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

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BARNEY GOOGLI MILLIONS OF USTENERS ARE WAITING TO HEAR YOU LA DE DOODY- DOO ON YOUR JUG, SN\)FF‘I-- YOU GOTTA PuLL YOURSELF TOGETHER-- FOR RENT APARTMENTS phone Blue 200. 4 ROOM furnished apartment. Oil burner, hot and cold water, 2 bedrooms, low rent. Inquire 407 South Franklin, telephone 172. WANT AD | INFORMATION | |: (A)unt. five average words to the Dnhy mv.e per line for cumccumve rooms and Klein Apts. bath, Phone FOR RENT—3 steamheated. Blue 160. n case of error or ¥ an ad | | has been stopped beiore ex- piration, advertiser please noti- | fy this office (Phone 374) at | once and same will be given , attention. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | | JICE in_ Blomgren Building; two rooms. Call 284. |5-ROOM Apt. Blue 200. FOR RENT5- “unfurnished house. 835 Dixon. Phone Red 470. One day ... Additional days . be Minimum charge ..50¢ e Copy must be in the office by 2 'wo office felock in the afternoun to insure| First Nd,ll()nfl] Bank Bldg. Inquire nsertion on same aay. | at bank. We accept ads over telephone | from persons listed in telephone Miectory. | — L e | Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE REFRIGERATOR, reasonable. 423 4th St., Johnson VACANCY at the Fosbee, COZY, warm, furn, apis. Light, water, dishes, cooking utens and bath. Reasonable al Seaview. | WILL PAY $15 to §26 for 2- or 3- like new, very| room furnished house. J. Paselk, or W. P.| Erwin’s Cafe. PARIY DESIRES small furnished house or 4-room furnished apt., for several months. Will rent or Write P.O. Box 2361 11-TUBE combination radio. BM—‘ gain for cash, $25. 229 Franklin St.| s ~| sub-lease. FOR SALE — Apartment house; money maker. 24 apartments, all | WANTED—Maid for general house- rented. Will sell on good terms lo‘ work. Phone 361 responsible party. Must have | $5,000 cash, balance on easy terms. \HELP WANTED—Woman for light ‘Write Emplre box P‘JM housework. J. P. Christensen, Auk = | Bay. LOST AND FOUND for sale 1119 W. yth St. FOR SALE—Dwelling house with store front on corner 9th and D Sts. Sacrifice for cash, $1,950. Write Henry C. Gorham, Box 932, | Juneau. | | LOST — Labrador pup from airport. Kindly notify airport. LOST—Pair gold-rimmed glasses in dark case. Return to A. W. Stew- art. Babe Ruth Gives Blood to His 22 Year 0ld Daughter | NEW YORK, | Ruth, 22, daughter of Babe Ruth, |is reported improved by physicians {in a Manhattan eye and throat hospital where she has received a blood transfusion from her fam- | ous father. Macfifififi[fle In Bendix Races NEW YORK, Aug. 8—Bernarr MacFadden, 70-year-old publisher and aviation enthusiast, announces his entry in the Bendix Transcon- tinental Air race from Los Angeles to Cleveland. The race takes place FOR SALE—Model Cafe, Cordova,| Alaska. Newly decorated. A fine| steady business. Very reasonably | priced. Selling to close estate. Box | 640, Cordova, Alaska. FOR SALE—Cily F!oat Beer Parlor. Phone 541 after 4 pm. MISCELLANEOUS BUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. | Lola’'s Beauty Shop, t.elcphone 201, 315 Decker Way. Aug. 8—Juliea YURN your old gold into value,: cash or trade at Nuggat Shop. Beaned by Pitcher, Judge I Forgiving CHICAGO, Aug. 8.—Twenty-four years ago Municipal Judge Joseph E. McGarry was knocked out by a pitched ball in a Knights of Colum- | bus ball game. He recalled it vividly when John O'Connor, forty-seven, stood before | him for intoxication. “Well, hello, John,” said the| judge. “Do you remember that|®3T1 Dext month. speedball you beaned me with?” oona i G, e BIRTHDAY PARTY IS Tears came to my eyes: I thought In honor of the tenth birthday I had killed you!” The judge, just to demonstrate) of Doris Mae Clark, daughter of |Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Clark, whose that he had no hard feelings about‘ that bean ball of years ago, dis- charged him. | birthday was Thursday, a party was given Saturday afternoon at the home of her grandmother, Mrs. Al CRUISE PARTY sy SR OUT YESTERDAY g BT PAA| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1938. By BILLIE DE BECK ; PRONOGRAPH UP HERE WITH TW L& DE DOODY D00 RECORD HWE'D SNAP ouT OF \ « T SWOW . THAT _NMUSIC WOULD TARRIEY A WOODEN HOSS-- & SHET \T OFF AFORE BUST & BLOOD VISSEL- A crash of two New York Central luxury trains, the Commedore V nderbilt and the Mercury, running between Detroit and Cleveland, left 34 injured persons in hospitals. The crash occurred 20 miles east of Toledo when