The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 24, 1933, Page 5

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WELL-THE FAMILY SECHS PLACE TO SPEND BOT\ THINK THEY RE ALLS Lt NEW YORK AN | LEAD: TAKES 2 GAMES SUNDAY Washington Loses to De- troit and Slips to | Second Place : NEW YORK, July 24— Th2 Yankees regained the American League lead Sunday by defeating Cleveland 8 to 1 in both games of a doubleheader while Washington dropp:d a single game to Detroit. | GAMES SUNDAY | | racinic Coast League ! San Francisco 7, 2; Sacramento 47, Seattle 5, 2; Hollywood 9, 7. Los Angeles 17; Oakland 2, 2. | Portland 3, 3; Missions 1, 2. National League New York 8; Brooklyn 5. Philadelphia 5, 1; Chicago 9, 3.' Pittsburgh 14; Cincinnati 6, 6. Boston 0, 2; St. Louis 12, 2. American League | Detroit 12; ‘Washington 8. i Chicago 2, 2; Boston 6, 7. H Cleveland 1, 1; New York 8, 8. Juncau City League Elks 3; Legion 5. POP BOTTLES AND RAIN HALT ONE DOUBLE GAME PITTSBURGH, Penn., July 24— Pittsburgh and New York divided | last Saturday’s- double header and ! ended the six game series on even' terms as Carl Hubbell pitched the League leaders to a 1 to 0 victory in the opener and the Bucs batted out a 7 'to 2 victory in the second game. The first game was interrupted in the eighth inning by a shower of pop bottles as the fans objected to a decision: by Umpire Moran. 1] The second game was halted for an hour on account of rain in the first inning. 1 GAMES SATURDAY | Pacific Coast League Seattle 3; Hollywood 2. Portland 15; Missions 8. Los Angeles 11; Oakland 1. San Francisco 7; Sacramento 8. National League New York 1, 2; Pittsburgh 0, 7. Brooklyn 8; Cincinnati 0. Boston 9; St. Louis 5. ) Philadelphia 1; Chicago 4. THAT THE SEA-SHORE 1S THE O AGREE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 24, 1933. By GEOR MAGGIE! AFTER THINKIN' VT OVER- SHORE 15 AS GOOD A PLACE TO GO AS 6E McMANUS « | GUESD THE SEA- SRS BILLS, FIVE TO .| THREE, SUNDAY Cleveland 2; New York 1. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Sacramento .69 44 Portland 157 45 .5935 . ‘ S Hotopoed e 5 Erskine and Junge Stage 3 ngeles . - | . Qading 52 s am| Pretty Duel, Latter Win- Missions 46 68 404 > R : San Francisco .42 01 73| ning on Bunched Hits Seattle 41660 - 3| pygereating the Eks Sunday § Natonal League |to 3 in one of the prettiest games ot o PC"'or the year, the American Legion New, Xork - i v |continued its march toward the Chicagd K second half championship. Rain, Pittsburgh 49 43 533 o iting just before the time for| 8. - Louis LD 'Stfi;whlch the game was set, kept down o s R '225 the attendance which was the Teodklye. gl 30 'Als‘smallest of any Sunday this year, P?flladelphia il ‘447 'Put those who braved the elements Cmcmn‘“‘:“"'m““ 1 5: " |got a lot of baseball for their mon- gy ob. | €V ! Won « gt };3'5‘ It was a battle between Jun: SEw. XAk 51 3 ivet hurler, and Erskine, Elks' star, L ehligon S 3 trom the first to the last inning.| PhiladBiin W ‘g ‘47 |Each man yielded 11 hits, including o 48 'flshwo triples and two two-baggers. Chicage 2 5 '“B'They were both given fine sup- gle\::land :: 53 "444 |POTt and the few errors made didn't 8 Touts 3B 6y 4 ps | FRPY R EXDEXLLTR, Juneau City League Misjudged Fly Did (Second Half) But a misjudged fly ball was| Won Lost Fct |costly to the Bills. It was respon- American Legion ... 6 3 667 sible for two scores and that was ‘Moose 4 5 444 |the margin by which the Warriors ‘Elks . 3 5 375 | won. e Both teams did all their run- GYES GONG WITH .;;mngx in zh;: ;mdh carnlo. Up to (that time each had a few runners wooD’ ALASKA TRIP aboard the runways but neither could crash through the other’s de- Superintendent H. L. Wood of fense for a tally. 4 the Seventh-day Adventist ‘Alaska In the first of the' fifth, with Mission and daughter Wanda, came one hand down, Litfle Mac’' shot to Juneau last week with the mis- a liner through first to the right- sion boat Messenger. After spend- field wall ‘for a triple. ‘Jernberg ing a few days here they will con- scored him with & hot single tinue their tour of Southeast Alas- through second. Livingston tripled ka and will be accompanied by over Stedman’s: head in -center, Pastor and Mrs. Gyes. \Bob counting. And Curley ambled Mr. Wood spoke at the regular home when Garn bounced one. church service last week which was over the fence back of left for a held at 11 o'clock Saturday morn- two-bagger. ing at the chapel. In the after- Warriors Rally Too noon a baptismal service was held.| These three scores looked as big SR TR as a house in view of the way NOTICE! Erskine had been turning back the | Warrior sluggers. The Vets, how- The Juneau Water Works have ever, were not to be denied. The moved their offices to. the First first two men were easy outs, Rol- National Bank from where it will ler popping out to Garn and Bted- transact all business. x |man fanning. adv. JOHN RECK, Manager. | Then the wrecking crew of the ———— |Legion ran amok. Worth poked RELIABLE woman .wants house- out a short fly to right for a sin- work. Telephone 396. !gle. Rustad duplicated the blow DAILY SP BARNEY HAS WON ORTS CARTOON —By Pdp { - / AlLL SoRrTs o INTERCOLLES/ATE BARNEY PENN ACE STAGED A COME -BACIS | NATIONAL DECATH AT CHicAEO™ R QAP' TRACIC HONOR'S. ¢ ~BVT HIS IS HiS . FIRST NATiovaL OECATHLOR TITLE, . BERLINGER.- -THE FORMER ALL-AROUND Wis THE" >~ All Rigits Reserved Ly The Associated Fress ERAND Lo £ LAST SUMMER. To HOLO DN To A voB. [+ in center. Allen met one of Ers- kine's fast balls squarely and drove it to right center for three bases, scoring George and Rusty. Boyd singlad to left, scoring Allen with the tying run. Andrews smashed the ball to deep right. Koski should have had it, but he misjudged it and let it go over his head for a \triple, Boyd counting. Junge dou- bled to leit center, chasing An- drews fcross the plate with the fifth and last Vet score. i Pitchers Tighten Tp | After the nfth the pitchers tightened up and there were no real chances for either tzam 1 count. Koskl singled in the sixth and Livingston in the seventh. They were the only Elks to reach base after the fifth. Manning was the only Warrior to sce first after the fifth. He poled ‘out a long single to right in the ieighth inning after two were away \and died at first. i Four double killings featured the {defensive play. Three of these were credited to the Vet infield, Roller starting two and Junge the third. Roller turned in a beautiful catch in the seventh when he ran into left field territory on the foul line and snared Erskine's fly. | Garn’s one-handed catch of Al- len’s line drive in the first was a darb. It was labeled a clean hit | which enabled Abby to double Rustad at first. Legion Moves Ahead The game: ELKS— ABRHPOAE MeSpdn, M.,. 2b 5,1.1.24 49 Jernberg, 1f< M:#50 172 0 €8 Erskine, p 400080 Livingston, 3b 4 1. 3% 2.0 Garn, ss 402240 McSpdn, H, ¢ 4011700 Haines, 1b 4 0 110 01 Converse, cf 300 } 00 Koski, rf 301100 “Blake, rf 100000 Totals 37 3112410 1 *__Substituted for Koski in sev- enth inning. VETS— ABRHPOAE Worth, rf 412101 Rustad, 2b 412340 Allen, ¢ 411300 Boyd, If 411100 Andrews, 1b .......4 1 212 1 0 Junge, P ... .4 02330 Manning, 3b 401011 Roller, ss .4 001 40 Stedman, of ........3 0 0 3 0 0 Totals 35 5112713 2 Summary: Earned runs, Elks Vets 5; two-base hits, Haines and Garn, Andrews and Junge; three- base hits, M. MacSpadden and Liv- ingston, Allen and Andrews; dou- ble plays, Elks, Garn to Haines Vets, Roller to Rustad to andrews 2, Junge to Andrews 1; bases on balls, off Junge 1; struck out, by Erskine 6, by Junge 2; left on bases, Elks 8, Vets 6; stolen bases (Boyd 1. Umpires: Hermle at the plate: Marshall and O’'Brien on bases. Scorer: Pegues. minutes. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS] PAINTS | Let us show you howto economize and still have the best. Hardware Co. ‘Time of game: one hour and 45| Read A New Serial b, BYNOPSIS: Nicholas Boyd (s a etar fallen from the movie heavens —beoause he played the hero once too often. He rescued the girl but only a . carred face and a Hmp. and @ cancelled contract .oere his re- wards. Even Bernie Bovd. his wife, cannot face obsourity in England, and when Nicholas salls for home, she remains in New York. On the ahip Georgie Bancroft repeatedly lorces Boyd to talk to her: at last icholas tells her that he is fond of her, but that they must part when the ship docks. But le gives her his t(gnretu case to replace one that had Dbelonged to her dead {father. s Chapter Eight HOME FACTS / WHEN Georgie got back to her cabin that night she found Neliy Foster already there, smearing cream on a face that was disfigured by weeping. Georgle shut the door and stood with her back to it for a moment, theén she laughed & little hysteric- ally, Nelly turned round. *“What are you laughing at?” she uemanded sharply. i “You, look so f-funny,” Georgle sald. Nelly flushed. “Well, you've been howling too,” she said defiantly. I know.” Georgie sat down on the side of the bed and sighed. “What do we do next?” she de- mahded, “Do!” Nelly screwed the lid on the cream pot with vicious fingers. “I'knoW what 1 do right enough. 1 g0 back to the shop and serve nasty old'women who treat me as if | were dift, from nine to six.” Georgie leaned her chin In cer haitd, “How did you get such a long hol- 1day?” she asked interestedly. “Doctor’s certificate,” the elder girl answered briefly “I had a vile cough and he thought I was con- sugptive. The head floorwalker ~t pup placgslikes gna; too, apd that helped. He'd marry me If he could.” “WHY faa’t he?” A “Beeause he's got a wife.” “And .would you marry him?” Georgle asked. Nelly shrugged thin shoulders out of hericheap camisole, “Don’t know. He's not bad, but no matter how he's dressed or wher- ever he s, you could always swear he was a floorwalker. “He might be kind,” Georgie sub- mitted. “Oh, he's kind enough,” Nelly agreed with weary scorn. “But you want something more than that—at least I do. Aren’t you going to un- dress?” “l' suppose so.” Georgle slipped out of her crimson frock, and beld it up at arm’s length, regarding it with rather wistful eyes. “Nicholas Boyd sald I' look like a robim,” ghe said. Nelly laugbed. “He would! He's been well tralned. Have you been crying about bim?” she demanded. “Yes.” “Why?” “I don’t know. tully sad.” “It's a swindle, that’s what it is,” Nelly assertcd rather violently. She was silent for 8 moment, brushing her short s'ralght hair with rather unnecessary violence, then she turned around again. 'l SUPPOSB Boyd has told you quite nicely and kindly that when you get to Southampton it's 1 think lite's aw- | all over, eh?" “}h..% golng to see Mr. Boyd " Georgle said quletly. h, are you? Well, you've E xd im enough,” Nelly said with blunt candor. Ggorgle’s eyes grew distressed. < you think ‘1 have?” she slg] “And yet | haven't chased himin the ‘7ay you mean. [t's been in quite’'s different way.” “Zhere is only one way,” Nelly d - clarpd 'stolidly. “Men only ever want you for one thing; besides, he margled. I've seen his wife. She's like & fairy.” “A very cheap falry then,” Georgle saldiquickly, then she sighed again. “Thit' wds beastly of me,” she said. ‘I expéct she's trighttully nice when ron her” . “Nicel!” Nelly was scornful. “Nicel and le.ves that poor devil of s man to come all this way alone?” Do yott know—" she grew suddenlv mysterious. “My bellet s, that he doegn’t ever mean to get to South- ampton at alL.” “What do you mean?” “Qnly that many a better man than he is has gone overboard just before the boat gets in,” Nelly de clared. *“It's the kind of thing a fallen film star would do, make & pictaresque exit, and mind you, I ddnt®lame Him.” Georgia said nothing: sha was sit- 2 he World FORGOT || denly Nelly began to weep. “You | Ruby M. Ayres ting very still, her eyes downcast, her slim body suddenly tense, Nelly went on, “You won't ever see him ag "1 any more than I shall ever see you. ‘Ships that pass in the night,’ that's what we are.” “But 1 gshall see you agaln,” Georgie said quletly. “I wanc you to come and stay with me If you will” “Stay with you?” The two girls looked at one anoth- er silently for a moment, then sud- ( don’t really mean it. 1 know if we hadn’t had to share a cabin you wouldn’t have spoken to me at ail. It's kind of you to say you'll ask we, but I know you won't when it comes | to the point.” “I don’t think you know much about anything,” Georgle said comle- ally. “You've got everyone and ev- | erything all wrong. Life isn't balf | so0 bad if you won't let it be. And,” Georgie went on positively, “You're quite wrong If you think I'm in love with Mr. Boyd.” Nelly climbed Into bright pink pyjamas. “Alright, have it your own way,” she said. “I'm going to bed.” “And when will you come and stay with me? [I'll give you my ad- dress before we land, and you must let me know when you are free.” “Weekends are my only time,” Nelly said; she sat on the side of the bed, one foot already under the sheet, “I say, do you mean {t?” she asked agaia tensely. “Oft course 1 do.” The foot came out again, and Nel- ly took an impulsive dive across the narrow cabin and dropped a half- med kiss on Georgie's cheek. Well, you're decent,” she sald. “Goodnight.” She disappeared beneath the bed- clothes. EORGIE finished undressing and lay down. She bad never felt more wide awaXke in her life. “Many a better man than he Is has gone overboard just before the boat gets in—" Nelly’s words haunt- ed her. > It was all nonsense of course; Nicholas Boyd was not that sort of man—not a coward! and yet, well he certainly hadn’t much left to live for, not now, He wasn’t anybody any more, and it was quite possible that even his wife bad turned him down. How could a woman be 8o cruel? A woman who had shared his suc cess too. Georgie’s beart ached for the man who had sald to her so quietly, an’ without a vestige of self-pity, “You're a little fool, Robin, a bigger little fool than even I took you for if you can squeeze out & single tear for an ugly, scarred devil who has toppled off his brass pin- nacle into obscurity.” « That was ths only time he bad ever spoken about himself to ber; no, he was not a coward. Life might have knocked him down, but Georgle was sure it couid never master film; he would take up the broken threads and make something out of them, even if he had to do it alone. “But | belleve 1 ghal) be there to help him,” she told herseit. “Some- thing in me tells me quite surely that I shall be there to help him.” She fell asleep at.last, full of quiet confidence, the onmly trouble being that when she awoke next morning life did not seem quite sc simple. She could not find Nicholas though she hunted t1e decks for him. It was raining a little and the sea was grey and rather choppy. People were packing and the gangways and passages were al- ready stacked with big trunks and suit-cases. Georgle wandered about on Boyd’s deck peering at the labels on all the big trunks (she was sure that Nicholas would have quantities of luggage) but when at last she found a trunk that bore his name, it was simply labelled “London.” And London was such a big place! Her uncl» had once told her:that if a man wished to hide, it was safer to go out of his own house and into the one next uoor than to go to Lon- don and hope to be lost, but on. the other hand Mrs, Lovelock who cooked and cleaned the house and got her own way in everything, had always declared that nobody could ever find you In London if you didn’t want them to, “You can walk about London for a month and never see a soul you know,” she had once told Georgle. “London’s the loneliest place in the world for all that It’s supposed to have five million people in it.” (Copyright, 1938, Doubleday Doran) 7 Theres somethmg m the adver- “.foday o interest, you. them, A dog and a rabbit are the best of pals at the home of T. R. Daw- D e e e N X i hese SAFEGUARDS PURE DRUGS protect you and your family against the dangers of infection, aid you in fighting the diseases and ill health in life. TRAINED MEN assist'you and your doctor in perfecting the defense against sick- ness. They have your interests in mind, always. PROMPT DELIVERY may be the means of saving a life. That is why we insist : upon it and are at your.call both day and night. JUNEAU DRUG CO.V “The Corner Drug Store” FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON ' Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 [N Prompt Delivery LET A CHECKING ACCOUNT STAND GUARD over Your Finances! A Checking Account at this bank will safeguard your funds; it will eliminate the risk of loss or theft of cash; it fur- nishes a legal receipt for each expendi- ture; and it supplies,a secord of each disbursement. Let a Checking Account stand guard over your finances. In addition to the protection, you will enjoy the conven= {fence of paying by check. 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