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FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1943 PHONE A CLASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by | o'clock in the afternoon to in- are insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone firectory. Count five average words to the Ene. Dally rate per line for consecu- \ve insertions: .100 Additional days .. 5o Minimum charge ......50¢ FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED FOR RENT ; TCUR. apts,, wy kept wnrln. Win- | ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, | dishes. Seaview Apts. FORSALE | ! experience. | | WAN I‘ED — Saleslady in g lou 20 to 35 years old. Ability | to learn more important than Permanent. Write Empire C 2159. WANTED—13- or 14-ft. round bot- DAVENPORT set and other fur-| niture. Phone green 353. | &»ROOM bungalow, partly fur- nished, 3 acres patented ground.| Good garden spot. See Wm. Reck \ Phone green 410. ‘ BOOK Sh('!f, books nis racket, pictur vash tub, baby clothes, kegs, ‘ jugs, propeller, logging chains, tools. W. H. Robinson. Phone| green 475, 1044 W. 10th St percolator, ten- | roning board, USED lumber, 1"x12", siding, coal- | wood stove, water pipe. 706 6th St. 5 ROOM f\nmslud house. Phone‘ black 615. | 3-ROOM furnished house, one acre | patented ground, 2% miles out| Glacier Highway. Call red 759 or | see Davis at North Transfer Of- | fice. STOCK and business of the Alas- kan Lunch. Call at Alaskan. DAVENO, chairs, tables. Black 625. 3 THOROUGHBRLD Toggenbulg good milk goats; goat, $60; also 4 sacks Sperry chicken mash, $10, if taken ught away. Box 1947, Juneau. Ll N APARTMENT house, furnished, going for half of actual value. Franklin. com;:l’e’lel& | less than | 431 So. | LARGE modern beauty shop, su-{ ka, Alaska. Good income. Owner forced to sell quickly. Write P.O. Box 493, Sitka. | 5—R06i\{ E;use, also income prop- erty. If interested, P.O. Box 1615. FOR SALE—25,000 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 Tldings MODERN 5 ‘room turnished log| house, Mile 3% Glacler Highway Montgomerys. FOR SALE—30 brake h.p. Covic| diesel stationary engine. BB Em-v’ pire. BED springs, ironing board, rocker, | book shelves, pictures, shoe skates, | E: 5, ¢l clccmci ovels, rakes, | logging ch and jacks, salmon | gill net, propellers, ceils, 5 h.p. Vuvlcan engine. Walter II. Robin- son, 1044 W. 10th. Phone gleenw lamy . CIRCULATING oil heater with | coil; galvanized tank and cop-‘ per oil line. Phone bkue 615, | LOST and FOUND LOET Blue sw:.son hat with | owner’s name inside hat band, on Willoughby Ave. Please leave at ' Empi\c office. MISCELLAWS WANTED for Juneau partner with | $300 (preferably middle<aged. wo- man). al expansion assured. 'P.O. Box | 321, Sitka. - 73 R R e O = TG RELIABLE party proving ability 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, BaranofsHotel. 1 young nanny|__ {Juneau, Isigned at Douglas, Alaska. | Dated at Juneau, Opportunity—with natfon- ' —— tom boat, square stern. H. Sum- mers. Gastineau Hotel. WANTED- Good - collapsible baby | buggy. Phone 527 between 5 and 9 pm WANTED—Small b:c}clc “Madsen’s Bike Shop. WILL PAY $100 “cash for best. car offered. Call at Erwin Apts, No. 5, after 6 p.m. loughby. Phone 788. WANTED—Washer; also dry clean- erman at Snow White Laundry. Good pay. Phone 299. |WANTED TO BUY—Large stove for Victory Coffee Shop. Phone 796. 1WANTED~Sleeping room by pro | fessional woman in private home, or small apt. Write Empire P| 2127, WANTED TO RENT—Radio for 2 or 3 weeks. Write P.O. Box 17, Juneau. WANTED —Two % bedsteads and springs. Call red 578, | WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and | shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned was, on the 19th day of March, 1943, duly ap- pointed administrator of the estate of RENE D. STRAGIER, deceased, and that letters testamentary there- for on said day were duly issued to the undersigned. All persons having claims against vouchers, and duly verified; within six (6) months' from the ‘date of ! thic Notice, to the undersigned ad- ministrator at the office of his at- torneys, R. E. Robertson and M.E. Monagle, at 200 Seward Building, | Alaska, or to the under- Alaska, this 19th day of March, 1943. HENRY STRAGIER, Administrator. March 26, 1943. 