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a3 —a ] T 19 TERRIBLE- DINT, | "'D e S AWAY AN’ THE C z \\% WN‘; Hl $1ck- 1T Looks EH SFVRYY - MW Awvon'T HA\IE LAD- KIN GO _ |lcornED CABBAGE ER ‘\ :N.\\:) WEEK- =l (0 ° - S B he % < 2 © 1928 by I POIRTS EMANUEL IS WALKER MIX SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8.—Af- ter months of dickering, Promoter IAncil Moffman came to terms to- [ with Armand Emanuel, young lawyer-boxer of San Francisco, to meet Mickey Walker, middleweight lchampion, in a ten round bout here August 27. It will be at catch weights with Walker shing around 165 pounds and his oppon- ent tipping the beam at 175 pounds GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast League .os Angeles 15; Hollywood 3. Sacramento 7; Portland 0. san Francisco 5; Mission 7 Jakland 9; Seattle 6 National League 5t. Louis 1; New York 10. [Chicago 2; Philadelphia 4 Pittsburgh 4, Brooklyn American League Washington 8; Cleveland 0 New York 6; Chicago 3. >hiladelphia 1; Detroit 4. 3oston 5; St. Louls 6. 3 2 STANDHIG OF CLUBS Pacific Coas‘fv League Lost Pet. Hollywood 676 Sacramento 676 5an Francisco 622 Oakland 514 Mission 486 .08 Angeles 405 Por! nd 378 Seattle 243 Natl:;uml» League Won Lost 3t. Louis 67 38 New York 59 41 Cincinnati 59 46 Chicago 61 Pittsburgh 54 rooklyn 52 Boston 29 Philadelphia 26 American League Won Lusl Pet. New York 73 67 Philadelphia 68 3t. Louis 57 Jleveland 50 69 9 Chicago 50 59 59 Washington 19 61 Detroit 16 60 Boston 40 66 377 Juneau Cit{ League Won Lost Pct. American Legion.. 4 2 667 Moose 4 2 .667 @lks ,, 2 3 400 Alaska Juneau 1 4 200 {EAVY SALMON RUN IN SOUTHERN -AREA All indications at the present time are that the salmon pack in the Southern district of the First Division will almost equal the heavy pack of the 1926 sea- son, it was made known here today at the local office of the U. S. Bureau of Fisheries. . The season in this area closes Aug- st 18 and opens again for seine shing only, from September 10- 29 inclusive. The total pack of the 21 can- neries operating in the district was 486,946 cases on August 6. IThis amount is close to that of the 1926 pack at the same time in the season and greatly ex- ceeds that of last year it was shown. Pinks and cohoes are in the majority of the run. There is a heavy run now at Cape Fox, at Dixon Entrance and at the south end of Beam Canal. The salmon are just starting the run on the east coast of Prince of Wales Island. Survivors of Treadwell Cave-in to Have Picnic SEATTLE, Aug. 8.—Many sur- vivors of the Treadwell gold mine cave-in will attend a pienic to be given for former resident of PDouglas Island here next Sunday, R .| afternvon went ‘Young Ed. Walsh Brings Back Olden, Golden Days of Baseball | By JAMES Y. KEENE | International Illustrated News Sports Editor EW YORK.—Ghosts of the past N hovered over Yankee Stadium the other day. For a brief !epace the olden, golden days of bascball were back. Out there on [the mound the som of a famous I father pitched the Kind of ball that | his daddy usea to pitch; tosing his | game only when tre game's great- i est batsman lammed out his thirty- ! ninth homer of the season. It was a typical Ruthlan smack that the big fence-huster uncorked | in the fatal seventh, and the crowd i rose to its feet and acclaimed the hero. But the biggest cheer ot the | up as young Ed | Walsh. the son of Big Ed of White | B0x tame, trudged to the clubhouse, | relieved by a pinch hitter in the ! uightn. | Fov this youngster with a right | arm. of braided steel, a mohth/out of. | the classte halls of Notre Dame, had turned back the crowding years and | showed the kind of stuff that made Big Ed the greatest spitball pitcher | of his time and one of the greatest of all time. For five innings he held | the Yanks In the hollow of his big hand, hitless and runless. For six Innings he dipped them in kalsomine | with a strong right arm that gave oft a baffling fast ball and a knuckle ball and a deceptive change of pace. Serene, impassive, business-like, this sclon of a great daddy went along, making the Yankees' “mur- derers’ row” look silly, while his parent and mentor, Big Ed, looked on critically from the Chicago dug- out. Then It happened. In the sev- enth, with two balls and no strikes the count on Ruth, young E4 Jammed one over on the inside and DO YOU THINK WEEK WITHOUT THAT FAVORITE DISH OF MINE? Sen of Famous Spltballér CALIFORNIA U SIGNED FOR | a Pitcher Like His Daddy (A THE DAI LY ALASKA EMPIRE WEDNESDAY THAT'S GREAT- OID YwYouw PUT THAT AD 1N NEITHER WIN - 90 | GOT BUSY-ILST TAKE A LOOK AT THIS MORNIN'S PER A 1 Feature Service Tne Great Britaw rights resorved " GOING UP; TO | -~ MEETENGLAND y I American Eight Oared, Crew Beats Canada— Finals on Friday SLOTEN, Holland, Aug. 8 The University of California crew | won from Canada in the semi-! finals the Olympic competition. | The American eight oared crew | has now gained the right to meel *England for the championship on' Friday | Ben Myers, of Philadelphia, wen the semi-finals from Gunth-| er, of Holland, in the single, sculls and will meet Bob Pearce, of Australin for the title Barge Club | coxswain, defeat-! ed the Italians and will meet! England on Saturday in the finals | - - | The Pennsylvania feur, without SALI:CY RUN GOOD | PETERSON REPORTS high and George Herman blasted | Salmon are running in ].\xm-‘ 1t over the fence into the bleachers. | Numbers from Dixon's Entrance uu Young Ed then and there became a | Cross Sound, according to reports | member 1n regular standing of the | brought here today by Capt. H. M. Babe's little class of serfous thinkers. | Peterson of the motorship Marg- ED WALSH, JR. | Young EA Walsh Is the product | nita. | of twenty-three years of coaching | Following are pack figures at| on the part of his dad, for the boy | the time the Margnita called at| bas had a baseball in his hand ever | the nneries during her last trip: | since he was a blue-eyed baby and | Deep Sea Salmon Company, Port| lay in an old-fashioned cradle in & | Althorp, 160,000; Sunny Point| Iittle house in Meridian, Conn. Big : Packing Company, Funter Bay,| EQ wus wheellng them in those (82,000; P. . Harris Company,| days, the stout-hearted mainstay of | Hawk Inlet, 55,000; Northwestern| the Chicago White Sox. And he | Fisheries, Dundas Bay, 45,000 vowed when the boy grew up he, | Sebastian-Stuart Fish Company, too, would wear a White Sox uni- | Tyéde, 35,000; Peril Straits Pack- ing Company, Todd, 45,000; Pyra. mid Packing Company, Sitka, 56,- 000, the roar ot admiring multitudes. The younger »Walsh is slightly more than' six feet, welghs about, 190 and is & natural athlete, form and hear, as he was hearing, i e e————— Married to TRAIL OPENING NEW REGION TO PROSPECTORS gressing—Open 30 Miles Country Says Merritt A mineralized area heretofore of Public Roads Chickamin in the Ketchikan district, declar- fweeks in office analysis and short min River and will follow inland ' Chickamin Trail Now Pro- practically inaccessible is being| A shori time was spent by the suys the complaint, and wanted a opened to prospectors with the)Official at the Zellerbach power|pome, for them. construction of the U. S. Bureau |Survey camp, on the east side of ——e——— trail field inspection of the Forest R rad Miller, licensed guide, of Mc-' Service activities. Mrs. Jessie Jorgenson, wife of |Carthy, | 30-Mile Trail Dr. Stanley Jorgenson, who has| F. E. Hilder, business partner The Chickamin trail which be-|been visiting here for severaliof Mr. O ill, spent several gins at the mouth of the Chicka- | months, left on the Alaska yes-|weeks in the same country )\unl-‘ i(;ot Alimony a distance of 30 miles, has made | good progress and so far this!Is Charge | season eight and one half miles! |are completed. Considerable more | will be built before |the season. Several prospectors - | SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8.—“I| the close of|only married you in order to get | alimony.” have gone Charles Fantell in his suit for |into the country already and alannuiment of marriage declares| number of others are planning to|ynat Mrs, Sarah Fantell told him| go in this fall, Mr. Merritt said. | yon after he had married| The trail of two and one-half miles built his year by the Forest her in South City June 27 last. He' T also says she agreed before mar-| Service from Manzanita Bay t0|riage to make a home for his 11- Manzanita Lake, one of the power | year old motherless daughter, but sites included in the Zellerbach| jght after the marriage she re- se power permit, was also visited| fysed to let the girl in the home by Mr. Merritt ! ¥ | Fantell had provided at South City Survey Power Sites She had two children of her ow Revillagigeodo Island. A crew of eight men are at work in charge BIG GAME HUNTER IS ON WAY NORTH| ed M. L. Merritt, Assistant Dis-|0f Wendall Dawson, water power o, trict Forester with the U. S, For- |Chgineer. A survey is being of J. O'Nelll of San Francisco, est, Service) today. Manzanita, Ella and Mirror Lakes | ;4 ,,,,‘,ml the steamer Alaska for| Mr. Merritt: returned on the[and dam sites and conduit lines.|chitina from where he will goj steamer Alaska from Ketchikan |It 18 expected this work will be|yith pack train into the White' ‘where he was engaged three|finished by the end of the present|River country to hunt big game. working season He will be accompanied by Con- terday for Cordova. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE at the City Hall on Fourth St., the forenoon of said day, at whi date of sale and costs as below TO WHOM ASSESSED L. Hensler ... 0. E. Schombel .... Robt. Johnson ... {Mary Chamberlain Dated at Juneau, Alaska, this 10th day of July, 1928. Publish July 12, 18, 25, Aug. 1 and 8, g ook Division, Territory of Alaska, dated May 21, Juneau, Alaska, a municipal corporation, for an order authorizing the sale of certain real prnp-srty’ for delinquent taxes for the year 192 mentioned on which the amount of taxes due on each tract, -.Blk. 203, NOTICE OF SALE N that pursuant to an order of the District Court for the First' 1928, in the matter of the application of the City of| ing big game last year. i | i 7 Cause Number 2835-A., A sale at public auction will be held! in the City of Juneau, Alaska, on Aug. 15, 1928, at ten o’clock ul" ch sale the following described property assessed to the individuals!' including penalty and interest up to tabulated, will be sold as provided by law. LOT, DESCRIPTION Lot 10, Casey-Shat- BLOCK, Tax Penalty Int. Costs Total { { | | i | tuck Addition . ..$10.00 $1.00 $1.00 $18.62 $30.62 Lot and Foundation, N. side W. Seventh Street 2.00 .20 10 9.30 1150 Blk. 31, Lot 3, Lot o 4.00 .40 .30 9.30 14.00 | Blk 107, Lot 1, Lot Only .. 20.00 2.00 1.60 9.30 32.90) H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk. AUGUST 8, 1928. By GEORGE McMANUS 1 DID- AN’ M OWAITING TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:- I'M DYING FOR A GOOD PLATE OF CORN' BEEF AND CABBACGE. PLEASE TELL ME HOW YOU MAKE 1T, RFSEECHINGLY YOURS, S o 86 Monument Erected to World’s Champion Milk Cow a1 On July 31, at the Carnation Milk Farm, Carnation, Washing- ton, the statue of Segis Pietertje Prospect, world’s champion milk cow, was unveiled with appropri- ate ceremonies. She was a pure-bred Holstein, born in 1912, and died in 1925. In 1920 she set a new world record of 37,391 pounds of milk and 1,448 pounds of butter in 365 days— nearly 4,000 pounds of milk more than any other cow has ever made. The following year she again sur- passed any other record except her own, her total for the two years of 72,931 pounds of milk and 2,865 pounds of butter constituting the world’s two-year record. 1t is estimated that during her lifetime “Prospect” produced 174, 000 pounds of milk, or91,000 quarts, or 20,250 gallons, or 87 tons of 'w eight— equivalent to approxi- mately 100 times her own weight. The average milk production in the United States per cow is 3900 pounds, or 1450 quarts, so that “Prospect” in her record year gave approximately as much milk as ten average cows. The statue which has been erect ed on the farm where her records were made is one-fourth larger than life size, and stands on a pedestal 7 feet high and 8 feet by 116 feet base. Hmch('hffo 8 Wulow thl Receive Part of $50,000 LONDON, Aug. 8.—Left unpro-|Inchcape to provide for her be- vided by her husband, who perish- | cause the whole plan of the flight ed in an attempt to fly the At-|came from Miss M i lantic, Mrs. Walter Hincheliffc Lord and Lady Inchcape already faced the future more hopefully | have established a trust fund of | today. 00,060 in memory of their She was nearing the end of her | daughter. This fund is to accumu resources when it was announced |late for fifty years and then be that Lord Inchcape had made a|applied to reduction of the nation zift of $50,000 to provide for those | al debt. who might suffer from the dis o A DU Y |ter im which his daughter, the| i Honorable Elsie Mackay, was lost PREPARING FOR HOCKEY with Captain Hincheliffe. The money was put at the dis- / YORK, Aug. S.—It's pret- posal of Winston Churchill, chan- |ty hot for hockey dope, but the cellor of the exchequer, who was | New York Rangers have stepped given absolute discretion as to its|out to make a trade for next win. use. While Captain Hincheliffe’s | ter's team, getting Dutch Keeling widow was not mentioned by name | from Toronto. in the announcement, the sum is e understood to have Deen given in) G. E. Almyuist, local taflor, response to her claims that there returned to Juneau yester was a moral obligation on Lord evening aboard the Mar TRUESDELL’S G UN ST()RF GET YOUR GUNS IN SHAI’I‘ Don’t wait until the opening of the Hl l‘lN(. SEASON! We carry a full line nf all kmdq of Ammunition and Guns ) BEW ARE Wet Weather and Brakes When it rains and roads are slippery, positive traction is oftimes difficult. This condition calls for complete control of your car more than at any other time. Good brakes are a ngcessary factor of safety, Wet Weather. We may help you avoid accidents. Bring your car around now, while you think of it, and let us inspect your hmkes. We inspect, adjust brakes, and reline them promptly, at flat rate charges, with the highest quality brake lining money can buy. in May We Serve You JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. SERVICE LUCAS, Manager 'CUBAN PUGILIST TS FLYWEIGHT TITLE AS GOAL Aug. 8 'TILDEN RETURNS ( HOME;IMMEDIATE PLANS UNKNOWN W YORK, Aug. 8 dig returned today Binr Unit- p n advanc York | et wi and a try at the b m rding his | Reports her y \ - His only emphatic s known as “Black Lightn n.jhe would have mothing to do with { der the managemen Dan ( rofessional tenni H aid b Mexican border promoter, w 1 no w what h ni | touting the flashy kid as a ns will be for the immediate lin the flyweight division future, | world. Jde is displaying his|- —_— % wares of the squared ring in com pany with Rosy Rosales, a 20.| | year-old Mexican lad of El RELIEVES | Texas, who fights at 184 pounds [the heavyweight class INDIGESTION | Jose Diaz is an ebon stripling| . . . QUICKLY| | who, meteorlike, flashed across the Carter's Little Liver Pills horizon of island ringdom three | | ve ago to disappear into the| lhc.,;....,,,'ffi.l';l:..-n« | maelstrom of Mexico City's fistic| meals or at bedime will do wonders, espe- | testivities, While in Havana Joo Soutatt e St 'f‘?{ff?.lfilfr.‘i'-ée'; | was spotted as being “like and \rendnflnln nuruvl n and n be taken known Mexican promoter was sent CARTERSMPILIS for to appear in a semi-final bout ——— - — | a tthe Mexican capital stadium. 1 F o | He later went to the Mexican & 3 | West Const where he repeated his Radio Orthophonic [ victories of the interior, qualifying| | Vietor Orthophonic Radiola | for the title of flyweight champion has arrived. Your inspection of Mexico. Joe plans to barn-| | invited. Phone 143 storm in the middle west during Anderson Music Shoppe the summer months and then try{ | | to crash New York carly in tho |22 | winter Cubans feel that, there | [is every reason to believe that | Joe, representing Cuba, will stan H a good show of peddling his ware f {from the top of the fistic ladder i with a better than remote possi E bility that he will 5o home for first H —rre —— E U. S. WATER POLO : . O f TEAM IS IN LEAD i AMSTERDAM, Aug. 8. — The [il . 8 Fancy-Tasteg United States water polo team [§ t certainly enjoy thel today defeated Maita by a score | 00l refreshing drinks andfi of 10 to 0. Germany and Hun- [§ | gary are vet to play and England [} land Holland will also tangle. H T i W i i l BE(‘OVERS HEALTH H i JUNEAU BILLIARDS John G. Goehler left St. Ann’s [i o 94 ! Hospital yesterday, having recov- W Phone 94 i ered from a long lliness. 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