The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 2, 1940, Page 7

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= L i) Yol “S—————— i SR, A —— o, e GEE-- ANOTHER SURUWOR -+ WE'RE THE S“RRKS ORE BETER /o i EQsY, T ACK Q' TINE GOLWN W AND HERE'S ONE MORE LET ME GWE NOW & HAND, BROTHER - QUIT PUSHIY, SRUFFY - UL HANDLE T SN JeePERS™ TUOR'S MORE EXCACEMENT ‘RODND UERE THeN & HOG- KILLWY — JUST W\ THE DAILY ALASKA EiriRE, 1UESUAY, JAN. 2, 1940. By BILLY DeBECK In case of error or if an ad has been stopped before ex- biration, advertiser please noti- fy this office (Phone 374) at { once and same will be given attention. ! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Count five average words to the | The. Daily rate per line for consecutive msertions: One day Additional days . Minimum charge ...50c Copy must be in the office by 2 clock in che afternoon to insure msertion on same day. We accepr ads over telephone from persons Usted in telephone directory. Phone 374—Ass for Ad-taker. o OR SALE 100 SALE—Several single beds and springs, $4 per set; two dres Phone 293. FOR SALE on easy terms or for rent—Completely furnished. P.O. Box 466 or ne Red 309 after 12 noon. FOR SALEDavenport and chair and rug with pad. Phone Red 405. FOR I\L]" Chmp M)del A 4-| wheel trailer. See Juneau Motors. 1993 V-8 FORDOR. New mutol‘ Good rubber. Right price for| cash Century Market. 20th complete full. sized bed and dresser. Very rua-“ sonable. See Cole Transfer. ‘ SINGER SEWING machines, Sing- er Vacuum Cleaners, Maytag Washing Machines, Maytag 110- voit light plants, Ironrite Iron- ers. Terms: §5 down, $5 month- Iy. J. H. Anderson, Box 101, Ju- neau. Alaska distributer. MU%T SELL equ!ty 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 Emplre office. WANTED WANTED— B‘\b\ bugfly for wel- fare work by Juneau Woman’s Club, Call 238 or leave it at the Methodist parsonage. WANT'Efi—f]sed?u;y sacks. 3%c each delivered to coal bunker: ~ MISCELLANEOUS T drcssmwkmg phone Blu° Hazel Austerman. BEAX and clarinet lessons. Phone Blue 559, Ted Austerman. " Watkins Products. Call Black 634, EXPPRT pubm tenography and bookkeeping. Alice Mack, office, Bararof Hotel. SUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 2u1, 315 Decker Way. { TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shep. CONTRACT BRIDGE classes now open. Helen F. Griffin, 427 4th st. Enksson WI" Relieve Local Northland Men Kon Eriksson, Traffic Represen- tive for the Northland Transporta- ticn Company, arrived in Juneau from Ketchikan last night on the North Coast Eriksson, who has been relieving Ketchikan agents, will relieve Ju- neau Agent Henry Green for a month and Green’s assistant, Orrin Kimball for a few days. Green and Kimball ar# sailing on the North Coast for Seattle and ONE 3-room apt. ‘and one apt. at Evergreen ROOM apt range, r‘ngldaxrc Comm 7Lh and Harris. Phone Green 200. I FOR RENT—Two- and three- room furn. apartments. Fosbee Apts. VACANCY = Large 1oom and n‘ half private entrance, cooking facilifies. Reasonable. 413 3rd St. ROOM close in. Reasonable. Seward St. FOR RENT—6-room modern bouse; unfurnished. Phone 484 or call 504 5th St. FOR RENT-—Two rooms, nice view, hot water heated. One block above Federal Bldg. Prefer men working days. Phone Blue 165. FOR RENT—Furnished house, 3 rooms and bath. Available after i New Year's. See George Sheeper, Seatter Tract, Blue 135. | DESIRABLE rooms: Honsel home on 4th St. Phone 488. FOR I‘ENT Oue apartment with ¢ bedroom and bed closet bed. Also one apartment with ‘bed- room, both furnished, Hillcrest. Phone 439. VACANCY Decker Apartments. Call Green 465. FOR RENT—Furnisiied housekeep- ing rooms. 209 Second St. 4-ROOM PARTLY furnished house _ SIGRID'S SALON TOMORROW It will be “open house time” to- morrow at Sigrid’s new Beauly Sa- lon in the newly completed J. C. Cooper Building, ion and an invitati is extended to the Juneau public VACANCY, couple only. Apply in person. Winter and Pond Apts. FOR RENT — One gas pump, in operation. Call Femmer at 114. VACANCY—N ug get Apartments. FOR RENT—Partly furniched flat Inquire Snap Shoppe. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils to call between 2 o'clock in the af- and bath. Reasonable at Seaview., termnoon and 9 o'clock in the even- LOSTARDFOUND 5 LOST—Lady's Lyceum wrist watch last Wednesday between Keith Wildes' house and Torvinen’s. Owner, Mrs. Alma Hendrickson. Ellen Chin and Peggy her staff of operators, ella, Helvig Barrager Gaddy, who will act for tomorrow. Many new and modern fixtures and appliances have been selected gfi::;démsee Spiniaon U for the new salon, which is expect- > i _led to be one of the most beautiful in the Territory. Appointments Ketchikan respectively, Green to will be taken on Thursday at the visit his family for a month and Kimball to visit his father over the week-end, returning here for the balance of a 10 days vacation. e = new location, according - - to Sigrid GIERKE ON WAY | Has Birthday| 0["‘ FOR WINTER Little Sharon Sharpe, duaghter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sharpe, i celebrated her seventh birthday to- Bob Gierke, veteran trader, lighter- day when she took her cake to er, and ‘miner of the lower Kus- school and shared it with members | kwim, passed through Juneau over of the second grade of the Jun the holiday. Public School and her teacher, Gierke, who operates a lighterage Mable Monson. at Bethel for Kuskokwim river| —— freight from the ‘bay, also is - ce—— terested in a humber of mines. He arrived by PAA plane Sunday and went out on the McKinley to- day to visit his two daughters in Portland and return in about three' months. MRS. SORENSON SAILING SOUTH Mrs. Paul Sorenson, wife of the Hirst-Chichagof mine superintend- °nt, sailed south on the steamer Mount McKinley after coming in Commercial | | over the week-end on the Este- beth. | Mrs. Sorenson plans to visit friends and relatives in Utah and California, returning in about two or three months. - .- NOTICE It is just a nice drive out Gla- cier Highway seven miles to Ar- kita’s Leather Shop. All jobs in' the shop will be finished at its new location. ldv.j Sigrid Walther will be assisted by as hostesses | Sharon Sharpe | Hopeful Greets Hopeful Presidential hopefuls, Thomas E. Dewey Federal Security Administrator Paul V. McNutt as they arrive at Washe ington on the same train from the West. McNutt is hopeful of securing the Democratic nomination; Dewey the Republican, Safe Deposit WAAL, T SWowW '\ A JuhwN -Jown Syndicate (left) of New York, greets PIONEER GROUPS - INSTALL JOINTLY THIS EVENING A joint installation will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the 1.O.O.F. members of the Pione the Auxiliary. There will be a musical program “mi during the evening Trevor Da- 1 photographer, will show '8 eels of mo 3 Mrs. Dora Sweeney will be re- lled as president of the Auxil- and Willlam Markle will alled as head of the Pione: Igloc. Other Auxliary officers to re- ceive the s C include Mrs Charles Hooker, vice-president; Mrs. Charles Fox. chaplain: Mrs. Joe Green, historian; Mrs, Kate Jarman, re-elected secretary; Mrs. John Satre, re-elected treasurer; and M Caroline Armstrong, sergeant- at-arms. Pioneer officers to be installed are: Jack Wilson, vice-president; Al Lundstrom, second vice-president; Alfred Zenger, secretary; John Langseth, hisicrian; Dean C. E. Rice, William Dougl: ees: S. J. Paul term; H. 8. Graves, a one yea two year term, D RUMMAGE SALE v at Salvation Army Hall, at 10 aum, adv. Tom starting Qldest Bank in | Alasha Savings | Banking by Mail Department | The B. M. Behrends | Bank Juneau, Alaska "Mexico Now Getfing fited in other respects. But this business of dispossess- ing foreign property owners with- out assurance of equitable pay- Tasie, Own Medicine |2, csumnce, ot rauttavle vev- Administration recognizes that ”i | American capital ever is to be (Continuea from Pnge One) ’puultd into Latin imov(' only upon America it will assurance it will is still above what the world price | e e Brom selzure w if the Treasury stopped = buying, but Mexico's fat profits | ha shed. Moreover, little courtesics -n’ery T(llks connection with the' purchase pro- gram which' Mexico enjoyed have | B s Land Young | INVESTMENT QUESTION Ej‘lan mn Lpll INVOLVED Just how far the “sanctions” pul-’ e carried is problematical. | LONDONBERY, Northern Ire- /\(‘L.Ln]\ wdmit that pressure is being ap- ed, although they casually make no effort to conceal it. publican Army, made fiery speech- es, was arrested and has been sen- tenced to six months imprison- ment. Shortly after sentence was passed a bomb exploded in a nearby fire An important point to remember is that many of the things the Car- denas administration is doing in > are popular with the Ad- ministration here. The peon is get- station. ting a new break. Land he once - >+ worked as a semi-serf is being Try The kmpire classifieds for given to him. He is being bene- results. Hollywood Sights And Sounds ’ By Robbin Coons ) HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Jan. 2—It is an odd circumstance, but the making of a movie about “Gulliver's Travels” may make its author’s version a museum piece in the course of years. The tale, thanks to the movie, is equaly likely to attain a rush of popularity it has never enjoyed before—hut it won't be the tale that Jonathan Swift wrote. It will be the tale, instead, that 675 artists working under Dave Fleisher’s direction down in Miami, Fla., put together for the color “cartoon” feature that Dave, and his producer brother Max, are gleefully exhibiting. They spent $1,500,000 on the putting together, climaxing their joint film careers begun 20-odd years ago when Max used Dave as model for “Koko the Klown” in the “Out of the Ink Well” series familiar to early movie fans. That the picture should overshadow the book in the former's present fanfare for attention, is but natural. And that the film should embellish the Swift yarn was inevitable. Me, I'm for the film version. . “It's Gulliver, all right,” said Dave, out here on pre-open- ing business and jitters. “We have the scenes most familiar in the memories of people who have read the book-—Gulliver being tied to earth b ythe Lilliputians, and Gulliver towing the enemy ships to break up the war. But we have gone farther. In the book Gulliver awoke to find himself tied; we show the little people doing their stuff. None of our characters, aside from Gulliver, is in the bhook by name. We have identified them, given them personalities—King Little of Lilliput, his daughter Princess Glory, King Bomho of Blefuscu, his son Prince David. And we have an rnfi‘,s\v.,y: reception charming hostessess glV\ thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delicioh: Van Duyn Candles. el T Perey’s "must come" guest. Try it} FRESH VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS exclusively important character in Gabby. the little fellow who discovers the giant Gulliver. Another one' i§ Twinkletoes, the homing pigeon who has trouble taking off to fly; and then there are the three spies, Sneak, Snoop, and Sniteh.” In the book the war between Lilliput and Blefuscu was pre- cipitated by a difference of opinion on the matter of cracking eggs. In the film—thanks to'the intervention of song writers Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger—the war becomes musical, but equally silly. The national hymn of one country is “Faithful,” of the other it's “Forever.” Gulliver suggests a nice piece of har- mony might be attained by combining the two—into “Faithful Forever.” So you can see what slim chance Mr. Swift has, when he’s confronted by an assortment of characters and songs such as the movie will boast. We aren’t shunting aside old Jonathan completely, but when the movie version comes out—in a 10-cent edition—what youngster is going to the town library to dig for the cause of it all? Dave Fleisher expects that the dime book will be the largest seller of the innumerable Gulliver novelties and toys all ready to pour on the market with he film's release. Splitting the royalties with Paramount, Dave estimates that the Fleishers will reap $50,000 from their used drawings alone. A New York art firm is undertaking to sell “originals” from the film at prices from $3 to 4800 apiece. | | Seward Street Near Third | | w I G G L Y \ _— e You'll Find Food Fner and Sexvice More €ompiete at THE BARANOF | COFFEE SHOP (Authorized Deslers) GREASES | Foot of Main Street GAS — OILS | Garbage Hauled || Juneau Motors Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS | TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 | FORD AGKNCY ? ! v SANITARY PIGGLY P Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR ZORIC '; SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 ‘ Alaska Laundry || Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 —_—— W l Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies | | Phone 206 122 W. Second | | Widest Selection of LIOQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 LOCKSMITR Let Us Repair Your Locks OR MAKE NEW KEYS JORGENSON MOTORS Auto Repair Work—Gas Ferryway and Willoughby Ave. ' B | Utah Nut and Lump ‘ COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 412 officials do not publicly | land, Jan. 2.—John Doherty, yv)\mhu supporter of the outlawed Irish Re-| | | HOME GROCERY | Phone 146 Home Liquor Store— gel. 699 American Meat——Phone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING kg Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery The Juneau Laundry| |ThomasHardware Co. FRANKLIN STREET between PAINTS — OILS | | Front and Second Streets [ Builders’ and Shelf | PHONE 359 HARDWARE JUNEAU-YOUNG ' Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS | Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL . US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” PHONE 36 FOR VERY PROMPT LIQUOR DELIVERY D — —_— “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery IF IT'S PAINT WE HAVE IT! Reliable Transfer Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble, PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 Ideal Paint Shop FRED W. WENDT PHONE 549 l Phone 723————115-2nd St. THE ROYAL ||| BEAUTY SALON “If your hair is not becaming to you—You should be coming to us.” ’ e — McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Califernia Grocery GROCERIES AT FAIR PRICES COMPLETE LIQUOR STOCK Buy in Quantities ami‘Save' Telephone 478 j‘l Delivery T FOR leifiANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON PHONE 409 BARANOF HOTEL BLDG. Window Cleaning PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. )

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