The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 1, 1936, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY. MAY 1, |936 BRINGING UP FATHER 3ONNY HAD SOME OF HIS COLLEGE CHUMS HERE TODAY. THEY WERE HOLDING A DEBATE-TOO BAD YOU WERE NOT HERE -THEY JUST \.EFT A FEW MINUTES AGO- OH! TH \ TOLD MEETING N THE PARLOR-| THOUGHT T FOR THEM WAULD BE NICE TO BE ALONE-SO THEM TO USE YOUR ROOM~ ] © JU3¢] King Pedbures Svidicate, SENATORS BEAT |/ TIGERS BY 807 IN NINTH INNING Manager Mickey Cochrane Hit by Foul Ball, Is Out of Game WASHINGTON, May 1. — Jake Powell slammed a ninth inning single down the third base line yesterday afternoon to score Buddy | Myer and the Senators thus de- feated the Detroit Tigers by a score of 8 to 7. Manager Mickey Cochrane, of the | Tigers, was struck on the lefl in- tep by a foul ball hit by Powell and the bruise was sufficient to cause him to retire and he will be! out of the line-up for perhaps, three days. ! GAMES THURSDAY Pacific Coast League Cakland 8; Los Angeles 7. Sacramento 6; San Francisco 5. San Diego 6; Portland 4 Missions 4; Seattle 2. National League Philadelphia 5; Pittsburgh 6. Boston 3; Cincinnati 1. Brooklyn 1; Chicago 2. New York 2; St. Louis 3. American League Chicago 4; Boston 16. St. Louis 8; Philadelphia 12. Detroit 7; Washington 8. Cleveland 1; New York 8. Jenkins and Rhoda Minzgohr. IsTEAM CWINS STANDING Or PACIFIC COAST CLUBS LEAGUE Lost Pet.! 10 697 14 563 15 550 516 PIN TOURNEY 453 (leveland. Hudson, Evans vl Champion Bowlers of ZAGUE 1 Current Contest Wor Lost Pet.| New York 5 615! Team C, including Hudson, Cleve- Chicago 571 land and Evans, won the champion- St. Louis 545 ship of the Elks Elimination Tour- Cincinnati 500 nament from Team I, composed of Oakland Missions Seattle Portland San Francisco Sacramento San Diego Los Angeles NATIONAL Margaret Miss Ledbetter is wearing a very special all-Alaska swimming suit which shculd start a popular wave of fashion for Alaska beaches. HER ”’S T'HAT SUIT ELIMINATION & Hickey, FISH LADDER - WORK FINISHED Ha]e) Bungs Crew n on Auklet — Leaves on 1 | { | Seal Patrol Monday In from the : Pavlof Harbor | | Auklet, on | tish ladder worl pleted. Haley | terda the crew of 12, all relief workers The Warden had high praise for | the workmen and said the job moved | \long in excellent shape and was | completed in record time. “A dan- dy crew of men,” he described them The 72-foot ladder was built at Pavlof at the falls to allow the fish to go up stream to spawn. It has | 14 steps each six by five feet, 30 inches deep with each step 12 inch- es apart. The lowest step is 18 inch- bove normal low water. The steps are staggered and each step at that place com- Charley Beale’s Capitol Theatre usherettes just couldn’t refrain from taking advantage of Juneau’s April sun this week, so they journeyed to the Thane beach for an outi Reading from left to right the Juneau girls are: g and sun bath. Thelma Ledbetter, Evelyn HOLZHEIMER GIVES SETUP ON BASEBALL 'Purely Commumty Affair ‘ | with Sport Only Thought, | League President Says PHONE 16 (Continued 1rom Page One' a playoff betvccn the four teams (‘EOR( E M(-MANUS Warden Donald S. Haley of |here Monday for Sitka on the an- the Bureau of Fisheries reports the 'nual seal patrol in that area and arrived in Juneau yes- | afternc 1 bringing with him | coast where he will be stationed this BUTTER | COFFEE Qur butter is a strict HEALTH TALK GIVEN BY DR. WEATHERMAN Rules for Ke;[)ing Fit Dis- cussed Before High School Students Featured on the program for Child Health Day which is heing recog- nized over the country today, Dr Harold Weatherman gave a talk this afternoon before students of the hizi school in the a ly hall The doctor spoke of the signifi- cance of the day, its purpose, and various aids to good health. Among and the walls are of six-inch con- suggestions mentioned to the stu- crete reinforced with heavy steel. dents for regular practice were to The top step and two wings at the have the teeth checked twice a year top are a foot thick reinforced with see the family physician regularly railrond iron, assuring permanency and follow every day rules of keep- and guarding against a washout in | ing physically fit the s g freshets. A door at the Dr. Weatherman ve a demon- top can be closed shutting off the stration this morning at the Gov- water and allowing for cleaning of €rnment Hospital and cne this af- the ladder. The Auklet, Capt. L., ternoon at St. Ann's Hospital. Both J. Collins, has been the tender on demons the job since April 10 when the Eid- er. which began the work, was as- formulas for infant feeding and care signed elsewhere. She plied back |Of the infant and forth to Tenakee for stores and S e supplies. It required six weeks for the undertaking Warden Haley OHONIN=> %8 LT i IS BROKEN George Cox, who was taken to St. Ann’s Hospital Wednesday after- noon, sustained a broken ankle | when a pile of ties fell on his leg while he was helping to load lum- ber aboard the freighter Oduna at the Juneau Lumber Mill dock D - SHIPPEY GOES WESTWARD MRS. ADSIY LEAVING ; | 1. c. Shipped, local ‘mining man; ON VACAT]ON TRIP | et on the steamer Alaska for Ko- | ‘dmk where he will leave at once Mrs. Agnes Adsit, Chief Clerk in | for Good News Bay. He plans to be the Territorial Auditor’s office, is | €ngaged in mining in that vicinity leaving Sunday on the North Sea |fOr the balance of the season. Mrs for her annual vacation trip to the | Shippey is the proprietor of a lwmm States. She will be gone a month, | Parlor herc most of the time to be spent in PR 15 Portland with relatives and friends. | SHOP IN JUNCAU. expects to leave then will return to Juneau before proceeding to Craig on the west summer, e FIRST! ions dealt with prenatal | and postnatal care of the mother, | CARPENTERS, ATTE) United Brotherhood of Cary Local No. 1944, will hold important meeting Monday 4, at eight o'clock. All memt are urged to attend: $ad ors, SIHOP IN JUNEA™, "'8 Wings of the Morning! Schilling Coffee in my cup starts my day sunny-side up! Give your coffee pot a chance to do its delicious best. Give it the coffee | it was intended to have— the Schilling Coffee ! specially prepared for it. Schilling Coffee Two kinds One for drip. } One for pereolator. { — e ) IR B GARLAND BOGGAN ! || Hardwood Floors | ! Waxing Polishing | Sanding f | United Food Co. “Your Home-Owned Grocery and Market” If in season, WE HAVE IT! We pride ourselves in giving Juneau the Largest, Finest, Assortment of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables obtainable. SUPPLY ARRIVING ON EVERY BOAT. LARGE, FRESH Ten Fast Beliveries Each Saturday EGGS Pittsburgh 500 Philadelphia 438 Brooklyn 429 Boston AMERICAN LELGUE Won Lost 1 5 10 Pet. Boston New York Cleveland Detroit Washington Philadelphia Chicago St. Louis _— e —— Townsend Plan Hearing Reveals Political “Deal” Sum of $12,000, Was to! Throw Organization's Strength to Gov. LOS ANGELES, Cal, May 1. Pierre Tomlinson, witness at the Townsend Plan hearing, told of a $12,000 “deal” between the heads of the Townsend organization and Gov. Frank F. Merriam’s representa- tives, through which he said the woting strength of the group was to | have been thrown on the side of! Merriam in the 1934 gubernatorial race. Tomlinson testified before the Congressional sub-committee inves- tigating the Townsend Plan. He said the deal was made by Dr. Town- send and R. E. Clements, former Sec- retary-Treasurer of the organiza- tion, with the Governor’s election representatives, but the money, he said, was never paid. “You mean, he didn’t get the dough?” asked Representative Jos- eph Gavagan, one of the commit- tee. “No, he delivered the goods be- fore they were paid for,” Tomlinson replied. ——————— LEAVES ST. ANN'S Mrs. H. R. Shepard who has been recelving medical treatment at St. Ann’s Hospital has returned home. ———————— SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! 417 Vukovich, McCormick and Morgan, at the Elks Alleys last night, in the last scheduled tournament bowli match of the season. Cleveland, of the winning team, broke 200 twice to win first place in | the total scoring with 593 McCor- mick and Vukovich, of the losing team, placed second and third in| the totals with scores of 542 ux'.(" : 525 respectively. McCormick bowled the best game of the evening, 212, and Cleveland placed second and | 33 third with scores of 207 and 200. | Team I won three swraight games from Team €' by narrow margins, | with a difference of only .42 pins in the team totals for the three games Complete scores were: | 5 * Team I. Vukevich 179 | McCormick 160 | Morgan 155 “Latest thing in bathing suits and truly Alaskan in style and material used, is the geod look- ing two-p ensemble made of hair seal, as modeled by Thelma Ledbetter, shown above. Trimmed with brown leather, the suit is composed of shorts and a close fitting bolero-like jacket fastened with two leather covered buttons. A band of leather finshes the top of the bathing shorts, and the collar is trimmed in like material. The slick hair seal is a tawny yellew in color with darker spots sprinkled through the fur. Designed and manufactured in the Juneau shop of Yurman, Furrier. 179 212 170— )I’ 114 173— 442 494 510—»1309 Team 155 207 *153 Totals 515 522 514—1551 | —Avemge-Did not buwl FLOOD SWEEPS OKLAHOMACITY, 167 | Totals | Hudson Cleveland Evans 161— 499 | 200— 593 | *153— 459 | CARD OF THANKS Our sincere thanks is extended J6ur ‘many friends for the acts of |kindness shown us over the loss of our beloved son and brother and {Many Farmer Hord” 5 Un-| accounted For—Man Believed Drowned ELK CITY, Oklahoma, May 1.— One man is feared to have been drowned, half a dozen farmer fam- ilies are unaccounted for and a score of business houses and homes were | | washed away or damaged when a | sudden flood swept through the city. A rescue crew of 40 men splashed through the mud along the banks of the branch of Elk Creek, two miles east of here, in search for the body of a man believed to be George Bates, of Chicago, whose car was/ swept into the rain swollen creek. | — e | | AT ST. ANN'S | Mrs. Edith Sheelor was admitted | to St. Ann’s Hospital for medical treatment last evening. —————— SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIES™! W. MURPHY and FAMILY. Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- , FULLY COMPOUNDED Next Coliseum adv. Front St. PHONE 97—Free Delivery ) especial gratitude is due Mrs. Pal<. mer and family of Tacoma for the | interest taken in our behalf. | to reach the finals. However, T al- | most forgot, they do get something 'for instance, when they make an error, unless they have their ears stuffed with cotton, thi e likely to hear from some over-enthusias- tic fan such remarks as ‘where did you get that Bonehead?' ‘chase him to the showers, ‘why put shoes on that flat-foot?’ ‘where did you get that flat tire?’ etc. Thus you can see that it is not all a bed of rose: “(3). The different organiza sponsoring the teams have the pleas ure of buying the suits and bats of | their team, and further have to | stand the jibes of their fellow mem- jbers if their team happens to hit the cellar position. Officials { “(4) Now we come to the offic- lials. You ask what do they get? | Nothing for their time and services but plenty of pleasure out of seeing the games and lots of kidding—but we like it—so go to it. And we still have the pleasure of buying a sea- son’s ticket for five dollars. “(3). Now we come to the public generally, just what does it get? I will answer this question by put- ting it in the following form. I know you are continually called up- .on, in the name of charity, for con- tributions, sometimes until it hurts, getting nothing in return except the good that you may do, plus the pleas- ure of doing it. ' “By a contribution to our baseball league you get all you got out of your contribution for charity and more. You have the pleasure of see- ing 38 games, which include 3§ league games as per schedule and two Fourth of July games, all for| $5.00, a seasoh ticket. Figure it out for yourself, it amounts to about 13 cents per game, and for the Love of Mike, my friends, we need the Five Dollars, the boys need the play- field and the Firemen need the money to ‘keep up the good work; | and we all need to keep alive in our | young men the spirit of good whole- some sport and exercise. “Let me again entreat you to! | make good your end of the problem. {"When the young ladies come to pre- sent you with your season’s ticket don't put them off but hand them the five dollars—better than that, | call them up and tell them to hurry up with the ticket. Time is short. |The 1936 season opens Sunday, ¢ May 10th, the hour to be stated later. | By the way, we have a band out that | day, so let’s get in behind it, ands lwhen the band stops playing bc‘ reudy to play ball.” i M. . B. Schillings 29°¢ Pound ly 93 score sweet cream butter. It ig marked as such| under our own label. Priced as low as cheap butter PORK and BEANS ARMOUR'S SPECIAL 2 large cans 29...| 25¢ EACH FINEST FRESH MEATS 30¢ HORMEL'S EASTERN 25¢ SOAP FLAKES Large 5 1b. pkqg. EXTRA CHICKENS Fancy Fat Stewers—POUND COTTAGE CHEESE PER POUND . RED ROCK Medium—Grade A 3 dozen 79¢ PICKLES LIBBY'S Sweet Mixed C quart jar ASPARAGUS Large fine assort- ment of BEDDING PLANTS arriving on North Sea Daisies, Pansies, Snapdragons, Robellias, Asters, Rose Bushes SEE JUNEAU'S FINEST VEGETABLE DISPLAY BANANA Golden Ripe—3 POUNDS ORANGE 3 DOZEN SWEET, JUICY—MEDIUM SIZE GRAPEFRUIT S5FOR ... 24° LARGE FANCY ARIZONAS

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