The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 8, 1943, Page 5

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OFFICERS, ¢ CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS Copy must be in the office by £ o'clock in the afternoon to in- wure insertion on ‘same day. ‘We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone Hirectory. Count five average words to the Ene. Daily rate per line for consecu- ¢ Alve insertions: One day ..... Additional days .. Minimum charge 10c S¢ 50c FOR RENT ;é)l?, RENT OR SALE piano. Phone 143 ~ |FURN central, location. Phone green 153 Full-sizc IODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Glacler Highway Montgomerys. 2 CABINS, 7-mile post, Highway.| ;s Phone 567 daytime, 143 Gas- 4.RM, FURNISHED mnouse. P.O. tineau Ave. Box 107s. MISCELLANEOUS FURNISHED 2-room Apt. With TURN your old gold into value, bath, $16. Phone 621, 175 Gas-| cash or trade at Nugget Shop. tineau Ave. CNFURNISHED apt. and house. Inquire Snap Shoppe. ’ GRS | GUARAN , FUR. apts,, easy kept warm. Win-| nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. dishes. Seaview Apts. 815 Decker Way. WANTED | SMALL apartment wanted. Phone . Ann Oney, Baranof Coffee Shop.| IS SwAMpED 'L Realistic Perma- WANTED TO BUY—Baby's play | pen. Phone Douglas 963 | WAfiTéD—PIaLfoi'm 42 scales, good metal double bedstead. Box 3036, Juneau. WANTED TO RENT — 2-bedroom | house, furnished or unfurnished.| H H H pouse, e o ¢ | Oregon Remains in Title Race by Defeating Idaho Five SEATTLE, Feb. 8.—Fighting des- perately to remain in the race in |the Northern Division of the Pa- lcific Coast Basketball Conference, the University of Washington Hus- kies swamped the leading Wash- ington State Cougars Saturday night by a score of 72 to 34. WANTED—AIl round baker, $300| per month to start. Write or wire Ploneer Bakery, Sitka, Al- aska. | WANTED—Will pay cash for 14x14 left hand propeller. P.O. Box 911, Juneau. WANTED—Small house or fur.| apt. Call Mrs. Powell at Baranof. WANTED—High cnatr, good con- dition. Phone red 583. { - OREGON STATE WINS CORVALLIS., Ore., Feb. 8. | WANTED—Will pay cash for good | S used piano. Phone red 206.|oregon State's defending cham- Alaska Music Supply. | sions in the Northern Division of WANTED — Girls or women for | (ne Pacific Coast Basketball Con- kitchen or waitress work. | ference defeated Idaho last Satur- Ex- | day night by a score of only 57 to perience preferred, but not nec Hir e HARe Nob 4Hb 151 to stay essary. Apply Percy’s Cafe. 10|~ . ; s m to2p m championship title. HELP WANTED _ Pay-As-You-Go Tax FELP WANTED Biderly woman | Explained; Sfinneft Sundays excluded. Phone 66 eve- nings. L ST TR s - LOST and FOUND ' uc s LOST—Eye glasses in brown case,\la“gu“gp' on So. Franklin. Reward. Phone 813, Home Boarding House. (Continued from Page One) plan in legislative It is essential to get the tax- payer on a current basis, Mr. Carl- son said. “There are only two ways of accomplishing that,” he con- BOY who found brown cenvas bag containing meney near Ball Park, | to Piggly Wiggly tax payments one year—in other - —.|words move fhe tax élock ahead— containing | or secondly, we can collect two BY U._WASH.‘ Gives Siraight Dope | tinued. “Either we can advance the| - CHEECHAKOS WIN GAMES Juneay Higfié Swamped Without Two First String Men SCORES SATURDAY NIGHT Officers Beat Malamutes, 35-31 Cheechakos Beat Juneau ¥ A large charity crowd gath {in Juneau High School gym Satur-| day night to watch the Officers defeat the Malamutes, and Juneau High lose to the Cheechakos. There | was action aplenty. | In the first game, a sure-passing “onm-rs squad held the Malamutes down in a game that showed the | winners leading practically all the | way. Frechling, Hoffman and Ros- |nov accounted for most of the | buckets for the victors, but John- |son of the losers was high man |with 14 points. Lundeberg, star |forward for the Malamutes, went lout in the third quarter on fouls, 'and the other forward, Kilty, fol- lowed him later. The second game was a walk-a- |way for the Cheechakos in - the last quarter. Paced by Smith and |Schork, who accounted for 15 and 13 points each, the Cheechakos proved too much for the Juneau squad which lacked two of its first-string men who were dis- {missed from the team after some trouble Friday night. Krusl played a good game for the losers, collecting seven points {and hawking the ball well. He and | Snell left the game on fouls in the last half. The games were non-conference and did not count in the stand- ings of the Gastineau Channel League. Guard Steve McNeil ol the Officers wrenched an ankle in |the exhibition games, however, and |tney go into championship |this week. Following are the box scores: Officers FG FT TP 2 8 {Brown, F {Hoffman, F . |Sumner, F Commons, F | Frechling, C [} G G | Mauze, McNeil, Rosnov, 0 6 9 0 2 8 15 ol woormnooa Totals 3 1 Malamutes | F | Lundeberg, F |Kilty, F . Wallenstine, F |Johnson, C Osborn, G Gosek, G |Calkins, G . TR 7 o N 14 6 0 mowmorwQ © 1 i e Totals S 2] | Cheechakos | Il voacamg FT TP 5 13 0 15 Powell, F Schork, F Elzinga, F | Smith, C |Landis, G | Pennock, G O 5 39 ol { Totals i 17 i Juneau High ] ] i v |Krusl, F . |Kearney, F Kendler, F |Snell, C ... Sperling, G . ‘Bs,vard, G Anderson, G . OO ORD M | Totals \ies from year to year (and provid- |ing for relief to those whose in- |come status changes radically dur- |ing the year); and (5) Giving fair 35| | FOR SALE — 3 purebred New Hampshire red roosters. C. H. Sherwood, Box 3036, Juneau. 7 Inguire Empire | year’s taxes in one year or over Oftice. i“u Dertif)d of years. There are leg- treatment to all by making the new U A S Flndex‘pl ::1:_? objections to either of those‘?g:n ea z:;:;;rsme‘,:::;zrm: h:,’,l ;. may elaim same and pay for this| The cgpper-Carlson bill would' empting merely the lowat. etk ad at Emplre office. move the tax clock ahead—abolish ets as has been suggested in some o “|the 1942 income tax indebtedness circles.) run SALE entirely and start the country’s now| The taxpayers, or most of them e |27000000 income tax payers on a certainly would pay out. just as NO DOWN PAYMENT. $15 per CUiTent payment basis. {much in income taxes, but with month, 4-room partly furnished ~Unfortunately,” says Mr. Carl-|the important difference that they house and improvement on 5-|SC™ “Many of our people have been would be paying this month on acre tract over looking Auk Lake. led to believe that by setting the what they earned this month—and Large garden plot. Write B0, 'ncome tax clock a year ahead, they in leaner years which are surely Box 1826, Juneau, woudn't be obligated for payment ahead, they would not be paying 2" o _ | of current taxes. Everyone must rzal ;taxas on a big income when salar- FOR SALE—6-room house, partial- i2¢ that our federal treasury must jes aye being slashed, stocks are ly furnished. Call 434 after 6 p.m. have more tax revenue, not 1ess."|not paying off, farm prices have ! The Capper-Carlson bill is sim- taken a nose-dive. plicity itself, so far as the tax- payer is concerned. It provides: | (1) Forgetting all about tax pay-| ments on 1942 income; (2) Start- (Tomorrow: How The Capper- Carlson Tax Would Work.) T NOTICE Dr. Carlson has returned to her Juneau practice. Eyes examined and brokeh lenses replaced in our own shop. Blomgren Bldg. Phone 636. ady. FOR SALE—Furnished house i 7 immediately this March 15 on Douglas. Phone Douglas 764. nine-a-year installments on taxes on income earned in 1943; (3) Mak- | ing income tax payments on a ten- is, with a year-end ad- (4) Giving relief provi “ns for those whose income va FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic diesel stationary engine. BB Em- pire. PALMER 18 heavy duty engine.l good condition—gas burner and e nk. Box 2313 | Cflminéis;(;n:-z 25 REMINGTON automatic; L. C.| ' Smith double barrel 12 guage shotgun. Guitar and instruction books. 1003 between 9th and 10th Sts. How WAS MY V. LARGE SIZE Duo Therm oil heat- Pumnml F. Zanuck er with coils. Brownie’s Barber by John Ford Shop. 0th CENTURY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA 12 rows OO(t) %ars, bumper to per = ' d encircling ;‘ " earth It wouid cover than 60 feet AP Features 2 football ficld more | i with #1 bills.. have fo write a check for $63,660 every 20 seconds : all year to spend it... | ‘ . i Counting a number per second aman | would have had fo start at the time / of the Trojan War (1200BC) / to have counted it by now... / £ q G B | /’ ,the Officers may miss him wher ! play,| | il W It would make 180 pure 1 NE hundred billion dollars Is the sum ! budgeted by the President for war | purposes during the fiscal year 1944, These 4 ( sketches translate that almost-incompre- hensible figure into everyday terms and give an idea of its true immensity. » the | 1 Skiers [EISENHOWER IS Jim Klein 09:11 | Bill Carlson 10:35 | reaiasi i 0 | IN NO. AFRICA Jim Rude 11:51 | 0 S d i ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN| nSunday Buddy Hunter 13:00 NORTH AFRICA, Feb. 8—The es- | R, Affair Held Sunday Morn-| Linn Forest Dick Wengersen 14:37 Jack Harrington 14:57 | tablishment of a North African | theatre of operations is snnounced p | | ing-Over One Hundred | i o | Buddy Hunter Out on Course | with Maj. Geh. Dwight D. FEisen- hower as Commander-In-Chief of Bill "Schmitz | Jack Wilson With a hearty breakfast tucked |under their belts, Juneau skiers| all Allied forces. Dave )Eiteman looked disdainfully at a thermo-| D Jack Harrington meter which had slalomed to a | GARDEN CLUB MEETING IS : POSTPONED UNTIL MARCH | | Dick Wengersen BT record low yesterday morning and headed for the best skiing that ‘The February meeting of the | Garden Club, scheduled for next Thursday, will be postponed and no meeting held until the regular March session, it was announced e today by Mrs. Wellman Holbrook, ATTENTION MASONS President. Stated communication of Mt. Ju- Postponement Juneau has had to offer in many neau Lodge No. 147 Monday eve- seasons. . ning at 7:30. Work in the E. A. Forty-one ski eclubbers attended|pegree. | he breakfast at Percy’s Cafe. Pat| | Dooley was in charge of the af- advy, | fair which "was enthusiastically rc-‘ | ceived, and may become a regulm'\l_ custom of the club. It is confiden- l [ following: were the times for two junior races: P Slalom Jim Rude Bill Carlson 332 356 36.8 446 438 454 454 56.8 57.2 583 is due to incle- J. W. LEIVERS, Secretary. R. H. WHITMORE 8 a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE i invited to present this coupon this evening 4 at the hox office of thes — CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “THE SPOILERS” Federal Tax—>5c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! WAR <z, IN PEAC ment weather, D i Cahokia Mound, in Illinois, is the largest prehistoric earthwork lin America. sially rumored, however, that sev- ral of the skiing fraternity who had roused themselves for the oc- casion returned to their sleeping |bags after the brjsk exercise of navigating Seward Street so early§ in the morning. % Over 100 on Course Well over 100 skiers appeared at | the slalom area during the day. The | hill was in the best condition since | the course was cleared in 1938, and | shows the results of cooperative effort on the part of Juneau skiers, in carefully filling holes and tramping snow. The ski tow oper- ‘ned the full day and saved some- | where over 1,000 uphill climbs for Juneau skiers. Slalom Course Races Bill Dean set two excellent sla- lom courses for the day's rages, with hairpin turns, rat traps, squir- rel cages and flushes galore. Al- though the combination of turns was considered difficult by many | skiers, they were the sort of cours- |es that develop skiers. The races were run on the steepest part of |the hill where a fall meant the| [loss of several seconds, which is| | valuable time in any slalom race. | | Bonnie Klein and Norman Bu-| |cey, two up and coming young | skiers, took the women’s and men’s slalom, respectively, Other sklers entered in the races were El- ‘wln Messer, Vieda Morrow, John | | Kubec, Dr. Rude, Bert Caro, Ed| | Dick, Henry Sanner, Charles To-| |bin and several other skiers who | were scratched because they did | not finish. | | Junior skiers proved they could | take the cold weather yesterday | when over 15 of them showed up on the slalom course and stayed all | S Birst National Bank | day. Considerable improvement in AU, ALMSKA ability was noted yesterday as the | ot JUNEAU boys lowered timés previously made | MEMB.ER FEDERAL DELOSLT INSURANCE .SORPORATION over the cross-country course. The 1 T I S S R S I S e R S e 1 | | 1 1 1 ! ! ! I- N AS THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our addition, the bank is 8 mem- ber of Federal Depasit Insur- ance Corporation ,which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED \ PAGE FIVE PIGGLY WIGGLY QUALITY with SERVICE P Phone hone* 24 16 When you buy DARIGOLD you get TOPS IN QUALITY! Butter, Milk or Cheese EXCELLENT inBABY'S FORMULA | ! Soothing Organ Music and EVERY NIGHT ¢ DOUGLAS 'l John Marin, Prop. Phone #8 THRIFT CO-0P | Member National Retatlse- Owned Grucers 11 SEWARD STREEY PHONE 767 T FORD AGENCY | i (Authoriged Deajers) GREABES--GAS—ON. Poot of Mamn Junean Motors FEMMER'S TRANSFER || 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 554 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Cal) Phones 13 and & Chas. G. Warner Co. | Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER || | ThomasHardwareCo. Light and Heavy Hauling E.O.DAVIS E. W. DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY OODGE and PLYMOUTH WHEN'IN NEED OF Juneau Transfer Phene 48—Night Phone 481 e Bert's Cash Grocery JPHONE 104 or 108 Free Delivery Juneau GASTINEAU | m ‘ lv-qu-l-l-unuv-u. Atr Service Information PHONE 10 or B Wall apér ‘Ideal Paint Hoal Paint Shop | HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant 237 PRONT STREST Phone 676 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liguor Store—Tel. 60 American Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576 Duncan'’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE “Neatness Is An Asset” Early railway track weighed 50 pounds per yard; today most lines use 130-pound rails,

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