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SATURDAY 1 P.M. Edition VOL. LXXV., NO. 11,626 Rookie Southpa ADVISORS SURVEYING SE ALASKA An advance party of pmfeg,sional" assistants and advisors to a Sen- ate sub-committee on preparedness arrived in Juneau yesterday. To- day they flew to Haines to look into port capacity and facilities there and will return to Juneau this evening. Tomorrow the party will proceed to Annette and Ket_ chikan from where they will return directly to Anchorage. The assistants are gathering data and facts in preparation for hear- ings to be conducted by the sub- committee consisting of Senators Lester Hunt (Wyo., Wayne Morse (Ore) and Leverett Saltonstall (Mass.) due in Juneau October 15. In the group are: Brig. Gen. El- mer J. Rogers, Jr., director of plans and operations, askan Command, Elmendorf Field; Col. Justice Chambers, special tech- nical assistant to the armed services committee; Col. Glenn ‘W. Martin Jr., from the Air Force Secretary's ; Col, William Davis, Head- s of the Department of the Army who is interes'ed in construc- tion activities; Walter Walsh, as- sistant to Chambers, all of Wash- ington, D. C., Leader George W. Gray of the RAF, an exchange of- ficer from Britain; Capt. Melvin Witham, Capt. Don Wilson, and Capt. Jack Rosenberry, all from Elmendorf Field. Senator Warren G. Magnuson, (Wash.) may jein the Senators tion trip. ihto. the entire| tee to make another inspection trip. who are looking question of what adequate defense of is needed for dollar spent in the Territory. 3 TONS MEAT FLIES HERE ON PAN AM Six thousand pounds of fresh, unirozen assorted meats for Ed, Shaffer’'s Sani‘ary Meat market was flown to Juneau yesterday on Pan American World Airways. This | is the largest single shipment of | meat carried here by the airline, Pan Am officials said today. In addition to the cargo, eight passengers arrived here from Szat- tle: Stuart Houston, Henry Geiger- | ich, J. McBride, M. Morrisey, Cliff Raines, Mrs. L. B. Selmer, C. W. Walker and Ralph Young Southbound for Annette: Mr and | Mrs, Francis Lillian and four child- ren. For Ketchikan, mann. For Seattle: John VanHorn, Roy and Ruby Swanson, D. W. Er- tel, Bob Cowling, Everett Nowell, C. W. Walker, J. W. Miller, Al| Sollars, W. L. Hawkins, Frank| Schneider and H. T. Hartshorn, FROM SEATTLE Sam Burnsed of the Alaska- Wrangell Mills, from Seattle is a guest at the Baranof Hotel The Washington Merry - Go - Round (Copyright, 1950, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) By DREW PEARSON mflINGTON — For several weeks, Chairman Stuart Symington of the National Security Resources Board has been making disagree- able statements at Cabinet meet- ings. “I'm sorry to tell you, Mr. Presi- dent, that the stockpiling program is not going well,” Symington hms1 warned. “In fact, it isn’t going at all.” It is now possible to get a clear- er picture of what Symington means. It is also understandable why Hubert Howard suddenly re-| signed as Chairman of the Muni-| tions Board, the agency supposed to stockpile vital materials so the | nation would not be caught short again in wartime, It can now be revealed that one of the most shocking deficiencies which the Munitions Board did lit- | tle about was aluminum. During| World War II, American housewives | were called upon to donate pots, pans and ket'les to help their country, because the war planners and private industry had failed to anticipate aluminum needs. Now it looks ac if, in case of all-out war, we might have to do the same -— (Continued on Page Four) | | Headquarters Al-| Alaska and ! seeing that the government is get- ting the most for each defense Edward Hu- 'Congressman Urges Alaska " Be A_dmifled’ WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 — & —| Rep. Passman (D-La), back from {an inspection of Alaskan coastal i defense installations, says that Alaska is as ready for statehood | now as it ever will be. | Passman was a member of a | three-man House