The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 18, 1935, Page 5

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RO, 3 o CR B OMAT 1 81 the spot where Miss Meadows was | tween ten and life when she 1‘ BRINGING UP FATHER }y GEORGE MecMANUS killed, and of actually seeing her | finally was caged In the | e . T sh the skull of her ‘‘rival” with | st ut on June 21, | \Cdfiftt‘(soo LONC‘ Pl m{zo‘\-%ak‘ri%w %LS?‘E;?C;F.‘CE %:HE \\SJIE(%\_‘E;OC\-)ONE ‘\:?I?‘DT SF%H‘J&'UL:D\_‘— I NOTICED THAT blow after blow. the established | WHEN | 9 - HE PREFERS TO Upon this evidence Mrs. Phillips her term was CALL Ag‘ lgow ke \EJSET:J - SeGole ST SOV N 230 e s DRINK OUT OF was found gullty of second degree and set at thirty ) M'is"f\\"- 5\- THIS TIME, BUT 1T YEARS OLD A BOTTLE - murder on November 7, and sen- made her elizible for | DMENT. B WY WUOZNT ME- AND NEVER tenced from ten years to life in )t the following 3 (O HES OUT | DON'T USED GLASIES- | | [San Quentin. ar' Privole % ;) W ! Escapes Jail Folloy many futie efforts, 4 > Pending her transfer to the | Mrs. Phil obtained the p:::: prison, the convicted wotan was -year v irted with held in the Los A s County | her rele s jail. On December 5 Mrs, Phillips hat means f years. she 4 ¢awed through the bars of her | must walk a ve W path of third-floor cell, raised herself to|right-doing an $ : ! the roof above, crossed over it and | refugee from | | slid down a drain pipe to the ! ground beneath. Her confederats \ awaited her in an automobile and she was whisked away to a tem- I . porary safety. r - Despite a world-wide search, she| That proved tme...A row with e —_—— S S SRR PSSR 2 3 B, = remained in oblivion until April 20, one of her companions (w n later b, : o 1923, when word was flashed from aal8 Adad -1 ape) batted in, MeAlister 2, Nowell 1| tammer Killer Tegioigalrits HOadIrnE: hat 'she |l veuisce HUSCH LA ’ INmANS BEAT Dally Sports Cartoon [oinse 1"roie . Bare 1. Raines| Hamimer Ki || Tesucigaion, Tond e n e apmebenion. 1 mmett; three-base Goes Free After S . hi Snow Koshak, Grummett; T Yo in €. Al Local peace officers rushed to-|parole revocation hanging over TAKE EP a o 3: left < rears in Gelliward the end of the 10,000-mile |her head, these same officials are Pon bases, Legion 6, Moose 3: Atolen = st trail they had followed, and she|wondering, “Can the Tiger Woman ba wr, Erskine, Covels; time| _(Oontinued trom Page On) |was returned to Los Angéles. change her stripes? | of ga heur, 50 minut um- Under the California laws her | E TR 4 UUT UF FIVE | TOWARD TlTLE 5 ! y. Jealousy of Mrs. Phillips toward: sontence was indeterminate be-‘ SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! ! "' the in girl over a romance—| .. R R T A e ‘ either real or fancied—between her | = D e [ Armour Phillips, husband of Moose Beaten 8 to 3— J. D er Mayor of (i JTEY i R e and in charge of | X 2 & . However, Game May Be Rpsiicic o) “Tiger Woman | Protested Today Tribe by Victory Goes Into Tie for Third Place | with Tigers | FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON | | | on the Alaska Railroad, is| Upon this and other information { | ja pacsenger from Seattle to Seward, |Mrs. Fhillips was arrested in Tuc || Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. | . i where he will travel to his home.|on, iz, and because of a cer- PRI, e ke g TACL’?ET"WD' SHuo, i"““e ’8’7 RESULTS YESTERDAY |5 companied by his wife and | tain ferocity she displayed toward |- s o 5 o ooz e, fndians Sade. W Foue. On 4 | Legion 8, N 3 (Moo [y, children, Nancy and son, J. J.'questioners, was labeled “The Tiger|¢- . R e e hct | five games by defeating Boston 11 | may prote:t). Betiney o AWorian . 