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THE, DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA = THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1945, “STARLNER JUNEAU | FVERGREEN ROWL | RUNRJUNEAD [ EVERGREEN BOWL , ' SPORTS FRIDAY; ' W | COMING T0 JUNEAY| M NORTHLAND Alaska Mrlm:;’—smrnner Juneau% SpE(IAl EVEHTSI T R A N s p o RTAT I o N flew to Juneau yesterday from An-! chorage with the following 23 pas-| Another week has passed and fxsld‘ sengers: Leona Karnes, Henry Hab- day is here again to be held tomor-| Portland’s Ducks Square Flag-deciding Series Against Seattle (By Associated Press) All season the Portland have held their pace-setting posi-| p(l H lTT E R S (tees the first two days to encourage SOUR ANGLE 10 EYE ON JOB AS {All American Amateur affairs in w AIVER pEDDlEK oss o ANKS the probable winner. It was a non- ! ag H b H H r row at 2 o'clock at the Evergreen| ta ant the best player to | crman, Darlene Haberman, Henry " [t whien oisy. wis: saksd ' Cronm '0 Rue Sale | n Anyhme Mccanhy Haberman, Jr., Kristen Brousseau Bowl, with the exception, weather, oing to lug home the top prize. H A | : | y As the field teed off nnplhe first Down Rlvef to RedS | wams '0 Siep()ut Johnson, Walter Schwalge, John' The main event for boys to ke held | Evans, Mrs. Alex Ross and child, Friday is the cross country race for ed to be that the firing would de- By Jack Hand ; ¥ : velop into a personal duel between (Associated Press Sports Writer) Ruth was quoted last night as say- ter Schwalge, John Evans, Mrs. Alex traction will be a tennis accuracy |Lord Byron Nelson, who has won' Prize sleeper play of the baseball ing he was interested in the job Ross and child, Robert Prather, | test for all ages. | year history, and Lt. Ben Hogan, on hand trick by which Cincinnati ac- ed in the managership of the New Russ Cedarwall, Walter Pienkowski, pi_ng-pung and croquet tou_mnmcnu Beavers | furlough from the Army Air forces. quircd Joe Bowman from the Boston York Yankzes. M. G. Pomeroy, John Pestana, Ar- will start next week. A}l interested Rod ‘Sox for the nominal $7,500 Joe Geotter, sports editor of the thur Lyons, Mr. Woods, Betty Dur- 8re asked to enter their names as |lieved it would take a 277 to win [ " ithis year. “We're moving up the w : | The founder of golfs’ richest com- | petitive attractions, which include ] |the All American Women's and the ¢ |conjunction with the money-jammed ¢ : P H" HARVESI;” was suicty newtra concernivg \/gferan Hurler Is Causing Bamzino Willing fo Move |win,” when May was asked who's . and child, Clara Gagnon, Arthur Permitting. 18 holes today the consesus seem- il . 2 PATERSON, N. J,, July 26.—Babe Clara Gagnon, Arthur Johnson, Wal- all ages. For the girls the main at- |the TAM three times in its four- scason appears to be the sleight-of- if there was any change contemplat- Theodore Allison, Clifford Johnson, Signing up for tennis, horseshces, | Paterson Evening News, said he put ken.and Mel Padilla. |soon as possible. waiver fee. tion in the Pacific Coast League TORONTO, July <i—The strong- by » _ | E 5 e e St because they have proved them- est field and the richest purse in the Stories ut the Mort Cooper- the question to the formee Sang of Ontgoitic passerigers were 25 m",O’F,:‘,el,rfi!.]xn:‘(:;:‘%;;u;,IM e salVés Jit too tough a Hub to|histary of ths Canadian: Open Goif Gharley Bamett, Biddy = Rosar- Swat In an ioterviaw Bk ERRater- lovs: U o it BB R LA Bk be cracked by the runner-up|championships are in prospect at Frankie Hayes and Joe Medwick- £On News-Patrolmens' Benevolent To Yakutat: Hardy Trefsger, C. an Tack 20r b Y. otd sites Seattle Rainiers. And, it would|Tcronto's Thornhill Club, August 2. Clyde Kluttz deals have hit the ciation Diamond Gloves Cham- W. Hedges and C. L. Voge. [ it it | pionship and was told by the former| To Cordova: Lucille Ling. Freg race for 5-6 year old boys seem that Emil Sick’s athletes