The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 15, 1937, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1937. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG B KNOW WHET, GNUEEN-- | | T LAD AWaKE ALL N\GHT WORRKRNIN BSOLT & NP\N\E WHUT : ¢ FOR MOLR UTTLE B0 BAAT CALLIN 1 THOLGHKT OF : T NOUNG-UN DAVID, GOLIRTH, ROMEO, DANL BOONE CHR\GTOPHER ALEXANDER SME OR --+ AN & WHOLE FLOCK OF KT CARSON OTHER EANMOUS F\RGT SME OR--- By BILLIE DE BECK *BARNEY SNE " NAOW HAW T THAT & SCANDAL T' THE WOODPECKERS 22 BS T WAS GANING--- ABOLT FWE-THIRTY TH\S MORNNG -=- OUT OF A PALE-BLUE SKY, (T CAME To ME--—- DOGGONE NE, GOOGLE ¥ WHUT BE (T 2 DONT KEEP ME N S\CH & BODACIOVLS SWWET--- N 2 9 FOR RENT FOR RENT—Apt. Phone 3602. WANT AD || INFORMATION ‘:-. _— ——— count fivc avcrage words to the | & FOR RENT-—Eight-room, ffirllislfi house on Gold Strect. Call 6003. line. Daily rate per line for consecutive Insertion~: One day ... Additional days . Minimum charge ..50c Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure ‘nsertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone directory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. 10¢ l RENT—3- room upt apt. with bath. 425 East 7th, phone 2004. FOR RENT--Three cabin with bath, $18. Phone 1603. P‘OR RENT—Two room apartment, five room apartment, and rooms for rent. Call 569. FOR RENT—Four-room runmhed house. Reasonable rent. 407 South Franklin, phone 453. FOR RENT—Cabin on 9th St. West. In case of error or if an ad ) has been stopped before ex- piration, advertiser please noti- | fy this office (Phone 374) at | once and same will be given attention. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE l - FOR SALE 4 | FOR SALE—Flat top solid oak desk | with six drawers, perfect condi- tion. Phone Douglas 323. t | | BLUEBERRIES for sale, 15¢ Ib.| i Douglas Scouts, phone 172 Doug- } las. [¥'OR SALE—15 chimney block, 1 | roof plate, 2 bedsteads, 1 folding, cot, 2 mattresses, 2 coal heaters. | 327 W. 11th. Phone 173. FOR SALE—Springs and mattress. $15. For rent: Phone 3372. FOR SALE — RADIOS — Complete | close out of Cliff's Radio Shop. All kinds of radios at bargains you never heard of. See them at | 512 Eleventh or call 243. :F‘OR SALE~-»Cuok|ng mnge with oil burner and 60 gallon tank, $20. Phone 243. F‘OR bALL~Completcly Imn house, four rooms and bath, and half. House two years large size basement, Juneau location. Bargain for cash. Call | after 4 p.n. 429 Tenth St. Clarks. € FOR SALE—Furnished house and | lot, No. 516, 3rd and Harris. Call | on premises after 4 o'clock or! phone 3342 before 6. FOR SALE—Piano, radio and cir- _ culating heater. All in excellent condition. Phone 132 Douglas. FOR SALE—One Hamy Davidson motorcycle. First class condition, $150. Phone Douglas 84 bctween‘ 4 and 6 p.m. FOR SALE — 5-room house, large lot, lawn, oil heat in basement, * finest location. Write Empire| A-802. FOR SALE—1936 4-door Pontiac sedan. Phone 163 between 5 and 6 p.m. ;‘OR SALE — Four-room | - | furnished ! house. Phone 3752. ! | FOR SALE — Two-wheeled baby buggy, good condition. Phone Thane 5-2 rings. FOR SALE—Second Liand 44-foot | hull. Reasonable. Phone 3283. FOP. SALE—1 acre patented, 4-room house under construction. Garage in basement. 