Appropriations | | subcommittee assigned to look over | | Coast Guard and some Navy in- | stallations in Alaska. Others were Reps. Gary (D-Va) and Fernandez (D-NM). “Alaska should be admitted to statehood,” Passman told a reporter. | “It is a vital link in our defense chain. Its people are loyal Ameri- | cans who have migrated there from | the United States. As a state it | would have a tremendous growth.” | | On the trip, Passman said, the | | group inspected Coast Guard sta- | tions at Ketchikan, Juneau, An- {chorage and Sitka, Alaska, and | Coast Guard Naval stations at Attu | and Adak in the Aleutian Islands. “The personnel and citizens at| | all stations are very alert and ready | to make any sacrifices necessary in the preparedness program,” Pass- !man said. He added that he was greatly impressed with defense in- | stallations. Passman said he will return home next week and remain there untili | | 3 | Congress reconvenes unless he is ‘\ assigned by Chairman Cannon (D- | Mo) of the Appropriations Commit- t | HEARINGS ARE SET ON NEW FISHERIES REGULATIONS, ‘51 New fisheries regulations, govern- ing the time, means and methods of | taking ¢ommercial fish in the wat- ers of Alaska are being prepared by the Fish and Wildlife Service and interested persons will be given | on opportunity to participate in | formulating the regulations and | amendments at a series of meet- | i | 1 i ings in Alaska and Seattle, it has; been announced by the office of the | Secretary of the Interior. | Views, data or arguments regard- | ing fisheries regulations also may be submitted in writing to the Di- rector of the Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice, Department of the Interior, Washington, D. C. Open discussions will be held at the following places: Wrangell, Oct- ober 11; Petersburg, Oct. 12; Sitka, Oct. 14; Juneau, Oct. 16; Seattle, November 6, 7. 1of the Council next Friday night. | the mayor were Finance, taxation, | | rian and assistants, engineer and NEWLY ELECTED COUNCILMEN IN; (OMS. NAMED The newly-elected city council- men were sworn in Friday evening following the last meeting of the previous city council in the coun- | cil chambers of the City Hall. Re- | elected members are George Jor- genson, Alfred Zenger Sr., and B. F. McDowell; new members, J. Bert Caro, J. A. Thibodeau, and Edward S. Nielsen. H Mayor Waino Hendrickson ap- pointed committees. City positions will be advertised Monday. McLean and Kristan were low bidders on city public liability and property dam- age insurance with $1,775.60. Others were Northern Insurance Agency, $1,845.000 and Juneau Insurance Agency, $2.646.89. A lone bid of $500 by C. J. Ehren- dreick was accepted to audit the city books. Bids will be put out im- mediately for insurance on the new Elks ambulance that has been turned over to the City. | Requests for council action to ex- ’ tend rent controls until June 31, | 1951, were laid over for future ac- tion after public hearings on the subject. There was the second reading of Ordinance 341 extending authority of the Civilian Defense council. Nielsen moved that the order of voting be rotated so that each mem- | ber of the council would vote first | every seventh time. Thibodeau and ! Caro went along but the three oldi councilmen voted against it. Mayor Hendrickson announced that the! procedure regarding the matter | would be investigated. There will be a special meeting | | | | | The 1950-51 committees named by appropriations and elections, Zen- ger, chairman, with McDowell and Thibodeau; Fire, health and sani- tation, McDowell, chairman, Niel- sen, Jorgenson; schools and library, Caro, chairman, Zenger, McDowell; | streets, sewers, lights, Thibodeau, chairman, Jorgenson, Nielsen; po- lice, Jorgenson, chairman, Caro, Thibodeau; boat harbor, floats, and city property, Nielsen, chairman, | Caro, Zenger. City positions to be advertised | are: city clerk and assistants, libra- | assistants, city health officer, ceme- tery