The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 16, 1936, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDM' MARCH 16. 1936. e HALIBUT FISHERMEN X The Business Firms Listed Be!ow Cteet Yoz: and Wish Yeu Success as the 393" Season Opens llIIIIIIIIIIllI|IlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHHIIIII!IIIIIIIHHIHIIHlIlIIIIIIiIIIIIIIlIHIIIhIIlIIIIIIIIIlIIII|IIIII|IHllllhlilmlllllllllllllllflllllll I. GOLDSTEIN HALIBUT GEAR TRCLL a«; GEAR JUNEAU, ALASKA i« Greetings, Fishermen! And Remember for . . . MEN'S OUTFITTING! GENERAL MERCHANDISE! SWANSON BROS. PHONE 217 South Franklin Street i Heartiest Wishes for a Successful Season! The Daily Alaska Empire We broadeast “All the News All the Time” over KINY, Juneau, at 9:45 P. M. Daily excepting Sunday TUNE IN! Ty Wishing You SUCCESS Harry Race DRUGGIST The Squibb Stores of Alaska Ketchikan Juneau DEPENDABLE DRUGS 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIII ALV HALIBUT FISHERMEN! SALMON TROLLERS! As you again make up your gear for the new season, we want you to know that our BEST WISIIIES are with you ALWAYS... Chas. G. Warner Co. PHONE 473 ENGINEERS—MACHINISTS «f i n||umn|nummml||u|||||||||nluun|u|n||u|uuuuuuuuummulummummmumumuumuuuummnmmumnuuummmummun ‘Ve»d\ Loa \]qllp[)dtb Gear JUNEAU FLEET SEVERSONON OF HALIBUTERS ANNUALTRW il OFF FOR BANKS ... ag,f‘ — She’s Never Peen to States d Ice, l)\[“l[ for " Times) e Dal :, City Council ce of Iamna and| rrounding coun- | g Iiiamna Lake con- enough world for ), he said today while in Anchorage on his| buying trip. Mr. %e\usun trip to the States in 1906 ided then that there was g in it. He would stay in A1~! iska and leave the States to some- e to worry about. r. Severson is accompanied by his ; the Ole Jackson; the Ino J ; the Little E n Winthers pt. Peter Hilc " lin her life. Mrs. Severson said she is nol particularly impressed with the modern conveniences of An- chorage but does enjoy ' shopping. She attended a movie here for the first time and was not ed in it, she said son came to Alaska in ]\ndm in Juneau to mine 1 in Juneau until he Long Bear Tooth, Picked Up on Street, Punciures Tire in 1894, when he and his npanions set out for the West- on the old Dora. The Dora the only ship going to the tward and it make three during the the winter When he first came to Alaska If Belicve-It-Or-Not Ripleyic ed this one and published it, uninformed throughout the s would probably think that roamed the streets of Juneau. according to George ark, driver for the Royal Blue b Company, the cause of a flat e on his cab yeste: was found g otohikan w o be a long bear tooth, which had B i 1 | lage and Wrs penetrated through the casing and | F<CUE IETH nto. the inner tul [ Jin Southeast Alaska undoubtedly a lost when a taxi-cab | s bl C40 | Alaska were in existence 0l Ah nal | verson wended 0 Unalakleet in trips summer but none as Mr. ‘ way West- I;“‘ l ward, finally landing Iliamna in 1895. He gave up mining in 1900 s |and established a trading post which he has kept until the pres. h ] e ! 3-Year-Gld Lad e Lost in Blizzard Over Night, Alive TWO BUTTES, Colorado, March 16.—Steve Benson, aged three, walked alive this mo Ing’ the: night Ibst. fn_ons’eh the ‘worst blizzards and dust storms ever striking this area. A posse of 500 spent the night searching for the lad. —eoe Homestead tracts with a maxi- mum ‘of 5 acres, authorized under he act of March 3, 1927, are in- asing in pog in Alaska. trappers and fisher | withi radius of several hum J (umnd upon the z post for all their year’ hey arrive by boat, dogsled, ! and sleds pulled by rein-| At Iliamna there are five bulhl- ngs including the trading post a Mr. Severson owns all of lhtm There is only one other white m\n in the (ummuml) - Only one hatchery was engaged in the propa jon of salmon in Alaska in 193 at operated by | the | Hugh Smith Lake, which collected 10,221,000 red-salmon eggs during the 1934 season, from which 9,- 860,000 fry were produced and liber- ated in Alaska waters. At the close of applications were on fiscal year for home- | file in the A Three-Part Drama presented by INDIAN and CARBONADO |—Comes the Dawn! Mr. Coalwise rises. Fur- nace fire still glowin, nicely. Was banked a! night with CARBONADO COAL . 11-—2:00 P. M. Mrs. Coalwise’'sbridge guests compliment her on how quickly her house warms up. “A few shovelsful of INDIAN COAL do the trick!"” says Mrs. Coalwise. 111—End of Month Mr. and Mrs. C. congrat- ulate each other-on their low coal bill. “The man said INDIAN and CAR- BONADO would save us money—and, hot diggety, they have!” Formula for cutting fuel costs: INDIAN to start the fire . . . CARBGNADO to bank it day and night. PACIFIC COAS'I‘ COAL COMPANY —PHONE 412— His Wife to Anchor-| wife, who has never been out-| side of the Iliamna country before| window was scheduled to| - a small native vil-| 1, Juneau and Sit-| tablished towns | None of the towns in Southwest! | DOUGLAS Pacific American Fisheries at| U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Burean) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p.m., March 16: Snow flurries tonight and possibly Tuesday; moderate Ssouth- | east winds. LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Veloeity 34 87 SE 8 33 88 s 4 30 7 w 7 Time | 4 pm Barometer 29.74 29.30 29.26 Weathe: Lt. Snow Lt. Snow Misting vest'y 4 am. today | Noen today CASBLE AND KADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am. Precip. dam. Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. veloeity 24hrs. Weathe= Anchorage 24 5 12 TFrace Barrow -20 -32 0 Nome 4 -6 06 el 12 06 | 10 Dawson 20 St. Paul Dutch Harbor -30 Clear Snow Cldy Pt. Cldy Cldy Cldy Pt. Cldy Clear Clear Juneau Lt. Snow | sitka Cldy Ketchikan Rain | Prince Rupert 3 3 3 3 g 5 Rain | Edmonton Clear Seattle €ldy Portland Cldy San Francisco Clear New York cldy Washington Cldy 50 52 66 54 66 showers, 20; 36; Juneau, Chitina, cloudy cloudy, 5 rings, cloudy, -2; Nulato, snowing loudy, -4; Crooked Creek, cloudy WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low barometric prersure cont'nued today (hroughout Alaska, there being a storm area of considerable intensity centered off the southwestern coast of Southeast Alaska, the lowest reported pressure being 29.10 inches. Under its influence, strong winds and gales were 1 g ed in the vicinity of Dixon Entrance, and precipitation along the c 1 regicn from the Prince Wi Sound region southward to 4 Cordova. Unsettled weath- er and sca Snows, ed over the interior and western : were rep: portions of Alaska. e |y, des his brother, also in Douglas. are with relatives. James’ | wife died last fall from yneumoma D GET READY FOR ANNUAL Ed Andrews' studio was an open house today for students of the —o—===2 | Douglas high school as they started | posing for their pictures to appear D'Es SUDDENLY ‘n\ the 1936 annual Taku. The se- | curing of “ads” and other material | for the issue is also under wny | lN FROM TAKU Louis DeFlorian, care-taker of Twin Glacier camp up the Taku John _]ames, Well Known\ River visited his former home here | Douglas Indlan S!rlck | yesterday. He expects to return to fthe camp as soon as he recovers en on Sunday | sufficiently from an injured shoul- der sustained by falling on the ice John James, about 50 years of age, | M®4T the mouth of the river. well known Indian resident of Doug- las, succumbed to an attack of heart | disease yestérday afternoon about | 4 o'clock while visiting at the home | of Frank James, his brother, in CINCINNATI — & Eighty-three of Douglas. Attendants called before |the 125 persons killed by auto- he passed away were unable to Savo‘mubnes in Cincinnati in 1985 were him after he was stricken. The re- Pedestrians, the Oincinnati Safe- mains are in charge of the C. W. ty Council announced. Crossing in Carter Mortuary pending funeral the middle of the block instead of arrangements. at interestcions was held the prin- Five children survive the deceased, r‘mal cause for pedestrian fatalities. ‘ > Jay Walking Fatal ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Qur Services to You Segin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Bost | \ S P T Thos. J. McCaul You are invited to present this oupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and recelve tickets for your- self and a friend or relative to see “China Seas” As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering . - Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE

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