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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 26, 1929. THE EMPIRE Is the Medium Through which the general public can always have its wants suppliea. Closing time for classified advertisements: 2 P. M. Closing time for display ad- vertisements: 11 A. M. Ten cents per line first in- se-tion. Five cents for continuous subsequent insertion. Count five average words to the lne. Minimum charge, 50 cents. { | 3! { ex Coach, 1927| del. (‘hmp Phone 176 or 1104. o s new mink | i inch mesh, 150 feet long| and two feet wide, all for $75.00.! Call Roo: Alaskan Hotel. IOR QALL Lb t) Bell Washm" Machine. Price, $50.00. Mrs. Franks, 716 6th and Kennedy. I‘OR T SALE— room house, fir place, stationary wash tubs, con- crete foundation, level lot, choice location. Phone 1501. Cary Safe, $50.00 From 4 p. m. to 6 FOR SALE — Phone 2652. D WANTED WANTED—Baby to carc for while ! mother works. Telephone 5204. WANTED — Scotch Collie Puppy. | Andrew Mack, Juneau, Alaska. WORK WANTED—Girl wants work. | P. O. Box 452 Juneau. ~ FOR RENT FOR RENT*SH‘I\I‘\ hr'mm'l rooms. Special winter Juneau Rooms. sleeping rates. | FOR SALE—Home, fully modern. 6 _FOR SALE—Burroughs ' Ing Ma- | rcoms and bath. Garden. Terms reasonable. Fine view. Apply Em- pire or telephone 134 Duuglas. FOR SALE—Miaget Lunch at less than cost. All new zqguipment. Largest Frigidaire, Larg Range,| etc. Does strictly cash business | and always been money maker. Terms to responsible parties. chine in A-1 conditiou. W/ill sell on time or cash discount. Call at Juneau Motors, Inc. Ask for Lucas. FOR RENTAF‘urmshed apnrtment { Close in. Inquire San Francisco Bakery. | F'OR m\LE—-spectacles ¥3.45 a pair at Home Grocery, E. Millaeger, General Merchandise. ! FOR RENT—Two room furni i house. Inquire at Seaview Apa ments. FOR RENT—Three and four room | apartments. CIliff Apartmcnts E 'OR RENT—O ished apartment Reasonable. 831 ¢ Basin Road, telephone 1004. \ = U FOR RENT—Five room furnished ; house, close in. Telephone 257. 'PROSPECIURS ATTENTION: A MISCELLANEOUS pair of good binoculars may find it for you. We have them. The Nugget Shop. PALMIST—Come ana have your fortune told from your hand. Work, business, marriage and the future foretold. 302 Fronmt Street. *FOR RENT—4 room furnished apt.! 421', Best 7th. Phone 2004. ‘ FOR RENT—Four room furnished apartment. Apply Mrs. R. P. . Nelson. 1 | ;GR RENT—One furnished three room apartment. Steam héated Phone 29. &"OR RENT—Furnished house New- ly renovated. 132 6th St. FOR RENT—Furnished steam heat- . ed apartments for permanent and & transient .guests. Muoxinnom Apartments. ER RENT—Furnished steamheat- ed .aspartmefits. Apply 'iugget Shop. glANO, Victor orthophonic Phono-‘ graph, sewing machines. Rent or| , sale. Anderson Music Shoppe. |ing the Alaska Indians who waited S R Ay 'OR RENT—Fuily furnished «, apartments, single or double. { Newly painted; baths and hot L water frnished. Furnished cabins ‘ $5.00 per month. Apply Sea- % view Apts. - i GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT ‘CLEANING 1 E. O. Davis | Phone 584 e |the W. J. Erskine Company, oper- | fruit, jeedro at Akutan and brought here. LOST AND FOUND 'LOST — Eamnan Kodak, llG A, leather case. Reward if returned to Gastineau Hotel. BOLDEN FOREST AND CARGO SOLD T0 ERSKINE GO, Wreck and Frenght Aboard Purchased for Five Thousand Dollars SEATTLE, Sept. 26—Disappoint- for heavy seas and gales to break up the vessel and scatter the cargo along the shores of the Alaska ['® Peninsula, the wrecked Golden For- est and her cargo has