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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—]JUNEAU, ALASKA Little Miss, Swagger Gingham Has Come to See Us Again. .. Rapidly becoming the most wel- ccme visitor in town . . . Swagger Gingham, this superb Galey and Lord fabric, woven by Cameron has no e¢nd of popularity . . . 20 different plaids or checks in heav- cnly color eombinations and it is the wonder ful quality you love. RAINIERS HOLD 2-1 MARGIN IN Joyce Evens Series on Saturday SEATTLE, Oct. 8—The Seattle Rainiers, holding a 2-1 edge over the |San Francisco Seals in the finals of he Pacific Coast League Governor's Sup playoffs, will invade the Bay | city this week for concluding games |of the seven-tilt series. Play will be | resumed there Wednesday night. The two teams broke even over the weekend as the Rainiers won Sunday and the Seals tock Saturday | night’s contest 4-2 behind the five- hit hurling of their ace righthand %5 | Bob Joyce. Seattle won the series {opened Friday night Third baseman Charley Aleno | powered Seattle to its triumph yes- terday. He hit a towering home- run in the ond inning and a three-run dcuble in the fourth. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE (Playeff Finals) SATURDAY — San Francisco 4 Seattle 2. SUNDAY San Francisco 5; Seattle 7. (The playoff series now stand two games for Seattle and one for San | Francisco. SERIES NOTES CHICAGO — It's probably s comfort to Hank Boro after his abrupt flight to the show day, but the ex-Yanke sverall record of 12 w | four defeats against the cluding his se: split STEP RIGHT UP, FOLKS Although more than 44,000 fans and only Tigers, in- lean be crammed into Wrigley Field, attendance at the first two Chicago games Wi just short of s Fast color, washable, 36 inches ‘K_S wide. ] R: i I i i 85¢cy i i | f { i ! f May we ask. that you limit your | purchases to not more than 5 yards ... We're sorry, that out of necessity the quantity must be limited and we’d like as many as possible to share . .. 3 . Ertends Lo QUALITY SINCE /887 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU 'NATIONAL WAR WEATHER BULLETIN | | DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MERIDIAN TIME:| RE“EF Fu“n |S Max. temp. TODAY i last Lowest 4:30am. 24 hrs, Weather at lAGGI“G HERE | 24 hrs. temp. temp. Precip. 4:30 am. | 51 42 0 Rain i “There is still a long way to go,” i 44 Snow Lion Frank Hermann, the Club’s 10 Rain National War Fund Chairman, re- Cloudy | ported at the Lion’s Noon luncheon Pt. Cloudy .ludny “But we've covered a lot of Pt. Cloudy |ground already,” he added. Clear The Woman’s Club recently turn- Cloudy ed in $20 and the pay deductions Pt. Cloudy | for the fund from the CIO’s long- Rain shoremen’s Union for September and October amountéd to $45, it was an- Cloudy nounced. The Business and Profes- Clear | sional Women’s Club and the Wo- Clear man’s Club are jointly sponsoring a 54 Drizzle tea at the Scottish Rite Temple on 82 Fog Wednesday, Oct. 10, with all the| 50 Fog proceeds going to China Relief 65 4 Rain through the National War Fund. It 51 Cloudy is China Day. ‘There was nothing to report on 46 47 96 Cloudy the Rotarian sponsored Memorial 38 43 Clear Library, since the Rotarians had not 38 44 1.14 Fog as yet contacted the Lion’s repre- ay to 4:30 a. m. today) sentative. M \RI\L WEATHER BULLETIN * y C}y‘g;‘sagg m‘*vrfflm Selby, Doe el i€} ilo Clouse were ap- : Reports from Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today Poliibda ta tha progrin mmm:e 5 = = : WI D, Height of Waves | for the next month Pt. Cloudy ‘.;;;w \)x: Ahd\‘l; i C:u;i:::om President Barney Anderson an- pis et 2 i nounced an executive board meet- Pt. Cloudy 47 3 3§ gant: ing tonight at Lion Doc Rude's of- t F fice. p &2 Slmt‘z‘:lh Guests of the club were Lion Gil Lincoln Rock Drizz) 2 Nerdling of Washington, and Mert Point Ret Pt. Cl 3 iy R. Harnden, PAA pilot, o( Seattle, MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: South r RATD 1 s PRy mfl"“ casterly SHAKESPEARE AT HOTEL 2 les per hour s showers today. Rain CrEB 7 HOONAHANS HERE < Mr. and Mrs. John P. Cushing, Jr., plane arrivals from Hoonah urday, are guests at the Baranof Piace facil million persons in the U e in rural areas, or in urban that do not maintain transit Lt. L. V. Shakespeare, of the Juneau Subport, has registered at the Baranof Hotel - D MCcALLISTER AT BAHA\U' W. McAllister, of Seattle, who ar- rived here by plane over the week~ |end, was a Barano! Hotel Cuest, that mark. | | e TOP-DOG TIGERS Detroit’s Tigers now are top-heavy favorites to walk off with base- ball's classic after yesterday's 8 to 4 victory over the Chicago club. The | Bengals cveried their score wi | Fordham Hank Borowy, who beat |them in the first game. | | | | 2 WINNERS ON HILL The Tigers, leading three games to two, were to send their broad- shouldered fireballer, Virgil Trucks, tc the mound hoping to. end the classic this afternoon. The Cubs are calling on tall, somber-faced Claude Passeau for this sixth game - D The earliest use of colored glass in spectacles authenticated by the record is a public announcement by a maker of spectacles in 1561. PCL CUP FINAL ; Seattle Retakes Lead Affer hed with 279, . s : ’ ' 161, carcer government official INGLEWOOD, Calif—Busier, at| WASHINGTON, Oct. B.-EffectiVe| pinance Minister Keizo Shibu: ! = ¢ ‘l e e ¢ 4% next March, all Army enlisted men | ¢qwe 49 financier otured the $25000 added service will be eligible ; 3 Vanity Hze and move leading money win s of all 34,035, She earned $17,445 in beating Canina by two lengths with Paula's Lulu third ARK, N. J. > of the Little World Se: American Association. ined out on Sunday, ’ > - 1A, Wash. — Jimmy Hines, | 1argest demolition job of the oc- diplomat tackling his first big do- on the 72-hole Tacoma cupation v e i “};::}“{:k:":;:;?":;fis‘;)‘tge: Foreign Minister Shigeru Yo- v shida, 67, a hold-over who, like second with 216, Ed Furgol, of D h D | 3 o Detroit and Utica, N. Y., made lsc ar e a a Shidehara, had opposed Nippon's in one on his final round und wdicap at Hollywood Park into seVenth place among Cc — The opening 25 was hed out by rain Saturday at the third inning. At that! of the International to 1 lead over Louis- | MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1945 Submarine Pens f NEW CABINET e soan s FOR NIPPONS ~ ORGANIZED (Contmuul /rmn Page ()nc} Hotel! Rooms Seattle Close to shopping, business, theatres—away from noise. Daily Only - CORNELIUS Apartment Hotel Third at Blanchard EL 2388 HAMBURG, Germany, Oct. 8— | British engineers will blow up the { huge concrete submarine pens at| | Famburg on Oct. 21. The pens were the largest Germany had and their destruction will represent the militarist clique. Home Minister Zenjiro Horikiri, Is Given Senale with two eal Commerce and Industry Minister, for (|l:~ll;].u1'51l]9(, t‘;mwf‘;ufl' Military | gankaro Ogsawara, 60, parliamen- mmittee eaArC ay. i i =y W tarian and businessman. y that time, Brig. Gen. Robert W. |~ yyu, Minister, Lt. Gen. Sadashi Berry testified, enough high-point i , Shimomura, 58, militarist. (Also a men will have been released to al- | >0 Ut low discharges on length of service — Naby Minfster, Adm. Soyemu T¢ ne. General George C. Marghall tola| y09% 60-year-old milltarist who | e oty tne twooyear dis. | commanded the Yokosuka Naval T e contompiated, bup | Base where occupation forces made did not sét & date. A their first amphibious landings on Between now and March, Berry J%Pan- $ ; d, critical point scores for di: Jugtice. . -Minister, ., Dr. Chiiso (!'ul‘l" will be reduced progressive- Iwata, lawyer, also a holdover from ly. At present the figure is 70| the previous capinet. x |ints, In November ¢ sshoula| The newspaper Yomiuri Hochi | said that the new ministers would drop to 60 points. ! e be installed tonight at the Imperial POLICE COURT FINES Eales - Joseph Jimmie, Lena Richardson, MARY JOYCE HERE {william . Milligan, all charged ; F |with being drunk and disorderly, Mary Joyce was in from her and Mrs. Millie Lott, drunk, have Twin Glaciers Lodge, on the Taku craeR; been fined $25 in City Police Court. River, this weekend, and is reg- It is estimated that the 1945 sup (IVILI N JOB Thomas Weaver, drunk and ddlS- istered at the Baranof. ply of lead will be approximately 20 'crderly, was sentenced to 10 days -9 l\ 3 per cent below require : jin jai Empire Want-ads bring resuits! PC' oy eRnme LCOOOOOGOOE YoNoNoN N COL OO0 OODOOCES RRRGGTG HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 8 — Lt. Gen. |y, 9 James H. Doolittle, leader of the () b4 first bembing raid on Tokyo, says () fi 1c will be leaving the Army soon ) QU Shbaiis “ and is locking for a civilian job. |G o “It will be something in aviation /‘ 4] operation or production—but I /, o ;I don't know exactly what,” he said |¢) ] at a p onference last night. // 4; “I've had some pretty good offers.” /, ooy ANCHORAGE ;} Gen. Doolittle addressed a film |® e b4 industry gathering here last night ¢) th e ;i to aid the forthcoming Hollywood | % campaizn in the Victory Bond | drive. 2 % -oo 9 Xooian 1 DUTCHHARBOR r4 9 PUT ON ROCKS ” (» BY NAVY, CLAIM ¢ ,, SEATTLE, Oct. s.—ermagm E .D. /fi Helmer of Unalacka, Alaska, said §) tcday that Dutch Harbor Navy ¢ commanders “through unfair and @ dictatorial restrictions, have put the //, «i: Ci Unalaska on the rocks.” 7 Hr]mm declared that for the past ¢ six months Unalaska has been “out n of bounds” to Navy men although j; n-. tc officials have “offered / to d ssible to right what /, the N y considers to be wrong. Through it all the Navy has refu cd even to give a reason for its orcar.” | Hzlmer said ke had telegraphed officials in Washington, D. C.,, com- | | | | AN AMERL /[/V ogto /I//n n JURENN T L R DC-3 Equipment .. Refreshments Aloft . . Stewardess Service ALASKA AIRLINES Baranof Hotel B o o o o e o o o o o o o oo oo o oo o VN N o o o o Ve oo o' o8 " PHONE 667 RRR COLONIAL TABLE LAMPS These are the latest in Lamp Creation. You will be surprised at their beauty and the efficient lighting dispelled by them. <4 ‘We Also Have Seme Very Nice SILK SHADES x for FLOOR LAMPS that will aid in bright- ening up these long dark evenings and add refinement to your home. See and then Get the Above at the ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER COMPANY : Phone 616 \