The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 28, 1935, Page 5

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* . . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE . BRINGING UP FATHER PERCY QUARTS, A BOY | WENT TO SCHOOL. WITH: IS GOING TO CALL . | TELEPHONED HIM TO COME TO DINNER.. HE STRUCK IT RICH IN THE GOLD-FIELDS AND 1S BRINGING HIS PARTNERS - BEGINNING OF THE FIRST ROUND IF | REMEMBER RIGHT HE ALSO TO COURSE IN A SCHOOL N~ o Syoe i BROWNS DEFEAT SENATORS FOUR GAMES IN ROW Last Place St. Louis Team Certainly Touches Up Washington ST. LOUIS, Mo.,, Aug. 35— The| disconcerting last place Browns ex- tended the home stretch of their victory string to six straight yester- day with a double conquest over the Washington Senators winning 10 to | €and 11 to 1. The twin successes marked their | fourth victory in a row for the| Browns at the expense of the Sena- tors and incidentally gave them their longest winning streak of the | season. GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast League Missions 0; Seattle 8. Hollywoed 1; Portland 6. ©Oakland 5; San Francisco 6. Sacramento 3; Los Angeles 4. National League Cincinnati 7, 1; Brooklyn 3, 10. All other games rained out. American League Fhiladelphia 5, 0; Detroit 6, 5. New York 13, 3; Chicago 10, 4. Washington 6, 1; St. Louis 10, 11., Boston-Cleveland, rain. { TEAM STANDINGS Pacific Coast League (Second Half) San Francisco Missions Portland Seattle Los Angeles Oakland Sacramento Hollywood Nationa: League Lost 44 Pct. Bt. Louis ......... 627 New York . Chicago .. Pittsburgh Brooklyn Philadelphia Cincinnati ........... Boston American League Won TLost 8 ... 68 . 62 ..o 62 .. 60 . 51 Pet. Detroit New York Cleveland Boston Chicago Philadelphia ‘Washington . 50 St. Louis 47 - eee HAUTALA DUE TONIGHT Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hautala! are among the passengers who ar-! rived last night on - the Yukon. Mr. Hautala will replace Mr. Regele as high school athletics coach. He will also teach in the depart- mentalized grades of the grade| school. i —,— st | ABBOTT TO SEATTLE Paul Abbott, connected with the Dupont Powder Company, is a pas-| senger on the North Sea for Se-| attle. 572 517 512 508 438 413 395 "SPORT SLANTS :heavywcight champion’s hands are {in such good shape that there is he succeeded. OK A REFORM )A\‘\/’/ ) 12 () " WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1935. By GEORGE McMANUS MAGGIE: MEET KLONDIKE MIKE, GRUBSTAKE PETE, LOWER-LEVEL JAKE — 5 J W e, e | DAILY SPORTS CARTOON-- Joe, -~ THE DAOOY OF ALL SPORTS ANNOUNCER S 16 FAMOUS PLEA FORD SILENCE AND #S GOOD NATURED BANTERING WITH HE CROWD ADPDED COLOR~ TO SPORTS GATHERINES STRETCH OF INTRODUCED 'Z SMALL o By Pap <45 YEARS JOE n ALL - GREAT AND b4 4 Rights Reserve oit Negro. Baer is counting rather heavily on a little PROMOTER MIKE JACOBS has|he feels he holds over ace-in-the-hole which the Bomb- }rvor packed when he faces the De- a just about decided to abandon the |er. Max feels that the impression he | plan he had in mind of signing Art made on Louis last winter when Lasky for the role of understudy to | the pair met in the dressing room Max Baer in his coming fight with | Prior to one of Max's exhibition Joe Louis. Mike took a flying trip [matches was a lasting one. He was up to Max Baer’s training cemp at | champion of the world at the time. ! Speculator, N. Y., and saw enough | He made the most of the opportun- to convince him that the former |ity to impress the young negro with hardly any likelihood he will need, Sharkey Was Felled By Idol Lasky to pinch-hit for him against| The former champion feels that the Brown Bomber. | it will prove andther Jack Sharkey- | Jack Dempsey case. Dempsey had Jacobs was very much impressed|)ons peen Sharkey's idol, so when it {by the way Baer tore into the 200- \same to their battle Sharkey just pound punching bag With no in-lgimply could not overcome that in- tention of sparing either hand. | ferior feeling and suffered a knock- Baer is really putting in some | u; when he should have beaten hard licks to get into shape for|, pempsey who was far past his the match with Louis. He hops °“"prime, of bed at six in the morning to take a five-mile jaunt through the woods. Plenty of wood-chopping and rowing to put him in shape for the ring work ahead fills a good part of the day. Baer had better nmot bank too |heavily on that angle. In the first | place Louis and Sharkey are as dif- ferent as night and day in tempera- {ment. Can you imagine the cold, | emotionless Louis going into one of Will Need Those Hands {those Sharkey crying spells? Or It seems strange that Max’s hands, ‘r turning around to talk with the ref- which a few short weeks ago were, reported to be in bad shape, should |sey almost tore his head off with suddenly become the iron fists or‘;a left hook? Hardly! At least not on | old, but Manager Ancil Hoffman in- | what he has shown in his bouts to sists that the miraculous cure was | date. * effected by a series of treatments at| When Joe Humphries raised Max the Baltimore hospital. Let’s hope(Baer‘s right hand after he had his hands are in shape, for he’s go- |been declared the winner over Pri- ing to need all the dynamite he'mo Carnera he was announcing his his greatness and is satisfied that| eree as Jack did just before Demp- | d by The Asso | 1ast world’s heavyweight champion The veteran anmnouncer was too ill to'act as master of ceremonies when Jimmy Braddock upset the dope and took the crown from Baer. Humphries and his good natured | bantering with the fight fans who |loved him has for years been a part of the picture of the ring shows in the east and will be sadly missed. i e GIRL BABY FOR LARSONS At 9 pm. Monday Mr. and Mrs. Anton Larson became the proud parents of a baby girl weigh- {ing 8% pounds, at St. Ann's Hos- pital. e - MOTHER, SON GO HOME Mrs. Clifford Mason and her in- fant son born at St. Ann’s Hospital on August 22 jreturned to their | home today. | | i MRS. STOLFI LEAVES |~ Mrs. Frances Stolfi, wife of Lieut. |Jg) Henry Stolfi of the Coast | Guard cutter Tallapoosa, is accom- | panied by her young son, Russell, as she travels to Seattle on the |North Sea. She and her son will | join Lieutenant Stolfi in Seattle for |a vacation while the Tallapoosa is receiving her semi-annual overhaul. B MRS. DELAMORE LEAVES Mrs. Estacy Delamore, aunt of Dr. |H. Vance, is travelling to Vancou- ver and Seattle on the steamer Prince George. She has been visit- ling here with Dr. Vance. | SHOP IN JUNEAU! I_Ier"e "Is F ootbail Sciteciule f;)r >19:?5 Pacific Coast Season FLEISCHACKER, | EX-GRIDDER, ON ALASKAN HUNT San Francisco Party Pass- es Through Juneau Enroute Westward } erb Flelschacker, Jr., one of the | ootball pla; ever to play ord Univi , knows that eason is near, so he's not opposition | two | b ¥ othe: eisco the and Fleischacker, with llow residents of San F ; a passenger for Seward on camer Yukon from Seattle,| e pigskin star has every intent 1wckling” all the wild game that 1 has to offer. king every bit as husky and tanned as he did when he pl.l,V("(l" for the Indians, Fleischaker talked| | over plans here last night with his cc ns, James Flood, son of a pi San Francisco realior, and | Hugh Mackenzie, who has made sev- | eral hunting trips to the Interior,| and who is a friend of Joe Ibach, aska guide. Mackenzie explained, ward by Jack Lein and two oth ides. Ar- nents have been made for two which will be used to fly | the hunters first to the north shore| of 'Cook Inlet | Lake Chatachame, Mt. Spur, the| north fork of the Kuskokwim River, | and Story Lake probably will be visited late Fleischacker, son of a San Fran- cisco banker, when asked just what | he aimed to “ta ' named gri: {bedt, fhoose, sheep, and goat, in | that order. Asked when the party planned to ! return, the Stanford gridder took on that *“touchdown” look and said | “Not until we get what we are af- ter.” VIKING CLU3 PLANS PRE-HOLIDAY EVENT ‘ _The Viking Club is planning a pie-holiday affair for Saturday, August 31, at the Odd Fellows Hall There will be cards and refresh- ments, and dancing to the music of Albert Peterson. According to the Committee-in- Charge, this will be the season’s ef- ford at royal entertainment, as it/ will be followed by a two-day holi- day. The party, will be met at - e WOLLAND FORR! UNIVERISTY OF Wolland Forrest, former Juneau young man who is now employed by a dredging company in the Iditarod, will attend the University of Alas- ka, taking the short course in min- |ing as soon as the dredging opera- tions shut down for the season. This i3 according to a letter received by B. B. Green. Young Forrest will attend college during the winter and then go back to the Iditarod at the opening of the dredge operations next season - eee - OUT TO BECOME NU! ALASKA Miss Frances Hoover, of Fair- banks, is southbound for Yakima, Wash., where she will enter St. | Elizabeth's hospital to receive train- ing as a nurse. {MRS. CURTIS WILL Schultz Bewildered Which way can a “reformed” racketeer turn, ponders “Dutch” Schultz at Syracuse since, if he re- turns to New York City to see his new-born son, three law agencies plan his arrest. RETURN TO SITKA Mrs. Arnold Curtis and her daughter, Alice Marion Curtis, will leave Juneau Friday for Sitka on the motorship Northland. They have been- residing here for two ) but will return to Mrs. Cur- tis Sitka residence, She is the mot of Mrs. Vern Coley, whose husband is connected with the Juneau Drug Company. G. F. Dunbar was a passenger aboard the PAA ‘Fairchild flown by lex Helden from Sitka to Juneau yesterday afternoon. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Commissioner’s Court for | the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. Before M. E. MONAGLE, Commis- sioner and Ex-officio Probate Judge, Juneau Precinet. In the Matter of the Last Will and Testament of AUGUST ANDER- SON, Deceased. NOTICE, I8 HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been duly appointed by the Probate Court for the Juneau Precinct, Territory of Alaska, administrator with the will annexed of the last will and testa- ment and estate of August Ander- son, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them to the undersigned, at his office, at Juneau, Alaska, with proper vouchers attached, within six months from the date of this notice. DATED at Juneau, Alaska, Aug- ust 20, 1935. H. L. FAULKNER Administrator with the will am ed of the last will and testament and estate of August. Anderson, deceased. First publication, Aug. 21, 1935 Last publication, Sept. 11, 'EATHERTOUCH Twu-way writing, Streamlined BALANCE design for ease and speed, ONE- STROKE Vacuum Filling Mechanism, are the three great achievements in fountain pen construction which make SHEAFFER'S the finest, most depend- able writing instruments. The LIFETIME pen (White Dot) isunconditionally guaranteed except against loss and wilful damage*. *Subject only to Available in a variety of colours. a tmall service fee of 35C for duties, insurance and administrative expenses. AT LEADING STATIONERY AND JEWELRY STORES Nature Provides Speedway For Briton’s Record By JOHN L. WHEELER (Associated Press Staff Writer) BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Aug 28 —Mother Nature may not have bad Sir Malcolm Campbell in mind when thousands of years ago she laid out one of the world's finest race courses in a mountain-locked northwestern Utah basin, but marble-like vastness of the Bonne- ville Salt Flats seems to hay d created for the titled Britishe his thundering Bluebird. The daring Englishman will roll his giant car onto the flats the sec- ond week in September for a race | against time—a race in which he hopes to reach his long-hoped-for goal of 300 miles per hour. | And there is every likelihood Sir! § Malcolm will attain this terrific| speed. In the parlance of a gambler, | it's a natural. Only some unforseen | accident will keep. Bluebird and its | driver from roaring up to tne 300-| miles-per-hour mark, such noted race drivers as John Cobb of Lon-| don and Ab Jenkins of Salt Lake | City agree. Other Marks Made on Salt t‘oune’ | Cobb and Jenkins have shattered | | world marks right and left this summer. They used cars smaller| than Campbell's Bluebird and they | sought endurance records. First,| | Jenkins put his machine through a |24-hour endurance drive and col- | |lected virtually every record avail- | ;nbxe in the bracket in which he| raced. He pushed his car up to 150 miles at times and set a 24-hour| average of well over 100. Soon after- | ward Cobb came over from England | |and grabbed all of Jenkins' records. | | The glistening salt flats were de- | | posited thousands of years ago by | i the receding waters of Lake Bonne- | | ville. All that remains of the lake imdny is that body of brine now | called Great Salt Lake. The glaring jnxpunsc of level rock salt extends jover a basin 42 miles long and 17| miles across, and ranges in thickness | i from two inches to five feet. Al-|dency, drivers have found in the though water is known to exist un-|Past, to draw the subsurface water jder the crust in some parts of the|through the rock-like crust and basin to a depth of several feet, the |make the course “slushy.” However, {hard surface will support tons of |this condition has very seldom ex- \'weight, and racers have nothing to|lsted, and when it has, a few days ‘1\-;11' from the platter-like course, ~|have seen it return to solid form. | Weather, A Minor Hazard etoth 1 {7 A | TUnlike Florida's Daytona beach, MRS. SHANKS LEAVES { jwhere Campbell sought unsuccess-| Mrs. J. King Shanks, wife of the |fully to reach his cherished goal, representative of the Gladding Me= ‘l.‘n’ salt flats do not depend uponfm‘nn Company, clay products firm, {tides, the moon or the wind for the left Juneau on the Aleutian for {“right” condition. Even rain will not 1 Ketchikan, There she will relolr‘ spoil the course for Sir Malcolm. |her husband, who left on the Al- The worst downpour will not make |aska from here. |it soggy or rough. The blazing sun | \, of a September sky would dry the MISS BOURNE DUE track within 48 hours. Miss Dorothy Bourne, who will 'Pu sibly the only unfavorable con- |teach the fourth grade in Junean dition which might slow up the big | this year was an inbound passeng '« Bluebird would come from humid-|on the Yukon. This is Miss ity. Dampness in the air has a ten- | Bourne's first year in Juneau. Sir Malcolm Campbell, at the wheel of his famous ‘Bluebird, will race along Utah's Bonne- ville salt flats, nature-made course, where other drivers have found conditions ideal for record-breaking, as he seeks his goal of 300 miles an hour in September. ———— Local Radishes, Onions, Turnips—Fresh Daily CALIFORNIA GROCERY ! The Pure Foods Store PHONE 478 Prompt Delivery FOR SALE! FAST CRUISER . . . 18 miles per hour, sleeps two, cooking facilities and excellent for sport fishing. COMMUNICATE WITH Laurence Freeburn SITKA, ALASKA 26 Hour Service Merchants' Lunch Short Orders Regular Dinners ILEY’S CAFE “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat

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