The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 8, 1939, Page 8

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8 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1939. MAYOR NAMES COMMITTEES FOR COUNCIL New Officials Seated-Ap- plications Called | for Tuesday % ; mien-of the | With the idea being to brighten ite ~Nanbed Yokt H juneau for the, Rotary conference = on retired from o which will come here this year, a | < 1938-39 Council | plans have been made {city-wide cleanup campaign will be % abaret Dance to be given |jaunched next week. Taicas atd Coun- | by the Elks in their ball special Chamber of Commerce Elroy Ninnis will be the last of the cleanup committee is to meet Mon- orschrnidt Were s until the fall sea- | qay evening at 7:30 o'clock at the 5y Olty ‘At r that reason special fea- | alaska Federal Savings and Loan | are being arranged Association office to organize the - The new dance committee Will |drive ; have charge of the cabaret event PR HG y and the members promise a good |time. The committee is composed o of Arthur Adams, Chairman; Leon- s received respon- |ard Holmauist, Art Burke, Wilson l Stock QUOTATIONS : o Cthe mew com- | (Bud) Foster, Joe Lynch and Dewey mitt inced by the Mayor, | Baker ,_ R ik S hairman of | Dancing will begin at 10 0lock, |\ u vope Aprl 8--Closig e Taxation Commit- 1t 18 further annoupced | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine tee, ar Chairman of the & T Y | stock at today's short session is 77, Police C . | American Can 837%, American Power Committees I_IN E R (0M|NG ! and Light 3%, Anaconda 211, Beth- Appointments are as follows | | lehem Steel 52%, Commonwealth » and Taxation, E. J.| wITH GOLD FOR “unrl Southern 1'%, Curtiss W airman; Oscar Harri and | 4%, General Motors. 37%, Interna- | tional Harvester 481, Kennecott "Fire Protection and Water, Oscar | U"I'I'ED STATES,%',, New York Central 12%, North- Harri, Chairman; E. J. Blake and | ern Pacific 7%, Southm"n Pacific et | Ll 10%, United States Steel 45'«, Pound Henry Messrschmidt | e Jls and Library (incorporat- Jhad | . . ed in a single Committee for the FO”Y Million Dollars; g first, time), Ralph Beistline, Chair- | DOW, JONES AVERAGES man; Elroy Ninnis and John Me- | The following are today’s Dow Cormick { Streets, Sewers and Lights, Henry | Ralph Messerschmidt, Chairman; Beistline and Oscar Har ) Police nnis, Chairman; ! John McCormick and Ralph Beist- /= line Wharl John McCormick, Ch man: E. J. Blake and Henry Mes- 340 {rc serschmidt It Applications Called The Council issued a call for ap plications for City appointive posi to be return- ticns, the by to the application office able City Cler (abaret Flaborate Affair Planned SOUTHAMPTON, England, April ' '8—The United States liner Wash- with a gold cargo aboard valued at ICITY CLEANUP " CAMPAIGN TO Dancels g LaUNCHED TonighI‘Special Chamber Commit- | tee Meets Monday Evening by Elks in Ballroom- Jenes averages: Industrials 121.34, rails 34.14, utilities 20.51 Worth of Yellow Mefal | Bound for New York | ston sailed today for New York 3,000,000 of which $10,000,000 is nm France. *Miss 10th AQefiue”,SPEAKER LYNG " GOING SOUTH FOR_YA(ATIO Nome Representative Wili Return fo Alaska in June '''''' "Hoppers” in House Get Jump on Spring OAKLAND CITY, Ind., April 8.— { Coroner Roy Sn:th’s house is full | of grasshoppers — although spring {has just arrived | Mrps. Smith took some potted ‘vp]nnts inside last fall. Dr. Smith | |said grasshopper eggs apparently |were in the pots and that, fooled by the warm house, they jumped the seaosn. HAS BEEN FIRST From the Very First The Outstanding preference of industrial and commercial buyers for RAY OIL BURNERS tells the story. RICE & AHLERS CO. Third and Franklin Streets— PHONE 34 'S ROTARY CONFERENCE—May 18-19-20 o RAYE NS REC.U.S. PAT. OFF 3 >ee Today’s News Tuasv.