The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 12, 1935, Page 5

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IVE TOLD YOU A HUNDRED TIMES NOT TO WALK AROUND IN YOUR. UNDERSHIRTAND OUT N THE HALL, TOO. HAVE YOU NO IDEA OF ANYTHING BUT BEING A LOW-LIFE ? | WONT TELL YOU AGAIN, BECAUSE IT DOESNT DO ANY GOOD. YOU JUST WONT THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1935. By GEORGE STOP ARGULING WITH THAT LADY, YOU BIG BULL-DOZER / McMANU JERRY © ASHEN, DAILY SPORTS CARTOON-- Man Who Gave Kidna ped Boy Breakfast, Other Attention, Is Rewarded by Steady Job Now SEATTLE, Aug. 12—Aid given young George Weyerhaeuser has raised the family of Louis Bonifas from the uncertainty of a wood- land farm, to security and a steady job in a sawmill, it is learned. NAUTY MARIETTA NOT TO BE SEEN Apparently leaving as quietly a§ they had arrived 15 days ago, M, PIONEER, DIES, ' DOUELAS HOME Island Resident for 40, Years Passes Short- | ly After Midnight 1 Jerry Cashen, 64, resident of’ Douglas for 40 years, passed away| at his home in Douglas shortly| after. midnight last night, the final| culmination of a .long pepiod of failing health from heart disease. The deceased is survived by his wife, three daughters, Mrs. Miles Godkins and Mrs. Esther Goss of| Juneau, Miss Isabel Cashen of Douglas, two sons, Lawrence of Sitka and Leslie .at Wasilla; also two sisters, Mrs, Willlam Franks of Juneau and Mrs. Clark Ardery in Los Angeles, and two brothers, Frank Cashen in Michigan and| Dan in Minnesota. Mr. Cashen and a brother, Tom, also deceased, arrived in Douglas from Ishpening, Michigan, at the same time on one of the earliest steamers, landing in Juneau. That was long before Douglas had a wharf and ferry ser 2. So the two young men then crossed the chan- nel in a canoe to spend the re- mainder of their days on Doug- g\::hgzltla(}‘.l.l_lefla«) years later Mr HE SET A NEW WORLO'S The remains are at.the Charles RECORDO IN DEFEATING JACIS? W. Carter Mortuary ; MEDICA AND RALPH FLANAGAN s o FOR. TE NATIONAL AcA<U. YARD FREE-STYLE CHA Messerschmidt No Prisoner; ! MPIONSHIO —Q;p’ (= THIS \Q-YEAR-OLO CHILADELOHIA YOUT | WAS A SENSATION AS A FRESHMAN AT YALE | © (LAST SEASON, | 1l | (e 'WIT4 AU ADDED YEAR. OF | EXPERIENCE AND NORMAL It was at Bonifas’ home that anq Mrs. H. E. Jamison and thelp | George stopped and obtained his|gg-foot yawl, Nauty Marietta, were " breakfast and further aid on June |not to be seen on the waterfronf D ( H“h |1 after his kidnapers had released this morning. 2 him. Jamison is a correspondent for The boy's father, John Philip the Seattle Daily Star, and he and Weyerhaeuser, has since given Bon- | his wife sailed their tiny. craft ifas a job in the Snoqualmie Falls|from Seattle. They berthed at the i Lumber Mill, one of the huge com- | Lumber Mills Float on July 27, 1 TTT7 |pany’s plants. and moved, later, to the Lower ‘TIGERS DE FEAT‘ TEAM STANDINGS -, City Float, i Pacific Coast League Today, the ship was not to be By Pap | Booond HAID GORST FLIES TWO |seen and it is likely that the ad- | on ost Pct. ventursome ir have headed f [}ch A GU Sox 4 San Franciso .31 24 sed| TO LAKE FLORENCE! O arr P Snever, o gomt Missions 82 25 561 T which they mentioned when inters { | Portland 31 25 .564| Harry A. aaams, popular Shriner |yiewed earlier, Los Angeles 30 25 5|from Seattle, who arrived last week s S S STRAIGHT GAME Oakland 2 27 and Jerry Craviolini, of the Gas- MRS. M'CURDY RETURNS Seattle @’ . o !tineau Cafe, were passengers| Mrs. Audrey McCurdy, Red Crogs e % }Hollywo_xl 21 36 .368 |aboard the Gorst Boeing flying nurse, returned to Juneau on the Auker Pitches Four-Hit| sacramento 22 35 .386[boat piloted by Vern Gorst, on & North Sea from Seattle. She was i 4 L fishing excursion to Lake Florence gone’ from the city about Lwg Contest Su."d‘".v After- National League Saturday. weeks. She accompanied Bertha noon, Wms 4 to ] won Lost Pet.| About 50 fine cutthroats wereiu»ro, Petersburg school teacher wno e New York 67 38 639 [hooked. The fishermen reported had undergone an operation ' i DETROIT, Mich,, Aug. 12.—Bé-|Chicago 67 43 609 |that many of the cutthroats had |Seattle, to Petersburg. [ hind the four-hit pitching of Elden |St. Louis 62 40 608 | the appearance of exceptionally | —— Auker, the Detrolt Tigers downed |Pittsburgh 58 51 532 |large mountain trout }‘ Adjutant O. Halvorsen cf flq Shicago White Sox 4 to 1 Sunday | Brooklyn 48 57 457 The fishing party left Juneau at|Salvation Army arrived in Junédu ternoon, sweeping the four game | Philadelphia 48 58 453 12.:30 pm. and returned at 7:30 on the Estebeth after a visit t§ series, running the string of victor- | Cincinnati 41 5 s|eciok the cannery at Todd, ™ ies to nine and increasing the hold | Boston 21 T8 b P o T 2 R L e 3 on the League's leadership. | - American League GAMES SUNDAY Won TLost Pet. Pacific. Coast League | Detroit 66 37 641 Portland 11, 0; Missions 6, 9. | New York 59 42 584 Hollywood 0, 5; Oakland 7, 7. Chicago 52 47 525 San Francisco 2, 7; Sacramento |Boston .54 49 524 3, 6. Cleveland 51 51 500 5 seles 4, 5.|Philadelphia 43 54 4438 g 2 S ,}Bt.‘,’nfl“}if,"‘,i { Washington 4 5 421 You can do it better with a* St. Louis 2; Chicago 3. | St. Louis 3B 6 350 Cincinnati 4, 4; Pittsburgh 5, 3. | C}IECKING Boston 5, 2; Brooklyn 7, 3. Juneau Gity League o New York 0; Philadelphia 2. (Second Half) Chicago 1; Detroit 4. Leglon 1 .8 .00 Philadelphia 8, 5; New York 4, 4‘]:[];?* Z g 'zgg A Checking Account provides these essentisls Washington 4, 4; Boston 2, 5. |®H3 s of security, system, and convenience in VEVELOPMENT HE SHOULD | BE A GOOD BET FOR | WE 1936 OLyMPic YL GAMES, Just Traveler When Gus Messerschmidt travels, he doesn’t particularly care where he sleeps just so long as the berth is a comfortable one. H. R. Shep- SLANTS ard, Juneau agent for the Canad- ian National Steamships, wants every prospective traveler to find| ARSI accommodations on his vessels,even| Lou Mais, swimming instructor of if round-trip tourists are occupy- | the Big Brothers’ Association of ing most of them. | Philadelphia, comes forward with a Those two facts account for the|novel explanation for the new turn situation that finds Messerschmidt | Of speed shown by American swim- traveling south to Vancouver, B. C., from Juneau in the prison room of the steamer Prince George. As Shepard puts it, “Gus wanwdiMedica and Ralph Flannagan to|team. a berth at the last minute. I was all sold out. So I gave him the guard -house. It's comfortable even| crd breaking time of 4 minutes 51.5| if it has bars at the port holes.” ESTEBETH - BRINGS IN 4 PASSENGERS The motorship Estebeth arrived from Sitka and way ports at 3:45 o'clock yesterday morning. Berth- ing at Pacific Coast Dock, she brought four passenger to the city. The inbound list: b From Todd—O. Halvorsen. From Chichagof—Max Saul. From Tenakee—H. Hendrickson, C. M. Shearer: e POWER MAN TRAVELS Charles D. Sublétte, connected mer And since it was Lou who | developed Johnny Macionis, the Yale youngster who defeated Jack {win the National A. A .U. 440-yard | free-style championship in the rec- | seconds, his words should carry con- | siderable weight. | According to Mais, good swim- | mers like Macionis almost bob on the top of the pool like: corks. You |see a lot of Macionis out of water when he swims and that adds ma- terially to his speed, for the more| of a swimmer there is out of the water, the easier it is for him to make progress. Mais compares a |swimmer to the hulls Gar Wood | builds for racing purposes. At full |speed one of Wood's racing boats is three-quarters out of water. | This new wrinkle in speed swim- | ming depends upon a peculiar phys- }ical construction. It requires soft, | pliable muscles with plenty of spring land snap, with a texture of flesh with the Pacific Gas and Electric|and bone light enough to allow the Company of Davis, Cal, is Lravel-‘swimmer‘s body to remain well out ing on the Victoria from Seamelor the water. with his wife. That is exactly the way Johnny HOLD HIM, O'’MAHONY! ; Danno O’Mahony, Irish wrestler, is shown putting an arm spread on Ed Don George in their Boston bout. O'Mahony won, thereby win- ning the undisputed world’s championship—in sgme states. (ABso- slated Press Photo). . ¢ | |g00od enough to indicate that the ! Macionis is constructed. He looks| powerful enough, yet he does n | possess the sort of strength you ‘[wou!d find in a weight-lifter. | FIFTEEN ON NIPPON TOUR l The Philadelphia youth is only 19 years old so he should be at his physical peak for the Olympic| | games next summer. He is one uf‘ |the most promising swinfmers the | | Yale squad and the leading scoring | | for the Eli freshmen last year. In-| | cidentally Macionis was chosen cap- |tain of the Yale freshman tank | Macionis is one of the group of 15 American swimming stars now touring Japan with Coach Bob Kip- buth of Yale. More than likely he will have an opportunity to meet some of the Nippon lads who will furnish him with stiff competition {in Berlin next summer, The trip |in the Far East will give the young- | | ster a taste of international compe- | tition which should prove invaluable to him in his quest for Olympic honers. The main objective of the squad of American swimmers is the three- day international meet in Tokyo August 17-19, when they will be called on to face the best natators of Japan. | FAPANESE BEAT ‘RECORDS, TOO | The American group’s showing will provide agyardstick which can | be used to measure our chances in Berlin, for the squad includes vir- tually every top notch performer in the country. The team should| be able to give a good account of |itself in any sort of competition. It includes Ralph Flanagan, Miami; | Jack Medica, Seattle; Jack Kasley, Detroit; John Macionis, Philadel- phia; Peter Fick, New York; Matt Chrostowski, Olmeyville, R. I.; Ray lKa\ye, Detroit; Danny Zehr, Chica- g0; Paul Wolfe, Los Angeles; Art| | Lindergren, Los Angeles; Taylor | |{Drysdale, Detroit, and Russell| Branch, Olneyville, R..IL, in the| swimming events and Dick Degener, Detroit, in the diving events. | The recent dual meet between | Japan's universities, Waseda and| | Kelo, in the 50-meter tank in Tok- | | Yo brought into action several of | | the stars who will face the Ameri- can contingent. | Most of the performances were }Americans will be pressed to the §1imn although only one world’s mark was bettered. Bezlo Kioke, {of Kelo, lowered the long course | standard for 200 meters breast stroke | to 2:428, an approximate pace of |2:44 for 220 yards, as against Wal- | ter Spence’s listed American mark | of 2:564. ; e THREE CROWN BRANDY is FORMER SWIM |the stars at Los Angeles and the| |ginia Mason Hospital on Septem- |complaints on propepty assessments. ninety proof, deliciously mellow— and low in price. Ask your dealer. CHAMP 1S TO BECOME NURSE SEATTLE, Aug. 12.—Helene Mad- ison, former champion woman swimmer of the world and one of Olympic Games, will enter the Vir-| ber 3 as a probationer and study nursing. This is the announcement made here by Miss Madison. - NOTICE TO TAXPAYE] On August 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, at 8 pm, the City Council will sit as a Board of Equalization to hear No adjustments can’ be considered after August 17. > A. W. HENNING, —adv. City Clerk. e, — ATTENTION MASONS There will be a Stated Communi- cation of Mt. Juneau Lodge, NO. 147 F. & A. M, this evening at| 7:30 o'clock. All Masons urged to| attend. By order of the W. M. J. W. LEIVERS Secretary. —adv. Cleveland | Second game called in seventh in- " ning on account of darkness. ERIDG DETROIT, Mich., Saturday afternoon, Tommy Bridges blanked the Chicago White Sox 4 to | 10 as Detroit marked up the eighth | | straight victory before a crowd of 25,000 fans. In winning hi of the season, Bri three er player to reach a base was the recipient of a walk. Charley Gehringer, sacker, hit his sixteenth homer of the season, with none on base, in the sixth inning. 10, 7; St .Louis T, 7. PITCHES SHUT OUT BALL AS | TIGERS BEAT SOX| GU Aug. 12.—Last | eventeenth gamv' sett iges allowed only hits, all doubles. The only oth- | iger second i rain, | Moose DIZZY WINS AGAIN M00S E, LEGION POSTPONED; DUE TOMORROW Field Poor, Conditions Un- led — No Game Scheduled Tonight RESULTS YESTERDAY Moose vs Legion, postponed, GAME TOMORROW At Baseball Park—Legion vs at 6:30 o'clock (postpon- ed game). handling your finances . . . . (1) INSURED SAFETY for your funds on deposit. Legal receipts for each expenditure, A double record of all disburse- ments and deposits. The convenience of writing checks for the exact amount of payment. Time saved by sending payments safetly through the malls. You can do it better with a Checking Ac- count! We invite you to open an account here this week- then pay by check! It's safe and businesslike! @ 5) The First National Bank Juneau, Alaska CHICAGO, IIl, Aug. 12.—Dizzy Dean, pitching masterful ball in pinches for his nineteenth victory for the Cardinals, defeated the Chi- Determined to play that final Legion-Moose baseball game, but (equally sure of insisting on good | playing conditions, President Wil- cago Cubs last Saturday afternoon |liam Holzheimer of the City League for the eighth straight triumph,|today declared that the muchly- by a score of 4 to 2. Although helpostponcd contest would be re was touched for ten hits, one a|scheduled for play at 6:30 o'clock homer in the first inning, Dean had | tomorrow night. the Cubs practically helpless in| Yesterday, rain again halted the pinches. | conclusion of the league's second |half competition. So, the Moose jand the Legion remain tied, with !that one game being needed to de- | GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 2; Missions 4. | termine the titlist. Hollywood 4; Oakland 6. | President Holzheimer said that Seattle 1; Los Angeles 3. { weather conditions and the muddy San Francisco 4; Sacramento 5, state of the field would not war- ten innings. rant a scheduling of the game to- National League |nlght. St. Louis 4; Chicago 2. ’ .t Cincinnati 2; Pittsburgh 0. ON INSPECTION TRIP Boston 6; Brooklyn 5. | Charles G. Burdick, Administra- New York 6, 1; Philadelphia 3, 6. tive Assistant<ia the Forest Service, | American League is leaving tomorrow on the Yukon| Washington 8; Boston 9. for an inspection of Forest Service| Chicago 0; Detroit 4. projects in the Westward. He will| ANNOUNCING The 14th Southeastern Alaska Fair JUNEAU, ALASKA Cleveland 0; St. Louis 1. Philadelphia 7, 2; New York 18, 7. visit Cordova, Kenai Pepinsula. Seward and The Daily Glacier Highw urdays only, at AT £ 4% 2 T4 b3 2 1 Alaska Empire is delivered daily to all points on the as far as Tee Harbor daily, and Eagle River on Sat- the same delivered price as in the City Limits or in Douglas, Treadwell and Thane . . . . or at the regular ‘subscription price, $1.25 per month. And when we say delivered daily, we mean daily, AND RIGHT AT YOUR DOOR. Call The Empire or contact the HIGHWAY DELIVERY, author- ized DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE delivery service, and START YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TODAY. Special Glacier Highway Delivery’ Service Daily Alaska Empire +{ “ALL BHE NEWS ALL THE TIME” anar B e o the! September 11, 12, 13 and 14, inclusive ‘. Write W. S. Pullen, Secretary, for Premium - Books and any other information WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 S 4 —— CAPITOL BEER PARLORS, AND BALL ROOM ; Lunches Dancing Every Night,;; » il Private Booths Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery

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