The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 29, 1938, Page 7

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DOODY DOO DOODY DOO DOODY DOO @i&l@ Youn WANT AD WANT AD | INFORMATION | rcv.mm five average words 0 n.v' Dally rate per line for consecutive \asertions: Pme—p—— | g A R In case of error or 1if an ad has been stopped belore ex- piration, advertiser please noti- | fy this office (Phone 374) at once and same will be given | attention. 4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | 10c Additional days ... 50 Minimum charge ...50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2 fclock in the afterroun to insure asertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone ¥om persons listed in telephone Miectory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. = FOR SALE FOR SALE — Furnished five-room house in Douglas. Inquire Doug- las Barber Shop. One day FOR SALE—City Float Beer Parlor Phone 541 after 4 p.m. MISCELLANFOUS BUARANTEED 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 Nugg=t Shop. Lode and placer location notices lor sal: at The Empire Office. FOR RENT BACHELOR cabin, furnished, $10 monthly. Inquire 1113 Calhoun. TWO-ROOM furnished apt. with bath. 711 5th and Kennedy, Apt. 2 VACANCY Bishop Apts. Phone 336. FRONT OFFICE in Blomgren Bldg. Two rooms Phone Blue 510, Roy Allen. 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, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable al Seaview. P.O. Box 212. WANTED—Woman to do general housework. Call 039, 2 short, 1 long. WANTED TO RENT—A furnished house with 2 bedrooms. Phone Black 135 after 4 p.m. WANTED — Experienced _salesman. Phone 53. WAfi}Ei)—2-T)r é-room n;arunem or small house, in town. Call 436 Goldstein Building. EABINEVT - MAKER wanted. Krafft’s Manufacturing and Building Company. Second and Franklin. MONEY WANTED—$6,000 at 8% mortgage on occupied boarding home. Hennings, Hotel Juneau. WANTED—Maid for general housa- work. Phone 69. LOST AND FOUND !'O(IND——Boys‘ bicycle some tim: ago. Owner may have by proving | ownership and paying for this adv. Archie W. Shiezs, President of the PAF, who has been in Juneau for | over a week, left here on the Alas- ka for Ketchikan, accompanied by Mrs. Shiels. .o —— An aerial survey crew, flying in Nebraska, recently found grass- !a copy of such addendum will {m2ided or delivered to each person hoppers while at an elevation of 10,000 feet and at 11,000 feet they captured a huge fly more than one inch long. * HOSPITAL NOTES | —_— & Mrs. Fred Heinke as admitted Lo St. Ann’s Hospital today for surgi- cal care. Jacqueline Brown underwent ¢ tonsilectomy at St. Ann's Hospital this morning, Ada May Burns had her tonsils removed this morning at St. Ann’s Hospital Samuel Johnson, a medical pa- tient at St. Ann's Hospital, was dismissed today. James Stevens was admitted (o today treat- the from ment Government Douglas, for Hospital medical e S Air mail’ service between New York and California was estab- lished in 1929. e NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY T'o be issued Oct. 1 ard forms close Sept. 15. For space and change of listings please call Juneau and Douglas Telephone Co., phone 420. adv. CALL FOR miuS Sealed bids will be received at the office of the City Clerk, Peters- burg, Alaska, not later than 2 p.m >n September 5, 1938, and will then be publicly opened and read, for furnishing all labor, materials, and cquipment necessary for the con- struction of the Experimental Fur Farm Building, University of Alas- ka, a frame structure with rein- forced concrete foundation, which is to be built in accordance with plans and specifications on file in the of- fice of the H. B. Foss Company, Ar- chitects, Juneau, Aiaszs, where they may be examined and copies ob- tained. A deposit of Ten Dollars ($10.00) will be required to insure the safe return of the plans and specifications, that amount to he refunded when they are returned. All bids shall be accompanied by , certified check, or a bid bond, furnished by a Surety Company au- thorized to do business in Alaska, for five (5) percent of the amount of the bid. Should the successful bid- der fail to enter into a contract and furnish satisfactory perform- ance bond within the time stated in the proposal, the deposit shall be forfeited as liquidated damages. The successful bidder shall be re- quired to file a performance bond in the full amount of the contract price, which bond shall be furnished by a Surety Company acceptable to the Public Works Administration. No bid may be withdrawn, after the schedule closing time for the receipt of bids, for thirty days. This project is being financed in part with funds provided by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works and shall be con- structed under rules and regulations of the Public Works Administration as approved by the Administration, by executive orders of the Presi- dent, and as amended for Alaska. Attention* is called to the fact that no less than the minimum wage rates, as shown in the con- struction regulations included in the contract, will be paid on this pro- Ject. If any person contemplates sub- mitting a bid for the above men- tioned work and is in doubt as to the meaning of any part of tie plans and specifications, or other contract documents, he may submit to the Architect a written request for an interpretation thereof. The person submitting the request will be responsible for its prompt de- livery. Any interpretation of the proposed documents will be made only by addendum duly issued and be as receiving a set of such documents. 'he Owner will not be responsible for any other explanations or in- terpretations of the proposed docu- ments. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive any infor- mality in the bids received. There is available the sum of about Nine Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($9,500.00) for this project. TERRITORY OF ALASKA By CHARLES E. BUNNELL, President, University of Al- aska, College, Alaska First publication, August 22, 1938. Second publication, August 29, 1938, TELL SNUFEY TO NEWS ITEMS FROM SITKA SITKA, Alaska, Aug. 28.—(Spzc- ial Correspondence)—Mr. and M Lawrence Freeburn returned day by plane from & two da in Juneau. Kenyon McLean, representative of the Harri Machine Shop of Ju- neau, arrived Thursday to install a heating plant in the new residence being constructed for Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Conway. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mantyla and three children arrived Friday aboard the M. S. Estebeth from Tenakee to make their future Fome. They have taken a suite at uie Tilson Apartments. Miss Peggy Schrey was a pas- senger aboard the North Sea for Seattle to visit before going to Pullman where she will enter Washington State College. Miss Schrey is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schrey, of Sitka, and graduated in June from the Sitka Territorial School. Miss Doris Stuart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Stuart, faculty {members of the Sheldon Jackson ISchool, who is taking a five-year course in nursing at the Providence Hospital, Seattle, will arrive in Sitka August 30 for a visit with her parents. Mrs. G. C. Jones, wife of Lt. Com. G. C. Jones, commanding of- ficer of the U. S. Coast and Geo- detic Survey ship Explorer, and Mrs. J. 8 Waugh, whose husband also is an officer aboard the Ex- plorer, left on the Yukon Tuesday for Wrangell, where the ship will be stationed for a short time Dr. J. H. Condit, former superin- tendent of the Sheldon Jackson School, who has been acting as curator at the Sheldon Jackcon museum during the summer, with Mrs. Condit will leave August 30 to spend the winter at their home in Pasadena, Cal. Mrs. P. G. White and son Gar- net, plan to leave next week for Seattle after spending the summer here with Mr. White, who is at- tached to Sqaudron VP-19 at the Naval Air Base, Japonski Island. Wigelius, wives of naval officers {attached to Squadron VP-19, which has been stationed at Japonski Air Base since June 1, North Sea for Seattle where the sqaudron will proceed September 1. Mrs. W. Leslie Yaw, accompanied by her parents, Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Witziman who have been visiting here for the past month, and who are enroute to their home in Olwein, |Towa, left Tuesday on the Yukon for Seattle. Mrs. Yaw will meet her husband, W. Leslie Yaw, Super- intendent of the Sheldon Jackson Presbyterian Mission Sehool here, who has returned from the East where he attended summer school. They will return here next week. Mrs. William C. Chareris and Mrs. David C. Gaede were hostesses at a one o'clock bridge luncheon Monday at the home of Mrs. Gaede at her residence in the Oja apart- ment, The occasion was in honor of the wives of naval officers and officers of the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey ship explorer who have been spending the summer in Sitka, and who left last week for Wrangell and Seattle. Covers were laid for Mrs. D. C. Allen, Mrs. C. E. Brunton, Mrs. R. Wigelius, Mrs. G. C. Jones, Mrs, J. S. Waugh, Mrs. Joseph Cronin, Mrs. H. E. Ober- holtzer, Mrs. J. J. Conway, Jack Calvin, Mrs. P. S. Ganty, Mrs. Robert Gebhardt, Mrs. H. J. Hod- gins, and the hostesses. Mrs. Con- way held high score at cards, and Mrs, Wigeli; low Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Rands and family, and Mrs. Rands’ mother, Mrs. Mary Whittemore, have chang- ed their residence to the Russian church house formerly occupied by Mr. and Mrs. P. 8. Ganty. Elmer Sticht, of Missoula, Mon- tana, is expected to arrive here next week to take up duties as instructor at the Sitka Territorial High School. Mr. Sticit will fill the position formerly held by Ralph Davis. P, T, Horton, who has been SORRKRY,MR.GOOGLE -- B8UT You'LL HAVE TO PRACTISE ON WIS JLG OUTS\DE -+~ Mrs. C. E. Brunton and Mrs. R.| left on the| Mrs. | HUH 22 WHAT'S TH' TROUBLE 2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1938. 7 By BILLIE DE BECK SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY | T Phone 723———__115-2nd St. THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming | to you — You should be coming to us.” | | | l | GARBAGE HAULED || Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 | Fhone 4753 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 19 b | | spending several weeks at Goddard {Hot Sprir left this week for }!na home in Seattle. Mrs. E. M. Cushing, who has been spending the summer in Sitka }wun Mr. Cushing who is attached |to the U, S. Coast and Geodetic |ship Explorer, was an outgoing pas- senger on the Yukon. N. G. Hills, who arriveé® here sev- leral months ago for service at the |Sheldon Jackson Mission School, |left last week aboard the Yukon for his home in Milwaukee, Mrs. William Jasobsen and son‘ (Billie, will leave Tuesday, August |30, on the 8. 8. Alaska, after spend- | |ing the summer in Port Alexander and Sitka. While here they were at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl | Peterson. * Long Bike Race PARIS, Aug. 29. — Gino Bartali, Italian cyclist, won the Tour de France, 26-day, 2,950 -mile race around France, by 18 minutes, 27 | seconds over Felicien Vervaecke of Belgium. The race went through the Alps and Pyrenees. | - ALASKANA, by Marie Drake, 50c - - | for sale at The Empire Office. NOTICE OF ELECTION To the Electors of the Town of Juneau, Alaska, Division No. One, Territory of Alaska: { NOTICE is hereby given that pur- suant to an Act of Congress ap- proved May 7, 1906, entitled, “An| Act Providing for the Election of a Delegate fo the House of Rep- resentatives from the Territory of Alaska,” and an Act of Congress approved August 24, 1912, entitled i“An Act to Create a Legislative Assembly in the Territory of Al- aska, to confer Legislative Powers Thereon, and for Other Purposes,’ and an Act of Congress approved | March 26, 1934, entitled “An Act Fixing the date for holding elec-| tions of a Delegate from Alaska to the House of Representatives and of members of the Legislature of | {Alaska and for other purposes,” land in conforpity therewith a General Election will be held on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1938 ‘bc(,ween the hours of 8 o'clock a.m. jand 7 o'clock p.m. of said day for Ithe purpose of electing the follow- ling officers, to-wit: A DELEGATE TO CONGRESS ONE TERRITORIAL TREAS- |URER | ONE TERRITORIAL SENATOR H FOUR TERRITORIAL REPRE- | SENTATIVES, The Common Council of Juneau, Alaska, having heretofore, by Res lution, duly designated the Votis {Precincts of said town and the ipolling place in each thereof, the Electors are hereby notified: That all duly qualified voters re- |siding within the boundaries of | Voting Precinct No. One of the !said City of Juneau, which are as follows: All that section lying on the northerly side of Second Street and West Second Street and the |said West Second Street extended lacross the tide flats to the City |Limits and easterly of Gold Creek !and Capital Avenue, will vote in Ithe Fire Apparatus Room in the :Cily Hall Building, located at the jcorner of West Fourth and Main | Streets, the same being duly desig- |nated Polling Place in and for Pre- cinct No. One, City of Juneau. That all duly qualified voters re- siding within the boundaries of Voting Precint No. Two of said City of Juneau, which are as fol- lows: All that section lying on the southerly side of Second Street and West Second Street and the extension of said West Second Street agross the tide flats to the City Limits will vote at Irving’s Market, located on 128 Front Street, 'the same being the duly designed |Polling Place in and for Precinct No. Two, City of Juneau. That all duly qualified voters re- siding within the boundaries of Voting Precinct No. Three of said City of Juneau, which are as fol- Jows: All that section lying on the northerly and westerly side of Gold Creek and Capital Avenue and in- cluding the Seatter Addition, will vote in the store building located i1at 731 E. Seventh, the same being the duly designated Polling Place lyln and for Precinct No. Three, City of Juneau. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, 20th day of August, 1938. ETTA MAE KOLASA, Clerk of the City of Juneau, Alaska. |Pirst publication, Aug. 20, 1938. JLast publication, Aug. 27, 193, H this Pay’n Takit PHONES 92 or 95 Free Delivery | The Charles W. Carter | Mortuary Fourth and Pranklin Sts. PHONE 136 Thrit Co-op | BUY FOR CASH | and SAVE the PROFITS Accident Widows Dodge Bride Fresh Meats, Groceries, Liquors, Wines and Beer We Sell for LESS Because We Seli for CASH! i George Brothers on your own spending. o . PHONE 767 e T A A : || The Juneau Laundry ED A. ZINCK, Manager | Franklin Street between AP S SR e AP PETET Front and Second Streets e e PHONE 359 | B SERRITS & I'TONY’S BARBER SHOP | |- ——— 276 SOUTH FRANKLIN BODDING TRANSFER Specializing in Ladies’ and ‘ MARINE PHONE Gentemen’s Hair-Cutting | BUILDING 707 | Rock—Coal Hauling “|j Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery When in Need of - DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL Th H d C . o omas rardware Lo. JR COAL CHOX YOUR COAL CHOICE PATNS S omE GENERAL HAULING Builders' and Shelf HARDWARE STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 696 | Dodge honeymoon cottage Mrs. Laurine Dodge, left Cinderella bride of only two weeks, Mrs. Laurine MacDonald Dodge, now is a widow following | = the death of her husband, Daniel | & George Dodge, heir to a share in JUNEAU - YOUNG T Hardware Company PAINTS—-OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware the §$6,000,000 automobile fortune, “Smiling Service” | Gima wha ARimnI who was drowned in Georgian bay, Bert’s Cash Grocery i Ontario, Canada. Young Dodge RO 36 = “ either jumped or fell from a mo- torboat while being taken to a hospital for treatment after an accidental discharge of dynamite — had torn off his arm and frac- | tured his skull. The honeymoon cabin at which the accident oc- curred is shown at top. Mrs. | Dodge is a former telephone oper- ator at Gore Bav. GENERAL MOTORS DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS 71 . P. JOHNSON i l Free Delivery Juneau ’ | HOME GROCERY “The Frigidaire Man” AND LIQUOR STORE 146—Phones—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET [ PRCSEOE & " PHONE36 | LIQUOR DELIVERY For very prompt i FOOD QUALITY AT | UNITED FOOD CO. TELEPHONE—16 |1 | SATISFACTION IN I| | If It's Paint We Have It! IDEAL PAINT SHOP FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 | COAL 3 \ { PHONE 412 Save ALL Ways! PACIFIC COAST The beautiful new 1938 | COAL CO. General Electric Triple- Thrift Refrigerators are now on display. See them! Check the G-E for low current cost, low upkeep, long life, for preserving food, for fast freezing and release of ice cubes, for conve- nience, etc. And we be- lieve you will choose 8 Gsneral Electric, | | FAMILY SHOE STORE ! | “Juneau’s Oldest Exclusive { Shoe Store” | LOU HUDSON-—Manager | Seward St.—————Junean McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY LIABLE TRANSFER | time. A tank for Diesel Off and a tank for Crude Ofl save burn.r trouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 Thrifty in PRICE! Thrifty in CURRENT! l Our trucks go any place amy ]} Thrifty in UPKEEP! ‘ Look at the price tags! Compare values! Check the multiple savings of a new 1938 G-E with any other refrigerator atany price. Home-Grown Vegetables Daily — All Kinds [ California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldag; - — WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. SOLD ON EASY PAYMENT PLAN Alaska Electric Light & Power Co, JUNEAU———ALASKA———DOUGLAS JOHN McLOUGHLIN N 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 “THE AWFUL TRUTH” Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE Bead the Classified Ads in THE EMPIREI

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