The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 24, 1937, Page 5

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'-——,_———.——— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MAY 24, 1937 BRINGING UP FATHER DARLING- | JUST HEARD THAT PROFESSOR CAVOT T-MY OLD SINGING TEACHER'S LIVING IN THE ALTOTEMPO APART= HOW DID | CANIT UNDERSTAND gargriuo WANT YOU TO GO H;ENG?ET HIN- = TN MENT BUILDING -AND THEY LET HIM IN— HE CAN GET US AN APART- MENT INTHAT BUILDING-AS | HEAR IT 1S DIFFICULT TO E I_ KS'“ JUGGI_ERS_ Baiiyr S portS Crarrflt‘bon T0SS SUNDAY'S GAME TO MOOSE Kimball Turns in Fine Mound Performance as Paps Take Win i Four Elks errors, coming right| after the opening pitch, filled the bases for the Moose and mightily disconcerted Purple Hurler = Nick Johnson in the last half of the first inning cf Sunday’s ball game at Firemen's Park. By the time Johnson had worked off the steam | engendered by his teammate’s bob- bles and got himself back on even| keel, the Moose had pounded his| fat offerings for two doubles, a single, and a homer, and had the| ball game nicely salted away with| eight runs to their credit. | First Homer Tex Hawkins, Moose catcher, | corraled the case of beer offered by, the Alaska Trading Company for| El YES-YOL. ARE MR- Jeas— B NS EAIONELR i A YARIEL AED FREDT EUH ATAREERR OF AMATER, SHPORTS the first homer of the season, when! F HE HAS he laced one of Johnson's fade- BOSTWICKS TRNEDL TO aways into the bushes in deep cen-| 022/ 2 7ONAN TROTTING. ter and looked to have a better than| CANDIDATE BECAUSE 1T even chance of reaching the thirdi —HE HOPES TO OFFERS Him cushion on the five-base clout. He| DRVE THE FILLY A SHauES e 4 Was able to keep right on chummg' IN HE RICHEST 7E‘A/'U 3 up the dust and cross the platter! OF ALL— DRIVE //Vm, standing up, however, when the cen- TROTTING COMEETIT terfielder Pete Schmitz hit the back! STAKES 7 side of the scoreboard with his| throw-in and the ball bounded to-| ward Evergreen cemetery. | With the nightmare first inning out of the way, Johnson had the! remained of the game ‘fairly well| All Kighta iteserved by The Assoclated Fress e o in hand, whiffing «eleven Moase | it h it m sl hitters and being touched for cnly Bl . five more solid blows, three of them (‘ being bunched in the third inning anzonerl to give the Paps their two other| runs. Tom Martin, Moose new-| comer, who was heavy hitter for the day with a triple and a double, which drove across three counters, threatened again in the second frame, with his three-base blnw.l but Johnson struck out the next! batter for the third out. \ Strikes 'Em Out Bob Kimball, on the mound for the Paps, had the Elks' sluggers! worn out swinging at his slow ball, | and disposed of seven of them via| the strikeout route, while being nicked for only one safe hit; Molly MacSpadden’s triple in the sixth, | which was followed by two Moose errors and a passed ball to put! across the two EIks' counters. Nick Johnson landed on one of Kimball's | fast ones in the ninth frame for ! what looked like a sure two-bagger, | but Hilding Haglund, Moose center | fielder came up with a brilliant | running catch on which he snared ! the ball over his shoulder to keep | Kimball’s one-hit game intact. SCORE BY INNINGS 123456 ELKS MOOSE o -0 .8 BOX mo e »Qmneo EaZ ELKS Johnson, p. b ‘ P. Sehmitz, cf........ *Hansen, cf. ... M. MacSpadden, 2b C. MacSpadden, 3b. Beede, 1b. ... s Hagerup, rf. -3 Fails Again to Lift Crown This blow by Champion Lou Ambers rocked Tony Canzoneri as the latter tried in vain in New York to Bardi, ss. . **Manthey, ss. Lowe, If. Blake, c. *0 | Kimball 4; earned runs off: John-" | o/son 2, Kimball 1; hit by pitched | 3/ball: Hagerup and C. MacSpadden| spor‘ D T N O ) cococcomorocolN cocococococo~ocool SHmmmbamaOO - ccoccommcooty ot ______ |by Kimball; passed balls: Blake 2,| Totals ... 