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Want Ad Information Phone 374 Count b average words to the line. Dally rate per line for consecu- five insertions: Pirst day, per line ... Pollowing days, per line .. inimum charge, 50c. Monthly rates furnished om re- fuest. Copy must be In office by 2 veclock on day of publication to Insure insertion on same day. We accept ads over felephone from persons lsted in telephone Urectory. Phone 374, 10¢ | Ask for ad-tgker. — | FOR SALE—Three-room house and loi 50x100. Free water. See Mrs. Reilly, 4th and Kennedy FOR SALE—Two lots with cabin, 4th and E Streets, Douglas. Rea- sonable terms. Inquire Guy's Drug Store, Douglas. FOR SALE—Lov ten, block two| twenty-five, with store building thereon, reasonable. Apply Mrs. Henry Gorham, or telphone 104. FOR 'SALE—Will sell or lease fox farm Wanderful opportunity, | good location, Il health cause for| selling. Fully equipped to do a geod - business. Reasonalle. Call Room 23, Alaskan Hotel, or tele- phone 528. FOR SALE—Northern Hol2l prop- erty. One of the best buys in Juneau. Priced low for quick sale. See owner on prentises. | FOR SALE — 17-ft. skiff. Cheap Inquire Carl Graves. Phone 349 YOR SALE—Eighwen-foot rouad-| bottom rowboat. Call Cdbin 4 335 Willoughby Avenue betwe.n 6 and 7 pm, FOR SALE—Real bargain, furnish. cd summer house at Auk Bay. $650. Call Bill Rudolph, Sanitary Grocery. FOR SALE—The Concrete’ Mig. Co. plant. Fu'. basement, spacious facilities. Write P. O. Box 784 of see F. Fagirson on premises. NABH sedan, splendid condition. Good tires. Telephone #4134, FOR SALE—Coal and Pres-to-10gs. See Juneau Com’l Dock or Phone 3 FOR SALE — new Cheap. Telephone 349. N e 1. “Tuouorrow's Styles Todav” Butler Mauro FOR RENT—5-room unfurnished house on Dixon St. Call 385. et heated room for gentleman. 115 West 6th St. Phone 330. FOR RENT—3 or 4 room furnish- ed apts. with bath. Telephone| 3204 | j fusnished | 67 afte Four-room St. Call FOR RENT house. 12th 5 pm. FOR RENT—Two-room furnished| apartment with bath. Telephunei 1532, | VAOANCIES close in. Scaview Apts. | Furnished. Also water, lights. Also cabins. FOR RENT—2-room house, partly furnished, $15. W. H. Robertson, Phone 4764. VACANCY, MacKinn, “partments Fukfiififib ;ua:m;eu'tflxor rent.} Nickinoyich Apts. Phone 5601. ;’_IIANOB ra;:?.éd:\ unea. Phone 143. George Ande: WANTED- apartment. TWANTED State j.rice. Box 988, HAS anyone & comfortable furnish- ed house to rent to a reliable} party for the winter. Needed be- fore Oct. 1st. Schoettler. Phone 5086. WOULD appreciate letters from middle aged Alaskans who are thoroughly 'familiar with outdoor life and conditions in Alaska. Aml a lover of nature and Alaska has always held a great interest for me. Address Mrs. Helen McFee, No. 29 North 2Ist Street, Oolum- bus, Ohio. 2 | WANTED — Ex;cx:cnced young woman wants general office work. Best references. Write Empire A 780. [ WANTED--Used diesel engine in good operating condition between 25 andl 50 h.p. Must be bargain Sheldon Jackson School, Sitka, Alaska, WANTED—Widow Iady wants sork badly. In need of employment. Best of references. Phone 472. CURN' yolr Uiv Ruso w16 walut Cash or trade Af Nueget ibop PO P OO POV COTOIVLY .00 0DEE000POUBOEY.T0000Q0C00 0L MISCELLANEOUS . ALSIE J. WILSON leaving on Es- tebeth for 10-day ' trip. Phone 2651, Back about August 10. SUMMER SPECIAL — Permanent and finger wave. Lola Beauty 8hop. Lala Hill, Prop. Phone 201. 