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B e E i Dl’NTTR‘( THIN'~ TO TELL ME | YOURE GOIN' S N T 'X cbsggfi%fi%n CoLLl PULL blooded COCkEl'e‘ s;mmels Neal BEdmonds across from Eur- eka Apts., Willoughby - Ave. FOR SALE OR RENT — RADIOS, PIANOS, SEWING MACHINES. Expert piano tuning. Phone 143 or - 488. /Anderson Music Shoppe. FOR. SALE—Oale Aana reslaurant doing :geod husiness but: owner| must leave city to look after other business. - Terms. . cash . or part: down. Communieate -immed- | iately 3181 .Bmpire for. wmn ipterviews. > a iifi N your ola gola into value. Cash or--trade at--Nusgget Shep. (CHILDREN cared for oy day, week. or manth. -; Phone. 2552, FOR RENT—Fivé-room partly futn- ished apartment, steam heated. Inquire San Francisco Bakery. ynca;cy A-fin.rt.mem, Nugget Sh;);:. MacKinnon residence for sale o:.'; rent. Phone MacKinnon Apts. i-"OR RENT—Two furnished house- keeping rooms. Phone 3204. FOR RENT—Store room formerly occupied by Jarman’s store on Second Street near San Francisco Bakery. For information apply San Francisco Bakery. THREE-room turnished apt., bath, electric range, Cormer 3rd and Gold. Ellingen Apts. | s PERELLE apts. Also houses. Phonc 2004. 421% East 2th 8t FOR RENT — Largs lousekeeping . voom,’ electric plate, $15. Also: 3- 587, ‘ —_— WOMAN wanted for general house work. ' Answer by letter to P 555 care Empire. CAPABLE young woman. wanted at 4o assist with- Douse work. dffl with- references A 6451 care Empire. 64 AR AN AT e Ly WANTED—First class shoe repair work for men, women and chil- dren at Saloum's on Seward St. " LOST AND FOUND FOUND — Keytainér with “keys. Owner may:have same by identi- fying and paying for this ad. Inquire 3404 Empire.: 4 | | Jones-Stevens Shop | LaDIES—cHILDRENS i . READY-TQ-WEAR : ! BSeward 'Street . ° ““Near Third | | VENETIAN SHOP 1 FIRST AND MAIN. i Ladies’ and Children’s Part | ‘ Wool and Woolen Stockings J Commercial Adjust- | ment & Rating Bareau | Room 1, Shattuck Bldg. (after January 1) COLLECTIONS—RATINGS | Albert White Fred Huntress | | | | tion. A tin cigarette box was tied to syN o psts: curt Tennyson, after esperate struggle, has Veughed u,o lake in Be t,mwdca‘n wilderness” where plaines should L& Wfl]fln ith Curt’s girplane. Sony 4hom Curt loves, has rafllly 1a réach’ 1gor Raramm mnlthy Took, whom 1‘5‘ b4 ing to inlucu ulp ::'fiou. wonnded 'tn 'a_hattle with the’ far- wnidable. Kiosoheq Mndfans. Bbos ¢ lained that mmya went_ m kin arakhan. alg. es ; Curt e~ Hlevay his story’ and striggles, 16 renc‘h ymwn mul ,q-om: hery Clwpler 4 NO SMASH URT took one glance along the south sifore-and groaned—balf a curge and half a ery of tragic disap- polptment,, The plane: was not |n sight, .. They fired shots In the hope lhlt Smash might have drawn it back inte :some_little: bay, -But they got no answer, Smash had failed them. They paddled over toward the cabin. As they drew in, Paul noticed & bit of. white -hanging from a dow pine branch. It was Smash’s hand- kerchief, put there to draw atten- the Iimb beside it. As Curt suspected, the box held a note. 01d Timer: l'fl] clearing out for Tellacet. Our left wlng tank sprung a slow ouf leak ‘and 1 thought it ought to be fixed, Ll get back tomorrow morn- ing without fall. Smash P. S. There's a dance at Lake Marlanne tomorrow. night, and 1 may hop over there ; but I'll be back bright Rnd sarly the next morning. Curt turned the note over, looking tor the date. There wae none. Smash had crazfly forgotten: even to date his message, In the furfous anger of helpless- ness he tore'the note to:bits. It was seldom that he lost complete control ot himself, but that idiotic message and the crack-up of his plans sent him ‘tramping - the ‘ landwash in:a blind fury. A tank leak—hell! Smash had got tired of being alone and had flounced off to soak up somé ot his sociablljty. He had not been agked to share any THE DAILY ALASKA YOULR SON JUST S&L\_ED wa In wishtul fancy she tried to imag- fne him there with bher, his rifie |between his knees, his lean hard face between: herselt and danger; but the memory of bis change and ‘als ‘withering coldness drove the fancy away. He had:even: ignored her. overture .to him that last eve- ning. Her cheeks . burned at the thougitt of her-confession, and his silent scorn of it; and yet she knew hat it she came out of this alive she '|would write to him and ask him to eome to see her. 2 A few yards down the portage trail two Indians unexpectedly came swinging around a buckbrush thick- ot. They were carrying a loaded £anoe, and behind them came others, & large party. Sonya started to her feet in surgrise. The churning-over- falls had mufled the notes; she had not knowm thiey! were about till M 'suddenly appearsd. s They werseKiosohees. Why, lhey were.the maln band!—there were Siam-Klale and ‘LeNoirt A sudden fear gurged theough: her. Ralph and Curt:and-Paulewhat had happened to them? This band had intended to stay.down there and hem that little island: in tilt: they had: killed the three men. Had they made another attack, successtul this time? ENOIR'S “glum face reassured her. As she went up to camp with the party, he told her the news, Nich- ols had been wounded, he said; the other two had made a shelter for him the next day and be had not been seen walking about. Shortly after dark that evening they had es- caped, in some unknown fashion. They had whipped south; an uni- dentified canoe had‘slipped through that bottle neck and it must have been theirs. They probably were get- ting out of the country, but on the chance that they might swing north again he was taking the main band home to protect his chief. Sonya guessed that Curt and Paul were hurrying Ralph out to elviliza- tion where he could get medical at- of those dangers up the Lilluar;: hi job was nothing more onerous than standing by with tite plane; nnd be had flunked it. } 1 oW when' they despérately need- ed him and the very hours wére pre- elous, he was Lochinvaring around somewhere, several hundred mites away. At the critical time when Sonya would reach that lake, they would sot be .there, he ‘and Paul. Phey: were stranded, n a-Godor- saken wilderness, with two hundred and forty. mouptain.miles Mwnn \hemsolunnnl her. 5 e e Bie e N the evening of the third day M:Sonpa’s ‘party stopped at twi- light and made camp In a drogue-of river-bapk. ploes,.The three indians, Trer -@scort-on the trip morth, buiit her a little lean-to, deftly wove a balsam-twig mattress for her blan- kets, and; -otherwise made her -as comfortable as they could. oThe leader of the three, an older halt brother of Tenn-Og, called the Balt, out ot consideration for the white girl in his charge. Sonya her self would rath 9 pughed on: the headwaters lake ‘hat night. was only twenty miles farther add they could reach it by dawn. New when the end of her long quest was in sight, she wanted it and its har rowing uncertainty over with, & Ig spite of the hard trip that d . she.did.not feel tired. She was at too high a tension. While the Indians were brofling trout for a meal, she walked back the trail to an overfalls around which her party. bad just portaged, and sat down on the lip of the rock thirty feet above the plung- ing water, i Dusk-was creeping into the moun- tain, yalleg, The poorwills were be- giuning to call, and owls drifted on nojseless, wing through the .heavy timber, The twilight, the solitude. the: song 0¢ the waters; seemed to ber a.kind ot pause and seif-com- munion before tomorrow came. With a secret rejoleing -sie had heard how Curtand Pagi.had beates Of. thowe, fourtasy: ¢ances. But she ad koown-thiey'd do-it! Tenn-Og no doubt-had taken them a boat after the attack, and they were sife now. But. where ware,ibopd, it was poe- sible, that Ralph. bad . weskenad ik thas case. would Cart “tollow her north -and try to’help her outt .| She wanted to think.so. Even the | faint possibility of it buoyed her ug. {t! |:.lznwl. ;u;bu bridges burogd i Aiptenly. Amn,_resources. {she reglized l\m-gmphuly -n“u had ]W on him. She felt lost with- ‘out.Mis protection, lost and detenss less and woefully inadequata to cope with, what Jag Rhead: .00 o .