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OH, MY OH, MY T 01D MY BEST TO WARN HIM-- THE DAILY 'ALASKA EMPIRE; THUR Malay, a pmmlsing first’ sacker. But Joe needed more seasoning, so back he went to the minors. sccording to the reports that have been drifting through, Joe has not come along as fast as Terry had hoped and may not be ready for big league service by next season. Bill would like to have Phil Cav- arretta. And so would almost any other big league manager. Phil plays the first sack as though it was part of him and already has the poise of ‘a veteran player. No| wonder that Terry is envious Charlie Grimm’s good fortune in picking up a gem like the 19-year- old Cavaretta, enabling him to re- tire to the bench secure in the knowledge that his old job at first is being well taken care of. Executive Duties Cali Terry If the Giants’ manager is enter- taining any ideas of trying to wean 0 you'Ll GET 20 i YEARS FOR > . ' » p R e L B ks TIGERS SCORE ~ Dai ts Cartoon awy Spor j ) ANOTHER WIN; . ROOKIE HELPS (= o o | / ' Roxie Lawson, Righthand-| er Pllchel" Chalks Up e O Four-Hit Contest | | worries TRYING TO KEEP HIS TEAN DETROIT, Mich, Aug. 29.—The | ON.ToR American League's leading Detroit | - Tigers wound up the longest home stand season yesterday with a 10 (0| 0 victory over the Philadelphia Ath- | letics behind the 4-hit pitching of ki Roxie Lawson, rookie right-hander obtained from Toledo a week ago. | GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Oakland 2; San Francisco 4. | Hollywood 2; Portland 0. | A Sacramento 12; Los Angeles 10. Missions 12; Seattle 8, game went 14 innings. 1 National League | ’ Pittsburgh 6, 9; New York 1,5. | Chicago 5, 1; Boston 2, 2. | Cincinnati 2; Brooklyn 4. St. Louis 13, 5; Philadelphia 5, 1.] American League i New York Chicago 1, 2. ! Bo;ton 0, 1; Cleveland 2, 3. } BILL CAWT @O ON FOREVER) Philadelphia 0; Detroit 11. | ~HES CASTING ABOUT FOR = Washington 10, St. Louis 2, 2. | A FIRST SACKER TO i | TAKE S PLACE 1 Pacific Coast League [ (Second Half) { Won Lost Pet. | San Francisco 41 30 577 Missions 42 31 Portland 0 32 g B ESOTIe waetlll Seattle 38 33 Al Rights Rovarved by The Associsted Press Los Angeles 38 34 "Oakland 34 39 Sacramento 30 43 Hollywood 26 47 Nationar League ) ‘won Lost There's a grand opportunity 8t. Louis 76 44 awaiting some capable young first New York 4 47 baseman. One like Phil Cavarretta, Chicago 76 50 of the Chicago Cubs, for instance. Pittsburgh .. 1 55 /1f you happen to know of one, pre- | Brooklyn 56 67 5| ferably a left-hander, send him to Philadelphia . 53 70 |Bill Terry, the New York Giants' Cincinnati 54 T2 | manager. Boston 33 88 Terry has been casting about in hopes of finding' Someone with American League enough stuff to step in there and Won Lost Pct.|relieve him when the time comes Detroit .79 43 648 |for Bill to concentrate on his ex- New York . . 70 51 578 'ecutive duties. That may not be 4 Cleveland 64 58 525|scon but Bill wants to have the Boston 62 61 504 |right man handy when he decides Chicago .. 4 60 60 500 | to step out of his player's uniform Philadelphia . 51 67 432 Right now there isn’t a first base- Washington 51 72 ,Alsliman in the National league who Bt. Louis 48 3 .396 ;rates higher than Terry but Bill SRR . T B knows as well as the next fellow STROEBE RETURNS T. J. Stroebe, a resident of Du- pont and connected with the Du- pent Powder Company, returned to Juneau from Seattle on the Yukon.!considerable interest in young Jog jthat he can't go on forever. He is 37 now. All Want Cavarretta Early in the season Terry showed boat (top) in trainin, hands to sock the slated Press Photos® i Howi About Those Hands, Max? Max Baer is apparently doing his best to get thése mitts in proper shape to trade punches with Joe Louis in September. Rowing a heavy at Speculator, N. Y., has helped strengthen his | g’ sand bag (bottom) during a-work out. (Asso " ’ Cavarretta away from the Cubs, he had better dismiss the thought. The former Chicago high youth is going to stay right in his home town where he is tremen- dously popular with the neighbors. Right now Terry has his hands well filled with the task of guiding the Giants to another pennant. But in the back:of shis head remains the hope of finding a capable man to take his place in the field while he directs the Jeam fyom: theibench | and sits in on the executive meet- ings of the club: . Natural Spitter National league batters have found cause to complain about some of the deliveries of George Earn- shaw, of the Brooklyn Dodgers, serves up to them. And on a number of occasions their claims have