The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 30, 1949, Page 3

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SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1949 DODGERS AND CARD PLAY ANOTHER TIE By JACK HAND Hail the clock—new chief pire in the National League. With two consecutive Brooklyn-| St. Louis games called a tie ty the time keeper, the man with the watoh is becoming more important than the players. Curfew struck at 1:10 am. to- day at Sportsman’s Park with the Dodgers and Cards locked in a 3-3 tie at the end of nine innings. Na- tional League rules say they can't start a new inning of a night game after 12:50 a.m. (local time) extra innings were out of the ques- tion. A heavy rain delayed the start. Brooklyn almost missed a chance to tie the score for they barely completed the eighth inning, with | St. Louis holding a 3-2 edge, at 12:47 am, MADE RUN IN 9TH As it was, the Dodgers managed um- s & THE DAILY ALASKA EM PIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA BeaversLose To Stars in ShufoutGame | | | | before he retired @ man in a four- | | run first inning at night. { Joe Dobson allowed only four hits in his afternoon triumph over Mike Garcia for Boston's fifth | By BILL BECKER straight win. Dom DiMaggio hit| Big Pinky Woods is Hollywood's safely iq both games, extending his' Number One Stopper this year. consecutive game hitting streak to| The large righthander halted the 25, longest of the season in the onrushing Portland Beavers with majors. g g g |a four-hit whitewash job last night. Qonnie Mack’s surging Philadel- | he 4-0 decision was Woods’ 16th phia A’s ran their winning string|win of the year against seven de- to six, their longest of the year, by|reats. It was a ppointment for | downing Detroit, 5-3. The A'S ar?|peaver rcokie star, Hal Saltzman only one . percentage point behmdixxca trying for his 16th, angd some i the third place Red Sox. ~1]10,926 fa jammed the Port- The St. Louis Browns, strugglin2|iand park. to escape from th}n c_ellar, scored | Tn handing Saltzman his eighth four in the 10th inning to hand joss the stars pounded out 13 hits. | Washington its 14th loss in 15} It squared the current series games, 6-2. Seventh-place Wash-|yy, pameg apiece and movedq Hol wko | | | at| largest treat caught in Utah this hooked into it on the Weber River daughter, Marjorie, 15, hold it up ington still is 4% games ahead of woo4 five and one-half games| [4-1, as Angel Cal McLish bested | 8 g ¢ |Mel Mallette. McLish scattered E b DAY FLIGHTS | . FRI | | third place, tbok a three-one series |edge over Seattle as Earl Toolson, as_follows: & The Oaks' Jackie Jensen con- From Anchorage: Mrs. Blanche|iinueq his improved batting pac the Browns. ahead of second place Sacramento ! eight hits for his fifth win. Pacific Northern Airlines carried | goperly of Newark,-made his PCL White, W. H. Cross, Bill Cross, F';wilh a double and two singles off gink, Ms. Tom Jensen, Dr. James | ! The Solons kowed tc Los Angeles, 29 ABOARD PNA'S and, moving along solidly in | ol 29 passengers on flights yesterdayaepyt with a 6-3 win. H. Tallman, Mr. and Mrs. Hamy|cpayley schanz, who gave up 10 tingles in all. r bagges |tingles in all. Heinz Becker bagged WASHINGTON, July Terrific Trout ECHO, Utoh.