The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 28, 1945, Page 3

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MONDAY, MAY 28, 1945 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA - WANT ADS i WANTED BY GEN’TLEMAN4 Dark, sinister quarters, isolated, so ms will not disturb neighbors. Write THE LODGER 1t FOB SALE FOR SALE — inder Buda Diesel, 63 HP., model. Swanson Gracery. Light-weight, 4-cyl- 1940 DeLuxe electric range, | Internal Reve- GENERAL like new. Lazetti, nue office. SALESMAN—Excellent opportunity for live-wire salesman calling on wholesale grocery #énd candy trade with our premium boards. Full-time or sideline. Highest commissions, Garsher Novelty Co., 23 South 4th St. Minneapolis Minnesota. EOY'S BICYCLE and Kayak, good condition. Phone Douglas 2403. OVER-STUFFED DIVAN. Inquire at the Snap Shoppe. BUSH and LANE Upright Piano, coil bed spring, full size; two mattresses, table tennis set, net, paddles and two balls. Call at Church of Christ parsonage, 10th and E Streets. VVANTED Smtmnan 7 to 15-HP., in good ¢ Room 209, Hotel Juneau. ndition {ship SbCOND MAID WANT ED— (cham- | me ber maid-waitress) in p FOR SALE—Several good Toggen-| family. Call 21, or write burg and Saanen grade milk!| Box 104. also some pure blooded | WANTED Man or woman for pan ' their also young bucks. v d P. O.| "washing and general cleaning Box 2321, Juneau, Alasks Apply before 10 a. m, Sully’s Bakery. P. secor pring | lead dcub! ‘WANTED—-Expu emed man wants ;. ob on troller. Apt. F, Kilburn ates new gear, also new trolling; APts, Douglas. Phone 43, after gear. $5500, cash. Call at 306, 5:30 p.m. Willoughby. e DOUBLE BED, mattress, S and L dresser. Phone 244. S BOAT—“Chechako,” has 9 sty | WANTED—Bulldozer man, ‘miners, muckers. See Herb Waugh, St. Eugene Mining Corp., Ltd., Klein Bldg. Phone 216. © KE FOR SALE—Hemlock dock piling, | 18c per ft. FOB Camp, near Wrangell, plus 4c per ft. towage. | Top quality, Elolin Logging Co. e PR 7 X | WANTED—Janitor. Wm. Paul, Jr, Juneau Agent. S Hu(,el Apply G WANTED —_ Expel ienced cle: Irving's Market. RESIDENCE on Auk Bay. Partly furnished. Beautiful view. Call i il | 190 or Blue 298. | NE FRESH LOCAL EGUS for "Sfl;‘é,';fWANTED Full-time _driver at ”] T1st Harbor Market. Phone 352. f»“““"" Mrskel- the £ WANTEL—Will pay top price for wir all kinds second hand merchan- INCOME VIEW HOME — ~ Three | :’:‘;Cks Lrom Fecenul B:“d‘;:‘i '{“D} dise except clothes. Douglas Trad- ge apartments, each With' two| ... b, "prone Douglas 25, P. O. bedrooms, one bachelor apart-: Box 1237, Douglas ment. $140 a month income. s $11,800 total price, $6,000 cash my | [WANTED—Used furniture. 306 Wil- h b6 equity, rest FHA. Will consider| Joughby. Phone 788. col good boat or car for portion of | - ffem cash consideration. Call Bob | Henning, Blue 370, for ‘appoint- | s ALASKA AIRLINES NEW DOUGLAS ON SATURDAY FLIGHTS Alaska Airlines’ Douglas NC. 157 |soon to be christened “The Starliner Juneau” made its first flight between &1 Anchorage and Juneau Saturday. Pilots Bob Long and Bill Lund p IA\.I Free SU l ROOM FUR’\IISHED HOUSE oil stoves; also 5 2-room cabins. In- quire 843 West Ninth Street. "BABY PLAY PEN" — Use three times Phone Blue 632. FOR SALE—4-Room house & lot lot, strictly modern. Full basement, fully furnished. $2500 cash; $3,000, terms. Phone 035-5. rings. | only i { { Un: { OR§SALE—Troller “Diana’™ e | Anchorage with the following seven W f | long. 8% {t. beam, fully equipped. |\, ongers: Harold Wurtz, Jo i Ohtysler Crown. fuatine. enginsf hine Browne, Grant Saylor, Robert tirst class condition. See Harbor‘guh“‘ Mae Wood, Page Wood and :7‘“ Master, | peter Wood. Henry B. Peterson 1 T ~ |flew to Juneau from Gustavus. ] Fon RENT | On the return flight the follow- |ing passengers were flown: H. M 2- ROOM furnished Apt. Oil heat, Parks, C. H. Dyer, L. W. Lawrence, bath. 513-A Willoughby. {W. R. Graham, L. N. Bayne, H. W. | Miller, Miss Sargent, Esther Evans, OR RENT — Light housekeeping |14, ¢ 0. Gunther, Mrs. Grant and zooms. Elderly gentleman pre-ichild, Wm. Gaunt, F. H. McIntyre, c . }nl\I ten on Ji e ir I F imm " RAINIERS 1 Coast Loop Leaders Tangle f“‘ in Decisive Series This into ¢ FIELD NARROWED a group Chanc ! brought the plane into Juneau from SUm ginin, VS. AP SPORT ~ ROUNDUPS By Hugh Fullerton, Jr. ated Press Sports Writer) } COLLEGE, Pa.—Opéning | isherman’s Paradise was > Suceess. P Auy/ ler could tell you that paradise| be a place where the fish| big and where they always| 1d the “aptly”-named stretch | Creek between State| Bellefonte, Pa., fills | . When this obs ast Friday 1STMEETING must Week at Seattle Bs | College that bill ! dropped in and A land ittle ball which have b art of the of the Pac luck eighth | \\mvl l in the 1d m the carried lln(l Way Pa 1gu his week in' g et the final ) v ones who trout. Made dise Easy | is com- | by regulations The Fisherr pletely hedged in and that may be why it also isg hedged by caste standing at about five-y intervals along the banks, {lic! their lines in blithe disregard of the safety of passers- by and of the snarls that result when two or three cast to one spot at the same time. Anglers may only with barble artificial and no “hardware” such as they get whacked with 'n having worms . No trout long en in section—may many as t, only two . The pmoject was rs ago as a model for and a school w mostly vanians can catchin; couple of out their rations record which | about each | 24,000 anglers took | than four tons of trout. nave fun? long reign in ized as victim of a es defeat, moves le with a scant half-game Rainiers will have the ntage of playing on their a winnin six out Angeles. crig 1d- st ng le ng them k over Los - NTUCKY DERB of lures- an 10 ir sy \((lxl T0 SIX LINELIES —With less to go before the|s Kentucky Derby wed t the to from W YORK two wee running of the narr rovement ting, but e where Per sure cf rout to eke m 1y im ow it's ield a made Burning Warren of During the only some more And do they > s DOUGLAS NEWS MONDAY NIGHT SEW year home m; ht's Lung C. F e om iraham’s Main John March’ for All | MMER CAMP SET FOR GIRL SCOUTS| Mrs. E. W. p director with in_Scout- | i Girl Scout | R s N WAY TO SERVICE amp will open June 17, it ON WAR' YO OEW wced today i [ Sewing Club this evening Edwin John- is located at| T Monday Night s scheduled to meet at the home of Mrs. son. Her residence Fifth and C streets. nece | and their | | SRR William Devon, Wilfred Rice Mickey Pusich are all n the U. 8. Navy at San Calif. T will enlist in the regular Navy, examination: permitting. Otherwise, they intend to join thg, Merchant, Marine. The three young men ar st ap- -hing 18 years of Devon Pusich were from the Bre who o June the with the lrlz W stay will con! le with nediate trcops going out July » for two weeks, Mrs. E. R. 15on, member of “the- Gitl “Seout p Committee, stated dline for applications to at- summer camp is June 1, while ne 8, Mrs. Josephine Boyd will lobby of the Baranof receive the balance of nies, start mp 2 prod and week chool. " Dou 1 the 1 to | LT. SHOENBERGER HERE IR {vic |efior *{the nightcap, 5-0, behind the three- | str { Sunday Redbirds to two hits in the opener. BAGS HIS 6TH STRAIGHT WIN |for the Tigers, 3-1, for his fifth \‘mumpl\ and Mickey Haefner out- | dueling Forest Orrell, 2-1, to give | Mort Cooper Pays First| Dividend'to Braves- Giants Stopped the Nats an even break The Chicago Cubs defeated Bmoklvn, 6-1, in the first game By Joe Reichler Associated Press Sports Writer) on may not be represented and came out with a 2-2 tie in the Isecond, halted after eight innings World Series next fall but ared today that the Hub by darkness the major league's two g gate attractions in s Dave (Boo) Ferriss of the and Mort Cooper of the ANDINGS OF THE CLUBS (American League) Team-— w. New York 20 Detroit 17 | Chicago 15 St. Louis 15 Cleveland 13 Boston 13 Washington 13 Philadelphia 11 Games Saturday New York, 13: Chicago, St. Louis, 9; Boston, 2. Detroit, Philadelphia, 4. Sunday Scores New York, 10-3; St. Louis, Boston, 7-2; Chicago, 0-1. Detroit, 3-1; Washington, 1-2. Cleveland, 8; Philadelphia, 3. sses Br iined his sixth straight ! 'd his fourth shut-out as iited the Chicago White Sox hit, a single by Tony Cuc- to help the Red Sox take win bill yesterday, 7-0 and 2-1. O'Neill turned in a complete the twin he 9-1. 2 two- to tri- (National ieague) Team— New York Brookiyn Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis Boston Cincinnati Philadelphia Games Saturday Chicago, 2; Philadelphia, 1. New York, 5; Cincinnati, 1. Brooklyn, 11; St. Louis, 2. Sunday Scores Pittsburgh, 16-10; New York, 4-5. (Second game called end of eighth. To be completed today). Chicago, 6-2; Brooklyn, 1-2. (Second game called end eighth.) Boston, 4-0; Cincinnati, 0-5. Philadelphia, 2-3; St. Louis, 0-2. he Sox 1 rookie righthander has nearly 65000 persons ine thy home appearances. In his Boston debut he lured 30,824 fans, despite the fact that the Cronin- men had dropped nine of their pre- vio 14 games. His second home was witnessed by 9,270, the est weekday gathering at Fen- Park, and yesterday 24,547 on hand. He promises to be an cqually strong attraction on the road Cooper paid his first dividend to the Braves on their reported $50,000 investment by blanking Cineinnati, 4-0. the opener of a double- hea with the Reds, who took dre way in er hit pitching of Cooper, ace righthander obtained from the St. Louis Cardinals last week, gained his third triumph without a setback by holding Lhc Reds to four hits. T St. Louis Browns! winning ak of nine straight over the Yankees ended when New York won both games, 10-9 in 14 innings and 3-1. ‘The National League’s first-place Giants were humbled by Pitts- burgh, 16-4, in the opener of a twin bill and were behind 10-5, at the end of seven and a half inn- | ings when the nightcap was hnlted f because of Pennsylvania's 7 p. m., law. The game will be completed today. The Cubs cambed five Giant hurlers for 18 hits. \ Cleveland won its fifth straight and ecighth of its last nine games by defeating the Philadelphia Ath-) letics, 8-3, in the first of a ‘sched- led double-header. The night cap called off because of rain. Jast-place Philadelphia_Phil- stunned the "world champion Louis Cardinals twice on two finely pitched games, 2-0 and 3-2. Charley Schanz and Charley Bucky Walters. (Pacific Coast League) Team— L. Portland Seattle Oakland San Diego Sacramento San Francisco Los Angeles Hollywood Games Saturday Los Angeles, 6; Seattle, 3. Portland, 5; San Francisco, 3. Oskland, 5; San Diego, 4 Sacramento, 6; Hollywood, 1. Sunday Scores Seattle, 8-6; Los Angeles, 2-2. San Francisco, 8; Portland, 4. San Diego, 3-9. Hollywood, 6-0; Sacramento, 2-3. D SHIPPER'S ATTENTION " We Wil be réceiving fréight for Letnikof, Haines, Skagway, Pelican and Sitka until May 31, at the Alaska *Dock and Storage Co. ! | /(G SOFTBALLERS Sproull each gained his first tri- wxph with Schanz limiting the! ALASKA TRANSPORTATION CO., D. B. Femmer, Agent. ATIENTION ODD FELLOWS Regular meeting Tuesday night at 8. Election of officers. George Clark, Noble Grand. D | MEET FRESHMEN Completing the third rou.nd and | commencing the third week of play in the local softball league, the | leading Coast Guard 10 will meet the Subport Freshmen at Firemen'’ Field this evening. The contest be- gins at 7 o'clock. NOTICE! Not rnpnnqblr for any debts contracted only personally by our- selves. MR. & MRS. CHAS. JOHNSON, Tenakee, Alaska. SES for Your Home Grown Flowers ‘When friends gather, a glass of light OLYMPIA is most acceptable. ferred. Call after 6 p. m. Ellingen | james Worley and Nina Barkauskas Apts. STEAM TED ROOMS. Call after 3 p. m,, 315 Gold Street. WINTER RATES, Seaview Apts. 0il and wood stoves, lights, laun- ! azy. Phone 236. MISCELLANEOUS PIANOS RENTEDTuned. Ander-| son Shop. THE FIXIT SHOP—General light, repair work. Phone 567. GUARANTEED Realistic ment, $7.00. Paper Curls, $1 up. Lola Beéauty Shop. 315 Decker Way. [F you have empty rooms or apts. for desirable people. inform the Gastineau Hotel. ‘"HARBOR MACHINE SHOP West 11th & F St. GENERATOR WORK and MACHINE WORK LOST AND FOUND LOST—Bunch of keys on cord. Reward. Return to Empire. FOUND—Girl's white gold ring. Owner may have same by identi- | fying and paying for this adv. FQUND—Keys attached to leather tag. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this adv. FOUND — Pair gold-rim glasses. Owner may have same by identi- fying and paying for this adv. FOUND—White gold wedding band. Three chip-diamonds. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this adv. FOUND — Pair “natural” shell- rimmed glasses. Owner may have | same by identifying and paying for this adv. The Killer Whale is capable of swallowing a fur seal porpoise at a gulp. Perma- | Phone 201 or small} \ The Douglas also stopped at Gus- ‘la\us to pick up six Morrison-Knud- sen men, and the plane arrived in | Anchorage with a full load of 21 passegers. NORTHLAND IN FROM SITKA ON WAYTOSEATTLE = The Northland returned from Sit- jka Saturday night with 14 Juneau- bound passengers as folows: G. E. Edington, J. Bizyack, V. R. Farrell, J. 8. Jeffrey, Mrs. J. H. Stone, Southall Stone, J. H. Stone, Mrs. Fred Sabey, Mrs. C. R. Hill, Sam Hill, Miss Joan Hill, Tom Hill, Sid Thompson, and Chris Nelson. | sSailing for the South, the North- land’s Purser, Wilbur Thompson, had the following passengers on his list for Seattle: Miss Emily Dean, Margitta Maier, Mrs. Julia Stream,| Mys. Mary Pinkley, Mary Pinkley,! ]Richard Johnson, Bart C. McCay, Edward Wistoski, Willilam Wistoski, ! Andrew Merculief, Robert E. Croken, | Mrs. Agnes Pike, Billy Pike, Clmmn‘ |Pike, Vincent Federici, John Bo-| dnovic and H. J. Anderson. ‘Wrangel-bound passengers: Jane | Williams, Susan Willlams, Grace Milles, Katherine Churchill and Col-| len Sharp. For Ketchikan: Mrs. A. Hedgees, Gary Hedges, Jt. jg Martin J. Lynch, | Charles L. Hessey, Cleddie R. Rob- | insen, Mary H. Husted, Mary Pier-| |son Hessey, Joseph M. Bravo, Jr., A.| Larson and Willlam Oxenberg. For Petersburg: Dr. Rae L. Carl- son, Mrs. Hanna Philberg, Mrs. S. W. Jenkins and Donald E. Eustin. BARGAIN HUNTER MILWAUKEE, Wis.— Owen Mur-| phy, an internal revenue man, no- ticed the YMCA cafeteria marked its day-old pie cuts with a toothpick and sold them for half price. He also noticed another diner who carried his own supflly of toothpicks | {and thus obtained fresh pie for half price. | { ' SHOES REPAIRED WHILE YOU WAIT! DAILY MAIL SERVICE Hollywood Shoe Shop W"’J e GIGGLEPROOF WOOL LONDON — Plans are being made by the wool industry to further per- ifect processes to “take the tickle out of wool” and make woolen tex- tiles, upholstery, clothes and car- pets moth-preof and non-shrink- able, the camp fees and the health cer- ate for all applicants. One of these must be turned in by every ap- licant (.nd they be obtained from the family physician, it is explain- Lt. Shoenberger arrived here the past weekend from duties in In-| terior Alaska to visit his wife, Mrs. | Shoenberger and two children. Mrs. | Shoenberger has been® visiting with her mother here, Mrs. Anna Boer. | ON CAMPING TRIP | A group of Douglas ladies and | their families left the past weekend | for their annual camping trip on | Marmion Island. Each year they take a two-week outside camping | trip. Families include the R. Mc- Cormicks, the W. Andrews and the | Carl Lindstroms | N PSS S Ten Southern States in 1935-36 spent $17.04 per Negro pupil in ele- | mentary and secondary schools | against $49.30 pr white pupil. S CITY — A Kansas City man was knocked unconscious while rolling up a motor car window when lightning struck near his home last night. A house guest gave him arti- | ficial respiration as an ambulance was summoned. When the ambulance arrived lhey found the unconscious man recover- ed and 30 cents ahead in a card game. ‘TRANSPORTATION C O M P AN Y ] The Baranof Liquor Store Has Moved from the Baranof Hotel Building o ITS NEW LfltA’l‘lfiN in the Klein Building across from the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company on SECOND STREET and three doors west from the FLOWERLAND SHOP. Buy Bonds forthe Mmhtu 7th Drive!

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