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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1945 ngzor[ Shorisfi ' sociated Press) The 4 Boston, 4-7; New York, 1-3 Portland, 4-3; Sacramento, 3-2. Golf Los Angeles, 5-7; San Francisco, — o .= i of 266 213; o (By SPOKANE, Wash.—Byron Nelson Jug McSpadden was second with Hollywood, 9-12; Oakland, 3-4. o o e e bt 5 | (National League) Chicago, T; Pittsburgh, 3. St. Louis, 9; Cincinnati, 6. Brooklyn, 9; Philadelphia, 4 ON (HAN(E To (Pacific Coast League) S et 2 won t 000 Esmeralda Open rnament with 72-hole score Ben Hogan and Sam —_— Enead tied for third with 275. STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS “Boner by Blinks" Leaves LOS ANGELE! Frankie Parker Vo A ""‘&““’L peg, Won the Pacific Southwest Tennis am-— v el E § i i ot 4 e Tournament by whipping Herbie Nafs Hanging on Ben- petrar 8 64 573 pu 6.9 6.4 Matgaret Osborne Is’ Perf e e 87 67 565 ywon the women's title by defeating gals Performance g no» gg: Louise Brough, 11-9, 6-2. New York b 523 Lo PENNANT RACES AT A GLANCE Cleveland 72 70 507 'NEW YORK—World ‘record sum gm“‘“o T -223 of $5,016,745 bet on Belmont Park’s — — oston T 81 467 gight-race program. Beaugay, $3.40, g H E £ g Philadclphia 52 97 349 captured the $10,000-added Matron ] E g e Stakes, beating Enfilade and Athene. gy T Pot O'Luck, $8.90, won $25,000-added - e Y o "‘“;“" % Lawrence Realization. Chief Barker . o A | cecond £ | Chicazo 92 55 e i n . 91 B7 INGLEW.OD, Calif—Bull Reigh, e “g z; $18.30, beat Paperboy by a neck in - ittsburgh e cofy' s American League— b ) £ g Hollywood Park’s $50000 American Detroit 86 64 0 . Handicap 6 Bosten 66 84 S R waiingtan 8y o7 -1 Cincinnati 60 87 :;“;‘;::' League— s Philadelphia 46 106 e s 000 e 00 s e t 390 X ° . St. Louis 91 57 1% 6 | (pacific Coast League Final) |® TIDES TOMORROW i Team— W. L. Pct ® . By JOE REICHLER Portland 112 68 622 o e e September . (Associated Press Sports Writer) Seattle e b a8 Sacramento 9 85 ® High 4:08a.m., 176 ft. o Should the Washington Senators San Francisco 9% 87 o Low 10:09a.m., 031t o fail to win the American League Oakland 9 93 e High 16:16p.m., 189 ft. o pennant by a single game, the San Diego 2 101 e Low 23:39p.m, -18 ft. e name of George (Bingo) Binks, may Los Angeles 6 107 ° L4 go down in baseball’s history books Hollywood 73 110 e o000 0000 000 U. S. DEPARTM celebrated ones as Fred Snodgrass,! Mickey Owen alongside such Fred Merkle, Heinie Zimmerman, T OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BURXEAU JUNEAU, ALASKA :md‘ oth whose “boners” cost WEATHER BULLETIN ;::l‘:am”u; v““;j;“h‘l]‘i:“: DATA FOR z4 IOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MARIDIAN TIME 3 &gy f Max. temp. TODAY It was Outfielder Binks' failure to INBI vtlawest 4:30 a.m, | 24 DR, ool equip himself with sun glasses that station 24 hrs* | temp. temp. Precip. g cost the Nats a chance for a clean Anchorage 51 46 43 45 Pt. Cloudy sweep of yesterday’s doubleheader Barrow 29 21 81 X Staw with the Athletics and a virtual tic | Bethel 62 40 5 ¥ o for first place with Detroit's Cordova 52 iy b o league-leading Tigers, who were Dawson 42 a b 200N beaten by the St. Louis Browns. | Edmonton 2 " = ouay The oversight enabled Phila- Fairbanks o a1 i Sy delphia to win the opener, 4-3, in Haines o 40 i % 12 innings, the identical score by Juneau .. '“: 4':' :’: Disle which the Senators copped the Juneau Airport 4‘: o =2 R?‘,'EI, nightcap which was - limited to Xetchikan ... ® AY, A2, 13""35 eight innings by darkness. Kotzebue 43 ,“, " g}oudyv The split left the Senators one MCGrath = z e ol full game behind the Bengals, but NO™e o o i = three lengths back in the losing I’;m:“,]:“‘\f, :g j: D:i;;lv column. The Senators can’t do any- Pe -fll,s":;‘k 64 50 .'(: Clm;(Aiv thing about it in thelr own behalf, o 51 < o 33 51 Fog as their regular season ended Sun- Prince Rupfl;t 52 :fl JQ Rain day. It left Washington in a spot San Francisco RS 50 0 Clear where Detroit now needs to win Seattle 65 48 Lo Rain only two of its four remaining con- Sitka ; 57 47 22 Drizzle tests to cpp the flag. Whitehorse : 42 | 34 11 Rain The Tigers open a two-game yajputat . 