The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 18, 1941, Page 7

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10¢ Additional days 5¢ Minimum charge .. 50¢ y be in the office by 2 e afternoon to insure h on same’ day. ccept ads over telephone | listed in telephone must from persons directory FOR RENT i‘;fiR. apts., easy kept warm Wm-;‘ ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. | 2 LA}{A( c‘lcn?\ front room apart-| ment: garbage, water, $35 month- ly. Phone 143. 2-ROOM apt.: ‘electric stove, Oil | heat, $22.50. Bon Marche. | 2-ROOM furnished duplex, oil] heater, electric range, close in,} $25 monthly. Phone Black 415. FURNISHED apt, 3 rooms and bath, Duo-Therm oil range. Rent.; including water, $15 a month.| Phone Douglas 48. LARGE steamheated fur. room,| good view. Phone Red 245. CLEAN Ssteamheated rooms, mod- erately priced. Upstairs of m)th1 Century Market. i 2-ROOM mheated furnished i apt. Phone Blue 474. | 3-ROOM nicely fur. stm. heated apts. and houses. Windsor Apts. 4ROOM fur. house and bath, oil heat, yard. 128 6th St., 2t07pm. Real Estate For Sale SMALL house. Phone Douglas 763.| FOR SALE OR RENT — 5-room/ furnished house, 11th St.” Phone | 366. house on| completely | SALE—5-room beach at Auk Bay, furnished with “light system,| garden spot and large newly- built garage. Garage large enough | to stow 18' boat in loft, reason- ably priced for cash. P.O. Box| 816, or phone 241. | FOR ROOM hotse with 3-room apart- ment upstairs; also 2 lots. Phone Blue 279, 5 to 7 p.m. ! 5-ROOM mode;n house overlookmgi Auk Bay. Full concrete basement. | Write P.O. Box 2313. 5- HOUSE for sale: one 4-room, one | 3-ropm apartment, furnished. 822 Basin Road. $3,250. | | 5-ACRE FARM: 2-room furnished house, 2 chicken houses, $550 cash. Bus service, Auk. Lake Loop Road. Write P.O. Box 2953. | Miscellaneous For Sale| CONVERTED of range, $35. Phone | Blue 265, 919 West 9th St. USED 4 cu. ft. electric refrigera-| tor for sale, good condition, only | $65.—Parsons Electric Co. i Lot R USED Horton washing machine, | only $35. Terms if desired—Par-| sons Electric Co. ! USED c;:ns&; model se%vi’hg 7mn-? chine, good Ccondition, $67.50.! Terms.—Parsons Electric Co. AROOM furnished apt. Phone Green 665 between 3 to 6 p.m. i AR | VACANCY—Snow White APts. | NICELY furnished 6-room house, 706 6th St., $35; 3-room apt. for helor, $12. Phone Blue 200. JUNEAU VRENTAL SERVICE. Call us for your housing needs. Cholce listings. Phone 633. | 2-ROOM partly furnished apart- ment. Phone Red 600. | S7ROOM steamheated apartment.| Electric range, hot and cold water. Phone 569. BAROUMES Apts.: 4 rooms, fur-| nished, hot water day and night, electric range, refrigerator andi laundry conveniences, garage, $30. Phone Douglas 132. 4-ROOM parny’mrmshed house, | 12th St. Call 67 after 5 pan. *FURNISHED room or office in Triangle Bldg. Call 253 or see Stan Grummett. CLEAN steamheated rooms. Sim- mons beds. 326-2nd St. $3.50 and | up per week. | TW apartments, $20. Also, 2-room fur- nished apartments for $16. Phone 621. | CLEAN comfortable room. Private home. Phone Blue 614. VACANCY at Fosbee Apts. o e R E AT O S, ST SR ONE steam heated room. Phone Blue 302. FURNISHED house and furnished apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. FURN, stmhtd. room. Green 675 VACANCY. HILLOREST APTS. PHONE 439. MODERN house, fireplace, chanrel view, herdwood floors, full base- ment, ofl heat, unfurnished. Phone 439. Py il SRR B T ¢-ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house. Phone Red 620. e L R ONE OFFICE room for rent. First National Bank Bldg. st el ol o RO FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. | FOR SALE—Daveno, desk, 4 chairs, | refrigerator, washing machine, mattress, springs, baby buggy, miscellaneous articles. Phone Red 230 after 6 p.m. WATKINS Products. Ph. Black 53(.: ALL STEEL hot air furnace. Com- | plete with pipe and fittings. Call 154 or Red 415. i L e YACHT Leota. Price low for quick sale. Owner going to military serv- ice. Phone 452 after 5'P. M. READING or distance lenses, $1| each. Frames, 50c up, at 337| Willoughby Ave., untill Nov. 15.| Day Optical Co. | '42 PLYMOUTH 2-door deluxe se-| dan, radio and heater. Phone Red 450. ¥ LADY'S indestructable wardrobe trunk; bargain for quick sale.! Phone Douglas 134. REBUILT Singer Sewing Machines. ! Non-electric low as $16; portable electric sewing machines good as new $22.50; beautiful console elec- tric sewing machine like new $30; good used vacuum cleaners $7.50 each; bargains in rebuilt % hp. motors. See them on the Motor- ship Hiawatha now in boat harbor or call J. H. Anderson, Singer- Maytag distributor. Phone 711. MODEL “A” Ford, $50. Black 725. SINGER SEWING MACHINES, Maytag washing machines, Iron- rite ironers. Terms: $5 down and $5 monthly. Liberal allowances for your ald 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. GOOD restaurant equipment for sale. Oan be seen at Case Lot Grocery, WURLITZER piancs. Expert tun- ing. Almka: t. Phone 143.— Geo. Shoppe. 'NOTICE - TO CREDITORS IN.-THE COMMISSIONER'S CQURT:- FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUM- BER ONE. Before W. W. KNIGHT, Commis- sioner and ex-officio Prpbate Judge, MISCELLANEOUS | FIVE CENTS each, Efli%}‘fi;&ii E s at Coal Bunkers. TURN your old gold into value,| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma. nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up | Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201! 315 Decker Way. i WANTED —Maid for general house- | :. Inguire Nugget Shop. "D—% or ¥ingie mattresses springs. Write Empire M 5 | Subscribe to the Daily A]aska“ he paper with the largest| irculation. | undersigned at Sitka Precinet. In the Matter of the Estate of RICHARD THORNE, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned was on the 12th day of November, 1941, duly ppointed Administratrix of the es-| te of Richard Thorne, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased are re- quired to present the same, with proper vouchers attached, to the Hoonah, Alaska, within six (6) months from the date of this notice. IONE FELTON, Administratrix of the es- tate of Richard Thorne, deceased. First publication, Last publication, 1941. 1941, adv. Nov. Dec. 18, 9, S e BUY DEFENSE STAMPS Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 5. Proper . Passing fashion ] . Enumerate b . Knock 2, Rubber tree 3. Large stream ¢ Biblical king 5. Present time 6. Puft up . Tilt . Ancient Greek religious festival 63, Cut of meat Witticism Nervous twitching . Straived to a high pitch Selt 61. Devoured 2. Appended 62 Novel . Dwell 2. Relating to the south pole . Take the E evening meal Mountain goat Certain Oil: prefix Put to flight 34, The Lady of Troy SAILORS NOT T0 WRITE OF SUB SINKINGS Letters from Navy Men In- , dicate U. S. Ships Sinking, Capturing (Continued from Page One) Powell of the Shreveport, who dis- closed its contents. Young Lacobee, operator of an underwater sound-detection device, wrote that he was aboard a United States destroyer on convoy duty, end that: “Coming back with our last con- voy, the Reuben James and the Salinas (an oil tanker) were sunk ahead.” (The Salinas and Kearny, while torpedoed, were able to make port. Apparently Lacobee thought they had been lost.) After the convoy on which -the Reuben James was lost reached its OO AR TR R early delivery wil chase price. al just behind us and the Kearny just| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA 1 sS[E] Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle PeDOVEN 2. Medicinal plant 8. Fold of skin under the neck New products* ne Divide into two u; -annit dJestination, Lacobee wrote, his ship ayed in port only one hour when ve were called out at full speed to help some of the ships that werc lbuing attacked.” | “After we got to them we were | attacked for ten hours straight | Cleveland | provided | painful { had {than three years later when, in a Washington used the veto power {which he was being ingloriously | pooiqant U. 5. Chief Execufive Is BreakingRecordonBills That Are Killed by Velo (Continued from Page One) dodged the issue by merely cted Ve'blsng nathing. Back in June, s say-| payments to some negles eran or his widow the White House issued a state- And it was on this last that|ment that the President outstripped Roosevelt to take a more affirmative to office, | than his predecossors who custo- wished stand When Cleveland came the Civil War claims of pensions |marilty let some bills die without scldiers or their widows were |5ignature or comment, and that he, really in full swing. When Roose- , would follow the policy of writing velt came to office, our veterans' on them “disapproved and signa 1elief was a going concern and it | ture withheld” and pending a brief that President | statement giving the reason or rea- had to deal|fons for his disapproval. That's measure similar to one|? broken precedent which the came up to Cleveland. It | President has followed religiously. | for funds to be PaId| o enormity | lh:lmn xolfhm suflcnng;(‘he President’s Glevelar l“" i lfi‘m"x“fi“; ‘Y"’u‘:“d‘;"]found in the statistical record! eveland sent the ac i which Baldridge has just com- the simple comment that he was piled. Third pfincr in tjhn fist “of vetoing it because the evidence| .cooc o held by President Grant showed the “veteran” had served w‘ho Wid Ty to Congress 93 s 0"‘" “"":k )‘;’ “hc inny and | yines, about one-sixth’ as many | FetYe sag Wb+ ooe e, 4 times as Cleveland and Roosevelt.| for [ } | thing has ever is a rare Roosevelt with a that of the numper of “a . poor vetces may be:r drunken stupor, he had fallen ogt only ‘twigé; ‘Monroe only once; | S e e 4 i land m our times we find the late| Harding vetoing only| six bills in the two years he was |in office; and Coolidge, in the next six years vetoing only 50. | DIVORCE ASKED carted home. In one respect, President Roose- velt already has beaten Cleveland's record—that is, in the matter of | pocket vetoes. These consist, of | | course, of bills passed at the end Margaret Kvande asked for di-| of a Congressional sessioh and al- |¢oree from Ole Kvande in an action lowed to die without the President’s | #jled in Federal District Court here signature. Roosevelt has pocketed |today. Grounds for the action was | 248 to Cleveland's 238. given as jncompatibility. The.couple However, in connection with were married in Juneau in 1927 and {until 3 o'clock in the morning | “Believe me, we left some subs {on the bottem—number | mined.” | At the end of the letter, young Lacobee said: “We captured two subs.” “Whether the people know it or | not, we're at war,” young Lacobee's | letter began. | SPORTMEN'S BIG . DOINGS T0 BE ON J FRIDAY, NOV. 28 The date for the Gastineau Chan- lnvl Sportsmen’s Association annual banquet has been changed to No- | vember 28, President Bob Henning |announced today. The affair pre- viously was scheduled for Novem- ber 29. - > GE PASSES ON Mrs. Rasmus Enge, resident of ‘Pel( rg for the past 41 years, ;))a.»sed away recently at the Wran- gell Narrows metropolis. She had been in poor health for some time. MRS. EN 0000000 Time is getting short and if you intend sending Christmas Cards out of town, you must place your order now so that 1 be assured. We have a complete assortment of cards from which to choose. Each design is individual and will not be duplicated. Your name, printed or engraved, will be included in the pur- Empire Printing Co. I|III|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllluulllIllllIlIlIIIIIIIlIIIIHIIIIIII|II|IIIIIIIIIIII|III|III|IIII|I|IIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIHIHIIMHIHIM this, President Roosevelt has never have two children. undeter- | i | | L 1R A Truly Great Nome AMONG AMERICA'S GREAT WHISKIES 100 Proof + National Distillers Products Corp., N. Y. § i Distributed by NATIONAL GROCERY GOMPANY Seattle, Washington - { Today * Come in 4o our office and look at our large catalogues. A OO RO -] PAGF SFVFN 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS e TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing [ ] FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 * - - s Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies | MACHINE SHOP | Ropes and Paints | 225 THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retaller- Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 767 SYSTEM OLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry Alaska Music Suppl Arthur M. Uggen, Manager | Harri Machine Shop O. HARRI, Prop. P.0.'Box 1143 Phone 319 e . FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealewn) GREASES GAS — OIL Poot of Main Street Junean Molors | Boothing Orgun Music and Deliclous Chicken EVERY NIGHT Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 ] (HOME GROCERY | Phone 146 Store—Tel. 690 Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Free Dellvery Junean Widest Selection ol LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 98 The- Juneau Laundry Pront and Second Streets PHONE 39 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — o1L8 Ballders’ and Bhelf HARDWARE Garbage Hauled Reasonsble Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 312 Phons 4783 —— ¢ ‘Every house needs westinghouse’ PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. 140 So. Seward 8t. Juneau, Alaska Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black 688 | ER G a NA " JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company FOR WALL PAPER Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt NOW OPEN! | Nance 5-10-25¢ Store 224 Front St. GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and RLYMOUTH DEALERS 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS PHONE 202 HUTCHING'S ECONOMY MAREKET Be Wise—Economize THREE PHONES 553—92—95 et WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL Us! Juneaun Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 The Alaskan Holel Newly Renovated Roems st Reasonable Rates Phone—Single O Rice & Ablers Co. Plumbing — Ofl Burners Heating Phone 34 Shee! Metal NOTICE AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing air route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. e The Daily Alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper. TO EASE MISERY OF CHILD'S COLD R OMVICKR

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