caretakers, police, fire depart- | ment, hydrant caretaker, fire alarm caretaker, garbage dump caretaker, airport building caretaker, and wharfinger and assistants. GIRL SCOUT NEWS Troop 11 met yesterday afternoon uled at 2 p.m. October 16, in the Senate Chamber, Federal and Ter- ritorial Building. RECLAMATION GEOLOGIST IS pointed chief geologist of the Bur- eau of Reclamation’s Eklutna power projech, here this afternoon via Pan Ameri- can World Airways. wife and three children, will take off Sunday for Palmer, headquart- ers for the $20,000,000 job. He was previously located at Thermopolis, Wyo. at the Hotel Juneau. CATHOLIC BAZAAR planning the Catholic Bazaar neg- lected to include the names of two local firms which have made sub- stantial donations for annual event which opened last night and closes tonight. Company is one of the largest don- ors, and the White Sewing Machine Company is another of the local firms cooperating toward the suc- cess of the bazaar. Sydney Lawrence, Reddie, airbase, crew members of an Air Force C-54 plane here with army personnel, are staying at the Bar- anof Hotel. ‘Wrangell lBa.rann( Hotel, The hearing in Juneau is sched- ENROUTE TO EKLUTNA Clark E. McHcron, newly-ap- was scheduled to arrive McHuron, accompanied by his The family will stop overnight IS CLOSING TONIGHT Inadvertently, the committee The Juneau Young Hardware FROM ELMENDORF Sgt. Charles B. Green, Tech. Sgt. and Andrew all of Elmendorf Field FROM WRANGELL and Mrs. Jack Waters of are registered at the Mr, at 4 o'clock in the Lutheran church parlors. The meeting was called to order by our President, Sue Wade. Some of the girls from our troop | have been to St. Ann’s Hospital | to read to the patients in the child- ren’s ward. Mrs. Eunice Neven helped us) with folk songs for the program we are having at the Government Hospital. Virginia Nelson, Reporter. | The meeting of Girl Scout Troop No. 12 Tuesday afternoon in the Elks Hall was opened by President Bonnie MacLean. The minutes of | the last meeting were read and approved. Our troop now has 31 girls regis- tered. Over half of the troop has paid their membership dues. As soon as they are all paid, we are going to have a party to celebrate. Our Leader, Mrs. James Larsen, showed us how to print pages for the diaries we are making. These diaries will contain all of the things that happen at our meetings. Our next meeting will be on Tues- day, October 10, We are all sup- posed to bring magazines for the | children in the hospital and one of the patrols is going to furnish cook- ies. Sheila Esther Godkin, Reporter. AT THE BARANOF Mr, and Mrs. George M. Cald- weil of Juneau are at the Baranof Hotel. FROM KETCHIKAN I R. Curtis of Ketchikan is re- gistered at the Gastineau Hotel. Members of at least one group of present-day Indians in New Mexico are descendants of the cliff-dwellers who lived in what is now Bandelier | Cleveland. | “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1950 UN APPROVES TROOP MOVES NORTH OF 38 NEW YORK, Oct. 7 — (® — The United Nations Assembly today in- directly but clearly authorized a final UN. drive across the 38th parallel against Communist North Korea. This was a vital part of a majority plan for rebuilding a uni- field Korea. The Assembly disregarded bitter Soviet opposition and voted 46 to 5 for the key section of an 8-power plan for rebuilding Korea under U. N. watch-care. The Soviet bloc stood alone against this main point. The voting began shortly before noon, after Sir B. N. Rau, India, asked the U. N. once more to set a definite time limit on the occu- pation of North Korea by U. N. forces. The balloting was paragraph by paragraph. The key section of the resolution provided that all appropriate steps be taken to insure conditions of stability throughout Korea. This was generally interpreted as | authorizing General Douglas Mac- | Arthur to send American and other foreign troops across the 38th par- allel to join South Korean forces already over the border. United States Delegates main- tained that MacArthur had enough authority under Security Council ac- tions this summer but some dele- gates took a different view and in- sisted the Assembly should act. Before the voting began on the majority resolution, the Soviet Ukraine charged that Americans and South Koreans are conniving to drive through Korea to Harbin,| seize Manchuria and give Japan the chief role in Asia. LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS SCHEDULES WEEK'S MEETINGS | The League of Women Voters will meet next week as follows: ! Highlands unit, 8 p.m., Monday, in the home of Mrs. Howard Schleiter on Glacier Highway. Luncheon group, noon Tuesday in the Governor’s House. Members are | asked to take sandwiches; coffee will be served. Miss Anita Garnick, meeting chairman, will lead the; first discussion in the “Know Your Territory” series. Mrs. L. B. Avrit, | chairman of the Voters’ Service League, will report on efforts of members to bring out a large vote in the recent city election. Mrs. Alice Schnee will speak briefly on her| recent trip to Washington, D.C. Tuesday afternoon group, 2 p.m,! Tuesday in the home of Mrs. G. E. Uptown unit, 2 p.m., Thursday, in the home of Mrs. Frank A. Metcalf, Assembly Apartments. The newly organized groups Wwill continue study of “Know Your Town.” FROM PORTLAND T. J. McBride of Portland is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel | SEATTLE VISITOR M. D. Morrisy of Seattle is re-| gistered at the Baranof Hotel. NENANA GUEST S. G. Towne of Nenana is stay- ing at the Gastineau Hotel. FROM YAKUTAT | J. B. Mallott of Yakutat is re- gistered at the Gastineau Hotcl FROM TACOMA C. F. Raines of Tacoma is stop- | ping at the Gastineau Hotel. HAINES VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kerns of| Haines are registered at the Bal-| anof Hotel. | STEAMER MOVEMENTS | Baranof -from Seattle due Tucs-| day morning with freight only, 10| | passengers. Princess from Vancoyver, 8 tonight. Freighter Lucidor due southbound Monday p.m. Alaska, from west, scheduled Louise scheduled to szuli National Monument. . ‘u-nve 2 am, Tuesday. l EPIDEMIC GROWS; POLIO TAKES LIFE AT PT. BARROW Bulbar Poliomyelitis, the which strikes direc'ly at the brain, took the life of an Eskimo woman at Point Barrow yesterday, bring- ing the total number of deaths from polio in Alaska to five, Since the polio epidemic began in early August, 31 cases have been reported to the Territorial Health Department here. Two of the deaths were at Fair_ banks, where a case just reported | raises the number of polio cases there to 15. The new patient is the mother of a stricken child. An- chorage has had 11, Ketchikan 3 (including two deaths), Point Bar- row 1, and Juneau 1, The young Juneau patient has a slight case of a mild form of the disease, and is improving daily, according to his physician. Dr. J. H. Stickler, Health Depart- ment epidemiologist, says the ma- jority of cases are of pre-school age or adults, only several being in the school_age group. Of the five deaths, four persons were adults, the fifth being a pre-school child. Iron lungs and two special polio nurses have been rushed to the Territory to assist in the emergen- cy. In New York, the National Foun- dation for infantile paralysis said a request for an iron lung was re- ceived from Point Barrow. Basil O'Conippr, Foundation President, said an Air Force transport would take one of the eight which already have been sent to Alaska. O’Connor said Dr. Albrecht would administer Foundation sup- plies in Alaska. He said a $14,000 fund was on hand from March of Dimes contribution in the Ter_ ritory. The two nurses ordered north are Miss Louise M. Suchhomel, ! chief consultant in orthopedic nur- sing for the national organization for public hearth nursing, and Miss Helen Anderson of the University of Washington Nursing School. Misss Suchomel flew from New | York to study nursing needs at An- chorage and Fairbanks, it was re- ported from - Seattle. Miss Ander- son was flying today irom Seattle to Ketchikan, METHODIST WOMEN HAVE BUSY PROGRAM At the monthly business meet- ing of the Methodist Women's Society in the church Wednesday night, these meetings were sched- uled: October 11, Mrs, Arnold Larsen will be hostess to the Afternoon Circle at her home. October 18, an all-day sewing meeting will be held at the home io( Mrs, Harold Schultz. October 25, the Evening Circle will be entertained by Mrs. An- drew Robinson. Plans for their November 18th bazaar were made at the meet- ing Wednesday night and Mis, A, B. Morgan, devotional leader, dis- cussed the bond between spiritual ! and physical healings. Miss Virginia MacLean spoke on “World Conditions and Internation- al Cooperation.” She stressed the struggle of the world to attain a positive peace, as opposed to the negative peace of the last five years, The excellent far-reaching effects of the social and economic assistance provided by the United Nations cannot be measured im- mediately but these programs are all building toward a more lasting peace, she said. Mrs. Harold Schultz, President, read an article from “The Metho- dist Woman” magazine on the dici- pline of religion. Mrs. Oscar Lund- quist, bazzaar chairman, reported that there will be a tea and food sale at the bazaar. Mrs. Florence Thornton was un- animously elected chairman of lit- erature and publications. An of- fering was taken to be contibuted to the Charles Forward memorial fund. Guests were Mrs. Frances Hawthorne and Mrs. Tangen, Re- | freshments were served by host- esses, Mrs, Henry Lennstrom and Mrs. Floyd Dryden. GRUMMETT AT MAYOS Stanley Grummett, Juneau in- surance man underwent a minor operation, a sympathedtomy, at Mayo Brothers in Rochester, Minn. last . Mrs, Grummett re- ‘celved word that he is doing nicely, and expects to return about Octo- ber 20, type | | perate dash for the border. Mus- MEMBER A! AMERICANS NOW HoLD KAESONG (By the Assoclated Press) The American First Cavalry Di- vision today captured Kaesong, a key Korean city only two miles south of the 38th parallel on the west coast road to Pyongyang. The South Korean Third Division drove within 20 miles of Wonsan, import- ant industrial center on the North Korean east coast. North Korean Communists, under the pressure of an expected United Nations all-out move into their ter- ritory, were trying to build a defense line that would save Wonsan and the capital city of Pyongyang, an- chors of a new Red front. Fifth Air Force pilots were at- tacking enemy convoys speeding in broad daylight to boister the de- fenses of the two cities. Jet planes and Mustangs rocketed, bombed and strafed about 20 trucks and other vehicles north of Pyongyang and caught about 15 vehicles near Sih- anju, about 50 miles north of the Red capital. The United Nations was expected to approve today the Korean peace plan allowing Allied forces to move above the 38th parallel. American B-29 bombers ripped a 285-mile stretch of rail line, over which Communist reinforcements might move, to a point within 65 miles of the Manchurian border. The bombers tore the Reds’ vital rail artery from Pyongyang to the northeast coast port of Chongjin, severing the rails in 30 places. The rapid advance of the U.S. First Cavalry Division to take Kae- song indicated its troops might spearhead the expected push of U.N. forces on Pyongyang. Kaesong is the largest city on the fringes of the Red border. It was from Kae- son that the Reds made their heav- iest invasion thrust last June 25. The city is astride the main rail route and highway to Pyongyang, 92 miles to the northwest. Australian troops fought off am- bushing Communist attackers in predawn darkness in their first ground engagement of the Korean war. The attack was made six miles north of Yongdong, 22 miles south- east of Taejon, as the Aussies| moved behind British convoys | headed for the Seoul area. { Allied war planes in South Korea caught a force of 2,000 Red troops