The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 12, 1945, Page 6

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PAGE SIX CARDS COPFROM | REDS IN LONELY MAJOR BALL MIX Full Action Pégged for Big | Circuits Today-Coast Idle Last Night The World Champion St. Louis Qardinals cashed another dividend check from the deal that sent Mort Cooper to Boston, when Charlie “Red” Barrett chalked up his sixth win of the his fourth ‘as a Cardinal, & the Cincinnati Reds la The Redbirds gave Barrett early | edge by pushing across five runs in the first two innings and he| went on to count a 5-0 shutout in the only scheduled major league baseball fra All big league resume action again today, as were Pacific Coast loop clubs, which were also idle yesterday { The PCL will open its twelfth week of play tonight with the critical Portland-Seattle series hold- | ing the center of attention. Two weeks ago the two leading North- west clubs met at Seattle and the first-place Beavers took five out] of eight games to check a long losing streak. The feud is to be resumed Wednesday evening at Portland, tonight being skipped as both clubs are traveling northward | from California . H Three clashes in California to- night will pit San Diego against Sacramento in the capital city, San Francisco at Oekland, with Los Angeles being entertained at Hol wood for a bit of cross-town rivalry STANDINGS ur THE TLUBS (American Lcague) Team — New York Detroit St. Louis Boston Cleveland Chicago Washington * Philadelphia (Standings unchanged scheduled.) an to teams were With Detroit’s fi Major League Ball Leaders 305t Jolmes and Gotham’s t continue taking turns at lead- Naticnal League hitters, with s having his crack a hitsman this week, accord lividual offensive perform- two maj ues, re- today by Associated major league American League Batting — Cuccinello, 349; Etten, New York, .338. Runs Batted In — E New York, 33; R. Johnson, Boston, 32. Hcmge Runs—Stephens, St. Louls, 8; R. Johnson, Boston, 7 Pitching—Borowy, New York, and Ferriss, Boston, 8-1. National League Holmes, Boston, No (National Leazue) wW. 28 Team-— New York Pittsburgh Brooklyn 8t. Louis Chicago Boston Cincinnati Philadelphia St, Louis, 5; Cincinnati, 0 gamé scheduled.) ported Press, Chicago, 208 Only (Pacific Coast League) | Team— W. L. Pet Portland 42 28 600 Seattle 40 29 .580 Sacramento 36 35 50 Oakland 36 36 500 Los Angeles 36 493 San Francisco 36 486 San Diego 39 466 Hollywood 44 371 (Standings unchanged—No games scheduled.) | Pitching Cooper, ————— { Mungo, New York, 6-1. GETTING GOATS |~~~ TAKES EXERCISE AROUND CORNER | it ARI“ES I.EAR“ ANCHORAGE, Mrs. May George Alaska, May 23.— | times at a local Batting .386; Ott, N York, .371. Runs Batted In—Lombardi, York, 40; Oimo, Brooklyn, 39. Home Runs — Lombardi, York, 13; Weintraub and Ott, York, DiMaggio, Philadelphia, Adams, St. Louis, 8. New New New and Bosten, after calling many ore as shopper for A PACIFIC BASE — Fifty-four Alaska Airlines, bought the store and Marine veterans of Saipan admit DOW waits on her Airlines successor, their fight against the Japan ada Holman. tough, but rt their war against So busy is Mrs. I-h:lmun with wild goats here was, in some ways, job of shopping for interior resi- tougher. The goats were destroying dents that she has drafted as her pasture and hastening erosion on a tant, Mrs. Theodore Law of the island, and Marines were assign- | Tu e of the line’s Pres- ed the job of wiping them out ic The invasion of goat land led into country more rugged than the. v(l-: erans had ever seen. One group of gix Marines, separated from the No. 5381-A iain party, traveled over trails even In the District Court 10}" the Terri- the goats had abandoned as unsafe,| tory of Alaska, Division Number gpending two days and two nights One, at Juneau in cold, gray cloud mists without, MARTINA WICKERSHAM, Plain- food or wats } tiff, vs. FRED O. WICKERSHAM The record chalked up in the| Defendant. ; goat war was 319 dead and an un-| THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIT- scoted number of prebables. ED STATES OF AMERICA After returning to the compara-|To the above named Defendant, tive comforts of the main camp,| Greeting: one Marine explained: “What goats | we couldn’t an to death.”|in the District Court for the Terri- |tory of Alaska, First Division, o] 5 . | Juneau, Alaska within thirty (30) | d. after the last publication of Annapolis Yearbook '« Had Mifscher Pegged .%o (" upon was | Mrs. La SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION summons, in case this a service pon yeu, in case this summons is ANNAPOLIS, Md.