The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 23, 1943, Page 5

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Copy must be in the office by | o'clock in the afternoon to in- Jare insertion on same day. ; 'We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone firectory. Count five average words to the Fne. Dally rate per line for consecu- \lve insertions: One day ... Additional days ... Minimum charge ......500 10c PHONEA | CLASSIFIED | FOR RENT | FOR SALE LOST—FOUND ' | | FOR RENT HISCELLANEOIIS rent. Man 706 6th St. WARM room for after 2:30 p.m. FLE npl.s., my kept ‘warm. wln- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, v-ter,’ dishes. Seaview Apts. WANTED WANTED—Matd for hotel Baranof Hotel WANTED—Boy for work i store after school and Saturdays. Ad- dress P.O. Box 981. Call | work. | party promu, abxluv} secure operating lease or| | can | profit sharing Gold Mining, op- crating large ore reserve. Actual mill recovery last 2 years average more than $20 per ton. See Peko- vich,” Baranof Hotel. | GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 815 Decker Way. TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. | books, | Experimental Commission, | $340 appropriation | per Furnished house Governor s Handed | $4,335,861 General Appropriations Bill (Continued trom Page One) Added $4,800 to the Commission- er of Mines item, allowing $2400 r for the hire of a steno- grapher-clerk. Added $20,000 under the item of Assay Offices and Sampling Plants providing $10,000 each for an assay jand field office at Nome and at {Ketchikan Added $1,000 for the Alaska His- torical Library and Museum for the purpose of cataloguing books and material. Added $10,600 for the Alaska Pioneers’ Home to provide for a vermin exterminator and also three meals a day. Added a stipulation to the emer- gency appropriation clause of $5,000 to provide that this appropriation shall be ‘expended under the direc- tion of the Governor. Knocked off a $5,000 appropria- |tion for ‘payment of bounties on This leaves the law on the but no money to pay the eagles {hunters ‘of eagles. More for Experiments Added $6,000 for the Fisheries making that appropriation $26,000. Deducted $140 from the original for the Board of Optometry. Added $33,800 for the Territorial Department of Labor. The bill came out of the House Ways and Means Committee at $4,062,057.39. It was amended in the House and sent to the Senate jat $4,084,457.39. It now stands $1,334,664.18 shy of the $3,001,307.21 estimated revenue But this latter figure may be changed by new tax measures. The new fish tax bill, now a law, providing ah additional five cents case tax on salmon, is esti- mated by the authors as capable of THE DAILY ALASKA EMPRE—JUNEAU ALASKA TRAINING Corinne Smith, who holds the Southern California women's three-meter diving champion- ship, does a hand stand during her daily practice for the na- tional women's A. A. U. indoor diving meet at Los Angeles. She is regarded as a strong contend- er for the national women’s three-meter title. DOUGLAS NEWS ELECTION OFFICIALS NAMED | BY DOUGLAS CITY COUNCIL | To preside over the city election | to be held Tuesday, April 6, the! Douglas City Council last night |elected the following officials: | | judges—John G. “Johnson, ~ Edith {Barras and Leila Devon; clerks | Rathleen Andrews and Flora Kirk- | ham. It was brought out that closing | |dates for registration of voters ]Si Dolls lon the day preceding the election ooley 98 137 116— 351 (4t ¢ o'clock, April 5. The mm!“bhm‘pe 134 90 11— 335 ;peno(l‘ (m' candidates is 5 p.m, ‘Terhuno 108 108 108—*324 Wednesday, March 3. Tom Cashen | | Stewart 197 127 127381 Has named as auditor to examine | & 2 .me gity books. { 1 467 462 462—1391 |4 ; Thé Council voted cancellation of Gt Teachers i several small items due the C“}"(SMV g '3 vigL g to clear the records. Personal taxes Ringstad 112 84 135— 331 for a very small sum due from|sasnno 91 120 194 344 men in service were ordered struek |y oo, 133 141 122— 306 off and a few old accounts due ’ i Sturgis 9 98 98204 thé wharf that could not be col-' i a ; T AR lected were also charged off. § Total 4 55 482--1474 Frank Pettygrove petitioned the o 37_ el ‘Counul for return of the amount Federals of $100 paid by him for a lot on (Spot) 12 12 12— 36| Fifth Avenue. Having failed to ful- Taylor o 149 157 149— 485 | fill the terms of his purchase agree- | 0\ 147 121 103— 371 ment in the matter, the pem"o"‘l\,lanughwn 162 166 91— 419 .| was disallowed. % o The grader was reported in good ey i AN oy |repair and ready for service again.| Totals 588 574 473—1635 ( " | Discussion of the insurance for! B Barinof %4 | flzemen business ended without ac- | oo 143 185 140— 468/ vtton being taken due to data on | arrett 143 143 143—°429 | rates which was lacking. | Mack 149 169 141- 455‘ { . Business of the session was con—lmom Fon 123 123 123—°369 cluded by authorizing payment of e ghornaf R) . A | Totals 558 610 5471725 | SEVENTY REGISTERED | *Average score, did not bowl, { Just about half or even less than | that of the voters of Douglas have ‘regtsterod so far, according to City COlerk Kilburn, With only 12 days |left' to get their names on the city | register, extra efforts are planned |by Kilburn to get them all before HAVILANDHAS | HIGH BOWLING SCORE MONDAY Haviland, of the Baranof n-um,: made high single game score and | high three-game total in Highheel | League tournament games on the Elks Club alleys last night. She |rolled a single game high of 185 lin ‘the second frame and had a| high total for the evening of 468. Scores last night were: Phae PIGGLY WIGGlY QUALITY AND DEPENDABILITY A tisket — a tasket — get out that market basket — and shop for all your Lenten needs. OUR SHELVES are well stocked with items that make up good LENTEN DISHES and it pays to shop L s R PIGGLY WIGGLY e - “Orderd must be in before 1 o'clock Minimum Delivery—$2.00. 3 ik There IsNo Substitutefor Newspaper Advertising! MOTHER OF ALASKAN PASSES AWAY, SOUTH | i Mrs. Otto Anderson received word: R B Chicken John Marin, Prop. Phone 68 ————————————————— the’ time is up. yesterday of the death of Mrs. Eli- | Delicious Fried EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 054 | WANTED or apartment. FDR Sefs Example on | zabeth Linna at Winlock, Wash., on | March 12. Her daughter, Irma, was | NOTICE TO CREDITORS ELringing in at least $500,000 during NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, Hhe next two years, perhaps as CHILDREN’S BIRTHDAYS Sanitary Meat Co. Phone black 634. WANTED—Experienced lady book- |that the undersigned was, on the |much as $750,000. keeper, general office work, wish- | es employment. Phone blue 669. WANTED—Val- Pak or Jack-Knife | travel bag, good condition, rea- sonably priced. Write Empire J D 2096 WANTED—Mar to work in Milk Plant. Juneau Dairies, Inc, P.O.| Box 2631. o WANTED — Night janitor, apply Baranof Hotel. WANTED TO RENT OR BUY — Furnished or .partly furnished house. Phone Douglas 963. WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. WANTED—WIll pay cash for good used piano. Phone red 206,/ Alaska Music Supply. LOST and FOUND LOS Navy blue leather purse at dance in Elks Hall Sat. night; contained glas birth certifi- cate and cash., Finder keep money but please return rest to Emp)re office, KH. FOUND —_ prpo cigarette lighter with Army emblem. Call at Em- | op;0 they figured about equaled Hospital yestedary for surgery. pire. LOST-—me”of gold rimmed blto\.al glasses. Please return to Empire, ~ FOR SALE FOR SALE—25,000 watt, 115 volt,| DC light and power plant (gaso- line), good condition. Price $1,000. the point at which the morale value ™Mitted to St. Does not require batteries. Write Richard R. Perry, Box 391, Sitka, ! Alaska, c/o Boat Tidings. |19th day of December, 1942, duly appointed “Executor of the estate of | {JOHN T. WHITE, deceased, and | that letters testamentary therefore | 3on said day, were duly issued to |the undersigned. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to wpreseflt the same, with proper | vouchers, and duly verified, within six (6) months, from the date of this Notice to the undersigned Executor at 5th and Gold St., in| Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, 30th day of.December, 1942. WILLIAM J. LeVASSEUR, Executor. |First publication, March 9th, 1943. | Last publication, March 30th, 1943. | adv. this " Proposal for Bedrock Living Levels-Bring. (Continued from Page One) | =i Most Terrific Howls ceo. andi$49,182733 tess than™ tne the pin and ducked. | | ‘ or recreation equlpmem ngux‘ed in | manpower conservation ‘and 'trans- ‘pon'mcn restriction, and came up with 315% of 1939 consumption, present rate of consumption of re- jcreation equipment. With that percentage as a start- |er, the agencies involved will work lout the percentage of normal con- {sumption of toys and recreation - ,cquxpment they think we must have even in the event of a long war. Thaz is, they will try to 'calculate of toys and recreation equipment will offset the savings of material 'and- manpower which could School Tax More In addition, the new school tax bill which brings working women under - its provisions, also is ex-! pected to increase the weight of | the Territorial money bags. The | Governor has the bill on his desk. | Other tax measures, however,are destined to take the chance of |being lost in the shuffle and con- | | fusion of the closing days. These include the two cents per pack tax | on cigarettes, the increased tax on| precious’ metals; ‘the bill calling for higher taxes on liquor. Censidering the fact that the in- crease in the pay of teachers adcl-‘ ed several hundred thousand dol- lars to the bill which the Territory must pay;” ajJong with the problem of maintaining all Territorial agen- | —— cles possible, the Legislature seemed deep fox-hole to have done a good job. It should be noted' that the ap- | propriations are " $161,070.61 less than funds appropriated two years amount récommended by the Board of Budget this year. e HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Earl Bland entered St. Ann's | | Paul Bader has entered St. Ann's Hospital for medical care, | Mrs. Olaf Heller, medical patient,| was admitted this morning at St Ann’s Hospital. Sgt. Arthur Hepp has been ad- Ann's: Hospital for surgery. be Margie Merculief was - admitted | dirt out of his ey ——_ |brought about by further cuts in 'HiS morfing at the Government| 32 FT CAB]N cruiser. $700. Stall “Z", Boat Harbor. 2 furnished . 3- loom with bath. Phone | MOUERN 5 roow furnished log Louse, Mile 3'4 Giacler Highway. Montgomerys. produetion. A glance at the tables accom- - panying the report shows that in |some cases a much greater cut can {still be made. |durable toys (not including “other |recreation equipment like footballs and golf clubs) are down for 100%. | That's because no critical materials Hospital, where Andrew Merculief| had been discharged yesterday. | Bessie’ John enterEd the Govern- | For instance, non- ment Hospital yesterday afternoon. L DO sinkers. | Juneau The art of making glass was meeting, Tuesday, February 23, at| Rewriting of Lefters; Pefty Tyranis Scored| l(nmmucd from Pq;,v One) |from an officer who was one of Maj. Gen. A. A. Vandergrift's oux”bmhdgy Sunday with a party for,@and a son. Olvo, who is with the party The Japs had landed some tanks. Eight of them got up to the Mar- ines’ front line. Seven were knocked out by anti-tank guns and half- tracks, but one scurrying along the beach managed to pierce our outer | defenses. Before its officer-in-charge real- | ized where he was, the tank was deep in our t-num} and all alone. It stopped for a reorientation. This is how the Marine officer told it— “That tank stopped right over a A courageous little Marine hidden there gave the situ- ation the once-over and then stand- ing on tip-toe, shoved a hand-gren- ade up under the treads, pulled “Five seconds later there was an explosion and the tread was blown off. The tank (it must have been in gear already) spun around like something out of an old Mack Sen- | lett comedy and dashed off across the beach on one leg—like Charlie | Chaplin rounding a corner —and ducked into the ocean. When it stopped only a fraction of its con-| |ning tower was above water. | ported: |from the Westward and will be in “The conning tower {the tank commander and into the water. opened and last we saw of him." He didn’t come | been full of| The boys certainly threw| enough of them into him. | to the fox-| up. He must have “When. we got over |tole, that little Marine was wiping s with one hand sides with the and holding his other—but not because of wounds.| He was laughmg - EASTERN STAR Chapter No. 17, regular understood fer ;thousahds®of? yars |8 ‘o'elock. Refreshments. before its use in makmq specta- ALICE BROWN, tumbled out| That. was the| Carlene, young daughter of Mr.| and Mrs. Lawrence Carlson, was| |four years old yesterday and sev- (eral children and their mothers 'enlo)ed the occasion with her as| (guests of Mrs. Carlson. | Larry Pusich celebrated his 11th |sevgral of his young friends. Ice jcregm and cake and a theater party atythe Coliseum were. included in the.day's cvcnns for the youngstex‘s 'REPORT s " HEB. DISEASES Continuing high among com- muonicable diseases reported in Lht‘ Tervifory during the month of‘ March are common colds and other | | respiratory diseases, according Ln‘ the! 'March 20 report of the Terri-| torial " Department of Health herel | A total of 673 cases of respiratory | |diseases are reported, 526 being in {the Army, 82 in the Navy and 65 at ‘Kodiak, while mumps contintie |in 'many places and total 79 report- led cases, 41 of which are from the| |Army and 25 from Eklutna. Measles show 83 cases reported, |64.in'‘the ‘Army and 8 at Seldovia; while gonorrhea cases total 51 and influenza 41. Forty-nine doctors are | practéeing medicine in the Terri- v at the present time, it is re- i BUY WAR BONDS i He is staying at the Gastinean Hotel while in Juneau. called south from Anchorage dur- ling the latter part of February and was with her mother at the end Mrs. Linna suffered a stroke which left her completely para- lyzed. Survivors are her daughter armed forces in New Gulnea - 2 FINAL RIIES FOR : PETER MANDARICH SET FOR THURSDAY| Final rites for Peter Mandarich, | 54, Who died Saturday at St Ann's| | Hospital after a long illness, will | be held Thursday, March 25, at 2| pm., in the Catholic Church of the Nativity, with the Rev. Edward Budde saying mass. Prior' to his iflness and admit- tance to the hospital last October, Mr. Mandarich was & miner at Chichagof. Born in Yugoslavia, he |’ leaves no known surviving relatives. Interment will be in the Moose Plot of Evergreen Cemetery, it was| announced by Charles W. Carter Mortuary, H. B. CREWSON HERE H. B. Crewson, merchandise broker, arrived here this morning town for several days on business. . NELS i) at. the box offi a8 9 paid-uip subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ' is invited to present this coupon'this evening * CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO 'HGI(PTS to see: “TWIN BEDS" Federal Tax—5¢ per Person’ - LEE ce of the-— FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and & Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Light and Heavy Hauling E.O.DAVIS E.W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! | are involved. But there is still a cles was dev | lot of manpower tied up in toy — Secretary raay: FOR SALE—30 brake hp Covic dicsel stationary engine. BB Em- '\u'e ¢-RM. FURNISHED nouse. P.O. Box 1078. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned was, on the 9th day of March, 1943, duly ap- peinted Administratrix of the es-| imanufacture, and who will say that HI the war .drags on it might not {be better to draw half, three- fourths or even all of it into zhe munitions industry? Distilled Spirits Fade On the other hand, distilled spir- | its’ consumption is already set at bedrock of 1%, with the notation that requirements provide for medi- cinal uses only. In case you wonder how yuu ' Batt‘: Cash Gr “SMILING SERVIOR:, m" tate of ISAAC NIEMI, deceased,| . 14 make out under a } X | and that letters = testamentary : |set-up, the report makes some com- therefor on said day were duly! B Lt | issued to the undersigned. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to present said claims, with proper vouchers, and duly verified, within (6) months from the date of Notice to the undersigned Administratrix at the office of her s, R. E. Robertson and M. E. /Imugle at 200 Seward Build- parisons between the present Bfl- tish clothing budgets and OCS bed- rock estimetes for clothing for more carefully worked out classi- fications. The ,comparison is very rough and does not consider dif- ferences in climate, durability of goods, wearing habits or some othcl factors. An American man would get a new suit about every two years;! ing, Juneau, Alaska, or to the the Britisher gets one abotit” every | = undersigned at West Juneau, ' three. years. But an*Amerlcan'S! ] Alaska. overcoat would have to last 10 years, | : Dated at Juneau, Alaska, this and the Britisher can get one in| ¢ | 9th day of March, 1943. about four years. The American | \wu]d gez 4 1 2 shers a yenr v.he HILMA NIEMI, : s, | e | First Natio ' First publication, March 9th, 194&'f};‘i‘i"‘in“:";fn:";vetw pairsTgr! i ; . | § o Dllicat] . 1943, | shoe T a year. The| i Last publication, March 30th, 1943, rock plan allows about the same,| of JUNEAU, ALASKA ‘ : - g . SRS e oo O LANDING A “LIVE" ONE == A Canhadian Mlne Dise MEMAE L DEPOSIT BUY WAR BONDS BUY WAR BONDS vosal crew handles a live mine after towing it ashore, ]

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