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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 29,1941 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING et S i Count five average words to the | line \ Daily rate per line for consecutive | insertions: Minimum charge .58 Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone dirocwrv FOR RENT “Reck Apts, Inquire Réck. and furnished Shoppe. FURNISHED house apt. Inquire Snap VACAN CY, Evergreen Apartmcnh | Blue 629. 2-ROOM apart. for rent. Red 404. | ‘PER !'.LL’I‘. Blue “APTS: 3 bedrooms, ofl| 200. range VACANCY October 1 at Kilburn Apt Douglas, All conveniences of modern apartments for ssui month. Phone Douglas 48. | -heated rm: of 20th reasonable. Up- | Century Market. | $30 af 4317, rxrmshed house, 1014 W. 11th St. Ph. ;R(\()\’! month TAGANGY Snow White Apts, Suit- | able for couple only. JUI\LAU RLNTAL SERVICE. Call‘ ; for your housing needs. Cholce llstlm.,s Phone 633. VACANCY, Nugget Apts. $35, up.| ©-ROOM furnished duplex. Close| in. $2750. 426 1st St. E. Phone| Black 415. | room. Green 675. NEWLY painted and furnished | apartment, very moderate rem‘ Inquire , Owl Restaurant, Douglas. FURN. stmhtd. MARSHALL APTS. 4 rooms, fur-| nished. Phone 751, or call at 114} Ww. 6th St. VACANCY. HILLCREST APTS PHONE 439. BTEAM HEATED, furnished, sleep- ing or light housekeeping rooms. Ellingen Apts. 3-ROOM cottages; 2-room cabin. 843 West 9th. Real Eslate For Sale ‘ WILL SELL xeasm\ablo one ac'° i} view lot, patented land, Fritz Cove road. Foundation 29x25 ft. First to finish frame of Large tent complete. way to road. Call 788. buildin 5-ACRE farm, 2-room house, 2 chicken houses, cash, Write P.O. Box 2053. $550 HOUSE on Douglas “Island one mile north «f bridge. ' Furnished 6 rooms an¢ bath, running hot and cold vater. $1,850 cash. Ernest Danicls. l'lxscellaneous For Sale MODEL A" Ford $50. thk 72') SMALL coal and wood circulator. Phone Black 634. BROWNING automatic 16 guage with leather case; 45-70 rifle, nickel steel barrel.—Sportsman Barber Shop. SALE OR LEASE—Pioneer Grill| at Fairbanks. Box 1554, Fairb’ks | FOR SALE——!QJG Studebaker coupe. R. F. Meyers, Weather Bureau. R SALE — Motorboat, “wilson seining ‘boat type. 45 horsepower‘ Atlas engine fully equipped. 5% ft. length. 3 herring seines; 1 salmen seine; 3 skiffs; 1 ware- house; boiler tar tank; 2 pond nets. See Capt. Martin Holst, 838 Ninth St. 16 PT. semi movable top, all brass screw con- struction and 5-horse Evinrude motor, $150. Phone Blue 330. |FOR SALE—Four J. B. Burford, SINGER SEWING MACHINES, Maytag washing machines, Iron- rite ironers. Terms: and § 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. FOR SALE80-Lass piano accor- dion, reasonable. After 5 p.m. William Spicer, Bindsiel -Apts. re- APARTMENT for rent, $16 month. Furnished. Phone 621, VACANCY—MacKinnon Apts. i i FOR RENT—4- -room Apt electric range, steam heated, hot and cold water. Above Capitol Cafe. P e SO | TR0 MODERN house, fireplacé, channel view, hardwood floors, full base- ment, oil heat, unfurnished Phone 439. N SR R B 3-ROOM nicely wur. stm, heated apts. and houses, Windsor Apts TWO large, clean, steam ~heated. front ‘room apt., including water, garbage, $35, Phone 143. e R B ¢-ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly wmodern un-| furnished house. Phone 484. —_— ONE OFFICE room for rent, First National Bank Bldg. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. COZY, warm furn. apts. Lights FOR RENT-2-rm and 3-rm. apt. Hot and cold water, stu«xphut Elec. range. Phone 569, TURNyouro orfndeltuwflmy. — e A et 8% CENTS EACH PAID for used sound guany sacks at Coal Bunk- ers. A LA & : 3 FOR LEASE—Modérn warehouse with refrigeration room—J. B. Burford. BOAT BETSY ROSS available for charter trips for hunting and fishing. Phone 411. SWEDISH MASSAGE: cabinet bath, Gradugte nurse. Plyoye Green 662 after 12 moon. RDOM with er without-board, pn 1 vate home. Grefl 462. GUARANTEED Red!hfic ‘Perma- . nent, $550, Paper Cprls, $1 up | Lola Beauty §hpp. _Phone " 201 | 315 Decker Way. * ! HELP WANTED RELIABLE woman' f6F waifress in ] Tenakee. For inférmation, phon? Douglas 173. ADDING PENCIL: adds mechani- T cally; new wanted in Add-O-Graph *Co, Dept. Saltillo, Miss.,, U. ? d on;. . agents| immediately. *5, | vest | RADIO BARGAIN—6-tube, 2-band RCA Victor console with 14-inch speaker, $25. Juneau Radio Service. | WATKINS Products. Phone Black 63¢. Mail orders ‘taken. Box' 1651. GOOD ‘réstaurant- equipment for sale. Can be seen at' Case Lot Grocery, WURLITZER planos. Expert tun- | ing. Alaska agent. Phone 143.— Geo. Anderson Musie Shwpe WAN‘I‘EB WANTED—To Rent. Houses and apartments, Junean mnm 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, (ONVOY OF i Ifalian High Comma nd i After Nine-hour Afta Sinks Several Vess R3E i T (Continued from Page Sar.urday, keeping up '.he att.wck du- pite- the fierce sky fighting, = % Down in Flames B Six‘Brmsh ‘planes were shot down, the Ttalian High Comman§ clllms all going dewn-in flames. t is'ad- Hfltfléfl ‘that elghz Itdlian plangs e been lost. 'rhe Italian High Command sald the Italian planes churned up the waters of the mid-Mediterranean from'1 o'clock in the afternoon to /10 o'clock Saturday night, striking | repeatedly at an_ irplame ‘carrier, ~ne . battleship,” ‘Several cruisers and 10 amroym guarding the Brifish ‘two heavy eruisere. ght cruiser, three. merchant- k55 2 SMANEY érdf¥ At a’destroyer.” e — prreerd one men Subacrlne for The I:mpne floor laid. Enough lumber | V bottom boat, re- $5 down| . {the right earplane explains. The 7 comm;nder “throws the ship .R:fl‘ Right-of- < 3 { furnished | The submarine attack on the U.S.S. Greer brings the North Atlantic patrol into the news spotlight more than ever. Mor- gan M. Beatty, AP Feature Service writer, is just back from a flying trip with the Navy over the patrol area. He is the only reporter to make this flight. Here is the first of a series of five reports on what he saw. | | By MORGAN M. BEATTY AP Feature Service Writer | | | ABOARD U. S. NAVY PATROL BOMBER OVER THE ATLANTIC |—“Line squall ahead!” The voice comes to my right ear in the headset. I turn to the | flight commander beside me in the |pilot’s perch forward. He's talk- ing to me the plane's phone system. His finger points ahead, right. There lies a long |cloud, stretching out all of miles like a huge water asleep on a log. The pilot speaks again. This time he's giving orders to the plane accompanying us, a mile or more off to the right. He uses the inter-plane phone system. This time his voice hits my left ear. “Advise me if you lose contact; I will assign altitudes.” “Roger,” comes back voice. The flight commander smiles, explains into my right ear. “That means he has received orders.” We are hurtling eastward over in to the black ten maoceasin another ithe North Atlantic. Earlier in t morning—much’ too much earlier for a late sleeper—we had \‘;ath-1 ered in the cabin of the opera-| tions officer aboard a huge float-| ing' air base. Its position is a se- cret, but .it’s “somewhere in the| North Atlantic.” ! There the whole squadron re- ceived final instructions for an assigned mission. Specific or- ders were secret. But broadly, we were told to cover part of the lanes fraveled by Ameri- can merchant ships and war | vessels plying between the | United States and new Army | and Navy bases in Iceland. | We had taken off at 3:45 a.m.‘ in dark, for ap hour or more to meet the dawn. The sun peeped over mag- | hificent red Chinese pagodas out-: lined in the clouds. When I saw | them 1 wondered why, all aviators aren’t poefs, but my commander had other ideas on his mind. He| 'said we Ccould have picked a bet-| ter day. 1 With that line squall ‘in front of | us, I know what he means. But our two 1,000 horsepower ~engines | churn us stepdily toward | the; st.arxp at 150 miles an hour. The| commander explains the vqunu is not 00 black " for safe navigation, | we wi sprt the end of it and| r‘mq‘i'n lour course. In a few! momen{a big chunks of fog hit us.| f “lo0k fJor our compamon plane, the voice comes | % 1 ‘at twelve, Can't see you. Let me Jknow i you climb. Calm and ‘easy it is, like the voice of a| fellow who'd casually ; dropped a, collar- button. He mlahl have add- | ed, “Darn it!” The flight commandér takes his! transmitter, glances af; the sea of instruments in front of him. “Hold twelve,” 'he " says. hold six-seven-zero.” “wflco“ T “That means he will comply,” | “IN | | {“Iron Mike,” the automatic - pilot, \ itakes over himself. They're holding l | signment. i plane | zero, Nelther can’ the flight |, YING THE ICELAND PATROL, U. 5. NAVY oN GUARD WORLD' SWORSI WEATHER; Pre-Seasonal AKE ROUII | |the Glacier Highway Hunters Take Carloads” 6f hnmers drove' ot terday and lccked longingly at flights of ducks feeding on the Salmon Creek and "Lemon Creek flats | | | TCELAND PATROL:—Navy flying boats like these watch the North Atlantic. different altitudes to avoid colli- sion. closes in tighter. morning lined The fog From a sunny with racing fleeey-white clouds, we ‘plunge inte twilight. The plane jerks back and forth. Rdin and wind hit the hull, sound like corn in a popper. Suddenly we're out in the clear. Our companion emerges to the right and above. Soemecbody punches me in the shoulder blade. The bearded face of our mechanic grins. “Soup’s on.” Slowly I clamber down from the seat pedestal. It's bitter cold of the arctics, the flying the fleece-lined jacket My legs creak. pilo in spite suit and they'd laned me. 1 remember the boys back Washington. They're probably en- joying a well cooked Ilunch in luxurious comfort, and here I am working like a horse. And they thought I was lucky to get th 1f they only knew! mechanic sits me down to What a lunch! Juicy tender steak, salted and peppered to a gqueen's taste. A beautiful fruit salad. Peas. Toast, butter, grape jjelly. Steaming hot tea. All laid out on the navigator’ table—right over a huge chart of the Atlantic Ocean. in as- The lunch. “Where are we?” I ask be- tween mouthfuls. - “Pick up your lunch,” says the navigator. I do, and he points his dividers to a blank spot about midway between New York and London. “About ‘there,” he says. I fall to again. By the time I| get that steak under belt, life's worth living. The mechanic points to thermometer, “Five above centigrade,” he says, hug- ging himself. Now I bhegin to feel -sorry rnr the boys back in Washington, sweltering in summer heat while 1 ride mgh cool and contented my e the | choppy seas and flown| New Musician Arrives Here; Sonl E)r Whites 1d Mrs. Robert White ¢ rents of a baby scn born 9:25 lock Sunday marning St. Ann's Hospital. The child weighed in at seven pounds and fifteen ounces Mr. White is in- strumental instructor at the Jun2au High School and Mrs. White is a piano instructor. M the « New Scoufmaster | For Norlite Troop Boys of the Norlite Boy Scouts Troop will meet their new Scout- | master at 6:30 p.n. tomorrow, when they gather at the Northern Light Presiyterian «Church for- a- troop feed it was announced today by Acting Scoutmaster Bob Dupree. | ‘The new man to head the Norlite | Scouts is George Fitz, who recently came to Juneau from Ketchikan, as electrician for the Alaska Electric | Light and Power Company. Fitzisa | | 's | former member of the Marine Air | Force at Sand Point Field in Seattle. | In Ketchikan he was active in Jun- | ior Chamber of Commerce activities. | Fitz said today he has plans for | | increased activity of the Norlite | | troop, with many trips planned and active classes in scouting. He | invited any non-Scouts interested | | in joining the troop to come to the\ | next regular meeting on Wednesday | night at the Northern Light Church. | He said he hopes to swell the troop to between 20 and 25 boys. Boys present at last week’s meet- | ing were FEugene Anderson, Bob Vernon, Charles Lineham, Bud Shaw, Bill Baman, Bill Carlson, ‘Axthur Lowell, Jack Everett, Dave | Sperling and Jackie Burford. | over the North Atlantic. | lily is now living in the States. Tomorrow: Tracksin a track- less Ocean, THE SERGEANT GIVES SIGNATURES FUNERAL SERVICES | Hancock, 177, But all the Nimrods could do was to =pot ‘snags and clumps of brush which they hope to use as blinds Wednesday morning, when the duck hiinting season opens Ehooting during the 60-day sea- | con will' extend from § p. m. each day. fist of sunrise times hunting season: "Date Wed., Oct. Thurs., Oc Fri,, . Oct. Bat., Oct. Sun., Oct. Mon., Oct. Tues., Oct. Wed, Oct. Thurs,, - Oct Fri, Oct. 10 Sat., Oct. 11 Sun,, Oct. 12 Mon., Oct. 13 Tues.,, Oct. 14 sunrise to during the Suntise 00 am 03 am 05 am am. am. am. am. am. 1 3 4 5 6 . pee) S 8 9 Oct, Oct, Oct. iy ol aieia ey Sat., Sun., Mon,, Oct. 20 Tues., Oct, 21 Wed., Oct. 22 Thurs., Oct. 23 Fri, Oct. 24 Sat., Oct. 25 Sun,, Oct, 26 Mon., Oct. 27 Tues., Oct. 28 Sh8aa a9 Sun.,, Mon,, Tues., We Thurs., Fri, Nov. 17 Sat., Nov. 8 Sun,, Nov. 9 Mon., Nov. 10 Tues., Nov. 11 Wed., Nov. 12 Thurs., Nov. 13 . Fri, Nov. 14 Sat., Nov. 15 . Sun., Nov. 16 . Mon., Nov. 17 Tues., Nov. 18 Wed, Nov. 19 Thurs., Nov. 20 . Fri, Nov. 21 Sat,, Nov., 22 Sun.,, Nov. 23 Mon., Nov. 24 Tues., Nov. 25 oot Wed., Nov. 26 .. Thurs,, Nov, 27 Fri, Nov. 28 Sat,, Nov. 29 . Nov. 2 Nov, 3 Nov. 4 Nov. 5 Nov. 6 . FOR W: €. HANCOCK SET ON WEDNESDAY Funeral services for William C. have been set for| Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock |according to an announcement |made today. Services will take place in the Charles W. Carter | Mortuary. Hancock, an old time resident of the Juneau area, died three days ago in St. Ann's Hospital. His fam- Interment 'will follow the serv- ices in Evergreen Cemetery. | Following Is a, i L-_—-—_—- 4 Eergeant Alvin C. York lrlzhl) obliges with'Butcgrapis for four anam L Maederer, Marion Dunst and Dorothy Malloy (L-R) befcre his speech on the eye of the American Legion Conyention at Milwaukee, Wis. The famed World War hero criticized Sen. Gerald P. Nye (R.-N. ' D.) for his testimony in the motion picture investigation In Washington. % A 1891—Half a Century of Bankmg—l!Ml TheB.M Behrends Qldesl Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS ' THRIFT co-0P m&w‘ws Member National Retafler- Owned Grocers STETSON HATS ot o QY A ey EE&W!!.'& — s ZORIC SANITARY PLUMBING and SYSTEM CLEANING PHOKE 15 HEATING COMPANY W. J. NIEMI, Owner Alaska Laundry 'latycmrp)ummum.. | our worry.” PHONE 788 Peaslei it —_— FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealbms) GREASES GAS — OIL Poot of Main Street Juneau Motors Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Marager Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE ¢ HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Ammafi“‘ Store—Tel. 699 Meat——Phone 38 “SMILING SERVICE"” Beri's Cash Grocery PHONE 164 or 105 Free Delivery Junesu —— The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Pront and Second Streets PHONE 350 JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—O] IL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition MY 12 S WALL PAPER Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Pred W. Wendt Sill Dance, Play NSRSy CORBETT SHIPP, Mgr, ST SR M. w PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Contractor—Dealer llolo.!nmdsa Juneau, Alaska Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black $80 m 1941 Models Now on Display hl a Gwlc iesel in Your Boat Il You lw uoo-mmmnon hr!l.l‘-q ‘.fill"‘n‘n::‘mlm Insurance kates e Odorless Exhausy that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked . . n.m COLUMBIA L l.mn COMPANY ¥ A Lumber and mw.. Materials PHONES 887 or TA7—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THROUGH US To Improve and Modernize Your Home Under Title LOF. H A M 'l‘lmc is no substitute tor Nowspapor Advertising