5 . i i ; | to 2 yesterday afternoon in the| i T | 5 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS 1 only game played in the American Lt s | e Her t cpened Scptember 20 | league. | | Unless the game is suc:ess‘Iu .V: ON ROUND TRIP | before a crowded courtroom. Wom- | o | The victory enabled the Tribe to! | protested, the Legion took 8 mighty ) Among the interesting round-trip ‘en predominated in the tensed v | €0 into a ‘tie for third plade wl“,‘ |step toward the first half eham-lp,ccenpers on the current run of throng, many of them having stood e as lneau the idle Detroit Tigers. ‘cnchip ufyl;"‘ CHBI/ LE}“Kuemfl; the con from Seattle to the'in line for hours to gain admit- | e Py 5 ball Park last night when they |y are Judge William A. tance. The attitude of the spec- i ¢ S e allf ed the Moace, 8 to 3. HOW Al vty b el Our Services to You Begin and End at the i . e i » . where Judge | tic among women, hostile to| Py gy : Z bl S [ Maove said last night that he would |Rc, e e 4: Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat in the sixth inning with two men OGRS Ll Santeet ) B8 o s. Riner end (w0 The as fought bitterly by |——— o I s i o on ba rrEsyNoula hase IR R William and Mary. | counsel for both the, state and the e SN0 ¥ b defendant and.toward the close the GAMES MONDAY Bob Boyd of the Legion| TG JOIN FATHER Fitate played a card which trumped National League | caught a foul ball which had N“c)d Scot tead 1s traveling t|all offorts of the defense. This Cincinnati 3, 1: Boston 8, 5 . jdown the grandstand wire netting. 'y, Seattle on the Yukon.|was the appearance of Peggy Cof- 12, } |T batter was called out on n f i5 a well-known Inter- ‘ee, Pittsburgh 12; Philadelphia 3. Chicago 5; Brooklyn 3. St. Louis 3; New York 14. American League Cleveland 11; Boston 2 All other games postponed on ac- count of rain or wet grounds. Juneau City League i Legion 8; Moose 3. Pacific Ccoast League TRESHMAN FLNSER_ No games were d in the Pacific Coast L yesterday as the teams were traveling to open this afternoon on. the following schedu’e for this week San Francisco at Sc- y4 104 camp in the spring but he Los . Angeles at Po out and earned the honor Sacr ment> at Missions; Oa »a hard work and an eager- at Hollywood. 5 t> learn June 21-23—Los Angeles at Seat- e o tle ; San Franciseo at Portland; FlieAn Fos Gamet Cakland at Missions; Sacramentn L€ Yankees might have had an short of winning asuir at Hollywood. PRI handers had not the rookie STANDING OF ~LUBS through as he has, for Lefty Pacific Coasv wLeague the leading pi in the Won Lost Pect, American league last season, seems Los Angeles 47 35 653 Lo have lost, temporarily at least, Dakland a4 30 577 the k of fooling the batters San Francisco 4 30 577 ¢ 1 euit. Hollywood 36 35 507 lis is one of those deceiving feattle 30 40 429 seems to be blessed Portland 31 39 443 a baffling curve ball Sacramento ........ 30 42 417 RC speed, and yet he| Missions ................ 28 43 394 fon manages: to sneak the bail Nationa: wLeague pact the batters or makes them pop Won Lost sct, UP harmlessly. He is a smart New York 35 14 14 youngster and is learning fast. Pittsburgh 33 23 589 Above all he likes to play baseball. St. Louis 30 23 566 He swings a potent bat, as he Chicago o7 23 ‘540 Proved when his double figured in Brooklyn .24 26 480, the scoring of a run when he shut Cincinnati 21 32 396 out the Tigers, 2-0, and defeated Fhiladelphia 19 30 .33311m Detroiters’ own rookie mound Bo-ton 16 34 390 Standout, Joe Sullivan. He could {give a fair account cf himself in American League the outfiel ddlshould his services be Won Lost Pet,|!2quired for he picked up a bit of New ¥ork 34 19 642 | experience in the outer gardens Chicago 27 91 563 in the course of his minor league Detroit 29. 23 558 | Schooling. Cleveland 29 23 558 CGene McCann, Yankees' scouf, Boston 26 28 .481 dizcovered Tamulis playing ball Wazhington 25 28 472 | With the Boston English high school Philadelphia 21 29 420 Inine and signed him for Chambers~' St. Louis 15 35 300, Purg. His path to the Yankees led t ugh Scranton, Cumberland, Al- bany, Binghamton and Newark. “Allen of '32” Is Back. Juneau City League Won Lost Fet.| Legion 8 3 -7127| Johnny Allen has helped keep the Moose preones <o) 4 -556 | Yankees in the thick of the pen- Elks 2 8 200 nant fight by flashing the form that enabled him to lead the Am- |erican league pitchers in winning percentage in 1932. Boasting a rec- ord of 5 victories against one de- feat this year it seems safe to say {Carclnian has staged a successful comeback. A sore arm left him al- most useless last season but he - Pap v seems to have shaken off the ail- Vito Tamulis may not be grab-iment and may be on his way to bing the headlines as other sensa- petter the mark he made in 1932 tional: first year hurlers are doing when he had 17 victories against but the chunky, well-set-up rookie s gefeats. lefthander of the Yankees goes| His three-hit victory over the De- 1ight on winning his ball games|iroit Tigers was most gratifying to just the same. With five victories,|the yankees for it not only downed three of them shutouts, to his credit | their most dangerous rivals for the Tamulis shares the top pllnhmv‘penm,m but broke the spell School- PORT honors of the New Yorkers' mound oy Rowe had woven over the New staff with Johnny Allen. Yorkars. Not flashy by any means, he has| The fine work of Allen and Ta- poise, confidence and most ‘m-,mu'h has kept the Yankees in the portdnt of all—control. He is 1Ot|thick of things while the other afraid to throw curves for he can|regylar pitchers have been slow in get a piece of the plate whenever|getting into their winning stride. he has a mind to. On the mound | - >->e he is very business-like and acts' MARTHA SOCIETY ICE CREAM as though he knew what it is allj SOCIAL about despite the fact this is his P {irst year in the big show. June 21, Presbyterian Church| Tamulis won 10 games for New-|pariors—40c lunch from 11 am. ark last season while losing 7./top 1 pm. Ic cream and cake to There was little in that record to|g pm. 25c. SAVE THE DATE. adv. recommend him for a regular turn BHOP 1 as a starting pitcher when he in- D UNEAU FIRST! that the lantern-jawed Northl! 4E BOLSTERED THE YAUKEES' SLPPING PTcHING STAFF but Manager McKinnon ' William x file Holzheimer, a protest, will have| | But tcs t back to the ball game.}y. .o, Giummett Scorcs Mootz realized tha started out as had to win i Tae heir remaining game t first half title 52, in the first inning, t tt. who had w on Jack Sc MANY ORIE: = B Fen Aboard the Yukon for : are many Oriental Wwo 7 ‘M‘]‘x l‘::s ]:‘Jz " will transfer to a “fesde 2 Ty paglcr transportation to Westwe : bt it b Herios, THEy Al golin fn. fol- S St ity L S lowing nummbers: 20 fof the Kodiak Second ning found them breaking plant of the Kadis ¥ the Joe Snow sm;z:ud smx;)l_\‘ pany; 20 for the Fort FARABL e T plant of the Fidelgo Island P: e ing Company; 20 for the Uganik W3 When Plichor Ward, MeAlis- plant of the San Juan Pish and’'cf banged a long one between cen- Packing Company, and nine for the '°7 8nd rizht ; = Snug Harbor Packing Company at' i L.-»gum. it oM ‘m‘n"' ESnug Hathot: in fourth with a quartet of runs. Here the Moose pport - - TO JOIN HUSBAND Mt /. J. Imlach, accompanic by her son Bill, are traveling on the Yukon from Seattle to Cordova, where they will transfer to a vessel | h will take them to Port Ben-| Imlach is Superintendent | of the Evans Bay Packing Company | W ny. Mr % Port Benny. JRREIE SO JOIN HUSBAND Mrs. Frank McConaghy, wife o the Superintendent of the Bay piant of the Surf Packing Cempany, is traveling to Cordova from Seattle on the Yukon. At Cerdova, Mrs. McConaghy and her daughter will book passage Conaghy. —— e — H FIELD RETURNS A. Field is returning to Cordova on the Yukon from Seattle. He is connected with the Kennecott Cop- | per Corporation. His daughter was| illed in the recent tragic airplane eral arrangements. — BINGHAM TO SEATTLE V. C. Bingham, associated with E. L. Graves in the building sup- ply business, left on the Alaska for Seattle. i Anchorage, Alaska. i September 10, 1934 | Notice is ‘Northwestern Herring Co., have| filed an application for a trade and manufacturing site, Anchorage 0784, for a tract of land situated at the head of Port Conclusion,| S. 3° 13 W. 259 chains distant, containing 5906 acres. Latitude 65 15° N. Longitude 134° 40' 30" W. and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Al- | aska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely should file their adverse claims in.the U. 8. Land Office, ‘Anchorage, Alaska, within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the Statutes. | FLORENCE L. KOLB, ‘ Acting Register. First publication, June 18, 1935. |Last publication, Aug. 20, 1935, Kukak | for || Kukak Bay, there to join Mr. Mc-| iccident near Cordova, and he has| been south attending to her fun-! hereby given that the| Baranof Island, embraced in U. S.| Survey No. 2150 from which corner | No. 1 said U.S.LM. No. 2150 bears| |which had been doin fairly well »nind the so-so pitching of Dave "urner, b Cne error, a bone- ad play, a balk, singles by John Koshak and Erv Hagerup, and a rouzing triple by Snow did the damage. Didn’t Need 'Em It isn't important that the Black | Sox got two runs back in the fifth, thanks to Grummett's nifty triple, S |aided the Legion in garnering two nore tallies in the sixth. The ball game was won before that. 2 lister became the first pitcher to win four straight in as many starts with last night's result. The , but it’s an old pitching adage “if you can put 'em where they want ‘em, youwll win.” In r words, McAlister had plenty of control. Turner, on the other |nand, was wobbly. He showed his }u ual brilliant array of fancy fool- | but pitched himself into too many holes. W Snov the day. He supplied a neat three for four record at the plate, in- cluding two stinging singles and a triple. in right center robbed Joe of an- other hit. The summary: LEGION— | Koshak, 1 | Foster, 3b Junge, 2b {Boyd, ¢ ) Snow, 1b | Ncwell, cf !H‘nverup, rf | Roller, ss ‘McAubLer P .- Totals MOCSE— | F. Schmitz, wnoococ®-hocoP @ W WWWW RN e DR © S 2b | Grummett, 3b i P 1b .. Haines, J. Schmitz, ef | Turner, p {P. Nello, ¢ | W. Schmitz, 1f | Covels, rf o—od@umc.—-.—g Totals 2 3 5 Score by mmngs Legion Moose ... 100 020 Struck ouz by MecAlister 5, ner 7; walker by McAlister 3, lxmr 3; wild pitches, Turner 2; ‘Turner; passed ball, P. Nello; balk nor that Kdshak's three-base ply | Legion hurier wasn't bril-| Jack Schmitz's good catch | tends the catch was illegal. PIC-‘ if thel ough | *- | Bxchange Building mmjw ' when your host pours from this bottle he hitting sensation of | a girl friend of Mrs. Phillips, an, who had been her companion when > Miss Meadows was slain, | IRFI AND TO SEWARD Mi fec told of OPEN ALL NIGHT E I rdise broker, the to a " rd on the ctore, whe the latter pur a hammer, Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, l’rop. f dlivmg with her to ?{fu doni have to be /acé . "to enjoy zick whiskey!” Phone Single -2 rings o -0 . et 6 o G : — - % PARIS INN PEARL and BILL Light Wines Lunches Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska i UNITED FOOD co. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 ] ! ! | ! ‘Copyright, 1936, The Old Quaker Co. . Your going to taste QUALITY Pacific Coast Coal Co. OFFERS For Quick Spring Fires INDIAN EGG LUMP COAL CLEAN HOT——ECONOMICAL A Hand Picked and Processed Coal that gives a Clean Hot Fire—in a flash. . For Old Quaker is a straight whiskey with that world of fla- vorful richness that lots of folks thought they just couldn’t ¢fford to enjoy. But you’ll find at your liquor store that Old Quaker has a price that is mighty pop- ular. A delicious whiskey that is proving to America that real quality does not always depend upon the price you pay! You can do no better than follow the leadership of the United States Government, who use thou- sands of tons of Indian Egg Lump Coal every year. $12.50 Per Ton F. O. B. Bunkers PHONE 412 Closed Saturdays at 1 P. M. ALSO £ OLD Qlllll{Efl pisTEd Gl LA 1 BOTTLERS SUPPLY CO. T P T R TR THE PACIFIC A ALASKA DISTRIBUTORS CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night \ Seattle, Wash. “ Seattle, Was| || Private Booths i et i

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