9% miles out. Lee Minkler, Box 2586. |000 SHARES Hm»cmcmol at $1.15. Inquire at Nugget Shop. FOR SALE—Roommg house, 11| rooms rented; 6 rooms vacant. Second and Seward. Inquire Em- pire. | CSICLEP S S OIL TANKS | ‘We have them in stock, welding of | all kinds. Portable machine, no job, too large or too small. ALASKA ARC WELDERS. FOR SALE — 44-ft. 35 h.p. Diesel | ., Boat Discovery, suitable for hali- but troling and seine fishing. Price $3,000.00. O. Fjelde, owner, care Olson & Sunde Shipyards, | Seattle, Wash., or Sunde & d’Evers | Company, Seattle, Wash. —_— e MISS GOLDSTEIN IS TO BE HONORED TONIGHT | AT BRIDGE SHOWER For Miss Aline Ann Goldstein, whose marriage to Mr. Leonard Pockman is to take place early next month, Miss Jean Faulkner is en- tertaining this evening at the Faulkner residence on Seventh Street. The affair, a bridge shower, will assemble Corinne Jenne, Miss Bar- bara Winn, Miss Beatrice Mullen, Miss Carol Robertson, Miss Ana- Poel Simpson, Miss Jean McDonaId' Miss Jean Simpkins, Miss Jeanne Vander Leest, Miss Mary Vander Leest, Miss Ruth Hirst, Miss Louise Murrish, Mrs. Tom Moyer, Mrs. Berte Hampson, Mrs. Jack Jeffrey, the hostess and the honoree. ———.——— BRIDE FROM YUGOSLAVIA - Ending a-five month visit in his distant homeland of Yugoslavia, B. Kuvora, proprietor of the Frisco| Cafe of Anchorage, returned recent- Iy with his bride, the former Ljplria Despot :of Yugoslavia. The two metl washing machine. | - |TURN your ola Mrs. McMullen. FOR REN’I‘—Bmue 6 rooms and bath, partly furnished. Inquire Nugget Shop. FOR RENT—Five-room unfurnish- ed house. Call 385. FOR RENT — b-room unfurniehed house, 3rd and Dixon. P.O. Box 1852, 3-ROOM, newiy pamrtea, beautafully furnished apartment, 65, Decker Bldg. See Louis Delebeque. RENT a practice pano for your summer cabin. Phone Anderson Music Shoppe, 143. FOR RENT-—rtousexecping Tooms. Call at Second and Seward. | FOR RENT—2 apts. Call at 614 Gold Belt Ave,, or phone 41¢ ~ Heated, furnished room. Close in. Phone 1421. VACANCY at mn Asemmy Apts. | VACANCY at the Giand, Gross and office or phone either 61 or 3101. FLAT for rent — Inquire Charles Goldstein Fur Store. -|FOR RENT—Seven room furnished apartment. Inquire Snap Shoppe. ZY, warm, turn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. MISCELLANEGUS MIMEOGRAPHING—Phone 79. “goid into_value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, Lola’s Beauty Shop,, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. MAN wanted for Rawleigh route of 800 families. Write today. Raw- lgigh's, Dept. land, Calif. RELIABLE woman wishes work, do- mestic or care of children. Phone | 6802. BOOKKEEPER and _stenographer wishes 0_l(ioe work. Phone 161. STRIKE MADE ON EEK RIVER TOWESTWARD Eighty-one Claims Already Staked—Drills Down 43 Feet, No Bedrock Yet ANCHORAGE, Alaska, July 15.— Al Jones has returned from Eek River, north of Goodnews Bay, and reports that 81 claims have been staked there. Jones said the ground seemed drills now down 43 feet have not struck bedrock. Jones said he is planning for hig development in the gold min- ing there and is building an air- field and installed a radio station. He owns several planes in connec- tion . with his:_activities. MRS. R. C. GROTHE ENTERTAINS TODAY AT HOTEL JUNEAU Mrs. R. C. Grothe of Maryland, who recently arrived in Juneau where her husband is stationed aboard the Geodetic Survey vessel Wesdahl, entertained at tea this afternoon at the Hotel Juneau in honor of her mother, Mrs. H. G. Fleischauer. Mrs, Fleischauer whose home is in Boston, is to visit with her daughter {for a month before returning East. The affair, for which several guests were assembled this afternoon, was {held in the new room on the mez- zanine floor of the Hotel Juneau. ———————— MRS. MCORMICK VISITS FRIEND IN KETCHIKAN Mrs. John MecCormick, wife of Deputy Marshal McCormick, is now visiting in Ketchikan at the home of Mrs. Clyde Morgan, and expects to return to .Juneau in a few in Europe when Mr. Kuvora visited there in 1930. days. She recently completed a visit of several weeks in the States. Coliseum Apts. Inquire Coliseum|. . . 