The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 1, 1943, Page 5

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‘FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1943 P 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 lirectory. Count five average words to the ne. Daily rate per line for consecu- dve insertions: One day Adcitional days Minimum charge FORRENT | GOOD APTS hand; one at Seaview, coal on hot apt. range, oil and cold water. By flan. 1. Cash in advance. 2 CABINS for reni, 7-mile post, Tlighway. Phone & FURNISHED apartment, two bed- rooms. Call Douglas 18. and house. GD apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. t'ROOM furnished apt., range, steam heat, hot and cold water., Phone 569. § ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- | ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. FURNISHED 2-room ADt. bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas- | tineau Ave. FLR. apts., easy kep‘t? warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, | dishes. Seaview Apts. | POR RENT-—Apartments, lnquire at office 20th Century Bldg. WANTED YOUNG couple d uv- ll\x'nhh(‘d‘ home or apt. pc-rm:xnon(ly.' Green 614 WANTED—One capable, well quali- fied clerk-stenographer for in-| teresting government position in Anchorage; also one experienced | clerk-typist for local Government | office. Phone 806, daytime. | WANTED—WIill pay cash for good| used piano. Phone red 206, Alaska Music Supply. 1 WANTED—Used “furnibure. 306 Wil- | loughby, phone 788. | WANTED — Girls or women for kitchen or waitress work. Ex- perience preferred, but not nec- I essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10 a m. to 2 p. m, LOST and FOUND . FOUND—Bunch of keys. Finder may claim same and pay for this/ @kl at Empire office. ! LOST — Billfold containing Coast Guard pass, draft reg. card and other papers. Please return to Guy Atkinson Office, at old Ferry | Float. Reward The custom of veiling Moslem women goes b to pre-Islamic day when band: of Bedouins roan:d th> cilie i towns. CLASSIFIED A;Xectrtc | |3-ROOM Furnished house and im- ~Inesday and Friday evenings only, HONE A FOR RENT | FOR SALE ' LOST—FOUND : MISCELLANEOUS g FOR SALE BARBER chair in first class con-| dition. Box 439, Juneau | |LARGE SIZE Duo Therm oil heat-' er with coils. Brownie's Barber Shop. ONE LARGE Lang 2-oven ]fnm Bargain. Inquire vanson Brc LUNCH | Alaskan counter for Hotel. sale—Inquire " ange, back bar and counter, stools, | with mirror two Duo Therm oil heaters, cof- \’ | fee percolator, kitchen oil range, | Frigidaire. Apply Mike Pusich,| Douglas. MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacler Highway. | Montgomerys. 5-ROOM fully lurmsh«;l_‘l;‘(;\;su,f full basement, 3-room .apt. up- 746 West 12th, stal evenings. | | FURNISHED hcuse. 822 Basin Road. Call after 7 p.m. |4-RM. FURNISHED nouse. P.O. Box 1075. provements on 5-acre homesite. 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, Auk Lake. L. WX .Cord. P. O. Box 609. MISCELLANEOUS TRADE ‘SZUO equity in 20-acre, | cleared, fenced farm with hufld-L ings in Northern Idaho for equi- | ty or payment on place in Ju- neau, Douglas or vicinity. Box 7, lel’\mx')a, Qre. DUR BARBER shop prices are the same as ever. Haircut 65 cents, shave 35 cents. Bob Light Bar- ber Shop. i 7IVE CENTS eacnu, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. CURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. IUARANTEED Realistic Perma- vent, $550. Paper Curls, $1 up Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 301 315 Decker Way. EPLACED Dr. Rae Lillian Gurison's office in the Blomgren Bldg. will be open for repairs and replacements of broken lenses on Monday, Wed- from 7 to 10:30 p.m. No eye ex- amination until Jan. 15. adv. e The vauy Alaska Emplre has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper who lost three of his own planes, visits his mother and nephew, Rick, i Maj. Robert Galer, former University of Washington basketball star, but bagged himself 13 Jap planes, , in Seattle, Wash, ‘, planes were vealed that 11 more German trans- |er, "‘fi&'-"»a... THE:DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA Radiophoto from Cairo, transmitted to San Francises by Soundphoto: Forces are shown burying