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6 L~ 3. POLLY AND HER PALS FOR SALE or trade for Juneay property — 2% acres on State Highway ncar Edmonds, Wash. Small residence; large poultry house; electric pump mn well. A. H. Goddard, Chichagof, Alaska BEE d, any length YXCEPTIONAL bargains in used cars now. Good selection. Con- _mors Motor Co. MISCELLARNEOUS CHICKERING Upright Piano for sale or rent. Expert piano tun- ing. Rates very reasonable. An- derson’s Music Shoppe. Phone 143 MANICURES soc. —adies only. Graduate operator. Helen Kasa- lica, Spickett Apts. Phone 182. ! TURN yo; ofi Vgafl;ilrjto' value. Cash or trade at Nugget Shop. BOARD and room, or board only, Marshall House, 6th and Frank- lin. Phone 3902. The Florence Shop | Permanent Waving a Specialty | Florence golmqul:t, Prop. LOST AND FOUND ' FORNISHED' 3-oom, 8- “THaigle mud“ SON LAMPS for rent. Buy the bulb and rent the lamp for 50c per week. Rental may be applied on purchase price. Alaska Elec- tric Light & Power Co. _ THREE-room furnished apartment; 2 bedrooms, 207 2nd St. . FURNISHED apartment for rent. Electric range. Call Cash Grocery or telephone 101. Furnished Heated Room. Phone 537. FOR RENT—Modern 3-room furn- ished house. Phone 4153. FOR RENT—Bingle, double steam- heated rooms. Corner 4th and East. Near Bergmann Dining Room. Mrs, O. Oberg. 2 2 MO SR | FOR RENT — 3-room furnished house. Phone 3404 oom apart- ments, electric range. Phone 2004. FOR RENT—Three-rdom furnished apartment. Clff Apts. | VACANCY ln-—!‘rances 7Apls. “In- quire 132 6th Street. F:&‘R‘T‘LY fuml‘n’};&ga'prartmenl Davis Apts. Apply 132 6th St. Py ey - TUWANTED WANTED—Girl for general house- work, - Phone 3441 t brown overcoat at LOST — Moose Hall. Finder please phone ® 4503. | WANTED—To trade $200 diam ring for used car. Address 2633 Empire, (o X Read the ads as carefully as you! read the news articles. | Joe AT 1HE HOTELS [ rai— Zynda Alda Tuve, Tacoma, Wn.; Mrs. |W. J. Sisson, Petersburg; Mr. and iMrs. H. L. Retllingshafer, Juneau; | poqjingghafer, 8. F. Heintzleman, Emma R. White, Juneau. Gastineau R. E. Baumgarten, Petersburg; Green, Hyder; Tom Tilson, Sitka; Glenn Carrington, Seattle; Mrs, F. F. Riehfield, Wrangell; |Ed. Sheffér, Ketchikan; L. Eng-1 strom, Wrangell. e ace, 25 cents. ruone 22. adv. PEERLESS BREAD Always Good— Always Fresh “Ask Your: Grocer” Any pl For Your Car NOW JUNEAU MOTORS NEW PRICES On Our HEAVY CREAM Per Gill, 10c; Half Pint, 20c; Pint, 40c The Same High Quality SO! AT . LD -George Bros., Sanitary Grocery, Cash Grocery or Phone 488 ALASKA DAIRY JOE KENDLER Steamer Movements ;| NORTHBOUND . Norco = scheduled to arrive Saoturday morning. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Admiral Evans scheduled to sail from Seattle Feb. 4 \ {e at 10 a m. . . . . . o Princess Nor&h scheduled to e e sall from Vancouver Feb. 4 e e at9p m 3 | ® Northland scheduled to sail e {e from Seattle Feb. 6 at 9 j® p m o e Zzapora scheduled to sail @ © rom ‘Seattle Fep. 6 at mid- e e night. ° e SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS e o Alaska is Scheduled to arrive e/ e at 6 o'clock tonight and sail e e south tomorrow noon. . . ® Northwestern is ~ scheduled e e southbound Teb. 8. . |o LOCAL BAILINGS . | o Estebeth leaves every Thurs- e day night at 6 p. m, for .i e Sitka and way ports. . ® Paclfic leaves every Thursday e | at 10 a. m, for Petersburg, ® | |e Kaké and way ports. . oo @8 ® 08 0 amae oo NORTHWESTERN IN PORT ONTIL THIS MORNING The' kaSreatmship Compan” | steamert orthwestern, Capt. Charies 1 A, Glagsgock, Purser ‘W. J. Wilcox, arrived here from the South at 9 o'clock last evening with 4% days® mail, freight and 17 first class passengérs for ‘Jungau. It left at 8 o'clock this rning for Haines, Skagway and Beward. Passefigers arriving here from Seattle were Mrs. Jolin M. Clark, Mrs. Henry Meler, Anh Rohwer, J. M. Saloum, he Stipich, Alda Tuve, A, Wald ahd ‘Emma R. White.| From Ketchik#h—Glenn Carring- ton, H. L. Redlingshafer, Mrs. H. L. J. K. Green aHd Bd Shaffer. From Wrangéll—Mrs. V. M. Rich- feld. From Petersburg—Mrs. W. J. Sis- son and Thomas Tilson, Jr. Those taking passage from here ere: for Halh — Mrs. Mary Suckery, Charles White, O. E. Schombel, H. Whitfleld and three steerage. g For Skagway-—<Raymond Dennis and Arthur For Valdez—J. P, Morgan, H. W. lsterung and @, #H. Skinner. For Bew John Olson, sam Shicklin, @fd two steerage, and one Ateeraffe for Cordova. ———— TIDES TOMOBROW 4 b8 High tide MY & m., 140 feet Low tide 138d:p. m., 36 feet Marine News | University !in a mourping period, CLFFs SERREN: /-27- OLD THEORY IS KNOCKED Thesis Writer Finds that Children Pick Their Own Toys COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb. 1—Ro- land B. Smith emerged from a mass of statistics gathered for a master's degree at Ohio State to announce that toy makers and retailers have been di- racting their advertising all these years at the wrong target. Proud fathers and indulgent mothers, he concludes, seldom de- cide what toys the child shall have and yet it is to the parents that the advertising has bezn directed. He studied 609 youngsters be- tween 6 and 12 years. Ninety-six out of every 100 children, he found, “have some choice in selecting their toys and of the 96, 28 are ac- corded complete ¢hoice by their parents.” Smith also found that 78 per oent of the children read or the ‘comic sheets. CAPITAL ASTIR WITH PLANS OF INAUGURAL BALL By BESS FURMAN WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.-—-With efficial socigty .still in abeyanc activities center on the oncoming inaugura- tion. ‘The capital is a-bustle with-ecom- mittee-choosing, preparing, hospit- ellty for @overnors and th staffs, and-—most important of a —arranging warm welcome for the new Presidential family. Thejr tgmporary home has been decided upon. The Roosevelts will step into the White House from the palatial residence of the la Mrs. Richard H. Townsend, long a social arbiier here. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the last Democratic President, con- Mrs. Jahn Allan Dougherty, is hard alt work on the first “official” inaugural ball since Taft's time. Three times before, Mrs. Dougher ty, ardent Democrat, has staged spectacujar balls on inauguration night, all “charity balls,” hel; usher Rgpublicans in. The proceeds of the Roosevely ball will go to charity too—but the affair has won its way back to ial” rating, and the fam- 1S THE TIME TO REPAIR YOUR CAR FOR -SPRING SEE US FOR ‘QUOTATIONS CONNORS MOTOR €0, e ' H ily. President will attend BY STUDENT look at the daily papers, other than e The story of how an amateur radio operator in New Zealand directed t! rescue of a man from a gas-filled cabin in Teller, Alaslml1 away, constitutes one of the most dramatic pages in the History of the air waves. The New Zealand operator was chatting, via dots and dashes, with a motion picture cameraman named De Vinna, at Teller, when the latter’s signals suddenly ceased. Alarmed, the New Zealander flashed out an emergency call which was picked up by Colonel Claire Foster Foster swung his radio set into action, con- (above), of Carmel, Cal. tacted another amateur at Teller and told 1 T hurried to De Vinna’s cabin and found the movie man unconscious from A few minutes later the amateur radio bugs flashed a cheery “He'’s okay now!” around the world. carbon monoxide fumes. One committee to keep the ball pinning smocothly through con- Mary Hattie Norton as way and Rep. ts personnel. Eleanor Roosevelt, President-Elect, and Alice Roosevelt Long- going to be next-block on Massachuset Ave- Anna the first cousin worth, are bors Townsend residence, accept- ed by the Roosevelts, is at 2121 Massachusetts Ave. For years the Longworths have resided at 2008. Social Washington, limousining out this swanky street of new embassies and old residences, clos ly and curiously scrutinize these block-apart hou: recalling the colorful and opposing roles of the Rooseveltian cousins in the cam- paign. Romantic indeed is the “house- within-a-house” that the Franklin Roosevelts will occupy. Mrs. Townsend incorporated in her building plans the fine old “Hill- yer” place that long ago stood on sented to take a place on the the site. It belongs now to her committee .to make things pleasant, heirs. for the Governor. Some Washingtonians contend That indeiatlgable organizer, an old superstition forbade her razing the picturesque old house that had figured in many a life drama. Others say she was merely ahead of her time in preserving a fine antique. From the exterior it's still easy tc see where the old house holds forth with its seven dormer win- dows, set in slanting shingles; and where the newer. stone one begins, with its rich windows of stained glass cavered by iron grill- work. This callsed it to be called BOTH RANC N. SOB H. J. YURMAN, A Triangle Buj | H AND WILD HIGHEST CASH *PRICES PAID @ EL, Inc. 208 West 30th St., New York City Contact for Information and Shipping-Tags laska Representative Iding, Juneau | THE SANITARY GROCERY “The StoreThat'Pleases"PHONES 83 OR 85 Acted in Dram circles boasts Ruth Bl',\'—I as chairman and Sen.|now shining them &il up for the g wife | by THE DAILY ALASKA®EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1, 193 By CLIFF STERRETT pr President-Elect. iy 1 he 10,000 miles him the trouble. This man | house with the Queen Ann it and the Mary Ann back.” | Window washers are at work oud occasion of oceupancy by a FINEST STEAMERS A {LARGEST LEET REDUCED ROUND TRIP FARES Juneau to Seattle and Retamn Lower deck, $65.50; upper deck, $73.50 Trckets on sale until Feb. 28; return portion limited to March 25, leaving Seattle SAILING SCHEDULE ’ weave DueJuneau Due Juneau Steamer Seattle Northbound Southbound BN 21 Jan. 24 N'WESTERN ...Jan. 28 Jan. 31 Feb. 9 . *YUKON Feb. 11 Feb. 14 Feb. 22 Port of Call: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines, Skagway, Cor- dova, Valdez and Seward. North- bound and southbound. *Also calls Latouche north and soutljbound. Southeastern and Southwestérn Route THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McKANNA, Agent *ALASKA Feb, 2 PHONE 2 Pacific Steamship Lines, Ltd. : SEATTLE, SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES, SAN DIEGO, NORTHBOUND NEW YORK Winter round trip rate, Seattle, Leave Leave as low at $65.50. Seattle Juneau Ad. Evans..Feb. 4 Feb. 8 Ad. Evans...Feb. 25 Mar. 1 SOUTHBOUND Leave Juneay Ad. Evans . Feb. 18 Calls at Sitka north ang south bound. J. E. KEARNEY ¢ Agent Y Admiral Line Dock PHONE 4 No handsomer front ‘doors could | ir MRS. ba returned home on the Northwe b is ington, made a trip to Seattle to ¢ Mrs. Meier when she was in| se the l | | e ———— = on-grill ho has been there &wenty yea south to attend the funeral of ner! ur died end remained there to help settle | bis affairs. merly a partner of Mr. Meier and | be found to swing aside and start | a They're | work and glass, backed | son hangings-—-and manned a courteous white-haired but President on his way. ————————— | | HENRY MugR i RETURNS FROM SOUTH | Mrs. Henry hsesar, whose hus nd owns the Peetless Bakery from Seattle. Mrs, Meler went | Adolph Goldschmidt, who in Seattle two months ago, cle, Theodore Hyder, for- other-in-law of Mrs. Meier, who | now located at Forks, Wash- e South, THE pr Hupmabile 8 IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor — 2 - 4 BERGMANN DINING | ROOM Board by . Week or Month Meals for Transients Cut Rates Chicken dinner Sunday, 60c_ ' . MRS.;J. GRUNNING T J. B. BURFORD & CO. Ticket Agent Phone 79 M.S.“ZAPORA” teppsqule Agnipen LoDt Calling at Funter, Chichagof*, Hoonszn, Tenakee, Port Alex&n&r. Kl wock, Craig, Ketchikan. *Calls first trip of mmt.h onlx Round trip to Seattle, $50. Low auto rate. WILLS NAVIGATION CO. Phone 3 THOMAS 4. mm‘, Agent, FERRY TIME CARD Leavesd Juneau vor Douglas and CAMADIAN PACIEIC 3:15a.m. 7:10a.m. 2: 5 £0 VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, 3:30p.m.t and SEATTLE *4:00p.m. F g Leaves Donglas for Jumean rom ]uneau( - PRINCESS NORAH February 9 March 2, 16, 30 | Winter” Exeursion” Ratés Now 8 Effect—ROUND TRIP $85.850 1—Freight will be_acospied 3—S8aturdays only. | Juncau Ferry & Naviga- ! tion Company Motorship “ESTEBETH” day at & P: M. for Sitka and © Way- Porte DAVE HOUSEL, Agent Phone Bingle O SEAPLANE MITKOF FOR CHAR1ER to Anywhere Sputheast Based at Juneau PHONE 1 J. V.. HICKEY, Owner