The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 8, 1938, Page 7

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i | T b e —— BARNEY GOOGLE NES--THE COMMNMO THE GUY WHQ OWNS THINK THAT OVER WHU! - g;______———————-fl WANT AD | INFORMATION | COunz five average words to t!.n Daily rete per line for consccutive nsertions: One day i 10C Additional days ... . 5¢ Minimum charge ..50c Copy must be in the office by 2 vclock in the afternoon to insertion on same day. ‘We accept ads over from persons listed in directory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-teker. telephone telephone WE'RE |N A =INE MESS NOW, SNUFEY -- YOU'VE GWEN THE COMMODORE YOUR MEASLES --- MLLION ~DOLLAR YACHT -- UP ON DECK AN' GET SOME AR -- \T'S TOO STUFEY DOWN HERE FOR ME -- insure SETT T U ————— L\Y OOoRE TH\S LE 1 GO WAAL , NAOW, HAIN'T THAT A SCANDAL TO TH'. PELLNCANS 22 WHAT & OHOM -- FOR RENT VACANCY—Nugget Apartments VACANCY Maloney Aplb Phone . 484, APARTMENT for “rent. California Grocery. FOR 5 fiifl‘ ;7Ox;é vacant apt., couple ‘only. Snow White Apt. 3 - ROOM furnished house With bath; also 2-foom apt. with bath. Mike Vagge, 513A wmoughby VACANCY at the Bishop Apts, FOR RENT—TWO office rooms in First National Bank Bldg. Inquire at bank. Iy 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 [ — FOR SALr. FOR SALE—_Spark Oil Heater com- plete with tank. Phone 81 FOR S’\‘\F 7 r«*nm ((ll\l|)l(’fi(l fur- nished house, 6th und Kennedy. Terms. FOR SALE10-rcom house all fur- nished, complete with large Yot Close in and with income. Apply at Frank's Cabin, Douglas. TERMS like rent on these used washing machines, $5 down, $4 a month. BENERAL Electric with pump, $45 cash price; Automatic Washer in A-1 condition, $45 cash; Easy Spinner Type washer, $60 cash. All may be purchased on time payments at the Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. USED Automatic Westinghouse electric range. A wonderful buy in a four-burner electric range with time clock. If you are in the market for a serviceable range if Alaska Electric Light & don't miss this. $75 on terms desired. at Hirst Chichagof $1.50. Inquire Nugget Shop. ['OR SALE — RCA Victor, Zenith, Emerson anc Crosley radios. Ju- neau Melody Shop. FOR RENT—Four - room furnished apt. with bath, Gastineau Ave. Inquire Juneau Paint Store. VACANCY MacKinnon Apts. FOR RENT—Furnished, neated,and preferred modern apartment in center of downtown business dis- trict; over the Guy Smith Drug Store. Phone 97. COMFORTABLE _apartment for iwo. Apply Winter & Pond Store. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. iy WANTED ‘WANTED— 1!‘1 for general house- work. Phone Black 381. CAPABLE vouuu ‘woman vants work in store, or can do office work Write Empire G-461. WANTED TO BUY—Used car, mod- erately priced, in good condition. Phone Green 185, DISTRICT Manager to handle cir- culation for leading American magazine publisher. Transporta- tion, Office, Advertising furnished qualificant. Write M. A. Steele, 5 Columbus Circle, New York City. WANTED — Young woman must have work. Phone Empire. Trv an Empire ad. MISCELLANEOUS GUARANTDED Refl“suc Perma- nents, $4.50. Lola’s Beauty Shop, 201, 315 Decker Way. telephone CHAPELADIES TO MEET Chapeladies are meeting tomor-' row evening at the home of Mrs. Dave Dishaw on the Fritz Cove Road for their regular gathering. the Empire classifieds for Try results. - FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget shop MEETING HELD BY EANE COCRTAIL PARTY THIS TURNED OUT TO BE-- WSSEN -- WHERE'S ALL THAT RACKET COMING FROM 22 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1938. By BILLIE DE BECK e w oL \WUD -“TURKLE T COME ALL TH' WAY ue WIE HERE TO CRAWL \nN ¥E- - JES . TO KEEP Y& COMP'NY, BUT \&= YO'RE COLLEGE IS NOT NECESSARY CHICAGO, March 8. — Colleges should not attempt to prepare per- sons for specific jobs, says Dr. Ro- bert Maynard Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago. “The first responsibility of the college is to help the student un- derstand the traditional wisdom of the race, not to prepare him for a job,” Dr. Hutchins said At present there is a great deal of excitement about training peo- ple for public service. Public life is concerned with action on imme- diate problems. The college cannot ring these problems into the classroom.” ADIO The following summary is com- piled from KINY Station’s latest available program schedule. The Daily Alaska Empire cannot be re- spongible for last minute changes: Tuesday—Closing Schedule 4:00 to 4:15—Works Progress ministration 4:15 to 4:30—Hawaiian Echoes 4:30 to 4:45—The Round-Up 4:45 to 5:00—Mood Espanol 5:00 to 5:15—Juneau Woman's Club 5:15 to 5:30—Fifteen Minutes in program Ad- Fairyland 5:30 to 5—World Bookman 5:35 to & Golden Tones 5:45 to — Radio Symphony Orchestra 6:00 to 6:05—Weather Report 6:056 to 6:30—Dinner Music 6:30 to 6:45—Melody and Song 6:45 to 7:00 — Comedy Stars Broadway 7:00 to 7:15—Singing Strings l to 7:30—Cecil and Sally to 8:00—Variety Booklet to 8:15—The Arkansas Minstrel to 8:30—Guest Night to 8:45—Music. to 9:00—Cub Reporters to 9:15—Parade to 9:30 — The House of Feter Mach'(’gor 7:30 to 9:45—Dance Music 9:45 to 10:00--Empire News Broad- cast of Finger wave, 65C. 14.09 to 10:15—Through the Holly- woods Lens 10:15 to 10:30—Let’'s Dance 10:30 to 11:00—Organ Treasures 11:00—Off the Air Wednesday—Opening Schedule 8:00 to 8:15—Morning Thought GASTINEAU NURSES 8:15 to 9:15—Breakfast Club Discussing plans for 9:15 to 9:30—Parade attending 9:30 to 9:45—Scandinavian Music the letcures Of Anita Jones, who|9:45 to 10:15—Sons of the Pioneers will visit here from the Maternal 10:15 to 10:30—Victor Quan Or- Health Center of New York, in July, members of the Channel Nurses’ chestra Gastineau | 10:30 to 10:45—Morning Chat Association met 10:45 to 11:00—Dance Music last night in regular session at St. 11:00 to 11:30—Melodies of the Mu- Ann’s Hospital. Mrs. E. F. Vollert, President, sic Masters 11:30 to 12:00—Top Tunes of the presided and plans were made to Day hold the next meeting of the group |12:00 to 12:15—The Serenader at the home of Mrs. E. H. Kaser ! Fol- the meeting refreshments | 12:30 to 12:45—Monitor Views the on the first Monday in April. lowing were . served by Mrs. Vollert. l The Charles W. Carter Mortuary Fourth and mtlm Bts. } PHONE 136 EXERCISE FOR HEAL' . Bowl at the BRUNSWICK Recreation Alleys Cafe in Connection Spec- ializing in American snd Dishes. Chinese TRY US ONCE! L 115 to 12:30 — Here Comes the Band WS 7 g3 | 12:45 to 1:00—% Hour of % Time BODDlNG TRANSFER | | 1:00 to 2:00—Midday Rendezvous MARINE PHONE | 2 :?m's:r: 15—Mario Chandler’s Or- Buu:olc:gcm P 210 DG by 14 Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery 2:30 to 2:45—Peacock Court P 2:45 to 3:00—Auld Lang Syne . ok £ 3:00 to 3:30—Symphonettes { Phone 723———115-2nd St. | |3:30 to 3:45—Electric Melodies THE ROYAL 3:45 to 4:00—Lovely Lady o 4:00 to 4:15—Works Progress Ad- | BEAUTY SALON | ‘ministration OPEN EVENINGS | |4:15 to 4:30—Hawaiian Echoes “If your hair is not becoming 4:30 to 4:45—Mills Bros. and Bing to you — You should be Crosby | coming to us.” 4:45 to 5:00—Club Cabana i [——— || Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES | l READY-TO-WEAR s 7 Seward Street Near Third SRt —— | R | | "GARLAND BOGGAN PHONE 582 | Buy Your Floors with a | GUARANTEE THERE IS NOTHING FINER IN RADIO THAN Carlsm Hear a Demonstration ]. B. Burford & Co. “Our Doorstep Is Worn by Satisfied Customers™ JOB TRAINING IN You Will Run Your Own Plane in 1963, or . AIMIN' TO G\T RISTERCRATICAL ' NE CAN GO RUN UP A STICK +==} aOne H umlr(’d and Forty Mile an Hour Car While we marvel at the strides of science gnd industry in the last quarter century, research- ers are charting advances equal- ty remarkable’ for the next twenty-five years. This is the first of five articles in which Alexander R. George, after talk- ing with the planners, pictures life in 1963 as it shapes up in the laboratories and on the drafting boards of 1938. By ALEXANDER R. GEORGE AP Feature Service Writer Only 35 years have passed since President “Teddy” Roosevelt was praised by the newspapers for his “characteristic courage” in riding an |automobile. Today more people in the United States ride automobiles than use toothbrushes. Teddy's grandchildren can cross the Pacific in a passenger plane, and transport pushes on to- ward undreamed speed and com- fort. Stratosphere Travel From scientists and technicians who teil on devices to cater to a populace which travels more than any other in world history, comes this preview of transportation in 1963: 1.—AIR TRAVEL DE LUXE—The China-bound North Orient Express slips through the placid atmosphere. In the air-conditioned dining-danc- ing salon, New York Importer Jack McGee strawberries and cream some 25,000 feet above the frozen tundra of the Arctic. He and his 200 fellow-passengers are on a two-and-a-half-day flight from New York to Peiping. In deep cushioned chairs they enjoy tele- vision presentation of the football game between McGee's own Fight- ing Irish and the Golden Gophers of Minnesota. After dinner and dancing to melo- dies from San Francisco, McGee chats by radio telephone with his wife in their Long Island home. Pipe dream? Not if you take the word of conservative aviators. Tech- nicians now are working on super- charged engines and cabins for high altftude atmosphere, and there is serfous talk that coast-to-coast sub- |stratosphere trips will be offered the traveler in two or three years. | The Family Plane 2. — MIDDLE CLASS FAMILY , rFLYING—On a sizzling Sunday morning in July, Grocery-man Joe Shultz of Topeka, Kag., drives his auto-plane from the home garage down to Topeka's Field for private flyers. Mrs. Shultz the two children |and an automatic ice cream freezer are with Joe as he takes off in his |low-priced “fool-proof” plawe for a Sunday outing in the Colorado mountain. country. Flight of fancy? Aeronautical folk are confident all this will come true within 225 years. Road-able aircraft already are here. The steady im- ent in small planes, plus American marketing talent, a gen- eration growing up determined to fly and the vast air “roominess” of the United States, presages flying by a sizeable percentage of the pop- ulation. Experts say volume demand will bring mass production and low- ipriced aircraft, COvE OneCOME ON OB HAVRN'T GO ALY DAY/ a~ 1T TAKES AN HOuR AND A MA\,\'— w0 M 1D Pleasure Driving 3. MOTORING IN 1963—Ver monter Aaron Snowbound and fam-| ily leave home in a blue-gray dol- phin of the highways for an au- tumnal week-end at the national capital. Their 1963 car is a bit bulbous- nosed, bopsts “dining car window visibility,” super-safety glass all around and perfected air condition- ing. The feather-weight metal auto, streamlined like a fish has a thick outer layer of rubber to reduce col- lision hazards, Chemically-treated fuels help to make the compact power plant al- most 100 per cent efficient. The Snowbounds have put a half-pint of essence of heliotrope in the fuel tank to make the exhaust fumes pleasant for other driver on the road. Papa Snowhound turns the dol- phin cnto a six-lane super highway (with bypasses at all towns). The perfectly-enineered road is illum- ined at night, the paving is skid- resisting and self de-icing. With au- tomatic gears, automatic brakes and perfect stabilization, the car al- most drives itseli. It can do 140; miles an hour, but the Snowbounds, being econservative, ease along at 78. Vibrationless Trains | 4—THE TRAIN IN 1963 — The Cornbelt Comet glides out of Chi- cago, its horn trumpeting a melod- ious au revoir to suburbanites. Pick- ing up speed, the metallic rabbit of tops off. luncheon with the rails soon is a maize-striped INCOME TAX REPORTS PREPARED James C. Cooper COULDN'T e MUPA W é’?’fi? | streak of cornflower-blue in the | prairie dusk. s Towa Farmer Hoffman to his hired man as they watch the streamliner whizz toward Des Moines: “Looks like she's hitting 130 tonight, Hank.” In the softly-illuminated, vibra- tionless dining car of the Comet, white-haired Henry A. Wallace, former secretary of agriculture, dines on corn-fed chicken and quick frozen golden bantam corn. Behind the diner is the music-movie-tele- visicn salon, air=conditioned, noise- muffled free of dirt and bacteria. Pading from the American scene is the old “iron horse.” In its place are quiet, slip-streamed versions of the “steam snorter,” electric and diesel-electric locomotivss Piling up in the transportation graveyard also is that venerable arrier of freight, the wooden box- car. The “side door pullman,” which endeared itsclf to the wanderérs of the open road is rapidly being dis- placed by an all-purpose, light- weight metal car to c every- thing from mushrooms to machin- ery. These cars, which can be loaded or unloaded from six sides, have the | fleet, joltless qualities embodied in the passenger trains that have re- placed old “Number 6.” The next “Looking Ahead Twenty-five Years” will be on Housing. C.P. A Authorized w"mllce Before the U. S. Treasury Dept. THIBD FLO()R, GOLDSTEIN BLDG. WELLINGTON LUMP COAL $ 1 5.60 per ton F. O.'B. Bunkers l'acific Coast Coal Co. PHONE 412 s Patronize n'%g’s Market OR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. Juneau, Alaska, March 