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[ERUCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN | DATA FOR 24 EOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M, 120TH MERIDIAN TIME lie Gagsaway carried Oakland to 8 5 to 3 win over Sacramento. It was | Gassaway's fifth win of the season | thirl over the Solons. The ANGFLS TRIM and his fourth was the big winning for the Max. temp. | TODAY RAINIERS Bv Oaks. They retired Sacramento's last | Lowest 4:30am. 24hrs Weather at Hugh Orphan and manufactured Station 24 hrs.* temp. tem, Precip. 4:30 am. four runs out of a triple, a double, Anchorage 37 28 28 03 Pt. Cloudy L SRR RS S T e P T two walks and a couple of singles. Barrow 11 i Trace Snow . 6 To 5 SCORE g Ecthel 32 26 Trace Cloudy 1 ANDING Or CLUBS Cordova 39 32 20 Cloudy - Baseball leams fo Practice =t R it Pacitic Coast Leagis | Eamonton 60 34 Pt. Cloudy 1 . HY Balls Good for Hits at ros aneetes HERTR Beetgs ‘;3: l;‘lmi,l:.md“ ¢ Nexi week 'or 0 e“ln ‘0' San Di F San Diego 16 1% 533 Havre - n viego as rog Portland 16 14 533 Juneau Airport 2 Cloudy i acramento 1 15 Ketahas 3 Sloudy 7V Rolls In San Francisco Wit 8 e o El‘:,.fi;\ B eason un a a e Oakland 15 17 469 Kotzebue 7 7 Trace Clear i v g (By THE ~3SOCIATED FRESS) Hollywood 14 18 438 Los Angeles 57 63 Trace Claar T i ot | The Los Angeles Angels built Seattle 11 %1 344 McGrath 12 12 Trace Clear B whal Ao A . ¥ their lead in the Pacific Coast P s Nome 10 19 Trace Pt. Cloudy Gz\tlin(‘num(?lmnxl()el.l‘ S e ',i,,,,‘;";'!““('f p,',f‘)."' L’]‘:::‘m_“‘tr::f;_ o | League standings to three games National League , Northway 20 20 0 Pt. Cloudy Jeek sach of the three teams . od e 3 3 D the fourth straight time while San | B S Db “loudy o vk S 5 e et e s s Wil th | T T S B, 3T G e e 5, o Again Available— Wil have two practice nights 4t tne band and all players o ~the o4 were taking heatings trom Boston 7 5 583 Prince Rupert 41 a1 08 Pt. Cloudy B D ¢ ; park. There will be the usual flag |y howi0q and & el Chicago 8 6 57l Seattle 44 44 01 Cloudy ! e o sing, ceremony, ‘then the gar The - Angels, after trailing for | Cincinnati 7 8 467 Sitka 38 38 08 Rain f | t ; .| The first ball will be pitched . - | Philadelphia 6 8 420 Whitehorse 27 31 Trace Cloudy The practice nights are as|p. vie Power, Exalted Ruler of|lDree innings, came to life in the RO BerY r i T cudy ‘ i, collows oy Elks. The ball will be caught [CWrth. making four runs on four NewYork B R T b 2% 3 27 i Jllgt Phone ! Ma (Monday) Elks; May 6, SoL BitiRe AShedean Teglon hits and then keeping the lead to St. Louis 2 10 167 4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) i - 'l Moose; May 7, Legion; May 8, Gummander and the batter at the Win 6 to 5. Dutch McCall, Oren s Ty 'WEATHER SYNOPSIS: A ridge of high pressure covers the castern 7 9 9 : Elks; May 9, Moose; and May 19, pate will the G. E. Almquist, Pres- Baker and Jess Dobernic perform- Kodhreaat ik Pacific Ocean and the mainland of Alaska. An intense low pressure I Legion ident of the Moose. Mayor Waino ed the twirling duties for Los An- W L Pet. center is located in the southern Bering Sea. This storm has now begun o 3] Prexy Holzheimer says the three grendrickson will be his umps. Seles with Baker getting credit for woy vork V% T to fill and winds which are now blowing near 50 miles per hour in the And Dehvery Will Start teams have iined up good play- the win. Rex Cecil, relieved by Chioago 6 5 545 Bering Sea are expected to slowly decrease. Only occasional light rain Gk 3 ‘ nd ‘tha season promises to ri-| The field is in excellent shape, Sig Jakucki in the fourth, was the cu-v‘vmm 6 5 545 showers hve been reported in Scutheast Alaska and skies have been only Wlihm a FEW MINUTES oncon In @ sporting way. made so by the Fire boys who losing pitcher. Slevals § 5 2a partly cloudy. Temperatures have remained near normal for this season K v also announces that on have been getting in some excellent The night game at San Diego g 1y ’ g0 ©f the year. Considerable rain has been reperted at all stations in the —_——— the opening day, Sunday, May 11, night work. e RO W T5E ank Atmost T ek Ouiag 2 Aleutian Islands and some light snow has fallen in the northern and | the “Play Balll" yell