The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 12, 1931, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 12, 193 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG WHAT? opaL STiLt REFUSES To COME OLT OF HER ROOM 22 = UMPH UMPH - TEL HER THAT I KNOW WHERE. EUSHA To WORRY — NSRS SN \S -~ FOR HER NGT AND TELL HER X SHALL AST SATHER TS CALL THIS EVENING - ES TN As close to you as our telephone is the means by which you-can get action to meet your wants. If you want to buy or sell, rent or to rent; hire or be hired; trade or give, Classified ads will get quick results for you. Reach for your phone now. Call 374 —Make your wants known and learn how little it costs to get action. e e THE EMPIRE Is the Medium Through which the general public can salways have its wants supplied. Closing time for classified sdvertisements: 2 P. M. Closing time for display ad- vertisements: 11 A. M. Ten cents per line first in- sertion. Pive cents for continuous subsequent Insertion. Count five average words to the Mne. Minimum charge, 50 cents. FOR RENT ° | FOR RENT — Glympic Pool l»lallI and Rooms. Fixtures for sale. | Apply I Coldstein. | | FOR RENT—Five room furnished house. See W. E. Kilroy or call DeVighne Apartments after five| o'clock. e FOR RENT — Small apartment, steam heated. Bishop Apartments. | FOR RENT—Four room furnished | apartment with bath. Steam heat- | ed. Electric range and Frigidaire. | Apply Windsor Apartments. FOR RENT — Furnished heated | rooms for gentlemen. Inquire 115 West 6th St. or telephone 330. FOR RENT—Steamneated furnish- ed room, suitable for two. Board i desired. Upper floor over San! Trancisco Bakery. = FOR RENT — 3 room furnished apartment, - Cliff Apartments. FIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, | Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. | MISCELLANEOUS RELIABLE family will care for| children. Short .distance from town. P. O. Box 848. Many weed seeds remain in the soil 30 years or more and then' grow, says Earl Jones, extension specialist at Ohio State university. Daily Empire want Ads Pay. RELIABLE GARAGE REPAIR SHOP H. C. SHIPPEY, Proprietor A place where you pay for satisfactory service only. TELEPHONE 149 Rear of Reliable Transfer FOR SALE FOR SALE OR REN 1 houses on 9th Street. Telephone 1132, FOR SALE—House saitable for tw: apartments. Housej number 952, Basin Road. FOR SALE — Sawmil: wood. Call Service Transfer. Telephone 523 WANTED WORK WANTED—A No. 1 cook, camp, hotel or boat, stuck here! and broke. Must find some kind of job. Apply Louis Novwick, Maki Boarding House. | WANTED—Man wants work, job or steady. Telephone 485. Night or day. WANTED—Girl for | light house- work. See Mrs. Kaufman, Gas- tingau Cafe. v rvu LOST AND ND LOST—Brown male Chesapeake re- triever, collar bearing City license | tag number twelve. Reward for information leading to recovery. Phone 4041. Convicts Dig Thirty Foot Tunnel Under Walls, Make Escape SANTA FE, New Mexico, Jan. 12. —Five convicts tunneled 30 yards under the penitentiary wall from the bottom of a dry kiln pit to freedom. The convicts worked nights fir- ing the kilms. The warden said the men must have taken weeks to dig the tun- nel. An investigation has been started. o, — The farmers’ federation at Ashe- ville, N.' C., buys eggs by weight rather than the dozen. FERRY TIME CARD weaves Juneau for Douglas and Thane 6:15am. 6:15 p.m. 7:15 a.m. 17:30 pm. 9:15 a.m.t 9:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m.t §12:15 pm. 2:00 p.m. 12 midnight 3:15 pm.t $1:00 a.m. *4:00 p.m. Leaves Douglas for Juneau 6:30 a.m. 6:30 p.m. 8:30 a.m. $7:45 pm. 9:55 p.m. §11:30 pm. 12:15 p.m. 1:15 a.m. {—Freight will be accepted. t—8aturdays only. §- -Effective April 1st. Juneau Ferry & Naviga- T kil BRING HIM P HERE - I& By BILLE DE BECK You ‘VAGABOND! IDNT You RO R oo I. QROERE! CovE B 5 0 ¢ HALL I TURN YOu ONER To THE P()LE\QE 2 OR AR Novw WILLL To Do As I sav- A NG 5 ®1931. King Features Syndicate, Ine., Great tsria n rights roserved, Marine News ) ® © 0000080 00 00 0 dentof the White Pass and Yukon Steamer Movements * Foute L] Eleven passengers