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THE:DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1934. BRINGING UP FATHER % £ )y By GEORGE McMANUS WELL-MAYGE AND SOMETIMES BOY. YOLIRE LUCIKY- SHE DOESN'T 1 WISH, MY \WIFE FOR A WEEK- J w3 = S ROAD PRQJECT o | ENDOR! WELL-\'VE MADE UP MY MIND TO GET MARRIED - BUT THE YOUNG LADY ™M TO MARRY TALKS TO RERSELF ~ UI Tne Fairbanks Commercial Club | has endorsed the construction of a; road from Fairbanks to Van Curls ' er's Bar on the South Fork of the| | 3. COLLEGES | ] | | Chena River. The purpose of the | \10aa as given, is to provide trans-i NANKING, China, Sept. 18— poriation facilities for mine opgr=' American universities attract more | ators who have properties in that Chinese girl students than any | district which could be opened upi other colleges in the world, accord- | in that way ing to statistics made public here. | — e tOf the 59 Chinese girls who went | BLINDED BY LIGHTS s abroad last year to pursue their| g G Nunan, New England Fish! studies, 23 entered American col- Company. plant manager at Ketchi~ leges, 13 went to Prance, 12 t0/gan, gnd Mrs. Helen Wantworth, Japan, three to Germany, two 10| a5, of Ketchikan were injureds England, and one to the Philippine | when Mr. Nunan's car lefi the Islands. | Tongass Highway near the Flrsk ‘Clty. plunging over a 60-foot om- / FOLLOWS BROTHER ‘bankmenc after Mr. Nunan was A i AL ‘blmded by the lights of an ap- proaching car. He suffered a brok+ BERKELEY, Cal., Sept. 18.—Ken en collar bone, and Mrs. Went- Cotton, young brother of “Chick,” | worth’s injuries consisted of what California varsity fullback, will be | the Ketchikan Chronicle termed out for the freshman football team. ‘;“superflumu" bruises. MR.JGGS- DOES YOUR WIFE ., EVER TALK TO HERSELF? NOT KNOWINGLY- SHE THINKS ™M LISTENIN TO HER-WHY? SHES ALONE \WHEN SHE'S WITH You ? SHE THINK S SAY A WORD WUZ LIKE THAT - 1 By Pap ACCURACY = TuEN SPEEC, /! NN -2/ .y © 1534, Ring Fesrures Syndicate, ¢, Great Brinsin rights sesérved. SENA_TURS_BEAT DAILY SPORTS CARTOON~ INDIANS WITH CRPPLED TEAM , Eighteen-Year-Old Sandiot; Recruit Holds Cleveland Nine to Eight Hits Ti,;_re;'s Batting Around .324; 31 Points Higher than in 1933 DETROIT, Sept. 18— So you want to know why the Detroit Tig- (On Glacler Highway) SMOKY'S PARIS INN TRIO EVERY NIGHT AT 10:00 (Hear '"Em Do-"The Flying Trapeze") FRIED CHICKEN — PIT BARBEQUE — BEER — WINE that he gained only one more point than Marvin Owen, who hit .262) ers are leading the American|last year and is now on the .335 League? | point. The answer is simple. Going into| Even Skipper Cochrane, whose their last home stay in the last ! record last year was .322 when the month of the race, the eight regu- | final game was played, has jumped lars were batting an average of |up 10 points, while Charlie Geh- 324, 31 points higher than they ringer, a .325 hitter last year, is did last year. now in the battle for the league Only one player, Ervin Fox, was batting honors with a mark of below his final mark of last year, around .357. and he only by four points, .ZBAi Going on down the batting order, against his final .288. The rest were | Goose Goslin now is hitting .310 above the 300 mark. | compared with his 207, made with The greatest jump was made by the champion Senators last season, Jo Jo White, who finished last Bill Rogell is 20 points higher than season with an average of .252, and his .295 of last season, Hank Green- started September with a mark of berg is 36 points higher than his 326's a gain of 74 points. Even at 1933 average of .301. 52 " NERCER. BEASLEYS PRIZE L HAS SHOWN ERNOUSH AAMUNTION TO TAKE HM A LONG WA WOODLAND GARDENS FRANKIE MACK’S MELODY BOYS LUNCHES DANCING CLEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 18.— With only three regulars in. the lineup and with an -18-year-old sandlot recruit pitching, Washing- ton’s crippled < Senators trounced the Cleveland Indians 13 to 6 in the opener yesterday of a five game series. Reese Diggs, product of the Bal- timore amateur ranks, held the In- dians to eight hits. PRANKIE™ GEORGE ANDERSON EXPERT PIANO TUNING Alaska agent Kohler Brambach Piano Co. Grand and upright pianos for sale and rent. | M'LARNINIS LEAGUE ACTS WINNER OVER ON MEMBERS BARNEY ROSS . o G e Welterweight Battle Goes| ~TWE EIGHTEEN - -YEAR.-OLD ! LAWRENCE! GAMES MONDAY American League Cleveland 6; Washington 13. Boston 3; St. Louis 0. New York 0; Detroit 3. Philadelphia 9; Chicago 4. | i National League | All scheduled games postponed | on account of wet grounds. Pacific Coast League | No games played yesterday in| the Pacific Coast League as the| teams were traveling to open this afternoon on the schedule for this week. PHONE 143—A4t Your Service ANDERSON MUSIC SHOPPE ~HE HAS COME - GACK IN GREAT SLE AFTER S DISSAPPOINTING EARLY SUMMER.. CEFEATS [ Three Nations Given Non- Permanent Seats—Rus- sia Is Expected in 15 Furious Rounds— | GEBva, Sept. 16.—The League of Nations has elected Chile, Spain | BOth Bauered +/ and Turkey to nonpermanent seats " |in the Council. Of two permanent| seats not occupied and vacated by McLarnin, belting Irishman, last|the' withdrawal of Germany and night won back the welberweightuyapan' one has been assigned to championship by taking a split de-| Russia, which is expected to join cision over Barney Ross, his form- |¢he League this week. | er conquerer, in 15 rounds of a furi-| China lost the privilege of reellgi-' ous battle before a crowd of about|pility when she received only 21 of 25,000 fight fans. |the necessary 34 votes. " There were no knockdowns. The Political Committee has re- Both men were badly battered, | commended the election of Russia McLarnin with his left eye com- into the league. pletely closed and Ross with both ! eyes damaged. The crowd booed the decision. STANDING OF CLUBS National League Won Lost 88 53 84 56 80 58 n 68 67 ki 85 88 NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—Jimmy HE SCORED A BI& UPSET IN BEATING 'BITSY” GRANT FOR THE SOUTHAMPTON towe DISTRIBUTED BY ALASKA-RHEINLANDER DISTRIBUTORS For proinpt service and immediate delivery of either Rhe!nllndel;s draught or bottled beer PHONE 114—Femmer’s Dock. 5 HAROLD L. STABLER, Local Agent . Jew York 3t. Louis Chicago Boston Pittsburgh Brooklyn Philadelphia Cincinnati ; H = All Rizhts Reserved by The Assoclafed Pists 580 | - - " 511 504 412 aboard for a ride with the winner. L . The Giants, if they win again, will o be ranked with the great teams of ) b ) John McGraw's day; the Tigers, SI —'ANTS if triumphant, will be rated beyond ALAN GOULD | .. 61 . 50 . 50 American League Won Lost 93 49 “ IS CREATING o IDEAL PAINT SHOP i A AR the machine that Hughey Jennings last piloted to the American League peak in 1909 but which failed in| three attempts to capture the world | ® 0 0000009000000 PORT BRIEFS e e 00 00 Pet. | 855 | Detroit New York Cleveland . Boston St. Louis . ‘Washington ‘Chicago Philadelphia 87 6 n 63 61 52 61 Pacific Coast League (Second Half) ‘Won 60 49 Los Angeles Seattle 56 66 T 8 9 87 ki 608 | 535 | 500 447 436 | 374 439 Lost 29 Pet. 674 563 series. LOUD NOISE WAUKESHA, Wis,, Sept. 18.— Casey Jones, a 15-year-old profes- sional horseshoe pitcher, has cre- ated a louder noise in this little | Wisconsin town than the original Casey ever did. Casey went to Milwaukee to pitch in the Wisconsin state champion- ship, but the tournament official: would not let him enter. He was too The world series is still several weeks away with a few debates on the polo fields, the high seas and golf courses to be settled in the | meantime, but the big argument is already under way in the grand- stands, at the lunch counters or around the 18th hole. | “The luck of the Giants can'tlast forever,” you can hear them say- “Those Tiger sluggers will ‘Hollywood Missions San Francl Oakland Portland Sacramento EGGS AGAIN BROOKLYN, Sept. 18.