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MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1945 . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU. ALASKA > PAGE SEVEN > WANT ADS ALASKA TAKES (B | TR FOR SALE MODEL A FORD ENGINE, com- plete, good condition. Also 1933 Ford Coupe with model A 19-inch tires. 930 West 12th St. BABY BUGGY, $850; bathinette, $3.50. Phone Green 163. ONE AMERICAN SUN FLAME circulating heater; one -ladys Hudson Seal coat, size 36. Phone Black 624, after 6 p. m. FOR SALE-12-Gauge Remington automatic, with fine leather case, $85. Call 663 before noon. {ARGE HOUSE at 725 Basin Road. Phone Blue 185, or call at 431 Seward Street. | LOST—Gold bow earring, pink| stone. Screw-on type. Reward‘ Return to Empire. 1 AT L ¥ SEATTLE; March 19.—Alaska took lead in Pacific fish freezing in 4, putting up a larger pack than iy other division of the industry, ind exceeding its Yargest previous by approxmately 26 “FOUND:Lad's;s ring. Owner may | | have same by identifying and i paying for this adv. LOST—Pair reading_glasses plastic frames. Reward. Please| call Black 380. | _____ iproduction Natural plastic |per cent. | case. Reward.| This was evident from the induse’ try's annual statistics, presented in — |the 1945 Pacific Fisherman Year- ! bock published for 43 years by Cap- | tain Miller Freeman of Seattle WANTED North American canned salmon WANTED TO RENT—Baby crib| 'O : i e Tor Too mnie ond o THO e [T Lo A L vears, due to a scarcity of fish in LOST — Glasses. yims, tan leather Return to Empire. F(;:e S:‘,I.‘E:jti ::;:m‘c:;‘lc' d;;fi:: A R Phone Blue 270 yyquaily all districts. The Sacra- Blue 185. 2 ; WANTED—A davenport. Phone 689.|mento River a notable excep- 2 YA \tion. This stream where salmon FOR SALE—Upright piano, good condition; also sled and skis with V\'Al;iTED..;Homp for male 6 weeks|canning had its origin had one of old puppy. Call 315. the largest runs on record in 1944 ! California sardine fishing in Oc- les. Write Empire R . L e BB ey ¥ WANTED — Small furnished apt. f(ober Whs the heaviest sver Ebowh, 5319. FOR SALE—2-Bedroom, fully fur- nished house in Douglas. Phone Green 1720. $85. $8. chest of drawers, Buggy, en 163. dresser, Sun-lamp, §30. Baby Bathinette, $3.50. Gr THREE-HOLE ELECTRIC RANGE, with oven. Call Percy's Cafe. FOUR flat-bottom skirfs, 9-912-10- 12 ft. each. Built by Albert Wal- lace. For price and information, Phone Blue 220, after 5 p. m. 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 357, after 10 a. m. FOR SALE_ Highchair. Phone Blue Call Room 412, Baranof Hotel. | hut shortage of help, particularly in = — _ . |the canneries, prevented the indus- WA}T‘VTED TS, nENT;Pmd“:' C““;Lry from canning the enormous Green 470 between 2 and & p. M-} quantity of sardines.sought by the WANTED—An oil range suitable War Food Administration, which for restaurant. Call Bus Depot,|a® the end of the season was taking 108. 