The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 23, 1941, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

b e i Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for consecutive nsertions: [T IS — Additional days ... 5o Minimum charge —..5% 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 | LOWER FLOOR apt., Demos house | in Douglas: 2 bedrooms, large livi room and Kkitchen, com- | pletely furnished, oil supplied for | heating—all for $45 per month. s See Felix Gray, U. S. Commis- ioner. CLASSIFIED ADVER TISING FOR SALE ? 3-ROOM modern home: basement, oil heat. Phone 525. | FOR SALE — 8-room furnished house with hot water heat, oil| burner. Also extra half lot with two garages. Reasonably priced as owner leaving town. See Doug- | las at Weather Bureau office. DR e e S A 5-ACRE farm, 2-room furnished house, 2 chicken houses, $550 cash, Write P.O. Box 2953. FOR SALE—80-bass pl;;u accor- dion, reasonable. After 5 p.m. william Spicer, Bindsiel Apts. VACANCY at Fosbee Apts. DOUBLE BED box springs, g00d | condition, 234 7th and Franklin. STEAM-heated rms, reasonable. Up- stairs of 20th ° Century Market. 3 HOUSEKEEPING rooms for| rent. Red 404, 4-ROOM m;{:.«mm‘ house, $30 a 1014 W. 11th St. Ph. 437. month 3-ROOM furnished heated apart-| ments. Miettinen Apts, 4th and Harris HOUSE on Douglas Island one mile north (f bridge. Furnished 6 rooms an¢ bath, running hot and cold water. $1,850 cash. Ernest Danit (s, RADIO-PHONOGRAPH with some records; living room table and lady's spinet desk, sold all to- gether or separately. Reasonably priced. Phone 686. VACANCY Snow White Apts.Suit-| able for couple only. JA≠\U RENTAL SERVICE. Call us for your housing needs. Choice listings. Phone 633. VANCANCY. Nugget Apts. $35 & up. 4-ROOM “furnished duplex. Close * in. $27.50. 426 1st St. E. Phone Black 415. FURN. stmhtd. room. Green 675. NEWLY painted and furnished apartment, very moderate rent. Inguire Owl Restaurant, Douglas. MARSHALL APTS, 4 rooms, fur- nished. Phone 751, or call at 114 W. 6th St. ¥OUR ROOMS, all furnished; hot water day and night; electric range; laundry conveniences; gar- age. Baroumes Apts. Phone Doug- las 132. MO o S oW R R VACANCY. HILLCREST APTS.| PHONE 439. FOR SALE—1936 Studebaker coupe. R. F. Meyers, Weather Bureau. SALE OR LEASE—Pioneer Grill at Fairbanks, Box 1554, Fairb'ks 16 to 9 in. Bargain. No. 1, Snow White Apts. 5-ROOM furnished house. for quick sale. See Mrs. Nelson, Douglas. Priced L. B. RADIO BARGAIN—6-tube, 2-band RCA Victor console with 14-inch rspeaker, $25. Juneau Radio Service. FOR SALE — Motorboat, Wilson seining boat .type. 45 horsepower Atlas engine fully equipped. 5% ft. length. 3 herring seines; 1 salmon seine; 3 skiffs; 1 ware- house; boiler tar tank; 2 pond nets, See Capt. Martin Holst, 833 Ninth St. HOUSE for sale, Seatter Tract. Phone Red 10. STEAM HEATED, furnished, sleep- ing or light housekeeping rooms. Ellingen Apts. 3-ROOM cottages; 2-room cabin. 843 West 9th. EPARMEJNT for rent, $16 month. Furnished. Phone 621, VACANCY—MacKinnon Apts. FOR RENT—4-room apt., electric range, steam heated, hot and cold water. Above Capitol Cafe. MODERN house, fireplace, channel view, hardwood floors, full base- ment, oil heat, unfurnished Phone 439. I S S ———— 3-ROOM nicely wr. stm. heated apts. and houses. Windsor Apts TWO large, clean, steam heated, front room apt. including water, garbage, $35. Phone 143. st taa il il g LTS TR S 4-ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house. Phone 484. PO AP TR L L . T ONE OFFICE room for rent, First * Nationa] Bank Bldg. e e FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. COZY, warm furn. apts. Lights, water, dishes, cooking utensils and bath. Reasonable at Seaview. VACANCY — Francls Apartments Inquire Snap Shoppe. o SR i ARSI R FOR RENT—2-rm. and 3-rm. apt. [} Hot and cold water. Steamheat. Elec. range. Phone 569. HELP WANTED RELIABLE woman for walitress in Tenakee. For information, phone Douglas 173. W.ANTED —Maid for general hous;:- ? Wwork. Apply Mrs. I. Goldstein. * MISCELLANEOUS BOAT BETSY ROSS available for| charter trips for hunting and fishing. Phone 411, SWEDISH MASSAGE: cabinet bath, Graduate nurse. Phone Green 662 after 12 noon. {l ROOM with o without board, pri- o vate home, Green 462. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up | Lola Beauty Shop. Phene 201 | 315 Decker Way. TURN your old gold into value, cask or trade at Nugget Shop. 8% CENTS EACH PAID for used " sound gunny sacks at Coal Bunk- ers. m_piro Classifieds Pay! s SINGER SEWING MACHINES, Maytag washing machines, Iron- | rite ironers. Terms: $5 down and $5 monthly. Liberal 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. WATEINS Products. Phone Black 634. Mall orders taken. Box 1651. GOOD restaurant equipment for sale. Can be seen at Case Lot Grocery. PO VA T WURLITZER pianos. Expert tun- ing. Alaska agent. Phone 143.— Geo. Anderson Music Shoppe. WANTED Al - B e VA WANTED—To Rent. apartments. Junean Rental Serv- ice. Phone 633. - — WOMAN wants hour work. Phone Red 665. WILL PAY cash for small used desk suitable for apt. Write to The Empire. T R et il Subscribe to the Daily Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation. Quaker City qu\ Bud THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1941 TROPICAL DUCK MIGRATION BEGINS 10 SHOW HURRICANE yp aounp juneAu H"S TEXAS‘.Shooting R;smdion With- in Half-mile of Roads for Big Game Only Scores Flee from 75-Mile-‘{ \ . Despite rumors around ‘Juneau, the “half-mile provision” in game an-Hour Wind and Ex- L R el gl oo g L ing, which opens Wednesday, Oe¢- PORT O'CONNOR, Texas, SeDi. (jper 1 it was announced today by 23. — Winds reaching hurricane p. pyfresne, executive officer force and high tides spreading de- ¢ tne Alaska Game Commission. struction about the town sent sev- o iovision, which restricts eral score of residents fleeting 0 g,n54ing within a half mile of safety to Port Lavaca today 8s & hjonways applies only to big game dangerous tropical ~ storm a&P- gnimals Dufresne explained. Only proached the Texas coast. highway provision affecting duck Northward 65 miles, at Freeport. ghooting prohibits the killing of where important national defense {,, foy) within 33 feet of the {industries are located, the Wind pignyay centerline, he declared blew 75 miles an hour and a seven- giong of the past few days foot tide backed water over the yaye started the ducks flying *from lowlands. Only a skeleton Crew re- i, north, Dufresne remarked,and mained on duty at the $25,000000 , pjce punch of ducks are now Dow chemical plant of the Free- feeding around Juneau. Some real port Sulphur Company. | duck” feeds are likely to result when | hunters’ shotguns begin spraying arrive here, will be on hand when N 's imust also purchase duck stambs | ing booked for Juneau: goes to Juneau southbound. . & hunter at one time, however the {lead at the birds after sunrise the .first day of October. Will Check Licenses I Game commission patrolmen, who have been patroling shooting ]uneau Bound grounds since the birds started to | | the season opens to check licenses R {and bag limits, Dufresne declared | SEATTLE, Sept. 28 —Motorship ge warned hunters that besides Northland sailed at 10 o'clock this thejr $1 resident hunting license ::1‘:;;:5 ’:-;Oor ps:su:e],‘,egfi;‘&é;:k?oflgafior $10 non-resident license, they | . |for $1 at the post office. .B,f;e“g" W e soe S| Bag Tmit is a daily total of 10 |E. B. Kunos, Mrs. Julia Willstandt, 9ucks of all species, and three | Miss Charlotte Groves. i geese. Only one daily bag limit of | The Northland calls at Sitka, then 'ducks may be in the possession of B —— (hunter may have two bag limits | of geese, or six of the big birds in Hea"h Re o" | his possession at one time, thus p allowing goose hunters to go out over a weekend and shoot their Shows Measles limit on each of the two days. g 4 Sunrise to 5 p.m. : Seasonal shooting will extend | lead Sltk lls"!mm sunrise to 5 p.m. each da — | Dufresne said. This r, he cau- A small epidemic of measles is ticned, there will be no open sea- reported from Tetlin by the Terri- son on Wilson snipe. | torial Department of Health in the Ducks now showing up around | weekly health report, eighteen cases here represent birds which nest- being reported from there. No other e jocally and some from along the | town reported measles in the Ter- | coast up as far as Yakutat, Du- ritory, although 14 cases of German reqne stated, Ducks which nested me:s‘es are reported from Nikolskl.';, tho mterior fly up the Yukon total of 15 cases of gonorrhea And Rnana. Fvers | are reported throughout Alaska, four | i ¥ |to the States east and go south of the moun- |from Anchorage and three from Nome. The others are scattered | cases. Tuberculosis cases reported totaled 14, ten of these coming from Kanakanak, found through clinics held in surrounding native villages. Other cases reported are as fol- dows: syphilis, 4; influenza 14, 8 tains, he pointed out. Although five percent of the total migratory 'flight of ducks, there are plenty of birds through this section every year to provide pretty good shoot- ing, he declared. i 150 EXECUTED IN CROATIA FOR BOMBING lfalian Ne\&;—Agency An- nounces Killing of 'Jews and Communists’ ROME, Sept. 23.—Fifty “Jews and Communists” were executed at Za- greb, captial of Boatia, on Septem- ber 19, it was announced today. | The persons executed were charg- ed with bomb explosions in the Za- greb telephone exchange five days previously, it was reported by Stef- fant, official Italian news agency. The Italian news agency said in a dispatch from Zagreb that the executions were announced by the Croatian Ministry of the Interior. US. Merchant Fleef May Be Armed-F.D.R. President Reveals Freight- | er Pink Star Had Can- non Aboard | — | WASHINGTON, Sept. 23—Presi | dent Roosevelt today said the ad-| ministration is studying the ques. tion of arming American merchan ships and told a press conference |that he thought we are heading toward that step and that every- thing will be done to protect Am- erican vessels. The President’s statement lin a discussion of the sinking last Friday of the freighter Pinksta The President erself carried a g s flying the amanian sunk. Panama i hips under her dent added, but sa lidn't knew hcw many. came The Pinkstar | W when some arming | y, the d that he | BIGPLANT AT RENTON | were id the Pinkstar | flag | DAN AMERICAN | PLANES CARRY | 44 PASSENGERS Airport Traffic Heavy as Several Planes Ar- rive, Depart Forty-four passengers are listed on the Pan American flights to and rom Juneau today in movements axpected to keep the Mendenhall Airport busy until early evening. | First PAA actlvity of the day came at 12:45 o'clook when a Lode-| tar departed for Seattle with John‘ @ullerton, Barbara Barrack, Will-| ‘am Laevry, Mrs. Robert Lavery,| Mabel Muenschs, Andrew Olson and Fred Miller as passengers, | Another Lodestar arrived from| Pairbanks at 2 o'clock, with Frank- | lin Kelly, Herman Medford, Don- | ald Medford and Frances Anderson deplaning here. | Joining the through passengers— Frank Ford, Harry Batchelor, Allan Brandes, Norman Lange and Rich-| ard Gordon—were B. Frank Heint-| xelman, Earling Iverson and Edgar| Brosius, all of whom were scheduled | e go to Seattle if the Lodestar con-| tinued its trip. Scheduled to arrive from Seattle| at 4:80 o'clock this afternoon is a Lodestar which made previous stops at Vancouver and Prince George, 13. C. Passengers for Juneau are announced as Mrs. Audrey Phillips, Carl Van Stant, Steve Chena, Eva Vaughn and Donald Dunn, with Mrs. Alma Chatnnet, Mrs. L. M. Brennan and C. R.| Walther going to Fairbanks. ‘Two Electras from Fairbanks| scheduled to bring Rupe| Clark, Jack McCaw, Albert Ander- son Matt Bischoff and John Ander- on on one plane ad Charles Burgue, ames Braddock, James Howard and Carroll Beamer on the other.| Brifish Woman } L] L] n povernman-owncd“ l S s I n g Ince Sal. in Orient Wife of Enfi\ Newsman| | Believed Abducted by Japanese PEIPING, Sept. 23—Mrs. Denzil | Clark, wife of a British embassy | press attache has been missing since | Saturday, it was disclosed today. Japanese-born, Mrs. Clark is a British subject through marriage. Unconfirmed reports that she has been abducted were viewed with | grave concern today, especially since Houses and | from Anchorage and 6 from Unal- aska; chickenpox, 6 from Circle; mumps, 7; and pneumonia 4. Nine towns reported “no cases” | for the week, 'Heinfzleman Flies South B. F. Heintzleman, regional for- ester of the Forest Service here, left Juneau on a southbound Lode- star this afternoon, bound for a two-week trip on official business to Seattle, Spokane, Portland and ' ARMY PRIVATE HELD AS SPY NEW YORK, Sept. 23. — Rene Froehlich, 30, a private in the United States Army Medical Corps at Fort Jay on Governor’s Island! was held on a federal espionnge'Sa“ Prantisco, z’e'i”n”:ea“’;:xbe‘:“::‘"; "‘:“; of, " As Territorial Administrator of tional Nazi spy ring 'ma"Agrtcuuure, Heintzleman will con- Froehlich lwas heid 48t i o fer with a number of Pacific Northwest chiefs . of bureaus of 'ag‘u:’ ball“ on the same chhreel o pepdrtment of Agriculture re- ;’ ckmres\?v ed in the arrest at!o. ging plans for the development POl e, Wash., several_weeks 880|,r Alaska farming and livestock of Kurt Ludwig, described in a. raising possibilities. grand jury indictment as the mas- Lok e ter spy in alleged rings which wexe| COURT RETURNS HERE organized under the guise of Am- erican activities. Returning here after naturaliza- AT TR T tion hearings at Wrangell and HERE FROM WRANGELL Petersburg, Judge George F. Alex- Ken Halvorsen, wife and two ander, Court Clerk Robert Coughlin, daughters arrived here on the Den- District Attorney Willlam Holtz-| ali from Wrangell. heimer, and Court Reporter Lawr-! —————————— ence Kerr disembarked from the| MRS. LAVERY SOUTH Denali this morning. Mrs, Robert Lavery, of Fairbanks, — et who has been in Juneau since last GO TO PETERSBURG | Friday left for Seattle by Lodestar Don Hoeson and wife left aboard| this afternoon. the Alaska for Petersburg. S B W WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. — The |She and her husband were criti- Defense Plant Corporation an- Cized in an article which recently nounces authorization for almost $16,000,000 to build and equip a fac- tory at Renton, near Seattle, Wash., { Company to make planes for the United States Navy. o ROEHM AT HYDER | i J. C. Roehm, associate mining! engineer for the Territorial De- partment of Mines, is in Hyder in- spetting mining possibilities of the| region, it was announced today.| Roehm reports much activity at| the Riverside mine, seyven miles from Hyder, where a crew of 25 men have reopened the mine and| are taking out tungsten ore. | ——————— HOLBROOK ON TRIP Wellman Hollbrook, assistant re-! gional forester in the Forest Ser- vice here, left on the Alaska this morning for Petersburg, where he will join Divisional Supervisor W. A. Chippenfield on a field trip. e MRS. CHIPPENFIELD HERE to be leased by the Boeing Aircraft | | the expectation that the union will |appeared in lecal paper. a Japanese 'MINE AND MILL WORKERS NAME 1942 CANDIDATES Final nominations for 1942 of- ficers of the Juneau Mine and Mill Workers Union, Local 208, were made last night at a regular meeting in Union Hall. Election dates, to be held between October 1 and 15, have not been definitely set. Officers will take office January 1. Other action at the meeting in- cluded a motion to purchase $76 in united States Defense Bonds, with follow the procedure every month. John Covich, financial secretary, purchased the bonds in the union’s name this morning. The following candidates were i known drug store proprietor of | terior. Visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hutchins is Mrs. W. A, Chip- penfield, of Petersburg. nominated: For President—John D. Kennedy, Rex Hermann and Robert A. Kan- RS o 5 T i vidan, MRS. RACE IN TOWN Vice-President—Kanvidan and R. Mrs. Harry Race, wife of the well- | B. Lesher. Second Vice-President—Jack Tur- kovich, Ernest W. Davis and Kan- vidan. Financial Secretary—John Covich, Juneau and Kefchikan, arrived on the Alaska after a visit in the in- Bernard Samuel Bernard Samuel, 61, president of tiie Philadelphia city council, is pictured above just after he was sworn in as acting mayor of the eity, succeeding the late Mayor Tamberton, # | WEAKER SEX SHOWS STRENGTH_when she has ‘ Philippine Islands smokes » clgar, as preved by this Filipino woman E. E. Standard and Val Poor. Recording Secretary—R. R. Lister, Elmer J. Lachance ands Ethan H. Nelson, Oonductor—John A. Martin. Warden—Mike Seston. Trustee—Nick Weber, R. B. Lesher and Loren Card. e GOES TO KETCHIKAN | Amby Frederick, Executive Dir- {In Alaska, is a passenger south, to Ketchikan aboard the Alaska. - MODERATOR LEAVES Dr. Herbert B. Smith, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church, arrived | frbm Sitka and left for the south aboard the Alaska. s e———— HARDCASTLE HERE i Arriving here on the Denali this morning from Ketchikan was Rich- | rard Hardcastle, insurance agent from the First City. e HERE FROM PETERSBURG l Elias Reyes, wife and two daugh- |ters, arrived in Juneau from Peters- ! burg aboard the Denall, { a mind to, & woman in the shopper ot the market place. lector of the Boy Scout movement | . 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B. M. Behrends Bank in Alaska SAVINGS Oldest Bank COMMERCIAL ) | r—. THRIFT CO-0P TIMELY CLOTHES Member National Retaler- NUNN-BUSH SHOES Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL STETSON HATS . PHONE 767 Quality Work Clothing $ (TR 2 SR | @ SANITARY PLUMBING and FRED HENNING HEATING COMPANY Complete Outfitter for Mem W. J. NIEMI, Owner : “Let your plumbing worry be | our worry." PHONE 788 | oo s —_—— ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANTNG FORD AGENCY PHONE 15 —— Alaska Laundry P guen . Poot of Main Strees Juneau Motors Alaska Music Supply||t~cooo____} Arthur M. Uggen, Manager L oo Pianos—Musical Instruments Soo(hlnq Organ Music and Phone 308 132" W. Becond D’”m“m;%‘*’fl ——|i DOUGLAS INN Utah Nut and COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 Lump * [ HOME GROCERY | Phone 146 Home U‘uor Store—Tel. 699 Americap’ Meat——Phone 28 “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 164 or 105 Free Delivery Juneau The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4788 PR L ARG B 6 ‘Every house needs westinghouse’ PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Electrical Contractor—Deales 140 So. Seward St. Juneau, Alaska Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black $80 John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 Sanitary Meat Co. T AND PO FREE m"l" Call Phones: 13 and & | GEORGEBROS. | Widest Selection ol LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 85 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Bailders’ and Shelt HARDWARE JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition e ey GENERAL MOTORS, DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON | “The Frigidaire Man~ FOR I'll.l. PAPER Phone 549 Ideal Paint Shop i Bt NORTHERN CORBETT SHIPP, Mar. Put a Covic Diesel in Your Boat If You Want MORE ROOM IN A Broad Range of Reduced Insurance £ YOUR BOAT More Miies for Your Money S L that B ‘mukhmu’ Freedom from Fire Hazards Smooth Low Operating and Maintenance Cests Bmokeless, Odorless Exhaust Diesel Dependability An Engine that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked CHARLES G. WARNER CO. COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPA OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 587 or 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title I. F. H. A. There is no substitate for N;v_zsbauer Advertisin Window Cleaning PHONE 485

Other pages from this issue: