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lUlbl)\\ JULY 25, 1944 Phone a CI.ASSIFIED Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure insertion on same day. YANKS MAKE BIG SMASH We accept ads over telephone from persons listea in telephone directory. Count five average words to the line. Daily rate per line for consecutive inser- tions: One FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOQUS WANTED DEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADS IS 11 A. M. ON DATE OF INSERTION - ON (HICAGO dav. 10¢; Additional days, 5¢; (By Associated Press) Minimum charge, 50¢ Yankees blasted three Chi- pitchers yesterday for 16 hits, {including two homers, double, to defeat the Chicago White ISox 11 to 5 for the second victory iof the series and bring the (losing streak to 13 games in last 16 starts | The leading St. Louis Browns| made it #n even break for the !series by winning 6 to 5 from Bos- ton. | Cleveland connected for 15 safe- |tics to wallop Washington 10 to 1. Paul Trout pitched his straight victory of the season y terday d also his fourteenth wi: lof the season, to give Detroit shutout over Philadelphia 1 to 0. GAMES MONDAY Pacific Coast League No games scheduled. the St. Louis 7; Boston 1. Chicago 3; New York 5 FOR SALE [ WANTED — CONTINUED Pittsburgh 7; Brooklyn 12. Cincinnati at WANTED — Press operators, Hand rained out. | 1 { National League { { i VE. letso e mdlo 1:hoxm~ with automatic rermd | Call Black 768 after 5 m | ONE G graph change p 1934 DODGE sedan, good rubber.| Phone Black 723 between 6 and| 8 pm, ;7_1 5 ‘VI()DFL 99 b'l age rifle, $40; 30-40 reloading set complete mm‘ sizing dies and bullet mould, $20;, RCA Console Radio, $25. Phone Douglas 46. | 25~ FOR SALE38-40 Winchester rifle, | long barrel, very good condition,! with 50 shells, $35; 25-20 Win- chester carbine rifle, $25; set of taps and dies and s tools, $40; 12-guage Winchester pump shotgun, $35 Thompson Optical, 214 2nd St. FOUR LOTS with six-room hous(" in Haines. Would consider trad-| ing for house in Juneau. Writu[ Box 600, Haines, Alaska. | 40-FT. CABIN CRUISER, built in; 1939, new 92 h. p. engine, 2 to 1 reduction gears; sleeps 5; mod- ern galley, oil range, lots of built| ins, hot and cold water, radio, davenport, lavatory, 375 gals. | water, 240 gals. gas. - Been- lived | in since built; venetian blinds“‘ Price $6,200. “Lilly K”, at Small| Boat Harbo i | 1936 FORD COACH in good con-| dition; one .35 Remington rifle | with 9 boxes shells; baby bed and | mattress, nearly new; 2 tabl‘ lamps, end table, coffee table, radio cabinet, small radio, man’s; wrist watch, steel fishing pole, | reel and line. Phone 628. FIRE PROOF National Cash Reg ister; Filing Cabinet for 300 ac- u»mus George Brothers. Place for sale 6 miles out Glacier Highway. Frank Maver. FOR SALE — New, modern four- room house; furnished. Phone | Green 483. ‘ -ROOM HOUSE, fully furnished;| oil range, oil concrete basemen. Starr Hill. Located on, Phone Blue 147. \ | UHOICE ONE acre lots, 3% miles| out Glacier Highway. Inquire; Snap Shoppe. fOR SAL¥—2 room House, 3% acre| Patented fand, Auk Bay. Call DeHart's Grocery, or write P. O | Box 574. WANTED REFINED GIRL, 26 years old, hard worker, 2 years bank and PBX| experience, typing, seeks steady employment. Write Amy Rotha,’ 1931 No. Gramercy Place, Holly- wood, 28, Calif. WANTED — Electric washing ma- chine, baby bath tub, electric iron. Mrs. Sarah Shorelane, Hoo- nah, Alaska. RESPONSIBLE party desires house or apartment for immediate oc- cupancy; permanent. Inquire| Bruce Kendall, Gastineau Hotel.| RESPONSIBLE woman to care for two children 5 or 6 hours each day in your home or mine. Bruce Kendall, Gastineau Hotel. WANTED — Competent experienced | stenographer, law office; salary | $175 monthly. Commencing any | time by August 15. R. E. Rop- ertson. WANTED — Cooking and serving dinner and parties $2.00 per hour; house cleaning $1.00 per hour; care for babies 85 cents per hour. Phone 172. Miss Brown. WANTED TO BUY — Late model car with good tires. Phone Green 440. WANTED — Dealers for Watkins Products at Petersburg, Wrangell, | Sitka, Haines and Skagway. Write | Ralph Shores, Juneau, Alaska. Box 2091, com-| —— heater and full| __ e AMERICANS {nounced that St. {nay, and Verriers have been cap- | Maysurirne, but no other details of | 25.