The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 3, 1942, Page 5

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URSDAY, DECEMBER 3 | CLASSIFIED 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 line. Daily rate per line for consecu- live insertions: One day ... Addgitional days Minimum charge FOR RENT STEAMHEATED Phone red 245. Sleeping rooms. Call Ander- 143 TOM THUMB piano. son Music Shop. Phone UNFURNISHED apt. and house. Inquire Snap Shoppe. $-ROOM furnished apt., electric range, steam heat, hot and cold water. Phone 569. 5 ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. FURNISHED 2-room Apt. with bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas- tineau Ave. fi!& apts., easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, | dishes. Seaview Apts. at office 20th ‘Century Bldg. WANTED WANTED—Elderly man or up! to take over this Past Office per- manently. ous opportunities. Address master, Fanshaw, Alaska Post- WANTED. TO BUY— port and chair, modern fast set. Phone blue 783. —Dairyman helper, good| Write MM 1782 Empire. WANT! wages WANTED--Girl counter Tor work. $50 weekly for right person. Ap-| ply Alaskan Hotel. WANTED TO BUY—Baby Phone Douglas 963 bed. WANTED-—WiH—pay cash for good | used piano. Phone red Alaska Music Supply. WANTED—Used furniture, loughby, phone 788. WANTED — Girls or women Ior kitchen or waitress work. Ex- perience preferred, but not nec- essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. MISCELLANEOUS OUR BARBER shop prices are thé | same as ever. Haircut 65 cents, shave 35 cents. Bob Light Bar- ber Shop. PIVE CENTS eacu, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. l_‘U_RF your old gold 'into value, :ash or trade at Nugget Shop. FUARANTHED Realstic Perma- ueal, $3.30. Paper Curls, $1 up. icla Beauty Snop. Phone 301, A8 Decker WAJ KENIU(KIANS N STABBING FRAY ON CPR VESSEL JuneauPolice Release | Stabber-No Charge Is Pressed Fred Carner, Kentuckian who stabbed a fellow Kentuckian, James L. Nooks in the back with his jackknife while aboard a Canadian | Juneau released fic Railway vessel in night, has been of Police B. victim declined to press ay by Chief after the charges. Carner and Nooks became in- volved in a quarrel in their state- room at about midnight. Carner is sa2id to have whipped out his knife and stabbed Nooks in the back. The knife struck a rib, however, glancing off, and the wound was not as serious as it might have been. The ship's doctor cared for Nooks and the captain called the / city police who arrested Carner on a complaint sworn out by the cap- tain. Both men were on their way to Whitehorse to work on a gov- ecrnment project, Good home with vari-| break- | H. Manery | BASKEIBAU. IN DOUGLAS ON FRIDAY fast HONE A FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS The next contests in the |stepping Gastineau Channel Bas- | ketball League will be played to- {morrow night in Douglas with the {league-leading Waacs meeting the |Falcons in a game that may !change the name of the team in| |top spot l A doubleheader for the price of | one, the St. Louis Blues will meet | {the Sigacs in lhv mphu'lp contest, Blg Game Dinner Is Scheduled attend the of the Stikine men’s Association, a game dinner |to be held in Wrangell, December 7, Frank Dufresne, ecutive Of- ficer of the Alaska Game Commis- sion, is prepared to test the acu- men of the members. He has pre- listing about | ny of which | be found in aska, and will then exhibit a speciman of one these, to be identified by the guests. About 200 attended last year's dinner, and President Fred G. Han- ford expects about that many this | year each member is en- Silvertone Gra- | titled to take one guest { Among the strange and exotic di ted on the printed menu re Cream of Brown's Island Snipe FURNISHED house, 822 Basin Nest Soup? Duck Mulligan, Duck Road. Call after 7' p.m. ler« Style; Zarembo Young Doe R SR e e T T la I esne, and for drinks, 4-RM. FURNISHED house. PO I b H 1 Box 1075. umberjack coffee, Slough Water 8 ‘uh(l Wild Goat's Milk ( MODERN 5 room furnished log| Rl SRS T | house, Mile 3% Glacler Highway.