Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PHONE A CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Copy must be in the office by t o'clock in the afternoon to in- sure insertion on same day. We accept ads over teuephone from persons listed in telephone irectory. Count five average words to the ['ne. Daily rate per line for consecu- e insertions: Orne day .. Additional days Minimum charge .. FOR BE!!‘I' FOR RENT — Peterson House, 3!’(]; and Dixon. P. O. Box 1852. Phone ‘} FOR SALE AYING HENS and Pullets, Nor- thern Vegetable Farm. Loop Road, Glacier Highway. 401 5-ROOM Modern FOR RENT OR SALE—3-Room| Waterfront on Bus Line. furnished home. | Full (ARDSWIN |Mort CoopeTfiurls Great- est Game of Career- Pennant Race Dope (By Associated Press) The St sured at least a tie in the National| League pennant race by routing| Cincinnati yesterday by of 6 to 0 | Mort Cooper yielded only: two |singles for his ninth straight vic- tory and his twenty-second win of |the season | Cooper pitched one of the great- lest games of his career yielding |only a single to Gerald Walker in the fourth inning and another to {Ray Lamanno in the fifth inning.| | Cooper never walked a man and the only Red to get as far as sec- |ond was to steal without a throw after two men were out in the fourth inning. A Cardinal victory or a Dodger defeat will now clinch the pen- | nant ’ The Brooklyn Dodgers came from | behind yesterday by beating Bos- ton and retaining a slim mathe- matical chance at meeting the| | Yankees again in the World series modern house, full basement.| concrete basement. Phone Doug-| Philadelphia divided a double. Phone 525. las 335. header with New York by winning R ————— - — — |the second game in a battle of 5 ROOMS strictly modern unfum-\I.ARGE USED Oak Desk. Priced | rookie pitchers as Bill Lohrman | right for cash. Phone 104 or 105 { between 8 and 5:30 ished house. 504 5th St., top floor. FOR RENT — Peterson House, Srd| go and Dixon. P. O. Box 1862. BANQUET Range, wood and coal; chairs, beds suitable for camp. FURNISHED four-room Apt. $20 &' 309 1ot st 10 to 4 p. m. month. Phone Douglas 18. '35 CHEV. Pickup. Good rubber. $260. Phone Douglas 78, 3-ROOM Furnished Apt. Frigidaire, oil heat. Red 404. Bougl ‘6NE FORD V-8 three-yard dump in uglas. one 3-room APTS. $20; FURNISHED One 4-room apt. in good spare, car apt. $16. Oil range, inlaid Ino. " 4nica) condition. Phone 344. good furniture, attractive, clean, [ comfortable. Phone Douglas 472 NEW STENOTYPE with complete after. 6 p. m. | course. Phone Red 510 between 5and 7 p. m. TVVO STORY heated store bIdg Inquire San Francisco Bakery be- | CUT GLASS WARE, nmcollancou\ tween 4 and 6 p. m. dishes and kitchen ware, electric coffee urn. 308 Assembly Apts. FURNISHED 2-room Apt. with bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gu.s-,NEW Overstuffed Daveno, Simmons tineau Ave. bed, inner spring and mattress; smal] dressing table. Cheap, No. | 2, Orpheum Apts., between 10 a. i m. and 10 p. m. | FURNISHED CABIN, Green 234, GARAGF, Phone Green 234. STEAM HEATED Rooms, single or double, 315 Gold St. { ROOM apt. steam heated, electric | range, cold and hot running wat- Phone 568. 11932 STUDEBAKER Coupe. Phone Red 415. ROOMING furniture for sale. i p)rc M1481. Write Em- er, private bath. ONE office roon. for rent. nm. joining lots, chicl 3 m National Bank Bldg. | Ji g lots, chicken coop. Phone Blue 220. VACANCY—Nugget Apartments. BLOCK mill wood $6 unit, delivered. FUR. apis., easy sept warm. Win-| Kindling $675 un't, del. Limited ter rates 915 a me. Lights, water,| amt. Order now. Juneau Lum- dishes, Seaview Apts. ber Mills, Phone 358. FURNISHED house and furnished apt. Inquire Snap Shoppe. FOR RENT—Apartments, inquire at office 20th Century Bldg. WANTED WANTED — 2-bedroom furnished house by Nov. Ist. Will take lease. Write Empire 1595. it i e R MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacier Highway. Montgomerys. |4 ROOM furnished house, large lot, close ln P. O. Box 1075, Juneau provemenm on 5-acre homesm:. 