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In case of error or if an ad has been stopped before ex- piration, advertiser please noti- fy this oftice (Phone 374) at ) once and same will be given b altention. "HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Count five average words to the ine Dally rate per line for consecutive sertions: (LT S —— Additional days ... Be Minimum charge —..58c Topy must he in the office by 2 clock in the aftermoon to imsure isertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone Jrom persons listed in telephone Nrectory. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Motorship “Forester.” Priced for immediate sale or, make me an offer. See boat’s! owner at Warner's float. J‘v')!.l' TOOLS; typewriting table, | chair, etc.; photo equipment; miscellaneous. Call Tony Kuhn, | phone 10, after 6 p.m. “OR SALE—Troller 31 B 324 and equipment for $500. See Al Sc¢hra- | men or call Red 379 after 6 pm./ SALE—1040 4op Bargain. Phone Black 290.| Chev 4-pass. &t'Oi: SALE—Four-room house on the beach on Fritz Cove road. BEasy terms. Rooms can be built upstairs. Running water. See Ole Jackson at the place. OR SALE—One 1941 Philco table model radio; one Stromberg Carl- son table radio; one ski ou All priced for quick sale on ac- count of leaving town, Apply at Apt. 502, Baranof, afternoon or eveping. THE DAIEY MES C. McREYNOLDS JA FOR RENT—4-room fur. flat. El- lingen Apts. Phone 351. VAT o A A XA | 3-ROOM fur apt., oil heat. 12th St. Phone Black 490, | 6-ROOM furnished modern, very nice house. 618 6th St. ROOM and board in private home. | Phone Green 462. 2 7BEI’)R60’L"I hous;. comx;l;lely furnished, practically new, hot water heat, low rent. Phone Green 611. | VACANGY at Wickersham house.| Phone Red 211. FOR RENT-—Baroumes apartments. Four rooms, all furnished; hot| water day and night; electric| range and Frigidaire; laundry| conveniences; garage. Telephone Douglas 132. | FOR 'RENT—2-room cabin. Partly | furnished. On Gastineau Avenue. Inquire Juneau Paint Store. ST. HEATED room. Green 675. 2-ROOM apartment, hot and cold water, steam heat, electric range. Phone 569. FOR RENT—CompleteXy—Elrxflsh(‘a 3-room apt. Call Cooper Bldg. Phone 182, FOUR-ROOM fur. apt. On street level. Oil heat. Elec. range. Private bath. Two beds. $40 mo. Crescent apts. 873 So. Franklin Street. There are those who believe became immovable foe of some Ne Justice McReynolds was on t tury. tion, he believed in the document * away by tenuous reasoning.” ROOMS in private home. Single| and doubles. Blue 302. 8-ROOM fur. house. Phone Red 600. FOR RENT—3-room apt. Owl Cafe, same now, since the departure on February 1, of Justice Clark Mc- Reynolds, a kindly man who yet was abrupt in manner; a liberal who A blunt supporter of “strict” interpretation of the constitu- In McReynolds the man, nevertheless, was the antithesis of Mc- GENTLEMAN OF LE ISURE NOW N AN INVETERATE AND EXPERT DUCK HUNTER A. P. FEATURE SERVICE the Supreme Court will not be the ew Deal principles. he high court a quarter of a cen- also live in Washington, where his ‘as it was written and not as whittled debutantes. DRIVES HIS OWN CAR SENT Hi5 RESIGNATION TO PRES. ROOSEVELT SHORTLY BEFORE HI5 794, BIRTHDAY Reynolds the jurist. The few in Washington who knew him intimately found a friend loyal and sympathetic, witty and delightful. As gentleman of leisure, Justice McReynolds, 79 on February 3, may live part of the time at Elkton, Ky., his boyhood home. He'll bachelor apartment once was the scene of Sunday morning breakfasts attended by the prettiest of He has his eye on the Pacific Coast, too, because duck hunting is good there and Justice McReynolds like to shoot. Douglas. CORNER LOT, Third and Dixon, | Phone Red 550. LUNCH BOX Cofe; must sell im- mediately. Bargain for cash. | LOST AND FOUND |LosT_Feb. 30 Lady's wr Imitialed R. B. L, Value, keep- sake. Phone Green 355. Pigeon Registrafion Being Underfaken, | U. . Signal Corps/ (Continuea 1rom rage One) { { | | | a feat which the signal corps of other wars would have considered J§impossible. The signal- corps’ largest carrier l cantonment is at Fort Monmouth, i~ 7. where more than 600 well ll trained birds are: kept -in 20 -lofts l —pigeon apartment houses. Eaenh pigeon has his own apartment and his own generous portion of food and water. CAPSULES STAY PUT Never having become more fa- miliar with pigeons than in mak-| e acquaintance you strike up feeding them crumbs around the| White House and State Department Building, I had a lot to learn. For example, the leg-band which hom- ers carry through life is placed on| them when they are less than a week old. When they are a month old, training starts and in another two weeks the message capsules are attached to their legs and stay there from that time on. Carriers start racing before they are a year old and their usefulness extends to varying periods. The average is about eight years. Eight years is mere infancy, how- ever, to the Army’s most famous pigeon. He's “The Kaiser” and prob- ably the only carrier veteran of the World War alive today. He got his ename when American troops pic him up on a hattlefleld; where he had been left by retreat-| ing Germans. The leg-band he! still wears bears the seal of the Imperial German army. “The Kai-| no lenger flies, of course, but| doesn’t keep him from being| most popular tenant of Lhe: at Monmouth. | R that the lofts Subscribe for The Empire. " BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH O RECKIMEMBER \E CRANED TO SEE ME ABOUT SUNTHW' — WHAT'S ON NORE WND, GENRIL 2 .|5-ROOM unfurnished house, | VACANCY Nugget Apartments. | MISCELLANEOUS | FOR RENT—UNFURNISHED APT, WITH BEDROOM. THE HILL- CREST. Présideni of '51 Variefies’ Passes Away T e ssa Howard Heinz, Whose Firm 8 ROOMS and bath, air condi-| Started with Horseradish, Dies in Philadelphia tioned, ‘heated, electric washer, laundry, new oak floors, electric| (Gontinuea from rage One) FOR RENT—3-room apt.: hot and cold water, steam heat, electric range. Phone 569, nice location. Phone 385. ONE OFFICE room for rent, First National Bank Bldg. range, frigidaire, nicely furnished. Call Windsor Apts. l 1 APARTMENT WITH BEDROO] ALSO 1 APARTMENT WITH/ BEDROOM AND ‘BED CLOSET. HILLCREST, PHONE 439. F_’Oiz RENT—Apartments, lnqnlre‘ at office 20th Century Bldg. | FOR RENT or LEASE—Ralnier | Rooms, ‘furnished or unfurnished.| See 'I. Goldstein. BOARD & ROOM, $50 per mo.| Steam heat, dry room and shower | bath. Juneau Rooms, phone 472.| COZY, warm furn. apts. Lights, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. issvain i VACANCY at Fosbee Apts. | VACANCY Perelle Apartment.| 9 Phone Blue 575. t ;-ROOM FURNISHED nputmmt;; also 5-room strictly modern un-| furnished house. Phone 484. | HOWARD HEINZ ;hclp him graF and bottle the | horseradish and thus started the | Pickles two years later and the son recalled that the constant association of that one product with the business was SWEDISH massage and cabinet o jittle annoyance to his father. baths. Mrs. L. Skeie, 410 Wost\ge quoted the elder Heinz's ex- 13th 8t. Phone ‘Civen 968, | planation of how the “57 varieties” 1% CENTS EACH PAID for used °ame sbout: soun ny sacks af Coal| “One day while I was ridin_g on Bum?engun 4 | the Sixth Avenue elevated railway N — in- New York, I noticed a sign uf BUARANTEED Realistic Perma-|a concern which announced that uents, $4.50. Finger wave, 63c.|it had twelve styles of shoes. That Lola’s Beauty Shop. Telephone gave me an idea, 201, 315 Decker Way. Istyles of our products, but that did | :?)MPLETE body massage in your home, $2.00. Call Black 510 be- fore 11 a.m. and after 7 p.m. = not sound right. Then I thought CURN your ofa gola into value, of kinds and the word ‘varieties' cash or trade at Nugget 8hop. |pjached in my mind. Gets the Idea Try a classified ad In The Empire 57 gripped me immediately. I{atal,c. stepped off the train at the next| Favored by 4 Presidents station, took the first train re-! On October 10, 1883, shortly be- turning downtown, went to my fore moving to Cheyénne, he mar- hotel and telephoned for our litho- ried Miss Dollie Burhans of Ionia, grapher to send his man over, We Mich. Two sons, Isaac B. and began work at once on the adver- Winslow B, were born to them. | card that proved a great Mrs. Van Devanter died in 1934. | She had seen her husband advanced Howard Heinz was born August by four Republican Presidents. 27, 1877, in Pittsburgh. His life Benjamin Harrison made him a was interwoven with that of his Justice of the Wyoming™ Territorial | family’s business as it was similar-| Supreme Court in 1889; William ly entwined with the men and McKinley named his an Assistant | times that made Pittsburgh known Attorney General of the United | for decades as the “work-shop of States, attached to the Depart- | ilhe world.” | ment of the Interior, in 1897; Theo- | | First Pickle Jars |'dore Roosevelt gave him a Federal | | Carnegie was stamped on steel; | Circuit Judgeship in 1903 and wil- | Westinghouse upon electrical appli- | liam Howard Taft promoted him | ances and air brakes; Armstrong on to the Supreme Court in 1910. He cork; O'Hara (later Pittsburgn|began his duties on the high bench |Plate) upon glass, and Heinz on|in January, 1911 | pickle jars long before other “new-, The opinions he delivered over gconmcrs like the Aluminum Com-|the more than a quarter century | pany, Gulf Oil and Koppers Com-| which he spent there, covered a| | pany, became known to the world.| wide range of intribate legal ques- | | The son got his preparatory edu-| tions. Generally he prepared them | | cation at Shady Side Academy and|at his Connecticut Avenue apart- iwas graduated from Yale in 1900.| ment, working in his study after | | | | | | He immediately entered his iamer’s‘dolflng coat, vest, collar and tie| firm as a clerk. He worked five while he puffed at a pipe, Hls‘ | years before he was made adver- opinions were clear, strong in logic tising manager, In 1907 he became ' and founded upon wide research. | sales. manager and in 1915 chair- as to coin. The fourth negative, on May 24, 1937, found Van De- vanter with the minority in a 5 to 4 decision upholding the unem- ployment insurance provisions of the Social Security Act, He joined| in a 7 to 2 finding that the old age pension section of that law was constitutional. B AID BILL 1S PASSED BY HOUSE Many Amendments Beaten Down Just Prior o Fin- al Vote Being Taken (Continued trom Page One) More Turn Downs g Earlier the House, by a vote of man of the board, assuming the presidency on the death of his father in 1919. He married Elizabeth Granger Rust of Saginaw, Mich., October 3, 1906. There were two sons, one Henry J. (“Jack”) Heinz, named for the founder of the business, fzmd the other Rust, named for the mother’s folks, Former Member Highest Tribunal | InU.S. Is Dead (Continued from wage One) ed state, so far as Van Devanter Iwas concerned. He was born at EMarion. Ind., April 17, 1859, the son of Isaac and Vloietta Spencer Van Devanter. He attended Indiana | Asbury College, now DePauw ‘Uni- | versity, and was graduated from I thought of| the law school of the University of | | Cinicnnati in 1881, He practiced 'three years at Marion, then moved |to Wyoming and helped organize | that territory for the statehood which came to it in July, 1890. He “I counted them up. The idea of was the first Chief Justice of the Foe of New Deal 1147 to 70 rejected the proposal the Up to his final term, which be- |bill be amended to prohibit sending gan in October, 1936, Van Dc.iAmerlcnn troops outside the terri- vanter voted against the Adminis-torial waters of the Western Hem- tration in 12 of the 13 major cases|isphere. An amendment authorized | which came before the court. His|by Representative Van Zandt was lone exception was the TVA case|Proposed as a modification of the which, with the gold clause find-|@mendment proposed by Representa- |ing, constituted the only early vic-|tive Jeannette Rankin. Her amend- | tories for the Administration. The Ment would have applied to sallors, | the Tennessee Valley Authority to|Scldiers. She redrew it and Van | sell electric power in wmmution‘z““d" revised it but his revision was | the territory covered by the act creating the Federal body. HAS FIREA " (] other new deal causes were decided. | ms' | Van Devanter voted for the Ad-| A1 s ministration in ten of these, His| \ " was exactly paralleled by Justice.‘ Sutherland with the other "cox)ser~‘ Two of Van Devanter's nexativc‘ According to information received votes in his last term were upon py the Game Commission this morn- Relations Act to The Associated|was found guilty before a jury in Press and t0 manufacturing con-|the Third 'Division Federal Court | TVA decision upheld the right of Marines, aircraft pilots as well as | with private corporations within |turned down by a voice vote. After October, 1936, fourteen | total of 11 “for” and 16 “against”| vatives.” application of the Wagner Labor!ing, Krist Carlsen, alien of Cordova, cerns. He voted to uphold the samelln Cordova yesterday on a charge of individuals engaged directly in in-|proper license. terstate commerce. His third anti-| Carlsen was fined $250 and sen- Administration vote was against the |tenced to serve three months in the government’s contention that abro-|Cordova jail. gation of payments of obligations eee in gold ‘applied to bullion as well! Empire Classifieds Pay! WHEN ASSEMBLY NAS BLOWN NESTERDRY AFTERNOON, NORD BIRD 2 SEX ©00T OF TWe CAMPE GROUNDS WTHOWT PERNNSSION 2 By BILLY DeBECK 7 0——7”'—‘———‘7 _V—V ‘ L .;v THRIFT CO-OP | Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers NEXT TO .CITY HALL PHONE 767 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Woerk Clothing [ ] FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men Opportunity Is Always Wailing! ALASKA SCHOOL OF AERONAUTICS Z0RIC SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 - FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealery) GREASES GAS — OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 36 e U SP § Utah Nut and Lump | Rl | | Krafft’s MANUFACTURING CO. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 63 HOME GROCERY | Phone 146 Home Liquor Btore—Tel '®w American Meat——Phone 38 — Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: ‘13 and & _—\fi GEORGE BROS. Widest Seluction ol LIDUORS ‘PHONE 92 or 85 The Juneau Laundry Front and Second Strewts “SMILING SERVIOE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 108 Bodding Transfer [ Free Delivery pOTLDI - Juneau ||| BUILDING Thomas Hardware Co.| PAINTS — OTLS Guilders’ and BSmetf HARDWARR E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 213 Phone 4783 ‘Every hotise needs westinghouse’ 'PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Electrical Contractor—Dealer 14080, Seward 8t. Juneau, Alasks Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black 680 _— ) » i 2 - ZENITH RADIOS 1941 Models Now on REPAIRS and SERVICE JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE Phone 464 Bill Hixson DEVLIN'S T_I_ic:;lhlm Co. Plumbing — Oil Bumers COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH 1S SUSPENDED, act as applied to corporations or|possessfon of firearms without a B. M. BEHRENDS BANK ® COMMERCIAL ... SAVINGS ... - § oo ey