16, 1943. adv. First publication, Last publication, April CALL FOR BIDS Sealed Bids will be received in the Office of the Commissioner of | Education, Territory of Alaska, Ju- tn | heau, Alaska, until 10 a.m; April 24, 1943, and will then be opened land read for the furnishing of all __|1abor; materials, transportation and equipment necessary for the com- plete construction of the Pelican City school building with teacher’s |quarters. Plans may -be . obtained from James C. Ryan, Commissioner of Education, Territory of Alaska. (Signed) JAMES C. RYAN | Commissioner of Education Territory of Alaska. ‘Flrsc Publication, April 9, |Last Publication, April 23, 241 OF MRS, ”'m | BEON S| EPISCOPALIAN mviti The funeral of Mrs. Elmo H. Ka.sex who died Monday after an! {illness of several months, will be on 1943. 1943, e Rets & ... _|in some manner when they jWANTED——Used furniture. 306 Wil- bedsteads and | said estate are hereby required to present said claims with proper | | Saturday afternoon in the chapel GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | of Butterworth Mortuary, Seattle. nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. The Episcopal service will be read. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201, Dr. Kaser, Mrs. Esther Metzgar, 315 Decker Way ‘ML». E‘liznbeth Kaser and Mrs. cash or trade at Nugget ShOD. |,ng were met by Mrs. Katherine iLand and Paul Land, mother and Marines were first called Devil brother of the late Mrs. Kaser, and Dogs by the Germans in 1918, other relatives. 0SED BY | CHIEF —W. E| CHICAGO, April | Crouch, chief of the division of | game management, fish and wild- life service, today said if American | hunters this year killed as much | |8 me as last year, it would be enough meat to feed an army of 15,000,000 men for 45 days or there- abouts.” The wild meat, however, is not intended to go to the armed forc- | |es but for the nation’s dining mhlu | “In advocating this harvest, | Crouch said, “the thought is not [to deplete the nation's wildlife or in any way delve into the breed- |ing stock. We have a renewable sur- |plus of game every year, and this |year it will be approximately the me as last.” 255,404,055 Lbs. of Meat He said a su of the 1 |state game dcpmtments year showed a total of 255404055 pounds of dressed meat garnered Iby hunters. Forty percent of this poundage came from the most available animals, such as rabbits squirrels, and opossum. | Although this poundage large compared with the na- | total meat consumption, it is very important in these days| |of meat rationing,” Crouch said It also is a good reason for per-| mitting hunting as usual this yea [ Another reason Couch gave for allowing hunting this year is the |constant need for game manage-| fment in conservation work. “Conservation does not mean | ‘just saving everything for the sake| lof saving,” he said, “Wildlife would | |eat itself out of house and home\ if it were ieft to itself and not con—‘ | trolled.” Would Preserve Resources A third reason for hunting in! 1943 is to preserve the nation’s! grain and orchard resources from' | depredatory ~ wildlife, Couch said.[ T There are few species of game ani-| mals which are not depmd'ltory‘ be- | 9. tion’s | is not | vers | tion's come overabundant, he said. | “This does not mean we should‘ permit a wholesale raid on our| | wildlife to save fields and orchards, lor to supply large quantities of |meat,” Crouch declared. “We are| working every day in the field of conservation to refute the kind of war hysteria which demands our| wildlife be hunted off indiscrimin- lately for the temporary advantage of increased meat supplies. The! basic stock should not be touched,| {and this can be controlled by the\ length of open seasons, and by area restrictions where needed.” | Crouch said even though the | | War Production Board has shut ‘for hunters — primarily shotgun i shells—there is enough stock on| tles to manufacture fresh ammu- | | nition' to supply. the hunters. May Release Ammunition He said the WPB was consider- I |ing a proposal to relax restric- tions on issuing hunting ammuni- tion, and probably “some way will be devised so there will be an equitable distribution of the avail-| able ammunition.” | Commenting on criticisms about hunters using valuable gasoline ’and rubber and wasting manpower | hours, Crouch said the nation’s economy is based on gas and rub- ber for trappportation, .and the supplementary meat supplies from hunting are sufficiently valuable to make use of gas and rubber for the purpose worth while. Thus far hunting restrictions have not dome much damage to the revenue from hunting fees of the state conservation departments' or from duck stamps of the wild-| life service, Crouch said. |MRS. FANNIE WRIGHT, AGED 70, DIES ms;u MORNING, Mrs. Fannie Wright, aged 170, |died this morning at the Govern- ment Hospital after a long l.unecs A Tresident of the Juneau area most of her life, Mrs. Wright was a member of the Russian Greek Orthodox Church. ‘Widowed, she is survived by a, sister, Mrs. Annie Fawcebt, nephews, John and Charles Faw- cett, and an adopted son, . Jack Joseph, civilian worker .at Excur- |sion Inlet, and his family. Remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary and funeral ar- rangements will be announced later. Hugh J. Wade, Territorial direct- or of the Social Security Board, left for Anchorage late yesterday afternoon on routine Social Secur- ity business. While in Anchorage Wade will confer with Army and USO officials ‘1egardmg the use and distribution jof recreational equipment through- lout the Ten')ww E e — YOUR BROKEN LENSES Replaced in ouv‘ own shop. Eyes. Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson. Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636, adv. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA - HOW SKIP- BOMBING WORKS MERICAN ingenuity has | developed o potent new plane vs. shnp battle strategy that is reaping dividends in he Southwest Pacific—skip-bombing. The idea, put to work by Lt. Gen. George Kenney, is simplicity it- self and was born of the need of doing a major job with limited equipment. This is how it works: With highflying bombers acting more or « less as a decoy for the ship’s main de- fensive firepower, another bomber comes in - at low level, broadside to the exchanging 'gunfire. The plane is able to draw a much better bead on its target than the bombers soaring at a 2 or 3-mile altitude. HAS POWER BOTH FITS, 600D BRAIN By BOB WIL H BYRACUSE—Explosive power in both fists and “plenty of brains” have carried Syracuse University's |Salvatore “Toots” Mirabito to col- lege ‘boxing’s highest "pinnacle. Toots, three-time winner of the Eastern intercollegiate heavy- | down on ammunition producuonlwelght boxing title and holder of foria bird to receive the signal and the National collegiate heavy- weight championship, has won 30 {hand and enough available facili- (straight college bouts, 13 by knock- cago, tells the story in Science, of- outs. Won 50 School Bouts | In fact, the chunky, 23-year-old physical education student has never been defeated in the ring, winning 50 scraps as a battler at Norwich, N. Y. high school and Manlius prep. What makes Toots a great fight- ler? “He can hit with either hand, he’s smart and aggressive,” said Tony Balash, his coach, and him- self a winner of the eastern inter- collegiate middleweight title in 1933. “Some of his hardest punches trav- el only six inches.” “Toots is a good boxer, but he has to be smart to overcome his lack of height,” Tony pointed out. “He's only five feet, 10 inches tall. °f the signal. It could be sound, or! p)ain and inexpensive. and 195 pounds. Some of the boys he meets have much more power- ful builds.” “Besides all that, Toots has what it takes to win when the chips are down. Six. times in his college car- eer, he's gome in there with the fate of (the entire match hanging on the final bout.” In the Army Now Mirabito was called up by the Army ‘two days after he won his third Eastern Intercollegiate - tour- nament title. The champ thus was prevented . from rounding out his athletic career with another year on the baseball team where he was a cateher. He also played a back- | field post on the Orange grid squad. After the war, Toots wants to be a coach. ‘A professional boxing career doesn't ‘interest him. iwo | TULSA, Okla —Dcrufln corng.m who wrong wayed h)p ‘way to fame, | is ferrying planes amm .country. | In a hurry, he tronoa breath- | lessly to a waiting plane, showed | his - credentials and ‘climbed in to, be a passenger enroute to pick up another ship. An hour later Wmn(-w:;y Cor- ‘rigan discovered he Aceidentaly had jboarded the wrong plane, headed in the wropg direction for the wrong destination. 1 Major Pendleton Edgar tells the story, straight, and says he saw it happen. — . NOTICE We, the undersigned, have today ta_.ken over the operation of the City Cafe and will not be respon- sible for any debts contracted pnor to this time. STEVE GUAZON, adv, FRANK DE MILLE, 1 2 As it nears the target, the plane drops a = bomb flat. In the way a flat pebble can be skipped on a pond, the bomb bounces off the water, arcs through the air. Mean- while, the bomber crew machineguns the decks and noses up in escape. 