65¢. |- SKG-12-SA, Oak-|'*"* -~ to be highly mineralized but many | DDDITIES FROM NEW YORK CITY, TOLD BY TUCKER Edward Lowe Tells One About Acting Days— Queer Collection By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, July 15.—Personal notes off a New Yorker’s cuff: Edmund Lowe, who is in New York at the mo- ment, likes to tell about the {time he and an- other actor had emerged from a long fast (he had just got a job) and were looking about for a room Finally one real estate dealer led him enthusi- astically to a dungeon-like cel- tlar below the basement into which no sunlight ever crept . . . The walls were mouldy and the atmosphere was damply pessimistic . . . “How do you like it?” asked the dealer. “Great, what?” “Yes,” murmured Lowe’s companion, “for growing \ mushrooms.” PR Once ‘each year Jules Charbneau brings to New York his vast col- lection of “the world’s tiniest ob- jects.” . And the man is mobbed before his exhibit is fairly, opened. What does this odd outlay dis- clost . . An airplane, for one thing, so tiny that a grain of rice is used for a landing field . .. Then there is a cash-register, two inches high, that actually works . . . Other items include: A carved camel that passes through the eye of a needle. A rare, jade Buddha enclosed in the husk of a rice grain. . . . Temple bells more than 200 years old no larger than drops of water. “ The Lord's prayer engraved on a grain of rice. . . . The working model of a piano so microscopic that it is played with an ivory tooth- pick. These are but a few of the 25,000 objects which, from a casual hobby, has become one of the world’s most amazing exhibits, . . . And they are Bert Acosta, the aviator, has been lured into headlining a Spanish revue at El Toreador.-. . , The flier is back with a fund of reminiscences of his activities in Spain. . . . Inci- dentally, if you get by El Toreador, make it late and get a gander at the murals. . . . They'll haunt you. Most of the firewood used by New Yorkers who are fortunate enough to own fireplaces is fu nished by a woman. . . . She is Miss Clark, and she is half owner of Clark & Williams, caterers to fire- place devotees. . . . Her stock in- cludes apple (which is rare and very expensive), oak, gum, birch, yew, balsam, maple, hickory (which crackles something terrible), fir, cy- press, pine (both yellow and white), beech (which is excellent for curing hams) and walnut. . . Horace Heidt has solved the problem of exercising his Great Dane in the city. . . . He has leased the roof of a block-long apartment, and his over-sized pal has an acre to romp around in, something like 31 stories above the sidewalk. Government Doctor Solves Tulip Mystery WASHINGTON, July 15—“Tu- lipomania” — a mystery that has puzzled tulip growers for centuries —has been solved by a Government scientist. Tulip blooms often change to fantastic colors and markings, which is called “breaking.” Grow- ers long have tried to induce the changes, which are carried on by bulbs. Dr. Frank P. McWhorter, after five years of experiments in the Department of Agriculture, says he has been able to accomplish “breaking” by a mixture of two virus infections injected into a healthy plant. et —— MISS SCOTT HERE Miss Eleanor Scott, school teach- Gastineau Hotel. rapidly making Charbneau wealthy. . . § | er from Wenatchee, has been visit-| ing in Juneau with friends for the| past week, and is stopping at the Woman Suicide At Age of 104 KOBE, Japan, July 15. — Con-| Lmd that life held no new happk-‘ ness, Mrs. Hisa Taniguchi, 104,/ ing herself from a bridge into the sea.. She was one of the oldest women in Japan, - e JUNEAU MAN - REMEMBERS SEN.ROBINSON | Inciden