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v . less pitching. THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE; MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1937. OHYES, MR, JIGES-YOL WiLL ENJOY DEAR OLD | | QUITE SO QUITE SO AND- IT 19 A OLD TOPP HE: P A S A - WHAT SHALL | SAY ? AY ANYTHING 3&() WANT=YOU LAUGHED UNTIL | WAS BAWMY-DON'T smgle in the ninth enabled the | Athletics to beat the Senators last | Saturday. SEALS, INDIANS SPLIT CONTEST g DURING SUNDAY, £ =i < : | Chicago 13; St. Louis 12. Cne Hundled apd Flfl).'-one‘ Cincinnati 2; Pittsburgh 3. HltS. Includmg Thll" Boston 0; New York 3. teen Homers Made ‘ GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Oakland 6; Missions 5. Sacramento 4; San Diego 10. Los Angeles 4; Portland 7. Seattle-San Francisco, rain. Brooklyn 3; Philadelphia 7. | American League St. Louis 4; Cleveland 3. New York 6; Boston 5. Philadelphia 6; Washington 4. Detroit at Chicago, postponed on account of wet grounds. (By Associated Press) Byverybody in the Pacific COasl League won and lost yesterday. J Batsmen banged out 151 hits, in- cluding thirteen homers. Five home runs enabled the Seals to beat the Indians in the first game. Thrge Indians also made circuit clouts. Two Seattle home runs won the COAST LEAGUE SATURDAY Portland,” the cellarites, smacked Les Angeles for the second game in a row. racond ‘geine /i San "Francisco Hobo Carson only allowed the behind Paul Gregory's nearly fault- Angels. sighk F1vk ¥ Hal Patchett, San Diego's cen- Each teem collected leven hits'in eleven innings. DIZZY DEAN STILL HAS HIS OLD STUFF Dizzy Dean demonstrated he still terfielder, continued his sensational hitting, getting a homer, triple and single in five times up. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League last Saturday night RIGHTO- | WENT TO SEE ONE i T EVAH GO TO A PLAY THAT MANY TIMES’ By GEORGE McMANUS 1 MIGHT GO T W BUT IE | DON#S [y THL;EPN-| GIVE IT Dazly S ports Cartoon 1 HIS RECOR | SREAKle 66 FOR THE OPENING ROUND suouu) HAVE. WARNED THE FIELD THAT HE | VICTORY WITH A AR -SHATTERING FINISH | =] --B) Pa) P WAS SERIOUS - NELSON CRASHED THROUGH TO ~+- SO )P NELEON HAVE TO KEER HiM IN LINE WHEN JITTERS THREATENED TO UPSET HM WTH VICTORY W SIGHT — o Al Rights Reserved by The Aasociated Press percha ball. It was made by pour-, Mississippi Woman Finds' | hair, nas the old stuff, setting down the San Dlego Wlu: bgst :c;s Cubs with five hits and winning Bah F;, o 1‘3 9 '531 the second game Sunday. tou At fghei o o The Giants missed a chance to Seattle o 889 345 gain the lead because limited to Sacramento' 13 n '5‘2 six hits off rookie Cliff Melton. Oakland 9 14 '3“ Tha Yankees beat Boston, bat- Atksions. ¢ 9 15 '375 1‘;‘:;““ Wes Farrell for thirteen Poruand 8 14 ‘364 | The Dodgers scored eight runs' in the last four innings to beat National League the Phillies. fe Won Lost Pct. Cleveland came from behind to Eitsburgh ... e S0 L0 beat St. Louis. St. Louis 4 1 .800 ! |New York 3 1 150 GAMES SUNDAY Philadelphia 8 od 600 | Pacific Coast League 1Brooklyn & il San. Francisco 8, 4; Seattle 4, 5. Boston fr 8, o “Los-Angeles 4 1; Portland 3, 5. |C1lCa€0 ... Slusae 2001 ncinati [ 4 000 | Sacramento 5, 0; San Diego 4, 2. . BATTAGLIATO |ing hot water on the gutta- percha | |and “squeezing it fn a press: ’l‘he‘ ‘mlghues& swatsmiths could get 220\ < HOFFMAN HIGH Oakland 6, 6; Missions 4, 7. National League American League Boston 3; New York 1. i Won Lost Pet. Brooklyn 10; Philadelphis. 6. | Philadelphia Lo e St. Louis 4; Chicago 0. Detroit 2 1 667 Cincinnati-Pittsburgh, ran. New York 2 1 867 American League | Chicago 2 2 500 New York 9; Boston 3, Cleveland 2 2 .500 Cleveland 5; St. Louis 4. is'- Louis 2 3 -400 Chicago 113 Detroit 7. Boston ... 1 2 333 Philadelphia-Washington, rain. | Washington 1 3 -250 e — - CARDINALS' PITCHING | STAFF SOFT FOR CUBS The Cubs’ victory over the Ca.r-l‘ dinals last Saturday afternoon | demonstrated that the pitching| nN BIRTH"AY staff of the latter is not so hot. | Five hurlers of the Cardinals,| including Daffy Dean, were unable| ISTRES, France, April 26.—Mau- to curb the Cubs’ onslaught. irice Rossi, famous French flyer, Ott’s two homers and Ba.\‘tell’s“celebrated his thirty-sixth birthday cne circuit drive gave the Giants last Saturday by making a 5,000- an easy victory over the Bees, who kilometer flight in 16 hours, 4 min- were shut out. iutes and 30 seconds, averaging Five Brooklyn errors enabled the 311.184 kilmeters an hour, which is Phillies to beat Mungo. . a new record. Feller Pulls Muscle t ST T Bob Feller lost his first .game of | ATTENTION O. E. S. the season to the Browns but| Regular meeting Juneau Chapter maintained his record for surike- | No. 7, Tuesday, at 8 p.m. Initia- out last Saturday by fanning el- (jon and refreshments. Nugget even men in six innings. He then Chapter No. 2 of Douglas officiat- | After watching the passing pa- ;oo oo rag-tailed youngsters, all! pulled a muscle in his million dol- ing. lar arm and was forced to retire. The Browns got all of their four runs in the first inning. Feller then fanned them right and left p. Rge Lillian Carlson, Optom- afterwards. 'etrist, has returned to her Juneau Lazzer’s homer and Selkirk’s sractice. —adv. triple enabled the Yanks to beat e ) i i the Red Sox. Rothrock’s pinch Empire c-issifieas pay. LILLIAN G. WATSON, Secretary. ———————— —adv. RUINS BAER’S COMEBACK PLAN u'!ht champion, flung nfim fans after his !orm.r world champion who odds were 3 to 1 against Farr said after the fight. This Tommy Farr, 23, British cmpln hnvy his arms high to accept the cheer: victory in London over Max Baer was attempting a comeback. before the fight. “I'm washed u 60 TO SEATTLE - FOR TRAININ | {Canadian Champlon Meets i Freddie Steele in Title Bout | SEATTLE, April 26. — Frankie Battaglia, Canadian middleweight jchampion, arrives here tomorrow to begin training for a title bout 'here on May 11 against Freddie Steele, world champion middle- weight, —— Sport | Slants | { By PAFP' ’ rade of golf for more than 25 years, Peter Hay, world-famous profes- sional instructor of the Del Monte, course, oldest in California, ha.s come to this conclusion:— “It's just as hard to make a birdie in this age of streamlining/ and speed as it was in the days of !the gutta-percha ball.” | Hay, 265 pounds of joviality, the |burr of Scottish highlands in his voice, figuratively was born with a club in his hand. He first saw the light of day in 1885, in Aberdeen. At the age of 13 he set out to make his own living. It was only natural that he should turn to! caddying at the nearby Bulgownie club, later to be known as the Royal Aberdeen. Golf was the hub around which' the entire community revolved. There were two municipal courses where golf was absolutely free. Owned One-Third Of a Club From carrying clubs it was but another step to swinging them. It| 'wasn't as easy then for a caddy to acquire clubs as it is now, however.' Golfers of Peter’s youth didn’t junk their sticks as freely as U. 8. links- jmen of today. “You've heard. about Sandy, who quit golf because he lost his bm?"‘ questions Hay. “Well, that was closer to being fact than fiction.” Hay and two boyhood chums learned to play with one club be- tween them. The modern pro would sniff at the set of clubs car- ried by his colleague of the '90s. A really large set consisted of a driver, baffy and spoon, mid-iron, lofting iron, mashie, niblick, putting cleek and putter. It was the day of the solid gutta \ed California a week ago Saturday. | yards. George VI Visited Him In 1913, strapping Peter Hay set ook on (66 oy navate 1. Tl to SHUUT SUNDAY be laid out in the Golden State.| He‘s been there since, hobnobbing | |with notables from many lands. The present King of England visit-| Assistant Chief of Police Roy Hoff- |ed the famed resort as a prince,‘man was high gun at the rifle shoot incognito. Indian potentates, or- held yesterday at Mendenhall range iental royalty and the pillars of by the Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club American wealth, society and in-| Wwith a total score of 180. Patrolman dustry have laughed at the anec-| | Ken Junge was second and Tex dotes of California’s oldest pro in | Leonard third. point of service. |SCORES FOLLOW Because of his own early start, ——Slow Fire— as a bag-toter over Scottish fair- 200 st.dg 300 Sit. ways, Peter has regarded the cad- Roy Hoffman . AT RIFLE CLUB dies of the district as his own| Ken Junge 43 special charges, to be watched over Tex Leonard . 4“4 44 and tutored in the ways and means |Oscar Waterud . 44 42 [of golf. |Art Berg 37 37 Many have risen to .fame underjl-{nrry Sperling 40 39 his guidance. Best known among —-Rapid Fire—- them are the Dutras, Mortie and 200 Sit. 300 Prn. Olin, and the Espinoras, a flock of{Hoffman 45 45 them—Abe, Al, Romie, Henry and Junxe k. 37 43 others. iLeonard .. 38 41 Olin Dutrz, now one of the rank- Waterud .43 31 |ing professionals, has held the Na- Berg . 47 40 tional Open crown. He once pack- Spel’llng 43 28 ‘ed clubs for St. Peter. So did the Total Hoffman 180 looking up to Hay as the biggest} Junge 169 man of the time. i Leonard 167 ———————— | Waterud 166 | Berg. . 164 STARTDRNE = == ————— i\ MRS. DRAKE ON LEAVE Fun sEanNG | Mrs. Marie Drake, Deputy Com- \missioner of Education, today be- Ban her annual leave. She expects FRUSH EAsT;w be gome from her office about a month and will spend most of the time at her home out the highway. Three Thousand Dollars Is Needed to Put U. of W. Crew in Poughkeepsie SEATTLE, April 26—A two-day s drive to raise $3,000 to send the Washington Freshmen crew to Poughkeépsie opens tomorrow. The University is financing the:} other two crews. | All three crews won national ti- tles last year and all three defeai-f THE BEST TAP BEER IN TOWN! VICTORIA TO SAIL ! NORTH WEDNESDAY Steamer Victoria, scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock, will not sail until 9| o'clock Wednesday morning. This' @ is according to radio advices re-| ceived by Agent M. J. Wilcox. | THE MINERS’ - e — SEE FEMMER FIRST Recreation Parlors For all kinds of feed, also fertilzet, | _ 1 ——00—0 “Alaska” by Leste. D. . Henderscn e it i WIDOW PUTS ' THOUSANDS TO WORK IN U. S. Activities for 585,000 on Relief Rolls By SIGRID ARNE AP Feature Service Writer WASHINTGON, April 26. — The | thing you remember about Ellen“ | (eft to right): Beach, This group of girls swam their way to championships at the A. A. | U. women's indoor swimming meet at the Lake Shore Athletic ' ‘ Club in Chicago. Front (left to right): i | Beach, 100-yard breast stroke; Arlite Smith, Chicago, low board i dlving. Marjorie Gestring, Los Angeles, hllh board diving. l!ur Doris Brennan, Providence, R. L, 3} utyle. Marian Mansfield, Chicago, third in higl | Dorothy Forbes, Philadelphia, 100-yard back slrnke Claudia Ee ert, Chicago, 100-yard free style: and Virginia Hopkins, Miami 220-yard f[ree style. Katherine Rawls. Miami ¢ 500-yard f ree | board diving: ' Woodward is her burnished copper - She’s a woman about 50 with COOPERS MOVE a straight, compact figure, lu:ge‘ Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cooper have blue eyes and a soft, Mississippi way moved from the Shabaldak Apart- of tatkiug and 8GR ments and are now at home in the Then you shock yourself by re- Fosbee. Mr. Cooper is a well-known membering that this red-haired lady certified public accountant of this is responsible for 585,000 people on city. relief rolls—all the women, and all| b those on white collar projects. | Empire classineas pay. LUMBERMAN AWAY Making a brief business trip to Ketchikan, F. E. McDermott, of the Juneau Lumber Mills, sailed from here Saturday evening aboard the steamer Mount McKinley. He | plans to return tomorrow aboard the steamer Alaska. It's like running a state. There - are a multitude of different prob-| lems to settle, The people must work, must live, and it mustn't cost too much, \ Many Details Michigan has a certain group o([ 600 unemployed women to keep at| work. Wihat does Mrs. Woodward | ihink of having them make cotton oys? She must check the cost of ottcn, the use to which the toys will be put, and the availability of a good teacher. | In this case Mrs. Woodward in-| fi vestigated, then wrote, “Go ahead. And the toys are turning out so well! that private manufacturers are hir-| ing the women off the relief rolls. That’s the, pay-off for Mrs. Wood- ward. She wishes there wasn't a woman left on relief rolls. Her own job would fold, but she'd gloat. WHITE A Widow Rugs, coverlets, working clothes, furniture, shoes—and orchestrss.f traveling theatres, surveys—all are turned out through Mrs. Woodward's office with, please note, a 100 per cent women’s staff of state and re- gional directors. Mrs. Woodward has traveled the widow’s trail. Fortunately, her red- head was full of government and politics, because she had a son to send to school, Her father, William Sullivan, had joen a Senator, and her first dose of Washington came hanging around her father's office asking questions. So when she was left on her own she ran for the Mississippi State Legislature in 1926, and was elected. She was convinced her state wasn’t looking for enough outside business, and she did so much talking about e U s, impo arsBrowne Vintpers Compeny, Ir Pacific Bottlers Supply Cg.fi_ Narne Your' Brand 3 TOMORROW you’ll be glad you said TODAY Pour out for yoursell a gen- erous drink of White Horse. Inhale that delicate fragrance. Sip, and roll it slowly over your tongue. Did you ever encounter such smoothness? Swallow. Was there ever such warmth without a trace of fire? TOMORROW you'll be glad you said White Horse TO- DAY. Half-bottles and pints also on sale BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY~—86.8 Proof w Yark — Chicago Lok Ragetes: B Distributors for Alaska: it that the State Board of Develop- ment hired her. She eventually be- came the chairman. In 1935 she came to Washington to find that she had to think up ideas to keep thousands of women at work on projects, that wouldn't cost much, and that would at the same time prepare the women for jobs. How well she and her staff have done their task is written in the records which includes such pro- Jects as these: In Topeka, Kan., women reclaimed chicken feathers from poultry farms and made pillows for relief famil- HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of the Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connectiocn A[R SERVICE INFCRMATICN | o v ies. In Alabama, 45 women cut sten- clls and made road signs. i In St. Paul and Minneapolis, women made street maps for the olind, marking car lines with twists of cord, and places with bugle beads sewn in a dot-dash code. In Oklahoma, 18 women beauti-| fied a city park. In Nevada, most of the rural schools were cleaned and repaired by women. ——— e Surgeon General Thomas Parran' of the U. 8. Public Health Servicel declares that 12 years might be add- 2d to normal life expectancy if present ‘medical knowledge were applied fully. —————— NOTICE For speclal fresh dressed chicken: call Femmer, phone 114. adv. COAL For Every Purse and Every The First National Bank IUNEAU CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS— $75,000 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCQUNTS Purpose PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 412 FOR lNS“RANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg."