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MONDA\ JANUARY || P 1943 HONE A CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by P 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 Ine. Daily rate per line for consecu- ve insertions: One day . Additional days ... Minimum charge FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT FOR SALE Highwa 143 Gas- | 2 CABINS, T7-mile post, Phone 567 daytime, tineau Ave. 3—‘BACHELOR cabins. Inquire 481 So. Franklin, rear, upstairs. WANTED—A furnished apartment to accommodate Legislator and| wife and 10-year-old boy from | 10th or 15th of January until} April 1. Phone 249. 3-ROOM furnished cabin with oil |_ range. 513A Willoughby. GOOD APTS. at Seaview, coal on hand; one apt. oil range, hot | and cold water. By Jan. 1. Cash in advance. 2 CABINS for rent, 7-mile post, | Highway. Phone 567. UNFURNISHED apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. 5 ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. FURNISHED 2-room Apt. with| bath, $16. Phone 621, 176 Gas- | tineau Ave. and house. | FUR. apts., easy kept warm. Win- # Bl(f\(_(,:Li‘ good condition, able; amateur $: kitchen stool, box, glass water Peterson res., Downstairs apt. developing 6-loaf pitcher. Albert 437 Park Ave set, 60 hp. V-8 engine. 28-FT. BOAT, 40 hp. Universal; good oil burner stove, $650. Phone green 160. dishes, fruit other articles. Phone blue 279. BICYCLE, ice skates jars, books, and 746 West 12th. TWO PAIR gold Damask drap- eries; wall mirror; Dutch ove bread box; G.E. S-4 sun lamp; man’s bicycle, new; new Win- chester 30.06, box shells; ama- teur developing set; ket; Bush rod and reel. Albert Peterson res, 437 Park Ave. Downstairs apt. |LARGE SIZE Duo Therm oil heat- er with coils. Shop. Brownie’s Barber ONE LARGE Lang 2-oven Bargain. range. Inquire Swanson Bros ter rates §$15 a mo. Lights, water, | Qishes. Seaview Apts. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. WANTED WANTED TO BUY — Single bed, complete — or mattress, springs only. Phone black 634. j | | | | LUNCH counter for sale—Inquire Alaskan Hotel. MODERN 5 room turnished log house, Mile 3% Glacler Highway. Montgomerys. FURNISHED house, 822 Basin Road. Call after 7 p.m. 4-RM. FURNISHED nouse. P.O. Box 1075. WANTED TO BUY—New or used | adding machine. Phone red 510. WANTED TO BUYAChlldR cnb‘ P.O. Box 768, Juneau. | PART ume or temporary employ- | ment by woman with varied busi- ness experience: typist. P.O. Box | WANTED TO BUY—4-room fur- nished house, or larger. Cush‘ available. P.O. Box 2864. i WANTED—High char, good con- dition. Phone red 583. 1 WANTED—Electric washer. green 225. Phone ’ 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—Will pay cash for good used piano. Phone red 206, Alaska Music Supply. ;AN’(]'ED—fJEcEIAfumnure. 806 Wil- loughby, phone 788. WANTED —Girls or women for kitchen or waitress work. Ex-| perience preferred, but not nec-| essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10' e m to2p m LOST and FOUND | | TRADE $200 cquity 3-ROOM Furnished house and im- provements on 5-acre homesite. 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, Auk Lake. Box 609. MISCELLANEOUS L. W. Cord. P. O. in 20-acre, . cleared, fenced farm with build- ings in Northern Idaho for equi- ty or payment on place in Ju- neau, Douglas or vicinity. Box 197, Willamina, Ore. OUR BARBER shop prices are the same as ever. Haircut 65 cents, shave 35 cents. Bob Light Bar- ber Shop. FIVE CENTS each, paid for used sunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. TURN your old goid into value cash or trade at Nugget Shop. FUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, 81 up wola Beauty Shop. Phone 301 315 Decker Way. $700 IS STOLEN FROM SITKA MOOSE - CLUB ON SATURDAY The Moose Club at Sitka was FOUND—Wrist watch. Owner mny‘ claim same of Dan Jekrich, 421| Willoughby Ave. FOUND-—Gold identification brace- let marked Wm. E. Orr. Call at Empire office. Prove ownership| and pay for adv. LOST*Mans bifocal gold rimmed glasses. Return to Baranof Hotel and receive reward. FOUND—Bunch of keys4 Finder | may claim same and pay for this ad at Emplre office. | "~ ATTENTION MASONS | Stated Communication of Mt.' Juneau Lodge No. 147 Monday eve- were issued to the following dur- and shipped West, to Iowa, where ning at 7:30. Degree. Work in M. M. J. W. LEIVERS, Secretary. | o 35 I | DIVORCE GRANTED | A final decree has been granted in U. S. District Court in the di- vorce case of Henry Nelson vs. Mary Ann Nelson. adv. . broken into Saturday night and $700 was reported stolen, the U. S. Marshal's Office reported today. At the same time, someone broke |into the Silver Foam cocktail bar, but nothing was taken. U. S. Deputy Marshal Kenneth P. Samson is investigating both cases. (ERIIFI(MES FOR TIRES, TUBES GIVEN 15T WEEK, JANUARY Certificates for tires and tubes ing the first week in January: J. L. Donohue (for defense), 1 tire; ‘Rovcr Bailey (for defense), 1tube;| He didn't like farming much. He Yellow Cab Co., 4 tires, 2 tube: Royal Blue Cab Co., 4 tires, tubes; Owl Cab Co., 4 tires. 2 American soldiers from the corn belt helped British farmers harvest .their 1942 crops. bread | trout bas- | “|of My ‘| went there, but the territory was reason- | Calif. shown at Trippi (62), and Hiunian: Georgia won, 9 o 0. Dr.DeVighne | Wrifes Book; Is Life Story Former Well Known Ju-! neau Physician Publishes | | | Interesting Chronicle | Dr. Harry Carlos DeVighne, prac- ticing physician in Juneau for {many years, has written his sec- ond book. It is called “The Time| Life” and is published by| J. B. Lippincott Company. The book, which is being read currently by many of the author’s| friends in Juneau, was ably re- | viewed by Stanley Walker in the| |New York Herald-Tribune. Mr. Walker says in part: Dr. De Vighnes story for the most concerns itself with hi\' | thirty years as a frontier doctor in Alaska, although that is only part of the bizarre outline of his life.; i The frantic gold rush was reced-‘ ing a bit when Dr. De Vighne, a! fresh and frightened young man, still tough enough. The inhabi- tants included the natives, who were being spoiled by the mission-| aries; a goodly remnant of the| oldtime gamblers and saloon pro- prietors; a fair sprinkling of dance-! hall women, some of whom had| great nobility, and the rest of a motley cast—made up of ordinary citizens, fugitives from justice, sourdoughs, hunters, fishermen and assorted bums. It was a vast territory into which the white man had brought an: appalling number of new diseases.| Methods of treatment were often fantastic. Surgery, if any, was primitive in the extreme. Sanitation was virtually non-existent. Into this difficult mess went young Dr. De Vighne to make a living and to do his best. He was none too well fequipped with learning and experi- ence, but he got by. He made a sur- vey of health conditions for the gov- ernment with a view to organiz- ing a health service for the Indians and Eskimos, and then he settled down to private practice. He appears to have been highly adaptable. He made mistakes, but he picked up knowledge along the way, and he did much for Alaska. Moreover (and this seems to hap- pen tp a great many doctors), he acquired a thoughtful philosophical habit of mind, an attitude toward life which shows through much of this book. The start of the story is unusual Dr. De Vighne says his first clear memory is of following a band down Seventh Avenue in New York in a political parade in 1884, when he was eight years old. He had been born n Cuba, of respectable parentage, and then had sotne- what unaccountably been - left an| orphan in New York Cty. There was a short period in the home of an Italian named Tony, then a! time when he was more or less the ward of a Bowery character named McGurk. Then he was a newsboy dodging truant officers and making a precarious living on the East Side. Finally he was picked up i an old farmer and his wife adopted | him as their grandchild. ran away, went to Deadwood, South Dakota, lived there until he was cixteen, then ran off again. In his vagrant youth he did all sorts of things. He rode the rods and the “side-door sleepers” from one end of the country to the other, He Before a throng of 93,000 persons, Lamar Da {to work inhis librar 'xunning of explosives | determined to be i been through just about everyt] | tor, THE DAIL\ ALASKA EMPlRt— JUNEAU ALASKA C. L. sky (46). UCLA players are Wiener and there didn't seem to be much hope for him. His turning point came one night in St. Louis, when, while waiting to catch a freight n, he saw a well dressed but very tipsy man in trouble. He took the man home, passed the night, and then found that he had be- friended a prominent but shock- ingly unethical physician. This medical maverick gave him a home for nine months, employing him and to assist him from his spectacular jags notion that he might like to be a doctor. He left St. Louis, did some more roaming, took part in some of the and conspir- | home lators to Cuba which preceded the ar with Spain and