The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 17, 1945, Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA- MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1945 There's Going to Be Some Changes Made . . . (and 80 Points, Are Doing It) rcat day in past y really good civilic and discharges We have a marvelous suit Army T 'S, or you fellows who have an, O, D. Blues to get back into some 80 points and an clothes . . . are helping you alon . .. stock (over 500 fine suits) and we’d like you to take a look st out sele re you'll appre setions. We feel pretty ciate the new styling, grand woolens and excellent fit Handsome suits Stern and Hickey enter civilian life single or breas browns, Michéels-Stern tailored by Michaels- -Freeman (you couldn’t in finer clothes) double ted modcls in blues, tans and grays. Suits - $45. to $55. Hickey-Freeman Suits $79. to $83. BENGALS VS. (UBS LOOMS FOR SERIES Detroit, C]Tcago (lubs Practically Clinch Bunt- ings in Two Big Loops By JOE REICHLER (Associated Press Sports Writer) It looks like Detroit and Chicago, after a 10-year wait, will meet again in the October World Series. Time is running out on their | ‘j{ivhou{meman CUSTOMIZED " CLOTHES (National League) Chicago, 3-4; Brooklyn, 2-2. Philadelphia, 4-3; St. Louis, 3-10. Pittsburgh, 3-2; New York, 2-9. Boston, 4-4; Cincinnati, 3-5. (Pacific Coast League) Seattle, 5-1; Sacramento, 1-5 Portland, 2-4; San Diego, 1-i 2 Hollywood, 4-1; San Francisco, 3-11 Oakland, 11-11; Los Angeles, 6-2. STANDIN OF THE CLUBS (American League) Team— w. Detroit 85 Washington 84 St. Louis 6 New York 4 | Cleveland 68 Chicago 70 Bosten 66 Philadelphia 51 Pet .568 528 521 493 .486 458 357 rivals. peared today that only a spectacular spurt by either of the two runners- | Washington's Senators or St. Cardinals, together with a up, Louis" complete collapse on the part of the ' leaders, could eradicate the leads of the front running Tigers and Cubs who last met in the 1935 classic Including yesterday's double tri-| umph over Brooklyn, 3-2 and 4-2, which incidentally erased the Dodg- ers’ last mathematical chance for e Nationa! League pennant, the| Grizzly Bruins boasted a four-game lead over the World Champion Red- birds, with each team having a dozen | games left on the calendar. Of lhes(m five are against each other. The Tigers won a two-and-a-half game edge over the Senatots in the| American League, with nine games left to play and six for the Nats. Chicago's twin-victories before a crowd of 40,187 came as St. Louls‘ was splitting two games with Phila- delphia and marked the Cubs’ | cighteenth sweep of a doubleheader this season to better the old major league record of 17 held by the Cards. Neither triumph was easy for the Cubs. In each contest they were f »d to break a 2-2 deadlock to win. The Tigers chilled Washington's pennant hopes by halving the Sun- day doublehzader with their chief rivals. With a throng of 29,500 cheering them on, the OCapital City challengers downed Detroit’s south- paw ace, Hal Newhouser, in the opener, 3-2, but the Bengals barged back to squeeze out a 5-4 decision in the closer and take a 3-2 edge in the series. GAMES SATURDAY (American League) Detroit, 7-7; Washington, New York, 7-3; St. Louis Philadelphia, 6; Cleveland, Chicago at Boston, postponed 4-3 4-8 2 (National League) Brooklyn, 12-6; Chicago Cincinnati, 2; Boston, 0. New York, 9; Pittsburgh, 55 St. Louis, 3; Philadelphia, 1 (Pacific Coast League) San Diego, 11; Portland, 4 Hollywood, 4; San Francisco, 2 Oakland, 4; Los Angeles, 3, Sacramento at Seattle, postponed GAMES SUNDAY (American League) ‘Washington, 3-4; Detroit, 2-5 St. Louis, 6-4; New oYrk, 2-5. Chicago, 5-6; Boston, 3-1. Cleveland, 3-5: Philadelphia, 0-7 With but two weeks of the | current campaign remaining, it ap- | | San Francisco ‘ued for second with (National League) Team-- | Chicago St. Louis | Brooklyn 549 | Pittsburgh 544 New York 38 528 423 Pet, 634 606 | Boston | Cineinnati | Philadelphia 59 44 (Pacific Coast League) i Team— L. Portland 67 Seattle % Sacramento 81 84 Pt 619 571 537 523 494 449 415 92| | Oakland San Diego | Los Angeles Hollywood Sporl Shorfs TULSA, Ok]A. Sammy Snead of Hot Springs, Va., won the Southwest | Invitation Golf Tournament and $2,000 in war bonds with a 72-hole \(‘019 of 277. Vic Ghezzi of Deal, N. , and Ben Hogan of Hershey, Pa., 286. Byron Nelson, Toledo, fourth with 288. LOS ANGELES—U. 8. tennis team | defeated a South American squad four matches to three as Francisco (Pancho) Seguraof Ecuador upset| national champion, Frankie Park-| er, 3-6, 10-8,6-3 — i LOS ANGELES—Quick Reward, $36.80, defeated Busher by a neck in $25,000-added Will Rogers Mile at Hollywood Park Busher earned $6,000 second place money and be- came greatest money winning filly of all time with $276,120, beating Top Flight’s mark of $275,900. ineteenth An- naul Southwest nis Tournament opens today at Los Angeles Tennis Club with Billy Talbert of Wilming- ton, Del, and Francisco (Pancho) Segura of Ecuador looming as strong threats in the men’s singles ngalnsp Sgt Frankie Parker, national champion - 586 | .415i 303 | cisco’s Seals, BEAVERS NAIL. DOWNFLAGIN COAST LEAGUE Present Top D|V|5|on‘ Teams Now Point, Gov- ernor’s Cup Playoffs (By The Associated Press) The winnah'and the new Pacific Coast League champions — Port- | land’s indefatigable Beavers. For the first time since 1933 the flag symbolizing the circuit title will fly at the Portland park. The Beavers clinched the 1945 bunting Sunday with a double victory over the San Diego Padres 2-1 and 4-2 to give them an eight-and-a-half game lead with eight to go. The loop's four top teams, all securely berthed in the upper divi- sion, will their sights this week for the Governor's Cup play- offs which get underway Sept. 25. These two positions, held by Sac- ramento’s Solons and San Fran- are still undecided, | the Solons having a two-and-a-half | game bulge today. >~ OOTBALL [ SCORES ‘The following are major rootballt scores of games played last Satur-| day: h Michigan, 27; Great Lakes, 2. 1 Air Transport Command (Nash- i ville), 13; Fort Pierce (Fla.) Navy| Amphibs, 10. \ Baylor, 40; Field 0. set ! Cape Decision SEATTLE — Aircraft communi- cator jobs paying $3,000 a year, or more, are open with the Civil Aero- nautics Administration in Alaska and persons seeking the posts will be paid $175 a month while being trained at Boeing Field, nounced today by the CAA Emplr; Want ada bring results!|that it has been desu;nated by the L u. Max. temp. | last 24 hrs.* 56 35 51 45 57 68 43 56 56 3 58 46 57 46 Station Anchorage Barrow | Bethel Dawson Cordova Edmonton Fairbanks Haines Juneau - Juneau Airport Ketchikan Kotzebus McGrath Nome Northway Petersburg Portland Prince George | Prince Rupert San Francisco ... Seattle Sitka | Whitehorse | Yakutat 57 68 56 54 6 5 | 8 | 55 | Station -..Pt. Cloudy ..Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Pt .Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Cape Spencer . Eldred Rock . Five Finger Light Guard Island Lincoln Rock Point Retreat MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Winds light and Blackland Army Air|variable less than 15 miles per hour generally from the north. Clear te | party cloudy entire district. it was en- | S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU. | WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOK zi 1OURS ENDED AT 4:30 A, M,, 12TH MZRIDIAN TIME | Lowest 4:30a.m. 24 hrs. | temn, 31 39 39 37 37 31 39 47 35 27 30 44 46 36 44 *—(4:30 am. yesterday to 4:30 am. today) MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports trom Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today ‘Weathers Temp. BULLETINS LONDON-—Lord Haw Haw, of the German radio, William Joyce, plead- | ed innocent to three charges of high | | treason when his trial opened today. | MOSCOW - Generalissimo Stalin met a group of United States Con- gressmen for an hour today and was undertsood to have expressed a de- |sire for a $6,000,000,000 loan from the United States. | SHANGHAI- All Japanese civil- jans in China—every Japanc=se man, woman and child in the entire coun- try—will be deported to Japan, Gen | H. Ying-chin, Commander of Chin- ese Forces, told correspondents at a press conference today. | WASHINGTON — President Tru- man is back at his desk today after a weekend in Missouri. He made no statement on rumors Secretary of War Stimson is to retire or that Gen. Marhsall will step out as Chief of Staff. He made no statement {on the labor situation. H HOLLYWOOD — Actress Mary | Astor has anounced that she will | wed Thomas G. Wheelock, a Chicago banker, sometime this winter. ATHENS--The Greek Government has protested to the Allied powers | because Greece was not invited to voice her views on ministers, it was | reported (oda SINGAPORE—The first shipment of rubber from major producing areas was on its way to England today. i OMINATO, Japan — Three light units of the North Pacific Fleet are scheduled to reach Yokohama to-| night with 296 American, British and Dutch liberated prisoners. They were freed from prison camps on Hok- kaido, northernmost Japanese home land. The disclosure was made in a message to Vice Admiral Frank Fletcher aboard the U. S. S. Pana- | mint at the Ominato anchorage. SEATTLE—Tiny, 65-year-old Mrs. Etta E. Jones of Attu, Alaska, for | more than three years a prisoner of the Japanese, has arrived here. | After attending to business matters | she plans to go to Atlantic City to |visit her brother, Russell Schure- man. EATTLE—The Catholic North- | west Progress, official’ newspaper of {the Diocese of Seattle, announces | ALASKA iiillIIIIIH!IIIEHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIlllll“lllIIIIIIIIIHIII|I||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIlIlIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIllIIlIIIIlIIlI||II! TODAY Weather at 4:30 am. Pt. Cloudy Clear Precip. 0 temp. 33 29 32 29 28 36 40 Clear Clear Rain Rain Clear Clear Fog Pt. Cloudy Cloudy 31 45 38 45 36 38 Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Pt. Cloudy 35 42 52 Pt. Cloudy Clear Fog 3 0 Pt. Cloudy 27 " 34 [ WIND Height of Waves IMOSQ Rev. Walter J. Fitzgerald, S. J., as the official newspaper also for | the Vicariate of Alaska. A.B. Cain editir of ths Alaska Catholic, ‘which has ceased publication, Wwill edit | Alaska church news for the Progress. | LONDON-—Chinese Premier T. V. Scong has arrived in London by plane from the United States. He is scheduled to spend several days in Lendon and Paris before return- ing to Chungking. YOKOSUKA — Headquarters of the Third Fleet Commander, Ad- miral William Halsey, says that Am- | erican demolition experts have elim- | inated 51 Japanese midget submar- ines, 103 suicide craft and 103 tor- i pedoes. In addition, 25 coast guns | were neutralized, all along the Uraga and Chiba peninsulas guarding the entrance to Tokyo Bay, The British flag has beon raised over the British Em- bassy in Tokyo. The building has been taken over for the use of high TOKYO 'WILBUR IRVING WILL MOVE HIS BOTTLERY HERE Wilbur Irving, who recently sold his Irving’s Market here, is back | in Juneau after a trip to California | and the East Coast. In New York City on September 15, Mr. Irving made good connections flying west, but nevertheless found traveling “tough.” “Everybody in the East wants to tra\'cl West and everybody on the | Pacific Coast wants to go East,” he | declared. Mr. Irving is leaving soon for Skagway, where he will close out his soft. drink bottling business, | preparatory to moving it to Juneau. He will locate his plant here in his Willoughby Avenue property next to the Alaska Coastal Airlines hang- ar. During 2T months in business | tioned there, at Whitehorse and at |Wason Lake, B. C. hile on the Atlantic Coast, Mr. .nving arranged to secure a large | assortment of flavors for his soft | drink business here. He plans to fea- ture the “Whing Ding” bl‘Bnd | e MARIE Bl‘YTAERT HERE Mrs. Curtis Shattuck and two | children, Allen and Roger, returned frem a two-and-a-half month trip to the States to visit friends and | relatives. They arrived on the North Sea with Mr. Shatjuck who met them in Ketchikan. LR R LONG CRIMINAL FILE | Just returned from Ketchikan, | where he made preparations for the | opening of the Fall Term of Court in that city, Assistant United States Attorney R. L. Tollefson, today dis- closad that the criminal docket for | the First City term will likely in- | clude nearly a dozen cases. One murder indictment is already | awaiting trial there, and several | more charges have been bound over { may at Skagway, he bottled huge amounts | to the grand jury. The Ketchikan of Coca Cola for Army troops sta- term begins early in October. British officers now in the Japaness capital. | LUENEBERYV, Germany-The in- ! famous beast of the Belsen concen- tration camp, Jesef Kramer, and 47 of his 8. 8. henchmen are on trial for their lives before a British Mili- tary Tribunal. The trial is expected to last about three weeks, with today’s session expected to b2 con- sumed in arraignments. Cenviction mean death by hanging or shooting, life tmprisonment, confis- cation of property or a mere fine. They all pleaded innocent. GREAT FALLS, Mont.—Two of the Army's Seventh Ferrying Com- mand airbases at Bismarck and | Fargo, N. Dak. will be closed im- | m um{ely and personnel returned to | Gore Field here for screening, the group’s Pubic Relations Office an- | SPECIALIZING IN PERMANENT WAVING HAIR CUTTING AND GENERAL BEAUTY CULTURE A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON PHONE 492 P ] DISCOUNT DATE For City Taxes has been exiended until CCTOBER I nounced today. The bases were used | : Tax bills are expected to be in the mails y the Air Transport Command for | : serving planes which flew Alaskan | |! dunng the week of Seplember l7fl'l alr routes "'llII|l!lllllllIIIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIII T0 KEEP THE RECORD STRAIGHT Mr. Smith, owner of the Smith Oil Burner Service, in an advertisement in last Frid being declared unfair te organized labor in Juneau. IIIIIIII|li‘IIIIIlIIIlIIIlIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|II|I|IIIII||IIIII|"' s Empire of September 7 tried to justify his actions which led to his shop However, his line of reason- ing is vague and absoclutely beyond the point: 1. He states that he is a member in good standing of the Steam Fitters Local No. 473 of Seattle. (We were informed by Local 473 that he still cwes part of his initiation fee.) He should know then that the con- stitution of the Steam Fitters’ International requires him to transfer into the Local under whose jurisdiction he works, after all, Juneau is not a suburb of Seattle. Why does he refuse to join Local No. 262? 2. What the non-availability of union members who are skilled mechanics concerns, the union rules that in such a case Mr. Smith is priv- ileged to hire non-union help as long as such help is paid and works under the conditions laid down in the work agreement of the Union. 3. Another reason Mr. Smith advances for not joining Juneau Local are some vague insinuations he makes about the organization showing favoritism to certain shops and practicing dscrimination against others. If he can prove anything of that kind, the place to make such accusations is the Central Labor Council and not an advertisement in the newspapers. This definitely shows bad faith towards the union. 4. We agree with Mr. Smith that it is the privilege of every Amer- ican to engage in business for himself, without being UNFAIR to Organ- ized Labor. But, actions talk louder than words, and when he further states that he is back of any plan to have 1009 organization in Juneau, we must consider that as only empty talk. Therefore, as long as Mr. Smith does not join our organization and stays away from our councils, the Smith Oil Burner Service will be considered UNFAIR TO ORGAN- Dir. and Vel. NE 3 ENE 15 N 10 NNE 5 NNE 5 Wsw 7 NNE 5 (Sea Condition) 2 feet 3 feet 2 feet 1 foot 1 foot Smooth 1 foot 47 47 44 48 49 48 48 What is the most popular Brook in America? 01d Sunny Brook, of course! The good-natured whiskey with the sunny disposition! Its source is old Kentucky and where’er it flows it brings good cheer. Enjoy Old Sunny Brook! You'll welcome its genial friendliness—enjoy its rich, smooth bourbon taste! {3 BILL RUDOLPH HERE | 3ill Rudolph, wellknown Juneau ! man, arrivad on the North Sea from Seattle following discharge from his | hitch in the Coast Guard - McGEE IN TOWN Jack McGee, of Pelican City, is ,@ guest at the Hotel Juneau SUNNY BROOK mefi'm ¢ BRAND NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK 5, N.V. + BOURBON WHISKEY—A BLEND §6.8 PROOF 51% KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 49% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS I1ZED LABOR. UNITED ASSOCIATION OF JOURNEYMEN, PLUMBERS AND STEAMFITTERS LOCAL UNION NO. 262 i = SO .|IIIIII||II|IIIIIIIIIlIIII||IIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllIIllllHIIIllll|IIIllllIlI.llllIIIlIIIIIllIlIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIlllIl D O O N O N N N N O NN O N N NN GO O NN ONONIN NN O NN NN NN NS P NN N o o NN NN o SN A S N N N S P O R o R 2222 2 2 2 e a2 OO o oo ) i FAIRBANKS RRRRRRRRRRRERRRRRR! A AP ANAANARRRRAE RRRNRRRRRRRRRRRRRRS ASSENHPHHEEEELEELEETLG LU e N o NoNa DC-3 Equipment . . Refreshments Aloft . . Stewardess Service ALASKA AIRLINES PHONE 667 Baranof Hotel SO TRRTRATARN H e e R RTr T

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