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the Titans almost me weeney g SORTBALERS Wi <. 5. Mil \\uh‘ escope. Dilg flew out, PAST OTIMEN 0ldtimers Disappointed i £ - o When Two Gangs of Fire- f f N hit a sir , McKin- | me P!ay ‘Sissy” Game | Walker scored crowd yelled for Frenchy was in the dugout hunting ther Pepsi-Cola. and his Volun- No. 1 baseball last side, who | out | Voiselle Cools Off During| Hour Wait fo Finish | cape sim ome Final Frame |teer Fire Company eam wen out by By Jack Hand I night in grudge | Joe Johnst (Associated Press Sports Writer) form re- | smoke-eaters | with final count of when g, New York Giant toward the McKinnon came home on Holm-| hit, tying the score at 8| nd when Johnston singled, is came home. MacLean was d with the bases loaded, forc- Nolan in and the first half fifth ended, 10 to 8, only to in the second half when lined out a home run llowed with a long hit ield and another home h, and Baker the game, 11 to10. - fieavers Shove : Rainiers Back Anolher Nofch o Ducks Mark Up Shutout for| Fourth Win in Five Starts, SeaitlePark | (By Associated Press) | Hearts of baseball fans in Beaver- Red town beat easier today as Portland Dilg, return to winning base; a two-week losing streak Jee and stretched Pacific Coast Porter, | L ad to and a half center- ! pg tield; run game on and his from Cempany 11 Uled ifth team No. 2. to 10, during ing of the be upset o Werner the back ccount dational League the twc Mel Ott's camp {lines to finish from Ninety Six, S. Nuts! reeled off eight succe: hey but since Voi in Cincinnati 10 New Yorkers have down ce All was serene n Big Bill - eyel c tritmphs belted out the fal- ball {look and s to peanut marked “Aw nuts, got off to a ¢ Company 2 at bat refereeing the foot telescope, they and Jh as though Voiselle ws size ter his initial victory western jaunt last|game night but the St. Louis Cardinals spurted for three in the last of the nth to tip the score in their favor, 4-3. as ex-officio referee and The ace righthander held a 3-1 of the Elks Lodge, guardi going into the ninth at Sports- | beer. Arnot Henderson wé¢ an’s Park, and had given up one umpire re run when a severe wind and | Fuzzy fingers, sy rain storm interrupted play for al-|br wind perm hour |to me Voiselle in tcok the|improve m hill, Ray Sanders greeted him with | trick ct core-tying single and Whitey | behind Kurowski tripled to win the game catchers gu for Reliefer Harry Brecheen. | ; Bucky Walters reccvered from a ghaky start by going 13 innings Shaw, for Cincinnati to beat Brookl pitcher; Gene §-3. Pittsburgh, which took over John Morri fecond place by a 6-5 shade over Werner, third base; Her Philadelphia, holds a three-percent- | left field; Dewey Bake ge point edge on the Cards and field; Doc. Sweeney, right rooks, who are tied for third. Jim Orme, shortstop. Chicago’s tilt with Boston was' For doomed Compar d out in the fifth before the line-up jellied, into ooked 1\12;:((1 rt with Minard Mill aid of a thre 1S ed 1 an When ups Line-up for h catcher Kirst victors How continued its form after its thr overcoming the of injuries and No. 2, the pilaying home field of the Leonard Holm- llenging Rainiers, shut out {Braves could make it legal, with quist, pitcher; Spike Mac y 1 2t for their fourth {Mort Cooper holding a 5-1 edge catcher; Chester McKinnon in five starts. l‘" the time. base; Bud Walker, second and’s 5-0 victory was never New York's Yankees greeted Joe Sadler, third base; Roy in doubt after the f part of the fCleveland like long lost relatives left field; Guy Gaudet, sixth inning, as Roy Helser pitched lafter a tough series with Detroit field; Joe Johnston, right flawless five-hit ball behind the fand pummeled the Indians, 9-2, Farl Hunter, shortstop {early five-run lead to which his behind Floyd Bevens' five-hitter. Kirsten got to first, and mates spotted him iDetroit dropped two full games the second - MacLean it jbehind the Yanks' by bowing base hit, as TAL Nons pitched for a the 0500 Boston, 6-4, when Walt Wilson got under way, but both went Es\.) 