The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 14, 1942, Page 6

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PAGE SIX A fumniture gift, in good taste, is the one gift that is sure to be used con- tinually, year after year, Give furniture! Drop Leaf Table An all-purpose table, for oc- casional use, cards, books, or as a lamp table, in walnut with gumwood. Table Lamps Lamps have the highest pos- sible gift value! These are great values. Magazine Baskets Specially well made, to serve as a gift. Has compartments for books, magazines, etc. A big value! Cocktail Tables A long graceful piece in the popular Chinese Chippendale styling, with liguid resisting finish! Card Table Sets Card Tables RUGS and SCATTER RUGS Juneau-Young Hardware Co. PHONE 12 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA statements, but would “make out but one bill, a year, usually the first part of January. Mr. Lundgren came to Douglas in 1907, having entered the Unit- ed States at Boston, Mass, in 1892. He was born May 10, 1872, in Sweden | ana after peering in, saw the body |of the cobbler in his bed in the rear room. | Police officers who were notified forced their way in, to find Mr. | Lundgren dead of natural causes { ' Found Dead | probably a heart attack. According | § to physicians, death must have {come to the 70-year-old pioneer sister, Mrs. | | | Helma Ahlberg of and a brother. rl Lowell, Ma relatives. Twice married, Mr. was single at the time » | death, and leaves no known chil- He a member of the Pion of Alaska, Igloo and also 2 member of the Moose Lodge here. Remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortu- ary. Funeral arrangements will be announced later - morning. | Beverly, S, Al's little fox terrier, Chippy, |who was his constant companion, on guard beside was Well Known Shoe Repairer | rewctant to 1eave ana nas | . little food since, friends Passes Away in Shop i being « iy surviving Lundg of the body, his dren Juneau be-~ was generally No. 6, |is being cared for by Johr -Heart Atfack AL loved for his kind-heartedness and = conducted his business according- Adolph Lundgren, generally ly. Many a down-and-outer has known as “Al d often affec- had his shoes repaired free, and tionately as “Wide Awak was | those who knew him counted him | found dead in_his cobbler's shop as a real friend. In re- living quarters late Saturday after- pairing shoes for residents of St.| The first inhabitants of North noon, when a customer went tol|Ann's Hospital, for instance, he the shop and found the door locked, declined to send out monthly America came from Siberia, via Ber- ing Strait. ¢ g 4 KINNEY IS SUICIDE IN [Former Well Known Car- | penter of Juneau Takes Life, C. Cole Informed Harry Kinney committed suicide at Whittier on December 5, accord- |ing to a brief announcement re- ceived in a radiogram by Cash Cole |from U. 8. Deputy Marshal Jack | Wilson, now at Whittier. Kinney was one of the best known skilled carpenters of this section and to his hundreds of friends was | known familarly as “Nq Foolin’ Har- ry” as the phrase “No Foolin’ " was generally his exclamation at all times. ' | Kinney was employed at Tread- WEST ALASKA MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1942 EORGE BROTHER Buy your Christmas things now, while our ' TWO-ALARM FIRE IN BOAT HARBOR LATE SATURDAY A double-alarm fire broke out at 9:30 o'clock Saturday night in |the boat of Knute Langseth, moored {in the small boat harbor, com- pletely gutting the inside of the {Hood Bay man's vessel before mem- !\bors of Juneau Volunteer Fire De- {partment extinguished the blaze. The two trucks were used be- cause the firemen had to depend lon the water carried in each truck for fighting the blaze. When the water tank on the first began to | 3et low, the second alarm was {put in, calling the second truck |to the scene. 'LES TEAGLE RESIGNS POSITION; TO LEAVE SOON FOR SOUTH Les Teagle, who has been mana- selections are complete . . . For your Holi- day Menus we have: PITTED DATES CANDIED FRUIT Assorted MIXED NUTS SALTED NUTS Califernia DATES Aristocrat Chocolate Covered Nuts WALNUT MEATS Assorted ¢)| well before the cave-in and then|,ey of the catering department of ¢ 9 & 9 9 2 ¢ ) 9 3 9 ¢ b4 g ;/ a g /} g g g ] 2 tubes. b4 b4 4 2 4 5: 9 // 2 2 // 9 ?/ /} 9 o ,/ JONES—-STEVENS ? 4 SEWARD STREET O o o O N NN NN SYoNoN N oY oV % (20OCOOCOOOOC00S Schenley Blerids Now Both Enriched with Rare, Fine HAVE YOU TASTED SCHENLEY Szwcive AND SCHENLEY Sesewe? NRICHED by whiskies from Pennsylvania. It's @he Taste theworld’s largestreserve! it Takes 4 States to Make! Schenley Reserve —a prized Blended with Grain Neutral Spirits formula! Light. . . delicate ... distinctive! Schenley Royal Reserve —a blending achievement. Rich, luxuriou: America’s finest. § Both blend the best from Ken- tucky, Indiana, Maryland and Spirits. 5% straight whiskey, 5 yrs. old. 15% straight whisk . 15% straight whiskey, 7 yrs. old. SCHENLEY ROYAL RESERVE, The straight whiskies in this product are 6% o more yrs. old; 40% straight whiskey, 60% Grain Neutral Spirits, 23% shraight whiskey, 6% yrs. old, 17% stralght whiskay, 7 yrs, old. Both BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 proof, Schenley Distiflers Corp., N. Y. €. ? | section in the boom days there /| cabinet shop. Several yes 4 TIRES, TUBES ISSUED ~|is head of the history department | went south to the & Harbor | He | returned to Juneau and w S0- | ciated with James Larsen a with Olaf Eikland in the s ago he | went to Anchorage and followed ! | carpentry there and then went to | Whittier. Kinney was in his fifties, accord- | ing to his local friends. He is sur- vived by a daughter who is either| in the Hawailan Islands or the| { IND WEEK, DECEMBER The following were issued tires| and tubes during the second week | in December: Alaska Electric Light and Power Company, 2 tires, 2 tubes; Juneau Dairies Inc., 1 tube; Berg Construction Co., 6 tires, 5 Wwilllam Maier, 1 ‘tire, 1 tube; Royal Blue Cab Co., 4 tires, | —er———— HAROLD ROTHS ARE PARENTS, GIRL BABY and Mrs. Harold Roth baby girl, born at St. Ann's Mr. parents of a 11:45 am. Sunday Hospital. The baby, infant sister to Le- Roy John, nearly two years old, weighed seven pounds eight ounces at birth, and mother and babe are | doing nicely, the happy dad re- ports. Mr. and Mrs. Roth were mar- ried here several years ago, hav- ing met as students at Winona State Teachers’ College. Mr. Roth and lin the Juneau High School, lalso teaches physical education.He| & has been in the school nearly four years. | ! B | The curfew bell is supposed to! | rises 18,731 -feet—more than 2,500 | feet higher than the highest peak | in the Alps. Some day youll thank a GE Sunlamp for your fine strong legs BE SURE YOUR BABY 1S GETTING ENOUGH ULTRA-VIOLET From the time your baby is born, be sure she gets hef daily sunbath—Summer and Winter. The ultra-violet in sunshine will help to grow sturdy, straight bones. In these months, when Summer sun is lacking, it's wise to use a G-E Sunlamp. A Gener- al Electric Sunlamp is handy —a short exposure, every day, is all yor THIS HANDSOME MODEL ONLY $00.00 Actually G-E Sunlamps are priced at almost ha!f what they cost a few years ago. ‘The new, popular LM-4 lamp, illustrated, is only $00.00. Powerful S-1 type models at $00.00. Come in and see the latest models and wz will }e'xphin how simple and easy they are o YO Moee ‘them today. Give your baby the daily ultra-violet she needs. The GENERAL ELECTRIC Sunlamp affords altsa-violet in abundance and has a similar benehcial effect to the wlera-violet radiation in the Summer sun. GENERAL &3 ELECTRIC SUNLAMPS Alaska Electric Light | attle I"“MUSICAL GIFTS are | at | the Baranof Hotel since its open- ing in 1939, has submitted his res- ignation and plans to leave the| latter part of this week for the | south, he said today. 1 Mr. Teagle will join Mrs. Teagle and their daughter, Sharon, in Se- and expects to continue to Santa Barbara, Calif., to go into business for himself. Thoroughly experienced in details of catering, Mr. Teagle } been responsible for the success of many banquets, dinners, lunch- ecns, receptions and other func- tions that have taken place at the Baranof Hotel since his ar- rival in Juneau four years ago from Seattle. | a B uioia] +Soctal om of the Junesu USQ,| 94 Aliyume yio pegipumply. then who will replace Mr. Teagle at scheduled for opening Wednesday, | gjq Cowgill, 766, at the USO Build- the Baranof are still badly in need of an over- | ing. 2 DELIVERIES DAILY 10:30 A. M. 2:30 P. M. PHONE 92 PHONE 95 Remember Pearl Harbor . . . 31 and Victory Week—BUY A BOND. MANY ARTICLES ARE | NEEDED, USO ROOMS stuffed davenport and chair, a pool table, and a refrigerator or old- fashioned ice box, to complete the furnishings. These articles will be purchased, To Make This a Very Merry Christmas, “Say It With Music” PHONORGAPHS RECORDS GUITARS UKULELES VIOLINS Recordex Record Library RECORD ALBUMS SONG FOLIOS Instrumental Folios SONG FLUTES MUSICAL EMBLEMS Music Carrying Cases HARMONICAS SHEET MUSIC ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY CORNER SECOND AND SEWARD WE SUPPLY GIFT CHECKS FREE! __“IARTIME sweethearts never change. Now, as at Civil War Christmas- time, candy is the sweetest Christmas gift of alll Give iami g, rich, won chocolates, caramels, fruits . . . to brighten her holiday . . . and chase war worries away! . [} Colorful Gift Boxes! Buy More War Bonds! Bulk Christmas Candy! | | Assorted Nuts in Celiophane Packages & Power Co. Phone 6 | PERCY’S Phone 94

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