The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 22, 1950, Page 3

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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1950 TIGERS ARE TIED WITH YANKS NOW (By the Associated Press) The Detroit Tigers go after un- disputed possession of first place in the see-saw American League pennant struggle tonight while the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox are idle. Detroit takes on the tough Indians in Cleveland in the first of a three game series while the Yanks and Red Sox mark time before opening a two game series at Yankee Sta- dium tomorrow. The Tigers tied the Yanks for the dead yesterday by trouncing the Philadelphia Athletics, 8-2. The Rea Sox and the Yanks were not sched- uled, PENNANT RACE American League pennant race at a glance: W L Pet GB GL v 91 53 .632 1 Detroit .91 53 .632 1 Boston 89 55 618 2 1 Remaining games: New York at home (6): ton 4, Boston 2. Away 2, Philadelphia 2. Detroit at home (7): Cleveland 3. Away (3): Boston at home (6): ‘Washington 4. Away delphia 2, New York 2. New York .. ‘Washing- (4): Boston St. Louis 4 Cleveland 3 New York 2 (4): Phila- Hal Newhouser, 29-year-old left- hander, has been selected to pitch for the Tigers against the Indians Bob Feller. Both boast identica: 14-11 records. The Indians have proved one of the Tigers’ toughest adversaries thi: year. They have clashed 17 times with each side winning eight games The other resulted in a 13-13 tie The victories were evenly distrib- uted, four for each in Cleveland and Detroit. Newhouser has beaten the Indians four times and lost to them twice Both of his defeats came at Cleve- land. Feller holds a 2-1 card against thes Tigers.i ) (1| i Meanwhile, Yank Manager Casey Stengel has a pitching problem tc solve. His team will work out at the Stadium today and two of his aces, righthander Vic Raschi and left- hander Ed Lopat, will try out their ailing arms. The Tigers jumped on Joe Cole- man, who has had arm trouble, for six runs in the first six innings and were never headed. ‘The game was the only one sched- uled in the American League. In the National, the Boston Braves defeated the St. Louis Cardinals, 5-0, and the Brooklyn Dodgers thumped the Pittsburgh Pirates, 10-8, to remain tied for second place. They trail the league-leading Philadelphia Phillies by seven games. The Phils and Chicago Cubs were idle. Warren Spahn blanked the Cards on two hits to rack up his 2Ist victory. In the other game, the Cincin- nati Reds defeated the New York Giants, 8-5. The Reds piled up a 7-1,lead in four innings for Howie Fox. The victory ended an 1l-game winning~ streak for Giant right- hander Sal Maglie. SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSEN’S PR RO A0 Teg . 555 D H 3 ERES How TO zow DIVIDENDS — THAT PAYS Thursday Night Handicap Bowl- ing League finds Casler's retaining their lead followed by Juno Drug Caro Transfer holds third spot. The three highest games rolled last night were by J. Estes 201, J.! Wood 199, and J. Wilber 191. High series of 521 was rolled by Mike Fenster. Team Standings Casler's Juno Drug Zaro Transfer Pan American Pacific Northern Alaska Coastal Sweeney's Bar Alaska Light Team and individual scoring fol- ows: L 2 3 4 5 5 6 Pacific 2. Krsul . Ward . Pheasant . Loken . Porter Totals 119— 413 101— 417 139— 409 151— 432 631—2046 Alaska Light 22 147 186 123 162 164 804 22 114 . 141 128 121 96 622 22— 66 150— 411 Handicap A. Hedges W. Hellan . 3. Peyton D. Moore Taylor Totals 145— 428 145— 405 693—2119 g Casler’s 134 . 145 133 . 