The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 8, 1951, Page 6

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T e PAGE SIX ‘;l;:laglee;ull;eral 4 "0ld’ Men Put Wil It Hurt, Doclor? |Enthusiasm for Fielding [Minfield Home |Stephen McPhetres i eld | Leclure May Save Dinner Club Opens School Year | Observes Birihday MondayMorming YanksBackin g i, Wil 25 Children ~|With Theatre Par 7 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA : SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1951 The “sample” afforded the Ju- . eono onljog oo onl B V Rl B TR jneau Dinner Club at its initial | 18 0 O Bi0 s ":‘LB“" o s 8 Monday morning for Eladio Bel- FIrS' pla(e [ meeting Friday night in the Bar- | &% When her DOley inain a[;l}_«tfl The Minfield Territorial School, Young Stephen McPhet oAl dics, Miipiio Chiinaniry . iasde: . | anof Gold Room was so good that u“mm,;mnéh ;;eacc X Brit- | opened Sept. 4 with a total of 25| of the Rev. and Mrs. Sam Mc- who died at Seward Aug. 25. They | ;hmo present *all expressed hope i X Cl\;\l;irenflelnmlgwlfllln_:xlll gl:\dfs. i Phetres, celebrated his tenth birth- « e \ . O + H | or more. “But we are fighting the id rs. Helen D. Blair, head teach-|day Saturday with a y forsen will be at 10 o'clock in the Lhuuh; Ihey May be Pushmg By “sample” is meant the lec-| of Communism nfui h:re is 0:: er, is in charge of the first and]school and pl)\mnr of the Nativity here. ture by Capt. Michael Fielding. second grades with fifteen child- enough to justify the continuation of the dinner-lecture club, ,dL(‘Ord ing to Elmer Schlotz, org and the first meeting migl g %50 i % real problem—you can kill men, b : “_‘”" ,l:jf‘f:“_d *:;"fl“‘sd g"”;,’:,‘xtm”” ' 40 but They Push And no lecturer could have Ixudi but you can't Kill an idea,” Fleld- | Fen Mrs. Blair Teceived her bach-} Bfl!hdn.\' cake, and a birthday Daters Wil e Frask Sis a more enthusiastic audience. ing warned. “The only way to | GIOF of arts degree from Syracuse [UnClecn were scrved - P vearers wil e Frank sion. | |ndians Around to Win T arge| 18 warned. «The oty WAy 40 | iversity and ook post-graduate| (€ Which the youngst hded Samm) Ste 0, | work at Syracuse, Beaver College B nee. is by an extension of the Mar- de, George Mamolo, Johnny Com-| By ‘the Associated Preae shall plan to the east.” ilang and Joe Alimorong Baseball may be a young man’s Ho pall bearers Will be| game but the “old men” are shaping Gaby Lampkey, Julio Parkon, Ma- | the destiny of the and the University of Washing- ton. She is now completing 15 con- : secutive years of teaching for the | Territory and is a former Juneau Invited x'\l(\[ were Marth Vicola: Apc I Jehn ‘Ste i 1d Jimmic CALLED TO C pennant races in B v p ast tea Esmino, Citoy Magdaluyo, | the American and National leagues. | el | | resident. g 1 Johnny Felipe' and Eddie Aligaya.| The New York Yankees are back Schlotz disbanded the origin- Illness of her grandson called | Fritchmann, Mary Burial will be in the Catholic| in first place in the American league al organization last night, told | Mrs. Nina Baroumes to Beimont The upper grades are in cha St Plot in Evergreen Cemetery thanks to Joe DiMaggio, 36; Johnny those present they were dinner | Park, Esquimait, B. C. She expects| of John Goins, a native of Tennes- CTHRSESIRY Friends who wish to call may do| Mize, 38; and Allie Reynolds, 32, suests of the Associated Net- | to be gone from Juneau about two|see who was trained at Maryville, B shaive so between the hours of 7 and 9| who led the club to a 4-2 triumph work Clubs and refunded money | weeks. Tenn. g o'clock tonight at the Carter Mor-| oyer Washington yesterday. Doubles to those who had made member- IR M g T R I and thé 5 tuary | by Mize and DiMaggio drove in | ship payments. s R B T O e FUTWRE s Mrs. Belarde has requested th: three minth-inning runs and gave instead of flowers those Reynolds his 14th win, may contribute to the Als Cleveland's Indians are only one berculosis Association. percentage point behind the Mr. Be - was graduated {rom| Yanks because of the brilliant yakima High' School and attended | pitching of 32-year-old Bob Fel- Puget Sound College in Tacoma.