The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 23, 1931, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FR[DA\ JAN 23, 1931 By BILLE DE BECK ORAY MIKE. TRE COROMER'S TRAT NOBUDDY DISTURBS BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG FINEST STEAMERS L ) TRUS PAPER CANIT ME 2 MURDER MADAME. LAMOUSSE N WHY ! I WAS (N LONE WITH WER - - TELL ME 1T AWNT TRUE, _MRGooGLe! I OO YA ALl T know! OH. WHY DIDAIT I GO (N TRAT NIGHT 2T tAGHTA SAVED HER -I WGz * ASHAMED O ME CLOTHES = TTHATS Wiy (SNESNIF): T ONWLY HAD ON TRAT OUERCOAT OF THE SENAGR'S - MY UNON SUT UNDERAIEATH -THATS ALL - SCRAM - WE GOTTA KEEP ALL S(GHT-SEERS OFFA T PREMISES, ( w[ P (sNiE-sNiE ) Nou TGLo ME ALL TRAT -Alow R SR e e AN " 7C! ul e UTTA The. DOOR - Tl MOSEY I DIDNT SHOW NOU THE PAPER BEFORE. BECAUSE I WANTED T As close to you as your telephone is the means by which you can get action to meet your wants. If you rent or to rent; hire or be hired; trade or give, Classified ads will get quick results for you. Reach for your phone now. —Make your wants known and learn how little it costs to get action. SEE How Noud ACT ! THERE “THERE - LISWV- DONT_CARRY ON SO - I™M YOUR FRIEND N\ I DONT BELIEVE Nou DONE 1T want to buy or sell, Call 374 THE EMPIRE Is the Aedium Through which the general || public can always 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 line. Minimum chbarge, 50 centa. FOR RENT — POR RENT—Four room furnished house with bath. Telephone 183. {8 e e 2 FOR SALE — Boy’s overcoat, FOR SALE ube electric | FOR SALE CHEAP- console radio. Also double-end|P Yukon horse sled. Inquire 113 Main Street. age 10 to 12 years. Practically new. Call 483. Hi FOR SALE — Sawmil wood. Call Service Transfer. Telephone 528 WANTED WANTED—Young man wants posi- tion of any kind. Experienced in accountancy and credit work. 10 years experience in automobile merchandising. Phone 143 or write Box 1144. fri WANTED — 1loors to sand. Old floors made to look like new. SEE MUSSER. Telephone 439. FOR RENT — Newly renovated 2 room apartment, also a cabin. Inguire at office of Seaview Apts. FOR RENT—Single apartment, va- cant after February 1st. Mac- Kinnon Apts. -| WANTED—Young man wants work WANTED—Work by day or hour. £ | Telephone 349. 3 of any kind. Experiericed in hotel and restaurant work. Address 812, care Empire. TUG AND BARGE | heavy jaway from Fu on Monday. * — @ TIDES TOMORROW ] T WisH T Wuz DB Marine News l...l‘...l.o-‘ Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Nerco due to arrive tomorrow noon. Should have 5, or G days' mail. Northwestern is due to arrivc 5 o'clock tomorrow after- noon. Queen late Saturday, or Sun- day. Princcss Norah due late Sun- day afternoon or night. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Alameda scheduled to sail from Seattle Jan. 31 at 9 am, Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle Feb. 2 at 9 p.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Admiral Farragut due south: bound about January 31. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thursday e night at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports, Pacific ‘leaves every Thurs~ day at 10 a.m. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports, eecoevenensecoe of al o! L3 . . e Ll . DRIFT IN GALE Jan. ..S—A the big .,L"e' of Vancouver, tug Andrew W. nd both driftet before | VICTORIA, B. C, storm tore arge Drummell, the of Seattle, y r S al hours anchored off Gordoa ead. The tug was damaged. i | | V PACIFIC LEAVES FOR TEBENKOF WITH TWO Carrying a fair shipment of| eight and two passengers, Lhe Tebankof and way‘ Her passengers were George The Pacific will return to Juneau — et | ol High tide, 4:21 am., 14.8 feet. Low tide, 10:27 am., 39 feet. | High tide, 4:15 am., 134 feet. Low tide, 10:31 p.m, 29 feet. TOR RENT — 5 room furnished house. Purnace and electric range. Telephone 257. 'FOR RENT—Desirable furnished apartment, three rooms. Bath and pantry. Close in. Telephone 227 after 5 p.m. FOR RENT — 3 room apartment. Hot and cold water. See Sam Rosenberg, 306 Front Street or Phone 593. FOR RENT—Furnished front room, reasonable, close in. Apply 121 » Gold St. FOR RENT—Five room furnished house. See W. E. Kilroy er call DeVighne Apartments after five o'clock. 