The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 2, 1936, Page 6

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POLLY AND HER PALS . THE.DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1936. S /TLL B8 READY Te0- - ¥ PAW PERKINS {8k SECCUNT, SAML . VER Fama s IS IT RAININ' 60T 2 NOT A SPECK, SUSIE. SEVEN WANT AD POINTERS Your want-ad will proauce, if you: L Think carefully about your proposition. 2. Direct your selling efforts at the individual. 3. Be specific "Ise colcrtul words. % eid generalities. i Tell the whole story. 3. Emphasize the best fea- all or part of h(’aflllliul 20 acre | sweet cherry orchard, half hour m Seattle. Young trees just arting to bear. Present income $3500. Should be $10,000 next year. Marine view, own water stem. = Write Maude Harvey,| Edmonds, Wash. FOR SALE—Airline 7-tube mantle two-burner hot plate ture of your offer. radio $20, | @ Victoria scheduled to sail from 6. Mention price. 4, 20 key German Concertina $8,| o Seattle 9 a. m. today but no 1. Make answering as essy steel cot with 2 mattresses $6.| o report at 3 p. m. as possible. Write P. O. Box 1921. o Princess Louise scheduled to s FOR SALE_Modern home on Fifth | ® sail from Vancouver Septem- R - R je ber2at9p m. Street near schools. Three bed- | e ¥ M%REN“ rooms, full basement, double gar- |§ Z“;if{:filscé‘:dl‘;fim“‘:5:'“9[;‘":‘“ i age, small down payment, balance Ak Sl i | To. il 1 e i e P - like rent. Telephone 1951. [¢: Fukoo SEREEIEL S0, 86l trou FOR RENT—Large room with twin oo e Seattle September 5 at 9 single room; both hot — Furnished dwelling ® 2 m jeas and sing BOR SR o North Sea scheduled to sail water heated. Phone 681. FOR RENT apartment. Telephone 2004. y VSV»room {;rnhhed FOR RENT — Two room p‘LrJv furnished apartment over Totem | Grocery. Telephone 626. FOR RENT—9 rm, house, auiomat- | with 15,000 square feet of ground space, exceedingly good garden o gihm N O . Allen, | © Northwestern scheduled to sail s;}'” 4 kr a s e from Seattle September 9 sw“l 318 e at9a m "OR SALE_Summer home at Auk ® SOUTHBOUND SATLINGS |Fo8 Alaska scheduled southbound Bay. See Henry Baman. . FOR SALE —Latest modc] National | o " e n e e s s 00 o Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Northland scheduled to arrive early Saturday. SCHEDULED SAILIN L8 . . . . . . P . . . . . . . . . . . L o from Seattle September 7 at @ ° . L . . . . next Monday or Tuesday. LOCAL SAILINGS ic steam heat, 6 bedrooms, 2| N A Bavalian ; = baths, electric Tange, overstuffed| O8sh Reglsiet; anc HaWAIA e Bstebeth leaves every Wednes- furniture, oak floors. Call Wind-| 8uitar. Inquire Siiver day mnight at 6 p. m, for Apts. Sy o sitka and wayports. e AR FOR SALE—1931 Willys 6 coach, ' ® Dart leaves every Friday at WaUANGY. Nugset Apartments 1 good condition, new battery— ® 7 8. m. for Petersburg, Kake COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, wat- $125.00 for quick sale. Write Em-{® and wayports. er, dishes, cooking wuter=ils and pire W 1813. ® 0 0 0 0 00 00 000 — .- oath. Reasonable at Seavie®. por SALE — New small modern |, 7 : T home, incomplete, will sell for one WARNTED half investment. Tllness cause for TIDES TOMORROW PHONE 3801 for a1l kinds of sew- Selling. Address by letter L 1810[%—— T ing. Mrs. W. E. Bathe. care Empire. | High tide 1:44 a. m., 183 feet —— e Low tide m., -16 feet = : <o. FOR SALE — Large lot on Ninth SAREED M tos geieral hous and Indian Sts. Build your home| High tide m., 190 feet work. Telephone 69. w. See Al-Zenger. Low tide 8:17 p. m. -2.6 feet now. B S WANTED—OIl burner ‘manufactur- er wants live distributor. The Silent-Heet: Burner is an out- standing value in the oil burner industry; priced so low you can meet any kind of competition, and yet give more value than your competitors. Write or wire FOR SALE—Moaern, twenly foot, mahogany front and baok bar, also cigar case. KRAFFT CAB- INET SHOP. AND FOUND LOS) for full information. Silent-Heet LOST—-Boys bike taken from side- Burner Co., 118 East 28th New York City, N. Y. Oil Street, WANTED — Scandinavian woman for general house cleaning. 