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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1943 Copy must be in the offlce by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to in- sure insertion on same day. We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone directory. Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for consecu- uve insertions: One day 10¢ Additional days Minimum charge . FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED CEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADS IS 11 A. M. ON DATE OF INSERTION. FOR SALE MODERN five room view home in West Juneau; full basement, auto- matic oil heat, throughout, fireplace, completely furnished including electric range and refrigerator. $3,200.00 handles. Balance in easy FHA terms. Douglas -962. FOR SALE — 1935 Chev. 4 door sedan. Red 370. ONE DELUXE oil “clrculator ‘heater with or without coil. Bargain 535 Harris St. Phone Red 230. LOCALLY g\own rutabagos. Thu are better—They are cheaper{ While they last $6.50 a bfifl,] Across the street from the Em- B Contact Paul Satko from 123 Main St. | pire. 6 to 8 pm, 4 ROOM furnished house and bath, | garage. $3,000.00. Inquire Blue‘ 499 from 5 to 7 pm. | PR St i LR o |- 25-35 REMINGTON rifle. Call at Room 22 Alaskan Hotel. 5 ROOM furnished or unfurmshed‘ house in Douglas. Phone Douglas 222. 3 CHEV. Sedan. New tires ex- cellent Motor. In good running condition. Black 499. USED ELECTRIC appliances — 1| White 3 burner hotpoint range 1 Gray Bar health motor; condition—guaranteed 6 month\ Parsons’ Electric Company. hardwood floors | PHONE A CLASSIFIED PHONE 374 | 'BOWLS HIGH LAST NIGHT The Sunday Night Bowling League ,pm,wfl last night at the Elks result- ing in a win over the Finance Of- |fice by the Signal Corps, and the Elks defeating the Coast Guard Bob Duckworth and Howard Sim- mons were high bowlers for the night’s play. | | WANTED ~ WANTED TO RENT—Small apart-| room. | 9. ment or housekeeping Phone Gastineau Hotel Room 41 refined Lonllr-‘mnn perman- WANTED-—By room and‘board or apt. ent. Phone 152. |WANTED-25-35 or 32 special carbine. Call E. Riggs, Bergmann Hotel after 5 p.m. | | i —Clerk Stenographer with | book-keeping experience, good permanent position 40 hour week | write Box 1831. | WANTE | WANTFD ngh School boy desires | job after school and on days. Write P. O. Box 368 Satur- | | WANTFD TO BUY Radio, purtubh- 5 or 6 tubes. Phone 3. Brunswick Barber Shop. | WANTED — to buyf-Phomgruphlc‘ equipment. Phone 294. WANTED TO BUY S{*(‘Ond hand washing machine, good condition, | Write Mrs. W. A. Thomas, Haines Alaska, Box 36. | WANTED—A-1 mechanic for inside work. Union wage scale. P, O. Box | Juneau, 711, Alaska. work; also maid for care of child-| ren, Phone 361. ! | WANTED—Used furniwurc. 306 wu- ; loughby. Phone 788. USE Glacier Ice for Duration—2| AMERICAN ICE BOXES $75.00.! We will allow trade-in-allowance on these boxes when our first stock of Electric Refrigerators ar- rive. Parsons’ Electric Company. FOR SALE—High chalr, crib, buggy, | baby swing. See Wayne Thomp-| son or write Box 795. LAYING hens. Write box 1588. coal WOOD OR COAL heater; range ; blower oil unit for range; | dmmg room table. Phone Blue 275 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE—Lease or rent—Will give person terms, 40 room apart- ment or rooms, partly furnished, good steam plant. P.O. Box or Phone 5032. POR . SALE—Miscellaneous quanmy tar, creosote and crude turpentine at dock of Chichagoff Mining Company, Chichagof. Alaska. Ap-| ply to Company there for qunn- tities available which will be sold at Juneau pnccs 1937 BUICK, radio, heater, new hat- tery and tires. Price $600. Phone| Douglas 363. FOR SALE—1 Duplex—2 Apts. Houses—3 rooms each, 1 Cabin—- 2 rooms. All furnished. For $8,000.| Apply Juneau Paint Store. FURNISHED House for cash $4,500. Phone 55. FOR SALE—Apartment for sn.le,! good buy, 8 tenants. Phone 55. +-BEDROOM house, W. H. Robin- son, 1044 W. 10th. Phone green 475. MISCELLANEOUS —_— L GUARANTEED Realistic Perma- Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201.| 'Il:cn'e; 315 Decker Way. June 15. TURN your ‘old goid fato value, cash or tfade at Nuggét Shop. | FOR RENT FOR RENT—Front bedroom, steam- heated, in private family. Phone Green 410. ° Call Gastineau Ave. before 6 p.m. SMALL Apartment. 125 2 ROOM tumixhed.np‘nmem with oil range. Inquire 337 Willoughby. | POR Rm—rur. Apts. mly 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. The hemp leaf is used as an in- toxicant ih Tndia, d@nd is known as- bhang. 51 | | NANTED—Washer; also dry clean- | erman at Snow White Laundry. | Good pay. Phone 299. | WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alasks Laundry. LOST and_ FOUND | | k1"'OUND — Diamond set dedm[—. i ring. lnquirc Royal Blue Cab Co. \FOUND oy $20 00 Tla\(-'lfl s cmck | Owner may have by seeing Glenn Allen at The Thomas Hardware. 'Luke Appling Inducted Info Armyof U. S. Bamng Champ of Amer-| ican League, Father of 2 Children, in Service ATLANTA, Ga. Nov. 29. — The Atlanta Constitution says Luke Ap- i pling, batting champion of the Am- mncan League, will report in Chi- cago for al examination and, i probable induction in the Army. The 34-year-old Chicago White Sox shortstop is the father of two |pre-Pearl Harbor children. | Appling has been in the Chicago jlineup for thirteen straight seasons and ‘won the-American League bat | crown last season with an average jof 328, the lowest mark to top the| | American League circuit in many | years. He previously won the hampionship in 1936 at .388. His ifetime average is .318. | ¥ nent, $650. Paper Cutls, $1 up.| IS INDUCTED CHICAGO, Nov. 20. — Luke Ap-| |pling, Chicago White Sox shortstop jand American League batting |champion, has been inductéd into the Army. | —————— STEVE O'REILL T0 AGAIN BE MANAGER OF DETROIT TIGERS DETROIT, Nov. 29.—The Detroit ~| Tigers announce the signing of | | Manager Steve O'Neill on a new one |year contract JACK JACOBS PULLS HIS ELEVEN TO WIN| RIVERSIDE Calif., Nov. 29. — Stellar padsing of Jack Jacobs, for- | mer Oklahoma star, led the power- ful Fourth Air Force Fliers to a |victory over the San Diego Naval | Training Station, 13 to 2, Sunday. |Navy scored twice in the last half last Saturday afternoon to down the stubborn Army team 13 to 0] |the Cadets. | touchdown in the third period, and !down in the fourth period. Following are the individual scores: Signal Corps Senecu 170 168 158— 496 | Duckworth 220 184 152 - 556 | Everetts 162 153 147 462 Berringer 178 131 157 466 Sundsten 176 138 191— 505 Total 906 774 805- 2485 | Finance Office | Spot 51 51 51— 153 | Blum 144 143 1556— 442 Harrison 119 122 189— 430 Bachman 128 161 116— 405 | Hulce 147 170 178— 495 Hoffman 189 160 187— 536 Total 778 807 8762461 | Elks Carnegie 158 175 Hudson 169 162 Simmons 189 177 Schoettler 136 185 472 Henning 159 147 528 Total 811 846 ; Coast Guard i armer 136 172 166- H(‘l‘dlick~011 181 140 197 | Wynne 181 133 164 Bernstein 126 133 276 5| Tomlin 149 163 118 430 | | Total ..., 3 741 9212435 - | FOOTBALL SCORES _ The following are final scores of important football games during the week-end Del Monte Preflight nia 8. Southern California 26, UCLA 13.! Georgla 48, Georgia Tech 0. i LeJeune Marines 13, Jacksonville } played | 47, Califor-| | Navy 6. Southern Methodist 20, Texas, Christian 0 | Southwestern Texas 21, Rice 7. Notre Dame 14, Great Lakes 19. Iowa Navy 32, Minnesota 0. PHILLIES | money holds ¢ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU ALASKA DUCKWORTH | Top Man in American l_eague e A Spud Chandler had just learned he player in the American L had to have his morning ¢ role of waiter. Chandler, his wite at Moultrie, Ga. (AP “'irfphmm | | | | HAVENEW BIG SHOT PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 20— Baseball's “glamour boy,” Bob Car- {penter, Jr,, is the new President of the Philadelphia Phillies, following the barring of former President William D. Cox from baseball by | Baseball Commissioner Landis be- cause’ Cox gambled on games in which his own club was involved Freddy Fitzsimmons who took over the reins of the faltering Phil- lies from Bucky Harris in the mid- dle of last s , will be “absolute boss of the fi next year The new promised the for- mer Brooklyn pitcher that he will get what he wants as long as the t d boss This was the assurance givep at A conference with newsmen follow- Oklahoma 26, Nebraska 7 ,ing the first meeting between the Brooklyn 12, Rutgers 6 |new boss, Carpenter, and Fitzsim- Navy 13, Army 0 Im North Carolina 54, Virginia 7. | “What Fred says goes,” said Car- LaFayette 58, Leigh 0. penter. - o aa o . Fitzsimmons agreed with Carpen- [ter that it will take at least five 'ARMY TEAM LOSES GAME TO MIDDIES, 29. — The WEST POINT, Nov. ! for the fifth straight triumph over| Bob Jenkins banged over for a| James Pettit made the last touch- | Fifteen thousand spectators pack- | \ed the stands, and the weather was | |ideal. During the game a steady re-| placement of Middies wore the Army down. When the Army backs did anything fpectacular, swarmed over them like confetti. Hume led the drive that cul-| minated in Pettit scoring on a fourth down plunge from the one- SALT LAKE CITY ARMY AIR BASE, CHAMPIONS SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Nov. 20.—The Balt Lake Army Air Base €leven took to the air Sunday to de- feat the cross-town rival, Kearns Field, 30 to 0, in the Utah Service | League and get Lhe chsmplommp [ | Monte's flight University of Californii " collegidns Jast qmu;day afternoon by a score | the count to 33-8: at“half time. years to make the Phillies pennant lcnhbu- e U. CALIFORNIA IS CRUSHED BY DEL MONTE, 47-8 Nov. 29.—Del| | Pre- the BERKELEY, Calif., star-powered Navy football team crushed Saturday afternoon by a score of {47 to 8, closihg the sedson'for bdth 14 fumbles of the two teams. teams. Lieut. Bill Kern, Del Monte coach, Middies | Started the officer team, and these @ punt 40 yards across the goal worthies scored in three and ene- !n2 | halt kickoff, and for and one-half min- €nd Dave Brown intercepted Jim |utes later | closed the period with a 61-yard for a touchdown. | march for another touchdown. minutes: after the - opening | got another, and then Ker put his second string into | the lineup and California promptly ! scored a touchdown a short time|fumble, George Callahan executed later, then trappzd Del Monte be- |40 ama#ing cutback back of the| hind the goal for a saféty. Kern then rushed the first stringers back into the line and ran|POWer was too much for the Bruins and they rolled comfortably on to Then the second stringers went | back again and they were more ef- fective than when on the field the, first Lxmn and un up the score, GIANT WORK POR R (RES_n Ascs b et 305 i vl s’ e ol Skl s mvnlmsumu'myhmdmnp:uuonnuflrndmhm thuuflwomu'““ gue for 1943—but even so, his small son |game$ with Army, (tcam among the service camps. {goal Tine. FOR SHOPPING AT Originul and BEST self-service. Finest foods at LOWEST prices. Wide variety of FINEST fruits and vegelables. SANITARY market. COURTEOUS personnel. SPEEDY checkout system, HOME - OWNED AND OPERATED 16—Phone—-21 RED WINGS DEFEM F TWO BASKETBALL PP WINGSDEFAT GAMES SCHEDULED | ssmmore s v . TOMORROW NIGHT Detroit Red Wings staged a third- e —————T NOTRE DAM 'WALLOPED BY | \ | { | ) traction is scheduled for tomorrow bt Inight in the Juneau High School GREAT LAKES; Ill, Nov. 20.