The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 4, 1951, Page 1

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'GIANTS WIN FIR UONGRESSIONAL LTBR HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXXVIIL, NO. 11,929 JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1951 S MEMBER A SSOCIATED PRESS Afomic Warfare ‘ (ilafions Given Two Juneau Men At Chamber Meet A harrowing tale of adventure in| Fighting | Now Fierce | the Interior Alaska wilderness was | | related today at the Chamber of | Feared In Korea Explosion of Second Bomb by Russia Cause Of Much Speculation WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — Russia has exploded a second atomic bomb and is pushing ahead with production of nuclear weapons, the White House announced yesterday. The announcement, coming just two years and two weeks after President Truman disclosed the first | atomic explosion in the Soviet, gave no further details. But the announcement, ‘couple with other developments at home and abroad, raised anew the ques-| tion whether atomic warfare might,| flare in Korea. | There Russia’s satellite troops and United Nations forces are in | stalemated battle; bitter fighting ind mounting casualties bring | victory no nearer for either side. In addition to announcement of | the new Russian bomb explosion, there are these other facts: | 1. An assertion by Senator Hic-| kenlooper (R-Iowa), member and| former chairman of the Senale-‘( House Atomic committee, that pow- | erfyl new atomic weapons are avail- able for use in Korea: that he favers using them; but that it is a mwilitary dedision. 2. The claim of Gen. Omar Brad- ley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, while on a Far East war zone trip, that U.N. forces can fight the war to a successful “mili- tary conclusien” .if truce telks fal finally. The General did not make any explanation of how this would be done against a numerically su- perior enemy. - Bradley returned to Washington today after talks with commanders in Korea. Except for the single opening sentence saying another bomb has been exploded within the So- viet Union, the White House statement issued at direction of President Truman contained no details. The balance of the brief state- ment was devoted to stressing! “again the necessity for that effec- tive, enforceable international con- trol of atomic energy Which the United States and a large majority of the members of the United Na- tions support.” However, White House use of the |on short rations. In spite of the | Commerce meeting when two Ju- neau men were presented with De- | | partment of Interior citations for | meritorious service. ‘ | | Harry Johnson and Terrence | | Robbins of the Bureau of Reclam- | | ation were members of a five-man | | party sent to the upper Susitna | River in July to survey for possible | power sites. To save time and| oney, the party decided to travel| in canoes down the river, a distance of 125 miles of unknown gorges and‘ rapids. | On the ond day, the canoes sl | were capsized by rapids and the|stopped the two-day old Allied of-| | men reported that it took all their | fensive cold along much of its 40- 4 |strength to cling to the canoes and | mile front. keep their heads above water. The river was so swift that the men were swept four miles downstream befdre | they could let loose of the canoes and swim to shore. A small amount of equipment was found on the| river’s sandbars and the men went mishap, the party decided to con-| tinue the survey and one group| investigated the geology of thej lower river while the others com- pleted surveys for dam sites. The first rescue party spotted the men from a heliocopter but when the pilot attempted a landing on a | sand bar, the 'copter was wrecked. | A plane from the 10th Air Rescue Squadron made a successful land- ing and the party was taken to An- chorage. Both Juneau Men | Harry Johnson was born in Ju- neau and was raised by Miss Minnie Field ot ihe Minfield Children’s home. He was graduated from Ju- neau High School in 1942 and served for three and a half years in the| U. S. Army. Terrence Robbins has lived in| | Juneau since 1949, when he was| | transferred to Alaska office of the| | Bureau of Reclamation from Wyom- | | ing former home was Circle, | Moy . He has a wife and two formal presentation of the | award, which is the highest honor given by the Department of the Interior, was made by Joseph Mor- | gan, district manager of the bureau. | Outer Harbor Drive Mayor Waino Hendrickson report- ed that the Alaska Public Works | | has submitted to Washingten, ap- | plications for the construction of | an extension of the Juneau Boat| Flame Throwing In- fantry Used to Make Wedges in Red Defenses U.S. 8TH ARMY HEADQUAR- TERS, Korea, Oct. 4—®—Flame- throwing Infantrymen from nine United Nations burned two narrow wedges in Chinese defenses on the western front today in some of th(\l fiercest fighting of the Korean war. | But smashing Red counterattacks | Gains up to four miles’ were ham- mered out in the two days. At other points gains were so limited the yardage was not announced. See-saw battles ranged over all of the shrub-covered hills in the (learance Imjin river sector northeast of K , sity f the di ted . . thow G = | GOP National Chairman The Allied offensive was launched by five divisions behind one of the heaviest artillery barrages of the war. American, British, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, Greek, Turk, South Korean and Filipino Wants Vindication on RFC Charges WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—P—Guy VALDEZ ELECTION VALDEZ, Alaska, Oct. 4— (P — | i | J. Egan was reelected in | city election. | Lloyd Alkire, Jack Antritter and| Arthur Welch were elected as coun- | cilmen. Emilie Taylor, Barbara | Weller, Jean Alkire and Jan Mc- | Ilroy were elected to the schnnl} board. | | even nouncement of the new order said censorship was not involved, the order has been widely attacked by editors, publishers and many mem- bers of Conhgress as establishing cen- sorship at the source of informa- tion to which the public is en- titled. Mr. Truman suggested today that newsmen should withhold some information made troops participated in the attack.| Tauks and planes supported them The Chinese fought so stub- | bornly from gheir deeply dug in positions — they've been digging in since truce talks started three | months ago — they had to burned out by flame throwers or biasted | by hand grenades. A bhundred TN planes rocketed | | tombed, strafed and fire-bombed | the Reccnstruction Finance Cor- the Chinese along the western| front. The longest gains — two miles| Wednesday and two more Thursday | — were made by Canadians. But American and Greek troops, fighting over ridges west of Yon- chon in the center of the offensivé,| were forced to make small with-| drawals Thursday along a ten mile sector. | Elks Honor Empire’s Elmer Friend, National Newspaper Week More than a million Elks through- | Chairman, asked Senate investigat- |ors today to clear him of any “tinge G. Gabrielson, Republican National of influence peddling, bribes” or other improper conduct in his con- tacts with government agencies. Gabrielsor made the plea in a| prepared siatement he filed with the comumittee as it opened an in- ke his ¥ lions. with poration (RFC. At immediate issue is his role in = negotiations conterning $18,- 500,000 of RFC loans to Carthage- Hydrocol, Inc., of which he is pre- sident and general counsel. | Gabrielson denied his contacts with RFC in connection with the loans were improper. He said he was appearing before the Senate investigation’s subcommittee at his own request “to refute slander with facts.” The GOP chairman referred only’ obliquely to demands from some Senate Republicans for his | resignation, but did declare he will not quit under fire. “It seemed to me that to resign as Republican chairman in the hope | available to them by authorized | government agencles. KODIAK, Alaska, Oct. 4—Lee| Various reporters at the news con- Bettinger was reelected Mayor, his| ference then expressed *puzzlement sixth consecutive term, receiving|OVer Just what the President ex- 189 out of 319 possible votes. | pects of them. Mérrill Coon followed Bettinger| Over and over again, the Presi- in the voting with 110 votes. Basil | dent said 95 percent-of all thi Clariz received 191 votes for a two- | COUNtry's secret Information has year_term as_councilman, L. K,|been released in the press. W *Nger and D. N. Hoylman.each [ At one point. he gave permission had 167 votes. John Wolf, with 175| for direct quotation when e salo votes, was elected to serve one year | it had been published “in the slick on the eity council. magazines and the newspapers.” Dr. A, Holmes Johnson, Mrs, Pat-| He did not give the newsmen any rick Lynch, and Paul A. Dupler |SPecific guidance, however. He sug- were elected to serve on independ- | 8ested that patriotism should gov- ent school district boards. ern what they publish regardless The city of Kodiak passed a $750,- | of what they receive from govern- 000 bond issue for a new water Went sources. and sewer system by an overwhelm- Mo cen o i ing vote of 171 for, eight against. Another top-heavy vote passed al essup s ’ 5 KODIAK ELECTION $800,000 bond