| Montgomerys, annual Sports- | Leaving fun-fes to FOR SALE 1042 PHILCO table model 1 phonograph, perfect condition $60 cash. 945 West 8th. Hans Johansen. rd ullu~ 1935 TUDOR For 1 > | may blue 670 after 5 p.m. of PARTLY furnished 3-room bung; low at 9-mile post. 3 acres pat- ented land. Bill Reck, phone green 410. since KITCHEN table, phone, set pots and pans, 1 trunk. Phone green 545. i ' Glamor Is Going fo 5 (ongress; House Is 1 3-ROOM Furnished house and im-! _ | provements on 5-acre homesite. | 3 % | 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, X | Auk Lake. L. W. Cord. P. O.| GOI"g 'o lEke "’ l’oo | Box 609. T 1 (Continuea frrom Page One) i else. If she doesn't turn her Wash- | {ington experience into a play, Im[ going to write some constituents ) 3 Moose papers. around Greenwich in 1944 : | Empire In “The Women,” she took down i |the hair of the Park Avenue Reno- | FOUND—Martin Malland’s wallet runners. In “Kiss the Boys Good- | | on M.S. Estebeth. Call at Empire bye,” she took the socks off Holly- | | Office for it, and pay for this wood and their search for a Sq lett | adv {O'Hara. In “Margin for Er f_vl.OS'l' and E'DIIND ‘ containing | Reward. Return to * she — {wrote the bitterest diatribe against | arker encil, black | Nazi brutality that has come out of top. Please return to Em-|this war. Reward As “Congreswoman from | necticut,” Mrs. Luce will have the | |kind of ringside seat that probably |no playwright worthy of the name ever had. If she’ll match her other | plays with one on the Washington‘l “comedy of errors,” she will deserve | |a Lifé membership in that great | American institution the Congress of the United States. - e |Los silver | pire PROTECT your pen and pencil by having your name engraved on | them by J. B. Burford"& Co. | } | ! | woMEN OF THE MOOSE Regular meeting Saturday at 8 1pm Cookie and candy sale. Games |will be played. All members are | | | | jurged to attend. GERTIE OLSON, l dv. Recorder. \Three Other Naval Crafi» e ) Not Including Destroy- | | er, Tanker Damaged ! (Continued from Pnge One) BUY DEFEVhE bTAMI’S 'DRESSED THESE are the fighting clothes of the enemy — basic army Rabat and the Lnedsmwn was sunk off Algiers in the early morning. | Notify Next of Kin | The communique said the next of kin of the personnel of those killed, wounded and missing are being | | notified by telegrams. i | The names of the damaged ves-| | sels are not disclosed by the Navy. | The communique is the first is- |sued by the Navy in the operations in the North African area. ‘ No mention of the possible num- ber of men lost is made. Former Coast Liner The transport Tasker H. Bliss, one of the craft sent down, is the former liner President Cleveland | that plied on the Pacific. She was| converted at Baltimore and placed in commission by the Navy last September 15. {was 12,500. 4 The Leedstown, sunk off Algiers, was the former Santa Lucia and was converted last September. Her | gross tonnage was 9,100 tons. yniforms of Germany, Japan and Italy. Each reflects to a de- gree the martial spirit of each coyntry. The skeiches and de- scriptions qu_b«nd on infor- mation in “Leatherneck,” \pt)bg lication of the U. S. Marine Corps. They should help you to~ be able to identify the enemy. Wide World Features | e BRITISH LOSSES REPORTED LONDON, Dec. 3. — The British | aircraft carrier Avenger, three de- | |stroyers and five lighter vessels |are among the Allied naval losses in the North African landings, A. | V. Alexander. First Lord of the Ad- miralty, announced today. The announcement said the de- stroyers were the Brooks and Mar- tin of The Netherlands and de- stroyer Isaac Sweeps. | Alexander told the House of Commons the naval Josses were | considerably smaller than expect- ed and “far less than the enemy | | claimed.” | GERMANY — PRACTICAL; Offi- cers dress like the ranks 1o be inconspicuous. Uniforms are greenish-grey, light and weather-resisting, - {known the sota collegians and old grads have for to be parlayed with the Japs. The slogan of the year in front of the except |teams as the |school auditorium of the | tions THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—]JUNEAU, ALASKA SPORTS SHOTS JERRY nsm BAKER Michigan partisans have long intense feeling Minne- them, xpected but they never Gopher frat houses was: “JUG THE JAPS—JUGGLE MICHIGAN.” These college games can certainly bring the animal instinct in our more rabid rooters out n had a great elevenn man as the entire line iplayed 60 minutes of every game for two linesmen who re- | ceived injur and were forced out with seconds to go in the Notre Dame game. They used only four substitutes, with good cause— that's all varsity men they | have! Mict | team this year the Indiana, is | outstanding fullback | will probably lists. Tom Kuzma of Gary, hailed as the in the country head all All-A and mericar This writer the foliowing ten best as lap ‘of the | picks Natiol went into the 1 season they 1942 DEFENSE FILM T0 BE SHOWN TONIGHT, 8:15, At 8:15 o'clock this evening will be a presentation in defense film entitled “The Air Raid War- den,” issued by the Office of Ci vilian Defense, Washington, D.C, for all members of the Civilian} Defen: Corps and of the Alask: Territorial Guard, R. E. Director of Civilian Defense nounced All members of both ¢ niza are urged to be on hand promptly and are requested to use the 6th Street entrance the building. This exhibition of this ifilm is only for members of CDC and Alaska Territorial Guard and no admission will be charged Later there will be another exhi- bition of the film for the general public, Mr. Robertson said There will be no alert tonight. 'DUFRESNE TO VISIT EXPERIMENTM FARM Executive Officer Frank Dufresne | of the Alaska Game Commission will visit the Petersburg mental Fur Farm this weekend for an- to Con- |several days on a trip to South-| east Alaska to examine blue fox | and mink which have been fed| and cared for in experiments dur-| ling the past year. The surplus stock will be pelted,| with the better animals being kept| for breeding and further experi- ments. The farm is a joint pro- ject sponsored by the Game Com-| of Al-| mission and the University | aska. WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. Bureau) Temp. Wednesday, Dec. Maximum 34, minimum 7 inches snow on ground o000 000000 TO KILL 24 ITI: ’v = GLITTER: ' Duce’s dudes, the afficers bo-fiblnud and be-medalled. Officers (left) wear grey-green Her gross tonnage H :"oumls, enlisted men khaki. JAPAN — ROUGH: Khaki is the color and the enlisted man's clothes usually don't fit very well. Spiral puttees, small cap are. res. there | the grade | I-| sSuMMONS Robertson, | (11(-1 Expul-‘7 RED CROSS SEWING ROOMS ARE CLOSED UNTIL AFTER XMAS Mrs. J. C production |chairman of Red Cross herd rannounces that members have com- | pleted their sewing fo tim: ibeing and ve discontinued the |Red Cross rooms. All y is now in the hands of knitter After Christmas, sewing will probably resumed Mvs, Thomas said th: es to pergonally man of the sewing lof the women who have 4 make the work pos: ex- | The Navy team deserves a break pressed special appreciation for the {in here some place but after two werk done by the Dou and |bours of trying I'll be darned if!|Thane groups. we could squeeze them in. They| wMrs. H. L. Faulkuer defeated Penn 7-0 and slapped the |chairman, is leaving for ‘Anm 14-0 but outside of these|any women wanting ‘\ulmu‘\ they have nothing 10 regarding knitting ‘bmg about. We might just as well: gimpson MacKinnon or list Great Lakes or Towa Preflight|}jam Manthy. with three defeats apiece, as Na-| pinished knitting may be itionul Champs. We should give|at the Thomas Hardware C [these first ten a big hand for they | with the names of the knitter have played a tough season and|(ne pieces. |come out on top. Southern Cal may AN supplant UCLA in the No. 10 spot | when they meet but only the future ‘can tell and my money on UCLA. |, {No matter which team wins, it | still must take a terrific she llacking from Georgia come New Yea | 'Day. Thoma the Georgia the Ohio State Tulsa Michigan University Minnesota Marquette 1 Alabama Georgia UCLA of Delroit be wish- chair- and all helped to she Tech roups ible. tla, the South information Mrs . Wil- may call Mr lef pany on ' DEFENSE COMING BONDS YOUR CARS TOMORROW Outside Operations Foreman Bert |Lybeck today warned Juneau driv- lers to keep their parked autos off |the main streets because the snow plow will be active for the next day or E“ ATCH WHERE YOU PARK l ks oA The che is a Chinese musical in- [:,nummn with 25 strings, played by i plucking. FOR PUBLICATION I No. 4960 A |IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR ! THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT JUNEAU. | ARNE R. DORUM, Plaintiff, MABEL J. DORUM, Defendant | THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA To the above named Defendant, Greeting: You are hereby required to ap- | pear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Division |at Juneau, Alaska, within thirty | days after the 9th day of Decem- i ber, 1942, in case this summons is | published or within forty days after |the date of its service upon you, {in e this summons is served 'upon you personally, and answer | the complaint of the above-named plaintiff on file in the said Court .m the above-entitled action The said plaintiff in said action :demand» the following relief: A di- vorce on the ground of desertion. And in the event you fail to so appear and answer the plaintiff will take judgment against you for | want thereof, and will apply to the Court for the relief demanded lin his complaint and herein- hbove stated. Witness the Honourable George | P. Alexander, Judge of said Court | \hereunw affixed this 17th day of November, 1942. ROBERT E. Clerk. By J. W. LEIVERS, Deputy Clerk Date first publication, Nov Date last publication, Dec Vs, FOR THIS SEASON'S MOST . EXCITING FILM ADVENTURE! A WARNER BROS. HIT with JEFFREY LYNN Philip DORN + Kaoren VERNE - Mona MARIS Diracted by VINCENT SHERMAN TRIANGLE CLEANERS New Location Juneau Laundry Building as % “for better appearance” PHONE COUGHLIN, 18, 1942, 9, 1942 adv. LT R Y i E. B. BLISS ! { as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE i is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the.— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "“THE LITTLE FOXES" ¢ Federal Tax—D5c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! { { THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depsitors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which i sures each of our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASKA ! MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOS! INSURANCE CORPORATION | knitting | | | PAGE FIVE P DIGGLY WIGGLY i QUALITY with SERVICE CUDKIES and CBACKEBS For Every Occasion NEW, FRESH STOCK Graha Ritz Cheese Fig Bars Vanilla Wafers Salted and Unsalted Sodas Jocktail Hour / am.l}Al.‘l. THE REST PIGGLY WIGGLY ONE DELIVERY EACH DAY Order Early But Not Lgte Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 | Chas.lfii.WarnerCo.l Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints 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 L ————— COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oll—Stove Ofl—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 a FRED HENNING Compiete ommur 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 19 or 20 FOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN AMERICAN LEGION DUGOUT EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. e —————————, CAREFUL . COOKING WILL . FLOAT A BATTLE SHIP BUDGET AND < 'SAVE FOR WAR ' 'BONDS AND STAMPY The choral “works of Johann Sebastian Bach include more than 250 sacred and secular cantatas, r thag P, M. f——-.—-—-——h——b-‘ THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retaller- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 — e FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS-OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors: S thing Organ Music ‘E;olkloulmdddck::d EVERY, NIGHT DOUGLAS INN. John Marin, Prop. Phone 68 LT ———_— GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE R0 0 Utah Nut and Lamp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 The Alaskan H Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O * Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies ¥ Phone 208 122 W. Second HUTCHINGS ECONON’I MARKET Cholee Meats At All 'n-h Located in George Bros. Store PHONE 553—92—95 ~ pa it e S N e . T Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39—539 20TH CENTURY MEAT ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 FOR Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Pred W. Wendt HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant 237 FRONT STREET Phone 676 Westinghouse Dealer Electrical Service and Repairs ! 123 SEWARD ST. | Basket making is believed to be one of the carliest human indus- tries, o

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