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[ | | | | I w "+ FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic ‘RIDAY, JUNE 4, 1943 | 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 Mirectory. Oo\mt. five average words to the Duly rate per line for consecu- Hive insertions: One day .. Additional days Minimum charge HONE A CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE | LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED — f | | FOR RENT 16- OW boat. Call red evenings. ¢ 4 MARINE MOTORS with reduction gears—one 60 h.p; also one 90| h.pp. Call after 4:40 pm, 910 W 12th | | NFW DINETTE set, table, 4 chairs, light oak finish, Daybed slip cover| and 3 pillow covers, set, rust color, never used. Phone 181. ? HOMESTEAD site on Haines Highway, improvements and five| acres cleared garden. Inquire John | Reck, First Natl. Bank Bldg.{ Juneau. ' ONE SMALL OIL RANGE. 513 Willoughby. ONE 1938 Buick coupe. Phone 357. TURKISH BATH—Room for small restaurant or lunchroom. 431 So. Franklin St. IT/IODERN, ! small 4-room furnished | house. Phone black 611 after } 6 p.m. | GENETT Buul\ Shup in Sitka, 6 years established business. Cheap| for quick sale. Mrs. Robt. Hagen, ‘ Sitka, Alaska. Motorship CHICHAGOF, length 65 ft., cargo capacity 44 tons, 125 hp, Bow steel plated. Price $4,000. Chichagof Mining Co. » 1817 Smith Tower, Seattle. |y RAINBOW Inn at business. P.O. Box 151, Sitka. Good | Sitka. BUY mill wood now, $6 per ,unit. | Sending application with O.P.A. for raise in price. Phone 358. I lO-TUlSE “Cadet” radio, $25. No. 4,! | Buckingham Apts., Douglas. §-ROOM house, also income prop-| ¥ erty. If interested, P.O. Box 1615. | | diesel stationury engine. BB Em- | pire. WANTED i WANTED TO RENT—Small fur-! nished apartment or house. Call| room 420, Baranof Hotel. L] WANTED TO RENT - Modern furnished apartment or house! suitable for couple. Required on| or before July 15. Call Earle| McGinty Green 700. i Io. two weeks or a month. Wri ue‘ P.O. Box 163. WANT ED—Man or woman to c!eam theatre, steady work, top wages. | Apply 20th Century Theatre. | NEED MAID for regular steady| three-hour shift at 75c per hour' Also position open for maid on| regular eight-hour shift. Apmvl Gastineau Hotel. YOUNG married woman wants| typing, stenegraphic position. Comptometer operator. Mrs.| Noody. Phone blue 220. 4“MALE GOV'T office worker Wdé-! sires room in private home. In-| definite stay. References. Write | Empire C 2352. \ WANTED TO BUY—Sedan in fair | condition. Call 647 after 5 p.m. WANTED — To exchange three- bedroom house for two-bedroom | apt. or house near town. Phone red 325. v v > WANTED—Full or part -time sum- mer employment by newly gradu-| ated high school girl. Phone black 198. \ WANI‘ED AT ONCE—Ironers n.nd shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. WANTED—Washer; also dry clean- erman at Snow White Laundry. Good pay- Phone 299. "’ WANTED—Used furniture. 306 Wil- | loughby. Phone 788. WANTED TO BUY-—Large stove for Victory Coffee Shop. Phone 796. I 743 2- |cated at Baranof Island, Tongass Na-| { tional jto be | per |1ar ROOM furnished apt. with bath, oil heat. Inquire 513 Willoughby, upstairs. | FUR. apts., pafiy kept warm wm-,’ ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, | dishes. Seaview Apts " LOST and FOUND FOUND—White gold signet ring. Owner may have by proving property and paying for adv. MISCELLANEOUS GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- | 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. NATIONAL FOREST TIMBER FOR SALE Sealed bids will be received by |the Regional Forester, Juneau, Al- aska, up to and including June 21, 1943, for all the merchantable dead| timber, standing or down, and all| the live timber marked or desig-| nated for cutting, on an area to-| taling approximately 67 acres, lo- the head of Appleton Cove, Forest, Alaska, estimated a total of 1,691,384 feet B.M. more or less, of Sitka spruce, west- ern hemlock and red cedar saw- timber. No bid of less than $1.50 M. feet BM for spruce and edar sawtimber, $1.00 per M. feet BM. for hemlock sawtimber, and |1c per linear foot for piling up to and including 95 feet in length, and 1'zc per linear foot for piling| over 95 feet in length, will be con-| sidered. $750.00 must be deposited price, refunded, or re- tained in part as liquidated dam- ages, according to the conditions of sale. Primary manufacture out- side of the Territory of Alaska of any part of the timber, is subject to the consent of the Regional Forester. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids received. Be- |fore bids are submitted, full infor- - |mation concerning the timber, the | conditions of sale, and the submis- sion of bids, should be obtained| from the Division Supagvisor or the Regional Forester, Juneau, Alaska. adv. WANTED TO RENT—A sunlamp! DOUGLAS NEWS FLORIDAN IN TRANSPORT SERVICE, LEASE-LEND Carl Floridan of Douglas is now jdoing his bit for Uncle Sam in the transport service on one of the cargo vessels carrying supplies to various Allied countries. Last heard from Floridan was that he was enroute from San Francisco to |Sguth Africa, in one of the regu- convoys. His previous voyage was made between Seattle and Aus- tralia. Although far from making the money he did working on some of the base projects in Alaska, the |element of danger that is always |present makes his work far more LEAVE FOR INLET David Simonson with her Mrs. |two children and Mrs. Stella Adams with her two children left yester- day for the vicinity of Excursion Inlet where their husbands areem- ployed. They resided in the Buck- ingham Apartments. |NOTICE TO PAY SCHOOL TAX Notice is hereby given to all per- sons within the City of Douglas who are liable for the payment of school tax as required by Chapter 38 of thg Territorial laws: that the tax is now due and payable to L. W. KILBURN, School Tax Collector. RS G ea adv. Empire Classifieds Pay! this | vith each bid, to be applied on the | | purchase SEATILE IS WINNER IN 43-Year-01§ Hurler Does Does Trick - Beavers Win in Twelfth | (By Associated Press) {the twelfth inning yesterday to |beat Oakland. Spencer |doubled. Larry Barton beat out infield roller Harris advancing. John O'Neill sent a long fly to |center and Harris scored | Forty-three year old hurler Johnson | plate. MES THURSDAY Pacific Coast League | Seattle 1; Hollywood 0, ten in- | nings. Portland 2; Oakland 1, twelve in- | nings. | San Francisco 7; San Diego 4 Los Angeles 6; Sacramento 7. National League New York 6; Pittsburgh 9. Philadelphia 2; St. Louis 8. Brooklyn 1; Chicago 8. Boston 4; Cincinnati 7. American League Chicago 6; Boston 4. St. Louis 1; New York 2, Cleveland 4; Philadelphia Detroit 8; Washington 2 City League STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League | | 10. E. PERCY POND FUNERAL RITES Final rites for Edwin “Percy Pond, 71-year-old Alaskan pioneer, will be held tomorrow, Saturday afternoon, at 2 o'clock in the chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortu- ary. | i vices, and pallbearers will be H. L. Faulkner, Henry Messerschmidt, Robert Simpson, J. W, Leivers, H. D. Stabler and Trevor Davis. Interment will be in the Pioneers’ Plot of Evergreen Cerastery. Mr. Pond died the evening of June 1 at St. Ann's Hospital, where he had been a patient since his re- turn to Juneau from California a few weeks ago. He had heen in ill health for the past few years. His wife and grandchildren are in Berkeley, Calif., ard a daugh- ter is a nurse with the British Army, stationed in London. With his friend of wearly 60 years—Lloyd V. Winter -Mr. Pond operated one of the pioneer busi- nesses of Juneau and Alaska. As chronicling photographers of pio- neer days, the two garnered a ricn library of action shots that are today priceless historical documents of the early era. ALEX MILLER RECEIVES PROMOTION; CORPORAL Of -interest to his many Juneau friends comes news that Private Alex Miller, somewhere in the Aleutians, has been promoted to a corporal. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller, young Miller was graduated from Juneau High School with the class of 1941. His sisters, Helen, Millie, Nellie and Rose Mary also 1eside in Juneau. TIGHT GAME Portland pushed across a run in| Harris| an! of the Seattle Rainiers held Hol- lywood to six hits yesterday to score a ten-inning victory. Jewell| scored the only run during the game when first baseman Butch Moran threw wildly trying to |catch him going from second to |third and then continuing to the ( Won Lost Pet.|io gt Lous series, bustled into |Los Angeles 33 12 133 the Windy City yesterday and San; Bsonieco ol 614 1 omptly had the wind taken out| {86 Diego 2 22 532050 them when the Chicago Cubs |OGakland 23 22 BSlllpagged an easy victory, which, Aollywood o e coupled with the Cardinals’ con- Portland 19 26 422] 00t of the Phillies, reduced the jBkazazetio A 386 | Dodgers’ lead to half a game. Old [ty . .. 17 28 315, warneke smothered Brooklyn | Netignal Lasne {with six hits. Bill Nicholson of the Won Lost Pet.|gyps hit a homer with a man on| Brooklyn 2% 15 B3Ad wisiy ‘ :S‘ Louis a8 A | At St. Louis, Murray Dickson { Pittaburgh 19 17 8 came out of the bullpen to pitch | Cincinnati 20 18 52 . 5 | his first complete vietory of thel Philadelphia 18 20 474 season with a triumph over the Boston 16 18 Phillies. Lou Klein of the Cards FEW ok 15 24 385 oo our hits at five times at bat. Chicago 13 25 342 " Cincinnati’s uprising in the eighth | American League |inning yesterday saved the game| Won Lost Pc against Boston. {New York 20 14 Manager McCarthy of the Yan-| | Washington n o s kees shook up his batting order Bl 19 16 but the bomb was placed too late | Philadelphia 2039 BIBlggiie et Chicago 15 16 ; Cleveland 18 20 474 Boston 18 21 .462 st Lous .1 0 ROU"NE FLIGHTS City League 1o " MADEDAILY WITH | Missouri Mules .3 0 1000 |St. Louis Blues ....3, 1 .50 webteet 21 s ALASKA COASTAL City . ¥ ok, All Stars 0 4 000 TOMORROW AT 2 Dean C. E. Rice will conduct ser-) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Weather or | Police Officer John Reill in a firm: “NO! or no ... explain the law The weather in San Francisco is a military secret . . . NO! JUNEAU ALASKA No? If's No! | a5 | -/ o but weather ly caught up with David Allyn to NO! | | | | | ,Dodgers Are | Wallopedby | [ b | There will be noLgan o ball ~ ChicagoCubs|. . e o | ling to .xlwnmon announcement. A | | game was scheduled between the| i (By Associated Press) The Brooklyn Dodgers, all puffed \up at winning the final game in | ; An Alaska Coastal plane left for {Haines this morning with A. S. Yarnell as the only passenger, |while W. E. Davenport, June Bene- dict, R. C. Williams and S. D. C. Larson were booked for Skagway. F. R. Enstinkey made the return| trip from Haines. Earl Eckstrom and Glen North- wett flew to Sitka and returning |were Dave H. Brown, Maxine Wal-| lace, Ivon Ofteslin, Ole Wick and| Arthur Berggren. On a f{light to Hoonah, passen- !gers were Lucille Willis, Sarah |Sharclain and Sarah Johnnie. For| Excursion Inlet, ' Leonard Lenecz| and Peter H. Dick. Coming to Ju- neau on the return from Excur- sion were Ray Liebsle, S. E. Jen- nette, Albert Robinson, Frank Wise, Chester B. Neff and B. M. Thomas. Completing yesterday's flight schedule, W. J. Peger, Olaf Lysted and Jean Hansen were on the re- turn trip from Pelican. For Excursion, Fred Mchniel Dave Perisby, Wayne Robinson, Wayne Casper and A. H. Russell. Mrs. Ernest Rude and Mrs. C. A. Bemis flew to Hoonah and Ex- cursion passengers included R. O. Decker, Lester R: DeMars, and Lester MoCallen, John A. Voight, Sarah Shanlon and Lucille Willis returned from the Inlet. On a return from Pelersburg, | | ;PRESBYTERIANS BALL GAME POSTPONED Missouri \hl]es and All Stars. AT ANNUAL MEET PLAN MISSIONS DETROIT, June 4.—A vigorous nationial and foreign mission pro- gram to meet wartime emergencies has been agreed upon by commis- sioners to the 155th General As- embly of the Presbyterian Church in thé United States of America. The reports of the two standing | committees came at the final ses- | sions' of the six-day assembly,| which had been streamlined both the war. The 450 commissioners, | ministers and ruling elders, repre- closed in some s, they are open- | ing in other according to the report. which the foreign-missions committee presented. are Afghanistan, parts of China/| » and the Andean highlands in South‘ America, where there are ml!]lon.s untouched by Christian culture. It urged that “because of the tre-| mendous need for missionary work | and rehabilitation and reconstruc- | tion after war,” special funds should be raised now. asking for a more active program, | the Assembly agreed to ‘“cooperate | in the' program for resettlement of | American-Japanese and seek in| every way to devl'lop in their com- | as to program and size because of | | sented just half the usual number.| ¢ “If doors for the time being are| ; “New areas| & . In the home fieid, in addition to| - | munities a spirit of Christian broth- | erhood toward them.” The report also called on the | church to combat anti-Semitisnt | ‘in any and all its manifestations | in our midst, and to strive for achievement of real and neighborliness among all men. Dr. E. Graham Wilson York, general secretary of \hr' board of national missions, said the | | board is helping create and perpet- | uate Christian ideals by teaching, | healing and preaching in cities and | rural sections, and among Negro groups, the American Indians, in the West Indies and among the Spanish-speaking groups. 7 i . LOOKS LIKE A PITCHER NEWARK —John Rager, up for |a trial with the Newark Bears, {reminds observers of Johnnie Mur- phy and Johnnie Allen because of his lantern jaw. If he can pitch as well as the other pair he'll be all right. POSTGIRL — Mrs. Nellie Beckman (above) is the first wo- man mail carrier to serve San Diego, Calif, is invited to present th J JACK GOIILD’ as a'paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE at. the box officg of thes— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: “ALMOST MARRIED" Federal Tax—#6c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! is coupon this evening IN WAR AS IN PE passengers were Robert W. Pear- son, Dave Westerberg and R. W.| Douglas. | Flying to Excursion were William | O. Morrison, Frank Lund, A. Ful-| gencyo, Alfred E. Hamlett and R.| P. Bindreiff. Coming back to| Juneau on the return were D. G. Paxton, Bill Warrens and James | Huston. | Last trip of the day, a return from Ketchikan, was made with the following passengers: E. H.| Keepers, J. R. Banryman, E. H.| Woods, James E. Rice and H. G. ‘ Maxwell. e 50 8L S Chemically-treated wood resists | rot and has an estimated length of | life three to ten times that of | untreated wood. l First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASKA - osIT R FEDERAL D B, AC DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FOODS AT PIGGLY WIGGLY YOU ARE SURE OF THE BEST! Phone I6-PEGGLY WIGGL Y-Phone 24 QUALITY with DEPENDABILITY brotherhood | of New W HE COWES HONE FOR DINNER/ The “Dinner” is whatever you wish fo feature! Of course, a he-man will want and and enjoy real nourishing food. AND WHEN YOU BUY THOSE There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! e o ey Soothing Organ Music and THRIFT C0-OP EVERI;' NIGHT Member Iluucgul Retailse- Owned Grucers John Marin, Prop. Phone 64 PHONE 767 ————————— rFoElAsnert FORD AGENEY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GABS—OIL Foot of Main Btreet Junean' Motors FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 054 GEORGE BROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEAT® AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 48 i Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Chas. G. Warner Co Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints Utah Nut and Lamp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE ¢ Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel The Alaskan Hetel Light and Heayy Hauling Nowly Reuovated Radus E O.DAVIS E. W, DAVIS “"‘"‘;::‘:“ PHONE 81 Renras 4 NORTH TRANSFER Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Planes—Musical Instraments and Supplier Phone 208 122 W. Seond COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DFALERS WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Ftove Ofl—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Junean Transfer Phene 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing a Complete Outtitter tor Men “BMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Pree Delivery Juneau GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Alr Service Informalion PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 600 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club INSURANC PHONE 578