The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 22, 1940, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH AWELL - (F (T AT N (TTLE NOKEN PAL-- SN -- T FRIEND O NOR'N - GOOGLE — HE'S GOT & GOLD WNE (N THET WD 0 WS -- AONEY-SUN -+ \\SSEN -- NE BRALEN-FACE BUZZARD -- (FE'N UE MENTION THRT LEETLE BRATS NANME ME AN' GOOGLE AWN'T ATALRIN' S\WNCE TR KID GOT Hen W0G-TED -- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 22, | | FOR RENT FOR RENT-Furnished apartment in Triangle Building. See Stan Grummett or Russell Cook. Phone 253 or Green 620. | WANT AD INFORMATION 1 stopped before ex- 1, advertiser pleas~ noti- CHANNEL VIEW APARTMENTS, is office (Phone 374) at formerly the Home Boarding nd same will be given House. Steam-heated rooms for housekeeping, including lights. Lots of running hot water in all rooms. Bath. Dry room. Freshly painted. v rate per line for consecutive (FOR RENT — House: Six rooms, Lot | bath, furn, and heated. Phone| Blue 302 between 6 and 9 p.m. s One day ... nal days m charge {FOR RENT — Furnished rooms, steam heated, hot and cold water. Phone 702, | ....50¢ aust be in the office by 2 1 the afternoon to insure rtion on same day. e r wpe e w pi eds over telephone VACANCY, Deckcr Apis. Phone| ns Listed in telephone| Green 465. i- AND 5-ROOM apts., steam heat, electric range, Frigidaire, corner 7th and Harris. Phone Blue 200. FOR RENT—4room furnished| house. Phone 187, after 5 p.m. © 374—Ask for Ad-taker, | | started, traile Phone FOR RENT—About 15th: large fur- nished apt. in Spickett Apts. 4 round dining table. Phone Green 515. szea;;x “heated. 763 ¥ SALE ’ FOR RENT—Apt, Klein Apts. Black NKS-MORSE C-b ) Good condition, | — s l tailshaft, propeller 6-ROOM unfurnishea house on 0! Warner Machine Kennedy St, Electrol oil burner.| Inquire J. K. Marshall, 114 West | — 6th St. Phone 751 camera ne Green 629. FOR RENT—3 rooms and bath, steam heated, electric range, E—Several single beds Frigidaire, nicely furnished, over- S 4 per set; two stuffed; 6-room house and bath, Phone oil heat, Frigidaire, nicely fur- z nished, overstuffed. Call at Wind- terms or for! goanie Compietely furnished. P.O. e : { or phone Red 309 after| ONE 3-room apt. and one 4-room apt. at Evergreen. One complete full- FOR RENT—Two- and thrée-room and dresser. Very rea-| furn. apartments. Fosbee Apts. See Cole Transfer. FC SALE- LL equity in income earn- rtments on Dixon. Three | two furnished, one| ce. Five minutes from | Phone 439. ict. Best view prop- | - ~ - rtv buy in town. See Bob Hen- | i-ROOM PARTLY furnished house 1t Empire office. for rent. Reasonable. Phone 67 after 5 pm & and bed bedroom closet bed. | Also one apartment with bed- room, both furnished, Hillerest.| One gas pump, in Call Femmer at 114. operatio: W >-Party ‘to take care of| B 8 3 Inquire City| VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. | 3 pm. R re at i d flat POR RENT-—artly furnieh Position as meat cut-| Inquire Snap Shoppe. of market or gro- ~ - i G AL 15 years experi- COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, | A CANDID TALK WITH— MADAME JUDGE WHO SHE IS ‘ THEN Judge Camille Kelley took over direction of Memphis’ Juvenile Court in 1920, she was the second wo- man in the nation and the first in the South to receive such an appointment. Her belief that age is ‘“psychological, not chronological” has kept her birthdate secret. Her court handles domestic relations and related cases as well as those of juvenile of- fenders. She has spoken frequently on nationwide radio broacasts and in 1936 she stumped the mid- west for President Roosevelt in his_re-election eampaign. Friend of the local all-pow- erful E. H. Crump political or- ganization, she has had its support in all her races for re- election, all of them without opposition. But, she says, she thinks of Crump, not as a poli- tician, but as a family man and a public benefactor who estab- lished the Juvenile Court, which she likes to call her “moral clinic.” SRNG ME QNOTHER. WONEN-BUN COCKTAWL- 940, . i By BILLY DeBECK | “My job is something like that of a doctor whom you go to with a broken nose you got in a fight. “The doctor doesn’t lecture you on the evils of fighting. He fixes your nose. That's what I d 0. “I try to fix these people up so they’'ll go out better citizens. Most of them don’t need punish- ment—they need understanding and someone to show them the right road. “No boy or girl is intrinsi« cally bad where mentality is normal, I realize it is necessary to deal severely with the violent offender who attacks society, but we should protect children from associations and conditions that cause crime—just as deter- minedly as we protect them from disease. “What America needs to do is to teach youth that American citizenship is a more thrilling adventure than any departure from the straight and narrow path. “I can do more with a‘delin- quent girl by-giving her a new dress than by preaching all the sermons in the world. “The average child would te Empire 416. water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. work.