319 Decker Way. BOARD AND ROOM — Over Mrs. Decker's house, opposite Moose Hall. Phone 423. Hilmi Rubinnen. UNERAL SERVICES FOR MRS. MEREDITH FRIDAY Funeral services for Mrs, Jennie Meredith will be held at the chapel in ‘the C. W. Carter Mortuary to- morrow, August 16, at 2 p.m. Rev. O. L. Kendall will ofifciate and in- termerit will be in Evergréen Cemeg- ter, i [ TIME SCHEDUL % CHANNEL BUS | Mobtana Creek. SUNWAYS: Bus leaves Auk Bay at 8 instead of 7 am. SUNDAY SPECIAL: Leaves Auk Bay at 6:45 pm and Juneau at 10 pm. Drug Co. “Expregs Money Orders Anytime” Phone 134 SHOP “ELECTROL —Of Course” } [ o1 - EH fl Jones-Stevens Shop | LADIES — M} ii READY-TO- | Seward Sirast | Mest Third | | SATURD 4AY EYENING SPECIAL! Auk Bay at c‘:;As p:\A n‘.nl‘d Juneau at 1 am, Leaves 4§ TRIPS EVERY DAY ‘Peter Pan Beauty Shop PHONE 221 MARGARET LINDSAY, Prop. Introductory Special $7.50 Permanent Now $5.00 $10 Permaneént Now $7.50 $5.00 Permanent Now $3.50 Finger Wave Free LIMITED TIME ONLY Steamer Movements NORTHBOUND Prince Rupert scheduled arrive 6 tonight. Northland scheduled to arrive Friday night. Northwestern due Saturday. to SCHEDULED SAILINGS Zapora scheduled to sail from Beattle August 17. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle August 17, at 9 am. Princess Alice scheduled to sail from Vancouver August 17 at 9 p.m Aleutian scheduled to sail from Seattle August 19 at 9 am. North Sea scheduled to sail from Seattle Augtist 19 at 9 pm. Prince George scheduled to sail from Vancouver August 19 at 9 pm. Victoria scheduled to sail from Seattle August 20 at 9 a.m. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Princess Louise scheduled to arrive at 5:30 Friday morn- e ing and sails south at 8 a.m. Prince Robert southbound Fri- day midnight. Yukon scheduled southbound next Monday. LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth leaves evéry' Wedne: day night at 6 pum., 8itka 1nd waypoits. Dart lcaves cv T aip. Tur Pe and wayports, o e 0 e 00 s 000 et #0000 b0 TIDES TOMORROW LI R A A B R Y High tide, 1:46 a.m. 188 feet. Low tide, 8:08 a.m., -30 fset. High tide, 2:19 pm., 1856 feet. Low tide, 8:27 pm., -18 feet. SEA SCOUTS WILL REPAIR MAILBOAT AT MEET TONIGHT | To make necessary repa:rs so that she may be moved to her final meoring place, the members of the Sea Scout ship “Baranof” will meet on the mail boat Paecific, beached on the tide-flats, at 7 o'clock to- night, Robert Hall, leader, announc- ed. X The Pacific has, been towed fo a £pot near where it will rest finally a5 a permanent meeting place for the Scouts. Tonight, at low tide, the Bcouts will make repairs to the Pa- ecific’s hull, so that, at high tide tomorrow morning, she may be floated into position alongside the Alaska Drydock ways. - e —— LEWIS IS LEAVING R. F. Lewis, President of the Juneau Water Company, accom- panied by his wife, leave tomorrow ahoard. the Princess Lo to tfil;k Home K2 in' San . Francisso, " I AV The need for competent funerel direction at low cost is filled by us. Our reputation attests our satisfactory and sym- pathetic funeral direc- tion. The Charles W, Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” I THOUGHT ° SERT oS TH' OTHER e NIGHT —=-- PRINGE ROBERT MAKING FINAL TRIP OF YEAR Canadian Nationai Line: Cal's Here with 301 Round-trippers Making her final run of the 1935 | tourist season, the huge Prince | Robert, flagship of the Canadian National Railways British Columbia fleet, berthed here at 4:30 o'elock yesterday afternoon from Vancou- ver, B. C. She left Gity Dock fo: Skagway at 11:30 o'clock last might, {and will make her final seuth- bound call of the year at midnight tomorrow. The Robert has made four trips between Vancouver and Skagway wgmenting the regular summer sailings of the Prince George and Prince Rupert. The Robert is the passenger vessel in the 5 service. The Rupert and Gecorge will continue operations this | month, A conference between H. R. Shepard, Juneau agent for the ar~''an Natienal, and Purser N. A, MeLean-of -the~ Robert, - resulted o bk aaloldaceiient that company officials did not intend to send |ihe Robert out on a fifth, added, trip this year. BUT L = HER TWO WEEKS” NOTICE GIVEN HERE BY NOTED AUTHOR Rex Beach Tells About Us- ing Flies—Leaves Here But Is to Return Fishing for salmon with flies is like one’s pipe dreams of trout shing. It’s just you against the sh. If the technique were to be perfected here, it would draw an- glers from all over the world.” In this manper Rex Beach, fa- mous author and ardent fisherman now visiting in Juneau, expressed his faith in & method of fishing omparatively new to Juneau