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GHT No runs, one hit, no errors, ¢ Higgins shot a hard single past'ski and Garagiola. Doerr went in' pAs i |on many beef and pork items one|stores. MER(HANIS ARE left on base, Kurowski into left field, but Walk-|back of second base to scoop up I re aynar I2 p I N vEAl lor two cents a pound. The increase in veal ceilings are Fourth Inning 's fast return forced York to stop Munger's grounder and threw to An official of the price agency limited to the two top grades P G'VEN BREAK BY Cardinals—After fouling off five at third and the bases were filled.| York for the Out, Marion going to John M Man(e" wul "ow Go Up said the new meat prices had no ~Changes in ceilings on other: | pitches, Marion singled over the| H. Wagner flied to Slaughter in third . connection with the current meat meat will vary from “one to two shortstop’s head into left field |deep right. York tried to score from' Schoendienst, up for the sixth > shortage and do not affect livestock cents a pound more or less than: opA INSIRU("ONS Munger sacrificed, Bagby to Doerr third after the catch but was out|time, was safe at first when Ryba TO Wed Saturday WASHINGTON, Oct. 10—OPA to- | ceilings. the current ceilings” the OPA an- who covered first. Schoendienst at the plate when Slaughter un-jfailed to touch first after taking lday ordered retail prices on veal| Instead, he said the revision is ncunced. { < ___field to DiMaggio in short center|corked a tremendous heave to Gar York’s underhand toss. York was jcuts raised seven and eight cents a required because the meat ceiiings X w ‘m ;: Marion holding sec nd agiola ‘Ll'\'(l‘lud » an. ass t anll Ryba prigs Mildred Maynard, daughter [Pound, effective Monday, and at the re-established on Sept. 10 were in- The Hawaiiun islands cover 6,454 adld | Moore flied deep to DiMaggio Two runs, two hits, no errors, charged with an error as Marion o¢ npps. George S. Maynard, will be- |same time revised retail cellings accurate in some regions and square miles. | hipped | No runs, one hit, no errors, one two left on bases ceme in with the fourth run of ,ome the bride of John M. Mancell — - 1al costs Of | jeft on base | Scventh Inning the inning. It was not a run John M. Man- shipping Red Sox—Schoendienst grabbed Cardinals—Musial grounded out d in for Schoendienst. : Staunton, . Hlinols, . Satun DiMaggio’s grounder and threw him to Doerr laughter rapped a enihs af 8 o'olook Anrs ¢ i > Tutt e TE .y | evening a a candle- an-{out. Williams lned & single over single throughthe middie® ot the' . Don. (Gusterldge -rcplhoad s Toerr (b S0 g SRRy oo s el Ch heads of Marion and Schoen- dlarond for his thivd ¥hit of the| i second bese for tne Hed B0k | #5050ty b Presoterial ig or die it HAlA. York wal: gabne Moore made a single past Pesky, Nort ")“‘ U el : 1y ¥ t 2 ® sending Schoendienst to second. Church. c- loped the first pitch into deep| Iurcwski lined a single into left » K . Willis . e ) right-center for a double, scor- field past the outstretched glove of ;‘-“" S ’”I‘ i the XC‘:%'“:‘““““ ‘hf‘{“‘:(wjmm' ka0t Rl gl GG : AR hter stemming at sec. twentieth of the game and tied the |t s | o “‘1‘- ams with "")‘_"1"‘; :“ 'l‘“l ""‘;, laughter stopping at sec-| ./ = " ¢or most hits in a world| Following the service, a :‘(tl‘p[ln];{ : Y ’ 3 A eries game made by the New York Will be held in the Gold Room o those ' 1t York's fifth hit of the Garagiola dumped a looper over S°Ti€s game made by b i A cing | seri Higgine: head Ihto 167t flad for &/Glsnts’ against the Yafikees|Octo- (he Beranot Hotel AU Srencs 5 16 | serie se . o & - o the couple are invite o attend, meet | Doerr walked on a three and two double, scoring Slaughter and send- :’I“’ i o Mu‘;;‘x(l \\\.:.n?dd ml 1‘511 by S ) Tk he | pitct ing Kurowski to third. Walker was "¢ b& lem, Drelsewerd, iqudolt =1 s Bradasale Y : S G 0Nl‘4 oAy B e ap e KOV o hird. wWalker was [T 20, O DI L e rigeiot s been Ui ]| IPHIOINIE 92 Successors fo George Bros. IPHI ) e b et ” SR v ‘ R - . p Sox o red | States istrict ourt eporter lor| ctive October 10 [ for |in the Cardinal bullpen |rapped into & double play, Doerr!for the Red Sox when he replaced| =~ Fro 5000 S ko o ot commodity } \ specific| Bill Zuber started to warm up to Pesky to York Ryba. _Siaughter, up for the second |the First BIvIsieh (o8 BF PR 00 i : wis R % ¥ : 3 me ped to York years. She previously held a similar ceiling established by OPA formula| Hig hit a three and two two left on base 11'"‘“_ e S BB, N T OTS, | rn and benvad. . fe father wis| fontiie i i Shat iR | Bite flied to Walker in shor 1 o8 i tioq three left on bases. b o o 20 > © 4 = b markup over cost may be in- pitch and flidd to Walker in short| Red Sox—Tom McBride batted ot on bases. e tate George 8. Maynara, torm- || Our siocks are very good as yef. Visit our slore and select your the additional cost of 'left fie The rtunners held their|for Zuber. McBride bounced out! Red Sox—By using six pitchers, = wo 0" 4" aditor of the Nome | d f “ ! ll d h l r other I istomary base to Marion. Moses singled sharply the Red Sox tied a record held by o oo % S i f3 9 3 H | : : ugget. Miss Maynard is the sis- needs irem weil-filieda sheives al mg| - transporta actually Munger cat York asleep off to right for his third straight hit. three other clubs. ter of Russell 'G. Maynard, Direct- | b d Ve h ney-saving P"ces° Yo“ can over and above cost of first base but threw wide to Marion |Schoendienst pulled down Pesky's Marion caught H. Wagner's pob| = oo % "nhenartment of Public| i i tomary transportation. and York scrambled back to safety. liner and threw to first easily fly, making the catch directly be- S A L) ! save money by aoingy all your shopping atthe H& M Grocery at our OPA offices throughout the Ter- Slaughter came in fast to gobble doubling Moses. hind the mound SR g 3 ¥ ! 'Y H ritory are insf ants up H. Wagner's short fly to right No runs, one hit, no errors, none: Culberson batted for Dreisewerd .m S xr_.w(/lfl(.jt e l.v‘ul.r\mu Mm- on this emergency adjustment pro-' One run, two no errors, two left on base. and lined to Kurowski. Moses beat for the past year and a ‘{‘ f, A-‘ s % vision, which will rem in eifect left on b Eighth Inning out an infield single, beating Mu- the Alaska represen x‘“\;‘l or A. H { only until the first or train Fifth Inning Cardinals—Mace Brown a right- Sials toss to Munger who covered ;“l“_m» &.C_”- of ‘j"‘_l; [““f”*:‘:: arge an (risg - - ea ( arrival following settlement of the Musial sent a terrific nander, became the fourth Boston first. Musial made a nice stop of Te '8 & PrEVRE TESCC b Ul shipping strike, the announcement into Higgins glove hurler. MuRGE Nounted” s single EeSky's grounder - and fhrew foj SUSoger | FOML f stated or doubled against the left past Doerr. Schoendienst attempt- Munger who covered first for the and popular. e s, 4 Merchants are being required to directly over the SCOre-ieq to sacrifice, but forced Munger Putout 3 H No 1 ol I { keep a record on airshipped com- |t secahd ‘wHeH,H. Wagner jpiieeal, N0 runs, one hit, o eroly lone | e s HE G 00 Y ] s " " modities showing the quantity ~Kurov rattled the left field|yn hic bunt and threw to Pesky at left on bast drilled in 1859. X ! brought in by the noncustomary wall with v drive scoring Slaughter.|caoong for the putout £ i < means of transportation q The ball landed about & foot over | noore walked Yor Toir: pitoties ' a 4 R tity sold, the freight 1 paid and the spot where Slaughter’s drive | nysial lined to Pesky, whose throw j 3 i ‘:Inz I P, @1 o e L) ( the amount of f 1t added to the [ to Doerr doubled up Schoendienst ¥ » ceiling price. Sellers are also re- 2jola singled into center but| No runs. one hit, no errors, one _— quired to inform pur by Kurowski was out at the plate on|jert on base. . s . thre )] age’ ' + " J § o, il S B T v e PAR-Washing Powder- - Gianipkg.§ slip or other appropriate means the center field. 'n:‘—l\““h it :z %first when Marion fumbled his 3 4 & s " [ i amount added to ceiling prices make the r>‘m)x>~>»~ll)d~ With & WU0E- | o unger for an er Eathwikl E under this provision, as long a 1(“» ‘,“T 95 e, “&(?“‘:' % ”1’ the camped under Williams' high pop & A is in effe Cariglon v’]“f‘ i Walker was Rudy York went down swinging e e T o2 i e o, ey i, Darigold, large cans - ° for purposely passed. 2 which Garagiola held on to [ 4 - ® Marion singled to left bu | Doerr slammed a home run high ums’ perfect peg caught G at the plate. PLAY-BY-PLAY two (Continuea from Page Onme) | lum- rl’m four hits, no errors, eft on base als’ lead to 5-0. The hit was a low Red Sox—Metkovich, a lefthanded line drive over Doerr's head but!hitter, batted for Bagby Metkovich rolled betwesn the outfielders to|flied to Walker who had to come the wall in front of the Cardinal to make the catch. Moses bullpen. d sharply into center. Jim Bagby, a righthander, and' Mt made a leap gloved- son of the famous Jim Bagby who hand catch of Pesky's wicked liner pitched in the 1920 world series for and narrowly missed doubling up the Cleveland Indians, replaced Moses who slid back to first under Hughson on the mound. the ta Doerr’ backed up on the grass to DiMaggio popped to Marion field Slaughter's hopping