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P"‘"“—'—'*"-"" i ——— i L RS , NOTICE OF APPLICATION | FOR PATENT THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1938 i R e By BILLI acres. There is an 18 x 40 ft. cabin near a trail on this millsi_e. Serial 09237 DESCRIPIION OF MINERAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN [MONUMENT: U, 8. L, M. No. 3-A, that pursuant to the Act of Con-|a 2-inch iron pipe 3% feet high set gress, approved May 10, 1872, NEIL |in mass of concrete on top St a WARD will file in the U. S. Land | high bluff, Lat. 58> 16’ 255" N. Office at Anchorage, Alaska, his|and Long. 134° 17’ 455" W. marked application for patent to READY |U. S. L. M. No. 3-A on a brass BULLION MILLSITE and FRAC- |Plate set in the cement base. TION MILLSITE, adjoining mill-| MAGNETIC DECLINATION at sites, U. S. Survey 2019, abutting |all corners 31° 30’ E. on side line 1-4 Ready Bullion Lode This Survey 2019 is along the |Claim, U. S. Survey 1600. These |line 4-1 of Ready Bullion Lode, U. millsites are in the Juneau Record- |S. Survey 1600. ing District, Harris Mining District, | Sheep Creek flows through both near the head of Sheep Creek, millsites roughly paralleling Line about 5% miles from Juneau, Al-|4.] Ready Bullion Lode Survey 1600, aska, in approximately Lat. 58° 16' | NO CONFLICTS OF ANY KIND. N. and Long. 134" 17 W,, described | ONLY ADJOINING CLAIM OF as follows: ANY KIND Ready Bullion Lode READY BULLION MILLSITE . |Survey 1600. All ground non-min- Beginning at Corner 1, identical |eral, with Corner 1 and 4, Ready Bullion | v 1SS and Bullion Extension lodes, Survey | wher 1 ois Gnriee Bircet. Seattis 1600, whence from said point U. S.|ywach “and of A. W. Fox, his agent L M. 5-A bears N. 52° 40 W.1289492 | ond attorney in fact, Box 613, Jus feet distant; thence S. 45° 00’ E.| poav” Alaska. 466.70 feet to Corner 2, identical |~ pHrs NOTICE, with copy of ap- with Corner 4 Fraction Millsite, | proveq plat of Survey 2019 posted along line 4-1 Ready Bullion Lode o jand included in said Survey Survey 1600; thence S. 45° 00° W., 5019 May 10, 1938 along line 4-3 Fraction Millsite : d . | BARNEY GOOGLE PARDON -ME, MADAN.-- MY FRIEND HERE WOULD LIKE TO TRY «. (ONE OF YOUR L& DE DOODY DoO OANCING LESSONS- ONE_ BN, | A .., PLEASE- WU gALL WY TRASSISTANT- ONE - KiCK ONE - TWO - THREE - RICK W NOW, FOLLOW E DE BECK TWO -TUREE - Al ey oy | 7 aer WL SE ONE DoLLBR N ADVANCE, (& You (LU SKI\P ALONG, SNUFFY - e ’l f(" ‘ [ ALEXANDER BACK FROM TRIP Miss Jane Alexander, Assistant | e " e Market Basher " |/CITY'S COSTS OF | | T"WANT AD | i INFORMATION | & Count five average words to the Ene. Dally rate per line for consecutive \asertions: o 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 Minimum charge . Copy must be in the office by 2 felock in the afternoon to insure nsertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone rom persons listed in felephone livectory. g Phone 274—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE TROLLER 30: olumbia River type—fully equipped—ready to go. Bargain for cash. Call blue 436 between 6 and 7 p.m. FOR SALE—House, 2 apartments, each 4 rooms with bath. Air con- ditioned, furniture, full basement, garage. Also 4-room furnished house. This property brings $130.00 per month. Will sell part or all. G. Sheeper, Evergreen Ave. Blue 135 evenings. FOR SALE—City Float Beer Parlor. Phone 541 after 4 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS RUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. CURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. by Bureau of Home Department of Agriculture Vegetable Plates—As You Like Them S e TR | BOAT HARBOR IS PLACED ATSS000 Bond IssuoiWill Be Neces- Economics, i Thanksgiving may have its roast |slices of deep-red pickled beets. turkey and ¢ranberry sauce; Easter,, Plate No. III. Begins with stuf- its baked ham or spring lamb; and |fed green pepper. Again let the| {July Fourth its fried chicken and |stuffing please the cook's fancy. | | watermelon. But late August is the Shell probably consult the refrig- REINDEER PARTY sary to Put in Term- inal ‘Facilities (Continued from Page One) from Eleventh and Twelfth streets to Welfare Director W. B. Kirk, returned to Juneau on the Mount McKinley after a visit to Ketchikan and other Southeast Alaska points in connection with welfare matters. | Miss