The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 28, 1939, Page 7

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- ’ BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH NASSLH, NASSLR , AN Y, AT “HEADLIGHT HBRRY “ SHO' KNOWS HIS "RITAMETIC — DAT £0' BUCKS T GWE Wih COME BRCK QOME, ESCO'TED BN TWO GUNDUD AN SIKTY~-SEBBEN DOLLANS — NAOW, DAT'S WapT T CaLS FOLDWNY MONE‘( 8055 - FOR RENT ROOM for 6th Sireet S Y WANT AD INFORMATION rent; also L,nrugo 32) FOR RENT—Small furnished apt.| Heated. Phone 348. VAC. r\NCY M u‘Kmnnn 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 Apts. FOR RENT—Apartment and room. Imperial Hotel. heat, 200. T I | ) AND 6-ROOM apts., ofl electric range. Phone Blue | | | | e s to the BHOM AND hoard for one g man. Phone Black 160. Count five average wor line. Daily rate per line for conseculive, insertions: One Additional days 5e Minimnm charge 50¢ Copy must be in the office by o'clock in the afternoon to insure insertion on same day We accept ads over from persons listed in directory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. BTUDIO COUCH; G.E. wash ma- chine; walnut dining room table. ain for cash. Margaret Lind- Phone Douglas 142 OMS and bath, electric furnished. 4 l{d 10c l~m:1 4 oak Call Windsor Apts. THREE-ROOM ment. Phone furnished 28 Douglas. apart- hone | — * telephone | G NCY Bishop Apts. Phone 3 telephone 3 P A 2-ROOM cabin for rent. McMullen. 9th St. W. FOR RENT — 4-room furnished apartment, good view, fireplace, couple only. 7th and Seward or Phone Green 198, FURNISHED 4-room apartment and bath. Available August 1. Phone right.| Blue 135. PLYMOUTH, priced 349 after 4 pm i{li{'] Phone furn. apts. voater. dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. boat engines; oil Arc 1931 FORD SEDAN; anchor winch; reverse gears; tanks; welding Alaska Welder F()R RENT—Unmlr\hed apt. for rent. Inquire Snap Shop. FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurn- ished apartments. Storage lockers, laundry facilities. Heated garages. Phone G. E. Krause 439 or call at the Hillerest. FOR SALE-U & I Lunch. Owner quitting busin Write P. O. Box 2274 or Phone 334. FOR SALE — 20-foot mahogany ‘runabout, 20-mile cruishing speed Box 2322, Ketchikan, Alaska. FOR SALE1935 Ford V-8 pickup, ! Reasonable. Phone Blue 640. AT BARGAIN—Seven-room house | in- Douglas, - furnished, full base- ment, on lot 100x175 ft. Is rented. | See or phone Mike Pusich, phone 603 Douglas. VACANCY- Nugg:ém Apartments. FURNISHED apL\ ai the Fosm'e “MISCELLANEOUS GUARANTEED Realistic Permn- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. A SECOND HAND Register for sale, in good condi- tion, price $75 cash. Call Phone | 528. FOR reliable care for your chilldren. Phone 297. | wTURN your old gold into value.1 FOR SALE — Good paying lunch| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. | room and candy kitchen. Write | —— | Empire B C 771. 1 TRANSFER buslness.. Priced to sell at once. Inquire at No. 5 Clxrf Apartments. CiviL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS o e S G AN NI MUST SELL equity in income earn- | ing apartments on Dixon. Three | apartments, two furnished, one| .ne ynited States. Civil Service wm_x ilrepl_ac& Five mln}ltes from Commission has announced open business district. Best View prop-|gompetitive examinations for the erty buy in town. See Bob Hen- | itions listed below. Applications Ping »t Tenples afflos, | must be on file in the Commussion’s o1l | office, Washington, D. C., not la-; exce ent ter than September 16. Inspector, ordnance material, $2,-| 1300 a year; and senior; $2,600; as-| FOR SALE—City Float Beer Parlor sociate, $2,000; assistant, $1,800; Jun-, Phone 541 after 4 p.m. ‘ior, $1,620; Ordnance Department,; o e | War Department. Applicants for FuE NOYEij ptope;t¥l,d‘c':>rner 4th the junior and assistant grades and Prankiin, 2 bulldings — ¥0¢ must have reached thelr 20th, but ¥0zzoou mou;se ;;': do’?‘e D-TOOM | 1ot not have passed their 48th | house, bof P sem, Boe birthday; applicants for the other‘ the owner. | grades must have reached their 21st, but must-not have passed their 55th | LOST AND FOUND birthday. | Educational and technical con- IDST—Nugget fob. $10 feward for Sultant in curriculum problems, $5,- return to New York Tavern. 600 a year, Office of Education. Ap- & s R R ‘plicants must not have passed thexr‘ w ANTED 153rd birthday. _ | Federal agent for home economi WANTED_8- or 9-ft. skiff, cheap‘;‘:i“"“:l‘mv rfl?? a year, Office of! . Education. Applicants must not have for cash. Lenhart, Cable Office. assed helr 3rd. ‘birthday: Pflncipal extension agriculturist, $5,600 a year, senior extengion agri- | culturist, $4,600 a year, and senior extension home economist, $4,600 a year, Extension Service, Department of Agriculture. Applicants must not have passed their 53rd birthday. Forest ecologist, $3,800 a year, and ! principal, $5,600, senior, $4.600, as- sociate, $3,200, assistant, $2,600 a year, Forest Service. Applicants for '.he three highest grades must not ' have passed their 53rd, for the as- | sociate grade they must not have ypassed their 45th, and for the as- — sistant grade they must not have passed their 40th birthday. Forest economist, $3,800 a year, and principal, $5,600, senior, $4,600, associate, $3,200, assistant, $2,600 a year, Porest Service. Applicants for ) the three highest grades must not have passed their 53rd, for the as- [sociut.e grade they must not have 1933 Ponnac Sport coupe, mechanical condition, good rub- | ber. Priced right. Phone 744. 