The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 26, 1944, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA CRIMSON BEARS ~ BROWNS WONPENNANT ' FLORIDA TO OFFER THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1944 sic spont evens || ALASKA AIRLINES PAGE TWO Better Dresses, Coats . . . MONTH-END CLEARANCE Nice values in better dresses, coats, in a feature month-end clear: tomorrow. and afternoor Black arance ance. It starts 1 dresses priced for and colors. Sizes Reg. 22.95 13.00 25 street and afternoon dresses all originals— Crepes and wool crepes A Beth missy and women’s Bt models. Blacks and col- ; “ ors. Sizes 10—44. : ¥ Reg. $35-45 17.00 26 1007 all-wool casual coats, interlined. Ches- . { terfields and reefers . . . / Black, red, colors. Reg. 45.00 $25.00 all-wool beautiful fur-trimmed models shawl collars. Fox, wolf, Reg. 89.50-150.00 $50 - $100.00 BM Rehiends Co QGALITY SINCE /887 100% Tuxedos and badger. and - WIN EXHIBITION - GAME LAST NIGHT Juneau High School Crimson Bears, making their first appear- |ance on the maple court last night in an exhibition game with the Alumni, with five lettermen and 10 others to draw from, made a dé- led impression as to form and ability for the coming cage season They promise again this year to capture the Southeast Alaska hampionship and give the other |teams in' thé Juneau City League |a run for their money. The lettermen are Ken Kearney, Les Hogins, Herb Mead, Linn For- rest and Denny Merritt. First-stringers on the team were Lee Lucas, John Dapce- |vich, Jack McDaniel, Tom Powers, John Bavard: substitutes, Bob Thibodeau, Henry Behrends and |Grant Ritter. | In a smartly-played defensive game, the Crimson Bears won, 34 to 26. Juneau High made the first score after the starting whistle. The Alumni came back fast and ;m the end of the first period the |score was 9 to 6. | “The Alumni were still_in the lead {in the second quarter and the !playing was wild. Pass after pass was made and missed. At the end of the half, the score was 13 to | 16. | In the third quarter Ken Kear- , high scorer of the Crimson | Bears, began to throw the casaba |through the hoop at a faster and |faster rate. At the end of the quarter, the Crimson Bears were {ahead, 26 to 20. | Kearney kept up the head of steam and the Bears won, 34 to 26. Kearney and Dapcevich were high scorers for the Bears and | Alumni, respectively. Kearney made | 17 points and Dapeevich, 12. There Iwas a good rooting section out to | witness the game. | - e 'EDMONTON CLIPPERS " (HAMPS OF ALASKAN " DIVISION FOOTBALL | | CALGARY, Oct. 26—The Alas- kan Clippers of Edmonton defeated |Fort Richardson, Anchorage, 7 to 0 {to win the Alaskan Division Air | Transport Command AAF football ' championship. Richardson won the first game {12 to 7, and the Clippers toek the second, 8 to 7. Both games were played at Edmonton. | The final game was scoreless for Alumni * SEVENTY YEARS BACK. NEW YORK, Oct. 26—Now that the St. Louis Browns have been | properly acclaimed for winning their “first” pennant, historians drag out the damaging evidence proving that it wasn't the first after all. As far as American League rec- ords go, 1944 brought the initial St. Louis championship but the club ¢ king of the walk when the| Brownies swept four successive titles in the American Association from 1885 to 1888. This wasn’t even the first world wampionship series for the per- ennial also-rans, who captured one of four pi offs that passed for world series in those d: FOR COMING WINTER Oct. 26—If you then | MIAMI, Florid; can buy a train ticket and find a place in which to live, 'you can have a ringside seat during the winter in Florida at the richest sport spectacle ever staged. Never before, not even in o time boom years, has the state scheduled- such a show. There will be horse racing with perhaps a $1,300,000 pay-off for race horse owners, nearly $1,250,000 for dog races, maybe $75,000 for!| college football, up to $26,000 for professional golfers, then count the | spectator participation and call it! a one hundred million dollar plus ason. i Orders for Christmas Cards MUST BE PLACED NOT LATER THAN NOVEMBER 10 ‘ TOMAKE SURE OF DELIVERY ‘ Sample Cards May Be Seen Now at the | DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE A BETTER BLEND FOR BETTER DRINKS GLENMORE DISTILLERIES COMPANY Tncorporated LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY Blended Whiskey 86.8 Proof—65% Grain Neutral Spirits [ e e e ANCHORAGE—FAIRBANKS NOME YAKUTAT — CORDOVA CONNECTIONS TO VALDEZ — KODIAK — BRISTOL BAY KUSKOKWIM PHONE 667 MAN, Traffic Manager Office Baranof Hotel ARTHUR 087 TR S T | INSURANCE A . Thompson Optical Co. Health, Accident, Life, Annuities 3 214 Second St.—Phone 387 Juvenile Educational k Endowments Lenses duplicated—Frames sold- M. B. MARTIN—Phone 53 ||| ered—Reading Glasses $7.50 pair 123 Third St. P. O. Box 1641 —Guns repaired—New Gun Parts Tanned RABBIT SKINS At Lowest Rates BUY DIRECT AND ROOMS WITH BATH SAVE MONEY. O 4 Any quantity, immediate WITHOUT BATH delivery. Write for Price Most Convenient Location A, —THIRDANDMARN—~ Valcauda Fur Co. Owner-Mgr., Clarence Wise Seattle, Washington Hotel Juneau For Comfort MAKE JUNEAU DAIRIES DELICIOUS ICE CREAM a daily habit—ask for it by name Juneau Dairies, Inc. BUY WAR BONDS @ Centrally located ® Splendid food and service s Large Rooms— . sll with Bath ALASKANS LIKE WINDOWS, DOORS, CABINETS 0. B. Williams Co. 1939 First South Seattle 4 "ROYAL CAFE THE OPEN ALL NIGHT ,wlxo were the isolationists who op- ! posed these preparedness measures before Pearl Harbor. Fortunately ! we do know the record. Dewey took |a strange attitude in his efforts to | get Congressional candidates to be BALLSAYS DEWEY STILL DOES NOT |the Clippers broke through and blocked a Richardson kick and recovered the ball on their op- ponents’ three-yard line. Cpl.| Morton Goodstein plunged over to GOVERNMENT T |three periods. In the final quarter, § FACE REAL ISSUE NEW YORK, Oct. 26—Republican Senator Joseph Ball said that Gov. | Thomas E. Dewey in his Minneapolis | gain declined to state | s position on vital ques- | " concerning the proposed se- | curity council. honest with the voters on these issues which are an attempt to dictate to Congress. “Apparently he doesn’t want a mandate from the people on this issue for himself or Congress. He wants a blank check,” Ball con- cluded. CUPID FLIRTS WITH MARS TAKING OVER BIG FACTORY fErie Concern Fails fo De-| liver Goods at Agreed score and Sgt. John Galvin con-; | verted a place kick try into a point e | GREMLINS, RAMBLERS SOLID LINES 10 MEET IN SATURDAY CONTEST SAN ANTONIO, Oct. 26 — Two Ball said: “Dewey’s speech, if we didn’t have a record on Selective Lend-Lease, repeal of the | Neutrality Act and other measures, would almost convince us that it was | the President and the Democrats SAFFRON, Englanid—Mayor John Wilson recently appealed on behalf of a sailor who wanted a girl pen pal interested in matrimony. He got 1,700 replies. | AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES | NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Fairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building KINLOCH N. NEILL JOHN W. CLARK WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 757 * BRINGING UP FATHER | TOLD BOBBY - SHE MUST COME IN_ AND KISS ME BEFORE SHE GOES OUT- WHAT ARE YOU PUNISHIN HER FORY Mandarin Chow Mein and Chop Suey Just Like in Chinatown! Steaks, Chops, Fried Chicken, Dinners " iLord Manufacturing Company of | i1 untied, high-scoring teams are to| ‘ Upon Prices SRt N B onen) | — Randolph Field’'s Hurrying Ram- | | WASHINGTON, Oct. 26 — The|blers clash with the Third Air- | Government today took over the|force Gremlins, but strange to re- late, fans are expecting a defensive battle for the reason two massive lines will collide, and make grid- iron history by holding the opposi- tion to virtually nothing. This is especially true of the mighty Ramblers, who show just 36 yards given to four teams, an average of nine yards per contest, which is an all-time record i The Third Airforce 206 pound; line allowed Georgia Pre-flight 46 yards and Georgia Pre-flight, which beat Navy 21 to 14, should look forward to this game and should %Erie. Pennsylvania, through an | Executive Cwder that said the |company boosted pricces of Gov- | ernment contracts and - “wilfully | refused and failed” to supply the | war materials under the previously | agreed-ti price. | White House sources said that as far as could be recalled, today’s action was the first time the Gov- ernment has seized a war plant over a price dispute. | The Executive Order said that conduct of the company interferred be ranked the nation's top team | with “production and supply of|for the week, inasmuch as it is| |aircraft parts and other essential}the only one matching a major un- war materi; and directed Sec-|defeated team. retary of Navy James V. Forrestal I s T {to take over and operate the plant PINOCHLE PARTY to the extent that he deemed| Second in series. Sat., 8 p. |hecessary to continue war produc-|Sons of Norway. Admission | tion. m, TRIANGLE CLEANERS - Bring Back Lost Beauty o Clothes Pick Up and Dcliver PHONE By GEORGE McMANUS THE KID 1S AWFULLY QUIET- | WONDER IF SHE WENT OUT AN’ FORGOT TO KISS MAGGIEE ? 1 KNOW - SO | DECIDED TO STAY IN- DINE atthe . . BATAAN CAFE" While the Popular Dreamland Swing Band Serenades You! HAVE YOU TRIED ANDY'S SPARE RIBS—Sweel and Sour? LOCATED ON SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET JUNEAU, ALASKA | ALASKA'S FINEST{|| e Sorve: | HOTEL : z;ln:;irsa‘:\eyl)lshu Eat in the Famous o Chowdiein Gold Room 65 l-‘Sried ;‘m & It Costs No More 2 " Phone 800 Wit taevie Woedley Airways JUNEAU—— ANCHORAGE Via YAKUTAT and CORDOVA Connections to ALL INTERIOR 4laska Points Lockheed Arrives Juneau 2:00 P.M. Electra Leaves Juneau 2:30 P.M. Tuesday-Friday FOR RESERVATIONS ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Phone 612 Agents Juneau W ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES Serving Southeast Alaska——Passengers, Mail, Express SITKA TRIP—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Hawk An- Pel- Kim- Chicha- Inlet Hoonah goon Tenakee Todd ican shan gof Bil‘h ~38 $. $10 $18 $18 $18 318 818 e 18 10 18 18 10 10 10 18 10 L] 10 18 U] 18 10 Haines and Skagway—Scheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. Haines Skagway Juneau .. $18.00 $20.00 Skagway 10.00 Express Rate: 1) cents per pound—Minimum Charge 60c Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED DAILY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell Petersburg Juneau ... X $35.00 $30.00 Petersburg 10.00 Wrangell ... Express Rate: 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to Ketchikan Express Rate: 10c per pound—Minimum of 60c to Petersburg and Wrangell Above rates applicable when passenger traffic warrants. Schedules and Ratgs Subject to Change Without Notios.

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