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2 Found . Help LOOK HERE! Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for consect~| gy T ouce Phone Douglas 763. tive insertions: One day 10¢ Additional days 5¢ Minimum charge 50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure HOUSE for sale: one 4-room, one insertion on same day 3-room apartment, furnished. 822 We accept ads over telephone Basin Road. $3,250. from persons listed in telephone — Miscellaneous For Sale directory. Real Esla}e For Sale 5-ROOM modern house overlooking Auk Bay. Full concrete basement. . Write P.O. Box 2313. NICELY furnished steamheated housekeeping suite with private lavatory, everything furnished, including electricity, $40. Inquire Rice & Ahlers. Phone 34. 51-inch poles; size 7 hockey skates, new. Phone Douglas 134. FOR SALE—Davenola. Phone Green 379. -~ STOVE—living room model. Bar- $20 PER MONTH for furnished 5-| ° K = room apt. Call Douglas 18. FOR SALE OR RENT_R. A, John- son house near Airport. Inquire Mielke, Duck Oreek. 2-ROOM furnished apt. Oil heat, electric range, $2250 monthly. Inquire Bon Marche, 40 PT. CRUISER Jennie K; sleeps nine. Will sell or trade for good House. R. A. Treffers, 326 4th St. upl;f (3-rm. apt.| Steamheated. Hot | Electric range. | 2- AA ND 3-RM with bath) and cold water Capital Cafe L) FOR SALE—M.S. Betty Ross. See J. J. Connors, Jr. | Z-ROOM furnished house, Phone Black 100. VACANCY, Red 614. Apts. Phone | YAGHT Leota. Price low for quick sale. Owner going to military serv- ice. Phone 452 after 5 P. M. “Mead 2-room | steam heated | Apts. 1 MODERN apt. Ellingen 42 PLYMOUTH 2-door deluxe se- | dan, radio and heater. Red 450. 2-ROOM furn. apt. Red 404. FOR, apts, casy kept warm. Win-| ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, w:\ler,[ dishes. Seaview Apts. REBUILT Singer Sewing Machines. Non-electric low as $15; portable | electric sewing machines good as new $22.50; beautiful console eleg- tric sewing machine like new $3 2 LARGE clean front room apart- ment: garbage, water, $35 month-| ly. Phone 143. | FURNISHED apt, 3 rooms and| bath, Duo-Therm oil range. Rent, | % including water, $15 a month.| Phone Douglas 48. H 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. LARGE 'srbeam‘nrn’te}] “fur. room, | good view. Phone Red 245. Maytag washing machines, Iron- rite ironers. Terms: 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. ,§-ROOM _partly furnished apart-| GG restaurant equipment for ment. Phone Red 600. sale. Can be seen at Case Lot Grocery, 3-ROOM nicely fur. stm. heated| apts. and houses. ‘Windsor Apzs.v ZROOM furnished apt. Phone| Green 665 between 3 to 6 pm. | JUNEAU RENTAL SERVICE. C_All i us for your housing needs. Choice | listings. Phone 633. ! BAROUMES Apts. 4 rooms, fur-| nished, hot water rdiay n:ld “;5:3: WURLITZER piancs. Expert tun- electric range, refrigerator s30,| 108 Alaska agent. Phone 143— laundry conveniences, garage, 330.| geq Anderson Music Shoppe. Phone Douglas 132. : 33 | MISCELLANEOUS H;GER_IiPS saw— filing = service, 9191 9th St. Skates sharpened. &-ROOM npartly furnished house, 12th St. Call 67 after 5 pm. ;'J_LEAN steamheated rooms. Sim- ». mons beds. 326-2nd St. $3.50 and up per week. 5 dach, pID. GOF. x | nny sacks at Coal Bunkers. TWO 4-ROOM furnished duplex | gEHY. apartments, $20. Also, 2-room fur-| TURN your old zold into. ——_value, nished apartments for $16. Phone| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. 621. e ey CLEAN comfortable room. Private home. Phone Blue 614. | | GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up Lola- Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 315 Decker Way. FURNISHED house and furnished Libby Maine o s s e SiNKiNG I ToldofHere HILLCREST APTS.| PHONE 439. (Continued from Page One) VACANCY at Fosbee Apts. - WONE steam heated room. Phone Blue 302. stmhtd. — e ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly modern un-| ® furnished house. Phone 484. P e | ONE OFFICE room for rent. First Nationa) Bank Bldg. 5o e SIS N g FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. and get ready to lower life boats, and at the same time he gave or- ders to the radio officer to send out an S.O.8. By that time we had taken so much water the main ;engines had stopped. Bridge Carried Away “She started to sink first at the L 2 I went aft to help get a WANTED—Used davenport. DOUZ-|poat over. We had men in the las 764, Iboat and got it swung out on the = g — [davits, When I came back to the WaNWED 5 Waman for out of m‘fnfbx'xdge. I cut the lashings on my once.!life boat, so I woyldn't waste any time when we had to get it over | the side. About the time I got to Couple. o take OVer | ie bridge, a monster the stern. rcoms or boarding house. | over It tore hotel » i | SWept Rent, lease or sell. New I"r"’Sh"Ioose the lifehoat we were trying ¢ ings. Making i Phone 2931y, launch. . The boat was swept GENERAL housework by experi- (back with all the force of that enced maid. Call Room 00, Berg- | water behind it and smashed into mann Hotel. the flying bridge, carrying it away WANTED—% or singie mlttressu;wmplemy‘ r ; ; “The next thing 1 knew, I was x;:l]d springs. Write Emplre Mip.y0 wou t0the bottom of the Car- 51, O a1 i ibbean. T had my lifebelt on, but awrenc- Tibbett, the baritone, I kept going down and down. I the Navy in the World ‘émember being glad my wife was going to have my insurance to ——————— live on. Then I thought about my Subscribe to the Daily Alaska|mother, who had just died. I felt Empire—the paper with the largest| !fl(e someone was poking a finger paid circulation. |into each of*my cars, and like WAN‘f‘Eb¥fi§xd ro; gen;ral house- ’ work. Write Empire C 909. et el . = |gtern. crab cannery. Write W 590, Empire, at T1a joined War. » FOR SALE—7-ft. skis and binders; | gain, $40. Alaska Credit Bureuu.‘ {W.-ATKINS Products. Ph. Black 634. | Phone | good used vacuum cleaners $7.50 | | MODEL “A” Ford, $50. Black 725.| |SINGER SEWING MACHINES,| $5 down | FIVE CENTS each, paid for used| TEWITVET | STEAMER MOVEMENTS NORTHBOUND Mount McKinley scheduled to arrive maybe in morning; snowbound in Wrangell Nar- TowsS. Yukon due Sunday. SCHEDULED SAILINGS North Coast scheduled to sail from Seattle today. Baranof scheduled to from Seattle tomorrow. Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle December 2 at 9 am Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Decem- ber 2 at 9 p.m. rthland scheduled to sail from Seattle December 3. North Sea scheduled to sail from Seattle December 5 at 10 am Tongass scheduled to sail from Seattle December 12. SOUTHBOUND SAILINGS Columbia scheduled south- bound 7:30 o'clock tomorrow morning. Tyee scheduled to arrive som time tomorrow. bound midnight Friday. LOCAL SAILY Estebeth scheduled td sall every Wednesaey at 6 p.m. for Sitka and wayports. Dart leaves every Wednesday at 7 am. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports, o o sail i . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . e © 0 00 PP PP IO P0G ETOOEOOCEOOOCOOLOOIOOROROOIEOEOIOTOEEOETS TS ——— TIDES | | (Sun time, November tide—3:39 am, 35 feet High tide—10:01 a.m. 16.0 feet Low tide—4:26 pm. 18 feet High tide—10:40 p.m, 137 feet. 20) | Low somebody else was caving my chest in. 'm a good swimmer, but T had to take a bitter mouthful of salt- one. ‘Onie more mouthful of water, ber thinking. “Then I started to shoot up. When I reached the top, I thought I was going to keep right on tra- veling. T'll bet I shot a good three feet out of the water Sees Wreckage “Then 1 began swimming. looked around, but there wasn't |sign of the Libby Maine, just ! mountains of water everywh 1 |was still watching for some piece |of wreckage I could grab, when |T saw the carpenter, swimming | along behind me. Then, in a few | minutes, I spotted a lifeboat, bot- |tom up, with three men hanging {to it, and started swimming in that direction. “Over the crest of a sea, T came on a piece of wreckage, part of (the cabin it was, and perched on |it was Denny Moore, a wiper. “‘Where the H—1 do you think |youre going?" he yelled at me. | “‘Trying to make the lifeboat, T | told him. “‘You better climb on this and {be d—n glad it's handy,’ he said. ! “When we both got our weight on the piece of cabin, it sank al- most below the water. Then along came Smitty, an elderly AB. who was so tired he just barely man- laged to grab the edge of the piece | of wreckage and hang on. I worked myself over until 1 could get hold of him and pull him onto the raft | That added weight made it go al- most six inches below the sur- face. I Rain To Drink “It blew all that day. That night !it rained, and that was our only chance to get water to drink. We had to put our heads back with four mouths open and catch what we could for a drink. “The next day, Friday, the sun jcame out, but it was still windy. There was a window casing in the piece of cabin we were riding on and we got old Smitty sitting on | opposite sill. We could look down | through that window opening and |see three sharks and a baracuda ’swimming around beneath us.They |seemed to be following right aleng | wherever we drifted and with the weight of our bodies weighing our Ifrail raft down below the water line we were plenty nervous. | “That afternoon, water, then I had to take another | fand I'll be a gone man,’ I remem- one side of the window openlng,l with his feet braced against the| Smitty miust | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASK Gashen — I had hold of Smitty's pantleg and| Denny had hold of his collar, | a big comber } | | hen all at once broke over us and washed the body out of our grip. The life belt was! | stil strapped to it, but 20 feet| from the raft we saw it jerked un-, der the water. Then it bobbed up,| only to be jerked under again. We could the sharks battling for # bite. There, within 50 yards of | where we drifted, Smitty's body | kept up and down until, within a few minutes, there was nothing left but that empty belt floating on the water ‘“Late bobbing that afternoon we saw U.| S. destroyers. not far away. We| guessed they were looking for sur- | vivors. We yelled and waved av| best we could, but we couldn't at-{ tract their attention. The most| discouraging thing in my memory | was sunset that night, with those | destroyers turning their sterns to | us and steaming away Rescued ( time saw | circle “It must have been some after midnight that night we (a searchlight traveling in a and coming close to us «“We'll drift ashore. said Denny “THere’s a .lighthouse ! “I thought so too. engines and knew it was ship. !Everytime the light got near us we'd yell and wave, but the beam | | never picked us up. We were about | {hoarse when I remembered my | whistle. My officer's whistle had been in my hip pocket all the time then I heard a e (I got it out and every time thatl.. the ity searchlight in Morse ON.’ “I don’t know many times I blew that signal, but that was |the thing that turned the trick |1t was about 2 am. Saturday morning whén we were picked up |by the destroyer Roper Couldn’t Sicep “Aboard the boat, they got our wet clothes off, gave us hot c fee first, then pea soup, then warr water. Then they sent us to bunks Tired as I was, I couldn’t sleep much. I'd wake up and want to put my feet on that steel deck to be sure it was real. I got to think- ing about the way the wind blew us and how the others would have drifted and I gave the information to a pharmacists mate who came through the quarters and asked him to convey the message to the| commander. ! got code near the us, T'd blow | words ‘RITE | how “Early that morning they got me | out to talk with the commander. I told him about the wind that carried us and he told me thac we had drifted 90 miles from where the Libby Maine went down in those 40 hours. About the middle of that morning we picked up some more of the crew. There were 13 of us rescued, out of the crew of | 32. “Well, the Roper transferred us| (to the Unalga, that used to be a | Coast Guard boat around South-| least Alaska waters here, and .she]‘ took us to San Juan, Puerto Rico.| Then we were taken to New York | for a hearing on the sinking be- | fore the inspectors and we went| home from there. | “That was all there was to it, |and, Lord, I hope I never have to |go through an experience like that | again.” CIVILIAN DEFENSE | SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED | | i Civilian Defense Director « for| Douglas, Erwin Hachmeister, with' {his aides, has worked- out a tena-| tive schedule for giving alarm in ic-se of danger and they are calling | ‘upcn practically every citizen of! |the town to assist where needed| should -emergency arise. ; 'To notify them the fire siren will be used and when given signals |are sounded those whose names are |listed below will be expected to| | respond. For the purpose of effecting a working organization two short Iblasts will be sounded on'the. siren |early one evening Monday or Tues- day next week when those whose (names are listéd below will proceed |as outlined. 1 Station No. 1; Meet at Alex Gair| Gray's residence for patrol duty of Capt., William Wagner, Jame; life T ! Disposition of of a seaj | have gone to Slee?‘ One of _his 1eet},.“jdence for patrol of city water | pped off the window casing and|lines and dam and west end of | \his leg dropped into the water for [town; The following (compose the took. I don't know which of those Capt., J. Neal, G. R. Isaaks, E. E. fish grabbed him, but they bit the Engstrom, R. E. Hollingsworth, A. | muscle right out of the calf of his | R. Edwards, Alex Gair, Sr. Ken- leg. You could look into the Mck:nem Shudshift, S: J. Greinor, Val |of that man's leg and see his shin Pool, Glen Rice, Rede Pusich, J. |bone and his knee joint, with the Anderson, Harry Worobee, Mike |flesn ripped right away from it, |Riesser, Elmer Svikko; Nurses— i Bleeds to Death |Lillian Bonner and Mamie Jensen. “I ripped his shirt off and tried | S““t"" No. 2; Warner's Grocery; {to make a tourniquet to stop mc‘n"e‘;;’; ;:l ggg(h a;;i E:stJ enkd. can- |blood flow above his knee. It was | y uad, Jack War- > o o ner, Capt., Ben Mohns, Jake Kor- {not good, though. He died from | P Ioss of blood. When his pulse wm“‘:’:‘“Ehfi)};mFl;;,k, Es lengzln. ":’1‘ i < y 3 . Dore, us the life had gone out of hm, n j Kiphy B Dore, Gus Erick- | {we still hung onto the body. Welson Sam Opich, J A E |had to hang onvo ine raft 6o, be- | Opich, John Nirmi, Clancy « |Henkins, Frank Varlen, Max Saul, jcause it was pitching badly, blllLEd Martinson, Al Lundstrom, Harry ) just an instant. That was all it squad for this station: Albert Goetz, | Kirkham! ticns civilian de-| fense & Captain And Mike Calvin Pool and Arne Shuds! meet at the city hall office B L H CARNI IS OPENING At 8 celock tonight Douglas Carnival staged vears opens its doors ave been made for a ooths are colorfully decorated and stocked with eats, and soft drinks irses, Fle and 4 t e Sebenico | uad to meet at Pusich vicinity of school; Tom Oashen, Capt., Dale Fleek, Felix Gray, Ji Sey, Jim Riedi, Sr., Frank Krsul, L. W. Kilburn, Caesar Sebenico, Wm. Sparks, A. J. Buckingham, E.! Lacey, Roy Osborn, Dayton Fleek Nurses, Catherine Balog and Mar- garet Cochrane. Station No. 4; Telephone office district, St. Ann's Ave, between A & & popcorn, and capdy theatre and Leonard Johnson res- 4 idence; Squad, Carl Lindstrom,|, Modame Ima Sce 3 2 Hop- | her_erystal ball for good, Earl Miller, Robert Savikko,|) oo 0'(“‘;“‘1 ;,‘m,"”“""f’ Ed Cashen, Joe Tassell, Ralph Kib- it < : g dancing Sideshows provide y; Nurses, Bernice Johnson and LB B Lindstrom unusual features. 3 | The program begin. Station No. 5, in the Douglas gym. The residence; patrol district, St. Ann’s js cordially invited and a Avenue, Johnson's residence to aqmission fee is charged Treadwell; Patrol, Gordon Gray, - Capt., Eugene Hulk, Franz Kron-|SCHOOL BOARD DECIDES quist, Mickey Pusich, L. Johnson, ABOUT CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS Pete Nordstrom, J. R. Guerin, Bill Douglas public schools will be Devon: Nurses, Edith Bonesteel,|dismissed for the Christmas holi- and Mrs. John Clark. days this year from December 22nd Stat No. 6; Cahill's residence|to 29th, reopening on the latter for patrol thence to 240 Power|date and continuing with exception plant and foundry; Squad, W. E. of New Year's day which will be the Cahill, Capt. Wm. B. Cuthbert, Al|usual holiday, according to p Endres, F. Snyder, A. Bonnett,imade by the School Board at Alex Sey, Jim Baras, Frank Petty-|meeting last night. Regular Christ- Grove, Chas. Whyte, Emil Uberti, mas programs will take place in Herman Savikko, Jim Devon, James | the school on Fridayy, December 19 Baroumes, Milt Valeson,” Tom Pop-| Supt. Pool informed the Board of ovich, Capt. J. Clark, F. Pike. Ben|his taking part on the Northwest Ha\'dghl. Ralph Mortenson, Evert Credit Association committee Martinson, Dota Brown, O. H. Bliss, proxy for one of the members who Obert Havdahl; Nurses, Mrs. J. R dbert could not attend. Our school he Guerin and Margaret Pearce said compares favorably with others Nurse at large is Mrs. A. R. Ed- in the territory. More money is “arg‘s spent on.library here than in most Fire truck drivers as follows will scheols. We are more fortunate meet at fire-hall; Alex Gair, Jr., than most of the schools he reported capt; Mark Jensen and Sante De-|in having a fire-proof vault gan. He further reported that the City truck drivers who will meet new curtain for the gym had been hall are Chas. Tuckett,|ordered and it was expected to be| capt., and Wilfred Fleek. here in time for Christmas pro- Car owners asked to meet at the grams. The curtain will be a rich city hall are Mrs. E. E. Engstrom, | purple and gold velvet Mrs: Felix Gray, Mrs. Robert Bon- monogram-D. S. ner, Jr, Mrs. 8. J. Greiner and W SIS A. Fleek. Car owners to meet at STORM RESUL Cahill residence are Mrs. W. E , A wrecked gillnet boat, 26 footer Cahill, Mrs. W. B. Cuthbert and Eagle, belonging to Joseph Jimmy Mrs. M. Valeson of Haines was smashed by the high Glen J. Kirkham wind last night and sunk at the Cashen are for the local floats as one of the results| and are to go to the City Hall. of the present storm. A tree about the Guard has been 6 inch diameter in Wakeman's yard arranged to take their regular sta- was blown down THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU FORECASTS: Storm warning: Northerly to northeasterly winds, 25 to 85 miles | per hour north of Frederick Sound today and in Lynn Canal and Taku Inlet Saturday; easterly to northeasterly winds 15 to 45 miles per hour south of Frederick Sound tonight and south of Gastineau Channel Saturday. Juneau and vicinity: Snow with slowly rising temperatures to- | night and Saturday, probably chaiging to snow and rain mixed by | late Saturday afternoon; lowest temperature tonight 16 degrees| highest Saturday 32 degrees; northeasterly winds reaching as hiot as 45 miles per hour in Gastineau Channel Southeast Alaska: Light to moderate snow with slowly i n'!‘ temperatures tonight and Saturday to the north of Frederick Sound but changing to rain and snow mixed with slowly rising tempera- tures south of Frederick Sound. Easterly to southeasterly wind 15 to 45 miles per hour south of Frederick Sound tonight and reach- ing as far northward as Juneau by Saturday afternoon; | winds, 25 to 85 miles per hour over the north portion, Wind and weather along the Gulf of Alaska tonight and Sat.: | Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: ecasterly to northeasterly winds, | 15 to 35 miles per hour, snow or rain; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinch- inbrook: easterly to northeasterly winds, under 20 miles per hour but increasing to 15 to 30 miles per hour Saturday, increasing clou- diness with local snow; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bflv" northeasterly winds under 20 miles per hour, fair but with increasing cloudiness Saturday; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: northerly to norlh: westerly winds, 15 to 25 miles per hour, partly cloudy. | & { LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 4:30 p.m. yesterday 30.27 12 57 NE 19 4:30 am. today 2993 12 55 NNE 22 Noon today 29.62 13 8 NNE 25 RADIO REPORTS DOUGLAS AL TONIGHT the first here in Preparations | crowd has the dusted off occasion A for the et at 8 o'clock publi malil Hachmeister's i s \ as bearing and Frank F. Home Guard northerly | Weather Overcast Overcast Snow || mome Liquor Store—Tel. 639 American’ Meat——Phome 88 | — & ‘Every house needs westinghouse’ PAGE FIVE 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B.W. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL e TIMELY CLOTHES } NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing [ ] FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Mem ol C AR e S Sl e SYSTEM CLEANING PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Masical Instruments and Phone 208 122 W. Becond ST Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. | TELEPHONE 4 | HOME GROCERY Phone 146 “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 18 or 105 Free Delivery Juneau The Juneau Laundry FRANKLIN STREET between Front and Second Streets PHONE 359 Garbage Hauled Reasonable Monthly Rases - E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Phone 4783 [ e Wl o e | PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Electrical Contractor—Deales | 140 So. Seward St. Juneau, Alasks Business Phons 161 TODAY 4:30am. Precip. 4:30a.m tempt. 24hours Weathe -15 0 Pt. Cldy =11 03 Snow | 13 Clear -4 Fog | 14 Clear 0 Pt. Cldy 39 Pt.Cldy | 34 Snow Lowest temp. -2 -24 12 -47 4 -1 Station Barrow Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethel St. Paul . Atka Residence Phone Blxck $86 e NOW OPEN! Nance 5-10-25¢ Store 224 Front St. S et Dutch Harbor Wosnesenski . Cordova Junecau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert . Prince George Seattle Portland San Francisco 36 Rain, snow 19 Clear | 20 Clear | Overcast Snow | Rain | Snow | Overcast, fog Rain Overcast, 0 02 22 23 0 04 02 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Cold, relatively dry air with generally clear skies prevailed over Alaska except over the southeast portion where moist warm air was overrunning cold dry air and causing light to moderate snow to the south of Juneau this morning. Maritime air with partly cloudy to cloudy skies prevailed over the Iering Sea and the Aleutian Islands. The greatest amount of precipitation was nine hundredths of aninch which was recorded as snow at Caig. The highzst temperature yes- terday was 36 degrees at Ketchikan and the lowest last night minus degrees at Barrow. The temperature over Southeast Alaska' ranged ‘with a minimum of eigh’ degrees at Haines to a minimum of 31 degrees at Ketchikan. Overcast skies with moderately low to| moderate ceilings, local snow with visibilities locally very low pre- vailed over the Juneau-Ketchikan airway this morning. The Friday morning weather chart indicated a center of low pre ure of 20.25 inches was located a' 52 degrees north and 134 degrees west and was expected to deepen and move slowly northward. R latively low pressure continued ov'r the Gulf of Alaska. A ‘seeond | low pressure center of 29.25 inches; was located at 48 degrees nor | »* ey COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS HUTCHING'S ECONOMY MARKET Be Wise—Economize THREE PHONES 553—92—95 * WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL Us! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 and 138 degrees west. A third low pressure center was located outhwest of St. Lawrence Island while a fourth low pressure cen- ter was forming near Dutch Harbor and this center was expected | to deepen and move slowly eastward south of the Alaska Penm.sulu.l A high pressure center was loca‘ed to the east of Alaska and a econd high pressure center was located at 45 degrees north and 162 degrees west. | ] Juneau, November 29 — Sunrise 9:15 a.m., sunset 4:18 pmn 12 SUSSSSSSSSSUL, | z | % MAT. PROC. & ENG. CO. Savrite Rust Preventatives Xzit Sont Eradicator Chemical Metal Treatments Plastic Refractories 104 S. Main Phone 607 D e Y [ SAVINGS L e T Leota’s WOMEN'S APPAREL Baranof Hotel £ | Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 -— R i B Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints bt ~— THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers NEXT TO CITY HALL PHONE 767 BRI ¢ P S Pt . { Harri Machine Shop 0. HARRI, Prop. P. 0. Box 1143 Phone 319 e e R § ) ) N N ) | 3 § | ) 4 (o o e FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAB — OIL Foot of Main Street Junean Motors et S ——— Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 86 o - e ey —— e GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection ol LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 93 ———— Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS - OILS ' JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL--GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition FOR WALL PAPER Ideal Paint Shop' Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt GASTINEAU HOTEL:. = | Every comfort made for our ‘u'n Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS PHONE 202 Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing — Oil Burners ' Heating Phone 34 Shee! Meial