The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 18, 1943, Page 5

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HURSDAY, FEBRUARY | 8, 1943 PHONE A CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by o'clock in the afternoon to in- e insertion on same day. 'We accept ads over telephone om persons listed in telephone ory. Count five average words to the Daily rate per line for consecu- insertions: One day ... Additional days FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED f FOR RENT x Sy ITEAM heated room, hot and cold | water, close in, woman preferred | Phone blue 600. { {FURNISHED apt. and house. | Inquire Snap Shoppe. ‘ SHED 2-room Apt. with| bath, $16. Phone 621, 176 Gas- | tineau | Ave. | R, apts, easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes, Seaview Apts. | WANTED ANTED—A Turnishéd apartment apartment or small house. Have no children or pets. Phone black 615. XfiTéfiihsed sewmg machmo. reasonable. Mrs. M. Isaacs, John-| son Apts, Gastineau Ave. Phonei 621. ANTED—Plnuorm scales, good metal double bedstead. Box 3036, | Juneau. | ANTED~A11 rounfl bflker, $3()0 per month to start. Write or wire Pioneer Bakery, Sitka, Al- aska. ANTED—Will pay cash for 14x14 left hand propeller. P.O. Box 911, 'ANTED—High cnair, good con- dition. Phone red 583. | VANTED—Will pay cash for good | ™~ used piano. Phone red 206, Alaska Music Supply. | | VANTED — Girls or women for| kitchen or waltress work. Ex- perience preferred, but not nec-| essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10| a m to 2 p. m LOST and FOUND i | OST—4 keys on lron rmg Re-‘ ward. Return to Empire. ! X OST—Between Governor’s house | and Federal Bmlding, Elks ring, red stone setting. Reward. Re~f turn to Beringer, Radio offlce,1 Federal Building. OST—Billfold containing money, birth = certificate and valuable papers. Keep money but please return papers to E:apire office. OST — A yellow leather, right hand, fur-lined glove, near Ju- neau Drug Phone 656. FORSALE 2 chlcken arden tools, p in good n and rubber. See C. F. 7%-mile post, Glacier McNutt. Highway. DNE Locomotive Crane, 8-wheel, 20-ton capacity. Contact: Inde- pendent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif. DNE Locomotive Crane, 4-wheel, 12-ton capacity. Contact: Inde- pendent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif. DNE Osgood crane on crawler tracks, 1-yd., heavy duty 700 soom. Contact: Independent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oak- land, Calif. TUG—100-foot Diesel, 250 hp., 3600-gallon fuel capacity, 9-foot, 6-inch maximum draft. Contact: Independent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif. [BARGE—30x100-foot, wood, ton capacity. Contact: Indepen- dent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif. cart, card Phone TWO - WHEEL baby table, cooking utensils. blue 694. ED compléte wuh sprmgs mattress. Phone green 379. INEW, slightly used davenport and | chair. Phone 172 or 552. [BOARDING house for sale or | ))mlr‘r gle marine Triang {20 HP. SCOTCH with oil burner. Cleaners. FOR SALE—6-room house, partial- ly furnished. Call 434 after 6 p.m. | near ski trail, foot frontage on beach and Douglas Highway, warranty deed, partially improved, $90 full price George Denman, Box 3009, El Paso, Texas. LOl' 40°'x100, furnished | FOR SALE — 4-room ! water, Mile | house: bath, lights, 312, Salmon Creek FOR SALE — 3 purebred New Hampshire red roosters. C. H. Sherwood, Box 3036, Juneau. FOR SALE—Furnished house in Douglas. Phone Douglas 764. | FOR SALE:-QO hl"‘ll;(’ hp Covic diesel stationary engine. BB Em- pire. 25 REMINGTON automatic; L. C. Smith double barrel 12 guage shotgun. Guitar and instruction books. 1003 between 9th and 10th Sts. P.O. 1 RM FURNISHII) nouxe. Box 1075. MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Giacler Highway | Montgomerys. LARGE SIZE Duo Therm oil heat- er with coils. Brownie’s Barber Shop. MISCELLANEQUS TURN your old go!d 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. HARRY EDWIN DUFF PASSES AWAY HERE Harry Edwin Duff, age 61, passed away at St. Ann’s Hospital yester- day. He was born March 10, 1882, in Pearl, Illinols. He was a wid- ower and is survived by one son, 40- lgel can count upon only 20 play-|Tommy Earley, Frank McElyea and THl; DAILY ALAbKA EMPIRE JUNEAU ALASKA oy [ciyde that's Harry Duff, Jr., of Eugene, Oregon. No funeral arrangements have been | made. The . remains are at thc‘ ! Charles W. Carter Mortuary. -es Arab traders are believed to| have taken the first banana stalks‘ from India to the Holy Land. i trade. Write Empire G 1985. CAPTURED YANKS GET PACKAGE A WEEK FROM HOME of Washington, he l'etumedl was employed by | MASONIC SERVICES | " HELD FOR BINDSEIL, services were| held at 2 o'clock this afternoon| for Walter Bindseil, oldtime resi- |dent of Alaska who died here last, Saturday after a long illness. The, Rev. Willis R. Booth delivered the eulogy and Mrs. Lola Mae "Alexand- ’ er sang two numbers. The services were held in (lw‘ jchapel of the C..W. Carter Mor-! |tuary, and the remains were in- |terred in the Masonic plot of Ever- green cemetery. Active pallbearers were H. L Faulkner, J. W. Lievers, J. J. Fargh-| er, Thomas Hutchings, J. A. Martin| and Ed Crowe. Honorary pallbearers were E. O. Dayis, John Halm, James Stewart, Tom George and Fred Follette. e —— BRYNHG F FUNERAL SERVICES SATURDAY Funeral services for Peter Bryn-! holf, an Alaskan oldtimer, who died/ February 12 at St. Ann's Hospital, ! will be held Saturday, February 20, at 2 p. m. in the chapel of the C. W. Carter Mortuary. The serv- ices will be under the direction of | ‘Igloo No. 6, of the Pioneers of Al-| ‘uaka with Dean C. E. Rice, giving| {\the eulogy. Interment will be in| the Pioneer's plot of Evergrasn i cemetery. | Peter Brynolf was born in Sweden | 75 years ago and came to this coun- try in 1898. He was a miner and| fisherman, and lived for many! years in Douglas and Juneau ELLIOTT FREMMING | HERE; GIVES NEWS | OF HIS BROTHERS Elliott Fremming arrived in Ju-| neau this week from Excursion In-/ let and will leave the first of the month for Elfin Cove where he is storekeeper for E. O. Swanson. Recent word from his brother,! {John Fremming, is that he has| {joined the Navy and is training at "Nmfolk Virginia. John, formerly jan employee of the Post Office in |Juneau, was transferred in 1928 to |the Post Office in Spokane, where {he has lived since that time. €| Another brother, Harvey, organ- izer and formerly president of the CIO oil workers, is now midwest CIO director with headquarters in| ‘Knnsa.s Mrs. Fremming, the winter with her Mnsonic funeral | | who has spent in Juneau, will leave huflmnd for Elfin Cove. ATIORNEY GENERA[ ALSO FISHERIES DEPT. | EXCHANGE OFFICES Offices of the Attorney General and the Fisheries department of | the Fish and Wildlife Service have been exchanged in the Territorial |and Federal Building. The Fisher- les’ offices are now on the Fourth floor of the building, emntrance room 430, while the Attormey General's offices are in the same location on the third floor. Reason for the change was to have the Pisheries department of the Fish and Wildlife Service near the Alaska - Game Commission branch of the vice. NOTICE That I will not be responsible for any debts—only ‘those ccnr.mcud by . myself, adv. OSCAR TILSON. iCELAND AS YANKS ARE SEEING 1 Tocthie wanamed Tostand town ..nm& Kluttz spell him. At least Braves Are Dent in Hurling Corps i [ "" ver ing corps but Stengel still has such o 0 capable draft-exempt chuckers as Lou Tost, Al Javery and .Frank Lamanna, Southpaw Warren, re- son, is the oy A-ler on the i Position Hymg for o, LT Braves' list and, as such, he ex- e oy Only 11 of Their ‘42 Play- 7 to b induciea 1ons vetore| - Alaska Star Airlines spring training starts | the Braves| son of Mr. and have contributed 12 players to the| ' : X uled for Training armed services. The first to go were | Mrs. ¢J..T, Petrich-of Juneau, has | censet and has taken a position fly- |and Bob Williams, a left-handed i 4 ! BOSTON—With only 11 of their| pitching rookie, before the t)pemng\mg With. Alasks, ‘Star Alrlines /in unconditionally released Johnny 3 | ceived by his parents. Boies ik p!«“m i Buddy Gremp and Johnny Sain, now‘ Sinoe-last Octoblr. when he flew ton Braves face their second war- Rsq Sockers Ted Willilams and time National League season With|Jjohnny Pesky have suspended their | Anchorage, young Petrich has been| about the same slight degree of op-|baseball careers for the duration. “t,;loerk":o:rlnil(:nl;e ‘fr:l‘mdc“:lw :; timism they did a year ago. P nutsen ‘ompa y 8 And so have Jim Wallace, Bob |and"/tontinuing his flying on the " ¢ . e . in Juneau when he was employed | ers when he starts spring train-|Art (Lefty) Johnson, all of whom|, { " ; ing at The Choate School in Wal- (saw considerable service with the |y, fon-American Airways Alaska most likely, Owner Bob Quinn will g ‘“"’““““ school which operated here. call many of the most promising ‘ Young Petrich has been interest- Stengel the player-strength he d«-‘ and "" graduation from the Ju- s \neau ngh School three years ago, | Four Young Outfielders | NEWS ]vel'st i v - . { Batean, While veterans Cooney and -Wa-| to Juneau to devote his entire time T to aviation. He TER IS | good outfielding left in their aging | SECOND DAUGH | Pt Wil she drounid.; dialy: | sr systems, Quinn, despite present BORN TO EARL MILLERS | N A conditions which put a high prem- | : 1;’“‘ l;‘“d{ M“bifl“ rl‘lli;e‘;‘”s‘e':f |lessons and getting in flying hours. ium on experience, has decided to|parents of a y g |With Bud Seltenreisch, Chief Me- card holders, Chet Ross, Manny|Wednesday rorenolnn atds'hnfinnsia small, Aeronca plane which they Fernandez, Maxie West and Tom- Hospital. The mother and c! are lfew in this vicinity last year.. In| Only the latter has displayed Bnyirepon {order to obtain the necessary hours kind of batting prowess in a Bos-| Linda Darline is the name given for his;license more quickly in the Stengel also should have a fflll‘-‘pounds 11 ounces at birth, ‘a)],v prevail in that part of the ly tight infield with Johnny Mc- | Territory during the winter. a Giant castoff, on first|{yycTORY BOOK CAMPAIGN i base, Whitey Wietelman on sec-| STARTED IN DOUGLAS |censd, which he was recently grant- ond, is the culmination of an am- Cincinnati in the Eddie Mmer‘an)ono wishing to donate books in |bition Petrich has had since a deal, at short and the aged TONY|ine Channel Victory - Drive = for |youu boy. }1‘3"]]?“?: {rsmio.::flk;ha:or:l?o b‘:"‘the Feusi-Jensen store or at the Schluesselburg, strategic Lenin- (3 ave any e X~ Library. |grad fortress, was named by Peter plate. 5 B About the only consistent hit- { CARD OF APPRECIATION ‘Schluessel,” meaning key. would. come from his No. 1 back- | thanks to our many friends for .m\ |stop, Big Ernie Lombardi, the | kindness expressed during our late | naturally, can not catch every day Stragier, and- his offensive punch will be (Signed) U. S. troops is (vplcal of the settings Americans are finding themselves in during this lluhal war./ what happened last season. KmH pETR'(H er deep dent in the Braves' pitch- Jim Tobin, Lefty Willard Donovan, " " _gn op'lmls'l called from Hartford late last sea- Former Juneau Boy Has ers Missing—-20 Sched- | Since pearl Harbor, | Kefth, petrich, Sailor Bill . Posedel, "Bama Rowell receifed .his commercial pilot’s li- 1942 players missing, including the of the 1942 season. Since it closed, | AnChOTage. according to word re- the Bos- mkmg naval aviation training with| AL Dlsne. . frofl 3 badis. ko Just now Manager Casey Sten-|Detweilee, Sebby Sisti, Al Rob(‘xgew e s, hegalt His svady ol ARG lingford, Conn. late in March. But, Braves last season. |Division .and took lessons from the prospects on his farm teams to give D‘)UGLAS |ed Mmaviation for a number of years |ana ne, year's study at the Uni- ner are suspected of having much |spent, his spare time taking flying depend up on four young 3-A draft ond daughter, born at 11 OC‘OCK‘chamc for PAA, Petrich purchased | my Holmes, for his fly-catching. |getting along nicely, according "’iOctober he left for Anchorage in ton uniform. {to the new arrival who weighed 6 petter weather conditions that usu- Carthy, | Possession of a .commercial li- Eddie Joost, who came from| ngice has been received that: jed, Cuccinello on third. That quartet |reading mattey may leave them at —————— Dect ity Troms . Avounis e |the Great for the German word ting Stengel has a right to expect | We wish to extend our heartfelt| — |league’s .330 batting champion. Lom, bereavement, the death of Renc| lackmg whenever Phn Masn or| Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stragier. WATCH THIS SPACE— Amtrlenn awldierl, sailors and ‘marines who fall into .the hands of the enemy are not forgotten by their homeland as e Drison camps. American Red Crou packages of food and to- bacco are sent to each captured American in Germany and Italy every week through the Interna- tional Red Cross at Geneva, Switzerland, where a warehouse filled with the packages is pic- tured above. Each of the 11- d packages, left, contains evaporated milk, biscuit, cheese, | cocoa, sardines, pork, beef, choco- late bars, sugar, coffee, powdered orange concentrate, prunes, ciga- rets and smoking tobacco. One shipment has been sent to Ameri- cans in Japanese hands and an- | other is being prepared, - MEMOER FEDERAL DEPOSIT b i s - Fedéral Tax—bc per Poesoh f"" ———— | CHARLES E. NAGHEL as 3 paid-up subscriber to THE DAIL¥ ALASKA EMPIRE ig invited to present this cou at the box office of CAPITOL THEA: m: m_ Mevgning Your Name May A”m! Flrst Naflnnul of JUNEAU, ALSEA INSURANCEL SORPORATION PAGE FIVE AL: od Subs titu And a Good Substitute for Butter: NUCOA Or mix half and half. Let us supply your needs today . . . and save for VICTORY! A fresh supply of WALNUT MEATS in bulk and cans—just arrived. Also—ASSORTED ROASTED NUTS PIGGLY WIGGLY Minimum Delivery-$2,00 * 1 .+ & Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 4 FORD AGENGCY (Authorized Dealers) " o ek Foot of Main Strest Chas. G. Warner Co. WOMEN’S APPAREL ‘Baranof Hotel ‘Light and Heéavy Hauling E. O, DAVIS E. W, DAVIS PHONE 81 Utah Nut and Lamp COAL: -} Irish immigrants brought the white potato to the United Statesi

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