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) * 4-ROOM partly furnished house, \ ! | 14 Buy Sell Lost Found Help LOOK HERE! Count five average words to the line. 5 Daily rate per tive insertions: line for consecu- One day 10¢ Additional days . Be Minimum charge 50¢ Copy must be in the office by 2| oclock in the afternogn to insure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone | from persons listed in telephone directory. FOR RENT 2-ROOM steamhem?dr apt with fireplace. Victor Apts. Phone 452. 2-ROOM steambheated '1])1rtmenl for rent, furnished. Phone Blue | 474, ! S8 WERseihag B SRR | VACANCY-—Shabaldak Apts. Phone 642. HOUSE with three rooms and bathj at 9th and C Sts. See J. C, Thomas, Thomas Hardware Co.! IROOM fumished Touse. Oll heat- | | er. Electric range. Close in. $25 per month. Phone Black 415. PR DE R T v 1-ROOM cabin, $7 per month. 843 West 9th. FOR RENT—Room 16 by 50 feet| on water front in Sitka. Suitable for manufacturing or smrage.i » Want to buy second-hand Gn-i crest logging jack. Moy’s, Inc.| Box 366, Sitka, Alaska. 2- AND 3-RM. apts. (3-rm. apt.| with bath). Steamheated. Hct and cold water. Electric mnge: Capl Cafe 2-ROOM furnished house, oil heat. Phone Black 100: . VACANCY, Mead Apis. *lr’iume| Red 614 [ MODERN steam heated 2-room | apt. Ellingen Apts. 2-ROOM furn. apt. Red 404, l"UR .|pls, casy kcpt warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, | dishes. Seaview Apts. 2 LARGE clean front room apart- ly. Phone 143, j FURNISHED apt., rooms “and bath, Duo-Therm ofl range. Rent, | including water, $15 a month.| Phone Douglas 48. LA)’?."C;E?sAwamheawd fur., rooem, good view. Phone Red 245. | - é-fioofifinioerfywar. stm:- hem}.d apts. and houses. Windsor Apts. 4ROOM furnished apt. Phone Green 665 between 3 to 6 p.m. JUNEAU RENTAL SERVICE. Call us for your housing needs. Choice listings. Phone 633. 8-ROOM npartly furnished apart- ment. Phone Red 600. BAROUMES Apts.: 4 rooms, fur-| nished, hot water day and night,| electric range, refrigerator and laundry conveniences, garage, $30. Phone Douglas 132. 12th St. Call 67 after 5 p.m. CLEAN steamheated rooms. Sim- mons beds. 326-2nd St. $3.50 and | up per week. WO 4-ROOM furnished duplex| apartments, $20. Also, 2-room fur-| nished apartments for $16. Phone| 621. CLEAN comfortable room. Private| home. Phone Blue 614. S e e R K | VACANCY at Fosbee Apts.’ SN e R R ONE steam heated room. Phone" Blue 302. FURNISHED house and tumumed‘ apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. 1 FURN. stmhtd. room, Green 675. 11940 PLYMOUTH ment: garbage, water, $35 month- | - Real Estate For Sale FOR SALE OR RFNT—-R A Jo)m- son house near Airport. Inquire | Mielke, Duck Creek. 4-ROOM partly furnished house on Behrends Ave. Phone Black 611.| 5] ROO‘V( modernu house overlookmg Auk Bay. Full concrete basement. Write P.O. Box 2313. HOUSE for sale: one 4-room, one 3-room apartment, furnished. 822 Basin Road. $3,250. Miscellaneous For Sale pe, perfect condition—radio, heater, defrost- er. Can be seen at Juneau Dairies 8 to 5:30 or phone Blue 240. FOR SALE — Candy, chips, nuts manufacturing equipment. Glo- ver’s Lunch, reasonable. Call 12 pan. or write Box 1916, Juneau. FOR SALlexleyfi reed buggy, $12; child’s 4-drawer chest, $6. Phone Green 685. 6 WEFKS pup))k-fi halr wire halr terrier, $2. Call Douglas 72. |FOR SALE—Pair 6 skis and binders, practically new, half price. Phone Blue 640. COAL and wood range. Phone Green 662, 410 12th St. FOR SALE—Davenola. Phone Green 379. |FOR SALE—MS. Betty Ross. See J. J. Connors, Jr, _ [WATKINS Products. Ph. Black 634. | YACHT Leota. Price low for quick sale. Owner going to military serv- ice. Phone 452 after 5 P. M. REBUILT Siriger Sewing Machines. Non-eléctric low as $15; 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 ircners, 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. GOOD restaurant equipment for sale, Can be seen at Case Lot Grocery. WURLITZER pianos. Expert tun- ing. Alaska agent. Phone 143.