The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 14, 1938, Page 7

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'BRINGING UP FATHER I.CA WHAT AQE You SO HAPPY THE ABOUT— JIGGS? THE TO MY HOUSE TO TAK 6)\ one 'umm INSTALLMENT ON H'T PAY THE PIANO - AND Y ARE COMIN/ E IT AWAY-- WANT AD || INFORMATION | Count flve average words W the e, Dafly rate per hne for consecutive ons: R . In case of error or if an ad has been stopped beiore ex- piration, advertiser please noti- | fy this office (Phone 374) at | once and same will be givem | attention. r THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE L_ —_ One day Additional days Minimum charge Copy must be in the office by 2 felock in the afternoen to insure usertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone tom persons listed in telephone Hiectory. “Yhone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. ; FOK SALE s FOR SALE — Kitchen coal range, A-1 condition. 525 5th St. after 5 p.m. | property preferred; e WANTED —_— e =) WANTED TO BUY—House, income furnished or unfurnished. Address L. Empire. | EXPERIENCED legal stenographer, familiar with brief narrating, court reporting and taking depo- sitions, desires permanent posi- tion. Salary reasonable. Box 60, c/o Empire. WANTED—Small acreage near Ju- neau. H. Hamsom, Fanshaw, Al- aska. MISCELLANFOUS DUTCH SA SAYS resh snow on ML, Juneau means it's time to get Prestone in your radiator. The price is $3.20 per gallon; radiator hose and pump packing extra. Drop in now and avoid delays at the last minute” DUTCH'S ECONOMY GARAGE AND WRECKING YARD—Diamond T trucks. Learn WELDING. Largest, best equipped school in west. Free cata- log. DUNN WELDING SCHOOL, 2033 N.E. Union, Portland, Ore. FOR SALE — 4-piece enameled | maple bedroom suite. Phone Black 139, WUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone SO LONG' SEE HOW ME HOLJSE == LOOKS WITHOUT A THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, OCT. 14, 1938. "CEMENT— PIANO IN I'T- -BOO-HOO === THOSE HORRID INSTALLMENT COLLECTORS WERE HERE AETER THE SPEAKING OF TELEVISION . . . . World Might Be Made Safe for Democracy ----I f ()nlv Tolvvuwn (Amld (yvt a Sponsor This is the second of two stories telling what the people on the inside say about tele- vision. By JACK STINNETT AP Feature Ser e Writer | NEW YORK--Television, to re- verse Fanny Brice's old song, hasn't much pasl—but oh, what a future! For a preview of that future, I've | been talking with the television re- | searchers of the National Broad- | casting Company — men to whom | talking pictures in the air are no longer a miracle men who are working daily with television in all its phases From experience and carefully worked-out plans, they paint as exciting a picture as one would ex- pect from novelists like H. G. Wells or Edgar Rice Burroughs. Perhaps some of them hint, television will bring the one great step forward by which historians will measure present times. Tune in on C. W. Farrier, coordinator: “Television will radiate more educational and cultural programs than Hollywood ever has been able to provide. Among our numerous prospects are programs showing the motions of heavenly bodies, experi- ments in science, lessons in agri- culture and safety, methods of safe- guarding public health, pictures of microscopic life, candid television, slow motion television and trav- NBC Copr_1938, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World tiz! By GEORGE McMANUS WELL- 'M SORRY- TO BUT= MAGGIE-YOU N\UST' REMEMBER- THEY HAVE TO COLLECT WHAT 1S DUE -OR ELSE ION MEANS FAST WORK: Engineers in the control room can watch the studio program through the green-glass windows n front of them, and can see in the screens at top, left, how it is going on the air. They bring the picture to the desired shading and switch from cne camera to another at the behest of the program director. Split-second decisions are necessary. inventions, but in this instanc. they may rejoice, for television will | dependability, have settled upon, and second, aims we first, | social- | | 1 KNOW IT- | HAD SELL. YOUR OVERCOAT AND OTHER SUIT. TO PAY THEM-BUT- THANK GOOD — NESS WE STILL HAVE THE Phone 724- 15- THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming ; to you — You should be coming to us.” CARNEGIE LEADS TUNAS TO WINS WITH 383 TOTAL At the Elks pinfests last lll"nf Tuna Claude Carnegie was high man with 583 as the Tunas won two out of three from the Barracuda | squad that never showed up to de- fend itself. The Salmon won three straight from the Albacore and the Sharks won two out of three from the Dol- phins. Tonight's games are Small Fry matches with Carp vs. Eels, Min- | s vs. Mullet and Smelt vs. Herr- Last