The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 25, 1940, Page 7

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SN\)FF‘( ‘.. OF ALL PEOPU! DO COME | N SO SORRN BARNEN'S OWT - HOW HeNE Now BEEN 22 -|, WANT AD INFORMATION D T - { In case of error or if an ad has been stopped before ex- piration, advertiser pless~ noti- y this office (Phone 374) at once and same will be given attention. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE :’Jum" five average words to the e ate per line for consecutive One day ¢ 10¢ Additional days Be ' Minimum charge .. 50¢ Copy wmust be in the office by 2 ¢ in c¢he afternoon to insure ;Lxrrnox' on same day. “We accepi ads over telcphone rom persons usted in telephone #irectory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE 4—CYL!NDER 1,200 revolutions, Fresh with all propeller. NS epower, etely cverhauled. cooling system fittings. One ine ready to go. Price $600. See Cash Cole, } 1ze engine, * MODLW' GOAD, NOWRE SURE YOW WONT ALl ’ MA'AM -- LITTLE BONEN-BUN 3 WHLE T PST 1'(302 2&?—:“&3&?&‘ 4 ~TAS LETTER -2 WL THRWW — 2 ; AND REEPWY BN ENE ON GO REruT QHERD, WA T SWOW UE LANISH Too: MUCH "TENSHUN ON THET NOUNG -, WL GOOG\E - By BILLY DeBECK TH LEETLE \NRRMINT Y G WON'T HEN T BACKBONE OF A BISCNT EEN WE DONT RUFF (X SONE - FOR RENT ( FOR RENT — 5-room - furnished apartment. Phone Red 380. HEATED ROOMS at Xainier Rooms, Phone 436. Bill White. FUR. ROOM. Heated. Very reason- able, 208 Main, upstairs. FOR RENT—Room, 316 Fourth St. Phone 488, BAcm:mn APARTMEN'I‘N} CHANNEL VIEW APARTMENTS, formerly the Home Boarding House, Sieam-heated rcoms for housekeeping, including lights Lots of running hot water in a.l Bath. Dry room. Fieshly sooms. paintied. . r’uir.iapt. with cabin. 513 A F‘OR RENT~2 -rm. bath, also 3-rm. fur. Willoughby Ave. | REDUCED winter monmly rntes at| | Seaview, including water, lights, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. s = HEATED room, fine view, Distin Ave, Phone Black 270. Day work- er preferred New York he’ll be playing FOR RENT—Furmshed apnrv.mem. in Triangle Building. See Stan Grummett or Russell Cook. Phunc 253 or Green 620. INSIDE LOOK AT - NATION'S BUDGET I.\I't‘iR()P E;C\'LINDEYé énéine, 100 horsepower, 1,600 revolutions, 1pletely overhauled, good as Frice $500. See Cash Cole. NPORT and chair: mahogany poster bed and dresser. New con- | VACANCY, Decker Phone Green 465. i- AND 5-ROOM apts., steam heat, electric range, Frigidaire, corner | 7th and Harris. Phone Blue 200. Apts. WITH FOOTNOTES (Continued from Page One) FOR RENT—4 room f\n'ushe(l dition; also radio and other furni- A65 and the outstanding item ure, Ping-pong table. Phone 523.| house. Phone 187, after 5 Pm. | p... js $39580 for “Care of Lep- ¥FOR SALE—Practically new trash FOR RENT—3 rooms and bath, Tt (Or = g 1t (1;“' ke burner with coils for use with steam heated, electric TANgS, I electric range. Harold E. Smith,| Frigidaire, nicely furnished, over-, Two page: ther ziong you Box 2049, Juneau. stuffed; 6-room house and bath, come to “Total. Navy Depart- o b 0il ‘heat, Prigidaire, nicely fur-!ment” ‘Read that, but don’t be MUST sell my home immediately, | 110 reasonable offer refused. George Clark. Phone Red 309 0 H.P. FARBANI Diesel Marine. Good condition, complete with tailshaft, propeller and accessories—Warner Machine Shop LE'—(;I:AE Argus camera | ger. Phone Green 620. f F S. and er , FOR SALE—Several slngle beds | and springs, $4 per set; two dressers. Phone 293. MUST SELL equlty in income earn- | ‘ ing apartments .on Dixon. Three with fireplace. Five minutes from business district. Best view prop- erty buy in town. See Bob Hen- ning at Empire office. | WANTED—Parzy w take care of sandwich stand. ~Inquire City Float Liquor Store at 3 pm. WANTED—Position as meat cut- * ter, manager of market or gro- | manager—15 years experi- e, Write Empire 416. AD D—Usea gunny sacks. 3%c each uLl)\cred to coal bunkers. WANTED- Old U. 8. coins. Gold coms my speciality. —Albert Deischl, Otis Orchards, Wash, Duich Reject (ooperation 0f Neutrals JGovernment Turns Down Suggestions Made by Winston Churchill THE HAGUE, Jan, 25.—The Neth- eriznds has rejected Great Britain's nt bid for cooperation of neu- inst Germany is resulted after tne closing of foreign affairs-debate in Par- nt when speakers oppoused the plea of “united action” sounded last sdturday by Winston'Churchill, The Netherlands Foreign Minister Kleffens said The Netheriands under no obligation to depart from her policy of strict neutrality. apartments, two furnished, one - nished, overstuffed. Call at Wind-!convinced. Total expenditures for sor Apts 1941 are listed there at $851,751,- 660. Now that Is supposed to be |all that the Navy will spend in he year beginning next July 1, ONE 3-room apt, and one 4-room apt. at Evergreen. FOR RENT—Two- and three-room but it isn't all that Congress will give them. Over in another col- furn. apartments. Fosbee Apts. |FOR RENT—Oue apartment with| (.. By Request “THE GOLDEN HEART OF ALASKA” The Natural Color Films and Slides By TREVOR DAVIS Will Be Shown at the Masonic Temple bedroom and bed closet. bed. Also one -apartment with bed- room, both furnished, Hillcrest. Phone 439. in FOR RENT — One gas pump, operation. Call Femmer at 114. VACANCY—Nugget. Apartmen ts. FOR RENT—Tartly furniched flat Inquire Snap Shoppe. COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light. water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. LOST AWD FOUND | LOST—Bunch of keys with name ' and last address on metal tag. Phone 299. FRIDAY, JAN 26 8:00 P. M. LOST about three weeks ago—Sun glasses in brown case, marked Broome Optical Co., Lubbock, Texas. Return to Empire. MISCELLANEOUS | SCHUBERT *ENDING’_When Pianist Webster Aitken (right) plays the C Major Sonata of Franz Schubert Feb. 24 in Schubert notes and the melodic measures of Ernest Krenek (left) as well. composer, has completed this “unfinished” Schubert. Mr. Aitken was born in Los Angeles where his iather's a nemmnper man, Krenek, a Viennese { misleading. land you find umn is “Total appropriated.” That is $904,540,037. But there is afoot- note to that which reads: “To- gether with re-appropriations of $4,071,000 in 1939 and contract authorizations of $20,000,000 in 1941; $22,070,000 in 1940 and $15- 000,000 in 1939.” Are you fc g? “total appropriations” is It is the total, only Turn to page A38 under of “Public Works.” way down the page “Navy Department.” Isn't that cute? A sort of treasure hunt, That item is for $50,000,000. It also has a footnote which reads: “Together with unexpended bal- ances from prior years.” Even that isn't the total. Al- ready this year, with the new Cengress just at the teething-ring stage, here is a request before it for an appropriation for the Navy But not, quite. the heading Follow half Adults . . . 40c Students . . 25¢ Tickets at Drug Stores and at Door. | sweniEn MassacivG. T in Sweden. Phone Blue 328. Watkins Products. Call Black 634 EXPERT pubnc stenography and | bookkeeping. Alice Mack, office, Bararof Holcl OUERANT-D Realistic Perma- | nents. $4.60. Finger wave, 66c./ Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. | TURN your old gold into value,! cash or trade at Nugget Shcp. CONTRACT BRIDGE classes niow | open. Helen P. Griffin, 427 4th st Commercial ROBIN IN SNOW Snow does not bother the Robin redbreast, many of the birds being reported in this vicinity lately. This forenoon, Postmaster Albert Wile and others watched from the Federal and Territorial Building windows a lone robin, exceptionally | fat,"hop around in the snow on the| opposite side of Fourth Avenue locking for a worm, or something.| L Oldest Bank in Alaska Savings l Safe Deposit Banking by Mail Department The B. M. Behrends Bank 3 | | —and other departments. You add the amount in thai to the unex- pended naval balances, appropria- tions, expenditures and public works allotments then divide the total by the square root of Thurs- day. The answer is $1,224,521,883. This is the amcunt the Navy will receive Lhis year. Cet it? Mines fo Be -+ BACAMENTO, Cal, Jan. 25, — BRIDGE PARTY ver mines are preparing for opera- Mrs. H. O. Adams entertained last tions ‘and “the richer properties have 'good ‘profits ‘in view. cvening at her apartment with two tables of ®ridge. Fulminate of mercury is an ‘es- sential 'war munition, being em- ployed as the detonator for shells. A shortage of the mineral was the explanation of the large num- Mrs. H, C. Redman, first, and Mrs. | bér of “duds” fired by the Ger- A. B. Hayes, consolation. Refresh- | mahs in the closing months of the ments were served by the hostess | World War. during the evening." Before the war American pro- > —— ducers were getting about $69 per Honors for cards were won by | THERE is one 'tiuck for every seven families in the U, S. has fluctuated between $170. $120 and Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons By LEON GORDON (The playwright and screen writer muses on the Quirks oF Fate—for vacationing Robbin Coons.) LLYWOOD. Cal, Jan. 25—On my way back to New York from¥ the South Seas, I dropped off in Hollywood for one day Lo see the studios. I never finished that tour because at the very first studio I ran into a number of people I'd known on Broad- way,s 8o I deserted my guide and before leaving the lot had agreed to return next day to write “Good Gracious, Annabelle,” Jeanette MacDonald's first non-singing film. I still don’t know what the inside of some of the studios look like. Accidents like this, little ‘quirks of fate, have marked the careers of almost everyone in Hollywood. Two of our finest directors are Frank Lloyd and Robert Z. Leonard. Lloyd ‘was a leading man 20 years ago when Leonard arrived. ‘Lloyd looked at Leonard, said “I can't compete with his looks™ and ‘quit to become a director. Ten years ago Donald Crisp was a director Dieterle was a player, Dieterle directs. and William Today Crisp is a player in pictures that Nine years ago Bing Crosby was singing “I Surrender, Dear” at the Cocoanut Grove, Lupe Velez was singing “Cielito Lindo” at the Music Box, and Jack Oakie was just singing on the ocrner of Hollywood and Vine. .Brian Aherne got his first stage ex- perience in the London company of my play “White Cargo” and the billboards shrieked “Garbo Talks.” It was eight years ago that Ginger Rog:-xs was maklng myswry 0‘!}: reception charming hostessess give thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delicious Van Duyn Candies. Little attentions make you & Percy’s "must come” guest. Try its % e exclusively i/~ % pfl n $ie ruocol.m "'»n 14 LATE SHOPS films, ‘and both Myrna Loy and William Powell were playing “heavies.” Lew Ayres was turned down as a guitarist because he couldn’t ‘double on' the violin—the ‘job went to Russ Columbo. Ayres ‘got a job at the Montmarte, which was later managed by Jadques deBujac, now Bruce Cabot. Only seven years ago Marlene Dietrich came here from Europe ‘and Tom Mix was making “Destry Rides Again.” Now Marléne has made “Destry Rides Again” and Tom Mix has just returned from Europe. All the stars were moving to Malibp, Pour years ago Robert Taylor arrived from Pomona College and Errol Flynn arived from Pago Pago. Gloria Stuart’s under- study took Glorig’s role in “Midsummer Night's Dream"” at the Bowl—Olivia DeHavilland. The stars were moving to Bel-Air. The billboards said “Garbo Smiles.” Tt was three years ago that Selznick started on “Gone With the Wwind” and Warners began ‘“Zola.” Two years agoin London T saw “Balailaika” at Her Majesty's Theatre, ' 'That same evening 1 was introduced to a beautiful young Hungarian actress who was on her way to Hollywood— Ilona Massey. Now Miss Massey is the sensation of the screen’s “Balaflaika” -which T adapted from the stage play. The stars were building homes in Pzim Springs. Last year at this time my former theatrical partner, Earl Carroll opened his spectacular night club in Hollywood. Every- one sald it wouldn't last a month. A visitor looked at Ann Sheridan and said “©omph!"” 3 This year the stdrs are going to Arrowhead Springs. “Gone Wil the-Wind" is released aid the billboards say “Oarbo Laughs.” - Operated Now {| E.O.DAVIS You'll Find Food Fner and | Service More Compiete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP | Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 Jones-Stevens Shop l LADIES'—MISSES’ ‘ READY-TO-WEAR | <ewara Street Near Third ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING ‘} PHONE 15 | Alaska Laundry i 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 | 70-ounce flask. Recently the’ price [ The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 e e . When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULI STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Junean Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 lfiDehvcry Juneau —— 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 —— Phone 723———1i5-2nd St THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON “If your hair is not becaming to you—Y¥ou should be coming to us.” —_— Telephone 478 Califernia Grocery GROCERIES AT FAIR PRICES COMPLETE LIQUOR STOCK FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY (FROM OUR OWN FARM) FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES PFoot of Main Street GAS — OIL8S Juneau Motors 4 BRI SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY 24——PHONES——16 Krafft’s MANUFACTURING CO. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONF 62 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 e 1 e g 0 AT ~E% S e ) | GEORGE BROS. | Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 "LOCKSMITH | Let Us Repaif ‘Your Lécks OR MAKE NEW KEYS JORGENSON MOTORS Avto Repair Work—Gas Ferrrway and Willoughby Ave. Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING " ) Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery | | Thomas Hardware Co ' PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf | HARDWARE JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL-GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” PHONE 36 FOR VERY PROMPT LIQUOR DELIVERY IF IT’S PAINT WE HAVE IT! Ideal Paint Shop FRED W. WENDT | PHONE 548 l McCAUL MOTOR | COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Prompt Delivery FOR INSURANCE Sce H. R. SHEPARD & SON PHONE 409 BARANOF HOTEL BLDG. Window Cleaning PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Ine.

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