Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
In case of error or it en ad bas been stopped before ex- piration, advertiser please noti- fy this oftrce (Phone 374) at 2 attention. ‘ | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE _— - (,oum five average words to the Ine, Dally rate per line for consecutive ‘asertions: [T TS — ] Additional days — e Minimum charge —..500 by 3| Copy must otflo' IPuzlm,k in the ntlarnom nisertion on same day. i rom persons listed in telephons) Wractory. FOR SALE FOR SALE — 4-ro0 -room furnished | || house. Phone Dotiglas 28. “, FOR SALE—Equity in new 2-room | . house, fully equipped; sewing ma- . ' chine, redio, double garage, Ply- mouth sedan, dragsaw, tools, 92 | acres, on loop road, $900. It's a | gift. Write tor XYZ, ¢/o The Em- &l pire. 'FOR SALE—Practically new G.E. washing machine, with pump. | Blue 763, horsepower Kermath Marine Mot- or. Write Box 463. - - — { FOR SALE—Scow house, new last 16x41 ft. Can be moved any- Located at Elfin Cove. Box 1855. year, where. Write } automatic. Reasonable, Phone Blue 4 fOR SALE—Cabin, 20x22, with fireplace, well built, can be lived in. At Lena Cove. Phone Green i 730 .. s 5 - i | 1939 CHEV COUPE, ran 4,000 | miles, very reasonable. Mrs. F. i w. Peter Bond Apts. ! FOR SALE—Equity in 4-room furnished house in Waynor Ad- dition. Bargain for cash. Phone *.* Red 770 before 6 p.m. FOR SALE—Small rooming house. Reasonable. Write Empire G 772. ! PRACTICALLY new 'Taylor-mc Phone Blue 465. | FOR SALE—Anton Peterson . es- tate, Fritz Cove Road. Patented. Approx. 23 acres. See Howard D. Stabler, Shattuck Bldg. Juneau, attorney for administratrix, | FOR SALE—Fully furnished home, with two lots. Phone Douglas 612. - i‘UNCH BOX Care, must sell im- mediately. Bargain for cash. FOR SALE—Modern 4-room house with two lots. Phone Douglas 74. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Motor- poat “Pal” See owner at Rock Dump. MISCELLANEOUS il TOMPLETE body, in your il nome, $2.00. Call Black 510 be- fore 11 a.m. and after 7 p.m. SWEDISH massage and cabinet baths Mrs. L. Skeje, 410 West 12th St. Phone Green 662. 5 g% CENTS EACH PAID for used ers. ,GUARANTEED Realistic Prema- nents, $4.50. Finger wave, 65c. ZLola’s Beauty Shop. Telephone | 201, 315 Decker Way. FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Baltim?):e. Md. AROLD H. BATES nofim“f'fv.m& gnldz. We accept ads over telephone|3-ROOM nicely fur. R SALE AT A BARGAIN — 90 | t Bl eI . 0T w i [ FOR SALE—Two .22 cal. guns, one| t sound gunny sacks at Coal Bunk- ND t Cooper Bldg. STEAM HEATED, nicely furnished apt, good location. Phone 452. FURNISHED apartment available April 7. Phone Blue 485. 3-ROOM fur. house, oil heat, Phone Blue 474. % 3-ROOM stm. heated apt., bath. Phone Blue 474. AGE FOI ‘RENT-AZS Gold sc $350 monthly. Phone Blue| 170. shm\er stm, heated apts. and houses. Windsor Apts. ROOM — steam heated, attractive, comfortable, exc. location, rea- sonable. Phone Blue 165. FOR \RENT—-Furnished apartment in Trh.ngle Building. See Stan Grummett, Phone 253. FOR RENT—3-room fur. apt. stm.| heat, fine view. Phone Red 245. Phone Red 404. ’\VACANCY Nugget Apartments. Re-| | duced rates. | VACANQY . Evergreen Apartments. Phone Blue 629. ONE FURNISHED APARTMENT ; AND ONE UNFURNISHED| i PHONE 439, | APARTMENT for rent. today. Call 478 board. Phone Green 462. CLEAN, nicely furnished 3-room and bath, at CIiff Apts, $20 and | neau. Phone 209. | VANCANCY — MacKinnon Apart- ments. Phone 671 or 304. VACANCY — Snow White Apts. 6 pm. Phone Black 490, 2 FURNISHED apts. Phone Red 600. FOR RENT—3-room apt. Owl cnu, Douglas. ONE OFFICE room for rent, nm National Bank Bldg. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. 