The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 6, 1939, Page 7

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GEE \WH\Z ANOTHER BARBER SHOP! \S SNUFEY L00SWNG WS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1939. ' BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH NES .S~ '\ THE MANLCWR\ST - ST RIGHT DOWN - LOVEWN WERTHER, \SN'T \X, %2 Oy DOOKY, CousSW - TINME'S A-WASTIN - s T SWOW HER LOOKS \WOWD TARR\EY | So S NoLe- | WILL SUBLET for summer newly renovated light housekeeping apartment centrally located. Call 677 between % and 10 p.m. or 10 and 12 am. INFORMATION | 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 i’AéAfiéYfifil1é§€L Ki)fll'l;l;ellis. FOR RENT—Small modern house, couple only, Phone Black 415, | SIX MONTHS—4-room apt. Com- | letely furnished, Channel view, twin beds. Adults. Marshall Apts. | Count five average words to the ne. Daily rate per line for consecutive Insertions: One day ... Additional days .. Minimum charge ..50¢ Copy must be 1n the office by 2 pclock in the afternoon to insure Insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone tirectory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. Fv‘(;R RENT—6-room modern hou call 484 after 5 p.m. APARTMENT for rent in Decker | 100 Bldg. Phone Green 465. FOR RENT — 2-room furnished bachelor apt. 141 S. Frankli 3-ROOM FLAT, completely modern, quiet, splendid view—couple only. Phone 686, 3.ROOM apt., electric range, hot FOR SALE TAYLOR Top Stroller in A- tion. Fred Schmitz, Red 246. -1931 Ford Sedan; 1933 1933 Chev Pick-up; reverse gears; 1% h.p, gas engine; anchor winch with niggerhead; 32-voit light plant; reconditioned Model A Ford motors, ready to install in boats; rebuilt Durant 4-cylinder with marine reverse gear; 6- cylinder Hudson water-cooled oil | and exhaust manifold. — Alaska | Arc Welders stationary deer ritles and one! 10-gauge double barrel Ithica.! Room 227, Baranof Hotel. FOR SALE—Smali, modern, com- pletely furnished house. Full base- | ment, oil furnace, hardwood floors, good view. FHA finance, reasonable. With or without fur-| niture, 649 Hemlock Way, Seatter Tract. Phone Green 135. THE NOYES property, corner 4th and Franklin, 2 buildings — one 10-room house and one 5-room | house, both furnished. Terms. See the owner. LATE '33 Ford Tudor sedan; 20,000 miles, rebuilt engine. Phone Green 462. LATE MODEL HUDSON Sedan in | perfect condition, driven on)* §,- 200 miles, priced for quick sale or will take light trade-in. Phone T44. FOR SALE—Henning apartments | on Dixon. See Bob Henning at Empire. FOR SALE—U & I Lunch. Owner quitting business. Write P.O. Box‘ 274 or phone 334. FOR SALE—City Float Beer Parlor. Phone 541 after 4 p.m. XPERIENCED bookkeeper and ac- countant wishes part or full txme‘ work. Phone Black 495. YOUNG BOY wishes room and board at reasonable rates. In- quire Ingram Varnell at Signal Corps Office after 4 p.m. WANTED—A room for part time work in respectable place. Phone Blue 265. EXPERIENCED PUBLIC _steno- grapher wants work. Alice Mack, Gastineau Hotel. i e — e | in during the last | two weeks of July. Write Empire, ML 800. | WANTED — A tenant for three months—a one-room downtown apartment, fully furnished. Write Empire T-594. ‘WANTED — Children at_Mintield School, Lena Beach. White chil- dren preferred. During the first four months of‘ 1939 United States and Canadian | manufacturers sold 1414,776 auto- | mobiles compared with a total of 906,475 in the corresponding period‘ last year. 4 —— The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; §1,00, and cold water. Phone 569. | FURNISHED 2- or 3-room apts. Phone’ Green 100, 725 Basin Road. t the Fosbee. DOZY, warm, tum., apls. Light. water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable al) Seaview. MISCELLANEOUS | DRESSMAKING, slip covers and alterations. Klein Apts. Red 763. | Dressmaking, designing, allerations. Stout sizes a specialty. Miss Jessen, Gastineau Hotel. YUARANTEED Realislic Perma- nenis, $4.50. Finger wave, 65¢c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Wdy. (URN your old gold info value,| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. "~ L0ST AND FOUND IF THE PERSON who found the billfold of Harry Stockman will| keep the money and send the| rest, which is of no use to any- one but its owner, to the Fairview Hotel, Fairbanks, I will be deeply gratified. LOST—Three-ycaz:-old child's blue coat. Finder please return to Sig- | nal Corps Office. HORROR MAN of mg.l: roles, Boris Karloff, shows his corn’s well past the tradi- tional stage familiar to mid- western farmers: “Corn knee high by Fourth of July.” But Karloff’s cornfield is but a garden patch near Hollywood. | Try The Empire classifieds for results, (cling,” if he’s a North Country man. | “pitching woo.” IN SPRING, AMERICA PITCHES WOO; BRITONS CALLIT’ i . Young Britons set out for a hoi make accordion music wherever they go. By WILLIAM McGAFFIN AP Feature Service Writer LONDON, June 6.—In the spring a young Englishman’s fancy quietly turns to “canoodling”—or to “coper- Whether canoodling or copercling, they mean one thing in American— This spring is no exception, de- spite the long shadow of Adolf Hit- phasis, that the administration was ' not retreating. The Democratic party wins, said he, when it stands| for liberal brinciples, loses when | it slips away. | The chill between Government | and business continues. The United States Chamber of Commerce was belligerent in its meeting here. Such is the change of atmosphere that Hopkins, who hoped to be the business peace-maker in the ad- ministration, a press conference: “Appeasement—I don’t like that word.” ROTARIANS TALK TIME CHANGE: “DEFER ACTION [Putting Juneau on Seatfle | Time Discussed - Boy | "CANOODLING" moaned forlornly at! LOS ANGELES GROUP HERE - WEDNESDAY | Chamber Tour of 140 Due { in Juneau at 3 Tomor- row Afternoon (Continue@ rrom Page One) Juneau time and remain until 10:55 tomorrow evening, while the Los | Angelenos travel by automobile to { Mendenhall Glacier and Auk Lake, | see the town and have their annual | visit with Juneau friends Members of the Juneau Chamber You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP | ————— Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third [ ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry Alaska Music Supply Arthur M, Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 208 122 W. Second Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 412 [ HOME GROCERY | Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat——Phone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 GEORGE BRO Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE The Juneau Laundryl FRANKLIN STREET between Frout and Second Streets PHONE 359 Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING 07 Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery M Thomas Hardware Co.] PAINTS — OILS Builders' and Shelf WARDWARE # | of Commerce will be on hand at the Plays Accordion {dock, wearing their red badges, to greet the visitors on arrival. A recep- After considerable discussion at | Uon aboard the Prince Robert for | their noon luncheon meeting today. [the: Junesy Chambee: Krteoutive Juneau Rotarians voted to table for | B0ard will be held sometime during i{the present a motion that the Club | tN® Poat’s stay in port. OQutside of g0 on record as favoring Juneau's| jchanging permanently to Seattle | LAbging . pe At Sitka Today |time. The proposal, made by Charles - . } |carter, would have requested the| 1044y the Los Angeles crulsers R = ” | are spending the afternoon at Sit- Secretary to notify the City Coun- | 2 SPen lcil the, Rotary Club favored the|*® Scheduled to leave there at 5 et o'clock this afternoon. The Prince arranged. liday in the country prepared to that, no formal program has been fquo.\mms about how much money | he is earning. Although the plan had many sup- porters at the meeting, it was de- | |cided that in view o reported ob- | the Alaska Juneau | Yet Jane is as anxious as any|G0ld Mining Company management | American girl to get her man—per- further study should be made be-| fore the Club takes a stand. haps more so in view of the pre-| . ponderance of females in England, | Entertainment was furnished at And whatever her thoughts, she|!0d8y’s meeting by Tony DelSanto, keeps them to herself when she l3-year-old Italian youth, who vlays hears John exclaim, “Queer blokes, the accordion as nobody has in Ju- Americans! They're much too good ‘Neau for a long time. * | jections from Robert will take them into Taku Inlet to see the glacier tomorrow before coming to Juneau. Yesterday the party was at Prince Rupert in tne morning and spent from 4:30 in the afternoon until 9 last night at Ketchikan, The visitors came north by spec- ial train, stopping off one day to visit the Fair at San Francisco, spending an afternoon in Portland and an hour in Seattle. They trav- eled on the Princess Kathleen to Victoria and Vancouver, where they had two hours before the Prince ler over Europe. In fact, young love seems to burgeon best in a warlike atmosphere. Word "Appeasement’ | Robert sailed at 9 oclock Friday | night. Northbound the Robert stop- ped at Ocean Falls, B, C., and made | Over Thirly Girls So John and Jane aiready are | canoodling in the darkness of the cinema. Four Bob the Evening | Is Now Distasteful fo | Are Registered for Government Widalsj SummerScouf Camp | John, who is lucky if he’s making $70 a week, doesn’t have a motor car. Therefore he takes Jane to the pictures—or “flicks.” as his uppm'i class compatriot disdainfully terms | i (Continued from Pnge One) ‘! Over thirty Girl Scouts have reg- SRR T |istered for the summer camp which the back yard to twist into “ter-;will be held for two weeks starting | a special cruise Sunday through Gardner Canal and Douglas Chan- nel. After leaving Juneau tomorrow night, the party will arrive in Skag- way at 7:30 Thursday morning, trav- el to Lake Bennett by special train for luncheon and remain in Skagway backer” for their own use. | June 14 at Eagle River, it was an- nounced today by members of the | board, with more applications ex- | them (although upper class attends NOT ENOUGH WASHINGTONS them with the same relish as John).!| Judge R. Walton Moore, Counsal- An evening at the pictures (in the lor of the State Department, now a suburbs) costs only about four bob | senior citizen of Fairfax County, (a dollar), counting tickets, trans-|has historical records of this little portation, cigarettes, a small box |story of how an early day statesman of chocs and perhaps a soda at the Set out to solve the principal prob- | milk bar. lem of the South—the single-crop John has to count on at least two |farm. ! pected within the next few days. Before registration cards are ls-j sued each girl must have an appli- | cation signed by her parents, as well as a certificate of health signed | by her physician. | Two visiting days will be held | at the camp during the two week‘ period, one June 18 and another overnight. Here Again Friday The Los Angeles visitors will be in Juneau again from 2:30 o’'clock Friday afternoon until 9 at night. Southbound stops will be made at Wrangell, Ketchikan and Prince Rupert. The travelers will be home in Los Angeles at 6 o'clock next Thursday evening. James L. Beebe, President of the and six (62 cents) apiece to catch i a new picture at a West End cinema; at least four bob to hear Cracie Fields warble at a music ball. But the old-fashioned Lovers’ Lane | is not extinct. It's just that it’s less convenient in: a land where it is reached laboriously by bicycle. | Bicycle Wee-Ends | | And the bicycle doesn't come into |its own until week-ends. Then long John and his muscular gal take to the open road—often on a tandem. | Riding to the end of the under-| |ground and then setting off across| | country on shank’s mare is another | favorite week-end divertisement in | this nation of walkers. Lunchtime | finds the lovers partaking of a lunch | Jane has brought along, or washing | down bread and cheese with bcer. ! between games of darts at a country | pub. John and Jane see each other at| least four times a week when they | start keeping steady company. | John doesn’t spend nearly so much | considered that, his major job on his girl as Johnny American does on his. John Bull doesn’'t have it to spend. Moreover, John’s expenditures drop off when he and Jane have | started the long engagement that economic conditions make the rule here. Jane, who also has a job, starts filling her “bottom drawer” with linen, while John begins to ‘save his money against the day when they’ll buy a house on the “never-never”"—installment plan, After marriage, the honeymoon— | which doesn’t last long. Jane’s duty {from then on will be to serve her | master as wife and mother, with no '} jevidence of a shift in administra- | | tion sentiment. Harry Hopkins was (merce to work at restoring busi- Each year millions of dollars of d Los Angeles Chamber, is leading South. Department of Agriculture gcout work, are invited to spend. °f Charles P. Bayer, Field Secretary. surveys indicate that the majority the day inspecting the work ac- DB2Yer