403 Franklin St. front of Chile Bowl, or for in reward for return Phone 167 MIS( hLLANEUUS yalk Cash information. EXPERIENCEL, _ young Thian MIMEOGRAPHING? Phone 194, waris general housework. hour. Phone 3801 TURN your cid gora Mt e € Cash or uade al Nugget Bnov | 50¢ GTARANTEEL Kealistic Perma- " FRED MATTSON | WATCHMAKER and | JEWELER | | | 1 | | | Watches, Clocks and Jewelry | EYE GLASSES SOLD AND REPAIRED ‘ 127 SEWARD STREET | | Opposite Goldstein Bldg. | | P.O. Box 1648, Juneau, Alaska L A nents, $3.75. Finger wave, 50c. Tola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. i “THE REXALL STORE” i your Reliable pharmacists compound prescriptions. —a ‘| JUNEAU-YOUNG | Hardware Company | : PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition i | i | § el ‘| Butler Mauro Dfig Co. L 2 GARBAGE HAULED | 9 Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS 1 TELEPHONE 212 SWAMPED SKIFF PUZZLE UNSOLVED Fears for the safety of two Lena Beach residents, reported missing after yesterday's story about finding | a swamped boat near Auk Bay, were set at rest this afternoon when Al-| bert White returned to Juneau and announced the two “lost” men are not missing. Mr. White made the trip to his Lena Beach home this morning to investigate the rumor after the U. S. Marshal’s office had been advised by teleplione thal Warren Harding, who is living in Mr. White'’s Lena Beach house, and George Caves, were seen rowing away from the beach Monday afternoon and had not returned yesterday afternoon. Mr. White, upon investigation, found that the report was in error, and [the two men are at his house. The Marshal's office continued ef- forts to find ‘the owner of the swamped skiff, but as no informa-! tion has yet been located, it is be-| lieved that the boat may have float- | ed to Auk Bay from some distant point. ———— MISS PULLEN HERE Miss Elizabeth Pullen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Pullen. ar- rived on the Alaska for a brief vis- it. She has been taking Child Wel- fare course at the University of Washington. Phonr 753 New York Life INSURANCE | HARRY RACE, Druggist “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” = Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards THE NEW KEITH G. WILDES | PHONES Office 601—Residence 601-2 Offering Saving's to Cash Buyers of Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear. “Save by Paying Cash” 107 Phone Seward “Tomorrow'’s Styles Today” ||Chatham Straits Transportation Co. “M. S. DART” ‘ Leaves Femmer Dock every Friday at 7a. m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. Freight received not later than 4 p. m. Thursday. FOR INFORMATION MAURICE C. REABER, Phone 4622 ol THE BEST | TAP BEER IN TOWNI* ® THE MINERS' Recreation qulors cmd Liqug . o . . " ALASKA BRINGS CAPACITY LOAD IN FOR JUNEAU Steamship Arrives from South at 5 and Leaves for Westward at 10 Steamship Alaska, bringing the |Legion Convention delegates from |Southeast Alaska towns and return- ling Juneauites, arrived this morn- ing at 5 o'clock and left westbound at 10 o'clock. Passengers arriving here on the | vessel were: D. C Boutelle, Doris Cahill, Mrs. W. E Cahill, Tom Clark, Mrs. C. N Crone, Carl Edman, Elizabeth Fras- er, J. D. Harlan, |S. H. Kelleran, E. C. Kibbey, W. D. Nutley, H. W. Parmelee, Eliza- beth Pullen, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. |Rodland, A. J. Stinzor, M. Rhodes, |K. Smith, Mrs, William Schmitz, |J. Schmitz, William Schmitz, Mr. and Mrs. F. Serdar, Helen Torkel- Isen, J. T. Tennesen, Mr. and M 0. Worthwine, John White, Bernice | Waugh, Mrs. W. C. Walther, Pat- ricia Walther, A. Zenger, H. Mead, {Harry King. 1 F. Denny, Irene Coulter, Sally ]Halr(. Mrs. D. A. Chase, Edith |Carey, Mrs. R. A. Bartholomew, C. |Johnson, I. A. Thatcher, R. John- ison, Alexander Mayer, C. J. Davis, |Delia Saeff, Helen Zamora, H. Williams, Patricia Weis, Mrs. C. L. | Weis, C. Moore, Blanche McGllvm |Ruth Morgan, Miss J. Crouthers, J Seldenrust, R. R. May, Mrs. Mayer, Sam Baker, S. A. Light, Eliza Jack- son, Mrs. Williams. Aboard the steamer when Beyers, P. H. she lowing persons from here: | To Valdez—George A. Parks, Tke | Taylor. To Seward—Mr. and Mrs. J. G. |Shepard, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gar- | low, Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Witt, Aga- | tha Witt, C. L. Wedemeier, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Mordan, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Bell, tafson, Mrs. queline Witt, Lee Thoma, Margaret | Pimperton, V. Bourgette, Isadore | John Hansen, E. Gus- | TOTAL TO DATE 1230 KETCHIKAN BASEBALL INVASION FUND INCLUDING ALL RECEIPTS TILL 12:00 NOON WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 DONORS AMT. Wm. A. Holhemizer ......$ 10.00 Elwood McClain . 5.00 John Pastl Henry Meier Tom George 5.00 2.00 2.00 California Grocery . 500 + Alstrom’s News Stand ... 5.00 Gunnar Blomgren 5.00 Phomas Hardware Co. 5.00 E. W. Griffin ... 5.00 Juneau Liquor Co. ... 5.00 Triangle Inn 5.00 Juneau Drug Co. & 5.00 Alaska Credit Bureau ... 2.00 Piggly Wiggly ... 500 ' Bodding Transfer e 2,00 H. 8. Graves ... 5.00 Chris Bailey .. 5.00 United Food Co. 5.00 Chamber of Commerce.. 20.00 Daily Alaska Empire ... 10.00 § ,Mr and Vln J. F‘ Chamberlin. / BUT I'M DANGED = TLL ADMIT IT'S A TAXT RAIN! @ 1936, King Fesures Syodae, inc. Wrkd aghte remred ___; Gives Program | poucras || Legion Backs NEWS Hospitslization, Child Wl fare, National Defense Major Gbjectives ISLAND MOOSE HUNTERS R COME BACK WITH G\‘IF‘ Joe Reidi and Jack Mills returned | home this morning bringing a mgr moose as the result of a hunting trip up the Taku River. Henry Ste-| vens and party secured two moose after a few days hunt in the same | region. The moose were killed near 'ericanism,” he said. “Our program the mouth of the river making it!calls for instilling in our children easy for the hunters to get their'what America means; teaching our game out. system of government, which we To Kodiak-—Nestor Aceoya. ._I‘ | (Continuea from Page One) welfare with the thought in mind of a fair educational opporl.umn‘ to every American child and imbu- ing in them the principles of Am- SERVING ALASKA THE YEAR 'ROUND Steamer Aleutian Aug. 28 Alaska -.Aug. 29 Victoria ... Sept. 2 Yukon -..Sept. 5 N'Western .Sept, 9 Alaska -...Sept. 12 Aug: 31 Sept. 1 Sept. Sept. 8 Sept. Sept. 15 @ Kathryn Harover, |cast off at 10 o'clock were the fol- | J. G. Williams, C. H Keil, M. John- | son, J. L. Olson, H. 8. Murdiman, | e NEW TEACHERS HERE Miss Harriet Sweetland and Miss Florence Ryan arrived here on the Aleutian to teach n the Douglas High School. ; ST T LEAVES FOR HOME Completing a ten day's visit with her brother Erwin Hachmeister, Mrs. Ann Henning of San Francisco | Cal. left on the Aleutian yesterday afternoon to complete her round trip to Southeast Alaska points, in- cluding Sitka before returning to her home, ->o— CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY Curtis Bach was eight years of age today and he number of little playmates this af- ternoon at the home of his par-| ents, Mr. and Mrs, Edward Bach. ————— BIG TIME AT DREAMLAND Mike Pusich will be host to the| Legion vistors on the channel to- night at the Dreamland. Special service and entertainment have been | armnged ———— ALEUTIAN 1S IN FOR LAST - TOURIST TRIP | Thirty b 1 Juneau on Alaska Line Steamer Last Night The Aleutan in port yesterday for M. M. Daneiki, Jac- | the last time this season sailed at| | 8 o'clock for Skagway on the Totem- | | land cruiise. | Passengers leaving on the steamer were: For Skagway—Venetia Hahn, E. | C. Berry, Matilda Benson, Casper iNelsnn. Mrs. G. Burwell, Raymond | Taylor, Eliza Taylor, R. C. Camp, (Mr. and Mrs. Lytton Taylor, Mrs, S. | Hemming, Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Tal- 'bot J. W. Flynn. | For Sitka—Mrs. O. T. Willlams, .ank Kaslov, Mary Kaslov, Rosie | Kaslov, Lizzie Kaslov, H. Roden. For Seattle—Mr. and Mrs. H. P. | Nieroth, Mrs. J. Allway, Miss L. All- 'way. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Christen- sen, Miss Ada Giovanetti, Anne | Martin. | Try The Empire classifieds for| |quick results. entertained a| | Wilke, Mrs, A. Pearson, Counzess} fighting ever against overthrow of it. |opposed to force and violence the attempt to overthrow our gov- ernment and our institutions and we stand ever ready to defend them at all costs. | The national officer declared that !the cause of peace is a foremost | cne with the Legion, and that ade- | quate national defense is the way | to obtain that peace “That is one of the reasons I am | |personally, as well as the Legion, | |vitally interested in Alaska and its| {place in the picture of national| defense,” he said. |important part to play in.that pro-| |eram, and there is no doubt in my | mind that she will play it well.” | The Legion, Commander Worth- ]me stated, believes further, in the | {interests of peace, in taking the profit out of war. ! “We believe every one should {serve on the same basis,” he ex-| H)lamed “the man in industry and ‘the man on the battlefield in ‘time | ]\0! war.’ > i SALMON SOLD HERE The New Engiand Fish Company | | packed boat, Louhelen, Capt. Knute | 4Hudre delivered the only trip on]| the Juneau Fish Market today; 16,- kooo pounds of king and silver sal‘ | mon. Late yesterday afternoon, the Cel»} tic, Captain Henry Moy, sold 7,300 pounds of salmon to the Alaska| ‘iCDflSt Fisheries. | |OLGA PAUL RETURNS | FROM ATTLE Vlsl’l‘ Miss Olga Paul, daughter of Mr. |and Mrs. S8am Paui, arrived on the | ‘Alaskn from Seattle where she has been visiting for the past several months with her brother-in-law and | sister, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Powers >, FLY Irving Airways, Inc., ‘1-place ‘White Lockheed. Phone 626. adv., | Phone 108 J-nun or 71 Douglas | Leave Juneau: A.M.—17: 15,8:00, 9:15, : 110:15, 11:15; P.M.—12: 15, 16, 3:15, 415, 5:15, 6:15 715, 5, 9:45, 11:15, 12:00 midnight, |Leave Douglas A.M.—7:40, 0, 9:40, 10:40, 11:40; P.M.—12:40, 0, 3:40, tfl) 5:40, 6:40, 7:40, 8:40, 10:10, 11:40, Glacier Highway Leave Auk Bay AM.—T:00, 8:15; (m H. S. GRAVES | “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaffner and | Marx Clothing PM—12:30, 415 Saturday and D Bosisl ok Leave Juneau: AM. — 1%1‘1.'3.30 PM—2:30, 5.5 sg and i Bunday Special—10:00 pum. ALSO TAXI SERVICE DRY CLEANING ® Soft Water Washing e — CANADIAN PACIFIC samung; TO' VANCOUVER, VICTORIA and SEATTLE From Juneau PRINCESS LOUISE September 8, 16, 24 October 3, 15, Tickets, reservations and full Pparticulars from V. W. MUL: believe to be the right one, and| l“uu in RAY STEVENS, Agert - J. B, BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF .. GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent . “Alaska has an ‘m Boat M. S. Northland S. 8. North Sea M. S. Northland S. S. North Sea M. S. Northland S. S. North Sea M. S. Northland S. S. North Sea Yukon and 4 NORTHILA === TRANSPORTATION CO Leave Beattle Aug. 31 ...Sept. 8 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Sept. 28 Oct. 5 Oct. 12 -.Oct. 17 SAILING SCHEDULE Leave DueJuneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. THE AYASKA LINE M. J. WILCOX, Agent—Phone 2 Arnve Juneau Sept. 4 Sepa. 12 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. N 7 8 14 15 21 The only line serving Alaska that maintaing & regaar weekly service throughout the yeac Leave Juneaj Sept. 4 Sept. 14 Sejt. 18 Sept. 21 Oct. 2 Oct. 11 Oct, 18 Oct. 23 Sept. 1 Alaska Transpertation | FREIGHT—*PASSENGERS—REFRIGERATION Weekly Sailings from Tacoma and Seattle f te Ketchikan—Wrarngall—Petersburg—Juneau Port Dock, Tacoma Pier 7, Seattle aP‘M Thursday 9 P.M. Friday \1. S. Zapora ... S. S. Evelyn Berg Sept. ept. 1 ) Sept. Sept. 4 11 D.B. FEMMER. Agent nghl Phone 312 PHONE 114 Alaska Air Transport, Inc. SEAPLANE FOR CHARTER 8-Place Bellanca Skyrocket 4-Place Stinson “Patco” AT ReEASONABLE CHARTER RATES PHONES, Juneau Hangar, 612; Night and Day Office, 587 SHELDON SIMMONS Chief Pilot HAROLD R. BROWN, Agent “JIMMY” RINEHART Pilot SCHEDULED AIR SERVI CE TO INTERIOR ALASEA Luxurious Twin Engine Transports Radio Equipped ® Office Gastineau Hotel PHONE 106 Louis A. Delebecque £ MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS EARLY! PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWA YS “Seattle Junegu :Fairbanks Nome EY

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