NORTHBOUND ® ' barked at this port. They were Mrs. Alamcda due tomcrrow after- ®/R. Ha sworth, Mrs, F. Hellen- neon. Has 2 days’ mail. © |thal, Mrs. H. L. Williams, Mrs. M. SCHEDULED SAILINGS McDonald, Sister Mary Edwards, Northland scheduled to sail ® | Miss Winifred Carlson, A. Cohn, C. from Seattle Jan. 12 at 9 e |Fountain, Kenneth Junge, pm. ® | Shepard and W. E. Wrigh | Admiral Farragut scheduled to ® | The Norah arrived in Junenul sail from Seattle Jan. 14 at e [from Vancouver, B. C., at 4 o'clock 10 am. ® yesterday afternoon, and departed Norco scheduled to sail from e at 11 last night for Skagway. She! Seattle Jan. 19 at 9 p.m. * scheduled to be back here at Northwestern scheduled to sail ® |6 o'clock this evening on her re- from Seattle dan. 21 at 9 SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Cieman o fics 2) PASSENGERS 0000000 frcorocceoe 6 tonight and sails at 11 o'clock. Queen scheduled southbound Wednesday evening. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thursday night at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. Pacific leaves every Thurs- day at 10 am. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports, sececvensece s B o MUSICAL NOTES | FROM NORAH FLOAT TO PIER ‘C(anadian Liner Disembarks| Princesc Norah due in port at ‘@UEEN BRI Vessel Unloads General | Freight and Coal at Ju- | neau and Douglas | eecesevesoecsoceo With 22 passengers and a good- sized cargo for Juneau, the steam-' ship Queen, Capt. N. A. Nickerson, |bound from Seattle for Skagway arrived here at 2 o'clock Sunday 'morning and departed seven and {one-half hours later. On her way down Gastineau Channel she called lat Douglas to unload coal and eneral freight. At this port, she discharged gen- ¥ral merchandise and coal for the Eleven Passengers .| Pacific Coast Coal Company. She ibooked 14 passengers here for | at This Port | Haines, Skagway and Sitka. ! 4 | The vessel's incoming cabin pas- trains of Humoresque Wer® songers were Rev. Father B. R. imingled in the medley of alrs, puphard, J. N. Wahl, Mrs, John som.y playcfi, that floated from ‘I‘QKC;\mpbell. Mrs. C. Olsen, Arne P. {brilliantly lighted forward salon of igigle 1, B. Crewson, Miss Beulah W. D.| | éamuel H. Sible |the steamship Princess Norah last night to halt for a moment the oc- casional wayfarer passing by on the Hawkins, Mrs. Rachel R. Broahs Sam Gaxalsof, George B. Grigsby, H. J. Stoll, Miss C. Phillips, Hans dark, rain-pelted wharf alongside.|yick, Ralph Priddy, P. D. Bentley, { The music, lacking considerably in|p gullivan, and C. F. Armstrong. |both interpretation and execution, tgoing passengers were Mrs. was nof good, mot bad, just ordi-lyucine Gare, Mrs. Bert Dennis, Miss nary. But notes from the violin|yayrp Kilancey, Samuel Fox and | king of instruments, like lines of & arthyr H. Miller for Haines; Mrs | Shakespearean drama, literary!c 7 ars Mrs. S. Kunz, Dr. masterpiece, possess such wealinw Alper Bert Caro and Frank of charm and beauty that seldomijuctin for Sitka; Mrs. A. MeCann can they be despoiled entirely of Margucrite Ward, Frank Nefsy and all their riches. And the embryotic|gtepnen Stanworth for Skagway. virtuoso aboard the Canadian liner et — was not without some recommenda- ! tions. His left arm was glued 50 KILLS GlHL HE FAILED TO WIN, with his owp efiort—perhaps, in the | |closely to his side that a knife blad> could not have been forced between them, so his fingering approached efficiency. He draw a long bow. imagery of the moment, the lgader | gpaTTLE, Jan. 12.