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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1935. By GEORGE McMANUS | BEGYOUR PARDON, BUT WILL YOU TELL ME WHY THEY ARE BLOWING THE z FOG-HORN ? | WISH MAGQIE 2 [ WOULLD STOP CRYIN. b \ VT SOUNDS ; ¢ TERRIBLE. BRINGING UP FATHER (3 OH,ME! OH, MY ! 'WE HAT WILL THE EY SAY O. J. HUMPHREY, JR., ROBER- BARDS DEFEAT TA E. HUMPHREY, and all helrs and devisees of O. J. Humphrey, deceased | cHILKUUT NINE TO THE ABOVE MED DE- | FENDAN ITING = | IN THE ME HE UNIT- are Y 1 to appear YOUR CRYIN AINTT GONNA DO NO GOOD. Wi ™ IN THE SOCIETY COLUMN ? GET TO EVROPE. B8O0O-BOO!!! in the above entitled court, holden . ~ [ at Juneau, Alaska, and answer the [Junior Club Trims Army complaint of the plaintift filed Visitors by Makmq Against you in the a entitled Y < E on, within thirty days from the Most of Errors date of service of this summons and a copy of the complaint upon you; and if you fail to so appear and answer, for want thereof, plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded In the § Bdvadiage of many er complaint, which is that title be ‘V’I’?""f‘““\ Fhe youthiul | o d in plaintiff to the follow= ardinals defeated the soldiers from i described tract of land: —=—=~ |Chilkoot Barracks at Baseball Park That RESULTS YESTERDAY Cardinals 4, Chilkoot Barracks 3 (exhibition). P|RATES Al_[] }b(;il); S_ports Cartoon CIANTS; CUBS P : ARE DEFEATED Tigers Continue Winning Streak by Defeating Browns 6 to 3 PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 2—The Pittsburgh Pirates again came to the aid of the faltering Giants yes- terday and turned back the chal- lenging Cubs by a 6 to 5 defeat. The Giants were idle. | certain traect of land 1, therefore, enter the Lit- | |last night in.an exhibition, 4 to| gjtuated in the Nushagak Re- cRITIcAL TILT 1 Series playoff with nw‘sTUCK PRlcEs s cording Distriet, Territory of | Legion half victors. But a Dave Turner, Signal Corps opera-| Ajaska, Division Number Three, | | win for tor, aided the losers as pitcher and| ompraced in U.'S. Non-mineral DUE TONIGHT 'c: jtm! se e Legion tonight would & - s | an inside track mwnrd! vER TUDAY 1 held the Cards to but three scnt-} Survey No. 309. Homestead Cer~ flag, anid in that [ }[m'x-d hits, but bobbles by his team-| ificate No. 74, S. Patent No, [event ¥ World Series will be : mates proved costly. containing 9.82 I hécessary The Soldier batting line-up: Mec-| acres; FiaG, oy TN ; Stevenson, 8b; land that plaintiff be decreed to VISITORS ON TRIP . ; o cf; Laighton, 1f; Haliday, rf; Trod- |titled to exclusive possession; and ‘Wright, as; gory, 2b; Averill,ipe the sole owner thereof and en- THROUGH A. J. MINE| W ¥ g~ Utdlitien TR 3D, you, and each of you, are required MOOSC, Leglon hedUled “‘tK b The Cardl batting line-up:|to appear on the date herein speci- best to port the stock market to- Rigmquist, + Hagerup, |ified and assert, claim and defend for Important Game . B : P 5 Through the courtesy of General(day but profit taking waves wav-|oo: S, bl nd, ss; Al- any title, claim or right of posses- at 6:30 o'Clock Superintendent L. H. Metzgar of |ered the list as a whole {exander, rf; Gould, 1b; Ellinsburg, sion you may have in or to said the Alaska-Juneau, visiting digni-| Today's ciose was rather heavy. | ipan it oo 2 a0k Tl 1N O Y BCHING GAME TONIGHT taries of the National Business and | Tiading was slack and showed| o Shorv SoOre thereof. At Baseball Park—Moose vs | Professional Women's Club enjoyed | further ening during the final| Soldiers The date of the order for pi- Legion at 6:30 o'clock. itseeing trip through the Al-|phour AR |lication of this summons is July meau gold mine, during the | e K fad BN o b .24, 1935, the period of publication 2 Alk? % | atteries: er and McLain;|;_ Al Thefe will ‘ve 1ew" fhore Cflg"’t‘“ M G S . Na.| CLOSING PRICES TODAY |iindstrom and Bloomqulst ol ‘;l;fli‘;'a.m" i p‘]‘fl:m:;:" | games played in ' Juneau's y| Mis. Geline McDonald, Past Na- | 4 s July 26, 5, an e i League baseball competition ‘thar | tional President of the organization,| NEW YORK, Aug. 2 —Closing | T e | lication is August 16, 1935; and the the one scheduled for 6:30 o'clock | And Lulu Fairbanks, of the Alaska |quotation of Alaska Jupeau mine; wrico Gladys Woods .|An emplows defendants are required to appear tonight at Baseball Park between Weekly, were the guests of Mrs. |stock today is 15%, American Can /oo the Mnmlim To, il ind Bas and answer this summons within the Moose and the Legion. Anita Garnick, Miss Caroline Todd, | 144%, Ainerican Power and Li:htj]‘“ Pl it Barke ‘('nl ‘N o thirty days after completion of last The standings indicate that, with | Miss Anita Garnick, and Mrs. Janet |5%, Anaconda 15%, Bethlehem DMJ;;L“_“(;" B Brasnt e (;f publication. just five more games left to be|M. Kraft of the local chapter dur- |Stecl 35, General Motors 38%, In-'y = ' : DATED at Juneau, Alaska. July played before the season ends, the[ing t! . | ternational Harvester 514, Kenne- oR |24, 1995, Moose have a half-game lead over | cott 19%, United States Steel 42%, SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION | { i ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, the Legion club in the drive for the| An increasing numbcr of so- |Pound $4.95%, Bremner bid 40, ask-| No. 3791A Clerk of the District Court for the second half championship. The | called guest houses have been mak- |ed 50, Nabesna bid 54 asked 58, 1n the District Court for the Ter- | Territory of Alaska, Division No. 1, | winner of tonight's game will take |ing inroads on the business of the |Black Pine Silver bid 29 2 34%,| ritory of Alaska, Division Num- By VENETIA PUGH, a mighty step toward that title. |large hotels in Bermuda, say Am- | United Alrlines 6%. ber One, at Juneau. Deputy. If the Moose win, they will be|erican trade observers in that col- 0 B 200, 22 T PACIFIC AMERICAN FISHERIES, First publication, July 26, 1935. favcred to garner the second-half |ony. | ®HOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! INC, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs.|Last publication, Aug. 16, 1935. MEMBER OF THE MIAMIBILTMORE COUNTRY CLUB. DETROIT AGAIN WINS DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 2— The Tigers took another clinch on first place in the American League yes- terday by trouncing the St. bouis" Browns 6 to 3. the Aleutian from Seattle, GAMES THURSDAY Pacific Coast League Hollywood 4; Missions 3. Oakland 2; Seattle 3. San Francisco 5; Los Angeles 3. Sacramento 5; Portland 7. National League St. Louis 7; Cincinnati 5. f s ’ fifi—— e - ikl Brooklyn 4; Boston 2. Chicago 5; Pittsburgh 6. American League Boston 5; Washington 9. Cleveland 8; Chicago 3 St. Louis 3; Detroit 6. TEAM STANDINGS Pacific Coast League (Second Half) Won San Francisco 274 Missions 25 Seattle 23 Portland 23 Los Angeles 22 Oakland 22 Hollywood 18 Sacramento 18 National League won,; Lost Pct New York 60 652 Chicago 633 St. Louis 589 Pittsburgh 551 Brooklyn 447 Cincinnati 438 Philadelphia 424 Boston 385 American League Lost Pct. Detroit . 615 Chicago 573 New York 578 Boston 3 516 Cleveland < 505 Philadelphia 460 Washington 426 8t. Louis Y 326 Juneau City League (8econd Half) Won Lost Pet. Moose 6 2 Legion 6 667 3 Elks 1 8 anf PAUL BROWN’S HAT TOO SMALL; HE 1S PUFFED UP TODAY Paul Brown, of the advertising staff of the Daily Alaska Empire, is all puffed up over a recent write- up he was given in the Cincinnati ‘Enquirer, one of the wotld’s leading dailies. Some time ago, Brown, an ardent. Cincinnati Reds' baseball fan, wrote to the sports editor of the Eastern paper, asking that his brother, Pete Brown, a resident of the Queen City, be given one of the several daily Enquirer passes to the ball game. Sure enough, his request was granted, with brother Pete’s picture in cartoon appearing on the sports page. The following notice appeared the pext day in the Enquirer: “Speaking of the night game with “the Cubs on Monday evening, Paul /Brown, a former resident of Wal- nut Hills, and a former Cincinnati newspaperman, furnishes some in- formation from the northern coun- try, where there is only an hour or two of darkness all night in the summer time. Brown is now an ad- vertising man with the Alaska| Daily Empire at Juneau, still gets the Enquirer, and remains an ar- dent rooter for the Reds. He writes ‘I knew Powell Crosley, Jr. when he used to visit his lodge near my home town of North Vernon, Ind. His famous lighting system at the