7, 1938. SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, «under date of February 23, 1938. gave authority under the Act of Feb, 19, 1920, to change the name of the scow SESNON NO. 6 to LOMEN COMMERCIAL CO. NO. 6. Said vessel was built in 1900 at Tacoma, Wash,; her official number is 165707; her gross tonnage is 41; her home port, Juneau; owner, Lomen Commercial Company, Nome, Alaska. JAMES J. CONNORS, Col- lector of Customs. Juneau, Alaska, March 7, 1938. SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, under date of February 23, 1938, gave authority under the Act of Feb. 19,1 1920, to change the name of the Scow SESNON NO. 7 to LOMEN COMMERCIAL CO. NO. 7. Said vessel was built in 1900 at Tacoma, Wash.; her official number is 165708; her gross tonnage is 32; her home port, Juneau; owner, Lomen Commercial Company, Nome, Alaska. JAMES J. CONNORS, Col- lector of Customs. Juneau, Alaska, March 7, 1938 SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, under date of February 23, 1938, gave authority under the Act of Feb. 19, 1920, to change the name of the barge SESNON NO. 25 to LOMEN COMMERCIAL CO. NO. 13. Said vessel was built in 1907 at Seattle, Wash.; her official number is 163212; her gross tonnage is 39; her home port, Juneau; owner, Lomen Commercial Company, Nome, Alaska. JAMES J. CONNORS, Col- lector of Customs. Juneau, Alaska, March 7, 1938. SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, under date of February 23, 1938, gave authority under the Act of Feb. 19, 1920, to change the name of the barge ELIM to LOMEN COMMER- CIAL CO. NO. 9. Said vessel was built in 1927 at Golovin, Alaska; her official number is 169885; her gross _tonnage is 46; her home pott, Juneéau; owner, Lomen Commercial Company, Nome, Alaska. JAMES J. CONNORS, Collector of Cus- toms. Juneau, Alaska, March 7, 1938. SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, under SIK HUNDRED LIVES LOST IN SEA FIGHTING GIBRALTAR, March 8.— British naval sources said approximatély 600 Spanish Insurgent séarfien Weve drowned in the naval battle off the Epanish coast between the Govern- ment warships and planes and In- surgent warships and when the In- surgent ¢rack warship Balaeres was sent down ‘School cmldren Be Fingerprinted TRENTON, New Jersey, March 8. —The State Senate has passed a bill making mandatory fingerprint- ing of children in public schools. e ATTENTION O.E.S. Juneau Chapter No. 7, Tuesday, 8 p.m. Rainbow Girls Majority Serv- ice, 8:45 p.m. Refreshments. LILLIAN G. WATSON, adv., Secretarv date of February 23, 1938, gave authority under the Act of Feb. 19, 1920, to change the name of the scow M. T. B, 8. INC. IV to LOM- EN COMMERCIAL CO. NO. 5. Said vessel was in built in Seattle, Wash,, in 1931; her official number is 171298; her gross tonnage is 45; her home port, Juneau; owner, Lomen Commercial Company, Nome, Alaska. JAMES J. CONNORS, Col- lector of Customs. Juneau, Alaska, March 7, 1938. SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, under date of February 23, 1938, gave authority under the Act of Feb. 19, 1920, to change the name of the scow NOME HARBOR LGT. CO. NO. 1 to LOMEN COMMERCIAL CO. NO. 8. Said vessel was built in Seattle, Wash., in 1933; her of- ficial number is 171596; her gross tonnage is 37; her home port, Ju- neau; owner, Lomen <Commercial Company, Nome, Alaska. JAMES J. CONNORS, Collector of Customs. The Jfie&u hfid:;y Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 ERWIN'S BOARDING HOUSE MONTHLY RATES SO FRANKLIN STREET = & ' er £y Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE P JUNEAU - YOUNG_—T Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition’ JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE 122 -SECOND . STREET ALL WORK FULLY GUAR- ANTEED 60 DAYS PHONE 36 LIQUOR DELIVERY For very prompt ‘;mavocus—_ For Women , 101 BEWARD 8T. GREEN TOP CABS PHONE WINDOW CLEANING +W PHONE 485 nummnynnthnulml Pay’n Takit PHONES 92 or 95 Free Delivery Fresh, Meats, Groceries. Liquors, Wines and We Séll for LESS We Sell for CASH George Brothers THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! | THE MINERS Recreation Parlors | BILL DOUGLAS % n “Smiling Service” Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Junesu ‘T HOME GROCERY AND LIQUOR STORE 146=—Phones—152 . AMERICAN CASH GROCERY ul MARKET I .m.m PIGGLY WIGGLY, i b T 5. S g v &

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