— Geo. Anderson Music Shoppe. MISCELLANEOUS HAGERUP'S 919 9th St. FIVE CENTS each, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. saw filing service, Skates sharpened. 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. WANTED WANTED—Baby's bed_and - high chair. Phone Red 410. [ SO A DS | WANTED—Malid for general house- work. Write Empire C 909. {FOR RENT ((onlmue!) National Bldg. VACANCY. PHONE 439. | at office 20th Century Bldg. b—:(()OM FURNISHED apartment;' Subscripe to the Dauy ‘AXaskn’Daw first publication, Oct. 15, 1941, | “|to the kitchen THE STORY SO FAR: San- ta has left two infants s gifts: a boy in a peasant's cot- tage in King Harald’s land, and a girl in a castle in the next | kingdom. King Harald fears it | an il omen because the in- fants are two halves of a white rose. | All Rights Reserved | AP Feature Service CHAPTER THREE Santa Carves a Pipe for King Harald Santa went straight home after he had left the girl baby in a castle and the boy baby in a peasant’s cottage. But the winds {flew faster than he did. They ran ;ahead and brought the news of |his trip to Mrs. Santa. Then they whirled and howled around Toy~ land waiting for Santa. Mrs. Santa watched anxiously at the window for him because she knew he would be worried. When she saw him coming down through the air she ran to the door and lthxw it open, shouting above the | wind, “Hurry, I have some hot | chocolate waiting for you. Santa’s pink face broke into a merry smile at that. He stamped around in the doorway shaking off the snow, and shouted back, I want some ginger cookies, t00.” She chuckled and rushed off When she came back into the big room she saw Santa very busy in the window at one side of the fireplace. He was digging in a flower-pot full of good, brown earth. Then he wsnt to a white cupboard, reached for a I think of a certain person they will break into bloom when that person is engaged in some im- portant business. The Queen said the blooms would be big, flowers.” | “My gracious!” said Mrs “why didn’t you tell me that be- fore?” , “Well, T never needed the vine before,” said Santa. “But now I want to be sure to know what's happening to the boy I left in the peasant’s cottage.” “Oh, hush,” said Mrs. Santa, “now you're going to worry: Here, sit down and drink the hot choco- late. I do declare, those wind fairies are nice little bodies but they make it so cold.” She frowned out the window where the wind fairies were kicking up great snow flurries. . So Santa sat down a little talking doll while he drank his hot chocolate. But he was really quite dis- couraged. He didn't make a toy for {two weeks after that. Santa was most worried about and toox United States DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska, Sept. 24, 1941, NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN that Vernon Lee Hunkins, entry- of Sitka, Alaska, has final proof oh his homestead ens try, Anchorage Serial No. 08677, for land embraced in U. S. Survey No. 2355, situated approximately 1% miles east of Sitka, Alaska, Latitude 57° 02" 50” N., Longitude 135° 08" W, containing 0.62 acres, and it is now in the files of the | United States Land Office, An- chorage, Alaska. If no protest is filed in the dis- \trict land office within the period | # ‘of room for rent, First| publication or thirty days | thereafter, said final proof will be |accepted and final certificate is- HILLOREST APTS.|FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire| """ | FLORENCE L. KOLB, | Acting Register. also 5-room strictly modern un-| Empire—the paper with the largest|Date last publication, Dec. 10, 1941 furnished house. Phone 484. paid circulation. adv. little silver box, and out of it he took something very tiny. “What in the world are you idoing,” asked Mrs. Santa. “This little box was given me by the Queen of Flowers, once| when I was in the south,” said Santa. “It holds some strange seeds. They will grow into a green vine, and if, when I plant them red | Santa| on his lap| man, together with his witnesses, | J. J. Cohway and Leslie Yaw, all submitted | | | {the good King Harald because he| had always been kind to his peo- ple. Santa knew the King would be-worried. And so he was. Little winds came to Santa and told him 50. Santa finally bestirred himself |and said, “Now, if I don't make |another thing this year I'm going |to make Harald ‘a present the like |of which he’s never seen:’” | That took a good bit of think- ing. Finally Santa decided to carve the King a very fine pipe. Around ) | the bowl he planned to carve the | three kinds of workmen Who were most important to Harald’s king- !(!(»m So he carved a far |ing his wheat, miner digging |coal, and a sailor sailing his boat !I\ was a very fine pipe, but Santa a was worried that it wasn't fine kmovmh | Suddenly he felt a little “op” on his wrist and there stood the Quten of Fairies laughing at him.| She said, “I've been watching| | you. Santa, T can make that a very unusual pipe.” She touched it with her hand, and all three little carved men stepped out onto Santa’shand. ' Then the Queen of Fairies touched | the pipe again and the three little !men stepped right back. That pipe was to be a great help to King Harald TOMORROW: The babies are | discovered. | | NOTICE OF ORDER FleNGj i TIME FOR FILING OBJEC- TIONS TO DISCHARGE IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR| THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, ' DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT| | JUNEAU. ! In the Matter of H. DEAN‘ i COUNTER, Bankrupt. | NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN that on thg,3d day of December, 11941, an ordcr was made in the| dbove entitled proceeding fixing the | Tth day of February, 1942, as thef last day for the filing of objections to the discharge of said bankrupt. Dated: Juneau, Alaska, Decem- tber 3d, 1941. HAROLD H. BATES, Referee in Bankruptcy. Publication date, Dec. 3, 1941. adv. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office | Anchorage, Alaska ’ Nov. 7, 1941. { Notice is hereby given that How- | ard Erickson has made application | for a homesite under the Act of May | 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) Anchorage { Serial No. 09955, for a tract of land | described as Lot D of the Tee Har- | bor Group of Homesites situated on ‘ the east shore of Favorite Chnnnel‘ and the west shore of Tee Harbor, Alaska, Plat of U, S. Survey No.| 12388, containing 4.56 acres, and it is | ! now in the files of the U. S. District | Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. | Any and all persons claiming ad- | versely any of the above mentioned | land should file their adverse claims | {in the district land office within the | period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be hmred b) the provisions of the statutes. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publicatiodf, Nov. 26, 1941. | /Last publication, Jan. 21, 1942, 177254 fd/d m IJM/' ww Le Ag I&f om:i/ Shop. §0ff icers Elected - ByWSCS;Group | To Have Bazaar| M James Boyle was elected | President of the Women's Society | for Christian Services at a meeting | of the group held last night. Other | | officers elected for the next term | |are as follows: Vice-President, Mrs. ! ‘H R. Sprague; Recording Secretary and Treasurer Mrs. Ronald Lister; ‘Clmlrman of Bazaar Sewing, Mrs | Clifford Robards; Chairman of Red | Cross Sewing, Mrs. C. H. Groves | Chairman of Church Social Nights, | \Mx< George Martin, and Chairman | lof Advertising and Publicity, Mrs. J | B. Smith. Plans for the bazaar and ‘xulvlnh\‘ tea were also completed at the meet- | ing, which took place in the parlo 1 of the Methodist Church. The bazaar will open at 10 o'clock in the morn- | |ing on Saturday, December 6, m\(H will be arranged in booths. One booth will be filled with Kitchen articles, another with baby things, a | third with dish towels and nprons.‘ a fourth with fancy work, and an- other a novelty booth, which will be | in charge of the Epworth League. Tea will be served during the| afternoon between the hours of 2| and § o'clock. Mrs. Lister and Mrs. | W. H. Matthews, Jr., will be in| charge of the dining room. The| kitchen committée will be headed ( by Mrs. Smith and Mrs, Martin { GOSPEL AMID RUINS LONDON (AP) — When church| R u‘lL"cxf(iu:r'"“!vv.lll, Rev. ‘Frnxnkl Moor, CDA CARD PARTY vicar of Welling, fitted his car| p,..c myjted-2bridge, pinochle, with an amplifier and t)urerl his whist to be played—prizes and re-| | parish holding ‘curb ‘services” and L "asu-nnd"fl &4 O 1k iy freshments. Hope chest award G 1’rh|§ sday, December 4, at 8 p.m., \yPnn.xh Hall. adv George Anderson, plano tuner, is | ————— | in town for a few days. For expert | piano tuning, call Anderson Music adv The Dauy aiaska Empire has Lhc‘ Lxrgcat paid circulation of any Al-| uska newspaper, i THE WEATHER V (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU FORECASTS: Wind and weather along the Gulf of Alaska tonight and Thur: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: westerly to northwesterly winds,| 15 to 20 miles per hour to the south of Sitka and northeasterly to| northerly winds, 15 to 20 miles por hour Sitka to Cape Spencer,| clear or partly cloudy; Cape ncer to Cape Hinchinbrook: east- erly to northeasterly winds, belov 15 miles per hour, partly cloudy with local snow; Cape Hinchinbroo: to Resurrection Bay: northeast- erly winds, 15 to 20 miles per hour, local snow; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: southerly to southeasterl; winds, 20 to 30 miles per hour,| becoming northwesterly winds, 2) to 30 miles per hour Thursday,| rainlor snow. | Scutheast Alaska: Clear or pa tly cloudy tonight, increasing| cloudiness Thur with snow o' rain by Thursday afternoon, | increasing temperatures Thursday; northerly to northeasterly winds, 12 to 15 miles per hour south of Frederick Sound and norther- | ly to northeasterly winds 15 to 25 miles per hour north of Frede:-| ick Sound | Juneau and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight with lowest tempera-| ture about 14 degrees; increasing cloudiness Thursday with light snow by Thursday afternoon; highest temperature Thursday about 18 de- slowly grees; gentle to moderate easterly to northeasterly winds. | LOCAL DATA ‘Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather 4:30, p.m. yesterday 29.26 23 52 W 6 Snow shwrs 4:30 am. today 2945 16 62 NNW 8 Clear Noon today 20.45 16 65 S 4 Cloudy RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max tempt. Lowast 4:30a.m. Precip. 4:30am.| Station last 24 hours temp. tempt. 24hours Weather| Barrow 3 -2 3 0, Cloudy Fairbanks -10 | -21 -21 = Clear Nome 16 9 16 04 Cloudy Anchorage 1 -5 -1 0 Cloudy Bethel 21 8 9 .05 Snow Atka 39 35 36 [ Cloudy Dutch Harbor .. 51 40 40 36 Pt. Cldy Cordova 22 6 16 0 Cloudy Juncau 31 15 16 06 Clear Sitka 33 21 22 .04 Clear Ketchikan 38 27 27 01 Clear Prince Rupert .. 37 29 32 80 Snow Prince George .. 45 24 25 15 Clear Seattle 61 39 40 19 Cloudy | | Portland 60 42 42 1.07 Pt. Cldy San Francisco .. 70 | 51 56 53 Rain . WEATHER SYNO! | Cold relatively dry air prevailed this morning over most of Alaska but due to the influence of a low pressure center in the Bering Sea, warm maritime air had penetrated the western por- tion of Alaska at elevation above the ground surface and mostly cloudy skies were reported from Prince William Sound to the Ber- ing and ‘along the west coastal area of Alaska. Rain or snow| had fallen over this area from t:e Alaska Peninsula to the Seward Peninsula and the Aleutian Islanls. The greatest amount of rain-| fall was 36 hundredths of an inch which was recorded at Dutch, Harbor. The highest temperatur: yesterday afternoon was 51 de-) grees at Dutch Harbor and the lowest last night minis 21 degrees at Fairbanks. Mostly clear skies and good visibilities but with lo-} cal patches of clouds 'near Petersburg plevailed over the Juneau-‘ Ketchikan dirway this morning. The Wednesday morning weather chart indicated a center of lb\v; pressure was located east of Dixon Entrance and moving slowlyeast- ward. A second low pressure ceiater was located in the Bering Sea, which was slowly filling with a third low center near the Shu- magin Islanos which was expectel to deepen and move about 600 miles eastward during the next 24 hours. A high pressure center located at 35 degrees north and 145 degrees west, Juneau, December 4 — Sunrise 9:24 a.m. sunset 4:12 p.m. was TM WRITING TO MARGE TO RETURN MY EVENING WRAP AND GLOVES THAT SHE BUT YER MAKIN’ A MISTAKE --- SHE ONLY BORROWED YER GLOVES/ 1 KNOW [T, MA, BUT WHEN SHE GETS THE LETTER SHELL WRITE ME THAT IT WAS ONLY MY GLOVES -+ By CLIFF STERREIT 4 d| - AND, KNOWING THE WY MARGE ALWAYS DENIES BORROWING ANYTHING , I CAN USE IT AS A RECEIPT/ 3 | | |- 1941 Kung Festuees $) e, foc Civ PAGE FIVE 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS TMELY cLoTHES || Leotw’s NUNN-BUSH SHOES WOMEN'S APPAREL STETSON HATS Baranof Hotel Quality Work Clothing omri A [} Sanitary Meai Co FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men ” * — e Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints ZORIC PHONE 15 Alaska Laundry THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retaller- Owned Grocers, | Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Plancs—Masical Instruments Phane 208 | 123 . Second mp;g}gr;”m Utah Nut and Lump Harri Machine Shop 0. HARRI, Prop. P. 0. Box 1143 Phone 319 COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 HOME GROGERY Phone 146 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealerm) uor Store—Tel. 699 uf"“'o: o R w4 Poot of Main Strees Juneau Molors “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 164 or 105 Free Delivery Juneau e e e Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 86 The Juneau Laundry Front and Second Streets —— GEOBGE BROS. Widest Selection o LIQUORS Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Sheif Transfer & Garbage Co. E. 0. Davis E.W. Davis 212—Phones—81 SRDRBTR S S0 15T (11 S ‘Every house needs westinghouse’ PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Electrical Contractor—Deales /| 140 So. Seward St. Juneau, Alaska Business Phone 161 Residence Phone Black 680 JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware FUBLRES Gins and Ammunition NOW OPEN! R Nance §5-10-25¢ Store roR 224 Front St. WALL PAPER Ideal Paint Shop Phone 540 Fred W. Wendt COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS GASTINEAU Eveéry comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 + HUTCHING'S ECONOMY MARKET Be Wise—Economize THREE PHONES 553—02—95 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS PHONE 202 IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oill—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms st Beasonable Rates Phone—Single O e e e o MAT. PROC. & ENG. CO. Savrite Rust Preventatives Xzit Soot Eradicator Chemical Metal Treatments Plastic Refractories 104 8. Main Phone 607 Rice & Ahlers Co. Plumbing — O1l Burners Heating Phone 34 Bheel Melal