| ler. The star righthander gave He first came to Juneau in 1929 | the Tribe a split in their twi-night || and worked for the Alaska-Jun-| deubleheader at St. Louis. Feller | . A pay expenses—can ke secured, they | { might still hear the next lecturer eau Mining Co. until 193¢ when| shut out the Browns, 7-0, aft Four-year-cld Kristine Hammo R \ . 4 s [ s after car-old Kristine Hammond (center) of Provo, Utah, is the | who will be in Alaska for the Fair- After 37 years in the Retail Clothing in time for thet next lecture?” one member asked Schlotz. And there is that possibility, the nefiremeni Sale confinues organizer assured the group pres- i ent—if more members, enough to b ”p V/DIMI/IST i “If we can secure more members, ° will it be possible to reorganize - = ] - = {zz ? he went to Los Angeles for four| Ned Garver had pitched St. Louis | first person in midical history ¢ Shiats s rs. He returned here in 1938 to a 4-2 opening victory. ¢ ¥ ; istory to rarticipate in a large scale human | tanks and Anchorage meetings. i G |~ s RREIGYSA At HUR"chine, |, FIv” tintigs of. shutout: celer] o & o determine if a blood fraction, gammo ghbulin, is effective | Otherwise an attempt will be made business I am ClOSlIlg out my huQE How do you score as an in- the Baranof Hotel and. Worked-ong | pitching by 37-year-old Eilis Kinder| L Preventing. paraiysis in pollo, The little Provo girl was theifirst | to organize next year, Schiota sald k of Men's Clothi dividualist? year at the Sitka naval base. | helped the Boston Red Sox gain a| noculated in the test. She is stated with Dr. Lewis L. Coriell, | All gresent were enthusiastical- stock of Men's Llothing Do you have what it takes tu J nk stand firmly for what you tl Last June he entered the sani-|split in their twin bilt at Philadel- Camden, N. project director znd Dr. William McD. Hammon, |1V 10 favor of interesting more eived at radio station KINY from Russia, torium in Seward. phia, keeping them close to the| director. (P) Wirephoto. friends in the club in time to hear — is right regardless of what othe Mr. Belarde had been an active | leaders. Kinder, aided by three E I DL AR ok the lecture series arranged for| at PBICES TH[\T WILL siay’ think, ustng good judgment Jeader in the Filipino Community | hits and two tallies by Lou Boud- thi§ year. : of course, or do you shrin} the here and was president of the or-|reau, 34, received credit for Bos- J H “h( ' I Capt. Fielding believes it pos- | " E 7 ~thought of- “being -different;’-if ganization at the time of hxs\";nnjc 6.5 opening win. he am. |JUNCAU F1€d enierio | sible to avoid the cataclysm cf , L St - etics, however, won the nightcap, | World War III by a pres ‘nlatm'\‘ “His death is a great loss to our|11-4, as Billy Hitchcock, 33, batted IH s of military strength on the ]ml : Az? hard as.th: wn_r(ds_may l_»?' Community,” Sam Constantino,|in five runs with two triples and | ponsor ¢il0 BroaGesis of the Western World and by of 5 A do you know that if you ever Community leader, said here to-|tWo singles, and 35-year-old Eddie | fering a better idea to the margin- | { ome 1n an € . urprlse VI e make the grade to m-rg_] :_md day.. “Eladio Belarde was a tireless Joost cracked a three-run homer. wo new transcriptions have beend- al countries than the Communism |} 4 the new earth—you will have Mbr 4 | [} to be considerably “different”? | | worker in Red Cross drives and| Brooklyn retained its five and polio, | y he mdati 3 . 1 Soring the war led a drive to Taise| @ half game bulge over the New |the Juneau Health Center and wil by the foundation.| .we must defeat the basic Sov- LARGE !)AV!“GS - | “Enter by the narrow gate," money for the Philippines. | York Giants in the National league |be broadcast on the regular center One is a card, “Polio Pointers for | jet design of military conquest,” | 2 | Jesus said; “for wide is the go 7 usan,| Tace as 33-year-old Pro n at 5:45]1951" and the other is “Polio Facts | the lecturer said, then suggested | and broad the road w her Roe ! program, this afternoc survived by his wif &t He is Edna,| Ditched an 11-6 win over Phila- |o'clock. On the subject of infan-|you Should Know.” Both are dis- | that the best way to acc omplish rank | delph Third baseman Billy |tile paralysis, they have the fol- this end is to go back into history | ith all of Juneau; his mother, Cox, with two doubles and a |lowing descriptions: RPN Y R P S Wl 6 b : _ | Graves-**The Clothing Mun homasa Belarde, a, sister Tuman,! tiple, drove in four Dodger runs, FROM TOK JUNCTION the \ i i sy “Information Polio,” is a discus-|2nd Street i : S ine in the Philip-| It was Roe's 19th triumph against | _ gy it ; D P antl: brother Lino, dn LA Poil two Josses. sion of the ten “most-asked w*--‘ Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Ahlini of | { / Crowd? Il,",-’u?.‘,'fr" £ g 3 to ruin, are wh and three children, Lind and Daphie and a -t and may be sbtained at center headquarters, 122 ! tributed free of cha e neanch Monte Irvin, 32, hammered his|40DS about polio. John Cameron g ! Tok Junction are at the Barano narrow 19th homer and drove in three tal- | SWayze is master of ceremonies and| — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — Hotel. and contracted the road w . . H " o] n & £ " ¢ Fishing Pilot Deparfs; |ucs to tead the Giants o a 7-3 win | bis panel consists of four polo ex-| s : T e 1o s over the Boston Braves. Thirty year Dt’lrbd\- Dr. Hnrrl Ih :{:m Riper, medi- | Sosees %\Lflm&m‘m@mfim‘x‘x H ca, irector of the National Fou old Larry Jansen went the route 3 1 . Df To Return Christmas for i 1ot vigtory. T "t®[ton for nfamle Paral: It is a little harder Elsewhore 33~ year-old Virgi1|Robert Neville, director of orthos S E E T H E N E w el ( Steve Bancroft, Pan American | Trucks pitched and batted Detroit) Pedic service; Dr. Theodore Boyd, [ ] | ffil‘"&I,fv“;ifii"I‘SI.\(.”Q‘QL easy pilot from San Francisco Who has|to a 2-1 nightcap victory over the | assoclate director of research; and %x | road. They hate to bb “differ- been here for the past ten days|Chicago White Sox in 14 innings.|Dr- Catherine Worthington, director Registered Trade Mark ent.” The esteem of fellow men enjoying salmon and trout fish-| The Tigers, behind the five-hit of professional ,education. 7/ is here and now. The gentle ridi- who find it.” Matthew 7:13, 14 (Weymouth). ing, left today. He reported that | pitching of Teddy Gray, also won “Summer Shindig” with Huk cule of neighbors is so keen and he had fine fishing and intends 1o | the opener, 4-1. Trucks surrendered | Snow and his “Rainbow \ch U. S. and Foreign Patents pending. real. Eternity is so far away, it return to spend Christmas at Taku | only five hits and drove in the win- (Boys” is a liv and fast-mov B e e e e e e s e e e e e e e e e e e e seems, and so unreal. Too often Lodge. ning run in the 14th with a double. | Proeram featuring Snow's music. = ide to fall in with the Tod Powell, outdoor columnist|The loser was 24-year-old Billy|[Snow and his boys are described as — erowd, and bury our co S oh: for the San Francisco, Calif. Chron- | Pierce. one of the top folk artists’ groups It is an easy way, a soothing way; but it is an insidiously | deadly way! [ | | i I | | E we [ | | remaining at the Lodge for an in- | four runs to lead the St. Louis Card- definite period. The two have been |inals to an 11-4 victory over Pitts- points 4 The true way, the right way, making television motion pictures | burgh. Cincinnati won an 18-in- [ to music. ; of fishing in the Juneau area. |ning 7-6 decision over Chicago’s, The health center now has on Nflw (DN BISPI AY AT TllE | has never heen distinguished by ' i its popularity. 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