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ASHINGTAN HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS AII THE TIME” VOL. LXXVIIL, NO. 11,933 JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESD.»\ \'. OCTOBER 9, 1951 MEMBER A SSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS YANKS WALLOP GIANTS BY SCORE OF 13-1 Winter Hifs Summer Inferior Alaska Time in WithSmash PacificNW Many Accidents Report- | ed with One Death; FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Oct. 9— | through —Winter has clamped down on in- [reading at Roseburg, Ore., terior Alaska, bringing snow, ice northwest’s highest report. and a rash of accidents resulting | Longview had an unofficial 83 de- in at least one death. | erees yesterday. Tacoma and Olym- One soldier was killed and an- ‘rm both had 82. It equalled the all- other injured when their car skidded |time October record for Tacoma off the Alaska highway 39 miles [set in 1934. south of Big Delta yesterday. The | Oregon temperatures ran general- victim was identified as Cpl. Ernest |ly in the 80's—while the east and Mudiett of Big Delta Air Force north entrances to Crater base. The injured man was Pvt. were closed by Snow. By Associated Press Pacific northwest has its The fall today. weather extended 9 Ex-Communist Louis Budenz told | the Internal Security subcommit- | | tee last week that recommendations third straight day of summer in the‘ Lake | Five Husky Babies south | California. The 85-degree | was the Six-months-old Alison Blake reaches to stroke fur of her six-weeks-old Siberian Husky pups. never tires of frolicking with her furry playmates. Albert Archibald of the same plnce The accident was blamed on snow | w lI I Up to three feet of snow covers | a a‘e s the Richardson highway between Biz Delta Junction and Big Delta | Lodge. The Alaska Road Commis- ulll on tion of highway is closed for the| winter and is no longer being maintained. Motorists will use at their own risk, the commission ing from ‘aldez or Anchorage -tef WASHINGTON, Oct. Fairbanks must go by wdy of Tok | Former Vice Preside Junction. Wallace was qu More than a dozen minor acci-|closed doors tod Sunday, most caused by ice and |his 1944 mission to snow. All were on the Richardson| Ghairman McC and Steese highways. told reporters tha subpoenaed to appe: | session later. essa on . ! ™Fhe former vice president, lugging a bu]gmf, briefcase, was accom- panied by George Ball, a Washing- Wallace made from China to the| “e rom e s V]atc President Roosevelt in June, <wcro in accord with the party line TOKYO, Oct. 9—®—The Reds|at the time. will deliver a new message to the| Wallace, in a letter to President Allies tomorrow, presumably their Truman last month, contended that truce talks. | opposite of pro-Communist.” Tonight they asked Allied liaison officers to pick up the message at . Panmunjom, proposed new locale | | Nafional Guard Personnel @ pm. PST Tuesday). \Back from Maneuvers That is only two hours before the | time suggested by Gen. Matthew B. \WI"I Stou! Ba"a'lons Ridgway for a meeting of liaison’ lay detailed plans for renewing|Alaska National Guard senior in- cease-fire negotiations. | structor detachment returned Mon- The Reds gave no indication of |day from three weeks field training what the message would contain. {cf Eskimo scouts of the guard. that top Red commanders had | the Noatak and Kobuk rivers. Both drafted their reply to Rxdgwav':’"veri empty into Kotzebue Sound message boadcast Monday night. In | | north of the Arctic Circle. Rubber it he agreed to renew truce talks in|boats equipped ~with outboard clined to enlarge the neutral zone|Col. Cameron, who accompanied as the Communists wanted. whc scouts on part of their river Ridgway also suggested the pre-|Patrols, said it was “interesting but paratory Wednesday session of lia- |cold.” | Robert Losee, pilot and mechanic with the guard instructor detach- The w a shing t 0 n ment, participated in the maneuvers (Cony=ight, 1951. by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) By DREW PEARSON ! and ice on the road. | sion announced today that this sec- | (hl ] ina Trip said. It added that motorists travel- dents were reported in the interior | Internal Security {ing, and would testi N Iuvn iawyer. ew Talkls ‘1944 helped the Communists and latest word on reopening Korean his recommendations were “the for the talks, at 8 a.m. Wednesday | officers in the Panmunjom area to|. Lt. Col. D. N. Cameron of the There had been no indication| TWwo grotips of scouts patrolled the vicinity of Panmunjom, but de- | motors were used in the river work. ison officers. Capt. Harry Germann and Sgt. | ASHINGTON — George Allen, [ the former White House jester, is now about the closest man to Gen- eral Eisenhower. It was Allen who acted as liaison between Truman and Eisenhower to make sure Ike didn’t get into the race as a Demo-‘ crat in 1948. Today, Allen, though a Mississip-! pi Democrat, says that Ike is sure | to run as a Republican. Talking to a friend recently, Allen predicted: “What Tkeswill do will be exactly what Roosevelt did at Chicago in 1932. He'll hop on a plane and fly straight to the convention.” “How’s he going to fly from Paris | to Chicago when he’s under orders from Comander-in-Chief to doa| job in 'Paris?” asked the friend. “Don’t be foolish,” shot back the former White House jester, “what’s the Commander-in-Chief going to do about it?” CENSORSHIP Inside fact about the President’s long press conference lecture about protecting U. 8. secrets was that his (Continued on Page 4) | Hotel providing air support from Kotze- bue. They are expected to arrive in Juneau this week after delays caused by adverse weather. Miss Elinor Menter, instructor de- tachment secretary, returned Thurs- |day from Kotzebue after assisting in preparation of reports on the maneuvers. FROM SEATTLE A Seattle visitor at the Baranof is George W. Dexter. TIDE TABLES OCTOBER 10 Low tide High tide 3:59 am., 14 ft. 10:42 a.m,, 14.1 ft. Low tide 4:31 pm. 48 ft. High tide 10:34 15.1 ft. e & o 0 0 0 0 0 0 Denali sajls from Seattle Friday. Baranof scheduled to arrive southbound sometime Sunday. Freighter Ring Splice due north- bound Friday at 6 a.m. Princess Louise sails from *Van- couver, tomorrow, 8 p.m. ‘Monmouth Center, Me.,, are sled dog racing enthusia sts. (# Wirephoto. Alison’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Philip Blake, of i | | | | 1(hmese Redson Front Now | The baby ncerf Tickei ;5 Equal rear’s Budgef “We made our budget” was the| proud announcement today of Mrs. | John McCormick, president of the Juneau-Douglas Concert Associa- | tion. That means that the worries of the group that has been selling tickets for the 1951-52 Alaska Mu- sic Trail concerts are over. committee in the Elks Hall last | night total of tickets sold and dona- 1 $3,812.80. The concert association budget had been established at $3800. Though the sponsorship list has been closed, season tickets may be purchased until Ooctober 18, the day of the Donald Gramm concert, first of the 1951-52 season. Single admission tickets may be purchased at the box office for $3.60 for adults and $1.50 for stu- dents, tax included, it was decided at the membership committee meet- ing Monday. Especially grateful for the assist- ance of Juneau mercHants who donated space in their newspaper advertisements to concert ticket sales and thoe with window displays advertised the Alaska Music Trail, Mrs. McCormick asked that they be thanked. “Every ticket sold helped. Com- mittee members in Juneau and Douglas did an amazing job. We know that our Alaska Music Trail Concert programs this year will re- pay those who are helping us bring music to Juneau,” Mrs. Mc- | Cormick said today. PENWOMEN WILL MEET The Juneau group of the National Pen Women will meet October 10 Wednesday at 8 pm. at the home of Bernice Morgan, 431 Seward St. 'Stock Quotations NEW YORK, Oct. 9—(®—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 3%, American Can 116%, American Tel. and Tel. 158%, Anaconda 50%, Douglas Aircraft 64%, General Electric 61%, Gen- eral Motors 52%, Goodyear 49%, Kennecott 87%, Libby McNeill and Libby 9, Northern Pacific 57%, Standard Oil of California 52, Twentieth Century Fox 23, U. 8. Steel 43%, Pound $2.79 15/16, Ca- nadian Exchange 94.87%. Sales today were 1,750,000 shares. Averages today were as follows: industrials 27345, rails 86.77, util- ities 46.36. e o0 0 0 00 0 0 0 . ¢ DUCK HUNTING HOURS . . October 10 ® Starts — 6:52 am. Ends — 5:07 pm. At the meeting of the membership | tions received was announced as|d New § suid nine were killed and 18 injured. Ten-year-old Cordie * Phelps, of Louisville, Ky., explains she de- cided on a new name for her new pet because “every time I say Whitie it makes me cry.” Whitie was clubbed to death by a passer- by who said the dog barked at him. When Cordie’s loss became known, sympathy and offers of pedigreed pulps came her way, but she went to the city dog pound and chose Frisky. () Wirephoto. To Investigate 'Charges, Ousting 0f Senator McCarthy WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 ~ P - Senate Rules subcommittee voted unanimously to investig charges made by Senator Be (D-Conn) that Senator McCarthy (R-Wis) be ousted from Congra Chairman Gillette (D-Iowa) tol reporters a subcommittee staff will investigate and has been instruct to report by Nov. 1. “When we get that report,” lette said, “we’ll decide where go from there.” Benton has called for a full- scale Senate inquiry to determint whether there are grounds to expe! McCagthy from the Senate. Benton told the group Sept. 28 believes McCarthy should be ousted He accused the Wisconsin I maker of committing perjury fraud and said he had e in “calculated deceit” of the A can people since his election Gil- to the Senate in 1946. * minesweeper’s hull but no one was esiroyer ifs Mine During Duel Eight or Nine Sailors Met Death with Eighteen Reported Injured TOKYO, Oct. 9—M—Far East Naval headquarters tonight an- nounced eight sailors were killed and 19 injured when the U.S. de- troyer Ernest G. Small hit a mine Sunday night. It was dueling with Red shore batteries on the east coast of North Korea. The Navy in Washington had ED The Small hit the mine as she took evasive action after firing at Communist shore batteries at Hungnam, 130 miles north of the 38th parallel, The resultant underwater explo- ion caused moderate damage in the rward section helow the water ine, the Navy said. The Small steamed out of range under her own power. Eight of the seriously wounded were transferred to the U.S. heavy cruiser Helena. The Small then went south to Wonsan, picked up a fleet tug and started for Japan for repairs. The Small arrived in Korean waters .Sept. 16 as an escort for the U.S. carrier Rendova off Ko- rea’s west coast. The destroyer arrived off Hung- nam on the east coast Thursday night with the U.S. battleship New Jersey and the Helena. Naval Bombardment The ships were giving Hungnam its first heavy naval bombardment ince U.S. Marines and soldiers were evacuated from northeast Ko-- rea through that port last Decem- ber. On Friday, the U.S. minesweeper Firecrest was hit above the water- ne by a 75 mm. shell from Red shore batteries. It pierced the hit. The damage was repaired on the spot by personnel from the U.8.8. Gunston Hall, flagship of the mine- weeping force off the Korean east coast. SEATTLE MAN VICTIM SEATTLE, Oct. 9—P—Rex B.| Middleton, 26, one of nine sailors| killed Sunday when a destroyer struck a mine off Korea, was to] have been released from active duty | December 1, his widow said today. | The widow, Mrs. Bernice Middle- | ton, said Rexy notified her a rew‘ days ago of his prospective release. - She said he hoped to be home\ |a 30-day leave with his wife and some time this month. Middleton, a World War II vet-| eran of submarine duty in the Pa-| cific and a naval reservist, was called back to active duty Sept. 8, | eastern fronts. | | in five months, checked U.S. Second | ‘| casualties, by U.S. Army estimates, |Cities Could Be Fierce Hand-fo-Hand Battles with Americans Raging on Two Sections | U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- | QUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 9—(M— Chinese Reds, shifted to crucial fronts, today fought fierce hand- to-hand battles with attacking American troops on western and | U.S. First Division Cavalrymen hacked out gains of more than a mile near Yonchon on the western front. Chinese, thrown into action on the eastern front for the first time Division attacks on peaks bloody Heartbreak Ridge. The Chinese shifted east to hait the Allies who have gained up to 15 miles there since the Reds broke off cease-fire talks Aug. 23. | near Reds promised to deliver a new | message ‘Wednesday in the series of