The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 22, 1945, Page 7

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MONDAY. TANUARY 22, | 945 WANT ADS FORSALE | ; ron”m;m : 3 - BARRELL Comb. 12-ga. Phone 567. imported shotgun. and 30-30 rifle. | |FOR RENT—E»Rm" furnished Apt., oil range and bath. Inquire 513-A Willoughby Avenue. REZERE PROJECTOR, Cire, per- fect 8-MM camera, 2.05 lens, 35| telephoto lens, Marvell exposure meter, 32 Cclt pistol, 306 rifle, new office desk and leather chah‘,j new filing cabinet. Call Room 326, Baranof Hotel. | s FULL SIZED Bed, chairs, table, kimodes. Call Red 578. ! FOR SALE—6 ft. hickory skis and | bamboo pools. 423 Harris St. FOR SALE—Table, stool and square, baby swing, sheep skin coat, rubber boots, set Fiesta pottery and Misc. Kitchen ware. No. 3,/ Evergreen Apts. i + FULLY MODERN, completely fur-| nished house, four mile post on; Glacier Highway. Call 62 during business hours for appointment. FOR SALE—Apartment cxiex1s}oxxj dining table. Phone 137, ‘ { FOR SALE—Metal bed. Double.| With springs. Apply 410 10th St. _FOR SALE—One 15-inch drill press| and motor. Good conditien. I. G. Fulton & Company. ! | i SR ez ; FOR SALE—Troller “Diana”—33 ft. long, 8% ft. beam, fully equipped.l Chrysler Crown marine engine,| first class condition. See Harbor Master. | { FOR SALE—Power saw. Contact| . Geo. J. Bednar, Tee Harhor. I |ForR REJNT;i Vt.ln:iflzi-rounr-;\bms 843 West, Ninth Street. STEAM HEATED ROOMS. Call after 3 p. m, 315 Gold Street. WINTER RATES, Seaview Apts Oil and wood stoves, lights, laun- dry. Phone 236. BHEHTY ¢IANOS FOR RENT. —Phone 143 MISCELLANEOUS THE FIXIT SHOP—General light repair work. Phone 567. HEMSTITCHING and covered but- | tons. Phone Black 510. 3UARANTEED Realistic . Perma- ment. $7.00 Paper Curls, $1 up Lolsa Bea:ty Snop. Phone 20 315 Decker Way (F you have empty rooms or apts. for desirable people, inform the Gastineau Hotel. LOST AND FOUND | LOST—Schaeffer Life-Time foun- tain pen. Name engraved on side. Lost in or near First National Bank. $5 reward. Return to Gas- tineau Hotel desk. Hamy Douglas. | LOST—By school boy, brown life- | time pen with military clip. Re- ward. Please return to Empire. TF?)R SALE—Furnished house on Gold St. Call Red 710 after 5| p. m. | GOOD established bakery in skag-. way. Steady business year round,l Write James Cozian, Box 305, ! Skagway, Alaska. | — —_— | ONE G. E. 10-tube all-wave con-| sole radio in good condition.| Phone Black 619. | ON account of iliness, log cabin, | 5 rooms and bath. Furnishings include electric refrigerator. elec- tric washer, radio, piano, etc. 3% . miles on Glacier Highway. Jack | Perry, City Police. | LOSTACuml;, silves Empire. Reward. CARD OF THANKS Thanks to our many friends for their kindness during the illness and loss of our husband and father; also for the many beauti- ful floral offerings. Ella DeRoux, Roy DeRoux, Norman DeRoux and family, Carmen Waldal, grand-daughmz! and. Return { TIDES TOMORROW Low tide—3:31 a. m, 42 feet. | High tide—9:53 a. m,, 159 feet. | OUPLEX house and two 3-room! houses and cabin, all furnished,| on Gastineau Zve. Inquire at Juneau Paint Store. Low tide—16:40 p. m., 0.6 feet. High tide—23:07 p. m., 13.0 feet. - ee— NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That Gustaf H. Savela and Frances ) | water. | isub: were operating off the Ameri-“ | tamkers. 1 | hoping to return 375 evacuees from| { Army officials on the possibility of | NAVY ALERTS PACIFIC SHIPS 10 JAP SUBS Liberty Ship Is Torpedoed East of Hawaii-Ten _of Cri Dead ALLE { | GASOLINE SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Jan. 22 —Tacit admission that convoys sail- ng out of Pacific Coast ports have seen alerted as to roving Jap sub- narines came today after the Navy/ 1isclosed the loss of the Liberty ship John A. Johnson and ten members »f her crew. The torpedoing, fol- ‘owed by a strafing attack on her| ifeboats, occurred in November, 400 niles east of Hawali. Of the ten crew members killed, nost died from sprays of bullets| ired, survivors said, by frenzied Japs | who danced on the sub’s deck,| sheuting Banzais and cursing “Yan- tee Survivers told of pending two terrifying hours, sub- nerging themselves and hiding be- nind wreckage to keep out of range of the enemy crafi. They said the sub strafed a lifeboat with machine- zun bullets and rammed a liferaft. The ship's skipper, Capt. A. H.| Beeken, of Tacoma, Wash, ‘was! rcscued after fifteen hours in the He escaped after his lifeboat had been cut in two by the sub.‘ Therc were sixty survivors of the; disaster. 1 Tckyo and Berlin | nounced on November 6 that Jap radios ‘an- an coast and that they had sunk several transports, . including oil B SN Natives Hope To Refurn Home The Office of Indian Affairs is| the Aleutian battle zone this spring. V. R. Farrell, Acting Director of Natural Resources, was to leave to- day for the Westward to confer with | zetting native villagers back to their slands by April. | There . are ninety-one families/ totaling 375 persons still in South- east Alaska awaiting Army permis- | sion to go back to their hommes:| Pribilof Islanders returned a ‘year ago. | Native groups now hoping to leave are from Atka, Akutan, TERR\" "DICK TRACY 5 Y JOE PALOOKA LEE < LOOKS LIKE THERE WERE BEEN FUSSING B A JAP HELMET' THERE'S THREE OR FOUR JAPS, AND ACOUND HERE: BW BEEN- A FIGHT. | HERES ONE OF THEM! ILL MEANDER BACK TO THE JEER SINC WILL SHOI UF: THERE SOUNER SOMEBODY HAS N NO SIR. HE CANT MAKE IT UNLESS TH| : LESS WEIGHT. JERRY AN' I KNOW HOW T'GET THERE-CAN WE g HAVE PERMISSION L OUTWE CAN'T BE COURT L[ W-WHY MARTIALLED OR CALLED DESERTERS. J&” JA HAFTA | WE'LL CARRY ONE-MA| DINGHIES . SIR=THERE'S NOTHIN' ELSE T'DROP~SO ) CONSIDERING THAT THE SHIP HAS TO GET IN-AND FOUR HUNDRED 5 POUNDS MIGHT MAKE IJ CANTGNE YOU THAT PERMISSION,, WHOA! YOURE NEW HERE ... I MUST EXPLAIN A FEW THINGS ABOUT JUNGLE PILOT JOKERS — AND ONE HOTSHOT cum‘s, CHARLES IN PARTICULAR ! VIEW HALLOO!"THE FATE OF THE NATION WAS RIDING THAT NIGHT..." ACK-ACK~ AcK! LOOKIT, YOU HEARD WHAT HE SAID=-A MESSERSCHMITT 109 | SHALL I ALERT ! THE FIELO Z CONDITION i JJELY LOW AND sLow Hi6 MO-THER SAID A5 HI5 MOTHER TOLD HIM 3 AND THEY HAVEN'T FOUND HIM 'I'LL GLADLY GO TOY JAIL — ANYTHING — JUST TO GET OUT OF HERE — HEI;P.’ ; LP ME / SEALED IN” THE ICE § BREAKERS HAVE CLOSED THE HOLE IN THE PIER \ I'M SUFFOCATING. TS JUST THAT ID WHY COME| [EVERYBODY I CALL ) IM SELLING GEN- )| Nikolski, i and | Saveln, husband and wife, have filed | yy31a0ka, Biorka, Makushin, RINGNG OUR DOORBELL]| [UNE LEATHER AROUND IN| [ON ASKS ME THE RATHER SLEER IN { WANTED JOB AS DRIVER and delive: E Juneau resident. Knows city. ‘Write Empire, No. 5095. WANTED—Child’s crib and mat- | tress; 2 highchairs. Phone 10, Room 220, until Sunday evening.' WANTED to buy, small chest of | drawers. Phone 162. WANTED Fine laundry: Shirts, curtains. Mending. Call Black 475 after 5 o'clock. WANTED—Job as mechanic. Cat and truck specialist. Call at No. 3, Village. WANTED—Used furniture, 308 WU- loughby. Phone 788. WILL CARE FOR CHILDREN by month, week or day; also on call. 327 West 11th St., Basement Apt. NOTICE! Bicycle licenses for the current “'yeéar are now on sale at the City »Clerk’s -office. J. E. KEARNY, City Clerk. | 32 Land measure 5. Rubber tree 37. Kverlasting; poetic 39. Ul"!lll of hear- . Greater ¢ inoun s Exist : Persian fa RiRea ey ng Light opan cotton fabric 2 Disease of rye . Leave . Stea . Rowing imple- Scanalnavian ment navigator 19. Purposes . Tropical bird . Pleced out . Trap for | catching’ certain fish . Putina for- gotten place . Women's club . Less brilliant in color . Companion . Tree . Festival 56, Entrance . Note of the dove Single thing . Openwork fabric 2. Babylonian deit; cean Christian era: A 30. Belgian