The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 5, 1943, Page 5

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DA\. r\PR]L 5, 1943 PHONEA CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by o'clock in the afternoon to in- ire insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone persons listed in telephone ectory. Count five average words to the Daily rate per line for consecu- insertions: One day .. 100 Additional days .. B0 Minimum charge .......500 FOR RENT 'CR. apts., easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts. FOR SALE UbKY pups, mflle 2 mom,h< old 843 W. Tth St, or R. Jameson, Eagle River. JAROUMES Apts. in Douglas at 1, cost price. Monthly income $120. Phone Douglas 132. st top barrels full of base oil, 1 mediun sized roller 50-gal. each; desk; rine gas engine, ready and rar- ing to go; propellers, bronze shafts, steering wheel, bell an other boat accessories. See L. F. Morris, Salmon Creek, three mile: out. No phone. P.O. Box 103, Ju-| neau, Alaska. THOROUGHBRED “Toggenburg” good milk goats; 1 young nanny goat, $60; also 4 sacks Sperry chicken mash, $10, if taken right away. Box 1947, Juneau. OR SALE — 36-foot troller, equipped, excellent condition. interested wire Clovis Bull, Seims Drake Co., Sitka, Alaska. lOR SALE — Baby's Phone red 370, [PARTMENT furnished, half of Franklin. house, going for actual value. completely less 431 So. ARGE modern beauty shop, S ka, Alaska. Good income. Owner | forced to sell quickly. Write P.O. Box 493, Sitka. ROOM house, also 1ncome prop- If interested, P.O. Box 1615. R SALE423(}00 watt, 115 volt, | DC light 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. “FT. CABIN crmser, $700. Stall “Z”, Boat Harbor 3 ODERN 5 room furnished log | Rouse, Mile 3% Giacler Highway. Montgomerys. OR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic' diesel stationary engine. BB Em- pire. 5 book shelves, pictures, shoe nkases ki poles, electric oven, electric lamps, broad ax, shovels, Io: 12 cheins and jacks, gill net, propellers, Vulcan e . Walter H, Robin- son, 1044 W. 10th. Phone green 475. salmon 1 60-90 medium duty ma-| fully | It | c/o| than | | springs, ironing board, rocker, rakes, | coils, 5- hp.! |{WANTED TO BUY-—2nd hand bi- cycle for 2-year-old boy. Phone | 784 ? | *WANTED TO BUY—Large stove | for Victory Coffee Shop. 796, WANTED —Single room, have steady employment. Call room 411, Baranof Hotel, between 8 am. and 1 pm. | {WANTED TO BUY—Baby buggy: Write P.O. Box 2404. | ‘WANTED Sleepmg room by pro-| fessional woman in private home, | or small apt. Write Empire P 2127 WANTED TO RENT—Rndu) for 2 or 3 weeks. Write P.O. Box 17,| Juneau. | WANTED—Two % bedsteads ax and‘ springs. Call red 578. \ WNANTED AT ONCE—Ironers nnd“ WANTED—WIill pay cash for good | used piano. Phone red 206,[ | Alaska Music Supply. 4 SUNDAY LEAGUE, 'HOW THEY STAND - {of teams and members for the first | half of the Sunday League now | bowling on the Elks Alleys: Won Lost t Elks & 2 Engineers Infantry B8 ! 3 -6 | Officers e | Player Hagerup Ignatowitz Lavenik ; F. Barragar Sterling Naughton Bystrek Ziegler Hildinger ) Ferrofie | Carnegie | Hudson | Commons Simmons Gryesik Natale Kreyling Armelino Mondoker Keely Conwell . Johnson . | Mauze .. | Hoffman | Jamrosek Gomerick P Av. ~202 . 187 ’ ... 186 .. 186 183 | 175 i 174 | g b e 170 i | | | | | | [ | . 169 . 165 . 164 .. 164 .. 163 160 . 160 “Technocracy” leading HE MAGAZINE is now for sale at all npewsstands. All Amerlc&nsshouldq read Technocracy’s program ' for | '}'otal Caonscription. A few numbers of the Technocrat left at Race’s| Drug Store. IRCULATING oll heater with coil; galvanized tank and cop- per oil line. Phone blue 615. 'LOST and FOUND OST—600x16 All Reward. Write P,O. Box 2248. JOST—Gold uo:.s in a loop from an ear ring along Séward St. Reward. Return to Empue MlSCELLAIlEUIIS ELIABLE party pmving ablu(y, can secure operating lease or profit sharing Gold Mining, op- erating large ore reserve. Actual mill recovery last 2 years average more than $20 per ton. See Peko- vich, Baranof Hotel. 