3 The ricocheting bomb blasts the ship’s » side. Best shot is to have it hit just below the water-line, a highly vulnerable spot. The tactic is unofficially credited with o major share in the Bismarck sea victory. The B-25 plane, named for l'lly Mitchell, air pioneer, has been used in the maneuver. merchantman, | | | i | sight. Possibly the signal is some- | thing connected with the m}stm- ous thing that enables homing pig- {eons to find direction. The bjrd signal and maneuver works faster than anything human columns can do. Blrds Flash Slgnals in Fllghl H. W. BLAKESLEE AP Science Editor HOSPITM NOTES Sigurd Wmtllm who entered St Ann’s Hospital last Monday even- ing for an emergency appendect- omy, is making a good recovery NEW YORK.—Here is evidence | Winther was on the halibut boat af,» signal system between bxrdgr‘memnm and went directly to the in flight. The signal operates with | hospital from the boat upon arriv- extraordinary speed. Five-thou-|al here. sandths of a second is enough time | Mrs. C. L. Wingerson entered St. Ann's Hospital yesterday for med-| ical treatment. alter its course of flight. R. W. Gerard, University of Chi- Arthur. Pinkerton and Henry Sully were incoming medical pa- tients yesterday at St. Ann's Hos- | pital. |ficial journal of American scien- |tists, He®was driving in Vermont when about 50 birds in a flock flew ‘alongside his car. They were Phae PIGGLY WIGGLY 24 QUALITY AND DEPENDABILITY F YOU ARE PUZZLED ABOUT WHAT TO SERVE COME IN AND LOOK AROUND IT PAYS TO SHOP AND COMPARE PRI(‘ES' PIGGLY WIGGLY Orders must be in before 1 o’clock { ¢ There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! only 15 feet from his window. Car and birds were doing exactly 35 miles an hour. After a few sec- {onds the flock wheeled away from the car. They did not follow Lm leader. They did not do a columns | left. Every single bird wheeled at exactly the same instant. Had a bird taken even 10 thou- sandths of a second to make f.heJ turn, it would have lagged, at 35 ;miles an hour, six inches behind’| its fellows. No bird, says Mr. Gcr-‘ ard, lagged that much. He got no.clue to the nature| | Margaret Katzeek were admitted ! charged Virginia Hanson of Hoonah and at the Government Hospital yes- terday afternoon. Hans Walter, medical left St. Ann’s Hospital and returned home: patient, yesterday Swetzofl has from the Julia been dis- Government Hospital. — eee - — In colonial America, the Puri- tans passed laws to keep shoes e — at. the box offi CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TIfiKETB to see: “GRAND CENTRAL MURDER" Federal Tax—b6c perl’erion‘ n WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! Fikst Na tiohhimnk of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT SAM FELDON a8 2 paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this wlrg:: this evening ce of DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED HOME GROCERY INSURANCS Dolicious EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 64 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Poot of Main Street Juneau Molors | FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Sanitary Meat Co. POR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 48 R 3t ot = | Chas. G. Warner Co. l Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE BHOP Ropes and Paints Thomas HardwareCo.| PAINTS — OILS Utah Nu} and Lump COAL Alaska Dock :oit‘o:ln Co. The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Reoms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E. 0.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH WHEN IN NEED OF Ulesel Oll—ftove Oli—Your Junean Transfer =~ NUNN-BUSH SHOES "~ STETSON HATS Quality Wosk Clothing om.!m‘:érormn oy “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Pree Delivery Juneau GASTINEAD HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Alr Service Informalion PHONE 10 or 20 Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wends: HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant 237 FRONT STREET Phone 678 Parsons Electric Co. ' Westinghouse Dealer Electrical Service and Repairs 123 SEWARD ST. Phone 146 Home Liquor Btore—Tel. 60 American Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMOQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 oo r———————— -Parcels DAY OR NIGHT Scheduled Delivery 10 a. m. and 2'P. M.