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THE HER STEP-FATHER SHOOTS HER DAWG, AN’ ™M A IF THAT GUY'S A | COMIC ARTIST, ESKIMO ! CYRIL AIN'T ONE OF THEM VULGAR SLAPSTICKERS, HE SAYS IT WITH TEARS ! SEE HIS “FUNNY" FER TODAY. Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cards The New Arctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON P | FOR SALE—oOule &na restaurant | FOR SALE—One 11x13 Willametie | 2-speed yarder, 4 drums, extend-| ed fire box boiler, on log float| with steel water tank. Complete with lines, blocks, steam drag saw and miscellaneous logging equip- ment. A fine powerfal unit at a bargain price. Inquire | New York Tavern | FOR SALE—Colcock boiler plate furnace with warm air furnace jacket. In {first ¢ condition. Can be seen in operation at Kon- nerup’s Department Store. Priced very reasonably FOR SALE OR RENT — RADIOS, PIANOS, SEWING MACHINES. Expert piano tuning. Phone 143 Anderson Music Shoppe doing good business but owner must leave city to look after other business. Terms cash or part down. Communicate immed- jately 3181 Empire for personal interview. »— 3 | ALLAMAE SCOTT | Expert Beauty Specialist [ PERMANENT WAVING | | Phone 218 for Appointment | || Entrance Ploneer Barber Shop | |+ — — g * I ! i PAINTS—OILS Builders' and_Shelf ] HARDWARE 3 § i { Thomas Hardware Co. b o FORD (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES Juneau Motors FUOT OF MAIN ST. AGENCY || FURN your ola gm& into value. Cash or trade at Nugget Shop. CHILDREN cared for oy cay, week| or month. Phone 2552. FOR RENT 2 range; housekée| apt g room, heated Channel Apts. Phone 436. FOR RENT—Four-room furnished house. Phone 187 after 6 p.m. “Furnished two room Apply Johnson’s Apts. or apts. telephone 5102 VACANCY AT the Nugget Apts. —~Mike George's seven- furnished house. Furnace room heat. Excellent view, overlooking channel and city. Brothers, Apply George saie or Apts. MacKinnon residence for rent. Phoné MacKinnon THREE-room furnished apt.. bath, electric range. Corner 3rd and Gold. Ellingen Apts. PERELLE apts. Also houses. Phone 2004. 421% East Tth St FOR REN1—Sreepiu; room. Phone 537, BOWLING Nothing, like the thrill of a v.en—stl.flkel Develop your game on the finest alleys ‘you ever played on. Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billiards Bowli.g Cigars Tobacco' Soft Drinks Barber Shop in connection Lower Front Street, opposite ‘Winter and Pond WANTED WANTED — 2nd hand ranges or small cook stoves. Phone 236. WANTED—$5,000, gilt-edge - secur- ity. Will pay 8%. Address replies to Empire No. 3431. work for men, women and chil- dren at Saloum’s on Seward St MISCELLANEOUS WILL trade blue fox breeders for trolling boat about thirty or thir- ty-two teet long. Call at 210 Gold Street. — E. J. Cook of Holdenville, Okla., caught a snapping turtle weighing 87 pounds on an ordinary hook and line. LOST AND FOUND FOUND=-Pair of eve glasses. Owner may have same by proving prop- erty and pay for this ad. See Ben Leaming, Elks’ Club. Y our low-piféed Taundry serv- BERGMANN "i | _DINING ROOMS | Table Board by Week or Month | { Transient Meals 50¢ | Mr. and Mrs. Mike Daniloff P H visre xmE Salmon Creek T PR SR LR logging | * S0 0000 eco0s0000 00000000000 o ® 0 8 000000 000000 Steamer Movements ° NORTHBOUND Alaska sthegiled ‘to airive at noon tomorrow. SCHEDULED SBAILINGS Northland scheduled to sail from Seaftle, January 29 at 9 pm. Princess Norah scheduled to sall from Varcouver Febru- ary 2 at 9 pm. Northwestern scheduled to sail from Seattle February 3 at 10 a. m, Norco scheduled to sail from Seattle, #ebruary 5 at 9 p.m. Zapora scheduled to sail from Seattle, ' February 6. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Victoria scheduled southbound Febrpary 2. CAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves every Thurs- day night at 6 p. m., for Sitka and way ports. Pacific leaves every Thursday at 10 a. m, for Petersburg, Kake and way ports. es 00 . 0000000 2000000 b s seeto 0000000000 00 o ; ®® 0 o 000 wvwoe TIDES TOMORROW ® e b 0o 0 00800 . L] High tide, .1:12 am., 148 feet. Low tide, 6:49 am, 3.5 feet High tide, 12:48 p.m., 16.8 feet. Low tide, 7:16 p.m., -13 feet e ZAPORA ARRIVES Motorship Zapora arrived in port from Seattle at 4 o'clock this morn- ing with two passengers from Se- attle, Mrs. E. Whiteley and Alfred Brookline. The vessel brought mis- cellaneous cargo for the Commer- cial sailed for the south at 11 o'clock this forenoon. JEC L L ey CAPT. A. J. LA GASA BACK FROM ROUND TRIP TO SEATTLE ON M.S. ALASKA Capt. A. J. LaGasa returned on his motorship Alaska, from a round trip to Seattle where he arranged for this season's diving opérations. He returned to Juneau by way of Hood Bay to inspect the cannery. tender White Bear, the Hood Bay Canning Company, which is fast on a reef there. Capt. LaGasa will report to the Seattle office of the canning com- pany the possibilities of salvaging the motor tender. The Alaska is to leave tomorrow for Security Bay, with supplies and Mrs. Mabel Jacob- sen as passenger. L AP REMOVAL NOTICE Juneau Florists will move their shop to the new Shattuck Building: this week. Marine News HERE FROM'SOUTH dock and after discharging belonging tol ~‘ady. ] districts in Alaska. CHANGESIN " NAVIGATION | ’ | Clarence Strait — Beck Island | | Light, found extinguished January | 10, was relighted January 13. | Wrangell Narrows—North Beacon | 11, reported ~missing January 16, will be replaced as soon as prac- | ticable. | Wrangell Narrows—Condition of alds in Wrangell Narrows remains | the same as stated in Local Nétices | to Mariners No. 257 of January 12, | excepting as otherwise reported | herein. Lights not heretofore re- | ported extinguished due to ice dam- | |age are mow being maintained in | {normal condition. Stephens Passage — Point Arden Light, reported extinguished De- | cember, was found burning January | 13. Favorite Channel — Poundstone {Rock Lighted Bell Buoy 1, report- ed extinguished January 1, was re- {lighted January 17. Lynn Canal Sherman Rock | Lighted and Whistle Buoy 2, re-| ported extinguished December 21 was relighted Jdanuary 17. Saginaw Channel — Faust Rock Lighted Bell Buoy, reported ex- tinguished December 26, was found |burning January 17. Lynn Canal—Clear Point Light, reported extinguished December 26, was relighted January 19. Chatham Strait — Morris Reef Lighted Bell Buoy 1, reported cap-~ sized by ice and extinguished De- | cember 21, was cleared and relight- led January 20. | Icy Strait — Spasskaia Isl and | | | Light, reported extinguisited De- cember 26, was relighted January 19. Frederick Sound—Round Island Light, reported showing erroneous characteristic December 21, was re-‘: stored to normal characteristic | January 12. . Sukkwan rows 'Light, January 19, day. Tlevak - Strait—View - Cove ~En-| trance Light, reported extinguished} Décember 27, was “found burning| January 19. 9 Tlevak Strait—View ' Cove Har= bor Light, found extinguished Jan- uary 19, was relighted same day. -~ || Klawak Inlet—Craig' Shoal Buoy | 2, established temporarily January| 18, in approximately same position;| as Craig Shoal’ Light ‘previously| destroyed. Portlock Harbor “~ Minnie Reef!| Light, reported extinguished De-| cember 26, was relighted January 21. T R | Regular mail service is nfain- |l tained throughout the year to sl Strait—Sukkwan Nar- found extinguished| was relighted same o8 When you bank veniently. banking service. house where they All Weather Banking Service! bad weather need not interfere with the prompt handling of your finances. can Bank by Mail easily, safely, and con- We invite you to use this all-weather Not only is it conven- ient—it also eliminates the risk of keep- ing cash, checks and ‘drafts about the And remember—déposits received by mail are given prompt attention! Bank at the First National and Bapk 'by Mail! The F irst Bank Junean, Alaska at ‘the First National, You SN S A TFAN T may be lost or stolen. T National ERS VR i did succeed. SYNOPSIS: On the train to La- reto, where he intends going into wnexplored dewico to seurch for Ll Langton, his vanished aviator friend, Frank Grahame recalls sto- ries he has heard of the dangerons land ke must visit. He Las left Hollywood on impulse. smarting wnder the movie star, Janice Kent's sharp refdal of his marrinage pro- posal. He also has left a pr 1 from thé great Myberg. pre to head a party which would picture in the Mexlcan fungle with Janice as star. Chzpter 18 ADVENTURE BEGINS A T ANOTHER time, in New York, 43 Frank had been yarning with a chicle ‘uyer he¢ had met at the Explorer’s Club. “Mexico,” stated this man, “in old Porfio Diaz’s time used to dump all their undesirables, all those con- victeq for this, that and the other thing, down on the Quintan' Roo coast. It was sort of the Siberia of Mexico. “They ‘weren't all po!iticos either, | 1s they usually were in Russia. 1 take it the jails got pretty full some- times in central Mexico, and the zangs they shipped south were fair- ly well mixed ¢riminal lots. “Fu , too, there doesn’t seem to be moie than the usual number of criminal types along the coast now and 1 know the fringes there IF YOU CRAVE A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED CRY, fairly well. Maybe they drifted back DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 29, 1934. ’ e By CLIFF STERRETT NEVER MIND, MAW=-= I'M DOIN’ NICELY, by Herbert Jensen truded oneself into a given set.of conditions, an' the result was cer- tain to be interesting. In another manner of speaking it was not nec- essary to choose a certain line of work and devote a quantity of time to it to achieve thereby success in living. ° You acknowledged what menit: or physical equipment you had and put yourself in circumstances wherein ' this equipment had a chance to perform something or othér. Tke'soldier of fortune went where there ‘were ‘wdrs, mechanics went where there was machinery, grocers kept near the ‘cénters of population. He knew the out-of-doors and loved it.- He knew a bit of soldier- ing. of mining, of trade, and of vari- ous other supplementary occupa- tions. He could make his living, if not his fortune, at any spot in the world, whether it be working for! wages, or by feeding and clothing himself from what the country of- fered. He had panned raw gold from gravel it Alaska, Columbia and Siberia. He had dressed tools in the -oil -fields of Oklahoma and Tampico, with an eye wdtchful for the main chance. He bhad made a tidy fortune in oil leases, only to lose it in a Cen- tral American planiation venture. Ad dined well. home. Or maybc the ones 1 saw were all second generation. It that's the case, it’s 2 laugh on the heredity boys. 1 dunn The third item was from 2 man old in the service of the Geographic Office.” He hal a flair for arch- eology. “Ther: are ruins in southern-Mex- ico,” he had said, “that nave never been Tlocated. Quantities of thein. The Smithsonian and the Peabody ‘people believe they're ‘there but have never gone after them. “They've got plenty to do with what they've already found. The Mexicans won't: look for ‘era, and tliere’s a good reason why. The ln- || dians’ in Quintana Roo dou't like Meéexicans, even though they are Méxican citizens themselves. That's /| amusing. There's been companies ‘of Mex soldiers cut up trying to get through that jungle, and they never “I've often thought,” he con- cluded, “that there’s something dam’ interestin’ jn that place— something a white man would like to see—they're so dam’ anxious to keep 'em out!” K lg A Ward liner, sailing south out of Vera Cruz, Grahame thonght of these things. The phiase “somethipg ‘Intéreéstifig . . ."soffie- thing a white man would like to see” kept forming and returring in tifs mind, fike a bright motfo eu- graved upoi a knight’s escutcheon. * Frank “supposed - that the first qualification of every adventurer was curiosity. Curiosity to see what was on the other side of the fence, the other side of the hill, the other side of the world. This inquisitiveness was as much a part of him as his limbs: i} was the basic mental equipment of those who devoled their lives to'research ‘ofany king; it sent savants to their laboratories as well ag_farm Tads down to thelr ships. 7 e his heart was sore, e real- iged’ that it was not Janice Kent who' had sent him south. She had simply provided the stimulus by denylhg him’ herselt afd the type ot life thet was hers. She had been the stimulas; the discovery of Bill Langton’s fate was thé objectsve. Frank’s philosophy of existence as not-slaborate:. Ong slmply 1> He bad, regained in an expedition back of Caracas in searchk of gold and emeralds. - So, while his memory of Janice was not dimmed, nor the lonely sensation gone from him, it was with some ne+r stirring of anticipa- tion that he arose, dressed, and left his cabin to the sound of the ship's cables ‘running through the hawse- oles. His hip had brought him to the point where he jumped off into the unknown. ON Raoul Ortega Rijon y Men- doza had dined weil. He felt very comfortable with the world. At least the soul of one half- grown chicken had sped, and quan- tities of rice had been boiled to make his dish of pollo y arroz. At the moment this concoction was swimming contentedly in a liter of wine, decanted, so the proprietor of the place had assureéd Bim, from a Spanish cask ‘ust through the cus- toms the day before. 5 He leaned against the doorway ot the restauranmt, savoring the last pleasures of the mea! when a little black 'dog scampered around the corner of the street and galoped through the dust'toward Don Raoul. It ‘Wwas ‘evident’ that' the dog would pass the gentleman at a distance of about five yards. 3 Don Raout dréw his revolver from his belt. He cocked and leveled it at the loping dog and pressed the trigger. The report and the yelp of the little animal broke the still- ness of the sleepy street. The dog squirmed in the dust. and began to crawl back to the corner from which it came. Don Raoul, in the act of replacing his revolvér, made a niss‘ng noise of Belf re- proach, and aimed and fired again. The ‘dog quivered and lay - The man nodded ‘tho yet with evident satistaction, and pushed the revelver into'its holster. His " shoulders straightened. His eyes dartéd up and down the street swiftly to see if any Bad witnessed his lapse in ‘marksmanship. He sighed, and lighting 4 black cigaret strolled down the street toward the freight wharves. k % % ,c:',..,u‘, 1934, 3y Berbert lensen) Frank begin strange Journey. = pea o Reduced WINTER ROUND TRIP RATES— Juneau to Seattle and return, Upper Deck $71.00; Lower Deck $64.00—Final return limit March 31. SAILING SCHEDULE Leave DueJuneau Due Juneau Seattle Northbound Southbound Jan. 27 Feb. 2 Feb. 8 Feb. 17 Feb. 23 Mar. 1 Steamer— *N'WESTERN iVICTORIA tALASKA *N'WESTERN fVICTORIA Feb. 10 fYUKON Feb. 17 t—Calls at Sitka. alls at Kodiak and Seldovia. {—Calls at Yakutat and Latouche. Jan. 20 Jan. 27 Feb. 3 Jan. 23 Jan. 30 Feb. 17 Feb. 13 Feb. 20 For Information and Tickets Call THE ALASKA LINE R. J. McKANNA, Agent nightat® p. | 3. B. BURFORD & CO. D. B. FEMMER | Ticket Agent Phone 79 Frt. Agt. Phone 111 GUY L. SMITH, Ticket Agent, Douglas = “ 99 Leave Seattle Arrive Juneau Leave Junes M's' ZAPORA Jan. 20 Jan. 26 Jan. 27 Calling at Funter, Chichagof*, Hoonan, Tenagee, Port Alexander, Kla wock, Craig, Ketchikan. *Calls first trip of month only SEATTLE AND RETURN—$50.00 Auto Rate—South, $1.00 per 100 lbs Wills Navigation Company Phone 3 Juneau Commercial Dock, Agenk CANADIAN. o FERRY TIME CARD PACIFIC | i 3 ; : LEAVE JUNEAU o | 6:15a.m. 14:00p.m., SAILING | 7:15a.m. 6:15p.m. | ! 8:00a.m *7:30p.m. TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA | 9:15a.m. 9:45p.m. "and SEATTLE 12:30p.m. 11:15p.m. 2:00p.m. 12:60 Midnight From juneau { 3:30p.m. 1:00a.m. PRINCESS NORAH LEAVE DOUGLAS 6:30a.m. January 17 iy February 7, 28 8:30a.m. T45pm. Winter Excurson Fares Now in| 59027 1ifopan. Effect—Round Trip Fare $64.00 | 2;15;) o 12_‘52 i Final Limit March 31, 1934 3:45pm. bk (i al P. Tickets, reservations and full particulars from V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent ! JUNEAU TFine Fioors Estimates Free ] ! GARLAND BOGGAN Contractor Hardwood fnoo‘rm‘g—z.mu. ! 403 Goldstein Blg. Phone 583 | *—Saturday only. i—Goes to Thane. | Juneau Ferry & Naviga- tion Company Pacific Transportaf flanommy‘ i{ M. S “PACIFIC™ ' Leaves City Dock every, Thurs- day at 10 am. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way | points. TIME SCHEDULE CHANNEL BUS LINE Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau ' 7:00a.m. 7:45am. | J. B. Burford & Co., Agents ' 12:30p.m. 2:30pm. |} pp 3 4:15p.m. 5:30p.m. 00,1} ¥alepiing Fids. N Sundays and Holidays ! Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau 8:00a.m. 9:15a.m. oW Motorship “ESTEBETH” Leaves Junean Every Thurs- More For Your Money AT COLEMAN'S day at 6 P. M. for Sitka and Way Ports DAVE HOUSEL, Agent Phone Single Permanent Waving a 8, ! ok - | ,.‘ The Florence Sho, 1 ] || LUpWIG NELSON | JEWELER Juneau lce Cream Parlors Exclusive Dealers HORLUCK'S | ~ DANISH ICE CREAM ||~ t ¥ B. 0. P. 4 A General Moturs Product! ’ - ANTI-FREEZE 2 Gallon Can for $3.50 Good for a whole season—will not boil 4 away. Prevents rust. With this we give complete radiator check-up—tighten ‘all connections and water pump! ¢ . CONNORS MOTOR (0.