'UARANTEED Realistic Perma- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 815 Decker Way. RN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. State tire and | wheel, buck.of Coliseum Theatre.} " HOSPITAL RoTES Hans Jensen entered 'St. Ann's Hospital yesterday for medical care. | Albert Duus and.'¥ngve Gunder- sen, medical patients, have been ‘admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital. | Masters Jacob and Paul Johnson from Haines entered St. Ann’s Hos- ‘pitul Saturday for tonsillectomies. Innokenty Merculief was admitted | {to the Government Hospital yes- terday afternoon. | Mrs. Alfred Fawcett and Mrs. H. A. Kenyon, medical patients at St. | Ann’s Hospital, were discharged Saturday. Alice Nelson has been discharged from the Government Hospital and !has returned home. TIDES TOMORROW High tide—2:40 am., Low tide—8:56 am., High tide—3:06 p.m., Low tide—8:05 p.m.,, e The Daily Alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al- | aska newspaper. | 19.1 feet. -24 feet. 173 feet. -0.1 feet. and Furone, for the Classic League tournament games on the Elks Club all of dinger had high total for the eve- ning, pared to 569 rolled by Furone Carnegie {F. IH. L. L. Hildinger (Spot) Kreyling Jamreak Gomerick Natale Gryesik Hagerup | Ignatowitz Bystrek Armellino | Furone . Phone | ( Lagle Conwell Keely Hoffman First Axmy amllcw |agels with | inflicted The following are the standings|of motor transport and infantry. HILDINGER AND FURONE TIED IN THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA BOWL SCORES L. Hildinger, of the Elks of the Yankees, high single game score when teams played team high Hil s Sunday. Each rolled a 214 in his second frame with 592 as however, last night were: Elks 187 148 139 178 175 827 Giants 96 96 142 148 160 180 149 128 190 136 105 164 Scores made 139 153 168 160 145 170 137 166 214 203 824 831 Barragar Sterling Hudson Totals 2482 96- 122 141 143- 165— 130 842 852 797 288 | 412 481 20 399 Totals 2491 Yankees 178 165 164 154 167 828 Officers 63 178 131 139 190 190— 558 134 141— 440 164 164— 492 159 203 482 214 188— 569 Totals 861 886~ 63— 154 177 153- 164 154 63 172 149 207 137 135 166 160 814 886 865—2 pot) aughton Totals PMTON NOW FORCING HIS ARMY AHEAD ptel \ s thher, Maska Lawnery_| Driving for Junction with, British Eighth Army in Tunisia (Continued from Page One) duelled sev- the losses enemy guns on cencentrations Long Battle Front Saturday night's A war bulletin issued at the s.ime time said patrol activity continued | DEL FETT, |along the whole Tunisian bame—‘ front and further progres: re- |poxtcd in the north where Allied| Del Fett, patrols successfully engaged and in- | dise broker, flicted casualties on an enemy pa-‘thfl south and is in Juneau for a [ trol. was An Algiers report said Mont- B9 | blow t|and. the others then fell back. and | tied | | com- RIGHT IN DER FUEHRER’S FAC E — These little play gadgets designed by Arthur Basson keep ashes off t| llUHh on the Gabes-Sfax road on \\mud‘n in pursuit of Romme’s larmy, and new battles were fl‘\mm‘!‘ lin all sections. Later dispatches said the AmehE |icans were a king against hea concentrations of enemy strength| in the brown hills and p: | Fondouk and El Guetar, |progress.” The U. S. Engineers cleared a narrow lane through the ‘mmvmlzl on the El Guetar-Gabes| road, however, and an American| tank column rumbled through Axis Tanks Destroyed The Germans then immediately | counterattacked and the Ameri- cans withdrew, but three of the 35 Axis tanks used in the counter- were destroyed in the move, with little | American infantry advanced a half mile over the roughest kind of | iin in the Fondouk sector and| | ps are driving toward the big| ,A\!» airfield at Kairouan and Port They made local assaults on high ground south of Fondouk jand met stubborn resistance along ithe coast | Rommel's forces be entrenched 20 miles north of | Gabes, according .to Saturday| ‘nn-hl s communique. et ,MISSION AIRPLANE BROUGHT NORTH; IS SHIPPED, ANCHORAGE Pastor H. L. are reported to W(md of the Alaska Mission was all smiles Sunday. The |reason was that the Mission air- plane, a fine model 24 Fairchild, lafter many delays in transporta- |tion, was passing through Juneau |aboard a ship for Anchorage where the mission superintendent will base the air . | A new steel-covered hanger has {been built in Anchorage to house the airplane and after returning from a trip to Wrangell and Ketch- communique ikan, the airminded pastor will gO‘Junm\u ‘Woman's Club will inaugu- |said Allied troops, tanks and guns to Anchorage and Palmer and place |¥ate ifs activities for {were reported battering the enemy .the plane in misdlon service where|With a business meeting to be held lalong the entire 250-mile front in ,t 15 much neetied: &t this- tinte. | Tunisia. g MERCHANDI | BROKER, HERE ON Bl?SINESSi‘ well _known merchan- | arrived recently from | | | short time on.business. } Mr. Fett is staying at the Bfll‘-J gomery’s Eighth Army was -rolling | anof Hotel: while in the cny ELECTRONICS O e NEW SCIENCE (DPRRS | WARTIME development, des- tined to be used in peacetime on a wide scale by doctors in their fight against disease, is a new port- able and simplified electron micro- scope (lower left photo), ten times more powerful than the best light microscope. Developed by General | Electric scientists, the new instru- ment is being produced for essen- tial laboratories engaged in medi- | cal and industrial war research, Heretofore “invisible worlds” will be explored with the new micro- scope which “shoots” electricity (electrons) through the specimen 10 be studied and produces a great- 1y magnified image of the specimen on a small fluorescent screen, like the screen in a television set. For example, six of these jagged tools (lower right photo), shown . il ‘here magnified 10,000 times by the new microscope, protrude from:the tip end of a mosquito’s stinger. As they drive into the skin and reach the blood stream, they close in, forming a tube through which the blood is drawn. Another example of the micro- scope’s power lies in the fact that it can measure accurately particles as small as one millionth of an inch, or one thousandth the diame- ter of a human hair, according to Dr. C. H. Bachman of the G. E. electronics laboratory. Today, harnessing the power of the infinitesimal electron, which is part of the atom, science is extend- ing the range of intellect and senses to a degree undreamed of in history. ‘launchu\g a | ploratory {ment of '‘Woman's Club fo ’;to come, up for-consideration, club it WATCH THIS BPACE—Your Name Blay Appear] he rug while letting you give vent to that \upprl‘fi\od desire, - Wilds of Alaska Bemq Bn:(i;rl fo Every 250 Searched for Minerals | Men in Hawaiian.Isles Needed, War Production' Is Report by Military ! (Continued from Pnge One) (Commuvd rmm Page One) project for iron | total “populatior but now Vitally needed [has 250 persons in the armed ser- vices. Rev. William H. Sealy, pa: tor of Kosse’s First Baptist cl\urch.; provided Mr. Johnson with the al-| phabetical list, with the informa-| tion that every one on it lived in chrémite. |Kosse at the time of his enlistment | Secattered throughout Alaska's|or was more “or less temporarily 586000 square miles are many un-|away from “home.” | tapped and unexplored mineral de-| The citizens of Kosse are proud posits which contain virtually all of their record and are soon un-\ the strategic, critical and essen-|veiling a big public plaque withj tial war metals. Ithe names of all their service men| Secretary Ickes states the Terri-|inscribed thereon. | tory thus far has produced nearly| Just how Kosse managed to Kf"‘\ a. biflion dollars in minerals most of | nearly a third of its population whiéh has been gold. The Bureau’s|into the armed forces is a story exploratory work in the Territory|I would like to hear more about.