but immensely popular on the Vancou- ver coast this season. Stewart E. White and W. E, Boe- ing, other exponents of trout tackle for salmon who recently explored these waters, are predisposed to- ward spinners and trolling; but Mr Beach, who employs only flies, ex- pressed himself as being more in- terested in .casting in shallow wat- ers, “There is undoubtedly a lot to be learned about the fishing here,” he said. “It will be a job for the 1 people to take up this tech- nique and perfect it. But when they do, they’ll have a thrill not easily equalled.” Yesterday, with Dr. W. W, Coun- cil, Beach essayed to duplicate his feat of some days ago, when in a cemparatively few hours he made a fix eguipment. Catck One Lepe a‘mon “We went out to Tee Harhor,” Mr catch with this light tackle| In command of the Robert is|Beach 'sald. “Doc get his motor Capt, H. E. Nedden. Aboard the| pcat and we just cruised around. luxury ship are 301 round-trip| But we had no luck. We caught.only passengers this trip. |one salmon and scarcely saw any The one inbound passenger for|until the tide came up, and then we ® Juneau' was Fred Rowlands, ‘Who had to come back. But we had a © boarded the ship at Vancouver, marvelous ‘day. I have never seen B i T {anything more beautiful than this | LAST RITES FOR TON G | TEZAK HELD SUNDAY | The last rites for Tony Tesak | will be held under the auspices of ¢hapel of the C. W. Carter Morfu- ary on Sunday, August 18, at 1 pm. Burial will be in the Moose plot in Evergreen - Cemetery, i . BODY LICE On Chickens and Birds If you want to keep your poultry absolutely free from lice, here's the quick, cheap, easy way to do it Simply sprinkle the chickens with Bu-hach, sifting the powder through their featherS as much as you can, The lice vanish as quick asa flash! And spsinkle the magic protective der in ‘your coops and hen houses. It's guatranteed safe—but| sure death to licel In Handy Siffer 8047 enroute | - | the Moose Lodge No. 700, in thé | | country when the sun shines op it.” Asked about‘his former experienc- es in Alaskan fishing, Mr. Beach | replied, “The only fishing I ever did !in Alaska when I lived here was strictly utilitarian. I got hungry and got A fish pole and a piece of bacon {rind and went to it, or I snatched | them out of a hole in the ice, broke | their backs on the bank, and ate them. I did try a little trout fish- ing around Cordova one summer some time later.” Tarpon Fishing Most of Mr. Beach's fishing, which has won him the respeét of anglers the world over, has been in Florida waters, with occasional ex- gursions into the Caribbean. It is amusing,” he commented, “to see the attitude of Cubans and Central Americans, who fish only for food or commerce, toward those of us _wh_y come down to fish for sport. 1 once took a trip along the North shore of Cuba. I had heard that there were lots of tarpon there, but obody fished them. We hired a FINE Watch and Jewelry Repalring | . at very reasonable rates | Il PAUL BLOEDHORN _ FRONT STREET THE SANITA PHONES 83 OR 85 BOEING FLYING BOAT SEE GORST FLOAT—Telephone 45 RY G |ON_PRI ROCERY Store Thet Ploasss” ERRETT > > @?AME. =< [ Spanish pilot who knew those wat- ers; he couldn't speak a word of Enpglish and I knew scarcely any Spanish, but we had a Spanish-| American dictionary and we strug- gled along somehow. “The Cubans laughed at our plan of fishing with tackle. ‘The tarpon, they said, ‘is a very strong and| vey hrave fish and knows too much! to be caught with a line’ The first time we got one hooked, I had to beat the pilot off, he was so excited. The natives would come out and sit ‘on ‘wharves and boxcars and watch for hours. When .we went to town they followed us about. They were /appalled ab what they consid- ered our jdocy in setting the fish frée after we had caught them. ‘They don't look crazy,’ we heard one say, ‘but ‘they must be. They work 11 the devil to eatch fish that can't be caught and ‘then when they cateh them they ‘tarn them Fithes With Stone On anoiher occaslon, In company with Fred Stonme, Mr. Beach ‘trav- eled in the yacht Wisdom to the San Blas Indian country. “It is.a cocoanut country,” sald Mr. Beach, ‘abeautiful archipelago of islands, five ‘or ten -acres each, shining and cparkling in the sunshine. The In- dians are morg or less backward so far as civilization is concerned. The little boys g6 stark naked, they are the cutest little fellows! The chil- dren werg . very friendly, but the adults werp pretty suspicious, and we had to tell them that anything we got in the way of fish we would sontribute to' them, We worked the reefs for barracuda. These Indians 1ad always speared all ‘their fish. Tackle of any kind was new to them. On one of these islands was land. Once we caught him explain- ng to the Indians how we caught fish with a line. “It is very sim- ple; said this educated fellow. ‘A fire which they call electricity runs from the spoons down the silver line and kills the fish when it ouches it'."” Mr. Beach described fishing as ‘the most aesthetic of all sports, because it is accomplished in the most beautiful surroundings.” Is Coming Back Yesterday's adventure will not be the last attempt of Mr. Beach to prove his theory in regard to sal- mon. “Although he leaves Friday morning for Fairbanks and will travel from there to the Matanuska | Valley, he expects to return to Ju-| neau on or ahout September 1, when he and Dr. Council will again take to the waters. “We'll probably go alone,” he said. “A boat can’t hold more than two fellows the size of us.” Among Mr. Bedch's activitles of | the past week have been dinners with Goy. John W. Troy, whom he described as a “trémendously fine and interesting fellow,” Judge James Witkersham, and his friend of many years' standing, Dr. W. W. Coun- cil. An invitation to address the local. Chamber of Commerce was declined because “I'd rather write than talk. 1 do better at 'it.” e ,e——— ® 00000 ev 0 9o . AT THX HOTElIE& o000 rnocee b Gastineau Ben Melvin; M. Joyce; Fred Row- lands, Vancouver, B. C.; Geory Tanghe; Mrs. Jay Wakefield, Santa Ana, Cal. % Alaskan Chas. T., Waul, SHOP IN JUNBAUDI' ', SOUTH NC_E $HIPS R . R Leaves Juneau south- nd every Satur- Juneau sotith- Aug. 17, &. m. H. R. Shepard & Sons Agents. Phone 409 CANADIAN | g Steamer YUKON N'WESTERN ALASKA ALEUTIAN VICTORIA YUKON N'WESTERN . Aug. 10 - Aug. l; ~..Aug’ 17 Aug. 19 -Aug. 20 Aug. 24 Leave Due Juneau Due::nen Seattle 'Northbpund Sou! Aug. 19 aug. 1y Aug. 19 Aug. 17 Aug. 20 Aug. 25 Aug. 23 Aug. 27 o AUg 50 Sept. 2 i sei:& 2 THE ALASKA LINE PHONES: M. J. Wilcux, agent, Phone 2 v A an Indian who had visited the main- | . FRANSPORTATION CO ROUND TRIP SEATTLE $65.00 nEnFBRNE BnRpRen® HAROLD KNIGHUT, ngent . 8. Northland . North Sea . Northland North Sea . Northland . North Sea . Northland . North Sea .. J. B. BURFORD, Ticket Agent CITY WHARF GUY SMITH, Douglas Agent ... Leat . Juneay Aug. 18 , Aug. 25 Aug. 30 Sept. 0 Sept. 13 Arrive Juneau Aug. 16 Aug. 28 Aug. 30 Sept. 7 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 A‘las_kalAir Transport, Inc. FOUR-PLACE STINSON SEAPLANE At Reasonable Charter Rates PHO! : Junean Hangar, 612; Nights, 5604; Office, 587 SHELDON SIMMONS, Pilot ST S N I S S B ) WILLS NAVIGATION COMPANY PIER B—SEATTLE, WASH. ; Ports of Call Ketchikan Tenakeo Hydaburg Hoonah Seattle Sallings BANDON ZAPORA . BANDON . ZAPORA BANDON JUNEAU COMMERC NE 3 P.4.4 Every SUNDAY Every MONDAY . Every TUESDAY Every TUESDAY Every TUESDAY Every TUESDAY Every WEDNESDAY Every WEDNESDAY Every FRIDAY AKE RE VATIONS EARLY ' . MAKE RESERVATIONS EARLY Flying Time Special 'Fishing, riunti Craig Klawak Port Junesa Chichagol 1AL DOCK—Agent ain and Willoughby Ave. . SCHEDULES Fairbanks to Juneau i{uneau to. Chichagof Fairbanks to Juneau Juneau to Fairban PASSENGERS AND EXPRESS Two-Way Radio Communication with ground stations at all umn Pacific Alaska Airways, Ine, Office Gastineau Hotel Spves CANADIA # ACIFIC g k. SAILING b TO VANCOUVER, VICTORIA and SEATTLE From Juneau PRINCESS ALICE August 9, 23 PRINCESS LOUISE Angust 16, 27 . PHONE 206 b