the sprays lead in all directions. craft, when the ammunition started to pop, RED GAINS MOUNTING, ALLFRONTS -~ (Continued from Page One) | reported new Soviet successes m‘ |all fronts Midway between Stzllin.’:l'z\(l and Kamensk, the Russians took the railroad town of Oblivskaya with a trainload of airplanes. In the Stalingrad factory Russian troops captured blocks of houses and killed 400 Nazis. Eight German counter-attacks were repulsed, 600 Nazis killed, 33 {tanks destroyed and four German | shot down southeast the Volga city. Dislodge Nazis On the central front Rzhev, the Nazis were from fortified positions Southeast of Nalchik, the Rus- sians engaged in offensive op tions, killing about 400 Germans. The regular communique also re- several | about of west of dislodged port planes were shot down in the Stalingrad area recently. — - OKEH'S ALASKA WEATHER ! CHICAGO.—Col. John W. Wheel- Army engineer in charge of construction on the new Alcan (Al- askan-Canada) Highway, says that Alaska’s severe cold isn’t too bad In fact, he says, walking down Chicago’s Michigan Avenue, blast- ed by biting winds from the north- west, is much more uncomfortable — - — D. WILLIAMS BACK FROM TRIP TO SITKA District Engineer M. D. Williams | of the Public Roads Alministration returned by plane from Sitka -,.__; terday afternoon after an official bu‘,mess trip. | M. Thmgs That Are Wronq With United Sfates in neses in the sands of the desert as the ammunition in a The Aussies were examining the tank that had been disabled by British air- ‘Record Coal Production, Men of the Australian Imperial 'man war tank 'Increased Output of War Present Effort fo Win Minerals, Forecast Alaska (Continuea from Page One) government Altogu(hm old .,umnmvm warhorse punmd out that the United States! has one sure stop-gap for this sort of thing |if enough pressure is brought to bear. That is the much-maligned | | Congress 1 silly, person who received a or every long-winded questionnaire; tioning or who has to put up with petty tyrannies from the little de- magogues in government bureaus, would take time out to wi Congressman or Senator a concise statement of the indignities heaped | upon him, many of those indignities | would soon cease to exist. In spite of all the raspberries it lmz were. generally higher, | has been handed, Congress still is the | best instrument for p pincer attack on those workers in the war effort !who take the wrong direction. -0 - 'ROTARIANS JAM More than 160 Rotarians, their | wives and guests, Room of the Baranof Hotel night and early this morning bring the New Year in with g Althcugh few of the Rot could be found roaming the str press time today, reliable jammed the Gold last to before |sources said that all who attended The Gold Room | had a swell time. was all dressed up by the Rotar- jan Decoration Committee and dancing and other forms of enter- | tainment preceded the 1 a.m. buf- fet supper, after which the celebra- tion continued - -es Empire Classifieds Pay! U S. Generals in North Mma Watching the arrlval “of Allied phnes at a \Inrth Mrlcan nlrport Lt. Gen. Mark Wayne Clark (second from right), second in command to Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, towered above his fellow officers. On the left is Brig. Gen. James Doolittle, Allied Air Force Commander in North Africa, at Clark’s right is Maj. Gen. Lloyd R. Fredendall, Com- mander of American central task force, Men at left are unidentified. branch that is a slow but area. | who is subjected to inequities in ra- | ) { rite his | mining of gold as a principal sour | | (Continued Iu)m Page One) | represents gold recovered from lodes . or placers. | 2--Though Alaska's mineral out- put in 1942 is estimated as slightly than three-fourths that of the ceding year, the intensive search for war minerals is already awak- | ening Alaska prospectors and min- lers to the fact thatythey are sol- diers without vmiform end for good age, hampered full production. A Ropes and Paints rew record-breaking output for 11943 is forecast, however. 