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T KNOW (T AT NOuUR FAULT, BESSIE - \T'S SBLt TY WHO KEEPS GLNMNMNG LP THE WORKS - S0- T THINK WE BETTER CALL THE WHOLE THWNG OFF - NOU KEEP THE “TROWSSERL” T SOUGHT Nou &N’ TOODLE-000 WANT AD ] FOR SALE—-((.ontmued) INFORMATION | a SECOND HAND National Cash Register for sale, in good condi- tion, price $75 cash. Call phone n case of error or if an ad has been stopped before e: ot piration, advertiser please noti- fy this office (Phone 374) at once and same will be given attention. | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE 528, FOR CASH—Very moderately priced 3-apt. house, good condition, fully furnished and occupied, oil heat installed, Frigidaire, good lot fruit and flowers, residential sec- tion, sufficient income to pay for itself in five years. Phone 173 | ’ len( (lw‘ average Wm‘d\ to the line. Daily (nsertions: One day ... Additional days Minimum charge Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure nsertion on same day. We accept ads over from persons listed in flirectory l'!mll ate per line for consecutive first class 45 inc I'UG BOAT, condition, Fairbanks-Morse hp. heavy-duty diesel er Will sacrifice and deliver. Also 125 hp. heavy-duty Atlas Im- perial powered tug, good sea boat. J. R. Maginnis, Marshfield, Ore. avy built telephone diamond telephone FOR SALE—Two genuine rings. Orpheum Rooms. 1936 mechan $21¢ dan in condition, Phone Ford al cash FOR SALE excellent good tires, Black 195. FOR RENT RFN'F — New WESTING- VACUUM CLEANER at delivery 25c additional. ELECTRIC CO., 140 Phone 161 unturnished 484 after 5 p.m. 74—Ask for Ad-taker. OR SALE Hrnw hold furniture. een 665 between 5 and 7 I“OR HOUS! 50c a da PARSONS So. Seward FOR SALE—One used Westing- house electric range. Two burn- ers and oven; just the thing for | small cabin at only $15. PAR- SONS {CTRIC CO. 140 So.| Seward. Phone 161. 6-ROOM mode house. Phone OIL libAlFR G.E. ironer, Cole-} man heater, sewing machine,]| household utensils, some A-1 condition, cheap. Embi RCOM furnished apt., two bath- rooms, electric range, oil burner. Call after 5 p.m. Mike Daniloff, GER SEWING Machines, Singer| 1565 Seatter Tract. Vacuum Cleaners, Maytag Wash- [ ing Machines, Maytag 110 - voit | light plants, Ironrite Ironers. Terms: $5 down, §5 monthly. J. I Anderson, Box 101, Juneau, | ska Distributer, St FOR RENT—Unfurnished apt. In- quire Snap Shoppe. st. TWO-ROOM cabin, West 9th McMullen. o | VACANCY — Gouple only. Wint 1937 PLYMOUTH, A-1 condition,! priced right. Phone 349 after 4 p.m. electric Phone bath, su'amhfluh'd hot and cold water. : vate FOR SALE range, kids. Address Alaska. -Milk goats and doe Box 482, Sitka,| 5- AND 3-ROOM apts, ofl heat, FOR SALE—U & I Lunch. Owner|" glootric range. Phobe Blue 200, quitting business. Write P. O. Box 2274 or Phone 334. Phone 336. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and ‘bath. Reasonable at Seaview. 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. FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurn- ished apartments. Storage lockers, laundry facili . Heated garages. Phone G. E. Krause 439 or call at the Hillerest. VA( ANCY--Nu FOR SALE — Good pavm(, lunch room and candy kitchen. Write Empire B € 771. TRANSFER business. Priced to SP]II t Apartmen at once. Inquire at No. 5 Clff|—— Ap"u‘tml‘ntfi MIHT %P,LL equity in income earn- ing apartments on Dixon. Three apartments, two furnished, one with fireplace. Five minutes from business district. Best view prop- erty buy in town. See Bob Hen- ning at Empire office. “DRNISHFD apus. fl' [h(‘ l“u.\u(‘e MISCELLANEOUS IF‘ YOU WANT to rent a t‘nr and | drive it yourself call Lloyd Reid, Blue 270. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Pinger wave, oficA: Laqla’s Beauty Shop, telephone | 201, 315 Decker Way. 1933 Pontiac Sport coupe, excellent mechanical condition, good rub- ber. Priced right. Phone 744, TURN your old gold into value, "\HE NOYES properly, corner 4th cz\sh or trade at Nugget Slmp and Franklin, 2 buildings — vne 10-room house and one 5-roomn house, both furnished. Terms. See the owner. Lost AND FOUND | Wdllcl tontaining $50 in Juneau; $16 reward.| Please return to Empire. MARINE AIRWAYS ON CHARTER TRIP | %57 10 POLARIS TAKU WANII‘D'VWcmAn wnan wark by day or hour. Phone 336. get fob. 310 reward [Ol w New York Tavern. Pilot Alex Holden took the Mar- ine Airways plane on a charter trip to Poloaris Taku this afternoon Those making the trip were S, Limo, | CALL RED 454 for. reliable hour | 4 or day help in your home, This merning Holden flew to Hawk Inlet with Oscar Olson of the Con- tinental Can Co., as a roundtrip passenger. Jim Sherry went to Chichagof and Holden returned to Juneau with two miners, WANTED —Baby Bed. Green 640; YOUNG LADY, employed, small furnished apartment by Aug. 22, Phone 197 after 6:30 p.m. WANTEDWe want to make you a liberal trade-in" allowance for your old washer on a new 1938 EASY. Convenient terms on the balance. PARSONS ELECTRIC , €O, 140 So. Seward. Phone 161.} The "HILLCREST" Ultra modern new apartments, all outside rooms, furnished or @nfurnished—view. Phone G. E. KRAUSE 439 or call at the “HILLCREST.” I'EXPERT stenography and hook- keeping—part or full time. Alice Mack, Gastineau Hotel. ~'| icans “this’ summer as the result of pe. ‘mghls at Youth Hostels. | organized THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, T SWOW,GO0GLE - NE HAWNT ACTWN LIKE & HUMARN BEAN - 'SPOSE TH' PORE GAL CAN'T GIT HER J0B BRCK - NOP o) WASHED Len FINSHED Bt & 2 TAKING A GOOD LOOK AT AMERICA IS NOW (OSTING | You arrive at a hostel toward evening. Here Barbara Niei- Jean MeMillan greeted of the Pursima by in .sen (center) and Nancy are W. E. Pimental, California. . . . house mother hostel Then you gather wood z, for a fire to cook sup- per. These girls are Helen Nielsen and Betty Jo Stone. Finally you fix up your 3, bunk—and it sure looks good. Trave arry their own sleeping bags. ON AP Feature Scrvice Writer SAN FRANCISCO, Cail-—Doliar- a-day vacations are being enjoyed by ‘several thousand younz Amer- 4500 in 20 ¢ ught to LI years ago Smith, who for- rcpe. tries United Isabel and' Mo merly were A Non-Profit Scheme This couple set up the first hos- tel in Northfield, Mass. The first loop was and. y rent is organ-| Youth Ho a ‘non-profit organization t Jmported from Eu # furnishing' their own — chiefly bicycling are spendi an idea They are locomotion hiking—and of putting up at a hoste! is ALt a night, plus 5 cents for fuel There are now 203 such hostels and is run by a distinguished board in the United All are in of srnors headed by Dr. Mary seenic or his s and are g woodley, former president of Mt. into Hostels | Holyoke coll are 15 to 20 miles ap: The idea is that the traveler can cover this distance in onc day afcot or on a le, or, in rare cases, 96439 overnight gues on horseback or in a Vica- | Mississippi, 80 per cent of these 8 tionists who want to whiz through |yrived by bicyele, while in the west 300 miles of scenery in a day Via|pijkers and c s ‘were evenly di- automobile are distinctly not wel- |y b s Fifty-four per New chains of hostels this |46 per cent hoys year have been set up in Mis- And what is a hostel? souri, eastern Towa, Indiana, It can be anything from a spec- and West Virginia. There is 2 |ially built rustic lodge to a school- complete chain of hostels, for |pouse, just so it provides adequate, the first time, rumming from | ceparate quaricrs for men and wo- Valley Forge, Pa., to Montreal. |mon and measures up to certain And three groups of boys and | iands in sanitation, cooking fa- girls t year will travel to the cilities, ete. Werld’s Fairs—most of the way | A large number of hostels are ru- in railroad cars set up as hos- homes, where house, porch or e, barn provides ample bunk room. Youth hostels originated in Eu- IAM are under control of “house par tels, Inc., s divided into eight regions. Hestel multiplyir In 1938, there administrative r were cent were girls by | -1 Ifn'.s East of the| proci§ | 1939. By BILLY DeBECK T LEAST NE COULD DO \S BUN HER B NEW BUCKET AN SCRUB BRUSH anN' SETTER WP AR B\ZNESS AG'WN - FIRST SAWMILL T0 OPEN SOON NEAR (ORDOVA\. Plans-To Use Timber from Nat. Forest George Roberts of Cordova plans to start a sawmill and logging camp we, Prince William Sound, miles north of Cordova, Service announced to- | beaten for at Irish abont the Forest day. The plant, first sawmill in Cordova vicinity, is expected to manufacture hemlock railroad ties for the Alaska Railroad and lumb for the g Al markets at Cordov: >3 and points along the Rich- dson Highway to Interior Alaska. tegional Fores Office Roberts has just been awnrded the initial sale unit of tim- ber for use of this plant. It consists of 3,000,000 board feet of hemlock and spruce stumpage in the vicinity cf the sawmill, in the Chugach National Forest. The timber will be cut over a period of not exceedir tw after which additional purch an be made as needed to keep the enteiprise going. The mill will be an entirely plent. It will have a capacity of around 20,000 board feet daily and be pawered with diesel engines. Rob- erts is reported enroute south to buy the necessary machinery, Approxi- mately 20 men will be employed and iction will continue practical- throughout the year. This operation should prove to be of substantial benefit to the town of Cordova, which is earnestly striv- ing to establish new industrial en- terprises to help offset the recent closure of the Kennecott Mine and s, Copper River and North- western Railroad, which were for many years the prineipal employers of the Cordova district. > SUGGFSTIONS T0 HUNTERS ISSUED BY FOREST SERVICE Pamphlet Issued Today Tells How to Shoot and Dress Game Animals How to shoot a deer and what to do with him after you've shot him is told in an eight-page mimeo- graphed pamphlet published today by the U. S. Forest Service regional | office here. Prepared by Assistant Regional | Forester Wellman Holbrook, Jay | Williams, Charles Burdick and Har- | old Smith, the instructions tell how to dress and pack the carc: of | deer, goats and moose. An attractive cover picturing a goat, deer and moose has been pre- pared by Sally Sha of the re- w,lom\l staff. ! “first edition” of 500 copies has lbeun run off by the Forest Service. Copies are available at the regional omce to unyone interested. the that 1ew normally the owners ot the house—and are sponsored by a lo- cal citizens’ committee. Sing For Entertainment Blankets are furnished and food is bought locally, but the hostelers |carry a linen sleeping bag,. table- ware and toilet articles. Drinking is forbidden, smoking discouragad. A wholesome sing-song “is the us- ual evening entertainment and the | curfew is 10 p. m. A typical hostel accommodates 10 men and 10 women, and persons | “from 4 to94,” may use it. People of high schoel and college age, | however, are at present the great- est_hostelers. The Smiths, who are still exe- cutive heads of the movement and operate out of Northfield, accent | the desirability of hosteling in dis- | tant parts of the United States |and abroad. This interchange of Jmenes and interest among the youth of the world, at low cost, is to them a major attracticn and justifica- ttion of the movement, 'CONGRESSIONAL | little ripples of political activity out sylvania but is not so mighty now. 'BILLIE HANSON | () \ i JITTERS SHAKE SOME SENATORS | friends say he is worrying about where he has not been; the Senate in his whole life. | Observers say there isn't a chance of upsetting him in 1940, | but he is taking no risks. On a re- cent date he put into the congre sional record 39 columns of speeches, articles, news clippings | and other pro-Ashurst matter that! might be useful in saving his skin —even if it is not in danger. 1 In a somewhat frolicsome mood he urged the Senate the other day to adjourn so the members could get back home. “I am advised today,” he said, “that I have sume political fenses in a sad condition of disrepair.” | Senator Pittman of Nevada another who' always suffers pre- election panics but comes up with post-election majorities. He didn't fight to stay out in the forefront of the silver group for nothing. Sil- ver is important politics in Ne-| vada Senator in Arizona, is Connally of Texas is another pre-election fretter, The old age pension movement has taken hold out his way. It helped elect Governor O'Daniel, the flour | dealer. O'Daniel, is a possible can- didate for Connally’s job. So you| find Conally taking care of that| situation by adding an amendment to the social security act designed to give two Federal dollars for one dollar of state money in the lower pension brackets, REASON TO WORRY Of course there are some members who are expecting real trouble. Sen- ator Truman of Missouri will beé cpposed for his party’s nomination by popular Governor Stark, who recketed to prominence as the re- 1t of éxposure about the Pender- st machine in Kansas City. In Wisconsin, the LaFollette or- ganization was beaten last year, and next year “Young Bob” comes up for re-election. In . Nebraska Senator Burke will get no support from the independent Norris lib~ erals nor from New Dealérs. Sena- tor Guffey once ruled high in Penn- One of those who doesn’t need to worry is Senator Hiram Johnson of California. They would elect him out there if he turned commun< azi. DROWNS AFTER HOONAH FIGHT | Fell from Dtfi(:'Unknown' Party Being Sought by Officers Billie Hanson, Native, widely known in Juneau, drowned Sunday | night at Hoonah when he fell off a dock during a fistfight with another person whose identity is not known. U. 8. Commissioner Robert R.| Brown reported to the Marshal's of- fice here that the verdict of a cor- onet’s inquest held at Hoonah yes- terday was that Hanson ‘“came to his death by falling from the ap- proach to Kane's dock into the wat- er and drowning. His fall from the approach was the result of a fight with a party or parties unknown,” Officers are investigating further into the fluhl -eo JANE ALEXANDER BACK FROM TRIP Jane Alexander, Secretary to i)|— rector William Kirk of the Terri- torial Department of Public Wel- fare, returned today on the vebsel North Sea from a week’s admin- | istrative trip to Wrangell. TELEPHONE 212, ' Phone 4753 [ Bt v et o 0 400 e o il P Jms Stevens Sne'- You'll Find Food Finer and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF ~-9 Garhage Hauled Réasonable Monthly Ratés E. 0. DAVIS AR EEADV TO- WFA‘R Seward Bweet Near Third . ZORIC "PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instrumeénts and Supplies Phone 206 122 W. Second Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 412 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Me: Phone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Frout and Second Streets PHONE 359 When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIlL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING BTORAGE and CRATINOG CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48--Night Phone 696 S AP P b U | — e “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau Reliable Transfer Ov~ trucks go any place any tine, A tank for Diese) Ofl and a tank for Crudy Ol save burner troubl PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON i | yanr hair 13 not becaming to you-—-You should be coming to us.” [tttk s i SANITARY PIGRETY 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 95 P s Sebn s THIS NUMBER PHONE 202 FOR HEALTH and PLEASURE at the 2 Bow! Brunswick CAFE IN CONNECTION (Chinese & American Specialties) Fnr Mo:t Tasteful Haircutting The Brunswick Barber Shop Specializing in Ladles’ and Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING m Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders' and Shelf HARDWARE JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—-OIL—GLASE Bhelf und Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammuriition GENERAL MOTORS, DELUG and MIAYTAG Plollml PHONE % FOR VERY PROMPT LIOUOR DELIVER 1 IF IT'S PAINT WE HAVE IT! } Ideal Paint Shop FRED W. WENDT : PHONE 549 ! McCAUL ot DODAE ina muqtm: DAILY FROM OUR FARM . 'l'elgpogie 478‘ F(FR INSURANCE " See H.R. SHEPAED & SON TELEPHONE 409 toange B. ™. anfll! #ANKR ®LDG. .....,......._.1.....