The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 21, 1935, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1935. By GEORGE McMANUS | THOUOGHT MONAHAN, THE BET TING COMMISSIONER | WONDER IF MY YES-HE WANTS ME TO KEEP IT FOR HM | SAW MR. MONAHAN WAS HERE AND HE LEFT THIS MONEY FOR YOU 7 HORSE WON P, £ l o: % ‘ 3 i i, T -0 I y oA il I o ©199% Kioa Fntorsd patione. 1ok Cupur S g e, |11 =28 = < [FAIRBANKS 1S CHAMP IN B. B. GAMES, DAWSON Will Rogers Contributed $100 to Expenses— Silence Observed L SAY POP, REMEMBER I'M WEARING MY NEW OVERALLS! | HAD $ 2.00 ON THAT ONE TOO DON'T WORRY ABOUT THEM $ON, THEY'RE LEVI'S ! DAWSON, Y. T, Aug. 21.—Fair-| banks held the championship in the baseball series held here.in con- nection with the celebration o memorating the Thirty-ninth anni-| versary of the discovery of gold in the Yukon. { The Fairbanks nine won two/ WH"'E SOX |N Dail ¥y Spbrts Cartoon By PapiN]GHT S[}H[][]L Clfiudy Days for Slfnn_ y Jim THIRD PLAGE; + WIN 2 GAMES Jocko Con:;c_]_ Struts His Stuff by Making Seven Hits, 8 Times at Bat CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 21.—Led by Bantam Jocko Conrad, who banged ,out seven hits including two dou- bles, in eight times at bat, the Chi- cago White Sox batted their way back into third place in the Amer- ican League by defeating the Ath- letics and taking both ends of a doubleheader 14 to 4 and 11 to 4. GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast League Sacramento 2; San Francisco 1. Hollywood 1; Seattle 9. ¢ Oakland 4; Los Angeles 9. Missions 9; Portland 2. National League Pittsburgh 2; Brooklyn 0. St. Louis 6; Boston 5. Cincinnati 5; New York 6. Chicago-Philadelphia, rain. American League Philadelphia 4, 4; Chicago 13, 11. Washington 2; Cleveland 4. Boston 5, 7; St. Louis 8, 3. 4+ New York 6; Detroit 5. TEAM STANDINGS Pacific Coast League (Second Half) Won Lost Pct Missiohs 38 27 .585 San Francisco 36 27 571 Portland 36 28 563 Los Angeles 33 30 524 | Seattle 33 30 524 | Oakland 31 33 484 Sacramento . - 26 39 400 Hollywood 23 42 354 Nationa: League ‘Wwon Lost Pct, *New York 72 4 637 St. Louis . 68 43 613 Chicago ...... n N 602 Pittsburgh 64 54 542 Brooklyn 53 60 469 | Philadelphia 50 64 438 Cincinnati 49 68 419 Boston 32 82 .281 American Leaguc Won Lost Pet. Detroit 70 41 .631 New York .63 46 577 Chicago 57 52 523 Boston . 59 54 522 Cleveland . 58 54 518 Philadelphia . 48 59 449 Washington 47 66 416 St. Louis 40 0 364 | ., | SPORT SLANTS \'In all the 28 years Walter John- son toiled in the baseball vineyard | he enjoyed few good breaks. His | debut into the big leagues on August | 2, 1907, was marked with defeat at | the hands of the Detroit Tigers by | a score of 3 to 2. Johnson spent the greater part of | his career with a team that never | figured in the pennant race and it | was not until the twilight of his pitching days that he managed to take part in the classic which is the dream of all major leaguers— the world series. It was in his 17th season with the | Washington Senators that his| chance to take the mound in the big fall series finally came along, and then he was not able to do himself justice. He spent his entire playing ca- eer of 20 years in the majors with the Senators and with little hn:lp‘k from his team-mates hung up a record on the mound that insures | him a lasting place among the game's immortals. The end of his | career as an active player was hastened when his leg was broken by a ‘batted ball. He played his last | game of bhaseball in 1927 and became manager of the Newark | | soared high at the start of the race - MEETING TO BE Joss a [ -THE PHILLIES MEXICAN SECONO |interest, Attendance to In-| BasEMAN ‘ dicate if New Venture | Will Be Tried | | | Does Juneau wan: a Nignt School | in connection with its High School? | | That question probably will be an- | swered Friday night at 7:30 o'clock | in the High School building when a | meeting of all prospective Night BE AS EXCITING AS | School students is held. BULL FIGHTING BUT | A. B. Phillips, superinterdent of ITE LOTS SAFER., | schools, sald today that there has been ‘“considerable” demand for a | night school here. The interest shown at Friday's meeting will de- | termine if such a plan is feasible. | Tentative enrollment and selection | of the most ‘popular of a list of ten | subjects which may be offered will | be accomplished Friday. | “If prospective night school stu- | dents can not attend Friday’s meet- | ing, they should study this list of subjects announced in The Empire :lomgh(v and should send in, by mail | to me, their choices,” Phillips said. | Here Are Courses | The courses which will be offered |if enough interest is shown, follow: Typewriting—two hours per night, | two nights per week, 30 weeks. Shorthand—Same as typewriting. | [ Home Economics, Cooking—two hours per night, two nights per| | week, ten weeks. Home Economics, las cooking. Manual Training—Two or | nights per week, three hours night, 30 weeks. English—Two hours a night, two nights per week, ten weeks in each course, three courses. HAE STEPPED 1IN FROM T SEMI-PRO RANKS AND AMAZEO THE FANS WITH HS FLASHY FIELOWNG e ) Sewing—Same ights Reserved by The Associated » more son as manager of the Indians, per and has b popular with Cleve- ince the days when he| was a on Cleveland’s only e vhe! i1 icker- | world championship baseball team | 55 7 b:ci;u\.}::axmxr,? “:i}‘,l :‘,:’;:nd,, in 1920, should have the support niBl';L ‘t“ La_“‘)—(TWO hO_U rks per citis and was lost to the club for |Of the fans in that town. That at wi-k; in“:ac:lgl Sq pe‘lr) g .(.C“ over six weeks. Joe Vosmik and !least gives him something more to Ma‘mmamg“‘(’“’i o Larce Datieed. Earl Averill, the two best outfield- | Work on than Walter Johnson had. cs (arithmetic, algebra, but not long after a series of un- fortunate breaks dogged the team and it slipped down the lacder. FRIDAY NIGHT | ers; Frank Pytlak, the first string e b Mol g catcher; Monte Pearson, Oral Hilde- brand, Clint Brown, Willis Hudlin, all starting pitchers; and Bruce Campbell have been on the side- lines for extended stays at some time or other during the current season. No club in the American | O'Neill has had a share of mana- gerial experience, having led To- rono of the International league in 1929, 1930, and 1931. He took over the job of managing Toledo of the American Association in 1932 and held the post' for two years until he returned to Cleveland as coach un- | nights per week, night, ten courses, Languages (French, German, Lat- in)—three hours per night, two nights per week, 30 weeks in course. | Music and Art—Two hours pe three hours per weeks in course, three | night, two nights per week, | weeks per course. | league has had any such misfor- tune in respect to injuries. | The wonder of it all is that John- son accomplished as much as he | did. All the time Johnson took all tors and janitors. The estimated the bad breaks without a whimper Mrs. Alsie J. Wilson has leased | costs will run about $5 per student just as he had done in the past. | the newly-remodeled store-room on | for each ten weeks, but this de-| It seems a pity that one who had | Second Street between Seward and ' pends upon the number enrolled in | played the game so fairly and so|Main, from Gus Brown. She plans|each class. Tt will not be less than | well has failure ringing in his to reopen her American Beauty this, Phillips said, and may be a ears. Walter Johnson deserved a |Parlor there about September 1, little more. kinder fate. | with entirely new equipment, and| No classes will be organized for Steve’s Got Popularity i‘mmounoes that she will specialize in less than ten students, unless the Steve O'Neill, who succeeds John- | popular prices in beauty work. rate per student is considerably in- | creased. Phillips promised a “thorough dis- cussion” of these matters at the| special meeting Friday night. MRS. WILSON IS TO Numbers Control Price OPEN BEAUTY SHOP A fee will be charged for the worl |in order to pay salaries of instruc Claim New Plane “Foolproof” straight games, 12 to 8 and 16 to 5. Will Rogers contributed $100 to- wards the expenses of the players of the Fairbanks team. s » S 5 While Chick Hafey makes hay . Jim Bottomley, wishes he had more oldish pals to talk |the Texas Centennial Central Expo- roem baseball with. By JAMES B. RESTON l (By The Associated Press) [ James LeRoy Bottomley, who is| known as “Sunny Jim” around the National league, isn't very sunny these days That is due to various reasons.| First, he squabbled with Larry| MacPhail, general manager of the cincinnati Reds. That was during spring training. So MacPhail told him to go to Nokomis, or some- where like that, and Jim did. When he got to Nokomis, he| found his wife severely ill, so he decided to forget about baseball and stay in this little Illinois town | and take care of her, But Mac- Phail discovered in the meantime that maybe he couldn’t get along very well without Bottomley, and Jim was eager to be back about that time, so they settled their dif- | ferences. Jim got away to a good start. He was the anchor man of the Reds' young infield, until he contracted lumbago, which reduced his activity to @ sun-bath on the roof of the grandstand each morning. But What A Koomie! The other doleful details of this ale are that Jim's mother fell sev- eral weeks ago and has been laid up ever since. And then, to top itx all, Jim lost his roommate. { With so many other things to worry about, you wouldn't think he’d worry very much about the| loss of a roommate. But with Jim, | Chick Hafey wasn’t just another| rooming assignment. In 1922, Jim’s first year as a reg- ulat with the Cards, Hafey was| brought into the Cardinal chain. The following year Chick started| at Houston but was brought back to 8t. Louis in the middle of the LOCAL RASPBERRIES | " ON MARKETS TODAY| | Local raspberries made theit first | | appearance for the season in fruit | markets today. Among the firs :pruducers near Juneau was L. F | Morris, located on Glacier Highw ‘The berries are of very fine qual [ Local residents a~e =':n nitk raspberrics from (he | | for home vsc. | % - f SHOP IN JU | UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. June 10, 1935. Notice is hereby given that Harold J. Grimstad, entryman, together| with his witnesses, Oscar Oberg and Savern Swanson, all of Juneau, Al-| team of the International league in | 1928, { Off To Bad Start { In embarking on a career as man- “ Johnson got off on the wrong when illness prevented him ! aking up his duties until the { 'got under way. He returned “ngton to manage the Sen- held that post for four sugh the latter part of " out of baseball, and on " 9% became manager of ! ~Indians. “the Indians under| lhed third and showed » many of the experts ribe to win the pen- A9 Cleveland's hopesI - aska, has made final proof on his| {homestead entry, Anchorage 07227.| for a tract of land situate on| Hump Island, Lynn Canal, latitude | 58° 26’ 30” N. longitude 134 ° 58'| 00” W. embraced in U. S. Survey| No. 2099, containing 150.36 acres,| and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Al- aska, and if no protest is filed in| the local land office within the period of publication or thirty days year, so for six years then they played together—four times they were in the world series. J | No. 33, meets tonight at the I. O. O.| | F. Hall for initiation. i AUSTRALIAN PREMIER RETURNS Spectators observed two minutes of silence in honor of Will Rogers and Wiley Post yesterday. TEXAN MEETS | TRUITT:GIVEN " INFORMATION Brother of Local Offcial Prominent Minister in Dallas A. A. Andrews of Dallas, Texas,| attended the Shriners' ceremonial| |last night where he met Attorney General James 8. Truitt, and dis- covered that his friend Dr. George W. Truitt, one of the outstanding | ministers of Dallas, is a brother of | the local Territorial official Mr. Andrews, who came to Juneau Yol “ns the personal representative of S s ®¥E~d | Gov. James V. Allréd of Texas, to in California sunshine, his old |jnyite Gov. John W. Troy to attend Tough as elephant hide. Basy as an old shoe, No wonder LEVI'S have been the choice of miners, lumbermen and other eutdoor men for nearly 70 years. LEVI'S are made from specially-loomed denim, 50 heavy it won't even snag in brush. They're copper-riveted atall points of strain...and so strongly stitched that you get A NEW PAIR FREE IF THEY RIP GLEVI LEVI STRAUSS & CO. San Francisco - Los Angeles - | sition at 'Dallas in 1936, stated that he is enjoying his first visit to Alas- ka very much. He hopes that many Alaskans will attend the Dallas Ex- osition. “Six flags have flown over Texas,” Andrews said, ‘“The flags of Franze, Rickey and Breadon, and Bottom- Spain, Mexico, Texas, the United ley joined him again. | States and the Confederate States— For three years they roomed to- | the Stars and Stripes since 1865. gether, bunked a ss the tram"rhe color of these flags has not aisles, consoled each other about faded—Texas is color itself. The being sent from a world series club Texas Centennial Central Exposition to a last-place club. At this point will be just as colorful as the flags MacPhail entered the picture again.|that have flown over her 265,869 Chick was down with a bad cold;square miles of beauty.” at the time and when he said he| wanted to go back to California to DB CAmHEfiE get over it, MacPhail pointed to the | number of people who get ovorl FROM KETCHIKAN colds in Cincinnati. So Chick went | anyway, and MacPhail had him! Dr. Rae L. Carlson of Ketchikan suspended. |arrived on the steamer Alaska after | Thus Jim was lett almost alone.|stops to care for patients at Wran-' All those brash youngsters that are gell and Petersburg. Dr. Carlson wllll over-running the Reds’ renaissance be at the Gastineau Hotel until’ lineup are of a different baseball | Sunday morning. She will return to| generation, His only consolation is her place of business in Ketchikan | that MacPhail has picked up, late- on the North Sea. ly, two comparative old-timers, Kiki| Dr. Carlson reports business Cuyler and Babe Herman. Jim can | conditions are very good in Ketchi—{ discuss “remember whens"” wlthiknn. Great preparations are being these two, and after you've had a|made for the Industrial Fair and dozen years in the league it seems |Carnival to be held there August 30 this is one of the real pleasures of (to September 2, inclusive, and a the game. great many out-of-town visitors are - - expected to attend. SONS OF NORW AY A permanent welcoming commit- tee has been appointed with W. K. WILL INITIATE, Spaulding as Chairman, The Fair MEE-"NG TONIGHT‘Commuwe has the full financial { support of the City Council. Ii is in- tended that the Fair shall become Sons of Norway, Svalvard local;an annual event. e Three 20-round fights were staged Cards, dancing and refreshments' at Butte, Mont., within a three-day will enliven the evening, and the period in 1903. committee in charge is anticipating | a large attendance. CIR3 e | Night motorcycle races have drawn large crowds in California | during the 1935 season, | Sent Up the Ohio River Then Chick was sent to the Reds, | and a year later Sidney Weil paid | out some more cash to Messrs. HUNTING OR FISHING TRIPS The M. S. “Wanderer” is open for charter. Inquire aboard boat.or Phone 293, Member Juneau Sports- men Association, Further information may be secured at George Bros. SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! LOW FARES! Air-conditioned trains to CALIFORNIA ‘When you go south this year, enjoy a fast, smooth trip by train. Leave Seattle any evening and have dinner in San Francisco the next night. Or § on and wake up in Los m:: next morning. W ‘This year, for no extra charge, you'll ‘have the added comfor: of | air-conditioning if you ride on our crack le or West Coast. The air in cars on these trains is auto- | matically warmed or cooled to the | ideal temperature. At the same tages, costs very little. Sleeping car rates are a third less than formerly. Dining car meals athew low prices: And rail fares are now 2¢ a mile and . Here's one example: TO LOS ANGELES From: Seattle . . . . $21.50 $34.00 $40 Vidcouver,B.C. 24.50 39.50 46 ‘These fares good in coaches on our fastest trains; it pntica He:ralded as a “foolproof” plane, this ship, two views of which are shown above, has been ordered by the federal government for the department of commerce. The plane, its designers say, can-be flown easily by anyone who ean drive an automobile. It can land in a steep glide, making it possible to clear high obstacles and get into a small plot of ground. Test flights were made at Ypsilanti, Mick. thereafter, said final proof will be accepted and final certificate is- sued. | FLORENCE L. KOLB, | Acting Register. First publication, June 26, 1935 ‘lasc publication, Aug. 21, 1925 * “Premier Lyons (left) of Australia, temporarily delayed by a ship collision when he started his homeward voyage from Seattle, Wash., re-routed his trip to San Francisco and saw the towering S8an Fran- cisco-Oakland Bay bridge. With him were F. J. McKenna (center) and J. A, Swanson, (Associated Press Photg) . also in improved i time the air is filtered to make it Tourist Pulimans, plus %‘:"h ¥ fresh and clean. charge (upper berth from Portland 1 Train travel, with its many advan- to Los Angeles $3.40, lower $4.25): i [ b ol #" ...and on to MEXICO CITY | Through Pullian cars to Mexico Seattle to Mexico City is w - | City from Los Angeles on our West $118.30, on sale every d: i | Coast Route via Mazatlan and October 15. Low fares this winter, i | . It’s the posulu place too. Write for our free booklet, to go this year. Roundtrip from *“I've Been to Mexico™s 2 i | South Pacifi ; ern Pacific i For folders, reservations or additional information, write to: B. C. Taylor, } 1405 Fourth Ave., Seattle, Wash.; or C. G. Alton, 474 Granville St., /| Vancouver, B, C; ox J. A, Ormandy, 705 Pacific Bldg., Portland, Ore, 1

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