Was with the Chamber group | of small-farm families live on a complished at the Eagle River camp, | °® 1ts Previous visits to Juneau. diet almost devoid of vegetables. | Camp director, Mrs, Rayno John- The trouble, it would seem, is!son, will be assisted in supervision | ! P that there were not enough George of activities by Miss Kathleen Carl- MU"L As Washingtons back in 1770. son and Miss Sue Stewart, senior FRANK’S CABIN REOPENED councilors, and Miss Barbara Her- | mann, Miss Mary Fukyama and ‘Two young men, Art Reinikka and ‘Clyde Boylan, have reopened Miss Laura Jean Clithero, junior councilors. Mrs. Waino Hendrick- son will be camp nurse and Mrs. Martha O'Mally, camp cook. T e M. v, % M " |Frank's Cabin in Douglas, specializ- ing in hot dogs, hamburgers and ISS Irglnla u en !icc cream. Formerly opened two !years ago by Frank Pettygrove, the Re'ur"s for Summer‘lfl-’-w bas been closed since last 7 fall. Returning to spend the summer _Their first venture in business, months in this city with her par- the young men are anticipating a ents, Miss Virginia Mullen, daugh- Prosperous future. ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Mullen,| 'S 2 G, e A Ez;n“}idk:h.’s morning on the steam—\MRs. JOHNSON AND | i i | NEW BABE HOME ‘,,(.:‘;?:sh ;‘;finathtshe":; cm‘:;‘ Mrs. Leonard Johnson and new- | College for Women. Miss Beatrice POTR baby girl, Stuart, came home | Mullen, who has also been ntund-:""m St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday. |iing the San Francisco college, wul" T b S return to Juneau for the summer| NEW BUS FOR DOUGLAS |following a six weeks visit with| A brand new Ford bus, just ar- | friends in the states. |rived for the Channel Bus Line, Y e s e .made its appearance on the streets | BOUND FOR KANATAK jof Douglas this morning on the 6 Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Evans .rgic'clot:k trip. The bus will shortly passengers aboard the Yukon bound take its place regularly serving for Kanatak, They have been oun-llDouslu patrons. side for several months. FREET g < arape g The Book ALASKA, Revised and . Ll < s 5 A | Empire classifieds pay, Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00, And now that we have finished with George we will get back to Washingten. There is a certain word often used in these parts that symbolizes much of the trouble arising between business and the Government over the matter of tax revision. It is the longish word “appeasement” that was imported frem Europe, where it came mlaj disrepute at Munich. | Early this year there was much going to the Department of Com- ness confidence. He said that he { And somebody started calling it “business appeasement.” You could feel a chill in the Washington air |almost at once. Appeasement, as it |{came from Munich, meant surren- | THAT NASTY WORD | President Roosevelt suggested that | Teporters hunt up a new word to cover the situation. It has become evident that the hunt for a new word was not in- tended as a joke. The President refused to be put in the position of the “retreat from Munich.” He has said repeatedly since, for em- i — Irene Stewart's LENDING LIBRARY BARANOF BASEMENT LOBBY Hours: Noon to 5:30—17:30 to 9 pm, When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 696 l “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau Reliable Transfer Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oll and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 Ty rm—Ty THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON “If your hair is not becaming to you—You should be coming to us.” || JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Comg PAINTS—OIL—G! any Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition GENERAL MOTORS, DELCG | and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” PHONE 36 FOR VERY err. ‘ LIQUOR DE_LIVBR! IF IT'S PAINT WE HAVEIT! Ideal Paint Shop FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 alae AN McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Lode lnummm‘ w lor sale at The Beapire Office. You Are Sure of Choicest Meats Only IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT . L4 California Grocery * THE PURE FOODS STORE [ FOR INSURANCE | See H. B. SHEPARD & SON TELEPHONE 409 M. BEHRENDS BANK BLDG. Window Cleaning PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc.

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