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MONDAY, SLPTEMBER 30, Cards, Dodaers Tied in FlagRace; PlayolfloBe - Played Be*l 20ulof3 - REICHLER WRITER X t0 BY (ap Jor SPORTS a fitting m turbuler the regular icnpal I e without ince the Brooklyn Dodge Carding doubtful if hectic episodes ‘tne big league just a few of the spened in 1946 Turbulent ¢ raiding of th Pasquel’s Mexica baseball eason Louis wound place ever were is many into are a Ma jor George L ba league Robert Murphy's eff lish a baseball union rowly averted Pitt player strik Resignation of six 1anagers. Sales of the Pittsburgh and Cleve- land Clubs. Bob Feller's detern strikeout record n Ma jor ed bid for a Red Sox' first , and pen- 1 record 18, the Majors. Never Suci Tie The Cards-Dodgers adlock was something new in Major Leaguc Lascball. Never before had a lar campaign ended in such a tie, although the «Chicago Cub: New York Giants were ordered replay a tie game to determine the championship in 1998. Th Cubs won that regular se playoff and also the World Series. The first Cards-Dodge playort is to be played in St. Loui row. The two teams then will go to Brooklyn for second 1 and pessibly a third Fri- sor ga hursday day World Serics Dates This means the World ries start next Sund. Oct. 6 i of next Wednesday. Meanwhi Red Sox will pass the an all-gtar sguad,in severa tion games. the Dodgers > punch will neces: blow either tc hip, bu Cooper while am the and peant Bro the champio s bowed to Mort Braves 4-0, the were beaten by John and the Chicago Cubs Fell Makes Record Bob Feller won 26 games and whiffed 348 batlers to better Rube Waddell's ofricial strikeout record of 343 (unofficial mark is 349). The Cardinals probably can find ihe most reasons to kick themselves for yesterday's results, for they knew full well that the Dodgers were having a rough afternoon with Boston’s Mort Cooper before the Red Birds “blew” their finale to Cards ny Schir 8-5. 8 NOR'I'HWES'I‘ AIRLINES ' lmunnummmumuummuuumlmun|mmumum||wn||m|uu||m||||u||mm|uu||u|||m|||m||m|m|um Elect HENRY A. BENSON A whict on a double a wild thr mattered carried over Brookly Chicago Beston Philadelphia Cincinnati Pittsburgh INew evsecoo00 cee ° ° ° . . ° ° ° ° for eye by 1946 WEST COAST GRID SEASON RUSS NEWLAN football the effects Coas! somewhat of las level hau kedown cruise turday for th champions m Open Lefere nee ey ng games v overflow to CI Johnny Schmitz 34,124 paying custom- produced Sportmans t crowd of the The Braves had r Br lyn and showing the 1, with George coasting Eac red amazing nlocked n others. 68,000 fans Soat inaugural large about 1-0 gap on eason it deadlock 13- along in cut Washington State pl Trojans ft Trojan to the n Southern invading Ohi On sconds Then came the fatal sixth Dubious the St. Louis pitching and/ The outcom collapsed during a dizzy ers lightly yielded five Chicago s next three infield hi ornia Stan Musial the Angeles Coliseum inning v California, the defending that the champion, load Boston 1 d the general f had been expected to/ chase - /SC Cougars clear out of the STANDING s City li a far piece Nutionat clashes this week wi of California at Los off nagainst the Huskies at Seattle California Bear at Ber and Washington State at in le: follow- dubio char at Satu mee ow by the tle When it scoreboard Coast 4-0 win ed over Broc Louis shington 2on and the each tackles 435 Pullman 409 396 other ¥ ko Football forecast on UCLA Bruins most pectacular the open: Satur- 50 to 7 walloping of s bulky, bruis team choices be favored out- at but not by they turned up 1 The Northern n, manned by players from 1942 win; Rose Bowl team, complete demoralized