100 per cent of production. ke e i) Tuna canning touched its second WANTED—Experienced Drug Store |highest all-time mark in 1944 due help for relief work. Write Em- to the astonishing yield of Alba- pire 5317. lcore in Oregon and Washington, ——— ————————————— |where the catch was much more WANTED TO BUY -— Vacuum than twice as large as ever before. | cleaner. Phone Green 353. In California a steady gain in pro- oy duction followed the partial re- |building of a fleet which was strip- {ped to meet the demand of war for |emergency v 1s. Fish freezing on the Pacific Coast in 1944 was by far the largest in history, exceeding 100 million pounds for the first time, and surpassing the previous record by 25 per cent. This was due to technical improvement and growing consumer acceptance of modarnly frozen fish as a superior article, cften fresher than unfroz- SMALL ADDING MACHINE — In | good condition. Call Gastineau | Hotel. WANTED—Small furnished apart- ment. Call Room 407, Gastineau Hotel. WANTED — Electric washing ma- * chine. Phone Douglas 335. WANTED—Steady job in Juneau. I am 34 years old and am me- Z =} - 2 wosvamrom |LEAD IN FISH: <5 | BLONDIE! 370. chanically inclined, but will take en obd A S | anything. Write F. Jacobs, 1623 i x ! il A FORSAL er “Diana”33 ft.| g Burnside St. Portland, 14 Vitamin liver production was well long, 8% ft. beam, fully equipped. Qregon. g ' maintained in 1944, although chief Chrysler Crown marine engine,| —- L iaiigeige (o |velisntesing placed on greater-than- first class condition. See Harbor | ALTERATIONS—Work guaranteed. €Ver catches of dogfish, off-setting bkt Pearl Prouty. Phone Blue 470, | decline in the catch of soupfin shark, k2 > SNk S e i s M s | - < ] run BENT WANTED—Male Cocker Spaniel, g six weeks old, brown or red. Also | —. canary, for delivery arch 10.} SENATE K“.I_S o |t 2-ROOM fur. apartment. Oil range, Phone 569. bath. $18 monthly. 513 Wil-| Ea CEALE TS B R T Dou lA D K & | loughby. WANTED TO SUBLET—Apartment o . __| for two or three months. Contact i STEAM HEATED ROOM-Phone| Ben A. McManus, Chief Clerk, APPROA(H Blll g Green 675. House. Phone 866. | 0 SR | | S e s e i S 81 So. Franklin St., $100.00 per| ’ Governor's Statement-Or-| ganic Act Obsolefe- | Causes Comment month, unfurnished. Phone 562. | BUD FOSTER DIDN'T LIKE HIS LANDING UNDER FIREATIWO FOR RENT—Steam-heated rooms. Men only. Haven Rooms. Phone 281. STEAM HFATED ROOMS. Cal after 3 p. m. 315 Gold Street. Alaska’s Senate whiled away the >-| e e N ThL. i7" SRR DRB RS LT s G SR hours Saturday afternoon by get- © —IL wg;’;rflz wfl“:*‘_:m“l“vl‘l" l:‘s" Front-line reporting isn't just all ting all rolled up over a batch of «f TELL 'EM I WAS RIDING e ““23: oves, lights, 1aun- o160y and fan-mail, according to a minor measures that had been €X- s} THE RODS AND GOT B 274008 letter written by Wilson “Bud” Fos- pected to sail smoothly by. & Occasioning most discussion was Rep. Fred Hanford’s House Joint Resolution No. 3. Following failure, ¢ to 8, of a motion to indefinitely Senator N. R. Walker ter, to his wife, the former Birdie Jensen of Juneau. ~ISCELLANEOUS : el i Bud, who broadcast the Marine PIANOS RENTED—Tuned. Ander- landings on Iwo Jima froin Admir- wrote that he son Shop. al Turner’s flagship, postpone, — —- — went over with the first landing to had stricken that portion of the THE FIXIT eneral light tha beach, where the Japs had measure calling for paving of $18,- 000 worth of Ketchikan sidewalks. Then, with a Douglas dock ap- proach and a Wrangell seawall left in it, the resolution was held up for general attack on three princi- pal grounds: 1) it should have been 2 memorial, not a resolution; 2) it would set a precedent of expending Territorial road funds within . in- corporated towns; 3) the resolu- tion is illegal under the Organic Act. Two witnesses called before the repair work. Phone 567. thousands of guns trained, and only Pes | the sheer man-power of the Marines v ipushed the Japs back. He said he "l:;m" ;Z:?L Psalper Ct:.rh. $1 “p‘iwem about 15 yards, then dug in nsqu- e ’w e b {and lay there for five hours before cker Way ihe could move, with all the shells F you -have empty rocms or apu.‘burscing over him. He spc_m D-Day on the islands, and two nights in a g;:::t::bl;oae:ple. fnfop mei!qx-hcle, and thinks he was either . “just lucky, or else dug in too deep.” | Bud tcld of helping to take WARNER BACK {wounded Marines back, some of Peter Warrier, of Warner's Ma- whom died on the way, and of one JLAKANTEED Realisic chine Shop, has returned to Ju- marine who was killed just a few p; i : e ¢ 3 f s lly def re: neau after a brief visit in the feet from him, by a Jap sniper, :‘lrl;nkw:;ar;::llifi ,,;:fl‘:ed}? :fmf States. whereupon the dead Marine's buddy 1, support, and William A. Hega S e el NI S (T - it < gt R e e o ;’l‘j‘:;f‘hr‘:;‘;“‘x’_ap sniper alive with 2 miohway Engineer, opposed. In his e |testimony Mr. Hesse brought out cAnu Tnansmn Bud said he was on the Admiral's 4,04 gyuring discussion of a similar iship for five days, and never slept proposal at a meeting of road of- GASOLINE ALLEY |at all during ti i i HAULING dndl CRATING X\Vualn gu;;“’plt:::t u:::e.!em}/:fs ltch(; (mials 1sthe QfREe.pis BOV. Clneh - DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL | |water in 10 soconds, which he says 1S SOme time ago, the ducstion Phone 344 Phone 344 | |is a “real thrill” % 10:_ legality of .such measures had | i wedatar s 5 arisen. | e — ud Foster is well-known here in| “opp’ Governor, Mr. Hesse stated, | Juncau, where he was with KINY, - | before going to Fairbanks, then to hd Iayored “the) cghatigtion . gug- NBC as a broadcaster. gested at that time and had re- ! marked that he believed the Or- HAIR STYLED | \u,,\\ ioucanon ganic Act is ‘“obsolete.” Senate ! President Edward D. Coffey, who MEMORIAL TABLED : 'o. D. Cochran Gruening and got from him by Experls | WE SPECIALIZE rted ng a recess, a little later, Senator contacted Gov. a The Territorial Senate Saturday tabled House Joint Memorial No. 17, {by Rep. Warren A. Taylor, which prayed for transfer of Indian Edu- have understood his remark cor- gp m | cation and Relief facilities, responsi- Yectly. Senator Coffey, however, Ibility and appropriations to me»when that information was- dis- Cold Territory of Alaska. |closed, again stepped forward to < | The concensus of Senate opinion Substantiate Mr. Hesse's declara- Waving | was that the Department of the In- t'OJ"- A ¥ terior might be only tco willing to ust before the vote was taken Permanents oblige— that all responsibility for O House Joint Resolution No. 3, | Styling |Indian education might be turned Senator Frank Gordon declared |over to the Territorial Department himself not convinced by the opin- | Shaping of Education, but accompanied by ion of Attorney General Henry Roden that such special legislation greatly-trimmed Federal appropria- tions. |is not valid ‘under the Organic | ———————— 1Acl. Three other Senators nppar-i Hours 9 A, M. to 6 P. M. ! CAA MAN HERE ‘enuy thought along the same line. | George Livingston, of the Civil|The final vote showed 12 Senators U3 i Aeronautics Authority, is a guest opposed and Senators Gordon, gy Beauty Salon| lat the Hotel Juneau. Walker, Green and Nerland voung‘u OPEN EVENINGS BY i lfor passage. | - ™= HARRY SHIPPEE HERE Harry Shippee, former resident | of Juneau, is here on business to, Cioodnews Bay where he has plati- | APPOINTMENT jpum property, Mrs. Shippee at one time operated a beauty shop on PHONE 538 Baranof Hotel Building {Seward Street. rrrrrrrrrrorres e rerd B e statement that Mr. Hesse must not .z | ’l‘Hl)‘ll}LE THEATRE - ‘\% 27BANY Dugasn , TTERBUG GENEeAT ) NERATIO) CAUsED 2 semacy ] POREY Eélpqfic‘e"gr 2\ 7 KNOBBY, WHAT 1S IT 2 COMMANDER LEONARD. SOMETHING === Mr. Hesse's statement. Dur- . ISUPREME SINITH 3 ‘WHEW! WoT A |was present at the meeting, sup- = |INSPECTION THAT SEEMS TO BE THE MATTER. 50, RYAN, THE QUISLINGS AND THE JAPANESE WILL NOT BOTHER U5 FOR A LITTLE WHILE.., o BUMPED OFF THE TRAIN, —— B A N GOLLY, FUZZY, IT WON'T BE QUITE SOM GWE us! BEAUTIFUL ... WHILE You WeRE PARLEYING WITH THE JAPS, WEVE WHOEVER THEY ARE, MAYBE TALK -~ SAY SOMETHING . 4 HON DO YOU GET THAT WAY, SKEEZIX? IT'LL BE E TIME YET. g ‘l/r WIT A WE LOOKED AT ME TOENAILS YoU DID NOT FIND YOUR. INTREPID NOTE THIE TYPICAL JITTER BUG! LOW FOREHEAD — WEAK MENTALITY, NO STAMINAF | NOW ASK HIM - WHAT DID 4Ou BAT AS HE HANDED ME THIS\OH- OH JEEPERS+JOE PALOOKA LOST ON FLIGHT IN SOUTH 3 UNTIL THE YANKEES CAN GUARANTEE THAT THE DRAGON LADY GUERRILLA X TROOPS WILL RETURN TO CHINA SAFELY — TERRY SHALL ENJOY MY HOSPITALITY — ELSEWHERE ! THAGA LIEE ! AT GUY IS A OMBIE AN YERA )~ WENTRILOWST KNOBBY, OLD KID- 11 DONT KNOW ( SAY NOTHIN' THAT'L L. ALWAYS YOU WANT TO DANCE ! NEVER DO YOU WORK. GO TO YOUR ROOM. PBUT IT CAN'T BE! ITLL HAVE TO BE R IN THE NEXT DECK. FOR UNTIDY SHOE STRINGS ? YEAH, A LITTLE IODINE AND SOME GAUZE— AND SET, TRACY. YOURE AN OPTIMIST, SARGE. ITLL BE YOU'LL BE ALL \COMPANY. YOURE TALKIN' ABOUT | HECK,NO! WHEN THE JAPS WILL FOLD UR OF COURSE. SHE JUST WANTED TO SAY HELLO. OUR HEROINE . I+1 AIWEEZ CODE To MR. RYAN IN INDO=CHINA ...MY COMPLIMENTS -AND IF ALL |5 WELL WITH HIM, HE MAY OPEN UP WITH FULL POWER AT 0330 HOURS ~—IN THE CLEAR... GERTIE! GORGEOUS GERTIE? WHEN THAT GI, GORGEQUS INFANT, _ FINALLY ARRINES, BACK HOME ! YOU _COULD ALWAYS TELL. WHAT THE WEATHER WAS GOING TO BE-GRANDPA'S BUNIONS WERE THE WEATHER BAROMETER- IT TOOK A LOT OF COAXING TO GIT FATHER TO PUT ON ASHIRT ON SUNDAY-BUT IT TOOK SIX MEN TO PUT ON HIS SHOES — MAZIE O'HANAHAN LOST HER G SWEETHEART-TH' BUTCHER = INE NIGHT-HE SAT A LITTLE TOO CLOSE TO A GAS JET AND HIS CELLULOID SHIRT AND COLLAR EXPLOLC #