The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 25, 1946, Page 3

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SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1946 THE DAlLY ALASKA EMPIREfi—JUNEAU ALASKA OAKS STAY AT TOP IN P.CLEAGUE (BY T The E ASSOCIATED PRESE) sudden sinking of the Los Anzeles Seraphs, leaders of the Pacific. Coast Baseball League for a day a week ago, by today had reduced the battle for the top spof transbay affair between the leading O: Oaks and the San Francisco to a Seals. Tollywcod’s 3-z defeat of the Lcs Angeles club last might was the seventh straight setback for the Angels since their brief moment glory and left them six games from the top. It was the then powerfu! com- bination leaning heavily on ex- Chicago Cubs playing for manager Bill Sweeney of the Angels that first cut the props from. under the Seals, never headed until last week. During the same week the Holly- wood Stars, row the nemesis of the Angels, took a seven-game thrashing in Oakland’s ascendancy. Rain Stops Game Weather did what no baseball team done to the Oaklanders in ten straight games, stopping them last night at Portland. Rain forced the game to be called in the first half of the. first inning. and’s iaieness gave San cisco, refusing to be counted a doubleheader chance tol creep up on the leaders. The Seals defeated the San Diego Padres, 3 to 2 and 4 to 2, leaving San Fran- ¢isco a game and a half behind the Acorns. | Pinch Hitter Fans Jansen, giving no four and yielding seven s, turned in the first win. Lefty | Werle, although in trouble in! , limited the Padres to! to cop the seven- umm" walks, | chicap. With the Padres threat-, ening in the seventh frame of the| first game, Manager Pepper Mar- | tin went in as a pinch hitter am’li fanned for the final out. 1 The Sacramento Solons and Se- attle Rainierg, confinued their see- | saw squabble ‘over sixth place! with the Solons moving in on a 14-5] walloping of the Rainiers. The! game evened the club's series at! two wins apiece. Eleven of Sacra-| mento’s and two of Seattle’s tallies | in- the free-scoring contest were! unearned. Cliff Mapes homered RESULTS LAST NIGHT San Francisco 3-4; San Diego 2-2.| Hollywood 3; Los Angeles 2. Sacramento 14; Seattle 5. ! Oakland at Portland, postponed, | rain. STANDING OF CLUBS ' Pacific Coast League Teams w L e ey i 18 »s,nlAgugultu €. San Francisco ... 36 20 i I X lan i ‘Angéies 31 2 561 new cabinet tomorrow a pl Hollywood . 26 28 481, ,40n, Previously, San Diego .+...26 31 456] it Sacramento 24 33 421150 chould have more control Seattle 23 32 418 presently ing Portland 18 35 340 chinery. American League ! Teams w L Pctiand the Premier Boston 27 8 171 Alltes would have New York 22 13 629 nding” of Japan’s food Detroit Gl AR Washington Al e Bt. Louis .. 15 13 Cleveland 14 19 Chicago s .10 20 Philadelphia 3 9 24 213 now. [hno twice and cracked out a single to'cast, today w drive in four of the Seattle runs,|ble to help each other througl The Rainiers committed six errors. Ination’s food crisis — but mad Emperor, Premier Outline "Self Help” Policy fo Tlde Over Crisis TOKYO, in Wada prepared to present to the Along with their self help admoni- | cpressed hope the, May 2.) an unprecedented broad- rged his 73,000,000 peo- | McIntyre scoring on a dropped | B “ 1ood job, Hiro Wada, as Minister of (tails unannounced—to eace the Wada told the, Japanese press he thought the “a 543 | Yoshida indicated he expected an | 533| Allied food allocation and pointed | 455 out that Japan normally imported ! 424 foodstutfs, so there were certain to :333{ be shortages in home production! lequate rationing the first baseman, Har-'1 rebuilt team and meet the lead- back six on strikeouts. by combined to lead Pittsburgh to a 6-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Kiner blasted a three-run homer while Rce spaced eight hits effec- tively. Hank Borowy, league's lead- ing pitcher last season, went tdown tend the inning. | ©One hit, one run, no Elk errors. Mogse Come Back | The Mcose staged a comeback in the fifth when with two away, by Vacura 1; umpires and Parker. Time of | hours ten minutes. Smithberg game two ST AVI)H\G OF CLU Griffin singled. McIntyre laced a, Team W L Pet e v . hit into the left field which was| Legion 3.0 ylooo! CTRI O AOON B jheld to a double according to| Elks 2 1 666 On’i‘helcozl; ot;e:" as':hedul-"d con. mperior Hiro-| p,xmnd rules, Griffin scoring. Har- | Moose 0 A 000 Ll up i etk w;.sumg[on and vey was safe on an infield bobble, LIKE DAD, LIKE SON the St. Louis Browns was postponed by rain. The short scores: National League h lhegthud strike, Magorty went amuml“ de it | the first baseman but went out cf. the baseline in doing it to become plain that he expects prompt ac- St. Louis 100 000 000—1 4 0 |tion by Premier Shigeru Yoshida’s|2n automatic out. | WINDSOR, Cenn.-May 25.—Fran- | Cincinnati 000 100 04x—5 7 2 | new government. | Two hits, two runs, one Elk er-|ojs pDe Sopo and his son, Sandy, Kreechen, Krist (8), Brazle (8) Two hours iazcr, Yoshida echoed | ror. share the same birthday date, June and O'Dea; Blackwell and Laman- his Empero words that Japan| Moose Threat 20. Today they were sharing the no. must adopt a “self help” policy.| The Moose threatened -again in same hospital rocm following iden- | Brooklyn 006 000 011—8 6 0 '! Yoshida added, in an 18-minute |the sixth when McLellan singled|tical operations on the same day. Philadelphia 000 100 000—1 2 O |press conference, that he had 1)\(1k- |into right field, Butler walked, Va- Sandy under t an appendectomy| Higbe and Anderson; Mulligan, \ed the best man available for le)cum was safe on a fielder’s choice,|at 10 a. m. the other day at St. Schanz (3), Humphries (3) and McLellan scoring on a wild throw I:u. the plate. Miller hit a long fly lbeLwecn the center and right field- Francis Hospital ford. The father pital that night. in nearby Hm'l-‘Semimck. entered the hos-| | Chicago ‘Pnuhurgh 102 000 000—3 8 3 de: peo-| er ma; FOR BETTER SERVICE---- To the West End We low llave a Stand and Direct Line Phone good unde: problems. . .FAIRB, Tanana Galena NKS. "AT THIBODEAU'S GROCERY On Willoughby Avenue ALASKAN CAB CO. Phone 777 Regulu- Service from Seattle and Tacoma - FREIGHT . . PASSENGERS ; 'BEFRIGERATION ALASKA TRANSPORTATION CO. Gastineau Hotel Phone 879 J. F. (Jim), CHURCH, Agent . 003 102 00x—6 8 O] M d vey .“ alked. The next two men g Legicn nine Sunday at 5:30 lvj' defeat dropped the Cards to] on a l . + » O'clee 'd plac?, ona full game behmd‘ ~d Mr. ;‘ s ‘;”“” ["‘“‘:“'“ B“,‘l"’hf("x‘u':; WK the Breokiyn Dodgers who took over lin B There is going to be a great (?) plate to retire the team | Mcose ABR HPOAE P! baseball game next Monday night One hit, one tun, one Elk error. Miller, rf, 400000 to see & NAUGHE eaTabazy nom weather permitting, so. it is said 3 Runs By Elks | Metcalfe, ss, L el There is a bunch of oldtimer The Elks went to town in their Griffin, 1b, 43218005, e pitchieg iz m.g, Juneau who still believe th 'half of the second inning when Mcintyre, 3b, 4988300 ile zomeur Pl T el play the old game in the old 1- | Mcserip the leadoff man, doubled Harvey, c, 32040 € 001 P R en il i kNS ioned way, swatting, running bases|into right field. Pemberton ground- Magorty, If, 200 11l toih tHURER GIBONE & dec] and piling up scores ed out, Moscrip going to third.' Haas, c 20 100 Or., ™" oy tin rally in the third These oldtimers, captained by Krause walked and Dillhoefer Butler, 2b, 1010620, ..0 Dk Mulligan clinched! Fred Henning, are going to me ngled scoring Moscrip. Avery Cochrane, p, 2.0 000 1yier for the Dodgers. | the Elks team of the Juneau OWY siryck out. Hobbs was-out on an|* McLellan, ¢f, .. 1 1 1 0 0 0 Newhcustr -Sncis. Sty I League; error by the third baseman, and °° Vacura, p,1f, .3 0 0 0 0 0 pu Newhouser joined Boston's Henning has lined up the follow- O'Reilly singled to score Krause' - ol o e ey ckoy HurHs &5 B8 NS Yaly 13¢ glatme blayers Jor 46,48 and Dillhoefer. | Totals 20 5 818 8 4 ..yen_game winners when the lanky thouler, ' eyent Ba fglaNe: o Three hits, three runs, and one * Replaced Haas in the fourth. |quhpaw ace pitched the Detroit Coughlin, Al Koski, Mollie Mot~ yose error, [** Pitched the sixth. Tigers to @ 8-1 vietory .qver, the! Spadden, Ted Keaton, Stan Grum-| "y, ghe pottom half of the third Eiks AB R H PO A E Clicago White Sox. The game| jmett, Claude Carnegle, JAMES| g Hagerup made first on a OReilly, p, 40 1 1 0 1 played under lights, as were all] Grme, George Shaw, Dave Ram-|qqneq third strike but was called Wilsen, 1b, 3 11 3 0 2the games yesterday, marksd the say, Al Bloomquist, IKenneth LOW,| oy “posause the ball had struck Hagerup, 2b, 3 0 2 2 1 0lest appearance as manager of Mike Haas and several dark RONSes.| ¢, ypives foot, Moscrip and Pem- | Moscrip, 3b, 33 2 3 2 0Jimmy Dykes, who turns over the| Erv Hagerup, manager of the EIkS 0, “yoieed, Moserlp scored on| pemberton, of, ss, 3 1 0 1 1 0 reins to Ted Lyons today. Wgulahfi Wil fhave | iy omplete a passed ball, Krause was safe on!Krause, If, 13 8 8Ny Newhouser, who gave up eight Habap) i “:.c e 3 | the shortstop’s error, Pemberton | | Gleasen, cf, 0 0 0 0 0 0 hits and fanned six, was aided by‘ Thc i de,d“}(‘d .mh:)("”m,;,{ scoring. The next two men uenl‘me” f, 4 0 0 0 0 0 Hank Greenberg's sixth homer of, 80 o'clock, Monday night. ~The o 0" g0 field ending the in- | Hobb, e, 11 0 8 1 0 the year in the eighth. | num ;\ of innings is not de .511.11-‘"“& <l e, 18 0 0 ol Held Bites tar the Bk ssven 3 o | No hits, two runs, one moose er-| — = _ __linnings by Boston's Ed Wright, the ror. Totals 28 8 9 21 8 3/New York Giants came to life to | In the last of the fourth, Hobb,| * Replaced Gleason in second. {tie the score at l-all in the last jApS UR E leadoff man of the inning for the! R {balf of the ninth and won the | Elks, walked. O'Reilly struck out.| Summary — Doubles, McIntyre,|82me in the 11th whep Ernie MuwAl AID IN | Wilson walked, Hagerup ainuled.\‘Mum rip, Hagerup; Double |vlu3'»,‘1"”“b“rdi smote a pinch hit home | Hobb scoring. Wilson was put out Krause to Hagerup; walked by Ul leftfield to catcher, attempting to; Cochrane, 5, hyg()'Ri’elny 4 su'ucl}z] Rookie muligldcr Ralph Kiner e cr that locked like a sure hit. So‘ Borowy, Erickson (4), Arhms M pul sure were the base coaches that (ARD ARE and McCullough; Roe and Camelli. oose p Vacura was already between third Boston 000 001 000 00—1 5 2 and hcme when Krause made a New York . 000 000 001 01—2 3 1/ flying one handed catch and threw Wright and Masi; Schumacher, G d ame Bu‘ to second to make a double out. | LOSERS To ‘Trinkle (9) and Warren. ’ oo One hit, cne run, one Elk error. American League | The Elks went out to sew up the Detroit 001 010 010—3 10 0 & | {game in the sixth when Wilson Chicago 000 000 010—1 8 1 i X I o s e 'o E I k S sineled and then stole second. Ha- | BLA(KWE[I- Newhouser and Richards; Grove, National League ks gerup doubled. Wilson scoring. Caldwell (9) and Tresh. Teams w L Pot Mcserip singled out but Hagerup Cleveland, at St. Louis—Postponed Breoklya o 2010 by was out trying to score. Pember- e s fon account of rain and wet St. ‘Kouls odlits o SCORE BY INNINGS ton was safe on a fielder's choice, BY REICHLER grounds. R :‘; o Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 i Moscrip scoring on a bobble by the | G ke A RO o i - v Mcose ...0 1 0 0 2 1 1 5 Ccatcher. Dillhoefer and Avery went, rtne g Louis Cardinals, who v P i P | Elks 03219 2 x 8 OUloend the lnning. B wan:mx “see” Elwell BlackwemMRS. DALZIEL RETURNS ; New York i8-8 o Three hits, two runs, one MO\ when the stringbean Cincinnatd ? R {last night in by far the best game n the seventh the Mm\se.m":’“ them five years ago, wouldn't mind GIRL FOR ANGOON COUPLE |of the present season. Little Eddie Pack again when M:‘\ifl“f’ V““(‘{"F‘"- a t they were never to : Mrs, Mary John of Angoon gave |Krause stole the show in the very OBl to be v i n ; | Mrs. Dick Dalziel returned by birth o a sevon pound four stmoving game making two fly- Griffin’s ilelders ‘fzylf:[» ;{ ‘ll':‘ I did the 2 r-old six-|plane y from a three-/ deughter & S:2T pan. yester o one-handed catches to save at Wre .sx}n,u (," scoring Gril m ‘\:‘ foot-five inch fireballer fmm Fres- m(nth‘s‘ it with relatives and the ok t Hos| ,“'11 least the three runs the Moose V€Y grounded out and Jerry Ma-ino knock the Redbirds out |friends in Washington, Oregon and v i [ needed to tie up the contes gorty with twa away hit a long fly ot £ cf the top perch inlCalifornia, going as far south as - | 150 Roval O'Reilly. thufe his de- 0 left field to be robbed by t! League standings lastSan Diego and stopping for some {but on the mound for the Elks, Krause's sccend spectacular catch night, but he became the second time in San Francisco and Los Imers 0 | pitched the entire game and struck ©f the ball pe. Krause winning hurler to register two viciories over|Angeles enroute. She accounts for out six men a biz hand from the stands. Pittsburgh's Ken Heint- her lovely tangby explaining that Following is ount of| One hit, cne run, ho Elk errors. the otter. |wEcrever she went the weather was { innings in which runs were scored: i clipping the Redbirds” wings exccptionally good, and having left ee S on In the top: half of the second A SUNDAY GAME o-1 for tho Reds, Blackwell dealt here in the middle of winter she Lir l,“m McIntyre was safe on an The Moose appeared a complete- ! ds only {our hits and turned recally appreciated the “summer” weather of the Coast states. In Portland, Mrs. Dalziel visit- and Mrs. Jack Mutch, and ~merton, Wash., with Mr. and Earl Wilson, all former resi-| e h\ “l'im)mg the Phnladelphm dents of Juneau who sent their re- | Qo Phils 8-1 before 34,492, largest crowd |gards to their many friends here. all possible. New Washington llotel DEAR ALASKANS: This is a word of appreciation from the New Washingion Hotel to you Alaskans who have con- tinued to stay with us during the crowded war years whenever you came fo Seattle. We always try to make you feel at home . . . to accommodate you if at Now, during the month of June, Seaitle will be host to the International Maritime Commission and our hotel will be more crowded than ever. We aren't going o ask you to stay away from Seattle in June if your frip is essential . . to come o town hefore or after the Maritime Commis- sion meetings . . . we will be better able to honor your : request for reservations . . . and we always want o do our best for our friends fxnm the North. For this cooperation in' making your travnl ! plans, we hopefully say thank you. i Speniting someiplingin Sy m }Ow with cousins whom she had| not seen for about 15 years, she| greatly enjoyed driving around that | part of the country where she was| .born, and noting the many changes | | since she lived there. | Another very enjoyable part of| the trip was a visit to a nephew's ranch at Prescott, in eastern Wash- | ington, followed by a trip to Van-| couver. While she enjoyed every minute of the time she was away, | Mrs. Dalziel says she is glad to be again, and plans now to/ “rest up from her vacation.” o S Does it Fit? LISTEN OES YOUR insur- | Radio, RKINY, 7 pm. Monday. ance fit your needs | Sales Tax, Speaker Anita Garnick. as accurately as your @19t hat fits your head? - e — This is a mighty gnod time 10 fmd out just what “size” insurance vou ought to have. May we give you the benefit of our long experience? Shattuck Ageney Seward Street Junau Phone 249 Empire Want Ads bring results!| Made specially for daily shaving GLIDER “No-Brush” Shave Cream The MODERN shave cream for MODERN men o | FRANK B. McCLURE, Manager Seattle, Washington, April 20, 1946 . but if it is convenient for you Sincerely, FRANK B. McCLURE, Manager New Washington Hotel Connech:g ANCHORAGE with more than 100 other points in M.nka with passengers and express service. Dependable 10% Mldim on Roundirip Fares ALASKA AIRLINE: Phone 667-0ffice wmt Hotel Comfortable ' Inexpensive ' Good for One Year §

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