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MONDAY, OCT. 19, 1931. | BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG Ut | X sl 0 ——— - GIREAT! BARNEY WHERES SPARKYZ ) 1| HO‘ T 3US PUT A HUNBRED SMackErs 7 HO» 10 ON HIM To WIN THE RAGE. - Youl KNOW, // L ALWAYS WAS CRAZY ABOUT THAT HOSS Ho!/ W WHADDYA THINK OF THAT 2 HE'S SO TICKLED QVER WHAT YoU SAID_HE ¢ouLD EAT_You THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, By BILLE DE BECK e T 19 The Daily A PHONE 374 s rrrrs { FOR SALE laska Empire | WANTED § /FOR SALE—Cheap; dining room ! extension table;’ library table; kitchen table; chairs, 2-hole stove; double bedstead. Phone " Mrs. Cashel, Douglas 142. '"MAGAZINE subscriptions; new or { renewals. Also Christmas greeting ! cards. Mrs. Erwin, Phone 436. JFOR SALE — Two-chair barber p/ shop. Price reasonable, low rent. 4 Inquire Box 1423, Empire. {FOR SALE—Library table, exten- ¢ sion dining table, leather-covered ! ¥ bed davenport; all in good con- dition. Price very cheap. Phone ;3372 ;FOR SALE—New Style WEDDING | ™ ' uyRINGS. ENGRAVING FREE. See ¢ ‘these at the Nugget Shop. ‘ ‘{WR SALE—sSafe; 2 Shaw Walker filing cabinets, 4 drawers each. George Brothers. ¢ BHREC B RS P TR SOR SALE—One cnoice residential lot. Inquire of D. B. Femmer. FOR SALE—Five room house with ! bath, large lot, in Seater Tract, [ bunh}. Phone 202. ' | R 0 72 S 1 N POR SALE—Plave Giass Showcases. % Various sises. Juneau Young " MISCELLANEOUS IN 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. Donald, Box 825, Dayton, Ohio. " PIANOS, 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. e JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE CO. Phone 79 Tubes Open Evenings i [} ¢ ! ¢ { o i 5 Service J. E.| WANTED—Woman wants work by | | The motorship Fairbanks, carrying! ;’mail and passengers to points on |Island and Wrangell, limped into {port last Saturday ! I ness of the early morning. | day or hour. Telephone: 146: WANTED—Honest married man to handle all my shell fish in Ju-| neau. Crabs and clams to sell to| homes, stores and restaurants.| Week's pay for one day's work.“ No money needed but honesty | required. Write and tell me about yourself, have you a truck? If not, use a wheelbarrow, I do. T.| | MUNOS, P. O. Box 206, Sitka,| | Alaska. WANTED—Wil: rent or lease large furnished house suitable for room- | ers. Inquire P. O. Box 1346, Ju- neau. :‘ FOR RENT |FOR RENT—Furnished room, $12| | per month. Phone 2551. | | | room apartment. Good view. Call | 115 West 6th St. Phone ‘330. | FOR RENT—Furnished three room i: apartment. 421% East 7th St. Telephone 2004. tl"\u‘n‘ s.h. rooms, newly renovated; reasonable; ov. Gastineau Groc. LOST AND FOUND | LOST—Tapestry bag near EplscoJ pal Church. Reward for return. | Phone 1104 | NO MORE CORNS i "OR CALLOUSES, Hard or Soft Corns, Corns betweem! the toes or on the top or bottom of the feet now disappear instantly. END.0-CORN takes them all off every, time—no pain, no fuss, just apply at nly and walk E‘ilh oc%lafnfl;"- h!lltli' mom“:.. I END-O- u you livg e away write: END-0-CORN LA ¥ Gurneia Bid, Chicago: | ERATORES [ | who will seo that you receive & Butler Mauro Drug Co. or Juneau Drug Co. i | iy DonDeE . g ‘ Old papers at The Empire. ! FOR NEW WOOLENS Fall and Winter SEE JACK, The Tailor Janeau: Ferry' & Naviga- |+ “Marine News 6,200 POUNDS OF FISH REGEIVED; 50,000 SHIPPED Catches Consist of Salmon| and Shipments Include Fresh Halibut Over the week-end 6200 pounds of fish were lified upon wharves in Juneau, and 50,000 pounds, be- sides 17 tierces, were sent to mar- kets in the States. The Frolic, Capt. K. Raatikain«l en, and the Hyperian, Capt. Os- car Oberg, brought 1,200 and 5,000 pounds of salmon, respectively. The catches were purchased by . the Juneau Cold Storage Company. Forty boxes or 20,000 pounds, of fresh halibut, packed in ice, was| 9000 e 0o Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND No steamer northbound. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 19, at 9 pm. Alameda scheduled to sail from Seattle October 20 at 9 am. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver October 20, at 9 p.m. Norce scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 26 at 9 p.m. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 27 at 9 am. SOUTHBOUN 3AILINGS Admiral Evans scheduled south bound about October 27. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Saturday night at 6 p.m. for Sitka and 900 000 000000000000000000000 000 rrrrrrrreresr wayports. Pacific leaves every Satur- day at 10 am. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports. @0 e 0 e 0000 s e e e sent on the steamship Alaska by . the San Juan Fishing and Pack-| ng Company to its house in Se- KETGHIKAN SHIP |attle, and 75 boxes or 30,000 pounds. 1of frozen king salmon, were sent !aboard the motorship Norco to} HuNs UN RflcKs Prince Rupert, B. C. to be entrained | |there to the Atlantic and Pacific ‘Company in New York. Jo o g o pr | TFourteen tierces of mild cured MO(OFS]’\IP Faufibanks leps salmon went forward on the Nored B k I t P to the Atlantic and Pacific Com- ac nto ort pany at Seattle, and three tierces for Repairs lof mild cured salmon were shippe 1/ e oo i d SR8 Hote0 b K B Enigtrondo KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Oct. 19.— Seattle. S i, LINER VICTORIA | CAUGHT IN GALE Runs Behind Island Neér‘ Nome—Bachimo Pas- sengers to Fly the west coast of Prince of Wales night after ! striking Qewey Rocks in the dark- | The Fairbanks went into Hun-| ter Bay to inspect the damage and found the pumps would no: keep the vessel afloat, and turned back here for repairs. The Fairbanks had three passen- ! gers aboard. | —————— NOME, Alaska, Oct. 19.—A radio from Bonny Castle, Hudson's Bay | Company’s agent of the trading| hip Baychimo, who is now at cizebue, said 22 passengers will be brought out via airplane to, |catch the steamer Victoria for the | south. | The Victoria was forced to heave | o (to in a storm, south of the Island, | ilast Saturday. A heavy northerly | o gale was blowing then and weather is also stormy toward the north. TIDES TOMORROW Low tide, 2:37 am. 28 feet. High tide, 9:17 a.m., 13.2 fee.. Low tide, 3:13 p.m., 5.7 feet. High tide, 9:07 p. 129 feet. — e, — HALIBUT PRICES . SEATTLE; Oct. 19.—Two vessels | arrived last Saturday with 38,000 pounds of halibut and sold the fish OREGONIAN HAPPY | for 6 to 13 cents a pound. OVER BIG GAME HUNT 19.—One hundred and twenty-three | Enthusiastic over the success of thousand ‘pounds of halibut were @ hig game hunting ttip: to ihe sold heré’last Saturday. American | Westward, R. R. Thompson of Mc- halibut sold for 3 to 8 cents ,lMinvule, Ore., is a homeward bound pound and Canadian fish sold for | Passenger on the steamship Alaska, 3 to 86 cents a pound. which called at Juneau yestérday | IR S TR | enroute from Seward to Seattle. Mr. Thompson and a party of BR. JORGENSEN HERE TO |friends came North about six fveeks VISIT WITH RELATIVES a00. They got two caribou near Cantwell, four mountain sheep and | two moose near Kenal, and three | Kodiak bear at the south ehd of | Kodiak Island. Both moose heads! {were fine speciméns, One of the| {bears measured &leven feet and| PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. Oct.| ,,Dr. Stanley Jorgensen, who went t0 the States recently on business, arrived Saturday to visit with his mother, Mrs. C. M. Jorgensen, and other relatives. He will remain here a week and the nproceed to his home in Cordova, where he Been located for several years. has| while the Alaska was In port.| | Mr. Thompson visited with and old | | friend, G. A. Schumacher, clerk at | FERRY TIME CARD |ine Alaskdn Hotel, | .’ | Leaves Juneau for Douglas and ) Yom Can Save Money at 6:15a.m. 7:10a.m. 9:15a.m.t 12:30pam.t 2:00p.m, 3:30p.m.t *4:00p.m. Leaves Douglas for Juneau 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m. 8:30a.m. 17:45p.m. 9:30a.m.t 12:45p.m.t 2:15p.m. 3:45p.m.t 5:00p.m. *—Thane. t—Freight will be accepted. t—Saturdays only. Harris Hardware. Co. 11: 5p.m. 12 midnight $1:00a.m. f L '1 ausanne Barl;heigkop tion Company & CARGD CARRYING NORCO SAILS SOUTH AFTER §-HOUR STAY VOYAGE NORTH MADE BY QUEEN FINEST iy STAEAMERS LARGEST ~~ § ¢ SATLING SCHEDULE BPECIAY REDUCED FARES: JUNEAU TO SEATTLE AND RETURN Upper Deck $33.50 Saloon Deck $65.50 Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Oct. 18 Nov. 1 Nov. 8 Nov. 22 Steamer— ALASKA ... ALAMEDA ALASKA - ALAMEDA .. REGULAR PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wran- gell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines (Chilkoot Bar- racks), Skagway, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. All sailings subject to change without notice. INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. NOWELL, Agent PHONE 2 ‘Alaska Steamship C Oct. 20 ... OCE, 27 Nov. 10 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 13 Motorship Brings Capacity| Vessel's Freight Shipment Cargo from Seattle— for Juneau Includes | 300 Tons of Coal / Books 10 Here Primarily on a cargo-carrying | With a capacity cargo the motor- voyage, the steamship Queen, Capt.