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‘Fate'ls Kind To Kiner « & PITTSBURGH PIRATES left fielder Raly Rises (4), makes first safely as ball goes past New York Giants first baseman Whitey Loskman in sixth inning game in New York. Play start- ed when Kiner hit a slow roller down first base line which Giant pitcher Sheldon Jones picked up and threw wild to Lockman for an error. Pirates wqn 2-0 to break the Giants winning streak of 16, piaehing the play is Pirate coach Bill Posedel (42). Sirugo And King Discuss Bight Marl n Staff Photo JOE SIRUGO shows channel crossing to City Manager Dave King which he will sell to the City at a reasonable price. Sirugo is of 175 feet from removing the marl roadway up to a distance Roosevelt boulevard. FORMER TUG (Continued from Page One) major pump having 150 pound pressure dispelling 2000 gallor per minyte; the secondary. h ing 100 pounds pressure, dispel ling 300 gallons. The maximum speed is kniote, achieved by the 900 horsepower diesel engine, with 125 ,shaft tions-per minute Pe sn trial has packed raw Home w- th canner find that hold the the r ir color the hot methods pro packed duce use of electric revolu npletel opposite taken place,! building 99 Wirephoto 2 erly St. Louis Ramsey Fas Fourteen As Independent Defeat Navy FAST-BALL TGSER * HURLS FIVE IT SHUT-OUT By PEDRO AGUILA In the Ind first half lagnight, the ependents won ovt the Navy vith Ramsey inthe box, ts pitched allowed fit hits and fanned 14 Independents scored one first inning Acevedo and was sificed to econd and scored ater stealing third on a passed bil. The Navy scoredone in the h, Duncan single to right, error put his on second. Dewitt hit one outof the park, called out f¢ not touch- third bat, Ramsey it two sin for Navy and Buster Rob- | erts hit a homer ana single for | the winners. Score and an but wa ing At R. H. E.|f 451 1028 Robertsand Walker; and Bohre. Independents In the nighteap, he Hospital played their first same in the league and held th: Cokes to a tie in eight innings Evans and R. Prez pitched | the full game. It was full of jthrills and more aguments than in any previous gme of the league At bat, Sands ht two for the Cokes and Hall hi! three for the; Hospital. Sherman hit two sin- | gles and a double. Score RHE. Coca Cola 864 N. Hospital 810 3 Batteries: R. Perez and Sands; E and Olms' Evans | Yesterday’ 's Scores _In The Major Leagues NATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. E 19:0 13 16 0 Erautt, By- Newcombe Cincinnati Brooklyn Ramsdeil, Smith, and Pramesa; and Campanella R. H. EB. f Pittsburgh 131 || New York 3.7% Dickson and McCullough Hearn and Noble, Yva Philadelphia 2 Staley, Breechen ‘and’ D. i Roberts, Heintzelman and ‘wil: ber. R. H. E, | Chicago 133 Boston 490 Minner, and Owen, Burgess; Cole, Chipman and Cooper. AMERICAN LEAGUE R. H. E. delphia BT. 1 051 and Tipton; Garcia, | Brissie and Hegan. R. H. E. Washington 212 3 Chicag 514 1 Scarborough, Kinder and Ro- sar; Trucks, Cain, Hutchinson and Swift, House. R. H. E. Boston 713 0 Detroit 514 1 carborough, Kinder and Ro- é Trucks, Cain, Hutchinson and Swift. R. H. E.j New York 1517 2 St. Louis 221 Reynolds and Berra; Solis, for the Free} New Court Star i () Wirephoto SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD Maureen Connolly. pretty tennis star from San Diego, Calif., smiles through the shadow pattern of | her racket at Forest Hills, N. Y., where she won her second | round match in the National | Women’s Tennis Tournament. | A former national junior titlist, Maureen is considered by many to be the coming star on the wo- men’s nis horizon. At any ; rat e'll add a lot of glamour to the court scene, LONGEVITY IS ORDER OF |THE DAY NEW YORK—(4#).—In countries the population is grow-| older _ and many ing proportionately his is in medicine, and other sociaf and economic | problems. | Look at France. } journal of the American Geria- | tric Society, quotes French stat- istics showing that of France's 40- lodd million population, 6,770,000 persons ate 60 or more, Forty- three per cent of them are living in poverty, niné per cent in dis- SERMON. GOES ON CENTRALIA, Ill. — (#)..— .