The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 25, 1943, Page 5

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MONDAY, JANUARY 24 PHONE A CLASSIFIED THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA — ' DOUGLAS | NEWS naries of 52nd Street: Tliey Sing But They Get Paid for Those Who look‘i (a FIRE DAMAGES CORTEZ | ror SALE RESIDENCE ON SUNDAY FOR l S 3 | Fire and water practically ruined LOST—FOUND the home of George Cortez and MISCELLANEOUS family living in the John Mills house opposite the Natatorium on |St. Ann's Avenue Sunday after- Inoon about 1 o'clock. The fire was ‘found by Dpuglas volunteer fire- men, responding to the alarm, to be confined to a wall in the attic |of the three-story structure and |was apparently caused by a de- | fective chimney. | WHAT THEY ALL SAY ABOUT PIGGLY WIGGLY COFFEE Copy must be In the office by ¢t o'clock in the afternoon to in- . sure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone Hirectory. Count five average words to the Mne. Daily rate per line for consecu- @ve insertions: One day ... Adagitional days Minimum charge FOR RENT PRRGRRINS: SO 5L S T A 2 CABINS, 7-mile post, Highway. Phone 567 daytime, 143 Gas-| tineau Ave. | H I;NFURNISHED apt. and house.| Inquire Snap Shoppe. § ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. 2-room Apt. ;th‘ bath, $16. Phone 621, 176 Gas-| tineau Ave. FUR. apts,, easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. WANTED WANTEDComfortable room for | young lady employed at Baranof. | Call Coffee Shop or room 314. WANTED TO BUY — Overstuffed chair and double bed, springs and mattress. Phone 207. WANTED — Stove, furnace and chimney cleaning and repairing, window washing. See Bob or Jesse. 313 Decker Way. Phone 201. “to clean| WANTED-—Reliable man theatre and maintain apt. Must be handy with tools. Only first class sober men need apply to 20th Century Theatre Office. WANTED—Will pay cash for 14x14 left hand propeller. P.O, Box 911, | Juneau. ! WANTED—Small house or fur. apt. Call Mrs. Powell at Baranof. | WAN"I"E“&High é:;filg good con-| dition. Phone red 583. WANTED—Electric vbasher. Phone green 225. WANTED—One capahle, well quali- fied clerk-stenographer for in-| teresting government position ini Anchorage; also one experienced | clerk-typist for local Government | office. Phone 806, daytime. WANTED—WUJ‘;:‘&;' cash for goodl used piano. Phone red 206, Alaska Music Supply. = {1 MAPLE dinette set, twin beds, | child’s wardrobe, mahogany rock- er, maple chair, child’s table and chair. Red 660. RESTAURANT, bakery and meat shop combined at Tenakee, Alas- ka. Inquire Caroline Hurley, Bar- anof Hotel. P:ALME:R ;t’lrhem'y duty engine, good condition—gas burner and pressure tank. Box 2313. 1937 DODGE panel truck, 6-ply { { | Dressing rooms are tiny, but pert Margo Good Jackie Hill of the Famour Door registers { manages a costume change at the “51” club reservation while listening to a night owl's | without a collision. fairy tales. Ly e By RAY PEACOC™ | WS VR Whales weiier |D0OT: SuivS WhoAMES 1 BHE A | Tony's. Iris Adrian, now in the, | s, worked in a couple of NEW YORK.—There's w 010ck | oot of old brownstone houses on West| (onnie Russell went from $50 52nd Street, between Fifth and |y week on 52nd St. to $750 a week lSixn] avenues. In nearly E"C!’yhn the Paramount Theater and ! remodeled street-floor front there . year's movie contract at $500 a | is a night club. And in nearly |yeek She's a little dark-haired, every night club there are girl g1 who started out when 16. Terry singers—canaries, as they are|jaywler, a carrot red-head, used known to the trade. |the strect as a stepping-stone to The latest census shows 43 girls | | i 50 a week. Edith Roark, a beau- over-sized tires on wheels, good|in the block, singing for their{(jry) platinum blonde, and an em- spare, tire chains, license. For |suppers and for mink coats smm’lw,. and singer of sorts, went on| quick sale, $375. 540 Gold St. places have two, some five, ‘)"“{nu her own cafe. And then there’s| DROOM house. has ten. |Mae Johnson and Helen Hughes| 395,:,);;?3? rl},]:,::;édm:etumtfi Outside the clubs, on the side-ju;q Billie Holiday and Frances! walks, are tripod stands Wwith pay and Maxine Sullivan, of whom nished as desired. Phone blue 330. FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic diesel stationary engine. BB Em- pire. 193¢ PLYMOUTH, 5 good tires, $75. 540 Gold st. DOUBLE ender Columbia River type troller, $250. See Harbor Master. 25 REMINGTON automatic; L. C. Smith double barrel 12 guage shotgun. Guitar and instruction books. 1003 between 9th and 10th Sts. LARGE SIZE Duo Therm oil heat- er with coils. Brownie’s Barber Shop. MODERN § room furnished log house, Mile 3% Guacler Highway. Montgomerys. FURNISHED house, 822 Basin Road. Call after 7 pm. 4-RM. FURNISHED nouse. P.O. Box 1075. MISCELLANEOUS TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 815 Decker Way. WANTED—Used furniture. 306 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| s m to2p m | " LOST and FOUND | handbag with | LOST—Dbla Dper perscral arlicles and valuable papers, pessibly taken from Nerthland Dock by mistake. Re-| ward. Call rcd 150. ITGS’I' —_ A7 5eliowish—ul‘an§c coilie dog. Answers to the name of Jill. | Lost Monday. Call green 759. | L0STMonday night—small red| suede purse with zipper, con-\ taining about $7. Badly needed. Please return to Empire. FOUND —Small purse containing | money - order. Inquire Empirei Office. TAKESEVEN POSITIONS FROM JAPS Kill 201 Nippons on Guad- alcanal - Raid Nip- pon Qutpost (Continued from Page One) Jap forces on the northwestern end of the island. The enemy still holds about 16 miles of coastline on the northérn side of Guadalcanal. Heavy attacks against the island o | base mentioned in the communigue FOUND—Bunch of ‘keys. Finder | were delivered against the Japs may claim same and pay for this|With both airplanes and warships oa at Empire office. |on Saturday. The island attacked | was Kolombangara in the Xinda run SALE |area of the New Georgia group. E | Said the communique: “The or- | eration was successfully completed. FOR SALE—Immediate delivery: | Fires and explosions of fuel and 100 BH. P. McIntosh and Sey-|ammunition dumps indicated that nour heavy duty air injection|the enemy-held area was c(om- stationary diesel with racmry[p’chgly burned out.” equipment, installed and run in test only. One 160 amp. arc wel- | der, .- - geod as new. Reason for‘HoI DOGS wITH selling, replaced by 300 ampi machine. One complete large! acetelyne outfit including acete- lyne generator. One 10 stamp battery with motors, 1250 Ibs. stamps, compiete (minor re- pairs). One 2-ton Federal truck, solid tires (should be good usable| At the regular weekly meeting of the American Legion post to- night in the Dugout, movies will be shown, the Jiggs Dinner com- mittee will make a report and condition). For price and infor- mation write P.O. Box 529, serving of hot dogs will top off the night. Juneau. i NEW clectric range, 203 Behrends Ave. Phone green 309. huge pictures of the girls. Their |yo; must have heard. | names are prominently (llsplnyod.“ The present crop has its pret-| The photographs are very lush.|jes and girls with ambition. One Isinging is a visual matter onljs Elaine Hume, a tall and rather |52nd Street. | winsome blonde with hazel eyes There are no contraltos and|who really is a dramatic soprano! altos and sopranos. There are|py; who will travel farther on blondes and brunettes and red- yer looks. Another is Jackie Hill, heads. They sing blue, torch and|yho has a degree of bachelor of swing. How well they sing is not |, from the University of important. They are paid accord- vania and who gave up |ing to their following 't singing to sing herself. | | A girl's following is the male’ i Kay | spenders who follow her from | of ha, was club to club, to listen to and/or ginger and traveled with bands, watch her sing. Between SONES | ss have many others in the block. she sits at the bar or at tables.| after a spell of modeling in New She can drink as little or as much | york she returned to singing. as she wants. Usually it's little.| rhere are more, of course, like |Her income is based on what the |the giy] who cried every time she followers spend. Her salary may gng “Love For Sale,” but you be $35 a week but she may make | can't name them all when it's $100 in tips. here-to-day-gone-tomorrow. Like It's a hard school, but a g0od|tneir unofficial historian, Sher- one. A girl who can hold an au- |man, the dapper headwaiter at dience has got the stuff. The {y, pamous Door, you have to {plock has turned out some fa-|pe pleased over their successes mous graduates. It's also broken|;nq philosophic over their short- the hearts of dozens of girls Who | omings and Z>ilures. | could or couldn’t sing but couldn't | e - ! lget a following. Most of the girls are between | | 18 and 22, because that'’s where | | Martha Raye sang in the old Fa- M, Egan, William A. Egan, Carl mous Door, when it was across|N, Johnson and Richard N. Neville the street from its present loca-} Taking passage from here to the | tion. Hazel Scott, who now »ux'nsiWe\stard were Stanley Baskin, thousands a week, a few _vmrs‘Dudley Reynolds, R. C. Cook, Fu- ago got $35 at the new Pamous gene Smith ahd May Metcalf. | teaspoon salt, % teaspoon pepper, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 table- spoon chopped parsley and one well beaten egg. Then stir in % cup hot water. Add to the hot lima beans and cook over hot water until creamy. Garnish with slices of hard-cooked eggs and chopped parsley, _ Dried lima beans—rich source of vegetable protein, “B” vita- mins and iron, are a great boon to the homemaker eager to pro- vide variety and high food value in menus despite the restrictions of rationing. To make today’s tempting entree, heat 2 cups cooked dried lima beans. Blend together 2 tablespoons butter, % i | | MRS, BERLIN the biggest turnover comes in. ‘Ph Those who stay on—can hold a | SATU RDAY | following but can’'t get into big | |money — usually are married or | FROM Sou]‘ just over being married. ‘ Let’'s look over some of the graduates. There’s Joan Merrill,| Arrivals here from the South Sat- {who worked in Leon & Eddie's.|yrday night were Pat Cartee, Neva HONORED WITH SUNDAY EVENT| Dainty Teaa;en by Mrs. Chris Wyller - Many Friends Present Honoring her sister, Mrs. Leonard M. Berlin, the former Margaret Abrahamson, Mrs. Chris Wyller en- tertained from two to five o'clock |Sunday afternoon with a tea and reception held in her home at Sixth and Gold Streets. A dainty flower arrangement pre- saging the arrival of spring, formed the table centerpiece, and was com- posed of narcissi, daffodils, jonquils and fern. Tall flanking tapers on a white Chingge cloth completed the dainty ensemble and other candles about the house added to the effect. 3 Over a hundred friends paid their | ' respe¢ts during the afternoon. Thgose who poured were Mes- demes Willlam Britt, C. E. Rice, Floyd; Dryden, Charles Sabin, Wil- bur JWester, T. A, Morgan, M. D. Williams, and R. J. Sommers. Those Who Served Serving was graciously conduct- ed during the afternoon by Mrs. Forrest N. Pitts, Mrs. Burr John- £on, Mrs. Helen Webster, Miss Alma Olson; Miss Elsie MacManigal, Miss Mable ,Monsen, Miss Velma Bloom, Miss Esther Boyd, Miss Pearl Peter- son, Miss Allison Swanson, Miss Marjorie Tillotson, Miss Margaret Maland, Mrs. Charles Popejoy, Mrs. Normsn Cook, Mrs. John McLaugh- lin, Mrs. Carmen Yates, Miss Nell McCloskey, Miss Eunice Logan, Miss Dalma Hanson and Mrs. A. B. ilips. | Mrs. Berlin returned from Seattle a week ago, where she had accom- panied her husband on his return trip to the east coast. The couple was married here New Year's even- ing during a brief furlough granted Mr. Berlin, who has been assigned to the War Department for about six months. ——— SALYAGING OF GLASS PLANE AGAIN DELAYED Two divers and a salvage barge were again delayed today in at- tempts to find and raise the Don Glass plane which went down in Gastineau channel last week. Pre- vailing conditions. also prevented attempts Saturday and Sunday from any salvage work. &% N BUY DEFENSE BONDS THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depasitors’ funds i our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is a mem- ber of Federal Depasit Insur- ance Corporation,which ia- sures each of pur depositors against los to a maximum of $5,000. First "horhood. After three or four hours' |helping the regulars put out the With smoke pouring out in col- umns from the sawdust-filled walls, firemen worked hard to open them up. rlenty of water was used to theroughly soak between pnrm.lons‘ so that no possibility could exist for the fire to get outside the walls and, accompanied by the wind, perhaps cause devastating damage to the surrounding neigh- work, danger was believed defin-| itely past, but the lower portions of the dwelling were rendered un-| suitable for further residence. Most of the furniture and person- al belongings had been removed! to the Nat and if not too much| damaged by wetting may be us-| able. Insurance on the building| was in effect, according to report,| to partially cover the loss. | In commenting on the fire, Chief Pusich particularly commended the | high school boys for their part in| fire and helping remove the fur- niture to a place of safety. It was their first fire since being sworn | in as auxiliary members of the department and the advisability of ®aving them in was amply jus- tified by their deeds in just the| one instance. | The Juneau Red Cross, lenmlnzi of the dire need of the Cortez| family, acted promptly, according to John Newmarker of the Juneau-; Douglas chapter. Blankets, clothes | and other articles were made avall- | able and praise is given to the| Treadwell and Douglas residents for their help in extending aid, es- pecially to the five children, in age, from 13 years down. ———.———— COUNCIL MEETING TONIGHT A meeting of Douglas City Coun- cil is scheduled for this evening to consider the questions of a liquor closing ordinance and the bus matter. T NO WELL BABY CONFERENCE No Well Baby Conference will be held in Douglas Tuesday, the Public Health Nurse announced to- day. e BOY BABY FOR NEIMIS Mr. and Mrs. Tauno Neimi of Douglas are the parents of a baby boy, born this mqrning at 4:50 o'- clock at St. Ann's Hospital. The baby weighed five pounds eleven ounces. Donald, six, and Judy, five, wel come the new baby. Mr. Neimi is at present driving a bus for the Channel Lines. Catholic Daughters Wil Pgr!y Tuesday Bingo games and the exchanging of white elephant gifts, which at- tending members are . asked to bring wrapped, will be featured at the social meeting of the Catho- lic Daughters of America, to be held tomorrow evening. Mrs. Harley J. Turner will act 88 hostess for the group at her home at 535 Kennedy Street. Following the social, refreshments will be served by a special com- mittee for the evening. - ® 06000000 00 WEATHER BUREAU . (U. 8. Bureau) ‘Temp. Saturday, Jan. 23 Maximum 14, minimum 7 National Bank of JUNEAU, AL SKA l MEMBER FEDERAL DEPCSIT INSURANCE .ol"lA'l‘: ‘Temp.. Sunday, Jan. 24 Maximum 12, minimum 5 8 0.0 0 00 00 eev 00 e sevo0eo0 IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED | 1 Ice Age. We Grind It to Your Order—COARSE, MEDIUM or FINE. Just now we have a lot of new items. If you have been waiting for anything in particular, ASK US! PIGGLY PHONE 16 or 24 | Sanitary Meat Co. | POR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY . Call Phones 13 and & Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP i Ropes and Paints WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E.O.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTE DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oll—Stove O —Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- lng — BStorage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phene 48—Night Phone 481 “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Pree Delivery GASTINEAU Every comfort made for our guests Ay Service lnformalicn HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Btore—Tel. 000 American Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 Duncan’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” Bricks and tiles are manufactured in the province of Quebec from clay deposited in an inland sea after the i FORD A i i ‘GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS - Builders’ and Bhett HARDWARE Newly Renovaied Reems at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O et Wau';:aper HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant PARCEL DELIVERY SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Scheduled pick-ups, 10:30 am., 2:30 pm. at 25¢ within

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