—This 11-pound German brown beauty is ene of the IBIRCH-BARK CANOE, OTHER ITEMS ARE GIVEN T0 MUSEUM | Two new acquisitions complete | Alaska is his greatest pride, and he feels like celebrating its arrival | This and an Aleut bidarka which | arrived at the same timé are gifts | of Volney Richmond, Jr., of Seattle, | president of the Northern Com- im(rcim Company. | Keithahn, always on the lookout to complete each category of dis-| |play in the museum, had scmehow | missed a birch-bark canoe. An ex- port from the United States wrote! | him, asking specifications of al season. Edd Bowen of Coalville | typical one. ear here. HMe prompily had bis ; On a trip to the Interior last B Dhls. broot: | summer, Keithahn searahed the | | Yukon and Tanana districts, but| no sign of one. He kept mentioning ! it to visitors, and a traveler re- ported having seen one hanging In {the N. C. store at Unalaska. | When Richmond learned of the ‘(mul;n"s interest, he gave it to |the museum, along with the bi- | darka. No Loce in Sight | John W. Fletcher, manager of: the N.C. Store at Unalaska, says the canoe came from the Iliamna region, which is on the line be-| tween Eskimo and Athabascan | | cultures. Keithahn is certain it is the Alaska Museum's flotilla of | full-size native ecraft, Curator Ed-{ ward L. Keithahn said today. | The only birch-bark canoe ot which Keithahn has heard in| a number of new acquisitions. Frederick W. Hosbach, of Phila- delphia, internationally known miniaturist who gave a tiny-gold- inlay in argillite urn to the museum November, made a return visit The important one is a com- panion-piece to the first urn. This one is plain but highly polished, in contrast to the dull surface of the other. Both stand less than an high, and are of exquisite craftsmanship. His second minia- ture gift this time is a policeman’s billy two inches long made of Alagka ivory, complete with a tiny “holster” of native wood. Hosbach is famous in his field, and is even represented by a dis- play in the Smithsonian Institu- tion. His work is a refinement of artistry in his field, as he makes “miniatures of miniatures,” accord- ing to Keithahn, Two pieces of Alaskan jade given the Museum by Mrs. Gilbert Skin- ner on her visit here this month bring Keithahn's native jade dis- play to six chunks and a bracelet. Mrs. Skinner's gifts are a nugget about three inches in diameter, and a slightly smaller thin slab, both of Kobuk jade, MEDICAL TEAM 10 STOP HERE ENROUTE STATES Medical specialists who have been conducting a two-week post-gradu-~ inch turday, and brought two pxe,\em;.' PAGE THREB !Point Barrow; Dr. E. S. Rabeau, Kotzebue; Dr. John Libby, Kana- !kanak; Dr. David Shulman, Ta- nana; Dr. J. P. Albitre, Bethel; and Dr. M. M. Van Sandt, Mt Edgecumbe. AMA specialists include Dr. Elliot B. Hay, associate professor of surgery, Baylor University Col- lege of edicine, Houston, Tex.; Dr. Edward N. Smith, assoc. pro=- fessor of obstetrics and gynecology, University of Oklahoma; Dr. Al- bert Lemoine, Jr., professor oph= thamology, University of Kansas; Dr. Harry J. Isaacs, chief of medi~ cine, Chicago Medical School; Dr. George C. Turner, director of the Chicago Municipal TB Sanatorium and . Milton Davis, professor of hetics, University of Louis- | | GIRL' FOR MONTYS A baby girl was born yesterday morning at 9:40 co'clock at St. Ann’s Hospital to Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Monty. Weight was 8 pounds, 3 ounces. Mr. Monty is employed at the Mendenhall Dairy. Steams-Massage Dellaway Health System PHONE 667 Plasmatic Treatments ( | Googe, Don Terbush, Alex Winther.| iy o of the eight hits off Toolson, | ate course in medicine at Anchor- to push over a run in the Himh From Yakutat: O. L. Elgin, M| oo 4 two-run homer. -.Df"(:‘f. hm;; ,l,novgm.l.""gl‘f]' 9;‘:* |of Athavascan make, and believes lage are due to arrive here this, on a walk to Roy Campanella, a|D. Hendricks, David Dudley. | Acorn third sacker Parnell Woods|A1aska will have 50 days of straig | the light cra{t to be about 100 years afternoon in an Air Force C-47| — ——————————r pinch single by Mary Ricker and| To Yakutat: Frank Hinsey. was felled by & Schans pitch, but|Shooting this