of—fi)rty Years| Ago Is Recalled by Dr. Robert Simpson i A small boy in Searcy, Arkansas, about forty years ago, was search- | ing for a nickel he had dropped| | through a crack in a wooden side- | walk. his five - cent piec: young man, tall, wearing a cutawa, coat, came by and offered his as: sistance. Together the boy and his im- ‘ pressive assistant tore up the side- ‘ walk, found the five-cent piece and with a rock picked up from the| road, hammered the boards b.lck! in place again. | “Maybe I can help you some!s: time,” the boy suggested after say- " ing thank you. | “Indeed you can,” said the young man. "My name is Joseph T.| Robinson and I am a candidate| for Congress. I would appreciate | your support.” The boy, who was Juneau's Dr. Robert Simpson, promised active support for the young Congu;flon-j al candidate. | Not many years ago, when sen- | ator Robinson was in Juneau on an | Alaskan cruise, Dr. Simpson met him again, and identified himself as the boy for whom the young| politician had torn up a Searcy sidewalk to help him find his nickel. MARGARET HAIGH I§ VISITING BROTHER Miss Margaret Haigh, sister of Mr. Thomas Haigh, has arrived in Juneau to be with her brother for the next few weeks, where she is from Detroit, Mich.,, where she Is a teacher. Mr. Haigh is a cadastral englncer with the Bureau of Public Survey.| He and his sister are staying at| \ e, Ior sale at The Emm Office. | PHONE 36 For very prompt “'LIQUOR DELIVERY + — OLDEST CONY JOINS A PARADE walk beside kind of work on when I entered prison 45 years found staunch enough to ¢ which we ley citrus While he was trying to recover ‘*"‘D approximately 70 miles long, it a dignified | lis packed and shipped under mmc’ y\thun 350 brands and trademarks, | ‘W | | [ | | the Fosbee Apnnments 9] VICT|j CANON CITY, Col, July 15— \,mccd that she had lived too long'when John Cox, Colorado’s oldest convicet, in Canon City's 65th committed suicide here by throw-lcelebratlon parade there was one stipulation he was asked to participate anniversary made. “I will march if you will let me a wagon carrying the a stone they made me ago,” he said. ‘The parade committee a; trouble locating rry the stone, hed more than a ton. beside Cox was Col- eed but Striding | orado’s oldest living prison guard, Andrew | work at a pris tenced to life for murder, at Crip- ple Creek in 1892 now retired, Hemmerle, who went to n in 1877, Cox, sen- is 78. Hemmerle, is 82. —— NOTICE The L.O.O. Moose No. 700 me at Odd Fellows Hall, Thursday ning at 8 o'clock. adv. > Although Lower Rio C is grown in s de narrow a wagon | Val- | BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Loty DB 5-14% World rights reserved, FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL FLOOR YOUR HOME WITH OAK~—Nature’s Gift Everlasting GARLAND BOGGAN PHONE 582 Buy Yours Floors with a GUARANTEE ___‘ [ | . Alaska Music Supply | | Arthur M. Uggen, Manager - | Yianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phune 206 122 W. Second W A RRACK Construction Co. T Yhone 45. MELODY HOUSE Music and Electric Appliances (Next Gastineau Hotel) Phone 65 | HARDWOOD "FLOORS [ LAID, SCRAPED, FINISHED Old Floors Made Like New | LOWEST PRICES { P. L. HAMMER Phene 532 241 Fr:nklin' Cigareues Candy Cards THE NEW ARCTIC Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap "JIMMY" CARLSON pharmacists compound prescrip- tions. | Butler Maiiro Dnlg Co. | The First National Bank TUNEAU CAPITAL——SSO 000 SURPLUS—$75.000 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 Gastineau Grocery in its new location PHONE 37 FOR FAST DELIVERY Where your patronage is more appreciated SPECIALIZING in French and Italian Dinners GASTINEAU CAFE Short Orders At All Hours --..N--.-m-q Jarman Custom Built $6.50 Friendly Five $5 Fortune $4 Product General Shoe Corp | | Nationally Advertised Prices SEE BIG VAN “3 Wk \Y\\ ¥ you enjoy indoor sports— here’s one of the best—TRY BOWLING! BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS Rheinlander and Alt Heidelberg BEER ON TAP e FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street PANHANDLE BEER PARLOR BEST BEERS and WINES P. BRENNAN Opposite Coliseumn Theatre Lode and placer lecation notices ] for sale at The Empire Office. PROFESSIONAL | DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER | DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am. to 9 p.m. Dr. Charles P. Jenne DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9, Valen(ine Bldg. TELEPHONE 176 Dr. Rlcbard Wlllmms DENTIST GFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN BUILDING e Dr. Judson Whittier CHIROPRACTOR Druglesc Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4 Triangle Bldg. PHONE 667 . RO || Fraternal Societies | of Gastineau Channel 3d and 4th Wednesdays at 8 pm. Visiting brothers welcome. N. C BANFIELD, Exalicd Ruler, M. H. SIDS, Secretary. MOUNI‘ JUNI'I\U LODGE NO. 11 Second and rourth Monday of each month in Scottish Rite Tempi¢ beginning at 7:30 p.n FORREST R. BATES Worshipful Master; JAMES W LEIVERS, Secretary REBEKAHY Perseverance Lodge No. 2 A mecta every second and fourth Wednes: day, 1.O.O.F. Hall. EDNA M BUTTS, Noble Grand; MILDRED CASHEN, Seu'ctary Juneau lce Cream Parlors [ Ice Cream. Soft Drinks, COYFEE SHOP Percy Reynolds, Manager Candy ' Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 | RELIABLE TRANSFER Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble. { | | | PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 | TELEPHONE 563 | Office Hours—9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dr. W. A. Rystrom DENTIST Over First National Bank X-RAY TWHEN IN A BORRY 7 CALL COLE FOR om.! | f DR.H. VANCE | { OSTEOPATH | Consultation and examination | | free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; | 7 to 9:30 by appointment, | | Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 177 | | Robert Simpson, Opt. D. | Graduate Los Angeles College | | of Optometry and | Opthalmology | Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground | I I Keep in mind . . . Caroline Todd Studio Piano—Harmony—Public Speaking 326 SECOND STREET Health. Foods Center BATTLE CEEEK, HAUSER AND OTHER DIETETIC FOODS 230 Franklin St. | Juneau Telephone 62 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR i Seward Street Near Third [ R " A AN Give a— - SMITH-CORONA TYPEWRITER J. B. Burford & Co. “Qur door step is worn by Satistied Customers” The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 ) S LIQUOR STORE Phone 655 Prompt Delivery 34 plus or 27 graviyy, in any amount . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSFER Phone 3441 or Night 3442 ! If I's Paint We Have It: | | IDEAL PAINT SHOP | FRED W. WENDT 1 | PHONE 549 Waltch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable raths PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREETS H. 8. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 | 4 t L 5 Juneau Coffee Shop MRS, T. J. JACOBSON Home Cooked Meals Served from 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Catering to Dinner Parties i " AR SRR R A 2 T [ JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers | A ____Ja Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE The Chas. W. Carter Mortuary PFourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136-2 J—————-- d

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