The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 5, 1932, Page 7

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BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG " ES'S- SIR-- Jus' A ™M INUTE-- THIS IS CAPTAIN PRATT- \STEN TO THAT o TS A HORSE 1N THERE TLL PUT KM e TRONSH - - / | Unused Artlcles---Sell Them Through the By BILLE DE BECK ONE T EXCI — AND< TWO - EE AN LE A MAITE, v:ousz--CAp___ : Want Ads § TELEPHONE 374 FOR AN AD TAKER Daily Alaska Empire R‘)‘R SALE — Portland Island fox I\ farm, fully equipped. Three-room [} ' house, outbuildings, outboard mot- or boat. Bargain at $1500. Inquire of John Reck. FOR SALE—Partly furnished four . room house in Douglas. Reason- able. Inquire Apartment Number Six, evenings, Bishop Apartments ‘IOR BALB—NI;_ style WEDDING ’RINGS ENGRAVING FREE. See these at uu Nuuet. slmp WANTED FOR RENT—Four-room furnished | house. FOR RENT—Tmee~room apartment with bath and electric range, corner Third and Gold Sts. 7"OR RENT—Occiwental Annex Din- ing Room and sleeping rooris. Very suitable for roomers and boarders. Apply Mrs. Palmer, Oc- cidental Hotel. SEAVXEW APARTMENTS and cabins, newly finished, complete- ly furnished, also water and lights. Bargain rent. Close in. Phone 183. WANTED-—Will rent or lease un- furnished 6-room house. Close in. * Pelephone 158, | WILLRENTSolsruomlunnshedv Il house. Close in. Call 523. WANTED — Woman for general }'housework. Phone 296. WANTED—Lady wants housework , by hour. Tel. 209, Cliff Apart- " ments, No. 3. " JANTED — Housekeeper. Apply 2t «Laufman’s Cafe in afternoon. INFORMATION wanted as to the | Whereabouts of Tom McIntyre. ‘Has been in Alaska for nineteen ears. Please write Wm. A. Mc- tyre, Beaver Creek, Oregon. YOUNG woman wants work by i or day. Phone Room 18, f Apts. " MISCELLANEOUS SWEDISH MASSAGE for rheuma- < tism and lumbago. Mrs. Olga! Anderson. Phone 207. PIANOS, Radios, Sewing Machines, , Phonograpbs, Expert Piapo Tun- Qg‘ Redio and phonograph re- pairing. Anderson’s Music Shoppe. PLAY BILLIARD —at— BURFORD’S PANTORIUM CLEANERS LOS1 ANV FGUND LOST—At Moose Dance last Sat- urday night, one lady's black zip- per size 5%—a brown one was left instead — Please return :to Mrs. John Monagle, 5th and East. {sreeesevnosnsoe | Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Victoria scheduled to arrive at 10:30 o'clock tonight. Norco due to arnive at 4:30 o'clock tomorrow morning. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle February 8 at 9 p. m. Northwestern scheduled to sail from' Seattle February 9 at 9 a. m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS -Admiral Evans scheduled south bound February 7. . LOCAL. SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Saturday night at 8 p.m. for Sitka and wayports, o Pacific leaves every Satur- ¢ day at 10 am. for Peters- . burg, Kake and way porta ©° 000000000000 00000°0 00 rrcccmrrcmes . . . ., u . . e e, . L] [ . ° . . L] . . . . [} L] L] . - FREIGHTERS T0 BEOPERATEDTO ARGTIC POINTS SEATTLE, Feb. 5—Growth of | trade between Seattle and the Arc- |tic was indicated today when the Alaska Steamship Company decided to send two ships' to Bering Sea and Arctic Ocean ports next sum- mer. The freighter Derblay will sail May 25 and an unnamed ship will sail from here on August 12. Both vessels will go ‘as far north zs ice conditions permit. ———ee—— o ——————p | TIDES TOMORROW | R b s R a1 U .Hkh tide, 1:04 a. my, 158 feet Low tide, 6:44 a. m, 27 feet High tide, 12:46 p .m., 173 feet Low tide, 7:15 p. m., —2.1 feet T Old papers av Tus Emplre. PAINTING DECORATING KAESOMINING ESTIMATES FURNISHED FREE First Class Work Guaranteed J. W. MEYERS ‘TELEPHONE. 