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SOLONS LOSE 2 GAMES T0 SEALS SUNDAY Seattle and—H—dIywood Go; 16 Innings fo Tie-Oak- land Tops Portland (By Associated Press) San Francisco defeated Sacre- mento twice on Sunday to become | the first team to take a series frou the Pacific Coast League’s leading Solons. Tied at the end of a sixteen in-i ning game by a 2-2 score, Seattle and Hollywood were forced to swp} Sunday to allow Hollywood to catch a train. - : San Deigo remains in third place in the standings of the league by splitting a double game Sunday witn Los Angeles, while Oakland kept a | slight jump ahead of Portland by] winning a pair from the Beavers. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League GIRL Mary Russgll, 18, of Bremerton, Wash,, a sophomore at Reed College, Portland, Ore., set the pace for the eight men in the Reed College crew in a race against the Portland Rowing Club. Mary volunteered Hollywood 2; Seattle 2. Game call- ed at end of sixteenth at-a tle to| allow Hollywood to catch & trai. | e Oakland 5, 7; Portland 2, 2. | Sacramento 5, 4; San Francisco | 1, 5. ' San Diego 9, 8; Los Angeles 5, 9. National League | Brooklyn 3; St. Louis 2. Cincinnati 2, 3; New York 3,2. | Chicago 9, 1; Philadelphia 5, 0. 'Pittsburgh - Boston, postponed, rain. N American League New York 2, 5; Cleveland 0, 3. | Boston 7, 6; Detroit 6, 5. washington 3, 3; Chicago 2, 4. Philadelphia 5, 5; St. Louis 2, 3. Gastineau Channel League Moose 6; Douglas 3. GAMES SATURDAY | Pacific Coast League Oakland 6, 3; Portland 0, 5. Los Angeles 12; San Diego 11. San Francisco 14; Sacramento 14, thirteen innings. Hollywood 6; Seattle 3. Nau League Boston 0; Philadelphia 1. Chicago - Pittsburgh, postponed, | rain. Brooklyn 5; New York 2. St. Louis 2; Cincinnati 5. American League St. Louis 3; Chicago 4. Other scheduled games postpon- ©od on account of rain. STANDINGS OF THE OLI Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet. Sacramento .38 17 691 | Seattle 29 25 5317 San Diego 29 28 509 San Francisco 29 28 .509 Hollywood ) 28 472 Oakland 24 31 436 Pertland 23 30 434 Los ‘Angeles 23 33 411 National League Won Lost Pct. St. Louis ... ) § 12 a21 Brooklyn .31 b4 21 New York .21 18 538 Chicago ... 19 21 475 Cincinnati . 24 442 Boston . 24 351 Boston 20 361 Philadelphia . 12 29 .293 American League . ct. Chicago . 605 Cleveland 604 New York .. 568 Boston .. 525 Philadelphia ... 523 Detroit 23 22 511 ‘Washington 15 29 341 St. Louis ... Gastineau C Won Lost Pct. Douglas . 571 Elks 286 STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, June 2— Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock at the opening session today for Juneau is 4, American Can 8%, Anaconda 26, Bethlechem Steel 69%, Commenwealth and Southern 5/16, Curtiss Wright 8%, General Motors 56%, International Harvester 49%, Kennecott 35%, New York Central 12'%, Northern Pacific' 6%, United States Steel 53%, Pound $4.04. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today’s Dow, Jones averages: industrials us.m,, rails 27,56, utilities 16. " BRINGING UP FATHER BEAUTIF] o ING S ThERE T for the job when no male candidates ap) Evergreen | Makes Announcement | Regarding Plans | The Evergreen Bowl, Juneau'’s re- creational center for adults and |children, opened today under the direction of Harold F. Roth, Juneau High School instructor. There will | ‘nm be any directed activities this | week as the entire time will be spent in preparing the bowl for the sum- |mer’s use. ; From noon Saturday and until |Monday morning at 8 o'clock the | tennis courts are to be reserved ex- |clusively for adults. This holds true | also for evenings after 5 o'clock. Younger tennis fans may use the ‘courts during this time if there are {no adults desirng to use them. Both |adults and children can practice a |little tennis etiquette by walking outside the courts instead of across |the back courts when persons are ;plnylng. This will make the playing Imore interesting and elimnate the | danger of being struck by a racquet as the back courts are quite small. Soft Ball League An adult soft ball league is to be started immediately and any per- | sons wishing to manage or enter a | team in the league should call or see Director Roth some time this week. The telephone company has again | offered to furnish a telephone for | the bowl this summer, Swimming Pool i The swimming pool is beginning | to look like something and both adults and children will be anxious | to use it this summer. Work has | | been progressing quite rapidly and it is hoped that the pool will be | ready for use within a short time. | | — - 'HIGURES AWRY peared. | jthird as he gave four hits, Traveling-man H. M, Brown and taken lessons, for she landed a fight- | his Minnesota salmon were the cause ing 12-pound king that she had | of much enjoyment at Point Bishop merely snagged amidships, Then | yesterday as the visitor from Minne- | proceeded to hook an 18-pounder off | cota strip-fished patiently all day, Pt. Bishop, the only kings caught " AS WHITE SOX |caught not a salmon. A rabid angler of all kinds, but | new to the game of Alaska strip shing and apparently to salmon deep with his herring set, onto a giant, scarlet Irish Lord. sluggish fish was brought to the sur-| face, and when he broke water,| | Brown claimed that he had landed | ithe first king of the trip. Others in| the party, ‘which included Mr. ang | | Mrs; Jack Garrett, Mr. and Mrs.| Art Beaudin and Dr. and Mrs. Steve Ramsey, agreed with him, told him | to catch more “kings.” | | Tom cod and more lords came up | from the bottom on Brown's line| and he was a happy man, believing; gll the time that he was catching| salmon and the others catching none. | He was stringing the fish and the | fishérmien swere stringing him until; he .got Suspi¢ious, then kicked his catch overboard in a disgusted rage. When Brown, who has fisehd for muskies -and the big game: fish in the central states, saw Art Beaudin putting a double hetring. set on his line, he compmented; “In the States we go out after fish that size, here you use them for bait.” After years of fish tales, Dr. W. W. Council landed the only catch| on Rod Darnell's, Honeypot yester- oay when the party was out to the| end of Douglas Island. The doctor landed four fish, largest weighing 44 pounds. In Lake 8itkoh yesterday six fish- than you could shake a stick at, as the firmest, nicest rainbows and cut- throats fairly begged for the hook. Dean Goodwin filled his creel in 30 minutes, he claims, and taking them all on a coachman bucktail | Everyone returned with the umn.{ Running ‘up to and over 16 inches, the rainbows are hungry, in good shape and fighting. Few mosquitos and no-see-ums are in the lake now. In the party were Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ralston, Mr, and Mrs. Dean Good- win and Mr, and Mrs. Roger Stev- enson. it Another flying party was dropped into the lake by Pilot Dean Good- win, but did little fishing so caught little fish. Out gn_the Leota with the Minne- | sota Salmon fisherman yesterday ermen and women landed more fish | on the trip. Skunked for the day's fishing Joe Meherin returned to Juneau after a and their appearances, Brown went day of trolling and strip fishing hooked around Pt. Bishop with the exhil-| The ,iration from the weather, but no fish e - — KUNNAS RITES HELD IN CHAPEL SUNDAY Funeral services were held Sun- day afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Charles W. Carter Chapel for Ar- thur Kunnas who died May 26 in Sitka. The Rev. John L. Cauble deliv- | ered the eulogy and- Ermest Ehler Isang three selections: Pallbearers were Frank Heinke, John Krugness, Hans Berg, E. O. Jacobsen, John Torvinen and EN Burfal “was_ in~ Evergreen Si & Ecoriomist Isador Lubin, now an administrative assistant to Sidney Hillman, an OPM director, soon will be named as: was ‘Mrs. Steve Ramsey, acclaimed aqyiser to Pnddlent Roosevelt. one of the most persistent, patieni From 1933 to 1940 Lubin was fisherwomen on the, Channel. From commissioner. of ‘labor. statistics’ GO INTO LEAD Chicago al_lo—p of Stand- ings, But Cleveland Is Half Game Ahead (By Associated Press) Despite a percentage mixup, the | Chicago White Sox took the Amer=~ | ican League lead yesterdgy after the | Yankees twice défeated the skidding l.Cleveland tribe, which suffered its |first shutout of the season at the )h:mds of Charley Ruffing and then |bowed to the eighth inning home run assault by Johnny Sturm and George Selkirk. As a result Cleve- land is a fraction of a point behind the White Sox in percentages al- though half a game ahead in games won and lost. New York moved to a game and 2 half behind the Chicago White Sox as they split-a .doubleheader with Washington yesterday. John Rigney | allowed only three hits in the open- er, but lost due to shoddy fielding. The Sox took the nightcap in the. eleventh. The Red Sox whammed the hap- less Detriot champions in a double- header yesterday, winning both by one run, and the resurgent Phila- delphia ‘Athletocs climbed in with two percentage points n ‘the first division after taking a doubleheader from St. Louis. In the National League yesterday, the Dodgers completed the bounce ! from a six-game losing streak to a nine-game winning streak as they nosed out the slumping Cardinals and earned first place. - The New York Giants and the Cincinnati Reds tied yesterday as they split a doubieheader with iden- tical scores. The Cubs reached the first di- vision yesterday after downing the Phillies twice in the only other games. LAST SERVICE HELD - FOR JOSEPH MICEK Funeral services.were held this afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Charles W. Carter Chapel for Jo- seph Micek, whose body was re- covered from Gold Creek last Fri- day after he had been missing for several weeks. The services. were conducted by the Rev. John ‘L. Cauble. Inter- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 194I. UMPIRE GETS ACCLAIM AS MOOSE WIN Douglas Loses Game on ‘Own Field After Fast 9-Inning Battle SCORE LAST NIGHT | Moose 6; Douglas 3 Score by Innings 123456789-TL Moose 10320000 6 Douglas 0000020013 After playing a knotheaded game for nine innings on their own field, and seeing a fine exhibition of English umpiring, the Douglas Red Coats fell to the blows of the plugging Moose on the Island field| last night, with the score 6 to 3. | 'The Islanders tossed the game| away with over-confidence, and with the aid of base Umpire Gildo| Battello, who called some outs that | even the Moose did not agree to.| Our hero, “Red” Shaw, started thel ball rolling in the first frame as he clipped out a single, the first| man up to the plate and the first man to score. Then in the thiid and the fourth the Moose did it| again as a total of six runs and nine hits were marked up for the visitors. The Douglas boys took not a run until the sixth. Three Doubles One Frame Claude Erskine, pitching for the Red Coats, started to slip in the! three doubles and a single, and allowed three runs to come in. First up, Shaw took a one-base hit, followed by Fritz Schmitz who doubled in Shaw. Grummett doubled to bring in Schmitz, and then came in him- | self as Sturrock took the third double from Erskine. The fourth run of the game with the Douglas still holding the empty bag, and' worth about as mueh as a pound; of “liver. Again in the fourth and for the last time in the .game, the Moose men scored, this time chalking up! two runs as Hasu and Schmitz mude the tour as Joe Snow banged out a slippery single. Came the sixth with both pitchers working over the boys 1-2-3 and Jensen,| iny for. Erskine since the third, sanding three down the line by strikeouts. 