Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PONCEN. ORRUNG -= T WAS Bl WN EBULT -» OW - 'VE BEEN SO UNKAPPY - THERE , THERE, NN DERR - NOTHWG WL EVER COME BETWEEN WS AN - WANT AD INFORMATION In case of error or if an ad has been stopped before ex- piration, advertiser please noti- fy this office \Phone 374) at once and same will be given attention. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | | 3 & Count five average words to the fne. Daily rate per line for consecutive Mnsertions: One day ... Additional days .. 5¢ Minimum charge ...50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2 peleck in the afternoon to insure Insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone directory. Phone 374—Ask for Ad- FOR SALE FOR SALE—Small house, four miles out. Write “X” c/o Empire. 10c FOR SALE—Doors; 2lso one steel bed for $15. Call Black 1 FOR SALE—One chmna closet, din- ing room table, writing desk, chairs. Bargain for quick Phone Black 119. FOR SALE—Two show cases, bar- gain. J. B. Burford Co. HOUSEHOLD ¥ TURE—Leav- ing city account illness. 571 for information. ¥OR SALE — V'eli-puiit home, 4 rooms and bath, furnished, oil Heat, electric refrigeration, view, close in, 146-ft. highway frontage; Chev pick-up truck, 5—‘ ton B. B. Hoist. Phone 0392. FOR SALE—'36 Debuxe V-8 sedan: radio, heater. Phone 489. GINGER SEWING Machines, Sing- er Vacuum Cleaners, Maytag ‘Washing Machines, Maytag 110- volt light plants, Irenrite Ironers. Terms: §5 down, $5 monthily. J, H. Ariderson, Box 101, Juneau, Alaska Distributor. sale. Phone | fine | fif'OR RENT FOR RENT-—One furnished apar ment with bed and bed clothe one small furnished apartiment | with bed closet only, at the Hill- | crest. Phone G. E. Krause, 439, or eall at the Hillerest. FOR RENT—Sleeping rooms. Call | 210 Main St. Reasonable rates. FOR RENT— ! tage in Douglas. Phone Douglas 312, HEATED SLEEPING room, 437 Seward St. Phone Blue 185. FOR RENT—2-room furnished apt., 725 Basin Road. Phone Green 100. FOR RENT — 2-toom furnished cabin at Lawson Creek. Phone I FOR RENT—Nov. 1: 4-room fur- nished house, 12th St. Fireplace, electric refrigerator, hot water heat, concrete basement. Phone 348. 5 - ROOM UNURNISHED house | Phone 426 —Modern 6-room un- shed house. Phone 484 FOR furr i?'UHNTSHED 3-room apL.”s’fiS per | month. Phone Douglas 28. 6-ROOM FURNISHED house; also 6-room fur. apt.—oil stoves. 425 E. Tth St. Phone Blue 200, VACANCY -~ Couple only. Winter and Pond Apts. FOR RENT—Dartly furnished flat Inquire Snap Shoppe. ERWIN'S CAFE for lease or saie COZY, warm, furn. apts. Light, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. FURNISHED aprs. at the Fosbee. | MISCELLANEOUS Vosce Sl | MRS. SKEIE — Swedish Massage in | your home. Trained in Sweden, Dcnmark. Graduate nurse. Blue | 328, {EXPERT pubnt_stenography and | bookkeeping. Alice Mack, office, Bararof Hotel. FOR SALE — Furnished 5-room house, newly refinished. Phone 173 Douglas. FOR. SALE — 30-horse, 4-cylinder Buffalo marine engine, good con- dition, cheap. See Red Wright. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | nents, $4.60. Finger wave, 85c. | Lola’s Beauty Shop, telephone 201, 815 Decker Way. TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shcp. FOR SALE—New modern home at 545 Hemlock Way. Call C. C. Rula- ford, Black 135. | CONTRACT BRIDGE classes now | open. Helen F. Griffin, 427 4th St. TRANSFER business. Priced to sell _ at once. Inquire at No. 5 Clff Apartments. —_— ) MUST SELL equity in income éarn- ing apartments on Dixon. Three apartments, two Tfurhished, one with fireplace. Five minutes from business district. Best view prop- erty buy in town. See Bob Hen- ning at Empire office. A SECOND HAND National Cash Register for sale, in good condi- tion, price $75 cash. Call phone 528. [HELP THY | NEIGHBOR Telephone 713 or write The Alaska Territorial, Employment Service for this qualified worker. ROAD FOREMAN-CARETAKER —Single, age 48. Was track fore- man on Seattle Street Railway 19 years. Has Civil Service rating. Also experienced at lathe miller, truck driver, and welding; has done mine repair work. Last three months in charge of small crew on road work for the Territory. Would like to have job as care- L @gm | WANTED — Reliable young man wants heavy house work, clean- ing, window washing, yard work. Phone 472, local references. WANTED TO RENT — A 2-room apt., not over $20. Phone 5032. WANTED — Reliable young man wants heavy house work, clean- ing, window washing, yard work Empire J 65. | | | LOST AND FOUND ain and keys, initial about Oet. 15. Reward. Box f | taker for the winter around mill, | | mine, boats, or estate. Thoroughly | reliable, with best of references. | Call for ES 2173. All Saints’ Day Service Tomorrow The “Unknown Soldiers” of the| church are remembered by the church in her services for All Saints’ Day. | For more than twelve hundred years Spend OALY §1 and Make This Test Have Your Clothes Cleaned the TRIPLEX WAY We apply Hold Crease fa your clothes! See how much longer they stay pressed and hold thelr shape. LADIES' DRESSES—You can trust your finest to TRIPLEX C 642 | this festival has been kept by the western church in honor of theése who, though unknown to us, have been faithful soldiers and servants in God's Kingdom here on earth. The festival will be observed in Holy Trinity Cathedral tomorrow morn- ing by a celebration of the Holy Communion at 10 o'clock. | !.tools, and products of that kind. HERE'S A CATCH Therefore, if Russia plans to | switch all that machine business to | Germany, she must face the pros- pect of a costly re-tooling of many | large machine units in her produc- | tion plants. You can't have ma- chinery of one pattern turning out part of a product, and machinery of ; another pattern turning out the rest of it. Not only would the process' of re-tooling be extremely costly, but it would have a tehdency to slow down production all along the as- sembly lines. And that would prob- | ably slow down the pace of Stalin’s ambitious third Five-Year plan. Therefore, American economists are wondering whether Stalin is go-| ing to sacrifice part of his plan, or pull Hitler's leg and send no raw materials to Germany. e Russ-German Trade Treatly (Continue@ from J’age One) He decreed in the same speech an increase in production all along the line. He ordered in- dustry to increase the value of its output by 88 per cent, come 1942, Agriculture got instruc- tions to step up its output 53 per eent. LOOK BN SEE (FEN 1T SEZ BANTHING ‘80T REFRASHMENTS aN' ULl BE PLune PROWD T &0 - & WEOODWNG (ULTATION TROM WSS CARTHINGDALE - THE NERVE OF TUAT DRME ' }(‘rnm(‘nl $136,000, is described by en- | gineers as a type particularly des | able for use of survey erews work- |ing remote areas of the Alaskan | coast. The Helene has occommodations for a crew of 14 and 12 passengers. Plans call for remaming her the Cavanaugh, in honor of Colonel J. B. Cavanaugh, former District En- gineer in Seattle. Robert Simpsons In New York City Yacht Bought By War Dept. Coming North $136,000 Vessel for Sur- vey Work May Carry Pres'den' on T”p | ©Of interest to their friends in T | Juneau is the news that Dr. and WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Pur- ; Mrs. Robert Simpson of this city are | chasc of an ocean going yacht for | recent arrivals in New York City. | survey work in Alaskan waters is | They are at the Waldorf-Astoria for | announced by the War Department. a brief sojourn. PO SOPMISRREERET S FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES Foot of Main Street GAS —~ OILs Juneau Motors You'll Find Food Fner and Service More Complete at THE BARANOF COFFEE SHOP ) \ ) l} ) Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4753 || Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Seward Street Near Third SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry Sanitary Meat Co. *POR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 ittt GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIOUORS PHONE 92 or 95 LOCKSMITH Let Us Repair Your Locks OR MAKE NEW KEYS JORGENSON MOTORS Auto Repair Work—Gas Ferryway and Willoughby Ave. TN S Alaska Music Supply Arthur M, Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 122 W. Second ot Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Doeck & Sterage Co. TELEPHONE 412 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat——Phone 38 Bodding Transfer MARINE PHONE 'HO! BUILDING k(] Rock—Coal Hauling All of this was duly reported in the official Russian newspaper Trying to swing both the trade Army engineers said they had ac- agreement with Germany and & guired the 200 ton, 150 foot Helene, third Five-Year plan at the same from Charles Sorensen, official of Pravda, and translated and repro- duced in bulletins by the United States Department of Commerce. Again very soon after the Stalin orders were published, Pravda made the plight of the Soviet even plainer to the communist in the street, by comparing Russia’s production with capitalistic Amer The picto- gram, headed “Production,” is based on Pravda's comparison. time, would be a good deal like trying to have one's cake and eat it too. D PEACOCKS WILL MOVE, REMOTE Now, asks the American economist TRAL'E'NG AREA who knows Russian trade, how can| Mr. and Mrs. Bill Peacock, who Russia step up the production of | have been living at Moose Lake on raw materials to feed an industrial | the Taku River for the last three production by 88 per cent, and at|years, are leaving tonight or to- the same time export raw materials | morrow morning on the steamer to Germany? v | Alaska for Cordova, Or, if it's grain they're going to| The Peacocks will spend the export, here’s.another picture in sta- | winter trapping in the upper White tistics: Official Soviet figures lisrf‘df‘ River or Ladue River country be- by the United States Department of | tween Cordova and Chicken north Commerce indicate total grain crop|of the Nutzotin Mountains, This production at an annual rate just|country, close to the Alaska-Yukon now of some 3,300,000,000 bushels, or | horder, is considered one of the abouit 21 bushels per capita, (You| wijldest areas in the North and can compare that with the United | choyid furnish good trapping. States per capita production of 38| The young couple, who have bushels.) i % 3 g | made many friends in Juneau dur- Last year, Russia had only 80,000 | y,0 their gtay on the Taku, expect 000 bushels to export, not necessarily | ¢, 3 £ make their home in the White because it was a true surplus over | River country. They will fly in the needs of her people, but because | ¢ wope she needed the gold it brought in| i+ Sg::g:";,"';';:"gf;:e:u;;;’e’f the world market. and a radio, except for which they Even so, 50 million bushels of will be’ compibhak grain for two nations mobilized to IRDINARlY eus oLl from the world until spring. the hilt as are Germany and Russia, ik e is a mere drop in the fe ket. W 47 P gt S NELSON RETURNS Ken Nelson, WPA Engineer, re- turned on the Northland from Ket- | chikan where he was engaged in' project supervision and planning.| e e — | The Book ALASKA, Revised and | Enlarged. Now On Sale; $1.00. ! BOWL FOR HEALTH o BRUNSWICK Completely Refinished HOW CAN IT BE DONE? WHERE WE COME IN | Now what about the produets Ger- many could send to Russia. United States Department of Com- merce figures on Russian trade, taken from official Russian sources, show pretty clearly that the de- ficiency Germany could supply would be machinery, tools, and sim- ilar finished produets. And what nation supplied that de- ficiency in Russia last year? | The pictogram headed “Russian Imports,” based on official Russian trade figures, tells the story for the last six years. i The United States is the culprit. We've taken the place of Germany in Russia’s trade with western na-! tions. And econservative estimates' indicate that some 80 per cent of our exports last year were machines, - | the Ford Company. } Upon completion of slight repairs M t T E and installation of radio equipment, | eels iomorrow Vei the Helene will sail from New York | for Seattle, probably late this week. A meeting 6f the C. D. A. Study Engineers declined to comment Club will be held tomorrow evening | on reports the vessel might be used | at the Main Street home of Miss | by President Roosevelt should he| Mary VanderLeest. The session will | visit Alaska next summer. | start at 8 o'¢lock and all members | The ve , which cost the Gov- are invited to be present. Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. # HOLLYWOCD, Cal, Oct. 31.—Dancing Vera Zorina came out in meeting and biffed the notion that dancing boys are s: s sald the lads are better he-men than most wrestlers and pugilists because the dancers have to train constantly, the athletic pugs only periodically. She didn't, but could have, cited ex-chorus boys Jimmy Cagney and Pat O'Brien, one-time female impersonator Wallace Beery. Bullétin: There’s a beard on the Warner lot, and Paul Muni is NOT behind it. Edward G. Robinson wears it for “Dr. Ehrlich,” the film biography of the scientist who found a cure for that un- meéntionable disease: syphilis Spencer Tracy has as many historical roles behind him now as Muni, who did “Pasteur,” “Zola” and “Juarez,” but Muni is still two up on Tracy in the beard department, three up in the make-up department. Tracy’s Father Flanagan, Henry M. Stan- ley, and Major Robert Rogers (in “Northwest Passage”) all look like Tracy but act, because Tracy is that way about acting. There has been a lot of kidding about movie actors who plunge into historical or biographical roles too blithely, but it’s just kidding and nothing else. Richard Dix was a Sam Houston fan, and read everything he could find on the man, before he was even asked to play “Man of Conquest.” Norma Shearer was cramming on Marie Antoinette and her times for two yéars before the picture began. Muni studies and bons on his characters so A yriome! o ¢ o mfid\{;’ reception charming hestessess give thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delicious Van Duyn Candles. Little attentions make you & "must come" guest. Try it} | i NOW AT Percy’s exclusively AT TN CHOCOLATE SHOPS Oldest Bank in Alaska Commercial Savings - Safe Deposit Banking by Mail Department The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau. Alaska —— intensively that he practically ceases to be Muni in private life. Anna Neagle did quite a stint of personal research on Edith Cavell, and collected documents and letters, to give her portrait the inner life it has. And Tracy, who could never be charged with affectation, virtually memorized “Northwest Passage” and steeped himsélf in bilographical material on Rogers. Bette Davis works out her characterizations the same way—witness her recent triumph as Queen Elizabeth. All of which is one explanation for the comparative tame- ness of Hollywood night life now. In the days of wilder and better pafties, a star could report on the set fully confident that a paternal director would guide his every gesture. It may mean a return to slapstick shorts and it may not, but after the pie-and-chase sequences in “Hollywood Cavalcade” RKO announced it was taking on Harry Langdon for a two- reeler. Town was surprised when it laughed at those slapstick sequences in the movies about the movies, but why—since the whole country laughed a couple of seasons back when the big stars were being sillies like that in !eatum of the zany cycle. There is bound to be speculation as to the characters “intended” in the leads of “Hollywood Cavalcade,” but the guessing might as well stop now. Don Ameche as the director is all the directors of the era—a touch of Sennett (slapstick, bathing beauties, Key- stone Kops), and a touch of Griffith (the spectacle-maker), plus nuances suggesting a score cf others. And the remantic story could have happened, but never did precisely. iCthdIic myr Group oA HERMLE & THIBODEAU The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and CRATING CALL US Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 105 Free Delivery Juneau Reliable Transfer Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Oil and a tank for Crude Oil save burner trouble. PHONE 149—NIGHT 148 Phone 723————115-2nd St THE ROYAL BEAUTY SALON “If your hair is not becoming to you—You should be coming to us.” — Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS - OFLS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shell and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man" PHONE 3 FOR VERY PROMPT LIQUOR DELIVERY IF 1T'S PAINT WE HAVE IT! Ideal Paint Shop FRED W, WENDT PHONE 549 McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS California Grocery GROCERIES AT FAIR PRICES COMPLETE LIQUOR STOCK Buy in Quantities and Save! Telephone 478 FOR See H.R. TELEPHONE 409 '_ Prompt Delivery SURANCE ARD & SON B. M. BEHRENDS BANK BLDG. Window Cleaning PHONE 485