The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 16, 1941, 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)

0 (&) - o L has been stopped ) piration, advertiser pleass ty, this oftice (Phone ST®) st once and same will be given attention, " mm\n.ru.am-mfil_ — e et Count five average words % the (Ine. Dalily rate per line for consecutive Minimum oharge — 08 Copy must be in the affice by 7| golock in the afterncon to insure Wnsertion on same day. We accept ads over talephone wom persons listed in telephode Wractory. et g PROSPERITY electric range, good condition. Phone Green 240 after 5 pm. RE-CONDITIONED washing ma- chines for sale— One General Electric ........$30.00 One Kenmore . 27:50 One General Electric ........... 35.00 One Easy Spinner 45.00% Two Apex, each* 25.00 Buy on Easy/Payment Plan. War- ranted may be turned in omn new Easy Washer. — PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. RS SR AR WAL b0, FOR SALE—Sherman Clay piano; Singer sew. mch.; GUE. ' wash. mch.; Royal vacuum; library ex- ten. table; LE.S. lamp; endtakle. call Apt. 8, Spickett, or phone 733. T ————S FOR SALE — New House, Seatter Tract—two bedrooms, basement garage. Phone Blue 775. MISCELLANEQUS furniture, wash. machine, high chair and crib. Phone Blue 763, Apt. 6, Klein Apts. FOR SALEtFurnimre complete n;r 5-room house. Inquire at 203 Third and Dixon, after 5 p.m. ONE 1935 4-door Plymouth, $125. cash. Call 416 East St. between 4’and 6 pm. WATKINS Products. Phone Black 634. FURNISHED bome at Auk Bay, 3 acres.: See Milton Ward, FOR SALE—1937 V-8 Panel Deliv- ery. Case Lot Grocery. HOME 4% miles on Glacier High- way, 2% acres, five rooms, fur-| nished, concrete basement, hot water heat, (very economical) large , refrigerator, 1,000-gal. fuel tank, double garage—$4,500. Cash prefered. See Paul Hudon, FOR SALE—Complete set Gurdies, 250 fathom stainless steel line, transmission shaft, chain, leads, pulleys. and spoons. Phone 0382. FOR SALE—Restaurant and apart- ment house: income property at @ bargain. Phone Douglas 28. N e FOR SALE—3% Fora Sedan, $300. Phone Green 160. Al s e gnal s SR 2 TWIN BEDS, complete. Phone Green 462. FOR SALE—Equity in niew_2-room house, fully equipped; sewing ma- chine, radio, dowble garage, Ply- wwouth sedan, dragsaw, tools, 92 acres, on loop road, $900. It's a Bargain to Anyone! Write to XYZ, €/0 The Emplire. —— e | FOR SALE—Scow house, new last year, 16x41 ft. Can be moved any- where. Located at Elfin Cove. Write Box 1855, FOR SALE—PFully furnished home;, with two lots.- Phone: Dougins 612. e e s FOR SALE OR TRADE— Mbfor- acat “Pal” See owner at Rock| Dump. % LADY wants hotel, cafe cooking or pastry. Phone 396. ey WANTED—Maid for general house- work. Apply 8t Ohas. Goldstein residence. Phone 69. U R A All-wheel U. S. military vehicles are able to climb grades of 40 to, to give satisfaction or| Pay tor Soldiers 1 Increases as Army ! | Rank Is Attained (Continnea from Page One) s T { m,m | sustenance, housing. medical cn:-o! 5-ROOM_ heated fur. apartment. thrown in and that entertainment| Phone 31 or inquire San Fran- and reereation comes a lot cheaper} cisco. Bakery: | than you can get it down at the FOR RENT—3-1 house, O11 pool hall or at the corner saloon.| range and oil heat. Inquire at Juneau Paint Store. | K. L. T, Madison, Wis. — The| L EhNCXA | best information I can get is that FOR RENT—New, 3-room apt. the first American Minister to Phone Red 250 at 437 Fifth and New Zealand will be one of the Park. | State Department'’s top-notel career | | dipiomiats now in the Far East. Yes, I saw the report that Mus.| | Florence Jaffray Harriman might| ol get the appointment, but without| any reflection on Mrs. Harriman's| 4-R(7)0Mmpur{|;"rur, house. Phone 67 after 5 p.m. FURNISHED house ‘or rent: - h. | heat: /wied ‘Sheve Spsnwory _ |already proved ability, the story POR RENT—3 rooms and bath. around the State Department is Oil stoves. Call 173 between 5 that nearly all problems arising and 7 pm. ;in the new ministry will be prob- 7 S AN WSS AR lems concerned principally with 3-ROOM steam heated apt. Phone the Far East and that some diplo- Blue 474. | mat who knows that section of APARTMENT Fon“RTEN:l‘: “Hotel the world like a book will get the Juneau, partly furnished. | J0b- | APARTMENT FOR RENT—Inqulre! C. E. Springfield, Mo.