—mmuire. | LAST out-of-town Legislator to leave the Capital after the 14th Ses- | sion, Speaker of the House Howard| Lyng is going south on the Alaska tomorrow to spend two months in| the states. | Rep. Lyng will visit a sister in} California and will attend the fair at San Francisco, heading back to Alaska about the first of Juneau. He may be a passenger on the first boat | to Nome from Seattle or may come by way of Juneau Since adjournment Speaker Lyng has supervised completion of the| House Journal and has met with the Board of Public Welfare, of which he is a member. e - TONIGHT and evey night They’ll Ring the Bell for you—Lee Caldwell and PRINCESS BELL at the NORTHERN! Tea This Afternoon Complimentary fo | Miss Yvonne Perry Duncan is enter- taining at a tea this afternoon be- | tween 3 and 5 o'clock at her resi- dence in the Reck Apartments hon- oring Miss Yvonne Perry, who will become the bride of John Whitely on April 15. In the receiving line is Mrs. Lud- of the bride- Sixteen-year-old Florence Farley, of New York's tenement district, is known to her neighbors as “Miss Tenth Avenue” since stealing the Tenth Avenue “Debbie Show” staged by the Boy’s Athletic League. It just goes to prove that the gem-laden debutantes of soci ety’s 400 have no monopoly on veauty, personality and glamour Miss Corrinne UNIFORMS WILL DAZILE DANCE One of the Top Piano Players on the Coast, PRIN- wig Thoren,.mother CROWD TO"'GHLg-vg:’uf;{};.v;;;gyvpf;vr;\l‘;yMg";n CESS BELL makes a swell team with Troubadour e and Miss Corrinne Duncan. | Drummer LEE, who will sing your favorites at your Military Ball Being Held at |, s, i i T MaSOfll( ]’emp|e by | quist, Mrs, Lu Liston and Mrs. E. . | Evans. | table . . . IF YOU WISH IT. —playing tonight till 2:30 : e —— ASSO(iafiO"S ‘“".:sl:.;mlin:m:;"‘:\(t;x].:rk?)m-mm Reck STEELHEAD An Easter theme prevails, with | bowls of daffodils and the Easter i | BESSIE REEDER Uniforms of the various brancnes | | ¢ the: Watlon L ba o | 1illy, offset by yellow tapers. form service | ing an attractive setting for the oc- night at the military ball | d'splay tc 4:30 o'clock ne r- 1 Among sports hisnermen, there’s casion. Approximately forty per- noon, The Council an annual assertion that, “If the be held at the Masonic Templel o S ™o qune the tea hours. cial meeting to col ap- | steclhead are in the creeks, spring u r the auspices of the Reserve|_ 8 Jen ot [ plications, Kty ot Officers Association and the Gas- Offices for which will If there is anything to the saw, tineau Channel Nurses Assoclation. apply are City Clerk, Chief of Po- | Pelersburg having spring, a Besides the Army uniforms to be Assistant Chief of Police, two cording Lo a wire received by The '\4‘m: by 1!!;:‘ variou: lwlmh\u(; the z gz lier T ; avy wil he represented by Simp- >atrolmen, Chief of Fire Empire from Petersburg flier Tony Nav p- | Peoiuen, Sl oY o ) son MacKinnon and the Public| n, AssISIn ' etk e e Health Service by Dr. J. F. Worley T ), City Wha riors are showing their pink-striped -“‘ g b . ) o L\m;‘ W ( eter « in Pete irg Creek, which b (~:»->\ ) e o Pe! 1 City ‘means that Juneau arvea steelhead . AT ink Gar ren't more than two weeks away. 5 3 - that-a < 1n missioner, C il vlil aitend ienight's forma ing Inspector = BUND OI.D DO(TOR and invitational affair, Tieut. Cort City Asst ¢ strate. | land Brook$, General Chairman trate are paid positions | % Numercus parties and mrr,rm-.x‘l it sicpi Blind, 81 years old and in searc fatuestnge: e scHinCiilinc b Councilman Messerschmidt pro- AL i cede the affair, a birthday of a correspondent, Dr. J. J % et 2 posed at last night's brief session = % 3 honoring Lieut. Cortlar B ; nell of Whittier, Colo.. has written > s et = ; that the number of volunteer fir : Yy g 5 being a highlight of evening. to Gov. Jc 4 xsking help ~ e o s ] men be increased from 30 to 36 S # \ers entertaining include Dr. | in locating an Al and Mrs. E. F. Vollert, who will be | arking that there had been no e in the force during the 10 he has been on the Council The matter is to be taken up with Chief V. W. Mulvihill new Street Committee re wk icrea in | nu was | The S e policy regarding laying of new con- | cre sidewalks, which City En- gineer Milton La gren said would have to be put in before the streets are paved this summer. The mlv-i ing contractor is to arrive here about April 15 to commence work. FOURARRIVE WITH BARANOF Four passengers arrived in Ju- neau from the Westward on the Baranof this afternoon. | From Seward, Ed Culbertson, pio- neer going to home at Sitka, and traveling man, R. C. Wakelin, From Cordova, Charles T. Byram and George B. Phillips, both trav-| eling men | ALASKA FEDERAL | Savings and Loan Assn.’ of Juneau H TELEPHONE 3 | sician, ° son ang- TENNIS WARS of 193¢ will find Bobby Riggs (above), he of the famous forehand, at 'the top. He teamed with EI- wood Cooke of Portland, Ore., to win the Bermuda doubles. hosts to their home and the W. A. Chipper- | fields entertaining informally | their apartment in the Feldon, with | lsix couples invited ‘ an informal gathering at | interested in the retired 10 will be g letters with phy- at Dr. Darnell's address is 1401 Wal- it Way. Have YOU—— BILLS IN YOUR HAIR! There's one sure way to get them out in a hurry: OUR POOLED ACCCOUNT PLAN for reservations call Mrs. Acton, hostess at . 800 u - | Served the simplest, most efficient plan yet developed for ; ot overcoming deht. . ] | L ] The Pooled Account Plan ~ | . gath all y iebts int & y one ?'r;ool.” OEuurc(heolsyx:uor TREAT YOUR CREDIT *z:‘; creditors receives regular AS A i THE payments on account from SACRED TRUST DINNER HOURS the money you arrange to leave with us from your pay check. You keep enough to pay all your cur- rent expenses. ASK US! We'll be glad to explain the plan more fully. ah fiara 0 —ALASKA CREDIT BUREAU- PHONE 2?9 CHARLES WAYNOR-Manager .. FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING . . then — hostess Under the Management of ROBERT ]. SCHOETTLER fo Church—— then Easter Breakfast at the Baranof — the last stop in the Easter Parade — serving: 11 o’clock until 2 o'clock DINNER (Price of entree includes complete dinner) Radishes * Green Onions Celery Carrots Avocado, Shrimp or Fruit Cocktail- Ceam of Tomato Soup or Consomme in Cup Grilled Fresh Alaska Halibut Steak, Lemon Butter—85c Calves Sweetbreads Saute with Fresh Mushrooms—90¢ E'riad. Unjointed Spring Chicken, Baranof Style—$1.10 Shirred Eggs with Chicken Livers, Financier—90c ' R_oun! Leg of Spring Lamb with Jelly—95¢ Grilled Filet Mignon Steak, Fresh Mushroom Sauce—$1.20 Roast Young Tom Turkey, Dressing, Cranberry Sauce—$1.10 Combination Salad Baked or French Fried Potatoes Buttered New Peas Fresh Strawberry Pie, Orange Sherbet, Cup Custard Cotfee or Tea £ RAY HARRINGTON Chef and Maitre d'hotel v ) » Q O g o o S 2 ot A Q e =

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