The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 20, 1951, Page 6

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PAGE SIX (Ieveland Comes Up On Yanks By the Associated Press Cleveland's sweep of the Boston series leaves the league-leading New York Yankees gasping for breath in the American League. Still out front by three percentage points after yesterday's 5-3 tory over Chicago, the Yanks face rough gojhg ahead. While they play nine of 10 with first division clubs, the Triba.plays only six—five with the bottom half of the league. Chances are the Yanks and Red Sox will jknock off one another in their eigh§ meetings while Clev eland picks up #hough ground to get home free. Then they can start worrying about Brooklyn, which opened up a 3% game lead on idle New York in the National last night by blank- ing St. Lauis 3-0. Chicaga, in a vengeful mood since | that dhput,ed rainy night game at | the stadigm in July, can knock the Yanks ou} of first place today while Cleveland rides a train to Detroit. | Cleveland’s Drive Cleveland showed its old buommg drive yesterday in walloping Boston 15-2, a blpw that practically doused | the last Red Sox hopes. They are trailing Wy 3': games with 11 to play. : Early Wynn became the Tribe’s | third 20-game winner with a <even-‘ hit job on Boston. While he coasted the Indians took full nd\antaum of 11 hits and 13 bases on balls by Maury McDermott and five suc- cessors. JRay Boone, Luke Easter| and Bobby Avila hit home runs. The Yanks didn’t bruise the ball in beatifig the White Sox. They had only; three hits but two of them off Lou:Krellow were enough to win withi the help of walks. Gil Mc- | Dougald$ homer with nobody on tied lhe!s(orr‘ at 2-2 in the third and Mickey Mantle's homer with two | on won the game in th fourth. | 4Kuzava in Relief ‘ | | , Lefty Bub Kuzava, Who replaced starter Tom oMrgan in the third, earned his 11th victory with a fine relief performance. | Preacher Roe took chiarge of pull- ing Brooklyn out of’its, tailspin by | shuttingfout the st bouts Cardin- | als with five hits. The crafty Lefty's record 1578 “phenomenal 21-2 | for the season mcluding seven wins | over St. Louis. Bubba' Church whipped Chicago for the sixth time, 5-1 @& the Phillies took advantage of four! Cub errors. Murry Dickson’s 18th win let| Pittsburgh out of last place, 7-3, at the expense of Bostonls young Chet | Nichols. | The hustling Phi}delphla A’s, strugglinig to catch fifth-place De- | trott, krjocked off the Tigers, 8-1,| on a sedén-run spurt in the fourth | inning. | Cass Michaels singled with the! bases lopded in the eighth to score two rung for Washington’s 4-3 edge over St. Lo Pat Ki‘mes’s Sister, In Jamaica, Tells Of Hurricane Hurricgnes aren’t fun, Miss Pat Kimes ledrned from her sister, Mrs. Elois Wafrilow, of Kingston, Jamai- ca, who was a victim of the recent “big blow” in thre West Indies. This is Mrs. Warrilow’s story of the hurricane in a letter to Miss Kimes: “Stormi warnings were posted at four in |the afternoon, everyone warned tp stay indoors and board windows and doors. “It strutk with a wind of 160 miles an hour pnd we huddled in a cor- ner of basement all night. Lights were oufand no water. “No die-knows how terrifying an experlem: was. Our house was the only ol r miles that the roof didn’t off. were démolished, huge trees lay all over. People were searching for miss- ing ones,”often finding them dead “Althoggh most of my clothes and personal possessions were destroyed by water, I am very glad to be alive. Thousal are dead. We were with- out lights or water for three days.” Hospital Nofes Admitted to St. Ann's Hospital Wednesdgy was Carl Heinmiller; dismissed were Mrs. Raymond Si- menstad, - Mrs. R. Johnson, Mrs Peter Nickel, Joseph Barranger. Born at St Ann’s Hospital to Mrs Edwin Hildre at 3:10 am. Thurs day, a boy weighing 7 pounds and 10 ounces. Dismissed Wednesday from the Government Hospital were Kather- ine Phillips and Norman Dimmert, both of Petersburg, and Johanna Peck of Juneau. AGE SALE ummage Sale, George ing, Franklin Street pt. 22 V. F. Brothers’ Saturday,™ “Wha?zwscene next day. Houses‘ 915-4t | Rainiers League Standings By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE L Pet| 54 625 56 szz 57 69 .527| 78 .466 | 82 442 87 396 98 319 New York Cleveland Boston Chicago Detroit Philadelphia Washington St. Louis NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. | Brooklyn 61(] 524 | .503 479 425 415 411 New oYrk St. Louis Boston Philadelphia Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago leaque Leaders By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting (based on 350 times at bat) —Fain, Philadelphia, .348; Williams, Boston, .323. Runs batted in—Williams, Boston and Zernial, Philadelphia, 124. Home runs—Z2ernial, Philadelphia, 32; Williams, Boston, 30. Pitching (based on 10 decisions) —XKinder, Boston, 11-2, 846; Feller, | Cleveland, 22-8, .733; Martin, Phila- | delphia, 11-4, .733. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Musial, St. Louis, Ashburn, Philadelphia, .342. Runs batted in—Irvin, New York, 111; Gordon, Boston, 106. Home runs—Kiner, Pittsburgh, 41; Hodges, Brooklyn, 38. Pitching—Roe, Brooklyn, 21-2, 913; Maglie, New York, 21-6, .778. Baseball Stars By the Associated Press .360; Batting: Mickey. Mantle, Yanks— | hit three-run homer in fourth in- nmg for 5-3 edge over White Sox. Pitching: Early Wynn, Indians— joined teammates Bobby Feller and Mike Garcia in 20-wirf elub with 15-2 triumph over Boston., Sports in Brief By the Associated Press WILLIAMSBURG, Va.,—William and Mary faculty charged a sports scandal ‘at the college was caused by an ambitious athletic program which “obscuring and corrupting” the real purposes of the institution. CHICAGO—Arch Ward, sports ed- itor of the Chicago Tribune, pro- poses a revolutionary program of Netional coach-swapping among colleges each year to save football. DELAWARE, O.—Sampson Han- over paced mile in 1:59 3-5 for world record over half-mile track. Baby Siffer Sent To Jail; Charged With Two Deaths OWENSBORO, Ky., Sept. 20—/— A 19-year-old baby sitter whose two charges suffocated in her absence today faced a 90-day jail term. Anna Louise Dillingham was con- victed of involuntary manslaughter yesterday by a circuit court jury which deliberated only 26 minutes. Miss Dillingham, crippled by Polio since she was two, was charged with two counts of involuntary mans- laughter as a result of the deaths of Ronald Wayne, 3, and Sheila Ann Holt, 1. She was tried for the boy's death. The children suffocated in a smoke-filled bedroom in the apart- ment of their parents, Lt. and Mrs. Harold Holt, last Feb. 21. Miss Dillingham admitted leaving the children for an early morning trip with a Fort Knox soldier whose name she had forgotten. Fire broke out in the Holt apart- ment after the baby-sitter had de- parted. Revolters Are |Executed in Hongkong, 119 HONG KONG, Sept., 20— B — [Shanghm'a wave of September ex- ecutions soared to 185 Friday with the public killing of 119 more “counter-revolutionaries.” The city’s Liberation Daily re- ported the executions. It said 66| persons were executed Sept. 9 and 11, | CLASSES STARTING Red Cross Nurses. Aid Classes starting this month. Call 434, 906-t1 | mers, WinFlag, =PCleague By the Associated Press | Seattle has the best ball club in the Pacific Coast League this year and demonstrated it convineingly | last night by beating Hollywood in | the fifth and deciding game of the | Governor’s Cup playoff series, 9-2. The 1951 pennant winners ex- | ploded for four runs in the seventh | inning, knocked knuckleballer John | Lindell off the hill, and continued | their assault against three other Hollywood pitchers. The game may have been the last in the Coast League for the two managers, Rogers Hornsby of Seattle and Fred Haney of Hollywood. Horsnby has been non-committal, but it is known that Bill Veeck is interested in him for the St. Louis Browns' job next year. And the New York Yankees, it has been whispered, may want to talk things over with him in the event Casey Stengel decides to retire this year. 38 Arrive on PAA; 49 Fly Southbound Pan American World Airways carried 87 travelers Wednesday with 38 arrivals and 49 departures. From Seattle: Pete Crew, Jess Em- | mons, Don Finney, Hank Gilbert- son, Carl Holton, L. E. Langdcn, Herb Moreau, Mrs. Burke Riley. Pete Smith, Mr. and Mrs. S. E Tucker, H. H. Ungethun, William Wood, Mrs. H. Kirby. From Fairbanks: A. Bandettini T. Doan, D. T. Finney, Grant Logan, Joe Wall, M. W. Boding, Miss Anna Heisler, Cora Tobuk, Elsie Silax, Lloyd Essig, Alex Brown, Max Pen- | | rod, Mollie Sheldon. From Whitehorse: Jack Webster. To Seattle: Nels Hattly, William Urguhart, Mr. and Mrs. E. Page,| and Robin, Mrs. R. Thibodeau, Vir- ginia Pettit, Richard Westwall, Leo- | nard Berlin, R. J. Stevenson, Tillie | Martin, Mrs. Thomas Flint, William Dore. Marie Osterback, Sisie Day, Frank Mnier, Max Kuney, Howard Weaver, | Stanley Pearlman, Allen Osberg, Sundrick, O: W. McIntyre, William Winn, Hugh Stoddart, R. J. Som- Robert Sommers, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Cozzens, C. W. Johnson. Mrs. C. W. Johnson, Leonard Pre- chel, L. B. Kerr, Richard Ziman, A. Ling, Mrs. J. C. Martinsen, R. Coll- | uccio, Arthur Quick, Gilbert Utness, Henry James, Frank Debruyer, Charles Olsen, Alice Williams, Clara Siberly. To Ketchikan: Jack Woster, Joe Wall, Max Wilson, O. T. Finney, Bob Miers. 10 Arrive from Westward Wednesday Pacific Ncrihern Airlines carried 26 passengers Wednesday with 10 arrivals and 16 departures. From Anchorage: Dr. Mathew Dr. Phillips, D. Debruyr, Lois Rei- mer. From Yakutat: R. George, Joan Welsh, Royal Burkett. From Cordova: G. Utness, Hateley, William Urghart. To Anchorage: Lewis McDonald, A. V. Collar, Felix Toner, E. Barber, J. M. Voyles, Max Kuney, Ken Lloyd, W. Wood. To Cordova: William Trimble, H. Moreau, A. Smith. To Yakutat: John Gibe, Greg and K. Johnson, W. McMillian, H. Unge- Neil S. | for THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA lamro is Tech Kayoed By Graziano DETROIT, Sept. 20—M—Rocky Gra! 0, whose blasting comeback in the last 20 seconds stunned Tcny | Janiro last night and gained Rocky | a technical knockout, wants to get into the next business—a middle- weight title fight with champion Sugar Ray Robinson. This may be early next year. Meanwhile the “we wuz robbed” cry came from Janiro and Frankie Jacobs, his manager. Until Rocky's crashing lefts and rights suddenly sprawled Tony on the canvas with the fight nearly over, Janiro appeared a sure winner in a wide-open slugfest. Referee Lou Handler halted the 10-round, tele- vised fight just as Janiro hit the floor. Janiro hopped right to his feet and joined Manager FrankieiJacobs in protesting Handler's decision. Many in the crowd of 8,086 booed. 1115 Travel on Alaska Coastal Tuesday Flights Alaska Coastal Airlines carried| a total of 155 passengers in Tues- day's flights wth 42 on interport 51 arriving and 62 departing. Arriving from Tulsequah: D. R. Forrestor, C. Bloomfield; from Haines: Carl Heinmiller, Mr. and Mrs. Simionstad, Mary Jackson; from Skagway: Goldie Hukill, F. Hukill, D. Hukill; from Wrangell: V. Hill, B. Hill, J. Hill; from Pet- ersburg; Frank James, Edna, Mat and Davis Brown, D. Starr, John Smith; from Tenakee: Allen Ware, carl Carpenter, Jack Gilbanks, Pedro Savello; from Hoonah: S. Sheakley, David Marvin, A. Quick; from Sitka: Helen Yaw, J. M. Voyles, E. Harber, Emil Lang, L. Kerr, Mr. T. H. Lundin, Mr. and Mrs. Wes Overby and child; Mrs. Clint Holmes, M. Holmes, Joyele and Martin Holmes, P. Dalgard, Marie Edwards, Ed Ringle, Mr.and Mrs. Preston, Richard Preston, E. Corcoran; from Todd: Carl Sa- ter, Karl Makinen; from Excur- sion Inlet: Salvador Ezar, Leon= ard Preschel; from Gustavus: Mrs. Glenn Parker; from Taku: Bob Schy. Departing for Tulsequah: S. Webster, Dorothy MacNicol; for Haines: L. H. Stanley, J. Corbett, Rev. Don Schwab, Allen Osberg; Skagway: Ray Carter, Robert Snyder, L. Rapuzzi; for Hoonaif Archie Jackson, Mr. anw Mrs. G. Dalton, Violet Dalton, Mr. and Mrs. F. St. Clair; for Sitka: G. Nigholson, G. H. Hillerman, A. Nation, L. E. Johnson, T. H. Lun- din, Ruth Fawcett, Alice P. Wil- liams, Larry Lindstrom. For Angoon: George and Shirley A. Johns; for Gustavus: F. Hall; for Excursion Inlet: Harry Mar- vin, Amey Knudsen; for Haines: Lawrence Foley, Jeanne Coakley, M. Riley, Christine Thomas, Mrs. J. Huisdock, Agnes Shaw, Ray Shepard;, for Petersburg: Bill Wil- der, Douglas Starr, Wayne King; for Wrangell: Bill Goodro. For Ketchikan: Lowell Warner, Warren West, Morris Hansen, T. C. Thompson, Raymond Scott, Joe Campbell, D. L. Frazier, Alec John- son, Mrs. Alec Johnson, Ralph An- drews, W. A. Bates, Peggy Dalig- con, Mrs. E. A. French, Vern Reed, Patricia Staley, Lillian and Sam British Minister Reporis Russian 'Milifary Power OTTAWA, Sept. 20— (® —British Defense Minister Emanuel Shinwell declares he has “solid evidence” that Russia has 215 divisions, 300 submarines and 19,0000 aircraft and is making great efforts to build its power further. “Like us, they are making great efforts,” Shinwell said, “and their forces are growing in power and numbers every day.” The British minister is here for the Atlantic Council meeting. “Weakness is a temptation of the would-be aggressor,” he told the Women’s Canadian Club. Upholstery Workshop Will Be Held Here Sept. 24-0cl. 10 An upholstery workshop sched- uled for Juneau from Sept. 24 to Oct. 10 will be held in the Miners Union Hall (CIO), Miss Hallene Price, home demonstration agent, announced today. The hall is lo- cated directly back of the Baranof Hotel and has convenient doors for loading and unloading the furni- ture. There will be some one at the building all day on Sept. 24 to receive the furniture. Miss Price states there are 24 signed up for the evening group, and 15 in the afternoon section which means that this workshop is filled. She said that all those who have asked about ¢he work- shop and whose names were put on the list should secure all ne- cessary materials and be prepared | to work on the first day. Miss Mary Robinson, home furn- ishing specialist, from the Univer- sity of Alaska will conduct the work shop. Miss Price will assist. General Election For Brifain Oct. 25 LONDON, Sept. 20—{®—Britain will have a general election Oct. 25, with Winston Churchill’s Conser- vative Party bidding to oust the Labor government of Prime Minister Attlee, an informed source reported today . The report came from the lobby (parliamentary) correspondent of the British Press Association, who usually writes with official guid- ance. Attlee’s press spokesman, ask- ed for comment, said “there is noth- ing official—yet.” FROM ANGOON Mrs. Peter Johnson of Angoon is registered at the Hotel Juneau. Fairbanks Area io Get Rainhow Trout The first sports fishing piegram for the Interior by the Alaska De- partment of Fisheries will get un- derway next week, C. L. Ander- son, director, said today. Ed 8. Marvich, biologist has com- pleted a survey of Lost Lake 5§ miles from Fairbanks. The 94-acre lake will be cleared of scrap fish by the use of rotenone in prep- aration for the planting of rain- bow trout %here in the spring, An- derson said. Arrangements have been made to obtain 100,000 “eyed” trout eggs from a private fish hatchery in IflahoA They will in a temporary hatchery in Fair- banks. It is anticipated that the lake can be thrown open for fish- ing in 1953. Marvich will be in charge of the rehabilitation project and wili assisted by Anderson, and biolo- gists Walter Kirknes ker and Ken Thorson. This will be the second fish project by the department which cooperated with the Terri- torial Sportsmen and the Fish and Wwildlife Service in transplanting grayling in lakes adjacent to Ju- neau. be hatched out| be | , Robert Par- | sports | THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1951 P 19 YEARS OF SERVICE IN ALASKA Year round Reduced Fares One Way Round Trip 63.00 113.40 98.00 176.40 80.00 144.00 Homer Naknek A. B. . 104.50 188.10 Plus Tax 10% Reduction on Round Trip Anchorage Kodiak Daily Flights & Passengers, Mail and Air Cargo Connections at Anchorage for all Interior and Westward Points Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 1 LASKA COASTAL AIRFNES‘ SITKA, 1CY STRAMTS " AND ~ CHATHAM STRAITS POINTS 6. ,mm AAsAmION 4] CHED! \"!‘.‘T et b} mmz- [TSETIN P S W [sTka___1020[1030[4-00|4%i0 [# % Tax Jaex | | m- [_{1ro0] § c=stauencs oF $T0PS vARIABLE ©=5TOP MaY 3 OMITTED IF_TRAFFIC | omr DOES NOT WARRANT X< ARRIVAL TIME VARIADLS. -!WMMW oy ROSS’ NEW 0A;s: of Douglas ======-=-= NoOaw offering a Sparkling Musical Attraction World Beater Songster Denny, Genevieve Murray and in- fant; John Peters, David Stuart, James Tanimo, Felix Zamorra, A. Denny. TURKEY DINNER Sponsored by the Women of the Moose Drill Team at the Moose .| Hall Saturday, September 22 at 6 pm. to 8 p.m. All Moose members and their friends cordially invited. Adults $2.00. All children $1.00. thun. 915-3t Hiram Walker&Sons Inc., Peoria, — EMPJRE WANT ADS PAY — De Luxe: specially elegant uncommon. WEBSTER is a straight bourbon whiskey, elegant in taste, uncommonly good ...a Hiram Walker Whiskey. 111 86 proof. MICKEY MacBOUGAL The ““Lass with Personality® plus Rare Musicianship ) Featured with the Famous Bob Hope and Horace Heit Bands Come Over to Douglas and Hear the Hollis Sulser Trio Versatile Insirumentalists Now Performing After Midnight Every Night Tom George, Jr., Manager of Ross’ NEW Oasis

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