the Vanderbilt crashed into the observation car of the Mercury, which had stepped after grazing Social Security Act Approaching 3rd Anniversary Seven of Ten Programs Op- erated in Alaska—Gen- eral Report Is Made (Continued from Pagr One) inder the Social Security Act in Alaska follows: 0Old-Age Insurance Under the old-age insurance sys- tem, single cash payments to cov- ered workers reaching age 65 and to heirs of workers who die began when the system became effective in January, 1937. These paymenits equal 3': percent of a worker's wages covered by the system. Monthly payments to workers who qualify at age 65 will begin in 1942. By the end of June 18,596 special | security account numbers had been | issueds to workers in Alaska. By June 30 of this year 40 pay- ments to workers at age 65 and payments upon death had been ymade to persons in the Territory. an automobile at a crossing. The Mercury’s observation car is at right. o say 51| GEORGE BROTHERS IN 511 NEW OFFICES TODAY Jontinuing their gradual remod- eling of their market there, George Brothers, operators of Payn Takit, today have th store offices lo- ministrative purposes. As of Ma | Alaska had a balance of $356 in the Unemployment trust mml, Unemployment Compensation is administered in Alaska by the Un- employment Compensation Commis- sion of Alaska with headquarters bt iRl cated on the main floor of their Public Assistance establishment, where they are much Alaska’s plan for aid to the needy | y,ore convenient and accessible than aged was approved by the Soclal|he old headquarters on the bal- Secretary Board on June 29, 1937 Grants of Fedeyal funds to the work on the new office was com- Territory under this plan began jenced last week and completed July 1, 1937. In July 1938, accord- |his week-end; a considerable space ing to estimates of the Social Secur- | peing completely closed in near the ity Board based on territerial re- front part of the store, directly to ports for past months, there was a |{he side of the principal trading total of 1,001 individuals receiving | counter. old-age assistance from Federal and | — — — Territorial funds in Alaska. The total amount of payments to recip- ients from combined Federal, Ter- ritorial and local funds for old-age | assistance in Alaska to June 30 was estimated at $311,817,000. | Average payments in Alaska in IMay were $27.08 for old-age assist- ance. Total Federal grants to Al- aska for public assistance by June 30, 1938, amounted to $189,816.37. | Programs Administered Maternal and Child Welfare: The Federal aspects of the programs for promotion of maternal and child health; protection and care of homeless, dependent, and neglected children; locating crippled children and providing medical, surgical, and cony. AS A PAID- The total of these payments Was .orrective care are administered by $3,141.87. The average payment in (ne Children’s Bureau of the De- | June in Alaska was $31.52. partment of Labor. Under Lhescl The Social Security Board has|programs Alaska has received $73-| established a Territorial office in|g37061 py June 30, according to Alaska. One of the functions of this preasury statements. This includes office is that of assisting workers 354.154.é0 for “maternal and child aged 65 and families of deccased peayth services; $8,20081 for serv- workers in filing claims for old-age |jceg for crippled children; and $10,- insurance benefits. This office is g9500 for child-welfare services. |located in Juneau, Alaska, and| pyplic Health: The program |through it, the Social Security ynder which Federal funds are |Board administers old-age INsur- given to the Territory to assist it ance and maintains its contacts i, establishing and maintaining with the Territory in connection adequate public health services is with unemployment compensalion | qministered by the United States snd, public ‘asgjstance. | Public Health Service. By June 30, Unemployment Compensation | Alaska: had recelved $68,55251 for | The Alaska unemployment com-|inic purpose, according to Treasury pensation law was passed on April [giatements. 2, 1937, and approved by the So- | cial Security Board on May 4, 1937, | thus permitting employers subject PAST LEADER OF to the Federal tax on employers of REBEKAHS DUE eight or more to credit contribu- | B — WPA Funds Aid Babies WASHINGTON, Aug. 8. The | Works Progress Administration an- nounced it has spent twenty-five million dollars in the past fiscal year helping destitute families with babies. | Mrs, Ellen S. Woodward, assistant administrator in charge of women's | projects, said half the babies born in the United States each year are born into families of the depressed one-third of the nation whom Presi- dent Roosevelt described as “ill- fed, ill-clad and ill-housed.” “This undoubtedly has something to do with the fact tht some 120,000 of them die each year before they arc a year old; that of those who survive, a ponderable proportion are permanently crippled by disease and undernourishment, and that the mortality among women in preg- nancy and childbirth is higher in this country than for any of the leading twenty-five nations of the world have Chile and Lithuania. Mrs. Woodward disclosed the W. P. A. was employing 25,000 women as housckeeping aids in homes to care for \)M)IL‘\ |MRS. PlJNlER AND SON LEAVE; VISIT| Mrs. left Saturday on the Baranof for Ealem, Ore., where they will visit with Mrs. Hunter’s parents. They expect to be gone approximately two months. Jarman's-Friendly FOQRTUNE | s4 Yan’s Store 278 S. FRANKLIN The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of *“~CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE “BAD MAN OF BRIMSTONE" Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE Home-Grown Vegetables Daily — All Kinds [ ] California Grocery NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PATENT Serial 00237 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN | that pursuant to the Act of Con- gress, approved May 10, 1872, NEIL | WARD will file in the U. 8. Land | Office at Anchorage, Alaska, his application for patent to READY BULLION MILLSITE and FRAC- TION MILLSITE, adjoining mill- sites, U. S. Survey 2019, abutting on side line 1-4 Ready Bullion Lode Claim, U. S. Survey 1600. These millsites are in the Juneau Record- ing District, Harris Mining District, near the head of Sheep Creek, about 5% miles from Juneau, Al- aska, in approximately Lat. 58° 16 N. and Long. 134" 17" W., described as follows: READY BULLION MILLSITE Beginning atsCorner 1, identical with Corner 1 and 4, Ready Bullion and Bullion Extension loaes, Survey | 1600, whence from said point U. S. L. M. 3-A bears N. 82° 49° W. 125942 | feet distant; thence S. 45° 00' E. 466.70 feet to Corner 2, identical with Corner 4 Fraction Millsite, along line 4-1 Ready Bullion Lode | 0 W, | Survey 1600; thence S. 45° along line 4-3 Fraction Millsite 466.70 ft. to Corner 3, identical with Corner 3 Fraction Millsite, this survey; thence N. 45° 00" W. 466.70 ft. to Corner 4; thence N. 45" 00'E,, crossing trail and Annex Creek Power | Line, 466.70 ft. to Corner 1, the place of beginning. Containing 5.000 acres. There is a 5x 10 ft. Tool Shed near Power Line on this millsite. FRACTION MILLSITE Beginning at Corner 1 on line 4-1 Ready Bullion lode Survey 1600, whence U. 8. L. M. 3-A bears N. 66° 49’ 30” W. 2077.17 ft.; thence S. 45° 000 W. 466.70 ft. to Corner 2; thence N. 45° 00° W. 466.70 ft. to Corner 3, identical with Corner 3 Ready Bullion Millsite, this survey; | thence 45° 00' E. along line 3-2 Ready Bullion Millsite 466.70 ft. to Corner 4 on line 4-1 Ready Bullion | Lode Survey 1600; thence S. 45° 0()’ E. along line 4-1 Ready Bullion Lode Survey 1600 466.70 ft. to Corner 1, place or beginnin, Conl’umng 5.000 “ALWAYS AT THE PEAK OF THE SEASON" That's the ROYAL SALAD At the Royal Cafe & 1ry One With a ROYAL DUTCH LUNCH Earl Hunter and son Buddy | ’n Taki Pay’n Takit PHONES 92 or 95 Free Delivery Fresh Meats, Groceries, Liquors, Wines and Beer We Sell for LESS Because We Sell for CASH! George Brothers When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 696 “Smiling Service” , Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau HOME GROCERY AND LIQUOR STORE fy B ] acres. There is an 18 x 40 ft. cabin near a trail on this millsite. DESCRIPTION OF MINEKAL MONUMENT: U. 8. L. M. No. 3-A, a 2-inch iron pipe 3% feet high set in mass of concrete on top of & high bluff, Lat. 58> 16’ 255" N. and Long. 134° 17 45.5” W. marked U. S. L. M. No. 3-A on a brass plate set in the cement base. MAGNETIC DECLINATION at all corners 31° 30' E. This Survey 2019 is along the line 4-1 of Ready Bullion Lode, U. S. Survey 1600. Sheep Creek flows through both millsites roughly paralleling Line 4-1 Ready Bullion Lode Survey 1600. NO CONFLICTS OF ANY KIND. ONLY ADJOINING CLAIM OF ANY KIND Ready Bullion Lode Survey 1600. All ground non-min- eral. POSTOFFICE ADDRESS of Neil | Ward is 918 Spruce Street, Seattle, Wash, and of A. W. Fox, his agent and attorney in fact, Box 813, Ju- neau, Alaska. THIS NOTICE, with copy of ap- proved plat of Survey 2019 posted on land included in said Survey 2019, May 10, 1938. Any or all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above described Millsites or premises are required to file a notice of their adverse claim with the Register of the U. S. Land Office at Anchorage, Al- aska, within the period of publica- |tion or within eight morlths sub- sequent to the date of the last pub- | lication hereof, or they will be |barred by the provisions of the | statute. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, June 16, 1938. Last publicnuon Aug. 27, 1938, Phone 723————115-2nd s-.J"l' { Phone | THE ROYAL | | BEAUTY SALON | | | | L OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming | to you — You soould be J‘ TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHING ® FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 | 9 [ FLOOR YOUD HOME WITH | | OAK—Nature’s Gift Everlasting GARLAND BOGGAN PHONE 582 Buy Your Floors with a GUARANTEE Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OMLS Builders' and Shelf HARDWARE JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammnnnlon -8 GENERAL MOTORS DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” !. [ S !ment fund against as much as 90\ tions to the Territorial uuomploy-‘ ’ Mrs, Rose McCroskey, past presi- THE PURE FOODS STORE the guests attended the matinee, A party left here yesterday morn- Those present for the occasion were ing on Irvin Noble’s gasboat and spent the day cruising the South- east Alaskan waters, disembarking at both Horse and Colt islands, Verna Mae Gruber, Peggy Houk, Jean and Anne Thompson, Jennie Larson, Anne and Nancy Rogne, Ruth Larson, Irene McKinley, Margaret Clark. where they looked “but all in vain"‘ for strawberries, following which | the group tried their luck at fish- ing at Outer Point. Those in the party included Mr.| SARAH H LINEHAN HAS BIRTHDAY and per cent of the Federal tax. Bene- | | dent of the Rebekah assembly, and| |its to unemployment workers Will| of the A.R.A., accompanied by her‘ become payable in January 1939. | husband, is leaving on the steamer The Territorial law for unemploy- | North Sea, August 19, for a round-| ‘mem insurance applies to employ- | trip cruise to Alaska. | |ers with eight or more employees.| During the time their ship is in| |An estimated 26,000 workers are| | port in Juneau, the McCroskeys will covered by the Alaska law. This|pe entertained by the local Rebek-| |estimate represents the number of | ah assembly. On Wednesday eve-| | workers who earned credits toward ning a meeting of the officers of fon FOR INSURANCE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery See H. R. SHEPARD & SON and Mrs. Grover C. Winn, Miss | Seven guests were present for| Barbara Winn, Fergus Hoffman, | the seventh birthday party of Sarah | Miss Dorothy Daw, Cortland Brooks, | Linehan, given at the home of Mrs, unemployment benefits in 1937. All necessary funds for adminis-| lrx\t(h the Juneau and Douglas Re- bel Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. ———————————————————————————————— | ah chapters will be held at the and Capt. Noble. —_—————— MOVE TO THE COUNTRY Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rhodes have moved to the Kilroy cabin on the Glacier Highway for the remainder of the summer months, Fred Jonas on West Twelfth Street, Friday afternoon. The afternoon was spent in play- | ing games, after which the usual birthday refreshments were served. ———— “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson, tration of the Alaska unemploy-| home of Mrs. John McCormick, on ment compensation law are paid by | West Twelfth Street, at which time | |the Federal Government. From May| | plans for entertaining the visitors| 4, 1937, when the law was approved, | | will be formulated. | through June 30, 1938, the Social —— ‘ Security Board has granted to Al-| Lode and placer location noticel | ,aska a total of $4226997 for ad-|for sale at The Empire Office, | WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 146—Phones—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET PHONE 36 LIQUOR DELIVERY For very prompt | X It’s Paint We idave It! IDEAL PAINT SHOP PIGGLY FRED W. WENDT WIGGLY || ~===" | 4 | FAMILY SHOE STORE “Juneau’s Oldest Exclusive Shoo Store” LOU HUDSON—Manager Seward St.——————Junean I McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Visit the SITKA HOT SPRINGS | Mineral Hot Baths Accommodations to suit every taste. Reservations, Alaska Afr

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