ground- runs, one hit, no errors, one er and threw him out, Musial go- left on base ing to third Sixth Inning Kurowski fouled to York near Cardinals- Zuber went in to the Red Sox dugout pitch for the Red Sox Garagiola singled to center scor- Munger watched a third strike ing Musial with the third run of breeze by, Higgins made a nice the inning, and St. Louis’ sixth catch of Schoendienst’s foul close run of the game to th Cardinal dugout Moore Walker struck out, missing a flied to Moses in short right three and two pitch No runs, no hits, no errors, none Three runs, three hits, no errors, left on base one left on base Red Sox—Williams rolled out to Red Sox—H, Wagner grounded hoendienst. York walked on five to Schoendienst and was an easy pitches. Doerr grounded a single out. Moore stood in his tracks to|thr h the hole between third and gather in Bagby's hoist Moses rt into left field, sending York singled between first and second to secend into right field for his first hit.; Once again Brazle began warming Pesky went down, swinging up in the Card’s bullpen. Alaskans Say, "MAKE MINE RELIANCE” Vacuum-Packed for Full Flavor RELIANCE PURE FOODS IS YOUR CAR’'S PERFORMANCE A VALVE GRIND MAY BE THE ANSWER IF YOUR CAR USES T0O MUCH GAS LACKS POWER HAS “ENGINE MISS” You may only need a motor tune-up, but a compression test will show for sure what causes poor performance. 1t will take just a few minutes and you will have a scientific answer instead of a guess. Our valve grinding service includes: reface valves—reseat block— ream out guides— clean carbon— adjust tappets—clean and space spark plugs and distributor points—set timing—adjust engine idle. CONNORS MOTOR CO. PHONE 121 7 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA over the left field screen, DiMaggio coring ahead of him to make the score 8 to 3 Higgins fouled out to Garagiola. Two runs, one hit, one error, none left on base. Ninth Inning Cardinals—Slaughter singled center for his fourth hit Kurow- This flavorful, rich-colored Paprika gives salads and other dishes that "‘come hither” look! Schilling e ski beat out a bunt to third and when Higgins threw wild to first for an error, Slaughter raced to § 5 third, beating Doerr's throw to H. Wagner who raced over to co o a third. Kurowski remained on first, R% fl v EE‘EABLB F although second base was left un- FERern ¥ia arm covered as Doerr had backed up York Garagiola singled to right scoring Slaughter and sending Kurowski to second. Mikereba, a righthind- er, replaced Brown on the mound to become the fifth Boston pitcher Walker sacrificed the runners alongs, Higgins to Doerr, who cov- ered first base. Marion doubled to the left field carner, scoring Kurow- P. 0. Box 391, Juneau When you kill that buck as you’ve got to do— We'll sell you the carrots for building that stew Then you can eat all you want for many a day For neither is under the OPA Now on these carrots I'm sure you will thrive The large sell for seven the small size for five. Stop the Toll of Life and Property They Take Each Year! | The great majority of fires are “pure accident,” caused by careless smoking, untended children, lack of caution in using combustible fluids and similar negligence. A thousand times, you may escape ! being burned but there’s sure io come the one time when careless- ness results in tragedy. Den’t take chances. Safeguard yourself, vour family, your community . .. practice fire prevention. e p—p————) MeLEAN and WERNER Insurance MARINE - CASUALTY COFFEE -- Manning's, We Grind it Green Peppers and Fresh Cranberries. aitention! Hutching’s Economy Market Choice Mieats PHONE 533 NOW...the most airminded people in liners will bring new concepts of air trans- x Fresh - 3 1bs. $1.00 JUST RECEIVED A SHIPMENT BY AIR EXPRESS OF FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES . . . Select Tomatoes in carfons; Seed- less, Tokay and Lady Finger Grapes; Pears, Canfaloupe, Casaba and Honey Dew Melons; Grapefruit, Celery, Carrots, Radishes, Green Onions, Spinach, Endive, Ear Corn, Egg Plani, Squash, DELIVERIES AT 10:30 A.M. and 2:30 P.M. Would appreciate your morning order by 10 .AM. and afternoon order by 2 P.M. Thank you. PHONE, WRITE or WIRE us your order and it will receive prompt Free Delivery with Groceries the world will get the most complete air- line service, with inauguration of four- | engine Douglas DC-4 Starliners. Carrying 44 passengers in luxurious ' comfort, or nine tons of freight at better than four miles a minute, the new Star- PASSENGERS Mhll * EXPRESS AIR port to the Territory. 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