—C. H. Janivor . Phone 652. Usea gunny sacks. 3%c ered to coal bunkers. speciality. —Albert ischl, Otis Orchards, Wash. i ] 3 TO MIDWEST —The Most Rev. Moses K.@ Kiley (above), bishop of Trenton, N. J., will move to ‘Wisconsin, following appointment by pope archbishop of Milwaukee. —ee - DR. STEVES, CHIROPODIST, 1akes Arch Appliances to measure— A office Oid U. S. coins. Gold | - 10 Valentine Bldg. Phone 648. | MISCELLANEOUS | SWEDISH MASSAGING. Trained| in Sweden. Phone Blue 328. | - i EXPERT dressmaking: phone Blue 559, Hazel Austerman. | BAX and clarmet lessons. Phone Blue 559, Ted Austerman. I Watkins Products. Call Black 634.| Em pubm—_soenagraphy and bookkeeping. Alice Mack, office,| [ ——— Bararof Hotel. OUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | nents, $4.50. FPFinger wave, 65c. Lola's Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. TURN your old gold into val cash or trade at Nugget Shep. | CONTRACT BRIDGE classes now’ open. Helen F. Griffin, 427 4th St. LOST ARD FOUND | LOST- ;e-colored glasses with- out rims. Return to Kaufmann's Cafe. Storekeepers in Ilford, north Lon- don suburb, have signed “mutual assistance pacts” providing that customers of a store forced to close because of air raid damage will transfer to another store included in the pact. S g Three cities in North Carolina —Winston-Salem, Durham and| Reidsville — manufacture more| than one-half of the cigarettes produced in'the United States. | ” rather take a beating any day than hear his father and mother quarrel. Most knock-down and drag-out fights in homes happen because a man and his wife are starved for beauty. “As long as folks fight, physically and verbally, there’s some hope of bringing them together, but when they get cold, indifferent and studiously _polite to one another, that's when I throw up my hand§ and admit defeat. As long as they’ve got fire enough to fight, there's usually warmth enough left to effect a reconciliation, “T don’t think P'm smart. I just love people an awful lot.” By NORMAN BRADLEY, AP Staff Writer There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising Oldest Bank in Alaska Commercial Safe Deposit Savings Banking by Mail Department The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska SRR e SN g - FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREABES Poot of Main Street GAS — OomIL8 Junean Motors You'll Find Food.Fuer and- Service More Complete at THE BARANOF | COFFEE SHOP Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 | S ———— ' SANITARY | " 'PIGGLY WIGGLY 24——PHONES——16 ‘ Jones-Stevens Shop |!*— LTI LADIES'—MISSES’ | e et Sl Lty READY-TO-WEAR | | Seward Street Near Third I Kl’attt,s | ' | MANUFACTURING CO. | | ('mmr.}-’rnwgl‘u;—mms | ZORIC L SRR ool U B R SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 | Alaska Laundry | Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY neau. According to Mr. Reck this was the fourth consecutive year ‘hat the Juneau Seal sale totals bettered the previous record. Seid Mr. Reck: “Such a record Slearly indicates the growing reali- -ation by the citizens of Juneau the mportatice of the utberculosis prob- em and the part that can be played 3 public organizations in its solu- tion. “Even though this was an out- standing year there are yet a large number of former contributors to sur work from whom we have re- setvéd no reply. Returns are still oming in and we hope that con- tributiohs from these people and rom ' others who intended to con- ribute but who have forgotten to end in their money will bring the otal to the $1250 mark which we riginally set as our goal.” SEAL SALE IN JUNEAU Over Eleve;H]ndreJ Doi‘- !‘tars Realized with More»hLCOme A mew high in Christmas Seal sale returns was disclosed today by John Reck, chairman of the Juneau com- mittee of the Alaska Tuberculosis LR B The Toledo, Ohio, City Council | Call Phones: 13 and 49 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 LOCKSMITH Let Us Repair Your Locks OR MAKE NEW KEYS JORGENSON MOTORS Arto Repair Work—Gas Ferryway and Willoughby Ave, Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager th.