will be Bfter tho 7 gnsning « gathis, Sun- any fiv:bull Wwas good foce hitis S 6 7 4‘53 western pertions of Alaska. Partly cloudy skies have been reportad in e X 3:45 o'clock in the afterncon. This day games will be played at 2:30 the Hollywood Stars rolied up a Washington 4 z Canada and the United States and little or no precipitation has fallen is done so as not to interfere with oclock in the afternoon and all 10 to 7 win over the Fadres. Out- bt . T 400 o5 Angeles yesterday afternoon reported a maximum temperature of P the Mothers DaysServices by the night games will start at 6:30 fielders stood helplessly waiting for RSB 102 degrees but at 4 o'clock this morning the temperature had fallen o F‘,R S/‘LE e GOOd lookmg Elks which will be held from 2 to o'clock flies they couldn't see. Base run 63. Temperatures over the interior of Canada and the western portion f ety e e oo R 00 FEELO I e s e SIx RE(ORDS (rr the States ('nnl:l.luld scmewhat above normal during the past 24 hours. POOL TABLE (NCW) = BT 5450 i i S aaguier vigtiry | they: dARERREDE Rk e Lan b Temperatures in the vicinity of Nenana were slightly below freezing " BOBFELLE g i NATIONAL CASH REGISTER - $225 Pat Mullin continued his fine lcading by cne run but Hollywood Q ; 2 a (A-1 condition) comeback with two home runs and drove Al Olsen from the mound SET SEATTLE MARINE “E’,\THE‘R BULLETIN BABBER CHAIR A Sh a single in Detroit’s 3-2 edge over with a flock cf base and fog hits P ] Répstis from Marine Siations at 'w;’Nf)' M. ':;':“-lvt ot ( -1 ape), ' $150 1 Philadelphia. Fred Hutchinson, of that were gocd for five runs B0k qaves { . IS SEIT!N@ Seattle, the much-maligned $75,000 It was Jack Brewer's second tri- gw (‘flpftsa:;:‘r:“ Y‘Vlemihpr T“:“" Islj;x'd Vc)ll; (Ben Clm‘ldi:imn A'MPLIFIER and SPEAKER ' $ 50 v dandy who never has been a big umph of the season last night as IM MEET <z b ke 22 b | So RE(ORE winner in the Majors, now has a he hurled the San Francisco Seals W ) R e o gl - i ey Call 644—DREAMLAND BAB—A“OI‘ZP.H | 3-1 win record. Dick Fowler wasthe to a 5 to 3 victory over Portland. 34 ¥ el i 5 o [ 1 X S # ¢ Five Finger Light Cloudy 42 W 6 Zero [, A’s loser Four of the Seals' runs were push- Lincoln Rock Pt. Cloudy 43 N 3 Ze | 4 Cold weather forced postpone- cd over in the third inning off SEATTLE, May 3—(P—Six new o .. g. .4 A e : e RS AR5 Eh Y ’ T Sommpaye ment of the Washington at St. Roy Helser. Third baseman Ray records were established, a world o oo fhe on = (‘i‘(mdy bRl by fiflr:: i { y 34 ? Louis game in the American and Orteig drove in three of the San mark equalled, a queen of a van- =% s s Micodtatéd. Proks Mports’ Writer) | the entire National League slate of Francisco runs in this inrng S i B A h ol DrUd it o ASDENE FIREDAST FOK (TR FERIID MBI GARART R (Ascociated Press Sports riter) Yoie BatHS whs Wishea‘out, & A00dOARE donE AR he posed as America’s finest swimmers m]l\(‘xhlvcy s.;rrmt:cros.s Soul‘x(_! :m»(l‘fh:- ?utsxde; waters, Sitka to Yakutat fratitbing | Bobby Feller again has estab! Short scores loaded. The Seals hold a series opened the Women's National 1:&"; :f;’l‘:.‘.;‘o,m:s;”ma'? f\al [.';“.M p: ,m,”"' ,.R;mmder oL in I ed himself as the top pitcher in i edge of three games to one. Senior Indoor AAU swimming and l;”'ll\(‘v hEG él(‘ka \:-um‘:?}.TL sd\l(l‘ m.]t, ll." ,.oudgle. o ding D‘X-OH.EH- y basebali with a solid chance of hit- Americun League The southpaw pitching of Char- diving champlonships yesterday at a0¢e (B SRRl Py 8 L0 onal light, rai s et Snorfin ting the 30-game win ma i !01 I{l !; ' the University of Washington pn‘DL i Dmmgion e S o aseller, it g S_h"“’ef- P q igh critics wh i bk Ann Curtis, veteran free styler R ) i s ety Cleveland 2 10 0 BUILDING pERM"‘S from San Francisco, took the heay- More than 22,000,000 acres of land | U. 8. traffic aceidents killed Goods 4 D kL oo stvest: net Apd L/Fervis an1 Wagner; Feller snd jest crack at the records and the in the United States normally grow | 33500 people and injured 1150000 e long karnstorming tour, he has Hegan. T reigning titlists wl]gzx she slashed cotton. in 1946. ' compiled a dazzling string of 29 R H E Three building permits for minor to the 100-yard sprint in @0ty Mo = = I shutcut innings FRAElEIIG 2 10 0 house repair jobs were granted dur- equal the worldss standsrd set ' e W e P T8 o O s W ey P, T e, T e Y e P s P e Pl s Pl s P s B s After.dasing /the .opener. 4o Ohi- Detroit 3 7 1 ing the past week by City En- 1944 by Denmark’s F. Nathansen. " i cago, 2-0, Feller has blanked St. Fowler and Rosar; Hutchinson gineer McNamara. Largest individ- Her record, chalked AP o the | Louis, Detroit and Boston in suc- 2nd Swift. ual job is to be done by George breliminary heat, bettered the =% pmaeial 5 iy L e R H E Jorgensen on his Seatter Streey American mark of one minute flat ters and athreehit jobe.In 35 inn- New York 5 10 1 home, wherg he will repair the roof €t iy 1831 by Helene, Madison ;o [ o ings of pitching he hes allowed Chicago .. Sehanty T duaRd G0 T Odeing B SO e e e Halh i Ok b - only 14 hits and has struck out Shea and Houk; Smith, Harris COst of $400 hRE D S ting . tha" Abfename | S0t batiens i$), Bithorn (9. and Dickey. Albert W. Fleek, at 323 Thira in 1:003 in beating the defen m;,. . ) 4 - 5 e G Epit Strect, fs domg $200 worth of roof (champion, Brenda Helser of Los 0 et PASIh Gl v répairs and enolosing. s poreh on ‘ADgeles,swhgse . meet » regord. I 3 yesterday against Bosten, Feller never had to wc about the pos- sibility of a perfect game. Johnny Pesky took care of that with a first-inning single. Three times in his career, Bebby has turned back the Red Sox with one hZ. The modern mark for successive shutouts is five set by Harris White of the White Sox in 1904 and the longest string of runless inninzs is 56, established by Walter Johnson with Washington in 1913. Easy For Ace Feller’s Cleveland mates made the victory easy for their ace, building up a 2-0 margin over Dave Ferriss on Joe Gordon’s second-inning homer and consecutive singles by Lou 4Zeudreau, Les Fleming and Pat Seerey in the fifth. While rapid Robert was adding a ncw chapter to his life history with his 141st win, rookie Frank Shea of tlic New York Yankees was record- Win a four-year college scholar- ship—a new Chevrolet — or one of the many valuable prizes offered by this paper. WRITTEN BY EXPERTS Now it's easy to build a cham- pion class racer! Just follow the instructions written by three ex- perts who have served for years as officials at the National Finals at Akron. These men have in- spected every winning car! They know whata carmust have towin! SIMPLE STEP-BY-STEP INSTRUCTION Big 64-page book shows you how to design, streamline, build; how‘to get proper weight distribution. Every step is pictured and explained in_ clear, simple language—how to make the floor, axle trees, axles, springs, steering connections, body, brakes, etc; how to yun-in bearings, for greater speed. Contains valuable tips on actual racing. The most complete book of its kind ever published. ony $1.00 POSTPAID nomo, oddress and $1.00 foday! HALL PUBLISHING CO. XBURY, | MASSACHUSETTS \ I Send 000 1:004 also had been smashed by her earlier effort. Nancy Merki of s house. Peter Johnson is making repairs to the roof of his house at HOSPITAL NOTES Portland, Ore, 204 Gastineau Avenue, at a cost s St. Ann’s Hospital admitted Pete of $100. Multnomah Athletic Club, erased Sekinoff for surgery yesterday. e s th_e American and meet recoxds_ol Dismissed from St. Ann's were 3.59.1, both held by Helenz Rains Master Philip Filipe, Kenneth Mar- ODD FELLOWS NOTICE of New York when she swam _the tin and Baby Kathleen Ryan. All Odd Fellow: requested to 300-yard individual medley in Government Hospital admitted attend the funeral services for Al- 53.4. no new patients yesterday, dis- fred W. Wills Monday, May 5, BUSRAT oA T chareed Lawrence Marvin from at.2 o'clock in the chapel of the Fifteen U. S. states require no Hoonah, and Cora Jackson of Charles W. Carter Mortuary. visicn tests before issuance of driv- Tee Harbor. —adv. 570t1 ing licenses. O IN ACCORDANCE WITH CHAPTER 38, SESSION LAWS 7‘,’{, * QF ALASKA, 1943, NOTICE AND DEMAND TO PAY SCHOOL TAX FOR 1947 IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL THOSE TAXABLE UNDER THE LAW WHEO MUST PAY SCHOOL TAX: All male and female persons over 21 and under 55 years of age must pay the school tax ($5.00 for each perscn); a female person who is uncmployed and who depends for her support entirely on her husband is not required to pay the tax; persons in the active military or naval service of the United States, paupers, insane perscns and those cared for by the Territory or who are permanently injured, infirm, maimed or crippled are also exempt. WHEN PAYABLE: The tax is payable after the first of January in each year. It must be paid to the Tax Cemmissiofier upon demand. If no demand is made for pay- ment, it must, nevertheless be paid to the Tax Commissioner or his authorized deputy within the time prescribed by law. Please remember that no demand or notice is re- quired to be made or given; but, as indicated, if such demand is made, the tax must b paid immediately. A penalty of 50% will attach if the tax is not paid within the allotted time. i EMPLOYER MUST FURNISH LIST OF EMPLOYEES AND PAY TAX. Whenevor requested by the Tax Cemmissioner or his authorized deputy any employer who has people working for him who are subject to the payment of the tax, must furnish a list of his or its employees together with the age of each of them to the collector, and must pay the tax due from each of them. When such payment is made by the employer, the col- lecter must give him a Schoo! Tax receipt tor each tax paid and the amount thereof may be deducted from the employee's wages. DOUBLE PAYMENT OR PAYMENT BY MISTAKE: Any person who pays the tax when he or she is not liable therefor, or if it is paid by an employer for his employee when such employee is not subject thereto, nas the right to claim refund of the amount paid; such person should first request the school tax collector to make such refund and if this cannot be done, he should forward such request to the Tax Commissioner at Juneau, giving his receipt number, Upon receipt of such request the Tax Commissioner will investigate and if he finds that the tax was paid by mistake, he will make the refund immediately.” Remember that request for refund mast be made not later than ninety days after the end of the calendar year during which the tax was paid. . g NON-RESIDENTS SUBJECT TO TAX. The Tax is payable by non-residents as well as residents. If the non-resident is merely a sight-seer or tourist, he or she is not required to pay the tax; but if he or she comes to the Territory for the purpose of en- gaging in business or employment and actually does so, though not a resident, he or she becomes liable for the pay t of the tax. PURPOSE FOR WHICH TAX IS LEVIED: This tax is collected to assist in the education of the children of Alaska. MAIL YOUR REMITTANCE TO THE Dl*iPART NT OF TAXATION, Box 651, Juneau, Alaska DO IT NOW AND AVOID PENALTIES DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION Box 651 Juneau, Alaska M. P. MULLANEY, Tax Commissioner. i g O O St In the 1946 selling period, Lamp- son, Fraser & Huth, secured the season’s record prices for Stand- world. It makes good sense that you market your new crop through the Auction House that is FIRST in selling power. AUCTION SALES DATES For Silver Fox and Mink 1947 Mutation Mink Date to be announced later Silver Fox, Mink, etc. .. Last recciving date . May 26th _May 8th Silver Fox, Mink, ete. ... Aug. 20th Last receiving date Aug. 1st * Sitverbly > Foysd Koh-ti-nm 0 e K1 e P sumes B coomme PY s PY snm T e P nannen B9 s B0 atiis, P s 150 mpcsccs T e U8 gncome: B momos SO0 oy TR e WO o T s, DR o k- e e * e * ed * e e * ) ) Shipped O ot pou O 4/'(///”" IPMENT woh L ol oF W YA EANCE L /:j'f/"_'f,— ARMSARER PACKAGE No- —/ 1 ‘Auction of LAMPSON, FRASER & HUTH ink Stars for 1947 Selling * Blipost * Misc. Mutation Mink ~* Standl 151 West 30th Street IN MINK SELLING ard Mink. It is our belief that LAMPSON. FRASER & HUTH, INC., Date during this period we also sold 151 West 30:::’:::k i the largest quantity of Mink pelts New |Y°'k“‘ ! g /o::“/"i’”__':_/ en: H of any Auction House in the G'"':;;. have ,hippfflrfl-——rg/” e asured Parcel Post o heck how h QUANTITY Nome of ShipPer £F D or Sreet Addren rawn UCTIONS will be d! Vlh:::n are sold checks SHIPPING INSTR et H x coretoy 4 and 98¢ d New York,1. N.Y. e * e * e * e * e * ot Private State o the above rA™¢ Treoty Sole: . 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