The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 1, 1947, Page 3

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1947 THE Bij Swappifig Deal in Pacific Coast League; By BILL Associated Press Sportswriter Guy Fletcher, for three seasons one of the coast league's better righthanders, twirled a magnificer four-hit, 10-inning 2-1 victory for Sacramento over San Diego last night. Then traded Mann and Bud Beasley and Out- fielder Bill Ramsev to Seattle for Pitchers Sig Jakucki, Rex Cecil, Charley Ribple and Outfielder John- ny Rucker. Eight-Player Deal The eight-player deal, the biggest swap in recent vears on the coast, was a case of fourth-place Seattle and the fifth-place Solons juggling talent in a hope to hop up their pennant chances. Offhand, if any- one got the edge in the trade, ob- servers were inclined to feel Fletch- er's 13-11 record tipped the scales for Seattle BECKER he was told he had been along with Pitchers Ga UNEAU'S LITTLE WORLD SERIES 10 START AUGUST 3 |Proceeds Will Go fo Base- | ' ball Hospitalization Fund for Players J ( i 1 | | | | | is | Juneaw's Little World Series scheduled to open a week from . !Lunda\‘. on August 10 at hrvm:m‘.\“ !ball park—weather permitting, that | Seattle Loses in 12th : | | The Gastineau Channel League| |winning Elks, under Manager Art| Floyd Speer's five-hitter. The loss | MacKinnon, will Le played off |dropped Hollywood into seventh ‘:\ 1{)\\];:":1 possible after the ser-| :‘:"’{ @ half-game back of Port- | Ty ot are on sale already, and | y every baskall fan is urged to get| | STANDING “; 1M CLUBS his now. They are seiling at $1.50 Biaitle Obast Legiue for the series, which includes the! L pot first four games, or 50 cents per| Los Angeles & game. If more than four games! ,).|k1.mrl‘ - o jare played, season tickats holders boa Mkasiaio 88 |will pay the regular rate | Seattle 85 5| All proceeds from the series will | sl AR 4 lge into the Baseball Hospitaliza- | Beict s P tion Fund, which was set up s2v- Hollywood 66 463 eral years ago to pay any expenses Bir, Hisro 61 dps |incurred by injured ballplayers > | - Natlora: seague | i W L Pet| .ll | Brooklyn 63 36 636 New York 9 42 538 St. Louls 51 44 537 Boston 50 526 R NDUP Cincinnati 47 475 Chicago 44 458 ' | Pittsburgh 40 417 2 Philadelphia 40 412 By HUGH FULLERTON. JR. Seattle Loses Seattle lost a 5-4, 12-inning duel with Portland last night, with Jaku- cki making his exit as a Rainier on the losing end. He pitched the last 4 2/3 innings, relieving Herman Besse, and was tagged for the clinching run on successive singles by Herm Reich, Harvey Storey and George Vico. Andy Sierra was the winner. ‘The Rainiers’ Hillis Layne banged out four hits in six trins to pull up even with Sacramento's Ed Fitzger- ald for the coast batting lead at 367, Solons Beat Padres Johnny Rizzo's pinch single for Fletcher won the Solons’ . thriller with San Diego. Ed Vitalich, the loser. also went the route, giving up 10 hits. Red Lynn broke a personal losing string of eight against San Fran- cisco by pitching Los Angeles to a 13-4 win over the Seals. An 18-hit attack. paced by Lou Stringer’s four, kept the Angels league lead at four 4.games over Oakland, which walloped Hollywood, 13-1. ‘The Oaks scored seven runs in the first inning, then coasted in on DARNELL'S It's here. ... 40 1b. test Nylon Stripping Line in 100 yd. coils Salmon Rods NOW — the first really new postwar RODS of rust-proof salt-water-proof— Beryllium Copper-. . . In 3 different sizes .'. . ACE RODS by PENROD Also Calcutta and Split Bamboo Trolling Rods @ Wire Lines ® Nylon Lines ® Nylon Cuity- hunk Leaders @ Vire ® Nylon @ Real Silk Gut Reels ® Penn49’s @ Penn 149's @ Ocean City @ Premax ; “You'll find your favorite sports supply” DARNELL'S SPORT CENTER American League i w L New York 65 32 Beston 52 43 Detroit 49 43 Philadelphia 49 48 Cleveland 43 45 Washington 42 50 Chicago 42 56 St. Louis 34 59 .366 Gastineau Channei League w L Pct Elks ¥ 2 178 | Mcose 3 5 375 Legion 3 6 333 >ee — League Leaders Heére are the leaders in the iwo major baseball leagues through games of vesterday: National League BATTING—Walker, Philadelphia, .354; Gustine, Pittsburgh. .331. RUNS BATTED IN — Mize, New York. 83; Marshall, New York, 30. HOME RUNS — Mize, New York, 31; Marshall, New York, 27. PITCHING — Blackwell, Cincin- nati, 18-3, .857. 1 American League BATTING—Boudreau, Cleveland, .339; DiMaggio, New York, .333. RUNS BATTED IN - - Williams, Boston, 71; DiMaggio, New York, 19. HOME RUNS—Williams, Boston, 23 Heath, St. Louis, 20. | PITCHING—Harder, Clevealnd, 6- 1, 857. —— .- — BIGGEST IN ALASKA!! Complete stock of oil ‘wood, coal {burning ranges, stoves, heaters at Juncau Young Hardware Co. ! —ady 64d-tf °® LET'S GO SALMON i FISHING TODAY! ; © | furnish hoat and ] sport tackle ] | © Special Evening Rates. Phone BILL JONES BLUE 560 ISV —— 4 ‘;'a__ WHEN YOU ASK FOR BOURBON Aok for Rentuckys Pinest WarerriLi~Frazie Kentucky Straight' Bourbon Whiskey . | | | TEAPILL AND FRAZIER DISTILLERY C0. B Pour yourself a glass of this | q great Kentucky whiskey and en- | joy its rare smoothness, its rich bourbon flavor and mellow bou- quet. You will always drink it with pleasure, serve it with pride. BARDSTOWN AND. ANCNORAGE, KENTUCK! NEW YORK, Aug. 1—(@—About a year ago boxing men were bemoan- - ing the fact that the huge Army and Navy boxing programs during the war hadn't produced a single first cl fighter . . . Two of the best 9 | prospects to show arcund here late- ly, Bernie Reynolds and Laverne Roach, steoped right out of the armad forces into professional ranks. Both won nice victories on the Les- nevich-Mauriello card Wednesday and look as if they're going places. | Manager Joe Vella found Rey- nolds punching a bag at Camp Stewart, Ga., and tossed him into camp bouts. Bernie, weighing less ! than 180, had been belting pretty good 200-pounders around, but that doesn’t surprise Vella. | “He always was better against the €d on big guys” says Joe. “When we fcught the Parris Island Marines I had to use him in two bouts. He {lost to a middleweight but knocked out a 200-pounder.” Roach was a member of Jacke | Wade's ‘Charlotte, N. C., golden gloves team before the but it was the experience |Marine at Cher vinced him he'd be a succe middleweight.” RING DOPE There was only one fight of any sub-importance last night and that | was at Sioux City, Iowa, where Abel Cestac, of Buenos Aires, got a TKO over Jimmy Howard, of Washing- ton, in the second round. Cestac weighed 222 pounds, and ;Hov\ard weighed 187’2 pounds. R BASEBALL GAME | " MAY BE TONIGHT Perhaps the final game of the second half Gastineau Channel !Baseball Leaguz is scheduled for ithis evening at 6:30 o'clock in the ! Fireman’s ball park. | The Elks will play the Moose; and if the Elks win, that will end the schedule. If the Moose {win, another game is scheduled for Sunday between the Moose and the Legion. i Of course, tonight's game is pend-' {ing weather conditions, rain or wet grounds. — e - i When you puy 1lur QUALITY %0y | | aot get the FINEST—Buy FLOR- | —aav. | he got y Point that con- as a sful pro | SHEIM SHOES at Graves. JUNE DAILY Al ASKA EMPIRL. s Verban is out at he n Philadelphia m2 by teamm recs. (P Phato a hit in the fourth inning umpire is Dusty ¥ 10 keld and the base for catehor is Willl disappeared and they must fight, it cut on eve ound inst that aggering me deficit | Even Howie Pollett, the old Codger-tamer, failed Ma - Good Try Falls Shert at Home Plate as he e from The Pittsburgh to « » Harry Walker. KETCHIKAN MAN NOW PARTNER IN tries to win were tled at 1-1 going to the ninth when Pe: We i IN BlG SERIES Reese tripled down the right field| Fuck Harris, wellknown Keteh- fcul line to score ce kan sportsman, today became a ith the winning run partner with Rod Darnell in Dar- —_— « nts Heip Out nell’s Sport Center of Juneau, 2 g The New York Giants also help- Darnell announces H he Dodgers build up their Hairis has keen in the sporting Thals fhe Way inings !“n: |m\(xlx}.r to Cincinnati, 8-7.gcods business in Ketchikan -and |.00m Up as AUgUS' . defeat left the Gi 10 full fold his business there to Herb Sl hach "t fhA Heohk dy Hetherington in order to join Dar- Homesfre'(h Taken Hatton’s threa-run by in vell, His wife and two children cighth turned the tid ter carl- will join Harris here soon R fer clouts by Jobnny Mize and Harris has had a wide experience By JACK HAND ker Cooper. It was No. 31 for in fishing and hunting over a good (Astociated Press Sports Writer) : part of Alaska and North America. A subway World Series, found- oh ‘Leonard, whose ,Aper Before coming to the Territory two dazzling western trips le release appears to have he was in the guiding service by the Brooklyn Dodgers and the an embarrassing mi‘taks, in Montana, and is experienced in New York Yankees, appeared likely 4 his 12th victory for Ben photography, firearms and tackle as the clubs headed into AURUSL, hopman's Phillies, a 3-0 five- Problems. He is also a pilot and notmally the head of the stretch ;i g uiot gver the Chicago Cubs, | Iegistered guide in ‘the baseball pennant 'races. Rain washed out the Boston at Harris comes from the hills of Thirteen straight victories by the'p; i jpurgh game and “threatening | Teanessee from a place within 30 under-rated Brooks bave gi ther" postponed the Detroit at Files of where Darnell was born. Manager Burt Shotfon’s men & Noo vk game, aithough the sun During the last war he served With commanding 10-game lead over'(pone most of the afternoon at the Coast Guard in the Alaska sec- the New York Giants and the de- () B AaRim tor fending t. Louis C iy Darnell and Hairis plan to have wTA,‘C ?:lll%("f": have fvp“n“'ff" :' 55 SRR “:“""f‘ .. a complete repair and manufac- 12-game margin on the defending = Cleveland swept its three-gdme | (yring shop for all outdoor equip- Boston Red Sox. sct from the Boston Red SoX, 5-4,ment. The shop is now being in- Dodgers' Feat on a pair of homers by Manager | gajleq for the manufacture and Brooklyn's feat has been more Lou Boudrehu and Joe Gordon. |repair of firearms, custom tackle; exceptional than the Yanks' be- Rob Savage stifled a last-inning oy, gils and solvents, leather goods cause the Dodgers were not sup- Ky OR{oRN0. #0; save! Phila=1gioh"on ‘cin bases, . halsterk: 0ATH: posed to be in the same class with 's Bill Dietrich his fourth| yjgge belts, dog harness and other the Cardinals. In sweeping tr over Ed Lopat, 3-2. Sav-'jtems straight from St. Louis at y retired Cass Michaels man's Park, the third by a margin yesterday, the Dodgers left Appling’s single helped pull the the champs hanging on the rops £ within one run of a tie. St. Louis has 59 games to pl Haefner continued his as compared to 55 for the Dodze nt pitchin scattering five but their overwhelming advantage Louis hits for a 4-1 Washing- in Fome games now has largely ton tiiumph. TERRY LEE OF THE MAN BOR'S TREACHERY, EH% GOOD! I KNEW THE FAT ONE WAS NOT TO BE TRUSTED, BUT THERE MUST BE PROOF TO SHOW TO THE FOOLS WHO FAWN AT HIS FEET. TAKE ME TO WHERE THIS PROOF MAY AYE; OUR MAN HAS HIM PLACED IN THE SHADOWS AT THE CORNER. OF THE FAT ONE'S BILLET. BY MY FATHER'S BEARD! WE'LL CONSIDER WITH THOSE GUNNY SACKS ) THE COMICAL ASPECTS M5IEU, YOU LOOK LIKE A LEAN ) LATER, SERGEANT. WOLF WHO HAS SWALLOWED / RIGHT NOW, CAN YOU The business will continue under the same name for the present. - IN ALASKA!! Complete Kk of ofl, wood, coal burning ranges st heat at Juneau Young Hs Co. 644-tf BIGG are —adv WE'LL LOSE HIM ! FOR ALL HI5 GREAT SIZE HE HAS THE, SPEED OF AN ANTELOPE. A veteran asked me a lew what would you s t thing, ot of all the and Eenefits coming to us veterans that we et I didn’'t have to think long ) give him an answer Good medical care,” T said, and I wa forgetting the education part GI Bill and prefer ence Civil Service and all the other which are meant (¢ smooth rinkles out of re justment medical care, beeaunc t me benefit which ¢ s for a lifetime,” I repeated y that's the st single we veteran hle Which biings n for just how good is the > in VA's 123 hospitals? little about this last month after visiting a VA hos- Coatesville, Pa So taday somebody jspital care I have received a letter lady signing herself Mrs, B. She says her father World War I veteran who was and out of VA hospitals from 19 what ut VA hi says from w. L. was A in 2 VETERANS' GUIDE By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL AGE THREE did not come witlout fort being made to } Well, we figurad would end no guards saw tha fee, and they to e in detail all the nefits that my mother as a vet- eran's widow was to, I thought 1 was pc on veterans' tenetits but I soon found taat I didn't knaw half of them. Before going to Hines my fath- ¢ (I n cne of the best ospital city. E the 1 courteous @ llent treatment 1 W Hi made sham- €d of the way rome pa ts (and eir relatives in the hospital here i and I know that the vet- crowd- fath- any 1 hos= o crans’ hospitals are terribly cd, but in of this my er received care far surpa that he received at civil I > FURERAL SERVICES FOR MRS, ELLA McLOUGHLIN held yes- chapel of Funeral rvices terda atternoon in were the 'X|fl‘.'"""_l‘\'l‘ (‘t:‘“" % ;)‘"l 1,_‘,‘ ]\‘: the Charles W. Carter Mortuary tell the story in her own words. [oF Mrs. Ella R. McLoughlin. Dean Bove come of her remarks: C- E- Rice conducted the services, feel it IS my duty as a vet. dnd Ernest Ehler sang two selec~ eran (Mrs. B. Identifies herself tons. “Beautiful Tsle of Some= as the former WAC) to tell you where,” and “In the Garden.” of a very recent experience we Fallbearers were H. 1. L . Fred Newman, James McNaughton, Don our privaie . W. £kuse, Willlam Biggs and Will- 1 p. m. on the afternoon of . . ifam T. Mahoney. Interment was 10, 1947, if he would call Hines 0 the Elks plot of Evergreen Hospital (n VA hospital near CCMetery, beside her husband, the Chicago) declaring my father a medical emergency, and asking for his admission to Hines “At 4 p. m. the ambul thorized by the VA) to take dad It was ambulance in town “We arrived at Hines in hours and they received my at the emergency office was no rush about the tion The doctor in charge all the care that could be and assizned him to a tumor and started him on an ulcer We returned home that night “That was on Tuesday. w nesday they ran all kinds of tes and tock stomach x. . Thur iay rectived a lett doctor in charge of Hir us thet my father's cg considere? and would ke any changes. “Dad was given a transiusion on Thursday and had been doinz ve nicely until Saturday at 10:30 p. m. at that time thers was a decid- ed change charted which ind internal hemorrhage. We rec ed a telegram just 15 minutes lat- er at our home here (adviting us to come quickly). “When we arrived at Hines one from the guard at the g medical officer of the day ned to expect us and did every- thing to make things as pleasant as possitle. Dad had two re tered nurses “specialing” him he was in the oxygen ten. Th watched him faithfully. At 5:15 he had another hemorrhage That was the end, but believe me, ne2 (au- 1 arrived the newest three father ‘There examina- tock a‘kad ward dict g advisin ttion was w2 alarmiag advised of late Jobn McLoughlin, who passed away November 20, 1939 it - 3. IF YOUr MONEY IS NOT EARNING FOUR PERCENT it will ay you to investigate our offerings in well chosen investments, ALAS- KA FINANCE CORPORATION, Cooper Building, 4th and Main. —adv.—574-tf - -ee When you payv yor QUALITY why not get the FINEST—Buy FLOR- SHFIM SHOES at Graves. NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETI- TION FOR CHANGE OF NAME NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Richard John Parenti of Ju- neau. Alaska has filed petition in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska Division Number 1 at Ju- neau for change of his name from Richard John Parenti to. Richard John Parent and that on July 31, 1947 the Court ordered a hearing unon the petition to be held before the Court on August 25th 1947 at 10:00 a.m. and at that time and place all persens mav appear and shew cause if any they have why the prayer of the petition should not be granted and the name of petitioner changed as requested. Given under mv hand and the seal of the District Court at Ju- neau, Alaska this 1st day of August, 1047 JOHN H. WALMER, Clerk of the District Court Division Number One By J. W. LEIVERS, Deputy. t publication, August 1, 1947. st publication, August 15, 1947. YOUR BOYS A GOOD SALESMAN, SARGE . THERE HE GOES WITH OUR STAR WITNESS. NOW, IF YOU'LL ‘) HELP ME STUFF THESE COAT, WSE/; LL PROCEED GUNNY SACKS UNDER MY TO CONFIRM THE OLD NDIT'S WORST SUSPICIONS. GOOD ENOUGH! NOW, HAND ME THAT BAG OF BROKEN GLA%S AND WISH ME LUCK . DID I NOT PROMISE THAT I WOULD: SHOW YOU A THING OF GREAT INTEREST % HERE, BENEATH ) THIS WINDOW.

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