Alexander visited at Hoonah, Sitka, Wrangell and Petersburg and at Ketchikan conferred with A. V. Simonsen, agent for the Welfare Department there. | - GERALD, GERALDINE |4-1 Ready Bullion lode Survey 1600, Any or all persons claiming ad- 466.70 ft. to Corner 3, identical With | yersely any of the above deseribed Corner 3 Fraction Millsite, this|ppnsites or premises are required survey; thence N. 45° 00° W. 466.70 | 1o file a notice of their adverse ft. to Corner 4; thence N. 45" 00'E. ) clajm with the Register of the U. crossing trail and Annex Creek Power}sb Land Office at Anchorage, Al- Line, 466.70 ft. to Corner 1, the|gska, within the period of publica- place of beginning. Containing 5.000 | tion or within eight morkhs sube acres. There is a 5x 10 ft. Tool Shed | sequent to the date of the last pube near Power Line on this millsite. FRACTION MILLSITE Beginning at Corner 1 on ‘line whence U. S. L. M. 3-A bears N. 66° 49' 30" W. 2077.17 ft.; thence DUE TO ARRIVE S. 45° 00° W. 466.70 ft. to Corner 2; lication hereof, or they will ba barred by the provisions of the statute. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register, First publication, June 16, 1938. THIS AFTERNOON open season for vegetable plates. erator for left-overs before she de- cides. If she finds as much as a piece of salt pork the solution is simple. The salt pork, diced and True, vegetable plates are not a part of a hoary tradition. Common sense, not sentiment, prompts this | to the harbor itself and a street is| | planned to run along the back of | the basin on the beach side. Wharfs will be built extending out.into the' BODDING CELEBRATE | In celebration of their birthdays, | ‘cuswm. Tired summer appetites ask . . |for var iety, freshness, interest. Shell Simmons Flying FaCt'iSmres and gardens are overflowing Finding Committee }with the answer—vegetables. June and July have their veget- from Cordova [able specialties, but both months 2 |together cannot compete with the The reindeer fact-finding com- |yige variety and large quantities mittee headed by C. E. Rachford, |offered in late August. In color Assistant United §Lales Forester, | gjone, vegetables range from the |was due to arrive in Juneau at 4/geep crimson of the beet, through o'clock this afternoon from Cordova ¢ne golden yellow of sweet corn and where Pilot Shell Simmons had crisped by frying, is stirred into well- seasoned bread crumbs, moist-~ ened with tomato or some left-over gravy. Top with golden brown but- tered crumbs or grated cheese to be melted in the oven. Next to the pepper come two large, round slices | of crispy, brown fried eggplant, and | then a generous helping of succo- | tash. It's best made of green lima beans with whole kernels of fresh- ly cooked sweet corn, but there are| many other interesting possibilities. | harbor and on the city side a sea- plane wharf is planned. According to information received | ment is to bring the dredger which | | is at present in Cordova to Juneau & huge bowl of garden flowers, se to start work this fall. Major D. M. Shearer from the District Engineer’s office in Seattle arrived here this morning on the Mount McKinley and this afternoon was in gonference with Gov. John W. Troy and Mayor Lucas relative Miss Geraldine Boddirlg, and her | brother Gerald Bodding, are being ‘honored with a dinner party this | here, the plan of the War Dcpfln_‘cvvning at their home on B Street. The table will be centered with off by tall yellow tapers, and guest: for the evening will include Mis: Miriam Lea, Miss Patricia Hussey, !Miss Thelma Bodding, Matt Wa -‘ den, Jay Williams, G. Lowe, CHI-‘ {ford Berg, Cal Butler, Harry War- jden, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank flown early this morning to bring {them here. The committee flew yes- terday from Anchorage to Cordova after Wending weeks in the rein- deer region around Nome gathering information on the reindeer in- dustry. In the party with Chairman Rachford are Dr. I. D. Wilson, head of the biology department at Vir- ginia Polytechnie, and Frank Reeds, Colorado editor and stockman, both members of the committee; Leon Cubberly, secretary to the commit- tee, Christie Sather, stenographer, and Ray Dame, official photograph- er. Also on the plane is G. E. Goudie, supervising engineer for munications Commission. e REINDEER COMMITTEE INVITED GUESTS OF