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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1943 P HONE A CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by ¢ o'clock in the afternoon to in- wure igsertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone irectory. Count five average words to the Ene. Daily rate per line for consecu- \lve insertions: One day, .. Additional days FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED ( | | ton capacity STEAM heated room, hot an water, close in, woman prefml(d | Phone blue 600. UNFURNISHED apt. and house. | Inquire Snap Shoppe. | FURNISHED 2-room Apt. with | bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas-| tineau Ave. PO EASER 148 5% 0.0 e Gl . FUR. apts., easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Beaview Apts. | WANTED WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry WANTED—Woman or girl to UlkL‘ care of children and light house- | work. Includes board, room and | wages. Phone black 670 after .')i p.m. 233 Franklin St. i WANTED—Used sewing machine, | reasonable. Mrs. M. Isaacs, John- son Apts, Gastineau Ave. Phone; 621. WANTED—Platform _scales, g0od | 3; metal double bedstead. Box 3036, | Juneau. WANTED—AIl round baker, $300 per month to start. Write or wire Pioneer Bakery, Sitka, Al- aska. WANTED—Will pay cash for 14x14 left hand’propeller. P.O. Box 911, Juneau. | WANTED—High cnarir, gooa_con-i dition. Phone red 583. WANTED—Will pay cash for good used piano. Phone red 206, {20 HP. SCOTCH !FOR SALE—Furnished house BARGE—30x100«00t, wood, 400~ Contact: Indepen- dent Iron Works, Ltd.,, 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif. |TWO - WHEEL table, cooking blue 694, baby cart, card utensils,. Phone marine boiler with oil burner. Triangle Cleaners 40- and LOT, foot 40'v100°, near frontage on ski trail, beach Douglas Highway, warranty deed, | partially improved, $90 full price. George Denman, Box 3009, El Paso, Texas. furnished water, Mile FOR SALE — 4-room house: bath, lights, 3%, Salmon Creek. FOR ’QALL purebred Ne;' Hampshire red roosters. Sherwood, Box 3036, Juneau. 3 in Douglas. Phone Douglas 764. " | Shipbuilders Make Record in 1942; Big | Program Gels Pralse | | (Continued lrom Page One) |the (‘nmmlssmn There is no_intention of discuss- ing those charges here. I only want | to reiterate what the President took the trouble to emphasize—that the Maritime Commission, in 1942, did a whale of a jop. The goal laid |down for them was 8,000,000 dead- | weight tons of shipping. When nu- { President announced (1941 lamong the production goals for tanks, planes, etc., there wasn't a figure in the lot that seemed more |fantastic. { Back in 1937, the commission’s |program was an average of 50 ships la year. In 1942, the production was 746 ships with an aggregate dead- weight tonnage of 8,090,800 tons. There is more to this, too, than meets the eye: In the course of the year, according to Admiral H L. Vickery one of the commission- |ers, Maritime turned over to the ’ vy the complete facilities of the Seattle-Tacoma Shipbuilding Co. |with hulls on the ways, which were ‘xw.’u cuough to mmnhuon to ac- lcount for 68,644 more tons =f ship- | ping. 4 In addition, there were scores of time-consuming conversions of mer- chant ships to naval auxiliaries and |in recent months 24 “highly pr |ductive ways” were diverted to con- |struction of naval vessels. In other words, says the Admiral 1if the Maritime Commission had lgone ‘through with its program | without the necessity of 1x'nn\l"l- ring part of its achievements to the Navy (this was merely an ob- servation, not a complaint) it would undoubtedly have reached 10,000,- 000 deadweight tons of shipping thi | year—probably the equivalent of 15 1o 20 years of peacetime construc- tion Almost half the total construc- tion took place - *he west coast, & far different situation than existed in World War I. West co: |yards produced 368 ships total of 3888400 tons. |coast produced 372 vessels 3089,500 tons; the Gulf | slightly more than 1,000000 and the Great Lakes the As the President said ship- ith The east totaling 97 for tons; balance — |hardly figures that will bring com- |FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic| diesel stationary engine. BB Em- pir 25 REMINGTON automatic; L. C.| Smith double barrel 12 guage shotgun. Guitar and instruction books. 1003 between 9th and 10th Sts. 4-RM. FURNISH 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| HISCELLANEUUS | Alaska Music Supply. | LOST and FOUND FOUND—Gold ring “with stone st't—‘ ting. Identify ownership and pay | for this adv. Empire Office. LOST—a gift: lady's black and| gold Schaeffer Lifetime fountain pen, between 3rd and Gold and| P.O. Reward $5. Call green 332, LOST—4 keys on iron ring Re- ward. Return to Empire. LOST—Billfold containing money, | birth certificate and valuable papers. Keep money but please return papers to E.apire office. FOR SAI.E SMALL apartment b p ly far d, priced for quick sale. Inquire J. C. Cooper, phone SALE—25,000 watt, 115 volt, ht and power plant (gaso- line), good condition. Price $1,000. Does not require batteries. Write Richard R. Perry, Box 391, Sitka, Alaska, c/o Boat Tidings. 