night's scores follow: Barracuda 185 185 178 178 170 170 533 533 Tunas 146 190 177 513 185—*555 178—*534 170—*510/ F. Henning | Halm | Shepard | Totals 533—1599 21 159 175 545 173— 530 167— 516 231— 583 571—1629 | Stevenson Cleveland | Carnegie Totals Salmon 233 166 178 178 181 180— 579 178—*534 191— 526 Radde Boggan | Riendeau 154 & Seward Street GARBAGE HAULED Reasonablc Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Fhone 4753 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAE Near Third Thrift Co-op BUY FOR CASH and SAVE the PROFITS on your own spending. PHONE 767 ED A. ZINCK, Manager PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOP—Triangle Bldg. Telephone—221 ‘When in Need of DIESEL YOUR COAL CHOICE OIL—STOVE OIL GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and FRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 69 565 525 549—1639 Albacore 184 184 1713 171 149 166 Totals 1842552/ 159— 503 182— 497 | Stewart Redman Robertson “Smiling Service” Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 , . 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 Brother= The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street betwaes Front and Second St=>ws PHONE 359 o 1 i BODDlNG TRANS.-._ MARINE BEONE BUILDING wi Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery Thomas Hardware Co. ral — OILS Builders' and Shelf HARDWARE JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition GENERAL MOTORS than |cultural advancement.” 1t | A New Pace for Humanity afford more employment e cither the radio or the movies e e -1 201, 315 Decker Way. elogs.” BELCO sad FOR SALE CHEAP—An exception Totals 506 521 5256—1552 MAYTAG PRODUCTS al buy in an 8-tube General Elec- tric console radio for only $57.50. ‘This set brings in the outside sta- tions in good order. Alaska Elec- tric Light & Power Company. USED HOTPOINT 3-burner elec- (URN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. FOR RENT ROOM with bath in private home; gentleman preferred. Call Black tric range for sale cheap at $20 cash. Terms if desired. Alaska Electric nght & Power Company FOR SALE—5 ~room houw in Doug- ) las. Apply Warner’s Grocery. OOM house in Douglas. Phone L. W. Kilburn, Douglas 48. 6- FOR SALL — wabvage for saher- kraut, 3 cents per lb. Inquire Rudy Ranch, Glacier Highway. FOR SALE—Canaries. 202 6U St. FOR SALE—U & I Lunch. Owner quitting business. Write P.O. Box 2274 or phone 334 FOR SALE—New 4-burner electric range, won at fair. Call Red 267 after 6 pm. — POR SALE—City Float Beer Parlor. Fhuue 541 after 4 p.m. " LOST AND FOUND LOST—Seven 20-dollar bills by ‘man and wife who just arrived in city, Will finder please return to Em- pire. SURPRISE PLEA ENTERED IN BIE ESPIONAGE CASE Deserler Admits Stealing U S. Government . Military Codes (Cbntinued from Page One) Dix said Dr. Griebl testified he did not know two of the defendanis in the forthcoming trial—Gunther Gustave Rumrich, former U. S. army, sergeant; and Eric Glaser, former army private—but that he did know Otto Herman Voss, form- er mechanic at the Seversky air- plane plant on Long Island, who was also indicted. Dix quoted Dr. Griebl as saying he warmed Voss he would be ar- rested, and Voss said he had noth- ing to fear. Voss, Rumrich and Glaser and Miss Hofmann are held in $25.000 bail each. . In Budapest, Hungary, you pay a fare, usually about two cents, to go up in an elevator in the fine modern apartments; the fare doubles after midnight. Most folk ride up and walk down. - e — i Try The mmpwe cassifieds for results, L I — 4217, after 6 p.m call Green 427. »FOR RENT— Garage reasonable rent. Inquire 319 6th St. [ROOM AND board, weekly or monthly. Home privileges. 319 6th t. FIVE-ROOM unfurnished Oil burner and garage. about Nov. 1. Phone 451. house. Vacant APARTMENTS phone Blue 200 POR RENT—Two office rooms in First National Bank Bldg. Inquire at bank. COZY, warm, furn. apts, Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. A Plane Could Bomb London and Still Be Distance of 5 Miles| (Continued trom fage One) a vertical range of 30,000 feet, roughly six miles, The range is much greater if the gun is fired at an angle instead of straight up. FreEE | But hitting a plane at five miles is a feat. An exploding anti-aircraft shell will spray fragments over a zone-as large as a football field. Get- oting the shell to explode when a plane is in that zone is something else again, but it can be done. But, on the other hand, it’s diffi- culr. for a plane four miles up and five miles out to drop a bomb on a specific spot. Even a slight miscalcu- lation of wind direction might make | the bomb miss its target a halr! mile. Every Londoner knows that a bomb that fails to hit