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I RlDM JANUARY 29, 1 943 P HONEA CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by ¢ o'clock in the afternoon to in- pure insertion on same day. ‘We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone tirectory. Count five average worlls to the Ene. Daily rate per line for consecu- tive insertions: One day ... Adgitional days . Minimum charge .......50¢ 10c FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED : By VIVIAN BROWN Wide World Features Write NEW YORK--The d'm dance girl short, slink fluffy right man to come through the door with a lifetime ticket. She earns a good living and the life is gay - but tall or gowned—is waiting for th FOR RENT | house, close in. Phone red 330. 6-ROOM Available modern Feb. 1. 2 CABINS, 7-mile post, Phone 567 daytime, tineau Ave. Highway. 143 Gas- 1ED apt. UNFURNIE and p Shoppe. Sr § ROOMS strictly modern unfurn- ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. FURNISHED 2-room ADV.. t. with| bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas-| tineau Ave. FUR. apts., easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. WANTED TO BUY—AIr comp paint gun or Auto- | Phone 303, Guy F.| WANTED sor for large mgbile shop. Atkinson Co, furnace and| and repairing, Bob Phone 201 to clean maintain -apt. Must h tools. Only first ced apply to atre Office. | TED - Siove, ning windo hing Jess n theatre be cla and h for 14x14| . P.O. Box 911, Juneau, WANTED apt. Call Mrs. Powell at Baranof. WANTED—High cnarr, dition. Phone red 583. good con- | WANTED—Will pay cash for good used piano. Phone red 206 Alaska Music Supply. ! 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 a m to2p m i LOST and FOUND | FOU D—Pair rea reading glasses in| . Simpson case: also 2 keys on | Inquire Police Dept. (| rin' LOST — Large dog, buff color,| leather collar, friendly. Answers | to name of “Frosty.” 421 Seward | containing valuable | Legion Card | to Empire Office. Bulova “;ri;t. face. Centact Case, Staticn. el MP LOST—A }ellowlsfi-orange collie dog. Answers ‘to the name of Jill. Lost Monday, Call green 759. LOST—Monday night—small red suede purse with zipper, con- taining about $7. Badly needed. lease return to Empire. FOUND — Small money - order, Oftice. purse containing Inquire Empire FOUND—Bunch of keys. Finder may claim same and pay for this ad at Emplre office. FOR SALE ' | 520 after 6| SKATE pm —Phone blue SALE--Furnished house in Phone Douglas 764. | FOR Douglas. 7 FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic diesel stationary engine. BB Em- | pire. 1934 PLYUOUTH 5 good tires, 375 540 Gold St. PALMER 18 heavy duty engine, good condition—gas burner and pri e tank. Box 2313. .25 REMINGTON automatic; L. C., Smith double barrel 12 guage| — shotgun. Guitar and instruction | books. 1003 between 9th and um: {1937 DODGE or | =— — | General | delayed for a period exceeding 30 Ghorl First B . she wants that vine-covered cou- tage, or at least an apartment ‘or two. That’s what I found out—amo: a lot of other things—when I w: host or-a-night at one of the town’s swank ballrooms, Roseland Most of the girls marry and have families and foresake dancing for domesticity. Several have fa tremely well. The girls told me of a wealthy young man who came 1 night after night until wedding bel chimed. But to get to the dancing, twenty of us sat on a roped off dais (the pen) waiting to be claimed. One girl said reassuringly: If a man is objectionable just {RESTAURANT, bakery and meat shop combined at Tenakee, Alas- ka. Inquire Caroline Hurley, Bar- anof Hotel. FOR SALE—Immediate delivery: 100 BH. P. McIntosh and Sey- nour heavy duty air injection stationary diesel with factory equipment, installed and run in test only. One 160 amp. arc wel- der, good as new. Reason for selling, replaced by 300 amp. machine. One complete large acetelyne outfit including acete- lyne generator. One 10 stamp battery with motors, 1250 Ilbs. stamps, complete (minor re- P ). One 2-ton Federal truck, solid tires (should be good usable condition). For price and infor- mation write P.O. Box 529, Juneau. panel truck, over-sized tires on wheels, * spare, tire chains, license. quick sale, $375. 54‘0 Gold St. 6-ply good For ender £250. DOUBLE type troller, er. See Harbor | LARGE SIZE Duo Therm oll heat- er with coils. Brownie’s Barber Shop. ‘MODLRN 5 room !umlshed log house, Mile 3% Guacier Highwaj. Montgomerys. {-RM. FURNISHED nouse. P.O. Box 1075, MISCELLANECUS WHY HAVE me tra ps” Wc clean and repair furnaces, stoves and electrical devices; window wash- ing by month. See Bob, 313 Decker Way. Phone 201.° SUCCESS! A client buys her me for an hour TO CREDITORS All creditors of the estate of Al n, deceased, are hereby re- present them with proper TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. GUARANTEED Realistic Perma-| NOTICE nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up., Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201.|Lunds qu 815 Decker Way. ed A — — ers within six mor from ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS |(oi¢ hereol to the und S administrator of &aid estate Sealed bids will be received by | lask Sister M. Borromeo at the Sisteu}“u\;;‘d I;xf\x 15 of St. Joseph of Newark, Ketchi- B S kan General Hospital, Kemh]kan“Punll(au(m Alaska, until ten AM., I-‘vhm:a\ry\!:‘(\b 5, 1943 12, 1943, for the construction of iz : the additions to the Ketchikani™ | date 1943 dates, Hospital, Ketchikan, Al-| aska, and will then and there be opened and publicly read alounl Bids received after the time fixed| for opening will not be considered Plans and specifications and form of contract documents may be obtained at the office of the Federal Works Administration, 511 Alaska Building, Seattle, Washmg-I ten, at the Ketchikan General Hos- | pital, ‘Ketchikan, Alaska, ahd at|ers among the men and women in the H, B. Foss Company, Juneau, |various defense and industrial ar- Alaska, upon a deposit of $5.00. leas in New York State have been The full amount of deposit for moved to increase their activity by one set of documents will be re- |reports of increased delinquency of turned to each actual bidder with- |juveniles made public by a spectal in a reasonable time after receipt!committee reporting to the New of bids. Other deposits will be re- | York State Social Welfare Board. funded with deduction not exeeed- | | This committee pointed out that s RELIGION yUW.REID ; Church boards and agencies in- linz the actual cost of xep]oducuan\dulln" the first six months of 1942, industrial York, increased by neglect by 39 in thirteen war and | counties in northern juvenile delinquency of the drawings, upon the return of all documents in good condi- tion within 30 days after the date ;: of opening bids. e 22 'per cent; child ch bid shall be accompaniea PeF cent; and the admission: by a certified check, cashier’s ¢h o “ldrf’f‘ to * foster -care by 33 or bid bond (with authorized sure- Do A PR I gostiquency, company, as surety) made. pay- ::y report said, “resulted from the abl to the Owner in amount not emple less than 5% of the amount of bid. .. fathers The Sisters of St. Joseph of cmmunity or Newark reserve the right to reject co,.yjce » any or all bids, and to waive In- | formalities. No bidder may withdraw his bid after the hour set for the opening thereof, or before award of contract, unless said. award yrient of mothers, working going due to another or in No matter how well paid you may be, if tk » are no amusements or no opportunity for relaxation ind pleasant social activities, buy themy id the Hon, es P. Taft, ense Health and Welfare Ser- . in speaking, to church leaders hout them, yom get the ~boys in service 1943 ve to live in discomfort and 1943. Loredom, and you get industrial ady. turnover and less war production. — Maybe they should pay no atten- More than 1250 service centers tion and keep going, but they don't, for soldiers of all the Allied nations and they are patriotic, too. That | 15 can't days. SISTER M. FLAVIA, Sisters of St. Newark. publication, publication, Jan. Feb. 29, Last 5, | Recre e WORLD reaking up of families due to the ; you |is stant director, | e conducted by the British YMCA. jsituation created the need for tmr1 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU ALASKA NICE WORK IF YCU CAN GET IT, SAYS VIVIA PE: THE walk away; we stand for any nother said: “If you need any heip, just call one of the housemen who police the floor—they take care of jitter- bugs and improper dancing. One girl is a model, another a radio singer end several do war work. They come from Connecticut, idwest and the a short time, | to nonsense I to whistle for a cus- Almost immediately, T ac- | itleman from San Fran- He wanted a date and I told him that was not permitted. We | te a glided about the floor to the music of Bob Allen’s orch tra. It was my first night, T He borro money for the three d A hands: tomer } qui e young man from De- r, bought We sat cocktail and m me” the electr We had some drinks ounge TIME OUT: dividend from his tion Section. The nation on le has met the need for tion through the USO markably fine job hun- -ommunities have done in ded hospitali Off the inent we haven't done tco well constructive activities help the menaces to health and hich every war pro- he duc The Methodist Federation of So- ia] Service, of which Bishop Fran- is J. McConnell of New York is president is urging pastors through- ;ut the country to form “weekly cussion groups” within their scal parishes for the discussion of ar and post-war aims, war and post-ar economy. Such weekly | | bodies of laymen now exist in sev- | eral important Methodist and other | church parishes. terested in sending religious work-| The Greater New York Federa- tion of Churches, through Secre-| tary Robert W. Searle, is canvass- | ing the churches of New York’s five | * boroughs to see what institutions are closing or limiting their ser- vice because of lack of oil or other fuel this winter. Where such'a sit- uation exists, the Federation ex-| pects to find other parishes in the :eme general neighborhoods where congregations and organizations can temporarily “double .up” by stag- gering hours of service. It has been ted that in many other com- large and small, congre- and their serviee groups | imilarly “double up” for the of the winter in .the upped and -best heated of mns into military | ; Fellowship among - races und‘ lequality of racial opportunity, such was expres¢ed in the early Chris-| tian church and is again appearing | as zn essential of Christian faith, gaining general acceptance, r. George E. Hayngs, | Council of the ca, in uncing the observance of Relmions Sunday” through- | ‘vu' : United Sta tv n February 14 numn(- ' | Haynes. “It says humanity is one; that the sume' ty of blood are in all races. Democracy approves. Its basic prm-— ciple is equality of opportunity for .sll Common sense sanctions. u‘ jacc of annc Rac | Vivian sips a coke N eful dance,girls custol war job! azed to le girls earn from $25 to $60 a week and dance approximately 100 dances | a night. T averaged $2 an hour, | received en cents for every ten- cent ticket, and § of the time ticket, T rls all thought 1 got a good pla cause I was a “new face.’ The ho and each hour in t s are from 8:30 to 1:30 girl must spend a half War Bond Booth. All of them are registered with the Police Department; all have to have | three references and a picture which is attached to the files As atter of fact at time I ided 1t had been ve tertal and as for wedding be Even pects: A a war best was car, tires dance 2 closing en- t, an artist, an r among others. The | 1e war'worker. He had a , and four d new t definitely— 86! Giles CARD ACE MAY BE | rtner, gets a dollar ticket with her p: hour “time teaches us that the of the kin, the slant of the eye, or the se of the head are absurd and precarious bases for claims of ra- cial superiority Man must d as man, apart from race 1 and color.” and birt} ‘Ministgrs who operal mills' for pecuniary gain pr their holy, calling and re rebuke” says the Board of Missions of the United Luth- Church in advising against y and mixed marriages due to in and stress of riages, the Board declares, “premise a new wave of domestic diffieulties and divorces chpsch can render a singular €. ¢ to eouples contemplating matrimony by providing wise coun- eel un:l wholesome Christian influ- | ence. . . The production of many com- | modities in Free China has more | than doubled since the war started. ' PAGE FIVE P DIGGLY WIGGLY 7is QUALITY with SERVICE Ready to Serve COD FISH required ted better an DAVE'S with 1 serve or For Sale at PIGGLY WIGGLY SPECIAL TODAY—Florida Tangerines L e Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 Chas. G. Warner Co. l Mdflne Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP | “CHUTE SUIT’ — Holly- b, wood frowns on zoot suit, but not on the “chute suit” as mod- eled here by Grace McDonald, It's a play suit idea of red, white, and blue. Derrmger Is Solid fo Cubs The Cm-l ul Der- pitching in aj FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel 29 sold K CINCINNATI, Jan innati Reds have ringer, dean of their g teff, to the Chicago® Cubs ght cash deal. neral Manager anncunced the eft the Red. on their Warren C‘ deal, which Ge NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E. 0. DAVIS E. W. DAVIS an 'vl.l[ HI-‘ | P}ION 81 dupl L won | ‘||n » to the Reds! Louis Cardi bled with i and wo ten games COMPANY [ i l DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS off for 1 his but -ninz pine men in WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Ofl—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Btorage and Crating CALL US! Junean Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 INDU(TED SHORTLY 29—George | man for 3 5 and one| of the herSts of their world series triumph over the Yankees, reveals he expects to be inducted into the ‘ Kurc third b TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing [ ] FRED HENNINC Complete Outfitter for Men Army soon. “I'd like summer,” ball again this he said, “but you can't| hing you want to in times Whatever happens is all to play Kurowski xpects Lo be follow- in 3 mination in March. This 2-B classification was due to the removal of three inches of bone from his right fore- arm fcllowing an injury many years ago. 4SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 165 Free Delivery Juneau NOTICE Dr. Carlson has returned to her Juneau practice. Eyes examined and broken lenses replaced in our own shop. Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. adv. ——————— BUY DEFENSE BONDS 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 a mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which i~ sures each of our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. E of JUNEAU, EDERAL DEPCSIT irst National Bank ' GASTINEAU HOTEL Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel 690 American ‘Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576 DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” [ Duncan's Cleaning 1 || TR R L-SEKA INSURANCE or older comprised one-sixteenth of the U. S. population; today they number one-fourth, ORPORAT ' COWLING-DAVLIN In 1900, persons 45 years of age | [ THRIFT CO-0P | Member National Retallee- Owned Grucers 211 SEWARD STREEY PHONE 767 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREABES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT BIIIJGLAS nm Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 8 Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS ~ Bullders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nut 2nd Lomp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated M at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE 0 Alaska Music §upply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Cholce Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONE 653—92—88 Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 . . . . Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant Y SERVICE | E 492 'l'n-u—luule--mll DAY OR NIGHT Scheduled Delivery 10 a. m. and 2 P. M. 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