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

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, | 942 PHONEA CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS Copy must be in the office by t o'clock in the afternoon to in- wre insertion on same day. We accept ads over teuephone trom persons listed in telephone irectory. Count five average words to the (ne. Daily rate per line for consecu- e insertions: Orne day . Additional days Minimum charge FOR SALE MALE BOSTON bulldog FOR RENT or SALE- —4- lm fl!‘l.‘ Phons gréen e, house, large lot. Close in. 128| e 6th. ;NO DOWN PAYMENT ~ |SMALL 3 'ROOM _furnished '|pv Qtpmhr’( X room monthly installments, 4- partly furnished house . | with large garden spot overlook- HEATED sleeping room, close m} ing Auk Lake. Box 1826, Cit el | PORTABLE RADIO, ac-de. and [HREE toom furnished apt. $15| battery, inlaid folding card table, _{meant first, p“ps'imlny of setting up camp for gun | whether a wad‘ Alaskan Platoon Shows Stuff; Big Feat Is Reveale (Continued from Page One) tea, some concentrated cereal. That was all. They could make fires only in da\'llgLL when the flames were not visible. Even then, the fires had to be kept to mere dribbles of flame for fear of the smoke being seen. They slept in their soaking wet clothes, without tents of any kind and couldn't smoke after dark | They had to move always with [the idea that some Jap probably |was looking down at them from {the next foggy peak. Their orders were simply to scout the island | land “engage and destroy” any ene- | | mies found. Couldn’t Use Radio They couldn't use radio to sum: mon help. Only to warn of a big concentration of troops, if such warning seemed necessary. Their job was far more than simply to| | exist. When the Colonel ordered a pri- |vate to find a gun position, he to decide where the 1gun ought to be from the view- point of its range of fire, con- cealment possibilities, the practica- |crews, and finally, long it would take. The Colonel one day told a Seout to locate such a position, and when he returned, the Scout was able to trace on a map the road route. But it was quite crooked and Colonel asked why. | could be built to the site and how the | The Scout said, | CORPORATION TAX PASSES SENATE VOTE Would be 40 Percent on $50,000 or More Net Incomes WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 The Senate voted today for a 40 per- cent combined normal surtax rate | on corporations with $50,000 or more net income, after rejecting a | proposal by Senator LaFollette for |a tax of 50 percent with a com- |bined rate on all corporations with $25,000 or more net income. | The Senate adopted the Finance | | Committee amendment lowering | the eredit of income taxpayers' de-| pendents to $300, but this change | |must yet be approved by thel Hmne e INDIA MUST - DROP FIGHT, SAYS AMERY | Secrefary Tells Commons that 846 Have Been THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA Crossword Puzzle 39. Chum \\Hunz table To ag inner vome Homo>E>z (o> Inquire Al Scenes of [AlD] Exist g 2. Type of elec= tric_current: abbr. Head coverings Town in New s o Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle | I { con- tomis 65 Amerlean Down . Massachu- humorist 1. Body of Jewe setts cape ish letter 66, Goes at an easy galt 67. Novel A fe . Half: prefix B 3 H\ mming bird 6 3. Am Town in Penn- sylvania A/ ad III%I t it Obliterated Stopped Kind of ¢ . Child's w f. . Large wa Rented 1 . Form Into a fabric . Kettledrum Fish . 158 Understand . Number TRIAL FOR 10,000 NAZI o PIGGLY last chance to refill months. < PEAR CRABAP PIGGLY CALL FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 | Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH Transfer & Garbage Co. QUALITY with SERVICE NOW is the time to get your canning fruit. CONCORD GRAPES PEACHES and others in season ONE DELIVERY EACH DAY Due to the help situation we must have all orders in by 12 Noon. PAGE FIVE WIGGLY "3 Your your jars for winter PLES ‘WIGGLY THANK YOU! Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 4 Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retatler- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET ver month. Phone Douglas 18. " large and small tapestries, lady's|“I dug holes all over the valley K]"ed m campalgn E.O.DAVIS E.W.DAVIS PHONE 767 3 » 4 ible » —— | fur coat, men’s suits, overcoat, and that route offers the best 2-ROOM Furnished Apt., ol st0VeS,| heayy blazer, miscellaneous|roadbed. It's the right grade s0| LONDON, Oct. 9—Gandhi's A”,‘WAR lEADERS REF EES To —Phones—81 608 Willoughby. Phone Douglas| itchen utensils. Black 405. that guns of that caliber can be!ngia Congress party must shun! 372, |= hauled to position with trucks of |yiolence or drop any plan to win FORD AGENCY i o yor, salE O WRADEAmN|L L O RS s | ol o Ay ; TAAWT INE DAVTIN | (Authorized Dealers) FOR RENT OR SAl 5-ROOM | poat Phone green 353. st |ite' AlHBEIEERUSI: KeRoltion, before COWLING-DAVLIN GREASES—GAS—OIL partly furnished house. Phone | ¥ the British will negotiate with it, Foot of Main Street Douglas 48. | MILK GOATS and kids for sale, 100 Percent Right L. S. Amery, Secretary for India, COMPANY BB | cheap. Geo. Bednar, Tee Harbor.| When the guns finally were in|i5lq the House of Commons ol ] JIIIU!I Ho'm 6 ROOMS sLmny ‘modern unfurn- | position, the Colonel checked and| pe disclosed that 846 persons ‘. 0 F: DODGE and PLYMOUTH ished house. 504 5th St top floor. HOT WATER St;lltrmb:thlul;m:: found that the Scout had been 10 have been killed and 2024 wound- President SGYS Commis- Reliable Sources SaV s imieind [ double coil bed springs percent right on each item, al- ('d since violence broke out on the . : FURNISHED APTS. in Douglis.| g5 though he had spent only & few |arreat of Ganani, August 8 wnen| SiON May Be Formed fo Rhineland Evacuees Soothing Organ Music and One 4-room apt. $20; one 3-room| ———————————— lnours looking over the ground, |tne Congress party made him Gen-| . . . WHEN IN NEED OF Delicious Fried Chicken apt. $16. Oil range, inlaid lino. 5-RM. HOUSE, two sun porches, oo’ iyl S, “an englfieer | eugitngiivie’ to 1sed & non-violewt! |nveS'Iga'e Crimes [ GOIng fo Greece EVERY NIGHT good furniture, attractive, clean,| furnished, 820 6th and Nelson or a traction expert. 1(‘amAaign for independence. | < | el Diesel Oll—Stove ou—uYn:r nnuuus m comfortable. Phone Douglas 472| Sts. Phone red 610. After more than a week, the first | 3 3 ; 3 | WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 —Presi-| ANKARA, Turkey, Oct. 9—Greek fi:l.fh;::nh.?T:;.ICn:In; after 6 p. m. _|OIL HEATER, round tables, for large contingent of soldiers arrived | dent Roosevelt asserted that the|sources said today that 10,000 Ger- | John Marin, Prop. Phone 68 FORNISHED 2-toom Apt. with| sale cheap. Blue 619, “;l“‘hall:wy thOl:Sh‘ Wasl "}isar-‘ARMY MEN (HANGE United States is prepared to co- :""”l“':”l'“"“)“'“';;AI:}"“"I“"“ m-.msl CALL US! . = £x g able weather. By then most of the | operate in establishing a commis- | bombed by the are expected :’.flu‘fv’e Phone 621, 175 Gas- | =1 r0is 1 man's bicycle, both | Scouts had been without sleep iori FFI E BUHNNG o S Snithe b bk oat o I Bods Thi WEHABR: Juneau Transfer GEORGE n”. Wi 3 | like new. Phone Black 600. |at least 48 hours. Nevertheless, each ilivestigation of war crimes of the| Several Athens streets were de- Phone 48—Night Phone 481 Widest Selection of GARAGE Phone Green 234 ‘I:-F'I‘. CEDAR oum(;zlrd 1)2)’&{.”560, took over the job of guiding some | )’Axlh and said it is the intention to clared evacuated on German STEAM HEATED Rooms, slngle or| double. 315 Gold St. } 4 ROOM apt. steam heated, electric range, cold and hot running wat-: er, private bath. Phone 569. ONE office room for rent. National Bank Bldg. First VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. FUR. ap easy kept warm Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. FURNISHED house and furnished | apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. | FOR RENT—Apartments, mqui;e‘ at office 20th Century Bldg. | s WANTED—Inner spring mattress for double bed, must be in good | condition. Phone Douglas 48. ; WANTED— Hardware Thomas Hardware Co. man at| I | WANTED—Used magneuzed radio speaker. Apt. 3, evenings, Kletn, Apartments. | WANTED — Girls or women Ior} kitchen or waitress work. Ex-| perience preferred, but not nec-‘ essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10‘ a m. to2p m WANTED— Experienced mangle workers. Alaska Laundry. "AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing | uir route from Seattle to Nome, om | FOR SALE~Purmshed cabin, Auk| |MODERN 5 room furnished log| Will take small payment. Red 340. ONh J ROOM h()usP also one 4- room house, both modern, oil heat. Inquire 418 Park Ave. after 5 p.m. FURNISHED house, 822 Road. Call after 7 p.m. skiff as part 5 Basin | Two TRIPP residences on upper Main St. to close estate. See| Mrs. Fred B. Johnston on prem- ises, 623 Main St. Phone green 413. STOVE, large windows, tables and! other materiai. Ring Thane three 3 rings or call between 5 and 7 p.m. George Getchell. | | Lake. Phone Blue 379. LAYING HENS and Pullets, Nor- thern Vegetable Farm. Loop Road, Glacier Highway. BLOCK mill wood 36 unlt delivered, JKindling $6.75 unit, del. Limited amt. Order now. Juneau Lum- ber Mills, Phone 358. house, Mile 3% Glacler Highway. Montgomerys. 