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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1941 FEINT WINS { | OAKS HOLD DiMagSefs SACRAMENTO Hit Record lhal()( any previous major les ISlAND NlNE San Diego and Hollywood , ™5, "shite e, ‘after tintcoims & 8 : ' L | Willey Pulls Fast One to Play Sandlot Game | "y o wio e e, BB 4 % b Y ' Stay on Base for (By A\M!N:ltfd Press) :‘:mrigg‘.ei:nfhtehfl:r" ‘4';‘01,);.0‘::‘" l!);\‘(“- SCORE LAST NIGHT thousandth hit in as few games as - Douglas 9; Moose § B'gugll:'”lt’ $ 00 The surprising Oakland Acorns i ~|did LiMaggio; althcugh both passed . defeated the Sacramento Solons, Pa. {that mark during their sixth sea- 8 - ;e :l;y Innings LIMITED TIME 5 6 N 0 2 0 B 3 BATILE FOR DOROTHY GRAY 72 « HOT WEATHER COLOGNE cific Coast League leaders, last night | i o Tor. the seonnil-alreighit waing: wikh 2on: 48 UIASDINAEES. - 3 9 Jack Salveson pitching a five-hit " 3 @ Keep cool and collected throughout { sticky hot weather,active sports, travel! Swish Dorothy Gray Hot Weather Co- logne on temples, wrists, nape of neck, all over you after shower. Wonderfuly refreshing! Makes a delightful light summer perfume, bady-rub. CHOICE OF 5 FRAGRAN asmin Bouquet, Rose Geranium Bouquet, Natural, Sweet Spice, and the NEw June Benguet. shutout game. Oakland clinched the | STAN™MINCS OF THE CLUBS game with three runs in the first Pacific Coast League inning and got only eight hits but Won TLost P~ Sacramento’s three errors helped | Sacramento 50 21 104 out “an Diego 39 34 5 3an Francisco and Portland vlay- | Seaftle S % . :!a‘st!h:‘ sf:lr:t ;:r ). 0;::::::’; 'slm;:fi ed a seesaw game last night but the San Francisco 36 37 K 1 5 Park: "as’ an epbeRin s A% NN Seals finally won out. Los Angeles 33 39 3 Tirdketi” And’ Shs" Skoske: Taik o u'm San Diego and Hollywood played Oakland 31 40 | lucky blows of the Douglas nine. a weird game last night that re-|Hollywood . 30 39 Wi Shok ot . sembled a sandlot contest that last- ' Portland 3 40 d > = g illey a single from pinch- National League g | pitcher Snow and then barrellsd | for first to run into a flurry of ed three hours. Eleven pitchers were | : 3 used during the game. San Diego Won T.ost o ¥ | s h d got 20 hits and Hollywood 14 hits. St. Louis ... 41 18 K i 3 arms and lfl,s_ as the first base- | Brooklyn 31 20 K ] : . man tangled in the race to the Y | plate. Both squ d - t : i oth squads claimed the de A - 5 8'2 i a GAMES WEDNESDAY | Cincinnati 30 28 E \ cision when the Douglas catcher QUALITY SINCE /887 Pacific Coast League |New York 28 27 . ? 4 San Francisco 6; Portland 5. | Chicago 28 29 A ” 3 i | pulled the faint and fell to the Oakland 6; Sacramento 0. Pitt<bungh A Iy g 4 : . ground. When he was pulled to his| San Diego 15; Hollywood 12. Boston . 19 33 3 8 1 i i feet, base umpire Keaton wmi Los Angeles-Seattle, rain. Philadelphia - 39 ¢ i 3 . jndamam in his decision that the! — runner was safe. Willey brought in, Naticnal League | American League ! - y o Brooklyn 1; Chicago 5. ! Won st N g 3 3 y : ) | the winning run two men later| St. Louis 7; Philadelphia 3. | Cleveland @ 3 | e i ( when Olsude Erskine took & “hot| ouls not s onn “ & s ¥ 3 S Sl single from Snow. Boston 4; Cincinnati 2. |New York 33 24 Hurlers Smith and Jensen were| Feinting a fnlnt to cinch a dis- puted umpire's decision, George Willey brought in the winning run New York 2; Pittsburgh 2. Game Boston el el o called when time limit reached. |Chicago 26 5 i S Billy Conn Joe Louis American League Detroit 28 533 Chicago 3: Now York 2. Philadelphia 31 456 Al 1lhat all cats aren’t so nimble. :“;‘;‘;‘x::eg'u::“"’:"q;"::‘?‘gu:: Detroit 5; Boston 2. St. Louis 34 E A RE Five lions recently were trans- B F ll | give the most hits. Then the Moose | Cleveland 14; Philadelphia 2. | Washington 38 ferred to a barless run separated broke down a 2 to 2 tie in the fifth as they blasted at Jensen St. Louis 3; Washington 2. Gastineau Channel llm:l::u:- | "0]’ So “IMB[E from the spectators by & most. o~ One STR'KES ouT taking the hits where they would’ Gastineau Channel League | Won ob: that A o sy Ido the most good. Smith, hit by a ——— Douglas 9; Moose 8. Douglas 1 fallen in six or seven times, - — Cage Moose 1 o i ey | pitched ball, came in when Guy| NEW YORK, June 19—After tnk- 'took a double from Jensen and|ing the worst punishment that he .then was brought in himself as has absorbed since his knockout by Double Snow knocked a homer onto me‘Mux Schmeling, Joe Louis last roof of the Government Hospital. |night opened up a fearful barrage | Elks 0 1 000‘ NEW YORK, June 19—Sure-foot- | g 250 nmm | But the Islanders stirred up a in the closing minutes to knock| rally of their own in the ronowlng out Billy Conn, challenger, in thef ea ure S AR |ed as a cat, en? Well, Bronx Park (i IIIIIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIII||Illlllll|||||llllllI||||II||||||l||IIIII|'lIIIl!IIIIHI||l||III|III|IIIIIII|IIlIIIIIIIllllIIIIllIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIUIIIIIIIIlIIII||IIIl|||||||||||II|I||IIIIII"' _ frame as McCay, playing his mu thirteenth round of their sched- BUY DEFENSE STAMTS zoo attendants have found l)'ll Chicago Sets Yankees Back gume tnis season, smashed out ! uled 15-round bout, and thus suc-| B b 0 l 0 R double to bring in Jensen and, cesofully defended his world heavy-' MAMARONECK, N. Y. June 19 y n y ne Kun- | Rustad. Then McCay trotted 'the Welght championship for the eight- _por the first time ‘In ‘11 years DiMaggio 0 [path as Stragier clipped . out aeenth time before a crowd of 54- g golf club can boast of both the | agglO n fast one-base hit, and the score 000 fans who contributed approxi- Open and Amateur golf cham- (By Associated Press) The Dally Alaska Empire has the iargest paid circulation of any Al | aska newspaper. BUY DEFENSE BO! I"' iy RICAN rmriLLs CHILLS SPILLS {was tied again. ‘mflt"ly $450,000. | plonship of these United States. | Three more runs came for the‘ Louis entered the ring weighing Last fall Dick Chapman of the | Moosemen in ‘their half at’ Grum-'199% pounds and Conn 174 pounds. Winged Foot Club here won the Hop Feller won his fourfeenth .mett, Slagle and Smith made the| *“The ‘greatest crowd to'see a fight ‘amateur ' crown 'over /the’ N ofé game against three losses yesierday | tour. Jensen was knocked out of since 72,000 turned out for the course. And a few days ago Craig as Cleveland rapped out 17 hits. ‘"“thc box that frame and Erskine: secondsSchmeling-Louls bout three Wood, Winged Foot professional, cluding five homers, two in succes- | went into hold down the battling’ years ago, was on its feet howling won the 1941 Open championship sion by Hal Trosky. Feller yielded | Moose nine. Then in the seventh, at the finish. by three strokes at the Colonial four hits and fanned eight men for | pusty Rustad took his third hit| For 12 completed rounds, Conn Club In Fort Worth, Texas. ‘:::Stast(v’v:s total of 119. He walked | i, tgee muha.u he whistled out, was master on the Associated Press Not since 1830 has one club AT a three-run homer, bringing in score card. He led eight rounds to had both champicns. East Lake Chicago stopped the Yankees | \ronning and Erskine before him. |four, making it necessary for Louis Club of Atlanta had both that again yesterday by one run, al- In Extra Frame {to put the crusher on. year—as well as the British Open II‘lmllmlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Rotary-Empire | |thotgh getting only five hits. Both | e coore was tied as the sched-| Two swinging left hooks to the and Amateur champion. That was Yankee runs were made on Charley Keller's homer. Joe DiMaggio hit safely for the 31st consecutive game. Schoolboy Rowe pitched an eight hitter’ for Detroit yesterday with Jimmy Foxx's homer the only extra hoarse, excited fans, as the con- test went into the eighth, The, Moose were sent, back to the bench {uled seven innings came to an end,|jaw, landed by Conn in the the year Bobby Jones won all fohr {and the grandstand was filled witn twelfth round, staggered Joe and major titles. { for. a few moments the crowd went wild as Joe fell back onto the ropes but came out, covering up and try- Bc m " in a hurry, as Erskine burned them!ing to hold on. a" s y T O oo o stride ahead of {1 8nd fhen Willey pulled his| Promoter Mike Jacobs kKissed ; ; Wetiitnton 7 the battle for the | Younded soldier stunt, took his run, Conn on both cheeks after the bat- S"" phn" le" celldt In yesterday’s game. |and won the game. In the flnll;'t!e and promised him a rematch.| Rookie Alva Javery of Boston out- half of the eighth, the Moose had| Louis said he was willing. H pitched Johnny Vandermeer of Cin- | Ohly four men to the plate. ‘ OTTAWA, Canada, June 19 — cinnati yesterday although each al- | The box score and summary fol-|py gmith; Smith by Jensen; bases Fishing bears that prowl the banks |lowed seven hits. {dow; on balls: off Smith 2, off Snow 1,/ 0f small streams in the : Queen Brooklyn lost ground in the fight Douglas off Jensen 3, off Erskine 1; stmuk Charlotte Islands off the Brlthh for ‘leadership of the National E out by Jensen 4, by Smith 6, by‘Cqumbla coast are a big haeldac!le | League as Chicago’s Vern Olsen willey, ¢ o Snow 1; 9 hits off Jensen in €| to fisheries officials—but there piwhed-flve -hitter and Hank Leib- nm;mg s'b' \1nn1ngs, 1 off Erskine in 2 |n.}nren't as many as there used to ers}:u :zuomhog::lse.d LA ¥ Erskine, 'xa-l.(-p 0 nings; 11 hits off Smith in 7 in-| be. 5 ne hits in Balog, *f ...... P nings, 2 off Snow in 1 lnnlng,‘ Ninety-one of the marauders seven: ‘runs yesterday behind the Jensen, p-if 0 passed balls: Grummett, Willey;| were shot in 1940, reports to un SEER G E IRy 00D, - o | MoCaY, Bl umpires: Lowe at the plate, Kea- | fisheries department said. Bears,, New York and Pittsburgh played Roller 4 b ton on. the bases; scorer: Gaffnev; are numerous in the islands. Of! {8 3 o, time of game, 2 hours, 5 minutes. | cials said that along one small sec- Ian 11-inning tie game that was in- Niemi., of terr for : ¥ ——————— errupted an hour so that the Bieakide, 1051 .- tion of beach tén of the animals Louis-Conn fight could be broad- cast. Mel Ott took his seventeenth |Rustad, 55 ... homet. .- ) (onverse's : ddst i Foul F. Schmitz, 2b J. Schmitz, ss-1b (os"' Snow, 1b-p ......... Sturrock, 3b Clancy Converse swung a mighty g“lemert’t, e swing at the Douglas-Moose game last night and the cut he took at sCor;::ru l‘;'” Mark Jensen’s hot pitch cost the|>T o P= Fi B exactly $100.05! For Clancy clipped out a foul and the ball smashed through one of the Summary stained glass windows of the Mem-| Stolen bases, Erskine, Jensen, orial - Presbyterian Church. Result: | Rustad, Smith 2; sacrifice hit: Con-| one more strike for Converse, $100- Verse; . tWa-hdse . hits: Rustad, Soap Box DERBY > w GREATEST AMATEUR RACING EVEAT [N THE WORLD. e SO S s IN JUNEA U =ssman=== Thursday, June 26 On Twelfth Street Hill e The Greatest Amateur Racing Event in the World! = = = = = were seen scooping out pawfuls FROM INTERIOR salmon as the big fish began n:: 1 Lee Lawson of Fairbanks is reul.u- cending creeks to the spawning tered at the Baranof Hotel today grounds. > 3 |after arriying from the Interior on e E a PAA Flectra yesterday. —————— BUY DEFENSE s'n'nrs lowevwanmaan ol ncocorrommnD sl Slwmcorrmommel Subscrine 0 the Dafly M | Empire—the psper with the lu'" val0 circulation Willkie Kin Back From Berlm DON’T MISS THIS LOCAL EVENT Come and See the Juneau Chnmpion == (or a stained glass wnidow installed, hit by pitched ball: P. Selected! - five cents for-the return of the ball 50::!“! .3; home runs: Rustad, ||II||||I|||||||||||||||||||||l|||||IIIIIIII"HIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIH lllII||||I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllflllIIIQHIIIIIIIIII||IIlllllmflmflllll|||||||ll||||llllllllllfllllllllr"0 the ball park. “pltched ball: Roller —BRINGING UP FATHER By GEORGE McMANUS | I'VE LOST ALL MY FRIENDS - THEY'VE R Ra gt ol vommonoconm 51 Sl mcomorrmwl IIIIIIlI||“HIII|l|||IllII|IIIII|lIIlIII|||I|||I|II||||||llIIIII|| II|||IlllllllfllflllllllllllllIIIIII|||IIIIllIl||I|!|IIIIlII||lII "'lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll MRS, JIGGS FAR BE WELL=1 MUST Sav- . JIGGS=IVE RATS-MAGGIE_TOOK ME TRICK IT BROM =& YRia IS SrRavee- || K58 2oeion PLAYIN' CARDS TO PLAY POKER ONE HAS TOBE . || THIS GAME IS WITH -1 WONDER HOW TH GAME QUEENS CAREFLIL._ WITH 15 GETTING ON? ACES Wi WHOM THEY PLAY : & Lieut. Mflflflfldtfi“nfluflml‘v’. Wendell L. Willkie, Republican leader, Ilm by Mrs. -rnvu in New York by mmflufle . He has been p « uaval M stthe U. § K ia d