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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1937 'BRINGING UP FATHER WELL, YOU WON'T FIND ANY OF MOST OF THESE BILLS ARE FROM YOUR SON AND DAUGHTER M YES- 1T WILL BE E!GHT o'CLOCK BEFORE WE GET TO THE OFFICE MAKES RECORD COAST LEAGUE f Wins Nineteenth Victory in| 23 Starts — Seattle Blanked Again (By Associated Press) gan Francisco won the nineteenth | victory in twenty-three starts yes-| ter with Sad Sam Gibson pitch- | ing a win over Oakland 4 to 1. Portland’s submarine ace, Ad| Liska, scored a third shutout and his ninth victory yesterday, Port- land defeating Missions by 5 to 0. Seattle was blanked ‘again yester- | day by San Diego. GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Ogekland 1; San Francisco 4. €an Diego 5; Seattle 0. | ns 0; Portland 5. | mento 6, 4; Los Angeles 5, 3. National League } »cton 4; St. Louis 6. Pniladelphia 6; Chicago 1 New York 6; Cincinnati 3. Pittsburgh-Brooklyn, rain. American League Chicago 6; Washington 5. Detroit 0; New York 7. Cleveland 8; Philadelphia 6. | St. Louis 9; Boston 11. { STANDING OF CLUBS Facific Coast weague | Won Lost pPct San Francisco 36 16 692 Sacramento 35 20 636 San Diego 32 22 593 Los Angeles 28 26 519 Portland 24 26 .480 Seattle 21 31 404 Missions 18 35 .340 Oakland 18 36 333 ‘ National League ! Won Lost Pet.| Pittsburgh 19 10 655 New York 19 13 594 | St. Louis 17 12 586 | Chicago 16 15 516 Brooklyn 14 15 483 Boston ik 12 16 429 Philadelphia 12 19 387 Cincinnati 10 19 345 | American League | Won Lost Pct ! New York 19 10 655 Clevaland 4 1 560 | Philadelphia 15 12 556 Detroit 16 14 533 Chicago 14 14 500 Boston 12 14 462 ‘Washington 13 18 . St. Louis 9 19 321 | Gastineau Channel League A Won Lost Pet. Elks 1 1 500 Moose 1 1 .500 Douglas 1 1+ 500 - Todav's News Today—Empire. WHEN T GET THROUGH PAYING THOSE BILLS \NE THERE 1 WONT HAVE ENOUGH LEFT TO CUY A PAPER MOTHER , I'M TIRED , GOING THROUGH THESE BILS WELL, T MUST_ TELL MAGGIE THAT WE'VE GOT TO ECONOMIZE Cochrane Keeps With His Team - from _Hnsp. Bed {Injured Tiger Leader Still By GEORGE Mc MANUS N, Y. YANKEES GETTING OVER THEIR SLUMP. Cleveland Is Also Hitting Stride, Same as New York Giants (By Associated Press) ‘The New York Yankees are def- LET THEM GO- JIGES CAN CHECK THEM AND PAY THEM initely over the worst slump in| two years and have widened their American League lead by the boost of a six-game winning streak. | Yesterday Cleveland rallied with a four-run spree in the ninth in-| ning to top Philadelphia which dropped to third position The New York Giants have pull- ed up slightly on the leading Pitts- burgh Pirates. - THREE-DAY OUTING IS ANNOUNCED FOR MARY JOYCE’S LODGE WRECK OF GOLDEN FOREST WILL BE DISMANTLED SOON I. D. Radinski, representative of a Seattle salvage firm, has recently purchased the wreck of the vessel | |Golden Harvest, from Capt. Magnus |Hansen, of the Explorer, it was learned here today. Mr. Radinsky will sail from Se- { i Critical Condition— | Loss Kept ‘from Him - WOVANS PICKED Hi P ON THE Joe ttle about the middle of June to he site of the Golden Forest wreck, »went 30 miles from Kodiak, taking with him a crew to aid in the dis- NEW YORK, May 21. — Skull-' Saturday night, all day Sundny| and Monday, at Mary Joyce's Taku Lodge is the pleasure held out for| those who desire to get out of the' Mary Joyce announces that her SANDLOTS OF CLEVELAND 4% = /i - THE FORMER CLEVELAND, QUTFIELDER /S GOING GREAT GUNS WTH _FE BROWNS) HE 1S POUNOING wE saLl (| WwH HIS JOE WAS TRADED broken Mickey Cochrane still lying