7—Lead, almost entirely a by- CALL | product of gold mining, came large- m’s |ly from the Alaska Juneau Gold In‘“srm Mining Company at Juneau. The total produttion was 1,050,000 l l 4 pounds, worth $68,000 OIL — FEED — HAULING - - Nite Phone 554 pay. The crying need for war min- erals from Alaska will siress di fication of metais and free Al-| a from too much aependence on of mineral wealth. Favorable Factors 3-Favorable factors directly af- fe¢ting Alaska’s mining industry in Unit Marie, Minus Pin, Cheery hattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospi take her home after doctors had removed the open safety pin (right), which was disclosed by X-rays. |output, Marie Cutler, ten- months old, waited happily in her crib at lhe Man- | prices that prevailed during the MRS 'DA HA wo :ymu‘ for most of the mineral com R °D | modities, other than gold and D'ES I" Ml("'fi‘" |silver, for gold and silver unit | prices were identical with those in - 194i. Weather conditions on the| Advices have been received in !whole were also favorable, permit- |Juneau by Mrs. Harold Smith of ting a longer period of mining. the passing of Mrs. Ida Harwood, 4—The storied Yukon led in|80, in Leslie, Mich, on November | placer gold production. While most |9 The deceased was the mother of the lode gold came from South- |Of the late Mrs. Guila Chappell and |east Alaska mines, Seward Penin-|Was in Juneau visiting about two | and the Kuskokwim ,-'W(,““\mnx ago and made many friends here during that time were runners up to the Yukon for | placer gold production. Principal | TR = producing district in ‘the Yukos | BUY DEFENSE BONDS was adjacent to Fairbanks. - — — 5-No Alaska Ores are Mined | r——— solely for their silver content, but s 3 C in 1942 about 136,000 fine ounces an“arY Mea! 0. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 valued at $96,000 were recovered as @ byproduct, a decrease of $45,000 from 1941 G—-Output of coal from 'Alaska mines in the year just ended is estimated at 237,000 tons, valued at $950,000 and equalling the 1941 the largest in Alaska’s his- Chas. G. Warner Co. ! tory. A serious fire in Alaska's largest coal mine, slides on the |Marine Engines and Supplies |Alaska Railroad and labor short- MACHINE 8HOP MOOSE CELEBRATE r NEW YEAR'S EVE Members of Juneau’s Moose Lodge | celebrated the end of 1942 and the | coming of 1943 with a bang-up party held in the Moose Lodge headquart- ers last night. A large crowd atttended and a fine time was had by all who gath- ered for the affair. Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL | Baranof Hotel - >oe - Light and Heavy Hauling BUY DEFENSE BONDS E.O.DAVIS E.W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH Juneau Transfer Phene 48—Night Phone 481 STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing [ ] Complete Outitter for Men “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 164 or 165 Pree Delivery Juneau tal, New York, for her mother to THT, 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 ia- ures each of our depositors againsg loss to a maximum of 35,000 First National Bank ‘|| GASTINEAD HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Alr Bervice Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 090 G. E. ALMQUIST | CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 | DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED. Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” | | | AUTOMOBILE OWNERS ATTENTION The 1943 Automobile License Plates are now available and on sale at the office of the City Clerk. The operation of motor vehicles not bearing 1943 license plates is prohibited after December 31, 1942 ETTA MAE DUCKWORTH, City Clerk. e In Northern ‘Africa the Moslem woman of the eity almost al- | w veiled, a custom not fol- lowv(l by desert women. adv. [ THRIFT CO-0P | Member’National Retallse- Owned Grucers 811 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 — FORD AGENCY (Authorised Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors of JUNEAU, AL:SKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT l i Canada shipped goods worth INSURANCEZ EORPORATION |3$658,000,000 to the United Kingdom in 1941, Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MBATS PHONE 203 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accouniant 237 FRONT STREET Phone 676 OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE AMERICAN LEGION DOGOUTY EVERY NIGNT MMCQ{#;

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