The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 10, 1946, Page 3

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1946 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'PNA FLIES TWO SECTIONS FROM WEST 10 JUNEAU Paci ern., Airlines yos- terday v two sections on the Anchorage-Juneau round-trip run. The first section with Captain Rebert Des Marias, First Officer CHICAGOAN IS COUNTING KOS STARS SPEED MEXICAN BALL “IN AAU MEET CIARHiTSU.S. Four Hawaiian Bantams . PAST SLOWED A 0. (R S S T — AN DIAMOND PAY Ha\}e Cinch OYCI 112-b. | § el o '} e : . o e —_— ; Amateur Crown . B Re . o o (‘\n‘“mll.x,\‘"E(Ix‘;‘x?:l‘:nl:, whlfilx:;ul‘{rll,\ Dow“ ANGH-S (laims He Forced Dodgers | _u | L3S o ; ; he interests of Paul S. Maier, Helen Maier, RO} Erown, Mrs. Norman Arlin and fo Up Owen’s Rate fo |1 the nieress child, Oscar , Herbert Smith, Ethel Olsca, Ann Qu Willilam pvingtcn, John Callahan, James 10— s tonight at the Jorge is freeir Howard Simmons. s bondag , David Buna, Baldwin Ok- Bill Swee STON, April 10.—F Hawai- band th keen Los Angeie-sfiub Sinks fo Bottom of Coast Loop's First Divisin MEXiICO CITY April Boston can League President ims he from the Anderson, Ccarl Grahn, A. A. Hedsds, M Sydney Laurence, Frances Per Cecl Hernandez, Dr, E. F. Graves, ! sey are 112-pounders Yoshi Mi- Virginia C‘ A Hov\nm‘ L. Griffen, (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) ls } aF s 1. Dahl, Rose Murphy, James oy’s collection of form-| ¢ ioh gathries; 1vs the | AMoto and . Walter Ofube. who ogksion, Mis. | Cubs and others play- g Dedgers promised catch- xchanged many a blow back ek, Bl ing baschall for Los Angeles, W 1 plenty of pe their islands. That quar- ta raction w lown by rivaled San Francisco in the early wok into organi ept last night's guarter-fir pe Morris with First Offi- pace-making, viewed the Pacific Brocklyn President Branch ctition in the title tou st league procecdings Y y “promised Owen a contract result, Hawaii from the bottom of the first ¥ 1t $20,000 annually | 8sstred of at least one National w,l'flm' SSRNERAT : mnrnn.\ln;) victory in tonight's 1e Hollywt Stars, g 6~ fisticuffing conelusion. over Seattle, Tuesday overtook th However, probably the outstand- cer Richard Chambrelain and Cub-packed Angels, who lost to th ! ing entry in the Nations W my Y e onal AAU box conve v apartment (10p) y relax in their McRoe, Tex Kirkendall, Milton their precocious pennant-chasing The fight the first round. In that Mrs > ment and, &s a Stewardess Louise Leitner. Aboard were the following passengers: San Diego Padres, 5 to 4. Pepper ing champlonships is ; Mart Padres, a o AW el e 4 Fab S iiviag army vetciun aitending Harviid, vesicd cyshing, Dave Crossman, Hjalmal porth, “hicago Negro light- e he faded w fad @ heine Ni:lson, Fred Peterson, Charles in a 3-2 win over the Portland R Beavers for the ninth victory in| el vt i " gia Clark, for a tonsillect suace N8 mes Qi SOmEge ity McKechnie, for surgery; Mrs. REBFZairS gt Beulah Les and Mrs. Al Lundstrim poouiar Business meeting to- both medical paticr J From its origin over 170 years age, VACANT STORE HOME wife, Barbara, and 15-months-old daush the vacant store in Cambridge, Mass., which they California‘s wine industry has George, 27, his ¥ quel declared - r, Janyce, smile from last night “It is curious Alfor e con grown and matured with the United States. For more than 50 years, L‘rnfc Blanca has carried on note that present in the tion that Owen Senor Ricke Monday o said, adding “never be- vld it have occurred to this senor to pay his players what they justly are worth.” week, when Owen first an- Danielson, Harry Dunning, Guunar by climbed to the top of the sec could do last night, to the sorrow ¥ B VAR e son HOSP“Al NUIES ‘To Anchorage: Bernard Dowling, Johnson, Jerry Lambert, Elmer ond division. 'of an Oregon entry—Lawrence 2 . | : & | st Ann’s Hospital admitted the Marion Hopkins, Floyd Harry, Bert Lindstrom, Ted McCulidon, Dick San Francisco’s Seals went about Parker of Lebanc lasted less than one follcwing patients yesterday: Geor- Zimmerly, Mrs, H. Hallman. this great tradition. Ask for Cresta Blanca by name. To Cordova: Ed Castle, Hamvig season choice for the ce B eavy. wart) oped pnas 1 Wick, Paul Tessman, Obert Peter- cleven starts, and ths Oakland club | ncunced that he was going to piy remained close behind cn Charlic 1B Pasguel’s Loop, he said that he er unleashed a ht at Odd Fellow's Hall, 8 p.m. Gassaway four-hit pitching to had agreed to a five-year contract s and rights reminiseent of Joe | Discharged yesterday was Ervin e IMagerup, medical patient ‘The Government ospital dis- 1 4 for an undi ed ary plus a Louis. The Oregenidn went off to subdue Sacramento, 4 to 1 Y A Hidne 500 cash bonus for signing the aland in a hurry, furnishing FROM SENTINEL ISLAND set-back charged the following medi M. Tatum and Roy J. Ribw tisnts: Evelyn Jones, Hoona document. The Dodgers were be-| Foxworth with his 77th victim in a lieved to have paid the backstop !'0W since his own last of Sentinel Island are guests at the | pert Benson, Hazel River Juneau; Baranof. | Bonnie Rongcarp, Tyonek, and An- tween $12,500 and $15,000 a year five years ago. na James, Douglas. he entered the Navy in| A subsequent knockout moved the en-Shattuck Workmen'’s . Admitted were Florence Bennett, Chicagoan into the semi-finals, n Law enacted at the . yecent special session of the Leg- Juneau, and Genevieve Hannon, of e 2 {slature, Sharpe complimented the |Hoonah ES API special jon upon passage of| ” - + nodt Progressive :labor loglss| EMBLEM CLUB 7 S AT igh e ke e Will hold its regular business and took a rap a itroduced by Represents Hi 3 OUSE | | eeting at 8 pm. tomorrow. All ceply hur - g I s t 4 A. Taylor of Fair- CRESTA BLANCA WINE COMPANY, Inc. Los Angeles and Livermore, Califernia SCORES T AY San Francisco 3; Portland 2. Oakland 4; Sactamento 1. san Diego 5; Los Angeles 4. Hollywoed 6; Seaftle 4. Coast Leaguc For over fifty yeors, the finest of American wines. . = rcontnued from Page One) ar of the Mexican d that he will sue 818 | Owen, signed a con- o play here for Vernon Stephens, San Francisco OCakland 665 Hollywcod 500 yes &and Los Angeles 546 |the har i 13 St. Louis Browns San Disgo & 416 |shertstcp who departed Mexico Sacramento 363 | suddenly after playing two games lation Members are urged to attend. said he w (241-t1) P et R S LSt X Portland .300 Seattle E 272 0 15’ bolt. The infielder > < | was a guest at the milliona s pa- | !latial home and the Mexican said | that Stephens “never before in his | life had lived as he lived in Mexico ROUNDUP Swi’s}horis BY WUGH FULLERTON NEW YORK, April 10.—“Wk do you think of 176-pound he DANVILLE, Va., April 10.—Man- weights?” asks Col. Heinie Milvr, ager Mel Ott of the New York ex-president and current executive|G is resting in a Danville secretary of the National Boxing|hcspital, after being struck in the Association and boxing coach and neck by a ball Tuesday. The Giants’ publicity man -at the University skipper was hit by one of Mike of Maryland. Heinie takes off | Budnick’s batting practice pitches from the recent Rocky Graziano- | befcre the game with the Cleve-| Marty ‘Servo mis-match on the land Indians. | theme that “weight equality is the| Following a very basis of fair boxing. The Oit rcmained 176-pounder against someone|team moved on weighing, say, 250, emphasizes the pooncs. g i differences a few pounds can make LOS ANGELES, Calif., April 10.| when two good scrappers come to-|—Dusky Jackie Wilson successfully | gether. . . .Miller suggests a_185- defended his California “welter- | pound class nught be in order—| weight championship by battering | and that's just how the present out a cleancut decision over Fred-| light-heavyweight division was cre- die Dixon. The tilt between the| ated. . . .We'd say maybe 180 or two Lcs Angeles lads went 12 195 would be a better dividing line |rcunds, in which the lanky Wilson | » the lower divisions,|gspeared the squat Dixon nearly at! own answer to what ' will, happens “the heck with| sportsmanship and weight equality| COLUMBUS, 0., April 10.—Base- if the gate is big” . and the pall makes 1946 bow today in liftle guy who risks a beating for oOnig's capital with the New York the biz money is the first to say | vankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers it. tangling in an exhibition contes T 1exuccted to draw more than 10,000 POINTED PARAGRAPH . |fens: Yank manager Joe McCarthy Red Smith (N. Y. Herald Tri-|nominated Charley Stenceu for bune) describing Herman Ke\ser's‘mt‘uhd duty and Joe Hatten was wait for the finish of the fiug\l«‘fli\jmnnn;er Leo Durocher’s pitching Golf Tcurnament: “A tall man sejection. with the look of a guy who has| S knowd great sorrow sat in Lhe" SAN JOSE, Calif, April 10— Augusta National Golf Club, ‘“E',Jflckle Jurich kicked over the dope moving, expressionless, not drink-pucket here last night with a stun- ing or eating or saying much. Just ning ten-round decision over the sitting there like a ball player in fourth-ranking U. S. bantamweight, a hotel lobby.” | Louis Castillo of Mexico City. CAMPAIGN TOAST | wicHITA, Kans, April 10—The Last word on basketball. . .the Chicago Cubs, lagging by four top high school team in 13 states games, will send Hiram Bithorn where they were rated by Dick against the St. Louis Browns today Dunkel for the Scholastic Sports jn the semi-final of their 20-game Institute last winter was Cham-|eyhibition marathon. Denny Gale- paign, Il Champaign, which| poyse will be gunning for the won 38 out of 39 games (and Who | growns 12th victory over the Cubs. said the colleged sghedules nli‘lt",)oe Grace poled a lstha ‘i’nmng long?) ~barely edged out Allen- pomer to beat the Cubs, 3-2 yes- town, Pa. High by a fraction of ‘“’Lerdfly and spoil a four-hit stint polx{mhror ;.)he :!(1) ;r;;‘:,(;i. Ll g;):s;iby Hank lraorowy who hurled the asl ow Dunke! S 5€ | first nine frames. figures. A guy who tries to rate | 10,000 teams is entitled to his own | methods. . . Other teams that| were right up there included Cleve- i land’s Benedictine High, Towa City, | Ia, and Cliffside Park, N. J. i ——e———— physician’s advice, behind while the| to Richmond. hockey played last as follows: Games of |nizht resulted Montreal 6; Boston 3; Montreal | ASEBAll |wen the Stanley Cup, four games 'to one. i‘ American League: Cleveland 7; baseball| Buffalo 5; Cleveland leads 3-1. ‘ U. 8. League: Kansas City 8; Tul- Scores of exhibition games played yesterday sre as fol- lows: 5 |sa 2; Kansas City leads 1-0 in best Detroit (A) 4; Boston (N) 3. lof seven series. Cincinnati (N) 4; Boston (A) 2. ‘ i Brooklyn (N) 2; New York (A) 0. TEELING Washington (A) 4; Philadelphia | N) 2. St. Louis (A) 3; Chicago (N) 2. |gular Elks Lodge session Wednes- New York (N) 3; Cleveland (A) |day April 10th. L. J. HOLMQUIST 3; tie, called end of 12 innings, Secretary. (240-12) | "Eleven O'Clock Club following re- | MONTARZAL, April 10. — The Stanley C embleniatic of the world's professional hockey cham- pionship, again was in the posses. sicn of Montreal’s fast-stepping Canadiens teday following their 6-3 victory over Boston's Bruins last night, anucks, who captured the National Hockey - League pennant during the last three regular sea- scns and the coveted trophy after two of them, won four of the five games played in the best-of-seven series. oo EMPLOYERS GIV BACKGROUND FOR SHIPPING STRIKE (Continued from Page One) ance with a Directive Order of the War Labor Board pertaining to the Pacific Coast. Payment of Yhis re- troactive pay has not been made. “The CIO in Ketchikan is now demanding that their rate be in- creased to $1.32 straight time and $1.28 overtime, retroactive to at L some portion of the period | for which retroactive pay has already been paid under the Directive Order abgve mention- ed pertaining to Alaska. This in- crease to $1.32 straight time and $1.98 overtime to be subject to further increase when and if new rates are established for longshore- men on ‘the Pacific Coast. Nego- tiations are now pending in Ketch- ikan between the CIO and the Waterfront Employers of Ketchi- kan, of which association the Al- aska Operators are members and which association in addition in- cludes local employers of long- shoremen. The Waterfront Employ- ers of Ketchikan have offered to put into effect as of April 1, 1946 the requested increase to $1.32 straight time and $1.98 overtime, subject to appropriate government approval. A like ofier has been made to the CIO at Juneau and Seward. The CIO at Juneau has| demunded that the present rate be immediately increased to $1.72% straight time ad $2.59 overtime. “Nete: - (1)—Retroactive to Oc- tober 1, 1944 at Ketchikan and to January 18, 1944 at Juneau and Seward. (2)—Retroactive to October 1, 1944 by agreement of March 19, 1946, (3)—Retroactive to some portion of pericd from October 1, 1944, (4)—Retroactive demand,” if any, not known. ” (5)—Juneau dock operators pay- ing $1.20 straight, $1.80 overtime. banks. He explained that objection to Taylor's bill was its insufficient coverage, since it included only hazardous occupations. Labor and Education the theme of a speech by Dr. James Ryan, TFerritorial Commissioner of Education. Dr. Ryan stated that labor is the staunchggt friend pub- lic education has ever had. Hq de- cried the fact that hundreds of Al- aska children are unable to at-' tend school and asked that labor work toward, universal education in Alaska. > Catholi Daughiérs Plan Communion, Last ifi'@lflts Meet The Cathclic Daughters of Am- erica, ct their regula ousiness meeting last night, made plans for a National Communion to be held at the 8 o'clock mass, May 5, and .oaduwea by breakfast in the Par- ish Hall. The following arrangements com- mittee was appointed: Mrs, T. J. Jacobsen, Mrs. L. W, Zack, Be: O'Neill, Mrs, M. Godkins, Mrs. J. A, Thibodeau, Mrs. George Simpkins and Mrs, M. Doogan. Mrs. Norman Bucy and Mrs. T. Rudolph were appointed to the phoning commit-_ tee. Mrs. A M. Geyer presided over last night's meeting in the absepce of Mrs. W. G. Hellan, the organi- zation’s Territorial Deputy, Mrs. Hellan is on an official visit to ne Coury of St. Charles Borromeo No. 1305 in Ketchikan where a meeting and initiation were held last nght. The Cathclic Daughters will meet again for a social evening and in- itiation April 23. Mrs. G. Simpkins, Mrs, A. M. Geyer andsMrs. A As- tone are on the social committee and Mrs. E. P, McCarron and Mrs. L. W. Zack en the entertainment committee. . A public card party will be held in the Parish Hall at 8 p.m. May 3. > Camera Club ls fo | Meet This Evening; | To Eled Officers ‘The monthly meeting of the Ju-' neau Camera Club will be held this evening at 8 o'clock in the High School Laboratory. Election of permanent officers is planned after adoption of constitution and by-laws. Trevor Davis will deliver a care- Major exception to prevailing wages now being paid for lungshore; work in Alaska ports is a scale of | $1.20 straight and $1.80 overtime paid by operators of loeal docks in the port of Juneau only. In other Alaska ports, dock employers payL the same scale as ship operators,' $1.26%: base. e RICHARD A. GRIBBLE HERE Richard A. Gribble of Petershurg;’ is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. fully prepdred address on film de-' velopment and expcsure and Wil- liam L. Paul, Jr. will speak on ex- posure of cclor film, with appro- priate displays of color pictures and slides. He will also report on the Photographic Scciety of Amer- | ica. H - e — | B. POWELL HERE } B. Powell has arrived here from Anchorage. He is registered- at the Baranof, ‘ “UNBLOGK” y22 DIGESTIVE TRAGT And Stop Dosing Your Stomach With Soda and Alkalizers fy }And when it gets blocked it fails to | digest proper eal relief from ligested. mMoOoOZ>ot MO for real relief is not ‘/// ‘- LN ..:'l:m.”:munnum« ///// 4 ullsumothing to / b your intestinal tract. Some= ol thing to cloan it out effectiyely—t 4 iat back on her feet. 7 canthenreach it. You get ge: that makes you f « Get Carter' -~ “Unblock” yourintestinal tract for real relief from indigestion. feel really good again. Pills at any drugstore— v+« 110 place like home for friendly refreshment To every home come moments when the family heart and hearth glow brightly. That's when Coca-Cola plays a mighty refreshing part. The words Have a Coke have a friendly ring that meets a quick response. The ice-cold refreshment of Coca-Cola goes right along with the warmth of companionship and home hospitality. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Juneau Cold Storage Co.

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