3-ROOM Furnished house and im- provements on 5-acre homesite. 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, L. W. Cord. P. O. LOST and FOUND {called for early draft service. Others unit to its new position, some many miles from the landing spot, and | then to guide another unit. That‘ went on for days. 1 How well its work was done is illustrated by the fact that Cast- | ner received several protests from commanders of the new trooj units that the Scout guides were going across the tundra so fast the troops were unable to keep up. Others Beefed When the job was done, the Scouts gathered around for their first fires, took time out to wash their faces, and even enjoyed few cans of field rations which | tasted like steak dinners to them, although the rest of the Army was | beefing about the food and the fact that' it was hard to heat. | ‘The Scouts, however, had only jone beef. It was that they'd been unable to find any Japs, even medium-sized ones, to pick on. The Scouts were organized soon after the war began to do ad- vance work for the Army in a country nobody knew much about. ‘The backbone of the organization were volunteers from the ranks| of residents of the Alaska back | country. i Ask a Scout where he came from and he’s more than likely to say, “Up Kobuk,” or, “I've got a rrunel on the Koyukuk.” Many of them are men outside of draft cate-| gories, not likely to have been | are natives and the remainder o!‘ the bunch are conscripts who hap- pen to know and like the back| | former " by one of the companies from the nle at J. B. Burford & Co. ldv, LOST v Wrecker crank, Saturday night on Highway, $1.00 reward; MISCELLANEOUS also large vacuum bottle, one aluminum painted truck wheel ATTENTION HUNTERS—Trespass- sing and hunting strictly forbid- and tire last summer. $2.00 re- ward. Return them to Dutch’s den on Spuhn Island. PRIVATE PROPERTY. Garage. #iVE CENTS eacl, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Burkers. — e TURN your old gold 'into value, tash or trade at Nugget Shop. e b i HUARANTEED Realistic Perma- uent. $550. Paper Curls, $1 up inia Beauty Shop. Phone 3201 315 Decker Way. | \ | | | | J The pauy Afiska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al- wska newspaper. Choice Vegefables In Ardic Circle; | Fine Gardens Seen TORONTO, Oct. 9.—Church of Ingland missionaries, writing re- ‘ently from Aklavik, N.W.T., 120 miles north of the Arctic Circle are most enthusiastic about the suc- cess of their gardens. Tomatoes are ripening on the| vines; there was more lettuce than | they could possibly use themselves; flowers were blooming profusely, especially the sweet peas; and| there would be staple veaeubles' to store for winter use. The over-worked can opener was |being given a good rest. - FLY TO ANCHORAGE Mrs. James McGinty and two children who arrived here recently from the States, left today aboard a Woodley plane for Anchorage. B BUY DLFENSE BONDS {it has been sent out for two and | minimum rations. ‘rugged training courses in praeti- ‘I no surrender is even fhought of. | aska has, except to undergo bomb- country, plus a few white collar workers—accountants and teachers —who have shown a surprising| ability to adapt themselves to the roughest kind of life. Many Applications The platoon leader is Robert Thompson, of Mocassin, Montana. | The fame of the organization has| spread quickly and Castner has been besieged by applications from officers and men. The Scouts have had the tough- est training coucse in Alaska. Many times during the last few munths‘ | | three weeks at a time with only Between times, the men have been put through cal military engineering, artillery placement, mapping and signalling in addition to the practice kind of combat in which it’s either win of | die, because no help is coming and Ready for Anything So far, they haven't met the ene- my. But no ground ier in Al-| ings. But after licking one island and coming up smiling, the platoon ap- \pears to be ready for anything. Meanwhile, given a rest period, most of the meén have gone hunt- | preferring to move to a