~ ) unt}o‘. She prayed be was hot bad- 1y hint. She' was: glad of their es- cape, but In anvther Way the news plunged. her into w black dejection. | Hitherto she:could teel \that: Curt was within twocor three ‘dayst awift travel of her and:that she sibly get back to hhn Bherhad even ‘hoped - that vher ‘might: be :coming north on her trajl, Biut'ngw when he was heading soutli,-6ut.of "the Lil- fuars, she felt -mnldlly; final- 1y abandoned. L At the ump beNolr sent Tenn- Og's oalf brothef.and two otlfer In- ‘ |dians on ahead to" take Karskhan the news.:The malnparty:was to travel os. that night, too} would have to payse. fo: ppertand g0 more slowly :and couid ‘not reach the lake till morning. . & Sonya wonderéd why ‘LeNoir in- sisted on traveliug that might. For some reason he seemed fn'agreat hurry to deliver her to‘Karakhan.u He commanded hetr gruffiy,’ss he brought her soms fish aid -dried Imeat: “Tonight, on res* of dis treey you stay close by me;Dod' step ato de dark; doa™get wit my'canoe3 keep hold my :balt. wen we:walk fcross auy partdge: Onderstand?” « ing the hasty meal:she wasrawsre bt Siam-Klale ogling her ‘withinar rowed eyes, as he had done at the Lilluarforks; but-now: his stare was 80 brazen that it unnerved her. As the party was setting the boats to water; he_ trupdied oyer to e Noir and said something to him and ferked a thumb in ber direction. Im- mediately a violent juarrel sprang up between them, and Somya gath- ered that Siam-Klale was Jemund- 40g the should go In his canoce. { LeNoir won the.argument,. and she stepped into his canoe.‘She was grateful to him fn a way, but she could read his pecret thoughts and they frightened her. His proprietary attitude was velled now, becausarhe mas afraid of Karakhao: but wiht about the time, only a fow homrs #ahead, when Karakhan would lie flead In his cabin? That incident at ssian Lake showed her whatishe bould expect from "Teeste LeNoir. ¢ In thatswhols:band she -tiadibut one friend, Tenn: Liike Tenn-Og, he seemed less bound than the others to the benighted custogis: of :bis: tribe)..and he.ep peared to have a certain influence with the other men. For an indi: Hie had been good to her ofi;the trip, lu might possibly take her.merass mguntains by a-secret. traft-and band.ber over 1p qome: treaty basid who would -get; her back bope. 7Coouriont 1933 William B Mowery) > Sonya meets the man: she hopes to Hll—ln 'Ml.l’fl‘i chagter s hewty Sonya promissd: to obey:him. Dur | whita people, But it was & dender t se e e - ® * Steamer Movements NORT] B Zapora scheduled to arrive Thursday. Norco schedled to arrive at :‘noon. -on .Saturday. y SCHEDULED SAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Jaru- ary 12 at 9 pm. Northwestern scheduled to sail e from Seattle January.13«at e 10 am. Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle January 15 at 9 p. m. SUUTHBOUND SAILINGS Yukon scheduled southbound at 4 o'clock tomorrow aft- ernoon. Alaska scheduled southbound January 18. ©0 0000000000000 00000000°0bo0e ® e o000 000 . TID) Rl LECRC R Low tide, High tide, 2:20 am. 54 feet, 8:81 am., 160 fo Low tide, 3:37 pm., 05 feet; High tide, 10:05 pm., feety — , FOOD SALE food sale at the Sanitary Groc on Saturday, Japuary 13. | MEN’'S SHOE PACS $4.50 4 \ ‘Worth the Price—Why Pay More? Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous © Draught Beer : On Tap e 000 000w The Martha Society will holg v —_— it GOODRICH E [Blg Van, the Gun Man | .————-—-——«l—tfi By GEOZ GE M HE SA\D YO\J DlDN"\" GIVE l-u‘g AILR O Tl 011'- oRroN\ |53t PURT ALL NIGHT FOR WESTWARD With a large consignment of ,frclght and express for Juneau, {and three and one-half days’ mail, _tn° steamer Alaska, Capt. C. V. Westerlund ‘commanding, . and L. J. McNamee, purser, docked here last night at 10:30 o'clock. The steam- er was held up by fog in Gasti- neau Channel for an hour before | docking last night. After unloading freight at the City Dock, the Alas- ka Juneau and the Pacific Coast dock. the steamer sailed from the latter for the Westward at 11 o'clock this ‘morning. There were 72 passengers aboard the - Alaska: when it arrived in port, the following for Juneau: ‘Walter L. Cairns, Mrs. George F. Freeburger, Alfred Hovelin, J. 8. Jeffrey, Mrs. J. S. Jeffrey, E. A. Jones, C. F. Lane, Helen J. Moss- man, H. C. McKinney, Egon Nord- berg, G. T. Oien, F. Pack, W. R. Seavers, Mrs. W. R. Seavers, A Van Mavern, Mrs. A Van Mavern, Charles P. Warner, from Seattle. Arrivals from Southeast Alaska ports were, from Ketchikan, Wil- | | | S o+ liam T. Mahoney, J. Johnson; from Wrangell, Sam Gadake, . George Blake and from Petersburg, Paul H. Abbott; I&D‘nm “"Thorsett and Jack Clifford. ‘Those who topk passage from here were, for Haines, George Garbe; for Skagway, L. Wernacke, | and for Seward, W. A. Brien; E. H. Clifford, Mrs. R. Brown, Violet | Lundell, Harry Brandt, Glen Frank- 1in, Bob Henning, Harry Lundell, George Karabelnikoff, W. John- son, William O'Neil, John O'Shea and James C. Ryan. MASKA GRAFT MISSING;ALERT MAKES SEARCH KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Jan. 10.— Outter Alert is searching the wat- ers off ‘Btolin- Island for the gas- boat Nellie: Tory, lost since the first of Decemmber. A message' ‘from the steamer Starr reported meeting the gasboat Anna Marie which ‘reported rescu- ing & woman off the Nellie Tory on Etolin Island and saying the woman was in @ critical condition. ——— e KETCHIKAN ATTORNEY IS HOME FROM ‘SEATTLE TRIP A. H. Ziegler, prominent Ketchi- kan attorney, returned to his home in the First City on the Alaska from making the ‘round trip to Seattle on business. ALASKA SNOW COVER Start the New Year With Our Special Shampoo and Finger Wave (For a short time only—S$1) Telephone 221 for Appointment PETER PAN BEAUTY Dance Par BEER E«tablished 1898 TONIGHT Capital Beer LUNCHES Music lors DANCING INSURANCE || Allen Sh('m,ck hu; J uneau, . u.u n ..--.». CrevaEay HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOT The Gastmaau Prcerar e T ey FINEST Leave Due Juneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound “.Dec. 30 .Jan.'2 Jan. 12 Jan. 6 Jan. 9 Jan. 18 Jan. 17 Jan. 27 Steamer— YUKON ALASKA . N'WESTERN ‘DEPERE.... YUKON . Jan, 23 Feb. 2 WINTER ROUND TRIP RATES—Juneau to Se- attle and return: Lower Deck, $64.00; Upper Deck, $71.00. PORTS OF CALL: Ketchikan, Wrangell, Peters- burg, Juneau, Haines, Skagway, Cordova, Val- dez and Seward. S. 8. ALASKA calls at Sitka northbound and southbound. 8. S. YUKON calls at Yakutat and Latouche northbound and southbound. S. 8. NORTHWESTERN calls at Seldovia and Kodiak each ‘trip. For Information and Tickets THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McCKANNA, Agent . LASKA STeamsHiIP Co.. PHONE 2 J. B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER Ticket Agent Phone 79 Frt. Agt. Phobe 114 GUY L. SMITH, Ticket Agent, Douglas “« 99 Leave Seattie - Arrive Junean- Leave Junem M.S. ZAPORA Jan. & Jan. ‘11 Jan. 12 Calling at Funter, Chichagof®, Hoonan, Tenaxes, Port Alexander, Kis wock, Craig, Ketchikan. *Calls first trip of month only SEATTLE AND RETURN--$50.00 Auto Rate—South, $1.00 per 100 1bs. Wills Navigation Company Phone 3 Juneau Commercial Dock, Agent CANADIAR PACIFIC FERRY TIME CARD Leaves Juneau for Douglas and ~ Thane 2 6:15a.m. 6:15p.m. SAILING 7:10a.m. $7:30p.n. 9:15a.m.t 9:40p.m. TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA | 12:30p.mt 11:15pm. and SEATTLE 2:00pn. 12midnight 3:30p.m.t $1:00a.m. From Jjuneau *4:00pm. A i Leaves Dougias for Juneaz | PRINCESS NORAH ‘ F900.5it 830 fa. . January 17 8:30aan. 17:46p.m. | 9:30a.m.t 8:55p.m. i February 7, 28 12:45p.m.+ 11:80p.m. | 2:16p.m. 12:15p.m. | Winter Excurston Fares Now in 3:45pm.t 11:150.1. | Eftect—Round Trip Fare- $64.00 5:00pn. : & b | Final Limit March 31, 1034 *—Thane, i Tickets, reservations and’ full ':.s.m i ; particulars from i ! V. W. MULVIAIILL, Ageat ! v. % A A5 Juneatll J]?erry & Nayi@-' b nplE o At Corur&cmdlnds:wu\i S e B tion Company ?mm—? SAE Bgucr m: mmm nmilfl; CHANNEL BUS LINE LEAVE AUK BAY 7:00 aM—12:30 p.m.~4:30 p.m. LEAVE JUNEAU (Out Highway) '._O:lb .am~—2:30 pm.—5:30 p.m I ’I‘l!o}o}ship : Leaves llm- M n-- day at 6 DL for'Bitka and qum DAVE HOUBIL. Ageny Juneau Ice Cream Parlors | Exclusive Dealers HORLUCK'S |” 'DANISH ICE CREAM | B. 0. P. A General Moturs Product! ANTI-FREEZE # Gallon Can for $350 Good!orlvholemn—wmnmbou away. Prevents rust, wm:thhnnu complete radiator check-u; mmn&.ml CONNORS MOTOR Co. By o e