The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 11, 1942, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA SPORTS SHOTS , 1942 Pll()NE A CLASSIFIED rime DIGGLY WIGGLY ™2 Copy must be in the office by 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 tine. Daily rate per line for consecu- tive insertions: One day Additional days Minimum charge FOR RERT Basin 5 to n Road. 7 pm i-ROOM house on | Call Black 100 from | e | 3-ROOM furnished apt., 1565 Seat- | Tract. Phone black 479 from 3 pm. | ter furnished house, corner Harris, top of steps, overstuffed, inlaid lino, oil heat, | monthly Phone Douglas 472| after 7 pm | 234, 6-ROOM 1st and GARAG! een 4 - ROOM furnished apartment. | Phone 18 Douglas. 4—T'IOOM'pA\:'lil;/ furnished house Phone 67 after 6 p.m. UNFURNISHED apt Inguire Snap Shoppe. 3 e — | 3-ROOM furnished ap ., electric| range, steam heat, hot and cold water, Phone 569. | FURNISHINGS for ; F'URNASHED house, JERRY BE FOR RENT . FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS There is a big game of football | tomorrow affernoon, a big time | game, the winner to go to the Rose Bowl. Tht game is to be played in Los Angeles between Southern Cali- uc You pick the it's e formia and winner: | Oregon State goes against St Mary's Navy tomorrow afternoon {in San Francisco. It's just anothe: game, off the record Incide la good |in Juneau ischool gym, with a curtain ra son Bears itally we ketball game right here tonight in the high in fact a doubleheader ser. The Crim- ‘lho Cheechakos. The curtain raiser. |\l|l\llh' at 7 o'clock, is between {the JHS scrubs. and the Douglas | serubs. The Sigacs came to the front |last Wednesday night in a game| |with the Falcons winning by a score of 50 to 34. This shows the| Signal Corps boys can click run SALE the maple floor as well as at their | keyboards or keys Turnished house, | 3-room apt. up- 12th, evenings ROOM fully full basement, stairs. 746 West the finest passing {was that between the Army they met Notre Dame Tecently | Eastern writers agree with this| columnist that the Cadets were faced by a passer whom many garded as the best in the Yet his whiz, Angelo Bertelli, couid complete only four of 18 passe for a miserable total of 22 yards That, buddy, is what I call Army defense. One of games REGISTERED Chow pups, Ores- ent Apts., No. 5. Phone 131. 3-room hous: heat; house also for rent one 5-room furnished house for sale. Phone blue 615 or inquire 523 Kennedy St. oil | PARTLY furnished 3-room bunga- low at 9-mile post. 3 acres pat- ented land. Bill Reck, phone| Hank green -410; Yankee freshman pitching star. Jknew what to do with his World Series check. He turned the check into bonds the day he re- ceived it Borowy, the New KITCHEN table, Silvertone Gra- phone, set pots and pans, 1 trunk. Phone green 545. war 822 Call after 7 p.m. Basin| .. good one birds and others: RNISHED house, P.O.|Crouch” is the latest occupational {ailment Army doctors have to cope with, according to Capt. H Road. 4-RM. Box 1075. | 5 ROOMS strictly r;odem‘imtum-} ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. 2-room Apt. with| Phone 621, 175 Gas- | FURNISHED _ bath, $16. tineau Ave. R,inp sTeasy zm‘ warm. Win-| ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. FOR RENT—Apartments, Inquire| at office 20th Century Bldg. | WANTED | WANTED BY school and Saturdays. Had months’ experience in cabinet shop. Write P.O. Box 1251, City.| BOY — Job after | 21 NANTED—Elderly man or (.Ou])l(‘ to take over this Post Office per- manently. Good home with vas ous opportunities. Address Post-, master, Fanshaw, Alaska. | WANTED TO BUY—Amateur pho- tographic and development equip- ment. Phone red 302 evenings. i WANTED—Dairyman helper, good | wages. Write MM 1782 Empire. { WANTED—Will pay cash for go{;d used piano. Phone red 206, | Alaska Music Supply. WANTED—Used furniture. 306Wll- loughby, phone 788. ! WANTED —Girls or women for| kitchen or waitress work. Ex- perience preferred, but not nec- essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10! . to 2 p. m. ¢ST and FOUND Two ke bbit's 1 turn LOST- chein with attached. Kindly re- to Empire. LOST—Black velveteen turban with rhinestone pin. Return to Sigrid's Beauty Salon. Reward. i LOST—Pair glasses in blue padded Kindly return to Empire. FOUND—Martin Malland’s _wallet on M.S. Esiebeth. Call at Empire | 8 Office and adv. LOST OR MISPLACED Man's fur-lined buckskin glove for right | hand. Kindly return to Empire | Office ~ MISCELLANEOUS for it, vay for this | ARLER ,hup prlccs are the same ever. Haircut 65 cen shave 35 cents. Bob Light Bar- ber Shop. !’)LRM FIVE CENTS es ncn . pad for u-ed gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. S D M PR R et TURN your pld gold Into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop FUARANTEED Realistic Perma neot, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up wla Beauty Shop. Phone 301. 115 Decker Way. A volcano in the New Hebrides is generally in eruption every threc or four minutes. | MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacier Highway. Montgomerys. (Sam) Francis, the Fort F. & Warren quartermaster training center. Francis reported that vate Christ Gestrich of Chi 0 former Illinois amateur champ. said he had trouble standing up traight “because I ha *|so much that my regular position is a erouch, in Ibe ready for a hostile HOSPITAL NOTES ™" The Chicago Cubs will do their Mrs. George Gamble, surgical [preliminary spring training patient at St. Ann’s Hospital, has ason at Mesa, Ar according to been discharged. n announcement made. 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. standing order to move by an Ralph Hackerson, who has been | receiving medical attention at St.|ages — cauliflower. Meaning the !Ann's Hospital, was dibchargcd\luxurium puffed-ear variety which yesterday. result from stopping left hooks. |Not in the memory of boxing fars John Jacobs, at St. Ann’s Hos-;40Wn in Seattle have they seen pital for surgery, has left (hcl‘“‘:h a dearth of ringmmen, Al Hos- hospital. llak being the latest to desert the ranks by trading his boxing tools Mrs. James Brouilette from Sitka |for a rifle. Harry Kid Matthews is gave birth to a baby girl this | the Last of the Mohicans. In years morning at 1:30 am., at the Gov»i"““- there were always a half ernment Hospital. dozen well known ring names in the vicinity, pining for action. They Carl Gustafson and Harry Izait|Seemed to come in bunches and are medical patients who entered by Wweights. Freddie Steele and St. Ann’s Hospital this morning. |Hostak, Wildcat Carter and Cecil |Payne, Dode Bercot and Ted Peter Hawkins was admitted for | Krache, etc. That insured lively treatment at the Government Hos- |competition, and a number pital last night. naturals. ! "Crossword Puzde ACROSS 35, 1. Type squares g7 | Disunite 3 9. Spoiled 2. 12, Familiar salu- 40. tation to & 42, physician . Music drama Ipoch . Turkish name 5. Fine paper In what way | Have regard for . Increases in size Mourntul . Pertaining to a part of the eye . Bazaar 2. Changed BAZAT o8 metal b1, TUFKich title Notion 57. Marylnnd race 62 . American [n- track 63, dian §9. Arablan gar- g Ppasses, as time g Note of the [>[z] Departure . Ate.sparingly Negative prefix Cut Female sand- piper . Plant of the lily family . Organ of hear- ng. . Evergreen trees . Ward oft 9. Weep con- vulsively ). City in Massa- chusetts EEXE AlP| [EITIA [DIO] Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN . Biblical tower . Burrowing animal . State of dis- sension Repaired shoes Typo of poetry . Dare . Before . Chain of mountains . Witness . In a line . Simpletons . Equality . Rear Seller Concentrate . Make gmends . Unseafing de- vice . Arabian chief- tain: variant Assistants Ocean . Performed . Article of apparel . Metrical foot of three short syllables . Kind of grape . Milky Way Adversa . Set in somes thing solid . Cooks slowly . Condiment . Seaweed de- rivative . Wild animal Central Amer- ican tree . Da[vnl:reak 8. leat Intimidate Essay College offi- cials Fowl m . Not et 61. Part of the arm 63. II/ HR// i 1 HIII// / Ml il are going to see | take on the l')oug].\,‘W | Huskies and the Waacs go '\gmmt‘,‘ht‘ first on| land. | good | York | . | those of Pri- | wrestled | | next Add to the growing list of short- | of | r RT BAKER BASKETBALL ON TONIGHT fans are of- ered’ a triple bill tonight in the Juneau High School gym, |alt for the price of one game. Main | drawit ard the bill will be jthe battle the Juneau High Crir and their Douglas rivals | Piling out the other end of the card, the Juneau Scrubs will battle the Douglas Scrubs and the aacs will play the Cheechakos. will start at 7 o'- Juneau basl on between | Bears game \rlock sharp. ‘ - "CHRISTMAS AT . THE CIRCUS™ IS | " PRESENTED HERE | An adroitly I'T¢ d lerly executed perform Juneau Grade Schocl operetta, wcnnsnnus at the Circus,” present- led last night in a crowded Grade | School auditorium and to be ‘p(‘d(,rd at 7:30 o'clock thi: | Admission is free For amusing and |competent home talent iating charm of ms at Christmas hour’s time could | profitably spent. Ringmaster Bill Forward and Santa Claus Jimmie Tripp are pivots around whom whirl a suc-| cessive array of bears, monkeys, ponies, trapeze artists and clowns, all realistically costumed in suit-; able garb. Outstanding performances the tumbling clown singing popeorn girls, trained animal act Children from every grade participating in the operetta, include Tony Horn as Tony; Ed- win Heisel as Toto; Joann Wolfe and Georgine Shanklin as accom- | panists; David DeLong, violinist; Anne Mauer, Joan Krane, dionists trapeze artists Mary Lou Fagerson, Margita Meier, Lor- etta Keithahn, Sarah Jane Line- han; Bears, Jim Sprague, Dohny | Ben Burford, Manuel Diaz, Dick Forrest, Lee Nance, Fred Schmitz, Dick Keithahn, George Messer- | schmidt, and Harvey Clauson All tricked out in pale gr and yellow, are the popcorn gi | Evelyn Hollman, Donna Jewett, | Sylvia Hubbard, Sylvia Davis, Lois wrence, Erna Stendar, Irene | MeKir Carlee Robert. Lola Hegstad and Bobby Jean Tew. Clowns David Satko, Billy Sper- |ling, Jimmie Sofoulis, Ervin Butts, Eddie Brostrom and Dale Roff are howlingly funny; and the “ani- |mals,” Frank Maier, Henry Ander- son, Roland Shanklin, Robert Som- mers, Robert Rhodes, John Chris- tianson, Gerald Hill and Frank Hughes, give a’ snarlingly realistic performance. Paula Kay Cook is the young lady who courageously permits the huge elephant to step over her, and animal trainer Reg- gie Kleweno cracks the whip in realistic style Monkeys who sing and dance Likens, Bobby Waugh, Donna Gould, Agnes Hared, Myr- tle Hughes, Lorne McAlister, Roy | Peratrovich, Billy Orme, Sandra | Garvin, Dorothy Roberts, Joan | Rhodes, Tlene Starbard, and Eliza- |beth Rekosh. | Galloping ponies with red sels are Katherine Bavard, | Fossum, Donna Olds, Sonia Sheep- er, Pat Oakes, Charlotte M'uon, Roberta Messerschmidt, Joann {bin, Sharon Sharpe, Jou,pmnr‘ Haud Bonita Bell, len, Iva Jean | Pagaran. Bonbonsy chocolates, | marshmallows and other candies| !in appropriate dress are .l\lh(‘nw }Axlnw.s Beth Daigler, Sylvia Lis- | zcx Pat Waugh, Beverly .Jmu.v.w Alberm Carlson, June R'n)snph(‘r,‘ \Joan Williamson, Joan Lesher, and | | Bonita Clark. 1 Russell Clark, August A\unm‘md‘ Roy Gray are the stage crew, and | |Miss Monson's entire second ;,ndcv ‘per!ormed as the band { l The operetta is under the di- | {rection of Mrs. Merle Janice Pitts, | | musical instructor in the school. ) M ‘ MRES. MORAN COMING | Mrs. Wendell Moran, the former Gladys Naghel, is expected to ar-| ir.“v.e from the south tomorrow to | visit with her parents, Mr. and |Mrs. Charles Naghel, and sister, Mrs. Grace Knudson. Mr. Moran is | |now in the armed service, D SONS OF NORWAY | MEETING-CARD PARTY December 12, Odd Fellows Hall.