issue for a new school, 3 for nine Against. Hydro Power Dam:s, Aluminum Plants, Asked for Alaska Harbor and the building of the out- phrase “atomic bomb” was signifi- er harbor drive in 1953. cant. The President announced two years ago—on Sept. 23, 1949—Lhat| Mayor Hendrickson stated that | evidence had been obtained of an|the outer harbor drive would re-| “atomic explosion.” He cautiously|route traffic away from neighbor- refrained from use of ‘the word|bhood 'districts and the new Juneau “bomb.” This time, the American|Grade School and wouid previde | scientists whose duty it is to main- |23 acres additional land for new tain constant vigil for such things,|buildings. The outer harbor drive| apparently were sure it was an ac- | would extend on filled in area from | out the nation are participating in| ;¢ saving my party embarrassment National Newspaper Week and Ju-|woyld have been construed as an neau Elks last night paid tribute|gqmission of improper conduct,” he to newspapers generally and the geclared. Daily Alaska Empire in psrtlcular.y The subcemmittee, headed by Principal speaker was R. E. Rob- | genator Hoey (D-NC), billed to- ertson, who traced newspaper his-| qay's inquiry as parallel to one it tory in Alaska and in Juneau and s conducting into the contacts be- described Elmer A. Friend of the ‘ween william M. Boyle, Jr., Demo- Empire as a dewspaperman typical | cratic National chairman, and the of the Fourth Estate. | R ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 4— P—The Alaska Development Board | has invited Charles E. Wilson, chief | of the Office of Defense Mobiliza- | tion to investigate the large num-i ber of potential hydroelectric power sites available in Alaska for large scale aluminum plants. The invitation followed recent re- | WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — (M Warren R. Austin told Senators to- day the United States need men like Ambassador-at-Large Philip C Jessup on its delegation to the forthcoming United Nations Gen- eral Assembly in Paris. Austin, former Republican Sena- tor from Vermont and now the chief U.S. ,delegate to the UN, tual bomb. Evidence Obtained Apparently evidence of the re-‘ | the Juneau Subport to | Point on Glacier Highway. In support of the project, Harold; Norway A purpose of the Elks' national| observance is the passage of resolu-| FC. Gabrielson, a portly man with a crisp voice, acknowledged under quests by Wilson that aluminum |testified at a Senate Foreign Rela- producers consider the possibility of | tions subcommittee hearing on lease of atomic energy into the Foss stated that few. critical ma- | upper atmosphere, * where traces | terials would, be needed for the are picked up by delicaté ms;ru_;cunswuccion of the road and that ments even though the explosionv (Continued on Page 'Two) The Washington Merry - Go - Round (Copy=ight, 1951, by Bell Byndicate, Inc.) By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON — Sen. Owen Brewster of Maine is leading an un- dercover drive to depose GOP Na- tional Chairan Guy Gabrielson— because Gabrielson” won't join the covert anti-Eisenhower campaign. This is what was back of the slam bang attack on Gabrielson by iso- lationist Republican Senators Dirk- sen of Illinois, Welker of Idaho and Jenner of Indiana, all faithful friends of Brewster's. For some time there has been bad blood between the amiable, conservative Gabrielson—who feel: he must be neutral as to all GOP candidates—and Brewster, who i both the strategist for extreme right-wing forces in the Senate and likewise Taft’s campaign adviser Gabrielson is privately pro-Taft, but he refused to go along on the anti-Eisenhower smear campaign re- cently distributed in Maine. In fact, Gabrielson told a Senate elections subcommittee he was “surprised and shocked” at the cir- _(Continued on Page 4) the approximate cost would be $1,- $00,000. Late Closing Discussed The Civic Affairs committee of the Chamber recommended that the closing hours for Juneau cork- tail bars be advanced from 1 am. to 2 a.m. for week night and from 2 am. to 3 am. on Sundays. The executive board modified the re-| port asking that the Mayor and | City Council make a study of the problem as there is a disc.imination against Juneau kar owners in favor of establishments outside of the city limits. The board rccommended that provisions be mad2 for special licenses to be granted for later clos- (é&nunuég on f’"age Two) tions by lodges throughout the|oath that he had participated in country asking that the President| negotiations with the RFC for take immediate steps to effect the|modification of the terms of the release of Associated Press bureau joans, but emphasized: chief William N. Oatis, imprisoned | moving their plants from the Pa- cific Northwest to other areas where power was more plentiful. (The plan has virtually been | dropped and was only exploratory.) | and President Truman’s nomination of Jessup to be bne of 11 delegates alternates to the General Assembly. Saying that. more mouthing of in Red Czechoslovakia on trump-| ed-up charges of espionage. Juneau‘ Lodge 420 passed such a resolution| unanimously. Robertson recalled the days when| this country’s foreign policy was| stronger; when indignities and in- justices to American citizens were not tolerated nor permitted to con- tinue and expressed the hope that the President would demand Oatis’ “In such discussions I neither asked for nor received favors. These were business details, discussed and decided on their merits.” He 'said the last of the series cf three loans themselves had been made five months before he bhc- came the GOP chairman. Boyle testified before the sub- committee previously. FISH LANDINGS The development board said|Communist propaganda can be ex- release and in so doing, let the Czechs understand that Americans will brook no further delay. The.large basket of chrysanthe- A total of 5900 salmon were landed at Juneau Cold Storage Thursday from five boats. Landed mum¢ in the Empire’s front office today is the gift of members of Ju- neau Lodge No. 420 with “congrat- | ulations and best wishes on this| from U and I, 1,000, Clarwood, 2,- 200, June K. 600, Elizabeth, 600, Good Tidings, 1,500. /@ @ @ ¢ o o @ o o o e|very special occasion.” s s e ol B T A Sl . . & 1 % WEATHER REPORT . A e DUCK HUNTING HOURS ¢ . (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU . s'o(k o“o'a'lons » g ® Tempetatures for 24-Hour Perlod @ | » October 5 2 | ® ending 6:20 o'clock this morning @ | NEW YORK, Oct. 4—(P—Closing| ® % 2 ® At Airport: Maximum, 50; e |quotation of Alaska Juneau mine|® Starts .. 6:40 am. 4 ® Minimum, 41. ! stock tday is 3%, American Can|® Eods s 5:42 pm., © . 115%, American Tel. and Tel. 159%,(® ® © © © o ¢ o o o ¢ . FORECAST Anaconda 49%, Douglas Aircraft g Cg.!u:eau and Vicinity) ’64'1, General Electric 61%, General o oudy with rain tonight Motors 52, Goodyear 48%, Kenne- |® and Friday. Southeasterly cott 87'%, Libby McNeill and Libby TDE TABIB ® winds 15 to 25 miles per hour. ® |8%, Northern Pacific 564, Standard ® Low tonight near 42 and e|Oil of California 53%, Twentieth|e * e high Friday near 48, ® Century Fox 22%, U. S. Steel 43%,|® OCTOBER 5 * L ® | Pound $2.797%, Canadian Exchange| e o e PRECIPITATION e 94381 e High tide 4:25 am, 151 ft. ¢ i ® (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today @ | Sales today were 1,810,000 shares.|® Low tide 10:12 am. 33 ft. |® At Airport — 0.01 inches; e Averages today were as follows: | ® High tide 4:13 pm, 178 ft. @ e since July 1—9.26 inches. ® | industrials 27540, rails 86.65, util-|® Low tide 11:02 p.m., -0.7 ft. ® ® 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o olities 4627, ® 00 000 0 0 0 0 Alaska had two sites which have “complete natural protection from possible attack, yet are readily ac- cessible to ocean navigation and can produce almost 18 billion kilo- watt hours of firm power annually.” The sites mentioned were the Taiya project, with an estimated 8,700,000,000 kilowatt hours of power annually, and Copper River valley, with. a potential of 8,000,000,000 kilowatt hours. “We desire to do our part,” the board statement said, “in the na- tion’s defense production. . . . Alaska | can add greatly to our nationdl wealth, and to the stockpile of de- fense materials.” FURNESS LEAVES FOR YMCA RADIO SCHOOL Milton Furness Jr., left last week- end for Seattle where he will con-| tinue his studies at the YMCA| Radio Scflool. He had been vistting in Juneau for the past three weeks. Ship Movements Princess Louise scheduled to ar- rive southbound Friday at 7 a.m., sailing for Vancouver at 9 a.m. Denali due southbound sometime Sunday. pected at the Paris meeting, in addition to the many important items on the agenda, Austin said the U.S. delegation: “Needs a man like Dr. Philip C. Jessup and these others here who have the principles and policies of the United States as part of the fiber of their beings so that at no time during the great storm and Errors — Thompson, McDougald. RBI—Lockman, Dark 3. 2b—Lock- man, McDougald. 3b—Irvin, HR— Dark. SB—Irvin. 8—Koslo 2, DP— McDougald, Coleman and Collins. Left—New York (N) 13; New York (A) 9. BB—Reynolds 7 (Thompson 2, Thomson, Westrum 2, Lockman, Stanky); Morgan 1 (Thomson); Koslo 3 (Mantle 2, Coleman). 80— Reynolds 1 (Dark) ; Motgan 3 (Koslo 2, Mays); Koslo 3 (Rtzzuto, Brown, Woodling). HO—Reynolds 8 in 6 innings; Hogue in 1; Morgan 2 in 2. Winner—Koslo; loser—Reynolds. U—Bill Summers (AL) at plate; Lee Ballanfant (N.L.) first base; Joe Papparella (AL) second base; Al Barlick (N.L.) third base; John Stevens (A.L) left field; Art Gore (N.L) right field.. T—2:58, A— PLAY-BY-PLAY First Inning GIANTS—Reynolds’ first pitch tc Stanky was a fast ball that cut the heart of the plate for a strike. Stanky sent an easy roller to Riz- zuto who threw him out. Dark, hit- ting the first pitch, sent a soft fly to Mantle. Thompson walked cn five pitches. Irvin lined a single over Coleman’s head for the first hit off Reynolds in two consecutive games. Allie had hurled a no- hitter against the Red Sox in his last appearance of the regular sea- son Sept. 28. Lockman smashed a eround rule double that bounced! into the left field seats scoring ‘Thompson. Irvin stopped at third. Irvin took advantage of Reynolds’ semi windup and stunned the huge crowd by stealing home. Irvin had stolen home five times during the regular season. Thomson walked on five pitches. Mays raised a high fly to Mantle in short right. Two runs, two hits, no, errors, two left on base. YANKS — Koslo's first pitch to Mantle was an outside fast bail and ball one. Thompson came in fast for Mantle’s fly to short right. Rizzuto lined a single off the glove of Dark who made a leaping try and barely missed making a spec- tacular catch. Irvin raced back to the furthest left field corner to make a spectacular leaping catch of Bauer’s bid for a home run in front of the 402-foot sign. DiMaggio raised a high pop behind second bas> that was caught by Thompson. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left on base. Second Inning GIANTS — Westrum walked on stress we are sure to experience, there will be a failure of ability morality, courage, or the skill tc represent this great country.” Austin, speaking without a pre- pared statement, went before the subcommittee before Jessup himseif returned to resume the day-long testimony he gave yesterday. Jessup declared under oath yes- terday that Senator McCarthy (R- Wis) gave false testimony in swear- ing earlier that Jessup has been a full count. Koslo, attempting to | sacrifice bunted sharply to Reynolds | who threw to Rizzuto forcing West- |rum at second. Stanky grounded | sharply into the hole but Mec- Dougald made a brilliant stop and | threw to Coleman forcing Koslo. | Coleman relayed to Collins at first to double up Stanky. 0 left on base. YANKS — Lockman scooped up Berra’s hot smash down the first| base line and beat the runner for| 65,673 (paid). Receipts l;ll.l'fl.flll“ No runs, no hits,-no errors, non2 PRICE TEN CENTS ST SERIES GAME 5-1 s N Squabble Delays | President Attempls f Box S Koslo Hurl Defense Money . [New York ) ab 't h oo 'a 2 Stanky, 2b 41042 H Bill Compromise Xp alll keceni vraer [t 2121 20lanis 10 p Thompson, rf 3.1 0 YN Irvin, If 51440 WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—®—In- 2 . Lockman, 1b 401 41/P8 H ability of Senate-House conferees u ressln n orma Ion Thomson, 3b b L B T I to reach final agreement delayed S H tion today on the,com Josys iy D ey ouse actior ' A | i promise $57,200,000000 defense - ** WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — B "’igijbomm' b b Sc Are Made i N ey | President Truman said today that| " . B e ores Are Made in Speaker Sam Rayburn said the| orge Be(k | his executive order tightening con- . First. Sixth F b conferees had run into difficulties| oo trol over i:m'erbx:mex;c m(‘orx;mucn New York \A) abr h o a Irst, JIX rames y in ironing out differences over Sen- A M grew out of publication of 95 per- | Mantle, rf 30040 H ate and House provisions on the re- | al" ayor Vent of our secrets “by the newspa- |Rizzuto, ss 4 021 2 Insp"ed Team lease of reservists involuntarily re- | . | pers and slick magagines.” Bauer, 1t $59..0:.0..0 called to duty. lKekhlkan | In a news conference which|DiMaggio, cf 40030 Shofl 5!0!0 Once the measure reaches the; [\'l:\rt;‘d late and lasted longer than | Berra, ¢ &0 o v i House, a speedy vote is expected| KETCHIRAN: Alask: ¢ | usual, the President sparred with|McDougald, 3b 41102 especially in view of the word that| Tyesdars clection h::etav?cblayor‘ newspapermen over the order and|Coleman, 2b R e B S0 Russia has exploded a second atom | George H. Beck, reelected without | Cer\red he had no desire to sup- | Collins, 1b §.00 120, 0] Menme Ul bomb. ¢ opposition L freedom of apegol. aMise 10000 SCORE BY INNINGS 2 | Ed Ginger was elected magistrate| The order was issued Sept. 25. | Reynolds, p 201808 | [ Iby a seven vote count over Jim| It empowers civillan as well as | HOBUE, D 000,071 GEANER: KR ::S"l z::fl" a rle so“ | Pinkefton. Pinkerton has demand-| military of the government |2-Brown 1020 0 0 R b n:g 1— 10 ed a recount. Joe Gooding is a new | agencies to withhold information |Morean. p 000 0 1fHits 20 : : ‘1' : . : e member to the city council and| which they think might endanger |C-Woodling 1-00150..0, @ SAPROLH g . | Paul J. Wingren was reelected.