CHAMBER TOMORROW Members of the reindeer commit- tee, who have been in the Arctic studying the industry at the request of Congress in' connection with the pian of the government to turn the animals over to the natives, have been invited to be guests of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce to- morrow noon at its weekly luncheon tomorrow noon at Percy’'s Cafe. the Alaska Aeronautics and Com- | the delicate green of the cucumber, 'to the snowy whiteness of cauli- flower Weads. The large purple egg- plant or huge, green head of cab- |bage is found next to a basket of Lilliputian black-eyed peas; and straight, erisp celery stalks border on smooth, round, red tomatoes. | Perfect building blocks for a sum- mer vegetable plate. Taking it all and all it's more a question of |where to stop than where to begin. At other seasons, construction of a perfect vegetable plate may be a matter of training and expert skill In late August thoughtful planning and care in preparation are suf- | ficient. Vegetable Plate | We'll take the vegetable plate, as |you 1ike it—not for the sake of the | vegetables, but of the man. And for that reason we'll welcome a strip |or two of crisp bacon, a bit of frizzled dried beef, a few table |spoons of zestful sea food, or a ham-hock or fat back for season- ing. Vegetable plate isn't a diet—its a meal. | You will want to choose veget- ables at the height of their season, ifor then they are cheapest and | best. You will want to make use of ‘what your garden and store has to | offer. Experts of the Bureau of Home Economics do not know your mar- to the project. Later, the Mayor |Behrends. | took the official and James G. Tru- | itt, civilian engineer .from the dis- | trict "engineer’s office, over the pro- a very few chopped mint leaves. | ject as well as out the highway look- | Parboil the green pepper shells for |ing over other proposed undertak- /3 to 5 minutes before stuffing ta |ings. |help make the pepper tender and | at the same time guard against | | over-cooking the contents. | John €. White, veteran business | Plate No. IV. First, baked pota-|man of Seward, died recently in| |to, white or sweet, with a generous |the Resurrection Bay metropolis at | cube of golden, melting butter. For |{he age of 78. He was for years company occasions the homemaker- | gperator of the Northern Pool hostess may prefer to serve whole [Room, | potatoes on the half-shell, combup} o0 €S |ing the fluffy texture of the mash- ALASKANA, by Marie Drake, |ed potato with the popular baked | — . 92, AR flavor. After mashing, pile the | #——— — potato high into the shell and| GARBAGE HA(leE}} brown over the top in the oven.| Reasonable Monthly Rates Grated cheese is a popular topping, E. 0. DAVIS jand some like the contents mixed | | with a little crabmeat, shrimp or| | TELEPHONE 212 salmon. Next comes green broccoli, | | Phone 4753 cooked just to the tender point in | shieiige boiling, salted water, and scrved}._ with melted butter, or Hollandaise |sauce if you prefer. Fried or broil- {ed tomatoes and a erisp celery stalk | ‘ The Charle’ w' Carlcr | stuffed with pimiento or seasoned Mortuary Fourth and Franklin Sts. PHONE 136 Buttered sliced, quartered or small whole carrots are the fourth veget- able on this plate. If you like, add zest by seasoning the carrots with Pay’n Takit PHONES 92 or 95 Free Delivery B JOHN WHITE IS DEAD | Fresh Meats, Groceries, Liquors, Wines and Beer We Sell for LESS Because We Sell for CASH! George Brothers 50c. | . You DINE BEST WHEN YOU DINE AT THE Dinners from 5 till 9 Daily. Special Sunday Dinners 11 to 9. JUNO-MAID ICE CREAM In Dishes, Cones or Bulk |cream cheese complete the plate. ]J Combinations Each of these vegetable combina- }Llons, if carefully prepared and well- |served, will present a pleasing color harmony, calculated to help rouse U|place of beginning. Containing 5.000 Last publication, Aug. 27, 1938. [ Phone 72— 115-2na St THE ROYAL 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° 00/ E. along line 4-1 Ready Bullion Lode SBurvey 1600 466.70 ft. to Corner 1, BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming to you — You should be coming to us.” | | Jarman'’s-Friendly TIMELY CLOTHES | NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HA ¥ QUALITY WORK CLOTHING [ FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men Van’s