then, finally, after vainly riding the rods to San Antonio in the hope of joining Roosevelt's Rough Riders, got a job in a state institution for the insane that city. Here, in this tragic {asylum, he got his first real medical training and more than ever doctor. He ¥ ed at that time, and for many yea terward, to become a neurologist, { but he never did. Instead, mostly by a series of chance incidents, he em- barked upon his strange but use- ful career in Alaska. He became one of Alaska's great (men, although he tells of his emi- nence modestly enough. They say| that he was known as “Doc throughout all Alaska—other phy- sicians there might be, but he was the one and only “Doc.” Ee had hoped, when younger, to avoid ob- |etetrics, but by 1920 he had deliv- ered his 1,000th baby. In 1933 he delivered his 2,000th. He gave the baby his own name by way of cele- bration, and the City of Juneau ob- served the event by dedicating the telephone directory to him. He had He had seen men horribly mangled by the enormous Alaska brown bears. He had seen many gunshot wounds., The drunk and disciderly| he had treated many times. He had seen squalor and ignorance, m,bllny and heartbreaking courage. At last the day came when he realized that he was the oldest doc- bered other old doectors, and how their patients had gradually drawn away from them. He decidea to leave while he could make a happy exit. So he went to an old adche house which he had bought in Cal- ifornia. He would establish a new office, find new friends and “again feel the thrill of greeting that first new patient whose troubles were unknown to me.” He says that. as it turned out, there were no risks| involved in this change. Dr. De Vighne's chockful of good stuff. He puts on no airs. He understands that, as a! medical man, he had many defici- encies. But he was on the spot, and -|he did the best he could. He seems |to have few regrets. Nor should he have. Ihree Judges Are Requested in Big (ases Against AP NEW YORK, Jan. 11.—Attorney General Francis Biddle today filed a petition in the Federal Court ask- ing that the Government’s anti- | trust action against the Associated Press be expedited and to be heard by a court consisting of at least one | Circuit Court of Appeals Judge and two Federal Judges. The usual pro- cedure is a single Federal Judge in | such cases. e More than teathers are enrolled in ticnal Education Association and Jkuew all the tricks of the hobo, its affiliated groups. It was here that he got the! but one, in Alaska. He didn't want that distinction. He remem-! memoirs are | 775,000 American | the Na-| | Douglas DavisReturns Rose Bowl Kickoff 44 Yards |BASKETBALL ~ ONTONIGHT} 1 After winning the high school championshilp for this area Irum: last week, Juneau High | School's Crimson Bears will. be out ! | | s (arrow), Georgia halfback, took the opening kickoff and | returned it to his own 44-yard line, almost breaking away for a touchdown in the game at Pasadena, He was pulled down from behind by Bob Waterfield, U. A. quarterback. Georgia players (30), Riddle (22) and Fears (10.) ALASKA COSTAL AIRLINES FLIES IN 600D WEATHER Profiting by the first break in weather for several days, Alaska Coastal Airlines made five round trips to Excursion Inlet yesterday and three to Sitka, and this morn- ing Shell Simmons made a flight ito Excursion Inlet. Those taking passage for Excur- sion Inlet with Dean Goodwin yes- terday wére Wilbur Mills, M. Ca- |Art Pladsen, Amos Cole, F. Fulen- cio, Joe Fulencio, A. Maypa E. J. Moeller, {A. V. Fesberg, Frank Hamilton, Wil- |liam R. Gates, and W. S. Holmes. Returning to Juneau were E. A. Hiuginbntham K. R. Rudolph, Neal Tumex Vernon Isreals, Harold A. ahobm',, Ralph Gabrielson, E. L. Govan, George H. Shull, |Okis, Arthur Stayner. Sitka _Flights On the three trips to Sitka with Shell Simmons as pilot, those for Sitka were E. M. Culver, V. E. Rawley, Frank Hennesy, Ruben {Ramberg, Harvey R. Swan, Merlin | 'J Langniack, Jack McConkey, Ev- | erett E. Smith, Bill Peterson, E. K. | Rushton, Russell Clithero. 1 Sitka to Juneau—Lue Dixon, Mandy Anderson, Bernice Johnson, Mrs. Earl Miller, Preston L. Wool- Gus Rosembolm, Don Poznan, Harry Datoff, Vern L. Hoban, Mrs. Emma Hoban. For Excursion Inlet this morn- ing: Jgse Tumanery, Felix Ro- |mero, Joe Moralis, Tony Yanguas,| g.|Paul R. Pugh. > | States District Court for the Terri- pris, John Serebia, Charles Loftus,!or within thirty (30) days after jdays after date of its service upon Leonard Johnson.