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» ~ WPDNI;SDAY JULY 14, 1943 PHONEA CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND Copy must be In the office by 4 o’clock in the afternoon to in- wre insertion on same day. ‘We saccept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone Birectory. Count five average words to the Dally rate per line for consecu- Gve insertions: One day et A Additional days ........ 5o Minimum charge ....580 FOR SALE 20-YEAR Established Dry Clm’\nm! Business and equipment for sale. | Excellent opportunity for man and wife. Only Dry Cleaning | business in city. For details in- FOR RE! quire Pantorium Cleaners, Box| 937, Cordova, Alaska. ROOM in pnntn homo (:(‘ntlcmnu preferred. References. 315 Third St. loughby SMALL $475. Harbor CRUISER, In(l\]”c B‘UR apts., easy kept warm wm- Master. ! ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, disiies. Seaview Apts. MISCELLANEOUS COLEMAN oil heater and combina-{[HAVE TWO boxes 30-30 hard tion Monarch electric, wood and| point. Will trade for 2 boxes .300 coal range, 3 Calrod units. Phoup; Savage. Phone 197. green 499. 22-FT. TROLLER, 8-ft. beam, fully | equipped, ready to go. Call Doug- | las 78 IGUARANTELD RPa.lXS!lC Perma- nent, $6.50. Paper Curls, $1 up Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 315 Decker Way. Effective June 15. SEMI - LEATHER bound .llhllnl%‘ containing 6 dozen victrola rec- ords, some large operettas; other| miscellaneous. 423 Harris St. | LOT in Douglas. Phone 378. | cash or trade at Nugget Shop. SALE—6-room house, full] basement and garage, Ray oil| burner. Best neighborhood. Phone | Baranof Hotel, room 411 between 4 and 8 pm. | FOR i United States | DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska, May 28, 1943. Notice is hereby given that Elvira T. Maurstad has made application for a homesite under the Act of |May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) Anchor- — < —_ |age Serial No. 09253 for a tract of THREE houses and cabin, all Iul'-}‘ldn(l situated on Favorite Bay, nished, Gastineau Ave. Inquire about 1 mile S. E. of Angoon, in Juneau Paint Store. |Lots 2 and 5, Sec. 31, T. 50 S, R. |68 E, C. R. M., embraced in U. 8. |Survey No. 2437, containing the |net area of 4.72 acres, and it is now lin the files of the U. S. Land Of- fice, Anchorage, Alaska. DAVE'S Cocktail Bar. Phone blue, Any and all persons claiming ad- 662. Bargain for cash. | versely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claims in the District Land Office at An- chorage, Alaska within the period pire. |of publication or thirty days there- — lafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the statutes. R i | FLORENCE L. KOLB, WANTED—Woman clerk, 42 his.| week, typing -experience pre-| Acting Register. Date first publication: July 7, 1943. ferred. Write No. C 2477, Empire, for interview. COMPLETELY furnished apart-| ment house in Skagway, Alaska,| located in business district. Can be changed into business houses very easily. Write Box 905, Skagway. S(,AM)I\'AVIA\I Rooms and Cry- stal Steam Baths; also Hamilton piano. 457 South Franklin St. Inquire owner. §OR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic diesel stationary engine. BB Em- Date last publication: Sept. 1, 1943, adv. ice janitor. United States DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska, June 28, 1943. Notice is hereby given that Ethel E. Haines has made application for a homesite understhe Act of May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) Anchorage Serial No. 09126, for a tract of land described as Lot I of the Triangle Group of Homesites situated on Glacier Highway, approximately 12 miles Northwest of Juneau, Alaska, Plat of U. S. Survey No. 2391, Sheet Phone | WANTED—Steamer trunk or or serv- ice man’s foot locker. Black 600; TYPIbT afternoon 2508. : clerk, Write | cashier, work. LADY wants Empire WANTED—Good 2nd hand bicycle. Pay gotd prd Green 250, 1;701 house up | no children. G/“AN']LIJ to $1C0 Phone 197. Apartm | monthly, | | by | WANTED—Car washer. Apply Dnve; Milner. Phone blue 510. | is now in the files of the U. S |Land .Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claim in the district land office within {the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be WANTED—Washer; also dry clean- |barred by the provisions of the erman at Snow White Laundry. |statutes. Good pay. Phone 299. | FLORENCE L. KOLB, — - -~ | Acting Register. WANTED--Experienced beauty OP-|pgte first publication, July 14, 1943. erator for permanent poSItion.|p,.¢e ast publication, Sept. 8, 1943, Apply James C. Cooper, 4th and\ adv. Main streets. RGeS WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. WANTED-—Lady bookkeeper; also a typist for 3 hours daily, and one| truck driver. Write Empire M 2421, WANTED TO BUY—Large stove CALL FOR BIDS apt. with bath. Inquire 513A Wll« | TURN your old gold into value, | No. 2, containing 4.65 acres and it| ‘|the game marked his fourth defeat THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE «JUNEAU ALASKA PADRES LOSE (LOSE GAME WITHANGELS {Portland Daais Holly- wood Stars in Only Other Game The San Diego Padres’ defense | cracked in one inning in the Pa- cific Coast League last night and was enough for Los Angeles to win. Frankie Dasso of the Pa- dres hurled against Jodie Phippsj in a nice mound duel but the An- gels won 2 to 1. Each pitcher allowed five The Los Angeles sluggers got two runs in the third on two hits and two errors. A seventh inning rally WEBFEH ARE | M‘ule's‘HurI:r;ikh'es;4-Hi'1 Ball in Game Here Last Nnghl SCORE BY IN\INGS 6 7—TI 5 5 Mules 1234 1010 Webfeet 0000 {that The Mules defeated the Webfeet last night in the second gameé of the second half baseball City hits.|League schedule. Schuler, Mule [hurler, pitched 4-hit shutout ball while his teammates ganged up on (McDaniels of the Webfeet, col- netted |lecting a total of 14 hits to drive four runs and enabled Portland to|McDaniels to the showers after five |defeat Hollywood last night in the|innings. Plake finished the game only other Coast League game. Four |for the Webfeet, allowing the Mules errors by the Stars contributed to two of the 14 blows. This game the defeat. levens the count for the Mules at lone win and one loss, losing the GAMES TUESDAY |first game to the Blues on Sun- i Pacific Coast League ;dfly. i Los Angeles 2; San Diego 1. In the first inning Cockrell { Portland Hollywood 2. [started it for the Blues by doub- Only games played. {ling into left field and scoring on All-Star Game la single by Docz. American League National| In the third inning Nielsen sin- League 3. |gled, Cockrell was walked and Niel- sen scored on Kreyling's fly in deep centerfield. { The fifth was the big inning for the Mules scored five runs on seven safe blows. Nielsen, who batted |twice in this inning, started it out |with a single. Cockrell flied out ito left and Docz, Kreyling, Hoff- man, and Schuler all singled in order before Hoffman was out af |the plate when Krisko hit a field- ler's choice to Plake, the Webfeet's |third baseman. Three runs had Sacramento 29 57 337! scored byt the Mules continued to National League hit Heinrich and Meilink singled, Won Lost Pct, [scoring two more runs before Niel-| 24 667 |sen was out on a grounder to end 34 .580{the inning. ! 35 521 In the last inning Schuler sin- 31 513 |gled and scored on an error com- 42 447\ mitted by Elzinga, the substitute 40 .444|shortstop for the Webfeet. Chicago 43 434 : New York . 46 395 American League Won Lost Pct. 43 30 589 Meilink, ss, 38 34 528 | Nielsen, 2b 40 37 519Cockrell, rf . 35 36 .493 | Docz, 1b 3 37 ABG’Kreyling, cf 35 98 479 |Hoffman, 3b 3 39 .473 | Schuler, p Philadelphia 44 -436 | Krisko, ¢ - | Heinrich, 1f | Pena, rf ‘AMERI(ANS TAKE GAME " YESTERDAY - * | | Vojtko, ss | Austerman, 2b {Nationals Beaten 510 3 in| ¢ All-Star Annual ‘ (Classic gk . PHILADELPHIA, July 14.— The Summary | American League wrote new words Three-base hits: Plake; two-base to an old tune as they smashed the hils: Cockrell, Krisko; stolen bases: | National League last night 5 to 3|Krisko, McDaniels; bases on batls: in an All-Star game here. off Schuler 0, McDaniels 1, Plake In previous games, the Ameflcfln:O; passed balls: McDaniels to Tom- League had chalked up a margin of |lifson; struck out: by Schuler 10, seven victories against three de-|by McDaniels 3, by Plake 2; hits feats but it was always the Yankees|off MecDaniels in 5 innings, 2 hits| against the whole National League. off Plake in 2 innings, 4 hits off| In this game there wasn't a single,Schulex in seven innings; hit by Yank used. | pn.ched ball: Schuler by McDanicl.s” Bobby Doerr, second, baseman for | double plays: Austerman to Bahr; the Boston Red Sox, smashed alumpire: O'Brien; scorer: Dapcevich; homer in the second inning to bring|time of game 1 hour 30 minutes. | in two ahead of him and decide the game. £ 2 The runs came off Mort Cooper, B 2 * I II St. Louis Card champ hurler and GUADALCANAL, July 14.—Base- {ball is still America’s No. 1 sport, even down here in the Solomons. Every evening just before dusk, the sound of ball and bat is heard throughout the jungle and over 5; City League Missouri Mules 8, Webfeet 0. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pct. 64 24 21 51 3 593 45 42 517 43 46 483 40 46 465 40 49 449 Oakland 37 50 425 Los Angeles San Francisco Portland San Diego Seattle Hollywood | St. Louis ! Brooklyn Pittsburgh Cincinnati Philadelphia | Boston BOX SCORE Mules = wloorvatnmnsoy New York cf | Detroit Washington | Chicago St. Louis Cleveland Boston | | O I L 4 T SRR R CRop e | ol souscisesy o 2 = | | Totals | ‘Webfeet { = S e | Janis, rf Bahr, 1b Stoppello, cf Plake, 3b, p . Tomlinson, Elzinga, ss Fisher Hunt E [ 1 0} 0 o0 [ 0 0 0 1 0 | | | | | O O CR T e sl ccoccornronorony by the American League sluggers. Emil Dutch Leonard of Wash- ington started for the Americans and was credited with the victory. He gave up two singles and a fly in the first inning. STEPHENS IS TOP BATTER {meaning of the word alibi, !soupbone for 11926. The next year found him at man in baseball,” | “Infield errors or lack of runs have! __|tracks. to attend §iill Going Strong At 40; Hubbell Says ’ He Never Felf Beffer By (llll‘ ROYAL AP Features Sports Writer NEW YORK.—“The greatest pit- cher that ever lived,” according to| New York Giants’ catcher Gus| Mantuso, is still winning them at| 40 years of ‘age. | He is the ohe and only King Carl | Hubbel, the pride of Meeker, Okla., who started throwing that screw- ball away back in 1923 as a mem- | bér of the Cushing, Okla, State League mound staff. | & The records say that old Long| Pants has won 251 games while losing 150, up to June 15th. They| don’t tell about all those heart- breakers he dropped while his teammates fiddled with the bat. | There is no mention efther of the fact that his left arm is abnormally twisted from throwing that screw- ball, that he doesn't know the| that he | has never squawked about decisions and never boasted about victorie S Discovered in 1925 | The book will tell you that old Hub was born June 22, 1903, in Carthage, Mo., but it is Maple Grove, a hamlet 14 miles northeast of Carthage, that the National League’s most famous southpaw | | claims as his birthplace. | It was while Carl was moving the Oklahoma City in 1925 that he was discovered by a major league scout and signed by Detroit of the American League. | Before he had a chance to show | his stuff for the Tigers, they farmed him out to Toronto where he won seven and lost seven in| Carl Hubbell, ancient Giant hurl- er, uncorks a screwball down the middle in recent New York game. Decatur, IIl, ki3 League with tries. Released to Beaumont Texas League in 1928, in the Three Eye 14 wins out of 21 in the AGOSIIA KNOCKS to the Giants for « re:;n:;sr;?:fi OUI JOE Mul.l.l of $40,000 after he chalked up 12 | victories against nine defeats. He B 5 | has neéver left the Giants since. | 14. _‘K“O"k“d. Most Valuable Player Twice of six in the In 1933, Hubbell won the National | |third round, Joe Auudm weighing | Ledgue’s most valuable player|15% €0t up and knocked out Joe NEW YORK, July jdown for the count award, but he had his best year in| Mulli ""““‘“ 1936 when he won 26 games while ! {losing six and again was honored wIFE MAKES HII with the scribes’ trophy. Ask any batter and he'll tell \()u that of all the twirlers in the senior | BUT HUBBY ERROR |circuit, Hub has the profoundest| kno@\lvdgc of what they like and dls'mce He has never made a note KN(JXVXLLE. Tenn,, July 14. — {on it but carries it all in his head. {Short of help on a busy Saturday, “When they hit him, they really Journal sports editor Tom Ander- deserve those hits,” says Mancuso,|son sent his wife to the ball park his " favorite catcher. “He doesn't|to cover the Knoxville Smokies. make a mistake on a pitch but| Wrote a fan to the paper after once, and being around 15 years,'reading Mrs. Anderson’s story: “You he made all his mistakes a long!should fire him (Anderson) and time ago.” hire her. Let him stay home with Ask Carl how he feels before he“he kids (there are five) while she goes to the mound tomorrow and!eptertains us with stories like the he’ll' tell you just as he has for 20 one she wrote on the Saturday years: “Never better.” | game.” “That Hubbell is the damndest P 8. his Tom ghost-wrote the yarn grins Mancuso. | from wife's account of the cost. him many games but he never plag. has shown any temper. Win lose, he never complains,” That's Carl Hubbell | | oo f e - Empire Classifieds Pay! » BICYCLE TO KA LONDON.—A bicycle pdlkhl:g- lot is the latest addition to British | Unable to use their autos| racing meets, Britons | have turned to two and three-| | wheelers. | Paul Bloedhorn Jewelry and Curios South Franklin Street FRANK OLSON a8 a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to present this coupon this evening at the box office of the-— CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: "JOAN OF 0ZARK" Federal Tax—6c per Person ATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! rine PIGGLY WIGGLY "o QUALITY AND DEPENDABILITY JUICES For Wholesome Beverages Unsweetened Orange Juice Unsweetened Pineapple Juice Unsweetened Grapefruit Juice Tomato Juice Celery Juice V-8 Juice Here's Health Cocktail White and Amber Grape Juice Apple Juice Liquir Apple Prune Juice Apricoa Nectar Peach Nectar AND OTHERS AT y PIGGLY WIGGLY There Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! \{ THRIFT CO-OP | Chas. G. Warner Co. l Soothing Organ Music and Dalicious Fried Chicken EVERY NIGHT DOUGLAS INN John Martn, Prop. Phone 4 Member National Retallse- Owned Grocers 11 SEWARD STREETY PHONE 767 FORD AGENEY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GABS—OIL Foot of Main Btrees Juneau Mofors FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Nite Phone 664 Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 93 or 08 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS® AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and & Thomas Hardware Co. PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE llhh!lulnill.m COAL Alaska Dock & Storage €o. TELEPHONE 4 The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated Reoms at Reasonable Bates PHONE BINGLE O Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints Leota’s WOMEN’S APPARE Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E. O.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTR DFALERS Alaska Music Supplf WHEN IN NEED OF Ulesel Oil—Rtove Oll—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- tng — Storage and Crating CALL US! Junean Transfer Y CLOTHE ~” NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quallty Work Clothing $5 (nid FRED HENNING Complete Outtitter for Moa Ideal Paint Shop Phane 548 hdw.ww Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 . Pree Delivery Junesu GASTINEAD HOTEL lnqon!d‘nmmnu;d- Alir Service Informalion the fields of Johnson grass a: for Victory Coffee Shop. Phone| Sealed bids will be received at| i Marines of an anti-aircraft unit 796. |the office of the City Clerk in the| INAMERICAN 12 23 WANTED—Used furniturc. 306 Wil- loughby. Phone 788. LOST and FOUND FOUND—Pair of glasses on Al- aska Dock. Prove ownership and pay for this adv Empire Office. FOUND— mg reel owner may' have by proving ownership. Call at USO. LOST — Lady's purse, containing) money and papers, between Auk| Bay and DeHart’s Store. Finder; please notify Highway Patrol- | High tide—12:37 pm.,, ired City Hall at Juneau, Alaska, until {4 p.m., July 18, 1943, for shingling |the roof of the City Hall. Details /may be secured from Bert Lybeck, City Building Inspector. HARRY 1. LUCAS, Mayor. TIDES TOMORROW Low tide—6:13 am., adv, -13 feet. 143 feet. Low tide—6:16 p.m., 28 feet. e There are 1,000 times as many corpuscles in the blood as man. Reward, white cells. work out while off duty. | In the shadow of thelr anti- |aircraft guns, the Leathernecks daily | |played “one-a-cat”, “serub” and| lother sandlot games just like the |boys at home. Even though the seasons are reversed down here and it is well into winter, the Marines dmegard it and like to think that it is| summer just as it is back in the States. CHICAGO, July 14—Vern Steph- ens leads the American League| batsmen after two weeks of duel-| ing, first with Oris Hockett of| Cleveland, then rookie Guy Curt- | wright of Chicago. The St. Louis Browns slugger boosted his average three points to .336, while Curtwright's average {shrunk three points to .33 to hold’ second place. RECORD FOR DODDS GETTING TIRESOME BOSTON, Mass—Gilbert Dodds| BERKELEY, Calif.—Ensign Corn- of Boston College holds the Newelius Warmerdam of the Del Monte England two-mile record. Doddsre-' Navy Preflight school, has pole cently went the distance in 9:15.7. vaulted 15 feet or better 37 times. ————— | INSURED of JUNEAU, MEMASA. FEDERAL DEPOSLY DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ' First National Bank ARE ALASEA INSUR PHONE 18 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel 098 American Meat — Phone 38 Parsons Electric Co.' Westinghouse Dealer Electrical Service and Repairs 123 SEWARD BST. PARCEL DELIVERY -SERVICE PHONE 492 DAY OR NIGHT Scheduled Delivery 10 a. m. * and 3P, M. G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 578