51 46 41 Rain stand against Cleveland Thursday and then jump to St. Louis for a pair on Saturday and Sunday. The Tigers Sunday were tamed *—(4:30 a.n. yesterday to =:30 a.m. today) MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports trom Marine Stations’at 10:30 A. M. Today by Nelson Potter, veteran St. Louis WIND Height of Waves righthander, who handcuffed them Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) with two safeties in registering a Cape Decision Pt. Cloudy 48 W 16 2 feet 5-0 shutout for his' eighth straight Cape Spencer Cloudy 45 ENE 10 4 feet victory and his fifteenth of the|Eldred Rock Rain-fog 14 NNW 6 Smooth season. ‘v Five Finger Light Cloudy 4 s 8 Smooth The National League flag chase Guard Island Pt. Cloudy 54 SW 6 Smooth remained unchanged as both Chi-| Point Retreai Fog 45 SSE 2 Smooth MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Inside channels cago and St. Louis won. The Cubs/ Drizzle and fog in channels protected their game and a half | of Southeast Alaska—light variable winds. advantage by trimming the Pitts- north of Freccrick Sound tonight with showers Tuesday. Cloudy southern | burgh Pirates in the opener of a|portion. Dixon Entrance and along coast to Cape Spencer—westerly winds scheduled twin-bill. The second |15 to 20 miles per hour, partly cloudy. -Cape Spencer to Yakutat—light game was washed out. variable winds tonight becoming westerly 10 to 25 miles per hour and ligh? The Cards continued to hound rain showers Tuestlay. the Cubs by battering four Cin-| o cinnatti hurlers for 12 hits includ- ing a home run by Whitey Ku- ~ AUDITS . SYSTEMS TAXES rowski, to whip the Reds, 9-6.|] Marty Marion, celebrating the day || NEILL CLARK and COMPANY set aside in his honor as the!] /] National League’s most valuable | Established 1940 player, stroked a double during a! three-run, fifth inning to drive in two mates. | Public Accountants — Auditors — Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Phone 757 FAIRBANKS OFFICE—201-2 LAVERY BUILDING Kinloch N. Neill John W. Clark GAMES SUNDAY (American League) St. Louis, 5; Detroit, 0. "OOTBALL SCORES Cornell College, 38; Towa Wes-| leyan, 8 | Depauw, 13; Wabash, 7 | Indiana State, 24; East Illinois T | Teache ! | . Swarthmore, 28; Muhlenberg, 8 | Wesleyan, 0; Middlebury, 0 | West Virginia, 42; Otterbein, 7 Franklin-Marshall, Ursinus, 0. | Virginia, 39; U. 8. C. G 10, Academy, | | | The following left for Seattle at | - 2 b 8:30 o'clock the same evening: Mrs T/Sgt. Joe Louis, world heavy- & M 54 EIngton|jonn Furness, John Furness, Jr Com ,()t() W()'di weight boxing champion, now holds| ' 'y, 18: Kans 1}\;’{"'?"‘;‘" r?’%‘;l;‘]"““‘_'; sorn L oael p y ‘ > '.g the Legion of Merit for fighting| oo Christi N. A 5; ' Rice, | ‘h': "gh“_‘-‘d- it ““I'y‘“‘”‘v & the gopd fight on behalf of Army | ;g Johin* Sheridan, Lila Holden, Peggy q Ay ekt Baylor, 32; West Texas State, 0, ys, Van' Armfield, Kenneth Wire, terday at Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, | new Mexico, 78; E. New Mexico ¥ 5% Anenreih y the award was presented to Louis | gojjoge, 0, as “a model soldier,” citing his| " Geoioia’ 49: Mu entertainment of 2,000,000 soldiers | g’ in many lands “by frequent’ boxing | | exhibitions which entailed consider-' able risk to his future” as heavy- weight champion | Fcllowing are the final scores of | major football games played last! Saturday afternoon: | Indiana, 13; Michigan, 7. GOPHERS GOING PLACES! Hondo Airfield, 6; Oklahoma, 21. Gridiron followers will get their North Carolina, 6; Camp Lee, 0. first peek Saturday at the power Blackland Airfield, 0; Southern teams of last season, Army, Navy, Methodist, 51 |Ohio State and Notre Dame, but Fort Warren, 6; Colorado, 0. | ‘meanwhllp the mid-we wonders St. Mary’s, 20; U. of California, if ex-Marine Bernie Bierman has 13, y {come up with another Minnesota Mississippi, 21; Kentucky, 17 juggernaut. The Gophers, Colorado College, 12; Denver, 0., | rolling along with the polish and Purdue, 14; Marquette, 13. precision of the elevens Bierman Minnesota, 34; Missour , 0. |turned out before he joined the Wisconsin, 0; Great Lakes, 0. | | Marines in 1942, bowled over Mis- Villanova, 21; Bucknell, 7. ! | souri, 34-0, in their opener Iliinois, 23; Pittsburgh, 6 | day. .They were led by Northwestern, 18; Iowa State, 6. | back Vic Kulbitski, who