The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 26, 1931, Page 7

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= THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 26, 193i. 'BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG \Hc‘s;fi"frwn '&%4 WABBIT" HOW MANY TIMES DO YASSUH, 1 HAVE TO TELL YOU AH FEELS JES LAK NOT TO BE SUPERSTITIOUS 2 NOW GET TO WORK AND FORGET 1T+ AHS UNDAH A SPELL \WIDOUT MAH WABBIT'S FOOT HE'S NEVER AROUND WHEN T N MAH WANT HIM! By BILLE DE BECK IThe Daily A PHONE 374 laska Empire FOR SALE WANTED m(} house for sale. Inquire at frcade ‘Rooms. FOR SALE—One 45 n.p. Fairbanks- Morse Diesel engine, together with its équipment and appurtenances, including one air compressor. Pride, $1,500.00 cash. Engine now stored on Hogue & Tveten Dock, Petérsburg. R. E. Robertson. —_— fOR |SALE—A few pen-born and Blue Fox pups. Write Northern Fur Farm, Hoonah, Al- aska. ! FOR SALE—New -Style WEDDING RINGS. ENGRAVING FREE, See thede at the' Nugget Shop. ‘SALE—2 Shzw Wwaiker filing cabinets, 4 drawers each. George | Brothers. $OR SALE—One choice residential | lot.- Inquire of D. B. Femmer. SITUATION wanted—Highly train- | ed stenographer with executive | ability available now. Extensive experience in law, medicine, mer- cantile. Responsible in clerical de- | tall. Mature. Mary G. Lewis, | Gastineau Hotel. WANTED—Woman wants work by { day or hour. Telephone 146. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Four-room furnished house. Telephone 187 after 6 p.m. sleeping room, close in. Phone 5317, LOST A¥ity FOUND { FOUND—Two overcoats left at the| Douglas Fireman's dance hall. Call at George Brothers Store. FOR SALE—Five room house with ¥ bath, large lot, in Seater Tract, & bargain. Phone 202. LOST or mislaid—Pair horn-rim- med spectacles. Reward. Phone —_— FOR SALE—Piate Glass Showcases. Vatiolis sizes. Juneau Young Hatdware Co. FOR NEW WOOLENS Fall and Winter SEE JACK, The Tailor Lausanne Barber Shop at Pioneer Pool mlldlet‘lnd | children’s haircutting 'ROBERT LIGHT, Prop. SERVICE CO. Phone 79 Tubes Service Open Evenings MISCELLANEOUS R a2 R TR S L 1 TR 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. | PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, Phonographs, Expert Piano Tun- ing. Radio and phonograph re- i pairing. Anderson's Music Shoppe. FOR fallen arches or aching feet Letterheads % l'd&u ¢ Carde Statements = na FOR RENT — Furnished, heated | s Marine News NORAH TAKES | 19 PASSENGERS FROM JUNEAU Princess Vessel Calls Sun- day on Wa{/ from- Skag- way to Vancouver 0000000 0000 Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND No steamer northbound. 2 SCHEDULED SAILINGS Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle 9 tonight. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle Oct. 27 at 9 am. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Oct. 20 at 9 pm. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle Nov. 2. at 9 p.m, SOUTHBOUNG SAILINGS Admiral Evans scheduled south bound tomorrow afternoon or evening. Alameda scheduled southbovnd about November 1. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Saturday night at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. Pacific leaves every Satur- day at 10 am. for Peters- burg, Kake and way ports, ® e 000000000 OES ——,——— With. 19 passengers booked south from Juneau, the steamship Prin- cess Norah, Capt. W. Q. Palmer and Purser P. A. Hole, departed from this port at 3 o'clock Sunday morning for Vancouver B. C. She had arrived here two hours earlier from Skagway. From the Lynn Canal port, the vessel carried 67 passengers. They were comprised chiefly of railway and steambcat employes of the ‘White Pass and Yukon Route going | |to Canada and the States for the ©0 0 000000000000000000000000 0 00 (rrrrrrrores —Associated Press Photo. Troops of Japan (upper) guard the entrance of the Japanese settlement at Mukden. Below: Chinese prisoners at Petaying, where, according to Japanese reports, Chinese soldiers attempted to cut the South Manchurian Railway, an “incident” which led to' eccupation, OIld Papers for sa'c at Empire Office Ordway’s Portrait Studio Portraits of Distinction . | TIDES TOMORROW | winter. Among them was H. Wheel- For Seattle—O. E. Jorgensen, J. (Curtis, Chdrles Lindley. ican Transport A SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Oct. 26. tude 140 east, 300 miles south of | . s i o . Barrels of Herring | 'er general manager of the White |Pass and Yukon system. | Persons who took passage from | thls city were: IN TYPHUON lN For Prince Rupert—John Nelson. For Vancouver—E. B. Sparling, | |A. A. Pare, D. 8. Hill. | 0R|ENTAL SEAS J. Connors, Jr.,, L. M. Myers, Miss Ruth Lundell, Mrs. Charles G.' ‘Wamer J. Monahan, R. Stump, | se “S" Mrs. M. Ball, John Rustgard, S.' Sends Oln S Whmh IS Valasky, Mrs. R. E. Smith, Frank Picked Up by Amer- —The transport U. S. Grant hns‘ZE!I 72 Puu N Ds reported it intercepted an “SOS” | . from the Japanese freighter Koro F SALM N P T Maru saying the vessel was in n| typhoon in latitude 