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WARL ,AARRY - T WOPE NE DORT CRAW T RAGGED END ] O DISHPP' INTMENT WHEN NE MEET P W WZ GOOGLE - SNIE - S AFTER ALl THESE VEARS — B GOLLY, SARNEN - (1 uE\leQ CORGET MW . COR TW\S - WANT AD 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 X Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for conseculive insertions: One day ... Additional days .. Minimum charge ...50c Copy must be in the office by 2 v'clock in the afternoon to insure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone directory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE SACRIPICE—Cabin cruiser, “Palo- mine.” See H. Punches, or phone 241, Terms. FOR SALE—One vanity _dresser. See D. B. Femmer. Call 114. 10c FOR SALE — Milk goats and doe kids. Address Box 482, Sitka, Alaska. FOR SALE—40 pairs A-1 Yukon mink kits, $25 pair, F.O.B. Kake. Buyer furnish crates. Franz Schneuer, Jr., Kake, Alaska. FOR SALE~—1900 “shares Alaska Empire Gold Mining Co. If in- terested address Willilam Kues- ters, 21 Orchard St., Nutley, New Jei 1937 PLYMOUTH: Priced Phone 349 after 4 p.m. FOR SALE*U &1 Lunch Owner right. quitting business. Write P. O. Box | 2274 or Phone 334, 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. FORi SALE ;iGood ;;nyinrgrlunch room and candy kitchen. Wnu Empire B C 771 TRANSFER buslness. Priced to sell at once. Inquire at No. 5 CIUI Apartments. MUST SELL equity in income earn- ing apartments on Dixon. Three apartments, business district. Best view prop- erty buy in town. See Bob Hen- nlng at Empire office. 1933 Pontiac Sport coupe, excellent mechanical ~condigion, good rub-' ber. Priced right. ‘Phone 744, FOR SALEACny Float Beer Parlor. Phone 541 after ¢ p.m. "HE NOYES praperty, corner #4th and PFranklin, 2 buildings — vne 10-room house and one b-room house, both furnished. Terms. See the awner. I.flfl AND FOIIND e Nugget fob. $10 reward dor o, New York Tavern. WANTED LOST reti two furnished, one! with fireplace. Five minutes from | FOR RENT only. VACANCY — Couple and Pond Apts. FOR RENT—Modern three-room apt. Phone Black 490. 4-! ROOM F'URNISHED apl bath. Mrs. Rosenberg, Franklin. . with 407 8. FOR RENT—-5 room apt with pri- vate bath, steamheated, electric range, hot and cold water, Phone 569. FOR RENT-—Furnished apt. Apply L. W. Kilburn, phone Douglas 48. FOR RENT — Small _four-room apartment. Call 79 before 6 p.m. ROOM with or without board, 431 Seward St., opposite P.O. Phone 584, HOME-LIKE apartment ln Hen- ning house on Dixon, be available to rent Aug. 10. Fully furnished, two bedrooms, living room, fire- place, $70. Call Green 375 or Bob Henning, Empire. AND 3- RDOM apl oll ht’al clectric range. Phone Blue 200. o VACANCY Blshop Apts Phone 336. COZY, warm, furn. apts. ' Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurn- ished apartments. Storage lockers, laundry facilities. Heated garages. Phone G. E. Krause the Hillcrest. VA( NCY- Nu’!gk‘L Apartments. Iv"URNISHED apts. al the Fosbee. MISCELLANEOUS PAINTINC, decorating, paper- hanging, furniture refinishing for room and board. Write Empire S 848. GUARANTEED Reansuc “Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 2v1, 315 Decker Way. FOR reliable care for your children. | Phone 297. TURN your old gold into value, cash or uade at Nugget Shop. LININ(: OR m’lkmg over coats. Call Mrs. Baum TMNA‘HW TRAD‘E PACT WITH JAPAN IS l “ (Continuea from Page One) | sionaries, hospital | school teachers. 'TEETH FOR GOLDEN RULE | Our attitude toward China, and until recently toward Japan, has been that of a busy-body, but lov—‘ ing, great aunt. It reached its apex in the late Victorian days about 1900 when John Hay evolved the open door policy. That was a sort of U. S. China golden rule. We sought to persuade others to do unto China as we would ourselves do unto China. ‘We have accepted the Dl’lvll(‘g('\ and obligations of extra-territori-| ality which, in the main, means that Americans in China will be| subject to U. S, not Chinese, civil| _ and court authority. But we have HIGH CHAIR, must be bargain. Phoné Red 625. EXPERT stanography and book- keeping=part’ or full time. Allce Mack, .Gastineau Hotel. ‘WANT TO R.ENT furnished house or apt. about Sept. 1. Phone Red 475. Mary Ch:rmond of Oneonta, N. Y., picked 200 four-leaf clovers this summer, passed her mormal exam- War’—in the nature of trade re-| Among many strange fish dragged initiation was held last and, possibly, em-|up from the depths, Phillips said, | the Knights of Columbus when the, inations and got a teacher’s job. Today’s News Today—Empire. LS L The “HILLCREST" Ultra modern new apartments, all outside rooms, furnished or unfurnished—view. Phone G. E. KRAUSE 439 or call at the » withheld, for the most part, from the international grab for conces- sionsfi At jtimes we have frowned or growled at England, France, Rus- sia, Germany and Japan in an ef- fort to preserve the open door. No administration yet has indicated that we would go to war about it. But the denunciation of the treatyy indicates this administration may | be ready to take steps “short of |arrangements — bargoes — to indicate strongly to| |Japan that, sentimentally, we are still fussy about who does what to| China. ———.