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3 ’ A - . ’ TU SDAY, AUGUST 8 |944 Phone a CI.ASSIPIED Copy must be in the office by 2 o'clock in the afternoon to insure insertion on same day. 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 day, 10c; Additional days, 5¢; Minimum charge, 50¢ FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND MISCELLANEOUS WANTED DEADLINE FOR DISPLAY ADS ° IS 11 A. M. ON DATE OF INSERTION FOR SALE WANTED LARGF bedstead. Douglas 325. WANTED-— A cash register. Butler - —— Mauro Drug Co. E — Sewing machxn(‘ 3 N Phone Red 279. Washing machine. Phone Red 330. FO“ :>ALE ()l he'\tL Red 611. iWANTEDfB_\‘ reliable ])(uty, 2- ‘ bedroom furnished house. Phone FOR SALE — Latest model 1992| Green 472, Spartan radio, 11 tubes, long and| ________ 4 ki chort wave, excellent condition.| WANTED—A summer home for | Phone 800, extension 605. cash. Write Empire 4299. TYPF‘V\'RYT!‘R DESK and chair, also typewriter; good coal range; various household furnishings and | equipment. Phone Red 330. WANTED — Experienced Christian woman, practical nursing prefer- red to take charge of children’s home. P. O. Box 1222, * FOR SALE—Seven ? | 12 GAUGE double barel shotgun,| COMBINATION RADIO - PHONO- stock needs repairing, $20.00.| GRAPH; goocd condition. Phone 30.06 Winchester model 70 car-| Douglas 18. bine, bolt action, good condxtmn,‘ — Tat0 3030 Martn rifle, long | WANTED — Dealers for Wakins barrel, with - shells, :$95:00, * 13]..[F;oducts at Petershurg, Wranaell, gauge Winchester pump shotgun, Sitka, Ha‘mcs and Skagway. Write with shells, $25.00. Al leather| Ralph Shores, Juneau, Alaska. gun case, like new, $50. 32-40| BOX 2081 Winchester rme,_ lever action, \VANTED~0ne 1)'\pel hangm, one 25.00. 30-30 Winchester rifle, | painter. Ideal Paint Store. long barre!, lever action, with| _ shells, $35.07. Thompson Optical WANTED — 3-bedroom house for' Co, 214 2nd Street. | immediate occupancy. Phone 761 L | before 10 a. m. and 289 from 35-FT. fully equipped troller “Stam-| 15.a m. to midnight, pede” also 2 room completely fur- _ nished house with attic, oil| VANTED—Used furniturc. 306 Wil- range, new bedroom set. Mrs.| loughby. Phone 788. George .- Harju, ~across --Douglas 7 = Bridge, Third steps to right | VANTED — Press operators, Hand Douglas Hiway. P. O. Box 1108, ironers. Apply Alaska Laundry. Juneau ITHACA 10-gauge hammerless ron BENT shotgun, Damascus steel barrel,! — ot with three boxes shells; good FOR RENT—Steam heated room. condition, with rubber shock pad, E:lingen Apts, after 6 p. m. $40. 30 automatic rifle with oy i BT shells, good condition, $50. Eclipse ]Ff)hRL d”;’;“ P;;‘Q‘é[‘;;"";flfi::”’az‘:;: electric outboard with new bat- makle ol < busner Phon’e Red tery. just like new, $75. 40 cal.| 279 4 Marlin rifle, lever action, octagon 4 be:n'vl. $10. 44 cal. Wmche§ter PARTLY FURNISHED 2-room apt. rifle, octagon barrel, lever ac}lon. with bath. oil range. Write Em- $10. two 44 cal, Marlin rifles, pire 4305. lever action, your choice, $10 _ VRGNS e each. 25-35 rifle with shells, $20. ROR RENT—Steam heated bcd-‘ 30-40 Kreig carbine rifle, good shape, $45. 30-30 Winchester, long barrel, with shells, $30. .22 Special rifle with shells, $20. .22 Mosberg rifle, good condition, with shells, $25. tical Co., 214 2nd St. ; 30-40 RELOADING SET, complete pop RmT—P"n:Xl;L’s”Easnyl with sizing dies and bullet mold, $20; RCA console radio, Phone Douglas 46. FOR SALE—3-room cabin and lot, oil range, oil heater, mangle, late model sewing ma- chine. Phone 757 or 481 Franklin. YORK Cold Storage Plant. Write P. O. Box 126, Juneau. Marsh. Thompson Op-| $25. ironrite | . }PIANOS FOR RENT. —Phone 143, Jackson | room. Phone Green 410. STEAM-HEATED ROOM, twin beds, $15 a bed. Phone Black 600 or 315 Gold St. |APT. FOR RENT. | Way. 323 Decker | warm. Winter raies $15 a month, Lights, water, Lisnes. Also bath | eud use of FElcctric Washer and Wringer i Laundry rovm. Sea- | vew Apts. |FOR RENT—Unfurnished. flat. In-| quire Snap Shoppe. MISCELLANEOUS electric hand books. Phone Blue 1725, or 525 5th. ¥ BRAND NEW Chev. marine con-! version motor, 85 h.p., including 2 to 1 reduction gear; also a twin disc power take-off. See it at 631 Willoughby, Juneau Weld- ing Shop. & AUK BAY small year-around home, Duotherm oil stove. Some other furniture; two lots patented land on water. Price immediate sale. Box 292, Empire. FOR SALE—Furnished 2 bedroom | house, 3': miles out Glacier Hi- wa, Inquire A. L. Blood, Ord- ways. : TOR SAL¥—2 room House, 3% acre | Patented land, Auk Bay. Call at e DeHart’s Grocery, or write P, O.