exchanges on resuming armistice talks. There was no hint of what they would say. Since they broke off negotiations the Reds have suffered nearly 80,000 and lost nearly 250 square miles of territory. | Returning U.N. pilots reported | they killed or wounded more than ° 400 Reds Monday — the heaviest toll they have taken in months. The Navy announced Red mines and _shgre _guns damaged two Américan ps. ‘L'wenty-seven Americans were killed or wounded. The shift of Chinese troops to the eastern front was reported Tuesday in a front line dispatch by Associated Press Correspondent Stan Carter, He said five Chinese were cap-; tureds on Kim Il Sung ridge after | Reds hurled unsuccessful counger- attacks at U.S. Second Division troops. Kim Il Sung ridge is north- west of Yanggu. The Americans have been trying to take it for four days. The prisoners said the Chinese replaced North Koreans on that sector two days ago. U.S. Army Intelligence officers described the Chinese as mostly “reluctant draftees” rather than professional soldiers. An Army communique reported | attacking Allied forces in the east-| ern ridges were held to gains of a| few hundred yards—or none at all.| Says American Atomic-Atfacked Congressman Urges Greafer Production of Weapons fo Halt Russia | Konikowski, p | Westrum, | Woodling. HR — McDougald, Riz- 'Box Score Official box score of game of the 1951 World Series: the fifth| | New York \A) | Woodling, If | Rizzuto, ss Berra, ¢ DiMaggio, cf Mize, 1b Bauer, rf | McDougald, 2b-3b | Brown, 3b | Coleman, 2b (,nlluh rf-1b | Lopat, p Totals =4 ® O mmomMO s~ ww BormcwrmorwmwnD ) Scuo~Nocowwous @ Coomwo—woasw | New York (N) Stanky, 2b Dark, ss Thomson, 3b Irvin, 1f Lockman, 1b Mays, cf Hartung, rf Westrum, ¢ Jansen, p a-Lohrke Kennedy, p b-Rigney Spencer, p Corwin, p c-Williams =4 s “ooo0occoocococococomaT FOoOHMCOHOMOWWN A LS A . coccccoo~ococomMoNe T OO HCCo ORI~ N O L me SoCOoOHOMO~OHO WO WWa S w o [ 3 Totals a—Struck out for Jansen in 3rd. b—Flied out for Kennedy in 5th. c—Grounded out for Corwin in 8th. Errors—Woodling, Thomson, Ir- vin, Hartung. RBI—DiMaggio 3, McDougald 4, Rizzuto 3, Mize. 2B— Mize, DiMaggio. 3b — zuto. DP-—Lopat, McDougald and Mize. Left—New York (A) 7; New York (N) 4. BB—Jansen 4 (Berra, Woodling, Rizzuto, Mize); Kennedy 1 (Woodling); Spencer 3 (Brown, Woodling, Rizzuto); Lopat 1 (Mays). 50-—Jansen 1 (Woodling); Ken- nedy 2 (Lopat, Collins); Corwin 1 TCaleittich ) ; Lopht % Westrum). HO—Jansen 3 In 3 In nings; Kennedy 3 in 2; Spencer 4 in 1 1/3; Corwin 1 in 1 2/8; Koni-| kowski 1 in 1. WP—Corwin. Win- ner—Lopat; Loser—Jansen. U--Bill Summer (AL) home plate; Lee Bal- lanfant (NL) first base; Joe Pap- arella (AL) second base; Al Bar- lick (NL) third base; John Stevens (AL) left field foul line; Art Gore | (NL) right field foul line. T—2:31, A—47,530. Receipts—$230,380.45. PLAY-BY-PLAY FIRST INNING YANKS — Jansen’s first pitch to Woodling was a slow curve that swept over the plate for a called strike. Jansen proceeded to fan Woodling. Rizzuto slapped a two and two pitch to Stanky who gobbled up the easy roller and threw to Lockman for the putout. Berra walked on four pitches. Dark raced behind third for Di- | Maggio’s hot grounder and threw to Stanky who made a nice pickup of :the low throw to force Berra at second, The game marked DiMaggio’s fif- tieth to equal Frank Frisch’s World Series record for most games played. No Juns, no. hits, no errors, one left on base. GIANTS — Lopat's first pitch to Stanky was a high one for a called mNOmwNOOOO®OS | ball. Stanky took two strikes, then .9 — (B —A| WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 — (® | erounded sharply to Brown who member of the Congressional Atomic | Energy committee declared today| Russia can launch “an atomic at- tack at 20 or 30 American cities." A Senator had put the number as high as' 50. Rep. Jackson (D-Wash), a mem- | ber of the atomic energy group, said | however the United States is now | capable of producing tactical atomic weapons—that is, weapons for uf,e; on the battlefield — which could| halt the Red Army “in its tracks.” Pleading for all-out production of atomic weapons, Jackson said there is “virtually no limit on the number of atomic weapons we can produce” if funds are made avail-| able. | “The time will come,” Jackson| said in a speech prepared for| House delivery, “when we can make these weapons in dozens of varieties | and in thousands and tens ot' thousands.” | | FROM CONNECTICUT Amelia M. Frazier, of Middleton, Conn., was an overnight guest at the Baranof Hotel. 1950 Middleton was home in May for two year old daughter, relatives| said. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Middleton, Spokane. threw him out. Dark stroked a line single over Rizzuto’s head into left. Thomson raised a high fly to Di- Maggio in left-center. Irvin singled off the left field wall, sending Dark to third and when Woodling juggled the ball Dark continued home and Irvin stopped at second on the error. Lockman swung at the first pitch and sent a soft fly to Di- Maggio behind second base. The run is not earned. One run, two hits, one error, one left on base. SECOND INNING YANKS — Mays galloped in to| get Mize's towering fly in ahunow center. Thomson fielded McDougald’s hot smash inside the third base line, | then threw wildly past Lockman al- | lowing McDougald to reach second on the two base error. Lockman was nicked on the left | wrist and time was taken out while Giant Trainer Doc Bowman exam- | ined it. | Irvin came in fast for Brown’s | slanting low liner. | Collins rolled to Lockman who | flipped to Jansen, covering first, | for the out on a’close play. No runs, no hits, on error, one left on base. Twelve-Hif Barrage Off Five Gianfs Most Runs Are Scored in World Series Game in Fifteen Years Short Score | Yanks Giants Composife Score (5 Games) Yanks Giants =82 R oam Z F |fT_ ol Y- Errors GIANTS Runs Hits Errors ~HoWOowa W cocmomne cmomomow m~mo@owne cocoNoman coc®moco® <) Won - TETET By JACK HAND NEW YORK, Oct. 9 — (% — The New York Yankees smothered the New York Giants 13-1 today with the most runs scored in a World Series game in 15 years to take a 3-3 edge before 47,830 Polo Ground fans. Rookie Gil-‘McDougald hit the third bases loaded homer in series history and Rhil Rizzuto punched a two-run “Chinese” homer down the right fleld foul line in the Yanks 12-hit batrage off . five Ohn‘ pitchers, m A Lopat: witinke o e second game, breezed home with a five hllhrlauhl'vll.. for the second timie. ’ Thus the scene shifts to Yankee Stadium tomorrow: with the Yanks needing only one mores win to nail down a third straight world cham- plonship for Manager Casey Sten- el. This was“thé biggest score by a series- team since 1936 -when the Yanks sunk the Giants 13-5 at the Polo Grounds Oct. 6, 1936. On Oct. 2 in the same park during the '36 series they hung up the all-time high of 18-4. Game Goes Into Rout McDougald’s blast into the upper left field seats some 375 feet away came off Jansen with the score tied at 1-1 in the third inning. That hit turned the game into a rout as Manager Leo Durocher paraded Montia Kennedy, George Spencer, Al Corwin and finally Alex Koni- kowski to the hill frying to stop the deluge. Strange as it may seem the Giants actually held a 1-0 lead at one stage, scoring in the first inning on singles by Al Dark, Monte Irvin and an error by Gene Woodling. But it didn't last long. Two walks and Joe DiMaggio's single that dropped in front of Irvin and was fumbled for an error, tied it up in the third. With two men on, Johnny Mize was walked intentionally, loading them up and setting the stage for rookie Mc- Dougald’s grand slammer. Not since 1936 when Tony La- zerri hit one for the Yanks against the Giants in that 18-4 game had a bases loaded homer been hit in a series game. The only pre- vious clout was by Cleveland’s Elmer Smith in 1920 against Brooklyn. Rizzuto's 257-foot poke off Ken- nedy followed a walk to Woodling |ln the fourth. It barely made the (Continued on Page Two) WEATHER REPORT (U, 8. WEATHER BURRAU Temperatures for 24-Hour Period ending 6:20 o'clock this morping At Alrport: Maximum, 50; Minimum, 38. FORECAST (Junegu and Vicinity) Mostly cloudy with light rain tonight and Wednes- day. Lowest température to- night near 40 degrees. High- est Wednesday about 45. Southeasterly winds as high as 20 miles per hour Wed- nesday, A PRECIPITATION (Past 34 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today @ ® At Airport Trace; ® since July 1—10.78 inches. . (Continued on Page Two)