9 2 126418 aflhwuns 2; left on bases, Elks 9,] * *Replaced Schmitz in second in-|Moose 10] time of game, 2 hours 20 8 } 0‘ regain the lightweight crown he twice has worn. Ambers was awarded 12 of the 15 rounds. Ly . i g | iarsh purgatives are makeshifts. A mere ning. ‘minutes; umpires, Nowell, Shaw; & *“Replaced Bardi in sixth inning. scorer, Clark. | ~ MOOSE ABRHPOAE . — "% — B PAP it Sy ) NOTICE New silks, biue with red trim, | (a2 % i’ = i flash at Goshen, N. Y., Ai it | Haglund, of. 4103 o o Forspecial fresh aressed chickens, | Will h“ AL OWE ; fuzu: call Femmer, phone 114. adv. (11 when the renewal of the| o i e ¢ {Hambletonian stake is trotted. The| Martin, £, . 4 1 2 0 0 0| NOTICE TO CREDITORs |colors will clothe Dunbar W. Bost: Cemuerse, a8, .5 1103 31N THE PROBATE COURT. JU-| 0 0ong owner-driver to compete in Hawkins, ¢ .4 116 0 0f NEAU PRECINCT, 'I'ER.R.I'I‘()RY'the richest trotting stake. (e Pl LT el 4 | * Young Bostwick's silks are not *Baldwin, rf. 100 0 0 0 In the matter of the estate of| h gspotts venbics Thae uite **—Addleman, c...1 0 0 1 0 0] ALFRED TTSO! new to g sgisgo e 5L ]:g,?g ?‘ FRED l‘l‘:’l‘rsol‘? 8180 | en very much in evidence on| Totals ........ 3810 927 17 4| ceased. "~ |polo ‘fields, in horsé show rings| *—Replaced Martin in eighth in-‘ NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN, |20d around other equine enter- ning. that Carl Mattsson Moltke has been |Prises. This season, however, Is the *“—Replaced Hawkins in eighth|duly appointed administrator of the iflrflt full summer as & trotting horse, inning. above named estate. All persons feinsman. ) THE SUMMARY having ‘claims against sald estate| = “Certainly, I'm going io drive in Stolen bases: Hagerup, Snow, are required to present same ,m_h‘the Hambletonian,” Bostwick de- Martin; sacrifice. hit, Grummett; proper vouchers within six months clared when inquiry was made as| two-base hits: Martin, F. Schmitz; |from the date, hereof at the office |to ‘who would pilot his Hollywood | three-base hits: M. MacSpadden,|of my attorney, Henry Roden, Val- |Audrey, crack 3-year-old filly, at| Martin; homerun, Hawkins; runs|entine Building, Juneau, Alaska. Goshen. batted in: Beede, Bardi, F. Schmitz,| Dated this 10th day of May, 1937. | ‘Bostwick got his first chance to| Snow 2, Martin 2, Converse, Hawk- CARL MATTSSON MOLTKE. |drive his star filly this season at ins 2;_ struck out by: Johnson 11,|Publication dates, May 10-1' A 8. C, in the winter tfotting Since, he won so handily in 2:15 1-4, and regards Hollywood |Audrey as though'she were a com- bination of all the favorite pole ponies, show horses, hunters and others he has owned, it is definite that the Long Island sportsman will allow no one else to handle the filly in the big race. | The odds on Hollywood Audrey, in the future books have dropped from 8 to 1 to 6 to 1, indicating Bostwick’s victory at Aiken, and his determination to handle her in per- son, have made an impression. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— NITHOUT CALOMEL And You'll Jump Out of Bed Feel- ing You Could Push a Bus Over The liver shonld pour out two pi iquid bile into your bowels daily. If thi s not flowing freely your food doesn’t digest. | it just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up | rour stomach. You get constipated. Your vhole system is poisoned and you feel sour, unk and the world looks punk. Salts, fizzy drinks, palatable laxatives and of »owel movement doesn’t get at the cause. It | akes the famous, sure acting Carter's Little Liver Pills to get those two pints of bile Jowing freely and make you feel “up and 1p”. Harmless, gentle, yet amazing in mak- ng bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little [dver Pilla. Took for the name Carter’s on ihe red package. Price: 26¢. By GEORGE McMANUS =3 SINGIN' LESSONS TO REthEE_M BER YOU COULD HAVE HIS APART- MENT AS HE IS MOVING OUT= | while Dizzy Dean, making his first' effort to start since last week's bat-! | tle of the century in which he lost’ out to Carl Hubbell, gave up elever hits but was still good enough to! win over Philadelphia. 