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TUE&DA\ SEPTEMBER 29 1942 | ' HONE A CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by 1 o'clock In the afternoon to in- wre insertion on same day. ‘We accept ads over teuephone from persons listed in telephone lirectory. Count five average words to the {ne. Dally rate per line for consecu- e insertions: Ome day ... Additional days .. Minimum charge ..... .50 FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED FOR SALE APARTMENT for Rent. Phone 241. 3"ROOM Furnishec Apt. Knight Apartments. Phone 426. oil ra;ée and oil Inquire 4-ROOM Apt. heater. Gastineau Ave. Juneau Paint Store. F—%fiiiu&’ri Peterson House, 3rd and Dixon. P. O. Box 1852. Phone 407. 5 ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. FOR RENT — Peterson House, 3rd and Dixon. P. O. Box 1862. FURNISHED four-room Apt., $20 & month. Phone Douglas 18. F‘URN!SHED TAPTS. in Douglas One 4-room apt. $20; one 3-room | apt. $16. Oil range, inlaid nno.g good furniture, attractive, clean, | comfortable. Phone Douglas 472| after 6 p. m. TWO-STORY heated = store Inquire San Francisco Bakery be- tween 4 and 6 p. m. FURNISHED 2-room Apt. Wwith bath, $16. tineau Ave. | | GAR:;aEfl”f’hone Green 234. STEAM HEATED Rooms, single or | double. 315 Gold St. o G TR T B T « ROOM apt. steam heated, electrir range, cold and hot running wat- er, private bath. Phone 569. R et i L L ONE office roon. for remt. First o, National Bank Bldg. b o bl R VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. D i I il PV N FUR. apis., easy mept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes., Seaview Apts. FURNISHED house and furnished apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. POR RENT—Apartments, inquire st office 20th Century Bldg. WANTED Phone 621, 175 Gas-| _ FOR SALE—Desk, tress. Write Empire 1600. BATH TUB. 710 9th Street. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Wood oOr Coal Range for oil range. P. O. Box 1165. LAYING HENS and Pullets, Nor-| thern Vegetable Farm. Loop Road, Glacier Highway. 5-ROOM Modern furnished home. | Waterfront on Bus Line. concrete basement. las 335. BANQUET R:anéé, wood and coal; chairs, 329 12th St., 10 to 4 p. m, '35 CHEV. Pickup. Good rubber $260. Phone Douglas 78, ONE FORI V 8 lhr yard dvmp truck. New engine, 4 new tires,| good spare, car in good mech-| anical condition. Phone 344. Overstuffed Daveno, mon: bed, inner spring and mattress; small dressing table. Cheap. No. 2, Orpheum Apts., between 10 a. m. and 10 p. m. 1932 STUDEBAKER Coupe Red 415. |ROOMING HOUSE Business or| furniture for sale. Write Em- pire M1481. §-ROOM house with lot; also 2 ad- Joining lots, chicken coop. Phone Blue 220. BLOCK mill wood $6 unit, delivered. Kindling $6.75 unit, del. amt. Order now. Juneau Lum- ber Mills, Phone 358. | MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacier m:hwu Montgomerys. 4 ROOM furnished house, large lot, close in. P. O. Box 1075, Juneau. 3-ROOM Furnished house and im- provements on 5-acre homesite. 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, Auk Lake. L. W. Cord. P. O. Box 609. WANTED — Lady wishes room in private home. Write Empire 1600. WANTED—Used magnetized radio speaker. Apt. 3, evenings, Klein Apartments. WANTED—2nd hand tire, 7.00-15. ‘Write Empire 1601. WANTED TO BUY—Bewing Mach- ine. P. O. Box 1682. WANTED—4 good used 450-19 or| 4.50- 21 tires. Cash. 'Red 340. WANTED—Woman, good character, to take care of children, do house work. Good pay for right person. | Write P. O. Box 1204. WANTED —Girls or women for kitchen or waitress work. Ex-| perience preferred, but not nec- essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10 a m. to 2 p. m, | WANTED—Experienced bookkeeper LOST and FOUND return to Empire. Reward. EYES EXAMINED and BROKEN LENSES replaced in our own shop. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson, Blomgren Bldg: Phone 636. MARY JOYCE BRINGS SIBERIAN HUSKY PUPS . T0 JUNEAU FROM TAKU Miss Mary Joyce arrived this morning from her lodge on . the Taku River in the river boat Mary J, bringing with her four fat little Siberian husky pups. The little fellows are to be shipped from Juneau to their future masters. H. Benjamin, of Sitka, will be for part-time work. Must be neat penman and able to operate Bur- roughs posting machine. Reply in own handwriting. Box 1554 Empire. W ANTED — Experienced mangle workers, Alaska faundry. AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing sir route from Seattle to Nome, on mle at J. B. Burford & Co. adw. MISCELLANEOUS ATTENTION HUNTERS—Trespass- sing and hunting strictly forbid- den on Spuhn Island. PRIVATE PROPERTY. FiVE CENTS each, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. . o Py mielo s i s o TURN your old goid to value, the owuer of one white pup while| Phillip Lancaster, also of Sitka, is getting two white pups which he plans to send outside. - The fourth of the litter, a little black fellow was brought in for Don Glass, Woodley Air Lines pilot of Anchor- age. Miss Joyce is staying at the Bar- anof Hotel and expects to be in Juneau for several days before re- turning fto Taku mdze Al DU(‘:OIII s OPEN THIS WEEK Members of the Pioneers’ Auxil- jary are to be hostesses all this week - at the regular nightly open houses for service men in the Am- erican Legion Dugout. As usual, the Dugout will be open each evening and service men are invited to drop in during their visits to the city and make themselves at home. bed and mat-| * | Agricultural Marketing Administra- Full| Phone Doug- | beds suitable for camp.| Phone ‘ Limited | LOST—Pair rimless glasses. Pimase | THE'DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'Tough War Baby Is | The Meat Problm; What Does It Mean! (Continued from Page One) (there is no ceiling price on the | animals themselves) and have to | sell at comparatively low wholesale | ceiling prices. The reasoning is | {that this is forcing some packen‘ out of business and that conse- | quently there is less meat on the | | market. * My two men at the Agriculture | Department snorted. |“Shucks,” said one, “in the first |place, we have reports of only three or four small packers going {out of busin In the secord | | place, there aren’t any loose mar-| | ketable animals running around. | The demand is so great that they're | {going to be snapped up by other packers.” | It is true that some packers are feeling the squeeze, and one sug-{ |gested remedy is a ceiling on live- | stock | | i. | | | more deadly than 8, fly-borne disease ... 800 from bullets! Right there, said my two experts, | is the catch. It would be next to| impossible to set a ceiling on beef | cattle, for instance, because you have to consider the meat yield of | various breeds, ages, weights, ete. | | Meat has been especially short | |the past two or three months, just | |keting picks up in the fall, the! ias it is every summer. Until mar-| and ants, too. . the one thousands o tion has done two things to relieve | |the pinch. First, although thei meat going to our fighting Russian allies is regarded as “the most im- portant meat on earth,” purchases {for lend-lease have been tempor- arily reduced. Second, priceg for| meat still being shipped albroad have been sét below the celllng’ |for other AMA purchases. This tends to make meat flow into do-| mestic rather than lend-lease chan- | nels. | Try some — today! STANDARD FLY SPRAY DOUGLAS NEWS VAL POOR VOTED MEMBER | | How to make the best of the! shortage? Two plans are being {considered. One is to allocate meat to various regions, then to states |and perhaps to counties and cities and even individual butcher shops. The other plan is just old fash- joned rationing, like sugar. The |WPB Food Requirements Commit-| 2" | tee, which developed the allocation | %% ¥ |idea, also has asked OPA to “pro-| ceed as rapidly as possible with the formulation of procedures for consumer rationing of meat.” OPA, however, insists it has no immed- jate intention of rationing meat. Declaring ‘a vacaney on pointment was this morning. reported | proposition *of having the a difficult one. HITLERTO FORCELAST BIG-DRIVE Winter Dra—fig Near As Summer Offensive of "Natzis Fizzle (Continued from Page One) more -ground in Stalingrad’s north- ern district and are moving up under a curtain of incessant bomb- ing attacks on Soviet defenses. German military quarters admit- |ted that the Russians are counter- attacking furiously, but dismissed them as having been “frustrated.” In the noon bulletin of Red headquarters, it was reported that Russian shock troops attacking the | northwest zone “broke into the enemy defenses and captured sev- eral heights.” Tops, B'Gosh ps, b 0O ALEXANDRIA, Sept. 29. A United States bomber recently sank | a, U-boat somewhere in the Enstcm Modlhmnenn The pilot radiced the informa- |tion to his base, then gave his ap- proximae positions and added, for | i, “where am I?” ¢ came back: “At the top of the class.” HOSPITAL NOTES Private Arthur Wood, & surgical | patient in St. Ann’s Hospital, has |been discharged. These May HHIH!“IIM‘III“IIIIIHIIIIIIIII!IIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllflllllfllflfllllfllIINIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIII It in Need of W. E. Feero has left St. Ann’s Hospital where he underwent a recent operation. Clarence Gove has been discharg- ed from St. Ann's Hospital where he was a medical patient. Irene Haffner has been admitted |to St. Ann’s Hospital for an ap- | pendectomy. Rudolph Miles has been admit- ted to the Government Hospital for medical care. ——.ee—— 00 e e s 000 WEATHER REPORT [ (U. 8. Bureau) L] - Temp, Monday, Sept. 28 Maximum 58, Minimum 49 e s 00000000000 Second and gumnmmuummmuumunnmuummmmumuummmuumuuuui T BULLETS! Ynu don’t believe it? Listen ~in the Spanish-American War we lost 5,000 men from and only This year, as never before, it's your wartime duty to pro- tect your health, your food, your clothes. That means you must kill flies quick. Moths Alaskans swear by —not at DOUGLAS CITY COUNCIL account ported in satisfactory condition to of-the prolenged absence of Alex Gair, Jr., the Douglas City Councll‘ the regular meeting last night | Val Poor to take his place neau had expressed his willingness and verbal acceptance of the ap-/to clean up the Greiner property | home Saturday from a received was given the Council. Due to the con-|about the property, partly in guins| Island. |tinued absence of Erwin Hachmeis- | singe the house was partly |ter as mayor, whose place is being taken by Councilman Engstrom the neces- sary quorum for meetings has been At last night's meeting a delayed report was received from James C.' e S We Are Pleased to The Receipt of a Number of GENERAL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS Diié to Limited Prodiiction of These Efficient Cléaners, Suggest You Call at Our Store and Ask for a Demonstration. The Alsska ElectricLight and Power Co. STICKS TO THE HOT SPOTS Thermo»Chnrged RPM Motor Oil is unequaled in cover- ing and lubricating hot cylinder walls and piston rings. Because it keeps a better oil film on these vital engine hot spots, it reduces engine wear. More —“RPM” keeps your engine cleaner than other motor oils. It ends carbon, sludge and varnish troubles. Prevents corrosion. Keeps oil filters cleaner, PAGE FIVE Phone PlfiGlY wmfilv Phone QUALITY with SERVICE HOME OF GOOD GROCERIES CRAB APPLES Juneau Grown 10¢ pound GET YOURS NOW For Pickling, Jelly or Jam PIGGLY WIGGLY Please place orders for delivery early. Orders received after 12 Noon will be delivered the following day, CALL Sanitary Meat Co. For longer engine life, and better, cleaner operation — switch to Thermo-Charged “RPM” today. In this war year when every extra hour of working counts—it will pay you to stick to “RPM” because it sticks to hot spots other oils leave dry! Use Standard Fly Spray— the spray with plenty of blitz f UNEQUALERD AT ANY PRICF STANDARD OF CALIFORNIA. | HICKEY BUYS CLARK HOME The -purchase by James Hickey of Juneau of the J. M. Clark hombe on St. Ann’s Avenue, with posses- sion to become effective on Octo- ber 1 has been reported. Capt.| and Mrs. Olark, who have resided on the Island for a couple of years, take care of next payment on the|expect to go to Ketchikan to reside, | bonds when due. |at least temporarily. i - e | Cooper, acecountant, covering audit ‘u( the school books for year end- ‘mg July 31. It was voted to pay off balance due the bank for loans leaving the water and sewer bonded indebtedness as the city’s only li- ability. The water fund was re- Report that Ralph Baker of Ju- Mr. and Mrs. Ell Post returned ten-day | Compl'ur‘t hunting #ip to points on Admiralty | They got one big buvk de- ‘vn'h,hlng in the neighborhood of | stroyed by fire last winter had been 1180 pounds in addition to other |magle by the Fire Department. game and enjoyed the period of| In cooperation with local defense, | fine weather camping out. arrangements were made to pro- IR =0 T2 S i vide bags of sand for use of the| SAVE THE DATE Territorial Guard as machine gun| Oct. 17 FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 55% 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 Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel THRIFT CO-OP frember National Retailer- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 [ S——— NORTH Transfer & Garbage Co. E.O.DAVIS. E.W.DAVIS ~—Phones—81 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Junean Motors Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES nests. Douglas Fireman’s Dance Armm‘mce o Be the Last Obtainable for Some Time. ¢ o a New Cleaner at This Time, We LT T e e T @i Franklin Sts. Phone 616 ~ NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 [ The Alaskan Hotel | Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O e ey GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 689 American Meat — Phone 38 HUTCHINGS ECONOMY NOR Cholee m Times Wall Paber Located in George Bros. Store L PHONE 553—92—95 Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 PFred W. Wendt Alaska Meat Market OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE |} The largest and most complete MEN stock of Fresh and Frozen AMERICAN LEGION DUGOUT Meats in Juneau. EVERY NIGHT L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39—539 Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. SONOTONE 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 hearing alds for the hard of hear- ing. Audiometer readings. Dr. Rae Lillian ' Carlson, Blomgren Bldg, Phone 636. 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