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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, P Copy must be in the office by ¢ o'clock in the afterncon to in- sure insertion on same day. We accept ads over teuephone from persons listed in telephone firectory. Count five average words to the \ne. Daily rate per line for consecu- Rue insertions: Orie day .. Additional days ... 5o Minimum charge .....50c 1942 HONE A CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED ON KENNEDY ST., 6-room unfur- nished house. Automatic furnace heat, garage. Apply 114 West 6th St., or call 751. STEAM HEATED Rooms, single or double. 315 Gold St. FURNISHED Cabin, Green 234. FOR RENT—5-Room house, batn, closets, full basement. 418 E. Tth. Phone 65]. $40 month. Present tenanfs vacating Sept. 2, but will yhow premises or phone Blue 680. 2 bed- [ED Apartment Phone Red 600. FURNIS rooms. BAROUMES Apts.; 4 rooms fur- nished, hot water day and night, electric range, refrigerator and laundry conveniences, garage. $27 montniy. Phone Douglas 132. i ROOM fur. apt. with bath, oil heat, reasonable rent. Phone Blue 139. . 7ACANCY, Fosbee Apt. Phone 443 ¢ ROOM furnished house, oil heat. Phone Blue 275 after 5 p.m. ¢ ROOM apt. steam heated, electric range, cold and hot running wat- er, private bath. Phone 568. FOR SALE NEW Westinghouse Ironer, open end; child’s training chair; small radio. Inquire No. 2 Evergreen Apts. 35 REMINGTON RIFLE. Special stock, Lyman receiver sight, con- dition perfect except exterior shows wear, 100 rounds ammuni- tion; Schick inject razor, never used, 40 blades. Room 504 Federal Bldg. GOOD Conditioned dresser, sprmg, double bed and mattress. Phone 115 or call at Reck Apts. on Cal- houn Avenue. 14-FT Round bottom, double end covered boat equipped with 4-hp. Regal inboard motor and all re-, quired accessories. Ideal for sport fishing and hunting. Guar- anteed good condition. $100 cash. Box AB.X. Empire. SMALL RADIO-Phonograph, 7-ft skiis and binders, 6-draw chest, portable wash tub, hand vacuum and other articles. E. L. Gruber, 746 West 12th. ROOMING HOUSE Business furniture for sale, Write Em- pire M1481. ONE office roon. for rent. First National Bank Bldg. Tw’I’NWSIZéWcoiI spri;g {15 éf{one Black 119. VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. { ROOM FURNISHED apartment; 480 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house, 504 5th St. FUR. apis, easy mept warm. Win- ter rates 5 a mo. Lights, water, dishes, Seaview Apts. FURNICHED house and furnished apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire| at office 20th Century Bldg. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS " MISCELLANEOUS 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, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up wola ‘Beauty Shop. Phone 3201.| — 315 Decker Way. AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing sir route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. WANTED WANTED—Boy 16 or over for after school and Saturdays. Phone 539 or Red 743. TURBINATOR Hair Dresse, nearly new, $45; also 40-ft. boat and engine $100. Phone Douglas 335. SMALE meing hT)EE, comple-;ly furnished. Phone 506. 1939 INDIAN SCdUT Motorcycle. Bargain for cash. 214 Gastineau Avenue, 5-HP Heavy Duty Atlas Motor, $25.| P. O. Box 609. FOR SALE—Small radio. Phone Red 510. Cheap. BLOCK mill wood 36 unit, delivered. Kindling $6.75 unit, del. Limited amt. Order now. Juneau Lum- ber Mills, Phone 358. MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacier Highway. Montgomerys. 4 ROOM furnished house, large lot, close in. P. O. Box 1075, Juneau. 