are! Top notch United States linksmen headlines, but Bowman’s moving day going to find the same condition have entered the 72-hole contest, in- was buried with the pony league prevailing in their current series cluding Harold “Jug” McSpaden, SCO and the British football re- also. |Craig Wood, Vic Ghezzi, Ky Laffoon, sults The 35-year-old righthander has Frog race for 5-6 year old girls. Relay for 7-8 yecar old boys. | Relay for 7-8 year old girls. Relay for 9-10 year old boys. ! Relay for 9-10 year old girls. | Yankee Star: To Anchorage: A. C. Kuehl, Jack “I definitely would be interested DeLane, Commander George Lingo,! in managing the Yankees if there V. M. Barmuta, T. R. Strandberg,! were any changes made. I've al- Dave Altaras, Ira Sweeney, Pat Sorte, Last night the Beavers evened Jimmy Hines and Herman Barron 4 ekl i - 5 d . o their “cmgo:hul" match with the| The prize money is $10,000. keen pitching since 1929 and has ways had a desire to l.nflnngt_z a big Marvin Sorte, Ph:hp_ Senour, Ruth‘ ) : . Sickmen to again forge into the seen action with both Philadelphia ltague club and feel I'm entitled to Senour, Mabel Hopkins, Irene Wag-, Relay for 10-11 year old boys. | s 8 B R 1 SR e WE P as 3 o i h r X o irls fltl even - game lead with which| GREAT LAKES, Il., July 26— clubs and the New York Giants and at least one chance at handling « ner, Betty Drowning, Joseph Jarvis,| Relay for 10-11 year old gitls. ull se 8 8 ! d the Red Sox big league club.” George M. Pettet and Elizabeth Sen-| 100-yd. dash, 13-16 year old boys. urgh before ht him back from the minors last year. This spring in Boston he they entered the series—the widest :Cl‘l('l Specialist Bob Feller's pitch- margin they have had at any time ing record for Great Lakes was .900 in the 1945 flag race. {today, his ninth victory coming yes- While Seattle and Portland were | terday as he hurled the Sailors to/Was knocked out thrgc times run- battling it out in deadly earnest|a 1-0 triumph over the Chicago|MDNE losing lf\fl decisions before | in the Northwest, the Sacramento | Cubs, National League leaders. ‘1‘;‘(“";‘(1‘”;0]“” ;";”i“” “‘:d l"“[‘; ("“:‘l‘r, S s yesterday romped gaily to a| The former Cleveland strikeout|Skippers waived him out of the cir- \ :;lwsfi}:;;:‘;f;l"(,‘f” [‘hv ;,,,’D,‘.g(, king held the Cubs to three hits cuit May 29. y : 4 ‘;;un:{ on a cigarette proved Expt:n— Padres and San Francisco tamed |8nd struck out 10 to increase his nce Buwmup arrived in Cincin-sive for actress Joan Bennett. She Oakland, 12-6, as planetary or some | S€a<on ctrikeout total to 120 in 84 nati, whether it was ngn handling was fined $20 in munlulp’dl court on other favorable influence fattened |innings. He has lost one game, |of wily Bill M(ZK‘r(:hme of the a cl?urg“ of smoking in her z\uui- b 5 i f PCL perform- | |change of scenery in a new league, molnl}* in Cold\vai.ey Canyon, where ::::“:A"T}(-d‘};‘.x,lalsli)(::i 6, Los Angeles | he became a ball of fire. Nobody smoking is prohibited because of P N Gl Rt Y o] HOME SIRE'I'(H {teat him in five outings until the fire hazard. o s i et [Phillis did the trick July 1. In 10 was the sanest score of the day. | 109-yd. dash, 13-16 year old girls. 20-yd. dash, 4-5 year old boys. 20-yd. dash, 4-5 year old girls. | Wreelbarrow race, 6-8 year boys. ‘Wheelbarrow race, 6-8 year girls. Freeze out for 9-10 year old boys. Freeze out for 9-10 years old girls. Freeze out, 11-13 year old boys. Freeze out, 11-13 year old girls. Freeze out, 14-16 year old boys. Freeze out, 14-16 year old girls. Cress country ‘for boys all ages Tennis accuracy for all ages, girls. o - > - - ->-ee our. IR A PR, PUFF, PUFF! $20 s, nemRick | BROUGHT HERE TO ANSWER (HARGES Marie Herrick, convicted bigamist recently placed in custody in San Francisco, arrived back in Juneau by | PAA plane from the South yester-| day to face charges of parole viola- HOLLYWOOD, July 26.—A few D e PR ERN [2 e Emplre Crassitieds Pay: | - starting appearances to date the §EN., ANDREW NEKLAND There were no major league; o . QO sy i o 2 R T R = .., | tion. g R e RPN /] games played yesterday. Im::’(]‘:IFANT‘WW i ,R J‘ud g _‘ Ulf S I‘m:: ,won & lf)“ 2 o £ong VISITS IN ANCHORAGE s Herrick was escorted north by | FERN A S H ago by the Marine corps be-|the route eight times, making more RS john Roseene, Chief Deputy Marshal | A photograph captures forever the beauty of the bride on her wed- N e ause he w n inch too short, Don- than one fan wonder how he was P M | 5 ) y | On his first visit to Anchorage in at San Francisco, who was to return| | < N ” b GAM:;” (\{vr,l:!\:,sl),\v B | ding day. We will take all your wedding pictures. (Pacific Coast League) zontal bar 15 minutes each day. As some of the majors went back PHONE 567 SECOND STREET prominent pioneer business man of Roseene, a former Alaskan, was lnst; | Fairbanks, recently arrived in the evening and this morning renewing suted Bo168t-8, 8 p ¢ - | He measured 5-feet-5, and cation on which no games were o .. yei city after a motor trip friendships formed before he went| SERVICE —~—— "~ , Yesterday he took another exam-!to work today after a one-day va- ination. Sacramento, 23; San Diego, 6. | | }‘xld A. Dunn, 17, swung from a hori- |shunted out of the American league. ten years, Senator Andrew Nerland, to the States by plane today. Deputy | | | San Francisco, 12; Oakland, | bl Hollywood, 6; Los Angeles, 4. |was accepted with an inch to spare.'scheduled, the files were still in- “ £ i Portland, 6; Seattle, 2. “Hope I don't shrink,” said Dunn complete on the Cooper-Barrett ‘;{‘iz‘hwf“;;s ’;‘_:‘éh:';‘i‘“;';m:':mfi:':;: ;ZquZgFEHCISCD more than fen| Christenson Bros. Garage | ——————— ANDING Oop OrTsk ;"“"‘”Iy' g ;,“:'_:;a‘::“'rf,n;‘:‘“sp‘;l st‘z,o“g‘l;‘s“ b‘t“": his grandson on the trip. In An- Mr. Roseene tesided at Valdez for| %09 Twelfth St. BRAONN. €09 | AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES 2 e ¥ ST ] : chorage, Senator Nerland stated |15 years, being at one time Deputy «___ ___________ " " _J (American League) | PHONE SERVICE IS NOW sore arm, has started only once in a ' " g o e e or | A ikt e e B (T L o ek e o s G O i NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Detroit . 47 36 566 as saying he would be able to take |yt "oHei€0 mmi:g um‘z“y ol | CARO TRANSFER ' ‘Washington 44 39 530, ablishment of a radio telephone | ONIY short turns the rest of the sea- .\ o | R | nd CRATL Public Accountants-—Auditors—Tax Counselors | £ “ s also going on. | Empire wnni-aos bring yesults! a Chicago 44 41 518 |circuit to the Aleutians from the SOn pending a winter operation. _ ____ — - '} DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE Boston 44 41 518| anchorage base have mow put the Barrett was knocked out of the box (PRI M7t NI TN R N R e , STOVE, or {| 3 " New York 42 40 .51211,,.\;1;/)15]‘;0;155 in direct voice pco,m“.( two times running by Brooklyn, but | |1} Phone 344 Phone 344 208 Franklin Street T»lephone 757 St. Louis 41 40 506 with the States. This link completes }¢ has compilsd a 10-4 record in St.| | JEWELL RISLEY OF LOS ANGELES | | s Pl QUKL AN S T BN Cleveland .. 40 43 482 |the connection of the Alaskan coast Lopls and 12°7 JeREATRET | | HAIR STYLIST i | KiNLOCH N. NELLL JOHN W. CLARK Philadelphia 30 52 366 | with the United States for telephone 95 i Wi]] b .'h L“cn.LE,s BEA“TY SALON ! | (Standings unchanged. No games | communications. There are almost three million | e Wi — P v Wednesday). ——.———— | persons in the Soviet Republic of | i | WE OFFER T0 A LIMITED NUMBER OF (National League) BUY WAR BO | Azerbaijan, L i CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY Team— W. L. Pet| -——— e G Aoy A Chicago . 53 32 624 ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE St. Louis 50 38 508 Brooklyn .. 49 39 557 TELEPHONE 757 U Pittsburgh ... 48 42 533 ; e l ANG | New York 471 45 51 t th h | A R— Just three reasons why \ e 2rpis Boston 41 47 466 Reliauce | EETET Philadelphia 2 68 269 J (8tandings unchanged. No games " Y} ” l E L L l S A I R IJ l N E s Wednesday). IT'S AT : | DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN (Pacific Couast League) . - Team-— W L Pt ol Your | via Petershurg and Wrangell Portland 42 635 Grocerd ! With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and ::z:lxen S gg :g gzg i steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle ok e P \ FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 g Oakland 5 60 .483 Assorted BALEER e e D e D e San Diego 54 64 458 Al'.mflflfl-' lf::::;‘; i sele: G D 'ecans i Los Angeles 52 63 452 Cashews OIL BURNERS DRAFT CONTROLS HEATING Hollywood 47 69 405 e Blanched Swell for Peanuts munching Smith Qil Burner Service Day Phqne 711 P. O. Box 2066 Night Phone 476 APSPORT ROUNDUPS CHICAGO, July 26.—The boys went after golf’s $60,000 “Pot of Gold” at Tam O'Shanter today. < And Promoter George May was 7 ! ! | confident that records would fall : \— e— ! in tke four-day hunt for the $10,200 (War Bond cash value), first prize in the All-American open in which 139 of the countrys’ top players, in- cluding 128 professionals, were en- ‘1. Fighters 2. Materials 3. Workers Serving the Cause of tered, The present record for the 72-hole stretch is 278 but May said he be- first-string fighting men right gathering war supplies for years a vast army of 35,000,000 work- = — ! now, ready for us, waiting for us. and years. They have huge stock ers fighting for her fighters— ' “ P e a c e Courteous and Dependable e Waiting till we get closer. And piles of vital war materials— seven-days-a-week workers. There eoo Service to Alaska in addition, 1,000,000 men of reserves of high-octane gasoline, are millions more in Manchuria, i n Am STYLED military age who have not been oils, rubber, fuels, steel, chrome, Korea, and Formosa. And an al- A] ASKA TBANSP()RATIQN C“- called to the colors and more than nickel, manganese—and they most unlimited supply of man- Pier 58 Seattle, Wash. Main 7479 b 1,000,000 physically fit young men have mines and mills and plants power in conquered territories. )4 Experls between 17 and 18 years old who constantly producing more. They Untold millions in conquered lands id have only recently been subject have almost no consumer pro- can be forced to work for Japan— tiive T G 5 i Japan has 4,000,000 to 5,000,000 to the draft. Yes, 6,000,000 to 7,000,000 Japs that we haven’t yet The Japs have been making and duction, virtually everything is war production. That’s another In Japan’s island home alone is Japan’s war-worker strength is mighty. But—these are only three Victory WE SPECIALIZE REDUCED FARES to Effective July 2I Westward Alaska of a thousand reasons why “IT’S A TOUGH ROAD TO TOKYO.* tackled—that’s one reason why “It’s a tough road to Tokyo.” reason why “It’s a tough road to Tokyo.” s““" Qe ! 4 - 4 Waving PASTES'I' and SHORTEST Permanents Says Lt. General Eugene Reybold, Chief of Engineers: ROUTE Styling “It will take hard work and a grueling fight. Besides that, it will ¢ Shaping take all our patience to beat the Jap. Every American is eager for via the big attack, but before we can hurl the full weight of our Army against Japan, we must build places for them to live and fight from. Airstrips, camps, hospitals, roads, bridges. Bases on Okinawa, Iwo Jima, in the Philippines. We are building now with utmost speed, and in these tense months we need your work, your backing, and your patience.” ANCHORAGE ...$..70 McGRATH - 100 NOME ... . 120 Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Baranof Beauty Salon| . 130 (Effective July 21st) Corresponding Reductions WOODLEY AIRWAYS CITY TICKET OFFICE This explanation of the war ahead is published in cooperation with the Armed Forces by o inoe v¥ ALASKA DISTRIBUTORS COMPANY ARt g s e APPOINTMENT " Seattle Phone 716 SUBJECT TO FEDERAL TAX PHONE 538 — e | A