been supported by the findings of the umpires who investigated. Time af- ter time umpires have tossed out the ball the “Big Mgose” had been using. It seems that George has been to:sing a “spitter.” And he is not, of course, one of the remaining old- timers allowed to use that delivery. Earnshaw does not ‘actually spit on the ball in (he manner of Burleigh | Grimes, his is a. natural “spitter.” | He merely perspires so freely that it is an easy matter to gather enough moisture on the ball to make it hop in the fashion of the real spit ball. ————— Warning Issued To Housewives Of Juneau Next Monday will be a holi- day and all stores will be closed. Housewives are warned not to forget to do shopping for Sunday and Monday, either to- » morrow or Saturday and if on Saturday, do it early as clerks and drivers may want to make an early get-away on hunting or holiday trips, school | PHELAN RATES Washington Coach Doesn’t See How Indians Can Miss This Fall SEATTLE, Aug. 29. Leland lSlullfUNl University at Palo Alto, Cal, will win the Pacific Coast intercollegiate football champion- ship .for 1935 That, at least, is the candid opin- lion of James Phelan, University of Washington grid coach. In an in- terview with George Varnell, sports leditor of the Seattle Times, he |expressed that belief. “Yes, it looks like Stanford again {to me,” “Irish Jimmy" said. “You know, Tiny Thornhill will ¢ have a ve n outfit. He lost but | two regul from his fine team 1of t year. He will have ex- | perience, co-ordingtion, and a .ver- |satility of individual talent that !cannot be discounted. | Will Be Big | “And get no idea the Stanford |team won't have size. It will have plenty of it. If Stanford does not |finish on top, I will be s L Bng That lengthy speech {the Washington mentor, |to Seattle from a pos due, rated the remaining teams in the Pacific Coast Conference Here are Phelan's pre-season rat- |ings: | | i | | | | | STANFORD TO - Pur- | Murra; Stanford—Must be ranked as fav- N n I ni ling neec Piot Jerry Jones Tells of Search for | Missing Int. Plane n 1934; not - WIN GRID RACE . 1ds on development of reserve SDAY, AUGUST 29; 1935. By GEORGE McMANUS on State—Leader of the division Big and strong, needs real contender later alifornia lronger championship con- . depends surprise; 3etter finished, stronger State—Big; will win some Not ton much. Whatever chance ded. - e Continuea Trom Page One) wdius, was in the air an 9 to 10 hours every day even straight days, from Au- 20, when the search started st 26, when the entire had been c He . ca Fred Mil Adler No Jone whe Moeller both veterans of in the In- oh r zan experience Alton G the passengers on an carried as card the plane flown by throughout the search. wa. s, day after h for his anxiety to tk 12 point where Pacific Bottlers Supply Co. B }‘Alnska Distributors Exchange Bldg."” 1ed, was when it left the jardous territory, vorn by fa- | in NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT JUST A REMINDER Reading time 2 seconds BLENDED WHISKIES nds made him stay at home and rest yesterday, Reports Discredited The report that Hines' plane seen passing over Chicken at noon, an hour after the plane left Dawson, was never defi- nitely established, Jerry Jones said The last time Hines' plane was seen by creditable witnesses, Jones stat- und at Dawson, flew over Swede Creek, and disappeared on a straight course to| “airbanks. | Pilot Jones remarked that Hakon| Christensen, an independent flyer with headquarters at Cantwell, mer- its the highest praise for his part tensen cancelled flights and rushed ane over the most haz- after day, in search for the missing aviator and his passéngers. Others engaged in thé search in addition to Jones, Hall and Christensen, were: John Lynn of the Northarn Air Transport of Falrbanks; Merle Sasseen of the Sasseen Airways of Anchorage, Herm Joslyn of ‘the Pollack Flying Service of Fairbanks, and Lyle Dor- rance of the Dorrance Airways of Copper Center. BRI R MRS ROBERTS DEAD | Mrs. J. G. “Bob” Roberts of Wrangell was found dead of heart) disease in the bathroom of he home. She is survived by her hu: band, whom she married in Wran-| gell on December 14, 1927, and by | two sisters, ! Alaska, unde D - | MR MITCHELL DIE Mrs, Urs Mitchell, who until ntly made her home in Ket-| chikan, died in Bellingham, Wash- ston, at the age of 87, Her body was shipped to Ketchikan for burial Ask for ‘ SCHENLEY'S Red Label or | White Label | BRAND Seattle, Wash. wis oo . oo RO T MRS. DUNBAR 1S PLEASED WITH SEAL SALE WORK Campaign This Season to Be Handled by Alaska Committee, She Says Mrs. Saidie Orr Dunbar, First Vice-President of the General F eration of Women's Clubs, addressed the Juneau and Douglas Women's Clubs at a joint luncheon meeting held this afternoon at the Moder Coffee Shop. Mrs. Dunbar, whose home 1is in on, and who is Exec- y 8f the Oregon Tuber- tion, came to Juneau as a representative of Tupberculosis Associa- Portland, Or utive Secretal culosis Assoc: on August 6 the National tion, “At the request of the Alaska Tuberculosis Committee,” she said, “I went to westward—visiting Cor- dova, Seward, Anchc Fairbanks, and Valdez, and speaking at the women’s clubs wherever there were any. I shall stop in Wrangell, Ketchikan and Sitka on the way out.” Anticipates Success Mrs. Dunbar was pleased at the activity and co-operation of the Alaska Tuberculosis Committee, members of which are as follows: Gov. Troy, chairman; Harry Wat- n, retary; B. M. Behrends, s€ Lr surer. “Last year you had your Christmas seal sale campaign the auspices of the first in said. This r the sale will be handled en- by the Alaska Committee. E W. Griffin is to be the seal sale chairman and I anticipate good results from his leadership. Asked concerning the prevalence of SWEETENS HE BREATH tuberculosis in Alaska, Mrs, Duns bar said, “The average death rate among white people here is very similar to that in the States. The death rate in the native populas tion ten times as,great.” She | reported that at.the June Triennial of the National Tuberculosis Asso- ciation public ‘health reports were {made which showed tuberculosis for 69, per 100,000 population. A sum of '$12,000 was voted by the asso- ciation for an educational campaign, she said. Leaving On Yukon i Mrs. Dunbar, who has beeu the house guest of Mrs. J. C. Thomas in Juneau, will leave Juneau Sep- tember 2 on the Yukon. She wili arrive in Portland on September 10. Mrs. Dunbar is also President of the National Association of T. B, Secretaries. BRE ‘EXCHANGE’ TEACHER VISITING IN JUNEAU Lucy E. Powell, of Honowlu ar- rived on the Yukon, enroute to Fairbanks where she will teach in the Fairbanks school this year. Miss Powell is an “exchange” teacher, exchanging position with a teacher from Fairbanks who will teach thi year in Honolulu, i Miss Powell has taught in jStates and the Hawailan Islands and her mother is the principal of one of the largest schools in Hono= lulu. She is stopping over in Ju- neau until the next boat to thé westward. She Is registered at the Gastineau Hotel., - e is GAS BOAT BURNS The Helen Payne,'dne of the first !gas prwered vessels in commission jin Alaska, burned to the water's {(\r!gfi last week where she lay @&t janchor in Salmon Bay on the eastk coast of Prince of Wales ll\&!& The fire followed an explosion |the cabin due to a hot stove and leaky gas tank. No one was in- jured, LOW FARES! Air-conditioned trains to il b CALIFORNIA Y ‘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 speed on and wake up in Los Angeles next morning. This year, for no extra charge, you'll have the added comfort of air-conditioning if you ride on our crack Cascade or I{’c:t Coast. The air in cars on these trains is auto- matically warmed of cooled to the idéal temperature. At the same time the air is filtered to make it fresh and clean. Train travel, with its many advan- A ¥ .vand on to Theongh Pullman cars to Mexico City fromiLos Angeles on our West Coast Route via Mazatlan and Guadalajara. It’s the ‘popular place to go this year. Roundtrip from tages, costs very little. Sleeping car rates are a third less than formerly. Dining car meals at new low prices, And rail fares are now 2¢ a mile and less. Here’s one example: r TO LOS ANGELES From: OneWay “vitest v Seattle . . . . $21.50 $34.00 $4¢ Vancouver,B.C. 24.50 39.50 46 ‘These fares good in coaches op our fastest trai also in improved . Tourist Pullmans, plus berth” charge (upper berth from Portland * to Los Angeles $3.40, lower $4.25); MEXICO' CITY - Scattle to Mexico City is of $118.30, on sale every day un October 15. Low fares this winter, too. Write for our free g “I've Been to Mexico’’; o 4 For folders, reservations or additional information, write to: B. C. Taylor, 1405 Fourth Ave., Seattle, Wash,; or C. G. Alton, 474 Graanville St., Vancouver, B. C; or J. A. Ormandy, 705 Pacific Bldg., Portland, Ore. PR Local Radishes, Onions, Turnips—Fresh Daily PHONE 478 BAILEY’S CAFE [PPSR Our Services to You G“E Plank of Every SN Phatart ¥ % The Pure Foods Store “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Passenger: Prompt Delivery 2 Hour Service Merchants’ Laneh Short Orders Regular Dinners pos Begin and End at the _yil; Boat R g