9 ABBOTT OUT S MANAGER - OF INDIANS Five Slraigaf)efcals in Row, Too Much—Bass- ler Is Acting Head SEATTLE, May 24. — Dismissal it Scrap Iron Thieves Take Manhole Covers HOUSTON, Tex., May 24. — A “wild scramble” for scrap iron is' causing the Houston street and’ bridge department plenty of grief, “Manhole covers and inlet grates for catch basins are being stolen of Spencer Abbott as manager of the Seattle Indians of the Pacific Coast League, was announced here last Satyrday afternoon by Presi- by the hundreds and sold to scrap iron dealers,” Commissioner S. A. Starkey says. “We can't afford to place a watchman at each catel Copr._1937, King Features Syndicate, Inc basin and manhole in town, and that's about what we'd have to do dent Willilam H. Klepper after the team had lost the fifth straight in the series by a defeat by San Diego Padres. | to stop the stealing.” S eee— — TWO CLUBS IN CELLAR PLACGE COAST LEAGUE San Francisco Takes Six of Seven from Los An- geles—Seattle Loses (By Associated Press) Missions and Oakland remained /'n the Pacific Coast cellar as they split a doubleheader Sunday. San Francisco made it six out 19f seven with Los Angeles by tak- ing a doubleheader Sunday. Seattle lost a doubleheader with San Diego on Sunday. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Seattle 3, 0; San Diego 10, 1. | Missions 1, 2; Oakland, 3, 0. Portland 1, 2; Sacramento 9, 6. Los Angeles 2, 1; San Francisco 2. National League New York 6; Pittsburgh 5. Brooklyn 2; Cincinnati 6. Boston 1; Chicago 11. Philadelphia 2; St. Louis 6. American League Cleveland 3; New York 7. Chicago 6; Boston 1. St. Louis 2; Philadelphia 6. Detroit 13; Washington 3, called in eighth on account of rain. Gastineau Channel League Elks 2; Moose 10. BASEBALL SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 4; Sacramento 7. Missions 1; Oakland 10. Seattle 4; San Diego 12. ” National League Brooklyn 4; St. Louis 1. Philadelphia 19; Cincinnati 9. Boston 2; Pittsburgh 5. New York 3; Chicago 2. American League St. Louis 2; New York 14. Detroit 9: Boston 11. Chicago 9; Philadelphia 10, eleven innings. leveland 1; Washington 4, game ied in sixth inning on account vain, STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast veague § LONDON — Parents in several par of Britain are organizing del trations to protest the |“slaughter” of school children by |speeding automobiles. Fathers and mothers of children dangerous arterial thoroughfare in the western suburbs of Lonwon— {demonstrated recently to draw at- tention to their demand for a 30- Won Lost rect. San Francisco 34 16 680 Sacramento 33 19 635 San Diego 30 22 5Ti Los Angeles 7 24 529 | Portland 23 26 469 Seattle 21 29 420 Missions 18 34 346 Oakland 18 34 .346 National Leugue Won Lost Pct. Pittsburgh 19 8 104 St. Louis . .. 16 12 511 New .York 16 13 552 Chicago . 15 13 ..536 Brooklyn 12 15 A4 Boston 1 15 .423 Cincinnati 10 16 .385 Philadelphia .1 18 379 American League Won Lost Pct | Philadelphia 15 9 625 |New York 18 10 815 Detroit 15 12 556 Cleveland 12 10 545 ‘Washington . 13 15 464 Chicago .11 14 440 Boston .. 10 13 435 St. Louis 8 17 320 Gastineau Channel League Won Lost Pet. Elks 1 1 .500 Moose 1 1 .500 Douglas 1 1 500 {250 Criss-Cross Road in Car-Death I’roteltl who have to cross Wesaway — a! Try an Empire ad. Johnny Basler, catcher, was named temporary manager. MAGIC - WORKING ATHLETICS TOP, BRIJWN§_SUNDAY| One Hundred to One Shot Aggregation Continues to Shade Yanks for Lead ROY HOFFMAN EQUALS RANGE RECORD SUNDAY, | Tallapoosa_Joins Rifle and | Pistol Club in Shoot at Mendenhall Assistant Chief of Police Roy Hoffman with a total score of 234 was high gun at the qualification {shoot of the Juneau Rifle and Pistol (By Associated Press) Club yesterday at the Mendenhall| Connie Mack's Athleteics pulled range, and at the same time he the rabbit out of the hat again equalled the course record. yesterday to beat St. Louis and con- A group of riflemen from the tinue in the American League lead- Tallapoosa joined the local shooters €'ship. Philadelphia, hitting last at the range yesterday and parti- in the league, and until this week- cipated in the shooting, but only for €nd fielding only sixth, boasts only practice, not scoring in the qualiti- o€ three-hundred hitter, and only cation round. jone other hitting over two ninety. Total score of yesterday's shoot AS yet the Athletics can be con- YOUR EYES are your most priceless possession. Only One Pair to Last a Lifetime tollows: jsidered only a collection of hun- | 1¢ you suffer from headaches, s Yards———-]d""d to one shots. blurred vision, visual dis- 200 200 300 300 500 T't1' The Athletics’ victory yesterday { comfort, have them exam- | S R 8 R 8 left them with a shade over the ined for refractive errors, Meyers 35 45 44 46 49219 New York Yankees, who walloped | 514 sight (presbyopia) or Edwards 39 34 35 36 36—190 Cleveland before the largest crowd possible muscular imbalances. Thomas ... 45 48 39 41 50223 [ the season, 59,000. In other : Johnson 36 43 39 46 42—206 A;nerlcnn League contests yesterday, | Call Today for an Appointment! § Chicago’s White Sox took the meas- ? Pomije 24 20 35 33 23—144 Hoffman 46 50 43 49 46234 ure of Tom ankey's Boston Mil- Dl', Rde L. thon Y Junge 30 50 41 50 44—224 lionaires, while Mickey Cochrane OPTOMETRIST Osbor: 42 40' 41 45 40—208 209 his Detroit sluggers landed on Wesl::l}::entel- Washington moundsmen for 13 | Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry | der 30 36 45 36 45201 Markers. s : Berg 30 47 42 42 42212 In the National League, the New Phone o Tulip 26 44 32 33 47—182 YOrk Giants overcame Pittsburgh, Lind 8310 4012 13- 98 T SETmr Barth 3 27 28 3 31140 Spain 21 4 20 9,256— 179 N Vs Branilt Hudwin 20 46 32 31 28—166 ife Ed Hoffman 36 39 44 48 47—214 % 1Chipperfield 28 39 37 28 11—143 TOMORROW you'll be glad you sai¢ i ; |Barthing .. 25 28 39 0 32124 * Bryson 33 46 35 37 40—191' E Myhre 39 31 38 28 42178, {Hudson . .36 36 40 41 45198, TODAY 'Waterud ... 40 47 43 42 46220 §S, EVELYN BERE HERE THIS A, M. WITH 350 TONS {Freighter Brings North I First Shipment of Coal | for Pacific Coast | ‘With about 350 tons of cargo in all for Juneau, the Alaska Transporta- tion Company freighter Evelyn Berg Capt. Alden Hansen, arrived &t Femmer's Dock here this morning at 1 o'clock. After discharging gep- eral merchandise there, she shifted ‘about 6 o'clock this morning to the Juneau Commercial Dock’ to dis- 'charge building supplies. The Evelyn Berg brought north on her present voyage 102 tons of coal, the first shipment she has ever brought to Juneau for the Pacific Coast Coal Company, and shifted again early this afternoon to the Juneau Lum- ber Mills to load 60,000 board feet of lumber for Sitka. She is to sail from Juneau about 8 or 9 o'clock Ithla evening for Hoonah, Hawk In- let, and Sitka, from where she will return south by way of Ketchikan. Included in the cargo from the States for Sitka aboard the steamer Evelyn Berg are two large steel sections for the new gymnasium being erected at Sitka by the Peter- Pour out for yourself a gen- erous drink of While Horse. Inhale that delicate fragranee. 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 giad you said White Horse TO- DAY. Half-bottles and pints also on sale BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY—86.8 Proof Distributors for Alaska’ The First National Bank IUNEAU Pacific Bottlers Supply Co. !man Cox_lsfl\fcflnn Company. l Cm m JUDGE RETURNS; | SURPLUS—$75.000 COURT TO OPEN | ® fhoeme ok COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS d.f‘iii‘mi“ig S uu;:ht: ACCOUNTS st dgendlploeti ol Koigied SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES vhas been holding court for the last 5 |two months. The regular court gl gt gy 2% Paid on e oA Savings reported, and indications are that b ‘they will have one. Aceo‘llnu |and re-crossed the road in pouring John H. Newman, court reporter, |rain, holding up traffic on a busy were expecting to come north on |confronted with banners mile-an-hour speed limit. i Robert Coughlin, Clerk of Court, A process of 250 strong crossed Peggy McLeod, deputy clerk, and Saturday afternoon. Motorists were the Aleutian. bearing ST PP S FOR INSURANCE slogans “Make Westway Safe” and James M. Brewster, well known |“It May Be Your Child Next Time.” Séittle pilot, arrived in Juneau ———— aboard the 8.8. Northwestern, and i “NOTICE For speclal fresh dressed chicker: call Pemmer, phone 114. adv. is now stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. Brewster will remain in Ju- neau for a short time, See H. R. SHEPARD & SON _ Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg.

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