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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 194! LEGION DEFEATS MOOSEBY 410 2: THRILLNG PLAY Moose Legion With a 4 to 2 win over the Moose last night in Firemen’s Park, the Legion (tied with the Elks azain for a fiyst place tie in the Juneau Basebal! Leaguc. Manning got a two base hit into center field for the Moose. When Selmer hit to shcctstop, Manning | got in the rcad of the grounder letting it hit him and was called cut. Vuille singled and Selmer scored from third. On a bunt to third, McClellan beat the ball to first. Phelps came up for a two base hit and Miller went out on a fly to Brown. Vuille was caught trying to steal home. ‘Nielsen made a field for a single. Rcllison ad-| vanceq him to second on a sacri- fice hit to Magorty who threw him | out to Ciari. Allred flied out to McClellan and Cope reached tirst on a wild threw from elps to Magerty covering first. Nielsen came in on the wild throw and Cope reacheq third. Brown got to first on Phelps’ error when he mis- judged the hop with Cope scoring. Metcalfe struck out and the inning | endzd. | hit inlo cenior) SECOND :‘NNING Magorty, in the seccnd inning, | got the first ree base hit of the | game hitting into center field. Craig | flieq out to Alilred and Clari went te first, hit by a pitched ball. Man- ning hit to sscond and Ciari wa put. out on the play from: Pasquan | A to Nielsen. Magorty came in after| the put out for the Mcese's sinle run cf the inning. Granted a & on talls, Selmer walked and Vuill The Moose were held| ma nder of the gam cond, | I 2 Pasquan walked. Krause was the! second man up and struck Kkristan hit to Phelps and was out cn the throw to Cia.i. Pasquan had stolen second 1 went to third o a wild pitch while Krictan wes ¢ Lat. On the play whi out. Nielsar In th was scacon f lan grounded . fireworks sta d he: of tr game came Wit down wken Phelps hit a the diteh. As he round teammate slapred him ca The Phelps pat on for revenze clamminz hit to ped by Brown the air to mak catch. As Browa came2 vie: through the izn: Creck still holding the 3 came up with it and Miller war called out. Rollison hit into left-center ficld for a twe baser. Alired and Cep. flied out to Miller and Mazorty Hitting- to short s put out at first but no: 1son stole home. Miller came to no . H the ditch was stop- > jum one-ha down, into Gol up § BOX SCORE AB i MOC:E Manning, celmer, ¢ Vuille, 3b McClellan, Fhcigs, 20 Miller, cf Idagc:ty, Craiz, rf Ciari, 1b *Peterscn, rf 58 i J. P W 68 09 €20t W M R ecRene | | | vl ccoroccorow 18 6 seventh. Tetals .27 L “pinch hit for Ciari in the LEGION Nielsen, 33 Rollison, p A S Metcalfe, Pasquan, 2b Krause, If Eristan, rf *Echmitz, 1b ol DWW WRww cooroorommT HemoOoOO O N~ if Tetals substituted for Kristan in fi Two base h Mannin~, Phelps, Rolliton, Kris- fan: three tas: hi Mazcrty, Craiz; kome ruus, P on SUMMARY Plumbing (il Burners [elephone-313 Harri Machi | Hollywood | Chicago | bases: Legion 3, Moose pitcher, Ciari; wild pitches, gorty 1; bases on off gurty 1, off Rollison truck by Magorty 3, by Rollison 7. pires: Oliver, Hazlett. Ma- Ma- out Um- Friday night's game t o'clock puts the Legion a the Elks to split the tis for f a RAINIERS IN WIN; ARE IN THIRD PLACE By GRAHAM BERRY op-leading Holiywood and run- n Diego are winning their Coast League games nowadays by pitching tather than by their vaunted power at the plate. At least that was the way it as Tuesday night when the Stars edged Oakland 4-3 and the Padres nudged Portland 5-1. Jollywood Georze (Pinky) ds racked up his eighth tory in setiing the Acorns back. He permitted 11 hits, ‘ut allowed no more than two in any one in- ning San Diego's Jess Flores limited | the Beavers to ven blows, and| held them scoreless until the ninth, w vie- | when the boys with the basement ‘st ccme through. complex came through with their lone counter on two safeties. | Denny Galehouse gave up seven hits to toss Seattle to a 6-4 win over b Gillespie, was Vi Only thre2 ns were earned. Two the fourth on sinzles by nd Jackie Alkrizht, plus »'s double. dern singled with Los Ange San Fr: Anzels Jlarence he hags full a 10 to 9 win over The win gave the o on ve s tod a STANDINGS OF THE CLUB: Pacific Coast League w . 42 638 503 515 492 492 San Diego | Portland National League w 23 23 22 19 20 18 Boston oklyn ew York Louis C.ncinnati Fhiladelphia 1 51 452, 495 40 Pittsbureg 0 Pc 67 553 | 525 525 513 487 | (4 0 New York . Boston Philadelphia Washington Detroit Chicago Cieveland St. Louis MICHIGAN MORTICIAN . i GETS BEAR TROPHIES| A Michigan mortician returned o th: midwest this weck, with an carful of and with tr hies to ¢ Lis tal ased on sox J. Le2 Verhecs, undertaker from ich., cut for.three > islands with Red Willlams uide akoard the troller At ock tack to the States with toth a black and brown bear] t:ophy. Going aboard the plane for the States with Vorkees were 104 King salmen bound for the dinner tnble of the Pontiaz’ Rotary club mecting this week. Toe two men got their brownies ¢n Admiralty Island and the blacks on’'the mainland. (RAFT CLUB ELECTION TONIGHT AT MUSEUM| | The annual meeting cf the Ala<kan Arts ard Crafts, Inc., for election of officers and board mem- bers will ke held tonight at 7:3) o'cleck in the Territorial Museum. e [:afing Nights-Red 730 ¢ Shop. Inc. THE DAILY ALASKA EM 121 READY Auto Classic FOR PLAY, Winner Pulls OPEN GOLF Down 551,575 By WILL GRIMSLEY INDIANAPOLIS, June 1-—-— NEW YORK, June 1—@— The Bill Holland, who shock off the field fer the 49th National Open bagq breaks of his fir two 500- z0lf championship was set today mile Speedway auto races to set a cept for nine places to be de- new record in winning his third try, ided in the next féw hours at);raked down the second highest hington, D. C. prize money tctal in Speedway his- One hundred and twenty-one tory for his victory. sharpshcoting pros and amateurs The Reading, Pa., roller rink qualified around the country yes- iztor won $51,575 for himself terday at the very same time that 1d Lou Moore, owner of the Blue slambang Sammy Sneak was estab- {Crown Special Holland drecve. Only 1ing himself as the “man to|Eilly Arnold ever got more for a beat” at the Medinah Country Club | speedway victory in 1930. He led all near Chicago June 9-11. { e laps of the 1930 race The spectacular West Virginian [and won ,100. added the P.G.A. championship to | total prize fund, announced his Masters crown by defeating |and distributed last night at the inny Palmer of Badin, N. C., at|annual Chamber of Commerce din- Richmond, 3 and 2. He gave every [rer for the drivers was $179,150—a indication that he intends to usurp |new record. Of the total, $115,000 the ailing Ben Hogan's golf throne. |was given by Indianapol No player has ever won the %g!Speedway Corporation. The rest was triple—the Masters, P.G.A. & w@p and a sory prizes. Open—in a single year. | Johnny Parscns won $18.250 for placing second. The Van Nuys, Calif., pilot set a new Speadway record for rear-drive cars. T Fcrmer Champs play Snead is one o1 30 players ex- cused from qualifying. These in- oy clud S | high finishers of pion Frank Stranahan; Guy Paul- 7 REPRESENTN. W- - 4 sen, the Medinah pro, and Palmer, who was given a special bid. That any march throught the 162-man Open field is sure to be zged was empkh zed in the qual- fy! trials which w a formidable €EATTLE, June 1—(®-— They grew up together, caddied together, carned to play golf together. Now they're going to the United States Cpen Golf Tournament to- gether, representing the Pacific Northwest. Theyre Marvin “Bud” Ward, the two-time National Amateur Cham- rions from Spokane, and Dave | “€ natra” Killen, Olympia profes- ional. ‘They outlasted the wind which whipped Inglewood’s hilly fairways {yesterday to earn the qualifying berths for the Medinah, Ill, classic later this month, Ward had two rounds of 37-34 for a pair of 7ls and a four-under- car ccore of 142 to lead the ten pirants. Killen was second with 7’-74—147. Ken Tucker, Everett °cro, was third was 75-74-—149, and | may get the No. 2 slot 't Killen decides against participating. Ward and Killen were both prep clfing hotshots in Olympia back in the 30s. Bud zoomed to the tof of the amateur heap. Killen evmt‘l | tually turned profe=sional. / MacGuire of Birmingham,| At Philadelphia, Ed (Porky) , made two holes in one at(Cliver, Seattle, pro, failed to make it—hut missed a berth because | one of the gualifying berths allot- 147 was 11 strokes off Har-|'cd to the Philadelphia district. He page. | skot 74-71—146. At Ponte Ver ¢s Plemmons started to quit after a fat 80 in the morning crippled caddy begged him to o0 on because he needed the money. Plemmens got a 67 in the after- ncon and qualified. There were some prominent cas- ua s—such as Ed (Porky) Oliver, Bob Sweeney, Dick Chapman, Mike Turnesa, Johnny Dawson, Joe Kirk- wecod, Jr., and Paul Runyan--but there was also sparkling golf by the koys who made it. Par-Wreckers Two of the younger professionals —Dr. Cary Middlecoff of Memphis and Freddie Haas, Jr., of New Or- leans—led the par-wrecking with 36-hcle score of 131. aas set a new competitive rec- ord at New Orleans with a 65-66, eleven under par. Middlecoff, one the leading money winners, had 67-64 over the '-70 Colonial golf course at Mamphi. Oliver flunked out at Philadel- phia with a 145. Joe Kirkweod, Jr., Hollywood, recent w.nner of the ohia Inquirer meet, missed the fat list at Chicago. The trials rned up vsual oceur Fifty-ye led the que with 69-72—141. some un- Bobby Cruikshank at Pittsburgh ' LEADERS IN B. 8. | Herc are the leaders to date in c majcr basesall leagues: NATIONAL LEAGUE | Eatting—Kiner, Pitts:urgh, | Louis, .364. | Batted In Robinson, n, 39; Kiner, Pittsburgh, 30. 2 Runs — Kiner, Pittsburgh, Mize, New York, 10. n;—Bianca, Brosklyn, da Beach, Fla., Broy- m)svmg NOTES Admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital y ay were Miss Bess O'Neill, Andrew Vitaljic, Mrs. Bertha Ei-| lin | Discharged were Mrs. Robert Faulkner and baby girl, Clarence | Walters, Alexander Cresa, Robert | Druxman, William Goodman, Rob- | M cit Andrews, Jokhn Bradley. Admitted to the Government Hos- |t rital were Mary Peters of Sitka and | Eugcne Faweet! cf Hoonah. Dis-| .366; Ay 11; Pite! .875. AMERICAN LEAGUE Z:tting — Zernial, Chicago, haels, Chicago, .343. Run: Batted In—Williams, Bos- on, 41; Steplens, Boston, 37. Fome Runs — Wuliams, Bcston, Ctephens, Boston, 11. Pitchinz—Lopat, New York, 5-0, 7-1, .355; 12 PIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA HOME RUN,IN SNEAD KNG 14TH WINNER OF GOLFERS |king of America’s professional golf- | ars today. | The slammer from White Sulphur Furillo, the fellow Leo|Springs, W. Va. earned that d said coukin't hit right- | inction yesterday when he came s making his old boss eat|from behind to defeat Johnny Palmer of Bad'n, N.C, 3 ang 2, for the 1949 Championship of (essional Golfers Association. Snead’s brilliant victory Palmer distinguished Sam g 1—The only golfer in histery ever By JACK HAND Carl durocher handers his wor The Brooklyn right fielder hit \ 14th-inning home run off right- ander Larry Jansen in the wee small hours this morning to win the “big game” of the young sea- on for the shing Dodgers. % win the Masters Tournament Furillo's homer of the|and the PGA crowns in one year. jear. both off Jansen, enabled the | After his match w.th Palmer, Snead ks to shade Leo's New York| mmeciately served notice he is out wts, 6-4, in a 3 hour-57 minute |tc take his third major title this hon at the Polo Groun sear in the National Open at Chi- As a rcsult of the homer and|cago next week. spectacular job of no-hit, no-run| 2—Tgae nation’s ief pitching by rookie Jack|winner for 1949. S: nta, the Dodgers enter June in| 31261083, with §: ' two-way tie with the Boston | yesterd triumph. Lloyd Man- Lraves for the National League|:;rum of Chicago is second with ¢ad. The Giants, who were Lart-|:1145750 anq Palmer third with ers in a triple “tie yesterday i~ | 310,050.83. ng, now are third. Snead moved yard Hermitage rourse yesterday in six-under-par 0 Lest Palmer. In the morning ound, Snead carved & 69 for the r 71 layout. They were all even ien €am and Johnny wound up ictivities for the Junchtime inter sion, over Br ) leading money rmed 0 comng from around the 6,677- _ Country Club sén was taree ouis irom vic-| ory starting the ninth. Gil Hodges | ¢d with a home run. Then they nt into their leng overtime duel at made 58 innings for the Hlants in the last three days. be big crowd of 43,922, best of Polo Grounds night season, w they were watching a battle {ir place. The f'nal of Bos- s 7-6 afternoon victory over the hillies was posted on the score- | oard. Boston had to come from way ack tc take that one. Trailing 5-0 oing intc the fourth inning, the 3raves finally pulled it out when eliefer Jim Konstanty walked