Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Want Ad Information l Phone 374 | Count average words to ihef line Daily rate per line for consecu- tive insertions: First day, per 10c | Following day ] . be Minimum charge, 50c. Monthiy rates furnished on re- quest Copy must be in office by 2 o'clock on day of publication to Insure insertion on same day. accept ads over telephone persons lis'>d in telephone PhunL 374. Ask for dd taker FOR RENT Oil heated T7-room , four , fire place furnisk Four-room house | furnish w oak floors, past oil ‘ heat. Call! ‘Windsor Apts. am Coffee Go! Shop with living quarters. Phone 2553. FOR RENT—The A COMPLIMENTARY ticket awaits| W. J. Markle to see the doubl fee e show at the UPTOWN THEATRE TONIGHT . featuring Williamson BENEATH THE SEA and a STUDY IN SCARLET. ROOMS FOR RE o bed- INCOGNI NOTICE When advertisers put in ads they sometimes don't wish to be bothered with phone calls and answering doorbells, so we give them a box number, such as Box 10-A, Empire. People wanting to answer these ads should scnd letters addressed to the box number listed. We will see the adver- tiser gets them. THE EMPIRE YOU SHORE PICKED )/ HOW DID I A SWELL TIME TO VISIT YOUR DARLINK DAUGHTER, ER (nc new rederal Hou\m KNOW THEY WAS GONNA SEAL THEPLACE L BEFORE I COULD T R Stea—er Movements NORTHBOUND co due Monday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS Princess Norah scheduled to ® sail from Vancouver Decem- ber 28 at 9 p.m. Victoria scheduled to sail from Seattle December 29 at 10 Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle December 31 at z ®esecoco0vcoece FOR SALE- EOR SALE - Vlull‘u ¥ |FOR SALE 9 pm. . Act it is possible for the owne: of suitable property to finance a : Z‘"‘S"c"a"{‘t]:c?:g‘“‘fi% ";’ sail from : modest home and we offer sites 3 ” at Woodford Acres at very rea- SOUTREWIND SAlLl.\GSh g sonable prices. See Mrs. J. W. . Ni’:l‘::s‘::;"u::;“;m”Cd sout! : \’VVuodfdedL S‘xlmonv cn?elf'," LOCAL SAILINGS 5 A COMPLIMENTARY ticket awaits Kenai leaves every Wednes- @ Walter White to see the doublej® day night at 6 pm, for feature show at the UPTOWN|® Sitka and wayports. . THEATRE TONIGHT featurine|e® Dart leaves every Friday at e Williamson BENEATH THE SEA | 7 a.m. for Petersburg, Kake e and a STUDY IN SCARLET. and wayports. . @ o000 0c o0 000 -A real Largain. 8-tube Majestic radio, model 91, super- hetrodyne ioud speaker, mahog- any cabinet. Also doll buggy in|® good condition Phonc 2322 quire Northern Hotel. e — %-room furnished | house, reasonable, Ninth and Cal- houn. Phone 462 | FOR SALE — 14-room furnished | apts. Reasonable. Phone 1532. — e TID! High tide, 7:08 p.m., e SPORT ® 000000000 00 TOMORROW ® e 0000000000 i 11. High tide, 6:31 a.m. 143 feet { Low tide, 1:13 pm., 43 feet 3 feet. rooms for roomers in private/ TURN your olo goio into value family. Modern, comfortable) Cash or trade at Nugget "hop‘ home, all conveniences. Call 374 - | 4 or write Box 195 before January I\lIbCLLLAi\LOU ! By ALAN GOULD 1st. Meals optional. - | s A e B IS B i M Y genmal lepaw work old or| FOR RENT — Two-room furnished| new, call Henry Gorham. Phone| Judge Kennesaw Mountain Lan- apartment. Phone 5601. 2553. dis, high commissioner of baseball, SUNLAMPS for rent reasonable. Rental charges may be applied on purchasing price. Ask about our plan. Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. A COMPLIMENTARY ticket awaits Mrs. W. K. Marshall to see the| Boston Braves, said to Judge Emil Fuchs of the “No Dogs Allowed,” and Judge Fuchs said, “Okey double feature show at the UP- | Judge!™ TOWN THEATRE TONIGHT| Fuchs wanted to turn his ball featuring Williamson BENEATH | THE SEA and A STUDY IN park into a dog racing track at night, but Commissioner Landis. | who got this $50,000 a year job be- FOR RENT or sale — Six-room SCARLET. house, partly furnished. Inquire Nugget Shop. [ S —— FOR RENT — Partly furnished house. Inguire 132 6th St. #OR REN1—iwo-ruum apt,nouse- keeping room, rarge, $20.00. Ev- erything furn.shea. Zhone 436 Channel Apts. LOST AND FOUND A COMPLIMENTARY ticket awaits Fred Henning to see the double feature show at the UPTOWN THEATRE TONIGHT featuring Willilamson BENEATH THE SEA and a STUDY IN SCARLET. PIANOS remea wned. Phone 143. Andcuon. WANTED WANTED - 9)(]2 bedroom rug in good condition. Call 3354. ROOMERS WANTED — Private| family wants two roomers in modern, comfortable home. Meals, too, if desired. Prefer young man not