The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 3, 1941, Page 7

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a MONDAY, NOVI MBER 3 CLASS ADVER — e ———— Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for consecutive day Additional Minimum charge Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone trom persons listed in telephone directory. FOR RENT-—Furnished house. Call Steve Stanworth, 589 CELY furnished 6-room house 706 6th St., $35; 3-room apt. for bachelor, $12. Phone Blue 200 JUNEAU RENTAL SERVIC Call us for your housing needs. Choice Phone 633. listin; STEAM heated 3 rooms and bath. Klein Apts. Phone Black 763 1-ROOM partly furnished house.| Phone Red 600 5-ROOM fur. house and 2-room apt. Red 404 HEATED apt. Two bedrooms.! Bishop Apts. 3-ROOM steamheated —apartment.| lectric range, hot and cold water. Phone 569. — | 5-ROOM steam heated apt., com-; pletely furnished, linen, dishes, | silverware, bedding, piano, Fri-| gidaire and washing machine to responsible person. $50 monthly| rent, Apply at 146 S. E‘rankhn‘ over Triangle Beer Parlor from 1to 7 pm | CLEAN steam heated rooms, mod-| priced. Upstairs of 20111‘ Market, erately Century “Nugget Apartments. | VACANC Real Estate For Sale HOUSE for sale: one 4-room, one ‘COTI‘AGE. income property, 1941 IFIED TISING SALE or " 3-rm, miodern | house, Sc’l(tl"r Tract. Call 525. F‘INNISH bfl!h.\ and apm‘tmenls: also store front for sale or rent Juneau Rental ‘Service. Phone 633. FOR SALE—5-room partly fur- nished house. 1020 W. 1ith St 1. E. Tucker. Phone 437. SACRIFICE Warm Springs Bay Health Resdort. Mrs. Raymond. Baranof “Hotel. 5-ROOM modern house overlooking Auk Bay. Full concrete basement. Write P.O. Box 2313. 4-ROOM house with bath, bargni;x for quick sale, 922 West 10th. 6 - ROOM completely furnished house, oil heat, reasonable. In- quire 511 Kennedy. Phone Green | 325. | BAROUMES Apts. Douglas 132. Phone heap. 3-room apartment, furnished. 822 Basin Road. $3,250. 5-ACRE FARM: 2-room furnished | house, 2 chicken houses, $550 cash. Bus service, Auk Lake Loop Road, Write P.O. Box 2953. for | sale in Juneau. Very reasonabie if taken at once. Phone Thane 3—three rings.—George Getchell. Miscellaneous For Sale| 1 DAVENPORT set; 1 bed set; rug, utility cabinet; crib, yr.-old size. Phone Red 332 lOOXH 6- ONE bed and springs, two bulcauxl one occasional chair, ironer, washing machine. Phone Thane 3, two rings. COTTAGE for rent. Juneau. Two bedrooms. Phone Thane 3-3 rings. | ¢ Getchell. \ YACHT Leota. Price low for quick sale. Owner going to military serv- ice. Phone 452 after 5 P. M. 1 BAROUMES Apts.: 4 rooms, fur- nished, hot water day and night, electric range, refrigerator and Jaundry conveniences, garage, $3 Phone Douglas 132. e e s | 4-ROOM partly furnished housed 12th St. Call 67 after 5 p.m. MARSHALL Apt. 4 rooms, furnish- ed. Phone 751, or call at 114 W.| 6th St. in; | office 253 or see room or Call FURNISHED Triangle Bldg. Stan Grummett. CLEAN steamheated rooms. Sim- mons beds. 326-2nd St. $3.50 and | up per week. Wl ik A R WO ¢ S B TWO 4-ROOM furnished duplex apartments, $20. Also, 2-room fur- nished apartments for $16. Phone 3-ROOM vx:icely fur. stm. heated apts. and houses. Windsor Apts. CLEAN comrorlable room. Private home. Phone Blue 614. VACANCY at Fosbee Apts. — e steam heated room. Phone 302. ONE Blue FURNISHED housc and furnished Inquire Snap Shoppe. mhtd. VACANCY. HILLCREST APTS. PHONE 439. MODERN house, fireplace, ehanr.el ¥ view, hardwood floors, full base- ment, oil heat, unfurnished. Phone 439. ¢-ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly wmodern un- furnished House. Phone Red 620. apt FUR room, Green 615 —— e ONE OFFICE room for rent, First Nationa] Bank Bldg. —— e FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. — e T NI R SRR COZY, warm furn. apts. Lights | — water, dishes, cpoking, and n-ux. Ihuomblo at Beat MISCELLANEWS CENTS each, pa y FIVE aic gunny s TURN your old gold into value,| s cash or trade at Nugget Shop. SWEDISH MASSAGE: cabinet| path, Graduate nurse. Phone! Green 662 after 12 noon. | GUARANTEED Realistic Perma-| nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up Lola Beauty sShop. Phone 201/ 315 Decker Way. 