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ESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1942 PHONE A CLASSIFIED . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to in- sure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone directory. Count five average words to the Hne. Daily rate per line for consecu- tive insertions: One day ) Additional days Minimum charge ...... FOR RENT FOR RENT e FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ((onhnued) H!D l\()ml 623 '\‘laln St. Call 486 after 5 p.m. Tapt,, clectric hot and coid " furnished steam heat, Phone 569. 2-ROOM range, water. WAREHOUSE space or storage. Cole Transfer, phone 344. ATED warehouse, including dry storage. Apply 20th Meat Market. HE metal Century LABIN $7 Phone }Vgrrgex'; 234. 3 FURNISHED apartment for rent. Phone red 600. 5 ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- ished: house. 504 5th St top floor. F'URNISHED 2 room Apt. with bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas- tineau Ave. e B !-l.lc apls. easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, watzr, dishes. Seaview Apts. FPURNISHED house and furnished apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. FOR RENT—Apartments, Inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. WANTED WANTED—A homesite, water front, | acre or more cleared land, P.O.| Box 487, Juneau. | WANTED—High school girl to| take dancing lessons in exchange | for dish washing, 4 hrs. per week. | Phone red 575. | TWO waitresses wanted for lunch| counter work. Experience not| necessary. Apply Alaskan Hotel. WANTED—Furnished apts, fur- nished rooms, room and board| for US. Gov't employees. Phcnc' 819 between 9 and 10 am. and| 6 and 9 pm. ! APPLICANTS for position as ush- erettes will be interviewed Satur- day morning between 10 and 12, Girls must be at least sixteen. See Mr. Garvin, Capitol Theatre | office over First National Bank. WANTED—Will pay cash for good used piano. Phone red 206, Alaska Music Supply. WANTED—Used furniture. 306 Wil- loughby, phone 788. WANTED — Girls or women Jor kitchen or waitress work. Ex-| perience preferred, but not nec- essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10 a. m.w 2 p m AIRMAIL ENVELOPES, showing Jr route from Seattle to Nome, m:{ NalLJ B. Burford & Co. adv.| | FIVE CENTS each, paid for used| gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. | TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. ikl ok o | ke JUARANTEED Realistic pem.! uent, $550. Psper Curls, $1 up wola Beauty Shop. Phone 30) 15 Decker Way. RADIO, waft‘l;cfilron. toaster, tric iron. Phone black 624. TWO 9x12 Broadloom pads, dining table. 181 rugs Phone red FOR SALE .'xsb‘oal Wngny and equipment, $400. See John Lowell or H. L. Faulkner. DISHES for sale, Apt. 7, Evergreen Apts. house, good blue 723 furnished Phone view. Terms. KITCHEN table, Sivertone Gra- phone, set pots and pans, 1 trunk. Phone green 545. YWO beautiful red fox furs. Phone black 624. FURNISHED house, 822 Basin Road. Calj after 7 p.m, _ COUNCIL CL | be recorded. It being reported that | become | teresting :D'\RILY furm*.hck] B luom lllmslu- 3 acres ground. Front Air- Phone 155. | 65-RM. FUR. house, 2 sun 'p'orchos. electric range, oil heat, 820 Sixth and ‘Nelson. Phone red 610. low, port Gate. i-RM. FURNISHED nouse. P.O. Box 1075, MODERN 5 room (umlshad log house, Mile 3% Glacier Highway. Montgomerys. ANN SHERIDAN | 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. DOUGLAS NEWS I MA OF CURRE} The regular meeting of the Douglas City Council was held last night with little of importance to teams bowling tonight and alleys, follow: rams 3 and 1 on alleys 1 and 2 4 and 2 on allms 3 and 4 e 5y ACROSS . 1. Scoteh elt; 4. Hard que: 10. Artificial language . French coin . Not profes- sional . Type measure Evasion Dad . Animal . Fisher for certain fish alk . Goddess of peace . Dress stone with a hammer ‘hickness ne ;Ih!) talks tons [~ [>|m |0 > > [oD>loln] ) (O Z][0[0] 19 Im |~ [> glibly . Smallest state: abbr. 42. Father | Danish 1sland Sign Irish excla- mation . Humble . Different . Oilstones . Island south ot Connecticut EEE%EEE wel 5 Im /%[5 >] > /m/5] Moz . Flower . Belonging to that girl . Pronoun . Glut Part of the Bible: abbr. . Baffled . King Arthur's lance . Hydraulic pump 61. abbr. . Adorns richly . Leave i Seoten welgh- ing machines 60. Greek island Article 62, Horseman's at 63. Crafty DOWN 1. Donkey a war W, | | 7/ 7adnid/ Jdun // WIIII///WII : the Last Month Was Al Wet ‘Bowlmg & warehouse on cify wharf had i . { Bota &1 anbng frar, tha matter| Last month was one of the wet- | Elks Tonlgh' was given some consideration as|test and cloudiest 31 days on u“j to the advisability thereof. Opin-|record, according to the U.S.| |ion expressed favored the accom- Weather Bureau in Juneau -I- . urkey Gobble Will Not In- ared to risk involved by the city. | cloudy, and two as “partly cloudy.” 2 p('u: Clerk L. W. Kilburn ma(;e All-time record was set in 191¢ ferfere with Regular a detailed report about improve-!When every as cloudy. Two | |ments to sewers and their outlets other years' Octobers also beat |ment of balance of automobile|there were 30 cloudy days Bob l)ll(k“oll)) announces that license money on hand to, the, October was all wet in other the regular Tuesday night bowling Territory was also reported made, | Ways also. A total of 17.23 inches |will take place on the Elks alleys The Council was given an m—‘ of rain fell. The all-time high tonight at the usual times. The |city’s water and sewer bonded in-|Wwere recorded. The year 1929's 17.51 !with the Thanksgiving Turkey Gob- debtedness to date, also as to pre- | inches beat last month, also, and ble which will be held in the big parations being completed to for-|in 1917, 1864 inches were re-|baliroom ward regular payment installment | corded Y, ssistant hos the Mrs. George Washington of Ju- T D.LW.C. MEETING IS Ineau will be guest speal for the jteam: SCHEDULED FOR TllUl{SDAYlN(‘nmL Having spent considerable falling on. Armistice Day tomor-|address by Mrs. Washington should lI (ol Moll[lr[ row, Douglas Island Women’s Club | prove both interesting and timely | will meet Thursday night instead, ‘as the study of our Latin Ameri- at the home of Mrs. Alfred Bon-‘c'\n neighbors is a project of the | wieui. Colonel M. E. Mollett, who | joined the staff of Lieut. Col. Roy | W. Riegle as executive officer last |in Alaska before coming to Ju- |neau. He comes from Col. Riegle's home state of sKansas where he lives in Topeka. lot service during the World War 11, twelve months ef which he was |in servide overseas. During his rsea service - Col. Mollett saw He was attending Southwestern Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle |College in' Kansas when World War YRR | T broke' out and entered the arm Jus a private in, the 65th Artillery commodity Bt training school and shortly be implements the end of the war received parale e, | commission as 2nd Lieutenant | Following the end of the . Medieval shleld ;:;:’SS mizea | Hiere he was active in football, - SN ana snow | basketball and track. His profes- g \slon is accounting and auditing and command | when called into active duty in Persian poet Coax i | Corporation Commission. He has Small agri- | taken an active interest in politics caltural o in his heme state and held sev- | eral political positions. soikesof - | pllowers | Col. Mollett’s chief hobby and he | has, for a number of years, been Gogamotive ecn | cOnsidered one of the leading polo English letter | players of the mid-west. He is a Aromatic gum rents which has p! d most of the mili- |tary and civilian polo teams of | the Central States. D LINDA DARNELL {modation afforded owners as com-| A total of 20 days were listed as {along lower Front Street. Pay-|last month—1929 and 1940 whe: statement covering the! Wwas set in 1939 when 19.11 inches |bowling games will not interfere now due. R Due to the regular meeting night' time in Chile, South America, an| nett. Mrs. Glen Rice will be the llub for this winter. | week had. several months of duty Col, Mollett Had eighteen months action in five major engagement: 8. Scarce CAC. He later attended office: 6. Separate the the fine | | Col. Mollett returned to college . Lists of num: | 1040 he was cashier of the Kansas 20. Acquire Act of returning | Polo and horses have furnished Utoplan resin member of EYES EXAMINED Stone workers . Australian bird Aromatic seed FPeminine name For Cards held at to which the public is Topeka Polo Club | —JUNEAU, ALASKA The Lone Star State, famous for l fighting en, beef critters and | fertile acres, is odding new | | honors with its beautiful daugh- ters. Exhibits A to H include the new Miss America, Jo-Carroll Dennison, and a few of the Texas-born lovelies grabbed up by the movies. | set | that as Territorial Ilector | neau, | ehikan | embezzlement 'M. L. STEPP, SR., IS INDICTED, KETCHIKAN, EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGE M. L. Stepp, Sr. later at Prince taking up residen as recently indicted by grand jury on of public Stepp, who custody some weeks at $2500. He w secret indictment formerly of Ju- Rupert, then in Ketchikan, the Ket- charges of money tak was Bail for was n in 120 as accused in a which school charges tax col-| wilfully, unlawfully embezzle he did and _ feloniously vert to his own use certain money to-wit: $1650," the money having been collected for the Territory in his capacity as school tax col- and con- |lector: | was |April 28 and September Y MARTIN V. W. MULVIHILL AND MRS, MULVIHILL TO LEAVE FOR SOUTH| Mr. and Mrs. V. W. Mulvihill are leaving this week for the States to spend a month visiting in Washing- ton and Oregon. While they are away they will visit Mr. Mulvihill's | sister, Mrs. J. W. Smith, whose hus- band is fruit manager for the Great Northern Railway in Wenatchee and Mrs. Mulvihill's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Sholund, in Gresham, Oregon, as well as Major W. R, Mul- vihill, who is stationed in Seattle. Mr. Mulvihill recently resigned as Juneau agent for the Canadian Pa- cific Railway. eighth year as Chief of the Juneau ing his absence Assistant Chief Min- ard Mill will have charge of the department. Mr. and Mrs. Mulvihill expect to return to Juneau in about a month. THREE WORKERS JOIN ST. ANN'S Arriving in Juneau this week, three new staff members to work at