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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. DEM FAH CWACKANS BoSS PoNY Bovs FASTAH DEA A SWEAR O LIGHT AUN OH, SHO DONE 0 Twrek. [ \fegH ¢ \ WELL - LE'S SEE WM R STEP N Jus LOoKIT The UTTLE BEGGAR / HODY AP PONY Bov- MAKE MISTAH GOOGLE Pwoun NESSIR' whHEN Toe WIPERS CLUB PROPOSED TS RAGE GETWEEN YOU AND PONY BQY I Teok Y AS A J0ke I feLT Thar PONY BOY WOULDNT STAND A CHANCE, BU AFTER THIS PLEASE RE EAOLGH GQENTLEMAN To STep EATIN' WHHE TM TALkIn The Daily Al;tska Empire PHON E 374 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE FOR QUICK SALE—Large Round | Oak heater, No. 160x2, with hot, water coil; good condition. Pricz2 | $30. Phone Douglas 134. L» FOR SALE—Durant Coupe, $300.00. Another shipment of U.S.L. Bat- teries on hand, $7.50 each. We tell you the cheapest way out of your motor troubles. Dutch’s Economy Garage. LONESOME—JOIN Ohio’s largest correspondence club. Members ev- erywhere. 150 ladies names, ad- dresses and descriptions (ladies 50c). Give age and occu- pation with remittance. J. E. Donald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. FOR SALE—18 ft. round-bottom boat; fir planking, oak ribs; pow- | ered with Star, 10 m. p. h. Phone Douglas 2403 or write Box 436, Douglas. FOR SALE—Woods' Arctic eider- down sleeping robe, Metropolitan | air mattress; good condition; rea-| sonable price. Phone 2201. | PPN, RSy SR A ‘POR. SALE—Studebaker sedan, 18,-| 000 miles, new rubber, bargain. Phone 5154. R e S e ey 'R SALE—One cnoice residential & lot. Inquire of D. B. Femmer. R SALE—F1ve room house with ‘bath, large lot, in Seater Tract, a bargain, Phone 202. R SALE—Franklin sedan, fine| running gear, engine, good rub-| ber. Bargain $250.00 Will make! dandy light delivery truck. In- quire Nugget Shop. ?OR SALE—Plave Giass Showcases., Various &lzes. Juneau Young| Hardware Co. FOR SALE—1930 Essex sedan, in fine condition. A real bargai | Call Strauss at Alaskan Hotel. »> ‘ 1l | | . FOR fallen arches or aching feet see Dr. FENTON, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING. FOR relief of constipation see Dr. Fenton, Goldstein Building. WANTED WANTED—Work of any kind by day or week. Mrs. Marsh, Phone 146. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Small apartment, also housekeeping and sleeping rooms. Steam heated and fully furnished. Channel Apartments, 6th and Main. Phone 436. FOR RENT—Four room furnished house on Willoughby Avenue. Call 183. FOR RENT—Furnished two room apartments, also cabins. Newly finished. Close in. Apply Seaview Apartments. APARTMENTS for transients and permanents. MacKinnon Apart- ments. $1.00.| o _!Furn. s.h. rooms, newly renovated; FOR SALE—Cheap, FORD COUPE.| Ieasonable; ov. Gastineau Groc. Good running condition, five goodipon RENT—Furnished, steam heat- tires. See Mrs. E. J. White, Mu-‘ ed sleeping rdom; close in. Phone seum or telephone 467. |3, R FOR RENT—Furnished five room, apartment. 421% East Tth St.| » Telephone 2004. | ~STOCKS AND BONDS: We buy| ¢ and sell stocks and bonds. Rating | and prices given on any security. | FREE INFORMATION. Consult | us. Price fixed at present market v on any stock or bond. J. A. v Handrahan, MacKinnon Apart- ‘ Invitationa. ments. " Lettetheads FOR SALE—One seal skin coat, w ° c.* marten trim. Good condition. Statements ° Size 38. Apply Apartment 16, C il MacKinnon Apts. | The largest musical organization' in the United States is said to be the Matinee Musical Club, of Phila- delphia, which has nearly 2,000 members. i \ ® 0 0000000000 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Yukon due tomorrow morning at 9:30 o'clock. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle Sept. 28, at 9 pm. Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver Sept. 28 at 9 pm. Queen scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 1, at 10 am. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 5 at 9 pm. SOUTHRBOUND 3AILINGS Alaska southbound at midnight tonight and sails 4 am. Admiral Rogers is scheduled southbound Wednesday. night and sails Thursday morning. Admiral Evans is scheduled southbound about Oct. 6. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thursday night at 6 p.m. for Bitka and ‘wayports. Pacific leaves every Thaurs- day at 10 a.m. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports, e eesecescse e — CONFESSES T0 KILLING WIFE, - HIDING BoDY Woman Irritated Mate by Claiming Superior Education 6 0000000000000 0 00 recrerereoe ece0cccesose eevevevscecccoe CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 28—A con- fession that he slew his wife be- cause she irritated him by remind- ers of her superior education, and then placed the body, wrapped in a blanket, in a man hole, is said to have been obtained by the police from John Chorak. Chorak was arrested last Satur- day at Beaver Dam, his former home, The body of Mrs. Chorak was found last July 4 in the manhole of | a sewer on the south side near Chorak’s home. An autopsy indi- cated she died as a result of suffo- cation. | “She used to be a school teach- | er. T never had much learning. She was all the time rubbing it in as to how much smarter she was,” said Chorak. e - 4 | TIDES TOMORROW . High tide, 2:07 am., 155 feet. Low tide, 8:05 am. 20 feet. High tide, 2:05 p.m., 16.7 feet. Low tide, 8:31 p.m. -04 feet. ———e———— . HALIBUT PRICES | . PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., Sept. 28.—Only 9,000 pounds of halibut, all Canadian, sold here last Satur- day. The price was 5 to 9.20 cents a pound. 4 SEATTLE, Sept. 28.—Four vessels arrived here last Saturday with 41500 pounds of halibut, The fish sold for 6 to 17 cents a pound. FERRY TIME CARD odves Jumean for Dougiss and Thane 6:15am. 6:18pm. 7:10 a.m. $7:30 pm. 9:15 am.t 9:40 pm. 12:30 p.m.t §11:16 pm. 2:00pm. 12midnight 3:30 pm.t $1:00 am. 3:45 pm.t 1:15 am. Marine News ROGERS BRINGS 13 PASSENGERS; GOES TO SITKA Admiral Liner Makes Brief Call After Her Arriv- al from Seattle With general freight and 13 pas- sengers for Juneau, the steamship Admiral Rogers, Capt. S. K. Gilje and Purser R. V. Harris, arrived last night from Seattle. She stay- ed here two hours and then de- parted for Haines, Skagway and Sitka. She will be back at this port Wednesday night and will sail on her return voyage south Thurs- day morning. Passcngers who disembarked at Juneau were: Miss Grace Jackson, Miss Mar- jorie Glossman, H. L. Faulkner, George Grigsby, A, S. Dunham, J. K. Hudson, Otto Helde, L. Rinden, John Goodchild, R. B. Melvor, H. Watson, Spencer Williams, and one third class. Persons who took passage at Ju- neau for Triangle ports were: For Haines—Mr. and Mrs. John Paul, Mrs. J.W. Maloney, Mrs. John Mook, Mrs. R. G. Wright, James Wright, J. R. Smith, William Ben- son, Ed Jenkins. For Skagway—S. Guyot. For Sitka—Mrs. James Crawford, Mrs. George Oja, Minnie Martin, Hylma Burke, John Marshall, A. Jennings, Paul Otto, John Boeback. PAINTERS WAGE SCALE IS FAIR, SAYS TREASURY Capitol Painters Fairly Treated but Contractor to Raise Laborers Painters at the Capitol are not being underpaid by the contractors according to a ruling made by the Treasury Department, after an in- vestigation into charges preferred by local painters that less than the going local rate was being paid. However, laborers on the same job are to be given a boost from $3.50 to $425 under the ruling of the Department. Painters on the job are receiv- ing from $7 to $10 per day, the Treasury Department found in its investigation, while the local day rate is said to be $8 straight. No helpers are employed on the proj- |ect. The Department held that the painters are being treated with fairness in the matter of wages. It held, however, that the $3.50 wage for laborers was under the prevail- ing rate and ordered it boosted to $4.25, which has been done. —— Skeletons Point to Giant Tribes in Old Midwest ST. LOUIS, Sept. 28. — A day when giant redskins, taller by a hand than modern Indians, roamed mid-western plains and followed their chieftain even into the grave is conjured up by recent discoveries along a bluff of the Mississippi River near here. Nine skeletons, believed by their discoverer to be those of Indians seven to eight feet tall, were un- earthed by workmen. The burial site is in a region where other aboriginal relics have been found in previous years. Eight of the skeletons lay about 12 feet below the surface in hori- zontal positions, face downward in two converging lines. ADMIRAL EVANS CALLSENROUTE FOR WESTWARD Fairly Large Cargo and 10 Passengers Brought | to Juneau | 14,500 POUNDS OF FISH LIFTED | ' T0 WHARF HERE First Trip_o?“Halibul in Two Weeks Sells for 5 and 2 Cents Bound from Seattle to Seward| Fourteen thousand, five h and Kodiak, the steamship Admiral | Pounds of fish were lifted u Evans, Capt. C. C. Graham and ' Wharf of the Juneau Cold S Pursey Byron Hyde, called at Ju-‘g‘flmp«:nis;.i' ;tg;g-\gm:‘nfl toda neau Saturday night. I s o Mgl The vessel brought to this porL;"“,‘I[_l an: g:o? p,:nfn(;’ )\[“?., a fairly large cargo, c ing of ‘kind]eof a[is)lxhtzd:)‘[ "'“1(”\ general freight for business houses. 10ty wéeks It ‘w - ght Of the passengers from Scatt!c"ho Anndcye éapt Ed. Lawl “nn;l A o . . okl or G was purchas’ed for freezing by the | city, ten were for Juneau and nine Cold Storage Company Wallis S | for the Westward. Persons disem- Gadie, mAnagan’ s for c‘om’; a I8 xing uss peere; 'pound, first grade, and 2 cents a ‘T. E. Daime, A. Van Mavern, pound, second grade. Charles H. Flory, H. R. Bronson, " mygnt thousand pounds of the | Mrs. H. R. an‘w_"‘ Miss Iris king ‘salmon were from the Emma i vgon. end Uil itrd. olass. Capt. Thomas Ness, and 1500 from Persons booked at southern ports the Imp, Capt. Tke Woathers. All for the Westward were: the salmon was bought by the Cold | Hubert Wilsoa, Thomas Sawyer, Storage company. Miss Irene Morrison, C. H. Kiel Mrs. O. Graewe, Mrs. D. B. Su ton, T. E. Featherstone, Thomas W. Clonenger, and oae third cls Persons who took passage here for the Westward were: | For Yakutat—H. L. Coleman, M.| J. Musser, Charles Johnson. For Cordova—Robert Wakelin. TWO MEALS DAY BEST FOR STOMACH TROUBLE Skip one meal and drink water; The animals were captured in instead. Wash out stomach and the vicinity of Mendenhall by J. bowels each morning by drinking L. Ervin, Nugget Creek powerhouse water with spoonful of simple gly- man, and sold to the Commission cerin, buckthorn bark, saline cum-|which has been stocking west coast pound (called Adlerika:. districts for s al years with ro- Adlerika brings out poisons you dent species for food for fur-bear- neler thought were in your sys-|ing animals tem. If you are nervous, Can't sleep, '/ —————— full, of gas, it will surprise you. JQ Adlerika contains no harmful diugs. FOR NEW WOOLENS Get-it today; by tomorrow you fecl Fall and Winter SEE the wonderful effect of this Ger- JACK, The Tailor non of this SEA OTTER LEAVES WITH MARMOTS FOR WEST COAST AREAS Enroute to the west coast of Prince of Wales Island, the Sea Ot- _| ter, patrol ship of the Alaska Game Commission, Capt. K. C. Talmadge in command, left port this morn- ing. It ca ed five pair of mar- which be liberated in the | cinity of Cr S5, man doctor’s remedy. Butler-Mauro Drug Co., in Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. —adv. Alaska Headquarters IN SEATTLE Two famous friendly hotels Hotel Seattle Seores The Arlington First at Spring =80 tomorrow IF YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU MUST UTILIZE THE “SURPLUS OF TODAY” IN THE CREATING OF AN | “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING AND BUILDING A SUBSTANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK FINEST LARGEST STEAMERS SAILING SCHEDULE Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound Sept. 21 Sept. 29 Oct. Leave Seattle Steamer— YUKON ... ALASKA ......Sept. 19 Sept. 26 ..Oct. 6 20 Sept. 22 Sept. 29 Oct. 9 Oct. 23 ALASKA ALAMEDA ..Oct. All sailings subject to change Nov. without notice. INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 » Alaska Steamship Co. P e S ) Arrive Southbound Juneau Lv. Juneau Sept.21 Sept. 24 Sept.26 Oct. 6 Sept.28 Oct. 1 Oct. 1 Oct. 5 Oct. 8 Oct. 13 Oct. 16 Oct. 26 Intormation ana tickets furnishs on Seattle-Cafifornia service. Callfornia-New York via Panam Canal and return. Round the world, Trans-Atlantio ‘Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one way wat- 9 er, return by rall), $350.00. B. H. HOWARD, Agent. Leave Seattle -.Sept. 17 Sept. 23 Sept. 24 Queen Evans Rogers Queen . Evans .. PHONES—Office, 79; Hotel, 10; Hangar, 435 - ) Northland Transportation Company SERVING ALASKANS Sailing from Seattle every Monday Night at 9:00 PM. for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Peters- burg, Douglas and Juneau. Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau M/S Norco Sept.14 Sept.19 Sept.19 M/S Northland Sept.21 Septi26 Sept.26 M/S NORCO Sept.28 Oct. -3 Oct. 3 FOR INFORMATION APPLY TO D. B. FEMMER J. B. BURFORD Juneau Agent Ticket Agent Telephone 114 Pelephone 79 First National Bank ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Eutter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 Where they met, a skeleton of unusual size was found in an up- right position. ———eteo— funean Ferry & Naviga: tioy Compsny __ In 1930, 209 growers in the South Carolina sweet potato contest had aumruexumummuwl acre, B Dri-Brite Liquid Wax For Linoleum, Hard Wood and Composition Floors = Juneau Paint Store MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co." LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY THURSDAY AT 6 P, M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION GOMPAfiY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Thursday at 10 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and Way Points. See agent for ports of call during winter schedule. Passen- gers must obtain tickets from agent before boarding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bldg. Phone TAXI SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Bgoth