been sold to| ating general stores on Kodiak Is- | land, for $5,000. ‘The cargo consisted of gasoline, case oil, lubricating oil, tar paper, rcofing, old newspapers, canned vegetables, hlankets, and phonographs. Seventeen tons of the ship’s cargo were taken aboard the steamer El- W. D. BROWN | CANVAS Canvas Cdllapsible Boats NOW ON DISPLAY & 600 feet 12 oz. canvas lead hose ( or particular women we | offer a full line of HELENA RUBINSTEIN’S PREPARATIONS For Sale ‘At . |® ® @ we can give your | printing that modern- VVVVVVVYVVVVYVYVVYVVIRYVIY istic touch so popularin present day advertising | AAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAL SUPPLIES GEO. M. SIMPKINS COMPANY BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG ' WHERE'S THAT KID 2 NEARLY TIME FOR THE AIOSE BAG AN' HE AINT HOME VET! NO TG WAYS ABOVY IT- IVE GoTTA KEEP HIM COVERED OR HE GETS INTO MSCHIEF N\HH I HEAR THE AN BACK DOOR SLAMMIN' TTHATS HIM AT (AST! I FOUNDA NEW PAL .BG AND WE WU2 QUYT HUNTIN® COUPONS - I DONT WANY NOU RUNNIN' QUT WITH STRANGE 8oYs T I KNOW WHO 2 0 0 000 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Northwestern is due in Saturday. Admiral Evans is due Satur- day. Admiral Rogers is duc Mon- day. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver Sept. 26 at 9 p.m. Yukon scheduled to sail from Seattle Sept. 28, at 9 a. m. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle October 5 at 9 am. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Admiral Watson in port and is scheduled to sail south at 5 pam. today. Queen due southbound early tomorrow morning. Alameda scheduled southbound October ‘1. LOCAL SAILINGS Ma:gnita scheduled to leave for Sitka and way ports at 6 o'clock Thursday night for Skagway, starting Sept. 17. every other Tuesday. America First leaves every Wednesday et 1 p. m. for Petersburg and Kake and way ports. 27eeee000000 0 - eee port . . ° . ° . ° . . . . . o . . ° . . . . . ® ° . ° . 0 » ® . ° . » . . - seeecroesccev oo HALIBUT PRIC ceoecescoseeseece SEATTLE, Sept. 26.—Two vessels |brought 114,000 pounds of halibut to port yesterday and sold for 15 to 18.5 cents. PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. Sept. 26.—Two hundred and three thous- and pounds of halibut were sold here yesterday. American fish sold for 8 and 149 cents and Ca- nadian for 9 and 135 cents. BRI MARGNITA BRINGS GEESE The Margnita, Capt. Severin Swanson, which arrived in port this morning at 6 o'clock from Rocky Pass, brought geese to Juneau which had been bagged by the nine local sportsmen who left here Monday on the Margnita for a two teek’s hunt in Big John Bay. The geese are destined for the friends and families of M. S.. Wilson, Guy McNaughton, Minard Mills, Charles Goldstein, I. Goldstein, Joe John- ston, Theo. ‘Heyder, J. H. Biggs, and Ed. Jones. | The ‘Margnita will leave Juneau tonight at 6 o'clock for Sitka and way ports. B s00ccecsssss0e TIDES 'TOMORROW L4 sevecsecevvssnc 16 feet. 118 feet. 6.2 feet. 141 feet. Low tide, 1:31 am., High tide, 8:12 am,, Low tide, 1:50 pm., High tide, 7:52 p.m., Commercial Jou printing at The @mpire. Jor another one begin? NINE FISHING VESSELS HERE WITH CATCHES | - Nine fishing boats have arrivec in Juneau within the past threc days, six of which sold their hali- but to the San Juan Fishing and 1 Packing Company, and the remain- ing threc to the Alaska Fish Brok- | erage. | The gasboat Ida II, Capt. John Sunderland, arrived in Juneau Tuesday with 3,500 pounds of hali- but which sold to the San Juan for 1250 and 895 cents. Among the five fishing boats ar- riving* in port on Wednesday were: gasboat Ford, Capt. Ole Brensdal with 600 pounds of halibut which sold to the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company for 1350 and 9.55 cents; gasboat Sadie, Capt. Stevens, with 600 pounds of hali- but, which sold to the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company for 13.50 and 9.55 cents; gasboat Ivan- hoe, Capt. H. Johnson, with 10,000 pounds of halibut which sold ta the San Juan for 12.50 and 9 cents, The gasboat Fane, Capt. Ole Jo- hansen, with 1,000 pounds of hali- but which sold to the Alaska Fish Brokerage for 13 cents and 9 cents; Margaret, Capt. Pete Hildre, with 11,000 pounds of halibut which sold to the Alaska Fish Brokerage for 1365 and 9.65 cents. Three fishing boats arrived in Ju- neau last night; the Norland, Capt, Tom Sandvik, with 20,000 pounds of halibut which sold to the Alaska Fish Brokerage for 1250 and 9 cents; Lou Helen, Capt. Knute Hildre, with 6,000 pounds of hali- but which sold to San Juan for! 1325 and 9.25 cents; Mary, Capt. Conrad Neergard, with 1,000 pounds of halibut which sold to the San Juan for 13.25 and 9.25 cents. The gasboat Ivanhoe, Capt. H. Johnson, will leave for the fishing grounds tonight after taking o bait and ice at the Juneau Cold Storage Co. AT THE HOTELS Alaskan T. Matthews, R. L. Carlile, Ju-j neau; Frances Footer, Lincoln Is.; | Mrs. M. England, Cordova; Mr. anfl Mrs. George Howard, Sitka; Frank | Wilson, Haines. Gastineau J. C. Thayer, Fred Herring, Ju- neau; Wendell Dawson; Jerry Woo- tan, William Fromholz; Mrs. Eva| O. Purdy, Costa Rica. | —r P 1 Dell E. Sherirt, Juaeau's plano tuner. Hotel Gastineau. —adv ! R ! Signing bills at midnight has given Gov. Fred Kohler of Wiscon-| sin a problem, as the point was raised, did one day end at midnight dllver ware Bsio s idadiiy JAPANESE TOY SHOP H. 'B. MAKINO Front Street P O. Box 218 for ‘Mall Orders el CAPITAL LAUNDRY Second and Franklin PHONE 355 We Call and Delives ——————— SR s St 5 1 T T 42 Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City ‘Hall, Second Floor Main Street and Fourth Reading (Room Open from 6-a. . t0 10 p.-m. Ofrculation ‘Room ‘Open ‘from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—~7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference Books, Etc. FEKRY TIME CARD Thane 6:15 pm. 17:30 pm. $:40 pm. §11:15 p.m. 12 midnight $1:00 a.m. 6:15 aum. 7:10 a.m. 9:15 am.t 12:30 pm.t 2:00 pm. 3:15 pm.t *4:00 pm. Leaves Dougiss ‘for Juneaw 6:30 am. 6:30 pan. 8:30 am. 17:45 pm. 9:30 a.m.t 9:55 p.m. 12:45 pm.t §11:30 pan. 2:15 pam. 12:15 a.m. 3:30 pm.t 1:16 a.m. 5:00 p.m. *—Thune. t—Freight will be accepted. t—Saturdays only. i—Effective Aprjl 1st. Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company TRANS-ATLANTIC ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave Housel, Proprietor Ladies’ Silk Hose Protected threads against Runs, Pulls, Wear Saloum S ATTENTION— BARGAIN TALOGUE AND HUNTERS Kolster 7 Tube Radio, Edison Cabinet Phonograph and Records, Baucher Silver Slide Trombone, Bruns- wick Panatrope, Columbia Cabinet Phonograph, Mar- ambaphone, latest model, 1 set Ludwig Professional Drums. for rent and sale. These instruments taken in trade as part payment on the New Vietor Radio Electrola. Expert Piano Tuning and Phono- Pianos graph Repairing. Band Instruments for sale. Cheap- -er than can be bought from catalogues. Anderson Music Shoppe SR | Leaves Jumeaa for Douglas and \ 1 | i ! | PHONE YOUR UI\DFRS TO US We wil attend to them| promptly. Our coal, hay, grain ami transfer business| is increasing daily. There’s a! reagon. Give-us a trial order | today and learn why. il You Can’t Heip Being Pleased D. B. FEMMER FHONE 114 FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Third and Franklin. 1-4 Front and Franklin. 1-5 Front, near Ferry Way. 1-6 Frent, opp. Gross Apts. 1-7 Front, opp. City Wharf. 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill. 1-9 Front at A. J. Office, 2-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro. 2-3 Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Barn. 2-4 Front and Seward. 2-5 Front and Main. 2-6 Second and Main. 2-7 Fifth and Seward. 2-9 Fire Hall. 3-2 Gastineau and Rawn Way. 4 Second and Gold. Fourth and Harris. Fifth and Gold. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house. Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. Distin Ave, and Indian Sts. Ninth and Calhoun. Seventh and Main. Twelfth, B. P. R. garage. Twelfth and Willoughby. Home Grocery, Beater Tract. e § | | | 3- 3-5 3-6 3-7 3-8 3-9 4-1 4-2 4-3 4-5 4-6 -7 4-8 4-9 5-1 TRANS-CONTINENTAL CANADIAN PACIFIC ———FAMOUS—— PRINCESS STEAMERS To Prince Rupert, Victoria Vancouver and Seattle Direct Connections at Vancouver to all lastern Points of United States and Canada VARIOUS ROUTES—STOP-OVER PRIVILEGES Through Tickets Sold to Europe and the Orient FOR TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS W. L. COATES, Agent Valentine ‘Building Juneau FINEST STEAMERS SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Beattle Northbound Southbound Sept. 7 Sept. 10 Sept. 17 Sept. 11 9p.m. Sept. 15 Sept. 16 Sept. 14 Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Sept. 21 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Sept. 24 9p.m. Sept. 28 Sept. 30 Sept. 28 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Foat Yukon Northwestern Alaska Alameda Northwestern Yukon W. E. NOWELL, Agent, Phone 2 e I e Passenger accom- |modations on ° Admiral Line v sels have been mpletely and materially improv- ed. You will find them very attrac- tive and comfort- Regularyy and Wependably Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Junaeu Sept.14 Sept. 26 Sept.16 Sept. 20 Sept. 19 Sept. 27 Oct. 10 Oct. 4 Oct. 13 Oct. 12 Steamer Watson .. Rogers ... Evans ... Queen Evans { Sept. 23 Sept. 28 Sept. 30 Oct. 5 Oct. 7 Sept. 19 ....Sept. 25 Rogers .....Sept. 26 Watson ..Oct. 2 Queen ......Oct. 3 INFORMATION wad TICKETS: BRICE H. HOWARD, Agt., Phone 4 GUY L. SMITH, Agent, Douglas 1 FOR PRINCE RUPERT, VANCOUVER, SEATTLE Leave Juneau Southbound PRINCESS LOUISE—Sept. 10, 21; Oct. 1, 12. PRINCESS ALICE—Oct. 22; Nov. 2. ® CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Tickets to or from all Eastern polnts of United States or Canada and to Europe or the Orient. Various Routes—kiberal Stopovers W. L. COATES, Agent. COASTWISE TRANSPORTATION CO. MOTORSHIP MARGNITA ¢ Leaves City Dock every Thursday evening at 6 o’cloek direct to Funter Bay, Hawk Inlet, Tenakee, Hoonah, P Althorp, Chichagof, Sitka, way ports. Tuesday at 11 p. m. Chatham, Killisnoo, Baran Leaving for Skagway and Haines every othgl' Information— A.F. McKmnon, Reliable Trnnsrer Co., Phone 149. g R Alaska Meat Company PHONE 39 Fresh Local Dressed Hens, Roasters and Broilers. Milani’s Chicken Tamales, Chili Con Cerne, Crabs, Oysters and Fish Pioneer Pool Hall MILLER TAXI IN CONNECTION Telephone 183 Pool—Billiards Meet your friends at The Pioneer. Chas. Miller, Prop. | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and Ead at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carxying Boat Frye-Bruhn Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon “Everything the name implies”