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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1949 L TN ’t fi. i 3 A B A DY g —— VAN-'SSLE,MMER'; IN HENRICH AT ANOTHER WIN - TOUGH TIME OVER BEAVERS = ND SAVE ¢ ly JACK HAND By JIM BACON q Disaster ' in St. Lous, following'| Those Ligw Oakland bats are| the shocking loss of Tommy Hen-|knocking the props out from under | rich, has rocked the league-lead- | Holl erch atop the Pacific| ing New York Yankees back on|Coa | their heels. e | While THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Two straight drubbings by the | Angeles 7 to 6 Wednesday night, the Oaks trimmed Lux‘q upstart Brownies while Boston was|San Francisco’s Con Dempsey h cooling off the surging Detroit Tigers, has cut the Yanks’ lead to two games as the season enters its/ final month. There is a chance that Henrich may be back in uniform within ,tossed a three-hitter at the Stars for a 3 to 0 blank. The Oaks now are but two games behind Holly- 1 | sacramento, which blasted five San Diego hurlers for 21 hits, won | ® L £ three weeks, but by that time the|14 to 7 to keep a game behind mn‘_‘] die may be cast. In the meantime the Yanks have brought up first baseman Fenton Mole from Newark. New York ran into the Browns in their hottest streak of the year and became the victims of St. Louis' sixth straight ser.es victory. Bumping Vic Raschi in a four- run first inning last night, the ‘Oaks. In the Icop’s other game, Seattle made it two in a row over Port- land with a 3 to 1 decision. ! STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS i Pacific Coast League W L a z At the 20t CENTURY | Pct 544 | = 538/ @ 8 M 87 T3 Browns soundly thumped the Hollywood ... Yanks, 10-3. Although nicked for Oakland ... ... 12 hits, Ned Garver went all the|Sacramento 86 T4 « way for his 10th win. The 22nd|San Diego ... 83 18 518 homers by Jack Graham and Dick | Seattle 80 80 500 | < / '\ ‘Kokos were the big blows for the! San Francisco - 83488 .m‘ Browns. Four hits by Joe DiMag- . Portland 75 84 472 Q gio provided the only Yanks spark.|Los Angeles 64 97 .:Z‘J!!}‘ CLEVELAND NICKED i I Cleveland missed a chance to; National League 1< nick a game and a half off the' w L Pet Yanks load when they 10gt to]St. LOUIS wreee T 48 610 iy Philadelphia, 2-1, in the second | Brooklyn 76 49 608/ game of a twilight-night doublo»}Bo.sLun 66 60 .524| ’ header after winning the npener.‘l’llilfldvlphia 64 62 508 7-6, on Jim Hegan's 14th inning| New York ... 63 62 - 504 homer. As a result, the Tribe gained | Piti<burgh 57" 68 .456 Ffl only a half game on New York and: C:ucinnati 50 74 403 > now trails by 4% games. | Chicago 49 80 380 q Homers by Bobby Doerr and Ted | | Williams, each with a man on,; American League lifted the Red Sox to a 7-4 win i e P Pect over the Tigers. New York m 47 621 INTO CELLAR ; Boston M 51 602 | = The only American League game/ Cleveland 74 53 583 that did not involve contenders' Detroit 72 58 554 | saw Chicago shove Washington B‘Phlludelph' st 532 I'ttle deeper into the cellar with,K Chicago .. ... 52 75 409{ a 4-2 decision. v | 8t. Louis 47 82 .364 | Rain washed out the NationaljWashington 42 83 ,asfi‘m League pennant race for the day, S PRI S A 16 postponing both the St. Louis-| ‘ Philadelphia and Brooklyn-cmcm-,MAGAZ'NE AR"(I_E 1) nati games. Thus the Dodgers re-é v | main ¥ games behind the Cardi- "AMES DODGERS ‘fi nals. Th Brooks play a day-night| ‘ doubleheader with Cincinnati today | 11 while the Cards meet the Phils in} ROE BESI p"(HERwh 1 | | a single night game. i Eight home runs were hit, five | * NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—UP—Who! by the New l“’”‘ Giants, as Le0 | the pest pitcher in baseball? | ® DU oeE = Ny thumped - PIIS-| preacher Roe of the Dodgers—on | g, i ; : Ithe basis of his stinziness with| Lk ston Braves tightened| e, rneq runs—says a copyrighted | ) their grip on third place _by edging | 5 picle published today in the the Chicago Cubs, 4-3, In 10 in-igeptember issue of Baseball Digest. pings. ! The Digest’s figures, prepared | ?we!l in advance to meet magazine ROBINSON KEEPS deadlines, covered the first half up only 241 earned runs per nine two weeks. ‘Tops in the American League was The speedy Negro second base-;Vic Raschi of the ‘Yankees with an man for the Breoklyn Dodgers still | average of 2.64. is first in the Nationul League,! however, with a clubbing percentage{ of .349 including Sunday’s games., B B STARS That leaves him a slump margin‘ [] [] of 21 points over second place Enos' Z % Slaughter of St. Louis. | Two batting stars yesterday and | Stan Musial of the Cardinals, last :one hurler as follows: Batting, Hank Thompson and | PAY CASH AND SAVE lof the season. Official figures pub- lished by the Jeagues do not appear until December. . L In his first 13 games, Roe gave "A‘Io"AI- lEAGuE'hmings‘ according to the magazine’s NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—(#—Jackie | tabulations. That led regular pitch- Robinson’s batting average has|ers in both leagues, although a few dropped fifteen points in the lasr,}relieters could sport a better mark. year’s batting champion, moved past Pittsburgh’s Ralph Kiner into|Bobby Thomson, Giants—Each hit | third place. Musial got 14 hits in a homer, douizle and two singles in | seven days, boosting his average|12-5 rout of Pirates. | o five points to .321. | Pitching, Al Benton, Indians—| Kiner, the league’s home runlBlanked A’s in 8 1-3 inning relief | monarch with 37 non stop licks,) job to earn 7-6 decision. | filled fourth place among the bat- _— ters with a slimming .311, oom-[ We are closing out our boys cords pared with the .318 he had a week‘and Jac shirts. Come in, buy now SHOP HERE ----Lowest Prices in Alaska----SHOP HERE You can save money by shopping at the 20th CENTURY SUPER MARKET . . . 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