person Cornell, 26; Syracuse, 14. ally rammed over three touch- Arkansas, 12; Barksdale Fleld, 6 | downs. Duke, 60; South Carolina, 0. ! e Texas Christian, 18; Kansas, 0. ! PICK 'EM YOURSELF 0. (Deciding who's right for left Texast Christian, 18; Kansas, 0 | field in the world series.) Tulsa, 61; Wichita, 0. . Al Schoe ienst, Cardinals Baylor, 32; West Texas State, 0. - ORDER OF CLUBS | NOT CHANGED AS | —Brought up this year as the latest and best thing in shortstops, Red found Marty Marion had a mortgage on the job so he switched to left field witching comes |easy to him; he was a right-hander | | but became a switch-hitter to ove | come the handicap of an injured| p(l (lOSES oul’ eye. | eanuts” Lowrey, Cubs — Was, | signed at a Los Angeles tryout Four Norlhéa_tlubs Finish | school for $1, which was a fair in- vestment, 1ce “Peanuts was the . . . | {Gube: sparkpias an o sy anwe| in First Section-Prep | {from fifth to first pi : . | Htk Chshtny ik - Whe for Cup Series | Slugger Hank came out of the! ol | Army, July 1, the Tigers came out (By The Associated Press) | {of the doldrums. . . . They nearly The Pacific Coast League slid past jwent back in when Hank sprained the finish wire Sunday in an anti- jan ankle. He's the man of the climatical finale that saw Portland, | Tiger pennant drive Seattle, Sacramento and San Fran- Gecrge Case, enators—one of cisco wind up in that order for the | the real speed-boys of baseball and Governors’ Cup playoff series, which | his .300 batting average as leadoff opens tomorrow. | man gives him plenty of chances to, Playoff semi-finals will get under | steal. way at Portland tomorrow night with | !the Champion Beavers entertaining the Seattle Rainiers. Single games ® | will be played there Tuesday, W(‘d-“ ® nesday and Thursday, with the ser-| ® jes being resumed in Seattle Satur-| ® day unless one of the clubs wins all | ® three at Portland. In that event | - | /o @ @ o0 @ v o 0 0 @ RISES — SETS ® o o September 25, 1945 o o 1' Sun Rises 6:48 a. m. e |there will be no games until Sunday, {® Sun Sets 6:51 p. m. e |afternoon. f . e San Francisco will open the other| @ ® © o 0 0 0 0 ¢ o o e :cmi-final bracket Wednesday night with three tilts at Sacramento and | sontinue without 'a break at the B Tre Columbia arrived from the westward at 2 o'clock Saturday >rnoon with the iw\ssengm"s from Seward: Hubert Le- | Baugh, Obie Stapleton, V tcn, Capt. Michael Zent, Livingston Desmund, Norton B. Henry Wankee. | To Ketchikan: L. L Ky., Teach-|casper Johnsen and Calvin C. Hart- | man We wish to thank everyone who {tock part in the Surprise Party on our Their kindrness made it one that will never be forgotten. (10,073-t1) PAGE THREE ART WOLFE IN TOWN RUM SALE 's stadium until one of the teams By Martha Society, Sept. 28, Art P. Wolfe, President and won the necessary four. Basement Northern Light Presby-|owner of the Hood Bay Canning S s \ terian Church, (10,073 & 10,077) | Company, is in Juneau with Mrs. o - Wolfe and son. They are registered COlUMBIA I“ pORT Empire Want-ads bring resuits!'at the Baranof. : ENROUTE TO SOUTH 4 ANNGOUNCEMENT Metcalfe Sheet Metal Is Now Equipped for following seven L Staple- Sorrels and MR.U. D. MOODY, well known local welder with many years experience S has charge of this department. . THANK YOU TRY HIM FOR SATISFACTORY Sy WELDING METCALFE SHEET METAL PHONE 711 90 Willoughby Ave. Kuhnhausen, 24th Wedding Anniversary Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Karki. %5 el & MALTING COMPANY E. 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Oh sure, the gals make fun of me at times. Call me a tightwad when I won’t loosen up for expensive clothes, or trinkets, or parties. But I don’t care. I like that “I’'ve-got-money-back-of-mé" feeling! So run along, wolfy, and sniff at some- body else’s door, "cause we’ve got one of the very best nest eggs a family can have— War Bonds. Yes indeed, buying and holding serivs “E” Victory Bonds is the easiest and safest way there is to turn every $3 into $4 in 10 years! 2 VICTORY BONDS ... TO HAVE AND TO NOLD! NEW WASHINGTON HOTEL, SEATTLE FRANK B. McCLURE, Manager This is an official U. 8. Treasury advertisemsent—prepared under auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising Council