The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 2, 1947, Page 5

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How to Catch o e’ RCH Hosband! A f 3 GAlL </ RUSSELL / FLAmE CARDS' HOPES DWINDLE FOR FLAG HONORS 3y JOE REICHLER (Associated Press Sports Writer) —PL Us CARTCON LATE NEWS Feature at 8—10 P. M. : The flag hopes of the St. Louis| TORMBERIPW? |carainais brishtenca - consideravly TTTIRN 7 today while those of the Boston (JI:\ I%I”';Llél‘_\ S:E?%}(])":(;L Red Sox flickered noticeably as the major league pennant races STORY OF EARLY DAY | SAN FRANCISCO roared into the September mmh drive. The odds were still very muL‘h against the Redbirds despite their doutle win yesterday which cut ers’ lead to six and a half games in the National League. However, tke schedule from here on is great- ly in favor of the St. Louisians. Of their remaining 25 games, jare scheduled on their igrounds. Of their last 38 games at Sportsman’s Park, they've won 30 for an amazing .789 percentage. The Dodgers, who wound up a 17 a split of a double header with! th2 Philadelphia Phillies, must play 18 of their remaining 22 games on the road. The Brooks' record away ‘31 28 for a .525 percentage. ! Cards Whip Pirates Tha Cards whipped the Pitts- jburgh Pirates twice in St. {6-5 and 8- 1in 10 innings. The Pirates broke {a 4-4 tie in the top half of the '10th on singles by Ralph Kiner, iBilly Cox and Elbie Fletcher, but JOBN WAYNE - DVORAR BARBARY COAST Featurng JOSEPH SCHILDRRAUT R S g , morning-afternoon doubleheader in {which two admissions were charg- ed. jbome runs to set a new club mark 182 established by the Yankees, of 1936. | Manager Chased Manager Bucky Harris of the Yankees was chased by Umpire; Nick Jones for “delaying tactics” as the Red Sox spanked the pace- setters 6-3 and 4-1. Harris had keld up the opener while trying| to make up his mind whelher to yank Karl Drews, his pitcher. Jcr'--; after trying to get the game | going without any apparent suc- cess, finally ejected Harris and ordered a new pitcher. Harris fil- ed a protest with American Lzague President Will Harridge. The third place Tigers won two from the Chicago White Sox 6-5 and 7-2. Bob Feller twirled his third straight victory and his 17th of the year by pitching the Cleve- land Indians to a 2-1 win as the ‘Tribe captured two games from the St. Louis Browns. The In- dians won the second game 4-2. WHITEHORSE FAIRBANKS NOME ights in Swift, convenient flig! h:;‘&-engmz Clippers. You'll enjoy delicious food, expert gervice —as a g;m\ o(‘P:: rican, world’s mos 3 ::‘:enccd airline. Ask for details and reservation! t... BARANOF HOTEL Telephone 106 LN AMERICAN e System of /W’m WirerriL-FRazizy KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY Botlled in Bond 100 PROOF Jaum ! WorLo AIRWAYS Clpen TUCKYmu 1810° /.4 ! Now, your Home ' Permanent is " EASIER! EASIER! EASIER! with new, round PLASTIC CURLERS i exclusive with WATIRFLL AND FRAZIER ISTRLLERY Ca. » BARSSTOWN ARD ANCRORAGE, KENTI > HOME .:.‘.-.mmm PERMANENT i ® LET’S GO SALMON THE CREME COLD WAVE a FISHING TODAY! ® | furnish boat and Deluxe Kit, with Regular Kit. plastic curlers fiber curlers 3123 sport tackle 5200 ::::L ™ 50 . sg:::l Evening Al brices plus tax | Phone BILL JONES $ BLUE 560 Butler-Mauro Drug Co. the front-running Brooklyn Dodg- home ! {long home stand yesterday \vnth‘ winning the first game | |catcher Del Wilber's triple with| ¥ two on and two out in the bott nm‘ | half of tke inning won for the| Brooklyn and Philadelphia ex- clnnrved 5-0 shutou!s, the Dodgers {winning the first game of the T).e only run cff Feller came as the ‘re<lhl of Jeff Heath's 24th homer. {ing man, won the 2,050-mile Ben- Washington dealt the Philadel- - |dix race and $10,000 first prize| phia Athletics their fifth and six- (By The Associated Press) Saturday for the second consecu-, KANSAS CIT Sept. 2.—P— \me successive losses by winning The Los Angeles Angels, after tive time when he flashed across The Kansas City Blues were hand- both games 4-0 and 7-4. nine games with the Portland the finishr line at an average spesd ed the American Association base- Subjected to a 1-0 shutout de- Beavers, found their lead in the of 460.423 miles an hour. tall championship last night as mm in the first games when Bob Pacific Coast League baseball pen- Mantz won by the cond place Louisville lost _the ‘Cl"lpman outhurled Ken Raffens-'nant race whittied from 3': games gin in the history of ames of a doubleheader to |berger in a southpaw pitching duel, 'to a shaky 1¢ games over sec- although . his speed w [the Cincinnati Reds turned on ond place San Francisco. faster than the wianing time last| Kansas City now leads by 9' |first time starter John Miller for| In a holiday doubleheader the year and about 180 miles an games with only 8 contests re- 110 runs in the first inning to hard-pressed Angels beat Portland hour faster than the last pre-war maining for each team defeat the Chicago Cubs in the twice, 9 to 5 and 1 to 0, but the winner. > - second hame 13-2. Beavers came out ahead in the| Mantz covered the course from! - ——e series by a margin of five games Van Nuys, Calif, to Cleveland m lea ’tc four' {four hours, 26 minutées and e ‘BASEBAL[ | The Seals kept close behind Los seconds in his souped-up P-! 51 | | Angeles by taking both ends of a Mustang. i A'%u % sncoveron’ | | doubleheader from Seatte, 5 to| Only one minute 1 eighteen lea d ers Svammine BANQUEI !4 and 7 to 4, to take the scries seconds behind him was Joe De- gt | six games to three |Bona, flying a P- entered by 1 SCOTT FlEL“ In the firsi games of the Los Thomas C. Call, of Los Angeles. ZACHARY. BETTY THURSDAY | The annual baseball banquet ziv- en by the Juneau Volunteer ®ire Department to the baseball players |of the Gastineau Channel League { will be the event Thursday night at 7:30 o'clock in the Gold Room of | the Baranof. All players of the three clubs, Elks, | Moose and Legion, will be guests of the department together with the | managers and all baseball officials. | Leonard Holmquist is in charge | annual awards for various feats per- | formed during the 1947 season will | ‘be made to the players at the, Louis | banquet. Davif’(’l;b* | Won Affer . Hard Match . FORREST HILLS, N. Y, Sept. mer and shoeless Ted Schroeder, of 185 Lettering the old record of in a 4-1 trimuph over the chal- homers of the season helped lengers from Australia. It may bte a long, long |before the tennis world sees }other singles battle like the yesterday in which Schroeder lasted Dinny Pails to apply clincter to the five-match series. For 71 games the two players | fought, ‘hls shoes half the time and Pails| |missing several chances at victory, |before the American finally won | |out, 6-3, 8-*, 4-6, 9-11, 10-8. | It was the longest singles match lever playad in a Davis Cup chal- |lenge round. v e——— AP SPORTS " ROUNDUP By HUGI: ¥ULLERTON, Jr. NEW YORK, Sept. Z—W—Okay. gang, get out of those fancy game uniforms and get those photo-| graphers off the field. It's time to start football practice. The attitude at ‘West Point, where Army is preparing for its| | first season in three years minus B. and D, is “We're still champ-< |ions until we're beaten.” . . . Notre Dame backers refer to last year’s team as “national champions.” ...| That should make quite a tussle| Nov. 8. . Doug Kenna, Tom Lombardo, Bob St. Onge, Jack Green and Johnny Sauer of the‘ 1944 and 1945 teams ‘are helping with the Army coaching this fall. Johnny Lujack, Notre Dame quarterback, has been working on | his punting all summer and is averaging ten yards further than before George Strohmeyer | spent the summer working in an automobile factory and George Con- |nor helped construct a dam in| Wisconsin. Frank Leahy spent his | time fearing Iowa. time | an- one out- LEAVE US GO Maurice “Mush” Dubofsky, the Georgetown line coach, blew in from a three-months vacation pounding his chest and announc- ing: “Look at me. Haven't had seven real meals in a month. I've lost 40 pounds; down to 230 now. I tell you, I'm ready.” . End coach George Murtagh looked up| and grumbled: “Ready. for what?” . “Well, T don't exactly know."‘ Mush admitted, “but I'm ready.” Apparently ready for the‘ dinner table. ELKS BASEBALL (LUB | BANQUETED TONIGHT Players of the Elks baseball | club will be banqueted tonight ut“ the Salmon Creek club and a diamond-fest is promised. —————— Buy your Fishing kle NOW the | with Schroeder discarding | | Mullaney, ANGELSLEAD IS SMASHED BY BEAVERS . geles - Portland twin bill, Cliff Chnmbers, the Angels’ big southpaw from Bellingham, Wash., held the Beavers to eight hits and fanned {game winner. The Angels blasted | Vince Di Biasi off the mound in the second inning with four runs on five hits and then Herm Reich smacked his eighteenth homer of the sceason with the bases | The Angels won their second game | with three successive singles in the |fitst gamc for the only tally. of |the game. Seattle Loses Two z | Seattle went into the eighth in- | from Ebbetts’ Field this season is|of the event and announces that the‘nh)g of its first game with San ‘Francmco with a 4 to 2 lead, but' then the Seals ruined their hopes by bunching three runs. Rainier, %Manager Jo Jo White let in the ‘winning run with an error when | 'he dropped Jim Gladd’s long fly ,and Ted Jennings spiinted home. In the nightcap, the Seals bunch- e 11 hits more effectively than | Seattle’s 10 blows to win and Hugh Luby broke a 4 to 4 dead- llock in the last of the fifth with a long single that drove in two runs. Sacramento and doubleheader. Oakland, tied ‘\nth Portland for third place in |the League standings, assaulted the Solons with 17 hits in the night- Oakland split The New York Gian:s swep: voun |2—#—Once more, the Davis Cup|cap to win 7 to 6 after dropping Yankees. ends of a double header at the Polo|belonged to the United States to-|the opened 8 to 7. Grounds from the Boston Braves day, saved by California’s tennis| 2-1 and 12-2. They smashed three buddies, stubble-haired Jack Kra- split a double bill. San Diego and Hollywood also In the first game Max West's 36th and 37th the con- the Padres sacond game, |Padres to win an 1l-inning test 8 to 7. However, fell apart in the and lost 10 to 0. Games Tonight Seattle at Hollywood. Los Angeles at San Diego. San Francisco at Sacramento. Portland at Oaklangd. STANDING OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League wW. L Pet. Los Angeles 86 2 544 |San Fiancisco ... 84 73 535 {Portland 80 T4 519 | Oakland 80 4 519 | Hollywood 6 82 481 | Seattle 6 82 481 {San Diego 4 83 47 | Eacramento 72 85 459 | Yesterday’s Resuis | | Los Angeles 9-1-; Portland 5-0. | San Francisco 5-7; Seattle 4-4. | San Diego 8-0; Hhollywood 7-10. Sacramento 8-6; Oakland 7-7. | | National League | w. L. | Brooklyn 82 50 621 St Louis 4 55 574 | Boston 3 60 549 New York 66 62 516 Cincinnati 62 2 463 | Chicago .. 58 42 446 Pittsburgh .54 16 415 Philadelphia . 54 6 415 Yesterday's Results : Brooklyn 5-0; Philadelphia 0-5. New York 2-12; Boston 1-2. Chicago 1-2; Cincinnati 0-13. st. Pittsburgh 5-2. American League wW. L. Pct. {New York 83 47 638 Boston n 60 542 Detroit 69 61 .531 Cleveland ... 63 61 516 Philadelphia ... 65 54 504 Chicago ... 60 465 | Washington 54 T4 422 St. Louis 46 84 354 Yesterday's Scores Boston 6-4; New York 3-1. Detroit 6-7; Chicago 5-2. Philadelphia 0-4 St. Louis 1-2. TAX COMMISSIONER MULLANEY RETURNS M. P. Mullaney, Territorial Tax Commissioner, returned to his Ju- |neau headquarters on hoard the Aleutian. -Accompanied by Mrs, the Tax Commissioner | has been absent for several weeks on a trip to the interior for the purpose of clearing up delinquent | taxes. He reported that the trip was “a financial success.” .- Waitresses ana rountain Girls wanted at Percy's Cafe. 665 tf ——e——— i ‘When you yuy sor QUALITY why at DARNELL'S for the SALMON DELBY, AUGUST 3ist. not get the FINEST—Buy FLOR- SHEIM SHOES at Graves. —aav. six to becom the league's first 20- | full. | i piml this meming Pet. ( Buy your Fishing Tackle NOW, Maniz Wins K C BLUES BendixRace CHAMPS OF AA LEAGUE STARTS [[l’[/fi TONIGHT Shows at 7:28 and 9:30 CLEVELAND. Mantz, Hollywood's | | i | Sept. 2@ fabulous Paul| fly- DeBona's average speed was 4582 ‘Through games of yesterday, the oy miles an hour and elapsed time leaders in the National League p g g i i LS I JCARROI. NAISH « BeflahM * Percy Kilbride seconds. | Batting— Walker, Philadelphia, Directed by JEAR RENOIR hoduud by DAVID L. LOEW and ROBERT HAKIM, Releated thr UNITED ARTISTS, ALSO "The Fall Guy” ALSO Latest World Wide News Via Air Express The apparent third place winner -353; Galan, Cincinnati, .318 was Bruce Gimbel, also flying a | Runs katted in—Mize, New York, P-51, entered by Jacqueline Coch-,119; Kiner, Pittsburgh, 105. ran, wife of Floyd Odlum, New! Home runs—Mize, New York financier. Gimbel covered 44: Kiner, Pittsburgh, 40. the course in 5 hours, 4 minutes, Pitching— Jansen, New York, 17- 10 seconds, for an average speed 4; .810; Blackwell, Cincinnati, 20- of 404 miles an hour. 16, 769, was Wiiliam .| In the American League: York, Next to fimish Pat ¢ Eddy ‘of La Jolla, Callf,, also fly-! ‘esne= Williams, Boston, 336; ing a P-51, who made the trip in Mpehell, Cleveland, .821. L. SRS five hours, 26 minutes and 25 tURS batted in—Williams, Bos- seconds for an average speed of 'O 89; DiMagglo, New York, and R itles i st Jones, Boston, 83 apiece. Home runs—Williams, Boston, 27; e ; o TS Haines Cutoff Now Open Piiching - Shea, New York, 11-4," 783; 10-4, T14.| To FAIRBANKS or ANCHORAGE Overmire, D( troit, Stars of | VYesterday RING DOPE Trip Leaves Juncau EVERY THURSDAY See J. B. BURFORD for Reservations Pighits st Tnight” esulled as| ’ I llpA\ Jones and Jansen were the follows: stars ‘of games played yesterday p," progriyn Tony Janiro, 152, BU S . iN E s in the two major leagues, batting g Youngstown, O, mnp(intcd' Art and pitching, with the folloWing poysncon” 158, Pittsburgh, in an' - " S why: it J gh, : und go. Batting, Murrell _Jones, Red " p¢ miami Flo—Frankie Abrams, Sox—Drove in all Boston's Tuns'yygy “nevoit outpitched Tony iith a single and 16th home YN paleg, 140; Middletown, Conn, in| in second game, 4-1 win over the J. B. BURFORD, Juneau Agent 1. POWELL, Haines a 10-round bout. i At Spokane, Wash—Joey Dolan, | | 'Pitéhing, Larry Jansen, Giants 1241, Spokane, outpointed Jackie |- ox’";’:’ dh‘:mlh"““ufi:‘;:t of whe €A |wilson, 120, Plttsburgh, In ten roun 3 hitter. over the Braves as the C'nOS [ HA R B 0 B C A F E Giants won the first game of a | % 4 double header 2-1. | Buy your Fishing Tackle NOW | Fried Shrimp, $1.00 Complete Lunch, 85¢ o e DL Fresh Strawberry Sundae, 30¢ |at DARNELL'S for the SALMON (oA | DERBY, AUGUST 3ist. | HOSPiTAL NOTES o i Admitted to St. Ann's Hospital |over the three-day weekend for medical attention were Mrs. Andrew | | Julaton, Mrs. Fred Wechte, Mrs. T. Butholz and B. D. Baker. Master | John Johnson was admitted Zor surgical attention Discharged from the hospital were Edward Durgan, Master Davis Wilkes, Jeffrey Wilson, Paul Kin- diak, Master Max Williams, Mrs. Roger Bailey and baby boy, Mrs. R. North and baby girl, Mrs. Andrew Julaton, Mrs. Eldor Lee and baby girl, Mrs. Fred Wechte and Lou)s Standal. | A baby girl was born to Mr. and‘ Mrs. Harold James of Angoon on Sunday in the Government Hospital. | Mrs. Harold George of Hoonah was | admitted to the Government Hos- | OPEN: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. " ' s dv.. 652-tf. 3rd Annual Deer Hunters' De DARNELL’S at DARNELL'S for the SALMON | Sport Ce”ter DERBY, AUGUST :unAdv" 652'“‘4‘ l 9 4 7 P R l z E A W R n s .- ! PO ; Previously Sponsored by i Case - Lot Grocery Will Award PRIZES for the BEST DEER ANTLERS Brought to Our Store This Season . . . 1st PRIZE = i ) ( 3 Finest and fastest transcontinental train built since the war—the all-new, streamlined, diesel-powered Empire Builder leaves Seattle every afternoon for Spokane, Minneapolis, St. Paul A 20-30 WINCHESTER RIFLE WILL BE GIVEN P FOR THE LARGEST DEER HORNS according o Dr. Churche’s rules for measuring trophies. i The widest spread, longest pomts and largest diameter at the base are more im- Ge) ";," iy portant than the number of points. Any horns with an odd point will be docked it e el the length of that point. Fourth Ave. at Union Street A HUNTING COAT WILL BE GIVEN FOR THE ™ MOQ’I‘ UNIFORM HORNS AND BEST TROPHY znd pRIZE . POINTS OR OVER. All horns must be from | Alaska Black-Tailed Deer taken thls season. Only the horns will be entered and they must be connected with bone and in their natural state. srd pRIlE A HAND-MADE HUNTING KNIFE WILL BE Ean AWARDED FOR THE MOST UNUSUAL AND THE JUDGES WILL BE: “FREAKISH” SET OF ANTLERS from Alaska Game bagged this season. JACK O'CONNOR, Fish and Wildlife Service MILO CLOUSE, Alaska Sportsmen’s Assn. BUCK HARRIS, Registered Guide ——The awards will be made shortly after the hunting season and the decision of the judges will be final. One set of antlers cannot win more than one prize. —These prizes are offered in the interest of good sportsmanship and good will. There are no strings attached. —=All antlers will be on display at DARNELL’S Sport Center until the end of the season and will then be returned to their owners . | EleVmmeafipmenlymmnenlyosenfle—senfle YELLOW CAB Phone ; 22 24-hour Dependable Service

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