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THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1950 TAE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ] Giants Lose [86!NAND OUTON ANCHORAGE YMGA | 1 | ALASKA COASTAL | BID IS sz1s 000 1 Doubleheader! THURSDAY FlIGHTS il ) : The Warrack Construction Co., | ; | | was low bidder for a new YMCA . STANDINGS OF THE CLUPS To B ro o kl “ | Alaska Coastal Airlines passengers. y,ijqing for Anchorage. l EGO IN Pacific Coast League totaled 86 on flights yesterday With | \yarrack big $275,000 with an al- | L Pot 44 departing. 32 arriving and 10| ate deduction of $10,600. | Oakland 56 614 — on interport flights. 2 Py (By the Associated Press) Leaving for Gull Cove, passengers | William C. Hufelsen bid $306,863 ian Diego 53. 563 v were: Ernest Hake, George Hake l'.\l!h a $12,000 alternate deduction, | ollyl‘\mnl 9 6 54| Bosto nand Brooklyn, the Dre-|for Todd: Joe Dunn, W. E, Neylon: |2nd Morrison-Knudsen bid $439,000 | seattle Ny -i‘ggme ason pennant picks, are down but 3 berq. | With @ $7,000 alternate. | e for Port Althorp: Arthur Petroberg: | San Francisco . T4 | B s Wi ¢ not out today—6'. games back with | o Hood Bay: Mr. and Mrs. Tray- | The bids will be sent to the New 5::-:1;:(3“11. . Z? -:g:‘ about six weeks to go. lior; for Excursion Inlet:, Walt J York YMCA International for evalu- | s'. A ‘ 2 " 43!16 Surging at Fenway Park, fourth- |gings: for Funter: Betty Sorrels ation, Manley and Mayer, Anchor- Emtramento 8 386 pjace Boston has a five-game Win- | for Chatham: Philip E. Myhie; for | %€¢ architects, said. ning streak going in the American |pejican: James Gleaton; for T;\l»:v.' A e e League. All were scored at the eX-ipoint: Gene Specht. ’ 1 | | i By JIM HUBBART Pt i, ¥ 2 L' Pol|oonce of the tattered Philadelphia | For Wrangell: Andy Barlow; for| " NUANS, MARTIN ON TRIP (Associated Press Sportswriter) Ii)lonuln 1 8608|2008 v o mght. Wash etk DIk Pk, Mr. an If the San Diego Padres are; Cleveland -02% ! ington comes into Fenway tonight, 'ays Herbe ne sburg | assaying a .comeback, then Lheyi New York 3 4 followed by all the western clubs, My, E“;b:\;l‘:)eé.\.v;ur ;:;T:rb for JRCKERRNTRR TR VS, SRS Iy N probably started too late to do them- IBnMon 48 E H’ | Brooklyn, cooling off the New 'Lake Hasselburg: James Camp i\’l artin’s cabin ('r\ux_m, the Veteran, selves much good in the Pacific ! hington 59 ‘45;!; York Giants yesterday in both ends ward Johnson; for Skagway: Thel- jm. a rv:unbn;:(yl .h‘xl‘l“flss :n‘ul ‘|- : Coast League pennant race. But the ;::;;‘:5;‘] L ;g 3865 a doubleheader, 8-6 and 5-1, re- ‘ma Clark; W. Swenson, M. Fremh.l ':"“ zl\nld) ‘E““":“C“"“‘:' "’;;““xl‘:nz‘ 1(‘; BERLINERS SEE U. S. AIR SHOW_A helicopter Hovers in’ middi duri :’;::l:st'gf Zydn:;ifl:nd;ep(?:l::]:x;xl‘;u‘r(j St. Lmu]s ' U. 8. Air Force demonstration celebrating "Armed Forces” day at Ttmpelhor Airfield, Berlin. rassment to the opposition. ! - e riere - Wi . s The scourge of the circuit before | National League ening their pace, threaten to romp For Sitka: Mel Hollis, Romulo mid-season rigor mortis set in, San Pet | home. The Phils open a series in Partusan, Mr. and Mrs. B. Hilding- Diego rang up its 10th straight vic- | Philadelphia | New York tonight while Brooklyn |er, Peter Crews, Phillip Arcia, Wen- tory last night by whipping Port- | Brooklyn entertains Boston. |cestao Abuan, Aresnio Min.., o land, 4 to 2. Bulwarked by the in- | Boston Home runs by Gene Hermanski, 'Ehman, B. Battcher, T. P. Hansen ure sure evitable Sultcase Simpson, the Padre | St. Louis 532| il Hodegs and Billy Cox helped 'W. Schwind, Joe Camille, Mary Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mangan and | iy gained second place in the National Bob Thibodeau; for Haines: Tony “| League from Boston. But those idle | Dire, Miss Edna Dire, Joe M. Smith | Phillies, showing no signs of slack- |Harold D. Dent. return in about six weeks. ' it GBI 557 550 . 8:// Chevrolet trucks with Loadmaster engine offer more net horsepower —proved by certified ratings on engines Used as standard equip- ; o 3 Loome .I. onventional medets 'of the fivi st popular makes, 13,000 to 16000 Ibs. G. .Y,W o P Chioig Mergyve ,.33'; Raoe Ddepsodariogs L 1 flfl batting power was there in .413. New York 514 | hon Newcombe struggle to his 12th |Alice Lord, Martha Cushing, Mrs Despite the triumph, however, | Chicago 440/ yictory in the opener. Still the Dod- | G. ‘urner. san Diego still dropped halt a| Cincinnati 435 | cers needed a fine relief job by| Passengers arriving from Sitka notch more behind the pace setting | Pittsburgh 358 | preacher Roe. Roe came in with the were: C. Beaushane, J. Angell, H Oakland Acorns, who took a;double- bases loaded in the eighth and three | McPerson, Mrs. A., Hope Don Fos- header from San Francisco, 6 to 1 ] | un’;‘lhgtttwshflkllllflf, rmrmed t,hlngsllouls FAVORED runs home. He made Don Mueller iter, W. Swanson; rap into a double play, then breezed Skagway: Ken Kamareaux, Harold | through the ninth. |Dent; from Haines: S. Hellenthal Erv Palica tamed the Giants with [Norm Banfield, Mrs. H. Schuten- | four hits in the second game. Carl helm, A. A. Schutenhelm, A..A M. Fréhch; from ub for evleFbodt; T0 RECAPTURE At. Seattle, the Rainiers split a scoFeks 'Wére 31 ta+1)7both: thmes:: The HEAVY (ROWN 14th homer, a single and fly ball to |Orval Nevers and two children Sdlons needed 10 innings to beat drive in three runs. | From Petersburg: William Porte! Jim Wilson, Seattle’s 20 game win- | Cincinnati shaded Chicago, 2-1, Mr. Boberg, William Shaeffer; from ner, in the finale; shabby base run- | NEW YORK, Aug. 18—®- ~Ezzard | in the only other National League |Pelican: Mrs. Malloney, Edward ning cost them the‘opener. ¢ Charles, the NBA-recognized heavy- | game. Kenny Raffensberger scat- |Gwin, A. V. Collar, Wesley C. Mc- {Donald; from Excursion Inlet: Nick double bill with Sacramento. The At Los Angeles, Choctaw Cal Mc- | weight king, will be the underdog | tered six Cub hits. Lish pitched the Angels to a six hit, 3 to 0 shutout over Hollywood. In Sept. 27 when he meets Joe Louis at Yankee Stadium. | Rain Wins One 'Gould Alec Kenezuroff, Larry Bear; 'from Gustavus: Joe Frydlo; from posting his 15th triumph, MCLlShI First odds offered were 3 to 1 that fanned seven and faced only 32 bat- | the Brown Bomber, now 36, would | ters. recapture the title he surrendered Simpson slammed his 23rd home | 18 months ago. Perhaps they'll run of the season for San Diego. It | shorten before fight time, but Louis, came with one man aboard, brought as always, will be favored. his RBI total to 100, and gave h1m1 Charles, 29, never has made a 31 hits for the months of August. lsmashing hit with the pu‘bhc In line with their drawing power, Wilson was working on a six.game |y ,,is will get 35 percent and winning streak before Sacramento | Charles 20 percent. Their managers cut him short on Len Ratto’s 10th | agreed to that yesterday in phone | Rain washed out the Pittsburgh- | at-St. Louis night game. Philadel- | phia and Boston were not scheduled. | | | Detroit clung to its three-game | |lead over runnerup Cleveland in | | the American chase. New York’s loss R | to Washington dropped the Yanks | | 412 games back and only two games SPI“ IGloo TAI.ES ahead of the Red Sox. The Tigers stomped Chicago, 8-3, on nine hits and nine walks. Aaron AS MER(URY SOARS Robinson and George Kell each hit | his” eighth'homer. | !Hoonah: Mrs. Jenne Marko; from Todd: Stanl y M. Eikum. | | Furillo ruined New York with his|Lyon, Hugh Wade, Mr. and M\; ! inning double with two men aboard. ' Loutish base running by John Lu- cadello cost the Sacs a run in the first game. He dogged it between third and home, with the result that a throw from the outfield nabbed Joe Marty for the third out of the inning before Lucadello could cross the plate. Al Lyons drove in all Se- attle’s three runs in the opener with a double and home run. The second game at San Fran- cisco was called after seven innings because of the curfew. The Oaks won both games in the seventh—the | first with a six run assault that wrecked Al Lien's one hitter; the second with a three run outburst | at the expense of Manny Perez. SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSEN’S conversations ~with International | Boxing Club officials. B.B.STARS Stars of major league baseball | games played yesterday are: Batting — Gil Coan, Senators — beat Yankees with two-run triple | in eighth inning, 2-1. Pitching — Steve Gromek, In-| dians—held St. Louis to one hit in six relief innings as Cleveland took i5»4 game in 12th. | FLEISCHMANN on a product i | \er 24 carat on gold—the finest i can be. Try FLEISCHMANN GIN | and be convinced. Alaska Coastal Airlines enables you fo arrange —through your local ticket agent—your passage o the States on Pan American, and then to any spot on the globel And for you who buy tickets in Sitka, Hoonah, Tenakee, Skagway, Haines and similar comimunities, ACA reserves a special block of seats sathat its passengers share equal priority with Sose ‘who buy-tickets in Juneaul @« W% % m&de«mm Your Depeosits ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA m FEDERAL DEPOSIT INETRANCE CORPORATION — Cleveland had to'go 12 innings to | whip the stubborn St. Louis Browns, trick. New York’s Yankees, only first | division club to tumble, bowed to| | the Senators, 2-1. After pitching no-hit hall for 6 1/3 ininngs, Allie; | Reynolds finally bowed to Sid Hud- son. In addition, the Yanks lost the | | services of outfielder Hank Bauer, hit on the head by a throw from | | catcher Al Evans, trying to pick him off third. Reynolds’ no-hitter was broken by Sherry Robertson’s infield single in the seventh. In the eighth Gil Coan’s two-run triple won the game | after a two-base error by Phil Riz- | the Red Sox to win his 12th game. The loss was the 19th in succession seasons. TOWN CRIERS TAKE ALL-STARS BY 19 70 6 SCORE The power laden Town Criers rapped out a 19 to 6 victory over an all star team picked from the | Juneau softball league last night it the Evergreen Bowl. No home- runs were registered. Jim Vuille of the Town Criers| and Richard Allen of the All Stars cracked long triples. Vauilles’ hit landed on the concrete of the ten- nis court, but due to the exceds weight in various portions he was oushed to drag everything into third base. Allen’s hit was a hard drive over the Town Criers center- | fielders head for a well deserved three base knock. Allen's hitting and fielding last night has proven without a doubt that he is the most promising high school player to hit the Juneau 'softball league to date. The battery for the Town Criers were Tom Powers, catcher and John Scott, pitcher. For the All Stars, Carl Mueller catchgr, and Sgt. Ja- coks and Lowell Trump, pitchers. The next meeting of these two teams will be Monday night at 7 p.m. at the Evergreen Bowl, LEADERS IN B. B. American League Batting — Kell, Detroit, .350; Goodman, Boston, .349. Runs Batted In — Stephens, Bos- ton, 116; Dropo, Boston, 113, Home Runs — Rosen, Cleveland, 32; Dropo and Stephens, Boston, 27. Pitching—Trout, Detroit, 10-2, .833. National League Batting — Musial, St. Louis, .361; Robinson, Brooklyn, .338. Runs Batted In — Ennis, Phila- delphia, 99; Kiner, Pittsburgh, 80. Home Runs — Kiner, Pittsburgh, 34; Pafko, Chicago, 28. Pitching — Hiller, - Chicago, 8-2, 5-4. Early Wynn’s pinch single fol-{ | lowing Ray Boone's triple did the! zuto on Hudson’s grounder had opened the gates. | Ellis Kinder went the route for | for the Athletics at Fenway in two | terday are: PORTLAND, Aug, 15—4D—Alflska| sourdoughs swirled their tales of | snow ‘and ice around a hotel lowy’ | here today. Outside the mercury |climbed toward a forecast 95 de- | grees. 1 It didn't faze the oldtimers ga | ered here for the 19Th International | {Sourdough reunion. Early- dax { Alaska pioneers, “Veterans ' of* fhe | | gold rush of 1898 and their followers, | | matched stories without ceast | The talk-fest, which star yés-1 | terday as more than 150 registered for the annual meeting, was to con- { tinue through the day. The annual banquet will be held tonight. The reunion will continue through Suh- day. Scores of WIL games played yes- Tacoma 10, Salem 2, Tri-City 9, Yakima 1. Spokane 10, Wenatchee 6. Victoria 4, Vancouver 1. 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