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FOR RENT ,, | In case of error or if an ad | has been stopped before ex- ! piration, advertiser please noti- | fy ihis oftree (Phone 374) at \ once and same will be given ¥ attention. FOR RENT — Double room with twin beds, also single room.Pre- fer women. Reasonable, Phone Green 629. | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | | 7 HoadwD room, Green 675, | Count five average words to the| 2-ROOM apartment, hot and cotd | ine. water, steam heat, electric range. | Dally rate per line for consecutive| Phone 569. v | Insertions: FOR RENT—Completely furnished, 3-room apt. Call Cooper BIldg. Phone 182, One day .. 100 Additional days .. Be Minimum ' charge —..580 Copy must bhe in the office by 2 relock in the afternoon to insure asertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone FOUR-ROOM fur. apt. On street level. Qil heat. Elec. range. Private | bath. Two beds. $40 mo. Crescent apts. 373 So. Franklin Street. | FOR RENT OR LEASE—Small house near airport. Elec. lights and stove. Oil heat. Ralph A. Johnson, P. O. Box 2586. | Single | FOR SALE SACRIFICING for immediate ' dis- posal: one Sunbeam Mixmaster, $23 value for $15; Toastmaster Hospitality Set, $19 value for $12; ROOMS in private home. and doubles. Blue 302. Westinghouse Percolator DeLuxe, 8-ROOM fur. house. Phone Redi $7.95 value for $5; Oregon Myrtle-| 600. | wood Salad Set, $9 value Yor $5; | genuine 8x10 Persian Rug Repro- FOR RENT--3-room apt. Owl Cafe,| duction, $50 value for $15; An| Douglas. practically new. Phone 501. FOR RENT — Large steam heated| FOR SAl;E’)’—’F&;-room house on'! bedroom, fireplace, fine view. Phone Red 245, FOR RENT—UNFURNISHED APT, WITH BEDROOM. THE HILL- ! CREST. i 3 2 <ol FOR RENT—3-room apt.: hot and| cold water, steam heat, electric range. Phone 569, | beach on Fritz Cove Toad. rms. Rooms can be built Running water. See Ole| at the place. | the F: up: JaCisor NEW HOUSE on Caro tract, Auk E Plumbing. $200 down. Low ments. J. Hodges, contractor. ne 800. R L W 1S SMALL cottage for rent in Juneau. T model Westinghouse De- Suitable for 2 people without _ Blectric range. Used feW| pjgren. phone Thane 3, three months. Sell half original cost. rings, after 5p.m. Phone Red 168. | e N A —— | 5-ROOM unfurnished house, nice! FOR SALE—Bedroom furniture,| =, .. ..0n phone 385. rugs, chairs, tables, davenport, 5 esid dishes, etc. Reasonably priced.| ONE OFFICE room for rent. First Phone Red 725. | National Bank Bldg. | FOR SALE—One 1041 Philco table| Drack 619. i 1 radio; one Stromberg Carl- | table radio; one ski outfit. All priced for quick sale on ac- count of leaving town Apply at Apt. 520, Baranof, afternoon or| evening. 2-RM. fur. apt.; bath, warm, clean, view, $15 month. Blue 510. |8 ROOMS and bath, air condi- tioned, heated, electric washer, laundry, new oak floors, electric range, frigidaire, nicely furnished. Call Windsor Apts. L APARTMENT WITH BEDROOM; ALSO 1 APARTMENT WITH BEDROOM AND BED CLOSET. HILLCREST, PHONE 439. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. BOUDOIR trunk. Reascnable. Phone 436. FOR SALE—20-25 hp. Bridgeport; Marine Engine. Cheap. Can be seen at boat Helena. Inquire Emil Vienola, across the Douglas bridge. CORNER LOT, Third and ‘Dixon. Phone Red 550. e i LEASE—Rainier FOR RENT or PART LY FINIS e, cari Rooms, furnished or unfurnished. and 7 acres land. Loop Road.! See I. Goldstein, ] Bargain. Box 1592, Juneau. 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. | VACANCY at Fosbee Apts. VACANCY Perelle Apartment.| Phone Blue 575. | 4-ROOM FURNISHED apmmnc;| also 5-room strictly modern un-' furnished ' house. Phone 484. | ey T v Sy S, VACANCY Nugget Apartments. LOST AND FOUND LOST—Blue Hart Schaffner & Marx overcoat, also hat, in Capi- tol Theatre. Reward. Notify Gas-| tineau Hotel. i FOR SALE — 36 Chev Sedan.| Phone Green 730, LUNCH BOX Cofe; must sell im- meciately. Bargain for cash. MISCELLANEOUS ':?)MPLETE body massage in your home, $2.00. Call Black 510 be- fore 11 a.m. and after 7 p.m. SWEDISH assage and cabinet baths. Mrs. L. Skele, 410 West 12th St. Phone Green 662, $% CENTS EACH PAID for used sound gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers, FUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. Lola’s Beauty Shop. Telephone 201, 315 Decker Way. fURN your o gold Into value cash or trade at Nugget Shop. " WANTED WANTED—to care for children at Juneau Nursery. By the day, week or month. Reasonable rates. Phone Red 119, " Subscribe to thc Dally Alaskn Empire—the paper with the larges paid circulation. ol RIVER CARRIES SALT INTO GULF EL PASO, Feb. 5—The Rio Gran-! de through its several tributaries| deposits five tons of salt into'the Gulf of Mexico every minute, ac—f, cerding to a survey by engineers of | the international boundary com- mission. In a single day the river deposits | the equivalent of 1420 five-ton! truck loads of salt into the gulf, the survey found. | Largest single contributor of salt to.the Rio Grande is the Pecos River of west Texas. —— e —— ' The Dally Alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper. “The Lauy Alaska Empire guaran. tees the largest daily circulation o: any Alaska newspaper. " THRIFT COOP | Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 767 Tiy a classified ad: in The Empire Here is the new priorities board, established by executive order creating the Office of Production Management, shown as they met in Washington. These are the men who are running the national defense program. Left to right are Capt. A. B. Anderson of the U. S. navy; Leon Henderson, mem- ber of the national defense advisory commission; 'm?dj; but Keeps Her Name » ~ Son of the late dictator of Venezuela, Colonel Gonzalo Gomez is pictured in New York with his bride, the former Monseta Gomez, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Gomez of Puerto Rico (no relation), Gomez was formerly married to Joyce Matthews of Hollywood. Four-Year-Old Shoots Girl Four-year-olds Kenny Douthit (left) and Anne Kynette were playing in her Los Angeles home when he found a revolver which the girl's mother kept under her gillow for protection. The girl, daughter of Earle Kynette, former head of the Los Angeles police spy squad, escaped death by inches as the gun went off. Doctors are shown dressing the wound in her shoulder. g Tl THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE; WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5. 1941 o o HCI'C Is Board Which Runs National Defense HIGH COURT William 8. Knudsen, director general of the Office for Production Management; Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., chairman of the priorities board; Donald M. Nelson, director of the division of purchases of the OPM; Gen. R. C. Moore of the army, and John D. Biggers, director of purchases of the Office of Production Management. LEND - LEASE MEASURETO. BEMODIFIED iNe_w limit;fi(_)fi qulersi | Discussed by Leaders | E in Congress ‘ | (Conunuea irom rage One) Meney Ceiling Speaker Rayburn alse said propos- {als were also being discussed to put | | a money ceiling on the amount to be | spent to aid Great Britain. | “Even if we put a Five Billion| | Dellar limitation in the bill, some people will say we are giving the | President a blank check as Congress | !ha.s given an order to approprlnte: that amount,” said Speaker Ray-| " burn. C. of C. Views James Kemper, President of the! | United States Chamber of Com- merce, presented the views of the {organization's Directors to the Sen- ) ate Foreign Relations committee. | The: contention is the Admmlsmi-" tion'’s legislationas now drawn give the President the power to involve| | the United States in war. | 1 NOTICE | AIRMAIL ENVELOPEKS, uhowlng' | sir route from Seattle to Nome, on |sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adw Guy J. Swope E. Tydin, m W succeeds Admiral |few men are rated his superior in | be is the youngest man elevated to | the Supreme bench since 32-year- | each. They were Justice Story, Chief |ally recognized, was the oldest man | to 'sit on the Supreme Court. Appx ove Swope for Island Job #hd Senator Tydings | Nomination of Guy J. Swope, former representative of ?cnuilvu.nll. | as mrethor of Puerto Rico has ‘been approved by the | mittee ‘on territories and insular affairs, headed by Sendtor Millard of Maryland, right. - Swope, shown =¢ left at the hearing to the Vichy government of France. GETTING 10 BE YOUNGER (Continued from wzge One) | | President Rocsevelt sought con- gressicnal authority for compul- sory retirement of a Justice. Hughes will be 79 on April 11, yet whiplash clarity and precision of mind. President Roosevelt never has indicated that the Chief Justice step cut. Justice Stone will be 70 and be- come eligible for retirement at full pay of $20,000 a year on October 11, 1942, Justice Douglas, 43, is the “baby” cf the court A Justice at 40, old Joseph Story, of Massachusetts, came to the court in 1811. On the basis of his youth, Doug- las has the best chance of breaking the long-time term record. Four men share the honor at 34 years Justice Marshall, Justices Stephen J. Field of California and John M. Harlan of Kentucky. Requested To Quit Justice Field, reported to be “in a condition of approaching senility” at the age of 81, was privately re- quested by fellow members of the ceurt to resign in 1897. Justice Har- lan was delegated to convey to Field the message that Field himself had carried to Justice Grier, 76 years old. Harland tried to temper the blow by recailing Field’s un- plearant crrand on the previous cccasion. Field's answer was reperted te have been the gruff exclamatiory: “Yes, and it was the dirtiest deed of my whele life.” Field resigned but under protest. The great Oliver Wendell Holmes, whese intellectual vlgor and clarity in his late eightlés were internation- He was going on 91 and had been on the high bench 29 years when he resigned in 1932. Unarmed Experis Ride fo Battle With _N_azi Ammy (Continued from Fage One) earnest. The job was this: Get those factory chimueys smoking; get those mills rolling; keep the coal coming out of the mines and the war booty streaming back to. the smelters. The main job for French fac- tories, textile mills and coal mines is to take the burden of civilian orders off the straining German in- dustrial machine. B LSS vlassified ad in The Empir« Try a senate com- William Leahy, new U, 8. envoy, " BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH T HEERED \E TH FUST TWNE L\SSEN ,{ARD T TOLD MO \NMBT \WWEN THE COMMAND, S EYES, LEFT/ \S GWEN~ TURN MOUR By BILLY DeBECK S\ -m-ggs PERSNICKITY wou SRARGINTS GoN “BNES \EF" - ME 10 CRANE ER BOOY - QUITTIN {_"—_-‘———‘ 1 | Opportunity Is TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN:BUSH SHOES Always qaiting! STETSON HATS ALASKA SCHOOL OF Quality Work Clothing AERONAUTICS FRED HENNING Complete Outfifier for Men FORD AGENCY GREASES ZORIC Poo ul M sureet "m Junean Motors Alaska Laundry o o EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN Alaska Music Supply L p. Phone 36 Arthur M. Uggen, Manages | Instruments Pianos—Musical Utah Nut and Lamp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Os. ‘TELEPHONE 413 HOME GROCERY | The Jupeau Laundry PHONE 390 Bert's Cash Gracery PHONE 106 ,° Free Delivery Jubean ol Horbage Rasled W. P. JOHNSON DEVLIN’ Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing — Oil Bumners g — Ol Bamee COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY Phone 34 Sheet Metal ) 4 . .. DEALERS B. M. BEHRENDS BANK COMMERCIAL ...SAVINGS ...