| the national security, and estab- | Totals i Bl R 7Y ) - ) s ee “‘ Emnest Anderes was elected t the| lishes uniform methods of “clas- | 1—Struck out for Hogue in 8th. | g, g 010000000~ 1 school board. P sifying” such information. b—Popped. bRt Tot: SOINDS 429, | ek 130100020— 7 R Although the President’s an-|C—Struck out for Morgan in 8th. | pyog 000000010~ 1 By JACK HAND NEW YORK, Oct. 4—(M—Dave Koslo pitched ' the inspired New York Giants to a 5-1 victory over the favored New York Yankees to- day in the World Series opener be- fore 65673 Yankee Stadium fans on a ‘dark// Al Dark’s’ rin . homer off loser Allle Reynolds in the sixth, Monte Irvin's'stval ‘of home and Whitey R run-scoring double, both’ accounted for the G} e /Yankee opening between, IO At-yent-old lefty from B only seven hits and none at :l’ from the fourth to the eighth, Irvin led ‘the 10-hit Glant at- tack with three gingles and a triple, tying a series record of four hits in one game held by many players, Trying for his fifth, he lined out in. the eighth. Still riding the ecrest of the wave that | them past Brook- Iyn to.the, Natignsl League pen- nant in yesterday’'s dramatic playeff thriller, Leo Durocher’s Giants held command all the way. Réynolds, a no-hit winner in his last start, yielded all five runs and eight hits before he retired after six innings. Seven walks help- ed keep him {n constant trouble. Bobby Hogue and Tom Morgan averted further scoring. ‘The clawing Giants, determined to clinch baseball’'s greatest comeback by winning their first series sincc 1933, had a man on base in every inning except the seventh. Played under cloudy skies that threatened rain, the game was fin- ished under lights from the sev- enth inning on. It packed little of the drama of yesterday’s playoff clincher. ‘The most stirring moments came in the first inning when the late arrivals still were hunting for their seats. y . With two out, Reynolds walked Hank Thompson. Irvin followed with a single and Lockman bounced a ground rules double into the lower left field seats, scoring ‘Thompson. On Reynold’s second straight ball to Bobby Thomso, Irvin lit out for home to score without an argument., It was the first steal ° of home .in s series since 1821 when two Yamks, Mike McNally ' and Bob Meusel—pulled the trick on the Giants. Wobbling along the way, due to his wildness, Reynolds escaped | further damage until. the sixth. |{Once again it struck with two out | when Dark blasted a homer into the lower left field seats, scoring Wes | Westrum who singled and Eddie | Stanky who walked. | The Giants left 13 on base, only |one short of a series record. Only in the seventh did they fail to get at least one man on base. The associated with six Communist- front organizations. House Approves | | the unassisted putout. McDougald lined a double off the low screen just inside the left field foul line. Coleman singled to right sending McDougald to third. When Thomp- son experienced difficulty in pick- ing up the ball, McDougald con- | tinued home on Thompson’s error | for the Yankees’ first run. It was Funds Bill for A“Q” R“ds not a run batted in for Coleman. | Collins grounded to Thomson who WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 — M —|iprey to Stanky forcing Coleman. The House today approved a bill|gianiyi relay was too late to double that would increase to $45,000,000 Baranof sails from Seattle Oct. 5. | Freighter Palisina scheduled | southbound Friday at 10 p.m. | essential to the national defense. | |up Collins. Reynolds drilled a Teder SN RS for oo | ground single into right field, Col- (Continued on Page 3) | Yanks left nine, three in the second when they had their big chance I"° get Koslo. Gil McDougald doubled to left | with ope out. When Hank Thomp- |son futhbled Gerr Coleman’s single, |McDougald scored on the error. Joe Collins forced Coleman but Reynolds came through with a single and Mickey Mantle walked to load the bases. Phil Rizzuto bounced to the box to end the threat. It was Reynold’s first loss after three series wins, and, Koslo's first appearance in a World Series.

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