The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 19, 1935, Page 5

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WHATS THE MATTER WITH YOU? HAVEN'T YOU ANY MANNERS? | SPOKE TO SEVERAL PEOPLE ON THE STREET TO-DAY AND YOU NEVER REMOVED YYOUR REMOVED AND HERE YOU ARE, SITTING AROUND THE HOUSE AND YOU HAVEN'T THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 19, 1935 | PUT THIS HAIR- YO TONIC ON ME HEAD THIS MORNIN' AN { THINK T MADE ME HEAD SWELL' BuUT. MAGGIE,ME DARLIN'- | CAN'T G\'T YOUR VT OFF, By GEORGE McMANUS U IDIOT! CAN'T YOU CHIGAGO CUBS DEFEAT GIANTS IN WILD GAME St. Loufs Also Defeats Brooklyn in National League Race CHICAGO, T, Sept. 19.— The rampaging Cubs ran their spectac- ular winning streak to 15 games yesterday, by crushing the New York Giants by a score of 15 to 3. The wild and wooly game, which was witnessed by 33,000 fans, left them wondering if Bill Terry's team is in the National League pennant race. As a result of yesterday's games, the Cubs are still two and one half| games ahead of the St. Louis Car-| dinals, who beat Brooklyn, who are six and one-half games ahead of the Giants. NO-RUN GA /. GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Seattle 5; San Francisco 6. Los Angeles 2; Sacramento 9. Missions 10; Hollywood 4. Portland 5; Oakland 7. National League Brooklyn 3; St. Louis 6. New York 3; Chicago 15. Boston 2; Pittsburgh 5. Philadelphia 5; Cincinnati 6. American League Detroit 3; Boston 4. St. Louis 7, 3; New York 4, 6. Cleveland 10, 10; Philadelphia 5, 0. Chicago 4; Washington 5. 'All Rights Reserved by The Assoclaled Press : By Pap TE ClCAGO WHITE SOX. HAVE HAD THEIR> SHARE OF MOy . NO-HIT_PITCHERS Ver, Tep I = TE LATEST WHITE SOX HURLER. To PITCH A NO-HIT) ME ot G CHARLEY ROBERTSON , —PITCHED A PERFECT “GAME. AGANST WE TSERS IN 1922 —~ONE OF HE S/X OW . - NOT A MAN REACHED FIRST I § seem to have quite a talent for arm, TEAM STANDINGS Pacific Coast League IR NEARFINISH : OFTRAINING 500 500 480 ; Negro, Former Champion,| Drive Through Hard | Drills. Yesterday \ 439 361 NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—(Copy-| righted by Associated Press, 1935) | —Both Joe Louis, Detroit’s Brown| Bomber, and Max Baer, one-time| world’s heavyweight boxing cham- | pion, were near the close of their| training grinds today in prepara-! tion for a bout in Yankee Stadium: here next Tuesday night. ; Louis went through a terrific; session yesterday at his Pompton'! Lakes, N. Y. camp, polishing off | sparring partners with ease. Ex-| cept for another boxing session | Saturday, Louis is through with; hard work and will do only a lit-| tle loosening up today, '.omon-owi | San Francisco Missions ............ Portland Seattle 2 Los Angeles . ‘Oakland Sacramento Hollywood .. National League Won Lost 94 90 84 83 62 65 . 60 34 Pet Chicago 644! St. Louis New York Pittsburgh . Brooklyn Cincinnati Philadelphia .. Boston American League Won Lost Pct. 920 639 82 681 % 521 3 507 70 497 . 62 437 - 85 396 Detroit New York Cleveland Boston Chicago Washington St. Louis Philadelphia and Sunday. | At Speculator, N. Y., Baer has |been drawing crowds of railbirds who find him either impressive or HNED HVE HUNDRED-‘anythlng but impressive, depending , Judge Simon Hellenthal in the |largely on the day. Yesterday he' U. 8. District Court at Cordova tore through a couple of sparring! sentenced the Copper River Pack- |Partners and never drew a breath ing Company to pay a fine of |during the process. $500 for having maintained its | He weighed in at a shade under traps in operation after the clos-|211 pounds after a lengthy work- | ure period fixed by the Bureau of jout. His trainers said he is Fisheries. The case, argued at the |counting the moments until he gets Seward term of the U. S. District |into the ring with Louis. | Court where the company was —————— | found guilty on three counts, came | WRANGELL ELKS INITIATION to the Cordova term on a demur-| Wrangell Elk: held an initiatory rer. ceremony recently, when six baby Elks, F. W. Wilkins, Neil Grant,! Ben C. Broadhead, Ted Hetchcock, and Frank P. Barnes, were given‘ antlers. PACKING COMPANY IS 0. B. WILLIAMS CO. SASH—DOORS—INSIDE TRIM i uA cor‘npmfm linei‘rte:dy at all || ! mes for immediate delivery. | Here are some timely :u;;g- 1 DOORS — WINDOWS | tions for the new home or mod- || Buy direct from manufact S srnizing the present one. SAVE § § § %" Veneer Wallboard 4x8 Doors—2-6x6-6, one panel sheets .............$35.00 per M |! 3x10 6-Lt. Sash OM | | Doors—2-8x6-6, one panel, light ... ..83.85 20x35 10x12 6-Lt. Sash e Windows—24x24, 2 light .. $170 Cellar Sash—34x19, 3 light ...$ .77 ! i f veeee S8 .$1.14 each 1 . 1.34each . 1.67each ... 242 each ||Complete Millwork service. Cabinet Work. Sash. Doors. Frames. Finish and Common Lumber. Hardware. | Veneer Panels. Garage doors with glass, | 40"X70°X1% ............... 6.15 each Special discount on all orders of $100.00 or over. Write for free illustrated catalog. 0. B. WILLIAMS CO. 1933 Firsi Ave. South Seattle, Wash. |Write for our new catalog FREE MILLWORK SUPPLY COR 2221 - I3t SOUTH SEATTLE She is ved by her husband, Charles Finzel, their two sons, Or- ville and James, three sisters, Mrs. Kittie E .Carter of Juneau, Mrs. William Booz and Miss Annie Bar- vie of Ketchikan, and a brother, Episcopal church in Ketchikan. | Alden R. Harvie of Marietta, Wash- Rev. E. R. Isaacson officiated. | ington. MRS. MINNIE FINZEL DIES AT KETCHIKAN Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie E. Finzel, aged 50, who died in the Ketchikan General Hospital, were held last week in the Methodist ‘whcxv the hurler of such a game | s P 0 R T * |has done little else to recommend| | |nim for lasting laurels. Bob Burke, ! |of the Senators, who in 1931 pitch- | SLANTS }ed a no-hitter against the Red Sox ‘1 | —the last recorded in the Ameri- can League until Kennedy wrote his on the books—was never more than a mediocre moundsman. Georg 9 Davis, of the Braves, and Ernie eball’s hall of fame with his| goon of the Browns, each pitched | no run effort against the one for posterity and did mothing | and Indians he was merely nore o enhance their records. following the example set bY 8| 14 ook Walter Johnson 13 years number of big league freshmen. ’I’hc}m get around to pitching his no- When Vernon Kennedy of the | 0 White Sox, pitched himself ! [ |into be a decided edge over their|ajeyander never crashed into the| experienced fellow hurlers| ceject circle at all. no-hit performances are con-' All-Around Star There is no reason why Kennedy Kennedy's no-hitter was the first: ghomd pe jinxed by the fact that by a major-leaguer since pe tymed in a no-hit, no-run § 1934, when Paul Dean | game in his freshman year. With | jin his first year with the St. Louis| 19 victories to show against sovpn}’ 1s, turned back Brooklyn|geteats for the White Sox, he gives | thout a hit or run, Carl Hubbell| gefinite promise of developing into | t back the Pirates in the same|, joq) pitcher. He won 17 games for ‘Iu~)non a freshman wearing the' oklahoma City last year against {Giants’ livery in 1929. John Mc-|class A teams of the Texas league. Graw saw two more of his first-| The White Sox’s no-hit star was | year pitchers step into the hall of |guite an all-around athlete in his fame—Christy Matheson did it in undergraduate days at Central Mis- 1901 and Jeff Tesreau came Lhrough‘souri State Teacher's College where with one in 1912. | he starred in football and track in Fresh Makes Good | addition to his brilliant work on| One of the six “perfect” games on the diamond. He held several Mis- |the major-league record books Was|souri Intercollegiate A. A. track and | | pitched by a freshman, Charley|fielq marks and topped his efforts| Robertson of the Chicago White|in that sport by winning the deca- | “30\ The 1922 season was only a‘,bhlon at the Penn Relays in 1927, |couple of weeks old when Charley| Kennedy has had a brief trial |sat down the Tigers without allow- | with the Pittsburgh Pirates and inzg a man to reach first base. last year Connie Mack brought him | The wearers of the pale hose of |yp from Oklahoma City only to send the Chicago American league entry him back when he developed a sore | 'hurling no-hitters, for in addition | PRASETORUSI N TSI s |to Rcbertson and Kennedy, five other pitchers have been admitted LIQUOR CONFISCATED r hurlers seem to have en-|pjiter: the great Grover Cleveland |z GOES TO JAIL ‘Mny 22 but he must do the six! Six months in Jail and a fine of | months in addition and also anoths er 32 days unless he pays the fine. ., Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! PRIERAFE S PR R Y SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! $656 was given Charles G .Men-| namin by U. S. Commissioner J. F. Mullen on a charge of assaulting Robert Croken last spring. Men- namin has been in jail since that PAY AS YOU WASH $3.00 DOWN $5.00 MONTHLY General Electric Thor Easy We handle three leading makes of Washing and Ironing Machines and sell them on very easy terms at reasonable prices. Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 i — ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Governm.ent Inspected RICE & AHLERS CO. Heating Plumbing Sheet Metal Work | PHONE 34 | GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beez WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 Ketchikan police made their first| arrest since repeal of “tax unpaid liquor” when they picked up Theo- | dore Magnuson, also known as Ted | Nelson, on complaint of his land- Ne Jinx To Kennedy lord, R. W. Edmonds. Searching A no-hit, no-run performance|the premises, police found a 25~ does not necessarily place the stamp | gallon barrel containing the alleged of greatness on a pitcher, for there|“moonshine”. The case was turned have been any number of cases!over to Federal authorities. to the hall of fame while toiling in| the White Sox uniform—J. J. Cal-| jlahan (1902), Frank Smith (1905 |and 1906), Ed Walsh (1911), Eddie Cicotte (1917), and 'Ted Lyons (1926). Buy with confidence where you see the SCHENLEY MARK of MERIT «+.then you'll drink with contentment All these and other Schenley liquors await you at your Schenley dealers— trustwor- thy values every one. No mat- terhowlittleorhow muchyou pay, be sure your purchase bears the Schenley Mark of Merit. It’s your utmost assur- ' anceofquality and a fair price. SCHENLEY'S GOLDEN WEDDING, BLENDED WHISKEY America's finest blended whiskey. “It's ALL Whiskey." SILVER WEDDING | DISTILLED LONDON DRY GIN Tea delicious ingredients give it the world's tastiest flavor KINTORE LIQUEUR SCOTCH WHISKY Schealey weat direct to Scotand 10 : e Y] get you s really ative Scotch whisky. STRAIGHT WHISKEY Once they leara its quality, they all come back for more. OLD QUAKER 'mG"lT ‘WHISKEY" SCHENLEY'S . BED LABEL—WHITE LABEL | TheDissp seling somhe whiskey AMERICAN CREAM BRAND BLENDED WHISKIES So creamy smooth, so mellow, so mild, you'll agree “If's the Cream.” OLD QUAKER DISTILLED DRY GIN A favorite everywhere. 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The aristocrat of the House of Schenley—every drop at least 4 years old. In Bourbon or Rye. SCHENLEY'S CREAM OF KENTUCKY STRAIGHT WHISKEY o Favorite in Kentucky, where they call it "double rich”,/ Bank Juneau, Alaska SN2 W F R

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