2 i - A O UM SR e ey FOR RENT — Small apartment,; steam heated. Bishop Apartments. FOR RENT — 3 room furnished| apartment, Clff Apartments. YIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe‘! RENO, Nevada—Louls Alan Haz-| eltine, noted authority of radio, | has been granted a divorce. Men- tal cruelty was the charge. s e RELIABLE GARAGE REPAIR SHOP H. C. SHIPPEY, Proprietor A place where you pay for satisfactory serviee only. TELEPHONE 149 ‘Rear of Reliable Transfer WORK WANTED—A No:. 1 cook, camp, hotel or boat, stuck here ! and broke. Must find some kind of iob. Apply Louis Novwick, Maki Boarding House. WANTED—Man wants work, job or steady. Telephone 485.-Night or day. 5 MISCELLANEOUS ures show each Seattleite spends! $700 yearly in stores. aceidents .in the first half of 1930| than in any corresponding. period | since 1925. - > : SEATTLE—uensus Bureau fig-| There are 662 retail stores here and the| ——————— There were fewer grade crossing | RELIABLE family will care for children. Short distance from town. P. O. Box 848. THE new medium will tell your troubles before you ask a gques- tion. About business, love, mar- riage, mining. Room 12, Juneau Rooms. ] IRIDIUM TIP Fountain Pens $1.50 to $3.50 The cheapest GUARANTEED Fountain Pen on the Market. Phone 25—We Deliver e —— — £ —— | Second Hand Guns Bought and Sold New Guns and Ammunition SEE BIG VAN | | ! i The Florence Shop “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- anent Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone 427 for Appointment BUSY WHY Not Only Cheaper but Better e e Sssssseessssscasscel RICE & AHLERS CO. GOOD PLUMBING “We tell you in advance what job will cost” |ctone and William Hawkins ipunch, Grove of Ketchikan for Petersburg out, change his name, punch the and Mrs. J. Sawyer of Juneau for| clock again and stride forth to Windham. ARQUND AND BRING BACk THE ESTEBETH BOES WITH BIG CARGO | AND 12PERSONS Motorship Dep parts from Juneau on Her Weekly Voyage to Sitka | | With virtually a capacity cargc! nd 12 passengers, the motorship| Estebeth departed from Juneau, st everfing on her regular c.kly yage to Sitka and way ports. Her, ght consisted of general mer- chandise. , Persons who booked passage on the craft were John Liner, William | Hansen, George John and S. Hel-[ lenthal for Hoonah; Fred John-| for | Tenakee; Michael Yankovich and Homer Ficklin for Hirst Chicha-| gof; John Sheer, R. J. Sommers,} |Edwin Johanson and H. A. Dahl- 1; o berg for Sitka. 1931, King lemm Syndicate, 1 e . Great Britala rights raserved. Associated Press Photo M“ Sada E. Lund, (left) former vaudeville dancer; has sued Dor- :t’y Janis, (right) enchantress in o husband, Sidney Lund. MllBUT NOT LIQUOR; BILL ORDERED PAID WASHINGT G, D. C, Jan, ems the fish spoiled and now [the government is asked to pay The Estebeth is schcduled to re- the bill, turn to this port Monday. | —_——— | BEATS TAXICAB; GETS ONE YEAR Man Hires Hlmself to Re- lieve Himself as Store Watchman CHICAGO, Jan. 23.—Every dJV {at 5 oclock Frank Eckhart would n‘"et himself at the time clock, |salute and report; “five o'clock and motorcraft Pacific left Juneau yes- 8ll's well. Wind from the East—" terday for ports. He would give the clock a lusty turn his overcoat inside duty On payday he would step to the |window and collect Frank Eckart’s weekly pay envelope of $42. Then ‘he would walk around the block, change his expression and come back for the $42 pay envelope of Frank Richards. By day he was a day watchman, and by night he was a night watchman. The company finally discovered Eckhart had hired himself to re- lieve himself on watch at 6. They called it “obtaining money under |false pritenses.” “The only thing I ever heard of sales amount to $258,935494 yearly. |that beats you,” said Judge Alfred Erickson today, “is a taxicab. year in jail.” e Daily Empire Wary Ads Pay. Crepe De Chine Princess Slips in Pink and Peach Sizes 36 to 42 S pecial $2.50 . [ liability” | last the of ed and iced The Coast Guard suspected Norwegian steamer Tampen smuggling liquor and in Twice it stopped the v 1 found nothing in her hold but halibut. This was in 1925, The House Foreigh Atfairs com- lmmm today recommendad pay- w of an $8765 claim to the ¥weglan government for the fish (hnt spolled. President Hoover asked that fhe bill be paid as “an act of grace and without reference to the legal of the government. - e QUAKEDESTROYS MEXICAN TOWN Several Thousand Inhabi- tants Are Reported Living in Tents MEXICO CITY, Jan. 23.