employed in manual labor, or young woman. Call 374 or write Box 195. W‘VA!;X'I"EMbeu‘n; “heated furnished | apariment. State price per month. Address Z 167, care Empire. WA D—men wunted for Raw- leigh Route of 800 families. Write immediately. Rawleigh, Dept. SK 4 BA Oakland, California. WANTED—Worman for housework. Must be willing worker, exper- ienced and good cook. Write Em- pire G-1200. A R B S PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARZ : i | Thomas Hardwue Co. I| | H | PAUL BLOEDHORN Cardinal e {cause gamblers had almost ruined | the game of baseball in the 1919 | scandal, is taking no chances of | lozing his job because of them. That seems to be a good decis-| ion. Exactly what made Judge Fuchs think he could get permis- sion from Landis to mix the two sports is not quite clear. But the decision does serve as a reminder that the game of profes- sional baseball is one of the most | | admirable industries in America to- | day. If all the industries of the na- | tion were conducted with the hon- esty of “the National game,” the| government would not need to ap-| ply the whip. It's on the Square The last National league cam- paign illustrates the game's hon- esty. The Giants held a long lead campaign, but started sliding in the second week of the month. The Cardinals were coming strong, and GARLAND BOGGAN [ f Hardwood Floors | Cabs FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates FRONT STREET 1 THE | MARKET BASKET Provisions, Fruits, Vegetables | Phone 342 Free Delivery | McCAUL MOTOR 1 COMPANY Butler M auro Dmg Co. JUNEAU Drug Co. B P. O. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY ———— _________4, “THE CORNER DRUG STORE” | Waxing . Polishing 5 Sanding | PHONE 582 | | . new situations! going into the last month of the |3 in the last series of the season, | with the pennant still at stake. they were scheduled against the Cincinnati Reds while the Giants met the Brooklyn Dodgers. Playing for the Reds this year were several former members of the Cardinals, Jim Bottomley at first, Gordon Slade at short, Spark Adams at third, and Chick Hafey in the field; Paul Derringer and Allyn Stout on the pitching staif The tendency of the Reds and the Cards to do business with each ther had often caused the scribes to wonder if there was not some connection between the two clubs Still, when the Cards swept the four-game series from the Reds. there was never a hint that every- thing was not upstairs. In fact everyone who knows anything about the National league is ac- quainted with the fact that the Reds would rather win a ball game om the Cardinals than from any other club in the leazue. Rough But Honest And in the other series betwe: the Dodgers and the Giants, eve: one knew that Casey Stengel's gang would come into the Polo Grounds and give everything they had to knock the Giants out of the lead. The fans knew Stengel would pitch Van Mungo in the first game against Terry’s men, and they flocked out by the thousands to watch this back-yard battle. That Stengel did pitch Van Mungo and that he defeated the Giants two straight is no longer conversation except in Flatbush where they will never forget it, but it still remains to the credit of the game that in perhaps the greatest gambling center of the country, the game got past a per- fect gambling setup without a sin- gle suggestion that it wasn't on the level. The fact that the National league decided to allow the clubs to toy with night baseball right after re- fusing to listen to Judge Fuch’s story is evidence that the league is willing to keep changing to meet e DART DELAYED BY MOTOR BREAKDOWN Held by bad weather and by an engine breakdown, the mail boat Dart arrived in Juneau at 3 o'clock this morning after spending five days on the journey from Kake. Passengers reported that a verit- able fleet of small boats was held at Taku. Inlet by inclement weather. A Mrs. Ross, Chris Anderson and George Anderson, the latter re- turning from tuning Bureau of Indian Affairs pianos in the dis- trict, were passengers. Old papers for saiwe here, THE MISSY SHOP | | | | Specializing in | HOSIERY, LINGERIE, | HOUSE DRESSES | and accessories at mode:atc | prices —— [ | Chatham Straits Transportation Co. M. S. “DART” Leaves Femmer Dock every Friday {at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Kake, Port Alexander and way ports. Preight received not later than 4 P m. Thursday. FOR INFORMATION We serve Reverently Thoughfully all those who select us as their director The Charles W. Carter Mo | MAURICE C. REABER, Phone 4622 e —— Wise to Cali 18 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need'of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal Transfer SERVING Al SKA THT A T to Seattle ar ! Return—Upper deck, $62.00. Hetiirn ' Iiniit M‘An- “hrey. 1 tickets to California by Pacific Steamship Lines HOW 'BOUT L/I\l') §.lu: IN HERE FER A HOUR OR SO2 1 CAILING SCHEDULE 7~ave DueJuneau Due Juneau Steamer Coatls Northbound Southbound ALASKA Dec. 17 YUKON 15 Dec. 18 Dec. 25 N'WESTERN Dec. 25 Jan. 4 VICTORIA Dec. Jan. 2 Jan. 11 s at Seward with S. S. STARR for 1d utian ports. Wednesday at Ports. Freight received uhtil noon' day of sailing. THE ALASKA LINE . J. McKANNA, Agent v WILL BE SOLD, SATISFY LIENS Action Taken by Federal Court Against Vessel of NW. 8.S. Co. SEATTLE; Dec. 28—Sale of the m steamer Evelyn Berg, owned by the gmfimfim Nortawest Steamship Company, = M”M/ 7/74’. /j‘é NORTHLA AND has been ordered for January 15 -v-:-m TRAN HYATION €O by eral Judge Jeremiah Neter- er to satisfy several liens, mostly labor, amounting to $4500. B and Company also holds a mor Ambrose Swasey gage of $2,400 against the ship. The only line servlng Alaska that main- The ship sale will be held at| tains a regular weekly service throughout PHONES 83 OR 85 Dean of American engineering 1s the Ballard Pish Dock. ihg yoar. Ambrose Swasey, above, 88-year- 3. Neterer ruled that in case MOTORSHIP NORTHLAND old Cleveland resident, who is the the Berg company bid the ship in, Lv. Seattle Ar, Juneau Ly. Junieau honored guest at the twenty- iy need pay only $6,000 in cash, the | ; Dec. 31 Jan. 4 Jan. 6 eighth anniversary celebration of rest being applied on the mort- | € j“"' 14 Jan. 18 Jan. 20 the founding of the Engineering sage |2 ET s T i L Foundation in New York City Swasey, a noted manufacturer of telescopes, began his career as a machinist in Exeter and Hartford, Conn. N N T 42 un ¥ We've made substantial reduc- tions in. trip to rnia. Sleeping car charges on our trains are a Ibfld less than last year. Complete meals in ‘our dining cars cost as little as 80¢. Rail fares are low. For example: TO LoS ANGEI.ES (from Seattle) . $21.50 34.00 40.00 One way . . . 21-day roundtrip . 3-mos. roundtrip . -—sood in coachies on our-fastest trains, also in !mpmved tourist sleeping cars (with berth lights, The Evelyn Berg has been oper- ated for several trips on the South- cast Alaska route with terminal at Juneau. - - SHOP IN JUNEAU! are 'way down' YFasd »g FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELIC!OUS HAMS and BACON Allen Shattuc ) | gidairk northern | 3 S § ) | | particulars from b &) DISTRIBUTED BY | ALASKA-RHEINLANDER DISTRIBUTORS | ate detiveryl of eltiier Rbeinlander draught or bottled beer PHONE 114—Femmer's Rock. |{ HAROLD L. STABLER, Local Agent “The Store Thut Pleases” SEATTLE AND RETURN-—$60.00 MOTORSHIP NORCO Leave Seattle Ar. & Ly. Juneau Leave Seattle Ar. & Lv. Juneaw Nov. 26 Dec. 1 Jan. 21 Jan. 26 Dec. 10 Dec. 15 Feb. 4 Feb. 9 Dec. 24 Dec. 29 Feb. 18 Feb. 23 Jan. 7 Jan. 12 SEATTLE AND RETURN—$48.00 J. B. Burford & Co. D. B. Femmer Ticket Agent Freight Agent Phone 79 Phone 114 Guy L. Smith Agent Douglas BANDON sails from. Seattle Jan. 3 BANDON sails from Seattle Jan. 19 Calling at Funer, Chichagof®, Hoonah, Tenakee, Port Alexander, Kla- wock, Craig, Ketchikan. *Calls first trip of month only. Auto Rate—South, $1.00 per 100 pounds. Wills Navigation Company Phone 3 All sailings from Seattle from Pier 7 at 9 am. S LSS, UMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. —— S, T [ORRRC Panlandle Air Transport Ce. | - pATeY 4-PLACE CABIN SEAPLANE FOR CHARTER Most Economical Air Transportation in Alaska I C. V. KAY, Manager | Phoue 619 FERRY TIME CARD LEAVE JUNEAU 6:15a.m. 18:50p.m. PRINCESS NORAH 5 November 28° December 19 Jatuary 2, 16, 30 Tickets, réservations and full V. W. MULVIHILL, Agent JUNEAU Winl;er ‘Round Trp ‘Excursion Rates ,in effect October 31. Final limit March 25, 1935 IRound Mp Vnnmn'er Victoria 00 [ Juneau Fefry & Naviga tion Company TIME SCHEDULE CBANNEL BUS LINE Three Trips Every Day Leave Junea: 7:30 am. 2:30 p.m. -s N 5:30 pm. mul.ve Auk Bay—6:45 p.m, ve Juneau—12:00 Midnight *Sunaays and Holidays Leave Auk Bay Leave Juneau *8:00 am. 'l'llc.-. Classical or Spemalty in class or mlnba » ZAPORA sails from Seattle Jan. 11 Juneau Commercial Dock, Ager” , o »