18-year-old Bill Pierce walked on a deuble, play. Roy Peratrovich was admitted two runs with the bases loaded rl Hunter scored the first run, 's Hospital yesterday. Washington had the same trouble detouring arcund Red Shaw when ams. C Steber and baby boy fwhen Walt Holborow passed three he stumbled and did a swan-dive. yeturned home Friday from St. Ann’s 'Cmcago batters in succession to Home Runs . H ‘hand the White Sox an 11-9 de- scored three runs lcision in the eleventh. t, two homers { Sig Jakucki’s three-hit, 4-0, white- L who brought of Philadelphia for St. Louis irsten him; and by c Was the finest job of the day and Capt. Orme first ball Ho: the Brownie hurler helped his own Pitche him the score | Mary cause with @ triple that started the 3 to 1 at the end of the first. pital for scoring. Umpire Mill came in for hoots his home. and jeers in the first half of the, M Anna Jensen was an outgo- cond, when he ruled a foul on ing patient Friday at St. Ann’s Hos- Maciean with the bases loaded. pital. Spike hit a long one on the next Maurice Nelson, throw, scoring Nolan and Holm- 'has been discharged from St. quist and tying the score, 3 to Hospital, 3, while Johnston and MacLean | Mrs. Harry Douglas, at St. Ann’s 5 came in on Sadler’s single, ending | Hospital for surgery, was'dismissed the half at 5 to 3. g { :7:' | Fric 2 " As Company No. 1 returned to! the plate, Baker and Shaw scored, leveling off the scoreboard, 5 to 5, | and ending the second inning. With Company No. 2 up at the ' i first of the third, Bud Walker led | | off with a clean home run, tipping | i the sootet iR s b ety B Bi) S(hedlfled '0 Mee'? team, for the second half batters | | to shoot at. And shoot they did, as LONDON, June 2 A British | e Y : 5 the beer basket’s contents dried up, | Foreign Office spokesman said to- New York tying the score when Orme came |day a conference of Gen. Eisenhow- | Pittsburgh . rter’s single, m}d gaining |er, Fleld. Marshal Montgomery and | rokyn two-run’ lead when Werner and |Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov, Russian | St. Louis v camé home on Olson’s hit.;Ccmmander at Berlin, was likely| Chicago Referee Booed | “any day now” in the German capi- | Cincinnati diul ot muscles to}ial. Boston Philadelphia Yesterday's Games St. Louis, 4; New York, 3. Cincinnati, 6; Brooklyn, 3. Pittsburgh, 6; Philadelphia, (Only games pinycdu (Pacific Coast l.emgut) Team— Portland Seattle Oakland San Francisco Sacramento San Diego Los Angeles Hollywood Yesterday's Games Portland, 5; Seattle, 0. San Francisco, 5; Oakland, 2 Sacramento, 5; San Diego, 0. Los Angeles, 9; Hollywood, 2 The double Beavers, handicap nd, center- field; Spike ball * to and in out were ahead of Ann's on” the making Ann’s Hos- turned to surgery, STANDINGS vrx THE CLUBS (American League) Team — w. New York 23 Detroit 19 Chicago 18 St. Louis 17 Boston 17 Cleveland 14 Washington 15 Philadelphia 14 Yesterday's Games New York, 9; Cleveland, 2 Boston, 6; Detroit, 4. St. Louis, 4; Philadelphia, 0. Chicago, 11; Washington, 9. medical patient, 13 5 Ann’s 3 594 529 - e High Commanders Of European War (National League) MUSEUM VISITORS SHOWING INCREASE Indicative of the general pick-up of peace-time activities, visitors who registered at the Alaska Terri *“weeum for May of this vear t e 583- persons, Curator Edward Keit- Laaadls veporied. But three tourists found t up to the museum last evening between 10 and 11:15 o'clock while the Canadian ship was port and the museum open for the first evening since war began, Mr. Ke hahn said. He added that unless greater interest is evinced the mu- seum staff will not be called upon to keep open on such evening occasions. S— Empire wanv ads gev quick resu M SERVING'ALASKA {is available to Halsey wherever he p ., | who fighting develop on the northern sector, at the highway junction of Chieenkian. Two Ships Sunk British bombers sank two ships in the Guif of Siam and hit at { transport down the Malay Penin- {sula between Bangkok and Singa- pore. Ground troops captured one of the last Japanese escape routes from Burma and annihilated 1,221 attempting to flee. Stiffening resistance was re- ported on two Philippine fronts— on Mindanao Island where four | divisions were compressing Nippon- ese remnants, and in Manila's Marikina watershed on Luzon. Possible action on Pacific war fronts soon by 3,000 British para- troop Commandos who are experts in disrupting communications was foreseen by one of their officers at |San Francisco. e — ' WOODLEY AIRWAYS | BRINGS SEVEN T0 | | JUNEAU ON FRIDAY IO GET BACK INTO ACTION Third Fleet Preparing fo Strike-Closing Phase Okinawa Fighfing (Continued /rom Page One) of Naha airdrome, and Chinen Peninsula on the east coast, where thousands of civilians were hiding in caves. Okinawa-based planes patroling Korean waters and submarines in the southwest Pacific were finding increasingly poor hunting for Japa- nese ships. The reason was indi-; ed in a report of southwest Pacific air operations, which in the| A Wocdley Airways plane, piloted | first five months of this year sank |by Art Woodley, brought the seven 2,117,482 tons of shipping, and|fellowing passengers to Juneau from | added five more vessels yesterday. \mlmrel({l‘: } Since January 1, they have also| Fay O. Durkce, W. J. Cole, Al destroyed 1,220 planes and droppcd:l‘““'\hl‘ Leonard Hardy, G. H. Gray, | 70,000 tons cf bombs in support of | ground operations. { The initial invasion of Okinawa alone involved $7,800,000,000 worth of U. S. ships using a billion dol- |Butt lars worth of planes and supplies.‘ ha Ten outgoing passengers —were flown on the return trip of which went to Anchorage: Lawrence s, Mabel Butts, the Rev. O'Flan- | an, R. A. Krueger, H. Tomlinson James Huston. Acti and Howard Wiley wele‘ -hound passengers, Grant' flew tc Yakutat and Henry n was the passenger to Gus-| ; Powerful Assault De The same sort of force, or larger, | cordo plans to strike. And Leif Erickson,|pcqe; Associated Press War Correspond- |, ent on Guam, noted that Spruance now goes ashore after four| of operations, “will be| Ernest G. Francis, formerly of the greatest and most | Yakutat, who pleaded guilty here powerful assaults yet delivered Thursday at a hearing before U. against Japan with the homeland S. Commissioner Felix Gray to a or key Chinese coastal areas as ob- | charge of giving liquor to a minor, Jjectives.” | was this morning sentenced by the | Chinese columns expanded the)r ccmmissioner' to serve one year in break in the enemy’s Indo-China.he federal jail. corridor to nearly 155 miles. The| e eee two-way push through South! DOUGLAS VISITS China from Nanking carried south-; Harry Douglas, of Hocaai, ward to Szelo and saw severe guest at the Gastineau Hotel. 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Remarkable Glider makes daily shaving simple and easy. It contains a special sooth- ing ingredient that actslike a lo- tion—protects and conditions your skin while you shave, leaves: it feeling refreshed. To use Glider, first wash your face with soap and hot water. ‘Then simply spread on Glider with your fingers—neverabrush —and shave. Glider protects your face. It enables the razor’s sharp edge to glide over your skin, cutting whiskers close and Not sticky or greasy— { Esther Hintax and A. V. Tesberg. |_ SATURDAY; JUNE:2, 194 IS YOUR OIL BURNER A FUEL HOG? A study of confidential records reveals the following as the mest common causes fer low efficiency: 1. Improper adjusiment of burner. -4 . Poor firehex design and construction. Air leaks in furnace or hoiler. Excessive or uncontrolled draft. Wrong shape flame for firehox. Poor atomization. Boiler or furnace either UNDERFIRED or OVERFIRED. Firebox or flue baffles needed. . Too high stack temperature. Peor design of oil burner. ¢ Are you only getting 69 or 7% COz when you should be getting 109 to 129, CO2? Let us test your burner with a reliable COMBUSTION TEST SET- Get the FACTS not mere GUESS WORK. The fellow who five years ago declared he could tell the efficient flame by SMELLING it or LOOKING at it, might not be as extinet as the dodo, but he does not come out in the open very often today. the Flag again on Corregidor... Let's raise the money in the MIGHTY SEVENTH ‘The Seventh War Loan is the biggest in America’s history be- cause seven billion dollars must be raised from individuals alone. ‘That means you must buy more and bigger War Bonds. ‘This is really two great loans in one; for this time last year you had been called upon twice to subscribe in War Loans. As our ing men raise Old Glory all over the world—let’s raise the il o ot WAR LOAN | Libby, MeNeill & Libby 119 Seward Street Fhone 554 UR FLAG flies once again over Corregidor. The cost was great in blood and pain, but our fighting men did not turn back. And on Iwo Jima, four thousand men—more and more—died to take the long step forward to Victory. Twenty thousand others suffered wounds. Yes, we're on the way to Tokyo! At home, your contribution to Victory is measured in dollars. 5 | W This 1s aa oficial U, S. Troasury adverdsement—prepased under suspices of Treasury Department and War Advertisiog Councll #,