2552 Marine News DESCHLER HAS T0 KEEP BUSY TO AID GARNER| House Parliamentarian Keeps'Right Close to Important Job By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 5— These are busy days for a bespec- tacled young chap in the House who is charged with the duty of kesping Speaker Jack Garner and other presiding officers in the mid- dle of that sometimes treacherous parliamentary road. Lewis Deschler, just past 30, | is the right hand man for Garner and other temporary presiding of~ [ficers of the House. I'ts up to him to see that the correct words ,are put into their mouths at the proper time. With the political ' division s6 close as it is this Congress, the parliamentarian must be constant- ly on his toes. It is vexry. easy for the House to get into’ a parliamentary tangle. There are those in the House— notably ‘the “progressive - bloc”— who rely on their knowledge of the rules to gain advantage. Correct rulings frem ‘the chatt must at times be made quickly. It's Deschler’s job to see ‘that the chair is jn a position to do so. He Whispers Advice He is always within a few feet ,of the Speaker’s dais, waere his whispered advice may he hedrd easily by the chair. Often before a member has completed his appeal for a ruling Deschler has begun his whispered advice. And he remains ever alert at his post until the storm has subsided. Deschler has been House par- |liamentarian for more than four years. Speaker Longworth appoint- ed him to succeed Lehr Fess, the son of the United States Senator from Ohio. He had ‘bnn Fess' as~ sistant. Before that he was & time- keeper in the House. He' has been a student of par- liamentary law for years, becom- ing interested in it by observing how important a part it played 'in House procedure. When - young Fess decided to resign, Longworth called him in one day and told him if he would learn all he could, when the place became vacant he " would give him & try at it. He'ls o admitted by expert ‘Parliamentari- ans in the House to be one of the bestmenlor'me’obmm has had. whenheumontheflnfl', Deschler may be found in the Speaker’s rooms, just across the hall. His desk i in & corner and is littered with all sorts of books on rules and parligmentary law. Not far away are the Chambers of the Supreme Court, where he must go frequently to look up de- cisions affecting lou,ullunen tary question. He has been know to work el 3 shnrtly after 9 o'clock, when the | A lMoon to ‘Blot Out’ Six Stars of the Plemdes F ebruar 14 By ROBERT H. BAKER URBANA, 11, Feb. 5-+-A ‘ifne op- portunity to watch the mgon, eccult cbars m‘l be offered’ on the eve- In two hours’ time during that evenlng the moon will passover six the brighter ‘stars of the | m the western sky. For chservation at Washington «‘interesting ' spectacle bagins firlt star disappears - behind the dark edge of the advancing moon. It ends soon after 11 o'clock, when the last star of the cluster to be hidden appears again at the bright ‘western edge. But the scheduled times are dif- ferent for different parts of the country. To avoid missing some of the occultations it iswell to be- gin watching at an early hour, If 2 field glass is available, it can be used to advantage. At nightfall on February 14 the | familiar cluster of the Pleiades or “seven sisters” can be found a lit- tle way south of the zenith, The moon, then at the quarter phase, will appear to the west of the clus- ter, moving toward it. +In its eastward motion among ! the constellations the moon passes over its own diameter in about an hour, and it proceeds in the direc- tion at right angleés with the line separating its bright and dark halves, Keeping these facts in mind one can estimate roughly when. the occulations will begin, The stars will not, of course, dis- appear at the ‘ragged edge” of the moon. The post who pictured a star’ between the horns of the cres- oent. moon “overlooked this fact. Such a sight can never be seen in | the heavens, The .star will disappear When ‘he dark edge of the moon reaches them. An hour later, or less, they will come into view again at the bright edge. T is interesting to notice that the stars do not grow dim and red as ‘the moon approaches. ' Thete !, are no atmospheric’ effects of the sort that we observe in the sefting| sun. The disappearance is sl |, den. FHus we are convinced'thes the moon fis not surrounded by an extensive atmosphere. The sudden disappearance of | stars behind ‘the moon shows also that, despite their énormous sizes, they are reduced by distance prac- tically to points of light. Other- wise they would fade lfld‘lflb like the sun in eclipse. —eeeo Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. o ALCYONE MOON AT| 9PM, S WEST ! Sky cbservers on February 14 will see the moon pass over six of the brighter stars of the Pleiades. Here is shown the moon’s course on tha4 night be- tween the hours of 9. and 11 as scen at Washington. VICTORIA IS DUE TONIGHT Sleamer Wbofla is due in por' tonight at 10, o'clock from the south with seven days' mail and express, 4 good load of passengers and {heavy tonnage of freight, Thé steamer will probably be in port all night discharging. The WVictorta has: the following passengers abun-x'd for Jumubmk . Hillman, John Geis, ©O. Arlin, J. P, Miller, C. B. Secrest, Mrs. Alex 1 A Jonas, Steve . —eo— ©€O-EDS TO SHOOT WITH MEN " NORMAN,' Okla., Feb. 5—Uni- sity of Oklahoma co-eds are go- 0t it out with the men. rifie team of the uni- meet the flmpshoobers of Kemper Military school, Boon- LUMBER JUNEAU L_UMBE‘R MILLS FINAL CLEARANCE Broken Lines of COATS—DRESSES—HOSIERY, Wool and Silk—NON-RUN UNDERWEAR-—HOUSE DRESSES--SMOCKS and WAITRESS UNIFORMS AT MUCH REDUCED PRICES Juneau Sample Shap ijdle Harris Hardware Co'. NEW SPRING €0ODS TO ARRIVE SOON. SPECIAL REDUCED FARES: JUNEAU TO SEATTLE AND RETURN Upper Deck §13.50 Saloon Deck $65.50 ‘' Léave DueJuneau ‘Dueineau Seattle Northbound Southbound VICTORIA Feb. 5 Feb. 13 N'WESTERN ... Feb. 12 Feb. 20 *—Freighter, 1or Southeastern and Southwestern ports. PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petetse burg, Juneau, Haines, (Chilkoot Barracks), Skag- way, Cordova, Valdez, Latouche and Seward. Steamer— INFORMATION AND TICKETS W. E. Nownu, Agent Leave Arrive Southbound EQIE BooND Seattle Juneau Lv.Juneau TO Adm. Evans .. Feb. Adm. Evans .Feb.16 Feb.19 vaa Ports of Call: Ketchikan, Wrangell Petersburg, Juneau, Sitka, 3 Cordova, Seward, Seldovia, Information and tickets furnished on_Seattle-California service, _ Callfornia-New York via Panama Canal and return. Round the world, Trans- Atlantie, Trans-Pacific. Round America Rate (m way wab- er, return by rail), $350.00. B. H. HOWARD, ACGIIL N Northiand Transportatwn ' Company SERVING 'ALASKANS WINTER OR SUMMER—Same Service—Same Rates New Low Round Trip' Rate<i$65.00 Salling from Seattle every Monday Night at 9 P.M. i J.B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER ! Ticket Agent Preight Agent Y Phone 79 Phone 114 MAILBOAT “ESTEBETH” (Davis ‘Transportation Co.) LEAVES JUNEAU EVERY SATURDAY AT 6 P. M. FOR SITKA AND WAY PORTS For informagien apply Dave Housel, Agent Phone Single O PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION ANY Motorship “PACIFIC” Lenm City Dock, J uneau, every Satur durl wintee fr CANCELLED CHECKS Tell the Story A chéckinz account in the First National aflords a customer an efficient sexvme which . be equalled in fi ntal. buginess ure Pay your bills by check and you nlw s have .a receipt in your ceneelled el Joint checking accounts for husband and wife is but one of the popular service 1o be had, services which can be enjoyed by merely maintgining a nomunl halaneq - in your account. First National Bank THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY Corner 4th and Franklin Sta, Phone 186-2

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