1934 BUICK sedan very good con- dition, $195. Apply Alaskan Hotel, A. Finberg. ACRES, 4-room furnished house, good garden s0il, 2 chicken houses, chickens, garden tools, 15-ton Dodge pickup in good condition and rubber. See C. F. McNutt. 7'.-mile post, Glacier Highway ONE Locomotive Crane, 8-wheel, 29-ton capacity. Contact: Inde- pendent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif. ONE Locomotive Crane, 4-wheel, 12-ton capacity. Contact: Inde- pendent Iron Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oakland, Calif ONE Osgood crane on crawler tracks, 1-yd., heavy duty 700} boom. Contact: Independent Iron | Works, Ltd., 821 Pine St., Oak- land, Calif. i F?R SALE—6-room hnuse: partial- ly furnished. Call 434 after 6 p.m. | . £ | TUG—100-foot Diesel, 250 hp., ! 3600-gallon fuel capacity, 9-!00(.' 6-inch maximum draft. Contact: Independent Iron Works, Lui,} 821 Pine St, Oakland, Calif. } |cludes tax. TURN your o!d gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. SUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up.| Phone 201.| Lola Beauty Shop. 815 Decker Way. CARD PARTY By American Legion Auxilihry, |Sat., Feb. 20, 8 p.m., in Odd Fellows Prizes | | Hall. and Everybody welcome. refreshments. Adm. 55¢; in- e, — extending for 2,600 miles the Pacific Ocean and Chile, between the Andes has an average width | of onlv 100 miles. adv. | fort to the enemy. | Irrespective of what the Mari- {time Commission turns out in 194 |it appears that one of the Navy's |“E's” for Excellence should gone to Admirals Land and Vic y ward mody. Macauly and John M. Car- B CITY COUNCIL MEETS The City Council meets tonight at 8 o'clock in the City Hall, Mayor Harry I. Lucas announces Among matters to be taken up will ibe the appointment of Jackson Perry as a patrolman on the police force. 'SIXTH GRADERS " ON INSPECTION | TRIP OF EMPIRE when her |young folks this forenoon Miss Alice Johnson brought | sixth graders to the office. The graders thoroughly inspected the | mechanical departments, composing room, watching the linotypers at the make-up men on the |daily and in the job department, then the pressroom and stereoty room. The graders were most inqui- fsmve and wanted to know about everything. — - BUY WAR BO‘\'I)S | work, | ministration leaves these are| | who have THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA U.S. Attack Bomber Strafes Jap Planes Skimming along a hundred feet or so above the ground, this U. strafing Jap planes caught on 'the ground in a dispersal area at Lae, New Guinea. a abled Jap bomber. Under tree cles) are in ha(-k;.-round. Rm in Democratic Congressional Ranks (auses Deep Concern (Continued from P'\gn One) whenever the Ad- an opening. These factors 1y the mak-| ings of a political Dom\,\'bmnk» Never in the ten years of the New| yeal has the Adminsitration skat-| ed on such thin political ice War Effort Okayed Summed up, it’s the consensus| of press gallery analysts that the new forces in this Congress won't| impede the war effort. Al]}'b(x'l)" tried “would get singed by | public opinion. Capitol Hill mail| generally indicates that the people are satisfied with conduct of the war abroad. On the home front, unified punch the experts | cee another story unfolding. There'll ery and Thomas M. Woodward, Ed- | | tration said this | be in plenty be sweet nothings. The blank check days In prior Congresses, the tration told ‘em, and the mill functioned. This time, the Presi- dent and his policy-makers must woo the votes for which they form- erly snapped their fingers, if the temper of this session has been correctly judged. Biggest trump in the Adminis- hand is the “Assistant President,” Jimmy Byrnes. He has the respect and regard of all the| Senate and most of the House. Old heads say that if Byrnes can steer the ultra-liberals away from pet New Deal legislation, and con- Adminis- The Empire office was a hum of\((nlld\:{‘ on hard-headed conduct of the war on the home front, there’s a chance for ing. This view implies some hand- gome gestures to placate the con- servative Southerners and the near- purgees of 1938. 1t means economy in non-essentials. It means the farm labor views of the South- ern bloc must get respectful at- tention. Otherwise, it's predicted that a lot of Democrats will cross the aisle to join a solid GOP minority in muking the home front hot for the LaMotta Pufs Robinson Through Ropes The climax to a gruelling fight in Detroit was when Jack LaMotta (left), knocked Ray Robinson of New York between the ropes in the only knockdown of the beut won by LaMotta. It was Robinson's first defeat in 130 fights. hin are over. | S. at lower right is wreckage of a Zero. chw Deal stalwarts of the past| {ten years. JUNEAUMAN 'WOULDFIGHT RASMUSSEN Hank Majcher Answers, Challenge from Ket- chikan Boxer. Heckled by a recent article pub-| |lished in the Ketchikan Chronicle, Sgt. Hank Majcher of Juneau has |accepted the challenge of Red Ras- mussen of the U. S. Coast Guard in Ketehikan. The article said Congress | that Rdsmussen defied anyone ia | about domestic policies, and it won't A]as}m to put the gloves on with | M'\]t'm“l has written to Ketchi- [kan, télling Rasmussen he meet him “any place, anytime, for anything or nothing, with any size gloves and over:any distance.” jcher has had three fights | since coming to Alaska and has won all three with knockouts. Ras- Imussen is supposed to be a wel- terweight champ and that’s Maj- cher’s weight Majcher says he has not yet had a good workout and he would appreciate it very much if Ras- mussen would step into the ring /for a few rounds with him Furthermore, Majcher thinks Rasmussen is a big cheese who is smooth sail- ! blowing off steam in the Chronicle | because he has nothing else to do Is there an answer? -, The harbor of Dakar, on the west coast of Africa, faces eas! Douglas attack bomber, will 2 (A-20) is It has just passed over Three disabled enemy planes (c NOTICE That I will not be responsible for debts—only those contracted myself. |any \b\ H|(|\ OSCAR TILSON. NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL PETITION FOR DISTRIBUTION MISSIONER'S (EX - OFFICIO PROBATE) | TERRITORY OF ALASKA, JU- NEAU COMMISSIONER'S PRE- CINCT.. In the Matter of the Estate of PETE MAGOFF, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on February 18th, 1943, AL~ ASKA PERSONAL SERVICE |AGENTS, as administrator of the tate of PETE MAGOFF, made and filed in the above-entitled |court at Juneau, Alaska, its Final {Account and Report and Petition |for Distribution, and that on said day the said court entered its or- der directing that a hearing be {had upon said Final Account and nrmmt and Petition for - Distribu- tion before it on Saturday, April 1943, at 10:00 o'clock a.m., at |the office of the said United States | Commissioner in the Federal-Terri- | torial Building, in Juneau Precinct, ‘nlri[my of Alaska, and requiring |all persons to then and there ap- |pear and make their objections, if any, thereto, and to the settlement |thereof; and, to the payment and ;dlstribuuon of all of the residue of this estate to the sole surviving heir of deceased, whose name and address is as follows: Thomas Magoff, Veronia, Ore- ( 8on, surviving brother of de- ceased. Dated at Juneau, ,lslh day of Webruary, M. E. MONAGLE, United States Commissioner i and Ex-Officio Probate Judge. Publication dates, Feb. 19-26, Mar, l6- 13, 1643. adv. Alaska, 1943, this e R. H. BURNS l a8 a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of thes — CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "BLONDIE'S BLESSED EVENT" ;Federal Tax—5c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE— Your Name May Appear! THEmnucmnlof:hi hnkiphdpdumrn— tive Th-l«y < operstion. ealddmm-. h ofimcn." the bank is & mem- ber of Federal Depasit Insur- ance Corporation, which is- wures exch of our depositors agsinst los to s maximum of $5,008. INTHIS BANK ARE INSURED First National Bank of JUNEAU, AL:SKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPCSIT INSURANCE SORPORATION jsource of national income in Chile. ACCOUNT AND REPORT ANI)I IN THE UNITED STATES COM-; COURT FOR THE, A Good Substitute for Brai PAGE FIVE is SlLFNCE And a Good Substitute for Butter s 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 WIGQJJY Minimum Doliv- FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — mwl.nqn Nite Phone 554 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and # | | | | Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints | Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Light and Heayy Hauling E O.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS PHO COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Ofl—Ftove Ofl—Your Coal ‘ing — Starage and CALL US! Juneaa Transfer Phene 48—Night Phone 481 T NUNN-BUSH SHOES™ STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 106 Pree Delivery Junesu HOME GROCERY Phone 146, Home Liquor L) mw-nn.- G. E. ALMOQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” World War, the chief During the first nitrate exports were [ TIMELY CLOTHES | FORD AGENCY (Authorised Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Poot of Main Straet Juneau Molors GEORGE BROS. Wideat Selection of LIQUORS Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS«- QIL8/# | Builders’ and Shelf | HARDWARE | Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager HARVEY R.LOWE 237 FRONT. STREET Phone 676