| Mississippi river flood couldn't stop the.Rev. ‘Larry Dauer at Chester, Ill. When he and his con- }|gregation found ‘their Chester church pews floating in the flood water, the minister saved his faithful guitar. He Bremen, Ill, where it was dry. a $106,000,000 BUSINESS DES MOINES — (4). — lowa markets enough eggs to supply an egg a day throughout the year for every person in New York City, accordin to Census Bureau; records, Census records for 1950 show that Iowa's egg sales in 1949 yielded $64,101,839, and that dur- ing the same year Iowa farmers sold 22,220,744 chickens for $21,- 813,354. The combined revenue in this industry was approximately $106,000,000. Garver, Pillette, Paige and Lol- lard. Official U. S$. Navy Photo * of only one run per game, bringing changing empha-) retirement plans, | “Geriatrics,” | tressing alee Sotagy and 41 per | cent live immediately } . | resumed preaching on a street at Kellner Shuts Out Cleveland For Athletics Zernial Slams 29th Homer | Of The Year’ NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—(4)— Lefty Alex Kellner and slugger Gus Zernial further tightened the American League pennant race yesterday when they led the Philadelphia Athletics to a 3 to 0 victory over the Cleveland In- dians. Kellner, who won 20 games in 1949 and lost 20 last year, silenced the once-mighty Indian bats with just five hits as he won his eighth victory of the season against 13 setbacks, The fast-balling south- paw doled out five singles and never was in trouble against the punchless Indians. In the last six games, Cleve- land has been shut out three times and has scored an average The tribe had won 12 in a row from Philadelphia before today. Of the four Athletics victories to date, Kellner has won three. Zernial supplied all the power Kellner needed to- win, In the fourth inning, big Gus slammed his 29th homer of the year, high in the American “League, with Elmer Valo on base. And in the seventh, Zernial doubled and scored on Dave Philley’s single. All three runs came off Tribe starter Mike Garcia, who was gunning for his 18th victory but wound up with his 10th defeat. The Boston Red Sox came from behind three times to beat the Detroit Tigers, 7 to 5. Ted Wil- | liams belted a three-run homer in the third, but the clincher was supplied in the top of the ninth on a walk and three singles. | Hoot Evers homered for the | Tigers. Williams’ homer was his }2%th and he also singled and |scored twice in addition to mak- | ing four great catches that nipped | Tiger rallies, The Washington Senators ‘needed 13 innings’ to shade the Chicago White .Sox, 2 to 1. Micked Vernon scampered home from second when Nellie Fox booted Sherry Robertson’s {grounder to score the winning run Ray Coleman’s homer provided White Sox run off Sena- } tor r Connie Marrero. | Mickey Harris finished and was the winner while the fourth Tiger hurler, Randy Gumpert, was the loser. Both the first-place Brooklyn Dodgers and the second-place new York Giants scored victories to remain six games apart, Big Don ; the onl Newcombe finally" worhis: 17th] 4e2vous._ victory after four futile attempts, as the Dodgers pounded Cincin- nati for 16 hits and a 13 tol vic- A|tory. But the star was Big Gil Hodges. The slugging first base- home runs of the season to tie Pittsburgh’s Ralph Kiner for the major league lead. Hodges’ 36th homer represents a Brooklyn club record. In 1930, Babe Herman hit 35 for the Brooks. Hodges also slugged a bases loaded double and drove in seven runs. Roy Campanella drove in three with his 28th homer of the year, The Giants. bounced back after their 16-game winning streak was broken Tuesday to defeat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 3 to 1. | Right hander Jim Hearn tossed 1a three-hitter for his fifth victory ‘over Pittsburgh this year and his 13th win of the season. A home run by Al Dark and a pair of triples by Monte Irvin led the Giants seven-hit assault off tiny Murry Dickson, who was after his 18th victory. |Capt.’s Condition ‘Still Unchanged Hospital authorities reported today that the condition of Bert- ram Sawyer, 54-year-old local fisherman, is unchanged from yesterday. Sawyer suffered second-degree burns about the face, arms and shoulders wien a flash fire broke out aboard his boat, the Ruth C, as he started the engines prepar- ing to leave Thompson’s Dock early yesterday morning. Pakistan Foreign Trade Doubled KARACHI —(?).