| Meeting, followed by third of series Card y. Benefit for Little Camp Norws adv. | clev- the and was re- evening, remarkably plus the children’s time, not be an more are the | and the are and accor- licorie > EYES EXAMINED |and BROKEN LENSES replaced m |our own shop. Dr. Rae Lilllan | Carlson, Blomgren Bldg Phone 636. Sue McMul-| T Selutipes - Adei| There isno subsmule for newspaper advernsmg' ...onc of Holeproofs NEW COMMANDO COLORS Ayouthful flattering be Black, blue bright ¢ ge for browns, and strong ors. Lovely with formal as well as informal clothes. HOLEPROOF = é{/m{ G//m gL, Properly Proportioned Lengihs in Luxsheer Rayons and Luxuria Cottons. Now as always you'll find Holeproof Hosiery authentically keyed to the season’s new apparel colors. Shades that are new, vital and vigorous developed to bring you correct color coordination with this seas tumes. m's cos- Also see Alert, a rosy burnished tone to wear with all browns, rosy rusts and the entire range of greens. And Surprise, a softly muted greige with a warm undertone that makes it new and smart. laboratory of N tional %etail Dry Goods Arize Properly Proportioned Lengths in Luxsheer Rayons and Luxuria Col- tons. Sheers, Service Sheers and Service weights. Rayon and Collml Lisle $1.35 Family Shoe Store Seward Street 1-81.15 For My Fair Lady! Warm her feet and you will warm her heart! $1.25 } a gift for the lady of her comfort in mind! 1fort and beauty in a ceep gift of smc Family Shoe Store ‘ ] Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED . First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASEA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIO Trinity Cathedral | Trinity Cathedral, QUALITY with SERVICE BUY Fresh === Cri Soda and Graham Crackers IN 6 and 8 POUND BOXES OR LARGER—AND SAVE See These Today PIGGLY WIGGLY ONE DELIVERY EACH DAY Please order early but not later than 1 P. M. Remember Pearl Harbor . . and Victory Week—BUY A BOND [ THRIFT CO-OP | Member National Retalle=- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREEY PHONE 767 AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 ‘ FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints e e——————— '_Soolhinq Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIG! DOUGLAS John Marin, Prop. B LD R I8 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 9§ CALL FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Phone 88 l Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS PR e 0 ESPARRNETE R | NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling Builders' and Shelf E.O.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS [i 1 HARDWARE s PHONE 81 ! > Utah Nut and Lum COAL Al#ska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 . The Alaskan Inla Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates “ PHONE SINGLE O COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Ofl—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Btorage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 i { Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplier B Pnond 208 122 W. Becond TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing | FRED HENNING [, Complete Outfitter for Men HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARRET i Cholce Meats At All Times. Located in George Bros. Store “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 185 Pree Delivery Juneau H 1 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place i ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 18 or 20 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt . HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 698 American Meat — Phone 38 HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant 237 FRONT STREET Phone 676 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 Parsons Electric Cg.' Westinghouse Dealer - Electrical Service and Repairs 123 SEWARD ST. OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN AMERICAN LEGION nnooér Choir fo Rehearse Choir practice will be held to~ night at 7:30 sharp at the Holy and all those who are to sing at the Christmas midnight service should be pres- ent, it is announced,

Other pages from this issue: