The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 15, 1938, Page 7

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_ BARNEY GOOGLE 7 Wuet aBouT MY CHECK HASN'T COME NET--BUT DON'T WORRY, SNUEEN--EVERN THING'LL SE OKAY BY TOMORROW-- ARKRANGED A JOB FoR US AT THE COUNTRY CLUe -+ \T'LL GIVE US & UTTLE THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE, w FORE N THE MEANTIME LVE T WONT S THET'S T FIETH SHOT T VORMNTS DONE HAD, BUT TUESDAY, FEB. 15, 1938. By BILLII NOU HEARD ME PUT BSacCK YOU TO THE N WANT AD | INFORMATION | 52 H “Count five average words o the line. Daily rate per line for consecutive nsertions: One day 100 Additional days 5¢ Minimum charge 50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2 p'clock in the afternoon to insure Insertion on same day. ‘We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone directory. | apts.; Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. F»-—A‘_“ g, BRI | FOR R_El‘i:r 2-room [ Rear Admiral Grayson, Head of American Red VIEWPOINTS ON LABOR ISSUES FROM 2 SIDES (Continuea 1:vm Page Oue) circles of Washington society and for several years conducted a Vir- Dlgests of British Trade ginia breeding farm and raced a FOR RENT i 0 . fairly successful string of thor- Disputes as Relative to | cugnbreds. FOR RENT—Three furnished rooms, U. S. Situations { Pecullar Introduciion. v 1 | Although Grayson was closer to ! with bath, Gastineau Ave. Inquire Ltne "Worid War Besid oEabis Juneau' Paint Store. (Continued from Page One) ‘_‘ = sident 13_10 ably & | PER TR TR T L N than any other man, he was un- THREE-room furnished apt., $20 < known to Woodrow Wilson until ican practice and discussion of the March 4, 1913. On that inaugura- | monthly. Cliff Apts. - . problem bas avoided social theory tion day, the new first lady of the for the most part and instead has jand—the first Mrs, Wilson—suf- FOR RENT — Steamheated room | with board. Private home. Black |emphasized labor’s local inter »/fered an unimportant but painful | 880, stressing particularly the purely|accident. Grayson was the only TRCARGY: Decker . Apettuients, | Tusinese aspects of cooperation. |member of the White House medical A political approach to the prob-|staff who had not been lured away !lem carries with it necessarily Llw‘;mn, his post of duty by the inau- ideg, of giving the government a guration spectacle. He attended her ‘lnrge hand in bringing about labor-|anq so impressed was she by the FOR RENT — 2-room and 3-room employer cooperation. And from|modest, dutiful young surgeon that steamheat, hot and cold that you can go back to the social ghe commended him to her husband science encyclopedia for the asser-|Grayson became the head of the tion that when the government|white House doctors—“the personal Feb. 23. Call Green 465 mornings. VACANCY MacKinnon Apts. | water, electric range. Phone 569. | apt, hot and| ] 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. 3 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE i | ALE FOR SALE FOR SALE OF k. .—Furnished house in Douglas. See Dick Mc- Cormick. 1000 SHARES of Hirst-Chichagof steps into labor disputes, the em-|physician to the President of the ployer benefits most—since the gov-| United States.” |ernment is interesttd mainly in pn--1 In the eleven years between that |serving the status quo, ‘which labor|day and Wilson's death, their two |strives to upset more frequently lives wove into a close fabric of A0 RNl 4 4&han capital.” ; FOR RENT-—Purnished, neated,and| As part of an attitude of peace; preferred modern apartment inat almost any price, the British ! center of downtown business dls-;ha\'c established many precedents trict; over the Guy Smith Drug/of non-compulsory conciliation and Store. Phone 97. arbitration of labor disputes—in- oy 7.0 g g e |terrupted by such events as the gen- COMFORTABLE apartment fOX| o) strike of 1926. That machinery, two. Apply Winter & Pond Store. i gesigned to replace strikes. I FOR RENT — Seven-room house— |dcesn't altogether. London bussmen one mile out on Glacier Highway.|Struck and messed up the recent| Cheap for winter months. Phone [coronation. But public and official | [prossure is for peace. cold water, steam-heated. Call 569. APARTMENT for rent, California Grocery. at $150 share. Inquir+ Nugget Shop. 244. FOR SALE — RCA Victor, Zenith, Erferson anG Crosley radios. Ju- neau Melody Shop. MISCELLANEOUS GOOD used clothing bought at 79 ‘Willoughby Ave. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65¢c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, 201, 315 Decker Way. TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY To be issued March 15 and forms close March 1. For space and list- ings please call Juneau and Doug- las Telephone Co. Phone 420. adv. SATISFACTION IN .FOOD QUALITY AT UNITED FOOD CO. “TELEPHONE—16 FORTUNE '] Jongs-Steven_: Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third TRY US ONCE! telephone | FOR RENT—Seven-room furnished EMPLOYER ALSO RESPONSIBLE Quite apart from any class an- gle is the provision in the British act making labor unions and work- ers responsible for illegal ac Among “illegal acts” are such things as “sympathy strikes.” Unions may be sued for damages, their legal re-| sponsibility under the British sys-| tem being quite a distance beyond that of American unions, except| |perhaps under the laws of some apartment. Inquire Snap Shoppe. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. WANTED SCHOOL girl desires reasonable rcom with board or cooking fa- cilities. Call 197 after 4 p.m. (i AY SON Grayson be- CARY T.GR intimate friendship. SINGLE man, middle age, sober.ll‘espomlble. honest, and industrious now on| One phase of the British act that|he nation through the World War. relief seeks home, able and will-;may interest many employers is| Intimacy Survives ing to work for room and fuel,|that it subjects them (the employ-| The Virginia-born doctor’s genial have own bedding. Will live any- jers) to rigors of the law in thelsmile and dark, merry eyes that where but prefer country to city same terms as unions. A “sympa-(looked from under shaggy brows be- life. Write Empire, Box W-412. [thy” lockout or a lockout intended|came almost as familiar as the lean [to influerice government action countenance of his chief. Where {would be jiist as illegal and punish-|wilson went, so did Grayson. He T T |able as a sympathy strike or a strike | was with the President at practi- LOST AND FOUND \intended to influence the govern- cally every important function in ‘mim- Hia 3 Vot Washington. He accompanied him 7 v T R s 8 I comment we should add | ris h ace conference LOST—Pair of glasses in black case that the British act is written m‘;: 1:?9_5 f;irw;seag:e sy at Pueblo, between Gastineau Hotel and nonest-to-goodness, straightout, un-|Colo,, when the early signs of the High School. Return to Stella derstandable English. That can't be|president’s impending paralytic Young, Gastineau Hotel. {sald for thé proposed wage-hourstroke appeared. % : e 2 | bill, He was one of a very few inti- mates of Wilson whose advice still was welcome when the administra- ition ended. While one after an- —a |other of the Wilson counselors step- ped off the national scene, Gr son’s influence enlarged. His deci: |ions and thcse of the second Mrs. {Wilson had national effect during the days in 1919 and 1920 when the President lay so gravely ill. It was they who had the say about what was important enough to be taken WANTEiD —_ Y(;ung ;;vomnn 7musl have work. Phone Empire. CARD PARTY GIVEN BY MRS. NORDLING | Mrs. Homer G. Nordling was hos-;* tess last evening at a bridge lmdl, Gastineau pinochle party assembling guests for! K. H. Schulze, Tulsequah; F. three tables at her home on Twelfth |Kelly, Vancouver, F. H. Colbur, Street. Vancouver; P. Sheldrich, Vancou- Mrs. Harry Douglas won first|ver;, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. O'Neill, prize in bridge; Mrs. George Gul-|Wesley Ruble, Lawrence Elby, Rich- lufsen, second; Mrs. J. B. Bernhofer, 'ard Wilson. o 3 ' AT THE HOTELS# low. In pinochle, Mrs. E. M. Pollty‘ Alaskan into the sick room. placed first, and Mrs Harry Stone-| A Orvill Gustafson, 8. McLean, Returns. From Navy House, low. [Mayo; A. Wasdahl. When Wilson's term ended in 1921, e ,———— ! Juneau President Harding made sure that Irving McK. Reed, Andrew Si- ons, Mrs. Raymond Meline, George IATION IS TO LD ‘TONIGHT Initiation will be held by the American Legion Auxiliary tonight Psychologists say that parents’ acts and gestures are a much more effective education ‘for children than words. Grayson would not be transferred out of Washington so that Wilson still might have his services. Gray- son continuéd as the former Presi- dent’s physician until Wilson died in 1924. A year later Grayson re- tired voluntarily from the Navy. Grayson was born' ih Culpepper County, Virginia, October 11, 1878, Ithe son of a country doctor. He was orphaned in boyhood ‘and although THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming ATIO Cross, Dies, Washington | Institute. He moved in the select | states which make unions legally same an indispensable ‘adjunct to| | the stern executive who was guiding | when members meet at 8 o'clock in regular session in the Dugout, with Mrs. John McCormick, president, presiding, to you — You should be coming to us.” ' ] | The program is in charge of Mrs. FLOOR YOUR HOME WITH | |George Gullufsen, Americanization OAK—Nature's Gift Everlasting | |chairman; and Mrs. Homer G. c ARLAND BOGGAN Nordling, National Defe; chair- PHONE 582 man. A social hour will follow. Buy Your Floors with a TERTL 8 AU : GUARANTEE A e & Norlitemen dinner | The regular gathering will be held tonight at the Northern Light Presbyterian church beginning - at 6:30 o'clock and lasting until 8 o'clock, with the Rev. John A. Glasse officiating. Dr. Joseph Aronson of the Bureau FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street e e e o of Indian Affairs Will present var- jous motion picture ‘scenes as the event of the evening. the financial way thereafter was| not very smooth he managed to takci a pre-medical course at William and | Mary College in Virginia, winning a‘? Phi Betta Kappa key, and to obtain medical degrees from the University of the South at Sewanee, Tenn.,| and the Medical College of Vir-| ginia, at Richmond. He also was a graduate of the Naval Medical School. He joined the Naval Medi- cal Corps in 1903 and was on the| U. 8. 8. Maryland, 1905-1907, when; the Atlantic fleet cruised around the world. ! He was married May 24, 1916, to Alice Gertrude Gordon of Wash-| Three sons were born to ington. them. ., - men recovered the auto of Mrs. 5 ”y of Milwaukee as it 5 i the edge of a 100-foot clitf where it had skidded. | | | | check FUR PRICES | cent, red fox 5 percent, lynx 10 per- cent, marten 10 percent, and blue fox 10 percent. Muskrat declined 5 percent. THAT DWOT OR \'LL REPORT Gets First N. Y.]ob Insurance James J. Klein, of Brooklyn, unemployed toolmaker, was the first person in New York metropolitan area to get a New York State unemployment insurance check. Jobless for three months, he got his first weekly B et o e— The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 E BECK : 4 Pay’n Takit |- PHONES 92 or 95 | Free Delivery Fresh Meats, Groceries. Liquors, Wines and Beer §° We Sell for LESS%Q&UM i L\SSEN ,YoL oU GOaT-- OON'T YE GO ACCLSWY e Q' SUNTHIN T NEVER ooNE --- We Sell for CASH' ** George Brot‘herg . Family-Style Meals ERWIN’S BOARDING HOUSE MONTHLY RATES SO FRANKLIN STREET B - [ - - 5 | Thomas Hardware Co. | | 2550 TOWND Builders’ and Shelf . e 4 L HARDWARE Ll e T R M Recreation Parlors } BILL DOUGLAS | 1 JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware | Guns and Ammunition e ; “Smiling Service” Y F— || Berts Cash Grocery {71 || JUNEAURADIO | very o] | SERVICE LT 122 SECOND STREET " ALL WORK FULLY GUAR- ANTEED 60 DAYS PHONE 36 LIQUOR DELIVERY For very prompt AND LIQUOR STORE 146—Phones—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET ! ! I Correctly Styled Clothes For Women 101 SEWARD ST. | A SRR o i RS P T ST GREEN TOP CABS PHONE T e b | SITKA HOT SPRINGS | Mineral Hot Baths | Accommodations to suit every - taste. Reservations, Alaska Atr I of $15. MRS. PETERSON IS HONORED AT PARTY. tin for the occasion. D James C. Cooper C.P. A Authorized to Practice Before the U. 8. Treasury Dept. CARTER, SHEPARD o Transport. ot = = 1] G. Day were hostesses yesterday at §* B ——— 4, i afternoon party honoring Mrs I McCAUL MOTOR i RELIABLE TRANSFER Hiida Peterson of Ketchikan, former | Our \rucks go any place sny | resident of Douglas, who left for | COMPANY time.” A taxk for Diesel Off | A her hnm‘v in the First City aboard ||| and " ank for Crude Ot | R z the Alaska last evening | save barner trowble, * SEATTLE Some fur! " Mg peterson had been: visiting || D°95S and Flymeuth: Deslers PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 ! prices advanced at the Seattle Fur 1" juncay for the past few days, = - Exchamge auction, held February 9 coming here with the Ketchikan e e e 2 ) and Hebruary 10, over the previous y,wiino team. o Ut ey 3 _ A number of old friends were l N c o M E T A x Wild mink ..‘u:\.lnul;d 41:(1().1 101015 yreceny for the atfair yesterday, ] percent, ranch mink about 5 per- gathering at the home of Mrs. Mar- REPORTS PREPARE:'} A, Other fur prices were unchanged. The market was strong. - o HOSPITAL NOTES George Smith, a medical patient, was dismissed today from St. Ann's | Hospital. | Robert Willett was dismissed yes- terday from St. Ann's Hospital fol- |lowing surgical attention. Mrs, H. B. Crewson was admitted to St. Ann's Hospital for medical | care today. | SR WOMEN OF THE MOO: | Drill practice Wedn esday e at 7 o'clock, to precede regular meet- ling at 8 o'clock. All members wear iwhite. Social and refreshments fol- "In\\mg meeting. | GERTIE {ady OLSEN Recorder. - e “MUSIC FOR MADAME" Spensored by the Martha Society; at the Capitol Theatre, Tuesday eve- ning, February 22. adv. | They Bridged Two States George H, Earle (left) of Pennsylvania, and Harold G. Hoffman of New Jersey, are pictured at Easton, Pa., as they dedicated the new bridge which joins Phillipsburg, N. J., and Easton. ‘The span is an important link in one of the country’s busiest transcontinental highways. THIRD FLOOR, GOLDSTEIN BLDG. TO LEAVE FRIDAY FOR GRAND IGLOO to the delay in the arrival Baranof, Charles W. Carter, President of the Pioneers of | | Alaska, and H. R. Shepard, Grand | | Sccretary, will not- leave for the | Westward today as planned, but will | |await the Baranof here. | Carter and Shepard will travel to Cordova where the Grand Lodge of | | the Pioneers of Alaska will be held | beginning February 22. Due |of the Grand Fresh Fruit and Vegetables ([ ] California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery WELLINGTON LUMP COAL $ 560 per ton F. 0. B. Bunkers Pacific Coast anl Co. MIELKE FUNERAL TO BE HELD THURSDAY Funeral services for Herbert Ern- | Mielke, who passed away at! age of 74 last Friday, will be d at 2 p. m. Thursday from the' apel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, it was announced today. | The Rev. John L. Cauble will of- |ficiate at the ceremony, following |which interment will be held in Evergreen Cemetery |x PHONE 412 FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48t e The Department of Labor was created in 1913. !

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