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PAGE SIX powe THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TR SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1949 (H AMP RUD | publication date. gate Bartlett will enable us to u-{ CATARRN aks ow FF (OUN(“. VOTES On motion of W. Burr Johnson, |complish -this, plus civic contribu- SUFFERERS - the Council voted to give enthus-|tions.” . FIND CURB FOR MISERY DUE TO IOMORROW m | Two H_Efl Ious 1astic support for location in Juneau Water Rate Increase NASAL CONGESTION. ( of a proposed Methodist College in| Action was deferred on the in-| Relief at last from torture of sinus, an(e Io Alaska. creased rate schedule of the Juneau | catarrh, and hay fever due to nasal S AP Box DERBY pRopER“ s‘lBl It was pointed out that while the | Water Company, as the firm re- | congestion is seen today in reports ' institution will be supported by |quested more time in which to con- gé":‘f: ;‘Z’r".'d.‘m“’,',':l“.'?;’"?‘tf"“ R 7 T derfominational funds, it will be a|sider revised rates, especially those oA | DIN OF THE CLUBS H Men and women with nizi Gel Ahead STANDINOS Winning Driver by, Plane Mayor, Councilmen Terms|non-secretarian coliege, and wisor connection charges. sinta’ Réaidatngs, ‘ohtd. poeiril | National League f N " ICI H H h e;m:leh ma:y IOt :: o S Sk Among other matters taken up at | éArache, hawking and sneezing mis- R el 0 National Classicat | Up fo Votes-Also High- | i schoot eraduates who now |, imene Siter B ke ot | el of blese reet atter uin | & ? 3 3 e v cosf .00, con- | i;, ’;‘LX;KBE;::E:’ | St. Louis 62 % 630 Akfon, 0h|o Iands Annexation cation, to receive advanced educa-|Were authorization for the mayor | sigering results, this is not expensive, ports Brooklyn 61 38 616 A lnon within the Territory. and city clerk to sign completed | amounts to only pennies per dose. Everybody seems to be just tread- | New York 52 48 520 ; The Council's support in this|léases with airline temants of the | KLORONOL (caution, use only as ing water in the Pacific Coast|Boston 52 50 510 Juneau's champion Soap Box| Two special elections and & pub- | oo ol prompted by a letter |N€W Municipal Terminal Building|directed) sold with money-back league splash. Philadelphia 50 52 490 Derby driver, Rudy Maier, will take |jjc auction of delinquent tax prop- from the Juneau Chamber of Com- |8t the Juneau Afrport; appoint- |guarantee. Readers of this paper may With leading Hollywood losing to | Pittsburgh 46 53 465 off by plane tomorrow headed for|erty were authorized last night byl \orie “Cricn i to receive a copy|Ment of William (Pug) Ryan as| obtain KLORONOL by sending this e, 6-3, last night, second|Cincinnati 42 50 416 Akron, Ohio, and what he is’ hop- | the City Council. {iot: tho. Istbar Mayor Waino Hen. |City harbormaster until the October | notice to SUMLAR CO,, 2700 Church 2 OMIARATEIow & sy Shatse| Ciloags 38 65 369 ing against hope will be & top spot | At least one of the elections must | gy oo U T WEUS CEN election; space for use of the cus- | AV, Brooklyn 26, N.Y. You need ; N 9 } o lin the Nationel Soap v { er 4, the new B o S i 4 " | send no money—pay postman on de- ain by dropping & double- ramer Shows SlgflS of Re- p Box; Derby |be held before October 4, Ebiscopal Church offictals on be-|todian at the airport building; to pesky Portland, 7-4 and| American League competition, Aug. 14. v | date for the municipal election 85|y or tne ety numerous spots in city paving for l:,m { W L Pet 'ufning '0 Form fOI’ Rudy’s smile was even bigger and | fixed hy the 1949 Legislature. ' which improvement has been re- E it that's the way it's been in|New York 63 37 630 broader yesterday than it was three| Chapter 36, SLA 1949, which More On Housing quested, and monthly departmental | Address PCL for a month now. Holly- ! Cleveland 60 40 600! BOS'OI’I weeks ago when he was brought makes the October date mandatory| Housing for Coast Guard person- | reports. City .o s been playing only 500 | Boston 58 43 574 back to the judges stand to receive |for election of city officials, also|nel and families, as well as other - er a fast 650 start. But no| philadelphia 55 47 539 the championship dward in the Ju- provides for varying terms of office | newcomers, was up for discussion eam has done much better. | Detroit 56 48 538 By JACK HAND neau