The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 18, 1938, Page 7

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~ BRINGING UP FATHER THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 18, 1938. YES-JGGS HAS A FINE NEW POSITION - AND JUST THINK- TONIGHT - HE 1S COMING HOME WITH HIS FIRST PAY CHECK- ISN'T IT GRAND 2 King Features Syndicate, Inc, World nights reserved AH-IT’S NICE TO BE WORKIN' AGIN - -NOW TO GO HOME AND By GEORGE McMANUS " | HOPE } HE HOLDS | ON TO THIS JOB- | WISH MY HUSBAND i WOULD GO || MIGHT TO WORK- NOW-1 WANT TO TALK| TO HIM FIRST= THIS INVENTION OF MINE HAS TO BE FINANCED] NOT SO L HEAR YOU- ('fo (s, YOUR WIFE'S BROTHER THE ONE THEY CALL | "FOG-HORN"- HE KNOWS YOU ARE IN- EHA;'OSEASBOHT ALL = KNOW -~ AN’ TH' FIRST TIME HE'S EVER BEEMN RIGHT IN HIS LIFE- | SUPPOSE | WIL.L. HAVE TO SEE HIM- SHOW HIM IN- HERE IS A NICE LITTLE POP-GUN - NOW -BE A GOOD LITTLE GIRL AN’ PLAY RIGHT IN HERE -~ Phone Youn WwANT AD /] | WANTED TO BUY—Large circi lating oil heater. Phone Black 246. ““WANT AD { INFORMATION Count five average words to the toe. Daliy rate per line for consecutive usertions: | WANTED TO BUY—House, income property preferred; furnished or unfurnished. Address L. Empire. WANTED—Small a;c‘reage near Ju- neau. H. Hamsom, Fanshaw, Al- aska. MISCELLANFOUS » A o I 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 — & |WILL TRADE my 100-acre ranch . = | with 7-room house, barn and One day . | chicken coop, etc, on Deschutes Additional days | River near Rainier, Wash., for Minimum charge .. | property in Juneau. Write R, Em- Copy must be in the office by 2| pire, Juneau. 7clock in the afternoocn to insure - — - —— — nsertion on same day. | Learn WELDING. Largest, best . We accept ads over telephone equipped school in west. Free cata- #om persons listed in telephone 108. DUNN WELDING SCHOOL, Hirectory. 2033 N.E. Union, Portland, Ore. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker, | YUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $450. Finger wave, 65c. FOR SALE Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone a1 261, 315 Decker Way. FOR SALE — Duo-fold davenport. Phone Green 605. [URN your old gold ir‘o value, cash or trade at Nugg=i €hop. bNE PAIR U. 8. P'ivweight rubber hip boots, size 5. Positively Iikc“ new. Worn only once, Suitable for | AT man, woman or boy. Cost $8. Sell ROOM AND board. Phone Blue 330. for $5. Room 204, Gastinem{ Hotel. ‘ ROOM with ba fix’i;;;l'v ath Do) gentleman preferred. Call Black 427, after 6 p.m call Green 427. FOK SALE — 4 - plece cnan{elcd‘ maple bedroom suite. Phone Black | ot O | FIVE-ROOM FOR SALE—5-room house in Doug-| Oil burner and garage. las. Apply Warner’s Grocery. bout Nov. 1. Phone 451. unfurnished house. Vacant POR SALE —-mh{:we for séuér-j R RENT—Two oi}log rooms in kraut, 3 cents per b, Inquire Rudy | First National Bank Bldg. Inquire Ranch, Glacier Highway. | at bank. 202 6th St.|COZY, warm, furn. apts. water, dishes, cooking wutensils Light, FOR SALE—U & T Lunch. Owncr. and bath. Reasonable ai Seaview. .. quitting business. Write P.O. Box | L 2274 or phone 334. i“’“ trollers operating out of there FOR SALE—City Float Beer Purlor."‘”d getting some of the highest fish Phone 541 after 4 p.m. ?rl}:eq in years as well as plenty of | fish. LOST AND FOUND |, * T " CIVIL SERVICE | EXAMINATIONS ! | % LOST—Mongrel puppy, color brown and black with white tipped toes | and tail. 522 West 10th St. Phone Blue 302. | ra 4 | The U. S. Civil Service Commis- |sion has announced an examination WALTER BACON IN for Post Office Clerk in the Post ON BRIEF VISIT Office at Juneau and applicat;:)sn |blanks may be obtained at Room Walter Bacon, former well known 311, Federal Building. Juneau resident who recently moved| The Civil Service Commission to Sitka, rencwed acquaintances states there are at present three with friends here while he waited vacancies in the position of Sub- for the arrival of the North Sea stitute Clerk to be filled. on which his wife returned after a | Applications must be filed with trip Outside. the commission by November 5. Bacon flew over from Sitka Sun-| e day wity Marine Airways and re- Lede and placer location notices ports Sitka “booming” with about|for sale at The Empire Office, | SUPPOSE l'LL HAVE TO THINK OF SOME SCHEME TOGIT RID OF HIM- | HAVE IT-1LL PRETEND | AM PHONING MAGGIE- YES-MAGGIE -I'M VERY BUSY-I'LL BE HOME SOON-BUT_I'VE GOT TO GO TO TH FACTORY AND THEN CALL ON TH' OUT-OF-TOWN BUVYERS- REMARKABLE WORLD WE LIVE IN-YOU TALKIN' TO MAGGIE AT YER HOUSE - AN’ SHE'S SIT TIN' IN THE AUTO DOWNSTAIRS- . T 'WHAT PROBLEM AT DA e YES-I'M RUSHED 'MAYO LEARN'N[} \Ohio Hears Modern Version Of Lincoln-Douglas Debates COLUMBUS, Ohio | [ | | | bating from the same platform. | i This year Ohio senatorial L3¢ i 4 1 ' 5 el 8 nts six Livingston Wernecke Flying| Fach chiooses three subjects for six the debaters: South — Says New Roads Going In | Small and remote Mayo, Y. T., is 1experiencing growing pains and for | the first time is beginning to feel a | throbbing pulse of metropolitanism | brought about by increasing traffic lproblems. are | Livingston Wernecke, General | ‘Manager of the Treadwell-Yukon ymines at Keno Hill, near Mayo, stopping over in Juneau to make a routine inspection of the Alaska | Juneau workings, for which he is Consulting Geologist, arrived in Ju- neau Sunday from Mayo and laugh- | ingly remarked that “everyone seems | to be getting automobiles.” ! Build 36 Miles | This summer, 36 miles of good | highway were completed from Mayo to the mine, taking the place of a | rough truck and caterpillar trail. “Even our Japanese cook bought | a car,” Wernecke said, “and I be-} lieve there are a lot more cars coming in next summer,” |‘ ill_another road is under con- | struction from Minto on the Yukon | River to connect with the mine and! make it possible for ore to be| trucked 80 miles to the Yukon in- stead of the Stewart.at Mayo. Outlet Provided Twenty-six miles of this road were completed this summer, Wer- necke said, and it is hoped the remainder of the road will be built CHALLENGED Rebert J. Bulkley of Cleveland defends his seat as senior sena- tor. He's a down-the-line New Dealer; got a pat in the primary from President RBoosevelt, his classmate at Harvard. Stems from wealthy family; likes to travel, fish and hunt. He's 58, smiling, affable, successful as a lawyer. Went to Congress in 1911 as a representative, became senator in 1930. Banking and currency have been his chief legislative interests. He was an early advocate cf prohibition re- peal. Married; has two children. Eighty years azo Stephen A. Dou Their duel made political history. candidates 3"‘” earlier decoration, awarded him in 1921 the Order of the Liberator. He also received a decoration from the Chinese government November 28, Rev. Charl and Caroline Sanford Barrett. His father was a Congre- gational minister, | He attended Vermont and Wor- cester (Mass.) academies and Van- derbilt University before entering Dartmouth from which he received | |an A.B. degree in 1889, Honorary degrees were conferred lupon him by the National Univer- ty, Bogota; Panama National Uni- | versity, Tulane and Southern Cali- | | for { Barrett was married in 1934 to Mary Tanner Cady. She died in | 1937, He maintained homes at Grafton, | Vt.; Burlington, Vt., and Miami. Fla. 1866, and a senate seat from [llinois by de- follow the same idea debates, the last October 29. Here R . - — | HOSPITAL NOTES l i | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Teidt are the proud parents of a baby boy, born at St. Ann’s Hospital this morning at 1:20 o'clock. The baby weighed 8 pounds, 7 ounces, Fi CHALLENGER Robert A. Taft of Cincinnati, shy son of the late President and Chief Justice, proposed the debates. He's a Republican, a vigorous anti-New Dealer. Was graduated from Yale and Har- Murial George entered St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday afternoon for medical care. Geraldine Feero, of Douglas, who has been a surgical patient at St. vard, has built up a big law Ann's Hospital, was discharged to- practice. Never wanted to be a ' day and returned home. | “President’s son,” wasn’t around | White House much when it was | A baby boy weighing 8 pounds, “heme.” Chose as subject of first 81, ounces, was born to Mr. and dcbate: “Resolved, That the Mrs. Bartness yesterday afternoon New Deal economy is a failure at 1:50 o'clock at St. Ann’s Hos- and offers no solution for unem- pital. ployment and depression.” He's 49, married, has four sons. Willlam 8hirk was admitted to next season, giving the rich Mayo mines an outlet to the two rivers| and permit of larger ore shipments, now limited because of the small tonnage it is possible to carry on the small Stewart River. Wernecke flew in to Juneau from Mayo with his pilot, “Slim” Grops- tis, and expected to fly south today, veather permitting.” > | INTERIOR PLACER | " OPERATOR GOES OUT JOHN BARRETT, DIPLOMAT, DIES " OF PNEUMONIA ‘ | — | Former Director General of Pan-American Union Had Fine Record | C. 1. Paulsen, Nugget Creek mine operator, arrived on a PAA plane from Fairbanks, and left on the Princess Louise for thé south| (Continued from Page Onl) |enroute to his home in Spokane, TR A 3 G TR | !Wash.,, where he will spend the self by settling American claims winter. He will return north about |involving several million dollars |next April 1. |which had been pending for years. After a successful first season of = Other diplomatic posts followed. placer mining with his new equip- He was assigned as advisor to Ad- i’ment, Mr. Paulsen shut down for miral George Dewey 'in the Philip- ‘the winter October 9. The mine pines, served as commercial com- ,equipment includes two draglines, missioner in Japan, China, Korea |a 'dozer, and hydraulic plant. |and Australia, and in 1901 was a | Dan Libby, an oldtime Alaskan, United States delegate to the Pan- |is in charge of the camp for the American conference in Mexico. He | winter, | was minister to Argentina two years | ————— land then, in 1904, was given his | DON'T MISS IT!!! \most delicate assignment, that of MARGARET BOWEN concert, minister to Panama. | October 21, adv.| Panama had just - seceded from |Colombia in a bloodless revolution. | tablishment of the Canal zone. |St. Aun’s Hospital this morning for surgical care. The United States was putting| through its agreement for construc- tion of the Panama Canal. Rela- tions of the three countries were difficult and complex. The suave Barrett kept the dis- | putes on an amicable plane. And he so won the confidence of Co- lombian officials that he was chos- en a year later to go to Bogota as minister and negotiate settle- ment of Colombia’s claims arising from secession of Panama and es- A medical admission at the Gov- ernment Hospital today is Ann Haurris. Dave Howard was admitted to the Government Hospital for med- lical attention today. Irene Williams was dismissed from the Government Hospital to- day, having received medical treat- ment and will leave for her home in Sitka. Triumph in Bogota Barrett’s Bogota tenure was at- tended by great success. He put 'WALMSLEYS NOW through the first protocol for set- | LOCATED, SEAT".E tlement of the claims and did much | —— to establish cordial relations be—} Mr. and Mrs. George Walmsley, tween Colombia and the United |who left Juneau recently, are now States. It was a personal triumph, located in Seattle. Writing to The for only short months before the‘Emplrc. Mr. Walmsley says they| women of Bogota had been shear- have taken up residence in apart- ing their tresses to make a rope ment 202, at 2317 Tenth Avenue “to hang the first Yankee who North. comes here.” | A letter received by Secretary | From Bogota, Barrett went to the M. H. Sides of the Elks Lodge from directorship of the Pan-American Mr. Walmsley reported he was in Union. He retired in 1920 and in the Providence Hospital in Seattle his latter years devoted much of but was feeling much improved and his time to writing. |expected to get out and around Venezuela, which had given him |again before long, } s Barrett was born in Grafton, Vt., the son of the|# { | BERENLPSY WRCTS VRS Phone 723——————115-2nd St. THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON OPEN EVENINGS “If your hair is not becoming | to you — You snould be coming to us.” GARBAGE HAULED Reasonablc Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Fhone 4753 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAE Seward Street Near Third Thrift Co-op BUY FOR CASH and SAVE the PROFITS on your own spending. PHONE 767 ED A. ZINCK, Manager BEAUTY SHOP—Triangle Bldg. Telephone—221 When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 6% “Smiling Service” Bert’s Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery HOME GROCERY AND LIQUOR STORE 146—Phenes-—152 AMERICAN CASH GROCERY and MARKET SBATISFACTION IN FOOD QUALITY AT UNITED FOOD CO. TELEPHONE—I16 COAL PHONE 412 PACIFIC COAST | G —f = | il SANITARY f 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 Meafls. Groceries, Liquors, Wines and Beer We Sell for LESS Because We Sell for CASH! George Brothers The Juneau Laundry Franklin Street betwaes Front and Second Striws PHONE 359 Sl | BODDING TRANSFZ MARINE PUANE BUILDING wi Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition GENERAL MOTORS DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” # 12 | | HONE 36 ;| For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY = If It’s Paint We iave It! IDEAL PAINT SHOP FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 | . “Juneau's Oldest Exclusive Shoe Store” LOU HUDSON—Manager Seward St.—————Juneasn McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY 5 i . FAMILY SHOE STORE |- - Home-Grown Vegetables Daily — All Kinds ® California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Promipf Deliery FOR INSURANCE _See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telg;ghpne, 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. WINDOW CLEANING TP g wan g ns

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