|ship Norco, Capt. A. Ekholm and A’\AN‘ Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau Evans *Oct. 13 Oect. 16 Oct. 27 A. W. Nickerson and 'Purser By- ron Hyde, arrived in Juneau rom Seattle Saturday evening. She sail- Purser H. Knight, came to Juncau carly Sunday morning from BSe-| attle and after a stay of eight ‘kan on the Queen. They were Mrs. John A. Curtis. | another nine feet from tip to tip.; | ed on her return voyage to the hours departed on her return to Puget Sound metropolis Sunday Puget Sound. | aflernoon. . | A large part of her cargo con- Out of Seattle, the vessel had sisted of fresh fruits and green 900 tons of freight. Most cf it, in- vegetables. cluding 300 tons of coal, was for, The vessel had a light pass n- | this port. Her cruise north, with ger list out of Seattle.' Several per- | stops at Nanaimo, B, C,, and South- sons booked from the southern ter- ¢ast Alaska ports, was delayed by minal port got off at Alaska towns | heavy fogs, and she was almoci south of Juneau. Cmly three pas- 24 hours behind schedule on ar-'sengers—A. White from Seattle, rival in this city. 'and Marion Blake and K. F. Mc- On_the way back to Seattle, the Teod from Wrangell were left vessel was routed to call at the aboard for debarkation at this city. way ports of Kake, Petersburg and! For the southbound voyage, the| Ketchikan. following took passage from here: Four passengers came to Keichi-, TFor Petersburg—Grace Jackson, E. Isaacson, M. A. Hagen, R. Wake-| For Ketchikan—Thomas Martin- lin and Dr. R. L. Carlson. ez, Margaret Martinez, Elizabeth Persons who bocked passage Martinez, Pleudo Martinez. here for ports couth were: { For Seattle—Dr. G. A. Doelker, For- petersourg—Mr. and Mrs. H.|A. Graham, David Weintrob. R, Sarbin, J. N. Hudson, Ken M R TRT e apeen, | Memeran, pOTERETH DEPARTS WITH HEAVY CARGO For Wrangell—Mrs, Verna Young With a capacity cargo but only) For Ketchikan— Charles Haw- thorne, H. B, Crewson. ForsBeattle—Hortense L. Williams, | A. Hésdephan, M. A. Hagen, P. M. | two passengers, the motorship Es- Coggins. itebeth, Capt. Edward Bach and b o e, o | Purser Robert Coughlin, departed NOTICE |from Juneau Saturday evening on her regular weekly voyage to Sit- Dr! Doelker is no longer asso- ka. Her freight consisted of gen- clated with me in my praetice. |eral merchandise, and a great deal adv.” DR, GEORGE L. BARTON. of it was destined to way ports. | Passengers were: For Hoonah—Charles Howard. For Tenakee—Willlam Mawkins. Edison Mazda Lamps ABSOLUTELY 'EJ{E STANDARD OF COMPARISON They cost no more than the other kind Our telephone number is Juneau 6 and we will deliver any quantity < B .Old!papers tor sale at The Em- pire.; i Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA ~as today =80 tomorrow IF YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU MUST UTILIZE THE THE CREATING OF AN “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING AND BUILDING A_SUBSTANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK First National Bank Evans Evans. *Nov. 3 Nov. 6 Nov. 17 Nov. 24 Nov. 27 Dec. 8 Ports of Call: Ketchikan, Petersburg, Juneau, Sitka, *Yakutat, Cordova, Seward, Seldovia, Kodiak. Information ana tickets furnishe on Beattle-Cafifornia service. California-New York via Panam return. Wrangell, , Canal and Round the world, Trans-Atlantie ‘Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one way wate er, return by rail), $350.00 B. H. HOWARD, Agent. SERVING ALASKANS Sailing from Seattle every Monda; ht as 9:00 P.M. for Ketchikan, Wnn;eyll.m;ahfl- M/S Northland Oct. M/S Norco burg, Douglas and Junean. Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Junesu 5 Oct. 9 Oct. 10 Oct. 12 Oct. 17 Oct. 17 Schedule subject to change without notice J.B. BURFORD & CO. Ticket Agent Phone 79 MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY SATURDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS 4 For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” D. B. FEMMER Freight Agent Phone 114 / Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Saturday, at 10 a.m. for Petersnurg, Kake, Port. Alexander and Way Points. See agent for ports of call during winter schedule, Passen- ers must obtain tickets from agent before. one 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bl Phone 7 DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Booth RED CEDAR SHINGLES DOES YOUR ROOF LEAK? We handle 100% Vertical 5-2 Shingle $4.50 PER M Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE US—358 Prepare Now For WINTER DRIVING COMFORT JUNEAU MOTORS CO. FOOT OF MAIN STREET \dg. TAXI SERVICE