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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 3, |93I BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG So TUATS TR LITTLE SMAM- THIS 15 THE. LITTLE FELLER THATS GONNA \ RACE SPARK HORSE (MY DAUGHTER IS SO CRAZY ABOULY % WHAT A PITY SHE_DIDNT COME WITH (e tizesese ) BE AU RIGHT 2 MR GooGLE E==—x oS TRIS (S WHAT T MOKE! i CALL GIASS - AU" SHELL BE HERE TOMOI?ROW " REAT SCOTT- HE MUST o' ¢ SEEN ME DOIN (Y- The Daily Alaska Empire PHON 0000000000000 0000° 0 08 Prrrrerrrres E 374 FOR SALE WANTED FOR SALE — Franklin pool hall, next to .City Cafe. Bargain. | Owner has other business need- | ing attention. FOR SALE—Seven acres of patent- ed ground with dwelling house | and other buildings on Fritz| Cove road. Telephon= 4043. FOR SALE — 2 safes; 2 Shaw| Walker filing cabinets, 4 draw- ers each. George Brothers. FOR SALE—22 ft. round bottom | boat, 30 hp. 12 mph; extra equipment, very cheap. P. O. Box | 203, Douglas. |FOR SALE—Studebaker sedan, 13- | 000 miles, new rubber, bargain.| Phone 5154. 'FOR SALE—One cnoice residential 5 lot. Inquire of D. B. Femmer. 'FOR SALE—F1ve room house with bath, large lot, in Seater Tract, a bargain. Phone 202. — VOR. BALE—Plave Grass Snowcases. Various sizes. Juneau Young| Hardware Co. FOR SALE—One seal skin coat,| , marten trim. Good -condition. ' Sige 38. Apply Apartment 16,! MacKinnon Apts. I MISCELLANEOUS | LONESOME—JOIN Ohio’s largest | correspondence club. Members ev- | erywhere. 150 ladies names, ad- dresses and _descriptions $1.00. (ladies 50c). Give age and occu- pation with remittance. J. E.! Donald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. | *, I‘P’IANCIS, Radios, Sewing Machines, | Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. FOR fallen arches or aching feet, see Dr. FENTON, GOLDSTEIN | BUILDING. {FOR relief of constipation see Dr. |} Fenton, Goldstein Building. NOTICE On account of sickness we will be closed temporarily. Please pay bills or call for undelivered clothes at Snow White Laundry. CAPITAL CLEANERS. . | WANTED—Work of any kind by | | FOR RENT—Smalil apartment,-also | Furn. sh. rooms, newly renovated; {LOST — Pair of glasses between | WANTED—Will rent or lease large furnished house suitable for room- ers. Inquire P. O. Box 1346, Ju- neau. | day or week. Mrs. Marsh, Phone | 146. FOR RENT FOR RENT — Furnished hous® on Glacier Highway, mile from city limits. Chas. Johnson. room 1% FOR RENT—Five-room furnished house. Phone 18 Douglas. FOR RENT—Three room cottage with bath and stove; free water. $5.00 per month. Telephone Doug- las 222. housekeeping and sleeping rooms. Steam heated and fully furnished. Channel Aparaments, 6th and Main. Phone 436. |FOR RENT—Furnished five room apartment. 421% East Tth St. Telephone 2004. FOR RENT—Furnished two room apartments, also cabins, Newly finished. Close in. Apply Seaview Apartments. APARTMENTS for transients and permanents. MacKinnon Apart- ments. reasonable; ov. Gastineau Groe. LOST AND FOUND Behrends store and Gold Belt Ave. Finder please Phone 5681.. Steamer Movements ‘NORTHBOUND Quecn. due Monday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Northland ' scheduled to: sail from Seattle Oct. 5 at 9pm. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 6 at 9 a.m. Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver Octo- ber 8 at 9 pm. Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle October 12 at 9 p.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Yuken scheduled southbound October 6. Admiral Evans is scheduled southbound about Oct. 6. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thursday night at 6 p.m. for Sitka and WAyports. o Pacific leaves every Thurs- e day at 10 am. for Peters- e burg, Kake and way porta. P00 0000000800 ——p i . . . . . | TIDES TOMORROW High tide, 5:45 am. 110 Low tide, 11:17 a.m., 7.0 High tide, 5:13 pm., 134 Tides Monday Low tide, High tide, Low tide, 12:53 p.m. 74 High tide, 6:44 pm., 131 ———.