The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 11, 1951, Page 3

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 195 Hollywood Still Knocking at Gales In Coas! League By Associated Press A pair of pretty fair Brooklyn farm hands, Artie Schallock and George Schmees, are keeping the | Hollywood Stars on the victory | beam. Schallock, the sawed-off southpaw, twirled his 11th win (and third shutout) in beating Portland, 5-0 last night. All Schmees did was poke his 18th and 19th homers, each with one man on. That kept Hollywood four game behind the Pacific Coast Leas leaders, the Seattle Rainiers, WX squeezed past San Francisco, 4-3. Oakland climbed into a third place tie with Sacramento by edging San Diego, 4-2, in 10 innings, while the Sacs bowed to Los Angeles, 11-5. Paul Calvert pitched Seattle’s win He allowed homers by Ed Sauer, Ed- die Lake and Buster Adams, but all with nobody on. The Rainiers made effective use of 11 hits bff Lou Burdette. Los Angeles climbed to within a half-game of fourth place by shell- ing Solon Ace Walt Clough in a seven-run fourth inning. Pitcher Doyle Lade won his own game with a bases-loaded homer. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W. L. Pet 65 607 61 510 54 .500 54 500 52 495 481 Seattle Rainiers Hollywood Stars Sacramento Solons Oakland Acorns ... Los Angeles Portland Beavers San Francisco San Diego NATIONAL LEAGUE w. 50 43 40 Brooklyn 26 New York . st. Louis ... Cincinnati Philadelphia Boston Chicago Pittsburgh AMERICAN LEAGUE v Chicago 49 25 | Boston Ngw York Cleveland Detroit Washington Philadelphia St. Louis Robinsen Loses Crown To Britisher LONDON, July 11 —(®— Sugar Ray Robinson, once considered box- ing’s invincible fighting machine, was stripped of his world middle- weight crown today after absorbing a terrific beating by Randolph Tur- pin, a comparative newcomer to fist fighting’s big time. Turpin, 23-year-old Negro almost unknown outside of his British homeland, astounded the boxing world by soundly whipping the New York titleholder in 'I5 rounds last night as a capacity crowd of 18,000 in Earl's Court arena cheered in dis- belief. The 31-year-old Robinson’s fistic world collapsed around his battered features, but he’ll get a chance on his home grounds to get his title back next September. Immediately after the fight, Rob- inscn’s manager, George Gainford, said a return bout would be held Sept. 26 in New York. “Jie was better than I was,” Rob- inson said without offering any alibi “I lost,” he said simply. Turpin finished without a scratch, while Robinson just barely escaped in the 14th round and ended up with a deep cut on his left eyebrow and another gash high on his left cheekbone. The Associated Press scorecard gave Robinson, who had lost only one other fight in 133 bouts cover- ing 11 years, just four rounds. Turpin got nine, with two even. Robinson weighed 154z, to Tur- pin’s 158 FIGHT DOPE Fights yesterday resulted as fol- lows: < London — Randolph Turpin, 158, London, outpointed Sugar Ray Rob- inson, 14, New York, 15. (Title). Los Angeles — Jimmy Carter, 135, New York, stopped Enrique Bolanos, 136, Los Angeles, 1. Kansas City — Rocky Graziano, 162, Brooklyn, knocked out Cecil Hudson, 164, San Jose, Calif, 3. | lied the 7- 1 Star Tussle Show Things Have (hanged DETROII‘ July 11 The | National League inner circle today saw an end to the American League's “reign of terror” and predicted a new cycle shifting the batting pow- er to the senior circait. Gil Hodges, strapping Brooklyn first baseman and the Nationdl League's home run leader, said after | the | yesterday’s 8-3 triumph over Americans: “It is the National that has the home run hitters now, not American. Yes, sir, times changed.” Ralph Kiner, the National's home run king for the last five years, echoed this sentiment: “We're the big guys now and they are the little boys” he said. “I could see that before the game when we lined up for the National An- them.” Hodges and Kiner hit two of the Nationals’ four homers as they bom- barded five pitchers for a dozen hits and ran up the biggest run total ever made by a National League All-Star team. Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cmds and Bob Elliott of the Boston Braves | also smashed homers for the win- ncrs. Those of Hodges and Elliott came with a man on base. George Kell and Vic Wertz of Detroit hit <olo four-baggers for the Americans. “It’s a brand new cycle,” beamed Charlie Segar, National League publicist. “Watch us from now on.” | Victimized for years by such dyna- miters as Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig. Jimmy Fox, Hank Greenberg, Joe DiMaggio and Charlie Keller, the ionals had won only five of the 17 previous All-Star tilts and had | dropped 30 of 47 world series. They haven't won a world series 1246. Last year they had to go 14 innings to win 4-3. The Nationals entered the game with the more robust batting aver- ages and better pitching that be- 5 odds favoring the Amer- results bore them out havt icans. The Not only did they outslug the Amer- | icans but they outpitched and out- fielded them. The emphasis was striclly on the heme run but little Richie Ashburn, ficet-footed Philadelphia Phillies cutfieider, hrought the huge Briggs Stadium crowd of 52075 to its feet with a brilliant leaping catch in the | sixth inning to rob Wertz of a near- homer. Ashburn caught the ball in | front of the right centerfield screen 460 feet distant after a fong run. National League pitching wasn't | either. Except for an unsteady | two-inning stint by Robin Roberts, youthful Phillies’ righthander, and a couple of home run tosses by Sal Maglie of the New York Giants, the National’s four-man hurling was excellent. Don Newcombe, Brooklyn’ righthander, was superb. Five hurlers went to the hill for the Americahs. Except for Ned Gar- ver of St. Louis, all were pasted freely. Eddie Lopat, pride of the Yankees was charged with the loss. SEAL CONTROL - (ORDOVA AREA BEGINS IN FALL Preliminary plans are under way for hair seal control in the Cop- per River area, C. L. Anderson, di- rector of the Alaska Department of Fisheries said today. He recently met there with mem- bers of the Cordova Fisherman's Union (Ind) and cannery repre- sentatives. A eommittee was ap- peinted consisting of Ira Rothwell, representing the ADF; Justin Strom and Vernon Paulson for the can- neries; and Harold Mike Babich for the fishermen. The New England Fish Co. and the Parks Canning Co. pledged ba $1,500 each to the seal control pro- | gram. The Fisherman's Union is putting up $1 for each $5 spent by the Department in that area. . It is estimated that between 10,- 000 and 20,000 seals prey on the | salmon on the Copper River flats alone. Nothing can be done until this year's salmon run is over, Anderson said, because it is planned to use depth charges. Experiments of this nature have proved effective. Hun- ters will follow and cleanup those seals that have been stunned or missed. All local help will be used. Anderson said he was gratified | with the enthusiastic response rrom the Cordova area. ‘Work on seals is also going for- ward in the Stikine area which is regarded as another strategic dist- rict where the seals do great dam- age. —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— { the | since | the All-Star game | corps | big | Hanson and | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— SAMON TAGGING |VETERARINN | PROGRAM T0 START STATIONED E | An a Department of Agri- REIN JULY! OFFSHO N ‘le culture veterinarian ior Southeast g laska will be stationed in Juneau, The research staff of the U has been announced by the de- |Fish and Wildlife Service is add tment at Fairpanks. He is Dr. ing another chapter to its pink| lml S. Honsinger, who has pre- almon tagging program in South-Viously been stationed in Fair- sast Alaska by transferring opera- |bar and Palmer since last No- |tions to the West Coast and Sum- vemk |ner Strait districts. Mrs A purse seiner has been char- Was tmm for an eleven-day period, July | o to 31, in an attempt to inter-| u-‘)» migrating pinks in de waters oif Baranof Islands. Offshore wat vided excellent, but sp sein- |ing in the past years it is |hoped to obtain more information fon their movements | On August 1, opérations will shift |to traps at Port Beauclerc and |Point Baker in Sumner Strait [Tl'ips will be operated before the season opens, and during closed week ends in order that all pinks taken can be tagged and then re- |lensed to continue to their spawni | grounds The program is in charge of Carl |Elling, who is associated with the |FWs Montlake laboratory in Se- attle. { Purpose of the Sumner Strait undl Al { Honsinger of Pomeroy, hington, arrived here yesterday the Aleutian to join him. They ¥ a place where a lab- ratory and small hospital can be set up Dr. Honsinger, the and Noyes | 1 pro- is | A Californian, is . graduate of the School of Veter- | inary Medicine, Washington State College in 1948. He also holds a de- gree in wildlie management from the same college. He will be re-1 sponsible for periodical inspection and testing cf livestock for tuber- culosis and Bang's disease in this area, a press release from the Ag- riculture headquarters at Fairbanks aid. “With the expansion of livestock and dairy industry in the interior, it is not possible for one veterin- | arian to handle the work of the entire Territory,” the s .-’ ted ve and Hoensinger will sistance to livestock, po fur farmers during epidemics and vith production problems. He will also advise and enforce meat hanf- ling regulations which are in the process of preparation. On his own time he will be avail- ble for private consultations on !dogs, cats, and other animals, he ald tod: DANCE AT GOVERNOR'S FOR VISITING NAVAL RESERVE OFFICERS Naval Reserve officers from two training ships due here Thursday will be entertained at a dance at he Governor's Mansion from 8:30 offshore experiments is to ascer- tain routes of migration as the sal- |mon pass from offshore feeding )qlound» to tr spawning streams |and to measure their rate of pro- |gress. A better understanding of the \hahm of these salmon is necessary in planning efficient and effective regulations. | A reward of 50 cents is paid by FWS for every tag returned with {information concerning time, place and method by which the tagged . The cooperation of nd cannery wor- ker is requ in watching for tags and returning them with the correct information to the Service. LOCH NESS MONSTER "REAllY' EXISTS' o'clock until midnight next Frid | Mrs. Ernest Gruening — |Grady and USS Johnson, bearing | LINCOLN, Eng., July 10, — (® — {105 trainees from San Francisco in | |Town Clerk J. Harper Smnh‘udmuun to the regular crews, are| claimed today he saw the famous!due in Juneau at 5 p.m. Thursday, | Loch Ness monster on June 27 according to information received | Except for an errant raindrop,,at U. S. Coast Guard headquarters Smith told a reporter, he would |here. | e a priceless moving picture to | The Juneau Chamber of Com- | ve it. {merce has furnished requested ins “T am a reformed skeptic,” said {formation on .sightseeing trips Smith. “The monster ex My | trips around Juneau, Herbert S. on and I watched it for 1 mm.{mmmml_ president, said. utes. It looks like the long-necked | The ships are tentatively | prehistoric dinosaurs reconstructed | uled to depart fo. Prince |by scientists from fossil bones.” {at noon Saturday. | smith and his son, Army | Charles Smith, were on a fishi “:vp to Loch Ness at the time Smith said he had planned to take | movie camera ‘along, but ’ {the last minute a raindrop .\pm-‘ | tered on the hotel window and he decided the weather woula be un- unitable. 12 { sched- Rupert Lt. Dra Call Issued For 7,000 Marines WASHINGTON, July 10, — (® — ) The Defense Department today is- | | Smith said he and his sor spot- |sued a draft call for 7,000 men for [ted the monster a mile from their [ihe Marine Corps and 28,000 for the | {rowboat. He continued: {Army in August. “My son said ‘that looks like a| ytalso announced it will want periscope.” Then we realized what |34 000 draftees in September—28,- it really was. We were speechless|gog for the Army and 6,000 for the and -spellbound. Marines. 5 i Today's announcement marks the 3 e since the draft was re- I ' | service except the army has asked Siranded’ By Road Washout for drattees. The August call for the Army is a revision of an earlier request. It previously had announced it would Pt o want 00 men in August. ANCHORAGE, July 11 —®— A BRI e bridge washout over the Eklutna river cut Anchorage’s highway con- nections with the outside yesterday. The trouble came from a torrent loosed by rapid melting of Eklutna glacier in the current heat spell. The bridge, at Mile 25 on the Palmer highway, went out first at 5 p.m. Monday. The Alaska Road Commission made temporary repairs. A dike gave way again shortly be- fore noon yesterday and the water undermined the rock-filled cribs supporting the bridge. The road commission hopes to erect a Bailey bridge at the wash- |out site. A new bridge had been planned for completion before the high water season, but construction was delayed by the difficulty in get- ting steel. PROPANE GAS FIRE “ON THE SPOT” ! FOUG"T 88 Houns and how! If disaster tem- | porarily closes your busi- . B J . | NEWARK, N. J, July 11 —(® Yt Ly ancan lose propetty | The $5,000,000 Port Newark propane dollase o0 can lose gas fire is officially out after 8¢{ . 5 income too during the hectic hours. - $ Fire Chief Charles Burnett callec | Period of repairs! But we can provide you back 13 fire companies after an in- spection trip last night at the War-| with ingurance protection against such losses. Call ren Maritime Corp., tank firm. on us today. Two others were left at the scene of Saturday’s rocket-like blasts as s Agency a precautionary measure. Phone 249 WIL GAMES By Associated Press Yesterday’s Results JUNEAU [ e— FPIANO TUNER HERE George W. Wigg, Ketchikan piano tuner, will be in Juneau for a month he said today. He is stop- tl e ( stineau Hotel at Yakima 6, Tacoma 4. Vancouver 6, Salem 2. Spokane 10, Tri-City 8. Wenatchee 4, Victoria 3. * LaVonr ANNOVET#ET | patibility ! ing the v PAGE THREE NEAU, ALASKA Civilian Defense Do Air Leaflels |Director on Tour "(arry the Mail” |Alaska (mes T i e g | ity of Washington researc are Earl Landreth, territorial director |¢ to try to learn if information of Civilian Defense, and Col. J. D.