The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 7, 1940, Page 7

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In case of error or if an ad has been stopped befors ex- piration, advertiser please noti- fy this oftwe (Phone 374) at once and same will be given attention. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE — Count five average words to the fine. Daily rate per line for consecutive msertions: One day ... Additional days .. Minimum charge Copy must he in the office by 2 relock in the afternoon to insure hurnon on same day. We accept ads over telephone rom persous listed In telephone Nrectory. thw 374—Ask for Ad-taker. FOR SALE SALE- Thl(‘é‘ loLs on St. Ave, 50x100 each, at $250 Phone Douglas 132, FOR Ann's each, FOR SALE—Troller Columbia, fully | equipped, $1,600 cash. Inquire| room 305, Gastineau. FOR SALE basement and garage. Oil heat. 819 Gold Belt Ave. Phone Red 142. | alnut bedroom set,, Phone 66 COIN - OPERATED MACHINES FOR SALE. Phonographs, slots, pin-tabl consoles, cigarettes, ter games--new or used, e stock. Prompt shipment. If it's coin-operated we have it at lo wholesale prices, Puget Sound Novelty Co, 114 EIth Ave. W, Seattle, Wash. | VACANCY, Decker Apts. ND FOR RENT—New 5-room furnished house. Phone 20 Douglas. | FOR RENT WP]l furmshed t.hrce-;’ room apartment with bath. beau-| tiful view. Inquire Rice and Ahlers Co. Phone 34. APT. FOR RENT—Blue 575. ROOM FOR RENT—325 6th St. THE HILLCREST: ONE FUR- NISHED APARTMENT. PHONE 439, STEAM HEATED apartment for rent. Call 452, CABIN, W 9th St. Mrs. McMullen. VACANCY—Newly renovated apt.— | at reduced rates. Nugget Apts. Phone Green 465. 3 ROOMS and bath, nicely fur- nished: overstuffed, electric range, frigidaire, steam heated. Windsar Apts. n. Green 675 room house, full | {"ROOM FURNISHED apartment; quarters also 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house. Phone 484. 6-room unfui 1ished house. Inquire at Snap Shoppe. VACANCY—MacKinnon Apts. VACANCY at Fosbee Apts, F‘OR RENT Partly furnished flat Inquire Snap Shoppe. COZY, warm lnm. apts. Ll[llfi.‘ water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. Baritone sax with nickle- | and sax Conn case E-FLAT plated MISCELLANEOUS THE DAILY ALASKA, EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 7, 1940. et o Volurteets MAXIE TURNS OUI T0 BEMIGHTY ROUGH BEAR f OI Amema Is Dead | (Connnued trom =age One) tion Army, and of Evangeline, who | became commander in the United| States, Ballington Booth at the |age of 26 was sent to Australia as Commander of the Salvation Army in that country. He served two years and so well did he succeed that in 1887 he wac transferred o America, then regarded as a doubtful pioneer field, to establish the Army's work. New York society received the | commander and his wife cordially | They were invitéd to speak at numerous funetions, entered many homes that had been closed to | predecessors in similar work and | enlisted the support of many peo- ple of wealth and distinction Treuble Starts In 1896, Ballington Booth ordered by London headquart Q ‘lea\'e America and begin work in | another land. A storm of protest greeted the order in America. In- fluential friends advised him that to leave the country would invite | disaster for the movement in the United States, and a petition was sent to London asking that the order of transfer be rescinded. General William Booth contend- ed that, since all Salvation Army workers took on oath to obey head- without hesitation, * he | could not make an eption for la member of his family without | raising the cry of favoritism and | undermining the very fabric of the organization. He refused to alter his decision was Founds New Order | The result of the controversy that Ballington Booth severed )ns connection with the Salvation Army in 1896. The same year, upon the advice of friends who urged the | establishment of a new movement, | he founded the Vounteers of Am- | crica. He devoted the remainder uf | his life to that organization, di- stand, in good shape, $72 cashi FUR garments made or remodeled. | recting its efforts in accordance flat sax with cas good Arg range finder, Alto Conn nickle-plated , like new, $50 cash; 35-milimeter camera 35 lens, leather new, with lens, Phone Red film, like $32.50 cash. m all 1'01 353. FOR SALE — Kohler & Campbell| piano. Apt. 104, Assembly Apts. Fur hats and caps made to or- der. Miss Hamilton, Hotel. rates, Juneau Rooms after Oct. 10.Open under new management, | CASH PAID for stamp collections | g yohice” pngland, July 28, 1859, ton and old correspondence. Hagmeier, Box 2228, FOR SALE—40-foot gasboat Pal. 4-56 Grav motor. At Rock Dump Float. Se. M. E. Monagle. 8% CENTS EACH PAID for used sound gunnv sacks at Coal| Bunkers. FOR SALE OR LEASE — The Midget Lunch. BMALL BUILDING for sale. Ceil at the Snap Shoppe. WANTED WANTED—Tide flat lot, suitable location for boat shed. Call Blue 62 HOUSEKEEPING or sleeping rooms. 210 Main St. Phone Blue| 429, WANTFD-—SL’CUH(! hand high (han Call Green 315 T DERMANENT W WAVING | and HAIR STYLING by CHARLES SIGRID'S BEAUTY SALON PHONE 318 | 5 | _—— e ——— . . Flying Insiruction Alaska School of Aeronautics, Inc., Box 2187, Juneau, Alaska Ly the hour or in courses from SOLO to COMMERCIAL. Bee Us at the Airportl S s o 1 X IR | & — o TVMELY CLOTHES | NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing . FRED HENNING § | ‘Every house needs westinghouse’ | PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. | | Electrical Contractor—Dealer | | 140 So. Seward St. Juneau, Alaska Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black 680 ———3 | Mrs. |another daughter. Arleen, age ninc,| BUAEA\ITEED Realistic Permd~ nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop. Telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. TURN your oma gom mto value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. GUNNERS GET FEW BIRDS ON NEARBY FLATS Duck hunwrs came back wearily to their jobs this morning after | what was reported a “poor” week-| |end shoot in nearly every nearby| flcckmg place. St. James Bay hunters reported | few ducks, and crowded flats at | Sumdum and Sweetheart produoed little in the way of bags-m-talk about, Best bags reported were from Dr. W. W. Council, Dr. C. C. Carter and Rod Darnell who brought in 28 birds from St.James| {Bay while other hunters in that spot went featherless. Concensus of hunters is that few| the flats,| northern birds are on weather is still too mild in the Interior to send waterfowl wing- ing to warmer climes and more |open waters and that the duck | hunting world of Southeast Alaska {needs is a good freeze and a few | severe stmmb Shlrley Godklns Born Yesterday | was born yesterday morning at St.| Ann's Hosptial to Mr. and Mus. Miles Godkins. The little miss tipped | the scales at 8% pounds at birth. Besides the new arrival, Mr. and Godkins are the parents of and Jerry, age seven. BARNEY GOOGLE 85 A RULE -T ONLY SEE PATIENTS W N OFF(CE E\_ €15 2w Kisw Eestutes mvad Subscrlbe or The Empire. Gasuneau | Esther Complete Outfitter for Men | | > D20V daugnter, Shiriey Esthe 4 with the philosophy he so often expressed: “You cannot talk to a man about | God when he is hungry and half A.zus enlarger for 35 mili- BOARD AND ROOM at reasonable | clothed and has no place to sleep. You have to feed him and clothe him first,” Ballington Booth was born ac On September 16, 1880, he ma 1 | Maude Charlesworth, the daugh! of an English minister. Throughout their lives she was actively identi- fied with her husband’s work and came. to be known generally as Maude Ballington Booth, They had two children. New Ideals When Ballington Booth founded the Volunteers of America he es- tablished it in accordance with h|~. own ideals. The military organiza- tion, characteristic of the Salvation Army, was replaced by a system |of church government in which nothing of the old order was re- | tained except uniforms and titles. | In addition to the religious work = carried on in its stations the Vol- unteers of America maintained soup kitchens, distributed Christmas b: kets and contributed much tow: general charitable relief. Commander Booth was a tall ‘stmng man oi commanding per- sonality who was known as a pleas- | ing speaker, He was a violinist of no mean ability, played the piano equally well and composed a num- ber of hynms for the use of his organization. Today’s news today m NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN | that a hearing will be held before the undersigned Probate Judge on October 14th, 1940, at 10:00 o'clock | A.M, in the office of the United | States Commissioner and Ex-| Officio Probate Court for the Sitka, Alaska, Commissioner’s Precinct, upon_the petition of MARIE PET- ERSON ' for her appointment as| Administratrix of the estate of E.| J. BATH, deceased and for the| | issuance of Letters of Administra- | tion to “her. -All persons in inter- est are hereby required at said time and place to appear or show cause, if any they have, why said tmnyed for. Witness my hand and official Seal -at Sitka, Alaska, this 28th | day of ‘September, 1940. WILLIAM W. KNIGHT, United States Commissioner and Ex-Officio Probate Judge petition should not be granted as| Former heavyweight champion Max Baer slugged young Pat Comiskey out of the title picture in the first round of their fight in Jersey City, of two minutes and 39 seconds of milling and gave him the verdict. who was draped on the ropes. - Democratic Governor Cf lllinois Is Dead (Continued from Page One) his official duties in April, 1939, Edward J. Kelly had been reelected Mayor of Chicago and there was apparent peace in the Democratic camp The people of Illinois knew Hor- ner as a bald, stout and affable gentleman with an engaging plat- form manner. He earned a reputa- a hard worker, frequently being found in his office after midnight His friends knew him privately as a jovial companion and a movie fan. He was a student of the life and times of Abraham Lincoln and as owned one of the largest private collections of Lincolniana In the Horner administrations 000000002 Phone 374 for PRINTING FOR EVERY PURPOSE THE EMPIRE PLANT DOES IT BEST! CRAFTSMANSHIP is the word that best expresses the quality of print- ing work that we turn out, means complete satisfaction to you. No job is too big nor too small for THE EMPIRE plant to handle. Phone 374 for full information. IIIHIIII||I|I|IIIII||||IIIIlAIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIl|||IIl|I|I i forms ® for Sitka, Alaska, Commis- sioner’s Precinct. Publication dates, Oct, 2-3-4-5-' 8 9- 10-11 12, 1940 adv. Phone 374 _lMIIIHIHIIIHIIIIIlllllllllllll!!llllllllllllmlIIIIIIIIINIIIIHII ND SNUFFY SMITH T KNOW, DOC- BT, THIS CRGE 16 DIFFERENT— NOW, A BETTER NOT TELL SNUFEY HHO YOU ARE - JUST SIZE Hit WP~ MEBBE YOIl CAN GNE Hith & TRERTMENT THAT'LL CORRECT HiS TFULNESS SNUEEY - T WANT You TO MEET AN OLD FRIEND OF MINE — ( OKaY,D0C- GET CLOSER To HiM ) 3] THIS \S INDEED PLEASURE MODLIN GLAD TO SEE \E, PODNER- COME (N BN SET A SPELL | of his second MODERN EQUIPMENT . .. IDEA MEN ARE ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE HERE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE N. J. the legislature was in session much of the time, chiefly to deal witn the problems of unemployment. Eight special sessions were con- vened in his first four years of office, two in the first two years term Long Years On Bench Horner’s political care in 1914, A 35-year-old atto: was elected probate judge of County (Chicago). Reelected times with increasing majorities, he had been on the bench 18 years when he resigned in 1932 to take up bachelor residence in the brick executive mansion at Springfield The sales tax was established early- in Horner’s first administra- tion, and at the end of his first year in office the state tax on real estate, chief source of the government’s income for 118 Revenue ales tax balanced the furnished funds for relief, increased began budiget and unemployment and that See Us for Printing ® handbills ® business letterheads invoices ® account books ® announcements ® post- ers ® business cards ® EXPERT IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIII|II|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII . Memorial Referee Jack Dempsey (right) grabbed the Californian at the end Baer’s trainer, Izzy Klein, rushed in to school aid, old age pensions and an institutional building program.| A third generation Chicagoan, Horner was born November 30, 1878. He was graduated from the Kent College of Law, then the law department of Lake Forest Univer- E in 1898. He received the hon- LLD. degr Unive College (1933), & from 29) Kncx . He interited an income from| but chose to make| s grandfather, y in the R MARTHA SOCIETY dinner on Oct. 10 in Northern Light | Presbyterian Church Adults 75 cents. Children 40 cents. From 5 to 7Dp.m —adv. - Subscrive Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulatiou. I|.- PRINTERS AND Juneau, Alaska ST Bv BILLY DeBECK I SWOW,G00GL! KNOWED VE WUZ BLEST WIE SICH NCE FREN'S - i - T NEVER WEINS GIT LONG JES LIKE MONKENS (N TH' Z00 ~ NAOW, WHEN VE QT TIRED, PODNER, DON'T SCRUPLE To SeN S0 AN 'L GNE \E A GOWN' OVER — Lincoln | fields of law nn:l‘ numlmummmmmflmm" T T to The Daily Alaska|' * bl i il FINE Watch and Jeweiry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealer~) GREASES GAS — OIL Foot of Main Street Junean Motors =" Soothlnq Organ Music tmd Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 e oo e ["Madean Mefal Works | South Seward St AIR CONDITIONING and OIL BURNERS SHEET METAL WORK 4 SANITARY PIGGLY WIGGLY 24— PHONES—16 | S -+ You'll Find Food Finer and 1 Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP -4 Krafft’s MANUFACTURING CO. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 Garhage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 L m—— ] Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 9 Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES" READY-TO-WEAR Reward Street Near Thirm ZORIC BYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE BUILDING £ Rock—Coal Hauling Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery Alaska Music Supply||—M ———— e oen, Manst= || | Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OTLS Builders’ and Sheit HARDWARE | Utah Nut and Lamp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Ce. TELEPHONE 412 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 9 American Meat—Phone 38 JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition | | GENERAL MOTORS, DELO® and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Map” PHONE 36 FOR VERY PROMPT LIQUOR DELIVERY The Juneaun Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Front and Second Streets PHONE 350 IF IS PAINT.WE HAVE Tt Idea'l ?ninvéNmop “SMILING SERVICE" [ Bert's Cash Grocery f Mccmr. MOTOR "COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH' DEALERS THE ROYAL | BEAUTY SALON “If your hair Is Dot you—You should hmbm?- —— l Phone 723———113-2nd St Oldest Bank in Alaska Commercial Safe Deposit Banking by Mail Department Savings The B. M. Belu'ends Bank Tuneau, Alaska | | | | | Juneau Lumber Mills, Ine. e

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