The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 28, 1932, Page 7

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% ; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURQDAY JULY 28, |932 ST 7 TV ERT Ty 3 L fRme s = 5 = & 3 ] B RNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG Bi BILLE DE BECK | g, B DOUGLAS : | TE | S - — QUALIZATION BOARD STARTS OUT WITH THREE HONR SESSION Water-Repellent Cruiser Shirts Sitting as a Board of Equaliza- on, the Douglas City Couneil eld its first session last night, pbing over the property tax list; pualizing where considered justi- jable and making such revisions P necessary on account of various ianges in property ownership, at. have occurred during the pst year. ¢ ! i , Sk o PR T_he Board will hold its second J. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRIGULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU ' Schmitz; left on bases, Elks :}.' the best game turned in so BS G ome R o ol Legion 5, ;HlLDEBRANB | this season by a Cleveland mound | Umpires—M. MacSpadden at the i $395 5 Woolen Cruiser clock. man, a six-hit affair that ac- Y ;~ . —————— The Weath,er plate, Nostrand and Lowé on bases | counted for one of the Indians & | Shlrts ' " ( h | ¥ Purdue University lost througt Am:llgn MEN WALLOP ATE BATA Time of game—onie Nour and 30 ls Bls AID four viclories in one series Wit: pradution 13 football letier me | SINGLE MEN IN BASEBALL o Um"& i g minutes. | Washington. most of whom had played the last | The married men’s baseball team 5 g ‘ s ppud WOk o ot et ‘ $4.95 lked all over the single men's Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, beginning at 4 pm., July 28: EMARE . | His next start was against the| i i tfit o the tune of 17 to 7 in'a Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; gentle variable winds. D E SOLD; GOES ‘ Athletics, & ten-inging winning| Vis Serrell, Detrolt piiching ace, ely game on the local diamond Humidity, Wind Veloclty Weather TO CUBS FROM SACS| RN effort . in. which ‘Hlldy” twice " T8oec VIS oY R nas el < night. A. J. Balog, pitcher,| ~Time Barometer Temp. Humidity eiocity e fanned the redoubtable Jimm thitee HIDSE e veat L BIq | d John Niemi cateher, com.| & P VESUY ... 2080 o 41 w 12 olear | croowTON Ga. July 28 —| OLEVELAND, O, July 28. — A |Foxx—ca with two out n defeated each time, | d the battery for the Iformer. b riad tod:?y 3088 5; :0 bt ‘30 Cg%;yr Frank Demaree, star outfielder ur‘“Lar basketball player is the new-|and b: e 4 T ; 3 | . . hile W, McCormick and = | Neon, today 29.82 6 5 NW the Sacramento ‘Senators, has been | found piiching ace who has given Hmflomuds courage in pitching - oy D‘.l‘ mJlm - Db ayes, alternating as pltchérs, and CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS. 80l o tite. Olddago Cuks. for im- |the Oleviland Indlans an import- |fo Foxy brought him no end of [t & o0 o o S iome SALODM Fleek as catcher, did the hon- e medlate delivery, it was announced , 4% 1@ on their mid-season spurt prais o T e the ) et with ' Soun BEMhd) ik s for the latter. YESTERDAY TODAY by Lewls Moering, owner of the[lOWArd the top in the American lanky, 23-year-old Hoosler enjoyed “CCH' S0 SO0t i o Gl { e ————— — == Senators. League standings. | the sensation of having “arrived.” i cross from Goldstein A Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4a.m. Precip. dam. ; ok Twice in his time Hildebrand| Staniey Coveleskie, famous pitch- | Buildin, LEAGUE 10, KNTERTAIN Station temp. temp. temp temp. velocity 24hrs. Weathcr‘ A v b MOy R »0ml Hhdsboand) VIR el 1o e 5 er in 1920, is wearing a manager's h | 349 i i Clay fransaction with no. other players|was the All-America center on!has come close to a no-hit game. ' ot W B FECE Bl S The Ladies' “League will hold fizzgw ;i ;g ‘1 48 bt lg 16 Cldg involved. two of Butler University's best Opce Chuck Klein, now with ‘h; \L”“ :lmluolr, ;;f;,d i g o g hei S - ' “ - .- — v tet s. hs iffior . in Phillies, then a semi-pro, ruined padiney e':rfle:;ogn ?f;g:}irle[ac::e ooms, | Bethel St A . g0 e 8L T Rain, ppAMMATES ONCE MORE :Sasslfx?;’i;lrfuzfivw‘bMd1(111’”11:‘»‘11" ™ tne attempt with a triple, and in| 7, : . v in. | Tort Yukon 8 8 58 58 0 0 Clear s B i e 1930 the ~Columbus team “nicked | 7 L S0 ML et S e g8 50 500 4 0 BLOMY aruanra Ga. guly zsfimu.,_hewh:d e any the ToCHORS | 1 Fon ot G, hite | THROW AWAY YOUR Fasr g e Fairbanks . 82 80 | 5¢ 56 4 0 P"gld’f Taitt and Rby Ca.\.rlyle, the heav;'npolls ‘lndmn’s,t u;m '\mc:\ i T R R Y CORN PLASTERS FORMER RESIDENTS N R o e Rain hitters of the Atlanta Crackers last | nally Was declared incligible ’ T RETURNING o :um.rbo{ e o8 4 “ 2 : 5 Clay Year: are teamed up together |college competition in 1930 Lv(‘- Synagogue Ruins Reveal }"crcx Quicker Relief from again. Taitt is playing left field |cause he had been playing sum- Hot Weather Foot Troubles Mrs. Olaf Swanson is a passen- gg‘r:::a AL S 32 g: | 212) gg 2 Tn;ce g{g;' for, Ifdianapdlis in the Amerlcanimer ball, he promptly quit school | Ancient Church B“lld“s‘ r x'mro.hbound on the North- jtomerindily P 71 i 50 51 3 0 Clear As.rocmzvmn“and Carlyle is playing [and took up his duties on the| : Just rub those stinging, painful stern due Saturda: route hers | right. Taitt was sold to the Phil- | mound. | stern due Saturday en R e e e 0 5 3 o e Bl e Phil- | mound. | JERUSALEM, July 28—An an-|corns briskly with Moone's Emerald om Oakland, California to spu'nd Ketchikan . 64 64 | 8 48 0 42 cm‘olgs hy lanta and Carlyle releas- Goes Up 'cient synagogue paved with fine|Oil if you want to get rid of them sumn}sr with her‘husband who Prince Rupert 66 62 50 53 0 06 Cldy | this season. | Winning three and losing eizht'mosaics has been uncovered at El! quickly, Binding the corns with a | emm?_\e(} at the Alaska Juneais. | paooion % 78 58 58 8 0 Clear | TET et was not so good arecord, even for Hamma, where the frontiers of cloth soaked in Emerald Oil will | ey will accupy- one ‘of the‘Rlea— Seattle . g 4 l 56 56 12 0 Pt.Cldy: CY GLAD TO LEAVE PITTS- a beginner, but he came to Cleve- | Palestine, Syria and Trans-Jor- further speed their departure. © cottages. Mrs. Swanson is ac- | piuoig 80 78 | . 58 58 6 02 Cldy | BURGH | land the next year for a trial ‘unm converge. Apply the oil wherever your shoes | mpanied by her grand-daughter. | (SR Lo 62 58 54; 54 4 0 Pt.Cldy| })H(‘we‘:‘: “‘“h" "0‘“ 4 1’;2 ade -1mlm | In the central nave are two mo- rub—across the instep, the back of | T R i L F, Where he won, and lost saic panels inscribed with Hebrew |the heels, on the joints. Takes the SR 3 | NEW YORK; July 28—Old Cv|s characters in the Judaea-Aramic sting and soreness right out. Keeps SERIES 222 NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS | The pressure is moderately low in Bering Sea and the Interior|Moore, Brooklyn hurler. was happy| Finishing the season here, he language. They commemorated feet from blistering and swelling, The Douglas City Council will| with showers in Berlng Sea. The pressure is modreately high north|when the Dodgers left Pittsburgh |won two out of three T SakTa oty Wb opatribated ‘“L eel l“fm_ ¥ s [lm:"md (1, AREL cet as a Board of Equalization| of Hawail and on the Arctic coasi with clear weather over the after a recent series. Moore 10st| The most retiring member of the . erection of the \;“)Sm" ohgallc u‘}nofln\t?“&‘x‘ww\? 3 . c(vfp\{;,v- you | ly 27, 28 and 20, from 8 to 9| castern Interior. Showers fell yesterday from Wrangell to Princetwo games to the Pirates during|Indian camp, Hildy s slowly| 'The Hebrew Univ H;» o A uiu,, ot a'x‘xlxloqb:):tt, \-A,mf Teet 1 THE NEW All property assessments for | Rupert, followed by clearing. Temperatures have fallen i, the ex-|the stay, each time going as ns|this year, but when the club be- salom has been gramted a license hot weather if vou just keep them | e year 1032 are made in the| treme West and have risen slightly in the Interior to a maximum of a relief hurler. ol SR . e 2 B T B ; | . B i i, il | SRS | | gan second eastern invasion to. excavate the ruins, Its archaeo- comfortable this easy way. Money | H b l b ——————— p B it Gae e b 80 degrees at Fairbanks. 5 |he was called upon to face the|logist, Dr. E. L. Sukenik, is an au- back if they still bother you' after| up'no e papers tor saze at “"he Empire | Senziors. The lean wokr- mtche:l thority on ancient synagogues. using Emerald Oil. —adv. y has been materially altered. % " four hits and three errors and a FELIX GRAY, JUNGE PITcHEs seme sketchy baseball. Brodie’s adv. y erk. p - ‘sluw hopper through the box ST T S wlnch was just out of Pete's reach | IN TRUTH A CAR IFOR A NEW AGE! NOTICE < e On and after, this 26th day of | GREAT GAME As ‘}'::‘l:l ic:‘ fimfi‘:’“ :hmv}:‘fil L:':d;“fi A ly, 1932, I will not he responsible rd; At \ contracted by my wife, Brodie y a ash. | BRI G ndh oo i alhae IN 1 ]‘Coughlm lifted @ nasty little fly Y rson unless I personally contract back of third which -Grummet} le debts in writing. ought to have gone back on and adv. ALBERT GUINO. didnt. 1t fell safe for a single, RS L T Elks Get Breaks and Er putting Brodie on second. i Errors Creep In ' AKE up voun rors Aid Them to Ad- ! Manning dribbled a slow one past ‘he box that Pete failed to minster Defeat ‘cover and it filled the bags. Big lIvER BlLE—- Mac' hopped one at Grummatt. Ken Junge hurled the Elks to The ball took a bad hop, carromed " i & victory last night for the second Off Stan's glove into short left ITHWT cnlom" time in threegdays, holding the flclddflnndlél;Odée m;)d Ccugll’llm ) 2 American Legion to four hits and Scored. loskey hit to eLe; d You'll Jump Out of Bed in a lone run while his teammates Who held the ball too long for ~the Morning Ratin’ te Go. _ | cunded out' 11 rouns off Pete & double sl:i:ungp‘eforfi wfilchhthe and. i+|Schmitz in four and two-thirds Stage was ¢ te finally threw " '“fim““;d’uifl.fl innings. Pete had lots of help to third and retired Manning for’ -ad':::étdhm o make you suddenly |in losing the game, only two of the first out. Andrews popped out JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor l JUNEAU-YOUNG | | i " Funeral Parlors Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers Night Phone 1851 Day Phone 12 and buoyant and full of sunshine., the 11 bel of the earned var-,to Hermsen at first. Junge singled’ [Fo ey s ot o sty | i |to score MacSapadden and sent! A NEW LOT e e reson fo ety oNB-ASTot: Bill Sehmitz, who relieved. Pete{McCloskey to third. Ken taking § Ping ia your liver. It shoul out two, ill Schmitz, W g { stcond ‘on., the ‘play. ; of inds of liquid bile into your dally: |in the fifth, held the Elks hitless ! | """'"n"""“ fowing freely, your fodd |and scoreless for the rest of the' Garn juggied Roller's grounder X t. It just decays in { 3 2 p m’hp ;oiu simeds. You have's |game but it was too late to Tepair|briefly then skied the ball to the) BY “ ol taste huulln oy h-'-l - ak the damage done the way Junge|Tightfield wall back of first, Mc-| “dw“,.ddm was pitching. He had plenty of Closkey and. Junge scoring while | stuff on the ball and his control Roller went to second. [Pete lobbed| % u- m— it n:dmc‘m—m'!?: was excellent when he- needed it.|One over to Orme and Bus' parked| R UBY M. AYRE S founds of M.h flov(n: freely and make you | o0 o.owc and Orme hit for the|it on top of Grant Baldwin’s house Y tain wonderf k ‘gentle m’gbez:mm-m% circuft, although Andy's was a|for the circuit, scoring Eddie ahead ! lcenmt:ml:k‘luth‘ bile :lwhfli freak homer. of him. That was curtains for But don’t ask for liver pilla. Ask for Carter's 3 the lanky Vet twirler. Bill Schmitz name Carter's Brought First Tk lr s H Wi S switched in from left” and was Liver Pills. Look un,mgghnflmm&o ? : tate. ©1381C.M.Ca | 1t was this hit in the second|, ... i ganger for the rest of the | game, inning, that brought in the first HOUSE DRESSES in fast color prints All Sizes SPECIAL e |Elks’ score, and was turned from MIDGET CH ;l 2 single into a four-base blow T::“g’: m:'_""“"’ Stop ’Em? by one of the breaks that favored " | omn“m}'yg-m | [the Bills. Andy hit a hard lne) BLES— AB R H PO A B $1 25 MIDNIGHT | |drive to right which Worth went |Coughlin, i #5160 0 . Merchant Lunch—40 cents | |after hard. The Vet outfielder|Manning, 2. ... 4 0 0 3 4 0f SR 1t o |missed the ball and crashed into|MoSpdm, C,3b...4 2 2 1 2 0 i ~T—————==—7|the bleacher bench along the wall. |McOloskey, f. ... 3,1 0 2 0 0 i He was knocked out for a few|XBaker, D, rf. 10000 0 minuutes and Andy rambled home |Andrews, 1b. 8311703 Jun(’au while Baker raced from secondltr’;nli’; 1;5 : f g (1’ : ? o ? base to retrieve the ball Worth |’ F o l Sh Tomorrow’s Styles s sb 1o rocume ‘Dlay & fmocs e Y, ... 3 11 170 gl Samp e op Today” g Brodie, ‘¢f. .-......’3 1T T 1 0 1 “The Little Store With The Bills added three more in the Big Valtes” the fourth an an error, a walk| Totals and two hifs. Big Mac' opened| x_gupstituted for McCloskey in' FEATURING the frame with a single to left,|gipp LI F s his second safety in succession. (ks r iy NEW He went to second when Andrews| ymmyoN— ABRH PO A E . g:oerwed aan:&:;n Hels:ngamm: ol Rt B ! = e gl Blake, i S d m[d whben Ken's sinile through second P i g ? (11 ; i (:.’ ONDRA: KENT wanted ro- ueae ar g0t through Maesen in centerfield. 08 G ol hagpi - Mac’s run was earned as he could | Grummett, 3b. ... 3 0 0 1 2 I' mance ant’happiness; AR Ca gkin have scored on the hit from seC- | Baker, S., 2b. 30001 0 pe K :::; ey BER %0, bajters) Werp | Eermsen, lu;., -2 00 s1e coveted: wealth and. luxury even ' Vets Score in Fourth xConverse, cf. 100100 N MERR! ons: JACKETS |l i B g L 3§11 e Sh e MARK MERRAN it o s e b s OO | o | Garn socked one of Ken's slow| o % 137 55| ANDERSON.®:She contrived deliberately. ta send MERRIMAN out of her life with:a lying promise, thea impulsively || » The O S T Sizes 16 to 42 balls on the nose for threde bases, NS hift b i coukd bhre mde ¥ o I |x—Subsiiated tor Mage 10 izt married him but lacked the courage:ta-prockaim:it to the world. m Trying to-deceive herself,; SONDRA raced recklessly A : fige. base. 0 s;;redw-nm:y 502 Saa 1 mtwflznu B Wty toward disillusion and heart-break for herself and her secret husband. SONDRA'S selfishness had pushed them to the (/ b, i v 0 m‘"‘m"mfi;s"z,fi;fié saca; doule) prink of: dis. sten whart a MSM’ climax in. her life aveiied a traseiy-lkcomlfim scrial of Youih and Romance. at Juneau Equipped Roadster Coach Coupe Cabriolet ....... p— Y] Sedan (4 door) ... 840.00 51 ’ near the walk and bounded over / Ll}‘-:...AA' |the fence, These were the first|to Andrews 1, MacSpadden toMan- Cl o f : Free Wheeling and Syncromesh > § hits off Junge. Bill Schmitz got|ning to Andrews 1; bases on balls,| ~.4 g 85, f§ . CONNORS MOTOR a single in the fifth and Worth [off Junge 1, off P. Schmitz, 1. 3 48 STARTS TONIGHT; IN o CO.. Iné 2 single in the sixth; which made|struck out, by Junge 5 by P. k] Juneau’s Own Store up the Legion's four safeties for | Schmitz 2, by Bill Schmitz 3; hits the day. 8, runs 11 of P. Schmitz in 4 and TuE EMP]RE : ; : Ten Elks batted in- the fifth,[2:3 inntngs; hits 0, asunm} ola tor sle at- ,,,,,,.,,.,,,,.....,}mnmynmmmmmzwm ; losing pitcher, P. ‘ome..w b

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