Store 278 S. FRANKLIN The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 | TONY’S BARBER SHOP | 276 SOUTH FRANKLIN BODDING TRANSFER MARINE BUILDING Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery Specializing in Ladies’ and Gentemen'’s Hair-Cutting When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL CHOICE Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders' and ° HARD\ YOUR COAL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and FRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER The group consists of C. E. ket, nor your garden. -But through q ¢ hot-weather appetites. On ever Rachford, Assistant U. S. _F‘oresber, 1cmp and weather reports from me‘])]flle there :p one vegetable 0’; Chairman; Dr. 1. D. Wilson, of U. 8. Department of Agriculture [prght color, as tomatoes, beets, or JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company Phone 48—Night Phone 696 FOR RENT [I Waino Hendrickson A ;"OR RENT — 2-room house. Mrs. McMullen, 9th Street. VACANCY Bishop Apts. Phone 336. FRONT OEFECE in Blomgren Bldg. Two rooms. Phone Blue 510, Roy Allen. VACANCY at the Nugget Apts. APARTMENTS, phone Blue 200, FOR RENT—5-room unfurnished house. 835 Dixon. Phone Red 470. VACANCY at the Fosbee. FOR RENT—Two office rooms in First National Bank Bldg. Inquire at bank. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, -water, dishes, cpoking utensils and bath, Reasonable at Seaview. - WANTED — Men to contract to wash all exterior glass of the Ju- neau Public Schools. The schools will furnish all necessary material including falls. Send your offer in, writing before August 27 to Ju- neau Public Schools, c/o A. B. Phillips, City. WANTED — Experienced _stenogra- | pher and bookkeeper. Reply in own handwriting giving qualifi- cations. Box C 946. WANTED-Maid for general house- work. Phone 361. LOST AND FOUND LOST—On deck of S.8. Columbia, last southbound call at Juneau: man’s silver watch chain. Valn- able as keepsake. Reward. Return to Empire, Box J949. PQUND—B&y;' bicycle some time ago. Owner may have by proving _ownership and paying for this adv. LOST — Sheafer Fountain pen. Return to City Clerk’s Office. Re- ward. SMITH IN WHITEHORSE “M@" Smith, of Atlin, traveled to Whitehorse by plane several days 2go-on a business trip, Virginia Polytechnic; Frank Reeds, they are able to make an intelligent | Colorado editor and stockman, and |forecast as to what may be plen- Leon Cubberly, the committee sec- tiful in various sections of the retary. ol ]‘wunm,» B 6o A : 1 Four good vegetable plates are Y suggested. Among .them they are CHIEF YEOMAN JOINS |designed to fit the garden condi- CUTTER HMDA TODAYmons of the country as a whole. | | | *- | * } =4 AT THE HOTELS l Juneau Mr. and Mrs. Archie Shiels, N.| R. Randle, Zola Guerin, R. G. Sudman, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hen- nings. |Each of the four has a dozen or Chief Yeoman William Kennedy more possible variations. The thou- arrived in Juneau this morning on sand and one possible pleasing com- the Mt. McKinley with his wife, binations make vegetable plate two sons and daughter, to join the |Planning most fascinating. cutter Haida. | Plate No. I. 'Starts with corp-on- The Kennedys have taken a home | the cob, “chewy,” juicy, sweet. Next on Franklin Street next to meia baked, stuffed tomato—red, tart North Transfer offices. easy to eat. Stuff with what you ——,- will. The men folks may like well- J s | seasoned hamburger, or diced pieces Baby Girl Turns |of yesterday’s roast. Macaroni and In Fire Alarm |cheese is another favored possbil- 3 ity. Use plenty of very dry bread Tb“ Aflemoon crumbs so -the tomato juices won't g 3 ooze out all over the plate. Next A five-year-old girl “playing with come shredded green snap beans, the things on the red box on the topped with sliced of hard-cooked telephone pole,” today sent the Ju- |egg. Spinach doesn’t have a mon- neau Fire Department screaming‘opoly on egg slices. The flavor of across town to Fifth and Kennedy '(he peans may be enlivened by gpa 8 Jeise glany, lcooking with a little finely minced T didn't know what it was!”|gnion. Or perhaps you will prefer |the little tot tearfully explained pyitered onions as a fourth veget- |when authorities traced the “cul- |spie. W, e | Sweet corn, always at its best |when fresh from the garden, should be simmered but a short time, sel- dom longer than 10 to 15 minutes, |for the greatest ‘tenderness. Shred |the beans before cooking. A mechanical shredder is handy, but the sharp point of a paring knife also will make fine cuts. Don't use |soda -in the cooking water as it's New Alaskan Ken Edward, S. Anderson, E. Ed- son, M. Rieshard, C. Carlson, Taku; H. Belshe, Two Dot, Mont.; Ira Lindsay, Two Dot, Mont. ————— VISITING BROTHER Mrs. Mary A. Stubbs, of Victoria, B. C, arrived on the Canadian Pa- cific steamer Princess Louise last evening for a visit with her brother d sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.! ;‘m Fel:;n ol!nx,hls city. jout in delicately browned, round, gt . oAl |green slices with little of the gumbo Lode and pmcer iocation notices for sale at The Empire Office, of the beans and makes surfaces |soft and mushy. It's best to depend upon short cookiug time In an open kettle, to retain satisfactory color. Plate No. TI. This time let’s start with shelled beans or black-eyed back. Along side of the peas or beans add a serving of fried okra, which has been panned in a little ‘ubhace or kale and two or three |destrutive to the vitamin content | peas cooked with ham-hock or fat| | | fat, but without water, and comes | ‘uxt.ufl. Next some scalloped green] carrots, to econtrast with creamy yellows, browns, delicate green or | white. Modern artists may be able to produce color harmonies ‘from the most clashing hues, but it’s best for the vegetable plate artist not to try to combine beets, carrots and tomatoes—or any two-of these—on | the same plate. Each vegetable plate presents one food that is crisp and another | which offers less resistance to the teeth, One of the vegetables is| |starchy and filling, the others more | succulent and refreshing, giving| variety and interest. There is a| |contrast in flavors between sweet | and tart, piquant' and bland. One of the vegetable dishes may require elaborate preparation, but others |are served in the simplest way possible. As to food value—vegetables were made for summer meals. They' | furnish their share of the minerals and vitamins — those substances | necessary for regulating body func- tions for good health—without sup- ‘p]ylng too many calories. But each of the four plates sug- gested above includes one vegetable that is calorje-rich—as vegetables | go. Calories are also added in the| form of cereals and other materials| used for stuffing and in butter or[ fat used for frying and seasoning. |Protein may be low, even though some meat, eggs, or cheese are in- cluded on the plate. So serve | plenty of milk to the children and use meat, cheese or eggs at another | |of the day’s meals. | ‘Served with the plate we suggest {a hot bread and a simple dessert— imore satisfaction and more calories. | Blueberry muffins are in season |just now. But if you haven’t the | blueberries, flaky biscuits, any plain lor fancy muffin mixture, or corn will be wel- | t { t !bread, or pop-overs, come. - — NOTICE On and after this date, August 23, I, the undersigned, will not be responsible for any debts unless || authorized by me. | —adv, E. ‘R. JOHNSON, PAINTS—OIL—GLASS “Smiling Service” Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau | | 4 o et e | HOME GROCERY AND LIQUOR STORE 146—Phones—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET Lt AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of *“~“CAPITOL THEATRE /AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE “NAUGHTY ‘MARIETTA"” Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE PIGGLY WIGGLY Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition GENERAL MOTORS DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” PHONE 36 LIQUOR DELIVERY For very prompt ——— I It’s Paint We Have It! IDEAL PAINT SHOP | FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 Home-Grown Vegetables : ° California Grocery Visit the SITKA HOT SPRINGS Mineral Hot Baths Accommodations to suit every taste. Reservations, Alaska Alr ‘Transport | FAMILY SHOE STORE | “Juneaw's Oldest Exclusive | Shoe Store” LOU HUDSON—Manager THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery RELIABLE TRANSFER ouwn‘omyflmn‘ time. A tank for Diesel Ol and a tank for Crude O save burn_r trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 8 FOR INSURANCE ‘See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. WINDOW CLEANING 1