ball park has nothing on our night baseball here. We play at midnight _Wwithout any lights at all’)” ‘ HER RECENT MARRIAGE TO Jous U.CRews 1SN'T GONG TO CURTAIL #ER, TOURNAMENT CAMPAIGNING — CHANPIONSHIP FRIEND HSBAND SHOOTS IS HE TO's TROPHY AT INTERLACHEN N AVGUST HIMSELF o Daoz SPORT SLANTS Last May John D. Crews took his bride, the former Maureen Or- cutt of golfing fame, into a com- pletely furnished love-nest in Mi- ami, Fla. That is, it was complete- ly furnished with the exception of one little corner which Mrs. Crews has reserved for the trophy em- blematic of the women’s national golfing championship. The -lady is determined to get it this summer and to that end has entered the National at Interlachen. The former holder of the wom- en's Eastern, Metropolitan, North- South and Canadian ladies’ open championships is letting no rust gather on her clubs for daily she is out on the links of the Miami- Biltmore Country club where she is now a member, striving to develop her game for the big test. To further augment her own “new deal” Mrs. Crews has armed herself with a complete new set of clubs. It is difficult to figure just what sort of game the five times Metro- politan title-holder will spring on the field at Interlachen for her praciice sessions for the present consist largely of experimenting with her new sticks. Mrs. Crews planned to use the invitational tournament at Asheville, N. C., as a yardstick by which to measure her progress. Hubby’s a Golfer, Too Her marriage was something of a two-way golfing pact for Mr. Crews keeps his card in the 70's. On those frequent occasions when friend husband manages to steal away from the office he serves as a sparring partner for his bride’s golf work-outs. Mrs. Crews has no intention of limiting her - tournament activities to the two events named but ex- pects to take part in most of the major meetings just as she has done in the past. Her past record is a brilliant one with her major victories including the Eastern women's championship in 1925, '28, '29, and '33, The Met- | ropolitan title in 1926, '27, 28, '29 and 34, the North-South crown in 1931, '32, and 33, and the Canadian ladies’ open championship in 1930 and '31. One of the obstacles in her path to triumph in the National will be Mrs. Opal S. Hill of Kansas City. Mrs. Hill fresh from her fine vic- tory in the Women's Western open at Chicago over a field which in- cluded Miss Helen Hicks and Miss Mildred (Babe) Didrikson, noted bus- ness women golfers, will be hard to beat. | Mrs. Hill Threatens The tournament at Interlachen on August 26-31 will mark Mrs. Hill's 11th bid for national hon- ors. The trophy has eluded her in the past but if the practice rounds which she recently flashed on the famous course, she had a pair of 80’'s and a par 78, mean anything she ought to be in the very thick | of the' battle. | On three occasions Mrs. Hill has| been the national medalist and three times she has reached the semi-final round. She won the Western amateur title three times| and the Trans-Mississippi four. | While on the subject of the Wom- | en’s national it is inleresting to| note how Miss Joyce Wethered far- | ed in her exhibition match on the same course. The British star thrill- | ed her gallery with a record-brnak—‘ ing 75, two over men's par, from | the back 'tees, virtually the same | course over which the National open was played in 1930. | It is safe to bet that no one in| the field of the Women's national will better that mark, even using the short tees as a compfrison. If the instructions of the United States Golf association are carried | out the women in the National will| be shooting from the front of the| short tees. R e | FROM TEXAS % T. F. Mayo, a resident, of College | Station, Texas, is making the round| trip from Seattle on the Aleutian.| He is a brother of Capt. Mayo of | the Thirteenth Naval District in Seattle. SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! 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Copyright, Echentey Distrite New York, N.X, Seattle Distributors to Alaskan Trade Exchange Building I AMERICAN 1 - reamy | BLENDED wHISKEY ONE PinT o Siheutly wnover A7 SCHENLEY, NEW YORK. W Y acifié Bbttleré Supply Co. Seattle, Washinston