Buckingham palace, a warehouse, or a rail ter- minal, may land amidst dense throngs in Piccadilly, Soho or Ken- sington. Although military men doubt that a hard pressed army would waste bombs on civilian pop- ulations, a swarm of planes bomb- projectile into teeming London streets. Now you begin to under- stand the why of gas masks and splinter trenches. A DEADLY NEW WRINKLE During the Spanish civil Barcelona has been bombed without ever hearing or seeing the planes that did it. . . . harbor long enough to start a tor- pedo squirming through the waves toward a British freighter, then skimmed over the deck of the torpedo struck. . . . The ship went down in three minutes. . . . That is something to think about.in. war- ing “legitimate” military objectives | might be expected to spill many a' | war, A Franco airplane| recently skimmed into Barcelona | doomed ship a moment before the| Programs soon to be tried includ a three-act play, opera, musical {comedy and piano and tango dance | lessons. | Even Dwarfs Hollywood However, Farrier ficials say television glorified movie on the air. “Even if we could use films,” which we can't,” says Thomas H. Hutchinson, NBC television produc- tion chief, “television would absorb Hollywood's entire annual produc-| tion in a few weeks. Therefore we must have a gigantic reservoir talent, music and literary material.” And it is on this point of “res- ervoir of talent” that NBC Presi- \denL Lenox R. Lohr sounds his I most optimistic note: “A matter affecting the public will be no, will doubtless become the leading reservoir of artistic talent.” world's | A {elevision engincer thinks that developments in his field may But it is Lohr who points out|change not only our lives, but us, |that many think television’s most |too, and other of- Striking effect may be in the polit- |this w. cal field. “When you sece taneously,” he a good basis for appraising intelligence, ability and Many people anticipate vision will promote the democracy and hear each voter and per: It is jus bilities, says Lohr, delayed. simul- “you have | a man’s!| NBC's O. B. Hanson puts it “Television is the quintessence of |concentration, and in order to avail jourselves of its benefits, we must wdlsuplmo and adopt ourselves to a sincerity. | |new set of conditions. Human be- | that tele- | cause o[\ by clarifying issues in | of bolitical struggles, and by making | familiar with the fauza nalities of candidate because of such possi- | that the public | introduction of television has been | “We have charted its fu- | lings are not yet geared to the mental alacrity required of them |in television, which incidentally | makes the stage and movies seem | rather sluggish. doubt that modern men and women |can meet the challenge.” As a matter of fact, |the problems and some of the fan- |tastic possibilities, there’s not much welfare is the effect television will ture with the objectivity of meydoum about anything ‘connected | have on the general employment situation. the implications of startling new historian,” he says, to simulate u:amy “because we are | People commonly dread humbled by its extraordinary power As our chie lw"h television except who's going | to pay the bill. That probably is | isn's i et televised from “Susan and God,” a lesson is rehearsed. PROGRAMS EXPAND: Gertrude Lawrence is shown, left, in a scene At right, a fencing Broadway hit. ‘Lhe biggest reason television available to everybody today. One of Farrier's chief jobs is to for making television pay its own way. ‘Several ideas are under consideration,” he says, “kut no practical way of making tele- vision self-supporting has yet been found.” When such an answer is found, the program probiem probably will be solved quickly enough. Until that problem is answered, no one can say exactly what sort of programs will be offered — nor exactly how expensive television receivers will be. It's something -f a vicious circle. People aren't like- ly to buy receivers until first-rate programs are available a good part of the day; such programs aren't goirg to be available regularly untii somebody—presumably an advert | er—pays for them; an advertis analyze plans bought, receivers. fare. . . . One thing Hitler no doubt | real:ux, that this time Turkey is triendly toward Britain, which opens | the Dardanelles to allow a back- | door attack on Germany | { > MISSIONARY SOCIE'I'Y REORGANIZES AND | ELECT NEW OFFICERS Yesterday afternoon at a meet- ing in the Lutheran Church Par- lors, the Missionary Society reor- | ganized and wiil hold sessions dur- |ing the winter, every third Thurs- day of the month at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon. The following were elected offi- cers: Mrs. Belle Knudson, Presi- dent; Mrs. A. Lagergren, Vice-Presi- dent; Mrs. Alfred Zenger, Recording Secretary; Mrs. John L. Cauble, Statistical Secretary; Mrs. Olaf Bodding, Treasurer. | AT ERE L N | Lode and piacer location noticed for sale at The Empire Office. ——e—— Empire ¢lassifieds pa¥. MOOSE TO FETE BALL CHAMPIONS AT ANNUAL FEED Members Channel League champion baseball team will be guests tomor- Woman's Club, row evening of members of the Ju-| form of a at a Trophy Percy’s Cafe, Tuesday, October 18, neau Moose Lodge, Team Banquet at Percy’s. Gastineau Channel League offi- | cials are also invited to attend the | American Home Department, head- discharged today. He has been treat- “victory feast,” which is set for 8:30| ed by Mrs. David Wood, chairman has been receiving medical care. o’'clock. The Trophy Team Banquet is an | sisted by Mrs. H. B, Humphery, Mrs. | annual affair, given by the Moose | George Leveque and Mrs. Ray Ward. | pital is Master Wesley Rhodes, who Lodgemen, in honor of their repre-| sentatives in the local ball leaguevlmed and the event is open to club|from the Government Hospital to- This year, for the third successive| members and their friends. Reser- day after receiving surgical care. time, it will be flavored by the at-|vations may be made by phoning ed for a foot ailment. IWBMAN’S CLUB LUNCH TUESDAY osrreacn i Mrs. Florence Syverud will of the 1938 Gastineau |guest speaker at the regular month- Moose | ly social meeting of the Juneau ceiving surgical attention at St. to be held in the no-host luncheon at lat 1:30 o'clock. The luncheon is sponsored by the of the department, who will be as- A musical program is also prom- mosphere of triumph, resulting from | Mrs. David Wood. the winning of the championship | by the team. A lively program of speeches and‘ | entertainment has been arranged agement has increased the produc-|forgotten that it was not till v.he‘ |for the affair, and it is expected |tion of milk on farms by 81 quarts| 16th | that a large group of members and | per year for each member of the |guests will be present, — ., — | The Parm Security Administra- tion reports that better farm man- | family, But there is no! 64 despite all | |isn't going to pay for them unless: \he knows that a lot of people have Sharks 183 183 172 172 137 166 Bavard Duncan | Duckworth 172—+516 | 180— 483 492 521 535—1548 Dolphins | 185 185 185—*555 Totals Barragar 1 183—*549 | HOME GROCERY AND LIQUOR STORE 146—Phones-—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET . 175 175 175 155 155 147— 457 Totals .. 515 515 507—1537 *—Average score. Did not bowl. >e 0 SCORE MADE Council | Tubbs | Tom Rolfe, Green Top bowler in the Brunswick Commercial League, | rolled 211-231-198 for a fancy total| Kof 640. The Green Top won two out ol‘ | three from The Triangle. Don’s Demons swamped the Home Grocery with three wins and no losses. Tonight’s games are Truckers vs. Snow White and Percy's vs. Juneau Florist. Last night's scores follow: The Triangle L. Holmquist 183 182 192 J. Snow 152 159 = E. Batelho 149 166— Hendricks 200 147— 484 541 5056—1530 Green Top 160 182 1564— 406 | 211 231 198— 640 146 120 214— 480 517 533 566—1616, Commercial 189 136 183— 508 169 157 182— 508 170 212 190— 572 528 505 555—1588 Home Grocery 0172 188 167— 497 149 186 141— 476 189 154 174— 517 . 500 493 482—1490 >ee — 557 31 315 347/ Totals Huntington Tom Rolfe Ellenberg Totals C. Jensen | E. Lindstrom A. Sturrock Totals A. Koski J. Hermle ‘ Thibodeau Tota Ls — l HOSPITAL NOTES ! Claude Erskine, who has been re- Ann’s Hospital, returned teday to his home in Douglas. “Woody” Burnett, a medical pa- tient at St. Ann’s Hospital, was A dismissal from St. Ann’s Hos- | Frank Jackson was discharged - e Tourists and botanists who to-| day climb the slopes of Mount| Pilatus in Switzerland have long century that anyone ap- ‘pronched it. Pilate’s ghost was sup-‘ lposcd to hover there, l *525 | — S SATISFACTION IN FOOD QUALITY AT UNITED FOOD CO. TELEPHONE—16 e COAL PHONE 412 PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. | L] l } W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY If It's Paint We iave It! IDEAL PAINT SHOP FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 FAMILY SHOE STORE “Juneau's Oldest Exclusive Shoe Store” LOU HUDSON—Manager Seward St.—————Juneau Our trucks go any place time. A tank for Diesel and a tank for C-ude O# save burn.r tiouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT M8 McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY 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 Bldg.. WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. LMOIMMM . v 5 84 B B e

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