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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1931. By. GEORGE McMAN NANAIMO WELLINGTON SCREENED A mighty good resolution is to call your full dealer for a ton of this surprisingly BETTER coal—NA- NAIMO-WELLINGTON—it is especially satisfactory for the heater and range although it is largely used for the furnace as well. This coal well deserves its reputation for being one of the most desirable coals on the market for the furnace, heater or range. Price, per ton, $18.00 JP FATHER NN STYLE- 19 /T2 WELL \ FORBID You WEARIN' THEM PANMMIES AROUND THE \\\\\\\\\\L HOUSE - __ B BRINGING 1 BUT-DADDY! THIS 'S THE VERY LATEST STYLE B; 0\1,DEARI You NEVER Witk M BURNIN' UP- I'LL. SEE YOUR MOTHER AN PUT A STOP TO THIS SILLY 75 T A G 1, ™ ) Nanaima Wellington Mine Run Quality as in the above but loaded from the pile of coal and contains just enough fines to make it more desirable for the furnace. Price, per ton, $17.50 Y SPORTS CARTOON RAEEGLASS]G \F 6rmer—1i;lil_]_‘ldrt Ma; ON TQM]RR[]W Head Amer;cap Loop | CHICAGO, June 2—Ban John- | son’s hobby of riding a particular railroad line as much as possible gave Willlam Harridge, probable | inew president of the American | |league, his start in the world of | | baseball. Back in 1910, the fiery founder of | | the American league decided that a | certain railroad line was the best in | jthe country. Accordingly, he in-| sisted that every team in the league | travel on that line as far as possi- | Boy, Steve Donoghuzs' 'ble, even if the routings meant mount, is scratchéd, leaving the fa- | overnight stops. mous English jockey without a! Harridge, then a worker in-the | horse and reducing the field to 27)passenger service of the railroad horses. jwas assigned the difficult task of | Conservative estimates place thc routing. attendance at the Derby at 750,000 So successful was he in pleasing | to 1,000,000, | not only Johnson but other Ameri- | - | can league club leaders and players | o ;a5 well that he won their admira- tion for efficiency, a word not as| often used in those days as now. A | year later, Johnson employed him! as his private secretary. | In that role Harridge experienced | all the successes and troubles that | accompanied his chief. But he stuck | through them all and remained af- | ter Johnson was ejected in 1927.| Often he virtually had run the| | loague . during Johnson's absences | due to-frequent illnesses. | When Johnson left and Ernest| | Sargent Barnard was elected to the presidency, Harridge was promoted Lost Pct.!to the office of secretary of the L T T L PR ER R PRI R R DA IO TR L TR L A L LR Attendance at Epsom Downs Derby May be One Million ESPOM DOWNS, Eng., June 2.— Gray skies and a sodden turf greet- ed the Derby candidates going through their workouts in prepara- tion for the Classic Race tomor- Pacific Coast Coal Co. PHONE 412 s SiE OLANS TO FOLLOW THE™ LINDBERSH# TRAIL - AND LY VERY HiGH 1 T T T T T T TR LT UL TR TTHTTH T T T O LT OO TR S UL Cosmetic Forecast By Helena Rubenstein These days, Fashion colors the skin in the glowing tones of the out-of-doors girl. The lovely shades of the Valaze cosmetics are a colorful com- plement to the new costumes. Valaze Powders, delightfully perfumed and exquisitely fine and clinging, in ten flat- tering shades. 1.00, 1.50, 3.00. GAMES YESTERDAY | . Pacific Coast League | No games played yesterday as| teams were traveling to open this afternoon on a new schedule for| this week. National League Cincinnati 5; St. Louis 6. game played. American League No games played yesterday. WILLIAM HARRIDGE With Barnard’s death last March, Harridge took over the reins of of- fice so capably that he is consid- ered the leading candidate for the presidency, which pays $40,000 an- nually. Being a railroad man by profes- sion, Harridge never has played a game of professional baseball in his Only Brilliant rouge is required to complete the effect of the new dark powder make-ups. Helena Rubinstein’s Red Geranium is a youthful lovely bloom. Try it. % STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Wen SHE WAS A » g 4 STAR ATHLETE AT WELLESLEY |\ Nicio -1S SIARNNG ouT THE CUTSTAND/NG WOMEN'c- IPORTING ADVENTURE OF THE YEAR —SHE 15 PLANNING To FLY ACROSS TheE ATLANTIC OCEA [N} n— ALONE /. ALAN GOULD ~ S5t thies 3 Horn:by has been hav- ; his troubles making the Chi- 0 Cubs perform in pennant There have been rumors of dis- cord that do not appear well- founded. In fact, rumors cling tenaciously to the footsteps of the Iiajah. He has had an unusualand cventful career around the National league circuit. But he feels sure he will drive his % team to the top and justify the eudden shift that moved him into Joe McCarthy's job the end of last season. “We don't look so good when we are not hitting—but who does?)’ asked Hornsby when I discussed the situation with him recently. Brooklyn hasn't been hitting. Pellows like Bill Terry of the Giants haven’'t been anywhere near their usual stuff. Simmons and ¥ Foxx and Cochrane didn't hit for a while, but notice what happened to the A’'s as soon as they did be- gin to connect. “They can’t be kept from socking as on as the weather warms up. Neither can the Cubs. We will hit and we will be up there giving the Cardinals and Giants a scrap.” BOATLOADS OF GIANTS The east has been used to seeing boatload of sinewy giants from the University of Washington score victories on the Hudson, but rprise at Yale to find the stroked this spring by a lad g six feet, six inches and scaling 190 pounds, even though Ed Leader comes naturally by his par- tiality for rangy oarsmen. development of this (Yale) d of young giants will be watched with unusual interest by A‘all yale men, and especially by thoze of the generations- prior to Leader’s coming to New Haven notes the Yale Alumni Weekly. “Bob Cooke had a prejudice agzainst giant oarsmen, which was firmly established at Yale until I.cader came and began searching for big. rangy men. “The present season seems to sur- 1 others in big varsity 8's. has a stroke oar who stands six feet three inches and weighs 180 pounds. The shortest man in the Columbia boat standsa pass al 4 Columbia half inch over six feet, while the| tight average 182 in weight. H=: vard and Princeton both have giant eights. Jim Wray, the old Harvard !coach who is now at Cornell, has always fancied big, rangy men anc has another such crew at Ithaca.” WHERE MEN ARE MEN “Just watch that University of North Dakota football team next fall,” warns Vic Mattson of Saint Paul, with an assist for Jay Ves- sels, “As an idea of the size of the outfit, their two new regular | tackles weigh 255 and 250 pounds. “Can they cover the ground? Well, Ted Meinhover, who is six feet, seven inches tall and weighs 255, was all-state end at fooib:ll and all-state center in basketball in high school. Jungle Jungeward, the other tackle, who is six feet, four inches tall and weighs 260 | took first prize in a university dancing contest. LINDSEY SHINES IN HUMBLE ROLE ST. LOUIS, June 2.—There may be better relief pitchers than Big Jim Lindsey, but ths $t. Louis baseball fan willing to admit the (Cardinal right-hander isn't king of them all has not yet been found. | While those who start the games | usually win the crowd’s acclaim, Lindsey has become a hero in the| Mound City by finishing them. | No matter how gloomy the out-| look, when Manager Gabby Street gives him the nod, Big Jim Lind- sey strolls to the hill, with the non- chalance of a bride making her : MORE SPORTS | NOISE IS DUE MADISON, Wis,, June 2.—Baskel- “Shorts” on the technique of| foothall, golf and tennis have been made by leading coaches and,ath- letes, and now the midwest’s great- est indoor sport will be glorified on celluloid. Dr. Walter E. Meanwell, Univer- sity of Wisconsin coach, and some of his star ex-Badger hoopsters will make the pictures at Los Angeles in July. Meanwell will be on the coast conducting a coaching school. Bud Foster, Ed Chmielewski, Carl Matthusen, John Paul and John Poser are the ex-Cardinal players, who'll be the “actors.” FORMER BIG LEAGUE HURLERS NOW TEAM UP IN NEW SYSTEM 10ukland ball is going talkie, too. | 34 30 Hollywood . Portland 21 618 league and once more was success- 24 556 ful. life. its complements. But he knows the game and Valaze Rouge en Creme Valaze Rouge Compact 23 29 26 25 Los Angeles Missions San Francisco Sacramento Seattle 26 519! N S— T (a2 2 i TWO CLASSES OF MRS. BURFORD IN Mary Jean M ise Tanner. . 21 National League Won Lost 24 11 23 13 .21 15 19 18 .. 19 20 18 20 28 481 PIANO RECITAL | 30 455! 30 444 31 404 i PC';‘ At the Buriord Swudio on Gold | 105 Belt Avenue last Friday evening, 639 primary and intermediate pupils | -583 gave a most interesting recital us- | 514 "o single, double and triple pianos. | 487 Before' the program, questions with | x answers illustrative of the work | 436 gone was an interesting feature. | 225, The following were the pupils taking part in the program: Betty Baggen, Maydell George, Thomas White, Jessie Kilroy, Ro- | berick MacLeod, Martha Peterson, | Keith Petrich, Ennis White, Enid Jarvis, Melvin Merritt, Virginia Mullen, Jane Elliott, Fern Gubser, St. Louis New York Chicago ... Boston Brooklyn Philadelphia Pittsburgh AT 22 Cincinnati .9 31 American League ‘Won Lost 28 10 22 16 .23 17 20 20 1T 21 18 26 Pet. 37 579 575 500 447 409 iPhiladelphia ........... {New York ‘Washington Cleveland | Chicago Detroit Old papers at the Emplre office cNaughton, e PHONE 487 MARKOE STUDIO Photographs of Quality Portraiture, ing, Cameras, Ef Photo Finish- Alaska Views, te. First National Bank Bldg. JUNEAU, ALASKA Jane Blomgren, Frances Orson and Lou- Lipsticks must harmonize and be the final accent of individual- ity in your Personality Make-Up. Valaze and Cubist Lipsticks Water Lily Lipstick Tel. 25 UNITED FOOD COMPANY CASH IS KING We Deliver Boston 19 e YOUR ISL Louis 13 22 37 Juneau City League ‘Won Lost Pct 3 2 .600 2 2 .500 2 3 400 ——.———— LUTHERAN LADIES MEET The Lutheran Ladies Ald will meet at the home of Mrs. B. B. Green on Distin Avenue Thursday afternoon, June 4th, at 2:30 p.m. Mrs. John Reck and Mrs. B. B. Green will act as hostesses. (adv.) (T | Elks Moose Legion PITTSBURGH, June 2.—Two pit- chers who were famous in the Na- tional league a few years ago, are now teammates on the semi-pro team of suburban Dormont. | They are Wilbur Cooper, former ' star left-hander of the ‘Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago Cubs, and Bill Doak, spitballer of the St. Louis Cardinals and the Brooklyn Robins. Cooper, considered one of the best portsiders in the league when in his prime, came to the Pirates in 1912. He joined the Chicago Cubs in 1925 and left the league the following year. Cooper won 216 games and lost 174 in his major league career. Doak also boasts an impressive rec- | ord. | —.—— MATES REFUSE TO ‘CATCH’ FOR IRISH SOLDIER-PUG imm trip to the altar, | They say in St. Louis that his‘ | attitude upsets the mental poise of | |the enemy batters. Regardless of | \"| whether there is anything to the theory, he usually gets them out| without undue delay. | In the first seven ga—~" 'a wh'h| {he did the relief act this year he pitched 12 in : eniy| one run. | Working almo-t | relief pitcher last year, Linse won seven and lost five games. ThisI year he looks better ¢han ¢ DANCE FRIDAY, JUNE 5TH | Parish Hall by the Nativity Club. (adv.) BELFAST, June 2.—Private Colin | Walsh is a new Irish hope for heavyweight honors, but he’s no sweetheart of the regiment. He never saw a boxing glove till a few months ago,-but he seemed to know how to use 'em by instinct. ITe started out practicing on his comrades in arms and mowed them 1~wp so fast he'd soon used up all the available supply. He was will- ¢ to start in at the beginning| gain, but the regiment wasn’t. Despite the present dearth of sparring partners he's won all his three professional fights and is looking for more. Walsh is 26. He comes from the wilds of Conne- mara, and is six feet two, FLORSHEIM| SHOES NOW $9.00 and $10.00 H. S. Graves The Clothing Man | OPEN STOCK DISHES In the New Crawford Design Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. Il!fl"_llmllllllllllllllllIlIIIlllIIIIIH_IIIIT ' PHONES 83 OR 85 THE SANITARY GROCERY “The Store That Pleases” ALASKA LAUNDRY Tel. 15 We call for and deliver ” INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska PiccLy, WicGLy THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat e e LADY BARBER 174 Front Street Near Goldstein’s Store Specializing In LADIES’ and CHILDREN’S HAIR CUTTING P e IS € 0ld Papers for sale at Empire Offic