—Frustrated of a great symphony. No doubl.ly, an gttempt to marry Shigeno forgotten, were the spurs, the hlgh;snmemum and take her to Japan top boots, the dark, tightly fitting|,, jive; Paul Katsuda; a former troucers, with their wide yellow|g,cone Oregon, student, shot ax side strips; the red coal that bui-|yjeq her and then committed sui- toned snugly like a glove arcund 2| ;4. : parrow waist and across & broad| gaisuda entered the girl’s home . by breaking a glass in the front Rudolph C. Peterson, 84, blue- | ioor The girl's mother fled as he eyed and fair-haired, member Ol qntered the house, to secure aid. the Royal Canadian Mounted Po-| gatende had been sought since lice, had the salon to himself, €X- || ct woek when he kidnapped the cept for a comrade in service, Wi~ |oir) and held her for one day to liam Lee Evans, about the samcioo.cuade her to marry him, age Jbut of dark compiRxion, who (4 ki was seated at a desk writing 2 letter, neither annoyed nor amu NEGRU BURNED by harmony variations. MARYSVILLE, Missouri, Jan. 12 —Chained to the roof of the school house in which it is alleged hc assaulted and murdered Velma Picturesyue Figure Quite a picturesque figure, he was. ‘Erect, he stood, enrapturcd Fun With Fiddle “Just having a little fun with the fiddle,” explained Policeman Peterson as he laid down the in- strument. “Where are we going? To Whitehorse. We are to relieve two men that have been stationed there for some time. “Yes: this is our first trip North, I'm from Dryden, Ontario. Evans is from Winward, Saskatchewan. This}yyter, young teacher, Raymond i3 our first boat ride. We never “W’Gunn, a negro, was burned to the sea until we reached Vancou»-,de&m‘ LRl 2% ] ver a few days ago. The Wiflding was fired by a “Enjoy ‘it? Say, it's the lift. How mob, i long’s it been going on?” Gunn was taken from the au- Light Passenger List thorities, despite National Guards- There were only a few DBSsen-lmen, as the negro was being taken gers on the Norah for Skagway and |to the courthouse for arraignment. the Interior Yukon. Mob members said the negro Among them was Mrs. V. I. Hahn, | confessed when taken into the of Skagway, wife of the superinten- ‘s:hool house Atianta Justice Learns Of His Appointment g AND TAKES 14/ v, of Atlanta, pic- red in Federal Court, Atlanta, (3a., after he had been apprized of his appointment as United States ircuit Court judge in the Fifth istrict Court of Appeals. Judge Sibley has been on the Federal bench for the Northern District of Georgia for thirteen years. NORCO UNLOADS GENERAL CARGD; TAKES ON FiSH Motorship Brings Two Pas- sengers from Seattle and Books 11 South Bringing a capacity cargo, con- sisting of general merchandise, the motorship Norco arrived in Juneau from Seattle and way ports at 4 o'clock Saturday afternoc She started on her return voyage south at 11:15 Saturday nigl ‘From Seattle, she brought passengers, William kson Leonard Hayden. booked 11. They were Mrs. Femmer and daughter, Mrs. Fergu- son, Mrs. Gus Gustafson, Mr. and Mrs. J. Olson,' J. Tormey, A. M. Paulsen and Joseph Bandin for Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Jones and Benjamin Evans for Peters- burg. The vessel for her voyage south two and she David lcaded frozen halibut for the New England Fish Company and the Marlyn Fish Company. —eee—— ATTENTION MASONS There wil be @ regular com- munjeation of Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147, F. & A. M. at the Masonic Temple, Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock. All members and visiting Brgthern urged to attend. By order of the W. M. J. W. LEIVERS, —adv. Secretary. PO 2 S T VR GRS PULL-OVER Sweaters al SWEATER COATS Will-Wite Travelo Kantsag Lido and Wigwam Y Bgands—All Standard and Popular SABIN’S “Everything in Furnish- ings for Men” 1 i l HUNGER PINGH BEGINS, WALES CARDIFF, Wales, Jan. 12—Hun- |ger is being felt as the result of the |delay in the settlement of the dis- pute which has sent 140,000 men out |of the coal mines. Shop keepers are jreluctant to extend credit as they lare still trying to collect bills as |the result of other strikes. The | coal miners’ union is to open a | canteen, perhaps tomorrow. APPLY TOR ASSISTANCE { CARDIFF, Jan. 12—Relief can- | teens are today dotting the Welsh | coal district. There has heen a flood of applications for food from women and children with no ade- ,quate funds available. TWO ROBBERS BET §15,000 Stage Sensational Kidnap- ping and Hold-up in exas Town CANYON, Texas, Jan. 12.—Two men robbed the First National Bank here of $15,000 last Saturday after abducting Levi Cole, assistant cash- ier, and his wife from their home and then overpowering Sheriff N who entered the bank before ti vault opened, Cole and hi: the bank ear ing, blindfolded. were locked up as they arrived. Attention to the hold-up was not attracted until the bank failed to cpen cn regular time. When the time lock released the deor of the vault, the robbers gath- ered up the money and escaped. D 0o to morn- 1. TIDES TOMORROW *Tow tide, High tide, | Low tide, High tide, 9:43 pm., 125 Answering that Question— | What Shall We Do This Evening? Bring HER to the Mid- get Indoor Golf Course— where all the young crowd is to be found. Fun and keen competi- tion—and with a prize list for various events which makes the win- ning worth while: Keep up your putting and short-shot game; OQur eourse is true and ac- curate, \ \ : JUNEAU MIDGET COURSE Entire : Second = Floor Goldstein Building FINEST STEAMERS SAILING SCHEDULE Round trip winter rates in effect, Junean to Seattle and return—$73.50 Leave DueJuneau DueJuneau Seattle Northbound Southbound 30 10 Steamer Dee Jan. Jan Jan. Dec. Jan. Jan Jan. Alameda > Northwestern .. 3 Alameda Jan. 10 13 . 20 Northwestern Jan. 21 24 . 31 REGUuAr: PORTS OF CALL: Ketchizar, Wrangell, Juneau, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. S.8. NORTHWESTERN and S.S. ALAMEDA will call at Petersburg northbound and southbound. All sallings subject to change without notice, Information and Tickets W. E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 23 Dec. 31 3 s ge (mi ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Southbound Lv.Seattle Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau Dec. 31 Jan. 3 Jan. 14 Jan. 31 Jan. 28 REDUCED RATE ROUND TRIP SEATTLE AND RETURN | $73.50 Queen Farragut Queen ..Jan. 7 Farragut Jan. (4 Queen ..Jan. 21 Jan. 11 Jan. 18 Jan. 25 b Visit Calitornia tmis winter, low round trip excursion fares from Seattle to San Francico and return $40,00, to Los Angeles and return $60.00, to San Diegc and return $65.00. All fares are firs class. Sailings from Seattle on Wednes days and Saturdays of popular coast- wise liners Ruth Alexander, Emma Alexander, Dorothy Alexander and Ad- » miral Peoples. GUY SMITH, Agent, Douglas. B. H. HOWARD, Agent, Juneau FOR PRINCE RUPERT, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA AND SEATTLE Leave Juneau Southbound PRINCESS NORAH January 13, 27; February 10, 24; March 10, 21, 31. WINTER EXCURSION FARES ROUND TRIP—$73.50 Tickets sold to or from a1l Xastern Points of United States or Canada and to Europe or the Orient Various Routes—Stop-Over Privileges B.C. COAST STEAMCHIPS | Travel via the Scenic Canadian Pacific Rockies fi;nous Candies he Cash Bazaar | Open Evenings Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Malp, Street and Fourth Reading Boom Opea From 8$a m to 10 p. m. Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—T7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL FOR TICKETS AND RESERVATIONS W. L. COATES, Agent, Valentine Building, Juneau PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Thursday at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake and Way points. See agent for ports of call during winter schedule. Passengers must obtain tickets frem agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & €o., Agts., Valentine Bldg. - MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY THURSDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For Skagway and Way Ports—Every Other Tuesday For information apply Dave Housel, Agemt Phone Single O NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION CO. WINTER SCHEDULE—Sailings every Monday night at 9 p.m. from Pier No. 5, Seattle, for the. following Southeastern Alaska ports: Ketchikan—Wrangell—Hyder—Petersburg—Juneau. Prince Rupert, B. C, Vancouver B. C.—(South bound only when cargo warrants Dec. 22—M.S. Norco Dec. 20—M.8. Northland *Jan. 5—M.S. Norco Jan. 12—M.S. Northland Jan. 19—M.S. Norco Jan. 26—M.S. Northland *Calling Hyder Juneau Agent. J. B. Telephone 114 For information l.pply to: D, B. Femmer, Burford & Co., Ticket Agents. “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST”

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