INTO HEADQUARTERS The industry of Army men around the former Montgomery - Ward Building is speedily converting the office into a comfortable waiting room, which will be head» quarters for the service men when | they are in town. The building has been rented| Army post and they are supecrvis- ing the furnishing and arrange- ment of the room, which will be their loading headquarters for transportation back to camp at night. The furnishings have been do- nated, through the cooperation of the American Red Cross, with Miss |Juanita Kay assisting in finding furniture for the building, The boys already have the basic | furniture necessary, including set- tees and chairs, some of which they have built themselves, Mrs. Ernest Gruening has presented them with a wicker settee and a ping pong table. Needed now are lamps, writing tables and smoking standg and pictures or wall hangings would be welcome, Miss Kay said today. The women of the American Le- | gion Auxiliary have given many‘ |donations and other Juneau resi- dents also have been cooperaung' in the. plan. ‘ ing mountain goats, or if the ru- |mor is reliable, chewing down a |few trees with their teeth just as relaxation. It's a matter of fact, however, that the platoon returning here did refuse good warm barmcka‘ nearby | beach and MHve in tents, despite | the autumn weather in Alaska. | | | | | JUNEAU MEN INVOLVED It is believed that several Ju- neau men are in the daring group’ that made the great landing and paved the way for other units ofl the do or die forces. ol 1IF PLAIN COOKING THIS EASY WAY! 0 stews, meat loaves, hash, add the magic touch of Heinz Tomato Ketchup — rare spices merged with Heinz pedigreed tomatoes, Heinz Vinegar, pure sugar. Order two bottles of Heinz Tomato Ketchup—one for table use, one for flavoring your cooking. HEINZ KETCHUP or- ders to provide housing | Reliable Balkan sources said that! German authorities in Yuzoslavia have decreed the death penalty for mete out just «nd sure punishment for the “ringleaders responsibie for organized murder.” It is the intention of the United States, the President said, that | Patriots who by showing lights |“the 'successful close of the war have been guiding American and shall' include provision for the sur- | British planes in their flights over |render to the United Nations of Yugoslavia to attack Axis domin- war criminals.” ated territory. | Presidenfiial Secretary Stephen | 5 T i R |Early, in giving out the press re- MISS ALBRECHT MOVES lease, failed to answer the ques- Miss Helene W. L. Albrecht, Ju- tion as to whether or not Hitler | neau physiotherapist, has moved and Mussolini are the Iwo ring-|from the Valentine Bldg. to 634 leaders whose surrender will ue ré- | gixth St. Phone red 246. v, quired. BT G e x 5 EYES EXAMINED SONS OF NORWAY and BROKEN LENSES replaced in Meeting 8 o'clock Saturday eve- |our own shop. Dr. Rae Lillian ning, Odd Fellows Hall. All mem- Carlson, Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. ' bers requested to be present. adv IN WAR AS IN PEACE DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing - FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 Free Delivery Juneau | GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelt HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instrumenty and Supplies Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 INSURED CONEIVATN! mansgement and strict Governmens supervision work constantly for the protection of our depositors. Additional security is provided through this Bank’s membership in Pederal Deposit Insurance Corporse tion, s United States Governmient agency which insures oach depositor against low to s maximum of $5,000: First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASEA MEMSER PEOERAL LT INSURANS egnéu‘nou ! | | | | | AMERICAN OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN LEGION DUGOUT EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS BUY DEFENSE BONDS Phone 206 122 W. Second HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Cholce Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONE 553—92—95 Alaska Meat Mar The largest and most complete stock of Presh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 390—539 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Pred W. Wendt SONOTONE hearing alds for the hard of hear- ing. Audiometer readings. Dr. Rae “ilian Carlson, Blomgren Bldg, Phone 636, Subscribe to the

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