The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 4, 1951, Page 3

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/| WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1951 SEALS CAN'T PUT ACROSS 'WIN GAME| By Associated Press Lefty Frank O'Doul is still hoping. His San Francisco Seals have start- ed eight times, and, as they say at the racetrack, they're still out of the money. The Seal boss really shook up his 1950 team during the winter, and this club bears no resemblance to last year's. except that it, too, is losing a lot of baseball games. ,O’Doul hopes to end his eight-game losing streak tonight with the crafty deceiving, Guy Fletcher, tossing his fancy stuff at Portland’s Ducks. Opener Spoiled Portland spoiled San Francisco's season opener last night with a 4-1 victory as Bob Drilling held the Seals to six hits. Only a long home run by Seal centerfielder Bill Mc- Cawley kept Drilling from a shut- out. The Seals drew a crowd of 4,626 to their opener, but at Sacramento there were only 896 paid onlookers to see the Solons and Oakland in action. Sacramento may have been let down at the box office but Man- ager Joe Gordon's boys stepped right up and won the ball game in the very first inning. The final score was 3 to 2. Two Games Rained Out ‘The Hollywood Stars were all set to open their home season against Rajah Hornsby’s Seattle Rainiers but the weatherman failed to co- operate. It rained in Hollywood sc the clubs will try again tonight with the Seattle lefty, Jim Davis hurling against Hollywood’s big Pinky Woods, Rain also halted the schedulec start of the Los Angeles-San Diegc series in the Padres’ park. COAST LEAGUE STANDING W. L. Pet San Diego 6 1 .85% Portland . @ 2 150 Los Angeles K5 SR T b Oakland . 5 3 .62 Seattle 3 4 42 Hollywood | .. 3 4 42 Sacramento . 2 6 .25 San Francisco 0 8 .000 MAYBE CHARLES MAXIMUM MIXUM CHICAGO MAY 30 CHICAGO, April 4—(P— Heavy- weight Champion Ezzard Charles and Light-heavyweight Champion Joe Maxim are scheduled to meet in a 15-round bout for Charles’ title at the Chicago Stadium May 30. ‘The long-rumored bout will be officially confirmed Friday when the two battlers submit contracts to the Illinois State Athletic Com- mission, a spokesman for the pro- moting International Boxing Club said today. RIVLIN IS AGAIN QUESTIONED IN CAGER SCANDAL NEW YORK, April 4 —(®—Dist- trict Attorney Frank S. Hogan has fdentified one of four men sought in the current collegiate basketball scandal as William Rivlin, convic- ted of a 1949 cage “fix.” The other three were not iden- tified. Rivlin was sentenced to a year in jail in 1949 for a vain aftempt to fix a Madison Square rden game between George Washington University and Manhattan College. Hogan said -yesterday that he wanted to talk with Rivlin about the current scandal, that has in- volved 17 players or former players at four local colleges. Five alleged fixers have beéen arrested. Last week Hogan said his men were scouring the Eastern seaboard for the four men. Senator Magnuson Talks af Anchorage ANCHORAGE, Alaska, April 4— (M—Sen. Warren Magnuson (D- ‘Wash) told Democrats at a Jeffer- son-Jackson Day dinner last night making Alaska a state will have a strong psychological effect to deter those who covet the Territory. Magnuson stopped here while en- route to Tokyo to discuss fisheries and marine phases of a Japanese peace treaty. He was met at Elmendorf Air Force base by Lt. Gen. William Kepner and other high-ranking of- ficials of the Alaska Command. B.B. CAMP By Associated Press Handsome Jack Kramer, tempest- uous righthander of the New York Giants, facing a “pitch or else” ulti- matum, has come through with flying colors. Kramey, reported late prolonged holdout, was told the other day by Manager Leo Du- Irocher to start pitching if he wanted tto stick with the Giants, ==| The New Orleans veteran met the challenge with a brilliant perform- after a On the Elks alleys last night in the sixth game of the second half{ance yesterday in Mobile, Ala, as the Juneau Florist won from Stand- [the Giants shaded the Boston ard Aviation by a score of 4 to 0.| Braves, 10-8. Kramer allowed only Triangle Club took 3 points from |one hit and no runs in five innings. Triangle Cleaners, Henning’s and|He walked four and fanned three. Parson’s Electric tied with 2 points| Meanwhile, another veteran right- each, Sick’s Rainiers won from Don | hander, little Murry Dickson, also Abel by a scare of 4 to 0 which puts | twrned in a neat job in Grapefruit the Rainiers in the second rounc ;fleague play yesterday. Dickson champ spot. Warren King rolle: pitched Pittsburgh to a 1-0 three-hit high series with 559. Erv Hagerup victory over the Chicago Cubs at and King had high game of 223|Houston; Tex. each. This week’s 200 Club members| Mike Garcia, hefty righthander were Nielson 211, ‘Blanton 204, King |of the Cleveland Indians, went the 223, Hagerup 223, Hanford 200. Four | route as the Indians turned back strike kings were Nielson, Alexander, | the New York Yankees, 6-3 at Tuc- Hanford and a young bowler by the |son, Ariz. Garcia permitted name of Shattuck. hits. One was a two-run homer by Team Standings Hogi Berra. W. L The St. Louis Cardinals won a Sick’s Rainier 38 14 [8-6 decision over the Detroit Tig- Paron's Electric . 31 21jers at St. Petersburg, Fla. The Henning's 27 25(Cards wrapped it up with three Don Abel ... .26 26|runs in the seventh. Triangle Club 25 21 Washington won a free-hitting Standard Aviation .. 25 27|16-15 victory from the Cincinnati Triangle Cleaners 19 33|Reds at Leesburg, Fla. The Nats Juneau Florist 17 35 [scored seven runs in the first inn- Team and individual scores last |ing and were never headed. =" THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA when Referee Abe Roth ruled it a|in satellite countries and assembled fifth round TKO after Herman re- |in the USSR. nine | s fused to come ont of his cornex for the sixth. Late in thes fifth round of the scheduled J0-round tussle the New Yorker laaded a blow that the Herman corner claimed was a foul. After a 10-minute delay Referee Roth finally persuaded Herman to continue the round and in the final seconds he was knocked down for a no-count as the bell rang. Herman refused to go on in the sixth. Rose Bowl Argument Keeps Up CHAMPAIGN, Il April 4 —#— A three-year appearance limitation must remain if any new RoSé Bowl football pact between the Big Ten and the Pacific Cozsi conferences ity ot Ilizois will not n of the series. Illinois, the first western confer- ence school to arnounce its stand, also wants any projected contract drawn up for only three years in- stead of five. K. (Tug) Wilson, Big Ten commissioner, said that after he re- ceives reports from all conference schools o meeting will be held May 25 and 2€ at Evanston, IIl, to vote on renewal of the pact. The Pacific Coast conference’s night were: The Philadelphia Athletics de- |par in the contract for the fives Standard Aviation feated the Atlanta Crackers, 8-6,|ye.r period which has just expired McCarthy . ... 161 156 181 498 |at Atlanta, Ga, d'J not limit team visite to the Barrager . . 140 144 114 398 In other games, tte St. Louis Fose Bowl, Haag . . 182 156 160 498 | Browns snapped their 11-game los- : Baker . . 166 166 166 498 ) ing streak by downing San Antonio. £ rapel Totals ... 830 755 797 2382| Beaumont nipped the Chicago . Juneau Florist :Nhite Sox, 6-5, and Dick Sisler’s Nielson .. 211 148 128 487|two-run homer in the 1lth gave 6 wi 7 i 7 Houston . .. . 167 166 193 526|the Philadelphia Phillies a 5-3 vic- miIr:srelrl'li:gt;:cg;?fiingc:;wflxe::_ Lindstrom 185 177 186 548 tory over Brooklyn. league championship finals. " Bu_rk_e N 137 142 443 Victoria set up the all-Canadian Jajoie . ... lgg }’;; ;(5)'; 24sa ) finale to the 1951 season last night Totals ..... 8 per r'e s with a 3-0 win over Portland in the seventh and last game of their i Triangle Club semi-final series. Negw Westminster Blanton . 160 204 154 518 reached the finals last week by Lincoln . . 134 176 40| 0y vork — Dr. Harry Wright, | besting Tacoma in four of their six Waddell 122 152 409 reasident of CONY, said he would | semi-final games. Day . 164 164 492 rcoommend that CONY quit playing| The Phil Henderson Memorial Scott . 165 167 487|in \fadison Square Garden, trophy will be at stake in the best Totals .44 789 813 2346 of seven Victoria-New Westminster ‘ Triangle Cleaners New York — Lotowhite ($3.80) |opening at Victoria tomorrow. v Ripke . - 133 166 154 453 won Fighting Fox handicap at Ja-| National League playoff ‘scores! Baxter . . 150 122 152 424|maica by four lengths over River-|last night are: Alexander . ... 169 157 182 508|j4ne Toronto 3, Boston 1 (Teronto; Whittier . . 107 145 149 401 leads best-of-seven series, 2¢d), Snow . 192 183 166 5851| gon Mateo, Calif. — Jockey John- | Deétroit ‘4, Montreal 1, (best-of: Totals ...... 151 713 803 2321lny Longden rode four winners at |seven series tied at 2-2), o Bay Meadows. Ali Bye Bye $19.70) to A Stewart . 174 174 174 522 i i ""NK pRI(ES HIGH Smith 166 525 i w2 SADDLER WINS BY | HERE! YOU SHOULD Henning . King . 183 559 IE(H"I( Al K A BE lIVING Il RUSSM Totals & 903 1784 2468 Y o s Parson’s El‘;‘;;” i l" HERMAN FIGH' Sometime ago an item appeared i, . 105 it in U. 8. newspapers that Russian- oy . bl ymde typewriters were being sold chmv»er— A X in Paris for as litile as $25. Infor- avkons 76 160, 807 LOS Ab_lGELES, Apr_ll 4 —»—|mation coming frcm an American Tota‘ls“ oF. 786 e Featherweight Champion Sandy|in Russia to local friends rather Saddler, New York, emerged with | doubts the Russian production be- ST Bt a technical'knlmkopt victory over |cause he reports that typewriters e s S Los Angeles’ Freddie (Babe) Her-|are a gl’ent luxury there saying he it s 157 448 man last night after a non-title | has never seen one in a public of- Nordenéon i i fight marked by almost as much |fice or store. Some old foreign made g ¥ ;52 179 531 verbal, as physical, argument. typewriters sell for around $250. Smithberé 147 164 496 Herman fans 'in the crowd of |He does say however, that it is pos- L Al 17,000 gave vent to a storm of boos!sible they are being mnncmed Yon Abel Mork . . 161 167 140 468 5 Py Estepp. . 137 181 129 397 ro -hme Abrahamson ... 144 141 144 429 Shattuck . 507 P Hoyez . 338 H m w ,k H - Totals 2139 ' m a A er qua 3 AUGUSTA, Ga. April 4 —(®— Three score golfers take a dare at the Augusta National tomorrow — a dare to whip the golf course which usually whips them. The Masters’ Tournament starts on the big and innocent looking National course waiting outside its 97-year-old clubhouse for this se- lected field of players, This is the 6,900-yards of rolling, pitching fairways and broad and slick greens where ego goes down as the scores go up. Eight hundred golfers have played in 14 other Masters’ and only 67 have beaten par over the four-round route. R. Guldahl and Claude Harmon have done better than any others — twc 279s. The best in golf is here, just as it always is. FIGHTDOPE Here are results of fights las! night: Los Angeles Featherweigh Champion Sandy Saddler, 130, New York, TKO'd Freddie Herman, 135 Los Angeles, 5. (non-title). New York — Lou “Sonny” Volpe 145, New York, outpointed Georgi¢ Flores, 146, New York, 8. JUST TELL Blended whiskey. 86 EE——— proof. 70% grain neutra FROM SEATTLE spirits. Hiram Walker& H. K. L. Johnson of Seattle is Sons Iac.,, Peoria, IIL a guest at the Baranof Hotel. —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— 2 YOU WANT IMPERIAL! THE MAN Alaska Distributors Company, Seattle-Anchorage, Exclusive Alaska Distributors Russian radios are twice as ex- pensive as the American models and not as good as those made by the British, Dutch, German or Swedes. Automobiles are largely copies of German or American makes and the Ford is their ideal and costs from $2,250 to $10,000. Meat runs three to four times higher than here, a good pair of shoes or suit seven to eight times U. S. prices. Hot plates and electric cooking devises are rare. Most pgople use old Primus burners for kerosene or alcohol. Most pecnle live in such crowded conditions thet there is no room for gadgets. There is no man- power for the production of con- sumer goods. All the manpower and brains are working on the mil- itary and heavy industrial install- ations, ALASKA COASTAL HAS 440N MONDAY TRIPS Passengers carried by ° Alaska Coastal Airlines on Monday flights totaled 44 with 17 departing, 15 ar- riving and 12 on intérport. Departing for Haines: Mrs. Flora Schombel, Eugene Lomen, Sonie Lomen, C. W. Kerns, Art Walker James Tillman; for Sitka: C. B. Finnigan, C. Maycock; for Peljcan: Mrs. Notar, Arvid Ackerman: for Excursion Inlet: Williath Marko- leck; for Hoonah: Mr. and Mrs, Harry Douglas; for Ketchikan: Bob Hadley, Bill Wilson, Harold Rad- cliff, Clarence Norton. Arriving from Ketchikan: Lawr- ence Dalton; from Hoonah: Frank Norton, Verne Albright; from Sitka: G. Vollen, Mr. and Mrs. Leask, C. Ranils, P. Sereadlock; from An- goon Mrs. Matthew Kookesh and ‘child; from Fick Cove: L. Colby; from Haines: Kitty Johns, Mrs. John Thompson, Josephine Thomp- son; from Skagway: Rev. 8. A. McPhetres. PAN AM CARRIES 44 Forty-four passengers were car- ried in and out of Juneau by Pan mcrican World Airways Monday th five arriving from Fairbanks, from: Seattle, 15 going to Seattle, wo to Annette, and two to Ket- hikan. i From Seattle: Andrew Anderson, tty Blindhéim, M. A. Braund, J. . Budd, Garland Craig, Ellen Emro, oward Fowler, Clinton Frederick, ohn"fonsethy L. MidHageNjMarvin! PASSENGERS MONDAY | PAGE THREE Hahn, Mrs. Frank Loewe, John Noyes, Diane Redstone, D. Robin- son, Robert Sadler, Eugene Scher- penberg, Lydia Smith, Takeshi, Ted- uchi, Rev. Fred Vogler. From Fairbanks: Marion Woods, Irv Curtis, Dr.” Philip Moore, Suz- anne Keough, Mary Jerome. To Seattle: Mrs. C. Watson, Floyd and Anne Severson, Kenneth Exel- by, William Hardman, E. G. Mur- phy, Mrs. Toby Perrty, Bill Hill, Stevie Cruch, Rose and Herbert Long, Mrs. James Googe, Major C. Canine, Crystal Jenne, Violet Estes For Annette: Art Lappi, White. For Ketchikan: Moore. Harry Floyd Volk, Mike Coroner Verdid, Coniraro Drowned Two Weeks Ago SEATTLE, April 4 —(P—Sylvester r. Contraro, 48, whose body was ‘ound floating in the, Lake Wash- ®aton ship canal yesterday, had irowned, an autopsy showed today. Circumstances of the drowning wre not known, Coroner John P. Brill, Jr,, said. A sister of the victim, Mrs. Geor- sia Young, Tacoma, reported her orother had been employed as a tailor in Seattle but had recently given up that job so he could fish in Alaska the coming season. Papers in his pocket had indicated he was from Wrangell, Alaska. He was born at Suquamish, Wash. The body had been in the water 1bout two weeks. DENTAL OFFICER HERE ANS DENTAL PROGRAM Dr. Vernon Forney, chief dental >fficer, Bureau of Indian Affairs, with hewlquarters in Denver, is at the Ala l:a Native Service confer- ring on the inaugurating of a den- tal program. . “The Bureau of Indian Affairs is Ty conscious of the need for a dental program even in the United States and is embarking on a den- tal program emphesizing the need for it,” said Hugh J. Wade, ANS area director. Forney expects to be in the area fiice for the next few days to sce what action can be taken to secure field dentists. He then visits the principle ANS stations at Mt. Edgecumbe, Anchorage, Bethel, the ekigenicy for field dentidts, ! The cc ttee acte proval from Adm. Forest Sherman, seeking consent. Sherman urged ending the r.ogram of war ship & (need for' criti-submarine vessels WASHING 'ON, April 4, —® The House Armed Services commit- Robert Sadler and C Freders tee today unanimously approved |ick, with the Bur Public transfer of 24 U. S. destroyer es-| Roads, arrived yes PAA corts to friendly nations under|from Seattle and are ng at .| mutual defense agreements. the Hotel Juneau *| save at least 12 ways when | ship by Clipper" Cargo!” You can't compare sea and air ship- ng costs by weight rates alone! g’on must also count these special economies of Clipper Cargot © Crating is seldom necessary. 2 Shipping weights are less, because you use lighter packing. ©No deterioration. © Lower insurance costs: goods are in transit 5o briefly. o Inventory and warehosse costs can be drastically reduced. e Shipping rates go down as weights 80 up. o Working capital works barder .o’ because paynient is quickes. 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 fees. Clipper schedules are fast, frequent in Alaska and to the States. For rates and schedules call your Clippes Cargo Agent or Pan Americaa. @ BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 [9Trads Mok, Pan Amoriean wm - _ Dnly Pan American offers the advan'agu of money . . . last longer. Eva unit from engine to factory-en load over the speeds you require. m!, What a Job-Rated. truck means to you A Dodge “Job-Rated” truck is engineered thefacfi%mfitaspemfic]og...uveyou you travel and m Every unit thal SUPPORTS the load— frame, axles, springs, wheels, tires, and others— is G\M nsht to provnde the strength and unlt that MOVES the load—engine, kammmon, propeller engineered at rear axle is to haul a “Job- ic t to meet a lllnlcuhr opetat.mg condition. truck engines—94 to 154 horsepower. They’re the most Powerf ul Dodge “Job-Rated” truc) base, cross-steering, wide front tread for easier maneuvering. Synchro-shift tnlnamissions @3-, o ATRUCK THAT FITS YOUR JC2 for cmin*eod " 1 DODGE YobiRated: TRUCK NOW! 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S worm-and-roller and up. Brand-new! adjusting! New gears on most mod- Extra quiet! Other design, new els. Short wheel- features include ing wheel dev~— plus lower hood line for improved visi- big bility. Pll.'S ALL THESE TIME-PROVED FEATURES DODGE TRUCKS HAVE HAD FOR YEARS Steering column gearshift stand- 4-, or 5-speed) rugged, silent, ard on 14-, 34- and 1-ton models Jrecision engineered. De Luxe with 3-speed transmission. and Custom cabs (with rear quar- Chrome-plated top piston ring for ter windows) available on all longer ring life, better sealing. models. And many other proved Dodge dependability features!

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