2Qatoher Willey and Erskine drew first. blood for the Islanders in the sixth. frame when Willey took af single from Snow, and Erskine got on when he was hit by a pitched, ball. Rusty Rustad, who, as a fam- | ous. New York fight promoter claimed, “wuz robbed,” took first on:a single and then got the thumb up and out signalfrom the base umpire when he attempted to mnke! it to second, bringing in Willey and Erskine for two of: the three runs made by the Islanders. | Calm, deliberate ball with the outfield doing . a. catastrophic job for-the batters, was played for the rest-of the game, the only outburst happening during the fast rally in the -final frame, when the Doug-| las, Jost a good chance of turning the, game. H The Islanders took to the plate ‘as «the last half of the last canto came. up on the books and made a desperate try to score the needed runs. Erskine took a single from Snow. and then Rusty Rustad made first. when Snow hit him with the ball. It was a fast and almost ef- fective rally, but it failed to work when - Rusty was called out slid-| ing nto third. A near mutiny was! precipitated as he bore down on Batello, but things smoothed out| with the fans arguing the pros| and cons of the decision. In the: meantime Erskine came in for the last run of the game and left the| score’ standing, after three mcn had been walked and Graham had grounded out the last of the three,' with a halved figure, 6 to 3. { The box score: Moose Shaw, 2b Schmitz, ss Grummett, 1b . Snow, p ... Sturrock, 3b AB R H FE Willey, ¢ 4 1 3 0 Culbertson, 1f 2 0 0 O Erskine, p-1b 3 2 1 0 Rustad, ss RS Yol v Jensen, 1b-p S 4 [} 1 [ Roller, 2b 3 0 0.0 Niemi, cf 3 0 0 1 | Stragier, 3b 2 0 0 1 Graham, rf 4 0 1 [} *Miller, . 1f 2 [ 0 [J 30 3 d Moore, cf .. Blake, ¢ .. Smith, rf Hasu, It AB 4 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 37 ol ~ccococomuny ol coormrpnmnl vl ocococccomot ment was in Evergreen Cemetery. old ‘Isaac -himself, must she have in the labor department.. . / QST A BIT SYMPATHETIC- OH- & g OH (3 2 THROAT -AND I'M VERY SORRY-BUT YOU MUST BE BRAVE -1 HAVE BAD NEWS FOR YOL - JUNE SLIP SALE Barbizon and D'signer Models IS THE SLIP BUY OF THE SEASON . .. Two of Americ right bargain price. slip. ent them at such a “In B. M. sreplaced Culbertson in sixth. Summary Stolen bases, Stutrock, Willey; two-base hits, Schmitz, Grummett, Sturrock; double plays, Grummett to Shaw to Grummett; Schmitz 10 Grummett; hit by pitched ball, Er- skine, Rustad by Snow; bases on balls, off Snow 3, off Bensen 1; struck out by Snow 9, by Erskine 4, by Jensen 8; six hits off Erskine in 2 1/3 innings, three hits off Jensen in 6 2/3 innings; wild pitch, Snow; passed balls, Blake, Willey; umpires, Druxman at the plate, Battello on the bases; scorer, Gaf- fney; time of game, 2 hours, 5 minutes. EXCHANGE _Emu (above), Reconstruction Corporation chairman, named president of N.Y. stock exchange to succéed Wm. Me- Chesney Martin, now & draftee. " By GEORGE McMANUS | Schram Finance was s foremost slips, at a down We're really proud of these and to pre “QUALITY SINCE 1887” 900040000 00600000000000000 You save 65¢ on each remarkably low price. 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Baseball Connie Mack (left), 78-year-old leader of the Philadelphia Athleties, receives a plaque for his “inestimable service to baseball and gova sportsmanship” as Philadelphia’s Shibe Park is renamed Connie Mack Stadium. Judge Harry McDevitt (right), chairman of a citizens’ com-, mittee, makes the presentation while Gerald Nugent, president of the . Phillies ball team, looks on. i — - There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising J"fi