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PAGE SIX 5 PLAY-BY-PLAY (Continued from Page 1) screen behind home plate. Lopat flied to Snider deep in center field. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. Dodgers —Woodling came in for Hodges' looping fly. Olmo also flied to Woodling, in left-center. Lopat picked up Campanella’s slow! base nnc] trickler down the first and easily threw him out at first No runs, no hits, no errors and none left on base. Third Inning Yankees— Rizzuto slapped a one- bouncer down to Miksis who toss- ed him out. Hodges made a nice gloved-hand stop of Henrich’s hard grounder and tossed to Newcombe who covered first to get Tommy | by a step. Berra flied to Herman- ski who hauled in his drive near the scoreboard in right-center. No runs, no hits, no errors, and; none left on base. Dodgers—Hermanski went down swinging. = Newcombe went out the same way. Reese went out on a high pop to Henrich between the mound and first base. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. Fourth Inning Yankees— DiMaggio was out o» a high towering fly to Snicer who made the catch near the wall in left-center. Brown lined a double against the left-center field wall. Woodling walked on four pitches. | Joe Hatton again started warming up for the Dodgers. Mapes doubled just inside the left field corner to score Brown and Woodling. Olmo raced across the left field foul line to get under Coleman’s fly near the field boxes. Lopat doubled off the left-center field wall, scoring Mapes. He overran second, but slid back safely avoiding Robinson's tag. Hatten replaced Newcombe on the mound for the Dodgers. Rizzuto singled to left but Lopat \vas} cut down at the plate by a fine throw by Olmo to Campanella. Three runs, four hits, no errors, one left on base. Dodgers— Miksis-was called out on strikes. Snider raised a high | fly to Mapes. Robinson walked on four pitches to become the first Dodger base runner since lead-off man Reese in the first*inning. Hod- | g BPNoNoNoNoN Vo) PN VoV oo N No VooV N Open 10 A. M. to 3 A. M. g? THE MIRROR CAFE Chinese Food ! Steaks—Chichen ¢l 20000 L0000V ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petersburg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 ges went down swinging, missing an outside curve for a third strike. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left on base. Fifth Inning Yankees—Henrich walked on a in from right field roll through his legs, the runners advanced a base on the error. DiMaggio was purposely walked. While making his fourth pitch to Brown, a called ball, Hatten sprawl- ed on all fours. Brown rifled a three-bagger down the right field line scoring Henrich, Berra and DiMaggio to put the Yankees in fthe lead 6 to 0. Woodling flied to Snider in short center and Brown was forced to stay put at third. Hank Bauer, | a highthanded batter, went in for | Mapes. Hermanski came in fast| for Bauer's bid for a Texas leaguer | and caught the ball on the run. His throw to the plate was far off his mark, but Brown still held| third. Reese fumbled Coleman’s| grounder but recovered in time to! throw him out at first with a fast peg to Hodges. Three runs, two hits, on€ error and one left on base. Dodgers— -Sauer replaced Mapes in rignt filed. Olmo fouled to Berra right at home plate. Rizzuto nice stop and throw to retire Campanella. Hermanski singled to Lopat. Tommy Brown, a right- Brown tried to check his swing, but sent a long looping fly to Bauer in short right. No runs, one left on base. hit, no errors, Sixth Inning Yankees— Carl Erskive. a right- hander, came in to pitch for the Dodgers. Hodges caught Lopat's pop inside the line midway between first and home plate. Rizzuto flied to Olmo in left center. Henrich singled high off the right field wall. | Berra popped to Robinson. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left on base. Dodgers—The official paid at- tendance was announced as 33,934. Reese got a single when DiMag- | gio fell trying to get his looping fly in short center. Bill Cox, a righ-| handed batter, went in to hit for| Miksis. Cox topped a roller to the $|left of the mound and was credit- ed with a single when Lopat fail- ed to come up with the ball. Reese stopped at second. Snider ground- ed to Rizzuto who stepped on sec- ‘ond forcing Cox and then threw to first to complete a double play as Reese moved to third. Robinson shot a single in left field and ,scored Reese .for Brooklyn's first run of the game. Hodges singled through the middle of the diamond sending Robinson to third. Olmo singled to center, son and sending Hodges to third. PLACE YOUR MONEY with us where it is rein- vested in one of the safest securities known, monthly repayable home loans. Years of con- tinuous safe operation