The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 17, 1942, Page 6

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'PAGE SIX T T R R TR TR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA | In explaining this tax, Wes Over- by stated that any person AUTO OWNERS WHO HAVEN'T PAID TAX 2, B0 St the vequinea ARE SUBJE(I 'l'o ""E stamp is subject to prosecution on a charge of misdemeanor, and may be fined not more than $25 Automobile owners who have not or imprisoned for not more than yet purchased their Federal Motor 39 days, or boti. He further stated Vehicle Use Tax Stamps were pre- sented with notices of such delin- 3 P 1 S o % quency by the local Deputy Col- AT since ebruary 1, 1942, or any lector of Internal Revenue, and period after that date and before requested to call at his office today. August 1 but has never paid the that any person who has usea his ~ag q‘_“‘ ~r that | Itax should not attempt to buy his stamp from the local post office. The post office sells only current stamps and the only stamp for ‘su]c there now is valued at $4.59 and should not be used unless the | first time the automobile was put ,into use was after July 31. If you ;flrz-, late in. buying your stamp, you |should go direct to the Internal | Revenue Office, Room 101, Federal | Building. Sttt — BUY DEFENSE BONDS g Vi P, -G 4 PITCHERS FIGHT DUELS ON SUNDAY Turpin, Gehrman Are Win- ning Hurlers for Rain- iers and Angels (By Associated Press) Seattle and Los Angeles split a doubleheader Sunday, both games | being a pitcher’s duel. The Rain-| iers took the first game, whlcni went 13 innings, and the Angels won the nightcap, seven innings. Hal Turpin and Paul Gehrman were the winning hurlers. San Francisco turned on the| power Sunday to snatch a twin contest from Portland. Portland won the series however, three to| two games, San Diego broke even in a doubleheader with Oakland Sun- | | ( THIS ANTI-AIRCRAFT ~ GUN COSTS $50,000 YOUR HOUSE may not be a military target, but bombs don’t stop to inquire. Bombs don’t ask your name or the names of your Idren, either. In this war, as in no other in history, we are all soldiers and civilians alike. “War is hell” . . . for all of us. And itis costly . . . for all of us. Who's going to pay the bill? Not only for the guns, but for the tanks and ships and planes our boys must have to smash the Axis? Who? Why, all of us . . . you and me and the man next door. Because we are all in this war, and because blood and tears and sweat don’t mean a thing if they do not come from everybody. Everybody must put every dime and dollar he can spare into Bonds and Stamps, even if it means going without something else . . . realizing that we are apt to go without everything, unless we win. Remember you can start buying Bonds by buy- ing Stampse for as little as 10 cents and that you get a $25 Bond (maturity value) for only $18.75. #50,000 for one 90-millimeter Help Win the War With the Money You Save i-aircraft gun sounds like | game eleven innings. day, the Oaks taking the * opener and the Padres bounding back to| take the nightcap. Sacramento and Hollywood split a doubleheader Sunday, the Sen-| ators taking the opener, but losing | the nightcap. The teams broke even in the series, four games each.} GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Los Angeles 1, 2; Seattle 2,0. First game 13 innings. San Francisco 7, 5; Portland 5, 2. San Diego 0, 1; Oakland 1, 0. Sacramento 5, 0; Hollywood 2, 3.! National League | Chicago 5, 4; Pittsburgh 1, 1. St. Louis 10, 6; Cincinnati 5, 3. Boston 2; Brooklyn 0, called at| end of seven innings. New York 6; Philadelphia 5. American League New York 11; Philadelphia 2, six | innings. | St. Louis 2, 6; Cleveland 3, First game eleven innings. Washington 4, 3; Boston 6, 10. Chicago 2, 3; Detroit 3, 7. First | | 1. Gastineau Channel League | St. Louis Blues, Beavers, post- | Chicago Sunday, the first game go- | YANKS BEAT ATHLETICS IN Indians in Batting Slump Sunday - Boston Wins Fifth Doubleheader (By Associated Press) Home runs by Joe DiMaggio and Joe Gordon and 4-hit pitching by Marvin Brewer gave New York a victory over Philadelphia Sunday in the first game of a scheduled doubleheader when was halted after six innings. Cleveland suffered the worse bat- ting slump of the season Sunday and scored only four runs but managed to divide a doubleheader with the up and coming St. Louis. Boston won the fifth double- header at home on Sunday, beat- ing the Washington - Senators for a sweep of the four-game series. Detroit took a doubleheader from Dodfi?’Win Streak Given Bump Sunday |Cards Beat Reds Twice Sun- day-Giants Trim Phillies —Cubs Stage Comeback (By Associated Press) Brooklyn's five - game winning streak was snapped Sunday when Boston's Al Javery shut out the leaders and limited them to a sin- gle safety. St. Louis whipped Cincinnati SIX INNINGS The game was called/ |after seven innings. t of money, doesn't it? ut this type gun is o real | poned. twice Sunday, a five-run inning in| |each game being the deciding fa«:-; ‘plane-crasher” —one shell from it can smash a half- million dollar Jap bomber quicker than you can swat o fly. BONDS & STAMPS Alaska Steamship Company " * This message for Victory is sponsored by PROGRESS IS MEASURED BY RESULTS Put Your Trustin Aets and Facts DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION HAS GIVEN ALASKA AND THE NATION ECONOMIC RECOVERY Compliment DELEGATE A. J. DIMOND on his ten-year record of splendid service to Alaska. THEY GAVE: The Wagner Labor Act — Repeal 18th Amendment — Banking Reform Laws — Home Owners Loans — Social Security Laws — Federal Denosit Insurance — Child Labor Act — Securities Exchange Act — Wages and Hours Act — Fed- eral Housing Act — Farm Relief — Flood Control — Soil Conservation — Na- tional Labor Relations Act ~ Thirty-five Dollar Gold — Alaska’s Bank Deposits were in 1933, §9,770,685.00. in 1942, approximately Twenty-one Million — Your c‘g_unlrfl h ngaged in an all-out war for surival of Democracy and the American ay of Life. ' Vote for These Democratic Candidates and Go Forward fo Victory and Grealer Prosperity For Delegate to Congress Anthony J. Dimond For Territorial Treasurer For Commissioner of Labor Oscar G. Olson Walter P. Sharpe For Territorial Senator A.P. Walker For Territorial Representatives - James V. Davis Andy Gundersen R. E. Hardcastle Crystal Smow Jenne GENERAL ELECTION TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th Won Lost Pct. | Los Angeles ... 83 54 606 Sacramento 80 58 .580 | Seattle % 63 543 San Diego 71 68 511 Ban Francisco ... 67 71 486 Oakland .. 64 T4 464 Hollywood - 61 178 439 ,Portland i OL <80 372 National League Lost Pet. Brooklyn 34 699 St. Louis 41 637 New York 53 543 | Cincinnati 54 514 | Pittsburgh 58 473 Chicago 67 442 Boston R 69 410 Philadelphia e 8179 .282 American League | Won Lost Pct. New York .. 76 38 667 Boston 50 561 Cleveland 54 534 St. Louis 57 513 Detroit 62 488 Chicago- ... 61 450 ‘Washington 46 65 414 Philadelphia ... 46 5 375, Gastineau Channel League Won Lost Pet. St. Louis Blues . 4 1 800 Juneau .. 600’ Beavers 600 Missourt .000 GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League San Francisco 4; Portland 6. Sacramento 13; Hollywood 2. San Diego 5; Oakland 0. Los Angeles 4; Seattle 8. National League Philadelphia 3, 3; New York 5, 4. Boston 4; Brooklyn 5. Pittsburgh 8, 8; Chicago 5, 7. American League New York 1, 5; Philadelphia 3, Chicago 4, Detroit 2. Washington 1, 6; Boston 2, 7. STANDING OF CLUBS | Pacific Coast League THIRTY HERE FROM SOUTH ON SATURDAY Thirty passengers arrived here Saturday night from Seattle and Southeast Alaska ports. Passengers from Seattle were as follows; Elaine Carmen Berry, John H. Bannick, Anna Lois Davis, Margaret Louise Fletcher, Flor- ence Monica Harter, Margaret Johnson, Stuart Johnson, Robert Johnson, Leonard Johnson, Eugene F. Kirtsen, Stanley T. Lovejoy, Robert Lockhart, MacIllwain Mar- shall, Frank Pyle. Alice Eileen Ronan, Irene Annie Stigenwalt, Harry Stigenwalt, An- drew W. Tolonen, Lawrence G. Viani, George Robert Berry, Jr., ' TWO CHINA | August 9. tor. Four unearned runs in the first| inning proved a big help to New York Sunday as they made it three, in a row over Philadelphia. Beaten twice by Pittsburgh on Saturday, Chicago came back Sun- day to take both games and mak- ing three victories in the five- game series. AIR BASES | ATTACKED U. . Bombers Raid Jap-| Occupied Porfs of | Hanoi, Haiphong (By Associated Press) The Jap radio of Saigon reported that Haoi and Haiphong, Japanese occupied bases on the east coast of China in Tongking Province, were raided by members of the China based United States Air Force on I This report is without confirma- tion, however, from any Allied source. Tokyo broadcasts a report that Jap: subs operating in Australian waters have sunk ten Allied vessels, totaling about 90,000 tons, between mid-July and mid-August. This is also unconfirmed by Allied quarters. e $25,000 DAMAGE CASE FILED HERE Suit has been filed in U. 8. Dis- trict Court here in which '$25,000 three-year-old Sitka child who sues| through her guardian ad litem, Al- fred Havre, from a Sitka meat| and grocery company. | The case involves damages suf-! fered by the child when she was! struck April 8 on a Sitka street! by a truck owned by the grocery! company. Harold H. Bates is at-| torney for the plaintiff. | - Mrs. kéttlesoniof Sitka, Is to Spend Two Weeks Visiting Mrs. Theodore Kettleson, whose husband is a well known property owner and civic leader of Sitka George E. Mack, Mable Ann Fair, and Edgar Stewart Robinson. Arrjving here from Ketchikan were Stella Young, P. Thomason, J. T. Barrett, A. A. McAdams, V. McAdams, H. Hayes and from Wrangell, Verna Ingledue, and foremr superintendent of the Pioneers’ Home, arrived in Juneau last night. " Mrs. Kettleson is staying at the Gastineau Hotel during her visit in Juneau and expects to remain damages is asked by Wlima Havre, | — Patriofs Off Bad InCrefe {Parachute Drill Mistaken for British Invasion- . Pay with Lives | LONDON, Aug. 17.—A number of 1Cvreek patriots on the island of Crete mistook a German parachute practice for a British invasion and |tried to help by seizing the Candia |airdrome. They paid with their lives, ac- 'cording to reports reaching the Greek Government in Exile here. .Three hundred of the patriots iare said to have been arrested and an undisclosed number have been |shot., NEW PRIORITY RATE GIVEN MINING MEN Territorial Commissioner of Mines ;B, D. Stewart reported today that | Wilbur Nelson, administrator of the |Mining Branch of the War Pro- | duction Board, has informed him that Order P-56 has been amended as follows: A-1-A ratings can be issued to holders of serial numbers for part of their quotas. The use of this highest civilian rating is granted to mining operators holding ser- ial numbers for not more than 30 percent of the dollar value of their third quarter quotas which have |been assigned. | — e ]NURSE'S AIDES APPLICANTS T0 | MEET TOMORROW \Personal Inferviews Will Be Given by Chair- men of Committee All women who have filed ap- plications as Nurse's Aides, whether or not they have Treturned the blanks, are asked to attend a short meeting which will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow in the Juneau Pub- lic Health Center in the Territorial Building. Any woman who desires to en-| roll in the course but who has not yet signified her intention to do so, also may report at this time to fill out an application blank. Women who are working during| the day and will be unable to re-| port tomorrow morning, are asked to ecall Mrs. 440, to make an appointment for| a personal interview. At the meeting tomorrow morn- ing, Mrs. Fred Geeslin, chairman of the Nurse’s Aide Committee, Mrs. Mary K. Cauthorne, special nurs-| ing representative for the American Red Cross for Alaska, and Mrs. Tur- ner, Recruiting Chairman for Nurse's Aides, will personally inter- view each applicant for the Nurse’s Aide course. When personal interviews have been completed, the classes will be started as soon as the most con- venient times have been worked out. The course, which is an 80-hour| course, will be given in classes several hours long if possible, ih order that it may be completed in the shortest possible time. After the class members have completed this instruction, with practical ex- perience and training in caring for hospital patients, those who have not had the 20-hour first aid class will be asked to take that course. Nurse's Aides are vitally needed for assistance in the hospitals of the city to give service which will relieve the burden on the regular nurses, overworked now because of the shortage of professional nurses because so many have entered the Armed services. - e Harley Turner, Blue| ™ Womenonthe Alert Beautiful Coiffure Is a Morale Booster THE NEW BOLERO HAIR CUT, trim for War Duty, and a minimum of time to give to your personal grooming, will be a great help to you in keeping a style that is becoming for your new-found duties. May we remind you that SIGRID'S is a Salon well capable of helping you to keep that loveliness. Yours for Victory! Permanent Wave SPECIAL All This Week $7.50 NINE_ARRIVE; SEVENTEEN OUT T0 WESTWAR Passengers arriving here from | Seattle Saturday night were Lucy Anderson, R. C. Copstead, J. W. Skipper and C. Thomas. Arriving here from Southeast Al-‘ aska ports were John C. Holcombe, Frank M. Verney and P. C. Man-| uel. p \ Taking passage for the Wc.stwa.d} were for Valdez, George Winchal, | Henry K. Barnes, James Suddath,| LONDON, Aug. 17. — The Polish S. Maknesdal, Sidney Lyon, James Government-in-Exile sources said D. Simon, James Decker, Robert| word has been received that L. M. Crosswhile, Gertha E. Edge. W. B.| Czerniakov, Mayor of Warsaw's Haines and Oscar Lake; for Seward, | Ghetto, committed suicide because Orah' D. Clark, E. L. Tvete, Stanley | he feared for the lives of 100,000 Zuern, R. E. Barnes and Rosie Jews whose names he was told to Brown. | list for deporatation. IGRIDS BEAUTY sALON Defies Nazi p Orders Buf Is Suicide (Warsaw's Mayor Takes Life When Told to List Jews for Ousting i Men find the Olympic is the place to really rest in this igh- r-time world. Relax and be “of home" :I.O:";;',:’ ;: in the center of downtown S'nm.-‘r (Army and Navy men especially woko‘m.d,) Friendly, club-like Olympic living is inexpensive too: Rooms from $3.50 with bath., o CONTIR or SEATTLE (L) \NWW\S SEATTLE. wasnnaron Fronk W. Hull, Managing Dirscter BUY DEFENSE BONDS 75 SAWMILL MEN WANTED at JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS ST for about two weeks. l ARTING OPERATIONS JUNEAU AUGUST 24TH

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