—Congressional ironers. Apply Alaska Laundry. | Amperican Léague | Washington 1; Cleveland 10. | WANTED— One pamtm one paper| Boston 5; St. Louis 6. hanger; mast be experienCEd.! Philadelphia 0; Detroit 1. Steady employment year round| New York 11; Chicago 5 for right party. Ideal Paint| AT Store. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet, 59 56 56 54 53 53 51 51 League WANTED—Used furniture. 306 Wil- | loughby. Phone 788. FOR RENT HRFE-ROOMED COTTAGE heat. 843 W. 9th St. | | Los Angeles | San Francisco | Oakland | Seattle oil | Portland . Hollywood __ | Sacramento (San Diego National 495 486 ugzot Apartments [VACANCY SI‘ILAM HI‘/\TED beds, $15 a bed. 600 or 315 Gold St. THREE ROOM Iulmshcd apl St. Phone Black 490. . win Phone Black gt 1ouis | Pittsburgh 554 Cincinnati 558 New York » { Philadelphia FOUR-ROOM lower flat, 2 bed-|Chicago rooms; oll range. Phone Blue 275, {Boston i ! Brooklyn 323 Decker| American League | Won A SRR St Louis Bishop Ap! {few vork —Phone 143, Boston — | Cleveland E‘OR R.ENT—Fur Apu Easlly kept! \Retroit warm. Winter rates $15 a month.! Ch)cngo Lights, water, Dishes. Also bath| | Washington and use of Electric Washer and Philadelphia 'Wringer in Laundry room. Sea- - eee TINIAN IS INVADEDIN QUICK TIME Tremendous Bombard- ment Precedes Landing on Jap Stronghold (Continuea 1rom fage One) _12th 440 427 414 414 Pct. .559 534 516 511 | 500 477 Smgle luom {ANOS FOR RENT. 433 FOR RENT—Unfurnished flat. In- quire*Snap Shoppe. MISCELLANEQOUS BUS DEPOT LUNCH open under | new management by “Skipper”. | { | | Fishing rods of all kinds repaired. Leave at West Coast ~Grocery. Walter A. Walker. | GUARANTEED Realist. Perma- | uent, $6.50. Paper Curls, $1 up, #®ola Beauty Shop. Phone 201. 315 Decker Way. " LOST AND FOUND FOUND — Canary. ou?{mr have by contacting Mrs. rine at G u Huul may Crum- airfield before the end of another day. The Marines went ashure at T7:40 am. after what was probably the| greatest half-hour naval and land- based hombardment trated on a single island entire Pacific. For guns based on Saipan, three miles away, fired at the rate of two (rounds per minute for the heavy guns, and 10 rounds per minute for the smaller field pieces. At the same time warships close inshore pitched salvo after salvo into the island with broadsides literally tearing all asunder. Overhead, carrier and land- based planes flew wing to wing, providing aerial cover. U. S. commanders exchanged understanding smiles after the pre- invasion blasting as troops of the Fifth Amphibious Corps made the beaches with little opposition, fol- lowed by their heavy equipment, making it clear that the Japs had been fooled as to where an inva- sion in strengthmight hit. Reports indicated that the ninth wave of men was the first to re- ceive fire from Jap mortars and machine guns—but this fire was nothing to compare with that when the Saipan invaders rushed ashore. The Marines pushed inland 600 yards in less than two hours. in the BRITISH IN NEW DRIVE Offensive Is Su Supported by | Heavy Bombers, Fight- ers, Two Forces (Contmuea irom Page One) Ninth Air Forces sent out 3,000 bombers and fighters today to sup- port the new American drive. The forces included 1500 heavy bombers, the largest ever dispatched on a single mission. Late this afternoon it Martin, is an- Defonte- tured and fighting continues at the American advance are disclosed. i D Monefary Bank Issue Up fo Next Congress BRETTON WOOD, N. H., July action proposed for the International Monetary Fund and World Bank for recon- struction will likely be delayed un- til the new Congress meets next January, an informed source said here today as the last delegates of the United Nations Monetary Con- ference left for their homes. Afrocities of Japs In The Netherlands East Indies Revealed (Continued from Page omne) the situation worse, Jap occupation troops have made it a practice of stripping all clothes from the peo- ple’s backs and putting them on their own, Philadelphia, | yet concen- | 30 minutes United States! THE DAlLY ALASKA EMPth JUNI;AU ALAbKA § Violent i | | a triple and | | S0x | sixtn Jim Tabor, Boston Red Sox third | fouttn inning of 2 game at Boston between the Red Sox and Chicago White Sox. on a bunt by Skeeter Newsome, Boston shorftstop. game, won by Boston, 4 to 3. (AP erephnlul HEROI( STORY - OF OPERATION, o | 546 | 519 | 519 | 500 | A FORWARD ALEUTIAN BASE —The story of another of those incredible wartime surgical opera- was recently related to an | correspondent by airbase sur- | pt. Rod De: who to- gether with another surgeon, Capt. Nathan Frierfeld, performed an op- pendectomy aboard a tugboat dur- | ing one of the blacker Aleutian storms, The patient was a member of the ! crew of a tugboat which had been unloading supplies at a remote Aleutian outpost. He developed ab- dominal pains, and by the time a radiogram could be sent to the| nearest base of the 11th AAF's| Emergency Rescue Boat Squadron, | 70 miles away through heavy seas,! he was in great pain, Gale Lashed Waters The doctors got there as fast as |one of the crash boats could bring | them through the rough water, which was lashed by a 60-mile-an- hour wind. Capt. Deakers said he |was suffering from “mal de mer” and thought the veteran crew was |not feeling any too well either., It| | would be a bad night for operating. | | But first they had to get from | [the crash boat to the tug, and the| was by dory, which Capt.| { s described as a “small and |gractious cockleshell.” Master of the vessel, Warrant Of | ficer Colvin A. Wilson, of Edison, | Wash,, sent Cpl. Lloyd H. Culver, falso of Edison, Wash.,, and Pvt. Steve P. Bebich, of Kodiak, Alasl to take the doctors over in the dory, | but there could be no using the oars. | The seas were too violent. So Mr.| Wilson moved unwind, cut the dory | loose, and let it bobble off in the dirction of the tug. | Aboard the tug, the doctors found | patient’s condition critical and de- cided they must operate immed- |iately. ~ Perilous Trips | Pfc. Jessie H. McCandless, of Hol- ly Springs, Miss., and Pvt. Bebich | made several perilous trips back and forth between the: tug and crash boat, - bringing bandages, instru- {ments and equipment. Staff Sgt Henry J. Wolfson, medical l'ncian, of Brookline, Mass., set up the “oprating table,” which con- »s)sted of the galley door supported | by two packing boxes. | | Three hours and forty minutes {later, a dozen red-eyed men still stood about the galley tensely watching the doctors fight for the soldier’s life. All surgical instru- | ments had been dashed to the floor at least once by the violent pitch- | ing of the tug. At a crucial mo- ment, the scissors had caromed to the floor, and scalpels had to be used instead. Sgt. Wolfson had to improvise a draining tube from the finger of a sterilized rubber glove. 3 Navy PBY Arrives But now the job was done, wnd {a Navy PBY could be heard circling for a landing. Rough seas or not, the great flying boat made the land- ing, and the patient was soon en- route to one of the well-equippe d Aleutian base hospitals. Capt. Deakers, after a good night's sleep, wrote Maj. G. R. Donley, Comanding Officer of the 1ith AAF's Emergency Rescue Boat Squadron, “The operation was suc- cessful, and I have nothing but praise and admiration for the skill of your men.” | R tech- RAPUZZI HERE WITH SKAGWAY PRISONERS Deputy Marshal Louis Rapuzzi of Skagway, has arrived with two pris- oners, Stanley McNallen and Edgar A. Payne, who have been trans- ferred to the Federal Jail here While in Juneau, Rapuzzi is at the Gastineau, ALEUTIAN BASE' | signed | extending |expires at | weighing! 150 pounds, (ollmon at Home Plate baseman, is out at home after colliding with catcher Mike Tresh in the Tabor came from third Tresh injured his leg on the play and had to leave the CARDINALS KEEPING ON WIN STREAK (By Associated Press) The St. Louis Cardinals blasted | Boston Brave pitchers for which 11 hits yesterday to win 7 to 1. In Brooklyn+the Dodgers downed the Pittsburgh Pirates 12 to 7 when a batting spree was turned loose in the eighth inning. The Giants rallied for four runs in the eighth inning yesterday to | defeat Lhr Cubs 5 Lo 3. RACING HORSE REARS UP, HITS GATE; IS DEAD DETROIT, Mich., July 25. — War | DYKES SIGNS UP FOR TWO MORE YEARS 1L, July Sox Mans a new two ar his present one the end of this season. ST C SCHOOLBOY WINS 3007 PITTSBURGH, Pa. July 25.—B. B. Wright, 18-year-old schoolboy, scored two knockdowns last night over Frankie ‘Wills,~~ 150-pounder, Washington veteran, to win a 10-round decision for his seventeenth victory inthe gy neoddine son of Man-0' War, s d reared and hit the starting gate| On the sune bill Sal . Bariglo, | yesterday and broke his neck and 120 pounds, .of Boston, NBA féather |4y et before running the sev- champ, decisioned Mike Martyx, enth the Detroit track. 129 pounds, of St. Catherines, in.a/pom jockey, was thrown 10-rounder. : CHICAGO, Dykes, White race on Brown, but not hurt. AL e THELMA McCORKLE IS ENROUTE TO STATES | Miss Thelma McCorkle is enroute to Spokane, where she plans to spend the remainder of the summer with her parents, before entering Washinton State College at Pull- | man in the fall. - D - ATTENTION, ODD FELLOWS Regular meeting of IOOF will be |held tonight at 8 p.m. There will be Installation ()f‘ntw officers, fol- lowed by refreshments. All Brothers are requested to attend. F. D. FENNESSY, Noble Grand. When hunger strikes between lunch and dinner or dinner and bedtime, you'll relish a heaping dish of creamy, deli¢ious JUNO- MAID Ice Cream. Remember, you can order JUNO-MAID at your fountain or take it home by bulk or brick wherever you are in Southeastern Alaska—FROM KETCHIKAN to HAINES. Sold Throughout Southeast Alaska! uno Maid ICE CREAM MADE IN JUNEAU BY PAGE FIVE Public Accountant-Stenographic-Tax Returns MURPHY and Successors to Harvey ROOM 3-First National Bank Bldg. E CABINETS MURPHY Lowe PHONE 676 e e e FIXTURES FULTON & KRUSE EV PHONE 433 BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING 146 So. Main Street SUSHEEFS SIS TS S USSR SRS SN | COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials * PHONES 587 or 747—JUNEAU YOU CAN GET LUMBER FOR ESSENTIAL REPAIRS ON YOUR HOME JEANIES CAFE 326 SECOND STREET 01d Fashion Home Cooked Meals Just Like Mother Used {0 Cook Phone 359 THE ONLY HOME CAFE IN JUNEAU JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL WELDING PHONE 787 THRIFT C0-OP Member National Retatler- Owned Grocers 211 SEWARD STREET PHONE 767 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL t of Main Street Juneau Motors Sanitary Meat Co. POR QUALITY MEATS ' AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 S | Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling E. 0. DAVIS E. W. DAVIS ; PHONE 81 COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS ey 'WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oll—Your Coal Choice—General Haul- ing — Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH SHOES STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing L} FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men “SMILING SERVICE” Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 Free Delivery Juneau GASTINEAU HOTEL Every comfort made for our guests Air Service Information PHONE 10 or 20 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 JUNEAU DAIRIES, Inc. Third and Franklin G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 CALL Femmer’s Transfer 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Dine - Bar - Dance Delicious Fried Chicken DERBY INN John Marin, Prop. Skagwa; Widest Selection of LlQU(lllS PHONE 92 or 95 Thomas Hardware Co.' PAINTS — OILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lump COAL Alaska Dock & Storage TELEPHONE 4 Co. The Alaskan Hotel Newly Renovated at Reasonable Ra PHONE SINGLE O Alaska Music S.xpply Fianar Mt Sttty and Supplier Phone 206 Second and Seward HUTCHINGS ECONOMY MARKET Cholee Meats Times mmmumfngufim PHONES 553—92—95 Alaska Meat Market The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. L. A. STURM—Owner PHONE 39539