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TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1947 r————— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA DAN(E every evening except Monday at the SALMON CREEK COUNTRY CLUB 51.75 Special Dinner Tuesday and Wednesday ROASTLEG ¢f PORK Salad—YVegetable—DPotatoes—Biscuits and Honey Chinese Specialties CHOP SUEY — CHOW MEIN CRAB FOO YUNG GGFOO YUNG FRIED RICE Salmon Creek Country Club 3 Miles North of Juneau on Glacier Highway JCIN US IN JUNEAU JULY 4TH TWIN GAME - NEXTSUNDAY! 0ldtim ers fiUnder Fred Henning, Will Meet Youngsters There will be a doubleheader of baseball next Sunaay, a part of the Fourth of July festivities. The first game will be between the oldtimers and the Teen-agers at 2 o'clock Fred Hennine ill manage the old- timers, who cannot have a league player in their line-up except for a catcher and pitcher. that would like to play and disclose the ages ure asked to contact Fred Henning. The game will be only five innings The regulr1 game will be at 3 o'clock befween the and Elks. This is a regular uled Gastineau “hannel game, OAKLAND'S CASEY played Legion | sched- League HAS HIS BIG SAY . By BILL BECKER ted Press Soorts Writer) league-leading Los Angeles San Francisco each other around refreshing Casey While and close-second prepare to w¥ this week k the Stengel, manager of the third-place | Oaklanders, forthrightly going to win (hu his coast he Seals? They don't like that ' Angels? | lef anded stuff. They can't play all their games in that match hox,” was Casey’s curt dismissal of his foremost rivals. “But give me Oakland. I afraid of the jinx,” was the color- ful skipper’s final crack of the im- promptu interview. Other series this week, Oakland at Hollywood, Die, The find San T - Sporis Cruiser FOR CHARTER ® FISHING PARTIES (Fishing gear supplied) ® Scenic & Photo Cruises at Hourly Rates ® Water Taxi to Taku Lodge Call BILL JONES BLUE 560 or Hmbm lee Any old men! ain't | and Sacramento and Portland | \.t Seattle, there'll be eight games | all around because of extra double- headers on Fourth of July | Incidentally, Casey had a “T.L." for Portland’s Jim Turper. He thinks the Beavers have flashed “the most offective pitching we've seen,” and likes Portland or Hollywood 1or feurth place in his predictions. With Los Angeles third San Francisco second, Oakland, of cour first. STANDING Pacific OF Coast CLUBS League L 40 40 41 45 42 Pet. 565 555 534 500 481 73 449 437 Los Angeles San Francisco Oakland Sacramento Portland | Hollywood | San Diego Seattle Nationai veague \4 Fer 578 576 557 508 500 485 | Boston Brooklyn New York | st. Louis Chicago | Cincinnati | Philadelphia | Pittsburgh | a American | New York 612 | ostomn 531 Detroit | Philadelphia { Cleveland Washington Chicago St. Louis 1 2 508 8 500 48 478 5 3 3 2 32 35 3 Channel League w L 1 0 1 1 Gactineaun Pet. 1.000 500 .000 Moose Legion ks - | WHIPPING CREAM i For the Fourth at your local gro- | cers or plant office. Juneau Dairies, Inc. —adv. 620-t2 - Empire Want-ads for result | NOTICE IS GIVEN: That on June 9th, 1947, in the U. S. Ccmmissioner’s Court for Juneau ! Precinct, at Juneau, Alaska, Howard D. Stabler was appointed adminis- trator for the administration of the | ancillary estate of TRA E. TUCKER, | deceased. All persons having claims | against said estate are required to present them, with verified vouchers | as required by law, to said adminis- trator at his office in the Shattuck | Building, Juneau, Alaska, within six months from the date of the first p\lbllcdlmn of this notice. HOWARD D. STABLER, Administrator. First publl(‘atmn June 10, 1947. 7. besides | BERnoY »-..‘,,N,---.,---,,,,»-,o'-"-—-'----,-,,,---,;--,,-,----,,--v--,,-,,_,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,1 s Women's Avsaner Baranof Hotel Building It’s the Nicest Store in Town DRESSES and COATS Greatly Reduced ALL HATS SUITS including 3-piece, tailored and fancy, sizes 1210 20. £35.00 Greatl B ucefl OIN US IN UNEAU ULY FOURTH NO EXCHANGES, NO including felts and straws , 50% OFF "“Rain-Beau” Plastic RAINCOATS $3.95 BATH SUTTS 5195 APPROVALS, NO REFUNDS; all sqles FINAL | Pct. 5631 | 3711 AP SPORTS ROUNDUP 3y HUGH FULLERTON, JR. 5 NSING, Mich,, July 1 A—One of Biggie Munn's first acts after coming to Michigan State as football coach was to get the squad together to clect a captain . It had been 15 rs since the Spar- tans had chosen a captain, but Munn, a very serious gent about some things explains it this way “I'm eat believer in captains. |A team without one is like a ship without a rudder; the boys need one and it’s the greatest honor a player can get. Also a good captain can do a coach a lot of good.” isn’t boasting about his 1947 prospects n't much material coming along, but he's very proud of Michigan State’s custom of jnever cutting a player from a squad | “We still had 125 at the end of spring practice,” he boasts. “I think {that anybody who comes to practice ll‘e;:\ll rly should be kept. In later 403 | vears he'll be able to say he was on i 397! the Michigan State football squad, | Meadows and N. Krook there, even if he {win a lotter asn't good enough to - > ROOKIF SHEA 1§ » BECOMING HURLER - NO. 1 AMER. LEAG. By JOE REICHLER | (Associated Press Sports Writer) Rookie righthander Frank Shea o the New York Yankees, who not long ago was unofficially tabbed as | the the best freshman hurler cof ago on Luke | run the Tigers 6-5 in Ch Appling's eighth inning home off Hal White. Washington emerged the victor in a sce-saw battle with the Philadel- phia Athletics, winning 8-7 with a threc-tun cluster in the last of the ninth. All games were played at night The scheduled night game between Cleveland and the Browns St Louis w; postponed by rain. New York, Boston, St. Louis and Pitts- burgh in the National League were | not scheduled - 'ALASKA COASTAL CARRIES SEVENTY ONE, 11 FLIGHTS Eleven flights were flown by Al- 1ska Coastal yesterday carrying 71 tc their destinations. Three of the flights were to Tulse- quah On the ncne were L. Berube The at [assengers first trip to taken over and G and D. Schuster second flight flew Tulsequah Daal came Ben re- turning with E. Miller and R. Val- laimount. W. Giguen and Mr. and Mrs. Hans Froeze flew to the camp, the plane returning empty | From Juneau to Hoonah were {Paul Herris. Frank See, Henry Murphy, R. Hanson and A. Craig. ummm to Juneau were M Iary Dougles, A. Blake, Joe Whit 1.m<l Kelly St. Clair On the second trip to were A nstoss, Wayne Vihiner, Mrs. Vihiner, B. Kangas and Sid Martin, M. Ringstad flew to Peters- g on the same flight. On ti trip to Juneau was Norval Mathi- son from Ketchikan Hcward ~ Stabler agway and N. Hoonah was tlown to S| A. McEachran was major leagues, today challenged Bob | flown to Haines on the northward Feller houser of Detroit as well as his own ,teammate Spud Chandler for designation as the Number pitcher of the American League. Shea last night gained his victory against only two when he defeated the American League champion Red Sox in Bos- | ton 3-1. Jee Dobson, biggest winner on the Red Sox, was Shea's ‘opposing moundsman yesterday but a two- run triple by Joe DiMaggio in the first inning got Jughandle Jce off on the wrong foot The victory en- abled the league leading Yankees to open up a five and a half game bulge over the second place Sox. The Brooklyn Dodgers, led by their new home run slugger Pee Wee Rezese, their new outfielder | Arky Vaugh and their new clean- up’ clouter Carl Furillo, downed the | Phillies in Philadelphia 7-4 to move | within two percentage voints of the National League leading Boston Braves. Ewell (The Whip) Blackwell, Cin- cinnati's no-hit pitcher, from a poor start to register his 11th straight and 13th victory of the season as his mates came from behind to defeat the Chicago Cubs in Cincinnati 6-4. Eddie Lukon hit his sixth home run for the Reds of Johnny Schmitz who went down to his 11th defeat. The Chicago White Sox spotted Detroit a 5-0 lead in the second inning and v,hen came _on to defeat of Cleveland and Hal New- | the One | 10th ' 8 defeats recovered | ilight. Returning from Haines werc Mis. Sq Hogue, Mrs Shellan and M. Goding Henty Goolland was taken to Ex- {cursion Inlet and Ruth Rona and sie Young came in from Fawk Inlet, completing the seventh flight. Roturning from Lake Florence were Sid Voiles, H. Swanson, C. Bassford, J McDaniel and F. Rein- | deau Coming in from Elfin Cove were IMrs. D. A. Calley, L. Calley, Raino {Aleg, Leo Lind, O. A. Calley and Mrs. R. W. Ceho. Two flight: were flown to Sitka | with Muriel Cook, N. Bonchard, B. {Allmeyer, D. Burch, Bud Haus and [R. Avrit. Returning were R. R. | Orme, Charles E. Rice, Ernest Ny- gard, Mrs. Nygard and two child- {ten, Rose Ticknor, Dorothy Bilbo, w Chipperiield H. Sperling, { Charles Burdick, Bobby Noff, Mrs. Noff, Mrs. T. C. Whitehead, T. C. | Whitchead, C. Forward, W. Wana- | maker and W. C. Olson o DA GO TO FAIRBANKS The Missés Harriet and Dorothy Jore, daughters of Mrs. Lucille Si- aenstad cf Auk Bay left Monday oy plane enroute to Fairbanks. - When you pay for QUALITY why 10t get the FINEST—Buy FLOR- SHEIM SHOES at Graves. —adv. SISO S-S SR \ CARPENTERS Overalls at Cas- lers. —adv. 618-t4 The HOTEL JUNEAU ‘““Where Living Is Pleasant®® | | | 1 | L Molorota pLavBOY" % SMALL AS A BROWNIE CAMERA * PLAYS ON AC, DC OR BATTERIES * LIGHT AS A POCKETBOOK ‘Take your favorite radio programs wherever you go. The Motorola “PLAYBOY" packs easily in an over- night bag. Plays virtually any place. Plug i¢ into the nearest socket, AC or DC, or play on its own batter- ies. The “PLAYBOY" has the tone, range and power of sets many times its size. Come in! See and hear the Motorola “PLAYBOY"—today! COMPLETE s 5 3 ; 2 5 with BATTERIES PHONE 394 ek bbb "Y';;I; BE;JSIQ St ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES AVING BONDS F management of this waged (o conserva- The satety ol depositors’ tunds s our ortmary cunsideration In addition. the bank is a mem- ner At tederal Deposit In- surance Cornoration which insures each nf o denosits ors against loss to a maxi- mum of $5,000. e speraiion POSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATI()NAL BANK of "' AU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPO:IT IVSURANCE CORPORATION is now under the New Management of GORDON and DORTHY GRAY who wish to take this opportunity to assure friends and patrons of continued operation in line with the congenial policies establish- ed by former owners — CLARENCE and LENORE WISE who express their appreciation to residents of Juneau and surrounding communities for past associations, and convey their earnest wishes for success to the new owners.