—You can| at Empire office. ibet. Mr. E., that Washington talks | e — | about a lot of other things than| 3':;?“ f“:l:lc:mm' 985 West Bmlwnr, lend-lease bills, and so f()l'(lLi e » . | With more than 160,000 govern-| SMALL APT. for rent, $30 month-| ment émployees and most of them | ly. Inguire Columbia ]_,umber‘affecoed from alarm - clock ring CGompany office. | until they switch off the lights at| ' night by. every move the Govern- |3-ROOM nicely fur. stm. heated ment makes, there’s a lot of talk,| ! { apts. and houses. Windsor Apts. but it more often is about the ef- e ———————— fects than the things that cause| FOR RENT-—Purnished apartment them. For instance, I've never in T’“:‘;‘e?::::gg See BHaD yeen in a city where there is so Am, b sl % !much talk about housing and FOR RENT—3-room fur. apt., stm. rentals as thefe is here right now. heat, fine view. Phone Red 246.) The two baby jaguars at the 'zoo got a terrific ride, as we say ,in the newsroom. The city still !is practically divided into fivei |camps on what caused a street VACANCY Evergreen Apartments. car wreck here a week ago when | | Phone Blue 629. |one car plowed into the middle of ONE_ FURNISHED APAR' ,another trolley moving, at right AND ONE_ UNFURNISHED #0Bles. And more than 75,000 APARTMENT. HILLCREST. Persons in one week visited the | new National (Mellon) Gallery of]| VACANCY Nugget Ajartments.Re- duced rates. PHONE 439, | T_‘Art which opened only a short APARTMENT for rent. Call 478 time ago. } today. it e S | i Jig i | SLEEPING room with or without| board. Phone Green 462. Mrs, D. R .Duluth, Minn.—Army | | officlals here tell me that thcre[ jare plans under way to construct e L AL e ey SR | VANGANCY — MacKinnon Apart- | More than 600 chapels in the Army | Phone 671 or 304. ‘lcamps at a cost of nearly 13 mil- mapts, |lion dollars, Just how much of a| i v s eprnbiliok p o ESTENA .| VACANCY — Snow White ApY. program this is for the Army may| Phonie 209 or Green 355 after 6 pm. 3-ROOM fur apt. ofl heat. 12th 8¢. Phené Black 460, B2y M R s 2 FURNISHED apts. Phone Red 600. P 5 S S A S S FOR RENT—3-room apt. Owl Cale, Douglas. be seen from the fact-that in 22 years, the Army spent less than| $1,000,000 for 'chapels. & I think I mentioned once before that the Army now has 1,200 chap- lains and is going to increase the| number to 1,500. They include| ministers of practically every mml and denomination. Services are to{ be held regularly in the chapels, £ with the hours of worship stag- ONE SERICE o e vent. FIfst) cered, The chapels will look just tional Bank Bldg. '?’nbout like any 500-seat church in any community, with steeple and all, | " _LOST ANU FOUND LOST — On Willoughby Avenue, large hand-knit reddish purse water, dishes, cooking utedslls and | with black purse inside contain- bath. Reasonable at Seaview. ing money, unsigned check, di- vy e x?luo::dj'l“mder return to Empire. prorain sl v P VACANOY Perelle Apartment Phone Blue 575. CONSOLES Crosley 7 fube ... Sparton 0 tube spécial Sparton 11 fube specia TABLE MO Swarton 6 fube Crosley Lay Down Crosley 7 fube .. Crosley Push Buiton AC-DC 6 tthe BC & § Crosley © tube Plastic .. (= FURNISHED spartment; al80 §-room strletly ‘modern un- fufnished housé. Photie 484. DE. E. R.' HUNTER Veterinarian. Small animal spec- ialist. Will be'at the Alaskan Hotel, S < WINDOW WASHING and house cléaning. Phone 159. SWEDISH massage and cabinet baths. Mzs. L. Skeie, 410 .West 12th St. - Phene Green 662. i 3% CENTS EACH PAID for used sound gunny sacks at Coal Bunk- Sparton BC & SW Brown Detrola Traveller _ Detrola Brown Cise | old goid into value, cash and a number of other things arej | where the season opens first, and at Kodiak Island and Southeast Al- | ‘| workers received a flat 10 percent President Vargas, of Brazil; President Roosevelt. | RIO de JANEIRO—When President Getulio Vargas of Brazil visits President Roosevelt in Washington late this month to promote thc program of Pan- American solidarity and security, the two leaders will find they already are united by strikingly paralle] careers. The visit, in- cidentally, is the first made by a Brazilian chief of state since Dom Pedro II assisted at Presi- dent Grant's inauguration of the Philadelphia Fair in 1876, and the occasion will be markes by a round of festivities for the visit- ing President, Mme. K Darcy Vargas, who is nearly as active in public life as Mrs. Roosevelt herself, and their vivacious daughter, Alzira. The careers of the two men as heads of state have borne marked similarities from the start. Roosevelt began his ninth year in office, Vargas his tenth. Both came into office during na- tional depressions. In the United States, public confidence was at its lowest ebb; in Brazil the rub- ber market had collapsed and some of the states were in open revolt. l Later Roosevelt broke tradition as old as the United States itself FISHERMEN'S | AGREEMENT NOW SIGNED Alaska Fishermen Rafify Contract Calling for 20% Increase (Continued irum wage One) union agent, said releases had been granted allowing men to go to work at any time in the western district, aska. A few details remain to be worked out in connection with the Cook Inlet agreement. The new paet covers a variety of rates of pay with a 20 percent increase or $22.50 monthly granted to all men paid on a wage basis in the Kodiak and Westward District, and a 37'% per- cent or $15 monthly increase for those receiving a percentage of the pack in these districts. : All _classifications in Southeast Alaska were granted. an increase of |’ $22.50 ' monthly, and Cook Inlet raise. Hicker. sald working with the, additional CIO unions, in- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1941. Vargas Visit to U. S. Will Expedite Program of Hemisphere Cooperation to run for a third term. Vargas disregarded the constitutional law of Brazil which said no Presi- dent could run for a second term. The world admires Roosevelt's courage in overcoming the rav- ages of paralysis. The courage of President Vargas also is well known. When Nazi revolutionists stormed his Guanabara Palace in 1937, Vargas took up a dangerous position with the other palace de- fenders and, with his daughter loading the guns as fast as he emptied them, he remained at his battle post until the besiegers were driven off. Alike in their views on pre- paredness, both presidents have brought about compulsory mili- tary training, and the work done in the United States to bring new stamina and self-respect to CCC workers is matched in Brazil by road-building, forest and land conservation programs. Although Brazil has a historic: al background of royal pomp and splendor, Vargas' official and private life is as simple and dem- ocratic as that of the Roosevelts, and recalling the success of the great “Churrasco” or barbecue he recently gave for the army of Brazil, he has expressed hope 'NEWS DOUGLAS iNEW €OMPANY FORMING | TO CAN ALASKA SALMON | Tied up at Douglas city wharf/is ‘a fair-sized scow, with house practi- | cally over all and a second story at |one end, which was towed here the | first of the week from Pelican City. | Some questioning as for whom and |for what use the scow is intended | reveals the following interesting in- | formation. A new company, now in process of incorporation, has been organized | by Albert E. Goetz for the purpose |of canning salmon, to be known as |the Juneau Packing Co., Inc.. As- | sociated with Goetz in the under- | taking are some half dozen busi- |ness men of Douglas and Juneau | who will be able to take some ac- ve part in the company's opera- tions, either in town or at their base. For the coming season Taku River has been chosen as the site for the cperations by the Company, with he scow converted into a floathy ‘annery anehored right on the fish- ing grounds, with the very latest nachinery to he installed. An ex- perienced and capable canneryman 5 NOW. SQuth. purchasing the equip- nent that will be n #ill superintend the installing of vhen he returns, Mr. Gegtz, organizer of the com- any, is weil known on the Channel ited a grocery store here or several yeas and also having ngaged in other operations whizh have fitted him fer his part in can- Aing. operations; During the past two Jmmers he operated a boat to the Taku as “buyer for Ioeal firms. fishing drea {n the Taku River iistrict has long yielded a gocd per- at Nugget Shop. The. Daily Aiaska Empire hils the 50 degrees. § Tafgést paid circulation of asks newspaper. Empire Classifieds Payl ODGLE AND'SNUFFY SHETE any Al-j cluding the Cann ‘Worki : i Flshémen.er’.}fic orkers, 2}: critage of soskeyes which the com- iny @ to put up ih a fancy and other units as sgon as possib! ” ——‘—o-“-—“— i ack that will command top prices. he agdvantage to fishermen in that cality of a market right at their that the Roosevelts will plan one | of their famous hot-dog picnics during his visit. When the presidents meet, seeking to out plans for stronger bonds of trade, cultural relations and defense, they will be faced by the fact that Brazil is the key to hemisphere defense. The Amazonas is a vast store house of raw materjals needed | by U. S. armament industries and Brazil, jutting into the Atlantic 1,000 miles east of New York, | probably would be the first American nation attacked by a European power. With this in mind, the United States has ac- quired a chain of bases reach- ing to British Guiana while Brazil is rapidly building warships and planes and establishing naval and air bases to form a “chain of fire and steel” along the entire east coast of the Americas. Other tgmjecls to be worked out by the two” leaders include development of exchange and travel facilities for a sweeping “get acquainted” program under which the average Brazillan and the average North American would be enabled to make inex- pensive trips to their neighbor’s country. door will undoubtedly prove mutual- ly advantageous. ————— POOL envsvOUAR ?1 Phone 208 132 W. Becond | _ MANUPACTURING CO. HOME GROCERY A noNe & Phone 146 v B Arertonn MeatoFheoe 18 Sanitary Meat Co. i " aSn PO T | On his way home is Calvin Pool, superintendent of schools, who is a passenger on the Denali which sail- |ed from Seattle yesterday. Mr. Pool| was a delegate to an Inland Empire Teachers’ Association which met in Spokane, Wash. STARS INITIATE Nugget Chapter No. 2, O. E. 8. held initiation ceremonies at its reg- ular meeting last night with a num- ber of Juneau Chapter members at- tending. Refreshments were served at the conclusion of the ceremonies. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL. LAND OFFICE Disttict Land Office, Anchorage, ka, January 24, 1941 Notice is hereby given that Ed- ward Jahnke has made application | | for a homesite, under the act of age Serial No. 08926, for a tract of land described as Homesite “G” aof the triangle Group of Homesites sit- uated near Juneau, Alaska, Plat of U. S. Survey No. 2381, containing 4,64 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. $. Land Office, Anchor- age, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned | land should file their adverse claim in the district iand office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or. they will be barred by the provisions of the Statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Régister. Pirst publication, April 16, 1841. Last publieation, June ‘Li, 1841. Tuesday—Wednesday | “IVISBLE STRDES” y BILLY DeBECK TINELY CLOTHES || Alaska Music Supply Alaska Dock & Storage Co. ——— — THRIFT CO-0P | Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS ’ Quality Work Clothing & 5 x ™ * — —» FRED HENNING Opportunity Is Complete Outfitter for Mea Alw&ys Wailing! ALASKA SCHOOL OF ! AERONAUTICS ZO0RIC s [ FORD AGENCY SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry (Authorized Dealer~ GREASEM ' GAS — OIL Poot of Main Street Arthur M. Uggen, Manager and Supplies f Nut and Lump '[ : COAL Utah TELEPHONE 4 —— FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and ¢ . 4 R S e | Widest Selection ol LIQUORS PHONE 92 or %C RO LI | Mficmd- JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE Phone 464 Bill Hixson IF IT'S PAINT WE BAVE IT! Ideal Paint Shop et S COMPANY « | DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS ' Oldest Baiik in Alaska @ B. M. BEHRENDS BANK COMMERCIAL _..SAVINGS ... 31

Other pages from this issue: