The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 18, 1943, Page 5

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Copy must be in the office by 4 o'clock in the afternoon to in- dre insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone firectory. Count five average words to the Daily rate per line for consecu- Bve insertions: One day .. Additional days .. Minimum charge FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS . FOR SALE 30-FT. TROLLING boat, 1st class shape. Main Float, Harbor dlA 200, Boat E)i(l' iINAL Nichols 9x12. Phone Chinese 574 rug, 40-GAL tank for sale Phone HOT 626 water for Windsor beginners, Apts [, suitable 218, TRUMPET $20. Apt after 5 p.m. 6-ROOM Phone | red 615. turnishec¢ house potatoes. See John Eagle River, SEED Acker- mann, | Motorship 65 ft., CHICHAGOF, lumlh go capacity 44 tons, 125 | hp., Bow steel plated. Price $4,000. Chichagof Mining Co.| 1817 Smith Tower, Seattle. Sitka. Good 151, Sitka. | RAINBOW Inn at business. P.O. Box B{Y mm vmod now, $6 per uxm Sending application with OP.A.| for raise in price. Phone 358. | 3-ROOM furnished house, one acre patented ground, 2% miles out| Glacier Highway. Call red 759 or | see .Davis. at North Transfer Office, adet” l.ulm, SZo No. 4, Apts., Douglas. 10-TUBE Buckingham 5-ROOM furnished house, sun porch, Flamo range, Frigidaire. 1 mile north of Douglas Bridge. Phone 5032. 3-ROOM bungalow, partly fur- nished, 3 acres patented ground.| Good garden spot. See Wm. Reck. | Phone green 410, 1 §-ROOM furnished house, black 615. Phone | APARTMENT house, furnished, going for half of actual value. Franklin. completely | less than | 431 So.| 5-ROOM house, also income prop- | erty. If interested, P.O. Box 1615.| FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic| diesel stationary engine. BB Em- pire. D IMMEDIATELY, to rent or lease 4- or 5-room furnished | house. Permanent. Tel. 800. Ask for Don Underwood. | WAN D AT ONCE—Ironers and | Alaska Laundry. 3 bedroom quarters anent Gov't | W/\x 5 shirt finishers. o1 WANTED TO BUY— Short wave receiver. Phone blue 379, WANTED—Two baxbm;, one hun-‘ dred dollars week guarantee. Cupps Barber Shop, Anchora.ge,; Alaska. mNr’i‘Eb— Wo;;an 161; ” paxl time work in home, 10 am. to 2 pm. Phone 11. | 6\'.’\.\"1'}:‘,1; Sma ye Bike Shop. icycle. Madsen's WANTED—Washer; also dry clean erman at Snow White Laundry Good pay. Phone 299. WANTEDUsed fur loughby. Phone 788. 'O BUY-—Large stove Coffee Shop. Phone ONE OR TWO Long’('nml g men employed days to share my fully furnished home for indefin- ite period after June 1. Excellent residential location. Phone red 649 TED Victory WAN for 796 2-ROOM furnished apartment, with bath, oil range. Inquire 513A Willoughby. I‘TL'R apts., easy kept warm. Win- ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. Seaview Apts, [ IN lat !sons interested in appear and file objections in writ- | ling to the Final Report and con- !11th day of May, ' Last LOST and FOUND L l)"l K( Grocery . Gastineau Reward. ys on ring @ Phone 487 Captain’s overseas cap. return to Empir LOST - Finder LOST or misplaced: one straw suit case, one over-night case lower plate false teeth. Liberal reward. Notify manager, Gas- tineau Cafe. MISCELLANEOUS GUARANTEED Real\snc Permn- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201 315 Decker Way. TURN your old gold Into value, cash or trade at Nugget Shop. NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL REPORT OF EXECUTOR THE COMMISSIONER'S COURT FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA. Before FELIX GRAY, Commission- er and ex-officio Probate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Last Will and Testament and of the Estate| also de- W. BURRIDGE, D. W. Burridge, of DUANE known as ceased NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Frank Garnick, executor of the Last Will and Testament of | Duane W. Burridge, also known as D. W. Burridge, deceased, has filed herein his Final Report of the ad- ministration of the estate ceased, and that a hearing will be had upon the same, before {undersigned, at Juneau, Alaska, at {2 oclock P.M. on July 12, 1943, which time and place all per- the estate may test the same. GIVEN under my hand and the seal of the Probate Court this 1943. FELIX GRAY, Commissioner Probate Judge, cinet. publication publication and ex-officio Juneau Pre- First May June 11, 1, 1943, 1943, adv. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That the petition of Olaf Westby and Clarice Westby, husband and wife, of Juneau, Alaska, has been filed in the Commissioner’s Court for Juneau Precinct, at Juneau, for adoption of Gaylord Lee Madison, a male child, born October 20, 1940, and for change of said child's iname to Gaylord Lee Westby; and that hearing on said petition has been set for 10 am. June 17, 1942, in said Commissioner’s Court; and that Carl Madison, the dent, non-consenting father of said {child, and all other persons con- cerned, are hereby cited to be and appear in said Court, at the time and place above stated, and show |cause, if any they have, why the adoption and change should not be granted. Dated: Juneau, Alaska, 1943 FELIX GRAY, United States Commissioner. HOWARD D. STABLER, Petitioners’ Attorney, Shattuck Building, Juneau, Alaska of name May 4, EIGHT THOUSAND AT OPENING RACE SEASON, CHICAGO CHICAGO, Ill. May 18. — Eight sand racing fans attended the of the summer long racing at Hawthorne Ovals yes- t start season terday Sales Talk paid $11.46 and $$4 to win the feature race. Last Gold placed and Bob's Dream showed. L S S o SPECIAL MEETING L.O.O. Moose tonight at 8. Initia- tion. ady. and | of de-| the | non-resi- |Browns has probably finished his| DODGERS WIN\ FROM (ARDS INST.LOUIS 01d Jinx of Cubs Still Work- ing-Cincinnati Back in | First Division (By Associated Press) The Brooklyn Dodgers mastered the world champion St. Louis Car-| |dinals yesterday on the Cards' own |field 1 to 0 as Rube Melton held [the Red Birds to five hits and also [batted in the one lone scoring| [tally of the day in the second in-| {ning More twilight game Johnny Podganjny, old the Chicago Cubs, pitched Phillies to an 8 to 4 victory Chicago yesterday. Johnny |shaky at the start, yielding xhrvr‘ {runs in the opening inning, then |settled down and did not allow an- |other until the ninth frame. The |Phillies scored five runs in the first inning, sending Claude Pas-| seau and Ed Hanyzweski to the! ~ |showers before the rally ended. Cincinnati went back into the first division yesterday by defeat- ing the Giants 3 to 1 in the first of a three-game series on the Polo rounds. Ray Starr, on the Cin- | nnati mound, held the Giants to eight hits and singled with the bases loaded in the second inning when Cincy scored all of tn(\ runs. than 12,000 fans saw the jinx of the| over wa GAMES MONDAY National League Cincinnati 3; New York Chicago 4; Philadelphia Brooklyn 1; St. Louis American League All scheduled postponed. Pacific Coast League No games were played in the Pa-| cific Coast League Monday as the teams were traveling to open to- day on the following schedule for this: week: Seattle at Portland Sacramento at San Diego. Oakland at San Francisco. Hollywood at Los Angolvs. OF CLUBS l'ndhr Coast League Won 24 16 16 15 14 9 9 8 National League Won 1 8 { ! Lost P(:L‘ Los Angeles 3 San Francisco | Oakland San Diego Hollyweod Portland Sacramento Seattle Lost Pet. | 7 708 8 .)7‘7 Brooklyn Boston St. Louis Cincinnati Philadelphia Pittsburgh |New York Chicago American League Won Lost Pct. 14 8 636 13 9 591! 14 560 9 600 10 476 11 440 8 421 8 36¢ | City League | Won Lost Pct.