Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
POLLY AND HER PALS 6 THE_VDAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY MARCH 16. 1937. T HOWDY, STRANGER---- 'COLRSE TAINT NO AFFAR Q' Mw= BUT YUH HAVENT SAID & LA KIND WORD TO A BODY SINCE 1 YUHVE BE“\I \*‘ CAMP. WANT ADS WANTED WANTED full or senting the lar cident concern in the worl all other cle Bert Elstad, Box 2032, Juneau. WANT AD [NFORMATION five ity E tie, reliablc part time, repre- st hedlth and a ount average words to the ly rate per line for consecutive EMPLOYMENT desired office procedure accountancy. F. S Apts. Phone 2553 All general bool Rhede, One day ...10¢ Additional days [ Minimum charge ...50¢ must be in the office by 2 lock in the afternoon to insure rtion on same day. We accept ads over from persons listed in lirecton y Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE for Frances J0py t 0 housework. A B WANTED Must be Empire Woman for in: od cook. Apply telephone telephone WANTED to room ana board chil- dren—Reasonable rates, schooling included. Minfield Home, Lena Jeach or write Minnie Field, Box 33, Juneau th reet four rooms v 12th Joe George ile; n and bath $1975. Contact Belletto. TURN your ola gold Into value sh or trade at Nugget sho;. Price Joe i Jiis FOR Dma.'r and stand for sale. 6352, BABY "Telephone | FOR RENT—3-room furnished apt. Harris Apts. Household furniture. 307 Goldstein Bldg. SALE 216 FOR Phone | FOR RENT-—Cabin at Mile 4, Gla- cier Highw Helene Albrecht, Goldstein Bldg., Phone 216. I'OR SALE—40x90-ft. level lot. 512 11th West 307, FOR RENT — v-:som furnished Simmons pouse 3 Ledrooms, full basement. pragtics 512 West 11th. new; breakfast table and 4 chairs ¢ . (hardwood) new, small davenport FOR RENT—Taree room suitable for small apt.; wa ¢ wilh bath; newly renovated. machine. 43¢ Tth St. quire Archway rooms. suiic FOR SALE—4-piece springs and mattress, En- House in Douglas, bedrooms, partly furnished, conditi on 50x100 lot. See Allen Shattuck. FOR SALE 3 VACANC at Koskey Apts. $3,000. ‘OR RED T Ninth Street. Mrs. len. Maude McMul- FOR SALE —Premier vacuum cleaner with floor-waxing attach- ment. Phone 5702. quiet heated 114 West 6th FOR Nice room for gentleman. phone 330. RENT — en-room house with St both furnished Apts. rent $25 monthly, St. Ann’s Ave, Douglas. Jim Bar- oumes, phone 132 Douglas FOR SALE— Apt. upstairs. FOR RENT- K[n\.ngln'l apts. Hot and cold water, lights, linen. Over Juneau Cabinet Shop. Sleeping room, $15 month] for FOR QALL Smaii (‘l(ulflnm, wood heater in excellent condition, cheap. Used one season, heats 3 rooms comfortably. Call 033-2 rings, tuning station. rent, Phone for rooms, bath. Iurm hed, 1472 VACANCY MacK.icaon Apts. FOR RENT —Attractive office space. Also furnished four room apartment $75, ing. See Stan Grummett. FOR SALE — 5-room house with bath and lot 40x60 adjoining lot 40x90. See owner, 427 11th St., be- tween 12 and 6 p.m. FOR REN I‘*S 3 266. I"OR SALE — Two-room furnished ]‘OR RENT—Tnree room flxxxmlmd house, 838 Basin Road. Terms to house; also two and three room | reliable buyer. apartments. Inquire Mike Vagge, 513 A Willoughby. FOR SALE—Sun wmp. Phone 4033, FOR SALE—1934 Chevrolet 1 in good condition. Douglas. aster Phone FOR RENT—3 room apt. Decker Bidg. furnished furnished FURNISHED, well steamheated sleeping rooms with in, 1852 after 1 p.m. 424 Franklin. reom condition, Doul.c ttue FOIL SALE — Sl\ C on \ & $4,000. Allen ‘GACANCY Nugi;ot Apts. FOR SALT ed, lends itself to duplex property, price $3000. for sale. Phone 373, Residcr tOR RENT—Seven room furnished apartment. Inquire Snap Shoppe. |§-ROOM inc quick steamheated furnished house, 2 baths, 6 bedrooms, elec- tric range, Frigidaire. Windsor | Apts. 'OR SALE—44-ft. 35 h| 1 cozy, 7Y, warm, Boat Discovery, suitable for hali-, water, dishes, but trolling and seine fishing.| ang bath, Price $3,000.00. O. Fjelde, owner, ' care Olson & Sunde Shipyards, | Seattle, Wash., or Sunde & d’Evers | Company, Seattle, Wash. MISCELLANEGUS FOR CHARTER - 62 foot, 50 h diesel cannery tender. Wireless | equipped. At Kodiak. Write W. J. Gronley, 6751 22nd N. W., Seattle. MIMEOGRAPHING? Phone 4951. Or leave orders J. B. Burford Co. FOR SALE—6-room house on Basin | road; reasonable. Phone 330. furn. apts. Light, cooking utensils | Reasonable at Scaview. | LOST AND FOUND LOST—Bunck of keys in ]oarher case Thursday night. Reward 1I returned to Empire, L G 407. THE MIDGET LUNCH 282 S. Franklin Open 6 3.m.—8 p.m. | | GUARANTEED Realistic Ferma- nents, $3.75. Finger wave. 50c.|! Lola's Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. Ludwig Nelson WATCHMAKER and JEWELER Try The Empire classifieds for results. White Spot LIQUOR STORE PHONE 655 Prompt Delivery " The Va chmty Box BEAUTY SALON 307 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 371 | PERSONAL HAIR STYLING VISIT THE SANDN 5&10 B i i ANt YOU TRAILER HOUNDS GIVES LIKE A PASSLE C' SCHOOL KIDS WITH A NEW TOY. nouse | in Triangle Build- | bath, close| light cooking permitted. Tel.| I CAN'T ABIDE GREENHORNS AS THINKS THEV'VE DISCOVE SOMETHIN' NEW MEBBE F I SHOW VUK » o - Steamer Movements NARTHBOUND e North Sea in.port. Scheduled e {0 sail for Sitka at 4 o'clock e this afternoon, o Mount McXKinley due leo mornin at 2 o'clock. e SCHEDULED SAIL! Norah' sched uver . . S. S, NORTH SEA ARRIVES ; FIRST VOYAGE OF 193 Total of 45 Pd< sengers Come Here on Northland Steamer— 14 for Sitka in Juncau at 11 o'cloc e this morning on her inaugural voy- e age for 1937, the Northland Trans- » portation Ccmpany steamer North e Sea, under Capt. A. W. Nickerson e brought here 45 passengers, 24 of them from Seattle, the remaining 1 from other Southeast Alaska . ° . . at tomorrow . vanc ton 1il from Seal 19 at 10 @ m elyn Berg scheduled to from Seattle March 19. e Yukon scheduled to sail from . ttle March 20 at 9 a.m. . BOUND SAILINGS a scheduled southbound Thursday at 4:30 a.m. LOCAL SAILINGS beth leaves every Wednes- day nlit at 6 p. m, for 4 Sitka and wayports h Sea is also carrying Dart leaves every PFriday at | passengers for Sitka, for ich port she is scheduled to sail e o | whic " i '3‘:""“”“’5' Kake ®frcm Juneau this afternoon at 4 and wayports. The steamer is expected STaNeIS, e 8 8L RN e southbound from Sitka arly r'\\h\&ld) morning. Just off drydock, the North Sea J. boasts new radio equipment, a —**newly installed Foamite smotherin m, 17.6 feet ! system in the fire room, and a clock , -10 feet |watchman system which is among . 139 feet |the recommendations of the Fed 3.1 feet |eral “Safety at Commission Another inn n aboard | North Sea this year is the carrying d, fertilizer, cottonseed meal|cf two pilots, in addition to the r ing see |ular ship's officers. The pilots aid- ing Capt. Nickerson on the pres !voyage are: Sam Glass and George BY MAIL Barrell. No tiresome exercises, you learn by playing the late popular songs. Each lesson swper- Vised and graded by professional feachers. You sccomplish in months what formerly took yaars. For beginners or advanced students. Low COst EASY TERMS MIRACLE CHORD DETECTOR FREE Hocsee e WRITE DEFT. M _FOR YOUR COPY TODAY GIVING PREVIOUS MUSICAL TRAINING. BROADWAY SCHOOL~ MUSIC BROADWAY THEATRE BLDG. . TACOMA. WASH. E sail . e . . . . ° ° ° . ° . ° ° ® ° 0 . . oI ° ° ° ° Se i OMORROW | I {! TIDES High tide 3:33 a. Low tide 10:10 ¢ High tide Low tide at the ! Mississippi laws regulate the sale Autos in Cargo Included in the fair amount of cargo brought to Juneau from the| South on her current voyage by the Northland Company steamer are 13 assorted automobiles and motor trucks, consigned to various Juneay distributors. | Passengers aboard the North Sea for Juneau on Purser B. R. Gilles- | list from Seattle were: Mis: y Gleason, Mrs. Wmlfrcd Jones, V. I. Kraft, Vivian Robillard, J. A. Auvil, Mr. and Mrs. L. Asp and two sons, Forrest Jones, R. F. Pollman, Gordon Selmyhr, Mrs. Mary Lindstrom, H. N. Graham, R. W. Eaton, Ernest Schroeder, L. Ol- son, Andrew Olson, Edward Carter, Elmer Stolling, Jack Crooks, E. L. Carlson, Hiram Freeland, and Tho- mas Judson, Jr. Passengers coming to Juneauf from local ports aboard the vessel were: Johnnie James, George James, | James Hooker, Melvin Hooker, R.|. R. Reagan, Miss Elma Proffitt, Jagk | Jacobson, Gene' Readerer, Miss Hcl-! en Shimuzi, Mr. and Mrs. R. BE.| Sebern, Joe Wright, Mrs. W. An-! | Juneau to Vancouver, Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS PRINCESS NORAH March 21 March 31 Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, CP.R. Juneau Alaska CANADIAN PACIFIC 300 Raams . 300 Baths from$2.50 - Siacial Weekly Nates ALASKANS LIKE THE v |Chatham dwans xrunspoctation Ce. | “M. S. DART” | Leaves. Femmer Dock every F'riday, at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port | Alexander aa¢ ~ay ports. Freight received not later than 4 p. m. Thursday. FOR INFORMATION MAURICE C. REABER, Phona 4622 CHANNEL BUS LINE Phone Y05 Jeueau or 71 Douglas ZORIC DRY CLEANING e Soft ‘Water Washing Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 ! | i 110:40, 11:40; P.Hr-lz 0 l 0 :40, 5:40, 6:40, 7: 11:40. Glacler Highway Leave Auk Bay: A.M.—7:00, 8:15; P.M.—12:30, 4:15. Saturday Special ! 6:45 pm. | wave Junmeau: AM. — 7-30, 9:30; *M.—2:30, 5:15. Saturday Special 10:00 p.m. First Bus Sundays and Holidaye leaves Juneau at 9:30 AM, { mis 126,545,000. By CLIFF STERRETT SAVVY, PODNER 2 RED 5 -, LEAD Galong, Miss lun:' Mdlfla' t Tveten, on, Miss Margaret An- | Ed Locken, P. Stev- and Jack Paul s through Juneau for 1 the Norih Sea are Tom Taan, . E. Reed, G. Daniel- . H. Stock, H. E. Olds, Eugene hel Isakson, Willlam Niemi, eman, Garrisgn Turner, Art| ng. E. Wentworth, L. T. Charl- n, J. W. Jones. g FORTLAND VESSELS JOIN HALIBUTERS PORTLAND, Ore, fisk craft have sailed the Columbia River to join than 140 boats of the halibut 't extending from Northern Cali- a to Alaska. The season con- tinues until 46,000,000 pounds have been taken. Florida Youths Real Policemen PENSACOLA, Fla., Mar. 16.—Pen- acola youths have the opportuity »f realizing ambitions to be a po liceman without waiting to “grow! up.” In a move to curb a “growing cri- minal tendency among youngsters,” the Pensacola police department and the Pensacola trade school col- aborated in organizing a junior po- lice department and an honor couct to try juvenile offenders. The department membership com- prises boys under 16 who passed ex- aminations. The policemen were re- quired to take the oath administered vegular policemen and they wear niforms. The 12 youths making highest ma in the examination were com- oned as members of the honor court and hear cases brought befare them by Lhn Jjunior “cops.” oo 1LY Paul BULLEGTS LIGE; California Protessor Spends 20 Years in Study-— No Broadcast By SAM JACKSON (AP Feature Service “Water) PALO ALTO, Cal, Mar. 16.—Cali- fornia, never be “first” \not broadeast this one: It has the largest collection of | rlice in the world. Before you nod “Yes. yes’ begin to identify them by name, it should be made clear that what is meant is real, literal lice — the parasites that infest men and ani- mals. The collection is in the labora- tory of Gordon F. Ferris, prorex- sor of entomoligy at Stanford w ersity, who has spent 20 years in his unusual quest. They’re Aristocrats At times Dr. Ferris keeps hvmg lice, but the great bulk of his lit-| Mar. 16. microscope slides. These can be filed lection that is the envy of every other louse fancier in the world— four of them, to be exact—could bz stowed away in a good-sized trunk. Considering their humble status, age. Professor Ferris believes the; date back to the evolutionary period when birds and mammals originat- ed. They also are exclusive, and will live only on the kind of animal to which they are adapted. A hu- man being cannot acquire lice from 1 dog, says Professor Ferris, nor can a dog from a cat. There are believed to be about 500 species, sach with its particular host, but Perris has collected and studied In the decaae 1rom 1920 to 1930 automobile registrations in the na- tion increased from 9,231,944 to mals. For some strange evolutionary The only line serving Alaska that maintains a regular weekly service throughout the year. Arrive Leave Leave Juneau Juneau Seattle No. Bound So. nouud Mar.16 Mar.18 Mar.28 Mar.25 Mar. 30 Apr. 6 Apr. 13 Apr. 20 Apr. 27 = North Sea Northland North Sea Northland North Sea Northland North Sea RAY STEVENS, Agent. J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Ayent. CITY WHARF ... GUY SMITH, Douglas ‘Agent. Alaska Air Transport, Inc. SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER 7-Place Lockheed Vega 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket 4-Place Stinson “Patco” U. S. MAIL PHONES, Juneau Hangxr, 612; ‘Night and Day Office, 587 SHELDON SIMMONS “JIMMY;HI:IN EHART Chief Pilot ‘HAROLD R. BROWN, Agent ’I‘HE TERMINAL s smm.nd-mnum-wmz-n JUNEAU CASH GROCERY CASH GROCERS Oomer Second and Seward Streets Free Delivery e PHONE 58 slow at claiming to| in anything, so far h:is‘ ASSORTMENTJ,S‘. LARGEST,WORLD few weeks to three months, but the longest Ferris has been able o keep them alive in caplivity ‘is only two days. Even that involves som2 percsonal sacrifice. The lice are placed in a small container like a wrist watch-case, with a fihe screen on top and a piece of chiffen on the bettom. Tt is then strapped om “the |arm of the professor or @& Tescareh assistant ‘The captive lice can feed through the chiffon, but can't migrate. Some danger attaches to this ex- (perfment and extreme precautions are taken to: obtain insects which are mot infected. One British inves- tigator happened to get some typh- us-carrying lice. The experiment was fatal. reason, Haematomyzus Elephantis, the little chap that infests the ele- phant, has developed a proboscis strikingly similar to the trunk’ of his host. Oue division. of lice is nourished by biting the flesh, but the two species which ‘the human race has to werry about are of the suckimg varfety. They live ion blood, and are carriers of the dreaded disease, typhus, which causes such ravages in prisons, armies and other concen- trations of human beings. “Probably 75 per ¢ent of the hu- | man race has lice, ‘improbable as it may seem to us in>the United States,” says Professor Ferris. “In IChina and central® Asia'the condi~ tion is probably normal. The rem- ady, however, is simple — personal cleanlinesc.” TSR rapped To Wrist The United States is the world’s The . life ¢ 1 of lice is from a Jlarges lmpmter of chemicals MARINE AIRWAYS, Inc. T“O LARGE QE;\I’LANEQ offer DEPENDARLE FAST SERV 1 w A ! | and * | | i | |tle guests is safely embalmed onl away in small space, and the col-| flice have quite an aristocratic line- REATTLE AND ALL POINTS IN ALASKA Authorized U s. uAn‘ Cérrlem PHONES: 623—106 —Hangar 106-2 rings LEX HOLDEN—-Filots——GEN% MEYRING SERVING ALASKA THE YEAR ROUND SAILING SCHEDULE Leave DueJuneau Due Juneax Seattle Northbound Southbound Mar. 16 Mar. 23 Mar. 30 Apr.. 3 Apr. 6 Steamer *MT. McKINLEY.Mar, 13 *YTUKON Mar 20 *ALASKA Mar. 27 “MT. McKINLEY Mar.31 *YUKON Apr. 3 *Ala calls at Yakutav, calls at Skagway north- how d Sitka southbound. McKinley and Vukon call at Skagway northbound, Sitka south- Lou id. Alaska (March 27 sailing) calls at Skag- way northbound oxnlv THE ALASKA LINE M. J. WILCOX, Agent——Phone 2 only about 225. The missing speci- § mens are from the rarer wild an: W R SRR R D PREE T Betwdéhi’ Noae, FIat, “Fairbanks ‘ant’ Jur Planes are always within 100 miles of one of, Zadio stations, pll manned by, experiente +4PAA ‘Electra Plane 'expected-to-arrive in s\uen ff\)n,l"airbanks to connect with stenlgj LEY M R