‘w“‘ in case land if you fail so to appear and|. Harold | tirr will apply to the Court fo: lery, M. Isaacs, Mrs A. E. Withey, 'hereunto set my hand and have | Empire Classifieds Pay! tonjght on the Juneau gym floor to tackle the Falcons in the Gas-| tineau Channel League and the Malamutes will play the Bruins in| the other Juneau game. | In Douglas tonight, the Sigacs| will play the Beavers, and the| Waves will take on the Cheecha- kos. - EXCURSION INLET V K. R. Rudolph, TORS E. A. Higginbo- tham, Arthur Stayner, George H. Shull, and William Smithson are Juneau visitors from Excursion In- let who are registered at the Bar- anof Hotel lN THE DI%TRICI‘ f‘OUR'l FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT/ JUNEAU. | MARY RHODES, Plaintiff, vs. WESLEY GEORGE RHODES, De- | fendant, No. 4967-A, ALIAS SUM- MONS FOR PUBLICATION. TO: WESLEY GEORGE RHODES, above defendant, GREETING: IN THE NAME OF THE UNITED STATES OF AM- ERICA, you are hereby command- ed to be and appear in the above- | entitled Court, i. In the United Division Number One, at Jupeau, in said Division of said Territory, and answer the complaint filed against you in the above-entitled acticr, te.: That certain action wherein MARY RHODES is the plaintiff, and WESLEY GEORGE RHODES is the defendant, which is nnmberedl No. 4967-A, on the docket of said Court, within thirty (30) days after the completion of the period of publication of said summons, which said summons by an order made and entered by said Court in said action on December 19th, 1942, was ordered to be published for a peri- od of once a week for four (4) con- secutive and successive weeks, com- mencing on December 21st, 1942, and ending on January 11th, 1943, in case said summons is published, tory of Alaska, January 11th, 1943, or within forty this summons is served upon you personally, and answer the complaint of the above- named plaintiff on file in said Court in the above-entitled action, answer, for want thereof, the plain- the relief demanded in her com- plaint, ie.: For an absolute divorce and dissolution of the marriage contract between plaintiff and de- fendant; and for the exclusive care, custody and control of Wesley George Rhodes, Jr. and Marvin Albert Rhodes, minor children of | plaintiff and defendant. And for such other and further relief as to the Court may appear just and equitable. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have affixed the seal of'the above en- titled Court at Juneau, Alaska, this 19th day of December, 1942. ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, Clerk of the District Court. By J. W. LEIVERS. Deputy Clerk of Court. Published Dec. 21-28, 1942, Jan. 4-11, 1043, ady. i ey THOMAS HALL ! as 8 paid- -up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | is invited to present this coupon at the box office of thé«—— CAPITOL THEATRE this evening and receive TWO TICKBTS to see: “BABES ON BROADWAY" Federal Tax—5c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! THE management of this bunh'-plndpdweaucnv tive operation. Th-lcty of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 8 mem- ber of Federal Depasit Insur- ( ance Corporation,which ia- oures each of our .depositors against los to s maximum | of $5,000. R FEDERAL DEPO First N‘m?galfiunk INSURANC i IN WAR % AS IN PEACI ORATIO e PIGOLY PAGE FIVE WIGGLY P“"" QUALITY with SERVICE SAUCIT Evaporated Gravensiein Apples The 4 The 4 ounce package makes one quart of Delicious Apple Sauck The 16-ounce package ma es four quarts. CONVENIENT AND EASY TO PREPARE! SOLD BY PIGGLY WIGGLY Delivery orders received early in:the day will be appreciated Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 Chas. G. Warner Co. I 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. O. DAVIS E. W. DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH _Berl‘s Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 ¥res Delivery GASTINEAD " HOTEL Every comfert made for our guests Kir Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liguer Btors—Tel 000 Meat — Phone 38 A 37 mm,. anti-alrcraft gun uses a ton of copper in every 20 min- utes of operation. ——— e FORD AGENCY (Authorised Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Molors EVERY NIGHT John Marin, Prop. Phone 88 ‘Widest Selection of. LIQUORS Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelt HARDWARE Utah Nl and Lunp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE ¢ HARVEYR. Lm” Public Accountemt’ 337 PRONT STREET Phone 670 OPEN HOUSE for m‘“ MEN mmlolm EVERY Rxcept each Monday and Mm‘h“