———— HALIBUT PRICES | '] PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Oct. 3.! —Halibut sales totalled 102,000 pounds here yesterday. American | fish sold for 2 to 5 cents a pound | and Canadian fish sold for 3 to 7.7 cents a pound. SEATTLE, Oct. 3.—One hundred and forty-nine thousand pounds of halibut were sold here yester- day, receipts from nine vessels. The fish sold for 4 to 9% cents a pound. ———— NOTICE OF SALE The adjourned Administrator's Sale of real estate belonging to the Valentine Estate will be held at, the office of Grover C. Winn in the Valentine Building at 10 a.m. Monday, October 5th, 1931 Old papers at Tnhe Emplre. Juneau Fg & Navigas | weeks the | liams, Skagway; Marine News - SEATTLE MAN DROWNED OF F ALASKA COASTf Is Swept Overboard from Halibuter Clipper During Storm PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Oct. 3. —The drowning of A. A. Leland, aged 40 years, of Seattle, in a storm |off the Alaska coast on September 21, was revealed here with the ar- rival of the halibut boat Clipper, The Captain said Leland was lost overboard and 18 skates of fishing gear were swept into the sea. The boat was badly battered by the huge waves. CABLESHIP IS DUE HERE EARLY SUNDAY The cableship Dellwood is ex-|" pected to arrive in port carly to- morrow morning. For the past Dellwood has been at Anchorage building a radio station | fur the new system of communica- | tlon between Seattle and the north. It is not known how long the {Dellwood will remain in port nor | when she will go to Ketchikan to ‘make repairs to the cable which has been broken for several weeks. — e — AT THE HOTELS Gastineau L. Vestal, L. M. Carrigan, neau; V. O. Harrison, Seattle. Alaskan Oscar Olson, Art Hedman, Taku; V. L. Waller, Seattle; C .McWil- H. C. Drun, Ju- Ju- neau. Zynda R. D. Carrigan, Juneau. ———r JENSENS HAVE MOVED Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Jensen have 'moved from their former residence, Sixth and Franklin, and taken a 'suite in the Bishop Apartments, | Fifth and Franklin. IF IT’S RADIO SEE US {Juneau Radio Service Co. PHONE 79 Shop with J. B. Burford & Co. tion Company 'ALASKA LAUNDRY CLEANING PRESSING Telephone 15 Frye-Bruhn Company ncnn—nun MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacem Three Deliveries Dally hg separation from her hus.! nd 4-year-old daughter, be- cauge of a deportation order to her blck to her native Juj fi'-:‘ 5 ka Kuzmanich cluo lbova with husband jand_child), who i3 soon to be a Anot.het again, made tearful en- ityeaties to the authorities to per- mit her baby to be born an Amer- fean. Mrs, Kuzmanich had only a gix-month permit when she came here six years ago and married uzmanich. The Jugo- Martin elavian Consul is interesting him- « self in her cas STRIKE OF 600 FISHERMEN OFF Settlement Reported to Have Been Reached on Fish Price VICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 3.—A complete settlement between strik- ing fishermen on the west coast of Vancouver Island and the salt- erizs has been reached according to .advices received here from Port Alberni. It is said the fishermen have agreed to accept the salteries’ offer of six cents a fish and fishing, will be resumed on Monday. The | salteries were paying 5 cents and 10 cents was demanded. Over 600 fishermen have been on a strike for over a week. AIR FIELDS FOR ANGLERS INYO, Cal, Oct. 3.—The forest serice "has ecompleted the cons- truction of four new landing fields in the Inyo National Forest near here to accommodate fishermen who fly here for weekend angling. ENROUTE SOUTH | FOR ROAD MEET Yukon Memre.r— and Speak- er of Canadian House Finds Conditions Better (Continued Ittin Page One) which to contend that is pm\inz troublesome. It grows cut of the movement of a considerable body of “‘cheechako: north lact Spring. tain employment in Southern cities, they trekked North in the hope of getting something to do. Most of these are still idle and without funds, making it necessary for the public to provide them with re- lief. Two New Strikes Two new strikes have been made in the Yukon in recent weeks that are highly interesting and, if sur- face values continue with depth, will result in the addition of new mines, declared Mr. Blask. One of them, deceribed in despatches from Whitehorse recently, is on thz hills at the head of Livingstone Creek, in the Big Salmon area. The other is on Big Creek in about the center of the Territory. Both are gold lodes and are reported to carry high values. Livingston W ernecks, Superin- tendent of the Treadwell Yukon operations in ‘the Mayo district, went to the Livingstone Creek re- gion by plane yesterday and is ex- pected to spend several days exam- ning the discoveries and making a preliminary geological study of the wrea. Interested in Highway Mr. Black is deeply interested in the Pacific-Yukon Highway project ind hopes that it will be advanced rapidly to the construction stage. “I cut my visit to the Yukon short two weeks in order to attend the Victoria meeting of the Inter- national Committee,” he said. He | expects that session to do a great deal to dispose of preliminary mat- ters and clear the ground for some sore of a beginning. Relics of New Stone Age Are Uncovered in China PEIPING, Oct. 3.—Four thousand years ago Chinese people lived in cave-like dwellings and cooked their food on clay stoves with separate ccmpartments hollowed out to ac- commodate pottery cooking vessels. This was one of the discoveries made near Wanchuan in the southi- east corner of Shansi province Qy Chinese archaeologists. ——e e Old papers at The Empire. —— P -as today =80 tomorrow IF . YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU MUST UTILIZE THE “SURPLUS OF THE CREAT TODAY” IN ING OF AN “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING A SUB AND_BUILDING STANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK F irst National Bank ALASKA MEAT CO. Butter QUA "ms‘&”"':z AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKIN Austin Fresh T Unable to ob- | SAILING SCHEDULE Due Juneau Due Juneau Northbound Southbound Sept. 21 Sept. 29 6 18 1 Leave Beattle Sept. 22 Sept. 29 Oct. 9 Oct. 23 Oct. ALAMEDA ... Nov. All sallings subject to change without notice. INFORMATION AND TICKETS E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 Steamship Co. Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau ..Sept. 17 Sept.21 Sept. 24 ..Sept. 23 Sept.26 Oct. 6 Sept.24 Sept.28 Oct. 1 Oct. 1 Oct. 5 Oct. 8 Oct. 13 Oct, 16 Oct. 26 Intormation ana tickets furnishe on Seattle-Cafifornia service. California-New York via Panam Canal and return. Round the world, Trans-Atlantie Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one way wat- er, return by rail), $350.00 | I W= ; B. H. HOWARD, Agent. Queen Evans .. Rogers Queen .. Evans ...... | PHONES—Office, 79; Hotel, 10; Hangar, 436 Northland Transportation Company SERVING ALASKANS Sailing from Seattle every Monday Night at 9:00 P.M. for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Peters- burg, Douglas and Juneau. Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Junesu Sept.28 Oct. 3 Oct. 3 M/S Northland Oct. 5 Oct. 9 Oct. 10 M/S Norco Oct. 12 Oct. 17 Oct. 17 FOR INFORMATION APPLY TO D. B. FEMMER ., BURFORD Juneau Agent Ticket Agent Telephone 114 ‘Telephone 79 M/S NORCO MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co.% LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY THURSDAY AT 6 P, M, FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For informatfon apply Dave Housel, Ageny Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY 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. Pl-en- 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 Booth Dri-Brite Liquid Wax For Linoleum, Hard Wood and Composition Floors Juneau Paint Store