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THURSDAY SEPTBWBER 30, 1943 Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to in- sure insertion on same day. We accept ads over teléphone from persons listed in telephone directory. Count five a’ line. Daily rate per line for consecu- tive insertions: One day Additional days Minimum charge verage words to the 10¢ 5¢ 50¢ FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED DEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADS IS 11 A. M, ON DATE OF INSERTION. I'IIR SALE FOR SALE OR TRADE—One 1936 Ford Sedan, excellent motor; one GMC 1940 pick-up in perfect con- dition. 95% rubber, one of the| cleanest pick-ups in Juneau; one completel furnished home in Doug; 6 rooms modern; one four room house with furnace, some furniture, 11 miles out of Fairbanks on year around road, will consider any kind of a trade| on any of the above items. Bring on your offers. Lee Swift, Douglas Box 7 Phone 764. I“()R SALE —Laundry And Dry Cleaning plant in Small Western | Excellent busi- | Washington town. ness. Write Empire 2830. LE—Complete Bedstead ex-| bp ng. Phone Blue 632.| My Home ritz Cove Road, furnished, hot cold running water, cil furnace heat. D. F. Millard. Phone Green 170. _SV\I E on ALL WOOL Rothmoor ladies winter coat, like new; hip boots; 2 pair | skates; 2 pair skiis; ladies ski boots; Raynster rubber suit; end table; book case; chest drawers. Call Black 694 or No. 3 Evergreen apartments. FOR SALE—Used 1))i\|1;511(1 drums. 109 W 1st, upper Apt. Blue 785. FOR SALE—Completely furnished 6 room house: :Call Douglas 763.| SACRIFICE—Large 5 room house, furnished, dishes, pots and pans, ready to move in, garden tools,| lumber, shingles, nails, wood shed: also one room shack with stove, odds and ends. Barrel of gas, kerosene, two door sedan '35, good tires. At mile 13, Red 325 for appointment to see premises FOR SALE—Palmer 18 Heavy Duty | Marine Engine — Complete or in parts, New Manifold, Box 2312 John Natterstad, Auk Bay. M. S. GAMBIER, needs minor re- pairs, 53 ft. x 14 ft. x 6 ft. O. A. Gross tonnage 32. Can be used for freight or towing. 226 6th St. Phone 416. FURNISHED HOUSE and Lot in] Douglas. See Carl Lindstrom. 6 ROOM furnished house, 2 lots. Phone 378. et SIMPSON residence on Gold Belt {‘Ave. Phone 266 for appointment.| (NCOME property in Juneau.Phone Thane 3, three rings, after 5 p.m.| 1-BEDROOM house, W. H. Robin- son, 1044 W. 475, COMPLFTELY furnished apart- ment house in Skagway, Alaska, located in business district. Can be changed into business houses very easily. Write Bor 905, Bkagway. THREE houses and cabin, all fur- nished, Gastineau Ave. Inquire “Juneau Paint Store. 1OR SALE—30 brake. hp. Com _diesel stationiry engine. BB Em- pire. MISCELLANEOUS HAVE TWO . boxes 30-30 hard point. Will trade for 2 boxes .300| Savage. Phone 191 GUARANTEED B.eallsflo Perma- nent, $6.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201 315 Decker Way. Effective; June 15. TURN your old gold into ¢alue. cash or trade at Nugget Shop. | TIn a single hour, a tons of steel. LOST and FOUND POUND—A palr o! gold " gold rimmed Owner may have them‘ glasses. b) pu) u\g for this ad. PARKING NOTICE “The 30 minutes Parking Ordin-| nnoe in the Business District will be strictly enforced. . . By JOHN MONAGLE, Chief of Police. WANTED —Barge or boat transpor- *" fee Shop. and | Auk Lake. Call { 10th. Phone green| 105-mm. cannon can fire more than three| PHONE A CLASSIFIED tation for two trucks to Haines Will pay top price for this servica, See Lee Swift Box 1237 Phone 764. party a Write responsible house. WANTED furnished Empire 281. TWO ROOM furnished apt. o sleeping room for two gitls. Phone at Baranof. by modern | Miss Shoemaker | WANTED—Cashier at Baranof Cof- |WANTED—A reliable |)(‘rs0n to care for two small children - in my or your home. Mrs. M. J. Strohmeyer P. O. Box 857. \'\"\NIED Sl condition. Phone |1’]71r;;;7iduirc 11’1’ good 226, WANTED—Young lady to work in Photo Shop. Write Empire C 2615 WANTED—Used furniturc. 306 wi- loughby. Phone 788. WANT D—Sewing machine. Pur- chase or loan. Preferably portable | power model by USO, Skagway, | for mending soldiers’ garments. Phone 1766, Juneau. | VANTED—Washer; also d_r-y clean- erman at Snow White Laundry Good pay. Phone 299. WANTED AT ONCE-—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. FOR RENT SRS £ 40N |FOR RENT—Unfurnished house 5 rooms, bath, full basement, hot | water heat. 418 7th. Phone Blue !‘ 680 or 334. | apt., oil range 13A Willoughby 3 ROOM furnished and bath, Inqui | FOR RENT—Fur, Apls Easnly kept warm. Winter rates $15 a month. Lights, water, Dishes. Also bath and use of Electric Washer and Wringer in Laundry room. Sea- { view Apts. i 'COAST LEAGUE ARE ANNOUNCED | | i LOS ANGELES, Sept. 30. — The | Angels have sold" to” the” Chic: |Cubs pitcher Ben Lynn, secod baseman Roy Hughes .and pitcher Jodie Phipps, and bought second |baseman Stu Martin, pitchers Bob |Bowman and Jack Mooty and outs fielder Bob McCoil from the Cubs. From the Philadelphit Phillies, the Angels have bought pitchers |Dick Conger and Antone Karl for ‘Rlp Russell and Ken Raffensberger. iThe Hollywood Stars have sold {Johnny Dickshot to the Chicago | White Sox. EXHIBITION ' SQUADS ARE NOW PICKED | NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—The big |leagues have .picked two 18-player |squads for a post-season exhibition = | trip to troops in the Pacific, includ- |ing praetically every top perfm'mer ‘ot the season. All eight National League clubs \are represented, but players are {taken from only six American Lea- !gue teams. R DANCING CLASSES 3 1 | NOW ENROLLING | Baton twirling, tap, acrobatic, toe {ballets, moderne, eccentris, special- lmes Stenographers’ body toning (classes. Beginners ballroom dancing. | " |studio, 411 7th St. Phone Red 575.| | Precinct, at Juneau, Alaska, Howard | GIANTS, CUBS nmu FOR {4 INNINGS Dodge rsTega"m Third Place by Defeating Pittsburgh Pirates (By Associated Press) The New York Giants gave the Chicago Cubs three runs yesterday, one on an error and two on walks, which forced in scores, but the teams battled to fourteen innings to | a tie which cannot be played off as | the clubs do not meet again this year, Johnny Vander Meer won his fourteenth game of the year yester- | day, defeating the Philadelphia Phil- ! lies to stretch the Cincinnati Reds victory streak to ten straight. The Brooklyn Dodgers regained | | third place in the National Lea terday by scoring nine runs in| the eighth inning to beat the Pitts- | burgh Pirates. Alpha Brazle, making his last start before the World Series, won hl'w‘ eighth victory yesterday as the St. | Louis Cardinals defeated the Boston | Brav Brazle got into several bas places but an infield flurry of base hits saved the day for tbc rookie soull\pa“ GAMES WEDNESDAY Vational League St. Louis 3; Boston 2. Brooklyn 14; Pittsburgh 7. Cincinnati 3; Philadelphia 0 New York 3; Chicago 3. called on account of darkness. American League Chicago 3, 0; New York 0, 4 Detroit 2, 9; Philadelphia 8, 1. St. Louis 4, 3; Boston 3, 3. Second | game called on account of dark- ness. Washington 6, 7; Cleveland 2. 4. | Washington clinches second place | x | | | | | jame National League Won 101 85 9 80 kst Lost Pet.| 49 673 65 567 7 530 2 52 77 480 82 446 90 408 | 94 369 St. Louis Cincinnati Brooklyn Pittsburgh Chicago Boston 66 Philadelphia 62 New York 55 Amcrican League Won Lost 95 84 9 9 75 72 Pct. 633 556 527 523 497 483 | New York Washington Cleveland Chicago Detroit St. Louis Boston 68 453 | Philadelphia . 49 327 .- | DUROCHER RELEASED BY RICKEY PITTSBURGH, Sept. .30. — Leo Durocher has been given his un- conditional release from his player-! manager contract with, the Brook- | {yn Dodgers, effective fext Sunday. He may negotiate for return as| bench imanager or be free to seek another job. President Branch Rickey said he did not want a manager tied down by a contract that keeps him from going somewhere else. “My manager must be a man who wants to manage the Dodgers more than he wants to do anything else,” Rickey said. | Rickey said he has not thought 015 hiring an}on" else, | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: | That on September 29, 1943, in the Commissioner’s Court for Juneau | D. Stabler was appointed adminis- trator of the estate of john Henry Regan, deceased .All persons hav- ing claims against said estate are required to present them, with veri- fied vouchers as required by law, to said administrator:at his office in the Shattuck Building, Juneau, Al- aska, within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice. ; i HOWARD D. STABLER,’ Administrator. First publication: Sept. 30, 1943. Last publication: Oct. 19, 1943, CARD OF ing the years I have o | who's better STANDING OF CLUBS I |shift put George (Whitey) Kurow- ski on third and he capped his sea. ,Mackmcn, allowed seven hits while winning his twelfth game in the As 1 am retiring from business October 1, I wish to take this means of thanking the general public for their kind patronage dur- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA World Series Newcomeérs NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—Ten Yan- cligible for their first world They are Pitchers Tommy | Byrne, Charley Wensloff and Bill! Zuber; Catcher Ken Sears; Infield- °rs Bill Johnson, Nick Etten, George | Stirnweiss and Oscar Grimes, and Outfielders Art Metheny and Roy Weatherly. | Byrne, Johnson, Stirnweiss and| Metheny played last year for Ne- | wark, Yank International League | farm. series. SEVEN CARDINALS ST. LOUIS, Sept. dinals including the former Philly clouter, Danny Litwhiler, will be making. their first bow in a world | [ 30.—Seven Car- | | series tiis year. Besides Litwhiler they are Alpha Brazle, the sensational freshman pitcher; Harry Brecheen, a prom- ising lefty: George Munger, husky right-hander; George Fallon, utility | | infielder; Lou Klein, Jimmy Brown's | replacement at second; and Dsbs| Garms, the 1940 National League batting (lmmp (ARDINMS NEW UNIFORMS_Hugh Casey (left), ex-Dodger hurler, and Peewee Reese, former Brooklyn shortstop, are in new uni- forms but still on the same team—the classy nine of the Norfolk, ARE WEAKER - THAN IN "42 Man fo-Man Swing, Around Line-up of Champtons CATCHER: Walker Cooper was By ()s(AI( Kx\"fl\ |an exceptionally fine receiver last ST. LOUIS, Sept. 30.—In the an-|year and he's even better this sea- nual pre-world series discussion of son. Some observers say he’s Bill than whom, it's pos-|Dickey's successor as the outstand- ible to say that the 1943 Cardinals'ing catcher of the majors. are stronger yet weaker than the! PITCHER Here's the real dif- 1942 team that swept to basebal)’s!ference between the two teams. In championship. addition to the loss of Beazley and It all depends on the yardstick|Pollett, the staff was weakened by used. Judged on their record against|injuries to Ernie White and Harry the rest of the National League,| Gumbert On credit side, Mort Billy Southworth’s current Cardin-|Cooper again won 20 games. Lefty als are far and away superior tu}.\lu.\' Lanier was effective, the re- last year’s club. They made a run-|lief pitchers took over starting as- away of the race, whereas the 1942 |signments with succ and Rookiz team had to travel at break-neck Al Brazle from Sacramento pro- ed to capture the pennant on the duced. t day of the season. | hitting streaks, including a chain of |20 consecutive games. LEFT-FIELD: Musial's shift from left to right makes it necessary to criss-cross comparisons and pit |Danny Litwhiler, Johnny Hopp, Debs Garms and Frank Demaree, this left-fielders, against | Elaughter, the Card’s 1942 right- tielder. 'They don't compare to Slaughter, who was one of baseball’s | best outfielders year’s But in a Cardinal-to- Caldlna] comparison, there’s no question lhat‘ the 1942 team was stronger. Brown. the Cardinals, the picture looks like | The Washington Senators wallop- SECOND BASE: After starting| A pair of extra-inning homers by at Lhc basis of cold statistics, he’s just/the end of the ninth innings. couldn’'t be any ether way Lonsme ing the war’s claim on a 21- game winner like Johnny Beazley, a star southpaw like Howie Pollet, two outstanding outfielders like Enos Slaughter and Terry Moore, and a 3 versatile infielder like Jimmy ovER lNDIANS All but one of them have been replaced in capable fashion, There's b ar: oepc been no successor to Beazley, who H H topped his brilliant fu-shma!l: am-‘Brow"S chn(h Slx'h Pla(e 1son with two victories against the | 1 H Yankees . . in American League In a man-to-man swing around 1 f by Home Drives this: 3 (By Associated Press) FIRST BASE: Ray Sanders di-| vided the job with Johnny Hopp ed the Cleveland Indians at both last year and neither of the 250 ends of a doubleheader yesterday. hitters measured up to real major|In the opener the Senators clubbed league standards. Sanders, a Imc‘anun Kennedy, Joe Helving and fielder, made the position all his|Jack Salverson for 10 blows. In the own this season by coming through!second game, Roy Cullenbine hit a with a bolstered batting average. |three-run homer. with Creepy Crepsi last season, the! Vern Stephens enabled the St. Cardinals put Jimmy Brown on‘Luuh Browns to clinch the Ameri- second in the infield shift mat‘r'\n League’s sixth place by defeat- helped them win the pennant. Lou|ing the Boston Red Sox in a li- Klein, successor to Brown, may nuL{mmng opener yesterday. The s have Jimmy's flash and fire but, onond game was halted by darkness as capable. | The Detroit Tigers lost the opener SHORTSTOP: Martin (Slats) 1»\'1!.1\ Philadelphia yesterday, but Marion, “Mr. Shortstop,” was the|they came back in the second game best in the league last year again this season. |victory of the season. Trout held THIRD BASE: The 1942 infield |the Athletics to six Tits. Kess | Flores, Mexican hurler for the son with a home run that won the final game of the series. Whitey |opener. actually hit only .254 but this )earr The New York Yankees were shut he hugged the 300 mark for the full|cut by the Chicago White Sox in campaign. |the first game of a doubleheader RIGHT FIELD: Stan Musial, yesterday but snapped back to after batting 315, third in the lea-|Wwhitewash Chicago in the second gue in his freshman year, turned|game. ; on the power this season to become ! — e e the major's leading hitter. CENTER-FIELD: Harry Walker, doesn’t measure up-to Terry Moore as a fielder, but he outhit him in| every department except home runs. | “Little Dixie?, had several extended | THANKS and |giving Paul Dizzy Trout his 19th' Va., naval air station. (U. S. Navy photo). I)I( GRAY] HERE ENROU Earl F. ranarian, is Graves, in Juneau ters at Palmer. past few weeks inspecting herds in Southeast Alaska. SUIT DRESS Created by Bloomfield For that special occasion when you want to be your prettiest, here is the last word in a lovely suit-dress. The motif of beading at the waist is the plece de resist- ance. Blue, brown, gray and black. Exclusive at Jones- Sllhns Seward Street Announcement THE NEW YORK TAVERN I§ now under new management and will be glad to serve all the old patrons as well os the new ones perated the New- York past. Exchange and the New York Tavern, and the best of luck to you all. JOHN PASTL with the same efficient service and the best of Wines, Liquors and Beers, as has been its policy in the . 1 George Salo Territorial | for fow days enroute to his hpadquar- | He has spent the dairy Duif’s i WESTWARD ADD WATER———MIX BAKE——THAT'S ALL! GUARANTEED GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SOLD BY PIGGLY WIGGLY Minimum Delivery—$2.00 Phone PIGOLY WIGGLY Phoe QUALITY AND DEPENDABILITY GINGERBREAD Mix (Authorised Dealers) GREABES—GAS—OIL Poot of Main Btreet Junean Motors Sanitary Meat Co. POR QUALITY. MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY _ Oall Phenes 13 and & Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints WOMEN’S APPARRL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E O.DAVIS E. W.DAVI® _PHONE 81 COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTR Bert s Cash Grocery ey a FORD AGENEY Utah Nt um-y COAL Alaska Dock & Storage €o. TELEPHONE 4 - Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager Pianos—Mausical Instruments <and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Presh and Prosesn Meats in Juness. L. A. STURM~—Owaer 3380 t '!ll-h. ol 2P S——— “, *