fall—10 more ;than {old. plane. an outfield fly by Pee Wee .Reese) To Anchorage: A. C. Kuehl| condibion: wits dekdrized &8 gwl'lmr year—while in Idaho and Ore- | It is a 16-foot canoe, so light | They will fly to Sitka Monday to {°p |with the st | The first f that red Eddie Miksis, running |Jja % v mon, L. i = 3 o 1 gon they will have split sons. of h i anc 3 C“"e f ie M Junes. S ‘31‘_’5 iom .;‘h _}n a hospital. The ball clipped him |, =, e S e intvesss ot 5 that Keithahn can balance it onjyie Mt Edgecumte Sanatorium or Campanella, . H Miller, M. M. Flint, A. C. John-',, 1,0 forehead. 20 day) ch, an increa of h cne hand. The hull is made Iniang Orthopedic hospital, return-i Howie Pollet, trying for his 14th!son, Lt. B. C. Ydeen, Max Buyer,_ San Diego made it three straight The liberalized migratory water- | three sections, as would be neces- i” hiets “WadRDBAG b fl to the win, had a shutout 3-0 at the end | Harry Davis, R. M. Collins, Mary | e San Francisco’s foundering fowl huntir regulationy are an- |sary if the trees were small. n‘s‘tgtm s y of seven innings with Nippy Jones|Sclanon, Linda Hemnes, M. M.|<ciic with Bob Savase weathering |DOUNCed by Secretary of the In-| 8= lis entirely hand-made, says Keit- ; ot ki dical specia- and Marty Marion driving in the | Welch, Albert Tessier. (ot T b "% lterior Krug. The choice between [ ; “There i -G YOPERILGS - I e y ; H . {a bad first inning to take a 6-4| - {habn, who added, “There is DO jigts haye been in charge of a re- runs. A walk and successive singles - | |split and continuous sons lay i sign of any tool being used except | . y r i fresher course given for all Alaska 8. pocket knife and a punch. iNative Service doctors, Alaska De- i The ribs are nct attached, but|partment of Health physicians, and ;held in their curve to the gun-|Air Force and Army medical offi- | wales by pressure. There are nalcers from Fort Richardson and Robinson | by Carl Furillo, Jackie and Gil Hodges gave the Brooks; two in the eighth. Ted Wilks came | in to strike out' pinch bhitter Gene! Hermanski to end the rally. i verdict. Mickey Rocco poled a homer | Bl B' STARS | hits the rest of the way. The Padres first pop. Then Savage spaced fiv | rocked Steve Nagy for two runs in | ing will be in Alaska | | where the season for the Second | |and Fourth Judicial Divisions and | Blar of ‘GEGON RNy WorR: |the Tanana River drainage in the' Pitching—Herm Wehmeier, Reds|the fourth and three in the fifth| ¢ ‘g | seats, just thwarts, It is sewed with Ladd Field Earlier this week on Monday, the | 3 % x - . Third Divisicn extends from Sept. i 3 Dodgers and Cards played a 42 —hurled fizst major league shutout,|to clinch &t. 1 fo Oct. 20. Dates in the re-| |thongs of tamarack, or possibly | Clinics were sponsored by the FAIRBANKS tie at Brooklyn when they stopped :‘{f_‘;(‘”‘mt' Bl . wip- over New( mainder of the Third Division are " e P ez g:fn"' and pitched with Afl";«klfl 'l“t“‘f Sel"v‘ceidr;e‘!’alf'«;“em wH“E“ol" the game under an agreement that| ¥ . | STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS !from Sept. 15 to Nov. 3 and in| oo AR hi _ of Interior, American Medical Asso- no inning should start after 3:00! Bamng‘—-—Dom DiMaggio, Red| St {the First Division from Oct. 1 WEARING plain shorts with na 9[ sl:cclul interest to Keithahn, | ciatfon and the U.S. Air Force. ,u".‘“ pm. (EST) to let the teams catchl*"x‘bco“e_d mnsecutxye_ hitting | Pacific Coast League {to Nov. 19. sign of lace-trimmed panties lxd‘ strip of lock-stitching at one Alaskan doctors learned the latest KAN a train to the West. streak to 25 games Ly hitting safel,v W L Pct| shooting hours for ducks, geese,| which startled fans at Wimble= ii’l . The tottom is an unusually | developments in the fields of in-! KE‘[CH' in both ends of Boston-Cleveland | Hollyw: 75 52 .51 wahich, starvied | nice piece of birch bark, the inside |t edici 1 St. Louis remains a game and a D PO! i Hollywood RS 99| ant and coot are from one-half | don, Englard, Gertrude Moran |of the bark bel 8 nside [ternal medicine, general surgery, ’EA"‘I half in front of the runnerup doubleheader, | Sacramento 68 56 74}(}\ hour before sunrise to an hour ke- | dres’ses = Ne;v o Ve s ‘ihe )e[e- al : eing stretched for|obstetrics, tuberculosis and oph- Dodgers with another night game | Oakland - 65 60 52000 sunset, unchanged from last | o puRsaubar KT w00/ ‘Hmlmo]og)’. convenient flights in {San Diego 5041 oa | . 8 | 3 al e postgraduate course has been pers. slated for tonight and a day game S Di 63 62 m}h(m_ practice. She pla.ns to compete I Although very old, and. 'xtcr‘ Th tgraduat has b Ivlll.u & engine Cli You'll Sunday. a D |Portland 62 62 500" By ang possession limits are; | fOF women's national crown at ‘Nngzinxzz_ rot:; ey gRarE LS e e enjoy every comfort, n?fl NATIONAL LEAGUE Leaders in the majors, through|Seattle .. 62 488! pucks—five in a day and 10 in| Forest Hills. (International) | o l"‘e:)illleént,e bk fibre 1o Sibley i WpRt, B SoUree AR Db ico — as @ guest of Pan Herm Wehmeier, 22-year-old Cin- | games of yesterday are as follows. | San Francisco e 432 | possession. " ! ent. : |incideq with the annual meeting of American, world's most ex- i 4 Los Angeles 53 417 - 4 | Both the canoe and the bidarka|the Alaska Medical . Association. Riadia 1 Ask for cinnati righthander, pitched his AMERICAN LEAGUE | Geese—six, in any combinatioh LAy ¢ = i ¢ | i rienced dirline. i : ' i — A will be allowed only in Oregon and are in remarkably fine condition,|The 1950 session is scheduled for pe at best game of the season and his| Batting DiMaggio, Boston, .347; | g not exceeding two Canadian geese,| xy . i |says Keithahn, Th & anl d bt 2 details and o first major league shutout as he Dillinger, St. Louis, .343. | Kational Kengue two white-fronted geese or two G SORBOx ahn. They were shipped Mt. McKinley Park in August. beat New York with four hits, 3-0,/ Runs Batted In—Stephens and| W L Pet prant. Closed season is continued| -rerstate shipments of duck and to Seward on the motoivessel Gar-| Accompanying the six speclalists BARANOF HOTEL eal W s, 3-0, s —E| S | ant. sed seas s SBRA. rRAR e 12 B g in the only other National League|Williams, Boston, 103, St. Louis 57 36 613 on Ross geese. One additional fi.mnv‘vfif‘,‘,\l‘_ el |p1d'h\\'c‘“;3:s:i 1""“;:‘;““;“"‘ JEongh’ to Jursan ASoaid are Sigk ROt HpAOING Ho) Phone 106 ame played. Home Runs—Williams, Boston, | Breoklyn 56 37 598 | gocse is permitted this year in L i o ieason. | he Aleutian, . ‘svrved as replacement doctors at m’“” 8 played. = 2 A < The 90 day post-season period| The third craft in the Museum|Alaska Native Service hospitals' The loss dropped the Giants into!26; Stephens, Boston, 25. Boston 50 45 526 hunters' totals. %t gl 3 % Sl 8 & P! e loss Ppe i ki | g 46 46 500 3 for possession of migratory game flctilla is the light skin kayak from during the conference. ANS doc- mm a fourth-place tie with theéd idle Pitching — Reynolds, New York,;NcY\ York‘ E: Wood n‘u('kgona |kt Yo Bie- e ans i Drevions biuniviE hidt ) : g " : o Philadelphia Phils whose scheduled!11-1, 917; Wynn, Cleveland, 8-2,|Philadelphia 47 47, 500 Coots—fifteen. lve g ers Wil i one sees direculy|tors at the meeting included: Dr. < day game at Chicago was washed |.800. $ Pittsburgh 44 48 478| Scoters and Eider Ducl dm!yf’ S mle{anhox; e:xte.xl‘ng":.helnu(:sfi\xm. ; James T. Googe, medical director out. Pittsburgh and Boston played NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 38 55 409 pag limit of seven, singly or in the| T n_ e clouds” over |of ANS; Dr. Phillip Maisonville, three innings of their night gamz| Batting — Robinson, Brooklyn, Chicago 36 59 379 aggr lv.mid 14 in. possession & iy 2 at Forbes Field before a storm .266; Marshall, New York anc singly or in the aggregate. ' forced the game to be called onSchoendienst, St. Louis, .328. American League | Rails—not more than 15 in the account of wet grounds. , Runs Batted In — Robinson,| W L Pct ageregate of rails (other than sorn) | Heré are tiue resuiis ol fistic en-| Successive home runs by Johnny | Brooklyn, 77; Hodges, Brooklyn, ’M"iNEW York 50 33 641 and gallinules, | counters last night: Lindell and Bill Johnson enabled' Home Runs—Kiner, Pittsburgh, |cleveland 55 38 591 Sora—bag limit increased from| At San Francisco—Al Hoosman,| “/ A " the New York Yankees to add a!27; Gordon, New York, 20. | Boston 52 42 20 to 25 birds a day. 204'%, New York, stopped Al (’ ' e appy half game to their American League | Pitching—Chambers, Pittsburgh, | philadelphia 53 43 552 American and red breasted mer-'Spaulding, 213, Oakland, Calif, 3. lead with a 3-2 edge over chicagOiG-L .857; Sewell, Pittsburgh, 5-1,|Detroit 51 46 526 ganser: singly or in the aggre-| At Hollywcod, Calif. — Harold | while Cleveland split a day-night!.833. Chicago 39 56 411 gate of both kinds; no possession | “Baby Face” Jones, 138%, Detmit,: » 3 p 3 limit or the . | i Charlie €alas, 141%,| doutleheader at Boston. The re-| ‘Washington 35 56 385 limit after the opening day. ou!pmpted Chiarlie alas, bl sults put the Yanks out front by wu B MEB A!.I. |st. Louis ... 32 62 340 Band-tailed pigeon—ten. Pr::cmx. S o g (/] nnounce oal— 4'2 games. | —_— — The season on mourning doves | t Long Beach, N.Y.—Rol an 2 i Si at the new Salmon Creek will be closed in Washington and | Lastarza, 183':, New York, stopped | TWIN GAMES SPLIT Final scores of games played last top | Jackie Lyons, 1¢3, Oklahoma City, Alaska, Hunting of band-tailed pigeon 5. Club on way to and from Derby. Cleveland rebounded from' a 2-1 Open ALL night! 59 2t afternoon defeat at Boston to smother the Red Sox in the night game, 9-3. The Tribe routed Chuck Stobbs, promising young lefthander, night in the WIL are as follow: Wenatchee 7-7, Bremerton 3-3. Victoria 5, Yakima 3. Salem 11, Vancouver 5. Spokane 9, Tacoma 7. M!’ I’M HAPPY ON WASHDAY! o Lb@ \ corrEE smop AIRPORT Will Open at 11 a. m. But only since I got my General Electric All-Automatic Washer! You'll be happy on washday, too (with a G-E All-Automatic Washer), because your part of the washing is done in 20 seconds. That’s just how long it takes to load the washer, set the controls, and start it You'll be happier with a General Electric All-Automatic, t0o, because it really gets the clothes clean . . . sweet-smelling clean. All the clothes are soaked, washed, and rinsed in fil- tered, circulating water, and the G-E Activator* gets the dirt out of heavy work- clothes—while it's gentle with the finest fabrics. ' Ask to see this wmazing washer in action. It’s being demonstrated today— every day—to show yow how to make washday a b ippier aay. s SALMON DERBY “Earlybirds” DAY - PERCY’S vwill remain open ALL NIGHT both Fri- 3 day and Saturday nights for § the benefit of ‘ DERBY FISHERMEN. | COFFEE, SANDWICHES, LUNCHES TO GO? Join Your Friends at PERCY’S | SUNDAY-JULY 3lst¢ We will remain open until - Seven P. M. to accommodate fishermen returning from #TRADE-MARK REG. U.S. PAT, OFF, GENERAL @ ELECTRIC WASHERS - DRYERS - IRONERS ALASKA ELECTRICLIGHT & POWERCO. Cheerful Dispensers of Friendly Dependable 24-Hour Electric Service | v the Salmon Derby— Drop in and see us!

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