The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 23, 1945, Page 7

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, | WANT 9 45 ADS FOR SM.!:> 1 MISCELLANEOUS 1&1/10 HP. OUTBOARD MOTOR. JANITOR SERVICE—Window and | Perfect condition. 186 Gastineau Ave. Opposite Johnson Apts. house cleaning. Reasonable. V. Qui. Phone 346. FOR SALE—4 rooms and bath, PIANOS RENTED—Tuned. Ander-| furn ished. Douglas 383. son Shop. TWO HOUSES—Both completely furnished including electric lights, | radio and washing machine. One acre pat. land, good creek, suit- able for chickens, geese and ducks. 5% miles on Glacier High way. June Gibson. Phone 35 after 10 a. m. GENL. ELECTRIC adjustable floo Sun Lamp, 3-unit electric heater., Douglas 134. 3-BEDROOM furnished house at, 125 Basin Road. Nice view of Channel. Oil furnace, fireplace,| electric range, over-stuffed set.| All newly renovated. Price $4500.| See Merle Rhodes at 431 Seward | Street. | 4-FOOT LOCKER TRUNKS»C&U; Juneau Transfer. COLEMAN OIL HEATER. Phone; Black 165, after 5 p. m. FOR SALE—Highchair. Phone afld 370. FOR SALE—Cash. 4-room house, ! furnished. One-half basement. 945 ! W. 10th St. Call Red 265 for ap- | pointment. FOR/SALE—Trol iana €. 1 long, 8% ft. beam, fully equipped.! Chrysler Crown marine engine, first class condition. See Harbor | Master. I OUPLEX house snd two 3-rocm es and cabin, all furnished | on' Gastineau Ave. Inquire at| ™ Jéheau Paint Store, WANTED-—Job. Experienced dinner, | fry cook or combination. Make real home-made pies. Fast worker. Neat, clean. Nationality, Filipino. 39 years old, married. High School education. White establishment only. Phone 230, Windsor Apts. | dsis | WANTED—Will pay top price for all kinds of second-hand mer- | chandise. Will buy anything. See Lee Swift or call Douglas 764. | ol VA TS AR L 8 vl Rk S ALTERATIONS—Work' g Pearl Trouty, Phone Blue 470. YOUNG MAN—Will work evenings, 6 to 11. Write Empire, 5218. WANTED—Male Cocker Spaniel, six weeks old, brown or red. Also canary, for delivery arch 10. Phone 569. MAN OR WOMAN—With car for part or full time business in Juneau and vicinity. Household Medicines—Food Products, BEx- tracts Complete line. Good profits. Write at once for par- ticulars. “Rawleighs, 306 Adeline St., Oakland, 7, Calif. WANTED — Fine laundry; shirts,| curtains.' Mending. Call Blue 447.| - | WANTED — Stenographer; also, bookkeeper. Permanent positions, good salary. Thirty-eight hour; week. Phone 466. ! WANTED — Doll _bugey, _scooter, | tricycle and old-fashioned gramo- | phone. Phone Blue 370. WANTED TO SUBLET—Apartment for two or three months. Contact Ben .A. McManus, Chief Clerk, House. Phone 866. WANTED—Man with boat, to hunt| KNOWN gold deposit. Write H. A, Hertz, Tenakee, Alaska. s T W A WANTED -— Washing - machine: | Phone Black 150 ,evenings. WANTED-Used furniture. 308 WD- | . FOR BENT l’“é& EEQT —_ Room. in fi;xvate home for gentleman employed : from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Phone 66. e T 3-ROOM FUR. HOUSE—OIl 1ange and bath; also 2-room fur. Apt. Inquire 513 Willoughby Avenue. LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM— Elderly man preferred. Call after 6 p. m. Ellingen Apts. T R S FOR RENT—Stcam-heated rooms. Men only. Haven Rooms. Phone 281. BTEAM HEATED ROOMS. Call i after 3 p. m, 315 Gold Street. WINTER RATES, Seaview Apts. Oil and wood stoves, lights, laun- dry. Phone 236. A 0ST AND FOUND FOUND—Lady's ring. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this adv. . LOST—Plaid wool scarf, Phone 2i'i fiUNDtfizu of glasses. May have/ .same by paying for this adv. FOUND—Two keys on chain. May bhave same by paying for this| | very few (Signed) MACHINELESS Permanent waves. Given in your home if desired.' Phone Red 483 for appointment. HANNAH'S BOARDING HOUSE— Board and room $60 per mcuth., Third ang Main. THE FIXIT SHOP—General light repair work. Phone 567. FJLUARANTEED Realisuc ment. $7.00 Paper Curls, $1 up Lo Beaty Snop. Phone 201 315 Decker Way Perma. F you have empty rooms or apts. for desirable people, inform the| Gastineau ifotel. RED FORCES MASSED ON GREAT ARC 11-Mile Smash Through German Reinforced Lines Announced (Cortinued fromn Page Ome) mans is now ncar, odalin declared | last night in a specia® crder of the best, but as a matter of economy. | {day. He said the great Russian win- Anycne in doubt about the quality [ [ter offensive Liad already cost the Of food served in the Home can Germans more than 1,150,000 men, killed or captured. Zero Hour Has Struck ‘The Moscow radio followed up the Stalin order with a German-lan- guag2 br ast declaring “the zero our I " and added: “the German Army in the to the German people ir tories to stop the war. nct tbe negotiated with the gencrals’ The Germans said the Russians fought into Guben, 51 miles south- river strongheld to the south, but declared the Soviets had been ejected from Guben. Artillery Barrages In the Polish corridor the Russians are fighting close to Gniew, only 32 miles south of Danzig. The Ger- mans conceded the Moscow dis- |patches which said severe, long- range artillery barrages are being directed at roads and railroads lead- ing from Cottbus to Forst, 12 miiles eact. Guben is 25 miles to the nertheast. | Attempts to cross the Neisse were made at Weiwaer, 20 miles sputheast of Cottbus, Moscow reports added. - Selective Service Board Members fo Soon Be Reward {Continued fjrom Page One) ands of little assault boats. Approx- imately 13 feet long and six feet wide, these boats have been made chsolete by the big sea-going LST's and LSI's that now are hitting the beaches. Fishermen, hunters and trappers are discovering they are a {bargain at $560 and disposing of them lat that price leaves the taxpayer kies out of pocket. of the disposal of sur- materials, one result of the reeent investigation has been the jbandles a large.part of the sales, of {an investigation department to check {all complaints. Treasury Secretary | Morgenthau ordered Assistant Sec- retary John Pehle to set up a div- |isicn in Treasury, procurement to ‘dig deep on all sales made and fol- lowed that with instructions to El- ury's investigating agencies, to es- tablish a staff to check on all sur- plus property disposals. STILL SNOW AT SLALOM COURSE SKIERS REPORT Skiers who put in yesterday’s holiday at the Second Meadow re- being “all gone.” They declared skiing conditions at the Slalom Course were ‘“very good,” and that a bit more snow jthis week should make the “better than ever” for next day. The Juneau Ski Club has an- nounced that this Sunday there “positively will be coffee!” Instruc- tion and time trials over a slalom run are scheduled. Races between Junior and Senior teams and a contest for feminine addicts of the “greased slats” are in the of- fing. g Sun- - NOTICE TO AUTOISTS! Beginning now, cars without JOHN MONAGLE, Chief of Police. . !Wallace Porter, follow: ‘| “In connection with your recent stablishment in Treasury, which | mer Irey, chief of all the Treas-| port that the snow is still far Ircml slope | licenses will be taken in and fines' assessed. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU. HANSEN REPLIES T0 COMMENT ON | PIONEERS’ HOME = Letterto leflators Offers | § "Waistlines” as |= i Proof of Food | Followipg the recent biennial in-' spection visit of members of the| . Territorial Legislature to the Plo-| ___ L. . neers'’ Home at Sitka, a letter from Superintendent Eiler Hansen, directed to the respective chairmen R of the Senate and House Terri-'ps torial- Institutions Committees, has been received and read before full| houses of the Legislature. e In his letter, Superintendent = Hansen replies to criticisms in the report of the investigation, directed jat the administration of the home. |Pertinent excerpts from the letter, 3 HEATED THAT I WANT TO WATER FOR TAKE A } | | |addressed to Andrew Nerland and - -] 1 isit to the Pioneers’ Home I am 7% !making the following statement as = |a general explanation of prevailing '} |conditions in the Home. When I gy receive a -transcript of the com- !plaints I shall be pleased to answer lcach and all of them in detail “The complaints evidently cen- ALASKA PAGWOOD/ YOUR BOS5 WANTS YOU ON THE PHONE RIGHT AWAY/ PAGE SEVEN NOW, KEEP MY PLACE FOR ME SIGNULS — Yl-91-4 /2 ILL NIBBLE A BIT OF ME tered around the food. It always 'has, and always will be impossible Ay to serve food in an institution that |will please everybody. I might add 'fr‘agfig:of) |—or anywhere else. | iR “I have now the best Kitchen 4 staff that has worked in the Home (during my eleven and one-half Iyears of administration. Further- & mere, there are at present three © |cooks to take care of what ordi- narily was accomplished by two. S “I buy the best food in the!