St. Ann’s Hospital, They include Miss Grace Nei- buhr, formerly of Los Angeles, Calif, who is now on the nur: ing staff; Mrs. d of Boise, Idaho, who will be on the office staff and do clerical work; and Mrs. Agnes Kroner, who isting in the kitchen. - The first international ski tour- nament was held in 1892 by Swedish skiers, ~IN WAR AS IN PEACE one DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSU CONS!!VATIV! management and strict Governmeny’ supervision work constantly for the protection of our depositons. Additional security i provided through chis bank’s membership in Federal sion, 8 United States Gover: each depositor against los First National Bank He is serving his| Volunteer Fire Department and dur-} have gone Josephine Green- | involved assertedly by him The money collected between 29 ;\l‘nlliIiONS FOR PUBLICATION IN THE COMMISSIONER'S § COURT FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA. Before FELIX GRAY, Commis er and ex-officio Justice of Peace, Juneau Precinct JOHN LOWELL, Plaintiff, vs HANS BLACKSTAD, so known as Hans Iversen, Defendant TO THE ABOVE NAMED DE- F DANT, GREETING IN THE NAME OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, you are hereby commanded to appear the above entitled court at Juneau in said Division Territory, and answer the plaint of plaintiff filed against you the above entitled action, within days from the date of the of this summons and a the complaint upon you fail to so appear and for want thereof the will take judgment you for the relief prayed will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint, copy of which is served herewith and to which reference is hereby made. The nent requested is the sum of 80 and interest and plaintiff's and the foreclosure of an attachment lien on the following described persenal property of the| |defendant, which has been at- tached, to-wit: | oat DAGNY, Official No.| , length, 36 feet; beam, 91| together with four gurdies, | sion- the in holden and com- in thirey service copy of and if answer, plaintiff against 'for, and you, a feet, with lines, spoons, rubbers, lead, 2 | anchors tender, radio, | stove, compass, fire extinguisher,| 1 16 h.p. Buffalo engine, 2 hand |saws, bit brace and a few bits " | and lines; The date of the order for publi- cation of this Summons is the 2nd | !day of November, 1942, The period | lof publication prescribed in said order is four weeks. The first pub- lication of the same is the 3rd day of November, 1942, and the | publication of the same is the 24th| )(|-1} of November, 1942, and the| [time within which the defendant is | | to appear to answer this Summons | |is thirty days after the comple- tion of the last publication | Dated at Juneau, Alaska, vember 2nd, 1942, | FELIX GRAY, U.S. Commissioner and ex- | o officio Justice of the Peace, { Juneau Precinet. Tlist publication: November 3, 1942, Last publication: November 24, 1942 adv. | No- | { i TRIANGLE CLEANERS New Location Juneau Laundry. Bl&lf.lhg “for better appearance” o PHONE RED | Deposit Insurance Corporse nment sgency which insures w o mazimum of $5.00M of JUNEAU, ALASEA aml BROKEN LENSES replaced mv | our own Rae Lillian shop. Dr. l Carlson, Wide World Features Kind of bean ! (1.4 FEDERAL DEPO Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636,/ INSURANCE € ORATION PAGE FIVE P DIGGLY WIGGLY P QUALITY with SERVICE B s e NORTH TRANSFER COWLING-DAVLIN [ stb i hae ) HARVEY R. LOWE This Store Will Be Closed TOMORROW ARMISTICE DAY HOWEVER Fight for a Treaty that WILL LAST. One for All—All for One! FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Light and Heavy Hauling E. O, DAVIS E. W. DAVIS PHONE 81 COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — BStorage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 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 Alr Service Information PHONE 18 or 28 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 609 American Meat — Phone 38 OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN | " AMERICAN LEGION DUGOUT EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. Public Accountant 237 FRONT STREET Phone 676 r | | BUY DEFENSE BONI)‘J RUY DEFENSE STAMPS | Sanitary Meat Co. | FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 Chas. G. Warner Ca. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints [ THRIFT CO-OP | Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 D —— FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors Socthing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN I John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 The Alaskan Hotel at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Cholce Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONE 553—92—95 Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Prozen Meats in Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39530 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARRET Juneau’s Most Popular 1 “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shep Phone 548 Pred W. Wendt SONOTONE hearing aids for the hard of hear- ng. Audiometer readings. Dr. Rae Lilllan Carlson, Blomgren Bldg, Phone 336. . Grizzly bears can climb only when they are cubs,