nearby to death’s door in a hos- pital here, with physicians expect- {ing to know within the next twenty- four hours whether he will live or ldie, keeps his tired mind still with the Dertroit Tiers, But, when he iasked how the team made out yes- |Verday, the knowledge was kept |from him that the Bengals were !badly beaten by the Yanks. GOLDEN GATE | BRIDGE OPENS, -Ali INDIAN NEVE) FORGETS, 7— / PEDESTRIANS Mo 7O HE BROWNS s aEs Hundred Thousand Walk- ing Across Great Span— .; Auto Traffic Friday SEEM! A : . X Indians, got under his skin. Any- way, when he said he was “happy’ Sport he was sincere. sl t !to get to new pastures to make Very likely Vosmik was anxious his comeback. He is a real .300 B PAP hitter, and, at 26, should be at the very peak of his ability. He reported to Manager Rogers Hornsby this spring determined to When Joe Vosmick was told last|make Cleveland fans regret the winter that he had been traded Indian management ever let him by Cleveland he made the usual an- 0. He started busting fences at nouncement: to :h:ms:mf:‘iiys ';;;‘gn:?, be "adw‘sgason‘gotlutr;derway there was no His remark was taken with a grain ‘ gl of & levown. San Antonia, Tex. He kept up dur- ing exhibition games. When the of salt. Most players say the same The fine hand of Rogers Horns- thing When shunted to new pas-|P¥» one of the greatest hitters tures. Just why Joe should be;baseban has produced, can be seen + in Vosmik's return to form. Horns- happy to leave his native Cleve- i % £ land, where he grew up and learned I_ay is a wl@ld at detecting faults in a batter’s style. He lost no to play baseball on the sandlots, to| ;o' hurting Vosmik on the right join the lowly Browns, was hard to| p track. understand. - ——— - T CHANSE OF SCENERY Y SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, May 27. —One hundred thousand persons started to walk across the Golden Gate as the new $35,000,000 bridge was turned over to the public for the first time. Tomorrow the bridge will be open to automobile traffic. ! The toll station officials estimated ‘that 3,000 to 4,000 persons jammed SPEED DEVILS the San Francisco approach to the bridge when a hoarse blast of a huge Fires 1 fog horn on the middle span sig- NEW YORK, May 27. — Speed naled the opening of the hridee to kings from all over the world will pedestrians at 6 o'clock this morne get their second chance at the 1ng. George Vanderbilt Cup July 5, on Phyllis Kirschbaum, aged 17, was the remodeled Roosevelt Raceway the first person to drop a coin in on Long Island. A $60,000 pot of the box and start the dash across gold, road-racing’s richest award, the bridge. awaits the winner. | Nearly 200 state and city police More than half of the twists and are patrolling the bridge to guard turns that checked the speed of the against suicide attempts. drivers in the first renewal of the Vanderbilt Cup classic last fall -have PE‘NGU[N CALI.S HERE been removed, leaving but seven ON VOYAGE, SEA’ITLE turns and a long bend. Most of the Enroute to Seattle, the Bureau remaining curves have been banked. With the present layout, there| in of Fisheries vessel Penguin was a which the gasoline gladiators can caller in Juneau last night for a S 70 8E POING HIM GOOD Rights Reserved by The Associated Press SE0000FOR are now four straight-aways | city over the two day holiday. ! mantling of the vessel. { e THREE ANGLERS OUT TO MOOSE CREEK TO SNARE CUTTHROATS boat will leave Keeny's float Sat- | urday afternoon at 1 o'clock for the Lodge and will return to Ju-)| neau, arriving here Monday night about 6 or 7 o'clock. Reservations for the trip, etc, may be made { through Betty Abel. Leaving Juneu by small boat, Joe, ————— l Lynch, Steve Ward and Lou Knnnl NOTICE | sailed from Juneau las® evening| Second annual meeting of the (o attempt to lure a mess of cut- stockholders and board of directors throats from Moose Creek, up the|lof Jack Wade Dredging Company Taku River. They expected to re-!wfll be held Tuesday, June 8, in turn to Juneau this evening with Dawson, Yukon Territory, Canada. all the fish their boat would carry.|(Signed) CHARLES A. WHITNEY, - adv, Secretary. | REBEKAH MEETIN HELD LAST NIGHT A large attendance from both the Juneau and Douglas lodges, marked | the meeting of the Rebekahs last evening in the I.OOF. Hall, with initiation services held during the| evening. Mrs. Irene Smith, Mrs. Evelyn Hollman, and Mrs. Ruth Blake were on tne refreshment committee; and Miss Blanche Thorgerson and Miss Helen Torkelson, on the entermln-‘I ment committee. i Initiated in the Juneau chapter | were Miss Eleanor Jahnke and Mrs. Helen Vienola, while Mrs. Joe Riedi was initiated into the Douglas chap- ter. Mrs. Jack Langseth placed high in cards. PSS C A Funniest of Gold Fish Cost Only $285 Each TOKYO, May 27—Do you collect goldfish? If so, you should have a Japanese “Ranchu,” which costs abcut $285. The story sounds “fishy,” but it's true. Ranchu “goldies” are a limited portion of 12,000,000 goldfisn the city of Tokyo has raised in the| last year. These aristocrats have bulging heads, trifurcated tails and no dorsal fins. They are runny‘ leoking; that's why they cost so much. Seven giant orange trees that bear heavily though more than a century old stand on the Laguna Seca ranch near Edinburg, Tex. | WITH MEALS..OR ANY TIME drink fine GARRETT WINES fine dinner wine re (light) Wine, red or white Old North Star | i | Brand Blackberry Garrett’s Concord wnjoy nine Ameri- can wines pro- duced by Garret W .. satyour | dealer. Garrett & | Company, Inc., Brooklyn, N. Y. ———————— WILLARD B. IN PORT In from Taku Harbor after lum- *MORE Vosmick had a poor year in 1936. After having been runner-up w‘ Buddy Myer of Washington for the American League batting title in NOTICE For special fresh dressed chickens call Femmer, phone 114. adv. ——_————— hit as high as 200 miles an hour, few hours, returning from a trip|ber and other cannery supplies, the in place of the previous lone three- to the Pribilofs. Capt. H. P. Knut- [Libby, McNeill and Libby,cannery quarter-mile stretch. Isen is in charge of the vessel which |tender Willard B. docked here at Tazio Nuvolari, who rode home makes a regular run to the islands, | the Juneau Lumber Mills this morn- Among those aboard was Mrs.|Ing. /home-town fans, prone to take it What Violent 1935 Joe slipped below the .300/ mark, hitting .287. Peerhaps the China was Uncle Sam’s best cus- tomer for aeronautical products in out on the perennially disappointing 1936. Ceslures You Use, Leo! Leo Durocher, Cardinal captain, gave himself up to white rot recent Card-Giant game in St. Louis after Um| caught Leo in the act of smashing the ball to himself, flinging a few of his choicest words at (| atcher Owen is shown at the left. TR i e in a fifth-inning rumpus of a e Barr called a balk on Dizzy Dean. The camera und in a gesture of anger. At the right is Dizzy umpire. is hidden by the nm.rlra body. ight broke out in the ninth inning the same aw ey ot & A free-for-all f! an easy winner in last fall's race, will be back to defend his laurels, Jessica Jorgenson, formerly of Ju- as will most of the other Italian neau and now a teacher at Un- and French riders who competed alaska. She is making a visit Out- against him. side and.will return to her post i |at Unalaska. GUN SALE MONDAY; 'sIx INSPECTION SATURDAY | SELL AT SEATTLE , N S | i The gun sale by the Alaska Game SEATTLE, May 27. — Halibuters Commission wiil be held June 1, selling here today are as follows: starting at 1 p. m., it was announc-! From the western banks — Co- ed today by Assistant Executive Of- lumbia 35000 pounds, 8% and 6% ficer Clarence Rhode. Due to Me- cents a pound; Eldorado 39,000 morial Day holiday Monday, the pounds, 8% and 6% cents; Liberty guns will be open for inspection all 38,000 pounds, 8% and 6% cents. day Saturday in the furnace room From the local banks—Albatross of the Federal building and also‘B,OOO pounds, 8 and 7 cents; Rosario on Monday morning prior to the 12,000 pounds, 8% and 7 cents; Le- sale, Rhode said. ‘Hmnon 15,000 pounds, 8% and 7 The guns, which include a wide Cents. variety, are weapons seized from game law violators over a period of 2 F[LE AR'"CLB il i OF INCORPORATION INTERCO. ASTAL PLANE Articles of incorporation have been mcs HEMZLEMAN |filed with' the Territorial Auditor 'by Alaska-U. S. Mines, Inc., of Che- NEWMAN HERE TOD AY halis, Wash., and the Owl Bus Lines, Inc.; of Anchorage. The former is capitalized at $30,000 and will op- erate at Teller, Alaska, where Mrs, T. A. Peterson is agent. Incor- HALIBUTERS Making the company’s scheduled Thursday flight here from Ket- {chikan, Pilot Ray Rershaw brought |the Intercoastal Airways red Stin- {son Reliant seaplane into Juneau {this forenoon about 11 o'clock and was to make the return hop to Ket- chikan this afternoon leaving here at the scheduled time, 2:30 o'clock. | Passengers coming to Juneau with {Renshaw this forenoon were: Jobn |Nelman and B. F. Heintzleman. |Hans W. Looff, Standard Oil Com- | pany flier, was to make the return |flight to Ketchikan with Renshaw {tms afterneon. - — -, ! Rattlesnakes whose fangs have | been temoved will grow new ones in about two weeks, porators are Alvan R. Weber, Har- ry Feagles, Palmer Dunlap, Guy M. Balfour’ and W. G. Armstrong of Chehalis. Incorporators of the bus line are W. E. Falconer, Cevil M. Wells and Nanele Wells, all of An- chorage. Capital is $400. —————— JAZZ ON GRID The First National Bank TUNEAU . [ CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS— $75,000 [ J ZOMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on | Savings Accounts i Alaska Transportation Co. SCHEDULED SAILINGS | Evelyn Berg from Seattle... ....May 18 [ D. B. FEMMER, Agent PHONE 114 Night Phone 312 Up for her regular springtime hull-scraping and repainting, Cash! Cole's gasboat Jazz was put on the |8rid at the Upper City Float yester- | jday afternoon. I - —————— { Lede and placer 1ocation notices llor sale at The Empire Office. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. LOOK TO A GMC HALF-TON TRUCK LOADING SPACE... *MORE *MORE VALUE | Available in either 112-inch o; 126-inch wheelbase and with the biggest standard bodies ... Advanced stream-styling ! combined with exclusive “dual-tone” color design ... Many modern features in- cluding all-steel “Helmet- Top’ cab, improved type of hydraulic brakes, complete full-pressure engine lubrica- tion for greater dependability and dozens of other refine- mentsandimprovementsthat assure exceptional perform- ance and economy. Thefacts about any GMC are yours upon request. QUALITY AT PRICES LOWER THAN AVERAGE GENERAL MOTORS TRUCKS AND TRAILERS CON NORS MOTOR €0, Inc. Juneau, Alaska