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| | series. Hack moved to third. Lowery < ‘ { p Av- -plAY was out, Benton to York =y - » ! One run, two hits, one error; e o | | | | | | | B | (Associated Press Grid Expert) (Bast) ups for the third game of the World f I}XEW_ YORK, Oct. 5—Off for a New York University at Temple. Series today w‘~ ies batting a\ferri.gos a single just over Mayo’s head into| No runs, no hits, no errors; none | third ride on the football merry-, (South) and pitchers’ season won-lost rec- s g right field, scoring Pafko. Passeau|left on base, go-round, but hanging on for GeBr| oo oi oo niami crds in parentkases): BRIGGS STADIUM, Oct. 5 — struck out | OLD THOMPS life to protect a two-week average (Rocky Mountain) CHICAGO, National League |Dizzy Trout, strong right-hander| Two runs, three hits, no errors; NINTH INNING of 843: i ey Stan Hack, third base (.500) of the Detroit Tigers, and 38-year- two left on bas CUBS—Hughes went out, Bent o g Oklahoma A & M at Denver. % 4 g » ¥ went aih PP Notre' Dame vs. Georgia Tech— 1o state at Brigham Young. Don Johnson, second base (.250) |old Lefty Ray Prim, known to his| TIGERS — Cavarretta made a'to Y Passeau was given a tre- | 3 The Yellowjackets don’t intend to (Far West) g Harry Lowrey, left field (250) |Chicago Cub mates as “Pappy,” great stop of Mayo's smash off mendous hand when he came in ; disappoint their followers for a College of Pacific at UCLA. Phil Cavarretta, first base (.500) will be the starting pitchers in to-'first base and while lying flat the game. Hack was safe at first second straight time. Notre Dame's i 3 Andy Pafko, center field (375 |morrow's fourth game of the world tossed the ball to Passeau for the cn a high' bounding ball to the 2 backfield personnel still in doubt— SATURDAY GAMES Eill Nicholson, right field (429) series. putout. Cramer lined out to Lowery pitcher's box. Hack was safe at DA Bn Thempson Livingston, c., (.500) The rival managers announced. deep in left field. Three Cub second on an attempted steal when FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1945 FORECAS By HAROLD CLASSEN This Week’s: Grid Games Major football contests scheduled throughout the Nation this weekend are: A \ i GAMES TONIGHT Georgia Tech. Wake . Forest vs. Army—One of (East) Wake Forest at Army. the best teams in the South tangles b AT ; Claude Passeau, pitcher (17-9). start of today’s game, staying with pop by Greenberg near the left Peg to socond. Johnson struck out with what is probably the best §‘°,Z‘,Z‘,’,‘¢u°‘;,‘fi:{ibfi,’;’,‘:,"' DETROIT, American League | the choices each had revealed field line, with %he result none| No Funs, one hit, orle error; one 2 team in the country—Army. Colgate at Penn State. F‘k(‘-('l(‘\’ Webb, shortstop (.375) ‘several days ago. | caught it. Hank then flied out to left on . IMPORTED Alabama vs. Louisiana State—It gyracuse at Columbia. IFE"I_‘,“\' M‘""‘,“’“j“dfa“l "25‘62’ | The 30-year-old Trout, Who Lowery in left. TIGERS—Richards fouled out to' is not impossible that the South-| y s sub Base at Cornell. , [Roger Cramer, center field (429) |worked five times in nine days| No runs, no hits, no errors; none Cavarretta. Hostetler batted for REB H B Hank Greenberg, left field (400) 'down the stretch of the American left on base. Benton. Hostetler was out, Hughes east Conference flag and a Bowl| bid will ride on the outcome of this Dartmouth at Pennsylvania. Holy Crcss at Yale, night fray—Alabamg. btte af Prinoeion: Rudy York, first base (.143) paign with 18 victories and 15 de- « FIFTH INNING - Indiana vs. Illinois—Despite the| Ursinus at Merchant Marine. | Jdim Outlaw base '(.350) feats. He is a holdover Bengal No runs, no hits, no etrors; none ¥ wholesale injuries and illnesses, Trexsl at West Virginia. Bob Swift from the 1940 world series, when| CUBS—Cramer came :ar in 10 jory on base, Y 4 among the Illini ball carriers and (Midwest) f o nire, pitcher (9-9) 'he lasted just two innings against take Hack's short, fly in left center, ! e v D e e R TE S o |, Ompires: Art 1us~mlena .;;.;» at the Cincinnati Reds and was Johnson also lifted to the Tiger ® Tllinois is the choice. Towa at Ohio State. i e, R Ry g Sl Nt vt o st S A SR T, B 0 BILIE VR irs basc; 'S a 0 Vel [ Navy vs. Duke—Mr. Jenkins has Iowa State at Kans returned to the Middie backfield and that’s reason enough, although Duke counted 163 points in its first two games—Navy. Iowa vs. Ohio State—The coun- Michigan at Northwestern. | Kentucky at Michigan State. | Minnesota at Nebraska. . Texas A & M at Oklahoma. Purdue at Wisconsin, second base; Lou Jordan (NL) try’s No. 2 team of 1944 makes it, Drake at Tulsa (night). pA(ED BY M(SPADEN' other portsider on the Chicago on an easy play. Outlaw lined out p g s g oot F[Sair 5 Bob npman. v has| 0 Hughes t shot st ey tovara dichirge Wi RUM or BRANDY ;aign—Ohio State. a at LSU (night). i DETROIT EINKS ACE been confined mostly to relief| No runs, no hits, no ervors; none Momming when they stepped aboard Holy Cross vs. Yale—One that ppi State at Alabama Poly.| ; | roles. {left on base. tho, steamen Boxh SRR DIt FHAY S0 - a6l go afbher 'way, bub-—Yals on at N. Carolina (night).| COMA. Wash. Oct 5 — “jugn| There was some talk that the| assignment to District CG Head- A 7 Tennessee vs. William & Mary—| Navy at Duke. McBoadon of s Ir’nl‘M\ gme: gd‘lusmg manager in today's game| SIXTH ANNING quarters at Ketchikan.. ” 5 The Vols pulled through, 7 to 6, Florida at Tulane. ""\\r” e Dx ‘(U. ' ”(‘fll 5 might change his mind and his| CUBS — York took Cavarretta’s The four prospective civilians r‘«r(" o Cwenk om0 and theis mavein| Notre Dame at Georgia Tech, |TUréol of Detroit are the leaders pycner and decide to start hisihot grounder and put him out at piriic® B2 Dwuln,. Al oopk, 20 K shouldn't be much greater this time| Mississippi at Vanderbilt. jat the end of the first round of | yirgt game hurler again. In that|first. Outlaw threw out Pafko, o Zub ShipS cis A6, At 3 Shegantoe g gy |the $10000 ‘Tacoma Open Galf| oee™it would be Letty Hal New-|Nicholign went oot to ¥ork, un.| L, (Bamey). Lind, Specialist (X) St. Mary's Pre-Flight vs, South-| Maryland at Richmond. 1‘]‘(‘_]“"“""‘, i ]“"1 ur-under-par | youser for Detroit or Hank Bor- (assisted. : ! ARl 1 G SIRER D T ol P50 f . ern California — The Trojans to, Charleston Marines at S. Carolina, 69 yesterday 1o break x;:z;_“w”“bwy for the Cubi No runs, no hits, no errors; none "o /e oA keep on climbing—Southern Cali- fornia. Michigan vs. diana defeated Michigan, Northwestern—still it is Michigan. Northwestern—In- tied Dartmouth vs. Pennsylvania— H i m The Quaker backfield talent is ter- Utahi’ab Colorad for rain in Chicago tomorrow tolinto a double play, Johnson .to 1 nlgh! BRI unhl 2 a. m. sa'urd" ghl' rific—Penn. Bt il TR partly cloudy. OCavarretta, Johnson took the ball ‘Neir, regular business meeting to- > v 5 Okiahoma A & M vs. Denver — ... (FaV Wes) The remaining games of the|pear the baselihe and tagged WOFTOW evening In the Moose Lodge ) bbb i ol Bob Fenimore & Co. to give a| oohinSion ab On Agruis: i world series will be played here, Borom, then tdssed to first for .00MS b the Seward Bullding on, i k > ! display tonight the Denverites will .- 8% Oregon. . I SRATTLE. G W e starting tomorraw. the. . doulle. Wekb: flied . ot . to ~ ARSI Siztets | Oregon State at Washington S. | SEATTLE, Oct. 5—The Seattle bbb Bansdeon i The meeting will convene prompt- remember—Oklahoma A & M. Washington vs. Califernia—The 2 { ekl v ir | + i o (Service Teams) {will try again tonight to open their H { dance of members is anticipates Huskies are determined to make| gegier Pleld at Second Alr Force, seven-game Pacific Coast League ogg'“g oS! 107 1 1e£% on, base. Lo et S ) ” A ot good on their southern invasion—| go1¢ Benning at Great Lakes. Governor’s Cup playoff finals. | Washington. - D VMI at Virginia. ! (Southwest) { TCU at Arkansas | Scuthwestern at Rice (night). Missouri at SMU. ’ Texas Tech at Texas. | (Rocky Mountain) | | | St. Mary’s Preflight at USC. i ‘SUNDAY GAMES LINEUPS —Prpbable line- DETROIT, Oct Roy Hugles, shortstop (.000) Roy Cullenbine, right field (.000) third base. TACOMA OPEN FIELD - SUITLESS SEALS DELAY OPENING Rainiers and San Francisco Seals A doubleheader scheduled for last man got back in the good graces THE DAILY ALASkA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA | (Continued from Page One) two left on base. TIGERS-Mayo went out, Hughes [to Cavarretta. Cramer flied out to | Nicholsen in deep right. Greenberg none | lofted to Lowery in left. No runs, no hits, no errors left on base. easy roller. No runs, no hits, miicft on base. 1o errors none [ [ FOURTH INNING { - CUBS—Lowery caught hold of a| EIGHTH INNING curve and drove it against the left{ CUBS—Cavarretta lined a single field wall at the 340-foot mark for|into right. Pafko sacrificed him to a double. Cavarretta sacrificed | second,. Benton to York. Nicholson Lowery to third, going out, Over-| swung at a third strike. Livingston |mire to York. Pafko walked on|popped out to Webb at short Are Hur r four wide pitches. Nicholson looped| No runs, one hit, no crrors; one a single just out of Shortstop left on base. . Webb's reach, Lowery scoring and| TIGERS—Cullenbine flied out to | Pafko taking second. Livingston K Nichclson in right. York flied out flied out to Cramer, both runners:to Pafko in right-conter. Outlaw holding their bases. Hughes popped popped out to I 1ck. their selections shortly before the players got mixed up on a foul Webb dropped Richards' perfect League season, wound up the cam- rretta. McHale fouled out to three-run barrage. Prim, sole starting southpaw on| No runs, no hits, no errors; r the Cub curving corps, wound up |left on base. | OUT FOR RELEASE the 1945 campaign with 13 wins TIGERS-Culienbine bounded out against eight setbacks, striking out to Cavarretta, unassisted. York Four men of the local Coast Guard 24 batters in 165 innings. The only (Went out, Hughes to Cavarretta, unit, the organization of the Cap- tain of the Port, Juneau, took the left on bas poioens—gwin aw e o WOMEN OF MOOSE MEET TOMORROW | five pitches. Borom went in to run for Swift, and Hubby Walker | pinch-hit for Overmire. Hubby hit WEATHER TOMORROW CHICAGO, Oct. 5—The weather seball’s world series fans here when he altered a forecast The women of the Moos2 will hold at 8 o' , and a e 8 - No runs, no hits, no errors; none i golack. and,a arge atben Riofers Is Revived coss* =5 e GEORGE BROTHERS FRIDAY-SATURDAY SPECIALS Fifth $3.95 Fiffh KAMCHATKA VODKA Black: and W hite . with purchase of 5th bottle of Liguor Store Liquor Depariment open 10 12 p. m. every There is no substitute for newspaner advertising [night. had to be postponed when pitch for Detroit and Richards re- BOMBAY, Oct. 5—The Provincial Placed Swift behind the plate. Liv- Government announced today re-|ingston hammered a double off the vival of the emergency whipping | right field screen. Hughes sacri- act of 1941, which provides for the ficed, Outlaw to Mayo, who covered | | bats. | flogging of persons convicted of | first. Livingston took third on the | The teams will begin their series rioting and other charges As play and easily scored on Pas- | | with a single game this evening. Hindu-Moslem disturbances per- | seau’s long fly to Chamer in center | . {sisted, the death toll stood at 36 field. Hack slammed a double down | - SolEM" H'GH MASS | |and the injured at 174, while close‘(he left field line, his fifth hit of To BE (ElEBRAIED Lutheran 11 oclock ' to 700 persons have been arrested. the series. Johnson was safe at | Sat., Oct. 6. Bert’s Cash Grocery.| . - first when Mayo bobbled his 1 (10,083-t1) | DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! grounder for the first error of the Villanova vs. Marquette at Buffalo, trun containing the San Fran- 1 | Third Air Force at First Air Force. |cisco equipment failed to arrive and | AAF Training Command at Fort!the Seals, themselves, reached here |Pierce Navy. |too late in the afternoon to round Army Transport Command at AAF up substitute uniforms, gloves and DETROIT, Oct. 5—Short, stocky! Frank Overmire will pit his lefl_:!’crsmmel District Command. handed wares against the fast ball| of Big Claude Passeau today as the | Detroit Tigers and Chicago Cubsf" all even at one victory apiece— square off in the third game of the! world series at Briggs Stadium in| WAKEUPTO REFRESHMENT! | Detroit. | * ] or erro , ( During the regular season Over-| BY REV M(MYRE‘ - — F gl 2 Elrafimenfismmeniyrenenfyssonllprenll 1 mire clicked for nine victories for‘ 1 the Tigers but he also lost nine| | games. Stubby is the kind of A home-coming Solemn High Mass pitcher who is either very good or\lwill be celebrated Sunday morning very sour. His mound rival—the at 10:30 o'clock at the Church of veteran Passeau—came up with 17 the Nativity, with the Rev. Wm. T. wins during the regular season and | Mclntyre, S. J. as celebrant. . was tagged with nine defeats., He will be assisted by the Rev.) Claude had a sore arm during the |Louis B. Fink, S. J., deacon, and the first part of the season but gradu-|Rev. Edward McNamara, S. J., sub-| ally pitched himself into shape. He |deacon. Mrs. Robert Thibodeau will is 'a “thrower’—he has been one be the master-of-ceremonies. i of the ranking fast-ball flingers of | The Rev. Wm. McIntyre, who was the National Leagué the last 10|Porn in Skagway in 1910, came to years. |Juneau with his parents and spent| | his boyhood in Juneau and Doug-| OVERSIGHT — ufiosrl\ ‘lns. He studied at Gonzaga Univer-| As baseball zany as Detroit is,|Sity in Spokane, Wash., attaining his| big-hearted fans have surrendered | Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts| | some 900 prized ducats for wday.sldegyees there, and also studied in| | tinale to wounded veterans at Percy | gam"""& He came jhere from, Jones Hospital, Battle Creek, Mich. |FOrt Townsend, Wash,, after a year | An appeal was made for the lekets | Of Postgraduste work in ascetical | - When it was discovered not a single |EIC0I08Y in that city. | His father, Mr. Ed McIntyre, who | h 2 ! ::erfii'te‘m"es patient was scheduled|, . long been a resident of Juneau,! | was unable to attend Rev. McIntyre’s | first Solemn High Mass, which he § icelebrated in Seattle, and the ser-! vices Sunday are being held in hi honor, as well as being the celebr: tion of the home-coming of the Rev. McIntyre. THOMAS HARDWARE (OMPANY JUNEAU ALASKA PHONE 553 Hardito Get Items Electric Irons Alarm Clocks Shears: Stainless Cake Turners Stainless Sauce Pots Red Head Shell Vests all sizes and gauge Scotch Tape Wool Carpeting == ~ Juneau-Made Dining Chairs i HANDY HANK Silent Hank Bowory informed Charley Grimm he would be ready for another crack at the Tigers Saturday if need be, although the| ex-Yankee usually needs more than three days' rest between assign- i < iy o i ALTITUDE RECORDS : oG UNOFFICIALLY SET BY JET AIRACOMET arkling . . . tang-y . . . zestful, the cool refreshment of ACME is something to dream about. .. and wake up to! LIKE A DOG'S TAIL Paul Derringer, veteran Cub, pitcher, is seeing his third world| series with as many different clubs. | But he probably won't steal the &:—:f@ spotlight this time like he did for! BUFFALO, N. Y, Oct. 5—The | | the Cardinals in the 1931 series and Bell jet propelled P-59 Airacomet | i the Reds in 1940. “The series just| has set unofficial American altitude | around,” | records of more than nine miles, ' | Bell Aircraft Corpoartion disclosed | | today with permission of the Air FULL HOUSE—PLUS "l‘echnical Service Command. The Cubs will-have a tougher| The No.1 YP-59, first production | * time than the Tigers in accommo- | model of the Airacomet series, pef- dating the fans in the Windy City|formed the feat almost two years phase of the series. For one thing, | 280, but the information was with- Wrigley Field holds somg 13,000 held until now for security reasons, fewer people than Briggs S(,adjux'x;,; a Bell statement said. General Manager iJmmy Galla- gher reports the demand for tickets was so great in Chicago that one} ' day after the Cubs advertised ticket | applications would be chepl;ed.1 there were 355,000 requests received E » in the mail. 1 seems to follow me | * grinned Big Paul. .the beer with th- high I.Q.(ll Quenches!) e | i STRAND DIVORCE GRANTED 0 D » @ ACME BREWERIES + San Francisco Mrs. Ellen C. Strand has been| granted a divorce from George g Allen Strand and awarded custody/ of a minor child, Distributed Exclusively in Alaska by West Coast Distributors, Seattle