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

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6, 1939. By BILLY DeBECK WARAL, T SWOW '\ NE LOOK LKE ME SEEN DRAWED THROLGH A KNOT QO\E — WRET IS NE ,CuZ 22 SNUFEFY -- QUN DOWN TO THE DRUG STORE AND GET TS PRESCRIETION FUARD =~ THE Was SOV Y e St ) ONE MORKRE NMERT UKE 00C. LAST N\GHT - PERE.- - HE SAD T 88D NSOMNA - WANT AD INFORMATION | 4-ROOM PARTLY furnished house for rent. Reasonable. Phone 67 | after 5 p.m. | TIEGLER ENDS BARANOF WORK In case of error or if an ad 1 has been stopped before ex- piration, advertiser please noti- iy this office (Phone 374) at once and same will be given attention. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE FOR SALE ‘ FOR SALE — Singer sewing ma-| chine, electric, hardly used, $75| Bought last spring for $125. Call between 6 and 7. Phone 701, Bill Rudolph, or call at Apt. O, Coliseum. SIMMONS STUDIO couch, can be made into -double-bed—like new. Phone Douglas 222. FOR SALE — Used washer, whirl dryer, $15. Phone Red 120. \ b “plano, fine ! tone, sacrifice. 873 Basin Road. { -1 FORD, winter equipped. Fine con- | |FOR RENT — 2-room furnished | FURNISHED heated room for rent. ROOMS FOR rent, 425 7th St. Lady Known as Lou Comes to New Life Under Veteran Brush apartment, and one large fur- nished room with private bath. Call 513 A Willoughby. Eustace P. Ziegier, wio shares the art spotlight in Alaska with Syd- ney Laurence, sailed south last night on the steamer Alaska after several months completing a murals com- missicn for the Baranof Hotel Behind him, Ziegler has left some of the best work he has e, in the cpinion of many Juneau art critics, who attribute the lar t part of r's excellent brush r Its on ont assignment to the fact| he was “given a free hand and let | alone,” as Ziegler himself put it. | In the Gold Room, Juneau’s I est, most luxurious dining room Ziegler has left gigantic murals of men and mountains and elements, vigorous in effect. In the Iris Room, (where ranof | Hotel Manager Bob Schoettier Black 380. room. up- FOR REN Reasonable. stairs. —Housekeeping 208 Main St., MODERN 3-ROOM apt., oll heat. Phone Black 490. X 3 ROOMS and bath, steamheated very nicely furnished: Frigidaire, electric range.' Call Windsor Apts. | 3-ROOM FURNISHED apt. Phone 385. FURNISHED APT. with bed cleset, $55; one apt. with bedroom, furnished, $60. Hillcrest—Phone 439. VACANCY, couple only. Apply in dition. 437 Fifth and Seward. | FOR SALE Eastman Kodak home Practically new.Reason- Call 185. I enlarger able for cash. BATHTUB \MIl; fittings and pipes; person. Winter and Pond APLS.|,.5,qiy exhibits a series of framed | s by Ziegler and smilingly an- | s he will have to refinish the room to cope with the added of Ziegler oils) the popular Ala FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. Phoné Douglas 48. FOR NT—Two-room furnished WHERE'S SNUERN 22 1 SWERR T WEARD W CONE W = NOU MOWEN W WHERE'S NN MEDICINE 22 Wallace Beery, Actor,. Bty DK | The Juneau Laundr.y FORD AGENCY (Authorized Deslers) GREASES Foot of Main Street GAS — OILS Juneau Motors Yowll Find Food Fner and Service More Compicte at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates i E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISS! READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry 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 — A S S Sl LOCKSMITH Let Us Repair Your Locks OR MAKE NEW KEYS JORGENSON MOTORS Avto Repair Work—Gas Perryway and Willoughby Ave. Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments 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 Meat-——Phone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING 07 Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Qil Delivory Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE i FRANKLIN STREET between || | Front and Second Streets ( “ PHONE 359 JUNEAU-YOUNG artist has left a variety of Ziegler | oils with pleasing contrasts in col- | H. E. Iffert, Mrs. Stella Fawthe ors and subjects, { Mrs. W. P. Scott, Mrs. E. J. Cowling, And in the Bubble Room, just off | M George Tulintseff, Mrs. Ray LARGE UPSTAIRS heated living the main lounge and the cocktail | Ward, Mrs, J. F. Worley, M Sta- apartment. Phone Douglas 28. Phyllis Anne Beery, seven months’ old, the second of the children When in Need of Wallace Beery of the films has adopted, posed for her first picture DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL with Beery Carol Anne Beery, 8, at Hollywood. | Beery indicated he intended adopting more as the present two grew YOUR COAL CHOICE | steamer trunk. Phone 293. | Hardware Company | PAINTS—-OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition . ¥ 5 - | /FOR. RENT — One gas pump, in i G-roont” House.” S otion, Call Femmer at 114. Riess, in Douglas. | and her new sistel FOR SALE—Set new sterling inlaid service for eight. Bargain. Green 168 after 5 p.m. silver Pl FOR SALE—28 beds, springs, mat- tresses, bedding, linen, dishes.