The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 9, 1942, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA C ) ouT O} (OAS{ GUARD Mrs. Grace: Wickersham is leav- ASSOCIATION |ing soon for the south on a busi- | | Meeting, Health Center, \'“‘*‘ Hip. .qne expects to be gone ;q; 13 g pm. Election of Officers OFFICE HERE* ployment Compensation Commis- | ision and his staff in connection with | (Ccnthfl!d trom Plle One) |the transfer of the Employment Difl . £ e |vision of the Unemployment COm- |, .anes but no craft—steamship, | |pensation Commission to the TV T W T W (OFFICIALS CONFERRING REGARDING TRAHSFER\ 22 Joseph T. Flakne, Director' of the‘ uy Sell | Lost . [ioid Somen S‘L‘."\,J“f.‘:‘é Ffl“nd {Hugh J. Wade, Director of the So- 1 cial Security Act are holding daily Help conferences with R. E. Sheldon, LOOK HERE! FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1942 Monday, 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1341 The B.M.Behrends Bank R e Oldest Bank in Alaska left: nautical 46. i s e i b ACROSS 1. Dude . Contalners Gy | Executive Director of the Unem-| . Biblical king Rumanian coin noistly through the FOR RENT ron RENT ((onhnued) Kilburn Apartment, All conveniences Of apts. for $30 a month. Douglas 48. VACANCY at Douglas. modern Phone per Apts. Turnished apt., $25 Winter and Pond 2-room Thane 2-ROOM month, r‘nt;uue, Juneau. 3, three rings. SMALL Phone 3'ROOM furnished house. Phone Black 415 furnished, heated Apts., 4th and Han 3-ROOM Miettinen GOMPLETELY _ furnished house, sth and Gold. See VanderLeest,| Butler-Mauro Drug. 3-ROOM apt., oil heat, nice loca- tion. Phone Black 490. FURNISHED complete, 3-room cot- tage, oil heat, reasonable rent. Phone Douglas 64. | COMFORTABLE, air - conditioned home with garage. Phone 156, 1-ROOM apt. Bishop Ap 336. ‘ Green 675. ‘stmdtd. room. FURN. IN DOUGLAS — 4-room apt. Attractive, clean, ient, very moderate rent. Douglas 472 after 8 pm. furnished conven- | Phone ‘ | FOR RENT_Large view apt. rea- sonable rent. Alder Terrace.| Phone Black 570. | , oil heat,| | | 4-ROOM furnished hous washing machine. Phone Green 147 after 4 p.n. SMALL nice apt, couple. 618 Fnst St. Phove Green, 230. Ta | i . Phone! ’16 FT. CEDAR skiff and 2% | TROLLING boat, No. 31C19¢ FOR RENT—Apartments, _inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. | o s e FURNISHED house and fumished‘ apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. | HILLCREST APTS.| VACANCY. PHONE 439. Real Estate For Sale fi 6-ROOM furnished house, full con- | crete basement. 873 Basin Road. . Call after 5 pm. ' Miscellaneous For Sale machine; Daveno; | double bed; chest drawers; chest- | robe; playpen; 1933 Pontiac se- dan. Phone Black 454 or call| 1026 West 9th after 5 pam. | DINING room set, oil heater, bed, | table, etc. Phone Black 429. GE. WASH. (‘OMP] ETELY furnished yem round home at Auk Bay. See R. B. Forr BEDS, mattresses, chairs, tables, dressers, brand new overstuffed chair and sofa, dishes, pans, etc.; assortment of grocer All at a bargain. Must leave account ill health. Act today. 873 Basin | Road. KITCHEN range; ice size 5'%. Phone Red 328. skates, Com- pletely equipped. Must sell quick- ly: Leaving town. $500 cash. Call Black 275 after 5 pm. outboard. Black 429. SALE—Used baby crib. Phone | apartment at Phone 426. 4-ROOM Apartments. FURNISHED 2- bedroom apart. Slh‘ Street Apts. Phone 107. | heat. Call SROOM house. Oil Black 100. urnished house in Ju- 1st and Hams, 6-ROOM neau, steps, inlaid lino, (md ovexsluffed new. oil range, very reasonable rent.| Phone Douglas 472 after 8 pm: cabin| $20.| 2-room oil range, LARGE furnbhed with bath and 124 E. St. VACANCY, MacKinnon Apts. VACANCY—One large unfurnished apt.; one fur. apt. Fosbee Apts. 4-ROOM parily rurnbfied house ox;n Behrends Ave. Phone Black 611. 3-ROOM furnished apt. for work- | ing couple. Phone 32 or call at 510 12th St. — e s VACANCY—Shabaldak Apts. Phone 642. AND 3-RM. apts. (3-rm. apt. with bath). Steamheated. Hot and cold water. Electric range. Capital Cafe. 2-ROOM furn. apt. Red 404. FUR. apts., easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. 2 LARGE clean front room apart- ment: garbage, water, $35 month- ly. Phone 143. CLEAN steamneatéd rooms. Sim- | mons beds. 326-2nd St. $3.50 and up per week. + ROOM FURNISHED apartment; a/s0 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house. Phone 484. TWO 4-ROOM furnished duplex apartments, $20. Also, 2-room fur- nished apartments for $16. Phone 621. 3-ROOM nicely fur. stm. heated apts. and houses. Windsor Apts. #-ROOM partly furnished house, 12th St. Call 67 lfter 5 pm. ONE office toom for rent, First — - ‘FOR ngm‘ Black 739. top of| WURLITZER ’WE ARE likely the largest dealer l FOR sAL.EvUpriwhc piano. Phone 156. FRANKLIN elec. $25. 740 5th St. WATKXNS Products. Ph. Black 634.| planos. Expert Lun- ing. Alaska agent. Phone 143—— Geo. Anderson Music Shoppe. sewing machine, | Green 153. MISCELLANEOUS RABBIT SKINS in the Northwest.| skins direct. Va1~1 Co., Seattle, Wash. in this item Order your cauda Fur HAGERUP'S 919 9th St. saw filing servlae Skates sharpened. FIVE CENTS each, pald for used gunny sacks 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. 815 Decker Way. LOST and FOUND lbgT—Bunan of keys on ring. Re- ward. Return to Empire. WANTED TO BUY*BEleOm set. Phone Red 611 desired as or out-pf- WANTED — Position housekeeper, here town. Box 758, City. Esther Rhind ls Wed in Anchorage Esther Rhind and. Oren Diamond |were married in Anchorage, at a| Christmas eve - ceremony, it was!| announced today. Mrs. Diamond is well known in Juneau as the proprietor of The |Vogue Shop and is the owner of ! ladies’ wear shops in Anchorage| and Fmrbnnks | . Diamond is an electrical en- National Bank Bldg Subscribe to The Empire. | i gmeer at Anchorage. | Present at the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hawver, arents of the bride, oldtimers in Alaska ! tory of Alaska, First Division, at Ju: | tromitenoff and J. C. Koosher, all| | without successors, and. the conse- | _ |trusts. i thereof, and will apply to the court | United States Employment Service. ‘i” It is expected that the uansfer‘m |will be completed and ‘g into | |effect Fébruary 1, Mr. Sheldon | st said. e MOOS MEET TONIGHT | Members of the Loyal Order of |0 Moose will hold a regular meeting | tonight in the Odd Fellows hall. | The session will be called at 8|ar o'clock. of - Hom URSING CLASS WILL MEET. TONIGHT |varying periods of time, depending | upon the nature of the applicant’s | For the first meeting since before !the Christmas holidays, the Home |Nursing class will meet this even- ing at 7:30 o'clock in the Health| pattekint (i Territorial Building. | Miss T. Broderson is instructor of the class, bu er ar to a hi: &l'MW()V\ FOR PUBLIC \TION NO. 4800-A. = In the Distriet Court for the Terri- tory of Alaska, Division Number One. At Juneau. GEORGE TULINTSEFF, GEORGE E. SHEEPER and WILLIAM GEORGE, trustees of St. Nichalas’ | Church at Juneau, Alaska; vam- end JOHN ZLOBIN, rector at St. | Michael's Cathedral at Sitka, Al- ! aska; and The Most Reverend THEOPHILUS, Bishop of San Francisco and Metropolitan of che. Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of America, Plaintiffs, vs. The members of ST. NICHOLAS' | CHURCH situated at Juneau, Al—} aska; the members of ST. MICH- | AELS' CATHEL RAL situated at| Sitka, Alaska; the members of the | RUSSIAN ORTHODOX GREEK CATHOLIC CHURCH OF AMER- | ICA; and also all other persons or | parties unknown and claiming any | right, title, estate, lien or interest | in the real estate described in the | complaint herein, Defendants. The President of the United States of. America. To the above named | defendants; and to all persons and parties concerned, known and un- | known, having or claiming any right, | title, estate or interest in the real state referred to in plaintiffs’ peti- jon and herein, or otherwise, ad- versely to the appointment of a trustee of such real estate, according to the prayer of plaintiffs’ said peti- | tion, GREETING : | You are hereby required to appear m the District Court for the Terri- | ar | ur G neau, Alaska, within thirty day: after the last publication of thi summons and answer to the plain- tiffs’ petition on file in said court| in the above entitled cause. ! The plaintiffs in said action de- mand the following relief: That His | Eminence, the Most Reverend Theo- philus, Archbishop and Metropolitan of the Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church of America, and his successors .in that office and title, be confirmed as the legal suc- | cessor, and successors, to the title and trust of His Grace, Most Rev- erend Platon, deceased, and of George Kostromitenoff, Peter Kos- deceased, in respect of all real prop- erty at Sitka, Alaska, and at Juneau, Alaska, that is still the property of the Russian Greek Eastern Catholic Orthodox Church of North America, and its members, and of the Greeco- Russian Church, and its members, by virtue of deeds of conveyance hy the United States of America to said | His Grace, Most Reverend Platon, and to said George Kostromitenoff, Peter Kostromitenoif and J. C. Koo- sher, in trust for said churches and members thereof, for and on account of the death of all of said trustees quent lapse and failure of said | And in event you fail to so appear' and answer, the plaintiffs will take judgment against you for want for the relief demanded in said pe- tition, and as hereinabove stated. Witness the Honorable George F. Alexander, Judge of said court, and the seal of said court hereunto af- fixed on this 17th day of December, 1941. ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, Clerk, District Court, First Divi- sion, Territory of Alaska. | | HOWARD D. STABLER, | Plaintiffs’ Attorney, Shattuck Building, Juneau, Alaska. First publication, Dec. 19, 1941. Last publication, Jan. 9, 1942, | without nage, application by the applicant. Forms | out red tape | Guard office. licenses air route from Seattle to Nome, on | sale at J B. Burford & Co. cht, trawler, halibut boat, or an)‘ 6. (S‘u\n)e{]n her type of ship—may operale" Nooden Territorial waters of the United | . Cutting wit ¥y . Work with the ates or depart for a foreign port hands a Coust Glukrd Ycense. | 3 Was & caddi- Routine details as to ton-| . Pilot beam, length, business, cus»yl &pprad ms license number and similar | Low galter . § | 3. Diamona- . v 63. Tree ts will be stated on the license | 64. Youthful years 65, Discover nose . Wine cask . Line of mowed ) Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN . Autumn . Genus of the olive tree Picked . Course of public life Footless animals commander e available at fice and may the Coast Guard | be obtained with- “4) be | Licenses will issued for | rench coln . Units of work salt_of stearic cld isiness or pleasure demands. (5) Licenses will be issued cov- ing only specifically stated areas nd permitting the license holder | operate only in those areas. If | license holder desires to leave | s specified area, he will obtain | new license from the Coast | Culturea . Above . Body Joints Urchin Put down More cational . County In New York state Tubs 20. Moving mechanical part 6) Ships plying r ports of call will be granted | covering their needs and hanges will be made to the ' Coast between regu- | irst king of israel @ through n poet L'\|R("«L exist- ing bird 3. Fine fabrics Hint ny hon uard ywn girls hle-land NOTICE | AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing | CUEJEE AN NN JNEEE . JEN N NN Junf Seaweed adv, Silence the Hysteria - Monger Since a month ago today, rumors in Alaska, and all down the Pacific Coast, have been a dime a dozen. And if we consider the quality of the rumors, they have been mighty expensive at that price. In a recent column, Brig.-Gen. Hugh S. Johnson hit at the hysteria-mongers as a greater enemy within the nation than the Jap navy and air force would be if it moved much closer to our coastline than it is likely to get. As an example, a man in the midst of the first Los Angeles blackout stood in front of a news stand and shouted that “thousands of Japanese planes are over Pasadena and heading for Los Angeles.” The man was arrested and the next day the owner of the news stand reported that the rumor dispenser was not an employee of the stand and was completely unknown to him. Johnson characterizes this purveyor of false news as “no prankster.” “This is an obvious part of Hitler’s technique of destroying public confidence and morale by stirring up scares,” he declares. If this be true, we may be able to lay some of our wild rumors in Juneau on fifth-columnists of the same type. But from the number of rumors to be heard along streets these days, this city must have a lot more fifth-columnists at large than we have ever dreamed. Let us put it this way—the rumors are quite possibly started by someone with an ulterior motive. But the more tragic sequence is that they are then ampli- fied and repeated, time and again, by persons who may otherwise be counted as good citizens. That the jitters they spread by these rumors are hardly the product of good citizenship goes without saying. If Gen. Johnson is right and we could trace these rumors to their source, then we would discover persons serving the enemy in their attempts to develop a condition of alarmed hysteria on the part of the American people. But have you ever attempted to trace those wild tales to the person who started them? As newspaper reporters, we have attempted to run down some of the rumors. Because if they could be verified, these rumars. would make alarming, but mighty effective headlines. But in every case we have traveled in a circle. The bearer of the tale heard it from someone purported to have heard it pver the radio. But when you find him the radio listener merely learned the rumor from a friend, who was talking with a grocery boy, who delivers groceries to a government o!!ncml s house, where he heard the story from a maid, who had a date two night ago with the fellow who told you the yarn in the first place. Because women and children are being evacuated from defense bases in Al- aska, primarily for the purpose of saving shipping space which would be required to bring provisions north for them, is certainly no reason for persons in Juneau to feel they, too, should get out of the Territory. There has never been any intimation that shxppmg wou]d be cut down to the point where it would be impossible to bring enough groceries north for Alaskans who earn their living here. Too many persons are willing to give us “inside /information” about the Japanese. Most of them are amateur investigators, with no rellable source of the dope they pretend to pass out. “The tongue of the amateur G-man is probably even more dangerous than the loaded rifle of the untrained amateur soldier,” Gen. Johnson said. “We must not allow either to be turned loose upon us by amateur direction of this highly technical job of civilian defense.” Sponsored by the J uneau Chamber of C_ommeree PA SUDDENLY SOT THE IDEA THAT IVE GOT TO, STAY IN TONIGHT/ " POLLY AND HER PALS VYEAH, HE SAID YUH/VE BEEN ON TH’ GO Too MUCH/ I HOPES YLH REALIZES WHY TM KEEPIN/ YUH T/ HOME FER A CHANGE, POLLY. 7 LETS SEE - LAST TIME " T WAS BECALSE Yo CUT YOLRSELF SHAVING AND YOUR BALL CLUB LOST A PENNANT/ . Belonged to me | Dinner courses | COMMERCIAL SAVINGS o TIMELY CLOTHES | NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing L] Complete Outfitter for Men Connors Motor Co. Herb Waugh Phone 411 230 S. Franklin Alaska Laundry Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage €e. TELEPHONE 4 HOME GROCERY Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 1M or 105 Free Delivery Juneaw Transfef & VGAnrbage Co. E.0.Davis E.W. Davis 212—Phones—81 ‘Every house needs westinghouse’ PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. 140 So. SBeward 8t. Juneau, Alaska Business Phone 161 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS HUTCHING'S ECONOMY MARKET Be Wise—Economize THREE PHONES 653—02—85 —— WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Ofl—Stove Ofl—Your Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 MAT. PROC. & ENG. CO, Savrite Rust Preventatives Xzit Soot Eradicator Chemical Metal Treatments Plastic Refractories 104 S. Main Phone 607 MARION’S Dressmaking, Alterations Designing 304 Willoughby Avenue Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 Chas. G_ Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OIL Poot of Main Strees Juneau Motors Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OIL® JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company IL—GLASS PAINTS—O] Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition WALL Pl[tl IdenIPamt%hop Phonb 549 fiuw’:!fl '(usnuu[ Every mum lnde for our guests ARir Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS PHONE 202

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