—Ma- hualtlan, a town in the State of Oaxaca, was entirely destroyed in weekfs earthiquake. Every house is down according to a re- port made by the Government Commission which also several thousand living " in tents. were killed. The town of Oaxaca was shaken in' ‘yesterday but slight. - FORTLAND, Ore. — The City Council has voted in favor of municipal ownership of light and power plants. Twenty persons the damage a motion picture made in Borneo, $25,000, charging the film player stcle the affections of her CUSTARD DESSERTS WILL BAKE BETTER | | | | | | | | Coffee is Also Better When | Roasted in Small Lots — | Hills Bros.” Method | The smaller the dish, the more evenly and quickly the oven heat can penetrate to the center of the custard. Such results cannot be counted upon when large baking dishes are used. Applying this principle to roast- ing their fine blend of coffee, Hills Bros. found the way to develop uni- form flavor in every ounce. A con- stant stream of green coffee is introduced into the roaster in auto- matically measured lots of about three pounds, and passes through in a steady flow, roasting a little at a time. There is accurate con- trol of both the flow of coffee and the temperature. This process, patented by Hills Bros.—Controlled Roasting—de- velops a delicious uniform flavor no other coffee has. The ordinary method—roasting in bulk—is vir- tually lacking in control. Grocers everywhere sell Hills Brufl Coffee in the vacuum can that it ever-fresh. Air, which de~ttoys the flavor of cofl'ee, is re- ‘moved from this can and kept out. |Coffee_packed in ordinarv cans, evcn if air-tight, does not stay fresh. Ask for Hills Bros. Coffee by name and look for the Arab— the trade-mark—on the can. Franclsco, California. EAGLES Fifth Annual DANEE Satarday—24th ELKS HALL Music by SERENADERS -~ WEEK END SPECIALS TOILET PAPER., large-rolls, good grade tissue, roll SWIFT’S BACON, fresh and delicious, by the piece, pound 40c¢ RED AND WHITE SOUP, 3 for : WASSON'S GOOD GRADE COFFEE, ¥ ¥ |¥ with water glass free, pound GARNICK’S PHONE 174 IN SMALL DISHES } {PACIFIC- Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., San | 931 | UNITED FOOD COMPANY SAILING SCHEDULE Leave Seattle Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound Jan. 13 Jan. 20 Jan. 24 Jan. 31 Feb. 3 Feb. 10 Feb. 10 Feb. 17 Feb. 17 Feb. 24 Steamer Alameda Northwestern Alamec Northwestern Yukon Jan. 21 Jan. 31 Feb. 7 -.Feb. 14 REGUuAr PORTS OF CALL: Ketchigar, vvrangell, Juneau, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. S.8. NORTHWESTERN and 8.S. ALAMEDA will call at Petersburg northbound and southbound. All sailings subject to change wmlout notice, Information and Tickets W. E. NOWELL, Agent [EAMS ’i!} CoM PAN _,_-J Southbound WINTER Lv.Seattle Ar.Juneau Lv.Juneau REDUCED RATE ROUND TRIP SEATTLE AND Farragut.. Jan. Queen Jan, Queen ... Feb, Farragut Feb. 11 Queen ....Feb. 18 Feb, 21 Queen Mar. 4 Mar. 7 Vislt Califorma tmis winter, low round trip excursion fares from Seattle to San Francico and return $40,00, to Lot 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, B. H. HOWARD, Agent, Juneau ADMIRAL LINE 21 4 24 7 14 Jan, Feb. Feb. 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 Eastern Points of United States or Canada and to Europe or the Orlent Various Routes—Stop-Over Privileges Travel via the Scenlc Canadian Pacific Rockies CANADIAN B.C. COAST STEAMCHIPS 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 from agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVER THURSDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For Skagway and Way Ports—Every Other Tuesday For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION CO. WINTER SCHEDULE—Sallings every Monday night at 9 p.m. from Pler 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 Jan. 12—M.S. Nbrthland Jan. 19—M.S. Norco Jan. 26—M.S. Northland *Calling Hyder For information apply to: D. B. Femmer, Burford & Co., Ticket Agents. Dec. 22—M.S. Norco Dec. 20—M.S. Northland *Jan. 5—M.S. Norco Juneau Agent. J. B. Telephone 114 “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuek Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” mn

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