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6 __POLLY AND HER PALS THE DAIL\ ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY NOV. 11, 1937 "1 DECLARE, IT SWEET SIGHT T GEEl | ~Marine News TH' WAY LEAVES FIT T KiLL! A e e s e rreersd | TANKER BRINGS OIL TO JUNEAU ker Rich- Standard Oil t mond, Capt. Clyde C docked at the Alaska Juncau dock yester- day afternoon at 3:30 o'clock and discharged oil there, after which she moved to the Standard Oil dock to discharge 500,000 barrels of oil The Richmond arrived from Rich- mond, California and wiil return to that port this evening or tomorrow morn'ng — e £ e * HoOsPITAL NOTES i Milton Bagby. Alaska Juneau min- er, was admitted to St. Ann’s Hos- pital at 12:30 a. m. today for treat- ment of a leg injury who was admitte to St. Ann’s Hospital from the Polaris-Taku mine on October 16, had a cast put on his injured 1 today. He will be in the hospit for about two weeks more Dan Naphan But Whiteside of the Gastineau Grocery was dismissed yesterday from St. Ann's Hospital following medical care. Mrs. Eske Eskesen and baby daughter are to be dismissed from Bt. Aun’'s Hospital this afternoon. - --o RECEIVES MEDAL Ray ' Duarte, caretaker of the naval radio station at Mile 7 near Cordova, has received a bronze medal for having an excellent rec- ord in the service. e BRADFORD AT W. S. C. Elliott Bradford of Wrangell has enrolled as a freshman at Wash- ington State College. - ‘Well-kept nails, and smoothly arranged hair are three marks of a well-groomed wo- man. 0. B. WILLIAMS CO. SASH AND DOORS BELIEVE IT or NOT It's time for Storm Sash. Order now and be prepared to laugh at Old Man Winter. 4 Lt. STORM SASH 1% and 1% inches thick Outside Measure Price of Sash Glazed 1'8"x3'11” $2.06 18'x4’ 1" 231 1'8"x4'11" 20"x3'11" 2.35 20"x4" 7" 63 2'0"x4'11” 6 2'4"x3'11" 2.55 2'¢"x4’ 17" 2.99 24'x411” a1 2'6"x4'11" 3.28 2'6"x4" 7" 3.00 210"x4’ 1" . 3.35 270"x4'11" 3.69 30"x4 17 3.69 .. Note—Ventilator 35c extra Any size made to order at pro- poruonate prices. Write for FREE catalog. 0. B. WILLIAMS CO. 1833 First Ave. So. Seattle, Wash. ke CCARDINAL . CABS = 25¢ Within City Limits a neat eyebrows I..l.......“ . | Steamer Movements ¢ bezan to hew his homes from the ask—and then they slip him a| g o | forests of Alaska — where his axe sealed envelope with their busxc\ BORTROOVNS ® |sent sharp echoes ringing through |and hips measurement. | No passenger steamer bound ® |the timper, and the wolves, hearing | Men send mostly for tobacco and | AU & i B ® these sounds sat back on their'shot and shell and other things| SCHEDULED SAILINGS ©|pnaynches and howled their com-|from a maculine world. Now and | m. November 13. ND SAILINGS . Seattle 9 SOUTHBOU —P m WHEN TH' MAN A"QOfiT\ WORK, HE ALLUS HUGS AN’ KISSES HIS WIFE | comparatively, se FER | ALASKANS 60 Y AIRPLANE few years ago, speaking the white man first Only Northland scheduled to sail @ |514ints to the moon |then someone wants a pint o' this from Seattle at 9 o'clock t0- ® " nay walked then, or he mushed or a case o' that. ! morrow night . ind dogs, or he traveled slowly | Yesterday, comparatively speaking | Px:}}:((-\.\.‘ Norah \y‘]!(y(’j}ltk] ;u: oss water with uncertain sail|again, the airplane was a strange | ‘l“f:,’mf'y“;‘\‘\“ vancouver 9 PI. %/ moday his means of transort has contraption. Today it is as much, Yukon scheduled to sail from e |Pecome the airplane, that still as- a part of many Alaskan homes as| tonishing instrument of modern|the stove in the corner. Juneau lots have carried nink, foxes, ience that moves the sun back- | live and dead trophies of | WAL, ==——2>% AN’ IT WOULDN'T s Y HURT NONE FER YU T' DO SOME ) creeks and the islands with air-| plane pilots for an astonishing list | lof household things. They order | |through the airplane companies, | needles, pins, diapers for baby,! thread, kitchenware and all that goes with the ordinary household Some women tear a page from a| catalogue and give it to the pilot. | “Buy me a dress like that,” they | It is here to stay. It is Alaska's North Sea in port and sched- e |Wards in its orbit of time. greatest blessing. And Alaskans use | uled to sail for south at 10 ¢! The age of the airplane is a the plane more than any other | o'clock tonight, Passengers e umber of years arrived in Alas- group of people in the world—de- | from Juneau allowed aboard e kan history. From the time Bill livery truck or passenger truck, the at T o'clock tonight e |Rodebaugh and Noel Wien made airplane does the work. | Alaska scheduled southbound e [the first passenger flight in Nome > | next Monday. o |with a rickety Jenny in 1914 to the ‘ LOCAL SAILINGS e |recent daylight-to-dusk flight be- cuLLEGE ls Estebeth leaves every Wednes- o 'tween Seattle and Juneau by Shel- dey night at 6 pm., for e |don Simmons, the airplane has Sitka and wayports. e |been becoming a fixture in Alaska. ¢ OJart leaves every Wednesday | And having become a fixture in ¢ af 7am. for Petersburg, Port [our daily life, the plane has come e Alexander, Kake and way- ® to fill a multitude of ange i e ports. ® needs. It is docto news- California [nshlule of Tec]’\-‘ L © 0 @ ¢ @ © o o o o o e bringer, grocery boy ¢ ln‘\n\pm» . . . FOR L % [tation rolled into a single unit. nology Beneflmary mn peppe $800,000 Estate LOS ANGEL! pper for the child whe walks heme from A little cheese sauce peured cver it increases the By (‘LIFF STERRETT ---BUT DON'T YUH TI-HNK £ 1 QUGHTA FRST GIT A INTRODUCTION TO HER? IIour deol C hlld Wl" Appreciate Lunches that Are Just a thtl? 5 pocml t | keep his money in the sound sto Be assured that Treasury officiafs | do not say directly what will be done about it. But that practical rituation, albeit in modified form in mest instances is what some Treas- | m) officials suspect occurred be- © the recent collapse in the mar- TREASURY 1S The recognition of this problem STUDYING TAX, HIGH BRAFHETS : S k. i5 in part what is prompting Treas- ury ccnsideration of modifications lllCOTfiC L’;/'{ :\i\\' B&, RC- of ile capital gains tax and the . . Sod bhigh icome tax brackets. Other d“CP ofitblll\l(;;jlébsled factors are inviting them also to ronts 1ne { look critically at the corporate un- I (Continued from rage One) |divided profits tax. They may not act sweepingly all fields but odds are good |around here that something affect- |ing these matters will be recom- mended to Congress. == i s the buying power in 'the market that if he of- | !l@rx a large block of stock the price | { — *|will sag and the receipts will be ¢ p |diminished. | Will he, nevertheless, sell this NORWOMEN DINNER ‘ block of safe stock, turn over to the government 75 per cent of the W[LL BE TONIGHT jgain in its value, sustain a fur- e 'ther loss on the thin market, and Over ninety-iive reservations | then risk the remainder in a spec-| have been made for the “Norwomen" ulative business that may or may dinner to be held at the Northern i not pay out for several years or not| Light Presbyterian church tonight ] ) 4 pay out at all? from 6 until 7:30 o'clock. AT Mrs. R. E. Robertson will preside PROBLEM RECOGNIZED and A. 8. Dunham will show col- v And the Treasury official replied ored motion pictures of the Mount \that the rich man probably would McKinley Park district. | Alaska Air Transport, Inc. SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER 7-Place Lockheed Vega 6-Place Bellanca Skyrocket { 4-Place Stinson “Patco” nocdle and ham cassercie, hol cut of the oven, is a perfect d scheol for lunch. U. S. MAIL TIDES TOMORROW | i1e hunt. They have rescued those | el v oAt i Y Wy whose lives have been in danger. mhe californis R e 1 : - | gingerbread, or a rice, fruit or brown e i Low tide 1:06 a. m, 33 feet They have made headline news :},‘f,,f‘3,‘1l‘,_‘;,',1.1,“,‘,\, s \me‘;(,'h. y. MRS, ALES YIRS (R OROL ;,C,” i PHONES, Juncau Hangar, 612; Night and Day o i"';“ “‘(‘: ! 82 :] “Z ::(tl with these flights, but the common nameq as the chisf eventual bene- AP Feature Service Writer 1f you have a little extra time try Office, 587 Low tide 1:59 p. m. ¢ cet |errand today that does not make of the $830000 estate of| It's worth walking home from using eggs. Creamed or scrambled SH 5 A High tide 7:42 p. m., 125 feet | the headlines is the airplane’s mail y n(;\;i.‘ll;n,’-‘ Atesman “,:,d fm 1 to find a lunch that's a little eggs—or omelets or souffles — may SIIEI.()(_)N §.'MMON5 L. F. BARR I ONS I{E;UR *S order business. R b Hiod o Passida: 2 1. And mother doesn’t have to be served alone or you can add left- Chief Pilot Pilot 4 MM Women send in from the remote N all morning to make that over meats and vegetables. QR NORTH YESTEl?DAY —— - e ey <ind of & lunch, either. Here are Advice on Desserts RUSSELL CLITHERO, Agent 1 Y |some suggestions: Don't serve desserts that are too - s | Chatham Stralts Transportation Co. gy N NN}, B{UJS LINE! Home-made hamburgers and pip- rich. Pastries, pies and steamed pud- WITH AAT NUGGE1 “M s DART” | Mphone 105 Juneau or 71 Douglas |ing hot beans with some home- dings, aren’t suitable for children’s p ’ Leave Juneau: A.M.—T7:15,8:00,9:16,(made chili sauce or catsup are a noonday lunches. ? A Following n\m)mul of the Alaska' p,.aves Femmer Dock every Wednes- 10:15, 11:15; P.M.—~12:15, 1:15, 3:15,|lot better than anything you can Canned or stewed fruits, baked M ED R l N E A l R w A Y s Air Transport Lockheed Vega sea- day at 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, 4:15, 5.15, 6:15, T:15, 8 9:45, buy, for instance. puddings (rice, cocox;ut. chocolate, plane in Seattle during the past tWo. poit Alexander and way ports. 11:15, 12:00 rmdmg'n So are home-made hot sand- caramel, bread or fruit), drop cakes 2-Way Radio Communication wecks, Chief AAT Pilot Sheldon prejont received not later than 4 Leave Douglas A.M. 0, 9:40, “'lr(“““ You can \N‘xlrfi “[ifih"s %4“1“;“1 dE«““—‘”Sl;’r_bflk“l SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Simmons made a dawn-to-dark 10:40, 11:40; P.M.- 3 :10, 3:40, le tover meat — topped by leftover tisfy the sweet tooth just as . T a A flight north to Juneau from the Dmv ik 4:40, 5:40, 6:40, 7:40, 8:40, 10:10, {gravy, heated good and hot. well. i s )Authorlzcd U. 8. MAIL Carrier Gl Puget Sound city yesterday FOR INFORMATION | 11:40 | Soup For Wash Days Milk is almost a must for chil- WEDNESDAY, 5 Hepairs to the Nugget includea MAURICE C. REABER, Phone 4622 Glacér Mighway | Or you can put leftover meat, dren at all meals. It is especially ”'“mmcfi?w‘{mfi?,fi' Tf:“‘:ff;rnde- Sitka, Chichagof, the installation of a new stabilizer o ey RV KUK TBAY - KWE-1:00, 82 15~-‘(hu'pr‘d beef or chopped hard- important at noon. Of course, if it ot NMongahedule 'T?rxim-r—xln’z "off Round Trip, nd motor work. Pilot Simmons, P.M.—12:30, 4:15. Saturday Special|cooked eggs into steaming cream is mixed with cocoa and topped by SEAPLANE CHARTEE SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN AI‘A'SnA fi with one northbound passenger, W. FORD AGENCY 6:45 p.m. {sauce and serve it on fresh, crisp, a teaspoonful of whipped cream or TELEPHONE 623 K. Ol took off from Lake Union (Authorized Dealers) Leave Juneau: A.M. — 7:30, 9:30; unbuttered toast. |a marshmallow that's so much the e ; i 1y morning at 7 o'clock and Sl W.—2:30, 5:15. Saturday Special| On wash days, when you haven't| better. ; | ALEX HOLDEN, Chief Pilot C. V. hAY, Traffic Representative ved here last evening after GREASES 10:00 p.m. |a spare minute, serve soup. (If you Here's a recipe for an egg m_)od!c stops at Alert Bay, Ketchikan and GAS — OILS First Bus Sundays and Holidays x:ene different kinds of soup dif-| ham casserole, serving from six to| Wrangell, weaves Junean at 9:30 a.m Herel]'n days r)ou) can have soup viph;: ; 1b. ;gg :{Jndles: l‘g ctups atehika: yrace Faber board- —_ imeals more often. diced ham; tablespoons butter; ‘(IAII:E{;,ifzrlr;{:‘::(l( 1!4}.1%(3:7:?::“ b?\-‘ligp ]UNLAU MOIORS Cream of mushroom soup, vege- % cup crushed pineapple <dx‘ained); 4y b Aaiben, | Birimons (bked b Foot of Main Street G“ smth \lablv. soup or clam chowder, is aw- |salt and pepper to taste. : Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bond for here. |fully good when there’s plenty of Cook the egg noodles in rapidly | e R R e Y. melba toast or nice crisp crackers boiling, salted water. Drain, but do Pilot Simmons flew the Nuggel ter to A. Vartanian, director of the Soviet search for the lost Polar| fliers. St e T Accused in his own time of nature faking because of the dramatic pos-| es in which he portrayed birds, John | James Audobon, early American na- ' turalist, has been vindicated by the studies of more recent scientists. —_— Hotel Junéau “Where Living Is Pleasant” B Nearest Federal Bldg. B Elevator Service. B Beauty Shop. B Reasonable Winter Rates Cheerfully Given. CLARENCE WISE Owner-Manager SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY *~— - THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! ® THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors BILL DOUGLAS south about two weeks ago on char-| |' e, T your Reliable pharmacists compound prescrip- tions. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING + STORAGE and CRATIN™ CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 696 "The Rexall Store" l — on the side. Add some fruit sauce or a small calad, milk and cookies to the imenu and you have something to |look forward to. | On bake-day morning it ymuch trouble to stick something ex- tra in the oven—baking potatoes, | macaroni and cheese, rice and to- matoes, e alloped corn, custard, il DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery grees. seasoning. not blanch. Combine with other ingredients. Place in ole. Bake for one hour at 300 de- If uncooked ham is used, cut into isn’t smaller pieces and use less salt in Add 1 cup mild cheese (diced) to 1% cups medium white sauce. Cook in double boiler until smooth. all the i casser- TRANSPORTATION CO | uflylmmgmmm a regular weekly service thronwhout the ves- i Arrive Leave/ B e | PRESCRIP- TIONS compounded exactly as written by your ZORIC DRY CLEANING [ ] Soft Water Washing 4 Your ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 Juneau to Vancouver, Victoria or Seattle SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS | Princess Norah—Oct. 28 | § fl‘ : Princess Norah—Nov. 7 >5 £ Princess North—Nov. 17 Princess Norah—Nov. 28 Connections at Vancouver with THE ALASKA — canapian SIS ~BEACIELC on a Leave Due Juneau Northbound "le" Oct. 26 Nov. 2 Liner Nov. 16 Nov. 23 LINE M. J. WILCOX, Agent—FPhone 2 Alaska Steamship Compqm' SERVICE*ON-ALL-ALASKA:" Due Juneau Leave Juneau Juneau o) Seattle No. Bound So. Bound % NORTH SEA ..Nov. 5 Nov. 9 Nov.11 NORTHLAND _Nov. 12 Nov. 16 Nov. 18 NORTH SEA ...Nov. 19 Nov. 23 Nov. 25 NORTHLAND ..Nov. 26 Nov. 30 Dec. 2 NORTH SEA ..Dec. 3 Dec. 7 Dec. 9 FRED C. CHARMAN, Agent ... . . ... .PhoTe 106 J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent... ” CITY WHARF ... Phone 23 " GUY SMITH, Douglas hone 19 Juneau QNLY 5 HOURS Foirbenis Via Picturesque Whitehorse Route Bfigb"“{’d Modern twin motored airliners have been flyinc on Sor. 4 regular schedules for over two years between Juneau- iz N Whitehorse-Fairbanks-Flat-Nome. Planes in continu- A ous two-way radio communication with eleven ground B stations, ] ] Leave *Juneau..........Tuesday *Fairbanks ... Sunday *Fairbanks ... Wednesday ... Flat-Ruby-Nome and re- turn same day. *—All year round schedule. NEW REDUCED RATES | “ JUNEAU—FAIRBANKS— E Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL Agent, CP.R. Juneau Alaska CANADIAN PACIFIC | e e Evelyn Berg from Seattle ... PHONE 114 Alaska Transportation Co. SCHEDULED SAILINGS D. B. FEMMER, Agent Nignt Phone 312 Nov. 9 LESS lc% ROUND TRIP Pacitic Alaska Afi-myc Inc, TRAFFIC REPRESENTATIVE . Loiis A. Delebecue—Gastineau Hotel Phone 106 Ol‘ioo—“!fz Residence