—|gym. The Bankers will take on the| iNnm- Dame scored a touchdown by | Crimson Bears and the Coppers will | period outburst Sunday to defeat | the Toronto Maple Leafs 6 to 4 in 'a National Hockey League game. Relief for Miseries of 3-purpese Va-tro-nol aa aha | | basketball at- had been named the most valuable eal, and so the Yankee pitcher played the |, 75 varq drive last Saturday after- be lined up against the Sparks ¥ > b mm-u It (1) lh ks SWO! and son are at their winter home |noon with only one minute to play, squad. The first game starts at| pranes, (2) soothes “H“"n' I.ld |but Great Lakes used those precious 7:30, and the second will follow ! (3) helps clear cold-clog= Rocisetes al second tally on a 46-yard | within ten minutes after the close | ged nasal es. final seconds to ta v) -yard | . Follow com] di- |pass, Steve Lach to Paul Anderson, u( the first game, rections in folder. M [to hand the Irish their first dolmtl e jof the 1943 season, by a score of 19 —————————————————————————— M o sturay tine permic| | THRIFT CO-OP The ted the Trish but 180 yards in rush- | WMomber National Retallse- The | Ownied Grucers AP IS TO SElECT 2 ALL - AMERICA FoolBAll IEAMS ing, the poorest this season. Gireat Lakes aggregation hit the| 811 SEWARD STREET |yaunted Notre Dame forwards for | PHONE NEW VORK, Nov. 20— The As- 184 yards in rushing. Creighton 77 sociated Press will select two All-|Miller, leading Irish ball carrier, wson Picked up a mere 63 yards in 27 attempts. Johnny Lujack, hitting was able to add only 64| i | America football teams this se for the first time. They will be re- leased next month. — FORD AGENEY (Authorised Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL vards. One team—the 16th annual As-° 1 - Yoot of Main Btreet scciated Press team—will be a col-| o 8 i legiate All-America. It will in- EUY WAR BONDS | Juneau Melers clude both civilians and Navy and | Marine trainees. Another team “m‘ ;e a Service All-America, comprised of players who have participated in Navy, Marine or Guard elevens. he new arrangement differs from thdf of World War I when only one team ‘was chosen. It was composed service men all of whom had played collegiate football. The late. Sanitary Meat Co. POR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY TOPS FOR CHRISTMAS —and After of Walter Camp made the selections at tNat time The 1943 collegiate All-America will be backed up by second and thir eam selections, along with the usual honorable mention list. Present plans call for second A list of honorable mentions will also be announced. Candidates for the All-America positions are now being lined up through reports from AP sports writers in every section of the na- tion UCLA DEFEATED BY ROSE BOWL | 50. CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES, Nov. 29. — The‘\ Rose Bowl-bound Southern Califor- | nia turned back the UCLA Bruins | R 0.DAVIS B W.DAVI® PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DPALERS of 26 to 13, in a game featured by | The Trojans scored the first| touchdown when Eddie Saenz ran The Bruins followed suit when Hardy's lateral and raced 87 yflrds SLACKS plus SWEATERS the BEST GIFT of all this Christmas! Cozy, comfy pull- overs and cardigans from our new selection — preeision- tailored slacks — wonderful for fuel-rationed homes! Jones - Stevens Seward Street The score was tied at the start! of the third period. In this per- | iod Ted Ossowski capturfd a Bruin| In the fourth period the Trojan win through fumbles that marred the contest to the end. e Bl Y WAR BONDS HARVEYR. Public Aceo«&a