—V. Adm. Mar ed upen you personally, and an- Andrew Mitscher, head of the S r the plaintiff’s complaint on file World's largest carrier task force, in ?h(‘ said court and in the was known at “Pete” during his days | etitled Cause : 258 U S Naval Academy midship-| The plaintiff in said action de- man, says the annual classbock,| Mands the following relief Lucky Bag, in 1910. | Dissolution “We know of him for a true friend | ¢¥15! bety intiff ¥ and a man on whom one can de- fendant on the grounds of incom- pend” is what the classbook said of | Patability of temperament; and for bim 35 years ago. It also tells oh‘an,\ other or further relief merited. him “combing his hairs to hide the | In event you fail so to appe: r and bald spot.” | answer, the plaintiff will take judg- | ment against you for want thereof, land will apply to the court for the u"pAlATABlE [ relief demanded in |and as herein states MEDFORD, Ore.—A leghorn hen Witness the Honcrable Geo. has adopted three orphaned kittens | Alexander, judge of said Co and owner Herman Offenbacher |the seal of said court hereunto says already trouble has developed. | fixed this 11th day of June, 1945. The kittens battle, paws against| (SEAL) J. H. WALMER, wing as their eager foster mother | Clerk of the above entitled court tries unsuccessfully to get them o | By: P. D. E. McIVER, eat the food she works so hard to | Deputy Clerk. provide—fat, juicy worms scratched | First publication, June 12, 1945. from the garden. | Last publication, July 3, 1945 Kid Pitchers | Tigers are depending on their kit pitchers, 17-year-old Art Hotteman (left) and Walter Picrce, 18, to help keep them in the pennant race. The former sandlotters, shown in Beston comparing grips, saw service in the recent series against the Red Sox. (AP Wirepheto) * You are hereby required to appear at | above | % | marriage now | and de-| | prrrr e WASHINGTON — Way up in A a, a Global War veteran reads this stuff of mine. He wrote a nice letter but, like all GIs and ex-GlIs, he had a couple of gripes—one about the subsistence allowance for a vet who gees in for the GI Bill educa- ticn scheme and the other about lcans planned in the GI Bill. You might be interested in his two kicks and my answer, so here's the way I wrotz2 to him. “Ycur interesting and thoughtful letter finally got down to me here but I haven't had time until now to acknowledge. “You ask if it’s ,possible for a married man to clothe, board and provide living quarters for his wife and himself while going to school full time on $75 a month. It's poscible but of course difficult. “Yet I don't think we should sneer at $75 a month. It seems a small cum for a man and wife when I Ithink of it as a number of dollars | But when I consider that the Gov- crnment will agree to pay for all tuition, books, suppiies and fees u to 500 bucks a school year plus $7 a month for a man and wife, it scems to be a generous proposition 1 can’t forget that thousands and millicns of young men in the past have taken training courses and gone through years of college edu- cation cn their own—with no finan- cial help from the federal govern- ment or from anycne. “They have worked part-time, they have worked and saved during summer vacations and thus, want- g knowledge, got it despite finan- cial difficulties. So when the Gov- rnment offers the GI Education program to veterans—offers a year of training to any qualified ex- service man regardless of age, and mere than a year to those whose education was interrupted by service —1 can’t heip but feel that it's a rather handsome offer after all. “The young man who, before he entered service, intended to get some COCHRANE SCORES FOURTH STRAIGHT SECOND ROUND KO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA VETERANS' GUIDE By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL e e e e e d |rate are scared to refuse (if the V. A1 me guarantee) because public and government opinion is with the vet- eran, and the refusal of loans to |veterans, because of a low interest | rate is allowed, might create odors 25 the facts began to boil out to the public. | | i e education or was getting it, is cer- tmistani oot GRADUATES SEVEN are now relieved of most and probab- | 1y all of the school costs, and he has 850 more a month than his parents | weuld have given him for personal, A graduating class of seven| expenscs. He would not lose any Eighth Graders at St. Ann's Paro- of thz 50 dollars, if he had (or|chial School successfully passed ecarned) any other income or if his Territorial examinations held in parents contributed. |May and received their diplomas “If he was working his way or Sunday afternoon, in the presence intended to do so, he now will be of Bishop Walter Fitzgerald, S. J., | able practically to loaf through, be- and their parents and friends. cause he'll only have to work Following the presentation of | enough to collect a little extra certificates issued through the | dough for subsistence. Territorial Department of Educa- “Along about the middle of your ticn, a short program was given letter, in writing about the 4 percent and refreshments were served by interest rate which is the maximum the Sisters of St. Ann’s Hospital. permitted for a veterans' Go Benediction of the Most Blessed ment-guaranteed loan, you say know that these instifutions (private GChapel, when the ritualistic hymns lending institutions) are not goiNg were sung by the Sisters’ Choir. to lend money at 4 percent to veter-. 