| already has resulted in the develop-|And if there’s any community that several ore beds and re-/has a better claim to fame for| ports of the mining engineers and |patriotism, I'd like to hear about metallurgists are transmitted regu- | that too. larly to various interested uow‘rn»' ! ment agencies, including the War| Nobody was more surprised than| Production Board, the Defense|State Department and White ' Plant Corporation, the Board of House circles at public complaints Economic Warfare, the Reconstruc-|against our “aid to Spain.” They tion Finance Corporation and the took it for granted that the people | Army and Navy Munitions Board.!were by now well enough educated In its Alaska program the Bur- | to diplomatic w re to under- ieau of Mines works closely with the {stand that any means employed to Geological Suvey also of the De-|keep Spain neutral would be justi- partment of the Interior, which fied launched its studies of the mineral| As a matter of fact, some mili- resources of Alaska in 1895. tary strategists emphatically de- - > clared that if Spain went over to lthe Axis now, it might cost thou- sands of American lives and de- |lay the United Nations invasion plans for months, which would Meet Tomo”’owmust billions of dollars. Featuring tl\é bm?artnwnl of As- MRS I.AMB SERV'(ES SET FOR WEDNESDAY “new and, .copper ores tungsten is being sought near Hy- |der. Also in southeast Alaska ex- projects have been car- ried'on at Yakobi Island for nickel andon the Kenai Peninsula for sociate Membership with Mrs. Mil- dred R. Hermann as chairman, the | the month | Lamb who died here March 26 will be held Wednesday, April 7 at 2 p. m. in the chapel of the Charles ‘W. Carter Mortuary. tomorrow at 2 pun. in the pent- house of the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company. Composed of women who have | Father Edward Budde will offi- formerly been resident members of ciate and interment will be in the club, the department’s function | Evergreen Cemetery. |is to permit - associate members‘ Wife of Ed Lamb, now working to | continted contact with local inter- |the Westward, Mrs. Lamb has for | ests. qmany years been a resident of the Activities of the American Home | G@stineau Channel. Taken ill with Department, in charge during| pneumonia at her home near Lem- | March, will also be reported upon | [on Creek, the 48-year old woman by ¢haipman Mrs. Harvey Sm]my‘\developed pneumonia following an in addition to attack of flu and expired on the N add n regular club business way to the hospital, ——————— presidents Mrs. Thomas Parke an- nources. i BUY WAR BONDS S o ~ L.E.TUCKER as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening atithe box office of the-— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “SHIP AHOY" Federal Tax—5c¢ per Penon : First Nafii‘mal of JUNEAU, ALASEA Funeral services for Annie Gladys | E'Ofilf'lné e PIGGLY WIGGLY 24 QUALITY AND DEPENDABILITY... - Phone’ IF YUU ARE ONE OF THE ABMY OF W=1-V=E-S§ YOU'RE JOB IS IMPORTANT! Our shelves are filled with new items too numerous to list, It pays to shop. BUY BY THE CASE! Buy More War Bonds and Stamps PIGGLY WIGGLY Orders must be in before 1 o’clock Minimum Delivery—$2.00 g There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! T THRIFT CO-0P | 811 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 D — FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Junean Molors Juneau R Pom Widest Selection of LIQUORS Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 . CALL FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 564 Sanitary Meat Co. PFOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Bullders’ and Sheit HARDWARE Chas. G. Warner Co. WOMEN’S APPAREL - Baranof Hotel Light and Heavy Hauling E. O.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE snd PLYMOUTH DFALERS Bert's Cash Grocery Pl gy 90 GASTINEAUD HOTEL Every comtort made for our guests Alr Service Informalion PHONE 10 or 30 ] HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 600 American Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576 HARVEY R. LOWE | Public Accountant 237 FRONT STREET Phone 676 PARCEL DELIVERY SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Scheduled Delivery 10 a. m. and 2 P, M.

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