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THURSDAY, JANUARY 15 , 1942 Lost . Found | Help LOOK HERE! FOR RENT 3-ROOM neat modern house, 921 W. 10th St. Inquire Harbor Mnr-' ket. i \ 4-ROOM furnished, heated apart- ment, basement wash, drying room. Blue 200 = | FOR RENT (Confinued) 12th St. Call 67 after 5 p.m. TWO 4-ROOM furnished duplex apartments, $20. Also, 2-room fur- | nished apartments for $16. Phone | 621. ‘ FURNISHED 3-room houst, oil heat ofil rang so 2-room cabin. In- quire Juneau Paint Store. l | 2-BEDROOM completely furnished | new houseé—hot water, oil heat. Waynor Addition. Phone (H'(‘l“]‘ 611. HEATED room, home privileges. 112 tineau Ave. Phn. Red 379. apartment. 3 - ROOM furnished | Phone 631. ; 2-ROOM furnished apt. at Knight Apts. Phone 426, 4-ROOM furnished house, oil heat- er, electric range, close in. Phone Black 415, FURNISHED apartment in 1T angle Bldg. Phone 253 or Stan Grummett. 4-ROOM apt., bath, electric range,; oil heater. 410 10th. Call 190] from 9 am. to 5 p.m. IN DOUGLAS, 4-room apt., 2 bed- rooms, oil range, inlaid lino, good furniture, comfortable home, $20 monthly. Phone Douglas 472 after 7 p.m. 3-ROOM heated apt., refrigerator, dry room and laundry facilities. Erwin Apts. Phone Red 559. VACANCY at Kilburn Apartment, Douglas. All conveniences of modern apts. for $30 a month Phone Douglas 48. shed a;iC”szs per | and Pond Apts | 2-ROOM furr month. Winter SMALL 2-room cottage, Juneau.| Phone Thane 3, 3-ROOM apt., oi tion. Phone Black 490. FURNISHED complete, 3-room cot- tage, oil heat, reasonable rent. Phone Douglas 64. COMFORTABLE, alr - conditioned | home with garage. Phone 156. O T M apartment. Bishop | Apts. Phone 336. | ONE office room for rent. First National Bank Bldg. | | Terrace. | FOR RENT—Large view apt., rea- sonable rent. Alder Phone Black 570, 4-ROOM furnished house, oil heat, )vashing machine. Phone Green 147 after 4 p.m. FURNISHED 2-bedroom apart. 5th Street Apts. Phone 107, ©ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house. Phone 484. VACANCY, MacKinnon Apts. fiCANCY—One large unfurnished apt.; one fur. apt. Fosbee Apts. 3-ROOM furnished apt. for work-| ing couple. Phone 32 or call at 510 12th St. VACANCY—Shabaldak Apts. Phone 642, | BARANOF Book Shop and Lendint | *'War Causes Increase in | 1936 | TROLLING boat, No. 31C199. Com- {LOST — Will the party. who tockf 3-ROOM nicely fur. stm. heated| apts. and houses. Windsor Apts.| stmdtd. Green 675.| ¥OR SALE | FURN. room. SINGER Sewing Machines, Iron- rite Ironers, Maytag Washing Machines. Terms $5 monthly, lib- | eral allowance for old machine.| Parts, service, repairs, any make machine. Call Singer Maytag Dis- ' tributor. Phone T711. condition: | 115. | ash s bicycle. Us also , 800 Phone Black Library. Inquire within. DODGE 232, §-ROOM furnished house, full con- | crete basement. 873 Basin Road.| Call after 5 p.m. | G.E. WASH. machine; Daveno;| double bed; chest drawers; chest-| robe; playpen; 1833 Pontiac se- dan. Phone Black 454 or call 1026 West 9th after 5 p.m. | o O At | DINING ;room set, oil heater, bed, table, etc. Phone Black 429. | COMPLETELY furnished year| round home at Auk Bay. See R. B. Forrest. | KITCHEN range; ice skates, size 5. Phone Red 328. | pletely equipped. Must sell quick- ly. Leaving town. $500 cash. Call Black 275 after 5 p.m. 16-FT. CEDAR skiff and 2% outboard. Black 429. hp. FOR SALE—Upright plano. Phone 156. WURLITZER pianos. Expert tun- ing. Alaska agent. Phone 143.— Geo. Anderson Music Shoppe. MISCELLANEOUS RABBIT SKINS WE ARE likely the largest dealer | in this item in the Northwest.| Order your skins direct. Val-| cauda Fur Co, Seattle, Wash. | HAGERUP'S saw filing service, 919 9th St. Skates sharpened. | FIVE CENTS each, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. TURN your old gold into value, | cash or trade at Nugget Shop. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $550. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 315 Decker Way. | LOST and FOUND | black suitcase with name of Mrs. | Donald Smith on brown tag, from motorship Northland kindly re-| turn it to Mrs. Jake Cropley. Very needful to owner. Reward. 2- AND 3-RM. apts. (3-rm. apt.| with bath). Steamheated. Hot| and cold water. Electric range.| Capital Cafe. E'UR. 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, 2-ROOM furn. apt. Red 404. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. | s i FURNISHED house and furnished apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. VACANCY. HILLCREST _ APTS. PHONE 439. ' | | | i 7 | Prevailing rates of wages and| scarcity of labor are causing in-| creased use of farm machinery in | New Zealand, says the Department | of Commerce. Don’t wait 20 and 30 minutes for your taxi —CALL US! STAR CAB ¢ PHONE { Don Lozzie—Owner | Social |from 12 to 2 a. m. Oticr defense THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA U-Boat Kayoed After A German submarine (top left) sank a:mérchantman in the battle of the Atlantic and was in turn brought to the surface by depth charges from a British corvette. The Nazis jumped into the ocean and can be seen bobbing about. Bottom. left. members of the crew of the sunken Marriages; Aufo License Plafes Are Being Saved ] holds his staff conferences at 8 c'clock in the morning. A year and a half ago, Washinston never stirred before 9 a. m. The British encies here and a fcod many of our own government departments are installing air raid alarms in their buiidings—like the old firebells that used to clang out | for fire drills in the schools. Twenty-one members of the House Disfrict committee, | by Rep. Jennings Randoph, chair | man, have been sworn in as mem |beds of the District’s special war- time police force - - UNCLE B COLUMBIA, Mo., Steuber, Missouri back and all-round aihletic star, is 20 years old and 20 times an (Continued from Page One) District " s a phoney drive for Defense Council fund the old telephone racket. A smooth vcice calls, makes a great high-pressure plea, gets a promise and sends around a collector. BBB officials say it probably is being worked all over the country. For lighting was the first time since flood- introduced here, the Capitol dome, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial and the White House spend their nights in darkness. Qver at OPM, housed in the new Security building, the caf- eteria keeps open around the clock, cerving full-course dinner in the evening and a midnight supper | 0B 5—Bob 1 half- agency cafeterias are making plans to follow suit as working shifts are uncle. He has six brothers and staggered through the night. OPM Chief William Knudsen five sisters, all but one married. Crossword Puzzle 6. Femlnine nickname Day's march Inhabitant of: suffix Applications ACROSS . South’ American river $ . Purvey food . Devoured 2. Chift’s napkin . Old-womanish Sea eagle Playing card 6. Nobleman . Mournful Hue . Purposes Negative By Outer covering . Eple poem . Musical instrument . Footpaths 5 Biunder 6 Body of water G2. . Strike with the palm ar: mechar part Rage Of the ear . Funeral pile 50. Symbol for sodium Gold: heraldry . Impolite Utopian Metal Big Young goat South Amer- ican [ndian 63. Foreign HENN/ AR y iical Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle DOWN 1. Manila hemp . Loop on the edge of lace . Son of Adam . Ornamental chalr leg . Literary scraps 6. Fatigued . Israellte judge . Make 9. Roman_bronze . Turn from one language into another . Within: comb. form . Sphere ineral springs . More orderly . Unctuously . Flavoring sirup . Make lukewarm . Hastened Australian Belirde . Bringing or giving back American Indian . Hungry Commotion . Percelved by the eye . Color . Danger . Artless . Tree . County n Nebraska Valley . Pleces out . Horse . English letter 64. 65, 66. Itent again 67. last Indian welght rst woman Bo¥ il e WU N B/ dRdl// <l 1 W7/l 7 7 /AN 2NN/ ANEN7 /AN d W//udNan/ headed | hantmar. Sinking merchant vessel are showh‘approaching the corvette to be taken aboard. The three corvettes sént t8 help the torpedoed ship found (fop right) an overturned boat with some of crew clinging to it, At the bottom right, a gunner who had drifted for 24 hours is taken aboard. i AN All.srAR |on pro-rating their by-the-picture | salaries to a part-of-a-picture scale, ! ] |There was a ticklish question of | MOV|E ASTmnmm too, settled by listing play-| ers in “order of thelr appearance.”| Listed thus or alphabetically, Boyer |heads the list—a fortunate ar-! Irangement in view of “the mon- !sieur’s fondness for list-heacing. | “Tales of Manhattan” will be in no hurry to be finished. One of its| major problems has been working| cut a schedule to obtain the de-| |sired starts — together — at times By ROBBIN COON they are free from other commit-! | HOLLYWOOD, Jan.15—*Tales of ments. The Laughton-Lancaster- |Manhattan” is somewnai of a mis- Francen sequence was completed are Rita Hayworth and Thomas | Mitchell—and it all adds up to a| powerful parcel for two producers and one director to handle. | The hardest job, probably, is over —that of “selling” high priced stars | | | \One Good-Name Plus Sev- eral Good Actors, then Producer Makes Good Hollywood hasn’t made one of the type since “If I Had a Million,” back in 1932 when a million was an | especially handy article. That was labout an eccentric millionaire (Richard Bennett) who picked |names at random from a directory| {and bequeathed each a fortune | -with varying effect on the re-| sipjents, That one had many directors, one for each sequence. “Tales of Manhattan” will have but one— Julien Duvivier, whose French picture, “Carnet de Bal” was a -onspicuousiy successful example of the type. It's the sort of picture Duvicier (known here mainly for “The Great Waltz” and “Lydia") has been itching to lay his hands . The story thread i “Tales” is, orovided by a tail coat, designed )y the “most exclusive” tailor for he “most glamorous actor” in New. York—Charles Boyer. Before it 'hds its career on a scare-crow, the nomer for a movie. It should be|first, the others are heing shot at| ‘Tale of a Tail Coat.” |the convenience of the principals To tell the tale—or tales—a gen- S uine all-star cast has been assem- bled. “All-star cast” is an abused ano" HMES wEll {expression, usually describing one| p fairly good name surrounded by KMWNA.R.R. MA" |several good actors. This time it| | means about a dozen players most | | e e et VISHTSIN JUNEAU or aided only by one other name.| o . ; | This, in turn, means heartaches, th’,’,‘f;;,?f"}m,r‘:,l;j };nh o | The gentlemen who brought it} joc,® o MO Siace s com- |upon themselves—and seem right;o"gt 8 € Riweds lsf:}?v . [happy_about it—are Boris Morros| . 0 “70 0% ® v',’fiif:,, 50" m_f R {and 8. P. Eagle. Mr. Morros used to | o to Anchorage u"n o {be a director of music who wore| oyl O TICTOIER after a vaca- | flamboyant shirts and neckties. As| o T P = s a producer, he still wears the i\h,.chu;l:;z 13]21‘0&'“:{1{:‘195 storn same. : Mr. Eagle used to bc]Sflm nah N Y | Spiegel, and is now Mr, Eagle to s aveid confusion with our olhor‘“.‘Ml' it atbes. e d e Spiegels and Siegels. 4."; m;m"gh L% ey, Ruplana “Tales of Manhattan,” as Mr»;:u?;m ni;]iuszm\::;ber o |Eagle describes it, grew out of algn, visited i/l v o | |dinner conversation on the possi-|ar, iy b e home! din ; B | before attending the World’s Series | bilities of telling several different in New York |stories in one feature — separate| ook, T+ Was | stork e |the third World Series Mr. Elmes |stories but tied together by one jaq seen ang the fir: | definite story thread. lof y B e mber of yeirs, but he said it was @as! thrilling an experience as ever. While they were in the east the Elmes also atended several big football games and theatres, They jreturned west in November ang have been in California since. | e . Frifz Cove Women E . . njoy Gathering, Friendship Club Members of the Friendship Clubf of Fitz Cove Road held their first meeting in the new year yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Jack Cremin. 3 { Luncheon was served at 1.o'clogk, and was followed with a discus- sion of defense work. Plans for work to be carried out by the cluby in the next few months were made. and the members spent the remaing-. er of the afternoon sew.ng. ! :0at has affected the lives of char-| Mrs. Walter Kleweno, a former wters played by (1) Ginger Rogers|resident of the Filz Cove Road was. ind Henry Fonda, (2) Charles|a special guest of the club and .aughton, Elsa Lancaster, Victorjothers who were present were, Mrs. *rancen, (3) Bdward G. Robinson,|Clyde Hill, Mrs. Arthur White, ne. 4). W. C. Fields, (5) Paul Robeson,|Ralph Reischel, Mrs, Lloyd Greon ithel Waters, Eddie (Rochester)|MIs. O. Jackson, Mrs. Clift Brown. ‘nderson and the Hall-Johnson|{Mrs. Peggy Thompson and fl’le, | *hoir. With Boyer in Sequence, 1'hostess. S PAGE FIVE 1891—Half a Century of Banking—1941 The B.M.Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska COMMERCIAL SAVINGS B e TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-:BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing a FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Mom * MARION’S Dressmaking, Alterations Designing 304 Willoughby Avenue Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel AT 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 PR Alaska Music Supply | THRIFT CO-0P Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Member National Retaler- and Supplies Phone 200 122 W. Second Connors Motor Co. Herb Waugh Phone 411 230 S. Franklin Alaska Laundry — Utah Nut and Lamp | COAL Alaska Dock & Storage €e. TELEPHONE 4 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS — OIL Poot of Matn Strees HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Btore—Tel. 600 Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Delivery The Juneau Laundry FRANELIN STREET between Front and Second Streéts PHONE 350 ‘Thomas Hardware Co, PAINTS — OIL® NORTH Transfer & Garbage Co. E. 0. Davis, E.W. Davis westinghouse' PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Electrieal Contractor—Deales 140 So. Seward 8¢t. Junéau; Alasks’ nessncs Poso s o ||| WALL PAPER Ideal Paint Shop Phons 649~ Fred W. Wenat' COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY e — GASTINEAU- HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HUTCHING'S ECONOMY MARKET Be Wise—Economize THREE PHONES 563—92—85 20TH CENTURY © MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS By CLIFF STERRETT Za ] WELL , THAT'S ALL YOU KNOW b ABOUT IT, PA/ JUST VESTER- DAY HE WAS WORKING SO HARD PLANNING OUR I HATES T/CRITICIZE, BUT THAT PHONE 202 BEAU O’ YOURN DON'T SEEM PRACTICAL --- NOT SERIOUS ENUFF --- NO PLANS FER TH/ FUTURE/ HIS BOSS FIRED HiM FER DAY-DREAMING 7’ WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Ofl—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL USI Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 MAT. PROC. & ENG. CO. Savrite Rust Preventatives Xzit Soot Eradicator Chemical Metal Treatments Plastic Refractories Phone