15 the grade school graduating ans when they can get 6 per cent' lass were Jeanette Doucette, Clair more elsewhere.” | Dunlap, John Monagle, Creighton “But the facts don't say so. Al- Noris Theresa Peterson, Markus ready 3,389 loans for homes, farms pccan & d bibiness B ERGICTIRNT griar=] oo and’ My SHiog nteed-loan plan have been made to ¥ . i i ICEL veterans by private institutions.| NOTIC None of them are over 4 percent Not responsible for any debts Susic contracted only personally by our- y by “I have a hunch there would be gelyes. i many more, if prices weren't gener-| MR & MRS. CHAS. JOHNSON ally above ordinary or average | values. The Veterans' Adminis e e TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1945 UNIVERSAL LIGHT PLANTS Now Available from JUNEAU STOCK One 500-watt 12Volt D.C. Two 1500-watt 110 V. A.C. Automatic These Planis Are NEW and READY T0 GO . PARSONS ELECTRIC (0. SEWARD STREET Tenakee, Alaska. ! we do a little better grade of PAINTING and PAPERING Many people have asked if we did Residence work and I wish to say we do and are taking care of these jobs as fast as we can possibly get to them. JAMES S. McCLELLAN Phone Douglas 374 P. 0. Box 1216 tion can’t complete a guurnntecd‘ loan if the price to be paid for the property is greater than a reason- able normal value. I'd guess this throws out the pessibility of many lcans. “But bankers and other lenders generally are anxious to help the veterans and often would make a loan to a veteran at the 4 percent rate, but are stopped by the fact that the V. A. can’t guaranty on ac- count of how the doggone property cost is excessive. “I've heard it said that some lend- ers who don't like the low 4 percent Q ATLAN June 12. — Freddie Cochrane, world’s welter- xing champion, has four s who probably will echo his statement that after three years in the Navy he isn't “hitting as Tast, but hitting much harde! The 28-year-old Elizabeth, N. J. redhead, a veteran of two years in A, (c) Columbia Breweries, inc., the South Pacific, stopped Eddie Miller of St. Louis, here last night to score his fourth straight second- round knockout in eleven days— three in four days. Miller, the fourth of five oppon- ents Cochrane is meeting in a tune- | up campaign before engaging Rocky Graziana in Madison Square Gar- dent June 29, was floored four times in the first round and went down to stay after 55 seconds of the sec- | ond heat, without landing an ef- fective blow. | e MAJOR BEISTLINE CN FURLOUGH HERE Maj. Earl Beistline, with the U. S. Army in the Aleutians since the beginning of the war, is home on a two-week furlough, visiting his par- | In War..... Peace... In ents. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beistline. | | Maj. Beistline last visited in Juneau six months ago, when he was home for the Christmas haliday | - - SOFTBALL HERE TONIGHT MAYBE This evening at Firemen's Field, at 7 o'clock, the Signac and Blue s teams of the lccal league will make a new attempt to open the! second half ‘of the softball season. Rain washed out their scheduled ! play last evening. | HOSPITAL NOTES . Clarence Anderson and baby son returned home Monday from St. | Ann’s Hospital. Master George Graves entered St. Ann’'s Hespital this morning for a tonsillectomy. Mrs. Curtis Rhodes, at St. Ann’s Hospital for surgery, was discharged yesterday. i Kenneth Gates was an outgoing' medical patient at St. Ann's Hos- pital Monday. Master Christie Crondahl, sur-} | gical patient at St. Ann’s Hospital, | | has been discharged. ¥ { Mrs. Anna Jensen was admitted | to St. Ann’s Hospital Monday for | medical treatment. e Among some tribes of American Indians, sticks given to witnesses of a marriage are broken in case| of divorce. | FLAG DAY SERVICES - THURSDAY—JUNE 14th—8 P. M. id complaint, Elks’ Hall | Public Invited | | IPPER EXPRESS POUNDAGE CHARGES Reduced 507 FOR SOUTHBOUND /RAW FUR SHIPMENTS L 7 ) & Piv AHEBICAN HWorLp ABwAYs 135 SOUTH FRANKLIN ST. « . " FLIGHT PLANS - to meet your TRAVEL PLANS Additional Flights TUESDAY - THURSDAY - SATURDAY JUNEAU to ANCHORAGE WOOBLEY AIRWAYS CITY TICKET OFFICE BARANOF HOTEL Serving the Cause of Victory Courteous and Dependable Service to Alaska ALASKA TRANSPORATION CO. Seattle, Wash. Main 7479 PHONE 106 Announcing ALASKA AIRLINES New Increased Schedules A JUNEAU — ANCHORAGE Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Friday ARRIVES JUNEAU . . . 12:00 LEAVES JUNEAU.... 2:00 14 Equipment: : 21-Passenger Douglas Starliner 14-Passenger Lockheed Starliner Lunches Served Aloft FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 681...

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