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. $-ROOM FURNIBHED. apartment; also 5-room styictly modern un- furnished house. Phone 484. YT il e SR { EXPERIENCED laundfess . wants work, day or hour, Ph. 209, Apt 3. WANT to rent, or will store for/ owner a small piano. Will give excellent care. No children. Phone 336. | FOUND—Pocket book ~contai some money, prop- }‘ fl'uilflre %t ‘Nal BankA | Mario Matos, 23, a Framb Wflmm Mass., April fouridry worker, made, the doctors and Army men at the Lamartifie St. induction center sit up and Dr. A. A. Rafferty, dental exam- 5-ROOM furnished house, oil heat.| SLEEPING room with or without $25, The best rental value in Ju-| Phone 200 or Green 355 after| 3-ROOM fur apt., ofl heat. 12th 8t.| NEW KIND OF CCC CAMP HAS CAMPUS THEME ;Fody-lhreeflng Ameri- cans Are Testing: Out Professor’s Theories | A. P. Feature Service SHARON, Vt.—With steel and fire 43 young Americans are testing one |of the theories of a great New Eng- |1and philosopher. The steel: the axes and grubhoes with which these CCC enrollees are hacking out a soil conservation job. ! The fire: the blaze of their camp’s | fireplace, A The philosopher: William James. | James believed that if youths from {all social levels and of all degrees of education were brought together in hard labor they would work off the spiritual energy so often awaken- ed only by war and create “‘healthier sympathies and soberer ideas.” Last summer six Dartmouth and Harvard boys went to work on farms in the White River valley. They got no pay, just a bed and board. At the jsummer’s end they had worked out the idea for a new kind of CCC jcamp—one that would be an inter- locking part of the community and ibe the proof of James’ theory. | | | | | Advised by Dr. Eugen Rosenstock | Huessy, professor of social philoso- Iphy at Dartmouth, they presented |their idea to a rally at Turnbridge town hall. The farmers for whom they had worked backed them en- i thusiastically, | Petitioned President Columnist Dorothy Thompson, who has a summer home in the val- asking him | to authorize the camp. The President named a special comrhittee, which | reported in favor. Work on Camp | William James began Jan. 4. The enrollees include 12 college men, one of whom has had two vears’ post-graduate training in the- ‘ 3o Of the others, one finished only the seventh grade. In age the, boys run frem 18 to 23. Scme were | transferred from other CCC camps, some are farm boys from %the valley. Instead of a military command- er, the camp has a council made up of enrollees, Before the fireplace at night the boys settle their govern- mental problems and talk over the many questions that rise in inquisi- tive minds, ‘The work of the camp will be plan - | ned with the council of the nine| townships in the valley. One project being comsidered is a biz commun- ity pasture for sheep. ‘ Meanwhile the boys turn out to, fire alarms, sing in church rhsn’ci | and speak at club meetings. Some- | times the college boys go in to Han- over, N. H, to one of the Dart-| mouth eating clubs. They take some | of the non-college boys with thrmv‘ Congress Critical Criticism has arisen in Congress | that the camp was “over-privileged,” that boys wealthy enough to go to college weren't entitled to enroll in he CCC, E. Glenn Amos, acting superin- tendent, replied: | “Instead of being over-privilegec this camp is underprivileged. It has | no recreation hall, no library, no canicen, And if some of these boys have a lot of money, I've failed to discover it. They all work and talk | alike. They're a swell bunch and they're good workers.” Actually, Amos says, only two or three of the college youths come | from moderately ies, | — Ex Erhard G. Jaeger, 21, former mem- ber of a Nazi panzer division, shown at induction hendqunrters m Boston, Mass., as he joined the . S. army. Young Jaeger came to this country in 1937 to study o Harvard, where his father is a pro- | fessor, but decided to give up his | edilege carcer to serve his mew eountry. _ scolarships, Dr. Rosenstock-Huessy raised an-|2s No. 1 postman overseas in World | other point. “To deny the advantages of thesu;now in use. In the first place, all well-to-do famil- camps to the college youths is to!division, | The others worked their way deny them their birthright as Ameri- are numbered. They were numbered | APARTMENT. HILLCREST. |ley, helped them draw up a petition ' through school or went Lhrol\ ;h on can bcys ) % Brazil Hails New Coffee-Bean Plastics : As Rich Solution of Planters® Problems { | wondering what to do with 800, 000,000 lbs. of coffee Europe's|by | qunu of about | pounds, That the RIO de JANEIRO.—Brazil is|calamity in y order on July 1, 1940, What little hand Jans | poses. Of inechily I St o By #u“ new industry just opened! Brazil's normal over-produc- tion is about 720,000,000 pounds yenrly. of the annual crop of 300,000,000 pounds of coffee. Wn- in Europe has reduced world markets, until the U. S. is to- day Brazil's only big customer. Brazil’s coffee surplus would give any country a headache. In Italy, the sale of coffee to households ceased by official is. still on is used strictly !or medicinal and military pur- ficial denials have met rumors that the Vichy Gov- t has been trying to get m needed 70,000 tons yearly of burn-|fertile coffee port is sells on the New York Exchange for th: lowest prices in history. about 6 cents per und. iscovered o Di American, Herbert in his lite” offers untold possibilities to a Brazil that is wakening from primitive industries to a new world. President Getulio Vargas, when he heard of the dis- covery, promptly sent for Polin, and asked vention under official eyes in Brazil. Plans were immediately drawn up for new “Cafelite” plants. They are ready. It now re- mains to see how far this nut- Top, lett, the rough plastic. picking coffee, and below, ufl:.‘lk‘;m“hnmdwlflnwflnmg other crops. The Sie worldls ”“‘fl qulet, whlle coffee | syoung North Polin, pencer “Cafe- floating laboratory, great him to prove his in- iner, said it was the first such case he had seen in 22 years of practice.| Twelve properly placed teeth are all. that are required to get by the induction bmrd NARD BIRD SMTH HaS DESERTED,S\RY WHEN HE HERARD. WE WERE GO ONER ELBOW Koo' HE LT OWr FOR WOME =/ W CoNT SR aw coum Mem\a\. e ol right tg"unpmtpvev%ofi groves of me | fine coffee BALLS O' FIRE Y, QM!\N’(‘“ bi powder the whole of Brazil, and in pris- | the rown will revolutionize entire industrial wo Pressed under tremendous heat make delivery lmpolllhle anyhow. ! perate _for Hied to biuy surplus, it is said. A uto figures, the|noise cotfee include 0 all of France, Germany, Austria, etc., Frenth Africa, Holla.nd. Italy, Switzerland. Bulpru. Greece, Spain | mine are finding Meanwhile, Brazil's lmpente iters tioned for the trees, and plant the “TuoR s BE TALTTY THOWSAN' OF W NeRMNTS &w{e’:{(«\\w WP “m..wmé. coun- | that eat up Reuenooeas into flat strips, it may be sold to home bruudz.'n K/ the square. yard, as plywood. It is heat:re- sisting and thus excellent for wn.rm or temperate climates. It is l. may save the of racket ]’m{ I'llnll w !oumiat(om in and in | circulation RIHMGAIN IN PARIS PARIS (via Berlin), April 4. The problem of putting a llmlued number of Paris taxicabs back into/ has apparently bcen! olved, according to the newspaper |“L’'Auto.” Within a short time it |is anticipated that 2,000 of them |will be rolling again in a _cky | which has been without this form |of transport for the last six months.| | At first it was proposed that | alcohol he used as fuel to replace the gasoline no longer available. But it was found that the coun- | try’s production would not suffice for the estimated 200,000 quarts a month necessary. Tests were made with taxis fitted up to use acety- lgne and this gas was found satis- factory. PR ELT LSRR Soldiers Gef Their Mail;Trainees Have 1 Deliveries Daily| (Continued from Page One} | ’ the APO (Army Postoffice) has |taken a page from his experiences| |Wwar 1 and developed the system corps or unit postoffices }Xn the other war, too, in sequence ‘szartmg with one. But it wasn't very long before it was discovered |that every time a letter fell into| |enemy hands, that number in the | frank, or cancellation, supplied the |enemy with information as to how | many army units were ip the field | |and how they were distributed. The| numbers were changed twice, but that didn't help much. Now, the division and unit post- offices still are numbered in se- | quence, but in a different way. All | infantry division postoffices take| | their numbers from between 1 and| ;200 cavalry divisions from 201 to] 250, and so on. So, the number in {the frank, merely means that the | unit with that number is at that | point. These postoffices move with their units, If a unit moves from Benning in Georgia to Dix in New Jersey, or if it takes the field, its postoffice goes along. USE SERIAL NUMBERS To avoid confusion through dup- lication or similarity of names,each| man uses his Army serial number after his name, so no matter if there are 9,000 Smiths and...3,000 Johnsons in training (if the World War ratio holds, there will be that! many this summer), each will have that distinctive serial number, uals, three sets of card files, with cards for every man in the Army make tracing a greatly simplified ters finally reach their sources through a process of elimination. The letter is sent to every unit To handle transfers of individ-| matter, Improperly addressed let- |} THRIFT C0-0P Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 767 STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing L] FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Mem Opportunity Is Always Waiting! ALASKA SCHOOL OF AERONAUTICS I0RIC SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 FORD AGENCY Alaska Laundry (Authorts6d Dealers) s o e e um‘ GAS — Foot of Main Street Junean Motors &-—-—--...W.... s T o bR I R LR SR EVERY NIGHT Utah Nut and Lump DOUGLAS INN c o AL John Marin, Prop. Phone 36 Sttt —— a4 Alaska Dock & Storage Co. — TELEPHONE 4 ! Kraffe¢’s HOME GROCERY °""":.,g,?:-,,4w; Phone 146 Bome The Juneau Laundry Pront and Second Strests “SMILING SERVIOR" Bert' s Cash Cash Grocery nubaunry Bodding Transfer I BUILDING Rock—Coal -*. Stove—Fuel Off Delivery | r———— Buba e Hauled Thomas Hardware Ce. Menthly Rates ‘Every.house needs. westinghouse’ PARSONS ELEL'I'RIC CO. mso‘s-nrdu Juneau, Alaska JUREAU- Y'ount;_ Hardware Company W g IL-GLASS Heavy Hardware postoffice in the camp until the man is found and if he isn't, it's! checked against the transfer flles‘ before it is returned or sent toi the dead letter office. | By this system, Colonel Kenyon thinks he might eventually deliver a letter addressed like that one which bore only. the privaté’s name and the address, “No. 4 in the Front Rank, AEF.” AN' OVERSEAS PLAN The APA also has an overseas plan worked out—not that they think they’ll need it but they are' not going to be caught napping again. Already, in a minor way, it has come into use with the forces' at the Atlantic bases dcquired from' Great Britain, from whom the zov-' srngnent has just obtairied an agree- | ment to allow mafl to these bases, ‘rom Newfoundland to British Gui- rates. From all of this, you may see t is you and 'you and you who :an cause the APO its greatest trouble when you fail to address a letter or package properly. Colonel Kenyon says the correct form is Pvt. Johnny Doe (Army serial ! number). Company F the h:#nd Sml. It may be made in a whole range of bathroom colors, or combified with other sub- stance to Imitate woodwork, wallpaper, etc, By BILLY Denr.cx °§\‘ 167th Infantry APO 33 US.A. Qr instead of U.S.A. the camp .aame and, state. na, to go for the domestic postal | s npemaarr=n ||| fdoal Paos Shop VRED W. WENDT PIONI e COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH Newly Renovated Rooms st "“"‘“', onable Rates Phone—Single 0 e iy s B s e circulation of any Ale COMMERCIAL .SAVINGS % \:.L LAY