The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 18, 1930, Page 8

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EARLY FALL OF | SNOW REETED - BY YOUNGSTERS B (o] DNOwW n Record for Community 1 1s to be washed out by tomo; - OFFICES AND BANKS OBSERVE ALASKA DAY SILK and WOOL HOSIERY $1.25 to ALL SIZES Colors—- Gun Metal Nut Pine Oak Camel Grain Manning’s Coffee 2 pounds ‘for 85¢ GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—95 Five Fast Deliveries Is One of|St LL L LR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 1930. rnment cinchona ava, who directs pro- ally the worl rk from which is extracted, will be - 14 PASSENGERS ABOARD ALAMEDA and most of the I , the t the duction of v ply of the t nine ional accus- profe their —,———— Louis Fete Marks First Use of Quinine Oct. 1 er ed for Ala ports at with 52 12 steer- O LOUIS will ob- |, ary of the first| passengers booked for Juneau October 31 and | gre garden. Henry Meier, Alice Golden, A. E director of | Lundstrom, R. Ma E. A. Tor- at quinine Faurap Siemes, W, wife geson and e used as a madicine in|H, Kreiger, wife and ), John 1630, Warner, R. L. Crouch two P I of the | stee: - E ¢ Ads Pay. Daily Empire var ZIPPERS AND | ARCTICS For Men, Women and Children CLOTH TOPS AS WELL AS THE ALL RUBBER ONES Men’s 4 This is something entirely new for men, and is a combination Arctic and spat. ~ nap Aretic SEE THESE NOW ot Leader Dep't. Store PHONE 454 GEORGE BROTHERS, Props. Open Evenings 100 Boxes FOR THIS PORT{ | Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle b. Fairy 1. Cortain 6. Alludes t support AP STE] & Azure . Pronout 0] - AMIE 3 . Unit of wor, ‘ SIEIN TE| ™ farest i, . Yale 14, Turn inside out [ABIA m N 15. Catnip C ovT R E‘E 23, Story tellers 16. Chureh collees E 1E] 24, Unseal: poet. | tions Rl |0 NE|VIE| Searlet |18 Upright 1/5M OIN/E|S! iy 20, Twelfth Jew- D E 3 VIE[R nging sylla Is onth = | e Voleaks ¥ l E S1. Transgress leily UINR MM E D d[\'lnn law Seed covering =D 3, Wager | And not é o[o O[R|E| 34. Pendent | i EISIT RITIE]| 7, Silkworm DEEIE E[A[R] . Genoral dgnt 3 ou el lightly g voice 41. Food used in catehing fish 43. Local expres- 52, Unustic alka~ sions " line solution 42, Medloval Ital- act of 47. Palmyra paim 03 Percelve ian family streng leaf DOWN 43, Cireuit of & 38, Domesticated 48, Profit 1. Hindu queen race track 41. Prickly sced 49, Deyvour 2. Open 44, Egg cells containers 50. Thing 3. Not_self-sus- 45, Automoblle 42. Comnound 51. Social gatne taining 48, Month of the ether ering 4. Cry of derlsion year B NIFTY COFFEE SHOP TO BE OPENEDR TONIGHT The Niity Coifee Chop on Front Street will be opened tonight at 7, Three Thousand Strike For More Pay,Recognitien NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. Oet. oclock and remain open until after 18.—Three thousand members of smoker and usual Saturday the International Fuel~ Handlers dance. The formal opening, how- r will not bz until Monday, but the service tonight will be par ex- cellent just the same. - Andrew Streed, veteran baggagg- man of Skagway for the White Pass and Yukon Railroad, is en- joying a brief vacation in Juneau He will return home on the steam- ship Queen, which is scheduled to depart from here for the Lynn Canal port tomorrow. and Union Truck Drivers, gasoline ation attendants and pump me- chanics, went on striketo day for recognition and higher wages. The companies affected include the Standard Oil Company of New York, Tide’ r Oil Company, So- bol Brothers, Municipal Gas Sta- tions and Tydol - Warner - Quinlan Company. ST e Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. 