safeguard your funds too. Start saving safely, profitably no w. We have never paid LESS than 2%% on Savings S Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Association OF JUNEAU 119 Seward Street Juneau, Alaska VING§ INSURED TO $5000 full count. Berra singled past| Hodges, sending Henrich to second. | When Miksis let Hermanski’s throw- | center. Cox flied to DiMaggio. Sni- scooted behind Brown to make a|left on base. right for only the second hit off Bauer’s bouncer near second base handed hitter, batted for Hatten. to Hermanski in short right. Rey- one | none left on base. | Brown to Henrich. Hodges sent a lat a delightful baby shower, Mrs. scoring Robin- | | Nelson, N. Reddicopp, A. E. Seaton, | | those Picture Allie Reynolds began warming up in the Yankee bull pen. Campanella lined Lopat’ s first pitch over Rizzuto's head for a single scoring Hodges and sending Olmo to second. Hermanski lined a single over Henrich’s head scor- ing Olmo and sending Campanella to third. 1 Reynolds replaced Lopat for the Yankees. Johnny Jorgensen, a lefthanded hitter, batted for Erskine. Paul Minner, a southpaw, joined Banta in the Dodger bull pen. Jorgensen was called out on strikes as Rey- nolds made only three pitches. Four runs, seven hits, no errors, two left on bhase. Seventh Inning Yankees— Jack Banta went in to pitch for Brooklyn. Billy Cox re- placed Miksis at third base. DiMaggio rolled out, Robinson| to Hodges. Robinson also threw out Brown. Woodling also ground- ed out to Robinson to enable the Dodger second baseman to equal the world series' record for a sec- ond baseman making three assists in an inning. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left o2 base. Dodgers— Reese lined to Bauer in front of the scoreboard in right- der went down swinging. No runs, no hits, no errors, none Eighth Inning Yankees— Reese scooped up and threw him out. Coleman flied nolds fouled to Campanella behind the plate. No runs, no hits, no. errors and Dodgers— Robinson bounced out, hot smash on the ground to Rizzuto who threw him out. Olmo was called out on strikes. No runs, no hits, no errors, and none left on base. Ninth Inning Complete fadeout except for runs, hits and errors. MRS. 6. BURNETT IS HONORED AT SHOWER Honoring Mrs. Gordon Burnett Don Foster and Mrs. John Hag- meier were co-hostesses Thursday night at the Foster home at Auk Bay. The guest of honor was the re- pient of many beautiful and use- ful gifts, all prettily wrapped in} appropriate colors. During the eve-! ning the guests enjoyed playing a fortune-telling game. Sandwiches, cake and a delicious THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA AFL GOING AFTER (i0 MEMBERS ST. PAUL, Minn, Oct. 8—M— The AFL today embarked on a plan to carve huge membership chunks from the CIO toward achieving a figured 1,000,000-member gain in 1950. Key officials of the American Federation of Labor said privately they expect to pick up big parts of CIO unions, when the factional scrap in the CIO comes to a head, | as may happen soon. A showdown between the CIO's| left wing and the right wing ele- ments is shaping up for the CIO| convention at Cleveland later this month. CIO President Phillip Mur- ray has threatened his left wing union leaders with expulsion. Labor circles expect the result to be a splintering of the CIO’s major | unions, with the CIO trying to sal- vage as many members as posslble; and. repudiated left wing leaders | trying to drag large membership| groups from the CIO. FOOTBALL _ SCORES , Final scores of football games, played last night are as follows: Los Angeles Loyola 52, Fresno State 13. Southern Oregon 21, cisco State 21 (tie). San Jose State 49, Pepperdine 12. Colorado Mines 19, Westem1 (Colo) State 7. 1 Missouri Mines 41, Northwest| Missouri 13. Evansville 17, Missouri Valley 7. South Dakota Mines 6, Northern State 6 (tie). St. Thomas (Minn) 51, St. Olaf 7| Emporia (Kans) 32, Rockhurst 6. Hawaii 27, Denver 14. San Fran- | Abilene Christian 13, Southwest- ern (Tex) 10. Hardin-Simmons, 20, North Texas | State 17. Drake 46, South Dakota 6. Alabama 48, Duquesne 8. Villanova 28, St. Mary’s (Calif) 20 San Francisco 38, Detroit 14. North Dakota 21, Augustana (8D) 0. Temple 27, Syracuse 14. Whitworth (Spokane) 14, Central ‘Washington 13. Lewis & Clark J.V. 12, Pagific hot punch were served to the fol- lowing guests: Mesdames W. D., Schoeppe, Frank Peers, Phil Dawes, J. H. Worgum, P. J. Nickel, Ken 1. Hagerup, R. I. Congdon, J. De- | Hart, Earl Barcus, and Bob Jones; | Misses Bonnie Jo Lynch, Cara Lee‘ | Foster, Lynne Barcus; the guest of honor, Mrs. Burnett, and the; hostesses. ‘ SONS OF NORWAY TO i MEET THIS EVENINGi The Sons of Norway will hold | their first meeting of the fall sea- | son tonight at 8 o'clock in the Odd Fellows Hall. Following the business session Albert Peterson will | |arrive to furnish music for danc- | ing. 2 | University J.V. 12 (tie). Washington Frosh 20, Frosh 7. FIGHT DOPE | Here are fights last night and results: At Detroit—Nick Barone, Syra- cuse, N.Y. outpointed Dick Wag- ner, Portland, Ore. 10. (Light- heavyweights, but exact weights un- available). At Hollywood, Calif.—Jay Cald- well, 162, Los Angeles, outpointed Bert Mendoza, 160, Cucamonga, Calif., 10. At San Diego, Calif.—Al Spauld- ing, 192, Oakland, outpointed Rusty Payne, 181, San Diego, 10. Idaho @ Are you | modernize If so, the Libbey" our lrrewnt home? a has an insulating layer of air s Come in and let and its advantages. There's no obligal Window and A DON I FOR YOUR HOME planning to build a new house, or means consider Thermopane*— ens*Ford glass insulating unit—for Windows you've always wanted. Thermopane l"i". you the extra beauty, smart- ness and cheerfulness of larger windows without sacrificing comfort and heating economy. the by a metal-to-glass bond. double-glass windowpane fits into ‘modified sash glase. s there the year 'round—eliminating the necessity of putting up, taking down and storing storm sash. us tell you the complete story on Thermopane ' Millwork and Building Supplies 538 Willoughby —-Phone 633 CUTAWAY VEW OF THERMOPANE in between This like a single pane of tion. *® uto Plate Glass ABEL | said. “The hell with the pitching. World Series Notes By FRED HAYDEN BROOKLYN, N.Y. Oct. 8—#— Ralph Branca said the disastrous call he pitched to Johnny Mize “went just where I wanted it to go.” Mize and all the Yanks felt the same way about it. The Dodgers would like to have ninth innings eliminated from this World Series. The Yankees won | both their games in the final stanza. | | Maybe a weakened DiMaggio will | be a week-end DiMaggio. “The| clipper smacked four “home runs” | in batting practice yesterday but| in three actual games he has col- | lected one puny single and fanned | four times. i DiMag doesn't relish all this talk a%out the pitching. “Every day they ask me about the pitching,” he I'm interested in the hitting—and I'm not doing any.” Carl Furillo blamed his groin in- jury for failing to get Cliff Mapes at the plate in the third inning on Phil Rizzuto’s fly to right. Carl's peg went wide and Mapes scored easily. “If I were in normal shape,”, said Furillo later, “I helieve I| could have gotten him at home. I've made longer and better throws, before. The pain in my groin pre- vented me from putting enough weight on my left leg.” Pee Wee Reesé, whose homer; couldn't save Brooklyn yesterday, thinks “Page Mr. Page” is a vastly tetter pitcher now than the one he faced in the 1947 series. “Sure, he was good then,” said Reese, “but Wwhat improvement! I thought he was a lot wilder. Did you notice he now throws curves? Pee Wee attributes Page's success to those curves and a blazing fast ball. MARTHA SOCIETY T0 HOLD RUMMAGE SALE The Martha Society of the North- | ern Light Presbyterian Church an- nounces a rummage sale will be held in the church basement Wed- nesday, October 12. At the Friday meeting the fol- lowing committee was appointed to handle the sale: Mrs. Willis R. Booth, chairman; Mesdames Ralph Martin, J. W. Leivers, T. A. Mor- gan, Jerry Williams, Ray Day, E. J. Cowling, C. E. Warfield, Altert Harrisor,, . Ray Taylor, Ben Reher, H. A. Stoddart, M. M. Flint and Charles V. Rudolph. Anyone desiring to have their rummage collected may notify Mrs. Booth before Tuesday. W.N.AA. PLANS REMODELING OF CHILDREN’S HOSP. WARD Regular monthly meeting of the Women'’s National . Aeronautical Association was held Thursday at the home of Mrs. J. D. McCarthy. There was discussion of the club plans under way for the remodeling and refurnishing of a children’s war at St. Ann’s Hospital. The club feels this ward is desperately needed for the care of the children of the community and hopes parents will give this project their support. Next regular meeting of the club will be held November 3 at the TODAY IS ARMY WITH MICHIGAN By ED CORRIGAN NEW YORK, Oct. 8—M—The season still is in its infancy but one of the best games of the cam- paign is on tap today — Army against Michigan. These power houses of the grid- iron—Michigan shows a winning skein of 25 straight while Army's streak stands at 13 without a loss —clash at Ann Arbor before a capacity crowd of 97,000. The mighty Wolverines, who got off to a squeaky start with a couple of relatively close triumphs over Michigan State and Stanford are mindful of the last time they met Army. That was in 1946, and the Cadets triumphed 20-13 with Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard carrying the ball. This year's Wolverines, rated tops in the country in this week’s Asso- | ciated Press poll, will rule slight favorite over Army. There are some other good games on today's calendar. Oklahoma and Texas, a couple of high scoring outfits, clash at Dallas before 175,000. This is a tossup but Oklahoma probably will have a slight edge. Notre Dame is more worried | atout the Tulane game next week ! than Purdue, while Southern Cal, which already has whipped Navy and Washington State, probably will beat Ohio State. Baylor and Arkansas are two rough-tough teams that play for keeps with the former rated one touchdown the better. Kentucky, which has surprised one and all, has been in- stalled as the choice over Georgia. Some other top games of the day include UCLA-Stanford, Yale- Columbia, * Towa - Illinois, Texas Christian-Indiana, Washington- Oregon State and Iowa State- Colorado. Villanova was handed a scare last night in Philadelphia. The Wildeats eked out a bare 28-20 triumph over banged and battered St. Mary's of California. The Cali- fornia team’s three touchdowns were the by-products of second period fumbles. In another intersectional fray at Tuscaloosa, Alabama overwhelmed Duquesne 48 to 8. San Francisco upset a favored Detroit University, 38-14. Temple whipped Syracuse 27-14. DOUGLAS BETTER; MAY LEAVE SOON YAKIMA, Wash., Oct. 8—(®—U. S. Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas was reported mending steadily today, six days after he suffered 13 rib fractures and a lung puncture when his horse rolled on him. He is expected to be able to leave the hospital here within a week or 10 days. THEY DID IT! BIG GRID GAME men who told six-year-old Martha Murray they were going to ‘“clean” her house were right—they did. Margaret Murray, on return from a shopping trip yesterday with this inquiry: “Mummy, why are we having our house cleaned out?” Pressed further, the child ex- plained that the men had entered and told her ‘they were going to “clean out the place.” Mrs. Murray discovered $126 in home of Miss Marian Jensen in Douglas. cash and a $26 radio missing from the apartment. ...only watch with the DuraPower M . o % fllllSEfll'lg Eliminates 99% of watch repairsdue to steel mainspring failures use it won’t rust and holds its *sj ie ness’’ for lasting accuracy. *Patent pending 1000 Gifts 19-jewel Lady Elgin $71.50 17 jevoel Elgin De Liize $57.50 Including Federal Tex Gifts for Everyhody The NUGGET SHOP Come in and browse around and | . BOSTON, Oct. s—(M—The three! Martha greeted her mother, Mrs. | SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1949 Sun rises at Sun sets at 7:20 am. 6:09 p.m. OCTOBER 10 High tide, 3:31 am., 15.1 ft, Low tide, 9:20 am., 3.1 ft. High tide, 15:16 p.m,, 168 ft. Low tide, 21:52 p.m,, -0.2 ft. ® & o & o 0 0 0 0 0 o e o o o ot . - SUN RISES - SETS . TIDE TABLE o s ° . OCTOBER 9 . OCTOBER 9 ® Sun rises at 7:18 am. e High tide, 3:00 am,, 158 ft. ® Sun sets at .....6:11 pm. e Low tide, 8:50 am., 22 ft. ot ® High tide, 14:51 p.m., 172 ft. . OCTOBER 10 . Low tide, 21:30 p.m.,, -06 ft. =t . - . 9 . o L) NOTICE i After October 10, no telephone o 0 0 0 v ¢ 50 v o rentals for the month of October will be accepted at a discount. All | remittances must, bear postmark of not later than discount date. Please be prompt. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS TELEPHONE CO. —adv, FROM CATHLAMET Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Snyder and family are stopping at the Baranof Hotel; they are from Cathlamet, ‘Wash. ALL T ALL % PRICES 2 517€5) 72 BURROWS WELDING (CO. JUNEAU, ALASKA PHONE 289 BRASSIERE by *“Allo-Ette” gives fashionable accentuated uplift to average and to slightly larger-than-average bosoms. In various lovely fabrics: bandeaux; with 2-inch band, as shown; and with 6-inch band. *There is @ Maiden Form for Every Type of Figurel” P ‘Give Me a Wild Tie, Brother® i Some men long For the soothing touch Of lavender, cream or mauve. But the ties I wear Must possess the glare Of a red-hot kitchen stove. The books I read And the life I lead Are sensible, sane and mild; / I just hate spats, I wear clam hats, But I want my neckties wild. Give me a wild tie, brother— One with a cosmic urge; A tie that will swear, And rip and tear, When it sees my old blue serge. Some folks say that a man’s cravat Should only be seen, not heard; But I want a tie That will make men cry, And render their vision blurred. 1 yearn, I long For a tie so strong : 1t will take two men to tie it. If such there be, Show it to me— Whatever the price, I'll buy it. Give me a wild tie, brother, One with a lot of sins; A tie that will blaze In a hectic haze, Down where the vest begins. So, give me a wild tie, brother One that will surely please— A tie with colors galore T’ll get that tie from Cec, brother, At Caslers clothing store. Caslers Men’s Wear from $1 Up -