The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 24, 1934, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

e e e o T e - - - - cd v 5 . ) T'M HERE TO MEET My SWEET WOMAN-= FROM THE SOUTH=-WEST ? BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG KNOw = LOOKIN/ NS TRAI TN halo) | Ao = I WANT TO SOME BODY, YA PODNER ? (OTHER NATIONS | 1 DOUGLAS FOLLOW ST EW'S A Inc,, Great Britain righs reserved. GEORGE — I'M GOIN’ IN THE WAITING -ROOM AN’ TAKE NAP ---- T'LL GIVE YOU A DOLLAR IF YOU KEEP g YOUR EYES OPEN FOR MY SWEET WOMAN -- SHE'S $SORT OF PLUMP - AN/ T THINK SHE'S GOT A WORRIED LOOK ON HER FACE -~ rights fescrved” tified before another subcommitiee LIEUT NUYES Is in support of the enlarged Bureau of Mines program advocated by REBEKAHS—ATTENTION There will be a meeting of t. has been workmg on Alaskan rn-;Ar‘NUAL BALL OF | IRE DLPARTMENT “Per.\evomnce Rebekah Lodge Icn and harbors proje"r.» including \Vnnge BIMUND PLEADS : the Territorial Chamber of Com- |A at I. O. O. F. Hall on January | educator. | merce. RR “""k at Ketchikan, WJ.m"ell Pon‘ i HELD ON FEB. 12 twenty-fourth at 8 pm. After|adv. COMMITTEE IN CHARGE. Senator Wheeler Has introduced | AIexander, Seward and Nome. The Twenty nnual ball | rputine business a social meeting SHETE S suspension of | enant Noyes was in Alaska®™ [ the Juneau Vol r Fire De- |Will follow to which all Odd Fel- Daily Empire Want Ads Pay much 01 last summer and visited | partment w Juneau last Octcber and Novem- ber, and while here the last time held hearings on the Douglas bridge project. 1 be held in the Elks|loWs are invited. [Pal' room on the evening of Feb- | EDITH F. SHEELOR, ruary 12 and the various commit- | —adv. Juneau- | tees are now at work making final plans-for this big event. | a bill providing for MEN UNDERPAID i 2 i TO NEW MEXICO : £t ELECTROL-KEWANEE ‘rormer Resndenl of Juneau Delegate Discusses Living HEATING UNIT TO BE PED SRl Daily Empire Want Ads Pay No. Secretary. TAKEN BY nNS has formally recognized the new Government of the Cuban Repub- lic. Advices received here Spain } recog: ment. The island republic been recognized by States, Great Britain, icu; Coiombia, Chile and San-Dom- ingo. The American Government announced recognition yesterday. d the Mendieta Govern- has mnow | the United ST. SAVA'S Federation will 26, in 1. O. O. F. Hall. gram will start at 7:45 p.m. lin the evening refreshments will be served which will be followed by a social gathering. Gastineau Channel are invited for the evening. ST. SAVA'S DAY is a SERBIAN NATIONAL HOLIDAY and is ob- :erved throughout the world as such. The celebration here will be performed in Serblan language and costume, and only SLAV peoples are invited to attend. There will se no admission charge made, but ‘o help cover the expense of the | meeting, donations will be accepted. “ST. SAVA” is the patron s: of Serbian churches and Serbian chools. He is being greatly hon- d by all SERBIANS as a great The pro- he LONDON, Jan 24 —Great Bnmh\l from | 1s0 ‘states that nation has| Spain, Mex- | AY CELEBRATION Lodge Numb@r 208 of the S. N‘ celebrate ST, SAVA'S DAY on Friday, January Later | ALL SLAVS of| llA\T ROUND SCHOOL CAGE SERIES FRIDAY IN DOUGLAS The | sch Douglas and Juneau high 1- championship series of bas- keteall games for 1933-34 comes to |an end next Friday night at the Nat. For the fourth and last try this son Douglas cagers will go ilhr\ limit to put one over on their | ancient rivals from across the | channel. | Hope dies hard in th» human | breast and it would not surprisa the bystander should a defeat be handed out to the stronger teams | this time. e I SCHOOL DANCE The Douglas high school society will sponsor a dance in the Eagles Hall following the basketball games Friday night. {Car Cranked in Gear Backs Into Window ! SAN FRANCISCO, Jan’. 241t |isn’t a good idea to start a car en it's in reverse, especially th» od kind that must be cranked. A. Mariani learned that. He pur- sued it down the street and shouted warnings as it backed through the plate window of a watc: glass aint | company office. Damage was about $200. — e Residents of Redwood City, Cal., staged a “disaster call” drill to co- ;cz'fl‘nmte the work of the Red Cross |and other organizations in case of a major disaster. SWEDISH MASSAGE Costs and Salaries in | Northem Territory ‘Continued from Page One) host of others may crowd in at the same time. Since January 3 the nomina- tions of several Alaska officials who have been serving under re- cess appointments have gone for- ward to the Senate. President Roosevelt has nominated Edward W. Griffin to be Secretary of Al- aska; George F. Alexander to be Federal Judge for the First Divis- jon; William T. Mahoney to be United States Marshal for the same division; Hugh O'Neill to be U. S. Attorney for the Second Division and Joseph 'W. Kehoe for the Third, and Thomas Gaffney to be Marshal for the Second Division and Chester J. Todd for the Third. (Note—Alexander and Gaffney have been confirmed.) | Delegate Dimond is making every effort to speed consideration of his bill to repeal the Alaska bone dry law and the Volstead act in its ap- plication to the Territory. Some de- lay has been oceasioned by the fact that the chairman of the Territor- jes committee, to which the bill] was referred, died during the sum- mer, the ranking Democratic mem- ber is mot desirous of acceptinz the chairmanship and fhe next, r}aflkini:n%?;e:nés ii_llt;x:i::tiw:r:i | ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 8. Ex;g:‘?;rflégg:y state. ; s try 2et| 3 Helps o e liamentary tangle straight-| 5. Strike with 7 9. Moon goddess e T ithout | the palm S NIIE EIBIE 10, Spoken ened out, as it seems that without | »ebhti o 3 EE bm 10 Booken i a . properly constituted chairman| L3 i / - Makes 1nto & ittee cannot properly| 12. Let it stand m 17. Baseball team e donm | 13, Every one function. | ™ “separately [EJAISIE] 1. Monthly re- | ;: gwi;s canton 7 7 g:h"l s A 5. t A recent caller was W. E. Ryan.| g’ Digects' of 21, Singing voice an Alaska pioneer from the Nome g:a:not sen- 22. Send out 1‘ days. H. was in that city in 1902 15, The bitter 23. ’ni‘l:‘go;l; i and 1903 and mined on Cleary ,, o Jyeich, 4 21. Debased Irish ' Creek for the three years starting 21 Produces /| coin . with 1904, Although he now, calls| 24 Putoon e - T3 is home, Mr. Ryan has| receptacle vine New York his home, y: e . Mo I been in Europe for the last couple g’ Fusible O e alde of years. | apenue e e e s it | . Hold - 5 ealment [0 . Hugh W. Terhune, Executive Of-| *= D3ion ™" 4i. Mako vellevé DOWN 34, Immerse You know as well as 1 do that lf I don’t see it now g 23. Exchange 48. Correlative of 1. Viper 37. Nerve network ficer of the Alaska Game Commis-| 35 Yale neither 2. Japanese 41. Animal's nose you’ Il .bury your nose in it and I’ll have to wait sion, who is now in Washington in' o iy B ficious S pm 43 Norwegian befo 1 . Arl i i ? esenta- % ¥ connection with' the AGG construc- | o plomely 8L Native metal ' tive 4 Seldom met efore .you’ll give it up . . . and besides, Mr. . not! e 3. €] 3 0] Wi $lgo woytin sadls PoRE b7 o) * Pimaiden 38 xciiea” & EarBe boay ot 45, Dltorm, Man, if you' think a budget doesn’t call for ’ad- location of Public Works Adminis- name . Writing 47. Sand hi 9 ¥ 40. Type squares implement [3 50. Stitch stu . tration funds, announces that two, g3 wye‘}%n in the 58. Meat dish 1. ln)ed on the 52 Favorite st dy bids for engines have been opened | mind 59. City in Italy Sheep to date. The Washington Iren| Works of Seattle was low bidder | for the motive power of the 114-| vessel to be used in southwestern | Alaska watéFs. Twin diesels, of 200- | horsepower each, will power the]‘ craft. This week bids were opened for 4 90-horsepower diesel to bel place@ in a 55-foot boat. The Pa-| cific Marine Supply of Seatfle is| soparently the low bidder, said Mr. Terhune. Invitations for hull bids | on three small boats were maned to bidders Wednesday and are to be cpened February 6. Specifica- tions for four other hull bids are now beine worked up. | ANl told. $151,000 is to be ex- pended for boats, headquaxwrsf bnildings. warehouses and floats. Mr. Terhune expects to be in Washington for another three| weeks. | In an appearance before the ap- n-ovriations sub-committee con- Anctine hearings on the Tnterior | Department supply bill. Delegate Dimond urged increased financial support for the Alaskan branch of the Geological Survey. He also tes- | to Train Army Engineers SHOWN BY MUSEUM| At the exhibition of machine an to be held in New York next Feb- ruary by the Museum of Modern Art of New York City, the Electrol- Kewanee Heating Unit, locally han- dled by the Harri Machine Shop, will be displayed as an example of outstanding design, according to a notice received by Mr. Harrl. The manufacturers of this oil furnace are pleased by this com- pliment as display of any product in this exhibition is by invitation only and that invitation is based on the judgment of the drectors of the Museum of Modern Art as to its fitness to be shown with other ! examples of outstanding design. The directors do not just pick the best of any class of products, and had there not been an oil furnace that met their exacting standards, there would not have been one in the show, the manufacturers were informed. .- EXPERT PIANO TUNING George Anderson, expert piano tuner, has returned and will re- main in Juneau for the next few days. Telephone orders for tuning in 143. adv, Anderson’s Music Shoppe. Shop in Juneau ~ment to detail in New Mex ' from Juneau and has been on duty | in Rio Grande Valley Word was received this morni by the Governor’s Office that Lieut. | John R. Noyes, U. S. A, for a num- | | ber of years a resident of Juneau § and recently of Seattle, has been | transferred by the War Depart- | Lieuteant Noyes, who is Lieutenant of Engineers, will act | as intructor of engineers with the New Mexico National Guard and will be stationed at Las Cruces, N. M. in the Rio Grande Valley about 45 miles north of El Paso, Texas. With his wife, Lieutenant Noyes | will leave Seattle February 1 for his new post. H Lieutenant Noyes was connected | with the Alaska Road Commission from 1925 to 1928 and from 1931 to 1932 when the road commission was turned over from fhe War De- partment to the Department of tne Interior. He was stationed in Ju-| neau at that time and he and| Mrs. Noyes, who taught school in| Juneau prior to their marriage, are | well known here. f He was transferred to Seattle | there as military assistant to the | ! district engineer of the Washing-| f.on district. Durmg that time hc Daily Cross-word Puzzle fl @ amm llfl%fill dAEE AN il dEE JENGN JEE EEJE JE l,l! it 3/ [ ] | ] ll. e, They know it takes a good deal of careful planning to keep within a limited budget, and that the best way to do it is to All you have to do is watch: watch the ads in The Empire. Smart Women Know Its Value for special value offering some night and go down to the store the next day and see how many women responded. You’ll realize then, that It Pays to Read the Ads in The Daily Alaska Empire for Stiff Joints SORE MUSCLES TENSE NERYV @& So good for that tired feeling! PHONE 10, Gastineau Hotel for Appointment Mrs. J. M. Malila GRADUATE MASSEUSE Once Again We can supply that long-timesfhiel #riend—*= © Black D_iamo_nd Lump $14.50 PER TON At Bunkers Especially adapted for the range Bunker ALSO— Price Indian Egg-Lump ... . $12.00 Carbonado Egg-Nut ... 13.00 The ideal furnace combination PHONE 412 PACIFIC COAST COAL Co. A 4|2 JUMERL FRYE'S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery I LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mdlé lnc IDEAL. PAINT SHOP If I's Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN'S?’BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 | | | | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Gll(l’hlko(‘gv.ry' Begin fl End n.t:r L {

Other pages from this issue: