The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 10, 1948, Page 3

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FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 10 1948 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA PAGE THREE NO-HIITER IS HURLED BY BARNEY. Omaha Lad Pitches Brook- lyn to Victory Over | New York Giants By JOE REICHLER The greatest pennant races in Major League history were forced to play second fiddle today to a 23-year-old, rosy-cheeked Omaha boy who only a few rt months ago was stiuggling to stay in the big time: This tall youngster from Nebras] ka blond-haired Rex Barney, rapped loudly on the dcor to pitching greatness last night when he hurled a no-run, no-hit game againsi the New York Giants. It was the first of the 1948 National League he second in the Majors Barney's superlative 2-0, at the polo within the feat the Giants, grounds, and advance to three and a half games of Jeague-leading Boston Braves There have been 89 other no-hit- ters tossed in the Majors since the turn of the century. Despite their victory, the Dodgers remained in third place as the run- | ner-up Pittsburgh es, behind the five-hit pitching of Elmer Rid- dle, defeate? the Cincinnati Reds, 6-1. The victory boosted the Bucs within three games of the Bra | who were rained out of their gam with the Phils in Philadelphia. Stan Musial troke out of his brief Latting slump, collecting four hits in four times at bat to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs. The Boston Red Sox increased their first place margin in the Amer- jcan League to three and a half games over the Yankees, defeating the New Yorkers for the second straight time, 9-4. The third place Cleveland Indians inched within a game of the Yan- o gers, 3-2, in 13 innings in a night game in Cleveland. Eddie Robinson singled home Ken Keltner with the decid:ng run. St. Louis’ Browns took both ends of a double-header from Chicago, 5-2 and 4-2, in the only other action in the American League. The scheduled night game bhe- tween the Philadelphia Athletics and Senators in Washington was postponed by rain. ——eeo—— Empire wantads get results! WORLD FLIGHT mrs. D waves at Burbank] Cnll ., from the plans in o xet a rouna-the-world flight record. The plane medified British mosquito ber. 25, a ‘micn she ho, (e @II(HER (ORSICA REPORTED TO HAVE JUMPED RAINIERS| !sald Gorsica had come to him re- pitching { enabled the Brooklyn Dodgers to de- = kees by nosing out the Detroit Ti- | SEATTLE, Sept. 10—(®--The pos- i lity that pitcher John Gorsica may Lave “junsied” the Seattle R’umm Coast League baseball club was being “investigated today by R.'nniel General Manager Earl Sheely. Sheely said Gorsica has failed to report for two s raight nights. He cently to tell of a rumor that Seattle had rejected an offer to sell the right-hander te a big-league club. GRID SCHEDULE FOR 1951-52 LINING UP '-'AN FRANC[SCO‘ Sept. “10—P— Framing of a 1951-52 football sched- ule occupied graduate managers of Pacific Coast conference schools in an unannounced meeting here last night. Oregon graduate Manager Leo down rumors of a Stanford pro against an “illegal football pr: ce” this summer at the webfoot campus. Harris said a physical education course taught ty ¢h Jim Aiken at summer school sesions might have been miscon- strued. not u footbaii practice,” he “I am unaware of a “I s ex] ned, protest.” FIGHT DOPE One kunockout and one fight called off was (- fistic Lneup last nizht as follows: At Scranton, Pa-—Pat Comiskey, 212, Paterson, N. J, knocked out Chuck Jennings, 252, Elmira, N. Y. @). At Philadelphia—Chicken Thomp- son, Philadelphia, vs Johnny Ha nes, New York, called off, rain. B, B. SIARS Stars of games played yesterday are as follows: Batting—Stan Musial, Cardinals— socked . two singles, a double and triple, drove in two runs and scored two runs including a steal of home to spark St. Louis to 4-0 triumph over Chicago. | Pitching-——Rex Barney, Dodgers— pitched first no-hit, no-run game of | National League Season in stopping New York 2-0. Barney fanned four, ‘and vm)ked cnly two. 311 Seward St. GLADIOLI in Assorted Colors Arrived Yia Pan American CUT FLOWERS IN SEASON H ALWAYS FRESH Roses —— Carnations —— Chrysanthemums JUNEAU FLORISTS dozen . Phone 311 will Hafey, Oakland's $100,000 Boston ... 8e. 48 638 scrdarmed ace, doesn't have tojNew York 81 51 02 citeh for a living. Cleveland 80 53 @ H Philadelphia % 59 1568 ! The big hurler went up (o the Detroit 62 66 ol ‘“&Lu last night as a pinchhitter St ° Tots 2 T ‘403 in the e‘lghlh lxstv'mght a}l(xid .b.h:;.. Washington 9 8 386 m! one into the right fiel ‘.st.m 5 Chicago 4 G ‘333 with a mate aboard to give the R Oaks an 8- victory over Sacra- % mento. Pacific Coast League It was the timeliest blow—but _Team: W L P;a; only one of many—delivered this San Franci 99 69 season by the = strapping young O2kland 99 10 53‘; Hafey, who reports to Cleveland LoS Angeles 91 6 o4 next spring, but hasn't pitchea Portiand 82 84 -:gz enough recently to raise a sweat. S:‘*“e 84 3: 4 Hafey’s heroics kept the Oaks— S8 Biegn - . . 459 trafling by a half game—on the Hollywood . 13 97 420 heels of the Coast League lead- Sacramento 69 101 406 | e ,r——— ~ Wins Goodyear Prize HERMAN R. (‘FISH”) SALMON, 35, of Van Nuys, Califi; won il Labor Day Goodyear aerial trophy race at Cleveland, Ohio, setting a new record of 169.608 miles per hour over a two-mile. 12-lap cours2. hown being congratulated by his wife, Evelyn, while son, 8, seems more interested in making faces into the mirror- (International Soundphoto) . He is Ran like sheen of the (mphy's surface. STANDINGS OF CLUBS H National League Tum W L Pet % 57 571 Pittsburgh 71 58 560 H ITER w I N S Brooklyn 71 59 ' St. Louis 7 62 534 New York 69 63 23 Chicago 57 6 FOR OAKLAND Philadelphih ST 6 o L Cincinnati 55 6 420 American League 1 By BILL BECKER | Team: W L Pt | ers, San Francisco. The Seals’ Con Dempsey stopped Seattle with four FAIRBANKS SENDS for 11 runs in the final two inn-| FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. ings te sink Portland, 13-5 —(M—The San Diego's Tommy Seats scat-' Commerce tered 11 Hollywood hits for a 6-2 tcday they have wirt. The Padres knocked Gordy Truman an appeal to use his ’Maltzbergcr out with five runs in emergency powers to assure Alaska and Rotary Club said the fourth. Dain Clay paced the sufficient commodities during the attack wvh three hit ! maritime strike. - - Earlier, Delegate aaid “Ninety thousand Alaskans deservc the same protection that 140,000,000 got from the President when he teck emergency action in | LEADERS IN B. B. Leaders in Major League haseball Boudreau, Cleveland 365. | which has been started heve will Runs batted in—DiMaggio, New | o 155t jf the government allows York 129; Stephens, Boston 122. !Lhe flow of supplies to be halt- Home runs—DiMaggio, New York' ;- 33; Stephens, Boston 27. Pitching—Kramer, Boston 16-4| £ L .800; Raschi, New York 18-6 .750. WESTERN INTERNATIONAL National League LEAGUE Batting—Musial, St. Louis | Ashburn, Phuagielphfa .333. Final scores of games played in , Runs batted in—Musial, St. Louis the Western International League 113; Mize, New York 109. lnst night are as follows: Home funs—Kiner, Pittsburgh 38;! Bremerton 9; Vancouver 3. 3715 Mize, New York and Musial, St. Spokane 5; Tacoma 4. Louis 34. | Wenatchee 9; Salem 7. | Pitching—Sewell, Pittsburgh 10-: 3| Yakima 5-5; Victoria 1-6. .769; Chesnes, Pittshurgh 12-4 750.} — o % T | > JUNEAU SHRINE CLUB ¢ During flight the intense muscular | Regular meeting of the Juneau activity produces much heat in a Shrine Club tonight, Legion Dug- bird’s body. [ ] 'otit. 1t A S0TTLED 1% BOND THREE FEATHERS, SLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, (5% GRAIN NEVTRAL SMIRITS « JAMES . PEPPER, STRAIGHT SOURRON WHISKEY, 100 PROOF * TWREE FEATHERS DISTRIDUTORS, INC., WEW YORK, B.Y, e ————————————A— hits, 7-3. Dempsey posted his 14th wir and struck out nine to bring his l | league-leading total to 154. The RUMAN MESSAGE' Seals shelled Dick Barrett off H the hill in the fourth and con- MAR'"ME S‘IR'KE tinued against Steve Peek. { i Third-place Los Angeles rallied 10. Fairbanks Chamber of | sent President ithrough games of yesterday Were: | hs recent nation-wide railroad | L i American League ! strike.” ; o Batting—Williams, Boston 367, pgrtlett declared much work > . HOT |CONTINUE EFFORTS, PERON GETS TOUG l GRID 'T0 RESCUE 10 MEN, HANGING IS THREAT . ., v su v wn us | FIGHT ON ALASKA RUCKY ARE |day to tridge a rain-swollen stream | |to unite two groups of a 10-man SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10—~(M—‘.FMW stranded Football battle lines are shaping up area of Alaska since early this week. for: a rip roaring fight for the! champ'onship of the Pacific Coast'to make shore yesterday with conference season, soon to start. |bridge-kuilding equipment and sup- The weaker teams of a year ago blies, A rise in the river level kept have come up with solid reinforce- 'the shipwrecked group from rejoin- ments to put them into contention.'ing after it had divided earlier to; The strongest clubs of 1947 are as attempt' to rendezvous with res- | lstmng. or more so. cuers. Southern California’s Trojans | Eight of the party were stranded squeezed into the championship by when the fishing vessel Caledonia the margin of a win over the Uni- went aground Monday, and the other versity of California. Those condi- two are Codst Guardsmen whose| tions may be reversed this season. |lifeLoat swamped in a rescue at- California, with a flock of star ta- tempi. i lent on hand, looks like the club to| After the party is brought to- Leat for the title this seasom gether, it will proceed to Icy Point — —— |for rescue by the Coast Guard Cut- | iter Citrus. | DE MARCO FIGHTS | e PEP 1N NEW YORK NEW YORK, Sept. i0—P—Paddy | De Marco of Brooklyn, a rising star | in the lightweight class, makes his most important start tonight at Madison Square Garden against featherweight champion Willie Pep 'of Hartford, Conn., in a non-title 10- ! rounder. | Winner of 32 fights in 34 starts| in a professional career dating back . lto 1045, De Marco comes up to me, pep scrap with a string of 21 vie- | tories. | ., H FILED By Jack and Lillian Loser | DIVORCE Oscar St. Clair of Hoonah rmd for a divorce from Natalia St. Clalr on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment. The couple| were married in Hoonah in 1939 and have six children. The divorce papers give the Alaska Native Ser- {vice exclusive care, custody and: control of the six children with Mr, St, Clair contributing to thelri support. “Fheaven's sake...missed it!" . . . but, mind you, you won’t. “Miss” when you get: your Fall garment needs at our shop. You're right out of a story book dressed in one of our Frocks .« . Wise up your wardrobe! -oo SENTENCED Adrian Alexander Joe and Clar- ence Guillory of Sitka were both sentenced to serve six months in the Federal Jail on the charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor, They waived prosecu- ticn by indictment and consented to prosecution by information this morning in the U. 8. District Court and. pleaded guilty to the <charge. MAMZELLE SHOP DIE THE AFPAKE Ph Alue 35F 3| Frankin SANTA FE, Argentina, Sept. 10.) wili disappear.” —{M-President | 3 SEATTLE, Sept. 10— Three ‘u.xrentened last night to hang those MIS \Cmut Guardsmen are attempting to- 4 | " porters. | Princess Louise enroute to Spokane who threaten violence to his sup- The President, speaking to work-| in the Icy Point, *© identify The Coast Guard party was able S . except “these rich who don't work; professional FAIRBA J UNEAU/VZXTDOM clear to Seattle—on frequent, regular achedules, low—with a saving of 10% on round trips. Call usat ... should be continued or . permanently iniure the Temtory of Alaska. | E. L. Bartlett | i TRAPS and FACT No. 1 FACT No. FACT No. There are 415 salmon traps in Alaska. Their loca- % tion, methods and number are regulated by the ; ‘ Us Flsh and Wildlife Service. If traps were a ' menace to future salmon runs, these experts could ! and would clpse any or all traps. Salmon traps are stationary. Therefore, they are | easier to patrol and regulate. Their locatxons are. ; determined by experts on conservation. .l It seemed clear; ‘however, , that Peron referred only to oppon- nts inside = Argentina he them war, and either they or we Juan D. Peron - e MISS NORRIS LEAVES Miss Mildred Norris ieft on the where she will enter Whitworth this inland city, did not | | College, for her junior year. Miss the persons of whom he | Norris has been in Juneau since to call them “de-|February, and has been employ- foreign trusts” and|ed by the Health Education Divis- these | ion of the Territorial Health Des " pnrtment of politician: ARE JUST «.by Pan American Clipper Gzrrmc AROUND ALASKA Is easy. And guick, too. Flying, Clippers take you where you want to.go—from Nome And you'll feel at home aboard. the big, dependable, ' Clippers, The food and service are world-famous: The fare BARANOY¥ HOTEL—Telephone 106: ON THE BALLOT in the October 12 election there will be a referendum on “the practice of fishing by means of traps . . . should be abolished.” To abolish traps, we believe, would amount to confiscation and ww’ld Salmon traps are limited by law as to the number of hours they can operate—they may NOT operate any longer than competing forms of gear. : LET'S BELIEVE FACTS, NOT FICTION, VOTE i o ON FACTS IN THE OCTOBER 12 ELECTION : 'YOTE TO CONTINUE S/ COMMITTEE OF ALASKA TRAP OPERATORS

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