4 WANTED—Girl for general house- work, Phone 607 after 5 p.m. .1 » EXPERT) stenography and book- keeping—part or full time. Alice Mack, Gastineau Hotel. » SOMMERS TO WRANGELL R. J. Sommers, construction man, left on the steamer North Coast today for a short business ‘trip to ‘Wrangell. Young Bobbie Sommers accom- panied his dad on the trip. P — e e The “HILLCREST" Ultra modern. new ts, all outsidé rooms, hed or unfurnished—view. Phone G. E. KRAUSE 439 or call at the “HILLCREST. T DON'T ASK NME, SUH— MSTAY HARKY JES' GETS HEAW FO' A SPELL AN SQUBBLES WD Q PENCIL-DEN RE P\CKS UPe OE TELEPHONE BN TALKS 'RITHMETIC - DATS AL - HE SHO' B & SVMAAT MaN- l i Have you heard about flowers on hats? They're “It” this summer. This chapeau is massed with violets, topped with green leaves and back-draped with violet. velvet ribbon streamers. - 'oould have been achieved under terms of the bill as originally passed. The Republican minority at the time pointed out the im- practicability of the so-called $417,000,000,000 reserve fund for old- age pensions and the hardship im- posed by an increasing scale of payroll taxes. In this session o1 Congress the merit of their conten- tions was recognized even by the Roosevelt administration and the act now is in the process of being amended. passed their 45th, and for the as- sistant grade they must not have passed their 40th birthday. Assistant, industrial counsellor, $2,600 a year, Federal Prison Indus- tries, Inc., Department of Justice Applicants must have reached their 25th, but must not have passed their 53rd birthday. Engineer, $3,800 a year, and senior, $4,600, associate, $3,200, assistant, $2,600 a year. Applicants for the two highest grades must not have passed their 53rd, for the associate igrade they must not have '"W"dr These two examples demonstrate L 45k:h o fvrll:(- ams“:(;\how an’ alert, mp;htant minority Efiflfle ABtfiybfl‘;fia; e e e 1pnrty can rend(_er constructive serv- il information may be oblained 1€ {0 the nation. Examples could at. Room 311, Federal Building. brel cited _ciay_ after day in which the minority is responsible for cor- recting legislation pending before Al lifl me ;:;l;::‘.stwts by searching for the Republicans Have Working Majorify Our liberties and our democracy (Continued from angc One) will be safe as long as we have in | Congeess a watchful, strong mi- neority party, ready and willing to perform its duty of checking im- moderate action by the party in power. SOMETHING ABOUT MARTIN Joe Martin, writer of this article chieftain of the rejuvenated Re- publican minority in the House, i regarded by non-partisan observers | as the most effective leader in the current Congress. He is a 54-year- old bachelor, a Massachusetts small-town editor-politician, and is serving his 14th year in the house and his {irst year as G.O.P. leader. He directed the congressional elec- tion campaign of 1938, first major Republican victory“in 10 years. —,,———— the minority party was impotent, Congress passed a long series of bills subsequently held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.” Congress enacted legislation so defective it was necessary to amend or repeal it. Take the tax on undistributed net earning of corporations. When this bill first was before the Congress, the Re- publican party pointed out that it was impracticable and predicted its evil effects on recovery and re- employment. Their objections were ignored. But all they predicted came true, and this year a stronger Republican minority succeeded in bringing about the repeal of this tax. NEED STRONG MINORITY The Social Security act had de- sirable objectives but due to un- wise methads prescribed for reach- ‘While J. R. SWEET'S IN CITY | James R. Sweet, mining engineer from Climaz, Colorado, arrived in the Capital City last night on the| steamer Prince George, Mrs. Sweet accompanied - her husband -here. B0SS WS\DE PaNY -DEN'S TWO GEM'MEN TO SEE NO' ~DEN @EEN THOO T WASTE-SASKET LA DOGS LOOKIN' §0' BONES — Women In The News Two Palrs—Four Thoughts Gloria Swanson, once Holly= wood’s highest paid actress, has just opened a business of- fice in New York to handle in- ventions. She says her film ca- reer now seems as though it were a dream, Tallulah Bankhead, actress: daughter of Speaker Bank-: head of the House, prepares to go before a Senate committee to plead for. continuation of the federal theater pro;ect. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER ; Gloria Swanson Somborn, 18, daughter of the former movie actress and of the late Herbert Somborn, is planning to be married to Robert Williams Anderson, 20, son of a Los An-, geles contractor. 4 1 M LADIES OF THE STAGE Helen Johnson, blonde show= girl, soothes an injured eye ‘after police intervened tp avert a riot at a stormy session of the American Federation q‘ Agtors on Broadway, Edythe-Reily Rowe Enroute fo Juneau Of interest to her many admir- ers in this city comes the news that Edythe-Reily Rowe, eminent cellist, is enroute to Juneau on the stcamer North Sea which sailed from Seattle today. Mrs, Rowe plans to spend month in the Capital City instr ing a group of young celli received a portion of their train- ing from her during the family's During her brief stay in this city Mrs. Rowe will be presented in ‘concert it is revealed. Mrs. Rowe and her family Au‘ at present making their home in Sacramento, Cal, where she is the first cellist with the Sacramento Symphony Orchestra. s Margaret Bowen fo Be Heard on Radio Mrs. Margaret Bowen, well known and popular soprano,” will be heard tomorrow evening between 8:15 and 8:45 o'clock over station KINY in an especially arranged concert. These will be both classi- cal and religious groups on the half hour. program. o - ORIV £ K Miss Crowell, Mrs. Hanebury on Visit Miss Mickey Crowell and Mrs. Don Hanebury left. on:the Nuisance III for Glacier Bay and Icy! Straits, From here, Miss Cmowell | plans to go to Dundas Bay whare she will spend several wecks visit- ing with Mr. and Mrs. Horace Ibach. -e ing these objectives the latter never | Empire Want Ads Bring Results. For Month's Stay| residence in Juneau a year ago.| ABROGATION NINE-POWER TREATY NO 1S PROPOSA Action of United Stafes-, | Nippon Handling U.S. | Move with Gloves { (Contlnuea rom DPage Onel | ciation of ‘the 1911 treaty by the | United States, says that Japan is willing to negotiate a new agreement | with the United States but that ‘1!. must recognize prevailing condi- tions in the Orient. The statement says in part: | “A néw situation is developing in !the East and the Japanese govern- ment has long been hoping that the other nations of the world would recognize this fact.” 4 An unofficial spokesman for the government predicted that the Jap- anese war with China will be over long before January 26 when the present. treaty expires. Japanese officials indicated that they believed the economic effect of #ie American action would be slight. Business men apparently were not s0 - optimistic as stocks slumped sharply on the Tokyo exchange yesterday and today. A In Chipa’s temporary Capital City Chungking, there is general sabis- faction and gratification over ‘the | American move. Foreign Minister Wang Chung Hui ‘declared that it made clear that the American policy is “to be judg- I ed by deeds rather than ‘words.” R 1 Empire Want Ads Bring Results, ;| TELERHONE 213 You'll Find Food Finer and Bervice More Complete at THE BARANOF SQFI‘BB SHOP TR Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates ‘E.0. DAVIS [ PR SR b.Iones-Slevens Shop. po o Seward Btreet Near Third e PHONEES | Alaska Laundry || LB s BB Alaska Music Supply Arthur M.-Uggen, Manager . Planos—Musical Instruments ' and Bnpp“n Phone 206 122'W. Second { Denunciation on Is Result oi‘ Utah Nut and Lump :COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 412 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 . Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat-—Fhone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU Trene Stewart's LENDING LIBRARY BARANOF BASEMENT LOBBY Hours: Noon to 5:30--7:30 to 9 pam. When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night I'hona‘ 696 “SMILING SERVICE" Beri's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau Reliable Transfer Oux trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diese) Oll and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble, HONE H9—NIGHT 148 ——— | Phone 723———115-2nd St. THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON “If your hair is not becoming to you—You should be coming to us.” | ettt — - Telephone 478 SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 85 | : b || The Juneau Laundry I FRANKLIN STREET between Frout and Second Streets PHONE 359 Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING 107 Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—-Fuel Ol Delivery ! e —— e — Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OIS Builders' and Shelf UARDWARE. JUNEAU-YOUNG ! Hardware Company PAINTS--OIL--OLASE GENERAL MOTORS, DEILG and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON PHONE % mm!m. LIQUOR nzuvm IF IT'S PAINT WE HAVE TTY, Ideal Paint Shop FRED W. PHONE 549 McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS b Lode ana piacer swcation notiost for sale at The Beapire Office. California Grocery FRESH RADISHES, GREEN ONIONS, SWISS CHARD, MUSTARD GREENS DAILY FROM OUR FARM Prompt Delivery TELEPHONE 409 B. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON M. BEHRENDS BANK Window Clecminm PHONE 485

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