— Pakistan's foreign trade has more than joubled since the inception of the new state four years ago. Exports in the year ending March 31, 1951, totalled $505,- 000,000, while in 1947-48 the fi- gure reached only $240,000,000. The 1950-51 total does not include exports) to India. Leading export commodities were raw cotton, raw jute, and raw wool. Broken-Hearted LINDSAY, Ont.—(),—Lying ina gutter doesn’t n¢ man pounded his 35th and 36th |# EE Now ES A Thursday, August 30, 1951 THROUGH %3 y Hho Milk vs VX-1 Fly- RED EYES ers, first gam DES MOINES—)— In f y |* 9:00—Navy “ Hospital, second | Senate recently, Sen. Benton (D,| Baptist Church recently, address- Conn.) reading excerpts from. aj ed graduating seniors of the Log- jae Soviet encycopedia, quoted night. Dr. told: the this item about Iowa. students a ey ‘that J Games This Week ISLAND CITY SOFTBALL LEAGUE THURSDAY— game. MONDAY— 9:30--Home Milk vs Hospittl, first game. 9:00—Coca Cola vs Indepen-| . “State in the middle west. of y dents, second game. the United States—large capitai- was cat cu a 4 TUESDAY— list farms provide the basic pro- gospel of Christ.” 7:30—Navy vs OpDevSta, first | duction: sauce rane SEs game, All farmers are in great debt, 9:00—Independents vs SubRon to the banks, and farmer's debts, Firm Re-Named | even in the case of full owners, Four, second game. are more than 50 per cent of the THURSDAY— ; The Kellex Corporation, search snd engineering toa oN 7;30—Home Milk vs Navy, first | value of the farms.” game. Nasi a branch 9:00—-Coca Cola vs. VX-l, second game. Insurance Agent's inane ae lithe fate FRIDAY— as 7:30—Navy vs Subron Four, | | $2, 800 Oversight leak first game. NEW YORK — (4)-—Burglars " : 9:00-—OpDevSta vs Hospital, entering the Brooklyn apart: The nation’s 1951 rye p iment of an insurance agent, took, tion is estimated at a two-carat diamond ring valued| bushels, about 6,000,000 | at $2,800 from the finger of his|the 10-year itn but n wife, but did not disturb a $400} 1,000,000 above last year. | wedding ring set with diamonds. The wedding ring was insured. STRONG ARM The stolen ring was not, mane 6 Deer, bear and. wild turkey}. The insurance agent said he {always thought of insuring that re the most popular big game pls a species hunted in New Mexico,” Al second game. Mattress Burning . . Time Twisted HUNTINGTON, W. Va.—(4)—! How long does it take for a cig- arette to burn up a mattress? The Huntington Fire Depart ment, making a series of tests, found that a standard spring} mattress will be destroyed in two and one-half hours. It plans to find out about other types of mattresses, too. The test was made in a trame| house erected for the experi-; ment in the department's drill} area. | A cigarette left on the mat-| tress set a smouldering fire) which burned a hole all the) way through in one hour and 11} minutes. | It took one hour and 45 min- utes for the mattress to break into flame. Forty-five minutes ‘later, there! was nothing left but ashes. DOG FOILS JAIL-BREAK CARMI, Il.— (#)—A sheriff's! pint-sized pooch foiled plans sat a jail break recently. Sheriff D. W. Griffith of white| County pieced together this ver-| sion: ar, the Griffiths’ tiny Pomeranian, started barking at 1:30 a! m. It roused the sheriff in} his quarters below the jail. He found the outer jail door and the! cell cage unlocked, but a 14-year | old trusty was missing. | Five male prisoners seemed to| be asleep. The boy was apprehended la-~ ter in front of the jail. He had returned after two prisonets who} admitted complicity but failed to} join him at a else ren- ting, but hadn't got around to it. aan oe conceal BERLIN — (® —Arthur ay frey, who is a pretty big man in it himself, says that except for sports, most television programs in the United States are no good. “Pee-ew,” said Godfrey of tel- évision programs in a radio in- terview broadcast here during his recent European visit. The versatile Arthur, who} handles his several radio and tel- evision programs like a juggler, said the only things he could commend on American television were the sports casts. ———— Fort Ticonderoga is located at a point commanding the waters connecting Lake George and Lake Champlain in Essex Coun- ty, N. ¥. 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