The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 22, 1938, Page 6

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, BRINGING UP FATHER By GEORGE McMANU I s A et e e _— | 1 BY | JUST RECEIVED_A WELL- DON'T 2 ‘ GOULNE T HES BRRS W-WHAT HAS TELEGRAM THAT WORRY - HUH? | DID THE i SO NIcE A A e NRAPPENED # _—— || oUR SON 15 MAR- MAGGIE ~ SAME ‘ B g 5 7 : RIED- MY BOY- HE = " - — | KNEW THAT ~ ! = NO EIGHT S - NO_ARGU : i MENTZ 1O HARSH O T WOULON'T PO || PsT HANE BEENE AL A H CROSS_ WORDS-- | CAN'T S et § QQ [ ] BELIEVE I'M HOME - ‘55»/; = 7 N (11 P i R " § o 3 E & p 5 of the California Gaocery ' as 15 e her husband. Then there is the son too, with father and T o e s his able inst rnia Grocery i niy Annive SteAMER MOVEMENTS GIRL SCOUTS ASSIST ;’ Ty WITH YUKON: .- omoins = ° WITH XMAS SEAL SALE . NORTHBOUND ; H e Alaska in port and scheduled to Mot of the Girl Scouts are i o sail for the Westward about i of the, Gl Boouts als i e 5 oclock this afternoon. fa, e Prips Y i e SCHEDULED SAILINGS Dhristmas Seal Sale, recely. 5 — o Princess Norah scheduled to S thefr. reward points {oward Sixty fares, 25 of that number ¢ sajl from Vancouver at 9 to- ; “ ’ Vil i i 4. steerage, were sold over the Alaska| s night _ Beouts_asibting include eanne E Steamship Company desks here for e Tongass scheduled to sail from @ ;)”‘»L A]'."‘.K} ,“ n 1 rflrv:n“ B | #he sailing of the Yukon yesterday e Seattle tomorrow night 0 £ \vv.]‘ “; mn(.m .(]1‘,‘.1. ‘,.,. { afternoon when that vessel passed o North Sea scheduled to sail e | 3(,‘(.(,‘ f,‘f HXI, « “!1”;1 sulc . southbound through Juncau. o from Seattle November 25 at ® Mary and Agnes Tubbs, Na § For Seattle passengers were Bar- o 10 am. . Humphrey, Connic D lorence ' bara Winn, Tony Pavelich, Mrs. ¢ yukon scheduled lo sail from e | I\dxx\x“klj‘\4;“l(|1 Mary Zukick, and _ Sam Niemi, Jack Cutting, Frank ¢ geattle at 9 am. November R 3 . Mar) 4 ilasse i Pitch, Mrs. Fred Knuttila, Mrs. M. ¢ 26, Seabiscuit out in front at finish of race with War Admiral G Ry i Foyrion, Prad Hallford, G, T.le. BOUTHBOUND BAILINGS Here's the finish of that match race between War good in record time. The race was run on the i Wyller, Car) Beisel Northland scheduled south- Admiral and Seabiscult, won by the latter. Sea- | Pimlico track at Baltimore. Scabiscuit won §15,000 MINER FALLS DOWN Miss G. A. Brincard, George Carl-| e pound late Thursday or car biscuit crossed the finisk line four lengths to the | for owner Charles S. Howard. ! son. Mike McKallick, Mrs. M. Mc Friday. e G e e CHUTE AT A. J. MINE Kallick, George Mathieson, Hugh LOCAL SAILINGS Pt = o ‘ , Wilson, Lloyd Jarman, Ray John- e Estebeth scheduied to sail every to one truck for delivery, another beverages from cocilails, wines STl i son. Milt Wagnish. Wednesday at 6 p.m. for Sit- e | was added to keep up the service through to the after dinner cor- Bob Hamiu N e o ¢ F.D. Isaacson, Dave Williams, Ar- ka and wayports. ! Future Looms Sl ; 4 fall of 40 feet down a chute at I BRI o8, M. Qrqut O Wint |'e: Dirg, haNles, sYaly : Wednesday, o About this tume, Nick Bavard Unitee S Mwat the Alaska Juneau Mine, the acci- ; 0. S. Sullivan, J. B. Warrack, Mrs. @ at 7 a.n. for Pétersburg, Port thought of the future—why not be| Everything is under one roof and gen ak place #bout 5130, orotods { V. Rademacker, W. F. Smith, R.C./ ¢ Alexander, Kake and wiy first on the market with home-|Nick Bavard is there in the middle 1oo evening, i Wflkcl‘iTl. Charles Mooney, Paulle ports. | grown vegetables? Right then busi-| of the business, a 1680Y. 1 Harmilbint oMot aridmiub/akrs { ‘Biconises L, Galtos Sk T R ness sagacity was again demon- Please, surrounded b; taff ofigng prut . il fice &Rl i e B el R R A | sirated. The property now known |clefks who have adopted the samelyooq but was resting easily today e e ] 4 as the Bavard farm, on the Eagle policy—treat the public right and 2 Bigie j.. vty bteve HBaumaryioh, John [1*]] | 5 . ;ay. was purchased and began | With good measure. for sale at The Emmire Gffice. 5 ::"k“y' feaann 2 Hmf“;’ ’fwk' Twenty-one Years in Busi-| i, qevelop. Experts were engploved Nick knows ail of his customers " sighipagm P ERbE. Fragtis Panchett, 1. Nichol, | J 3] sole purpose of cultivating|and can spot a new one just as o-— = o R e Lo flc s ere H “ [ Juneau-——Sllll the ok R0 i et Coll: batting an eye. He is Nick | { SN EanEsine A Keahe. ) Growing Stron el s brers ahid they ave Mis. 237 SOUTH FRANKLIN | H For ‘Petersb Bed Winatiy - d rowing ong fornia Grocery now owns and oper § L B e Rt AR S ates the only farm in Alaska ex- s, Miss or hello Bobbic | JUNQ SAMPLE SHOP | | T P e e The California Grocery is today |clusively for supplying products for | to him. bt | e e | " .. Frem Southeast Alaska ) A=?. Pyle, o ———— R L. L Trimble, Jim' Zavorinoff and V. Cruz. For Wrangell--Louise Joseph For Ketchikan—Earl Anderson. ALASKA DOCKS WITH 43 FOR - CAPITAL CITY The northbound ~steamer tied to the ¢ with 43 8 port From wk here this forenoon ard for this ngers abe e Were Blancl ra Clau Harry C M. Carpentcr pet frs. O. Clauser ymas Carl, H. C. Culp, W. J igh, W. B. Heisel, Mrs. W. B. Heisel, Edwin Heisel D. W. Hagerty, Mrs. G. E. Hal and baby, M. Hayes, L. F. Johnson Agnes Johnson, Louise Kemper, C. dale, Lucille Lonsdale dale. Mrs. P. K. Lucas, @.. Rickelts, M-s. M. C. Sm'th_Jr., Shell Simmgns, Aldec Wods, Har- Ien' Woods, Viclet Woods, M. Backey. ts—T. V. Stedmayn. Rila Andro, R. L. Hall, Norma Kubley, A. H Ziegler, Mrs. Zieglér, Alice Burritt, C. E. McLean, S. Carruthers, Nellie Weston, Mrs. Rhoda Lloyd, M. A. Bjorge, O. Halvorsen, Gordon Hal- vorsen. In This Morning The';motorship Noi<hland, Capt. L. Willisats, arrived in Juneau this morning shoptly before eight o'clock with 17 passehgers aboard for the Capital City from Seattle and Southeast Alaska ports. Adrian Lons- 0. G. Olson, N e, From Seattle, passengers were: E ,Rob‘erfion, Richard Kobbeyik, Robbevik, Mrs. Bert Ma- Alaska: Hausness, Mrs, J. Coulter, Ernie Sarff, Peterson, R. Smi Olaf Hinsen, m'g B. Foss, N. A. McEachran, Bertha Tiber, The Rev. Lars J. A 'ku Reed, Ed Atkinson, E._Atkifison, Outbound tp. Sitka from Juneau Charjes Ander- ohnaon, Mis, B | Heinie Berger's little foot freighter-passenger boat, was|and California Grocery on the way south | closely linked during all of |after a successful season of opera- | time. | Alaska | ‘ Waw Seattle "Hardlu.ck" Hanson, Skip- per, Well Known to Many Juneauites The motorship Discoverer, Capt. ninety-some in Juneau toda, tion let p Capt. Jim “Hardluck” Hanson, ell known in Juneau where he op- erated the Virginia for many years between Seattle and Cook In- | orts. is skipper proud 15 made ten trips. this sur i whle to A e of 40,000 miles {1 1 mer fi an aggre on The Discoverer tons of freight gers. She is 1 This is the for the vessel and she will come north again next spring. and “Hard- carries about 110 and téh passen- her. purchased the old Auk Bay cannery | here and transported it to Cook In- let, completing erection of another | c¢annery there in 1929, when the fish market was “sour.” $ | “We hung on until we couldn't i'.:Akl‘ it any more,” Hanson said, | “but I still think Alaska is the only | place in the world. After all, it's| one country that is remarkable in that the Norwegians took it with-| out firing a shot™ High tide—1:43 a.m,, 15.6 feet. | Low tide—T7:17 am. 32 feet. | celebrating same maturity, name of Albert Geno was admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital last night for sur- | gical attention. George Hendrickson underwent a | minor operation this morning at St. Ann’s Hospital. | Joseph Kinch is a médical admis- | sion to the Government Hospital | from Douglas. ’ Martha Walter, of Tenakee, en- of Juneau. Twenty-one its Twenty-first years, location, has and “Bavard, onions, and at the alw under the | have this cabbages the | truck, and even ti California | berries and raspberries come from Grocery been in business and like! the Bavard Farm to augmept the |an infant, has now grown to real supplies from the States When Mike Bavard passed awa for that name Nick Bavard purchased his brpthe been | jnterest in the California Grocery Store Again Enlarged Still business incr Anni- | their use. Of course the farmi can- versary of successfully catering to not supply the unusual demsafid but and pleasing the purchasing public homegrown radishes, carrets; green and other garden delicious straw- Ay ed, and Nick, Just 21 years ago, Mike and Nick | who personally supervises operations ery on lower Front Street, Bavard opened the California Groc-|of the store, always being on the now | job, decided that to handle the pa- called South Franklin. The name|tronage he must enlarge, and again of the street ha 1 i tomer ind select on both store. uld w stock sides. Out in front, was a vegetab display with cooling water spraying ly always “full up.” over the tempting commodities, in trip of the year |the summer months. Business Develops Business began to pick up almost J. Krozh," B. F. Lein, Helen Lons- | luck” Hanson will probably be with| within a few weeks and Mike and Nick, who were making friends | “Hardluck” got his name when he a fast manner, got their heads to- gether and the result was that the| store was soon cnlarged. But patronage continued to grow and the store was enlarged again. Gains Reputation | The California Grocery was gain- ing a splendid reputation. The most popular brands of staple goods were on the shelves and as fast as new commodities were on the market, the California Grocery had them also. The general public began realize that if certain articles werc manufactured—the Service Every Trip s changed, in S. to California Gro. with s and if d ALASKA TRANSPCRTATION COMPANY Sailings from Pier 7 8. TONGASS PASSENGERS REFRIGERATION but not | the California Grocery took on more he o space. Gradually new departments Groce it were ided, it v market mall sp located right in the groc Jepart- 1tk down the ce ment, and then a liquor depart- from the shelves: ment, adjoining the store. The Cali o small was fornia Grocery can now supply the everything ' from also the eanttle Ledves Scattle Nov. 23 FREIGHT “PRIN- Consistent attention to busi keeping up with the times, s ing customers, treating them as partners in the business, cour- tesy and every other well practiced art has made the California Groc- ery a homey word. Nick is married and Mrs. Bavard is as, equally involved in the suc- 3 3 X 3 — TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHING ° FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men Telephone 133 | | | — Jarman's-Friendly FORTUNE $4 Van’s Store 278 S. FRANKLIN Steamer SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound THE ALASKA LINE cery received them first. ALASKA Nov. 19 Nov. 22 Nov. 28 Patronage steadily increased and IYUKON . 26 Nov. 29 Dec. 5 e D. B. FE.:MMER ALASKA . 3 Dec. 6 Dec 12 AGENT MT. McKINLEY Dec. 10 Dec. 13 Dec. 19 . o BARANOF . Dec.17 Dec. 20 Dec. 26 Ehone 114 Night 312} sy MeKINLEY ; .. Dec:94 .Dec.21 Jan. 2 ! 1 - BARANOF ... <y o Dec. Jan. 3 Jan. 9 THE SIGN OF 1 # DEPENDABLE ’m‘ 1—Calls at Yakutat Northbound and Southbound. SERVICE | =55 Travel | /WINTER ROUND TRIP FARE - —— $74.00 REGULAR | CoNADIAN ! |Effective November 11 Return ticket must be tised By March 25, 1939. U. 8. AIRMAIL on a 4 1 Juneau-Fairbanks tered the Government Hospital u:-“_ day for surgical care. A baby boy was born to Mr. and ! Mrs. Alex Wilson of Hoonah at 5:15 | o'clock this morning at the Govern- | ment Hospital. The baby weighed seven pounds twelve ounges. | DANCE Sponsored _b; Guild, CESS” Liner JUNEAU TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA OR SEATTLE SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Norah November 27 December 7, 18 , Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services: Transcontinental PACIFIC ALASKA AIRWAYS, INC. LOUIS ! Trans-Pacific Tickets, reservations and Ticket Office—Phone 2 Al:}si(a cON-AL B. 0. ADAMS, Agent Steamship C RARLASKRA HOTEL GASTINEAU ‘Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE - ~AIK SERVICE INFORMATION Freight Office—Phone & ROUTE HAUGEN TRANSPOE TATION CO M. S. DART U. S. Mcil Carrier Leaves Femmer's Dock Junean, every Wednesday 1t 7 a. n For PETERSBURG, KAK ro inf . D. B B MER—Phone 1i4 Freight must be on dock not 4 P. ML Tuesday. FOR HEALTH AT THE BRUNSWICK RECREATION, ALLEYS CAFE IN CONNEGTTON, Spec- ializing in Chinese am Americank Dishes—TRY US ONCE i e SUBSUSSUIIS GREEN TOP CABS-—PHONE | 678 BUY GREEN TOP RIDE COUPON BOOKS: ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 | ALASKA LAUNDRY | | .) ] cuc o~ e $6.25 in rides for $5.00 $3.00 in rides for $2.50 Dr. E. Vollert | il |/ AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO The Daily Alaska Empire Is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of ““CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE “BRINGING UP BABY” wwur 2ane wiay Appest—WATCH THIS SPACK - 1 9 COLUMBIA LUMBER CO. |, OF ALASKA LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS PHONES 587 OR 7T47—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Titie I, F. H. A. Alaska Air Transport, Inc. SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER Frequent Flights to All Points in Southeast Alaska AUTHORIZED CARRIER—U. S. MAII PHONE 612—Day or Night Hangar and Shop in Juneau SHELL SIMMONS———Chief Pilot RUSSELL CLITHERO — Dispatcher All Pleanes 2-Way Radio Equipped Opérating Own Aeronautical Radio Station' KANG MARINE AIRWAYS _ 2-Way Radio Commueaication SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE Authorized U. S. MAIL Carrier *TUFSDAY—Subject to arrival of mail boat from South. Juneau to Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Todd, Sitka, Chichagol Kimshan Cove, Hoonah, and return. *Frequent Nonschedule Trips—10% off Rcund Trip. BEAPLANE CHARTER SERVICE—ANYPLACE IN ALASEA TICKET OFFICE, TRIANGLE PLACE—PHONE 623 Alex Holden, Chief Pilot A. B. (Cot) Hayes, Traffic Represen uz NORTHLA WEEKLY SAILINGS Round Trip—$72; with toilet—$83 and up. Leave Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneas Seattle No.Bound Sp.Tound NORTHLAND Nov. 22 Nov. 25 NORTH SEA . Nov. 29 Dec. 2 NORTHLAND Dec. 6 Dec. 9 HAROLD C. KNIGHT ... SS—— 7Y T (] J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent . _Phene 79 ¢

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