| frem air-dropped leaflets is Alexander, acting adjutant general Revere pace of the Alaska National Guard, leave nd what their effect is on | | this afternoon on a tour of territor- | | ial cities, Civilian defense direct :lh(\‘((!\" mayors of Anchorage, Fairbanks,|a Nome and Seward will be contacted to further acquaint Landreth with T | territorial civilian defense problems. | ~ost would run to more than $10¢,000 Heads of the armed forces in Alaska | for the first year of a proposed will also be acted in Anchor- ' $200,000 three-year pr age and Fairbanks. Landreth and| - Col. Alexander expect to return in i about 10 days. A. V. RITCHE HERE Ritche from the Taku the Baranot Hofel. b l\l'u COHEN SENTENCED, RE\ FINED ON INCOME TAX' VIOLATIONS LOS ANG Mickey to five year €00 fine The sen two ho! tion of U s t | Har | € prison for r five year maximum and $4 Cohen 1 appeared and wearir a seemed ner v is H at ~| REMEMBER GREEN'S FUR SALE at the ——& BARANOF HOTEL POSITIVELY ENDS THIS WEEK 10 » entenced today and a $10,- tax violation. e after nearly A substitu- ued before n Harrison gambler to sentences of r counts. The been 20 ycars iy ot d, pace mas_es of people The re wunced a research Awr Force on here. will feot the bill " announcement said the any ckend e regents cor jec . dapper dresyer, without a necktie windbreaker. He His redhaired wife t his side during the DR. TED OBERMAN OPTOMETRIST FROM WASHINGTON, D, €, Lt. Col. and Mrs. T. E. Robe |of Washington, D. C. are ston at the Baranof Hotel. PHONE: OFFicE 61 JUNEAU, ALASKA 2074 CENTURY THEATRE BLDG. long e 2ND FLOOR Cohen, conv | come tax ey ment could I prison tern 1 He also « 1 have counts AppIC 000 in unpaid mated $100,000 it ment to conduct his June 20 of in- and false state- received a 20-year $40,000 fine, been held ac- ximately $250,- plus the esti- cost the govern- | trial 1 Two Divorces Filed Yesterday Two acti g Su nny Brook--m straight Kentucky bourbon (Old Sunny Brook White Label), or a mellow, Kentucky blend (Old Sunny Brook Yellow Label). Ask for the Ofd Sunny Brook which meefs your own faste, e //|\ [ ‘The name 01d Sunny Brook on @ bottle has, for gen- erations, been an assurance to the consumer that he is getting the very finest whiskey. That same assurance is yours today—whether you like a fine s for divorce were filed yeste! District Court Virginia Nelson is asking a di- vorce from Norval Nelson charging incompatibil The couple was it d Juneou in 1850 and have cne child, Jenniter. There are no| property rights involved. ‘ Plaintiff is asking custody of the| child and $50 a month for its sup- port. She further asks that the de- fendant be ordered to pay her at- torney fees and court costs. Mrs Nelson is represented by William L. | Paul, Jr | Resic cerned tion, Mari M. 7] ay in be of Skagway are con- the second divorce pett \ Matthews §uing Jax 1/6ws on grounds of incom- | The couple was magried in Haines in 1947 and have two small children, Janies Max Jr., three years old and a daughter of five months. The complaint charges that the | couple separated the middle of | March, 1951 and have not lived to- | gether ince. ‘ Mrs, Matthews asks that custody | of the older child be divided [ tweén mother and father at six | months periods but that she be given complete custody of the baby. She ‘mg $30 a month for the| child’s care, There is no property in- volved. M E. Monagle is repres plaintiff as attorney. AR L\ 86 PROOF Remember...Sunny Brook is the whiskey that’s Gfeer/z'// as its Name w——— THE OLD SUNNY BROOK COMPANY, I.OUISVII.I.E KENTUCKY ? DLDSMOBILES FAMOUS ‘ROGKET Over 100,000 now on the road | Time-proved! Road-proved! Owner-proved! That’s Oldsmobile’s “Rocket”! Behind this famtous engine stand two-and-one-half ycars of high-compression leadership—billions of miles of better driving—over 700,000 “Rocket” owners! And every one of them can tell you that there’s a dramatic difference between the *Rocket’s” true high-compres- sion power and ordinary power! The “Rocket” The “Rocket™ is tops for flashing, economi- cal power! New combustion chamber—new extra large carburetor —new distributor— new starting motor and damp-proof wiring harness—new air cleaner and intake silencer —short, rigid 5-bearing crankshaft—hydrau= lic valve lifters ~auto-thermic pistons. means amazing action—exceptional economy! The Rocket'Sets the Pacs in High Compression ! The “Rocket” means silken smoothness— solid dependability! We suggest that you come in-for a “Rocket Ride,” but we warn you: Drive @ “Rocket” Engine car once and you'll never be satisfied until you own one. TR SEE YOUR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER JORGENSON MOTORS - Marine Way - PHONE 527

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