'LOST and romm Lub[‘ ~Green cedar »km and oars. Notify ‘Auk Bay store. LOST—Person who took Zeiss fielc. glasses is known, return to Em-| pire, reward. no questions nsked.i i | 16-FT. CABIN or | s at Coal Bunkers. | | Defense bacon into small pieces to season cruiser, inboard { motor. KINY early aft. or eve. 0.| READING or distance lenses, Q)‘b] each. Frames, 50c up, at 337 Willoughby Ave., untill Nov. 15. Day Optical Co. |42 PLYMOUTH 2-door deluxe se- dan, radio and heater. Phone| Red 450. LADY'S indestructable wardrobe trunk; bargain for quick sale. Phone Douglas 134. | REBUILT Singer Sewing Machines. Non-electric low as $15; portable electric sewing machines good as new $22.50; beautiful console elec- tric sewing machine like new $30; good used vacuum cleaners $7.50 each; bargains in rebuilt % hp. motors. See‘them on the Motor- ship Hiawatha now in boat harbor or call J. H. Anderson, Singer- Maytag distributor. Phone 711. MODEL “A” Ford, $50. Black 725. |SINGER SEWING MACHINES, Maytag washing machines, Iron- rite ~ironers, Terms: $5 down and $5 monthly. Liberal i allowances for your old sewing machine or washer. Call J. H. Anderson, the Singer-May- tag man at Phone 711, or call at motorship Hiawatha at Boat Harbor. Repairs, parts, service, WATKINS Products. Phone Black | 634. Mall orders taken. Box 1651, GOOD restaurant equipment for’ sale. Can be seen at Case Lot Grocery, WURLITZER pianos. Expert tun- lnc Alaska sagent. Phone 143.— Ammuw Shoppe. 2 miners wanted for Hawk Inlet. Howard D. Stabler, Shattuck Bldg., | Juneau. Ohio High Sdiools Aid Defense Sa!es COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 3.—Ohio | high schools have been asked by, the Ohio Defense Savings Com-| mittee to participate in a special | campaign to boost sale of defense stamps and bonds. Known as “Football Week for Savings,” the campaign to be held will feature programs and displays at football games. - - IIIII"|HIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIImllllllllllllllmllllll A AT USE SCISSORS Scissors are handy for removing rinds from sliced ham or bacon. They can also be used for cutting foods. The scissors make more evenl pieces than a knife. Pra it S BUBSEHIBE 1o ‘1'e nmpire A *AMERICANA L By RAY PEACOCK AP Feature Service Writer ACKS OR BETTER, boys. Quit nursing nickels and decorate the mahogany. . Pass. . . Open. Anybody remember to brmg | coflce" .. . Call it, Sure, somebody must have brought some coffee. Raise you five. can get out. . . You in, Chalky? ... Turn got two pair. . Three lousy treys! A guy ought to be shot . Maybe I got some drawing to a pair of treys coffee. How many cards this time? . don’t have any coffee. . flush and only one stayer. . .. Dcal em, Art. How about taking a.look at Thanks U.S. For Relief ... And five more. Grocery clerks . See it. What about the coffee? ‘em over, Milt, I that coffee, Milt? Aces by eights, straight. break? . Two of LT call. | now, , Pass!! . . . Pass!!! frem a 5,000-mile trip aboard an RAF. fighter plane. He visited Addis Ababa in Abyssinia, Asmara jin Ei and Nairobi in the heart of Brlnsh Kenya. He re- ports that during a private inter- view with Empcrer Haile Selassie 1in the Abyssinian capital, the Em- Haille Selassie Appre- ciates 25,000 Tons of Food-Also Blankets WASHINGTON, Nov. 3—Safety peror expressed ‘“sincere gratitude American generosity and good will.” Also brought to a successful con- | clusion, Mr. Bain reports, is the distribution by the International Red Cross of 100 tons of powered milk to the undernourished Italian children of Eritrea. This distribu- What eggs? . . LOD‘JE look at that coffee, Milt. . . . boys. . . . Tens by fours and beat 'em. I'm looking right . Three jacks. Your deal, Pigk. , ., Cof- | fee, eh? Well, i'll go nice with some fried fish in the morning if you have some fried fish, but it ain’t coffee. It's bread crumbs. . . « Pass! . .. A HUNTERS 3 § I didn’t say it was coffee, No good. I gotta Step on it, Chalky, and deal. . .. Anybody look at the eggs to see if any didn't I'll open, Sorry 1 mmmont-d thom Rk glay \}(lcah gne thmg“a,t.: time. Let’s find out about the coffee. . . . Wall the best. Why don’t you know for sure? Swell | until after the next deal. 'm afraid to look. . .. place this is gonna be in the morning if we | Bet five. . I got one bag of somcthmg that felt lxkc coffee. . Nobody else calling? Look at that! Spade | PHILANTHROPIST " OF NOTE PASSES - AWAY, HosPifAL ‘Simon Guggenheim, Once ~ Senator from Colorado, Dies in New York | (Continued from Page One) COMMERCIAL | business in 1919. As evidence of his life-long inter- {est in Colorado he left bulldings 23 wmch he had given 10 the State| feeweerceorrcosrcerasrroas | Normal School at Greeley; the State University a} Boulder, the State m' ms | Agricultural College at Fort Collins and the State School of Mines at NUNN-BUSH SHOES | Golden. _In association with his :vrcthen he' gave a building for the| STETSON HATS National Jewish Hospital for Con- :sumpuvcs at Denver, M'Y Work Clothing Philanthropist Probably his outstanding philan- . thropany was the establishment, rm mfi | with his wife, in 1925, ¢f the John Simon Gugegenheim Foundation in !memory of a son who died in 1922 It had an original endowment of| Complete Outfitter for Men yet. ... I'll open. ... Stay. ... Stay..., Come $3,000,000 to which $1,000,000 was| | on, Chalky, make up your mind, Gimme two. |added in 1929. It proviges scholar-| z o l l s your| ' "Maybe Al and Bonnie are bringing some |ships for deserving students of the ’ . Pass. ‘mfloc Not a chance. They're supposed to United States and Latin-American| [} bring bacon and potatoes. . . . Gimme three. countries for advanced study, at| l e A BctJfive ... I'd sure 1l§§ a cup ofhcofiee now ‘hcme or abroad, in any of the/ Yeal ike last time. 3 uncnw boys. . . » Some guys throw money !seiences or fine arts. The com- 2 ' around like they owned it. . . . Better take a petitive angle is entirely ahsocnt Aluka Lllmdt’ - {from the foundation’s selections of its Dbenificiaries, the chief tests being possession of creative talent| lof a marked bent for research. ‘ Alukn Mllflc Of Swiss Parentage __fllv Simon Guggenhelm was born in m"m ‘Philadelphh December 30, 1867, the sixth of seven sons of Meyer and l‘ Phone 208 lfl W. Second | Barbara Guggenheim.. His father had come from Switzerland in 1847 PR 43 jand to that country his sons were |sent to finish their educations.| Simon, after studyine languages m‘h nl’ “‘ L“’ {abroad, in 1888 joiried his father| P COAL ing, comfort articles fer Brntmwmd brothers wh ohad in 1884 or- wounded, and such foodstuffs as|ranized the firm of M. Guggenheim | C rice, flour, evaporated milk and|&Sons to operate the ]'aurf:xs lace | mm&sw"l‘ navy beans. The supplies arc dis-{and embroidery importing business. TELEPHONE 4 tributed in Egypt, Eritrea, Abys-| Meanwhile the elder Guggenhe[m sinia and Syria through 23 relief had become interested in western | agencies including the British Rr‘d‘minrx and in 1889 the family con-| Greek Red Cross, the Red Cross, French Cross, the - Such Goings On In Social Circle Egyptian a Red Crescent and the Lady Lamp-|Pueblo, Colo. Simon was sent there. |son Refugee Committee. the cern was moved to New York and smaller smelter was opened at Phone 146 | He moved to Denver in 1892 and rtecame interested in politics. In 1896 he was nominated for lieuten-| lant governor by the silver Republi-| [cans but, because he had not| reached the constitutional age for| Ithe office, withdrew from the ticket, | |He was a Republican presidential| “SMILING SERVICE" llvs-‘ndsxl at the Eritrean port of |tion was made at the specific re- | el 904 | B ’ h assawa are 25,000 tons of Ameri- | ques Htiih aiithotities sb oo~ st clector in 1 d t) s later | can’ Red Cross h‘.od*n‘lfla and ?!yllt‘u:n“rtlxg‘“l;:; II\::;?;;""!;":} (;1(3:5 SOCIAL CIRCLE, Ga. Nov, 3v_§Wfls elected to B:}lle sz:a::..“ i) en scas erery ankets for the relief of bard- chip a like quantity of powered|a fair exchange may not be'a rob- He was. married . November 24, PHONE 104 or 168 pressed civilians throughout the milk to the children of Greece bery, but this sort. of thing: 18:s0me- o . 0. Olga ilinichi of New York.| | - Pree Delivery Juneau colonies of East Africa, it was an-| Since the start of the war, civil- | ghine Jike it. Postal inspectors said | - crc _Were two sons, John Simon, neunced here jan refugees and wounded soldiers|some one broke into the postoffice |1 ¥hose memotyiithe scholarship The news was received by cable |and sailors of the Middle East have| here, opened numerous packages |‘cundation was. established, and from Ralph Bain, Red Cross rep- | received from the American Red |until he found himself a new pair | G€CT8e Denver Guggenheim. b i) 8 i resentative in the Middle East,|Cross 2 328, r s - R Th J L Imdry =i e FRANKLIN STREET between 'l||||"||l||||"||||||||||||"||||||||||"||||||||||||||||"|||"|||||||||||||||||||||||||l||||llI|||||||||||||||||||||m|||||"|||||||||||||"||||||||||||||||||||||| ||Iilllliii IIIIHIIlE Pront and Second Streeta PHONE 350 chase price. Time is getting short and if you intend sending Christmas Cards out of town, you must place your order now so that early delivery will be assured. We have a complete assortment of cards from which fo choose. Each design is individual and will not be duplicated. Your name, printed or engraved, will be included in the pur- il Empire Printing Co. numnmnnmmummum|uunmn|mummmmmmmmmmmmmuumnu|mlmmnummnflmmnnmmunuunummmmmnmnnm NOW OPEN! Nance 5-10-25¢ Store 224 Front 8t Under N&"m&ent TUNEAU X ht P RRBERY Mrs. E. L. Hopper, Mgr. 315 Thjrd 8. _Phone Red 119 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS + HUTCHING'S ECONOMY MARKET Be Wise—Economize WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL ] uUs! Junean Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 Come in fo our office and logk at our large catalogues. AR R AR R RO ————— HOME GROCERY * THREE PHONES 553—92—95 * PAGE SEVEN 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B.M. Behrends Bank QOldest Bank in Alaska SAVINGS e " Sanitary Meat Co. | FOR QUALITY MEATS | AND POULTRY 1 FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 * & — IR 5 R S RS T T ET | Chas. G. Warner Co. | | Marine Engines atid Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints —— THRIFT €0-0P ’ Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 787 i Harti Machitie Shop O. HARRI, Prop. P. 0. Box 1143 Phone 319 e . ¢ FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREABES GAS — OIL Poot of Main Street Junean Motors - Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS - OILS JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardw GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PEODUCTS W P. JOHNSON “he Frigidaire Man® WALL PAPER Ideal Paint Shop Photie 649 Fred W. Wendt (GASTINEAU | HOTEL Evcljy comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS PHONE 202 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates Phone—Single 0 Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing — Ofl Burners Heating

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