50 chickens, 13% mi. Loop Road, Auk Lake. L. W. Cord. P. O. Box, 609. MISCELLANEQUS ATT'ENTION HUNTERS—TI‘ESPB&S- or| Sng and hunting strictly forbid- den on Spuhn Island. PRIVATE PROPERTY, WANTED—Ono second hand bath | tub. Write XYZ care of Empire. WANTED—4 good used 450 - 450-21 tires, Cash. Red 340. WAN'I‘ED—Woman, good character, to take care of children, do house | work. Good pay for right person. f Write P. O. Box 1204. FIVE CENTS eacu, paid for used gunny sacks at Coal Bunkers. | TURN your oM gold ' into value, | WANTED —Girls _or women for| 350 OF trade st Nugget &hop. kitchen or waitress work. Ex-| GUARANTEED Realistié Perms< perience preferred, but not nec-| nent, $550. Paper Curls, $1 up. essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10| Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. a. m. to 2 p. m. 815 Decker Way. — = LOST and FOUND LOST—Pair rimless glasses. Pimace xetum to Empire. Reward. ANCHORAGE MAN HELD HERE MUST FACE NEW CHARGES WANTED—Experienced bookkeeper | * for part-time work. Must be neat penman and able to operate Bur- | roughs posting machine. Reply in own handwriting. Box 1554 Empire. WANTED —Good used _ electric washing machine; also two single beds. Phone Blue 724. John Zelepusa, arrested in Sitka WANTED—One capable, well quali- fied clerk-stenographer for inter- esting government position in | OFderly conduct charge, 'has been Anchorage. Salary $200, per|charged in Anchorage with failure | month; also one experienced !0 keep in touch with his local draft board, the U. S. Marshal's clerk-typist, salary $180. per mo, Phone 806, daytime. Office reports. Zelepusa's present term exph’e.; October 11, on which date he will be re-arrestéd and sent to Anchor- age for trial. AIRMAIL EHV'EIDPEB, showing o gir route from Seattle fo Nome, un —_———— wle at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. ————————— Subscrive w tne wvaily Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest waid circulation. ’ from the south where they have Egypt's Qattara depression has a total area of 6950 square miles, at | Peen since last, July. They have least half of which lies more than |been visiting triends and relafives 160 feet below the level of the Medi- | in Bozeman, Montana, since they terranean, left Juneau, ‘;J ANTED— E;perlenCEfl mangle workers. Alaska Laundry. MR. AND MRS. PETER BOND RETURN FROM TRIP SOUTH Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bond have truck. New engine, 4 new tires,! good mech- | HOUSE Business or| with lot; also 2 ad- | and now serving a sentence in the | Federa] jail in Juneau on a dis-| returned to their home in Juneau| shut them out in the opener. the second game, his 29th homer of the season. In National League New York 8, 2; 3. Boston 3; Brooklyn 5. Cincinnati 0; St. Louis 6. American League Chicago 3, 4; Cleveland 1, 2 Coast Playoff Series Seattle 2; Sacramento 1. Los Angeles 1; San Diego 0. OF STANDIN CLUBS \l National League Won Lost P:' St. Louis 104 48 Brooklyn 101 50 EG‘P New York 83 65 561 Cincinnati % T4 507 | Chicago 68 84 447 Pittsburgh 64 81 441 Boston 58 87 400 ; Philadelphia 41 106 27‘7 | American League o Won Lost Pet. |New York 103 50 67 3. Boston 92 59 609 St. Louis .82 69 543 Cleveland 3 T8 483 | Detroit 40518090 R0 ) Chicago 65 82 442 - | Washington 62 89 411 Philadelphia 55 99 357 SEATTLEIS VICTOR OVER SACRAMENTO 'Rainiersl—ake Second | Straight as Angels Blank Padres | (By Associated Press) Seattle turned in the second straight victory yesterday over the new Pacific Coast League Champ- |ion" Sacramento and lead in the President’s cup playoff series by| two wins to one. Carl Fischer hopped up with Bllh Schmidt in a pitcher’s duel. | Los Angeles blanked San Diego| yesterday recording the second con- secutive Shaughnessy win behind | the 4-hit pitching of Ray Prim. (leveland - Walloped By Chicago Indian’ s Fourth Place Lead Over Tigers Cut fo Half Game (By Associated Press) | Cleveland’s fourth place lead over Detroit in the American League |was slashed to half a game by Chicago yesterday as Chicago |grabbed a doubleheader. Ted Lyons rung up his, four- teenth victory of the season’s play \wn.h the aid of the bat of Wally |Moses. Moses also made a*homer in the second game and thus helped Louis Cardinals are as-| a SA‘OH" Walker who was allowed | Mel Ott scored | Philadelphia 0, ‘ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA FEAST DAY WILL OVERREDS, | P SOLEMNzED ~ SCORE 6-0 ON OCTOBER 4 ‘b\ plane from Whitehorse, having|instruction meeting of all pla-| Sunday, October 4, will find the|peen on an official business trip for | toons of the Alaska Territorial| Feast of the Little Flower, €om-|the Jast several week Guard took place last night at| memorating the birthday of “"‘1 Mr. Green spent a week in Skag-[7:30 o'clock in the grade school | Church, ~celebrated by Oatholicway conferring with military and | auditorium. Members heard lec- | Church of the Nativity of Juneau,|cjvilian officials and is hopeful that |tures on extended order and guard with an outdoor ceremony at the jmprovements will be made in the|duty by four regular army instruc- | Shrine of St. Terese. | water system there with the coop- |tors | | This will mark the first celebra-|eration of the two groups. | These instruction meetings are ‘(um of the Feast at the Shrine, and for the Shrine this year. Scheduled for the day’s pro- gram will be Mass at 11 a.f., with the children’s choir of St. Ann'S| Patochial School singing the High| M Following mass will be the wsalemn Way of the Cross. dar pews have just béen installed in the chapel at the Shrine and will accommodate 120 persons, the same number seated in the Church of the Nativity in Juneéau. Moré pews are to be added the Shrine chapel later. One of the Juneau parishioners is at planning to furnish hot dogs for: all the soldiers, and in the eve- ning a bonfire will be built and refreshments served Catholic Daughters of America are making arrangements for a bus to take worshippers to the Shrine. e - ‘Mr. and Mrs. Fenno | Pass Through City' Mr. and Mrs. D(‘Hnl Fenno passed through Juneau on a re | cent southbound boat, enroute to! Tulsa, Oklahoma, where Mr. | np is to take a special course in the Sparton Aeronautical School M | cox, | s the daughter of M Mrs. Howard G. Wilcox and is well (known in Juneau, where her par- | ents lived for four years. Mr. Wil- icox is dean of the school of mines| inf the University of Alaska in | Fairbanks. | Mr. and Mrs. Fenno spent the |summer in Dillingham, Alaska, | guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Fen- no. The latter is U. S. Commis- | sioner in Dillingham This will be the first trip either |Mr. or Mrs. Fenno has made to ‘mlzmd Umu‘d Slfltvs | High tide 2.47 am, 176 feet Low tide 8:48 am.,, -0.1 feet High tide 3:01 p.m,, 182 feet Low fide 9:14 pm., -11 feet | jwill be the last outdoor ceremony | The occasion this year will es-| pecially honor service men in tr vicinity. Twenty Alaska yellow ce- Fen- | . Fenno, the former Betty Wil- | andj IRICHARD GREEN BACK FROM TRIP Richard S. Green, Sanitary En- | Bineer for the Territorial Depart- jment of Health, returned yésterday In Whitehorse, he studied the |sanitary problems in connection iwnh the Alaska end of the Alaska Highway, and spent ’m\ wecks observing the [the road. He says the opinion of |experts is that the road will ‘opvn to traffic by DPecember, {it is merely a one-way track work on Jll lult and ‘ bmldmt are lromemknh lROBERT RI(E ary ' CLERK, TAKES OPA | ACCOUNTANT 10B 1 Appointment of Robert Rice as |Junior Accountant for the Office jof Price Administration was an- nounced today by Mrs. Mildred Hermann, Director of OPA for Al- | aska. | Mr. Rice has resigned his posi- tion as City Clerk of Juneau and |expects to assume his new duties | within two weeks. | ———— ‘OPADIRECTORTO ~ LEAVE FOR WEST, Mrs. Mildeed Hermann, Director |of Office of Price Adm ration for Alaska, expects to le: in the a near future for Anchorage and | Fairbanks where she will open dis- 'trict offices for OPA Her departure will take place as soon as possible after the return of Calvin Pool, Assistant Director of OPA, who is on his way home from a trip to the Interior and Westward .o OLDTIMER DIES Loujs Tyssebro, 66, fisherman, who came to Alaska in 1910, died ‘ncmm at the Pioneers’ Home in ‘snku | - eee- ) SONS OF NORWAY | lows Hall at 8 o'clock. ment and refreshments an interesting | the difficulties encountered in its| ALSO INTERIOR | Meet Saturday night in Odd Fel- | Entertain- | 600D ATTENDANCE MARKS MEETING OF TERRITORIAL GUARD With a 90 percent attendance an| |to be heid every Thursday in the {futtire but will be held by pla- toons instead of the entire com- pany, Apl G F. F‘rwhmrm aid " GAME COMMISSIO " PLANT PHEASANTS NEAR HAINES BASE Executive Officer Frank Dufresne .md Wildlife Agent Rod Darnell of Alaska Game Commission re yuuned from Haines yesterday afte {making the trip north to plant {mongolian pheasants near army base, The birds have left under the protection of | Myron Christie. Dufresne says further planti: will be made next year if thes» pirds get through the winter in good shape. The pheasants were hatched by Washington breeders,! but next year's stock will proba- bly be scrumd in Alaska. DONALD MacINTOSH ‘ SOUGHT IN ALASKA' Mrs. Clara MacKintosh, 1081} | Hazelwood Avenue, San Jose, Cali-| fornia, has written the Empire ask- ing for information about Donal A. MacKintosh, whom she believes| to be in Alaska. \ Mrs. MacKintosh says she has not heard from him for many years. He| would be about 63 or 64 years of| is well educated, of good ap-| pearance and was a business man She would appreciate receiving word from any Alaska resident who Lelieves he knows the whereabouts or has known of Mr. MacKintosh - e - CARMICHAEL PROMOTED | th been Lieut Bud Marmichael, former Juneau- ite, is now City Clerk, City Treas- | urer, Tax Collector, Utilities Treas- urer and collector of various city | fees and licenses at Sitka. | S eee NOTICE ‘ Bills now owing the Tony Simin | Estate are now payable to L. W. Kilburn, Administrator. B ! Emp)re Cld%lfl“ds Pay! L'llllIIIlllIlllllllllIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIHNmlIliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"" |m Illlllllllll!fllIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHIHHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIlIIIIIlI|IlIIIIIII|||IIII|I|I|I|IIIII|lIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIII|IIIII!IHIIHIHI!HIIIHIHI to win the nightcap. i We Are Pleased to Announce The Receipt of a Number of GENERAL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS Due to Limited Production of These Efficient Cleaners, These May Be the Last Obtainable for Some Time. If iit Need of 2 New Cleamer at This Time, We Suggest You Call at Our Store and Ask for a Demonstration. The AlaskaElectricLight and Power Co. Second and Franklin Sis. : S ||IIIllIII!IAII]IIHIHIII[IIHIlIIIIlIIIIIIlIIIIHIIIIlIIII|IlllilIIIIHIIIIIHIII"IHIHH|||IHIIIIIII|I‘III|||ll||II|ll||l|lII||||!IIII|IIIIIIIII|I_IIIIIIIIIIlHIIIIIIIIII‘IIIHIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIII Phone 616 E T 44 || COWLING-DAVLIN PAGE FIVE iy PIGGLY WIGGLY e QUALITY with SERVICE HOME OF GOOD GROCERIES DOLE PINEAPPLE and PINEAPPLE JUICE “THERE IS NONE BETTER" We have DOLE No. 2145 sizes and size No. While This Shipment Lasts at PIGGLY WIGGLY Please place orders for delivery early. Orders received after 12 Noon will be delivered the following day. 2 and in pineapple slices in No. DOLE Pineapple Juice CALL | FEMMER S TRANSFER | 114 | OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Sanitary Meat Co. | FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 P S —— | Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints A THRIFT CO-OP Member Natlonal Retaller- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 NORTH Transfer & Garbage Co. E.O.DAVIS E.W.DAVIS —~Phones—81 B — FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Motors COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS —_—— Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN | John Marin, Prop. Phone 66 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 92 or 95 WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Ofl—Your Coal Choice—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 Complete Qutfitter for Men | Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 165 Free Delivery Juneau The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Rooms at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O P T, o —— GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY [ ————————————————— Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager. Planos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 146 Phone 206 122 W. Second Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 American Meat — Phone 38 CERE L M HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Choice Meats At All Times Located in George Bros. Store PHONE 563—92—95 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wendt Alaska Meaf Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39—539 |OPEN HOUSE for SERVICE MEN AMERICAN LEGION DUGOUT EVERY NIGHT Except each Monday and first Tuesday evening of the month. © SONGTONE P 20TH CENTURY MEAT Jlmenn s Most Popular “Meating” Place ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 202 hearing aids for the hard of hear- |ing. Audiometer readings. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson, Blomgren Bldg Phone 636. | DEFENSE STAMPS BONDS S SEATTLE ® Perfect comfort ® Centrally located l..rnl.-l ® Splendid food ol with and service S KEEP ‘EM FLYING bath. Special Rates to Permanent Guests ALASKANS LIEE THE Subscribe to the Daily Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation. i