| Can be seen at Thomas Hard- ware | General Electric w 4 E. St. SALE, i FOR SALE—4-room house, partly | Zurnished. In Seatter Phone Black 479. I AM BUILDING new home. My present home for sale cheap and on terms. P. O. Box 466 or phone Blue 675 after 12 noon. FOR SALE — Furniture, leaving town. Call 571 between 5:30 and| 9 pm. | MUST SELL 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. NURSING, housekeeping, care chil- dren, by graduate nurse. Hourly nursing if desired. Write “100” c/o Empire. E}OO}) JSED piano. Write, giving full details, to XYZ, Empire. WANTE Work, any kind: me- chanical drive cat, truck, grader, cook or bakery work, bartender,| carpenter’s helper or lather, night chman or janitor. Can fur- nish A-1 ref. Married. Am. Legion member, Post No. 4. Empire R 259. WANTED—Chimney cleaning, win- dow washing by experienced man. Phone 241. WANTED—Woman for light house- keeping. Particulars on applica- tion. 224 Windsor Apt. Apply eve- nings. WANTED—Used gunny sacks. 3%c each delivered to coal bunkers. WOMAN WISHES janitor work after 6 p.m. Address P. O. Box 2105, City. WANTED—DISTRIBUTOR > desire a Distributor to handle line of first-aid approved fire tinguishers and fire alarms. er good salesman who can de- > full time contacting schools, | churches, stores, garages, hotels, canning factories, homes, auto, truck and bus owners, farmers,| public institutions, etc. Should be financially able to carry a small| stock on hand. Write complete de- tails, references and past experi- ence. Address President, Fyr- Fyter Company, Dept. 412, Day- ton, Ohio, DURING THE winter months live | Watkins Products. Call Black 634. room for one or two steady mm.“lmmg’- where workmen have just renters, 146 Willoughby, next m‘ccmple(c'! inlay of mahogany in Pinnish Baths ? cak floors for dancing, Ziegler com- | pleted a mural that is certain te - ularize one of his favorite bji The subject in question is ei “The Lady That's Known as Lou,” or some such Klondike charmer.| She dances in an otherw sombre | barroom seene before admiring boot- ed sourdoughs, garbed in pink lace| and bare flesh almost shocking so0 | close to the barroom rail | Ziegler, who had “Lou” painted in | smaller oils before, admittedly sur-' prised himself with his new lady of the barroom dance. “I should have| enlarged her before,” he declared.| - | Trinity Jr. Guild fo i Fill Christmas Basket Plans for filling a Christmas Cheer | basket were made at last I s meeting of the Junior Trinity Guild, | and a dance to b ponsored by the | group was also suggested Hostesses for last evening were Mrs. Burr Johnson and Miss Lu-| cille Fox. The next session of the | Guild will be held January 2 for the purpose of electing new officers. -~ ¢ Mrs. George Johnson Has Dessert *Sewing Honoring her mother-in-law, Mzs. | Margaret Forester, Mrs. Geornge Johnson entertained at her Dixon Street home today with dessert-| luncheon and an afterncon of sew- | ing. Asked to be present were Mrs, MODERN FURNISHED apt. after Dec. 5. Phone Green 750 STEAM HEATED room for rent. Phone Green 675. at Hotel Juneau. rooms. Residential comfortably Quiet, view rates. VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. FOR RENT—2-1oom furnished apt., 725 Basin Road. Phone Green 100. | oom house, 7th and Main. Inquire J. F. Mullen. s furnished cabin at Lawson Creek. Phone 91 FOR RENT—Partly furnished flat Inquire Snap Shoppe. i COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. MISCELLANEOUS | MRS. PHILLIP'S original Christmas decorations at the Needlecraft Shop. PHONE MRS BATHE for any kind of sewing. EXPERT dressmaking: phone Green 739, Hazel Austerman. SAX and clarinet lessons. Phone Green 739, Ted Austerman. BXPERT“ pubn:_swnography and bookkeeping. Alice Mack, office, Baranof Hotel. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. | Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 61, 315 Decker Way. Anchorage, Alaska, November 17, 1939 Notice is hereby given that Ma- | ko ; thias Halm has made application TURN your old gold into value,|for a homesite under the act of| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. | vay 26, 1934, for a tract of land| CONTRACT BRIDGE classes now | €mbraced in U. S. Survey No. 2377, open. Helen F. Griffin, 427 4th |Anchorage serial 08807, containing| St. 2.18 acres and situated within the; LOST AND FOUND Mendenhall Elimination from Ton-| gass National Forest, in latitude| FOUND—16-ft. skiff floating on channel, Phone 037, two long, two 58° 23 10” N. longitude 134° 34" { W. and it is now in the files of the| short rings. |U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Al-| aska. | 8 Any and all persons claiming ad-| versely rany of the above men- tioned land should file their ad-| Mrs. D. B. Baker of Hoquiam, |verse claims in the district land Washington, arrived here last night office within the period of publiea- | on the steamer Yukon to spend sev- |tion or thirty days thereafter, or eral months visiting her son-in-1aw | they will be barred by the pro-| and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George |yisions of the Statutes. S, p GEORGE A. LINGO, ’ Register. PRACTICAL FURRIER, opposite 1./ Date first publication, Dec. 6, 1939: Goldstein, Fishermen's Bldg.im"“ last publication, Jan. 31, 1940. Phone 436, or I may call, adv. VISITING DAUGHTER 4 | make a doll for the King of West- | pretty pewter dishes for Santa and | Bright red dishes for the soldie; | “She should have faith if she is | her thoughtful looking with large cey Norman Tec and Mrs. G R Rice DR. ST | Makes Arch app. 10 Valentine THE STORY SO FAR: San- ta has promised to make a magic doll for the King of Westphalia whose kingdom was badly wrecked the night the God of Lightning gave a feast for his son and set him off on his adventures. Chapter Three The New Doll SANTA sprang from his bed | the next morning the min- | ute the sun pink-tinted the jcicles hanging outside his window. He hummed a little| tune as he pulled on his red| breeches. He hummed as he tugged a silver comb through | his long, white beard. That was the day he meant to phalia. It was to be a doll like none | you or I have ever seen. She was| 1o be tall as a lady. And at mid- night she was to have the power | to talk to her owner about all the | things that would interest a King. So Santa was thinking hard by the time he went out into the Toy- | shop workroom. Mrs. Santa was | setting breakfast. She put out| tiny crystal dishes fairie herself. Lit the visiting woods and the dolls. | Santa was so silent at breakfast | that Mrs. Santa asked, “Are you worried about this doll?” Santa put down his cup, scratch- ed his forehead, and said, “Well,| I guess I am, I don’t seem to see just how to make her. What do you think she ought to be?” Plenty Of Ideas Quick as a flash Mrs. Santa said, to comfort the King.” “Right,” said Santa, “and what else?” “‘She must think of other people before herself,” said the captain| of the soldiers. “Not too pretty,” said another| soldier. “No? How?” asked Santa. “Oh,” said a woods fairy, “make eyes and a mouth that smiles eagily.” “She should speak only the uth,” said a tin soldier, clder, There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising| ALKING DOLL .@/..6/ SIGRID ARNE : . 138 ud when the. smoke. cleared there. stood the doll. “Good gracious,” said Santa,jand heaven and earth? Thatl's “there are plenty of ideas, Now Mrs. Santa, what should she wear?” “Oh, let her have yellow hair,” 1id Mrs. Santa, “and a dress of soft blue chiffon with a little silver necklace and some cornflowers in her hair.” Wishes Come True Just then there was a puff of white smoke at the bottom of the huge Christmas tree that stands in the middle of the Toyshop. And when the smoke cleared there | stood the very doll about which they had all been talking. Santa hopped up with surprise, and ran over to her. She was almost as tall as he was. “Well!” exploded Santa. Then, “pop,” the little Queen of Fairies appeared on the doll's shoulder. | She said, “Santa you are alwars e. making gifts for other peop! Here is a gift for you. I have let this doll grow as you talked, be- cause you were really wishing. And 1 can make wishes come true. “Cah she talk to me after mid- night?” asked Santa anxiously. “Can she talk of wars and crops what we need for the King.” “Wait and see,” said the Fairy Queen and she twirled on her tiny toes. Mrs. Santa had walked to Santa’s side and now she touched the long, full sleeve of the doll’s dress. It was shimmering, blue chiffon just as she had wished, and about the doll’s neck was a lovely silver chain made in the pattern of little clover leaves. And in her long yellow hair were some corn- flowers. “She looks as I wished,” said Mrs. Santa. “So she must be as you wished. Now you must wait until midnight to find out,” There was great excitement in the Toyshop that day. Santa went straight back to his work. And so did all the fairies that make dolls and wagons and doll furniture and horns and strings of beads. But they all kept stealing glances at the new doll. After dinner ‘the toys and fairies went to bed. Santa filled his pipe and sat down by the fire to wait for midnight, TOMORROW: The son of Light- ning comes to the Toyshop. WATCH FOR DATES in THE EMPIRE when the “TALKING SANTA CLAUS"” will appear at the Capitol Theatre. ' Reliable Transfer GENERAL HAULING STORAGE und CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 G RAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man" “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery | PHONE 105 Free Delivery PHONE 36 FOR VERY PROMPT LIQUOR DELIVERY IF IT’S PAINT WE HAVE IT! Ideal Paint Shop FRED W, WENDT PHONE 549 Juneau | Our trucks go any’ any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crudeé OIl save burner trouble. PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 Phone 723—————i15-20d St THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON “If your hair 18 not becaming to you—You should be coming to us.” McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS ” California Grocery GROCERIES AT FAIR PRICES COMPLETE LIQUOR STOCK Buy in Quantities and Save! ~Telephono 478 Prompt Delivery - FOR INSURANCE «See H, B, SHEPARD & SON - PHONE 409 . . . BARANOF HOTEL BLDG. 5 [ Window Cleaning - PHONE 485 | P LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. 4 rrrrrrrrrrrresy

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