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WANT ADS FOR SALE 'WORKERSATRACE ' ‘TRACKS MUST GET | IN WAR LINE NOW SALE— Second-hand Christ- WANTED —Experfenced’ ' bookkeeper ma ; tree. Guon- condtion, only| and ?enel'fll office man for 1lfi§x‘-‘ WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 Hede sed few days. See Darwin Hocl.‘ by coldrstu:‘agecmzm.lManu»: trac have lost the right to hire s ¥ Wan prelerred. Good saary and workers after January 3 as the War| NF}\\—db}-mch table \A\\]undm::ne—; living quarters furnished. APPLY | Manpower Chknmninsiah Wit thirg tor, complet e ; R’ s bt 4. totor, comflete- RS | #wmes;iC. Gguper. the cmployment ceiling authoriz | WANTED_Eldeily man to care for |tions from track operators. FOUR GUN Magnun The ruling is made following thel THE DAILY ALASKA AMMUNITION FOR CIVILIANS ALL OFF NOW Action Pron;ptved by Sud- den Increase in Mili- tary Requirements 300 HH. Magnum AR bhind b — Model 70 Winc mlu ith A‘;hm]’;';‘;f quarters furnished. |\ ovigus order that all animal rac-' WASHINGTON, Jan. 2—The War Hensoldt Scope; 30-06 ‘Model 70 _ ___,ing shat down by Wednesday so that | Production Board has called a halt Winchester with 4-P. Gerrard WANIFD TO RENTf age. Call |racing employees could be taken into!cn all production of civillan am- Scope; 300 Savage Model 99, with | Green 720, war industries. munition and moved to conserve the Buckhorn sights; 20 gauge Rem- — Sr— L S S present stocks of ammunition for ton Auto. Model 11. All excel- | WAN’ TED—Sales Girl. Apply Sully's| EMBLEM MEETING TONIGHT only essential uses. 3 lent condition, plenty -shells and Baker Regular Business Meeting, Em-| Yesterday was the final day the : g _|blem Club Ne. 90, 8 p. m, Elks|manufacture of ammunition for any accessories Write Empire, C-5004. ' yoryy EA?;E FOR 6}{i REN bY‘HnH First business month, week or day; also on call.'and new officer: PAIR ICE SKATES, 5 and 6., 327 West 1lith St, Basement Apt.| P. O. Box 3036, City raEeY $ d MR o - | WANTED— Uged furnivure. 306 W ] ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS CHILD'S SLE Condition, ' oughby. Phone 788 |- ‘Notice is hereby given that City 186 Gastineau Avenue, opposite G lof Ketchikan, hereinafter referred to as the “Owner,” will receive up | to, but not later than 8 o’clock P. M., ! ! P. S. Time, of the 17th day of Janu- 1945, sealed proposals for the MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Fully munppvd restau- rant. Cash. 460 South Franklin, — ary, after 1 p .m. Phone 377. GUARANTEED Realisuc Perma- |award of a contract, for the con-| AW i ment. $7.50. Paper Curls, $1 UD |struction of Beaver Falls Power TROLLER “DIANA,” 33 ft. long,| Lola Beauty Snop. Phone 201 'Facilities designated as Project No 8% ft. beam, fully ecquipped.| 315 Decker Way. |50-158-N located in Ketchikan, Ter- Chrysler Crown marine engine,| — — ritory of Alaska. Such bids will be first-class cond. Inguire 306 Wil- 1F you have empty rooms or &PIS.yeceived in the office of City Clerk, 788. | for desirable people, inform the|igeateq at the City Hall, and will be phone Gastineau Hotel. opened and publicly read aloud at ; Talibut boat \}HlD ; the above stated time and place in! ength 54 ft., with 50 | the City Council Chamber. | HP heavy-duty Atlas Imperial LosT A“n ro““n Each bid must gonform and be re- | engine. Pack: o T I T AT L sponsive to all the pertinent Con- | cludes full string of halibut gear I.ObT—Comb. .\llvt‘l bAnd “Return | tract Documents. £opies are now on and full equipment in perfect Empire. Reward file and open to public inspection in condition. Write J. C. Bustness, - — — — ~— the offices of the Owner located at Box 225, Ketchikan, Alaska. LOST—Between Klein Apts. and getchikan, Alaska and at the En- - k7 8 : Decker Way, on Xmas Eve, ladies| gineer’s office at 301 Hoge Building, EMALL OIL Phone Re wrist watch, 17 jewel Glycine. Seattle, Washington, where copies 578 Keepsak Reward. Phone 201. may be obtained by a deposit for Slay ot S e ——— - —-—— leach set as shown below. This de- account of Iiness, log cabin, |-OST—Will party f‘?_"l zwr)k t'{‘f‘_ posit will be refunded if the set of 5 rooms and ba Furnishings | W'o"% overshoe for right foot by |gontract Documents is returned in include electric igerator. elec- i el M?“"“C Temple please |go0d condition within 10 days after tric. washer, radlo, Diano, ntn, 81| Al Plack 619, |the bid opening ‘ miles on Glacier Highway. Jack | ~— | Each bid shall be made out on a 2 1 e bid form to be obtained at either of Perry, City Police. Es ! ! HOSPITAL NOT |the said offices in which the Con- { A | tract Documents are on file. | was admitted to| Each bid shall be accompanied by Inquire at, St. Ann's Hospital yesterday for | certified or cashier's check payable medical care | to the Owner, or a bid bond in favor 5. Bjork was admitted to St. Ann's | of the Owner, executed by the bidder completely Hospital yesterday for medical at- |as Princival and a satisfactory sure- furnished including electric lights, | tention. ty company as Surety, in an amount radio and washing machine. One ' St. Ann’s Hospital admitted Mrs. nHot less than five per cent of the acre pat. land, good creek, suit- Erik Larsen yesterday for medical | maximum amount of the bid. The check or bid bond shall be given as and lv\o 3-room furnished, | Chester Stenc: OUPLEX house houses and cabin on Gastineau Ave. Juneau Paint Store. TWO HOUSES, both able for chickens, geese and |lreatment. ‘ ducks. 5% miies on Glacier High-| Henry Peterson from Gustavus!a guarantee that the bidder will ex- way. Junc Gihson, Phone 357,|Was admitted to the Government |€cute the contract, if it be awarded : T | Hospital last night for medical at- | to him, in conformity with the Con- after 10 a. .1 tract Documents and will provide the Peter Hawkins was admitted to [surety bond or bonds as specified the Goverament Hospital yesterday ‘Lhcrcm within five days after noti- for medical care. fication of the award of the Con- tract. tention. !-‘ Oll RENT - e — FOR RENT — Two vacancies at FORT RICHARDSON HAS | The Owner reserves the privilege Crescent Apts. Phone 428 | WOM 5 POST EXCHANGE |0f rejecting any and all bids or to | e il waive any irregularities or informal- | S As a convenience for women |ities in any bid or in the bidding. FOR RENT—Steam-licated room. s o o phigit Wi Chrok i | workers at Fort Richardson, a post| NO bidder may withdraw his bid one Green for a period of 30 days after the {exchange has been cpened in the | date set for the opening of bids. st beauty shop in which toilet STEAM HEATED ROOMS. Calligoods, hand soaps, safety pins, Dote: December 5'$§§§E3sm A after 3 p. m., 315 Gold Street. | ooth brushes, etc, are carried AP 2, S s heting | | Mayor. e o X . D sit required f set HEATED ROOM. Phone Red 570, | AUTO LICEN! com;‘;g:e p;flt‘m s d”‘;p:c"i;'ic;‘;mn‘f e | ST 25.00. Deposit for each of 5 units City Clerk’s Office will be open covering (1) power house and cot- WINTER RATES, Scaview Apts. Until 5:30 p. m, Jan. 3-4-5, to ac- age (2) pipe line, (3) tunnel, (4) 0il and wood stoves, lights, laun- Lommodatc those wishing to buy transmission line clearing, and (5) dry. Phone 236. r licenses. | tranmission line: $5.00. | J. E. KEARNY, |First publication, Dec. 26, 1944. City Olerk.'Last publication, Jan. 2, 1945. FIANOS FOR RFNT —Phone 143 - FOR THE DURATION... ! While traveling is difficult . . . we’ll be thinking of our friends in Alaska. .. Evenif we don't see them . . . | Keep On Buying Bonds TOWININ1945 ° BUY MORE ' BONDS ... THAN BEFORE New Washington Hotel, Seattle FRANK B."M¢CLURE, quaqer L pe wi su meeting of 1945, except Government military use was rmitted Manufacturers’ stock 11 now be frozen This action was prompted by the dden increase in military requite- ments ¢f small arms ammunition. In El Salvador, all men over 18 must vote in all elections. WAR R VOLUTIONIZES SEAFOOD ’NDUSTRY May Seek Finny Tribe With s | | | [ | | | | | | 1 Ih i ) | shores. A good catch after trawling for cod and haddock in New England. dy ESTHER V. W. TUFTY WABHINGTON—Fishing in the | postiar world may be done by heli- copter . .. that cheap, g skyfly which can hover over the water to locate schools of fish. One Washington fish expert, Charles ‘B. Jackson, also foresece the use of radar, echo-sounding de large scale fish operations. In the future, too, he sees factory ships that can fish “right and improved methods of fish re- frigeration and dehydration. he war has revolutionized the fishing industry. It deprived the American hostess of her party-pop- ular imported anchovies, crabs, sar- dines and smoked fish products, but at the same time forced us to look into our own waters for fish to re- place imports. It made it impera- tive to find new sources of vitamin oils and we found them, luckily, many of our “trash” fish . .. thrown back by our fishermen as worthless before the