Clint onatser with the bases full in the 1nth, Y Other halved the first bifore Snead pulled con the fourth with a birdie wo on the par three twenty-second. The match was never even again. WIL BASEBALL Final ccores :f ;nlfs played in major ot scheduled, eavy program ontest :, league teams were! awaiting today's of intersectional | ast night are: Yakima 9, Tacoma 3. Spokane 4, Victoria 2. Eremeiton 12, Salem 7. { Vancouver 13, Wenatchee 7. FIGHT BOPE | One knock¢ .1t tock place in fistic ncounters last night. Other re- ults are as follows: At Chfcago—Gerald Labroi, 136, Gary, Ind., outpointed Wray Carter, 1251, Chicage, 8. | plan encourages farmers whc have At Milwaukee — Bob Sandberg, | (WO or more spars rooms to take 35%, Milwaukee, outpointed Harola | n city vacationers cn a paying Baby Face” Jones, 136, Detreit, 10 | “asis and thus develop a new type At Salt Lake City-Ernie Hunick, | >f resort business in rural areas. 38, West Jordan, Utah, knccked| The project was orizinated by Sut - Rocky ‘Bobo” Drazo, 136 | William P. Wolfe, New York repre- ON FARMS NEW YORK, N. Y.—(#—An un- ual plan for the cominz summer cnths which will increas ncomes and broaden understand- ings between urban and rural peo- | ple has been presented by Grange organizations to members in 12 states from Maine te Virginia. The > all Snead in the| he Western International vaagueJ PAGE THREE }l!. Joseph, G. T. Kelly, Ray Kirk, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Mahoney, F. B. Paul, Mrs. W. J. Perry, Mrs. B. Thompson, M A. S. Thompson, Don Jacobsen. From Ketchikan: Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Bittle, W. M. Bruner, Mr. and Mis. F. E. Farrell, Freida Green- wald, auline Greenwald, Ray F. Keil, Olgn Kobhivik, Denny Moore, F. P, Walsh, Esther Wilson. For feward: Mrs. Bertha Nieley, Mrs. M. G. Sadina, Jamos Sadina, Carl White, Sigh Wallstedt, Johnny Jordan. 30 IN ON BARANOF LAST NIGHT: SAILS 'WEST THIS MORNING Docking last nign. at 8:30 o'ciock northbound, the nof left this motning at 8:15 o'clock on her | westward voyage. Thirty passengers iizembarked and seven embarked. From Seattie Jomes G. Browne, urrie, Cpl. and Mrs, A. P. Fortney, fawthern passenzers were: Elizabeth B FROM SKAGV, .Y Mrs. Malcoim A. idoe of Skagway is at the Baranof. | ! s Garl Holloman, Jack CLIPPER' FARES TO | SEATTLE ' REDUCED AS MUCH AS 20% Fly April 15 to June 30 — and save! | Fly to Seattle by Pan American 4-engine | & Clippers April 15 through June 30. Save | up to 20% on one-way fares! Free luggage allowance increased to 66 lbs. per passenger! Special One-Way Fare (plus tax) $136.00 104.00 72,00 60.00 48.00 Saving $24.00 26.00 18.00 15.00 11.00 10 SEATTLE FROM NOME | FAIRBANKS WHITEHORSE, Y. T. JUNEAU KETCHIKANt tincludes connections at Annette Isl. PARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 #Trade Mark, Pan American Alrways, Isa LAN AHERICAN WORLD AIRHAYS The cf;!/fl” of //4'%/0]_ dp)en‘ i | | | | | Louisville, 6. entative. At West Springfield, Mass.—Den- | e niz “Pat” Brady, 135, Hartford, ::.nc.\K Joey Carkido, 139'2, Youngstown drew, 10. At Los Angeles— Harold Dlade ©3 Angeles, outpcinted Jesus Fon- cca, El Paso, Tex., 10 (weights un- available). B.B. STARS Stars of games played yesterday are: Batting—Carl Furiille, Dodgbrs— hit homer in 14th inning to give Brooklyn 6-4 edge over New York Giante, Pitching—Jack Banta, Dodgers— hurled 5 2-3 scoreless and hitless relief innings in Brooks' 14-inning victory. Epller Brushman in town. For ap- pointment call Mr. Baker, Baranof charged was Joseph Jimmie from | Haines. 1.009. Hotel, 209 ¢ Refrigerator Special A-6-48 Westinghouse $197.50 This Is a BIG BARGAIN and Stocks Limited, We will accept orders for Seattle shipment subject fo stock available. Price DBrop Guarantee We will credit purchaser any drop in price which might be made within 60 days of purchase. 10 MONTHS T0 PAY IF DESIRED Small deposit with order SeeTkis Westinghouse PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. Made by Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Blended whiskey. The stri HIRAM WALKER SINCE 1858 BLENDED AND BOTTLED BY HIRAM WALKER & SONS.INC PEORIA - ILLINOIS Mok " MPERIALS Registered W WVED Peoria, Illinois. 86 proof, ¢ whiskies in this product are 4 t whiskey, 70% grain neutral spicitss