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/M'W)M _BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG DA SECRET MEETING = SHE WILL TAK' PLACE IN DAF ASEMENT O % ~CE PAL. NIGHT ~ GOMEZ WILL BE WAN OF The machine s worshipped: in ath EMILIO - YOr MAKR’ SURE GUSTAVO = HE INVITES ONE OF DA PEASANTS JOOSTA FOR DA LOOKS A TINGS - HA!Y SENOR QOCGLE STAY SROuS T ne MQOSTA N %4 SAAY - BABY - T'D LIKE YO TATTOO YOUR PHONE NUMBER ON MY CHEST=-- OH, BOY - This REST 1S SURE DOIN!' ME A LOTYTA GOOD-— T HOPE THEM DOCTORS DON'T ARE Ol START PILIN/ 1N AN’ SAY I'M HOW GOES THE BATTLE ? | MAN MACHINE Here is a Rucsian werker with machine units, symbslic of the new day under the Soviet regime. Scrvant er master—what of on some technical subject, and most feeeeeecereccreroeceeas ALL RIGHT~ st Rll..ln‘uhen,- lhr prol"t riat ig bdng tanlm ns power ln I':uhmnh\g a communstio society. THE DOCTORS N THE\R ]mcnl in the National league so far {is that the livelier ball has made a tremendous difference to one and fall. With a few notable excep- | tions, crack pitchers are not bowl- ing along the shutout route the yway they did last year. The big | hitters are, of course, having a wonderful time but the infielders are in constant danger from rifle- shot drives and the outfielders are running themselves how-legged try- ing to snag long drives. Bill Terry insists the new ball has helped his club as much as any other, but the figures do not show it and his club's faltering de- fense does not justify the manag- er's assertion. Airtight defense and consistent pitching carriad the Giants over the rough spots all ason, offsetting a number of s. The breaks have been { gain this season but neither the pitching nor the defense of the world champions has been up to plugging the gaps. This spring has witnsssed some of the longest drives on record in nearly every National league park. The home run pace, with Chuck Klein on top, is the fastest it has been in years. I have seen in- {ielders all but knocked off their feet after getting their hands on line drives. After an interval of smart, fast “inside” baseball, with the less lively ball, the sluggers |are once more back in their ele- ment, swinging from the heels. FRISCH ALONE AT THE HELM During his visit to the Big Town Manager Prisch of the Cardinals not only gave the,Giants another taste of his club's siege-gun power but succeeded in convincing the <keptics that there is no internal dissension or lack of esprit de| corps in_his outfit. = Frisch's only\ disputes during the club's, stay in | New York were with the umpires. i | It is more or less well known he ‘has been mvolied» in-stories of internal warfare among the Car- dinals. Current rumors, however, prob- ably can be traced alone to the fact that Frisch, Gabby Street and <Jimmy Wilson were all somewhat at loggerheads last year, prior to the Old Sergeant's removalasman- ager. Subsequently Wilson was traded to the Phillies, to become manager, and George Watkins, re- putedly an anti-Frisch man, went to. the Giants, in exchange far George Davis, The with cross-purposes and confliciing elements eliminated, Frisch is in the driver's seat with a fairly clear road ahead on which to demonstrate he can combine control, . tactical leadership . .and winning , results. - e Old newspapers ror sale at Em- pire Office, Not Becduse” Weé Cheaper BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. | PLUMBING HEATING . SHEET METAL Are 'RIIKY l Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. STAR BAKERY NON:-ACID BREAD DAILY SALT RISING BREAD SATURDAYS Phone 546 ¢ J. A. Sofoulis Front St. GEORGE BROTHERS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS ° Phones 92-——95 Free Delivery Phone 36 FOR VERY PROMPT DELIVERY! JUNEAU LIQUOR CO. PErcY REYNOLDS, Manéger | pe———— INSURANQE - oo Allen Shattuck, Inc. |that Frisch’s departure from the o | | | Giants seven years ago: followed a | ]| “We tell you in advance what || | DOU GLAS s of disagreements with John | Job“wilt ‘bost’ l From time to time |- H (he machine today? Is it throw- irg workers cut of jobs or pro- viding additicnal work and mere Jeisure? How has the un- young hoys, children, girls as now want to be when they grow up. 'mbolic of the importance at- ed to the machine in Russia well as engineers Established 1898 Juneau. Alugka 1J. McGraw, emplgyment problem affected the niticns’ attitude toward ma- chine; How are the major ccuntries trying to cope with this poblem? Is the emphasis cn mgre machinery, and still mere? Is there a revolt against whirring wheels and meshing gears? Is the ancwer of fas- cist Ttaly and ccmmunist Rus- sia different from that of dem- ocratic’ America? These are some of the questions consid- cred in a daily series of nine articles frcm as many coun- tries, of which this is the first. RUESIA. P. RICHARD:ECN ing about branch tis 5.,)0"d.1n" its effort to com- plete e Herculean sk of con- verting ' the world’s first secialistic state from a backward agricultural nation to one of the advanced in- dustrial power. Still Short of Needs ‘The country still is woefully short of all it needs so that it continues in the second five-year-plan, as in the first. to rely on the machine to lift it higher into the realm of mass production. By the end of 1937, when the second five-year period ex- pires, by 227 per cent the production of the machine building industry alone, compared with the output at the end of 1932, when it amounted roughly to 6,000,000,000 rubles an-! nually. This includes machinery for heavy industry, transport and ag- tractors, the increased output of which is planned on a similarly large scale. “A Pewerful Weapon” More emphasis is laid on the machine here today than on any “other subject, with the possible ex-, ception of communism. The younger generationeis being taught that the machine, unlike most other capitalistic institutions, is the most necessary and powerful weapon that can be wielded in fash- joning .a communistic society. Hand in hand with the constant official pressure for more machines goes the exhortation to the prele- tariat to master technical knowl- edge so that it in time will be able “to operate the machines efficiently. mer visiting her family at Daisy,! Every school places emphasis it is proposed to increase is the fact that the world itself has been added to the Russian vo- cabulary. It is pronounced ex- actly as in English except that the | “e” is sounded like an ‘‘a.” Tomorrnw—-lta.ly. > - M’CORD WILL ERECT COLD STORAGE PLANT AND RESTOCK RANCH J. L. McCord, well-known Al- askan, was a passenger for the Westward yesterday on the Cur- acao, bound for McCord, where he intends to put into effect an ex- tensive development plan. Included in the program is the erection of a cold storage plant and the restocking of his ranch with cattle and sheep. Mr. McCord is accompanied by L. B. Blankman, an associate in the venture. It is said that Frye- Bruhn is also interested in the project. SIMPSON HEADED FOR PENINSULA TO START DUDE RANCH i G. Simpson, formerly of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, is a passenger for the Westward on the Curasao. Mr. Simpson and his brother are asso- ciated in the “dude-ranch” busi- ness, and it is their intention to | institute such a proposition at Kas- ilof, on the Kenai Peninsula. The “dude-ranch,” when established, will cater to the big-game hunt- ers who are annually attracted to the Kenai Peninsula. | ———————— INTERNAL REVENUE MEN COME HERE BY PL. The seaplane Patco, of the Pan- handle ' Air* Transport Company, irip to Skagway Saturday after-|| noon to bring down Miles . Price and George Bucsko, of the U. .| Internal Revenue service. ———— PARKS GOES SOUTH | ‘Wilson J. Parks, who arrived here in the seaplane Baranof from Cor- dova, left on the Princess Adelaide | for the south. ————————— MISS MARGARET YEAKEY TO Miss Margaret Yeakey, teacher in the Juneau Public Schools, left for the south on the Princess Ade- | laide, She plans to spend the sum- | ‘Washington. ricultures but not automobiles and Pilot Chet McLean, made a round) | Cysux SPEND SUMMER IN DAISY, WN, NEWS | MAYOR GOETZ LEAVES FOR SHORT TRIP SOUTH; DELEGATE TO LORVENTIO\ Mayor A. Goetz is a.south- bound. passenger on the Princess Adelaide which left Saturday night, to attend the Masonic Grand Lodze at Tacoma, as delegate from Gas- tineaux Lodge No. 124. Mr. Goetz also planned a short visit with his parents in Oak Grove, Oregon before his return here about the 28th of the present month. ., TO VISIT RELATIVES Miss | Nina Baroumes left Sat- urday night for Seattle where she will spend some time with her sis- ‘er Helen, who is a student at the Metropolitan business college, later visiting friends in Cashmere, Wash. and Portland, Oregon. e HERE FROM Kk1CHIKAN Mrs. Charles Graham, nee Miss Elizabeth Robertson, and two chil- dren, is visiting with her aunt, Mrs. John Mills. e HOMEWARD BOUND | |in the National league. {the Cardinals, all things consid- |ered, have the edge of on the J. R. Boudreau, of Anchorage,| Giants, “There,” remarked the dean, the assistant dean and, in echo, the acolytes of the Polo Grounds press box,” is your National league championship team for 1934.” They were not, as you might surmise, referring to the home team, despite the fact that the Giants at present hold the cham- pionship of all professional base- ball. They were singing the prais- 1es of those hard-bitten, fast and resourceful St. Louis Cardinals— the Red Birds of Prey. Whereupon the Cardinals, as if embarrassed by all this laudation from the higher realms, proceeded to dissipate an early advantage and lose the ball game. Wild Bill Hallahan got wilder. Frankie Frisch’s strategy misfired and Joe Medwick in left field gave a very good imitation of Poodles Hanne- | ford, the celebrated circus tumb- ler. So what? So, we concluded, the afternoon events were altogether typical of the kind of battle like- ly to be waged all summer long Perhaps the Piratese, the Cube but is bound home on the Curacao af-|the Braves won’t concede it until ter a year at the University of Washington at Seattle. :;_—_____e' | LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER [ = ALASKA WELDERS J. R. SILVA, Manager If Possible to Weld We Can Do It ['f Willoughby, Near Femmer Dock PHONE 441 | | | i Help Kidneys orly functioni [ ] mufim der mike you n‘f{er l!amegatmg { Up Nights, Nervousness, Rheum; {alhns, bllffxfl;,l B:\ml&(. Smn'xngd ‘ tching, or Acidi the guarantecd O o cescrtosion Caen st fx you up g v mnzy | back. Oaly 750 at drugisis. | |" New Swagger Suits Pay Cach—Pay Less— MUCH LESS $9.90 up COLEMAN’S more convincing evidence is offer- d in the relative standing of the clubs. ABOUT THAT AGILE AGATE ‘The one indisputable develop- 1 Special ITALIAN-FRENCH DINNERS with wine if desired DAILY—A full course dinner you will enjoy for 75 cents. Gastineau Cafe Gastineau Hotel i o e |lllll||IWIWIllflIllmmlflIHI|lllIImlllmIIII||II|lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll||||||1||IIIII|I|IIIII|IIIII||||II|IlIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII]miIIIIIll“lllllllllllllllll IIIIIII!I III|IIIIlllIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIlmllllIIllilllllllllllllllllllfll||l|l|JlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIII ds June 15th FEATURING Florsheim Shoes ~ Regular $9 - Reduced to Florsheim Oxfords Regular $8 - Reducedto $6.85 H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man IIIIIII'IIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII A