The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1948, Page 1

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THE DAILY A VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 11,009 JUNEAU, ALASKA !gEDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1948 Cleveland Blanked In Ist. World Series Ga HURRICANE SWATS MIAMI THEN MASS ROARS OUT T SEA Three Tornadoes Sprouted -Heavy Downpour Oc- curs-Damage Large MIAMI, Fla, Oct. 6 Florida's “Gold Coast” dried out today after a tropical hurricane scrubbed the area with wind and rain. One person died of a heart at- tack, and six others were injured in the Greater Miami area but all Florida apparently escaper serious wind and water damage. Cuba counted 11 dead, 300 injured and crop .damage estimated at $6,000,000 when the storm raked the island before moving on Flor- ida. Key West escaped damage. The Caribbean-born storm scored a direct hit on Miami. The cen- ter of the great swirling mass passed direcily over the city early last night, roared on to Fort Laud- erdale and sliced out to sea at Pompano. Sprouting at least three tor- naoes before it left Florida, the hurricane dumped 9.56 inches of rainfall at the Miami International | Airport, and flooded the western suburbs of Greater Miami, Holly- In pronouncifig sentence, Judgelwood and Fort Lauderdale. Mathes said that to spare Kaw-' One tornado wrecked 13 houses akita’s /life “would dishonor the and injured three persons at Pom- memory of Pvt. Sadao Munemori” ao. (Nisel winner of the Congressional The storm came Just two weeks Medal of Honor). {after another hurricane poured six- The convicted man's mother,|inches to a foot of water over the Mrs. Tose Kawakita, buried her southern half of Florida. That face iri her haids when she heard | storm flooded ghousands of acres the “sentence, ' Judge Msathes dis- {of farm and grazing lands around letter fro *u‘ml e son_ was . gullty of treason, she did | i Judge Mathes said the sentence was not based ‘on the brutalities with which Kawakita was charged. | 0". SlRlKE Sl'op' “His crime,” the Jurist explained, | ’ “js_that he sald from 1943 on he did everything he could to help' Japan win the war.” H Kawakita, -born in Calexico, SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 6.—P— Calif., returned here from Japan Ten policemen were injured, three and was spotted in a departmentiof them hospitalized, and several store by an ex-GI ‘who had been | pickets were clubbed and beaten imprisoned at Oeyama. today as bloody violence flared at the struck Standard Oil Co. re- in Transbay Richmond. ‘Only one picket reported for hos- pitalization. Eight were jailed. BRUTAL JAP CONVICTED OF TREASON lnterpreierfi at Infamous Camp Oeyama Sen- tenced o Death LOS ANGELES, Oct. 6.—P—Cal- \fornia-born Tomoya Kawakita, convicted of committing brutal- ities against American war prison- ers while he was an interpreter at Japan’s infamous Camp Oeyama, ' is under sentence of death for treason. Federal Judge Willlam C. Ma- thes yesterday sentenced the 28- year-old Nisei to die in the gas! chamber at San Quentin prison. Morris Lavine, defense counsel, immediately filed notice for ap- peal. Lavine tried for hours to have ‘the conviction set aside on grounds that coercion and undue influence had been exerted upon | the jury. Kawakita—called “Meatball” by] 35 ex-servicemen who testified against him—was convicted of treason ' Sept. ‘2 after eight days of heated dellberation and eleven weeks of trial: : (P—South | | * finery TWO FOUND DEAD BLOODY VIOLENCE “ALL THE NEWS WARRENROUTED | i ! FROM TRAIN CAR ;Tl’ll e H"" - sveuazwGTRuck Dewey, Lew ‘Governor, on Campaign’i(ampaign To Tour, with Family Trans- | ferred on Train | By B. L. LIVINGSTONE ! ENROUTE WITH WARREN TO CHICAGO, Oct. 6—P—Flames f Secrefary of S';ie Mars Summoned Home from ) {Three Powér; fo Probably U. S. Accusér Hiurls Charge ASKA EMPIRE ALL THE TIME” MEMBER A BLOCKADE RUSSIA IS NOTE FOR INDICTED RUSSIANS BEFORE UN i | | | of " Starvation of Ber- lin"”" at Soviets Send Joint Demand fo Paris for Talk By ERNEST B. VACCARO ABOARD TRUMAN CAMPAI sweeping the rear truck of Gov. Earl Warren's private car early to-| day routed the Governor and his| family from bed and halted the TRAIN, Oct. 6.—(P—President Vice Presidential special. man opened his third _campa! The blaze had its origin in a|tour teday with a pl'on\is‘e that journal box, and a train staff| Democrats if elected, will write “ member said it had seriously dam-lceut Democratic labor legislatio: aged the axle. i (to replace the Taft-Hartley A trainman spotted the flames passed over his veto. as the Repuolican Vice Presidential| Mr. Truman made his promi | cinnati about of route to Philadelphia where he ! Marysville, Ky. | will make a major address in Con-. Damage to the car, the Aleutian, |vention Hall at 6:30 pm. (PST)._ | | “Back in President Hoover's the slogan was two ecars 6:20 a. m. east | caused trainmen to uncouple it. ; At Cincinnati, where the train day, ywas 2!z hours behind schedule, every garage,” Mr. Truman said | another car was coupled to the rear| “Apparently,” he continued i, lof the train |attack on GOP housing | Mrs. Warren was able to gather “the Republican candidate | up only enough clothing to meet ning on a slogan of ‘two her family’s needs at Chicago to- in every garage.'” ke night. | Lewis’ Attack Mnll[n-ntqe All other possessions had to be: The President had this to " left behind in the car, which is|today about John L. Lewis’ to be hauled to Chicago after rush.on him yesterday as a “mall repairs in Cincinnati. scheming sort of an individual. The Governor and Mrs. Warren, “You remember the statement and their daughter, Virginia, trans- made atout John Garner . . . ferred to another car. .\made Garner a great man.” t SRR, o ‘The United Mine Workers leader 2 oo K-" once described former Vice Presi- led, Tour Cut Short TEHRAN, Iran, Oct. 6—®— The President'’s comment came Two hundred persons were Killed g5 he started on a three-day east- and thousands were injured by 8n e campaign swing that will carry ;eanhquake last midnight, a d‘s‘jhlm into the home state of his patch from Meshed said today. |Republican Presidential rival, Gov. Damage was reported great. The Thomas E. Dewey of New York. dispatch said parts of the famous My Truman had planned to Meshed mosque called Gowharshad make it a four day tour but cut it collapsed. short after summoning Secretary »Mcshed is the capital of Khor- of State Marshall back from Paris asan Province, in eastern Iran. to report on the international sit- ! y T L B | uation. AMERIC L evil old ma man ~Was ' opening of the Mine Workers ennfal convention in Cincinnati. |late yesterday that Mr. Truman +had directed Marshall to return from the. United Nations sessions A" ESK'M o The White House announcement i it hen l 1 ‘as E. Dewey is going | dent Garner as a “labor baiting, | ' poker playing, whiskey drinking & Lift Blockade PARIS, Oct. 6.—#— American,’ British and French U. N. Secur- The United States indicted Rus- ity Council leaders met late to- sia today before the United Na- day to hammer out a resolution tions Security Council on a charge calling on Russia to end the Ber- of menacing peace with the “star- lin blockade, a British official vation” blockade of Berlin. reported. Surprisingly, Russia’s Andrei Their informal meeting was also Vishinsky attended the session, to decide whether the West's end- which he asserted was illegal and the-blockade resolution would be!indicated he would boycott. (By The Associated Press) United States, Britain and France, C. Jessup ran up the charges or ' separate ones, the source said. against the Soviet Union: then he The general expectation was that took out a French Socialist news- the call would be a three-power paper and started to read as if bored. He left the session raging at newspapermen. . Jessup, a Columbia - University professor, declared the United States is determined “to take such measures as may be necessary to insure the safety and subsistence of our forces in Berlin and of the (2,500,0000 population comunitted to their charge by the four power 17 £ agreement.” i"‘\ : (AMPAIG“ He accused Russia of trying to YR force the Western powers from 4 "7 Berlin. He said the blockade pre- i —_— prevents free -negotiations but that ALBANY, Oct. 6 (P Gov. Thom- the U. §. is willing to talk on all to keep points about Germany “the moment away at a United Ameri- the blockade is lifted.” Russia gn theme on the ground blocked . the land . routes . in, June, training Russla. but -has asserted several times of e tial late that there is no gw also will * continue “to™ up “weeused ~Russ faend hammer at the idea that this Ing Beriin. " He called her offer {country can maintain its prosper- to feed the Western zones propa- |ity and thus meet its economic BAnda. He accused the Soviets of | commitments to Western Europe. | Creating “organized and inspired Friends of the New York Gov- mob violence” and with welshing with He' serious | special was speeding toward Cin- | at Wilmington, Del., first stop el =!a joint one in the name of the first took copious notes as Philip SSOCIATED PRESS BOX SCORE CLEVELAND (American) ABRH (<] o) amrmrar-cod Mitchell, Doby, cf Boudreau, ss Keltner, 3b Judnich, rf Gordon, 2b Robinson, 1b Hegan, ¢ Feller, p I Srremwe PWW e s | —es | 1 - 9 = Totals 32 0 BOSTON (National) AB R Holmes, rf Dark, ss Torgeson, 1b Elliott, 3b Rickert, 1f Salkeld, ¢ Masi, ¢ M. McCormick, rf Stanky, 2b Sisti, 2b Sain, p WO O W e cccococeo~ococorm cococuvravmmmn0 ccco~cococo00o lco~occnwoco~0P Totals 24 1 227 4 Errors—Elliott, 2. Runs batted in ~—Holmes. Stolen bases—Hegan, Gordon, Torgeson. Sacrifices—Fel- | ler, Salkeld, M. McCormick. Left on bases—Cleveland 6; Boston 4. Bases on balls — off Feller 3 (Torgeson, Salkeld, Stanky). Strike outs—by Feller 2 (Torgeson, Salkeld); Sain 6 (Gordon,' Feller 2, Boudreau. Kelt- ner, Judnich). Umpires—Barr (NL) plate; Summers (A)' 1b; Stewart | (NL) 2b; Grieve (A) 3b; Paparella (AL) If; Pinelli (NL) rf. Attend- ance—40,135 paid. Time-—1:42. - e PLAY BY PLA INDIANS—Sain’s first pitch to leadoff batter Mitchell was a ball. Mitchell hit the next serve to Mike McCormick in left center. Doby swung &t a three and two pitch and loited an easy fly to M. MeCormick in dead center. , Boudreau fouled out to Rickert "near the left field boxes, No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. BRAVES—Holmes lined to Doby "in left center field. | PRICE TEN CENTS me SAIN HURLS SHUTOUT IN - GAME TODAY irst 1-0 World Series Since ‘23-Heart Brcak- ing los§ _for Feller SHORT SCORE F Cleveland Boston ~o® s o0 | i SCORE BY Cleveland Runs Hits Errors Boston Runs Hits Errors ~ 00 Secoend game of in Boston tomorrow. By JACK HAND z = 1 0 L] 2 [ 1 L £als g 2 [ [ ~coweoscow coosomonZ emouemeoun ccoromcaZ esesucoeul cco~ Zz Zomm-mooox® A mnww g1l - = a BRAVES FIELD, BOSTON, 'Oct. 6—P—Johnny Sain hurled the first 1-0 World Series shutout since 1923 today when he blanked Cleveland’s Bobby Feller, to give the Boston Braves the opening game of the best-of-seven series ‘before some 39,000 fans: Sain, the rubber armed right- hander with. the fancy curve ball, outpitched the great Feiler who allowed only two hits in a heart- breaking loss. The Indians got four singles off Sain, a 24-game winner in the regular season. Pinch Runner ficores Tommy ~Holmes, the Braves' home the only run on this afternoon with a single past third " base scoring pinch runner Phil Masi {in the last of the eighth. It was the first 1-0 game since Art Nehf of the New York Gilants “INAUTO, CORDOVA' After the. battle Standard Oil said in a statement there would be no further negotiations to end the 33-day wefinery strike in Cali- fornia until all violence and riot- ing had halted. e ————— SEATTLE, OAKLAND PLAYOFF TONIGH Oakland, Calif., Oct. 6.~M— CORDOVA, Alaska, Oct. 6.—® —Two persons were found dead yesterday in their car, victims of | carbon monoxide poisoning. | They were -identitied as F. J.| (Bil) Strzelecki, Cordova agent| for Pacific Northern Airlines, and | Barbara Wilson. Officers said the two went for a drive Monday night and their | maghine went off the road. Tracks showed, they sald, that the °ar| The Oakland Oaks, who won their had been rocked back and forth first baseball pennant in 21 years, by racing the engine in an at-istart the final playoif for the Pac- tempt to get it back on the road. Ignition and heater swimhes' were still on and the gas tank dry } tonight. when the car was found. The Oaks returned last night Miss Wilson was the daughter from their semi-final playoff tri- of Mrs. Mary Wilson, formerly of jumph over Los Angeles to Cordova and now of