134 150 696 Pan American 26 26 133 117 145 131 13¢ 134 158 147 135 149 31 704 126 142 164 161 144 37 . Estes . West . Arnold . Taylor Wilber Totals .. 107— 404 171— 466 781—2214 26— 199— 449 Handicap . Wood . Stephens Macchia Adams Neilson Totals 134— 402 108— 413 158— 442 761—2196 7 A 2. i A Juneau Drug 34 34 107 107 . 133 133 90 112 43 170 154 177 661 1733 Alaska Coastal . Stewart 167 115 . Leighton 175 149 . Bloomquist .. 101 103 . Fenster 183 165 . Brown . 171 160 Totals .. 97 692 Handicap 34— 102 . Andreson 3. Moore Page . Brust, Totals 141— 407 153— 355 141 454 165— 496 7412135 124— 405 145— 469 132— 336 173— 521 711—2200 Caro Transfer . Hawkins 161 119 . Davis 191 136 . Oldham .. 145 145 . Tibbits . 160 148 Cahail .. 147 146 Totals 804 694 Sweeney's 8 119 169 115 146 143 700 128— 408 146— 473 145— 435 150— 458 189— 482 758—2256 8— 2 136— 379 87— 355 143— 345 137— 457 182— 493 693—2053 Handicap ... S. Sheldon .. E. Oswald B. Sweeney E. Johnson . J. Werner .. "Totals .. 660 “RAIN OR SHINE” “Enjoy weekerd at LAKU LODGE. $25 includes round trip transporta- tion from Juneau; deluxe lodging, meals, fishing and sightseeing trips. Phone 202 for reservations. 592-tf A REAL BLUE c“lp EMA 6! 121— 375 103— 430 128— 379 201— 461/ 111— 398/ 191— 485 8| 136— 412 107— 321} 137— 468 BEAVERS LOSEBY 2 ERRORS (By the Associated Press) But for a pair of errors by second | baseman Eddie Basinski, the Port- |land Beavers today might have been the proud owners of the longest winning streak of the Pacific Coast League season. As it happened, however, the usually reliable Mr. Basinski made | ning and set the stage for two San ancisco r the ball game, 4 to 2. It snapped Portland's victory ipassing another 1l-game winning streak established by San Diego and interrupted by this same Portland 5]club on Aug. 19. Elsewhere along the circuit last night, Hollywood edged San Diego, 8 to 5, Sacramento upset Oakland, ,10 to 7, and Seattle trimmed Los 1Angeles, 8 to 5. { For the Stars, anyway, the game lat Hollywood was something of a phenomenon. The Hollywoods, aptly nicknamed the hitless wonders, fwith the accent on the hitless, jamassed 18 blows in knocking off the Padres. l Sacramento turned in a six run L‘thlh inning in subduing the pace- |setting Oaks. It was Itriumph of the week for place Solons. At Seattle, right hander Charley | Schanz had pitched a pretty decent the the last finding the range on him with two | down in the ninth. But Seattle Man- ager Paul Richards sent reliefer | Vern Kindsfather out in time for ;the Rainiers to pull it out of the fire. STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League Oakland San Diego | Hollywood Seattle San Francisco { Portland jLos Angeles Sacramento | | i National League w 88 80 . 80 -7 2 62 61 52 L 85 61 61 66 71 81 84 93 Pet 615 567 567 | 538, .503 434 421 359 Philadelphia | Boston | Brooklyn 1 New York St. Louils Cincinnati Chicago | Pittsburgh \ American League w 91 91 Pet 632 632 618 582 441 390 375 .333 New York .. { Detroit | Boston | Cleveland | Washington | Chicago | St. Louis Philadelphia B.B.SIARS - l fgames played yesterday are: Pitching — Warren Spahn, Braves —pitched Boston to a 5-0, two-hit | victory over St. Louis for his 21st | victory. Batting — Joe Ginsberg, Tigers | —climaxed six run first inning rally with three-run double to help De- troit down Philadelphia, 8-2. RUMMAGE SALE Methodist Church Sept. 23. Sale starts at 10 a.m. el N meLiow, OLO WHEN YOU -TIME NT IMPERIAL | A al is made by Hiram Walker. Blended whiskey. 86 proof. 701 grain neutral spitits. Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Peoria, Illinois. - two wild throws in the eighth in- | that gave the Seals | string at 11 games, one short of sur- | first | ball game until the Angels began | Stars of major league baseball | e ENTERTAINING poie, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE (GRIDDERS T0 START SATURDAY . 1 NEW YORK, Sept. 22—(®—Dor- | mant since last New Year's Day, the | college footballers bestir themselves tomorrow in every part of the land. Nothing very big. Most of the| powers which will appear among the {first 10 on the Associated Press| ".nlI a month from now still have | another week of practice remaining. But there are a number of better- | than-fair attractions on the day’s program, and at_least one game down he deep South could prove the payoff on a sectional title at is the clash between Louis- ana S ton under the lights. Both are esteemed contenders for the South- eastern Conference Crown. | The week" from a nal viewpoint possibly is that between Southern Methodist ' | and Ge a Tech inight engagement. A encounter nificanc pits the highly Maryland team against Georgia, Athens. The soothsayers have in- stalled Maryland among the na- tional leade: Midwest Quiet The Mid-West remains quiet ex- jcept for an intersectional duel at East Lansing between Michigan State and Oregon State, The Far| Western team won a 25-20 thriller a year ago, but the Spartans are fav- ored on their home grounds. Out on the coast the champion California Bears entertain Santa Clara at Berkeley, and Stanford, which is supposed to be the heir ap- uarent in those parts, plays host to San Jose State. Neither of the big ‘(!\. ms appears in danger of an upset. Texas, touted as the hottest thing |in the Southwest Conference, dis- plays its new muscles against Texas Tech at Lubbock. Only a scattering of games are scheduled in the East. Boston Col- lege's skirmish with Wake Forest in the New England city probably is the headliner. Connecticut plays Yale in the bowl. | Other openers around the country include: Kansas State at Univ. of Wash- ington, Washington State at Utah State, Oregon at U.C.L.A., and Col- lege of Pacific at St. Mary's. '+ LEADERS IN B. B. Here are th major league base- | ball leaders to date: National League Batting — Musial, St. Louis, Robinson, Brocklyn, 5. Runs Batted In — Ennis, Phila- delphia, 118; Kiner, Pittsburgh, 116. | Home Runs — Kiner, Pittsburgh, 46; Pafko, Chicago, 35. Pitching—Maglie, New York, 16-4, 800; Konstanty, Philadelphia, 16- .‘)‘ 762, at Dallas, also‘a sig- of some 346, American League Batting — Goodman, Boston, .357; hell Detroit, .342. Runs Batted In—Dropo, | 142; Stephen’, Boston, 140. Home Runs — Rosen, Cleveland, | ‘3() Dropo, Boston, 34. | | Pitching — Trout, Detroit, 13-5. 722; Raschi, New York, 20-8, .714 Boston, MARINER SCOUTS MEET Mariner Scout Troop 10 .held its | of |second meeting at the home { Mollie Jo MacSpadden on Wednes- day evening. We discussed dues and | decided on $1.25 to be paid on the! troop's birthday. It was moved and lseconded to go on a hike up Lemon ICreek. Saturday, September 30. We Ithen closed out meeting. Arlene Parsons, Reporter. FLAVOR o e and Kentucky at Lexing- | most important game | ‘ JUNEAU, ALASKA ALASKAN HURLER PITCHES "GRUDGE' SALL IN SOUTH CK MOUNT, N. C. Sept. 22 (P The favorite souvenir of Bill T 15 is the return half of a « trip ticket from Anchorage, A |, to Atlanta, Ga. 1, a husky 21-year-old ; was pitching semi-pro ball home town when a scout him for the Atlanta Crack- The Seattle Rainiers muf- chance at him, thinking he w limits due to the school- |b . Bill was given the round |t \kt( and set sail happily for a Crackers sent him to Wilson of the Class D coastal plain league, ¥ that if he lasted 30 'S he get $1,000. Wilson ! n the 29th day <y Mount, of the same league, the boy and after that he care which team he beat as st v\ as Wilson. But t his old chums, ext time around he whipped 3-0 and then he took the rub- ecision, 5-2. pending winter in Rocky and figures that return actually will be a ticket to time baseball. 9 DEER, 2 BULL MOOSE BROWSE, FLORIST FOREST bull moose browse in the nery by a small mirror lake Juneau Florists window, with a hunting Of course they're only pot- and not life-size but look very 1l Nearby the same win- dow a pottery buck deer alertly guards his family of four wide-eyed does and curious fawns. Their “fer- est” consists of a totem pole philo- dendron, a peperomia and ferns. They are quite safe because no hunters are to be souths e s cut him Two gres in t keeping theme tery in he lost | in | season | 'POMARE MAIL BOAT' 1S ORDERED BACK BY MARINE INSPECTOR KODIAK, ka, Sept The Pomare, a Seattle bo: the contract for of mail to Seward, Kodiak and villages on the Aleutian chain was ordered | back fo Seattle by the Coast Guard yesterday. The Ceast Guard’s only explana- tion that the “certificate of | inspection was taken because of werk which needed to be done on the Pomare.,” The Merchant Ma ine Inspector at Juneau ordered the action The Pomare Coast Guard cutter of Kodiak. The vessel, owned by Aleutian Steamship Company Seattle, was ordered home by of , Juneau. On its first mail run the craft went aground near Kodiak Island but got free under its own power, FOOTBALL SCORES 22 P holding was stopped by a 300 miles west the of way Here are scores of college foot- ball games played Thursday: YaCrosse (Wis) Tchrs 41, (Ia) 0. le Rock JC 12, Arkansas State Austin (Tes 5, Southeastern OKla- | homa 0. Gustavus Adolphus (Minn) 0. St. Ambrose 18, Iowa Wesleyan 6. | Northeast Louisiana 43, Poteau (Okla) JC T. College Idaho 37, North. 33, Augsburg Idaho 27. WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE Douglas city water will be off from 9:30 am, to 3:30 p.n. Sun- day, Septem ber of cleaning the reservoir. 613--2¢ Luther | 24 for the purpose | *| save at le when | ship | Clipper* Cargo! You can’t compare sea and air ship- ping costs by weight rates alone ! You must also count these special economies of Clipper Cargot © Crating is seldom necessary. | s Shipping weights are less, because you use lighter packing. | oNo deterioration. o Lower insurance ¢osts; goods are 'y transit so briefly. o Inventory and warebouse costs can be drastically reduced. o Shipping rates go down as weights 80 up. On’y Pan n American o 47 o Working capital works barder .o | BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 T rade Marh, Pan Amerkcan PAGE THREE ast 12 ways by because payment is quicker. o Documentation time and costs are reduced. One Air Waybill covers shipment from origin to destination. ©Goods arrive when needed . . . while the market is strongest. eDamage and pilferage losses ase greatly reduced. ©C.0.D. and collect services available to many countries. o Fewer bandling fe. Clipper schedules are fast, frequent in Alaska and to the States. For rates and schedules call your Clippes Cargo Agent or Pan Americaa. ffers the advantages of FFE’R’CZR&’U ALASKA’S GREAT MIXOLOGISTS George, . a Moore Oscar Ulland invite you to the Big Party Tonight 1:30 A. M. AT JGAEME SVIL0 TRIIORIN9]! Ross Oasis Added Entertainment for Y our Enjoyment .NOTI CE... NEW LOW CAB FARE TO THE OASIS Any Night $1.00 After Midnight ROSS" 0ASIS George Moore, Manage r “The Gayest Spot on the Channel”

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