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THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1942 | Copy must be in the office by ? o'clock in the afternoon to in- sure insértion on same day. We accept ads’ over teuephone from persons listed in telephone directory. Count five average words o the Mne. Daily rate per line for consecu- Wve insertions: One day ... 100 Additional days ... 5o WMinimum charge ... .50¢ FOR RENT FORSALE = | CLASSIFIED HONEA FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED | \ "IRIPLE" IS GOAL Ted Williams, Bosfon Shug- FURfi;é;IED cozy ap_tznment, close in. Phone Red 330. FURNISHED Apartment, 2 bed-| rooms. Phone Red 600. §TEAM heated apt, 3 rooms and bath. Klein Apts. Phone Black 763. FURNISHED home on beach at Auk Bay, patented ground, good location near end of bus line. Inquire Auk Bay Grocery. Terms can be arranged with responsible party, Art Lundberg. 30-ft. fully equipped trolling hoat. Spauldings, Auk Bay. 3-ROOM furnighed apt. Phone 385. BAROUMES Apts.; 4 rooms fur- nished, hot water day and night, electric range, refrigerator and Jaundry conveniences, garage. $27 montnly. Phone Douglas 132. VACANCY at Ellingen Apartments. DUPLEX 4 room and bath, redec- orated, new oil range, $0. Phone 621, N | FURNISHED 3 room apt. Oil hea:- er, $20 month. 426 1st St. East. HILLCREST — ONE VACANY. PHONE 439. 8 ROOM fur. apt. with bath, ofl heat, reasonable rent. Phone Blue | 139. | — s VACANCY, Fosbee Apt. Phone 443 | ¢ ROOM furnished house, oil heat. Phone Blue 275 after 5 p.m. Triangle | FURNISHED apartment, | Bldg. Phone 253 or see Btani Grummett. i | TWO ROOM and bath apartments. | Oll ranges $16 monthly. Phone | 621. § ROOM furnished house, yphone Red 404. ¢ ROOM apt. steam heated, electric range, cold and hot running wat- er, private bath. Phone 569. 8 ROCM fur. apt. for rent. Stein- beck Apts. | | ONE office roon. for rent. First| National Bank Bldg. | VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. § ROOM FURNISHED apartment; also 5-room strictly modern un- furnished house, §08 5th St. PUR. apis, easy mept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes, Seaview Apts. apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. e & ROUM nicely fur. stm. heated| apts. and houses. Windsor Apts.i FOR W—Apmmmu, mene! at office 20th Century Bldg. i TURN your old goid‘into value,| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. QUARANTEED Reslistic Perma- | nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, 81 up | Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 301 315 Decker Way. | HELP WANTED | {HELP WANTED — Woman to do second work in private home. Expericnced person preferred or will take young woman to train. Phone 21. PUT ANEW HAT ON YOUR BUDGET DOLLAR TOP EVERY: PURCHASE WITH Py em SAVINGS STANPS |CAA OFFICIAL HERE WITH WIFE ON WAY TO ANCHORAGE OFFICE \ W. R. Peterson, who is with the ' ICAA, is in Juneau today with Mrs. [Peterson on his way to his head- quarters in Anchorage. | 5-ROOM house, furnished, excel- lent view. A bargain, Shattuck Agency. 5 Slightly used tires with 1937 Ply- mouth Sedan. $250 cash. Inquire 429 Willoughby after 5 p. m. 5-ROOM furnished house, 2 sun porches. 320 6th St. Phone Red 400. 11 BEDS complete, 10 dressers, stands, stoves, oil burner for range, chairs, etc. Call rear door Sanita.y Barber Shop, 273 South JFrankin. Phone Red 392. plete with return system—almost new —real bargain. Triangle Cleaners. OCK mill wood $6 unit, delivered. Kindling $6.75 unit, del. Limited amt. Order now. Juneau Lum- “ ber Mills, Phone 358. MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacier Highway. Montgomerys. 4 ROOM furnished house, large lot, close In. P. O. Box 1075, Juneau. WANTED ¢ICTURFS taken of last week’s Slamboree events. Call at Miet- tinen Apts.,, 4th and Harris. | MAID for general housework. Phone Green 381, Scarcity of essential tommodities and ineffective price control has caused an abnormal price advance in Finland cities, says the Depart- ment of Commerce. SUBS MADE ger, Is Trying for B. B. Crown i BY BOB BROEG | BOSTON — Thumpin’ Ted Wil- |liams, who hits to live and lives !to hit, thinks this year he'll win |thé American league triple batting crown he.so narrowly missed last season—and maybe hit over 400 again. No American leaguer has won the triple crown—led the league in hit- ting, home runs and runs batted |the feat in 1934. | Williams, slim slugger of the Bos- [ton Red Sox, bashfully admitted he might seem ‘“cocky” but he insisted' “Honestly, though, I think I'll lead the league in hitting, in home runs and in runs batted in. That's my biggest goal—next to a pennant for the Red Sox—and I think I can do it. “You know, I feel that I ought to get a hit every time I go to bat, and while that probably sounds silly, that’s the kind of confidence I like to have. If I hit like blazes from now to the end of the season, maybe I can hit over 400 again. Harry Heilmann thinks so.” Exercises Every Morning Williams, who posted a gaudy 406 batting mark last season, loves to talk about hitting—particularly with Harry Heilmann, former De- troit slugger, and now a radio sportscaster there. Heilmann's 403 in 1923 was the American league's last .400-or-better average until the curley-haired, 23-year-old Williams turned the trick last year. “Heilmann insists that I've got to believe in myself, that if T don’t, no one else will,” Ted said. “But I not only believe in myself, T tr; to do something about it. That why I try to hit as often as I can, why I've always got a bat in my hands. That, too, is why I take cal- isthenics in the morning to strengthen my hands, wrists, arms [New York Yankees' Joe DiMagglo. |in driving teammates across the {in—since Lou Gehrig accomplished | combined are considerable by base- ball men as responsible for his bat- ting brilliance. Two-Thirds of Goal With a three-year major league average of .356, Williams boosted his total home run output ta 91 last season with 37 round-trippers, high for both leagues, and drove in 120 runs—only five fewer than the leading total batted across by the Y Failure to win' the runs-batted-ip title cost him the coveted triple crown, however. But at mid-season this year, Williams was far in front plate, also in home runs. Only his batting average, still a sight for sore eyes, was off the 1941 pace. His slow start, he explained, probably was attributed to “npt, enough hitting practice at spring| training, though I'm not sure that la Tot of bases on balls—limiting imy chances to hit—wasn't the real cause.” And he added, grinning? “You see, I got more walks than |anyone else last year (145), but |most of them didn’t come until after the all-star game. By then I al- (ready had built that batting aver- age up. Guess I scared a few people that day—mostly pitchers!” Williams’ drmatic two-out-in- the-ninth home run gave the Amer- jican league a 9-7 victory over the National league ali-stars for Ted's “biggest thrill.” And the scene of the classic—Briggs stadium, De- |troit—he described as the park in | which he most likes to hit. . Own Park Is Tough | “Yep, the Tigers’ park and then ithe Browns' park (Sportsman’s park, St. Louis) dre my favorites. |Our home field (Fenway park) is tough with that long right field.” Occasionally a Peck's bad boy, |the youthful star sulks once in jon their constitutional privilege |of exercising their vocal chords in| | uncomplimentary fashion at his ex- | |pense. Voluntarily, he brought up ithe subject that recently cost him $250 in a “loafing” fine levied by Joe Cronin, rock-jawed Red Sox manager. “I'm sorry when something like that happens,” Williams said, his handsome boyish face serious for a moment. “I'm sorry because God as blessed me with ability—and |I've had good luck, too.” He has begun attending morn- ing trade school courses in mathe- matics and related subjects, in ordre to prepare himself for the navy air corps in which he has enlisted i and shoulders.” Almost skinny, with 170 pounds on his six-foot three and one-half inch frame, the left-handed power- house nevertheless possesses the strong arms and sinewy wrists—plus better-than-perfect eyesight — that QUEEN GIVES SPEECH HERE 10 CONGRESS chaser from President . . . Al During Capifal Visit WASHINGTON, Aug. 6—Wilhel mina of the Netherlands, r Queen in her own right to visit the United States, told Congress Itoday that “No Surrender” remainis the motto of her people, suffering though they are under the alien rule of the invaders of Asia and Europe. The monarch, who is now con- Récsives 173-foof Sub-| first | iductmg her Government in Exile |Mass., addressed a joint session of |the House and Senate. |from a quiet, rented estate at Lec, | as a reserve. But he still finds |time to go fishing after a ball |game at_home. | “Almost every evening after a |game here I go out fishing to re- llax, and I don’t eat dinner until| about 9 o'clock. GHANDIMAY | LEAD REVOLT OF INDIANS Deadlock InevifableinNe- gotiations Over Independence n (By Associated Press) A deadlock in the crisis arising | | | i awhile when cash customers stand | next up in hitting practice. And, brother, that's something I never miss!” - JUNEAU RESIDENTS TAKE CAA COURSE Three Juneau residents have been selected by the Civil Aeronautics Adminis ion to be trained by the CAA in its Aircraft Communicator Training Program for Alaska. They are Allen D. .Tallman, Mrs. Mary F. Tallman and Mrs. Alice F. Leighton. - eee — U. 'S. MARSHALL MAKES TRIP WITH PRISONERS U.. S. Marshall William O. Ma- heney left by boat today for the 'Miss Kay Mitchell Is Here on Way to Fairblfl\ks to Wed | Miss Kathryn M. Mitchell, for- mer commercial teacher in the| Juneau Public Schools and secre- tary to A. B. Philligs, superintend- ent, arrived here from the south| yesterday and is in Juneau await- ing plane transportation to Fair- banks. Miss Mitchell amd Leo Lorenz, pilot with Pan American Air-| ways, Alaska Division, whose en- gagement, was announced here last| spring, will be married soon after her arrival in Fairbanks they will make their home. Since the close of school the latter part of May, Miss Mitchell | where | i States, taking several prisoners {o has been visiting her family in! Nyssa, Oregon, Jeges i BT . Island of New 1. Apropos York state: 4. Blanched abbr. 9. Corroded 35. Tresigss piain § ¢ n Florida 13. Roman house- 38, Occasionai symbol for 13. Wear away erblum I4. Small_explosion 39. Spinning toy & Batore 41 Presented 42, City In Nevada 16. Lukewarm 44, Nestle 7. Leaf of the 46. Cook with dry Dalmyra heat palm 47, Shelter 18, Tie 48" Attire 20 Thin paper 50, Abandon 22, Assoclate of 53 Pertaining to Joshua vinegar 2. Muko edging 56. Collertion of 2. Ovens facts 27. Calls torth 67. Make speeches: 31 Arrow polson humorous 32, Buckeye state 59, Greek latter ELL A88 A 7 F' 'INQUEST SET FOR MURDER VICTIM HERE Hoonah Native, William Watson, Shot Near Pelican City The top of his head blown off, the body of William Watson, Hoo- out of India’s demand for immed- | ijate independence from Great Bri- | tain appeared inevitable today. | There was conjecture, however‘j | that President Roosevelt might ad- | dress an eleventh hour appeal for | India not to complicate “the task of those who are figthing for. the | preservation of human freedom.” The aboye quotation is from Sec retary of State Hull's recent broad- {cast in which Hull, without men- tioning Indid by n#me, emphasized nah napiye, was brought to Juneau today g Charles Raatikainen of Pelican” City on his boat and is now in the Charles W. Carter morgue here pending coroner’s in- quest, Watson was shot on the morn- ng of August 3 near his home at elican City with a 30-30 rifle, of- | ficers said. His wife, Mary Watson, is being held in jail here pending investi- B ddENN W AN JEENN N /Al B AR A N JuN EEEN WdEN NEW SECRET | Mysterious Witness Gives Important- Testimony ~Has Formula WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.—A mys- terious Mr. Murray today told the |'Senate Military Sub-committee of a formula for making concrete subs, and the formula is so secret he said he did not want the of- ficial stenographers to take down | | helmina. Transferning the ship| what he said, Later Chairman Lee waited 45 minutes for the man to appear at a public hearing. The inventor, chemist or what- ever he was, asked for an execu- tive session and declined to iden-| tify himself within the hearing of reporters. He told Chairman Lee he would prefer that the stenographers not fecord his remarks and at his re- quest a closed hearing was granted and Murray gave his testimony. After the hearing, Lee told the newsmen he was convinced con- | crete could be used to manufacture cargo carrying subs. RAID TODAY LONDON, Aug. 6—Two German raiders machine-gunned the streets southwest of London late today, but the principal casualty was the clock on a church tower. No bombs were dropped. | She said: “Imaginé what it Et,o be under bondage; to a proud {country to be subject to harsh, alien rule. What would be the American answer if the 'invader tried to cover his wholesale, sys- concentration camp, or the &h?n ination of hostage practice?” After her visit to the Capitol, the Queen drove to the Washing- ton Navy Yard, where she received from the President a new, 173-foot steel subchaser named Queen Wil- under the Lend-Lease Law, the | President said, the Dutch peopls once more are fighting for inde- | pendence, “once more may they |win it and maintain it.” JAPS CLAIM NEW GAINS, TOKYO, Aug. 6—Japanese head- quarters announced late this after- noon that Japanese naval units have occupied the strategic points of Kei, Aur and Tanimbat islands in the Arufura Sea, north of Australia, be- tween Timor and New Guinea. They said the occupation was carried out July 30. ———.— — BUY DEFENSE STAMPS | means to 4 -liberty-loving country | temati¢ pillage with a firibg squad, | }fant, Mr. and Mrs. James Pride, adventure. AUSTRALIA | tional Reésources Planning Board, , vacation visit in Sitka. that American sympathy is with th ation of the case. No charge had freedom seeking peoplés and re- | been filed late this afternoon. served for thése who “by their ac Felix Gray, Coroner, is {o hold | show therselves to bé worthy of it.” | an inquest tomorrow morning at Barring a late minute compromise, | 10 o'clock. the All-India Congress will be in, & utmorise. Ghandl, 10, lead India’s PIONEER PRIEST HAS FORTIETH ANNIVERSARY | | | ‘ \ 390,000,000 people in a “mass strug- . gle on non-violent lines on the wid- est possible scale” against British rule. In Bombay, an All-India Congress working committee declared that it is hopeless to appéal to Biitaih o i The fortieth anniversary ‘of Dean e C. E. Rice’s ordination to the N- ( ‘. “ | priesthood was observed this morn- ;) : |ing by Holy Communon service in m | Holy Trinity Cathedral. AR 6 | His first assignment after his 'll‘ '! m‘v ordination was Alaska and it was il only a few days later that he left Passengers for wi mfl,senttle on his way to Alaska. | Coastal Mfli;& su:d&:y w?rlé ;. A.| The young priest had never Morgan, Margaret ton, Agnes;«‘vefi" mountains before, or the sea Hiltz, Mrs. C. V. Kay, Herb Knud- |and the trip to Alaska back in sen, Mrs. M. E. 'm.nehfirt and in- (1902 was the beginning of a great The journey to Inter- | Marilyn Pride, Scott C. Lynch and ior Alaska on his way to Circle on Earl D. McGinty. the Yukon took him more then a Leaving here today with ACA for month. Delayed in Dawson, hé Ketehikan were W. C. Arnold, A. R. out of money. Meals at $1.00 eac! for Petersburg, Bertha Mooare. SRR . e SR MRS. KAY GOES HOME Mrs. C. V. Kay, who has becen visiting in Juneau for several days, left for her home in Sitka today via ACA plane. ———e mu Ann Hirqunn. of the Na-| xpense account, His first job after his arrival in circle was to put a floor in the church and hospital there and today—forty years later—when a 1eporter-called at Trinity Cathedral |he was preparing to finish a floor recently put in the basement of the church. He has been a car- penter ever since he came to Alas- ka, he said. 3 has retiirned fo Juneay after a short ran |High tide 1 |Low tide Tilley. and George E. Patterson and |1.ad not been provided for in his |Figh tide Phone 24 Phone 16 SUNSHINE POTATO CHIPS BY LOOSE-WILES PACKED IN ATTRACTIVE COOKIE CANS Also in 5-ounce packages Serve with Cold Meats, Sardines, Shrimp and assorted Cheese. SOLD BY PIGGLY WIGGLY FOR BEST DELIVERY SERVICE PLEASE GET ORDERS IN EARLY! Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle 60. Little child 64. After song Took the part of 65. No: Scotch “orded cloth DOWN 63. Decp reverence 1. Fish sauce . Young salmon . Molasses . Divisions of a corolla . Mountain ridge . Cut oft . Prepare for the | press . Surrender t . Marginal note | . Kind of balsam . Fencing sword . Wind indicators . Amerlcan Indian 23. Acted . Short skirts 6. Protuberance on the skull | . Cover the inside . Youthful years . Wooden shoe . Roughly elliptical e 7/ . Orlental . Turn to the right . Move back . Considered . Information . Sufficlent: poetic tumble erus of the Virginla wi'low . Sleeveless garment Bl In March 1803, the young priest went over the trail through bliz- zard* weather to Fairbanks, follow- | ing the stampede there 1 | aad conducted the first church service in the new town in one of its three buildings—a saloon. Most of the last forty years have been spent in Alaska. He lo°t in 1906 and was married at Nasictah Seminary near Milwaukee to Mrs. Rice. He brought his bride north {on their honeymoon and they lived at Circle for several years. After eight years in Interior Ai- aska, Dean Rice was transferred to Seward then to the States. In January 1921 he returned nortn, this time to Juneau and the Holy Trinity Cathedral where he has {been -since that time. NEW YORKER ASKS DELAY IN TAX BILL WASHINGTON, Aug. 6. — W. J. Schieffelin, Jr., New York City, | testified today that if approaching elections made it impossible to vote on the retail sales tax question now, the Senate Finance Committee ought “to stand up and tell the country so.” . He appeared before the committee for the Chambér of Commerce of the State of New York. Schieffelin said that his otganization believed it might be to the country’s benefit to “have no tax bill at all until after the election, rather than a bill to go into éffect while Septem- ber or October are dominated by elections and politics.” He said a House Ways and Means Committee member he did not name had predicted that the House would accept the sales tax if it is included in the rewritten revenue bill by the Senate committee, although many representatives would prefer not to vote on the issue at this time. ——————— 4:53 am., 24 feet 11:27 am,, 118 feet . 4:57 pm., 55 feet 11:09 pam., 14.1 feet | Low tide IRL THATCHER HERE Irl Thatcher, wholesale represen- tative with headquarters in Ketchi- kan, has arrived in Juneau from 1 Skagway and will remain here for several days. RERE SOUTHBOUND Hal Pairhurst, merchandise brok- er, is th Juheau today on his way to' Ketchikan on businéss. COWLING-DAVLIN Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 4 Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retaflér- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 NORTH Transfer & Garbage Co. E.O.DAVIS E.W.DAVIS ~Phones—81 COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Be Wise—Economize THREE PHONES 663—92—95 Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 85 WHEN IN NEED OF _ Diesel Oll—Stove Oll—Your Coal Cholee—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing [ ] FRED HENNING Compiete Outfitter for Men Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Bullders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 “SMILING SERVICE" Beri's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 1608 * Pree Delivery Juneau GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information " PHONE 10 or 20 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O DEPOSITS 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET QUALITY MEATS PHONE 202 HOME GROCERY . Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel, 699 American Meat — Phone 38 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN AMERICAN LEGION DUGOUT ! i EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of thé month. UP TO NATIONAL BANK FUNDS ARE INSURED AGAINST ALL LOSSES—INCLUDING ENEMY BOMBING First National B & of JUNEAU, ALASEA $5,000 ARE INSURED IN THE FIRST HUTCHINGS ECONOMY Viqsaco Cholce Meats At All Times Located In George Bros. Store PHONE 553—92—95 Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39—539 20TH CENTURY MEAT MARKET Juneau's Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS