The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 14, 1930, Page 6

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Sasid b ot i You’ll Help Us Materially B JUNEAU WILL START ANNUAL CLEAN-UP NOW Campaign Starts Tomor- row, and Will Continue for One Month With the fine weather experi- enced during the past several days, | Juneau is prepared to start the annual clean-up tomorrow in earn- est. The campaign will continue for one month during which time property owners are asked fo rackgy up all debris, pile it in a conven- jent place where trucks can easily get it and carry it away. | With the annual cleanup also | starts the yearly paint up ;xml‘ many homes as well as business blocks will be gone over by a small army of decorators during the next few months. Various committees from organi- zations have been appointed to see that cleanup and paintup week is vigorously pushed Many property owners are al- ready making plans for gardens | and flower beds in an effort to| make the city attractive as well as| productive looking. ASKS HOOVER | FOR PARDON WASHINGTON, D. C, April 14| —Phil Metschan, Republican State Chairman of Oregon, has asked Fresident Hoover to pardon E. O. Olmsted, former President of the | Northwestern National Bank of | Portland, who has served one year of a five-year sentence for un- | authorized advance of funds of the institution. ‘f WHO'S WHO } i‘— AND WHERE Mrs. Hazel Petrich left on the Queen bound for the States. She received word shorfly before the boat sailed that her father had suffered a paralytic stroke at his home in Olympia, Washington. Charles W. Wilson, of the Bu- reau of Public Roads, left on the Queen for Ketchikan for survey work. He was accogpanied by as- sistants. Returning to her home in Ketchi- %kan aboard the Queen, was Miss Dorothy Nunan, who has been sta- tioned here temporatrily with the District Attorney’s office: A. E. Wick, local representative of the DuPont Powder Company, | left for Ketchikan on the Queen He expects to be away about three weeks. Bound for her home in Germany for a visit, Mrs. Jaseph Kendler, accompanied by her daughter, Mil- dred, took passage south on the| Princess Norah. | Peter Tudein, traveling agent of | the Copenhagen Politiken, left on | the Princess Norah for Vancouver, after a trip to the Interior, | Passengers leaving Seattle for Juneau on the Northwestern due here tomorrow, included Horace, Adams, assistant agent of the| Alaska Steamship Company, who| has been visiting in -the Btates for | several weeks. William Strong, who was called south week before last because of the serious illness of his wife, is refurning aboard the Narthwestern. Ray Stevens, assistant cashier of the First National Bank, is ar- riving on the Northwestern tomot- 1ow. He has been on a vacation On the Northwestern due tomor- ow, are Ted and Bob Keaton, | known here for their baseball play- f el et Di¢ papers for sale at The Em- office. ¥ - JUNEAU YOUNG HARDWARE CO. oA House i Usually |as:old as it Looks I Give Yours C,Youth-Bath i ‘A HOUSE not more than five years old can eas ily look five times that age, inside and out, if it is not painted regularly. And, all the while, the building, as such, is rapidly disintegrat- ing, because its surfaces are not protected as they should be from weather—summer and winter. Both seasons are bad for houses. Prematurely old houses are seen everywhere. And what a pity. Give such, houses a beauty-bath, a youth-bath. Paint is the best “fage- lifter’” for ugly houses. What do guests think when they are alone in your bath- room, and take & peek, perhaps, at the medicine closet, or the soap in the dish, or the other toiletries which belong to this wvitally important room of the home? This closet showld be replete with talcs and bath selts and shaving creams and every one of the pretty, perfumed articles which make the day start off with a gladsome rush. There is such a wide selection to choose from, and they are as essential to health, Dappiness and hygiene as the paint, enamel or lacquer OB your bathroom walls, Butler-Mauro Drug Co. RE-PAINTED - and Jewel Bright In America, almost everyone has' an automobile. Motor cars have contributed very largely to our na- tional prosperity and to human happiness and con- tentment. But ome year begins to take toll on body finish. The car shows the effects of weather—dust, road-wear. Yet it is mechanically good for many A repaint job of the kind we can do years to come. defies criticism. We can repaint your car with as much painstaking care and with as much profes- sional skill as at the factory where it was first built —and at very moderate prices. CONNORS MOTOR CO. What the Wotkers of " c:n Z’rok_;bri %u/ N every professional line, there are talented people who remain at your service, year in and year out ... painters, decorators, plumbers, carpenters, repair men, papeshangers, plasterers—and a world of others. Their prices are consistent with the service ren- dered and they keep homes and communities at the top peak of condition. ” Encourage them when they advertise or when they make per- sonal calls. They are really trying to “do you a favor” if you but knew. It is human to “put off,” but time is relentless, and too much “putting off” brings a shabby and “rup down” house or place of business, B. M. Behrends Bank Clean Up arnd Paint Up y Cleaning up Your Propert) - THERE are many public speeches made on the subject of “Civie Pride” and “Our Town, First Last, and Always,” but what is just @8 necessary-—more 80, in fact—is real, hard work and the pitch-in- and-doit spirit. Actions always are more effective than words. Every run-down house or store is a detriment to the community. Enlist in the Clean Up, Paint Up, Plans Up, Fix Up Campaign! City of Juneau, Thomas Judson, Mayor - Moy -~ Juneau Fire Dep’t - - & ALL the little tots gather around the doll house and work like Trojans, scrubbing, washing, dusting, painting.’ A good ex- ample has been set them. They see Mother doing it. And later on in life, when they have homes of their own, they will remember— and do likewise. At house-cleaning time, every woman should have a wealth of material with which to do her work successfully and economically. We can show you how to shorten the labor of house-cleaning by 3 liberal margin, Leader Depatrment Store Tl-fls is certainly a generation of happier housewives and moth- ers. It i-dnx'd dll,zt woman's work is never one, but a ive age, with so many hboppmuwwde- vices, makes it possible for the housewife to devote much more time to the relaxations of life. Electricity in the home is one the answers—at nomina cost, snap of a swil ing of a button, wil form fim.x.;‘u lz?mn whkh‘bwwld::flt many times in way, EEm T o ere outlets! ences which are 5o popular todar? Ask us for suggestions. ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. AVE you ever watched the birds of early Spring? How / they build their nests with meticu- lous care and scurrp about in what ¥/ ) seems to be the equivalent of / “Spring House Cleaning.” Owners of homes experience the same fine urge, as the cold days cease, and Nature “gets busy.” Any house profits by the application of paint and varnish and by the mak- ing of a pretty.flower garden. No professional knowledge is required —provided you have quality paints, seeds and bulbs—plus efficient gar- den tools. We can supply you with all these things. THOMAS HARDWARE CleanUparnd Paint Up Clean Up a7d Paint Up / vlo) 4 | B ] “vi ¥ 8 [ b O 1 ot ©

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