1T PIGGL: _ - SCORES AGAIN Extra Fancy Delicious Apples $1.75 100 Sacks High CTolor Yakima Gem POTATOES - - These Apples and Potatoes go on sale Monday Morning at 8 A. M. TELEPHONE 24 (Guaranteed 100 pounds to the sack) GET YOUR ORDER IN EARLY PIGGLY WIGGLY ALL OVER THE WORLD No Extra Charge for Delivery Mail Orders Carefully Filled Father Nicone, a member of the Greek Orthodox Church, lived for |many years in the monastery of |st. John Chrysostom, and for a time was stationed in St. Peters- FATHER NICONE T0 GIVE TALK AT CATHEDRAL IWill Give Address on Fa- His Amer- in the Russian revolution. ican headquarters are delphia. he arrived here last Tuesday on the steamer Northwestern. He will i m go to Sitka on the steamer Queer ous Monastery of St. |82 0 Ske o . o here later John Chrysostom next week. Shortly afterward, he : will proceed to western Alaska, vis- | The work of the world-famous |iting Seward, Anchorage, Kodiak monastery of St. John Chrysostom, and Afognak. |Mount Athos, Greece, and a des- e —— cription of the institution itself |which is a part of the ancient monastic republic that has been in i oxi a1 |kon Railroad, is a visitor in Ju- i ! i of this city. by Father Nicone, at Holy Trinity R McAhste.r ,“t i Cathedral at 11 a.m. Sunday, it was Sy E.|jstered at the Alaskan Hotel. ice. | Wwilliam Flynn, ' locomotive en- gineer on the White Pass and Yu- PRE-HOLIDAY LAMP SHADE SALE AT 50 PER CENT DISCOUNT on 11 models now on display in our show windows. List prices on this group range from $12.00 to 9.00 each. Sale Prices--$6.00 to $9.50 Each, Net Make your selection now as this offer will not be repeated Lamp Shades make useful acceptable Christmas Gifts Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. PHONE JUNEAU NO. 6 $1.99 burg, leaving there at the time of | Phila-| To visit severai points in Alaska,| H. E. Gaylor of Haines is reg-| \av : 2%rs Says Puffy: “I always have wanted to see \ The Lion once saved by a Mousic s0 wee.” So he slides down a valley and over a ridge— « o There are Lion:and Mouse very busy -at bridge. . (Copyright, 1930) ' ——t iy COUNTTOLSTOY | | ! | VISITS HISTORIC { PLAGESINSITRA Titled Russian Flies ".o i Town Once Ruled - i by Czar | Just 63 years—lacking one day-- |after the Russian flag was lowered jand the American flag raised at |Sitka, in token of the transfer of {Alaska to the United States, Count (Ivan A. Tolstoy, scion of an il- {lustrious Muscovite family, Vi d the old capital. He viewed his- itoncal places familiar to country- |men of his resident there in they, \last century. His sojourn of sev- ieral hours in the famous town ful- |filled a desire that he had enter- tained ever since his arrival in thee inew world. | The Count, who came here from {the Westward early this week and iwho is a house guest of Major and Mrs. L. E. Atkins, journeyed to Sit- |ka with Mrs. Atkins in the Pio- |neer Airways’ seaplane North Bird, |Pilot James Dodson. i Despite blustering weather in the "vscinity of Juneau yesterday morn- iing, the aircraft left here in the |forenoon. A short distance from (this city, the plane experienced icalm and clear atmospheric condi- |tions. A stay of three hours was ‘made in Sitka. The return flight’ |was pleasant all the way and the {airship, without incident, lighted jon Gastineau Channel late in the |afternoon. | The Count has booked passage | for the states on the steamer North- | western, scheduled to depart from$ here for the South next Tuesday. —— Joseph Hill, mining man, who is active in the Lynn Canal countrys |1s greeting friends in Juneau. He is at the Gastineau. —_————— “ Miss A. B. Coleman is a guest |at the Zynda Hotel. —————— W. H. Noot and Henry C. Tofty are among those staying at the | Alaskan Hotel. If you are the man we think you are, you'll want a half dogen of these new ties, ~ | lgh stripes ana colors in heavy 8ilks, or all-over designs in color- inl emll patterns; Just see them and lot the ties them- selves say the rest, SABIN’S

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