27 north lati-| UPON FISH DOCK Further attempts by the Grant i to learn details were futile. | — — e o Week-end Receipts at Ju- | neau Also Include 292 High tide, 1:13 a.m, 153 feet 1 Low tide, 7:03 am., 28 feet. High tide, 1:00 p.m., 17.1 feet. Twenty-six thousand, one hun-| Low tide, 7:32 p.m, -1.1 feet. |dred and seventy-two pounds. of| —_—————— king salmon and 292 barrels of| herring constituted fish receipts | over the week-end in Juneau. All 'the catches were purchased by the | {Juneau Cold ‘Storage Company, net | vessels arrived here last Saturday prices for salmon to the fishermen | with halibut. The two had a cargo | . {being 16 cents, 7 cents and 4 cents | { of 44,000 pounds and sold the fish for the three respective’ grades, | % 10 apd gl pents. “The large reds will be mild cured and the small reds and| PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. OC.|lpies wil be frozen,” said Wallis| hu;l_n.)::le::x}:e gf;s;::; E?;"g:cuff“s- George, President of the cold| 3 |storage company. | g:k’; n:m:';‘:; "b:a;m:ol;! ng:; Boat, captains and catches fol- {low: and Canadian bgats sold for 5 and | Hyperien, Oscar Oberg, 14,327 11 cents a pound. pounds; Sadie, James Stevens, 2,-! —_———————— _ 450 pounds; Sokol Martin Hofstead, | Although the states of Queens. 9,395 pounds. land has an area of 670,000 square g The herring were unloaded from miles it has a population of less|y,. wyson Gapt. Martin Holst. than 936,000 and only 6,776 miles| FERRY TIME CARD of railways. Leaves Juneau for Douglas and | Thane e 3 | HALIBUT PRICES ! [ SEATTLE, Oct. 26—-On1y two — FIRE ALARM CALLS 1-3 Third and Franknn. | 1-4 Prcnt and Franklin. | 1-5 Front, near Perry Way. 1-8 Front, near Gross. Apts. 1-7 Front, opp. City Whart. 1-8 Front, near Saw Mill. . 1-9 Front at A. J. Office, ' 3-1 Willoughby at Totem Gro- 6:15p.m. $7:30p.m. 9:40p.m. 11:15p.m. 12 midnight $1:00a.m. | 1 | | 9: § 12: 30p.m1 2:00pm. 3:30pm.t *4:00p.m. Leaves Douglas for Juneau 6:30a.m. 6:30p.m. 8:30a.m. $7:45p.m. 9:30a.m.t 9:55p.m. 12:45p.m.t 11:30p.m. 2:15pm. 12:15pm. 3:45p.m.t 1:15a.m. 5:00p.m. *—Thane. t—Freight will be accepted. ${—Saturdays only. | Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company Edison Mazda Lamps ABSOLUTELY THE STANDARD OF COMPARISON They cost no more than the other ki‘nd Our telephone number is Juneau 6 and we will deliver any quantity Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA P ———. -as today =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 ; .. First National Bank FINEST STEAMERS SAILING SCHEDULE SPECIAL REDUCED FARES: JUNEAU TO SEATTLE AND RETURN Upper Deck $73.50 Saloon Deck $65.50 Leave Oct. 30 Nov. 13 REGULAR PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wran- gell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines (Chilkoot Bar- racks), Skagway, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. All sallings subject to change without notice. INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. N’OWEI.L. Agent N N N Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau' Ly. Juneau *Oct. 13 Oct. 16 Oct. 27 Nov. 3. Nov. 6 Nov. 17 Nov. 24 Nov. 27 Dec. 8 Ports of Call: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Sitka, *Yakutat, Cordova, Seward, Seldovia, Kodiak, Information and tickets furnishe on Seattle-Caffornia service. California-New York via Panam Canal and return. Round the world, Trans-Atlantle Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (one way wat- er, return by rail), $350.00 B. H. HOWARD, Afll& Northland Transportation Company SERVING ALASKANS Bailing from Seattle every Monday Night at 9:00 PM. for Ketchikan, ell, Peters- burg, Douglas and Juneau. Leave Arrive Southbound Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau Oct. 19 Oct. 23 Oct. 23 Oct. 26 Oct. 31 Oct. 31 M/8 Northalnd M/S Norco Schedule subject te change without notice J.B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER Ticket Agent Frelght Agent Phone 79 Phone 114 { MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis Transportation Co.) ) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY SATURDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For information apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O b i PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Leaves City Dock, Juneau, every Saturda; % at 10.a.m. for Petersvurg, Kake, Port Alexander and' Way Points. See t for ports of call during wmter schedule. Passen- " gers must obtain tickets from agent ore bodrding ship. Phone 79. J. B. Burford & Co., Agts., Valentine Bld'. Phone TAXI SERVICE 7 DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Booth IS YOUR HOME READY FOR WINTER? If you are contemplating any building or alterations, now is the time to do it. We'll be more than glad to sell you the LUM- BER, CEMENT, CEDAR SHINGLES, MILLWORK. USE ALASKA LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE 358 QUALITY and SERVICE Prepare Now For WINTER DRIVING COMFORT JUNEAU MOTORS CO. FOOT OF MAIN STREET

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