————— Chestnut chips, once discarded by the tanning-extract industry, 439 or call at-+ FORERUNNER OF MORE | Liberal, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1939, AR - HoW WELL T REMEMSE! THOSE GOLDEN \LOCKS - QER 50\)\.?\3\. ENES AND PEORLY - TEETH- R TH PORE CRITTER LOORS L\KE HE'S GONNG BUST & BLO0D N\SSEL- CALM NOURSELF, HARKRN - SHd - DONT ACT LOK & BODACIONS by Adelaide Kerr wmr‘.MODES o/t/xe MOMENT Queen Elizabeth’s penchant for parasols has brought them back into the fashion sun. They are twirling over some of . the smartest heads in Newport and Southampton, ries a white one with a spectator sports costume. a gav Zig: striped linen one. E s < ) B, PHILUPS " RESIGNS FROM ROTARY (LUB School Superintendent De-| fails Summer Fishing Experiences Superintendens of Schools A. B. Phillips, Chairman of the recent Rotary International ~Conference here, announced his resignation from the Juneau Rotary Club. Phillips, who has been strip-fish- ing commercially for the past vxv-lnl weeks, told a few fish stories today. He and his partner, Alex Dunham, Principal of the High School, did not catch enough fish to break even |on’ their summer venture, he said. 1On their best day they caught 50 salmon and 44 pounds of halibut, but there were many lean days. was an eight foot mud shark. S VISITING ROTARIAN Lloyd G. Stoner, jeweler from Kansas, is a through pas- senger on the Columbia, making the railroad and Richardson Highway are being used to make corrugating | | reund trip. Stoner attended taday's board. - | The Book ALASKA, ‘Revised and mhrpa, ‘Now On Sale; $1.0, | meeting of the Juneau Rotan Club. | | > Try The Emplre clasaifleds (or‘ results, Both are shown at. Southampton. Befly, Jim Wilcox Visiting Relafives Miss Betty Wilcox and her broth- er Jim are visiting during the week with their grandfather, Professor (E. R. Wilcox of the University of Washington, at his summer home. Next week the two Juneau High | 8chool students will go to Olympia | to spend some time with their great | grandmother, Mrs. Alice Stookey, and to visit with their new cousin, Mrs. Allen Stookey, the former Mar- garet Schmitz, whose marriage Miss Annabelle Simpson of this city re- centiy attended as maid of honor. The two Juneauites, son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Wilcox, will return in time for the onmuw of school next menth. - KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS INITIATE LAST NIGHT by by business meeting followed night A | met at the Parish Hall. Joe Thibodeau, Grand Knight, | presided at the session. The next meeting will be held August 21 — - TOURISTS STOP ’ Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Maples of Deming, New Mexico, | are Tegis- | tered at the Gastineau Hotel, stop- ring off in Juneau 'm' 4 week's| /isit here, | At left, Mrs. Rodman Wanamaker car- At right, Mrs. Herbert E. Weston tops her slacks with JOHNSON DBIIES CURTAIN THEFT Axel Johmnn nrrvstcd Saturday after allegedly stealing a dozen cur- tains’ “from the Gastinean Hotel, pleaded. innocent in U. 8. Com- missioner’s Court when he was ar-| raigned yesterday afternoon on a charge of larceny from a dwelling. Bond was set at $500. S .. DIVORCE »UITS Suits for divorce were filed in Dis- trictiCourt today by Elizabeth Elaine/ Gioovanetti against Edward John Giovanetti and Herbert L. Cooleman against Marie Coleman. - “JIMMIE” TRUITT HERE James Truitt of Seattle arrived on the steamer Aleutian this morn- ing to visit his parents, Attorney General James S. Truitt, who is ill, at his home in the Baranof Hotel, | and Mrs. Truitt. - FELCH HERE Baxter Felch, merchandise broker, came in on the Columbia this morn- ing and is a guest d(, the Gastineau Hotel. ———-——— Soil and water conservation prac- | tices ' recommended for use in the | southwestern dust bowl have been known to farmers since before the! time of Christ. I Ui 50 o 3‘ Book, ALASKA, Revised :and T80, Nfiv On Sale; $1.00, "'erations at Tin OCity, By BILLY DeBECK WE HAE N0 FORGET-ME- o5 o B AR 1 GRL Hm - FISHERMAN 15 BACK IN PORT lvpshcked Smlor Weathers: Gulf Like Trojan Says Skipper The Northern Lignts have prob-; ably seen everything but halibut| fishermen with lipstick—but such“ is true. | Betty Ann Lowman, 23, smiled up | from the decks of the halibuter| Norland today, discharging fish at| the cold storage, said the 16-day trip to the wild Area Three banks was “Swell!"—and as she said it, dock lingerers had to admit that reuged lips do something to a set of oilskins, Husky Betty, accepted dubiously by veteran hal'but skipper Tom | Sandvik for a trip to the banks,| returned to Juneau with the Nor- land and six halibuters last.night with Capt. Sandvik warm in his| praise for her as a fisherman. | “After baiting three skates of| gear, she could bait as fast as any | man on the boat,” Sandvik said. “She worked like a Trojan and wanted to do everything. The only | thing we couldn’t let her do was| take a turn at the roller. There| was too much danger of flying| hooks. And except for the first day or two out, Betty was a good sailor insefar as “taking it” where it was rough. She had to leave the din-| ner dishes once to try the rail, Sandvik said, but from there on| had n otrouble at all. The Norland fished the often stormy waters of Shelikof Strait| and Cook Inlet, bringing about 12| or 14 tons of fish to Juneau. If| there’s enough fish for limits, Betty | will get a man’s share. 'MORE TERRORISTS ARE TO BE SENT OUT OF ENGLAND LONDON, Aue 8 Home Secre- | tary Sir Samuel Hoars today signed expulsion orders against four addi- ynonnl suspects of Trish Republi-! can Army terrorism. The total is | now 61 banished from England | within the past two days. In Northern Ireland police pa- trolled the streets following a re- | port that the army leader Sean Rus~ !sell had been seen in that area. | Police were afraid that his appear- ance would be followed by a new | series of bombing outrages in Eng- land. 1 - . TWO MORE 10 | JOIN SUSHNA SURVEY PARTY Two experts from 'Washington to Ijoln W. A. Rockie's land use survey {party in the Matanuska Valley and Susitna Flats passed through today on the Columbia for the Westward. ‘They are an agricultural econo- mist, V. Webster Johnson of the Di- vision of Land Economics of the 1 Bureau of Agricultural Economics of |! | the Depaartment of Agriculture, and |} | Dale Dotty, General Land Office e‘([)l'rt who has been making a land use study i’ \hc qmfihwu MINING ENGINEER FLYING T0 RUBY M. D. Madden, former Superin- tendent of American Tin Fields op- near Nome, arrived in Juneau on the Columbia this morning and flew to the In- terior. He is going to Ruby to con- nection with private mining inter- | Mrs. Madden and her daughter Marilyn, are guests at the Baranof Hotel, Coulterville, California. ——————— Empire Want Ads Bring Results, l I READY-TO-WEAR visiting here briefly before || returning. south to their home in You'll Find Food Finer and BService More Compléte at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP SANITARY PIGGLY ; WIGGLY Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FRE£ DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and evens Shop LADIES'—] GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 85 I Seward Street Near Third Z0RIC BYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 — s AN R REMEMBER THIS NUMBER PHONE 202 20TH CENTURY MARKET * 5 Alaska Music Supply Manager FOR HEALTH and PLEASURE Bowl * " Brunswick €AFE IN CONNECTION (Chinese & American Specialties) For Most Tasteful Haircutting The Brunswick Barber Shop Specializing in Ladies’ and Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alnska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 412 Bodding Transfer MARINE BUILDING Rock—Coal Iflllh‘ Stove—Fuel Ol Delivery HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liguor Sto Tel. 699 American M Phone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Bullders’ and_Shelf WARDWARE JUNEAU-YOUNG | Shelf and Heavy Hardwars ‘Guns and Ammunitien The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Prout and Second Streets PHONE 359 When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OM YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING OALL US Junean Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 698 GENERAL MOTORS, DEIAJG and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man® — “S8MILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau [ Reliable Transfer | Ov» trucks go any place any thwe. A tank for Diesel Ofl and a tank for Crude Oll save burner trouble. PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 IF IT'S PAINT WE BAVE TT | Ideal Paint FRED W. WENDT PHONE 540 — e Phone 728—————I115-2nd St. THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON “If your hair 45 not becaming to I you~—Youshould be coming to us.” California Grocery SWISS CHARD, MSTAID nmx DAILY FROMOURFARM . . ! rm.unoumr FOR' INSURANCE See H. B. SHEPARD & SON' TELEPHONE 409 B. M. BEHRENDS BANK fi McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTR DEALERS LUM'IR i S i T