™ market. I do this not only because I want the Pioneers to have the @ THANK You, || F rLL 6T ( MR. WALSH . Ceee, TMGLAD I A YOU THINK SO. s examine my purchase vouchers on file in the Auditor’s office. “The food question, therefore, as far as I am concerned, resolves itself into a matter of quantity and | variety. “The Legislature has always been most genercus in dealing with my & budget. It will be recalled they [ spiked it $7,000 one time for eggs. & Neither the Chef nor myself are out to make a record. Especially! not at the expense of any resident | of the Home. There is never a - 2 S8 STANDING BY TO § A\ TEST ou. MR | QYAN THIS 15 RADIO TOKYO! THE NEWS IN ENGLISH & > uaranteed. | ¢ast of Berlin, and Foist, another Shortage of food on the table Naturally, the quantity of each variety has to be estimated closely. | It has, of course, happened that | one particular item ran out. But! there never has been any time, at | any meal, that there has not been plenty to eat. While we have re-' ceived many men suffering from malnutrition there is not a single man during my time as Superin- tendent that has complained on that score. The best proof I can fur that subject is the P R TR o v YOUR FIRST JOB WIL. BE TO TRANSPLANT > | THESE FROM THE FLATA 54 7O THE FOT. et A rnish on waistlines of the men in the Home. “I regret the Committee did not | have, more, time. to mvestigute‘n;t & details of ‘operation ‘pertaining” B the Home. I am certain that a wvisit {to Goddard would have disclosed |conditionts "there to be eminently |satisfactory. | I am informed that little, if any, criticism was directed against me personally. However, since I am primarily responsible for the op- eration of the Home, the welfare lof its residents and the acts and | 'efficiency of its employees, it is b incumbent upon me to answer and | refute any and all complaints that | & are not justified, and if they be w3 meritorious to make corrections and | adjustments accordingly. To that! end I welcome any constructive | criticism or suggestions that will | improve conditions in the Pioneers’ Home.” 2 |COASTAL 6 YOU THROUGH THESE DRIFTS, NINA. =R 4 ARUNES o CARRIES 22 FARES In a flight to Tenakee yesterday, | !Alaska Coastal Airlines carried R. 7 2, | IN HEWARK .Y WILL FOLLOW IMMEDIATELY g BEFORE YOuU CAME A~ AND COLLEGE AT . NIGHT T~ WELL~ MY WELL SEE THAT & YA DO WHAT | YER BROMERS, [ WHY ANT 3 IM STUDYING MEDICINE YA h YA IN A | STARTED A PREMED COUR:E. J 777 WE WAS DEFERRED IN THE DRAFT-HES GOT TRRE BROWERS OVERSEAS, ONE AT TARAWA ,ONE ON D-DAY. A IT WORKS .. THE CONFIRMING POCTORED RECORD ) SIGNAL TO MR. RYAN EYANS STATION HAS <\ IN THE PRE-ARRANGED AYE, AYE, | SYNCHRONIZED WITH \CODE...NOW, IF THE THE TOKYO TRANSMISSION | JAPS DON'T CATCH ON COMES IN CLEARLY JTo THIS BEFORE WE AND DISTINCTLY / CAN UTILIZE IT. ON BOARD AN AMERICAN WARSHIP STANDING OFF THE INDO-CHINA COAST.. 3 3 BACK AT NORMAL SPEED)] THEN SLOWLY.. OKAYS WITH HELD WELL, THIS 18 INTERESTING! AS SCARCE AS IT 16 A WOMAN'S HAT AND HAND+ ¥ WOULDN'T CARE IF You CAME RiGHT QUT OF N_THE PENITENTIARY, 1ALLY, CERT:E, b 21D YOU WORK HERE P /1 PRIVATE ’ LUAATZEN |15 A CHUKE SOMEBODY'S DONE EVERY DAY’ FOR THE WAS MY JoB HERE, FROM THE TIME e I WAS A d TINY GIRL. |W. Canfield to that port. Juneau to Sitka—Al Anderson, Charles Stafford, J. W. Rhodes, | {Justine De Wolf, John B." Moon, | Sasha V. Calvin, Jack Gucker. BEGGING THE Sitka to Juncau—Elmer White-|™ |GENERALS PARDON, SIR, horne, Arnold Austin, Kathleen |f Daniel, Josephine Carter, Albert Gaségégw“;"g\é\% § Patterson, F. M. Paulo, Bert Flatre, {Albert Fleek, James Nelson and Ray Perkins. Juneau to Haines—Grant A. Mc- w2 | Murray, Carolyn Perkins and Ira Powell. « Skagway to Juneau—F. L. Phelps. s FROM SEATTLE Roy C. Simes, registered from | Seattle, is a guest at the Baranof. JIGGS PICKED LP BY A BATTLESHIP JUST OFF PSST ! ENAP TO ATTENTION, SNUFFY, HERE COMES THE TWE BONIN \SLANDS --- TAKE A RADIOGRAM TO THE SKIPPER, SNODGRASS LISTEN-1 WANT YOU TO GO P AND PACK MY BROTHER'S THINGS-1 WANT YOU TO SHOW HIM A LITTLE KINDNESS! 5 AH-GOOD NEWS MAGGIE'S BROTHER [ 15 LEAVIN'_ TODAY — THIS WILL. BE EASY- HE ONLY | HAS ONE SUIT- SO THERE'LL BE LITTLE IN

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