at the the dismay of visualized a Rugged Rugged football fronts. The in the nce Yerk American L is orr with the Oregon te 8 404 T Bruin: g0 481 hind USC 86 142 gallop Oregon 429 the 318 on clev 597 day soxcar figure: eboard 88 105 was close to TIDE TABLE G OCTOBER 1 tide 5:32 am., 129 1t U. W. tide 11:18 am., 6.2 ft In Washington 17:16 p.m., 149 ft il tackle big which oubtedly . fr its def St. Mary's G from behind in the in '24-30"to ‘'make the fcal chart appear silly. Wash- gton made 18 first downs to and rushed 247 yards against 165 yielded on the ground Cregon s alifornia in California Wisconsin. Oregon, rept essing onz of the best eld: the coast, just College of the Pacific Loses ho! High Low High tide smas . w e o o o m - o o last quart- o o canme SUN RISES g OCTOBER . ° . 7:00 am 6:3¢ pm also figure ely 28-7 cle ° o o - —NOTIC N. He M. D, Eyei7 o6 for Ketchikan is now Both 1 Medical, and Surgical |gtarts, e for a few days. Appointment taye the examinations may be made of the latter’s sorry showing against calling the clinic. Stanford’s untried eleven E S e ford overwhelmed what was thought S. Leota crom Auk Bay to be the best Idaho team in years, Thursds 5 am. to con-45-0, with O'H bus for Fair- s or Anchorage. See J. B. Bur- adv. their initial State should Idaho in view beaten in Washington measure of - o Little World Series Sarls In Louisville lODI:\/ALLE hv, Sept. 30. —T)cd at one game apiece. Louisville of the American Association and Mon- jtreal of the International League, |will resume their battle for the 1946 Little World Series title here tonight. LISTEN 7 i [ | | ->-eo | p.m. KINY—Sept. 30, | Octeher 5 and 7—Hot—Alaska Tax-; Program Speaker, | Pa 3 League. Albert White. ady. THE BARANOF ALASKA’S FINEST HOTEL EAT.IN THE BUBBLE ROOM Snecial Dinner 510 8 P SI. 75 B 18 UNDERWA'fi THE DAILY ALA*KA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA "OOTBALL THRILLS IN/Pro- Football ¥ Scores The following final s weekend football games Notre Dame ; Illinois 6. Noerthwestern 41; Iowa Michigan 21; Indiana 0 Misso! Ohio State Towa due 0 Minnesota Nebraska 6. Michigan State 42; Wayne Carolina 15; Vir 14 Institute Geor Tech 9 Tulane 41; gia 6 Chattanoo: ipy dney Tech whberry Col inia 71; Hampden nderkilt 35; Tenne outh Carolina 21; N 0 Duke lor 16 lina State istian 19 Oklaho! 13; B Color 0 13; Florida 7 State ¢ mons Tex Tulsa Pacific tin's 6 Eastern Washington 13 ) State (Lewiston Normal) Whitman 7; Whitworth 6. Pacific Uni c.0 Hawaiian Portland 13 U. of Washington Tech 6; Texa 3 52; New Mexico Lutheran 26 North 0 20; St Bucknell 0; Cornell 21 Rutgers 7; Columbia 13 Kings Point 0; Yale 33 Rhode Tsland 14; University M e 13 University Colby 0 Collega City quehanna 13 Harvard 7 of New Hampshire 13 New York 7; Sus- University of Con- Navy 7. [ 9; Northwestern Lawrence 14; Union 0. - - SEALS INTO CUP SERIES (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRFSS’ Jansen, whose 30 belped the San Francisco Seals win Pacific Coast League pennant has added home run hitting to™an already enviable bag of baseball tricks e imperturable Jansen belted a ninth inning homer over the er- nova 0; 41 St Larry victories the t field fence at Hollywood y win his own game the Seals i the final the Governor's Cup play- ay to and send round of off The eries with the Ses the first round Hollywood Stars with four straight victories. Be- ginning Wednesday night, they will tangle with the winner of the Los Angeles-Oakland series for the Gov- lernor’s Cup. ! With Los won Angeles leading that lengagement, three games to two, after a double victory yesterday. 3-2 and 2-1, the Angels could sew it up at Oakland tonight. An Oak- land win would put the deciding me off until tomorrow night. The heme field of the winner will be the locale of the opening of the final playcff with the Seals R HERMAN IS NAMED ~ PIRATES' MANAGER | PITTSBURGH, . Sept. ‘l”mehulgh Pirates today announced \lh(‘ appointment of Billy Herman, | Boston Braves second baseman, as {their new manager, succeeding |Ft~mkm Frisch, |ENGSTROMS OFF ON TRIP T0 KETCHIKAN Mr. and Mrs, Elton Engstrom left by plane today for Ketchikan on a ccmbined business and pleasure trip. | Engstrom will contact buyers and fishermen there. Mrs. Engstrom plans to attend the CIO-AFL Labor | rally which will be held tonight in i the school. auditorium. This rally is a get-to-gether of labor leaders and Territorial can didates before the October 8 elec tion. s ) S LUNCHEON NOTICE Juneau Weman's Club Wed. noon at the Baranof. For reservations: Phone Green 297 or Red 483. adv T Marys 30.—The | GRID GAMES ON SATURDAY EW Dame YORK, Sept. 30.—Notre and Texas stood out today serious challengers of the my’s two-year reign in the col- football domain after a week- filled with surprises tighting Irish opened their 1 for national honors by whipping Tllinois team, 26-6, Satur- should hur week Bend ollowed st of Miscouri by slming rado, 76-0. The Longhorns must | > Oklahoma A & M on the Texas | this week | e Aggies saw a 20-game win- streak come an end in tie with Arkansas Saturday still look erful cnough to the Longhorns their fi as he most th ep thi South to real hard ed to beat Okla- with Doc Blanchard or catches Cornell, 21-( of Bucknell, in its thiv West Point which opened over Vil Columbia, 13-7, and -0 winner Marine Academy PADN 21-7 bench nqueror 7-0 | in with a i move ! tepped | invader | Mer- riomph ainst Rutgers Yale, chat 10V w Colgate over the Beloved Land i | SEATTLE, Sept little four-year-old ume Lo Seattle in go back home Alaska Soon he'll be on with | heartbroken parent and John nes i There he'll lie in his beloved, na-| tive Alaskan soil. Martin died late last week at Providence Hospital of | leukemia. When a Petersburg phy- sician diagnosed the child’s illness July, he advised the mother | to bring him to Seattle for treat- ment. Martin was in and out of the hospital a number of times, but finally the disease was more than his little body could overcome Now the Varnes are waiting for waterfror tion to become more settled can get ship transportation tc e Martin home, at lact | 30 Mar July to Ever since in Varnes | he \u.m(-rl Petersburg bis war hi M the e British Columbia Is To Have New Li.Gov. VANCOUVER, B. C, 3ept. 30. Charles A. Banks, world-known min- ing magnate, has accepted the Lieutenant-Governorship of Brit- ish Columbia, and will be sworn in- office in Victoria Tuesday. Banks, who succeeds the Hon. W./ C. Woodward, has large holdings in Australia New Guinea, the United States, South America and Canada Born in New Zealand, he came to British Columbia after World War I to make a survey of mines. - .- MARSHAL TO KETCHIKAN | U. 8. Marshal William T. Mahon- ey was to fly to Ketchikan today, to be in attendance at the special term of the District Court there. | Chris Didrickson, 13-year-old Sitka youth, charged with murder was to be taken to Ketchikan by the Mar- shal, for disposal of his case by the Court there. | to P07 S High Chair Pads—Home Beauti-| fu]. adv. - - American citizenship was grant- cd to the Puerto Ricans in 1917. FROM SEATTLE FLY UNITED MAINLINERS TO CALIFORNIA AND "ALL THE EAST” FLIGHT TIMES FROM JUNEAU TO CHICAGO . . 18% hrs. NEW YORK .. 23 1/3 hrs. SAN FRANCISCO . 14hrs. LOS ANGELES . . 17hrs. (via connecting airline to Seattle) | was {to a baby girl weighing ' Pefersburg Tot ; 1 | Will Lie in ‘ | were Rounding Out Full Weekend NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—The first full weekend of play in the Nation- al Football League will be rounded out tonight with the New York Giants meeting the Boston Yanks on the latter's field and the De- troit Lions tangling with the Car- dinals at Chicago. Three games yesterday left the Chicago Bears and Philadelphia Eagles in command of the circuit’s | two divisions. The Bears rolled over the Bay Packers 30-7, and the Eagles stopped the defending champion Los Angeles Rams 25-14. In the cnly other game of the day, the Pittsburgh Steelers, who stole a march on the rest of the league by beating the Cardinals the previous week, and the Washington Redskins, played a 14-14 tie The looked like a title thtcat as scored twice through the air on the ground a: en cen Lears they and twice Bay > v HOSPITAL NOTES St. Ann’s' hospital admitted John W. Wilsen and Louise Peterson over Sunday. Mrs. Andres Julaton also admitted, and gave birth pounds and 6 ounces at 2 p.m. Sund Discharged were M George M. Moore and her baby boy, Joe Ibach, Mrs. Larry Trambita and Mr¢. George Voight and baby boy. Government hospital admitted Jessie Anneskitt frem Klawock, and Katherine Howard of Juneau on Saturday. Yesterday Teddy Moses, | Paul Charles Luktusigak and Ed- | ward Shavings, all from admitted. Edna Abbott of away in Government hospital at 2:14 o'clock yesterday afternoon. She was 30 years old. The remains are at the Charles W, Carter Mor- tuary . - 'WALTER FIELDS GH FIRST CHILD and MX\ \Va]lm D Fl(‘ld b(‘- the proud parents of a Aby here Saturday afternoon child, which has been named Wil- liam Dudley, was born at St. Ann’s Hospital at 3:30 o'clock and weigh- cd seven pounds, seven ounces, This is the first child for Fields and is the first grandson cn both sides of the family, Even though Dr. J. O. Rude did have to pestpone his moose hunting trip in order to superintend the arrival, the Fields don’t mind that at all. ALASKAEL Juneau passed Mr. came boy The | | the Beer, the light refreshment l)everage of millions of temperate people... Olympia Brewing Company OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON, U. 5. A, | FOR YOUR HOME, BUSINESS or BOAT FIRETOX Automatic System Fire Protection Nunivak, "Sefiles Like a Blanket Over a Fire” IT WILL NOT FREEZE | Juneau Welding and Machine Shop P. 0. Box 1473 Juneau, Alaska Distributo: s for Southeast Alaska Evervtlung in Sporting Goods ECTRIC LIGHT & POWER (0. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA Cheerful Distributors of Friendly Dependable 24 Retailersof Hour Electric Service and General Electric — Hot Point — Bendix — Apex — Thor and Kelvinator Refrigerators, Ranges, Washing Machines Mangles and Muncllum Electrical Appliances General Electric — Hot Point — Hoover and Royal Vacuum Cleaners A First Class General Electric Mazda Lamps and operate Repair Shop Manned by Skilled Mechanics Telephone Service . . . No. 616, Juneau, Office No. 6 Regular Service from Seattle and Tacoma Labor Commissioner Capable . . . Progressive . . . Sincere GENERAL ELECTION ... October 8, 1946 (Paid Advertisement) JIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIII;IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII|IIIIIIII|Illlfl||I|MI|IIHIII!IImIflm|||IIIIIIII UNITED AIR LINES In Seattle, call Elliott 3700 or your travel agent ||||||lJJllIII|I|IIlllll!lIIIiIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII FREIGHT . . PASSENGERS wmmmu ALASKA TRANSPORTATION CO. Gastineau Hotel Phone 879 J. F. (Jim) CHURCH, Agent