3-ROOM Furnished house and im- provements on §-acre homesite, 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, Auk Lake. L. W. Cord. P. O. Box 609. ~ LOST and rmn LOST—Small purse with bill and silver. Call Green 398. | for| WANTED — Cotton _ mattress double bed. Call Terr. of Edu- cation. EXPERIENCED Bookkeeper, Thomas Hardware Co. The | WANTED—One capable, well quali- fied clerk-stenographer for inter- esting government position in LOST—Near Cole Dock, blue sweat- er and pair glasses. Will pay re- ward. Call Empire 1527, LOST—Ratchet of hydraulic jack. Return to Jorgenson’s Motors. $5.00 reward. LOST —Blue and white letterman sweater, 1 yr. stripe, above tim- berline on Mt. Roberts. Return Anchorage. Salary $200. per month; also one experienced clerk-typist, salary $180. per mo. Phone 806, daytime. WANTED TO BUY—Radio-phono- graph combination. Phone 81. WANTED—2 High School boys, dish washing, 4 p. m. to midnight. Royal Cafe. WANTED— Experienced mangle workers. Alaska Laundry. WANTED--A Bicycle In good con- dition for $10.00 Phone 364, M " PUTANEW HAT ON YOUR v BUDGET.DOLLAR | Tlll’ EVERY tllASE to Empire. REWARD. LOST—Ladies Waltham gold lapel watch. Initialed J. R. 8. in case. Return to Gastineau Hotel. Re- ward. ‘Don't forget to vote. The polls do not close until 7 o'clock tonight. ® 0 00 0000 00 0 00 4 WEATHER REPORT (U. S. Bureau) Temp. Saturday, Sept. 5 Maximum 66, Minimum 47 Temp. Sunday, Sept. 6 Maximum 58, Minimum 53 Rain—56 inch Temp. Monday, Sept. 7 Maximum 55, Minimum 52 Rain—52 inch eec e 000000 —————— or| — | Pickerin, SITKA RUN KEEPS ALASKA COASTAL BUSY A busy week-end for local air- iplane travel is recorded by Alaska | Coastal Airlines passenger lists. | saturday passengers to Sitka were Elizabeth Collins, Lillian Collins, E. |L. Bartlett, J. C. Cooper, Louise |Adams, Mrs. George Jorge Janice Jorgenson, Rae | Steve Vucovich, Irene Rasmusse) |Jane Winthers. Phone 132 or | pagsengers arriving from Sitka! o eieq to be present. |Saturday were Jerry Green, Mrs. W. M. Rogers and infant, Mr. and Mrs, William Rodenberg, E. S. Rob- |inson, John H. Smisler, Jack Clark, 1Rnhc‘rl Lockwood, Ray Winfrey, | Ernest Parsons. Round-trip passengers to Excur- sion Inlet, Saturday, were E. B | Skiels, O. N. Clock, Jr., Jam |Houston and passengers from Ju- neau to Excursion Inlet were J. Ry Isaak, Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Syre and A. C. Adams. Arriving from Ex- cursion Inlet Saturday were Marie Parker, Jeanette Elaine Parker, J. | K. Rodgers, Walter Skewes, Leon Johnstone. The only trip Sunday brought |Hans Floe, T. Conrad and Felix |Fello to Juneau from Hawk Inlet. Two Sitka trips Monday pd Sitka-bound, Virginia Dick, Feli Romero, Diego Paulino, Louis Sel- mer, Margaret Fenton, Max Lurz, {Charles Nyman, Ethel Lange, Ed Mahlum and Milton Arbetter and brought from Sitka Henry Hull, J. {E. Samson, Katherine Benson, Irene Benson, Charles H. Worsham, Betty Everett W. Hepp, Clifford | W. Burke, R. A. Ramsey and Jane | Winthers. Juneau Sitka passengers today were George Salo, Charlotte Mar- tin, R. Roberg, J. Godfrey and D. {Dugan and returning were Jack lRlsch, M. N. LaChance, C. R. {Dawling, Edith S. Anderson and J. C. Morris. e | NURSES, RED (ROSS REPRESENTATIVE GUESTS OF ROTARY: Guests and speakers at Juneau Rotary Club’s meeting this noon in Percy’s Cafe were Lieuts. Mable Moore and Eleanore LaFleur, U. —|S. Army nurses; Juanita Kay, as-| sistant to the field director of the Military and Naval Welfare Service of the American Red Cross, and Maj. Ralph Freeman, U. S. Army. Walter Carl, manager of radio station KINY, and Hank Harmon, Juneau High School teacher, were welcomed back, O. M. Benecke and Roald Cop- stead were initiated into the club by Homer Garvin, and Harold Roth | introduced Bob Helgeson, high| school representative. Ben Falken- berg, of Seattle, also was a guest. DR. WHALEY DIES IN SEATTLE MONDAY Dr. Oliver Whaley, for many years a practicing dentist in Southeast Alaska, died in Seattle yesterday. News of Dr. Whaley’s death was received in Juneau by his sister, Mrs. Julia Terhune. Cause of his death was not given. Dr. Whaley had practiced in Wrangell and Ketchikan for the last twenty years. Recently he took over the practice of a Seattle dentist in the Stimson Building, Seattle, and moved his family there. | Survivors are Mrs. Whaley, and | thier daughter, Miss Jerrine Whaley | of Seattle, and son, Dr. James O.' Whaley, of Ketchikan. in Juneau. Dr. James Whaley was graduated from the Juneau High | School and lived while attending school with his aunt, Mrs. Terhune. | ———————— CDA MEET TONIGHT Catholic Daughters of America The Whaleys have many friends | aska newspaper. The Daiiy alaska !mmre has the |will hold a business meeting at 8| largest paid circulation of any Al-lo'clock tonight and members are | requested to be present. i R HIGHWAY UNIT OF TERRITORIAL GUARD T0 MEET TONIGHT y Unit of the Alaska The Highw: Territorial Guard will meet this evening starting at 7 o'clock at the Auk Lake Road Camp, Captain John G. Osborne announces. Instructions in the care and clean- ing of rifles will be given preparatory to training in rifle marksmanship and all members are urgently re- - NATIVE TUMBLES OVER EMBANKMENT Attracted by the .suuml.x of moans {coming from the hillside just be- ow the blind end of West Eighth| Street in the early morning hours | of Labor Day, passers-by discov- | ered an injured man lying head- downward on the hillside in the undergrowth. | Police were called and rescued | Charlie Takook, native, who had tumbled over the street end and lying in an uphill position with his | head on the downward side, was | in critical condition from scratch- | es, bruises, and loss of blood flow- | ing out of his head and nose. | Takook is now recovering in the Government Hospital. B | | | MANY VIOLATIONS OVER ]‘ | WEEK END AT CRAIG COURT | U. 8. Commissioner’s Court at| Craig was busy over the hohdnv: week-end. Greg Raras was arrested | on a charge of assault with a dan-, ‘gerous weapon, Clifford O'Shea on a charge of being drunk and dis- orderly, Anna Haldane on the same {charge, and George Bandal was sentenced to serve 60 days in the | Ketchikan jail on a drunk charge. HOSPITAL NOTES | Master Frank Johnson entered St. Ann's Hospital Saturday fm‘ medical care. 3 i Mrs. Dorothy Jameson was a pa-| jtient in St. Ann’s Hospital over| the week-end. Annie Carlson was in St. 's Hospital Saturday and Sun- day for medical treatment. | | Ynjva Strom was discharged from St. Ann’s Hospital Sunday after being under medical care‘ | there. —_— | | Andre Caliboso has been dis- | {charged from St. Ann’s Hospital/ where he was a medical patient. | Capt. John D. Conwell has been| discharged from St. Ann’s Hospital after receiving medical care. Mrs. John Neal bocame the mo-| |ther of a daughter at 12:10 a. m., Semzmtm- 8 in St. Ann’s Hospital. The baby weighed 6 pounds, 15' ounces. Leonard Burkette is a surgical patient in S8t. Ann’s Hospital. Joe Zadkovich is a surgical pa- tient in St. Ann’s Hospital. Alice Kadashan entered St. Ann's Hospital for medical care. | Mrs. Hubert Gilligan and her infant son went home this morning {from St. Ann's Hospital. 1 Inez Johnson has been discharged from the Government Hospital. Discharged from the Government| | Hospital over the week-end were| Alexandria Mandegran, Ernest John | and Flora Hobson. Anna Thomas has been admitted | to the Government Hospital for medical caré. l . S Don’t forget to vote. The polls do not close until 7 o’clock tonight, ' Jones averages: | rails, 26.73; utilities, 11.52 ALASKA NEW CUI N EA OUTPO ST—'ms is Port Moresby. United Nations base on the southern shore of New oulne-. which has been | the object of repeatsd Jupanm bombln: attacks. It stands between the Nlppone:e and uorthern Austral VICTORY TAX INCOME NEXT WASHINGTON, Sept. 8. — The Senate Finance Committee, by a vote of 13 to 6, this afternoon adopted the proposal for a 5°percent victory tax on income on all indi- viduals in excess of $624 a year. - e PERCY REYNOLDS SOUTH ON VACATION Bound for Seattle where she will spend several weeks visiting rela- flvev.\. Mrs. Percy Reynolds sailed suum Saturday afternoon. —— e GAMES TODAY The following are results 6f games played this afternoon in the two major leagues as received up to press time: National League PAGE FIVE e plGGLY WIGGLY i HOME OF GOOD l’ ARSNIPS OK WAX BE!/ GREEN l RED PEA at ONE DELIVERY QUALITY with SERVICE GROCERIES NOT JUST ORDINARY BUT GOOD S RA WH()I,E CARROTS BROCCOL 1 ANS "EARS RS CREAMED MUSHROOMS in Sauce THESE AND OTHERS PIGGLY WIGGLY EACH DAY Orders Must Be in Before 12 Noon ‘ Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel HANS FLOE HERE Hans Floe, superintendent of the P. E. Harris ‘cannery at Hawk In- let, is in Juneau awaiting transe potation south. He is at the Bar- of. NORTH Transfer & Garbage Co. E.O.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS —Phones—81 - eee MRS, ELLORA JOHNSON WITH INDIAN OFFICE e Ty | Mrs, Ellora B. Johnson began work today in the Fiscal Division of the Alaska Office of Indian Affairs, | General Superintendent Claude M. Hirst reports. | COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH - M. H. SIDES RETURNS DEALERS FROM TRIP NORTH| Deputy Collector of Customs, M H. Sides returned to Juneau yes-| WHEN IN NEED OF terday after a two weeks' trip o Diesel Oll—Stove Oll—Your Skagway and Whiu-hupc on offi-| ial business. e RODENBERGS lll‘ RE Mr. and Mrs, Willlam Rodenberg flew in from Sitka Saturday for a visit in their home town. | eew “ | | | Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES Pittsburgh 0; Brooklyn 4. American League Boston 11; Washington 15. St. Louis 4; Detroit 1. Ulcvelm)d 10; Chicago 0. R STO(I( OUOTMIONS NEW YORK, Sl‘pl. 8. quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stoek today is 2%, American Can 67%, Anaconda 25%, Steel 53%, Commonwealth and Southern 3/16, Curtiss Wright 7% International Harvester 474, Ken- necott 30%, New York Central 9, Northern Pacific 64, United States Steel 467, Pound $4.04. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today’s Dow, Industrials, 107.62; —— ' MORRISON-KNUTSEN EXECUTIVE 1S HERE C. R. Shinn, vice-president of | Morrison-Knutsen Company, arrived by plane from his headquarters in | Seattle yesterday and is in Juneau | on routine company business. While here he is at the Baranof | Hotel. i TS MRS. JOHN YOUNG LEAVES FOR SOUTH Mrs. John Young left over the week-end by steamer for the south, | where she plans to visit her family in Los Angeles for about three weeks. Mrs. Young is on leave of absetice from the Social Security jOffice here. EYES EXAMINED and BROKEN LENSES replaced in | her divorce suit against director- our own: shop. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. — - — — Closing | § Bethlehem | ' Foxx, 85-year-old veteran of 18 | he isn’t looking for a manager’s NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quuality Wm:k Clothing L] FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery |, PHONE 104 or 105 Free Delivery Juneau STILL SMILES— Jimmy big league baseball seasons and now with the Chicago Cubs, says GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Alr Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 Job but would consider an ofler. Divorces Director Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt BRI 1 T T OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN AMERICAN LEGION DUGOU1T EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. Pictured on the witness stand in Los Angeles is Helga Moray, blonde British actress, as she testified in producer Tay Garnett. She received a default decree, winning the cus- | tody of their year-old son and $200 a month for his support. 5 P ————————————— BUY DEFENSE STAMPS 20 SAWMILL MEN WANTED | at JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS JUNEAU ® Now Operating ‘ “ 3 Phone 636 AVOID WASTE ON THE LITTLE THINGS.. SPEND FOR THE 'BIG THINGS. WAR SAVINGS BONDOS Subscribe to the Daily Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation. hearing aids for the hard of hear- ing. Audiometer readings. Dr. Rae Lilllan Carison, Blomgren Bldg 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 THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retaller- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 —ee e FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Moiors Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS * Bullders’ and Shelf HARDWARE ' The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE © Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Cholce Meats At Al Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONE 553—92—95 Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Jureau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39539 e = 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202