who swept out of the mountains 75 miles northwest of Taegu in a des- tangs sowed the area, near Yong- dong, with jellied gasoline fire bombs. A spokesman from Gen. Mac- Arthur's headquarters said Red prisoners had reported that about 80 percent of North Korea's 10,- 000,000 inhabitants would be friendly toward U.N. forces crossing the 38th parallel. { High tide 12:27 p.m,, 17.0 ft. Low tide 6:33 p.m., 0.6 ft. ® 0 = o 0 0 v 0 0 WEATHER REPORT Temperatures for 34-Plour Period ending 6:30 o'clock this morning In Juneau—Maximum, 57; minimum, 44, At Airport—Maximum, 56; minimum, 45, ® 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . TIDE TABLE e o October 8 o Low tide 5:30 am., 11 ft. e High tide 11:556 am., 154 ft. Low tide 5:53 pm., 2.7ft. e/ High tide 11:57 p.m,, 159 ft. o . October 9 . Low tide 6:09 am., 02ft. . . - . . ® FORECAST (Juneau snd Vieinity) Cloudy with intermittent rain and southeasterly winds as high as 25 miles per hour tonight. Cloudy with showers and decreasing winds on Sunday. Lowest temperature tonight 42 degrees. Highest Sunday near 50 degrees. PRECIPITATION ® (Past 34 hours ending 7:30 a.m. todsy City of Juneau—0.30 inches; since October 1—0.40 inches; since July 1—22.47 inches. At Airport — 0.03 inches; since October 1—0.05 inches; since July 1—19.39 inches. | Sisler, 1f iball. Rizzuto grabbed Jones’ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE SSOCIATED PRESS BOX SCORE YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct. T—{M—Official box score of the fourth game of the 1950 World Series: Philadelphia (N) ab Waitkus, 1b . Ashburn, cf Jones, 3b . Ennis, rf b-K. Johnson . Hamner, ss Seminick, ¢ . c-Mayo Goliat, 2b Miller, p Konstanty, p . a-Caballero Roberts, p ....... d-Lopata .... ‘Totals 34 24 13 a—Struck out for Konstanty in 8th. b—Ran for Sisler in 9th. c—Ran for Seminick in 9th. d—Struck out for Roberts in 9th. dLmeeG e g el o0 NooocOoOOCOoCOoCOoO~OO~OON NO O OO OO HOO NG =T COCcOooCRhOoOWNON S WD O COOHOROHNOOCORO D New York (AL) ab Woodling, 1If . Rizzuto, ss Berra, ¢ DiMaggio, cf Mize, 1b Hopp, 1b Brown, 3b W. Johnson, 2b . Bauer, rf . Coleman, 2b Ford, p .. Reynolds, p . Totals ... E-Goliat, Brown, Woodling. RBI- Berra 2, DiMaggio, Brown, Bauer, 2b-Jones, DiMaggio. 3b-Brown. HR- Berra. DP-Mize and Berra; Cole- man, Rizzuto and Mize. Left-Phila- delphia (N) 7; New York (A) 4, BB-Ford 1 (Waitkus). SO-Ford 7 (Sisler, Ashburn, Goliat, Jones, Hamner 2, Caballero); Konstanty 3 (Ford 3, DiMaggio); Reynolds 1 (Lopata)., HO-Miller 2 in 1-3 in- nings; Konstanty 5 in 6 2-3; Roberts 1in 1; Ford 7 in 8 2-3; Reynolds 0 in 1-3. HBP-By Konstanty (Di- Maggio); by Ford (Ennis). WP- Ford. LP-Miller. A-68,088. T- :05. PLAY-BY-PLAY First Inning PHILLIES—Waitkus walked on a full count. Ashburn swung at Ford's first pitch and lifted a short fly to Woodling in back of third. Jones was credited with a ground rule double when his drive bounced into the right field stands, Waitkus stopping at third. Brown fielded Ennis’ high bounder just inside the third baseline and threw to Berra who tagged Waitkus out at the plate. Jones held second on the fielder's choice. Sisler was caught looking at a third strike, a fast pitch that caught the outside corner. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left on base. YANKEES-—Goliat bobbled Wood- ling’s hopper past the mound and Woodling was safe on the error. Jones raced to his left and made a nice stop of Rizzuto’s sharp grounder and threw him out at first. Berra drilled a single past Goliat into right field scoring Woodling who slid in ahead of Ennis’ throw to the plate. Miller uncorked a wild pitch and Berra raced all the way to third before Seminick could retrieve the ball. DiMaggio lined a double off the barrier in right field, scoring Berra. That was all for Miller. He was replaced by Jim Konstanty, making his 76th relief appearance of the year. Mize grounded out to Goliat; DiMaggio moving to third.| Goliat gloved Brown’s grasscutter a few feet from second base and| whipped to Waitkus to retire the runner, Two runs; two hits; one error; | one left on base. Second Inning PHILLIES — Rizzuto scooped up Hamner’s sharp grounder and fired across to Mize for the out. Seminick also bounced to Rizzuto. Goliat flied to Woodling.in left. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. YANKEES—Bauer went out on a high pop to Hamner at the edge of the infield grass. Coleman flied deep to Sisler who made the catch several feet in front of the left field barrier, about 375 feet away. Ford was called out on strikes. No runs, no hits, no errors, none | left on base. Third Inning PHILLIES—Konstanty received a fine ovation when he stepped up to the plate. Konstanty sent a trickler to Coleman who tossed him' out. Waitkus rifled a line single over second into centerfield. Ashburn struck out swinging at a low curve - CHNHOO MG ~O NS moocococomoRnO N T cowoommmoOROR mococococomOoORNBONY - S 4 4 4 3 3 1 .3 1 3 3 3 0 2 1 P.M. Edition PRICE TEN CENTS w Wins Series for Yankees UPRISING BY PHILS 1S NIPPED Lowest Scoring‘ Series in History-Only Tofal of 16 Runs for Both Teams SHORT SCORE Phillies ‘Yankees _ (OMPOSITE SCORE (Four Games) R H 26 30 S Phillies Yankees . Phillies Runs Hits Errors Yankees Runs Hits Errors By JACK HAND YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct. 7—(M—Whitey Ford, 21-year- old rookie southpaw, won the New York Yankees 13th World Series title today with a 5 to 2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies for a four- game sweep before 68,098 fans. It was the lowest scoring series in his- tory. base, afid two out in the ninth, Altle Reynolds, winner of the second game of the series, relieved Ford and put down the Phillies’ uprising by striking out Stan Lopata, a pinch-hitter. It was & two-run error by left fielder Gene.Wobdling that spoiled Ford's shutout. . It was the sixth clean sweep of a series for the Yankees. Yogi Berra smashed a 365-foot home run into the right field seats in the sixth inning to help the ‘Yanks nail down this clincher. The Yanks routed rookie Bob Mil- ler in the first inning with a two- run blast. Rellefer Jim Konstanty held the champs in check until the sixth when Berra’s homer, a hit batsman, Bobby Brown’s triple and a fly ball acounted for three runs. Only in the ninth did the Phillies get after Ford, one of the youngest winning pitchers of any World Series. He was nicked for a leadoff single by Willie Jones and hit Del Ennis on the right leg before any- body was out. Dick Sisler forced Ennis at sec- ond was taken out for pinch-runner Ken Johnson. After Granny Ham- ner struck out, Ford was only one out away from finishing the ball game. But it was not to be. Andy Seminick’s long fly to Gene Woodling apparently was lost in the sun and fell out of Gene's glove for a two-run error, both Jones and Johnson scoring. After Mike Goliat pumped a single to left, Casey Stengel decided to lift the kid and call in Reynolds. The big crowd gave Ford a tre- mendous ovation as he walked to the dugout. There were even boos for Stengel as he walked out to confer with Reynolds on how to pitch to pinch-hitter Lopata, who struck out ending the ball game. Msr. Sabin Refurns Affer Needlecraft prinq Trip Buylng on the West Coast mar- kets has been completed by Mrs. Charles Sabin, owner of the Needle- craft and Junior Shop, who return- ed to Juneau by Pan American early this week, While south Mrs. Sabin entered her daughter, Joann, as a freshman at the University of Oregon. “Eu- gene was swarming with Juneau High School graduates. Others who entered the University while we were there were Katherine Bavard, Dan Noyes, Billy Sperling and Frank Maier.” Fall and Christmas buying for the Needlecraft and Junior Shop took Mrs, Sabin to markets in Se- attle, Portland, San Prancisco and Los Angeles. Mr. Sabin remained in the north- -— Gt P R 1 west during Mrs, Sabin’s trip south, and is in Seattle now, but will re- turn to Juneau in a short time,