The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 23, 1942, Page 5

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1942 P CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by f o'clock In the afternoon to in- wre insertion on same day. We accept ads over teuephone trom persons listed in telephone Uirectory. _Count five average words to the Dally rate per line for consecu- Kve insertions: Cue day .. Additional days Minimum charge ... ! FOR RENT MODERN 4-room house half mile | north Douglas Bridge Phone blue 730. 10¢ 50 500 2-ROOM steam heated apartment vacant in the Lesher Apts. Phonz blue 474. VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. 3-RM._APT. fumished. Oilstoves.| 210 Main St. ! CABIN, §7. Phone green 233. [ F'URNISHED aparlmenl for mnt Phone red 600. 3-ROOM furnished apt. 1565 Seat- ter Tract. Phn. black 479 from 8 to 3 pm. 2-ROOM Furnished Apt., ol stoves, | 608 Willoughby. Phone Douglas 372. 6 ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- | ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. F‘URNISHED zroom Apt. with bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas-| tineau Ave. STEAM HEATED Ro‘oms, single or double. 315 Gold St. e ¢ ROOM apt. steam heated, electric range, cold and hot running wat- | er, private bath. Phone 569. ONE office room for rent. First National Bank Bldg. FUR. apts., 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, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. WANTED WANTED—Used _typewriter. have you? Inquire 340 West 12th St. or write P.O. Box 244 WANTED—Baby high chair. Write Empire C 1670. WANTED TO BUY—Baby buggy in good condition. Write D-1000, Empire. WAN'I'ED Girls or wome kitchen or waitress work. perience preferred, but not nec- essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10 a m. to 2 p. m. |2¢ - FT. TRUNK _ |FURNISHED house, | What HONE A FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS ‘Why Did FDR Make | Hyde THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU, ALASKA Named on New Economic Stabilization Board Recent Secret Tour! Simple Answer Given (Contmued 1rum Page One) those who know mm pest make it sound. In the first place, the Presi- dent's need to get away from the daily routine of wartime in the White House must be apparent to any one who gives a thought to the facts. Except for a dedication into Maryland, a few days Park, and an occ auto ride near the capital, Roose- velt has been his own prisoner of war since before Pearl Harbor. Early and late, day in and day | out, he has gone through the daily | White House round with never a | change of scene to aid relaxation. junket at lonal FOR SALE | FOR SALE—Used sun lamp. Phonu green 413. cabin gasboat “Mist” $200. Model A engine. Fifth float, Small Boat Harbor. Phone red 245. SECOND hand windows and doors. Mrs. Runquist, Douglas. STUDIO couch, $20; also electr ic| wash. machine, $20. Phone blue 120 or call at 435 9th St. MALE BOSTON bulldog pups. Phone green 640. LOT 40x100, near , 40 feet frontage on beach and highway, warranty deed, bargain, $125 cash. George C. Denman, Box 3009, El Paso, Texas. ‘1934 PONTIAC Sedan good con- dition, good tires. Call at 209 Gold St. or phone black 330. 4 RM FURNISHED house PO Box 1075. |4 HP. OUTBOARD, $50 cash. Phone 671 before 5 pm. 5 RVI HOUSE two sun porches, furnished, 820 6th and Nelson | Sts. Phone red 610. " 822 Basin Road. Call after 7 p.m, \TWO TRIPP residences on upper Main St. to close estate. See Mrs. Fred B. Johnston on prem- ises, 623 Main St. Phone green 413. jSTOVE, large windows, tables and — | other material. Ring Thane three 3 rings or call between 5 and 7 p.m. George Getchell, | 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% Glacler Highway. | Montgomerys. | | 3-ROOM Furnished house and im- provements on 5-acre homesite. 13% mi. Loop Road, L. W. Cord. P. O. 50 chickens, Auk Lake. Box 609. The Federal Works Agency, Sub- | Regional Office, Region No. 7, 511 |Alaska Building, Seattle, Washing- ton, October 22, 1942. Sealed bids, Add to this monotony, the great tresponsibility which falls on any chief executive in wartime and multiply it by the stupendity of this global war, That is something the President can't escape, no matter how many | trains he takes, but by changing the scene, he perhaps has been able to readjust the load he's car- rying. As for production centers, his reason for visiting plants and training those close to him have | even simpler explanation. | The President’s interest in — | duction — whether it be of ma- chines of war or of the trained | soldiers and sailors who will man |them in battle—is keen. He likes ln see the wheels go around and to watch the assembly lines rolling them off a pro- INGVALD MARTIN, JUNEAU RESIDENT, | DIES IN SEATTLE Martin, long a Juneau resident, died yesterday in Swedish Hospital in Seattle after having gone south for medical treatment a week ago, although doctors held out little hope for his recovery. Mr. Martin, who was in his sev- enties, had no relatives here, and it is believed most of his family is still in Norway. Although he had been a resident {of Juneau for many years, he was quiet and seldom spoke of his private life. A carpenter by trade, he slowly accumulated more and| more property, building houses on | w. and Mrs. Goddard expect to | the lots, and renting them. |spend about two months on leave It is estimated that he owned i, {he States. Both are well known the whole of the hillside between i, juneau and came here from Lower Gastineau Avenue and LOW- | gjtka to make their home for a er Franklin Street near the City|pumper of years during which Mr. Dock, and probably owned about|Goddard was with the Alaska Game 25 or 30 houses there, which he|commission. From Juneau they rents. |moved to Ketchikan where they He had been a member of the|)veq for several years before again Lutheran Church in Juneau ever | .king Sitka their home. Here, in since its organization some 15years | Ketchikan and Sitka, Mr. and Mrs. o, i Goddard have always been active News of his death was received‘m civic and organization affairs in a telegram. to Mrs. Andrew Ros- ness and she was asked to notify MRS. JACK GARRETT HERE his friends here. Nicholas Fleiness,| Mrs. Jack Garrett and her son believed to be an uncle, is handling | joe returned today from Sitka arrangements in Seattle and the| where they spent the last week vis- funeral was set for October 26 in‘,um, Mr. Garrett. Mr. Garrett was the Home Undertaking Company |formerly on the staff of the Bar- there. nnor Hotel and resigned several m-(»ks ago to accept a position at the Silver Foam in Sitka. VIITORS [ Mrs. Garrett has resumed her RETURN TO JUNEAU| ..ion at Sigrid's Beauty Salon Mrs. T. J. McCaul and Miss El-‘hm 3 len McKechnie returned to Ju. neau last night from Sitka where | they have been visiting Mrs. Mc-| Wesdesday, Sept. 2, 1752, was fol- Caul's son, Royal Smith, for the Jowed by Thursday, Sept. 14, when Top (left to right): erican Farm Bureau Federation; lmld, \l, and Eric A. Johnstox EM. GODDARD AND MRS. GODDARD, SITKA, SOUTHBOUND E. M. Goddard, Northland Trans- portation Company agent at Sitka, and Mrs. Goddard are southbound passengers who passed through |Juneau on their to Seattle during the past "12 hours. Ingvald . - SITKA —_—— |in triplicate, for furnishing all la- ATRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing Jir route from Seattle to Nome, un ‘le at J. B. Burford & Co. RADIO - phonograph. Call at 530 Park St. upstairs, or write P.O.| Box 494, Juneau. MISCELLANEOUS FiVE CENTS each, paid for used| yunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. TURN your old gold Into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. FUARANTEED ' Realistic Perml-J nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up wola Beauty Shop. Phone 301 315 Decker Way. LOST and FOUND LOST—Pair Zeiss 6x30 binoculars “Silvamar” No. 1 123 657. Re- ward. Wellman Holbrook, LOST — Wallet contaiping papers and money. Keep money. Please return papers to Empire. John G. Vavalis. FOUND—Lady’s overnight bag, tire and rim, car jack. Identify at City Police Station. DEPUTY U.S. MARSHAL K. P. SAMPSON AND MRS. SAMPSON HERE K. P. Sampson, Deputy U.S.Mar- shal at Sitka, arrived in Juneau last night on official business. He brought over several prisoners. Mr. Sampson was accompanied by his wife and they will be here for several days before returning to the Baranof Island community. acv. | |bor and materials and performing all work required, subject to the terms of the specifications, for the construction of a Recreation Build- |ing, located at Sitka, Territory of | Alaska, will' be received until 10 |AM. P.W.T. November 5, 1942 al' the Sub-Regional ‘Office, 511 Alds- ka Building, Seattle, Washington. |Bids are to be delivered in ad- | dressed envelopes as specified. Bids [not posted in the United States mails are to be delivered at the |aforementioned office. Attention is |called to the fact that not less than the minimum wage rates as set forth in the specifications must be paid on this project. Specifica- tions may be obtained at the Sub- Regional Office, 511 Alaska Build- ing, Seattle, Washington, and at the office of the Federal Works Agency Project Engineer, Baranof Hotel, Juneau, Alaska, upon de- posit of $10 to assure return of | rints and specifications not filed with bid. Bid security in the| amount specified is required. Cash | deposits will not be accepted. A serformance bond and a payment Jond must be furnished in an amount of not less than that specified. adv. — e PETERSBURG FAMILY TO GO TO CALIFORNIA Ole R. Ekren, retired Petersburg business man, left Juneau this| morning on his way south. In Petersburg, Mrs. Ekren and their| daughter will board the steamer | and together they are going to| continue to California. Mr. Ekren had been in Juneau for several days on private busi- ness. last two weeks. | ACROSS 1. Pointed tool 4. Brazilian macaws 8. Quote 12. American writer 13. Hire 14. Sufficlent: poetic 15. High rank 17. Entice 18. Demolish 19. Type of win- ow 2. Blixhll inten- ally, . Hawalian dance . Insect . Father . Some 3 Queler chaps: slang . Note of the scale . River bottom . Philistine god . Predicaments . Personal sense of dignity . Bay windows . City in Okla- homa . Goad . Marshy . French river ). Wicked . Short for a mnn s name 26. Destroy 28 Plgpen Toward i School book 33. Front SRR rwork il adal) WEN/d ELd Samm sl fl%%/il Bd/ ANEN ZdudEEE n/d >l | V4 | flfifl’// ARG ES R Rd NN JEEE 64. Syllable usqd » ma FT] the meqnc calendar was adnpwl Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle DOWN 1. Mimics . Grown girl nhurriedly st in musical refrains ear apart he elbow Cubic meters . Salad plant . Accustom . High pointed hill Female sheep 6. Body of self- luminous gas . Solid part of & lace design . Yellow ocher Begin Sounds Bird's beak Pillow covers Carthaginian . Floor covering . Player of & certain musical instrument Tdle talk Flew aloft 3 Hlpgl. against . Finial of & s . More profound Waken . Gold coin of k Dro (‘ut Iennhmu [ - Kind of pastry . Rubber tree . Drudge | Appointment of these six labor, agricultural and business leaders by President Roosevelt to serve on the new Economic Stabilization Board was announced by James F. Byrnes, director of Economic Stabilization. William Green, president of AFL; Philip Murray, Patton, president of the Farmers Cooperative Union. Ralph E. president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. ‘BlA(KOUI SIREN | president of CIO, and James G. Bottom row: ward O'Neal, president of the Am- Flanders, president, Jones and Lamson Machine Co., Spring- fuosm KELLY ROUTS CUSTOMER NOW IN OREGON | A B Phflllps. .supm'unendem of schools here, today received a let- ter from Hobart Kelly, for eight years superintendent of schools in Ketchikan, who resigned this year. BRIGHTON, Me., prise blackout cost Clayton San- born a customer. The sound of| the shrill siren unnerved Sanborn as fie demonstrated a gun to the| . Kelly says he is now making {)19\!)14.;;,.“\« ]l:u,\lux‘]and .ho u»anr(-;\- | his home in Portland, Oregon, and lonally pulled the trigger. The | woreing for the Aluminum Com- charge hit the ceiling and the cus- | s & |pany of America in Vancouver, tomer hit only a few high spots in and sends greeting to his his rapid exit. He didn't return. | Wwosh @nd seads b many friends here. ! OL(. 23—A sur- Junior ODA Has Meet This Week Junior Catholic Daughters of America met this week and held | initiation following their business ‘meetinq. with Zelma Gross, Jean- ette Ducette, Rita and Barbara Barnhill as initiates. Following the ceremonies, re- | freshments were served. The out- |side work of the Junior CDA was (m’_"dnscusaed during the evening, and tHa the girls this year will roll ban- dages for St. Ann’s Hospital. — ., Dimout Color Changed HONOLULU, Ou. 23.—After ten months of blackout in which auto- | mobiles were permitted to upuruto with blue lights, the military gov- ernor’s office decided blue was the wrong color and ordered red lights substituted. i N Pensacola Dam on Grand River, | northeast Oklahoma, is the est multiple-arch dam in world. .- BUY DEFENSE BONDS Empire Classifieds Pay! [ e O L. JAHODA as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA !JMI'IRE is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the< — CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "Country Fair"—"Don’t Get Personal” Federal Tax—>5c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! R SO PSR IN WAR AS IN PEACE owe DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED CONQRVATIV! mansgement and strict Governmens supervision work constantly for the protection of our depositors. Additional security is provided through chis benk’s membership in Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora« tion, 8 United States Government agency which insures each depositor sgainst low to o maximum of $5,000, First National Bank PAGE FIVE e PIGOLY WIGGLY 5 QUALITY with SERVICE NOW IN STOCK FRESH Cauliflower Egg Plant Radishes Green Onions Parsley Squash—3 kinds Sweet Potatoes Cucumbers Tomatoes PLEASE GIVE US YOUR Cantaloupes Dianjo Pears Barilett Pears Seedless Grapes Rebier Grapes Malaga Grapes Golden Delicious Apples Jonathan Apples Mackintosh Apples Crabapples Canning Pears DELIVERY ORDER EARLY NOT LATER THAN 12 NOON FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E.0.DAVIS E. W. DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Btorage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing = FRED HENNINGC 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 Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. §90 American Meat — Phone 38 OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN AMERICAN LEGION DUGOUT EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS of JUNEAU, ALASKA M [ '=ouu D<POSIT INSURANCE ‘CORPORATION I BUY DEFENSE BONDS 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 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—-GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Molors Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 85 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf 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 Snpply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager { Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats In Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39539 (e . 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau’s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 Wall Paper’ Ideal Paint Shop Pheone 549 Fred W. Wendt SONOTONE hearing alds for the hard of hear- ing. Audiometer readings. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson, Blomgren Bldg, Phone 636. Subscribe to the Dally Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest pald circulation. et 3 o el o g

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