—::fl;:l"'!ll;:mmenu 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 Ameriéan Meat——Phone 38 HERMLE & THIBODEAU Bodding Transfer MARINE ngn Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery BUILDING Association, when he announced that returns from the Juneau sale | ecently considered legislation to had mcunted to $1160.01 or $40.01|'icense and regulate the use of Jleycles. abeve the best previous le in Ju- Hollywood Sights And Sounds 8v Robbin Coons By HUBBARD KEAVY (Batting for Robbin Ccons—on vacation) HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Jan. 22. — “OF MICE AND MEN." Screenplay Eugene bv Solow from the novel of John Steinbeck. Directed bv Lewis Milestone. Cast: Lon Chanev, Jr., Burgess Meredith, Bettv Field, Roman Bohnen, Bob Steel, Charles L Bickford. Granville Bates, Oscar O’Shet, Leigh Whinper. ok The comment of the man who made this picture, in reply to many well-wishers on the night of its opehing here, should be significant to a great many moviegoers. Said Hal Roach, a former truck driver, by the wa “T believe the story the book and the play. And it is. It again proves that life can be “mirrored” with- out filth and vulgarity and profanity, a set of devices used by some of the lazy modern writers. And, further, that movie fellows like Solow and Milestone are about 98 per cent more ingenious than fellows like, say Steinbeck. As the title suggests, this Is a story of frustration. is frustrated and so are George and Candy and Mae. But audiences won't be, because this is so vigorous and its char- acterizations so real that they will sit on the edges of their seats, trying to find words so poor Lennie can express himself, hoping for George, crying with Candy and, probably, feeling sorry for Mae. Just as effective without the profanity of Lennie It is direct and to the pdint, this picture, one of the few which never deviates from its objective. It sets a course toward tragedy and defeat in the opehing 10 feet and there is no ex- CORE! g Hat rsvlh’: reception AT charming hostessess give “ thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delictlous Van Duyn Candies. Little attentions make you & "must come" guest. Try it! =)o Duyn Yan/ny* VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS traneous action which is not entirely pertinent to the inévitable disappointments of most of its hapless characters. In speaking of the cast, one doesn't know exactly where to begin. Young Chaney, as Lennie, was only a name, over- shadowed by his late father’s superior talents, until now. He has become somebody by virtue of this performance. Meredith, per- haps the sole member of the cast who “mugged” (and he should know better) was ideally cast as the big guy's keeper. Miss Field's Mae is Steinbeck’s Mae, or better. Bohnen, giving the same performance in a less well-balanced filln, would have walked off with all the honors. The others also are exeellent. It is the kind of picture that impresses Hollywood. It cer- tainly will get consideration when the Academy awards are dis- cussed. “THE SIDEWALKS OF LONDON.” By Clemence Dane. Directed by Tim Whelan. Cast includes Charles Laughton, Vivien Leigh, Rex Harrison, Larry Adler, Tyrone Guthrie. This is a faseinating bit of moviana, mamly because it con- tains Vivien Leigh BEFCRE she was Scarlett O'Hara and Charles Laughton, resting some of his laurels BEFOI phinging into the arduous and often absrd melodramatics or “myl“lw?l- back of Notre Dame.” + Tmagine Scarlett as Liberty, a protechnic little waif of Lon- don towa, who became a great musical comedy star. Imagine Ruggles of Red Gap as a ragged busker (street singer) who helped her on her way and returned to bumdom. 1 never eould] but there are moments in the picture when it’'s not such bad fun tying. e Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE |The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between | Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 JUNEAU-YOUNG | Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition When in Need of DIESEL OIL—8TOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 GENERAL MOTORS, CELCO 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| Juneau IF IT'S PAINT WE HAVE IT! —— ey ' Reliable Transfer tme. " task o blessh 'On | | Ideal Paint Shop and a tank for Crade Oil save ’ /FRED W. WENDT burner trouble. PHONE 145—NIGHT 148 Phone 723———115-2nd St THE ROYAL || BEAUTY SALON “If your halr is not you—You should be ‘California Grocery GROCERIES AT FAIR PRICES COMPLETE LIQUOR STOCK Buy in Quantities and Save! Telephone 478 FPS“ H. R SHEPARD & SON Window Cleaning McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS to tous.”

Other pages from this issue: