The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 17, 1934, Page 5

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FATHER-DEAR- THAT |1 QUST KNOW HE 1D | DINNER WHEN MOTHER COMES {| HOME- SHE'LL. ASK IL HiM TO STAY- Bt GIVEN CLUB IN B, B. LEAGUE Fourth Club Added to City league — Will Pick Teams Next Sunday The City Baseball League will ase its membership to four the 1934 season, accord- o plans laid last night at a of the management pre- r by Judge W. A. Hola- The new cntray d by the Douglas which had rep- the meeting and at be composed largely residing in_ Douglas, gh definite assignments of to the teams will not be until next Sunday afte: oon. Pending that a schedule be prepared for a split season, h half comprising 20 games. y-six ball tossers are en- for the year, including n new talent that is touted highly. The management of League is pleased over the out- and predicts faster ball than r before. Emmett Botelho, who has func- tioned for several years on the umpiring staff, was i Chief Umpire for 1934. empowered to select his own staffl of assistants. J. E. Pegues was elected Vice- President, succeeding George Kohl- hepp, who Tickets for the entire 40-game n will be placed on sale shortly at a $5 rate. The season will open as planned on May 8. The usual opening ceremonies will be arranged by J. L. Gray, Chief of the Fire De- partment. —e—— LYMAN S. PECK IS HERE ON HIS WAY TO NEW YORK CITY Lyman 8. Peck,~General Manager of the Pacific Alaska Airways, arrived in Juneau aboard the steamer Alaska last night and will se: remain here until Thursday, when | he will take the seaplane Baranof to Petersburg to catch the North- western southbound. Mr. Peck is on his way to New York City, headquarters of the Pan-American Airways, of which the Pacific Alaska is a subsidiary. He will have his headquarters in New York City until the late sum- mer or early fall when he expects to return to Alaska. HORRIO COUNT DE CEIT 15 IN THE PARLOR AND GOING TO STAY FOR to be permitted to en- al-| declined renomination. | WILL YOU PARDON ME WHILE | ' PHONE? | FORGOT TO DO 'T THIS MORNIN~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, ‘TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1934. [ 5 3 HELLO! 15 THIS THE POLICE STATION? OH! HELLO-CHEF' I'D LIKE YOoU TO COME OUT AN HAVE DINNER TO-NIGHT- GOOD - COME RIGHT AWAY - i 329 Feamies §;idicaie T By GEORGE McMANUS HE'S GONE- DAUGHTER! | FTER HIGH JUMP | COMING DOWN A i | { Jim Oglesby, Los Angeles first baseman, is getting back down to earth after jumping for a high ball tossed from the third base. Monroe Dean, a young man of the Portland team, took advantage of the situas tion and is seen reaching first safely. It happened during a baseball game between the Angels and Beavers. (Associated Press Photo) ISOUTTOWIN |ONE GOOD GRID - TWENTY GAMES TEAM LINED UP ‘OId “Silver Fox™ Pmmises?l'lu"k Anderson Says El- Great Work for Min- even Should Go neapolis Team | Placeiirld Win RALEIGH, N. C, April 17. Hunk Anderson, former football coach at Notre Dame who trans- | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn,, April 17. —Old Jess Petty, patriarch of American Association pitchers, has ferred to North Carolina State put himself on the spot. College this year, believes “one He says he is going to win 20 good team” can be selected from games this season for the Min-(his varsity squad next fall. —* neapolis club—a victory for each| Hopeful of a better season than |year he has been in organized|the college has experienced in | baseball. many years, Hunk has been tell- | Jess copped 18 victories in his| ™8 the Slomd. Swaspec 4 P “We will have one good team {18th ¥ baseball. Th o | Jae i baeet e “SI°|1is fall, a team that ought to go ver Fox” is in pretty good shape, 1 Ve f » according to reports from Mont- RismeEen v{m e gamgs. | gomery, Ala, where the Millers He lays claim to an exceptionally strong line from end to end and 'four stellar backs. The college is seeking games with Northwestern, { Chicago and possibly Fordham. - e "are training, and is under his us- ual spring weight. Petty, a southpaw and former hurler for the Brooklyn Dodgers, | was one of the first Millers to re-| | report. |N. G. NELSON LEAVES TO MEET FAMILY IN SOUTH; WILL RETURN IN MAY P TR ' D. M. BOTHWELL LEAVES | ON A BUSINESS TRIP N. G. Nelson, prominent busi- ness. man and property owner of Juneau left on the steamer Alaska D. M. Bothwell, wholesale rep- resentative, left on the steamer for a business trip covering Ketchikan,|for Seattle. Mr. Nelson will meet | Wrangell and Petersburg. He ex-|his wife and children there and | pects to return to Juneau in about,"e““'" to Juneau with them early two weeks, in May. Daily kmpire want Ads Pay Shop In Juneau 431 Rights Resorved by The Assoclated Presy By Pap s+ THERES TE LITTLE MATTER OF 25 POUNDS | OF SURPLUS WEIGHT \ THAT MUST coug OFF BEFORE #E PACIFIC COAST TEAMS TRAVEL No games were played in the { Pacific Coast League yesterday as ,the teams were traveling to open this afternoon on the following ! schedule for this week: Hollywood at Seattle. Mission at Portland. Sacramento at San Francisco. Oakland at Los Angeles. Lester Stoefen threatens to g0 back to college ii ne doesn't make the Davis cup team this year, which miay or may not be the tip-| off on how our amateur athletes regard an education. Johnny Fischer, Cincinnati's golfing pride, has given up his studies for the spring in order to be in first class playing condmon‘ for his trip abroad with the| | i STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet. American Walker cup team. | Los Angeles 1 3 186 These are isolated instances, Missions ... 8 6 571 young athletes capitalize such op- K Oakland . 8 6 671 example they furnisn to the rest|Sacramento 8 6 5T of our athletic yputh? On the‘San Francisco ... 7 7 500 other hand, what is a month or, Seattle . 5 9 357 two of missed or delayed school- Portland 5 9 357 ing® as compared with the broad- Hollywood ... 4 10 286 ening influences of travel and the — e e i s ’ . NCTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL xperience of international ‘compe: ACCOUNT tition? ‘Why, in short, shouldn’t our star young athletees capitalize such op- portunities while they are at their - dor the Territory of Alaska, Ju- best, provided they do mot sacri- _ neau Commissioner’s Precinct. fice altogether the advantages of In the matter of the LAST WILL completing their education? | ,and TESTAMENT, of MARY | LOUISIA WINN, sometimes i In the United States Commission- er's (ex-Officio Probate) Court VINES IS STILL “OUT” 'c‘xs‘zg B0 B L RN, D> It may be recalled a few years, ' NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ago that the epithet of “tennis ghat on March 26, 1934, JOHN bum” first was tossed at.our Da- RECK, as executor of the estate vis cup youngsters because a mem- of MARY LOUISIA WINN, some- ber of them left school to parti- cipate in spring training at Au- gust, Ga. The uproar Wwas SO great that this rather too osten- tatious bit of preparation was dis- regarded in subsequent seasons. So far as I know all the boys then in- volved are now doing pretty well. ‘When Ellsworth Vines first rose to the top of American ama- teur tennis in 1931, and was sel- ected automatically for the follow- ing year's Davis cup team, he promptly left -college in order to concentrate on his game. The United States Lawn Tennis Asso- cition remonstrated with him, on academic grounds but Ellsworth insisted he could not do justice to, both education and topnotch ten- nis at the same time. | SILVER SET OF. TABLEWARE Only $2-98 will get you a guar- anteed 26-piece Vines has not yet gone back to| college, has no intention of doing! so and that's that. The answer, of course, is that he is now in the| tennis business and doing very| well at it, despite the handicap of ' not having his diploma from Sou- thern California. See Our Window for Particulars! NO GOOD TO THREATEN That brings back to Stoefen and the question of whether or not Southern California’s latest gift to the tennis heights will get the place he demands on our Cup out- fit. If he does, it will not be due to any threatening moves on his part. The U. 8. L. T. A. is just the kind of an organization that might tell Lester Rollo Stoefen to go right back to school and forget all about Introducing “PUROLA” Household . the Davis Cup, since he chooses to| R d make an issue between the two. | eme les Otherwise there is no doubt Sto- efe's winter performances make|) P U R E, as the name him a much bigger factor than he| appeared after the turf tourna- ment’s ended in 1933. He seemed at least a year off, as Davis Cup timber, but somewhere in the past indicates, none better times known as JENNIE WINN, Deceased, made and filed in the above-entitled Court its final Ac- count and Report, and that on said day the said court entered it1 order directing that a hearing ba had upon said final Account and Report before it in Juneau, Al- aska, on May 26, 1934, at 10:00 o'clock am. and that all persons then and there appear and make their objections, if any, thereto, and that notice of the [iling of said final Account and Report and said hearing thereon be given by publishing in the Daily Alaska Em- pire, a newspaper of general cir- |culation in the Juneau Commis- sioner’s (ex-Officio Probate) Court, First Division, Territory of Alaska, |for a period of once a week for |four (4) consecutive and successive | weeks. | Dated at Juneau, Alaska, |26th day of March, 1934 | JOHN RECK, | Executor of the last will and testa- ment of Mary Louisia Winn, sometimes known as Jennie Winn, Deceased. | First publication, March 27, 1934. |Last publication, April 24, 1934. MRS. C. F. BROWN RETURNS FROM VISIT IN STATES thrs Mrs. C. F. Brown, whose husband | is proprietor of Brownie’s Barber Shop, returned on the Northlamd from the south where she had been ’vismng her relatives for the last; two months. | | | In the BAG! Pack your clothes and linens in the laundry bag, send it to us, and you'll smile! That's what thrifty women do! Alaska Laundry | HALIBUT ARRIVALS TODAY ARE HYPERIAN AND Halibut arrivals today were the| A Hyperian, Capt. Oscar Oberg, 7, 500 pounds, sold to Alaska Coast|St. Ann's | Fisheries for M-1817, Capt. J. R. Elliott, 6,000 cold. pounds, sold to E. Engstrom (or‘ 6% | MRS. MARIE MCGUIRE IN | M-1817 HOSPITAL WITH Colfl Marie Hospital treatment Mrs. McGuire entered! yesterday to and | receive for a severe 6%, and 4% .—e- Daily Empire Wau. Ads Pay i and 4%. | " COMING! CLEAN UP WEEK THAT MEANS FRESH PAINT INSIDE AND OUT We are prepared to supply you with all the necessities for a genuine cleanup. Dic-a-doo Paint Cleaner Puritan Paint Cleaner Climax Cleaner for wall paper and window shades Double X Floor Cleaner Steel Wool Sand Paper FLOOR WAX Fullers, Johnsons, Old English and Dri-Brite SHELLAC—WOODFILLER PLASTIC WOOD For refinishing your walls and wood work use 'FULLERGLO Available in Ivory, Cream, Pale Ivory, White, Silver White, Nile Green, Seafoam, Orchid, Baby Blue, Buff. A semi-gloss quick-drying enamel, easy to apply and extremely durable. DECORET 4-hour drying, high gloss enamel in all the desirable bright colors. FULLER’S HOT WATER WALL KALSOMINE Easier to apply and covers better Juneau-Young Hdwe. Co. THE TREND IS TOWARD ELECTROL - of COURSE! Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Heating Sheet Metal few months he has picked up more aggressiveness and shotmaking skill. In a year already filled with doubt as to just what our best Davis cup combination may be, Stoefen joins a lineup of eligibles already including Frank Shields, Sidney Wood, Wilmer Allison, John Van Ryn, George Martin Lott and Cliff Sutter. TOP SCORER FOR MARQUETTE B. B. ELECTED CAPTAIN' MILWAUKEE, Wis.,, April 17.— six - foot 200 -pound forward, “Roaring Ray” Morstadt of Wau- keegan, Ill, has been elected cap- tain of next year's Marquette uni- versity’s basketball team. Morstadt tallied 163 points to| lead the Hilltoppers in his sopho-| more year and this season was still on top with 162 points. He also plays halfback on the football | team. 1 Items include all the com- mon every-day preparations such as Todine, Carbolic Acid, Sulphur, Boric Acid, Sweet Oil, Epsom Salts, Cascara, Peroxide, Camphor, Castor 0Qil, Turpentine, Glycerin, Alcohol-Rub and many others. For Each $5.00 worth of this merchandise purchased at our store dur- ing the next two months, you can have a beautiful 26-PIECE SILVER SET at half the wholesale cost Fully guaranteed. See us for particulars. Daily Empire Want ‘Ads Pay GUY L‘ —————=| SMITH | JUNEAU T ResTAURANT | { Dirug Store Chas. Peterson | | “THE HOME OF GOOD | Next door to Coliseum i FOOD” | - WHAT IS CALROD? Calrod is the magic heating coil on which you place your cooking utensils. Developed in the great General Electric house of magic, it is available as standard equipment on the famous Hotpoint Electric Range. Try Calrod Cookery Speed—Economy Durability—Efficiency Cleanliness—Satisfaction Safety END COOKING TROUBLES See Our Display of Hotpoint Ranges Sold on Our Easy Payment Plan—Liberal allowance on your wood range Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 [+ S | | | THE SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases”

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