Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1945 Fortunes of Yankees in Sorry Pass Manager Joe McCarthy Is Tossed Off Field in Umpire Row By The Associated Press) Yankee fortune have reached a sorry pass that Manager McCarthy has been ejected by impire for the second time in 15 year New York man- r and the club is staggering pn unbroken eight-gam losing k toward its first second di- it finish in 20 seasons Joe rarely sets foot on the dia- mond, choosing to master-mind from dugout, but & Louis last 1 he came out to protest when L ire Red Jones called Vern Stepher at first base in the xth innine. ruling Nick Etten's foot was off the ba Etten got the heave-ho first and McCarthy von followed Nelson Potter limited New York to four hits in earninz his tenth victory, 4-1, for St at the cxpense of Rookie Ken Holcombe Big game of the day was in Detroit where Washington clipped he Tigers' lead to two and one- half lengths by grabbing a 3-1 tilt tehind Mickey Haefner. Buddy rged air force captain, first hom nce re- jcining his club in the attack on Stubby Overmire Cleveland edged Philadelphia 6-4, while Boston swamped the Pale hose, 8-2. Phil Marchildon, dis- charged Canadian serviceman who spent two years in a Nazi prison camp, was charged with the A's loss in his first appearance Otis Clark, Red Sox rookie back from Louisville after an early season failure, stopped Jimmy Dykes' gang with eight hits to decision Johnny Humphries at Chicago. The Chicago Cubs lengthened heir lead over St. Louis in the National to six full games with the help of the Phillies who shaded the Cardinals, 3-2 in a night game battle of the Barrett Boys. Dick the Phillies snapped a 10-game Icsing string in downing Charley the Red of St. Louis on Andy Eeminick's two-run homer. There w a near-riot at Ebbets eld when Umpire Tom Dunn alled Dixie Walker out at first base cn a very close play. Chi- cago's early lead held up for a 4-3 shade despite a typical Brooklyn uprising that forced Charley Grimm to replace starter Claude Passeau with Ray Prim Jack Brewer, formerly of the vy, outpitched Ken Gables, an ) Idier, as New York nosed out Pittsburgh Ni GAMES FRIDAY (National League) Chicago, 4; Brooklyn, 3. New York, 3; Pittsburgh, 2. Philadelphia, 3; St. Louis, 2. (Only games played) (American League) Washington, 3; Detroit, 1. Boston, 8; Chicago, 2. Cleveland, 6; Philadelphia, 4 St. Louis, 4; New York, 1 (Pacific ast League) San Francisco, 5; San Diego, Los Angeles, 3; Seattle, 0. Oakland, 5; Portland, 4 Sacramento, 2; Hollywood, 0. 5 STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS (National League) | | | | | | | | | | | | Team— W. L. Pet Chicago 71 38 651 St. Louis 67 46 593 & Brooklyn 62 48 564 New York 81 52 540 Pittsburgh 59 56 513 Boston 52 63 452 Cincinnati 45 64 413 Philadelphia 31. 81 21 (American League) Team— W. L. Pet ¢ Detroit 62 45 579 #Washington 60 48 556 ¢ Chicago 57 51 528 i Cleveland 5 51 523 St. Louis 54 52 509 New York 52 52 500 Boston 52 58 4T3 Philadelphia 4 10 327 (Pacific Coast League) Team— W. L. Pet Portland 87 53 621 Seattle 80 59 576 . Sacramento 75 66 532 “San Francisco 72 69 511 #Oakland 68 74 479 San Diego 65 178 455 Hollywood 56 85 379 .o PEARL SPRENGLE ARRIVES Pearl Sprengle, of Haines, has ar- ‘rived in Juneau and is a guest nt‘ the Gastineau Hotel 7 — .- £ GRIFFIN HERE £ Reuel M. Griffin flew to Juneau| § yesterday on an incoming Pan Am- | erican Clipper from Fairbanks and fis a guest at the Baranof Hotel. - LIKNESS IN JUNEAU John Likness, of Chatham, ar- rived yesterday on an Alaska Coastal Airlines’ plane and is a guest at the Baranof Hotel e |Crash SEATTLE DUMPED BY LOS ANGELES AGAIN LAST NIGHT Portland Beavers Edged Out 5-4 by Oak- land Acorns (By The Associated Press) Los Angeles dumped Seattle for the third time in four attempts last night in the Pacific Coast League with a 3-0 .score. Neither outfit tallied until the eighth, when the Angels ch with three runs and a double While th happening, Port- land was d ed, 5-4, by the Acorns; Sacramento blanked Holly- wood, 2-0, and San Francisco beat an Diego, 5-1 - AP SPORTS ROUNDUP WOMEN'S TENNIS | FINALS ON TODAY | l liam H. Kaydor, Mrs. W. H. Kaydor, v NI } a a J. W. White, Mrs. J. W. White and | Mary Corday. IN DECISION LastNight | g VE R RE( ‘ The S. S. Alaska returned to Ju- | neau last evening southbound from | Seward with 16 passengers arriving BOSTON, Aug. 18—Thanks to MiSlaiiagn | from both Seward and Cordova. successful uphill battles, the na- NEW YORK, Aug. 18—Youthful! Those from Cordova were: Harry tion’s two top ranking women ten- Tony Janiro has dcmonstrated;Aase, Sam Allen, Grady Brown, M. nis players, National Champion again that he apparently is des- tined to become a standout in the post-war boxing world. The curly-haired, baby-faced 19- ar-old from Youngstown whipped Montreal’s Johnny Greco at Madi- son Square Garden last night, stretching his victory string to 40 of 42 bouts and turning the tables | tle were the following: R. W. Reed, | Louise on the Canadian slugger who won | N. L. Washam, Mrs. N. L. Washam, | Calif., 10-8, | L. Brown, Louis Celli, Lloyd Brown, Pauline Betz of Los Angeles, and ; Patricia Mallott, Ollie Phillips, Bar- | Margaret Osborne of San Fran- | bara Phillips, Cecil Adams, Ruth cisco, will give an encore of their Reinhart and Billy Williams. 1944 National Title Match today From Seward: Richard C. Cook, in the final round of the Longwood :Mrs. Tiny Carey, A. Riendeau and | Invitation Singles Tourney. | Mrs. A. Riendeau. | Miss Betz had to overcome a Leaving later last night for Seat- | lJove-five games lead to overtake Brough of Beverly Hills, in one of yester- a close decision in their first meet- | Melvin L. Burton, Mrs. M. L. Bur- | day's: semi-finals. In the other, ing on July 20. | ton, James J. Balz, Luis G. Padilla, | Miss Osborne rallied after the A favorite with the television |Rose Schollmeyer, Nadine Metcalf, | opening set to send the favored people because of his phowgemc‘flmh Torkelson, Mrs, June Harrett ah Palfrey Cooke of Los appearance, graceful Tony boxed |Tom Harrett, Dr. F. S. Shandley to the sidelines by 6-8, into decisive | Mrs. F. S. Shandley, Nicholas An- ! and punched Greco i | margins | submission in their eight-round go. drasi, Wilmer J. Brumit, Robert L e In the very last minute of the Curtis, Mrs. A. E. Erickson, A. E fight, Tony barely missed ScommiErickson, Sam Devon, Katherine| The top An:vmh.x_n general in a knockout. i Johnson, Richard F. Berntwitz, Dr | World War I was Sir John Mon- entice, Harold Childs, Wil- " ash. Two sharp rights hit Greco on|H- R. Pr By Hugh Fullerton, Jr NEW YORK, Aug. 18 That $50,000 professional baseball fund | to “give the game back to the| kids” secms to cover a very wide | territory Let's hope it doesn't | get into the hands of someone | who will translate it into “some- | thing for the boys.” Normalcy | note: Notre Dame's football dept.| is ed over how to use Big| Joe parclla. He's too good (ori the No. 2 quarterback spot behind | Frank Dancewicz and when they | tried him at fullback during the summer, they found Marty Wendell and Frank Ruggerio taking excel- | lent care of that job. ... . Latest convert to the “T” forma- ticn (well, one of the latest) is Tulane’s Monk Simons, who plans to spice his. single wing with “T” leaves this fall . Leo Durocher is claiming that the umps are picking on him and he went to National League Prexy Ford Frick yesterday to protest his bouncing Thursday by Ziggy Sears. Leo says he merely was going to ask if the scoreboard was right on balls and strikes (it wasn't) when he got the “out” signal. Probably he’ll discuss Tom Dunn today. Penn State doesn’t plan to resume a full inter-collegiate sports pro- gram until the beginning of the next budget period, July 1, 1946. Given a good football season, the budget ought to be in fine shape by then. Ex-Cardinal Stan Musial' recently tried his hand at pitching in Hawali and blanked an all-star Army team on Maui with four hits. But his chief stock in trade still is hitting line drives straight enough to hang your laundry on. | -> TIDES TOMORROW . 1945 . ® August 19, . 4:54a.m,, 20ft. 11:30a.m,, 1201t 16:55 p.m., 5.81t. 23:00 p. m., 14.8 ft. Low High Low High L ] TIDES MONDAY 20, . 1945 ! ® August Low High Low High 48a.m, 08ft. 21 p.m,, 132 ft. 53 p.m. 4.6 ft. 56 p.m., 15.8 ft. 1 1 Sea ©eececscceccccvccscco e YOUR property can be in- | sured against damage by | falling aircraft. As inter- est in flying increases, there will be more ex- posure to loss, Ask this Hartford agency hm\_.\'nu can get this pro- tection at very little cost. Shattuck Agency Seward Street . Phone 249 | [ : Juneau tg of Haines, have arrived in Juneau | winds less than'15 miles per hour over the entire region. Variable cloudi- and are guests at the Gastineau |ness. FORECAST FOR JUNEAU AND VICINITY: Cloudy with some Hotel. sunshine today and Sunday. Warmer temperatur EVer REACH INTO “an fuery Soek? Well, I have. And it's a tough feeling when you need money and don’t know where to get it. ‘They’re the best insurance I know against finding the old sock empty if I ever have to dig down into it again. And I may have to, you know. You can’t help but win by putting War Bonds away. In ten years I'll get back 4 dollars for every 3 I put into E Bonds. And in the meantime, the money is always there if I need it. What better proposition could you want «..for yourself ... for your family ... for your country . . , than War Bonds?. WAR BONDS..fo Have and to Hold .| NEW WASHINGTON HOTEL, SEATTLE FRANK B. McCLURE, Manager Jack Fletcher, Manager Invites You to Attend the Opening Performance Of THE ALASKA'S ~O / 4 9 g) ) gfi zg b2 7 ) F the polpt. of the chin. His knees|. o . = = ' IR A sagged and S t to g e f;" ,:,'aenf\:?:etoa';“ it L:! U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU R Vv clinch and hang on until the bell.i ‘V'Xt'i";fl‘;lk! i’;;j;\lsl}(fi'rlN 19 | DATA FOR 23 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MERIDIAN TIME E 0 Romnv ms"‘mn’ | *—(4:30 am. yesterday to 4:30 a.m. today) | I R { Max. temp. | TODAY | GOVERNOR ARRIVES | last | Lowest 4:30am. 24hrs. Weatherat| L I | Station 24 hrs* | tenip. temp. Precip. 4:30am. | ON. NORAH TONIGHT | anchorase i ke Y 44 0 Pt. Cloudy | L T | Barrow 46 32 33 0 Pt. Cloudy . The District Governor of ' Rotary gg:gg]v ~ gg :_71 ?’ g;}ufi?“dy ! Y E Clubs for this district, W. HaroldiD & 40 0 Pt. Cloud: S Hicks, will arrive in Juneau this E:;Z‘;‘:on o o 3 i b 4 S evening for a district assembly on L ! - bud H the Princess Norah, and will be met ;"‘;bflnks g; 7 j‘g ;’ Pt. Cloudy | by Juneau Rotarians, Rotary dele- J“ ef‘ o 43‘ 14 = e o 2 gations from Prince Rupert and funeav . ; S " Ketchikan also will be aboard, |Juneau Airport 8 | e« 42 02 Cloudy “ us o | Retchikan 57 4 Ny e Showers ; 9 ‘omorrow after attending Day Kotzeb: 51 43 e T Cloudy | 5 & o8 o of Prayer church services the Ro-;N‘u’me ue, - 51 . 4; A ittty 2 % &g y c)m‘"m;w’;‘l;;lafio‘:‘g:?su;'agruflgl{: Northw;ny 60 | 36 38 16 Fog :g a" "ho and Monday will be devoted to the FPetersburg 5;’ | 41 :?[ 430 ge“al i 16 assembly, which will be held in the gfi%‘;fl‘;‘ ‘75 ] 32 5 ‘l’, Sassy § i | BUBEBLE ROOM Monday evening will feature a :?“CE georgt gi ! ,42 f:, ?z g:au(d:i' a ! g Rotary Club Ladies’ Night with a FTince “F;'_" o o 54 i d°“ y 4 £E % dance in the Gold Room of the Bar- San Francisco auLy anof Hotel, Seattle T 53 0 Cloudy | Delegations also are expected from Sitka o g * - Clear T SR TR AT TR At e < 0 Petersburg, Wrangell, Sitka, Anchor- | Whitehorse ¥ 34 o o Rain age and Fairbanks, JYnkutat 58 44 49 T. Cloudy ——— - L et | MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN | : CH | Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today | | Reports trom Marine, Sta y | Bo A S Rk s WIND " Helgist of Waves | Entertainment Starts ut 8 o°Clock - at the Baranof Hotel. | station Weather Temv. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) TR < S | Cape Decision Clear 48 NW 1 Zero { 7 MR., MRS. JORDAN HERE | Cape Spencer Cloudy 5 - E * 7 1 foot é, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Jordan, of gjdred Rock Cloudy 50 SSE 13 Zero ) e S DL sl il s e e Ketchikan, are guests at the Gas- pjve Finger Light Light For 48 Calm Zero i b o e 2 tineau Hotel. |Guard 1sland Cloudy 58 N 5 Zero A (R I Lincoln Rock .. Cloudy 52 ' NNW 8 1’ foot ASTEITR RS =8 (8 a4 taprdl g Cradsednc At BRXABb g HAINES MEN HERE Point Retreat Pt. Cloudy ‘51 SSW 6 Zero Theron Kidd anl Lioyd Gilbert, MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Light variable | - 9003000000 000000000 0 file\/))a/‘a 0 Presents HEATHER LANE'S Farewell Appearance ’ sConecert in Miniature® TONIGHT ----8t0 12 ; inthe BUBBLE ROOM