| Box 574 NEW MODERN iour-room furnish- ed house. Terms. Phone Green | 483. Place for sale 6 miles out Glacier Highway. Frank Maver. 1-ROOM HOUSE, fully furnished; oil range, oil heater and full concrete basemen. Located on Starr Hill. Phone Blue 147. CHOICE ONE acre lots, 3% miles out Glacier Highway. Inquire Snap Shoppe. 'BUS DEPOT LUNCH open under new management by “‘Skipper”. Fishing rods of all kinds repaired. Leave at West Coast Grocery. | Walter A. Walker. |GUARANTEED Réalistic Perma- | ment, $7.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201, 315 Decker Way. | LOST AND FOUND | | LOST—Tan wallet containing Gov- ernment check and paper money. Reward. Return to Empire. Fireproof, paper-based plastics are | being used to build railroad baggage | care in Great, Britain. | —————— NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS | The Common Council of the City of Juneau will sit as an equaliza- tion board in the council chambers | of the City Hall from 8 p.m. to 10| p.m. August 7. 8 9 ,and 10, to consider complaints from taxpay- lers regarding their assessments for the year 1943, and to make what- ever adjustments and corrections to the tax roll that are found neces- sary. After final meeting of the board fho further adjustments can be made. » | Portsmouth, Va., and Robert F. Gil- | | strated the form that made him the | | finest hurler of the tournament. In | J. E. KEARNEY, ' adv, City Clerk, RED ARMIES |In Alaska Wate SEIZE 2,000 | OIL WELLS Vistula River Defenses Broken—Krakow May | 1‘ Be By-Passed (Continuea 1rom rage One) these armies has bent the back of the sagging German defense at Lithuania. Twin drives toward Memel and | Tilit, key to the East Prussian cities, are also reported. Fifty towns or villages have been captured, includ- ing Saukenia, 70 miles east of the Baltic port of Memel. [ The Bagramian troops, who last | week plunged to the Baltic below Riga, advanced as much 25 miles yesterday in a new surge to ‘the sea. PRINCE RUPERT the Coast C Cutter made L u. service. Juneau. { Lieut. Engineer B. C. McFadden. C. M. Gabbett; Capt. D. | | \ | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA rs 35 Years Ago‘ RING DOPE Back in 1909 and 1910, these U. 8. Coast G ard cutter Rush. They were The photograph, which turned up after 35 years, was Standing, left to right: ut. L. T. Chalker, now Rear Admiral, . Coast Guard Headquarters); Commodore; Third Licut. Engineer C. E. erved aboard officers of the Revenue Pilot James Keane; Second (and Asst. Commandant at ond Lieut. P. R. Roach, now Sugden, now Captain; Third Seated, left to right: Second Lieut. . A. deOtte; Second Lieut. and Dr. Herman E. Hasseltine, USPHS. F. A. Young; TEN WINNER OF SOFTBALL TITLE - Al-Soldier Series Played| at Fort Richardson- nghhghts Given FORT RICHARDSON Alaska | Registering three straight wins aflm i losing the first game, Prince Rupert ‘mmnlund champion, won the Alaskd w softball championship play-off series | three games to one to defeat APO | 1729, holder of the Aleutian crown.| The all-soldier world series, best three out of five games, was con- | hurled the 2-1 victory in the second game. Brig. Gen. S. D. Downs, Jr., Ccom- ' | mander of this post where the mainland tournament and the play- off serfes were played, presented the winning trophy to Master Sgt. Leon~ ard F. Welsh, Boston, Mass.,, man- | | ager of the Prince ‘Iolluv\mg the final game, i 'SAILORS OF GREAT LAKES DEFEAT SOX | Aug. 8— defeated | 11, sailors GREAT The Great La § S, the Chicago White Sox 1 to 0 yes- cluded August 1, with Prince Rupert terday for their 29th victory in 40 | rapping out a 5-1 victory to end the {games, Virgil Trucks let the Sox play-off in four games. | After APO 729's 5 to 4 extra inning victory in the series opener, Prince | Rupert won the next three games handily, dominating the play in the | field, at the plate and with superior pitching. Only in the first attempt |to play the fourth game, an ab- | breviated four-inning contest called because of a heavy downpour that sent players and spectators scamper- | ing for shelter, did the Aleutian ten Wik | show its first game form. The| HOLLYWOOD, Cah( Aug. 8.— scmc when the game was called was ' An aggregation of players from the {down with two singles ->-oe—— COAST LEAGUE AGGREGATIONS IN EXHIBITIONS 2 to 2. {Hollywood and San Diego teams | Prince Rupert victories came by defeated a Seatile-Oakland group scores of 6-1, 4-0, and 5-1. {last night by a score of 5 to 4, | Ace Piicher by virtue of superior pitching and Cpl. George S. Nigro, Bellevue, O., | timely hitting, although the north continuing the winning brand of collected a total of nine hits to hurling he demonstated in the |seven for the south. mainland finals, was the winning v pitcher in the first and third Prince | SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8.—The Rupert victories, holding the op- |south all-stars, made up of San position to two runs while allowing |prancisco and Los Angeles players, ten hits. Cpl. Joseph McMillan, Co- | |defeated thz north team of Port- gumbia, Ind, plighing Dt B"“"e‘lund and Sacramento 5 to 4 last in either the tournament or senes,mmm after the north scored all rhurled shutout victory, limiting the | | Aleutian ten to three hits. Pfc. Vin- | cent Balas, Dayton, O., who shared | | pitching honors with Corporal Nigro | | during the tournament, was credited | with the one Rupert loss, the eight four of its runs in the first inning and was then blanked out. g HOPES IN TOWN inning 5-4 opening gdme of the| Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hope have series. arrived here from Point Retreat | Batting Honors and are registered at the Baranof Hotel 7 Batting honors for the winning club were shared by Technicians Fifth Grade Arthur Lancaster,| bert, Sandusky, O. Corporal Lan- caster was on base six times with four singles and two walks in nine official trips to the plate for a bat- | ting average of .444 during the| series. Corporal Gilbert put together a double and three singles in ten ! trips to the plate for an even .400! Pvt. Ervin E. Young, Lodi, Calif., ! carried the pitching burden for the losers. He was the winning mounds- ' man in the first contest and was | credited with the last two losses, | aided and abetted by loose inneld‘ play by his team mates who marked up 13 errors in the four games. He was touched for 13 hits and the| same number of runs in the 22| innings he pitched. Work at Stick Leading stickers for the losing ten were Sgt. Cecil Carlucci, Bell, who rapped out two doubles and a single and drew four free passes in eight official trips to the plate for a mark of .375, and Pfc. Peter Dur- ando, Petaluma, Calif,, former pro- It fessional baseball player for the Houston team in the Texas League, who pounded out a triple, a double | and two singles in 11 trys at bat for an average of .363. As an added attraction following. the first three games, an all-star team picked from the mainland tournament battled a team of all- stars from APO 726, with the former winning all three games by scores of 1-0, 2-1, and 4-0. Outstanding Feature Outstanding feature of the three games was the hurling of Tech- nician Fourth Grade Leslie Lees, St. Louis, Mo., who again demon- shutting out APO 726 in the first| game, Sergeant Lees pitched another of the no-hitters for which he is famous and struck out 19 batters. In the third game, he pitched the first three innings without allow- ing a hit and struck out 7 of the 9| batters before turning over the| mound duties to Sgt| John L. Cuntz, | also of St. Louis, who completed | the shutout, Sergeant Cuntz also Rupert team | | i | SAVE THE O( your broken lenses and them to Box 468, Ketchikan, Alaska. They will be replaced promptly in' our large |atory. C M. and R. L. Carlson. eomw; (hurles (oburn in My Kingdom for a Cook’" | | send the advantage and well equipped labor- remove In New York last night cwell, 138-pounder of Newark, ored an upset in an eight-round lecision over Al Guido, 134-pounder ;(rl New York Guido had beaten | Maxwell twice before In Baltimore last night Prdru‘ Hernandez, 125-pounder, of New York, a decision in a ten-rounder over! Hubert Sameu! 135-pounder of | Philadelphia. Sergeant Lou Woods, 154-pounder fof Camp Crant, took an eight Hast nu.m Lowl feathe: ight contender, won | round decision from Lou Angelucci, | 160-pounder of Chicago in Chicagol SUB- DRAFT AGERS IN BASEBALL GAME | NEW YORK, Aug. 8—A picked team of eastern sub-draft age base- ball players defeated a western| (team yesterday 6 to 0 at the Polo| | Grounds. | The game witnessed by 17,000, |who turned out to see the boys | from 28 cities play the all-Ameri- ‘can game. was sponsored by the magazine Esquire The western pitcher held the east but four errors offset | { | | [to five ‘hits, — - To keep lashes long and thick, the mascara every night. TWO for $11.50 e ONE DRESS $21.00 TWO for$21.50 ® COATS and SUITS Half-Price @ HATS and BAGS Half-Price No Exchanges . . No Refunds ® ONE DRESS $11.00 Back to School JUMPER DRESSES 2.95 CHANNEL APPABEL 70TH CENTURY THEATRE ‘BUILDING JACKET NO HEAT * NO MACHINE * NO DISCOMFORT A Special Price for a Limited Time i TO INTRODUCE HALLIWELL COLD WAVES LUCILLE had special training in the Halliwell Method in LOS ANGELES. Lucille’s Beauty Salon PHONE 492 SWEATERS /W0 New Mag for your HAIR with the exquisite Falliwell KERA-KOLD PERMANENT WAVE To You! thoroughly | PAGE FIVE Public Accouniant-Stenographic-Tax Relurns MURPHY and MURPHY Successors to Harvey Lowe ROOM 3—First National Bank Bldg. PHONE 676 { ) CABINETS FIXTURES FULTON & KRUSE BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING 146 So. Main Street ————) 133 33 PHONE 4 COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES 687 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 fo Cook Phone 359 THE ONLY HOME CAFE IN JUNEAU JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING—HEATING—OIL BURNERS—SHEET METAL WELDING PHONE 787 Third and Franklin THRIFT C0-OP Member National Retaller- Owned Grocers 211 BEWARD STREET PHONE 767 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks’ Club PHONE 576 CALL Femmer's Transfer FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL Foot of Main Street Juneau Molors 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Dine - Bar - Dance Delicious Fried Chicken DERBY INN John Marin, Prop. Skagway Widest Selectlon of uqnons PHONE 92 or 95 [r—————————— Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 49 Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Ropes and Paints Thomas Hardware Co. 'NORTH TRANSFER Light and Heavy Hauling PAINTS — OIS E.0.DAVIS E. W.DAVIS Bullders’ aind Shelf SONR 4L HARDWARE ——————————————————— COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DEALERS Utah Not and Lamp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co. TELEPHONE 4 ey WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oll—Your Coal Cholce—General Haul- ing — Storage and Orating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 \ Alaska Mum Supply and Swupplier ‘| Phone 206 Second and Sewsra | FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men Alaska Meat Markel The largest and most complete stock of Fresh and Frozen Meats in Juneau. “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 105 Pree Delivery Junesau PHONE 39839 HOTEL Juneauw’s Most Popular Every comfort made for our guests “Meating” Place Air Bervice Information ONLY THE BEST OF MEATS PHONE 10 or 20 PHONE 202 HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Wall Paper Ideal Paint Shop Home Stere—Tel. 690 3 Phone 649 Fred W. Wendt Liquer | American Meat — Phone 38