sea Feb. 3 M. 8. Northland Feb. 10 S. S. North Sea Feb. 17 M. S. Northland Feb. 24 S. S. North Sea Mar. 2 Arrive Juneau Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. 17 24 31 Y 14 . via D rams TRANSPORTATION CO The only line serving Alaska that main- tains a regular weekly service throughout Leave Juneau Jan. 19 Jan. 24 Feb. 2 Feb. 9 . 16 . 23 2 5 ALASKA Transportation Company Next sailing Evelyn Berg from Tacoma, Wash., Port of Tacoma, Jan. 15, am., and from Pier C, City Dock, Seattle, Jan. 16, at 9 pm. Next sailing Zapora from Tacoma, Calling Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau. Wash.,, Port of Tacoma, Jan. 22, am, and from Pier C, City Dock, Seattle, Jan. 23, at 9 pm. Calling, Ketchikan, Wrangell, Detersburg, Juneau. For general information call Agent — D. B. Femmer—Residece Phone 312, Office Phone 114. Weekly dervice from Seattle and Tacoma D. B. FEMMER AGENT 1 FOSS Phone 107 [ECORS Juneau | Chatham Straits Transportation Co. | 'M.S.“DART” Leaves Femmer Dock every Friday, |at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. Freight received not later thn 4 | CHANNEL BUS LINE | Phone 108 Juneau or 71 Douglas | Leave Douglas—20 minutes before CONSTRUCTION €O. { | | each hour, starting 20 minutes be- |fore 8 am.; last trip 20 mirutes before midnight. umve Juneau — 15 minutes after each hour, starting 15 minutes past 1 am.; last trip 15 minutes past 12, midnight. Glacier Highway Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau 7:00 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 8:15 a.m. 9:30 am. 12:30 p.m, _ 2:30 pm. 4:15 p. 518 pm. Saturday and . and | Sunday Special 4y Special | 8:45.pm, 10:00 p.m. Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or' STORAGE PHONE 36 “For very prompt LIQUOR DELWERY R ‘ ] FINE i WARRACK | Watch and Jewelry Repalring | ' Construction Co. | PAUL BLOEDHORN || Juneau Phone 487 { at very reasonable rates — FOR INSURANCE WY S N S N = [y . Telephone 409 THIS bank places at your disposal its complete facils ities, with the assurance of the fullest cooperation in meeting your requirements. We believe you will find satisfaction in the efficiency of our service and in its per- sonal, cordial dature See H. R. SHEPARD & SON B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. wvery Banking l-‘or varx Banking

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