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MONDAY, MAY 17, 1943 PHONEA | CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS Copy must be in the office by do'clock in the afternoon to in- re insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone : from persons listed in telephone Birectory. Oount five average words to the Dally rate per line for consecu- lHive insertions: One day .. Additional days Minimum charge .... FOR SALE ' 6-ROOM furnished house. Phone O} red 615. men ' employed days to share my| fully furnished home for indefin-| ite period after June 1. Excellent residential location. Phone red| 649 ONE LARGE General Electric| range with broiler and sunken | cooker. Phone blue 565 ! FOR SALE—Half interest in board- |5 ROOM furnished apartment, with ing, doing good business. Write' path oil Inquire 513A Empire CB 2297. i Willoughby. THREE husky pups. No. 3, Capitol|[FUR. apts., easy ept Apts. | range. “warm. Win- | ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, 53 ACRES clear land, house ana| dishes. Seaview Ap barn. See John Ackermann, Eagle River. * LOST and FOUND i i . (LOST¥SaLurd:\y night, glasses in} { | SEED potatoes. See John Acker- mann, Eagle River. case. Phone black 380. Motorship CHICHAGOF, length |LOST—Keys on ring at Gaslmeau! 65 ft., cargo capacity 44 tons, 125| Grocery. Phone 485. Reward. hp, Bow steel plated. Price|— NS = $4,000. Chichagof Mining CO_ILOST—Monday. tie chain with 1817 Smith Tower, Seattle graduated gold nugget and larg- er nugget hanging from center. Cash reward for its return. Phone 028, Post Chaplain .Beahn. RAINBOW Inn at Sitka. Good business. P.O. Box 151, Sitka. | o g - - BUY mill wood now, $6 per unit.|[OST — Captain’s overseas cap. | Sending application with O.P.A.| FPinder return to Empire. for raise in price. Phone 358. | b & e < AR R |LOST or misplaced: one straw suit | 3-ROOM furnished house, one acre| case, one over-night case and| patented ground, 2% miles out| jower plate false teeth. Liberal| Glacier Highway. Call red 758 or| reward. Notify manager, Gas- see Davis at North Transfer| tineau Cafe. "~ MISCELLANEOUS ;GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- 5-ROOM furnished house, sun| nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. porch, Flamo range, Frigidaire. 1| Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201.| mile north of Douglas Bridge.| 315 Decker Way. Phone 5032. 10-TUBE “Cal radio, $25. No. 4, | Buckingham Apts., Douglas. TURN your old gold into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. 38-ROOM bungalow, partly fur- nished, 3 acres patented ground. Good garden spot. See Wm. Reck. | Phone green 410, ‘ WIllIE pEp / i _DlackiBBesa i e als | | less than | completely | furnished, going for half of actual value. 431 So.| ~ LINING 3-ROOM house, also income prop- | erty. It interested, P.O. Box 1615.| ) FOR SALE—30 brake h.p. OOVlC;’ NEW YORK, May 17—The New diesel stationury engine. BB Em- ! York State Athletic Commission pire. |has named former champ Chalky White and Boston's Sal Bartolo| to fight for the right to meet Willie! Pep for his world 1ealherweigm‘\ | boxing title. §-ROOM furnished house. Phone black 615. WANTED WANTED IMMEDIATELY, to rent o or lease 4- or 5-room furnished| house. Permanent. Tel. 800. Ask | for Don Underwood. ;BASEBALL (luB WANTED—Young 1ady wishes smail| OWNER iS DEAD [ 1 apt. or furnished room. Mrs. Joy, Baranof Hotel." | | \ e | LITTLE ROCK, May 17.—Robert ED — Middle - aged woman |G- Allen, 75, President and owner ckeeper. Hours about 10 aum. 0f the Knoxville Baseball Club of to 5 pm., Sundays excepted.|the Southern Association, is dead| Phone 66 evenings. here. et Allen was a former Major League WANTED TO BUY—Baby stroller. pitcher and shortstop and former Phone blue 734. |owner of the Little Rock and Nash- |ville baseball clubs. WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. ‘“owm WANTED IN EXQHANGE — A furpished apt. for a furnished house. Call at 129 Tth St. | THOMPSON 70 NEW ORLEANS | Howard J. Thompson, well known |former Juneauite, passed through here enroute to New Orleans, where P o ™ ihe will take charge of the Weather WANTED TO BUY— Short wave | Bureau office. receiver. Phone blue 379, Twenty-one years with the Wea- P g e LS ther Bureau in Alaska, Mr. Thomp- WANTED—Two barbers, one hun- |son was with the local office for dred dollars week guarantee. scveral years, spent some time in Cupps Barber Shop, Anchorage, Fairbanks, and more recently was Alaska. in Anchorage as Regional Adminis- e e trator. WANTED—Woman for part time He plans to meet Mrs. Thompson work in home, 10 am. to 2 pm. at Utica, New York, where she has Phone 11. |been for the past year, and before 3 — |gcing to Louisiana, the Thompsons WAN‘TED—Small bicycle. Madsen’s | ) spend a month in Washington, Bike Shop. |D. c. \’VAN’J:ED-Z or 3 bedroom quarte‘rs after June 15. Permanent Gov't position. Phone 656. - WANTED—Washer; also dry clean- erman at Snow White Laundry. Good pay. Phone 299. ® 8 0 00 00 0 0 00 WEATHER REPORT (U. S. Burau) Temp. Saturday, May 15: Maximum 64, minimum 40. WANTED—Used furniture. 306 Wil- loughby. Phone 788. {Los Angeles San Francisco THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA LOS ANGELES WINS 18 STRAIGHT; GOES | NEAR RECORD NOW| 'Seattle andE)'rtIand Lose Doubleheaders Sunday -Identical Scores (By Associated Press) Angeles has stretched streak to 18 The modern Pacific Coast record was made by Los 19 defeatless games in all-time record of 20 Los the winning games League Angeles, 1939. The |sames was made by Seattle in 1903. Portland lost two games on Sunday by identical scores. This season, Portland has lost 18 games, 13 by one-run mar- gins At Hollywood Sunday, outfielder John Dickshot hit safely in both games of the doubleheader, running his hitting streak to 29. Like Seattle, GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League San Francisco 6, 6; Portland 5, 5 Second game seven innings. Los Angeles 2, 2; Seattle Second game seven innings. San Diego 1, 1; Oakland 4, 2 Second game seven innings. Sacramento 1, 1; Hollywood 2, 3. Second game seven innings. National League Pittsburgh 1; New York 3 St. Louis 4; Philadelphia 3. Cincinnati 1; Boston 3 Chicago 0; Brooklyn 4. American League New York 7; St. Louis 3, 0, 0. Washington 7; Detroit 1 | Philadelphia 5; Cleveland 3. Boston 2; Chicago 4. City League Missouri Mules 14; All Stars 3. GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Los Angeles 7, 1; Seattle San Diego 17, 3; Oakland Sacramento 6; Hollywood San Francisco 5; Portland 0. Twi- light game only seven innings. National League Cincinnati 0; Boston 1. Chicago 6; Brooklyn 13. Pittsburgh 1; New York 2. St. Louis 6; Philadelphia 3. American League New York-St. Louis postponed. Boston-Chicago postponed. Philadelphia 0; Cleveland 2. ‘Washington 1; Detroit 8. | 3 0 2 4 4. STANDING OF CLUBS | Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pct. 24 .889 16 615 16 562 15 517 14 500 Portland 9 333 Sacramento 9 321 Seattle e 269 National League Won Lost Pet. 682 611 556 Oakland San Diego Hollywood Brooklyn St. Louis Boston . Cincinnati Pittsburgh New York . Philadelphia Chicago American League Won Lost Pct. 14 667 444 476 421 .333 New York consecutive | 476 | MULES SWAT ALL STARS IN SUNDAY GAME SCORE BY | Missouri Mules 6 0 All Stars The Missouri Mules kicked the All Stars hard in the Sunday game, both teams making their first appearance of play in the City League. The Mules put six runs across in the first inning and five more in! the fourth inning. But all of the| scoring was not faulty pitching of Hamm because he did not have the support in the infield and numer- | ous errors were registered. Hamm | stayed in the game until he went| to the bench in the first half of| the sixth inning after 12 scores |had been chalked up. Long then went on the mound. Stolen bases were the games. The Mules have a good team, but not as good as the box score shows. Kreyling is a good heaver and in- icidenmlly good at the stick. He stayed in the game until the rirst; of the sixth when Stang, a south- paw, went on the mound | The All Stars, in yesterday's game, seem to lack team work and also hitting power. They have| a mighty good back stop in Mar- tin, who knows the game The game went the full nine in-| Inings, both sides putting across two runs in the last inning. | There was some good individual |playing and for the All Stars a| fast double play was made, catcher to third to second. i The next game will be played tomorrow night between the Web- | feet and Missouri Mules. The box score of Sunday's game | follows: numerous in | All Stars | {Church; S. C. Leung of the Y.M.|a tour of Cuba, Haiti, Mexico, Co- ‘SCHNOZ' NOW A GIANT — Ernie (Schnozzle) Lombardi, veteran big league backstop, now wears the uniform of Mel Ott's Giants. Experts say he should be able to smash that short left-field fence at the Polo Grounds. Mountains, is working with leu(lvrslnm feel at home in it. White peo- in the College of the Ozarks to!ple generally, expect their buddies | furnish religious education to more|in arms and the missionaries, held than one thousand children in 1uxu‘uluor irom them; while their Afri- al mountain communities surround- |¢an ‘relatives’ had langugaes un-, ing Clarksville, . Atkansas. M “knu\cn to them and the customs Shell and the teachers of Bible at|also entirely foreign. Our mis- the College give training to some sionaries felt that of all the Ameri- forty college students each week;|cans in the country these needed these students then go out as teach- most the kindly Christian contacts ers into the communities where we could give. Some of them said week-day Bible classes have been/that since coming to Africa they organized in rural communities. had not felt like singing but at |the mission they sang their spir- Seven leading Chinese Christians|ituals in the church, the hospital, have been added to the American|the leper camp, and in our homes Advisory Committee which, in A number of white officers and China, has been in charge of the|soldiers, doctors and nurses, were distribution of relief funds and sup- |likewise appreciative. This was par- plies reaching that country through ticularly true of the Jews when they | the Church Committee for China|Wwere invited to the home of & mis- | Rellef and the denominations it|sionary to spend the evening of | represents. These new members|the Day of Atonement.” { are; Bishop W. Y. Chen of the| Py Methodist Church; Bishop Paul| Dr. Frank Laubs Yu-pin of the Roman Catholic|apostie of literacy,’ ch, “missionary has completed C.A.;. Miss Shih Pao-chen of the|lombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia Bra-| YW.CA.; Mrs. K. C. Wu, wife of |z, Trinidad, Guatemala asd Vene- Wellenstein, 2b |Dosek, ss | Laughlin, rf | Hoiosen, 1f | Londeberg, | simek, cf ‘Sperllng. 3b {Martin, ¢ Hamm, p |Belcher, xf Sabin, cf Parmenter, c Long, p Talman, Sloan, ¢ ol %! al 3 0 0 [ 0? [ { ol 0 14 1b rf H“Ntd.—NN—-Noou\u—-uw; wloccoocccomococommy ol orrmococococcomnvoocomy | 32 | Missouri Mules E| Schuler, c o Docz, 1b | Meilink, 3b | Kreyling, p, rf Hoffmann, ss Cochrell, rf | Krisco, cf | Nielson, 2b |Heinrich, 1f Lacour, c | Trevino, ss |Stang, p | Parker, cf 0 Bilin Ot Sini R Lol it < i el iy Bl sem o doim anme iy = \for 24 years. 0 lege, where he was an outstanding lathlete, and of Union Theological P School of Theology in Beirut. rb«fn housed recently, report great the vice-minister of Foreign Af- zuela in the interests of plans to falrs; K. M. Hsu of the Kinchengteach millions of peoples of these Banking Corporation; and Fei Chi-|lands to read and write. He has hao of the Central Trust Company.| been conferring with missionarie: 5. educators, and government heads. When the Rev. Philip Hebard|Special charts of the so called ward, of Collinswood, Conn, was| Laubach method” of teaching comthissioned a missionary of the|reading have been prepared for Congregational . Christian Church |the Aymara and Quechua Indians— on May 9 and assigned to service |the largest groups of Indians and in Beirut, Syria, he became the IOV almost one hundred per cent first member of the fourth genera-|lliterate tion, of his family to become a miséfonary. His greatgrandfather was & ‘thigsionary in Turkey for 49 years; his grandfather served the American Board for 30 years as| tréasurer; his father was a mis- | sionary in the Near East and Syria This newest mission- | ary is 4 graduate of Amherst Col- | - FISHERMEN MAY NOW SECURE WAR | RISK INSURANCE Men Engagé-dvi'n Alaska In- dustry May Secure Short Time Policies | WASHINGTON, May 17. To| \providr protection against war soldiers have |'isks for men in the Alaska sal- fishing industry, the War| Seminary; he has held pastorates | in Connecticul for several years. He | will join the staff of the Near East | Missionaries working among lnp-r ers in two mission stations in the Belgian Congo near which a large camp of American {mon fnterést in their . work -on the pan}Shmping Administration announces of the, soldiers—especially the doc- they may be insured under its| rise PIGGLY WIGGLY PAGE FIVE 24 QUALITY with SERVICE FRESH BULK COTTAGE CHEESE ON SALE AT PIGGLY WIGGLY PLACE YOUR DELIVERY ORDERS EARLY IN THE DAY Newspaper Advertising! ———————— Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 8¢ [E———————————— | FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone b54 PRI 75107 el Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 4 Chas. G. Warner Co. l Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes snd Paints Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E. O.DAVIE E. W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE snd PLYMOUTH |tors and the nurses. “But perhaps |the most appreciative of the visi- |tors have been the American Negro ! Summary Stolen bases, Laughlin, Wellen- death and disability Fishermen’s Life Insurance policies in amounts from $1,000 to $5000 per man for {St. Louis Blues Missouri Mules Cleveland .. ‘Washington Detroit 12 571 istein, Dosck, LonHeberg, Simek, 13 542|Sperling 2, Parmenter, Lacour, 10 500 Rreyling 3, Cochrell; two base hits,| St. Louis .. 8 AT\goffmann, Londeberg; bases on! Philadelphia u 458 palls, off Kreyling 5, off Stang 3, Chicago 8 444|0rf Hamm 3, off Long 4; struck Boston 7 333 qut by Kreyling 4, by Stang 7, by City League Long 1; 1 hit off Kreyling in 5 Won innings, 4 hits off Stang in 4 in-| 2 nings, 10 hits off Hamm in 5 in- nings, 2 hits off Long in 4 mnings;t umpires, Churchman at plate, Jo-' |seph on bases; scorer Dapcevich; | | time of game, 3 hours and 20 min-| { Lost Pct. 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 1 City 0 Webfeet 0 All Stars 0 —————————— When a mother cat wants 10 mother kittens, she is going to do so and Billy Williams, Night Mer- chant Patrolman will vouchsafe for this. When he returned to his cabin on Knudsen's Row the other day, he found a strange cat serenely mothering those Kkittens and the real mother purring around and “The Chinese rural home, which (during the previous thirty or forty years has largely withstood the im- pact of meodernizing movements, has undergone significant changes very -much put out. ds a result of the wdr,” says Dr. After a shorf investigation it was|Irma Highbaugh, =director of the found the strange cat had “lost”|Methodist Rural Service Center in| her own kittens but was bound on|Kienyang, Szechwan, West China mothering kittens anyway and|“One of the greatest is economic. bréwsing around had found Billy’s|Others are: new freedom for wo- kittens. men which brings new self-respect Everything is all right now as|and a new status; self-activity of the two cats take turns in an ami-|the farm family instead of the old | cable agreement. The kittens have|Passivity; a pew honesty, and also two mothers and are growing plump | BeW vices; education and literacy on double nursing. for the masses instead of for the| i few; consciousness of being citizens of a great nation and willingness | to sacrifice as individuals and as| families for larger interests. Every rural community has furnished its qugta of soldiers who leave behind CANON = CITY, Colo. — Sheriff|yives with added burdens and| Foster Ransom spent two daysichildren without a father’s care hunting a fellow wanted on alFamilies moving in great masses check-forgery charge and then|from occupied areas have changed | found him in his own jail. The|almost as much as if they had prisoner had been arrested on a|gone to a foreign country.” Temp. Sunday, May 16: Maximum 51, minimum 41. ® o a0 0 0 0 ¢ WANTED TO BUY-—Large stove for Victory Coffee Shop. Phone ° 796. l. charge of drunkenness, by city officials, and sent to the sheriff’s The Rev. Burney Shell, o jail for safekeeping. y Presby terian - missionary in the Ozark one month to four months. - BUY WAR BONDS soldlers,” .report the missionaries. They had, returned to the land of their forefathers and yet they did M. MacSPADDEN as » paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present thig coupon this evening at: the box office of thex— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “THE TALK OF THE TOWN" Federal Tax—6c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED First Natioml Bank of JUNEAU, MEMALE trofAL Ok S’Wfiflm ) WHEN IN NEED OF NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Pree Delivery Juneau GASTINEA HOTEL Bvery comfort made for our guests Air Service Informalion PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Btore—Tel. 600 American Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576 FORD AGENE€EY (Authicrized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Poot of Main Btrees Junean Motors Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Buflders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nl and Lamp CoE™: Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 The Alaskan Hotel at Reasonable Rates PHONE SINGLE O Alaska Music Subply Arthur M. Uggen, Manages and Supplies - Pnone 208 122 W. Seomd Alask: Ideal Paint Sh o b o . ek HARVEY R.LOWE Public Accountant PARCEL DELIVERY SERVICE PHONE 492 DAY OR NIGHT Scheduled Delivery 10 &. m. and 2 P. M.