derby. |for mayor and councilmen. as members studied letters from Alaska Sales and Service Agency for Lyman Linde, San Diego right-| Chicago 42 59 416 AP Sports Writer Ellis Reynolds, who served as| Firm and unanimous in their be-iKenneth J. Kadow, director of the n n n A n T rllnlnllcn der, tossed his third shutout of | washington 36 62 367| Jack Kramer's return to 1048 director of hill top operations this lief that the choice of length of | Alaska Field Staff, in which he - e year against Los Angeles. Helst Louls 3 68 335|form with a six-hit shutout for|’e®F 8nd has'worked faithfully for terin should be made by the voters, asked what tax and other consid- Food Machinery | tewashed the Angels 4-0 with| its. | Francisco blew a 7-0 lead, n came from behind to edge| ramento with three runs in the 10-8. Sa ninth, FROM SITKA Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Harrison and Oliver A. Colby of Sitka are guests at the Gastineau. DON'T BE A JACK! DON'T let your insur- ance problems care for themselves . . . perhaps lose your investment in home, business, car or other property! Call on us. Let us give your insurance affairs ex- | Murphy, 171%, San Diego, knocked | 1out Jerry Brown, | geles, 3. | | 142, {Bill Sudduth, 142, Topeka, 10. Pacific Coast League W L Pet Hollywood 78 56 582 Sacramento 70 62 530 Oakland 70 64 522, San Diego . 66 66 500 Portland 66 67 496 Seattle 66 68 493 | San Prancisco 60 T3 451 Los Angeles 5 M 425 BOXING NEWS | At Hollywood, Calif—Irish Bob 169%, Los An-| At Topeka, Kas—Sammy Angott. Washington, Pa., outpointed At San Prancisco—Lloyd Mar- { shall, 169, Sacramento, outpointed ; Bob Dunlap, 178, Oakland, Calif, 10. At Long Beach, N.Y.—Tony Pel- lone, 150, New York, stopped Cho- foro Martinez, 146, Houston, Tex. 8. At Salt Lake City—Reno Poli- dori, 170, Salt Lake City, outpointed Angel Sotillo, 200, San Jose, Calif. 10. LEADERS INB. B. | AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—DiMaggio, Boston, Williams, Boston, .340. Runs Batted In—Stephens, Bos- ton, 109; Williams, Boston, 107. 344; pert attention. Let us pro- vide YOU with depend- able Hartford insurance. Shattuck | Agency Seward Street Phone 249 Juneau Home Runs—Williams and Step- hens, Boston, 26. Pitching—Reynolds, New York,! 11-2, .818. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting — Robinson, Brooklyn, .360; Slaughter, St. Louis, .335. Runs Batted In — Robinson. Brooklyn, 86; Hodges, Brooklyn, 82. Home Runs— Kiner, Pittsburgh.1 27; Gordon, New York and Sauer, Chicago, 23. Pitching—Sewell, Pittsburgh, 5-1, -833; Branca, Brooklyn, 12-3, .800.; SAVINGS INSURED TO $5000 YOUR FIRST DO 'YOUR FIRST DOLLAR Saued | 'IF SUMMERTIME JOBS are providing you your! first opportunity to earn make it & habit to save as you earn. Or, if you've never saved, it will be an eventful day when you |, start a savings account. Do it now! Savings herefl | are insured, and you may open an account or add | %o it in any amounts you wish. We have never paid LESS ¥ Alaska Federal Assoc 2%% on Savings | i | AR Earned money, you'll be wise to' l than Savings & Loan iation OF JUNEAU 119 Seward Street Juneau, Alasks SAVINGY INSURED TO $5000 i faltering Yanks Boston may be the most important development in the American League race since Joe DiMaggio re- joined the New York Yankees. Failure of handsome Jack to measure up to his brilliant 18<5 record of last year almost ruined the Red Sox in early - season. Kramer lost six in & row until he| finally broke the streak with relief help, July 24. i When Kramer cooled off the Tigers yesterday, 9-0, he became the sixth straight Boston starter to go the route. Just as DiMaggio's return bol- stered the league-leading Yanks in late June, Kramer could make the difference between the pennant and an also ran to the Red Sox. Dom | DiMaggio contributed his bit with a double, hitting in his 32nd straight game. Vern Stephens bashed his 26th homer. Arrival of the St. Louis Browns proved to be just the tonic the needed. Casey Stengel's gang broke loose with their roughest batting attacks in weeks, sweeping a doubleheader, 10-2 and 10-5. Although Cleveland whipped Philadglphia, 3-2, in a night game, the Tribe dropped back three full games behind the Yanks. Boston is 5% off the pace. Mickey Haefner, fired by Wash- ington for “indifferent - perform- | a number of years in running off pany Rudy on the big trip. RACER ON THE WAY The slick little nile green racer which brought local yictory for Rudy is already on its way to days ago by express. Not until Fri- | day of next week will Rudy get to see his car which now has “Daily Alaska Empire” printed neatly on each side. “All the cars are put into a special building,” the champ says, “and not even the boys can look {at them until the day for trial Older brother Frank Maler, who made the Akron trip in 1947 has been briefing Rudy on how things, |will be back in Ohio. | fast, medium and slow classes for first heats,” Rudy explained. “I sure am hoping mine will be fast.” Rudy and Reynolds will stay at the Mayflower Hotel for the first two days in Cleveland, with Rudy moving next Thursday to the spe- cial quarters for all champions at |the big YMCA camp. “It's gonna be lots of fun there,” Rudy says. “They have every kind of sport imaginable, with horse back riding and swimming and just eyerything.” SCHOLARSHIP, GRAND PRIZE The local champ will have an “All the cars are divided into| ance” a month ago, returned wtth‘ opportunity to win a four-year the Chicago White Sox to whip the| college scholarship to any college, Senators, 5-1, his first win in his| .0 grand prize in the national new uniform. meet. Gerry (the Giant Killer) Staley,| ¢ pes Jucky enough to win the who holds four decisions over the| ...nq prize, a 1949 Chevrolet four- New York Giants, kept St. Louls| 4o.. sadap Rudy says he'l take in the National League lead with| yellow one, since the winzjer wiil ?}'H)Ls verdict over Leo Durochers|yave his choice of colors. Third iants. tehind the Red Birds with a 6-4 edge over Cincinnati, their sixth straight. Shortstop Granny error, permitting Ralph Kiner to score in the last of the ninth, enabled Pittsburgh to squeeze past Philadelphia, 1-0, in a tight duel between Bill Werle and School- boy Rowe. Each allowed five hits. The Boston Braves, gradually drifting out of the National League race, were given another shove by the last-place Chicago Cubs who battered Warren Spahn and three | successors for 15 hits and an 8-3 edge. WIL BASEBALL Games last night: Yakima 6-4, Victoria 4-3. -Vancouver 12-9, Salem 6-5. Spokane 6, Tacoma 5. Wenatchee 13, Bremerton 10. MARCEL CERDAN GETS CHANCE T0 GET BACK TITLE NEW YORK, Aug. 6—(P—Marcel Cerdan of France will get his chance to win back the world mid- dleweight title from Jack Lamotta on Sept. 28 at the Polo Grounds. ‘The International Boxing Club made the announcement yesterday that the champion from the Bronx, who took the title from Cerdan by a knockout last June 16 at Detroit, will defend his crown at the home of the New York Giants. CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST LECTURER HERE SUNDAY A free lecture to which the pub- lic is invited will be held Sunday evening at 8 o'clock in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, at Fif- th and Main. Speaker for the eve- ning will be = Archibald Carey, C. 8. B. of Detroit, Mich., and his topic will be: “Christian Science: How It Can Help You.” He is a member of the Board of Lecture- ship of the Mother Church, First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. & WASHINGTON — (A — The Air Force has confirmed reports that it is considering the transfer of some Boeing btomber plane produc- tion from Seattle to the company’s Wichita, Kas., plant. Hamner's | members of the present council | Attorney Howard D. Stabler on an | ordinance to present the problem | clearly. | Last night, that enabling mea- sure, Ordinance 331, was passed in days after publication of notice, voters -will register their prefer- ences. These two proposals will be on the ballot: (1) Shall the mayor be elected for a two-year term? (2) Shall members of the City Council be elected for three-year terms, terms graduated as provided in the ordinance so that, by 1851, two councilmen shall be elected at each annual election? These provisions will be put into effect if the majority of qualified votes cast are for the propositions. Should both proposals fail to carry, both mayor and council will be elected for one-year terms at an- nual October municipal elections. Highlands Annexation Subject to certain technicalities before a petition can be presented to District Court, the Council vot- ed to adopt a resolution annexing the Highlands (Waynor Tract), & measure that will be put to the voters after approval of the court. To pass the special election, this proposal will require a majority vote inside the city, a two-thirds vote by those concerned outside the city limits. Property Sale Judge George W. Folta having signed the order Monday, on peti- tion or the City of Juneau, for a sale of specified parcels of prop- erty on which taxes are delin- 1 erations could be given Martin An- | the boy racing event, will accom- have worked for weeks with City|derson to encourage the construc- tion of an $800,000. housing unit. The council instructed the mayor in his reply, after pointing out_ that taxes for the first year could be refunded but that the present coun- Akron, having been shipped several third reading as amended. Twenty'cll can do no more toward later i relief than make liberal recommen- ’dlugm to the group succeeding- it. Sentiment was against a free building permit, on the grounds jthat. it is a fixed municipal _fee, /and is a burden of at least as great smallk family dwelling. Library Report B. Frank Heintzleman appeared to make a report on‘the Juneau { Memorial Library Building. He reminded the council that he, with B. D. Btewart and Dr. James C. Ry- and one-half years ago to serve on the library committee, empowered and .construct the building. Shortly after the appomtment, tpe committee bu‘ught the property across from the Oity Hall, and started to get public subscriptions brary fund has $34,000 cash In U.S. Government bonds, and $12,000 in unredeemed pledges. Due to changed prices and condi- tions,- it is now- believe@ that the proper type of bullaing, originally | thougnt to’ cost $70,000, will come to $100,000. As public subscriptions even in small ameunts have been ! ! difficult to raise in the past sevéral | years, the committee has made no attempt to put on a campaign |!or funds. B “We are eager to put up a fine building,” said Heintzleman, “and | prize will be a sound movie pro-|quent and unpaid, City Clerk Jack| we thought from the start that it 11049 and 1948 racing classics. Even if he wins no heat, a pos- sibility the champ doesn’t want to think about, he will bring. home a fine wrist watch. The 13-year-old champ who. is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Blanton in the finals here July 11. The local derby was under the and the Daily Alaska Empire. The car goes to Akron as an official tries must have the backing of a daily newspaper. FAIRBANKS HEALTH FACILITIES INCREASE Local public Fealth services the Fairbanks area are being aug- mented, aceording to word received today from the Department of Health. Headquarters for the local unit has been established in the Golden Heart Bullding. present time the Fairbanks District Office will provide laboratory and environmental health services. The name “Thule” was applied at different times in antiquity to Norway and to Iceland. Maier, Loop Road, beat out Sandy : sponsorship of the Rotary Clubj Empire car since all national en-; in| At the; | public auction to be held at a date to be fixed at least 30 days after 846; Wynn, Cleveland, 9-2,| Brooklyn remained a half 8ame yootor with sound reels of the |Popejoy soon will post notice of a|would take at least six years. We still are in hopes that the Public Facilities Bill introduced by Dele- I Shrine of ‘Sporis 5th and Gold NO MASS AT CATHOLIC PARISH CPICNIC SUNDAY—August7, 1949 Bring your own lanches . . . Buses leave from Catholic Church; -~ * §1.Terese and fun forall ... at 11:00 2, m. THE SHRINE -- AN 1 ¥ 3y DISTRIBUTED BY ODOM COMPANY ————300 an, had been .appointed about two | to buy the land, raise subseriptions | for the building. To date, the k- | proportion to the builder of ‘all | Refrigeration TANDY BROS. LL Franklin—! BOB Display Rom 296 S. OGO First Church of Christ, Scientist Juneau, Alaska Box 511—Phone 971 Announcess==- FREE Christian Science Lecture CHURCH EDIFICE Fifth and Main Sts. August 7, 1949 8:00P. M. Archibald Carey, C. S. B. Detroit, Michigan Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts OO ... on your ties7?? clothes . The Triangle Cleamners SpotsBefore Your Eyes? Let TRIANGLE clean your . .. spots disappear like magic, and presto. . . your clothes are new again. . For better Appearance suit, dress er | 0 HE i