—When Al Lopez, Brooklyn catcher, has a good day at bat, he eats the same thing for breakfast each morning that he had on his good'day until he runs into a hitless streak. ——————— Mining Location Novices at Em- pire office. .47 . 46 . 47 . 40 31 31 547 529 528 449 .360 348 e L e 59 FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin, Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apts. 1-3 1-4 1-5 1-6 1-7 1-8 1-9 2-1 young, they said. To enter the state break it up and scfltler the pieces.’ “Hubbell gave tne best hitters championship you have to be 17 years old, because if youre any|n the American league a taste of younger the gallery will be toofDis stuff in the all-star game and much in your favor. he will have two strikes on most of Pans who hid trekkd gown. tc ;hose Detroit free-swingers, before Milwaukee to see the boy compete they know what it's all about. raised a howl. In the middle of the| “Schoolboy Rowe, when he was final match between Harvey Elmer- | Just a fresh kid two.years azo, had son of Kenosha and Harold Skeets, | "he Giants eating out of his hand a townsman of Jones, a man stop- | during ‘the spring training trip and ped play by yelling, “Il bet $5{his speed will be too much for Bill there's a kid in the crowd can|Terry & Company.” whip either one of you.” . “New- York outsmarted the Smart- Casey learned eafly in life thgt{sst team in the American league there is no honor in a. man!' last. year, the Senators, so what state. He went to Iowa and was the | has it got to worry about this sea- sensation of the Iowa State open|son? After Hubbell, there Schu- championship. He beat Charles|macher and Fitzsimmons to feed Davis, Kansas City, several times|the Tigers a pitching diet such as national champion, and against|they haven't swallowed all year.” Guy Zimmerman, South Dakota| “The Tigers have speed and ex- state champion, he set a new|traordinary fighting spirit, in ad- world's record by tossing 32 double|dition to a .300 batting punch ringers in one game. right down the line, so how are But though Casey found no hon- |they going to be stopped? The Car- or in his home state, he has found|dinals and Cubs have been treating it here in his home town. A state |Hubbell roughly all season. Why exhibition tour is being arranged|can’t the Tigers do the same?” for him so that he will be able to compete in the National champion- ROWE VS. HUBBELL? ship in California in October. And Whether you figure the Tigers have the edge because of their if this is not successful, the citi- terrific hitting or that the Giants zens of the town plan to down into thein ‘pocketssta {inady thol . \‘ubund o' win: becgise -of. thelr boy’s way to the event. He can do everything all the oth- er trick shot artists can ‘do, they \ say: light watches, pitch ringers basepalls highest honors should over a chalr, or anything else youd | [Uish some of the briskest action like to see. since Pepper Martin' conducted his S one-man raid against the ‘Athletics nated to tangle with Carl Hubbell in a first game pitching “natural.” The Tigers as a whole have caught the popular fancy of baseball fans much the way the Giants did last Yanks may not win the American sport as the triumph of a long league pennant this year, but they |shot. | have been suwetsfl,;l financially. | Now that they are both up there, Not onee, urlng;pt om were 1 of: course, thé clubs they rnrcea‘aa pos! ‘amm\ur. peppery Mickey s M J The entire country will tune in YAN Es LosE on the opening day at Navil Field, WIN AT GATE year in their unexpected gallop to the top. Neither was picked even —_— to land in the first division, and Sunday or holiday game at home.|shrewd Bill Terry are being given' The rain came when the Yanks|the old fair-weather cheer. It's an € it, during the week. old American custom to climb Detroit, if Schoolboy Rowe is nomi- NEW YORK, Sept. 18. — The|there’s nothing so stimulating in . GIANTS SHOULD WIN Since pitching has always been rated at least 60 percent of the baseball battle, and justifiably so on the basis of past performances, the Giants should beat the Tigers as decisively as they did the Sena- tors last year. I am not unaer-estimating a team «that hits around .310 all season or manifests the aggressiveness and recuperative qualities of Mickey Cochrane's crew, yet the simple fact is that the Tigers will face the best pitching of the year when they swing at the offerings of Hubbell, Schumacher, Fitzsimmons and, if necessary, Parmelee. they hit .310 against this quartet it will be something about which to write home to. Uncle Oscar in Kalamazoo. Against this kind of flinging De- troit can offer Rowe, Tommy Bridg- es, Elden Auker and veterans like Alvin Crowder or Fred Marberry. Rowe undoubtedly has class but he will need it to withstand the ex- traordinary strain of world series play, where the stakes are highest. He was be a sensation or a bust. Bridges is more experienced but has had an erratic year. Auker is an- other freshman. Crowder couldn’t stop the Giants last year. - e - SHOP IN JUNEAU! UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. July 23, 1934. Notice is hereby given that Daniel Huttel, entryman, together with his witnesses, Edward E. Zim- steadier and more experienced|™Mer, and Mayo V. Raney, all of pitching staff, the 1934 b’:';m for |Haines, Alaska, has made final proof on his homestead entry, An- chorage 08071, for lots 1 and 2, sec. 19, lot 1, sec. 24, T. 28 S. R. 53 E. C. RM. containing 12340 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, said final proof will be accepted and final certificate is- sued. GEO. J. LOVE, Register. First publication, Aug. 28, 1934. Last publication, Oct. 23, 1934. [ by the | “and the, | I« ELKS ALLEYS | The bowlinz alleys at the Elks Club are now opened for the sports and the first games were rolled today. and the first bowling tournament will probably get under way next week, — e Mning Location ~otices at Em- ire office. —— LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET | " OPENED TODAY The Chicago Cubs are Interested uying Pepper Martin and Dizzy Dean from the St. Louis Cardi- i nals, which i5 no news, but the | Cardinals are \interested in selling | them, which is. i i it i | Herbert Mumm, police reporter for the Ohio State Journal in Co-' | lumbus, Ohio, gave up his job to A committee has been named 8¢t @ tryout with the Washington | Senators in Cleveland, Sept. 17. Art Shires is now managing the Fort Worth Panthers in the Texas' Ilcague. His brother Len is playing second base for Galveston in the |same league. . Heinie Meinie, Pittsburgh Plrnl,e’ pitcher, once worked in his (nther'sl blacksmith shop. Now he'’s in the hotel business with his brother. SHOP IN JUNEAU!. ' FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. ) “: GEORGE BROTHERS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS WINDOW PHONE 485 PSS CLEANING INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 UNITED FOOD Co. CASH G - ‘Phone 16 ~ We Deliver Juneau, Alaska ROCERS Meats—Phone 16 | If It's Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster - - You Will Appreciate Nanaimo-W ellington Lump AT This Time of Year $17.80 per ton DELIV ERED ' PHONE 412 PACIFIC COAST COAL (. 2 4| JUNEAU ALASKA Alaskaq Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single Q-2 rings _| FREE DELIVERY Harri Machine Shop “ELECTROL—Of Course” LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills "’_'_"’ v Old Papers for Sale at Empire Of