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- ] syIvJuJ militia (<4 o B SR AR TRF R R a e - cdaRE R L LSRRI TUN AN U I ARRG OISR ARRGE VY, Ace Dtaft Dodger in New Bld for Pardon R January, Mrs. delphia, court fight to FORGES IN ] RUNS TO LOSE LONG TIE GAME Pressne'l, l)irl;ll.ing for Mil—:[ waukee Brewers, Walks Five in Eleventh ST. PAUL, July 27.—Among oddities of the 1934 American As- sociation seas spot in the D] C game in which Columbus four hits in 11 innings, yet de feated pitchers walked in the ty ing and winning Tuns Bill Walkup worked 10 and one- | third innings for Milwaukee, hold- ing Columbus to four hits, but is- suing nine p J ers had tak the 11th, Forrest ‘Walkup. Pressnell proved fully as % ous as his predecssor. During the one-third inning he was on the mound he passed three men. Fi- nally, with three men on and one out, and the infield all. set for @ double play, Pressnell tossed four wide of the plate and forced in the tying run. His next at- tempt was no better, and the win- ning runner also strolled in. * Building Uses Headstone * . of 1776 Veteran’s Grave' ® BERGDOVL MANSION IN ost recent move to seek a Presidential pardon for Grover Cleveland Bergdoll, America’s most famous draft- fer, comes from Bergdoll himself, now married and the father of three children in Weinsberg, Germanys lnd is said to have support of a Phlladfllph)a post of the American Legion. Bergdoll is willing to come back to stand trial before a civil—not military—court and to take the medicine from which he fled in 1920. Last Emma Bergdoll, the exile’s mother, who still resides in the palatial family mansion in Phila etitioned President Roosevelt for a pardon for her son. But her appeal was as unsuccessful as her revent confiscation of Bergdoll's $1,500,000 fortune by the U. S. Alien Property Custodian fol- lowing his flight. Bergdoll’s refusal to fight for the U.S. was inspired by his love of Germany, his parents’ native land. It is recalled he oifered to fight for Germany in 1914. the | ADELPHTA MRs GROVER. BERGDOLL AND CHITDREN. lution, forms the { lumber company’ | Westport_ district, old { Kansas City. An old { pied the company erected its 1915. The | not mo ornersne oi a|Is believed wie westernmost of any » | veteran of the Revolutionary W: .- Shop in suneau A OO OO WARRACK ; Construction Co. | Phone 487 building inf ¢ | v naily (4 grave of Boggs, or | Juneau than 10 feet from ti | present location of the SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY SALT-RISING BREAD 15c Loaf Star Bakery JTUATED ON GLACIER HIGHWAY—Just a nice ride from —~CHANNEL BUS SERVICE Juneau @ [ancing - Dinners - Sandwiches No Cover Charges THE BEST MUSIC IN ALASKA! You Won't be sorry. 1" { A IT’S \ It’s searches out gently, ever lievable? ofi‘c_\,o \/ LAUN il Illlmlllfllmmlllml||mlllllllllllfllllfimmlllIlullllllmlllllIIIHHIHIIIIIMWl { A like a story of adventure. engineers experimented and worked to perfect this mar- velous dry cleaning system. the marvelous things Zoric does for your eclothes. so thoroughly. color back to bloom, puts that new-day softness into wool- ens, restores the show-window luster to silks and satins. But doesn't le Then try Zoric—and sce! . SOUFOLIS FREE DELIVERY A, Dirt I)Qtective there’s no escaping ZORIC ....mmnnmzmnnmununnmnmmmlmnmmnmlmmImmlmmmmnmmllminmmmu [ The way chemists and But there’s no mystery about It r 50 It .perks up the nap, brings hidden dirt — cleanses the fabric e Wt ave a trace of odor. Sounds almost unbe- YOUR ALASKA DRY