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MAGGIES CHANGEDHER MIND FIFTY TIMES TRYIN' TO MAKE UP HER MIND WHERE WE SHOULD | | SPEND THE QUMMER AN 7T HAS DECIDED AT LAST TO GoTo L THE SEASHORE: THAT SUITS ME- © 1933, King Features Syndicate, Inc , Great Britain rig! hes reserved \THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE; TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1933. BY GOLLYTMERE COMES DANNY MALONE- \WHAT IN THE \WORLD! 1S AILIN HIM- "GOODNESS, MAN' YOU LOOK TERRIBLE- YOU NEED A REST-YOU SHOULD GO AawAYy NOW- | NEVER ThHE THAT S WHATS TMATTER \WITH ME- PITTSBURGH IS IN WIN STREAK; TAKES 2 GAMES Recover from Batting Slump to Beat Brooklyn in Doubleheader PITTSBURGH, Penn, July 18.— Snapping out of a hitting slump, Pittsburgh yesterday pounded out 32 blows and swept to victory in a double header with Brooklyn in the only games played in the Major Leagues. h Pittsburgh advanced to within half a game of the second place Chicago Cubs and four games of the leading Giants. The scores yesterday were 14 to 7 and 2 to 0. It was Swift's tenth victory of the season compared to five de- feats. Swetonlc hung up his sev- enth triumph by scoring a shut- out. GAMES MONDAY National League Pittsburgh 14, 7; Brooklyn 2, 0. American League No games played. Pacific Coast League No games played yesterday . as teams were traveling. to open this afternoon on the following sched- ule for this week: p: San Francisco at Sacramento. Portland at Mission. Los Angeles at Oakland. Seattle at Hollywood. Pacific Coast League Won Lost 64 42 61 43 60 44 60 45 .. 49 54 46 61 40 65 38 64 National League ‘Won Lost .. 48 33 40 38 41 43 ®% 47 50 Pet, 604 687 577 571 476 430 381 372 Sacramento Hollywood Los Angeles Porntland Oakland Missions . San Francisco Seattle Pet. 593 545 542 518 .500, 440 440 419 New York . Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis Boston Brooklyn Philadelphia .. Cincinnati 48 45 .44 .43 . 36 87 36 | low SIX-DAY BICYCLE RACES—-—POUF! FRENCH HOLD RACE AS IS RACE e e | in the symbolic yellow sweater, 15; AND wIFE HERE a big shot in French sports the! A PARIS., July 18.—American cycl- ing fans who sit bleary eyed until the small hours at six-day bike races have nothing for endurance on French fans who each year fol- breathlessly the “Tour de France” lasting twenty-seven days. For almost a month every Frenchman who has a bicyele— and cyclists are thick in France —follows the “tour” nmile by mile through the newspapers, the radio and the news reels and when the procession comes through his town takes the day off to be on hand. (Carloads. of reporters follow the racers tirelessly and report by the column on how Leducq took the mountain roads on high and P:lis- sier pedalled in the rain. And the winner, all togged out American League Won Lost 53 30 . 53 43 . 42 40 40 Pat. 639 639 518 500 AT1 Washington New York .. Philadelphia ... Chicago Detroit Cleveland Boston .. 35 St. Louis .33 57 Juneau City League (Second Half) Won. Lost 3 422 367 Pct 571 .500 42 American Legion Moose 4 Elks .. a5 PRAISES ALASKA SCENERY O. F. Guptill of Fontana, South- ern California, a section famed for its fruit and poultry,.is a round tripper on the Alaska. He is a native of Maine, and stated the Alaska scenery reminded him great- ly of the Maine coast, although he admitted that Alaska surpassed it in beauty and variety of scenery. R < i CALL FOR BIDS Sealed bids will be received at the City Clerk’s office up to'5 p.m. Friday, July 21, for the construc- tion of 150 feet of concrete side- walk, four feet wide, on 4th St., between Gold and Harris St., and 200 feet of concrete sidewalk, five feet wide, on Gold St., between 4th and 5th Sts. Specifications upon request. Right reserved to re- ject any and all bids. A. W. HENNING, —adv. City Clerk. 460! 6. W. SKINNER remainder of the year. ( This year there were eighty start- ers representing France, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland, Germany and a scattering from most of the rest of Europe. This year’s tour, which will fin- ish' July 23, covers twenty-three s f istages, roughly encireling the en-| rives . Last nght {tire French 'boundary. The total Ve |distance is 2,735 miles. The lon3- .G w. Skinner, President of the est day’s run is 182 miles, while the Ajaska Pacific Salmon Corporation, shortest over the Pyrences MOUn- ang Mrs. Skinner, arrived in Ju- tains is 56. i neau on their motorship Jeanette! The winner is determined by the a4 9:30 o'clook last evening and total elapsed time for the twenty- wj) remain in port until sometime three 1laps, the winner of ¢ach this afternoon when they will leaya day's run getting a bonus of tWO for the Port Althorp cannery of minutes. the company, to remain for severa} 3, days. They will stay in Southeast Al- aska during the remainder of the canning scason visiting the wvari;, ous canneries of the corpomtionj and return to Seattle early jn/ September. On the way north Mr, Skinner stopped at the plants at Ketchikan and Kake, both of which ) he will visit again during the sea- WITH FRIENDS President mka Pacific { Salmon Corporation' Ar- ‘ JUNKERS PLANE OFF | EARLY TODAY FOR CHICHAGOF ISLAND | | | The Junkers F-13 plahe, belong- 1ing to Col. Victor Spencer, of Van- couver, which has been in Juneau ) |since yesterday morning, left at w0 |6:30 o'clock this morning for Lisi-| Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Skinnef, | he Jeanette are Mr. and Mrs. |anski Strait, Chichagof Island and " * : will return to Juneau, this evening, ®- A. Johnston and Mr. and Mrs, | 'W. H. Harris, mining expert, who L. Burke, all of Seattle. Mz, is with the party will spend the Johnston is manager of tbe Hattan day looking overthe Apex El Nido Paint Co. in the Puget Sound City mine on Chichagof Island. W. R, and Mr. Burke is Manager of Stan- McClusky is p”gm of the ]m_?c dard Stations,” Incorporated of Se- plane and F. M. Staines, mechan- attle, a subsidiary of the Standard | ie A ’ 0il Company. 1 “It is much too early to comment | D. J. McRae, alsg a mining ex-' pert, who with Mr. ing over mining prospects in Alas- ka and northern Canada for Col Spencer, remained in Juneau to- day. ‘. this year in the canneries of South- east Alaska as the season ope) only a short time,agq, ‘but we (for a good run,” Mr. Skinner & e | The canneries being operated by | mT;i,;m;mumsg‘:efl:;y ;’::;ft the Alaska Pacific Salmon Corpor- | row for Prince Rupert and Fort ton all have full crews. working | | nery in Ketchikan | George, continuing from the latter A0 @t the cannery i pla(::eg to Vancouver, B. C. ,only local labor is being employed | o while at the others preference was | !shown to native and local emp]oy—‘ BABY GIRL BORN TO ;ees. according to Mr. Skinner. “In | MR. AND MRS. F. P. \all we have about six hundred mna- | HAMILTON ON SUNDAY tives working this season,” he de-_‘ (clared. | Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Hamilton are, After their arrival in Juneau the parents of a fine baby girl {Iast evening Mr. and Mrs. Sklmmr" born at their residence on Sunday land their guests called informally | evening. The young lady weighed ion Gov. John W. Troy and his, eight and one half pounds. Both'family. she and her mother are gemngi William Edris, of the Skinner along nicely according to Dr.-H. C.|and Eddy Corporation, Seattle, and DeVighne, the.attending physician. | Mrs. Edris, arrived this morning on the steamer Aleutian and will| DAILY SPORTS CARTOON . 1) THE SIXTH ROLND CARNERA LANDED A HIGH RIGHT IT WAS T4 RIGHT THAT BROUGHT PRMO THE WORLOD'S HEAVY WEIGHT 11 -THE 8I6GEST EAR, THE CROWN MAN TO, RT3 is DESPISED i join Mr. and Mrs. Skinner on.the Jeanette. Old papers 4 The Empire [OUST ST SOMETHING NEW! —Try Our— TOMATO ROLLS Juneau Bakery LCapital, L5 Parlors. G. J. PAUL, Prop. PHONE 569 COLD BEER Delicious Luncheons BEER TO TAKE HOME Your Choloe of 5° Brands{ 3 bottles, 55¢ ¢ We supply the paper bags, We comply with all Federal and J"firrlh'unl ‘reig\nauon!. & & \ N L Harris is look- °P the size of the pack expected |3 .. Joins Red Birds Leo Durocher, regarded as the eatest shortstop in the National ague, who is the principal figure in the trade between the Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Cardinals. Du- rocher and two teammates go to the Cards in_exchange for Sparky Adams, Allyn Stout and Paul Der- ringer. The acquisition of Du- rocher makes the Cards dangerous contenders for the league pennant. JAMES M'CLOSKEY BACK HOME FROM TRIP TO PIONEER'S HOME IN SITKA James McCloskey, member of the Board of Trustees of the Pioneers’ Home, in Sitka, returned on the matorship Northland from a visit to the home. Mr. McCloskey Wwas in quga‘ for about a week. e MRS. NELIA HILL ENTERS . HOSPITAL FOR TREATMENT [ Mrs. Nelia Hill entered St. Ann’s Hospital for medical treatment last eyening, Mrs. Hill, whose home is in| Misselisj, is visiting her son, Frvin® Hill here. S e The advertisements are your guide to efficient spending. “Where shall T have this prescription filled, doc- tor?” When your physician recommends us he does so because he knows that our prescrip- tions are compounded of the best ingred- ients we can buy. We do not rate” preparation we make Juneau Drug By GEORGE McMANUS ' VE BEEN AT 'THE SEASHORE AN ITS MADE A WRECK By ALAN GOULD Among other things | have figured: That July would find the high- |1y touted Pirate outfizider of Wan- |er, Lindstrom and Waner hituing for a combined batting average of a few points over .23), while fh2 Phillies boasted a tsio of Klein, Schulmerich and Fullis clouting the old horsehide for .350 or better, the |greatest offensive by any ouier trio in cither major lcague | That mot even such terrific thumping as this could b the self-same Phils out of {lie National League cellar, whe the ured to be .a. real tender. That New York would be lead- lin\; the league by five games on July 4, that ancient barometr:z date on the baseball calendar, but that jit would be the Gian's and not |the Yankees. The Yanks ware trail- ing Washington by 2!: games at the same time. That the afore-mentioned Giants would bz getting as good or better pitching from Hubbell, Fitzsim- mons, Schumacher and Parmelce than the widely-advertised Cardi- nal staff would be geiting from Hallahan, Dean, Carleton and | Walker. And that both Boston clubs would win double headers on the sam? day (July 4) from such teams as |the Giants and Athletics???? who woula R2i con- For What It's Worth Speaking of the standing of the clubs at the critical milestone of the race, July 4, our energetic Mr. Paul Mickelson of Chicago dives into a bushel of figures and comes up with the following interesting conclusions: R 1. The leader through July 4 'in] the American League for the past five years won the flag. 2. The leader through July 4 in the National League for the past five years won the pennant twice, llost it three times. St. Louis made up the most ground in 1930, jump- ing from fourth place on Indepen- dence Day to first place at the finish. Pittsburgh in 1929 and 1932, and Chicago in 1930 were on top “Oh, most any druggist can do it, but if you want to be SURE, better call up Juneau Drug Co.” on " July fig-| 4 but landed second in | the final standing. Giants “Safe” 3. From 1928 through 1930 the one-two clubs in the Amerxcan\ League stayed that way from July | 4 to the finish. The greatest | shake-up in the American was last year, outside of first place which | was occupied by the Yankees all the way. 4. A leader with 50 games won on July 4 looks “in” in the Ameri- can League; in the National, the ! leader with as many as 44 in the games won column orally | safe, | is ge SALES EVERY MONTH IN THE YEAR, 1933 Auction Sales Dates July 25 October 24 P. S. On July 4, the Senators| had won 47 games, the Giants 44. | T o i { | ! Fort ) ‘When the 1933 Fort vitation meet, golf title. of the year in as many quests. Her other crowns are the Fort Worth city, Texas state and | Southern. | FOUR TITLES IN ROW i September 26 December 21 August 29 November 21 Special Sales Held on request of shippers Worth, Tex., July 18 Miss . Anlela Gorczyca won Worth women’s ir it was her fou Advances will be made as usual when requested. NOTICE! The Juneau Water Works have moved their offices to the First| National Bank from where it will transact all business. adv. JOHN RECK, Manager. Transferred by telegraph if desired. THE SEATTLE FUR EXCHANGE 1008 Western Avenue Seattle, U. S. A, Classified ads pay. 1T NEW! DIFFERENT! | PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOPPE Second Floor, Triangle Bldg. Daily Emptre Want Ads Pay If Iv’s Important ¢ To You- —it’s important to us! We regard the problems of our customers as our own problems. We are genuinely , anxious. to help-our customers solve their. . problems, surmount their difficulties, and get ahead financially. That’s why we say, “If it’s important to you, it's important to us.” You may count on this personal interest in every transaction with this bank. FIRST NATIONAL DRAUGHT BEER Equipment Bleck Tin Pipe Rubber Beer Hose Pumps Chromium Plated Beer Faucets Gas Regulators buy “cut drugs nor do we use them in any Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STORE" :{dn'éau Cash Grocery % P CASH AND CARRY“ Corner Second and Seward X Sqlmon DON'T MISS Anything Good! BEER LUNCHES Creek Roadhouse ANTON REI S Double Distributor Valves Chromium Plated Picnic Outfits Complete We have in our organization Mr. Ahlers, Mr. Baker and Gee Bee, all old-time plumbers who thoroughly understand the installation of Beer Equipment and the handling of block tin pipe. If you want a real good job installed as it should be Phone 34. RICE & AHLERS CO. Plumbings, Heating and Sheet Metal “We tell you in advance what the job will cost” THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL”-of course! Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Heating Sheet Metal