vio- linist T Z il ol o 1674 f///A P Wd ) a7 | ) L dEa am > 7 | their joint petition in the Commis- | Kashega. The twelve families of ! sioner’s Court for Juneau Precinct, | | First Division, Territory of Alaska, | at Juneau, for adoption of Arnold | Lee Swanson, born at Seattle, Wash~ | ington, October 11th, 1929, and Milo | Lon Swanson, born at Tacoma,| Washinton, March 17th, 1931, and for change of their names to Arnold | Lee Savela and Milo Lon Savela; that hearing on said petition has | been set for 10 A. M. March 14th;| | 1945, in said Commissioner’s Court; { and that Hans Jacob Swanson, sometimes known as Hans Jacob | Gunderson, the non - consenting{ father of said children, and all other | persons concerned, are hereby cited | to be and appear in said Court, at; the time and place aforesaid, and show cause, if any they have, why | the adoption and change of names | { should not be granted. | Dated: Juneau, Alaska, January | 15th, 1945. ! FELIX GRAY, | United States Commissioner. | HOWARD D. STABLER, | Petiticners’ Attorney, | Shattuck Building, Juneau, Alaska. First publication, Jan. 15, 1945. Last publication, Jan. 29, 1945, ' cIL[AISTHINFTO[U[LINETE [RIEINITIERNAIL[VIARNRIA| [EININEIARILIEIAIDIEIR]S] | [PIR[EILIAITIE]S] E| dealer advertisin g in the area [TIEINE/MEINT] [EILEIVIAITIEMNGIAIMVIT] (Pl TIEIRIMEIR|O/SIE] [RIA[GIE[D] salutlg Of Saturday’s Puzzle Dry 67. Small depres- 64. English school sion . Affirmative W 66. Pitcher BEYN . Hawser 2. Declare 3. Succession of related things . Full of sharp points Direct . Soft groan 7. Arrogance . Meanings ;|O. McKay, the last three islands.plan.to moye | to Akutan. [ O. M. Brown of Seattle has been{m named Resejtlement Director supervise the transfer and his wife has been appointed nurse. — e FORD AUTO DEALERS PLAN BIG CAMPAIGN ' SEATTLE, Jan. 22—Organization | | factory branch area into a cor-! poration for the purpose of admin- | istering a dealer advertising fund when automobile production is re- | sumed, is announced by D. D.! |Howard, President. | First meeting of the board of directors of the new corporation,, known as the Northwest: Ford Dealers Advertising Association, Inc., was held recently for the purpose of electing officers. They | are D. D. Howard, Seattle, Presi- dent; Catlin Wolfard, Portland, Oregon, Vice President; William Seattle, Secretary- ‘Treasuer. | The board of directors is com-; posed of Howard, Wolfard, McKay, | and these other Ford dealers: W.| L. Teague, Walla Walla; Jos. S. ‘Welty, Wenatchee; W. L. Phillips, Salem, Oregon; Al Heurby, Shelton, | Washington; and H. E. Majer,| Spokane, Washington. | The corporation expects to spend a large advertising fund for Ford when business tonditions return to normal status. The bulk of the ap- propriation will go into newspapers, it was indicated. J. Waltér Thompson Company, advertising agency for the Ford Motor Company, has also been se- lected by the area dealer group as its agency. A A R S P There are about 19,000 deaths in AT ONE OCLOCK,IN THE 7/~ MORNING? BILLFOLDS A THE DAYTIME to) = lz =) = [ of the Ford dealers of the Seattle| =~ Ll R = Z w 2 5 THIMBLE THEA the United States each year from suicides. HEY, SNUFFY I a T-TYPHOON \S A-HEADIN BALLS O' FIRE Y TWS-A-Wev ! LOOKIT THEM WUITE CAPS L SWOOSKIN TOAN| FRO ISN'T THIS "BRINGING UP FATHER LL LEAVE ITON- | CAN'T HEAR ENdd . Upper shell of a turtle . Town in alaine . Charge 2. Comfort YOU CAN ENJOY IT WHLE 1GO TO MY _ROOM AND SEW ILL LEAVE M¥% DOOR OPEN SO | CAN HEAR BOBBY WANTS ING THAT OPERA - -I'M 5 GONNA ASK HER YOU SAY- 1. Meadow Heavy hammer Loat * Stainers . Device for measuring pended . East Indian cereal grass . God of love Huge Ibsen character Kind of wood Added 6. Waste 9. Decompose 50. Singly . Resume Weary . Sfcred image . Canvas shelter SINCE WHEN DOES SHE LIKE\OFERA\ ? WM QT ALSO-I'M SO GLAD

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