war. Right now there just isn’t enough vitamin A, the anti-infection vita- min—which increases visibility in the dark—to go around. That's tough on war workers and fighting men who need it. Over-fishing of the soup-fin shark to secure the vitamin-rich liver oils has practi- | cally resulted in its extinction. «In our search arising out of our wartime crucial needs, we found new commercial uses for fish by- products. Fish oil, for example, is needed as core oil in the casting of metals, and in the manufacture of printing ink, linoleum, oil cloth, paints and varnishes. One of the most optimistic of prophets is Jackson, assistant di- rector of the Fish and Wildlife Serv- lce of the Department of Interior. | He sees our expanded fishing in- dustry extending over. the ocean waters of the world, although be- fore the war only 14 per cent of our catch He's already talking about our annual fish and seaweed ba no longer being second to Japan’ Well, supplying most of our crabmeat. ‘They caught the giant king crab va- riety right under our nos ‘h finders and even blimps for | on the spot,”| x . 5 POL {ing new era in the fish world. was taken off forv:ignj‘ if we win a fish war with! ! Japan, that's good, too. Before w | entered the war, the Japanese were = n ! ericans, most of them wounded, fied, % - \ DE'I'A“S IO[D DR. PAUL LINDQUIST AND W GO SOUTH | After spending the last year in| Anchorage, Dr. Paul Lindquist was | B te LONDON, Ja Newspapers lied HeadQuar-qyee with the public health depart PrE ment. Dr. and Mrs. Lindquist 1\~n' hat two Ger-|go. ) states on a recent vessel| hail of machine |y " geward Prior to coming to AP seless CAD- | ) horage, Dr. Lindquist was with ArnrloRte thet ,““‘ the department in Juneau They 1,\1&*“ T 1d lined UP| oo in the Territory for about 20/ tches said that the men,|months red in cold blcod on Decem- sre mostly from a field ar- llery unit captured near Malmedy, lgium. They had left their trucks k shelter when the German nk: appeared and rounded them up in a field. sermans searched them and ir W ttes and valuables addenly opened fire tanks joined from 40 he shooting continued n a guard n which the ards away mti fell. The Germans then dked up and down shooting all fallen men showing signs of life. It was d that about 25 Am- | | s, on the | ! |we are tinning new ' | cited—not only the boys who would | industry pay big. jucts, But Mrs. Housewife, don’t be- south side of Alaska. Now our fighting lads have seen to it that have the monopoly on Bering a fishing. Also, for the first time, varieties the red and sand crabs. A1l of this has even Congress ex- rather fish than make speeches, | either. All 21 members of the House Merchant Marine and Fish- eries committee are alrcady agog. They didn't have the time to in- vestigate personally this approach- But they could order a survey made and they did. So now the “Fish’ half of the Fish and Wildlife Ser ice is delving into the possibiliti and compiling a big, but true, fi story to tell congressmen, To most Americans, as to the hip- boot and sou'wester men, fish for the table will be the primary rea- son for hauling the shining things out of the water. But fisheries are beginning to realize that it is the hundreds of other uses of water animals and plants that make the Never Enough Jackson crives home that point. “It would be safe to say today that if we did not consume a single pound of these fish for food, we still would not have enough fish for industrial and other uses.” Farmers can't get enough fish meal (the dry, powdered residue) for their catile and poultry. The vitamin pill-maker can't get ade- quate amounts of fish oil. Even the housewife is having a hard time locating fancy bottles, jars and tins of imported fish prod- moan the loss of Russian anchovies! Off the coast of California a great abundance of anchovies will soon be claimed. If there's more than an beMised to spread on those little party crackers, the excess can be orbed, we are told, by the hog d cattle industries (minus the crackers, no doubt). Even sea-weed has a new future. Formerly we imported vast quan- 5 of Irish moss from France and Norway, to be used in the manu- facture of pudding, pharmaceutical plies, and skin lotion. Now the Missachusetts coast is supplyingus wiH this aquatic plant wh d, is used in the ma recently Helicopter, Blimp, Radar | Oyster tonging .| clarify and import body to beer. 5| this country. For instance, small poundments of water for'flood con- | trol, transferred to Seattle for WATKINS GOOD HEALTH PRODUCTS Foods, Medicines, Flavorings and Spices, Toiletries and Household Necessities at \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ;| ! ! PRE-WAR CEILING ’ 3 $ \ y e PRICES Phone 174 COMPLETE STORE 127 SEWARD ST. »,,,,,,-M----_,(vl,_,, in the Atlantic | of paints, shoe black, medicine, con- fectioneries, ice cream, radar, pho- tographic supplies, and storage bat- teries. It is used by brewers to One of the most important’ prod- ucts of seaweed is agar, a gelatin- | like substance on which bacteria cultures are grown in scientific laboratories. The War department even looking intothe use of sea- in the making of munitions, Agar weed-gathering was exclu- | sively a Japanese industry prior to | 1941. | “In fact,” says Jackson, “most | of the things we once imported could have been produced right in | iness units could duplicate the moked fish products we used to get from Norway. They could cater to the delicatessen trade with a line of fish pastes and smoked or pickled products and other fancy packs. They are already smoking white fish and faney-packing squid.” Too many untapped fish sources exist, says Jackson, determined to tap them as soon as possible. “Every year the fisheries of Alas- | ka retu to the people of the United States more than five times the purchase price of the territory, | yet th ch is confined to three species salmon, herring and halibut,” Jackson tells us. “We have reason to believe that in the Bering Sea, and from the Aleutians down the Alaskan coast to British Columbia, there are tremendous | quantities of flounders, pollock, cod, and other spec It we. do not make use of them, some other na- tion will!” Similarly, he would seek tuna i and shrimp beyond the limited areas fished today. He would try to sell the Europcan and Asiatic idea of eels and skates in the diet, because of the preponderance of these. The California ard, fishery is equali ports from Portugal . . . it accounts for nearly one-fourth of combined V. 8. and Alaska fish poundage hauled in. No water is going ln waste, It | the Fish and Wildlif rvice has its way. Farm ponds are going to be stocked with fish. Even im- line, or pilch- ! z former im- | power and irrigation will be I PAGE FIVE | Public Accountant-Stenographic-Tax Returns MURPHY and MURPHY Successors to Harvey Lowe ROOM 3—First National Bank Bldg. PHONE 676 ESAACS——Building Contractor REMODELING — REPAIRING CABINET ‘SHOP 270 South Franklin Street. PHONE 799; Res. Black 290 JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL PHONE 787 Third and Franklin COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 587 or 747—]JUNEAU YOU CAN GET LUMBER FOR ESSENTIAL REPAIRS ON YOUR HOME M. S. PATRICIA WEEKLY TRIPS BETWEEN Juneau — Haines — Skagway Leaves from Small Boat Harbor MIDNITE TUESDAY NITE Freight and parcels accepted until 6 P. M. Tuesdays PHONE 94 OR 498 FOR RESERVATIONS THRIFT C0-0P Member National Retailer- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET | PHONE 767 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Btreet Juneau Motors CALL Femmer’s Transfer 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Dine - Bar - Dance Delicious Fried Chicken DERBY INN John Marin, Prop. Skagway [ —— Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Gall Phones 13 and 49 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 85 Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints NORTH TRANSFER Thomas Hardware Co. Light and Heavy Hauling PAINTS - OILS E.0.DAVIS E.W. DAVIS Bullders’ and Shelf PHONE 81 HARDWARE COWLING-DAVLIN | COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Utah Nut and Lump COAL Klaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Orating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 0393 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Mm-l' Planos—Musical snd Supplier Phone 206 Second and Sewsrd TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing ] FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Cholee Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONES 553—82—95 “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 165 Pree Delivery Juneas P e Alaska Trading Co. J. W. GUCKER, Prop. PHONE 122 or 4 At Alaska Dock and Storage SRS HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Stere—Tel. 690 American Meat — Phene 39 Ideal Paint Shop Phone 548 Pred W. Wenat 18