Ketchikan. |[greeted at the station with The Washington|zs cwrs = 5 MeHY -Go - Round Charley Gassaway as starting pit-" By DREW PEARSON cher tonight. Rainier Manager Jo- (Copyright, 1948, oy Tne Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Jo" White tentatively selected big Herman Besse, who has been ef- fective against the Oaks all sea- son. Because of the rainy season in the Northwest, it was announced he entire final series will be play- | J. Pamnell Thomas of New Jersey,|tonight, Thursday and chairman of the Un-American|there will be a doubleheader Sun- Activities Committee, is a most{9ay, and if necessary the cleanup suspicious person. Not only has he|g8ames Monday night. investigated all sorts of = alleged G TS 7% 3 A8 Communists, but he also sought to : investigate a policeman who nr-‘lower Mea' p "Ces rested him. g Thomas is not, however, at all} happy over the current FBI in-| vestigation of himself and the kick- | backs he received from four women who returned all or part of their CHICAGO, Oct. 6—®— Live- Stock experts see a possitility of government salaries to him. Nor[lower meat prices ahead. Hog prices does the Congressman relish the|Were on the downgrade all through investigation of the way in which |last week and yesterday they took he kept two soldiers out of combal and then later collected several hundred dollars from their hmfl-l ies. The policeman Thomas want investigated was Maryland State ]wnrd, The drop was the biggest one- markets in the principal corn belt ed region. However, the American Meat Ak B RA G (may not reach retail butchers for (Continued on Page Four) a while yet. LONG OVERDUE AT 'NOME, TRADING TRIP % | NOME, Alaska, Oct. 6—(®—Thir-| White House Press Secreta 'teen American Eskimos are report- | G. Ross said “no particular cri ed long overdue today on their dictated the President’s summons annual trading trip across the|to Marshall—He just wishes an Bering Straits to the Siberian oral report on everything that has . mainland. { been going on.” | The report came from a radio Mr. Truman is sending his per- |operator, Roger Menadelook, on sonal plane, the Independence, to :Lime Diomede Island in the mid-'Paris to bring the Cabinet officer dle of the Straits. | home. He said that the island store- :keeper, Elmer Elsanga, and a doz-| on Saturday was coupled with the ,cancellation of a number of rear | platform appearance set for that |day in New York state and Penn- > ernor said his closest adviser on| foreign affairs, John Foster Dulles, clinched ‘with the Soviet Union. Dewey and Dulles conferred for three and a half hours yesterday about the world situation. Dewey said afterwards they paid special attention “to the grave problems created by the policies of Soviet Russia.” — e - FOOD SUPPLIES UNLOADED FROM CHARTERED BOATS Two cargoes of fresh fruits, vege- tables and general produce came ! into Jureau this morning on crafts under charter by four local con- cerns. The Discoverer, chartered by the Odom Produce Company, came in| from Seattle and way points at 3, on u directive, agreed upon Dark sent n slow bounder to{shut out Joe Bush and the New Prime Minister Stalin in Moscow 5 | Robinson who barely beat the run-; for lifting the blockade, by mak-| .=y 4o pag sliding into first! ing a fresh demand for permanent ” ol - of 11 includi b base for the putout. | T, < of. /S le, including the| o gegon called out on! air lift, from Berlin to the West. strikes i ] % ! No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. third strike. With the count two; and two, Keltner singled over El-| Second Inning PARIS— In one section of the Jjott's head for the first base hit WAas INDIANS—Gordon looked at ai York Yankees in 1923. They came down to the last of the elghth all knotted up at 0-0, when catcher Bill Salkeld worked Feller for a walk on a 3-1 pitch. Billy Southworth, the Braves' crafty manager, sent Phil Masi in to run for him. Mick McCormick shoved Masi along with a neat sacrifice bunt. Then Manager Lou Boudreau's strategy called for an intentional walk to Eddie Stanky, just back in U. N. Britain demanded that Rus- of the series, Judnich lined to| sia give a yes or no answer to Holmes, and Keliner just managed :f)wn:: :::\:‘I:jru:yw day. dayolf due whether she agreed tp control of to beat the throw back to first; atomic energy before existing ato- |base on an attempted double play. mic bombs are destroyed. Hector| Torgescn got down on his knee, McNeil ,of Britain said his country|to make a nice stop of Robin- and the United States “will notison's wicked smash down the first| hand over information uncondi-'paseline, and stepped on the bag tionally.” |for the unassisted putout. | No runs, one hit, no errors, und ‘one left on base. BRAVES—Judnich came In fast to gather in Elliott’s soft fly in short right. Rickert lofted to Doby in right center. BERLIN—The Government's U. S. Military official German newspaper said the Cominform— the Communist information bur- Sisti Goes In After Stanky drew ihe pass, Southworth sent in Sibby Sisti who had replaced him while he was side- lined, as a pinch runner. Holmes then delivered the game winning blow, a hard smash past third base into left and Masi flew home with the big run. It was a real heartbreaker for Feller who had a no-hitter going into the fifth Inning. Even in the eau — met recently in Dessau in the Russian zone of Germany. Ger- man Communists attended. A a.m. to unload at the Alaska; ‘Transportation Company dock. | Skipper is John Thornton. three g fast | Salkeld struck out on pitches, swinging at a blazin lone for the third strike. eighth, until Holmes, a .325 hitter, smashed his outside pitch to left, he had a one-hitter riding along. be !added in reports to Nome that the ;mainland is only” about 40 miles named | ific Coast League Governor'’s Cup;en other men left the American against the Seattle Rainiers here!Island early this summer. Travel- ! |ing in a large native skinboat, (they were to go to the nearby Siberian Diomede Island and then go on to the Soviet ‘mainland. He away at the nearest point. The radio operator said group is now more than months overdue. ¢ He said one old native on the two the group ‘might have been caught in the ice floes;, always prevalent in the Straits, and been unable to the | little American igland thought' that Capt Bolles, Alaska Plane Crash Vidim, ‘ Bllrled_itl_ArlingIon | WASHINGTON, Oct. 6.—IP—The | (body of Navy Capt. Harry A. Bolles, killed in an airplane crash {in Alaska in July, 1943, was bur- fed in Arlington National Ceme- tery here today. The body, originally buried at | Adak, Alaska, was brought here to rest with the nation’s honored The Robert Eugene, skippered by Fred Ahl, tied up at the 20th Cen- tury dock shortly after midnight last night. The vessel was chart- ered by Bert's Food Center, Mar-| shall Erwin Case Lot Grocery and | Juneau Cold Storage. H - HOTEL GUEST Mrs. Paul Bramlett of Vam:ouver,I Wash., is staying at the Baranof Hotel. . S e e o ® o o o — e WEATHER REPORT flights over Manchuria. major item was reported to have i > | No runs, no hits, no errors, none been a discussion of “the attitude of the Comifform A the event|left on base. Even after Holmes' hit, scoring of open coniliet.” L Third Inning Masi, there was trouble ahead for e INDIANS—Elliott failed to hold Sain. He got two out in the ninth. Hegan's sharp grounder and was Then to the dismay of the 40.135 charged with an error as the run- chilled fans who paid $180,122.22, ner reached flist safely. |Bob Elliott threw Ken Keltner's Feller missed two attempts to bouncer high over Earl Torgeson’s bunt, then struck out swinging at head for a two-base error. a high one. ~Mitchell fouled to| Instead of being disturbed by the Elliott who made the catch in back | wild *heave, Sain calmly went to of the third base coaches box. work on Walt Judnich to make hls Hegan took advantage of Sain's sixth strikeout victim. He didn't slow windup and stole second walk a batter. sliding in ahead of Salkeld’s throw ' Magnificent Duel with plenty to spare. % | These‘two ace righthanders, per- Doby bounced directly to Dark haps the best in baseball, hooked up Two Base Error NANKING— Chinese National troops are reported to have aban- doned Changchun, capital of Man- churia. Chinese Communists sur-; round the city. i i SHANGHALI- Pilots of two Amer-l jcan owned planes said Russian fighter planes harassed them in SEOUL—Korean Home Minister ed at the Oaks' park in Emery-|ed the view. ASHINGTON — Congressman |Ville. Single games will be played | Friday. | Are Now in Prosped tia sharp drop even further down-| day break in six months at some Institute says that the lower prices | return. Others, he said, discount-|qeaq v His widow and two children { Keefer Fobes and Virginia Fobes live at 1855 Shelby Street, Seattle |His death occurred when a Cous! STOCK QUOTATIONS 'IGuard photographic plane, on “"?Exogg;“‘:‘?:h:'h“ J“unec";s‘;'wmch he was a passenger, crash- { mine stock: tode¥ii %, Ameflcanied on Moul_)l. Moffatt shortly af- |can 824, Anaconda 36, Curtiss- P akectt. Wright 10%, International Harvester | gperating base, Roosevelt 1271, Kennecott 58%, New York : I i Central 16%, Notthern Pacific 21%, | gz:;min R:,c;:' mw;nsm;umed iy U. S. Steel 80%, Pound $4.03%;. Sales today were 710,000 shares. Merrill Lynch and Co. averages today are as follows: industrials | 181.72, rails 58. utilities 34.72. - - STEAMER MOVEMENTS -, — - — CHICAGO TRIBUNE SUPPORTING DEWEY | | | CHICAGO, Oct. 6—®— The All American steamers tied up Chicago Tribune said editorially | { by coastwide strike. today it will support Gov. Thomas | Princess Loulse is scheduled to E, Dewey for the Presidency. be- ! sail from Vancouver Saturday, Oc- cause it considers him the “least tober 9. Iwor.sv. of the candidates.” The huge drydock at the Naval ® Roads, | . T. M. Yoon said four trainmen confessed and then denied ® carried out Communist orders to o |cause a recent train wreck which iklllcd 36 Americans, e | LILLE—The Communist-led coal . “slrike continued in France. Rail ® workers and dockers started walk- (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Period In Juneau— Maximum, 44; minimum, 35. At Airport— Maximum, 46; minimum, 30. FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Increasing. cloudiness with light rain showers tonight followed by mostly cloudy and light rain Thursday. Not much change in tempera- ture, Increasing southeast- erly winds reading as high as 20 miles per hour. e PRECIPITATION @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today In Juneau — Trace; since Oct. "1, 143 inches; since July 1, 3134 inches. At Airport — —02 inches; since Oct. 1, 69 inches since July 1, 2134 inches. o |out gas as coke ovens went. cold, o Ak ®| LIMA—Peru tightened martial ® law. Two new revolt moves flick- ® |ered at Arequipa in southern Peru |and at Paramonga, 110 miles north o of Lima. The main part of the ® uprising was stemmed at Callao, ® the Lima Port, Sunday. . .o ! OREGON CITY GUESTS . . ®! Golda Haskins and Dorothy e Burkholder of Oregon City, Ore., ® are guests at the Baranof, they : who tossed him out No runs, no hits, one error, one left on base BRAVES—M. McCormick offered at PFeller’s first pitch and sent an easy pop to Boudreau in short left i fleld. Stanky. fouled off a couple of pitches, then popped to Keltner. the ball close to the first base field boxes. No runs, no hits, no errors and none left on base. Fourth Inning ;4 INDIANS—Boudreau struck out, He fouled tipped the third strike but Salkeld held on to the ball. Gordon singled into center, the ball slipping by Dark’'s outstretch- ed glove Keltner struck out on a hit and un play. and when Salkeld drop- third strike, Gordon “fl,{ 0,", 7 Pn;e_ fivfl { H ir ped the piv £ (Contin |in a magnificent duel for the first seven scoreless innings. Marv Rickert, an obscure out- | fielder from Milwaukee who came up to sub for the injured Jeff Heath, 'broke Feller’s no-hitter in the fifth /with a swgle to right., The only other hit off Rapid Robert’s de- livery was Holmes' game winner. ®|ing out in sympathy. The Frenchigain fouled to Robinsen who took! On the other hand, the Indians ® ! coal basin around Lille was with-| 'had been picking away at Sain with” a single by Ken Keltner in the second, another by Joe Gordon in the fourth, one by Jim Hegan in . the fifth and another by Larry Doby leading off the sixth. - ER FOR BELLS DAUGHT! A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Bell in St. Ann's Hospital yesterday afternoon. "The baby weighed nine pounds three ,ounces at birth. Mr. Bell is em- iployed by the Alaska Coastal Air- "'lnys.

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