| {St. Louis Blues 2 1.000 Missouri Mules 1.000 City .000 Webfeet .000 All Stars .000 Top Hmer in Amer.League IsOufof Game Shor!stofiephens of Browns Fractures Pa- tella Sliding ST. LOUIS, May 18—Vern Ste- phens, shortstop for the St. Louis New York Cleveland Washington St. Louis Detroit Philadelphia Chieago Boston | 1 0 0 0 baseball career for the duration. This was disclosed today following a report of an X-ray showing Ste- phens fractured the patella of his left knee Sunday sliding into sec- ond base and he will likely be out of the line-up for six to eight weeks. He has been pasting the ball at a 368 clip and is the top| hitter in the American League. | Stephens was recently reclassified as 1-A and expects to be drafted in about two months. > DR. GEORGE HAYS BACK AFTER SITKA (HIE('KLP! Dr. George Hays, liaison officer | of the Department of Health, re- turned to his Juneau office last evening from Sitka, where he has been for the past few days on de- partmental business. “WHITE IS ,‘jTechni(aI Kayo Ends Fight | scored | closed THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA Ladies in There Pifching their beefsteak ration points to their mates during the season. won't show up on the box score are (left to right) Mrs. Ron Northey, May and Mrs. Si Johnsen. JOELOUIS |2 - TODEFEND HIS TITLE b But It Will Be Affer Present e War If It Does Not Last Too Long HUACHUCA, Arizona, May Joe Louis, cavalry sergeant, defend his title after the war, the war does not last too long Louis made this statement here| after his arrival from Burbank Calif., where he has been appear- ing in the filming of a movie! 18, will it} | |“This Is The Army.” Louis plans to spend three days lon leave with the troops here - WINNER IN CARTO BOUT | prietor -Philadelphian’s Right \ Eye Closed by Blow BALTIMORE, Md. May Chalky White, former feather- | weight title claimant, last night a technical knockout over Frankie Carto of Philadelphia in| the eighth round of a scheduled ten-round bout. g Carto’s right eye was practically at the start of the final 18. round WASH. U. VARSITY IS LOSER OAKLAND, Calif, May 18—The| University of Washmgmns crew';,) shorn of their three-year crown,| are Homeward bound with a con- solation prize after coming off sec- ond best in the annual regatta with California. While the varsity crew lost out seven and one-half lengths, the Husky yearlings showed high pro- mise, nipping the shell by a one- foot margin over the two-mile dis- tance. The feature race, over the three- mile course, was marked by ragged rowing on the part of Ulbrickson's {inexperiénced Huskies. Nearing the two-mile post, stroke Elliott Loken “caught a crab” and almost lost his ocar. The varsity’s time was relatively slow, California winning in 15 min- utes and two and five-tenths sec- onds, Washington breaking the wire 25 seconds later. - METHODIST LADIE: MEET WEDNE Methodist ladies and their friends are invited to a sewing meeting and dessert lunchevn to- morrow, Wednesday afternoon, at the home of Mrs. Floyd Doyle in the Hillerest Apartments. Th luncheon is set for 1 o'clock, | sence | enroute vacation {ment of liquors, |service somewhere overseas, v husbands play ball for the Philliecs—who vowed they'd aliot DOUGLAS NEWS TING OF GUARDS SCHEDULED TONIGHT Douglas company of Terri- Guards meets this evening usual hour of 7:30 o'clock Natatorium. Regular uni- with raincoats and gloves in order, according to Capt. H. Andrews. The torial at the in the Walter CASHEN RETURNS than a year's Mr Thomas Cashen and two children, Tommy, Eddie and Mary Lea, arrived home last night flom Montana where she was vis- |iting her mother and father on | their, ranch, the O.C. The latter she reports are enjoying prosperous times, although experiencing the samgydifficulties so common every- where, shortage of help. MRS, After more ab- MISS Miss Gra to PUSICH SAILS > Pusich left last night sattle for visit a three week: MARIN LEAVES BUSK Taking along a good sized ship- beer and other opening stock in of business, the John Marin, pro- | of thé Douglas Inn, sailed last night for the Gateway City. merchandise for his new place ‘Skagway Inn,” IN \l'l{\l(l ABROAD Bill Bliss, former Douglas young man, is now in the Coast Artillery accord- ing to word just received here by his father, O. H. Bliss. | PENNY DRIVE ENDS IN DOUGLAS THIS Drive <-n'\'rlup¢-:\ in WEEK Penny Doug- Mrs. Danny Litwhiler, las will be collected the end of week by Mrs. W. E. Cahill, Drive committee member on Island. Mrs. Cahill has asked all people with contribution the Children’s Orthopedic Hos| leave their money in the Drive envelopes Douglas sl and cafes before the end of week in - FINAL RITES FOR Those who'll make the sacrifices which Mrs. Merrill | this Penny | thie | that for pital Penny | tores | the | MRS. PARKER TODAY Conducted by the Rev. Ralp] Baker, services for Mrs. er were held this afternoon in chapel of the Charles Mortuary. Interment was green Cemetery. Serving as pallbearers E. Robertson, M. S. Whittier J. Gallwas, Fred Henning Conn and A. L. Calame Mrs. Parker died May attle, Wash., where she has making her home with her Leslie, since the death of her band [\\\ years ago. - 5 in - MACK EADS FUNERAL TOMORROW AT 2P. Mack Eads, be | Funeral services for Canadian born American, wil held tomorro Wednesday a noon, at 3 the Charles W. Carter Mort who was employed and asbestos worker (I'v U. S. Engineers at Sitka, ha himself May 5 in his cell in City Jail here, using a strip of vas torn from the of his bunk. His age is given as 38, home in Oklahoma o o L R O RS YOUR BROX LENSES Replaced in our own shop. Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carl Blomgren Bldn Phone 636. and were F. John I. mattress c h E A. L. Park- the W. Carter in E ver- R A Se- been son | hus- M. 1 fter- ck in the chapel of s a with nged the can- over his Eyes 1son adv TED KEATCIN at the box offi ce of the-— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “THE TALK OF THE TOWN" Federal Tax—6¢ per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED as » paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening First National Bank | of JUNEAU, ALASKA EDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATH | | | {| Chas.G. Warner Co. | Pne PIGGLY WIGGLY 22 QUALITY with SERVICE Phone It'san old, old story BUT it's true . . . IT PAYS TO BUY CANNED FOODS in GALLON LOTS Look over our stock of Fruits and Vege- tables, Pickles Catsup and Sauces in gal- lon cans. PIGGLY WIGGLY PLACE YOUR DELIVERY ORDERS EARLY IN THE DAY There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Adverlisiqg! P———— Soothing Organ Music and Delicious Fried Chicken | EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Marin, Prop. Phone 88 THRIFT CO-OP Member National Retallse- Owned Grocers 11 BEWARD STREEY PHONE 787 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREABES—GAS—OIL PFoot of Main Strees Juneau Motors FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone b54 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 93 or 88 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND PQULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 4 Thomas Hardware Co. Marine Engines and Supplies PAINTS — OILS MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 WOMEN’S APPAREL Barsnof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E O.DAVIS E. W. DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DFALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oll—Rtove Ofl—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ng — Storage and Crating CALL US! .!noq- 'rm"s_ler Complete Outhitter for Mem “SBMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 184 or 108 Pree Delivery Juneau Ideal Paint Shop Phone 549 Fred W. Wend$ [ HARVEY R. LOWE Public Accountant GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Alr Service Informalion PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liguor Store—-Tel. 690 American Meat — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576

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