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‘BRINGING UP FATHER THE DAILY ALASKA BVIPIRE SATURDA\ SEPT. Il By GEORGE MgMANUb VYLL JUST TURN ON THI MOVIE CAMERA AN’ TAKE A PICTURE OF MESELF- E I'M ANXIOUS TO SEE HOW | LOOK IN A MOVING Copr. 1937, King Features Syndicate, Tne, Wor 1937. < [IIN] W—i( i 14 rights reserved. THIS PICTURE HOME RUNS ARE CAME WINNERS, COAST LEAGUE Circuit Driv:i: 12th Spells Victory for Padres— Indians Get Two ated Press) Outfielder Rupert Thompson’s home run, with two out in the twelfth inning, gave San Diego victory over Los Angeles yesterday afternoon San Prancisco edged out the Mis- sions last night while Lou Shores pitched shutout ball after the fifth inning. Sacramento won the first game last night from Portland but Port- land finally got the bats swinging and splattered base hits all over the lot to win the second game. Mike Hunt, leading home run king in the Pacific Coast League, smack- cd out two more circuit drives last night to beat Oakland for the fourth traight time. (By As: Pacific Coast League Los Angeles 3; San Diego 4. Sacramento 6, 8; Portland 2, 17. Oakland 0; Seattle 4. San Francisco 5; Missions 4. National League St. Louis 0; Chicago 11. Cincinnati 6; Pittsburgh 7. New York 1; Boston 2. Philadelphia at Brooklyn played later date. American League Cleveland 6; Detroit 5. Washington 3; Philadelphia 5 Boston 4; New York 3. G OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost 99 69 93 5 93 kil 86 82 83 84 76 92 5 92 66 101 ,3951 National League { won tost Pet.! .. 18 609 ki 592 70 .. 68 70 55 to be Cacramento San Diego San Francisco Los Angeles Portland Oakland Seattle Missions J 5 .:4 554 512 .437 New York Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis . Boston Brooklyn Philadelphia 53 Cincinnati 50 American League Lost 411 397 Pct. 672 585 New York Detroit Chicago Boston Cleveland ‘Washington 576 Is Supreme Court Bill Dead Issue with FDR?| (Continued 11uu Page One) was not mentioned in the 1936 plat- form. Now the President has suffered another defeat, on the Supreme’ Court bil. In the message given out at the time he signed the lim- ited Court Revision bill passed by Congress, he implied he would fight!' for the balance of the original pro- posal. But he did not say so in such certain words that retreat would be later impossible. With the Supreme Court bill he! is in the same position as with the World Court protocol and the St. Lawrence Waterway treaty. He is not pledged to a renewal of the ef- fort. Sincere predictions can be| heard here on either side—that it will be revived or that it is dead| forever. | Obviously the answer has in the amount of brimstone put under members of Congress by opposing! forces. ,,,,, oo 'today to St. ‘ment £ { P { DUN BUDGE IS TENNIS GAMES ... 42 Polish and Chllean Women Jackie Fields, Are Meeting for Hon- ors, Forest Hills FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. 11. 538 —Don Budge is the last American ting 523 left in the National Tennis Cham- asked Rooney to turn 515 pionship and the hero of the Davis and returned to his native Chicago. 430 Cup team meets Baron Gotfreid In casting about for someone to von Cramm in the men’s singles. The women’s title is between Jadwiga Zedrzejowska of Poland and Senorita Anita Lizana of Chile. The Polish girl eliminated Helen Ja- 'cobs easily. .- HOSPITAL NOTES ; Mrs. H. Turner was dismissed medical attention. Mrs. Tom Moyer and baby boy were dismissed today from St. Ann’s |Hospital. Hospital. The baby weighed seven pounds, seven ounces. Mother and child are reported doing well, Mrs. Bert Hampson was admitted medical care. Miss Pauline Mestrezat was dis- missed today from St. Ann’s Hos- pital following surgical care. James McKarren, who has been confined to St. Ann’s Hospital, went i home today. Two persons, Jack Gamble of Ju- neau, and Ole Taug of Tenakee were dismissed today from the Govern- Hospital following surgical care. MINISTERS TO MEFT The Juneau and Douglas Minis- terial Association will meet in regu- MARRIED GLENDALE, Cal, Sept. 11. ) TVE GOT A MESSAGE FOR GARC/A HHE WELTERWEIGHT CHAMPION DEFENDS HIS CROWN AGAINST CEFERINO GARCA N THE CARM VAL OF CHAMPIOMS ROSS HAS FOUND THE PUNCH HE HAD BEFORE™ HE STARTED Typhoon, Floods In Japan Hinder Army’s _Sunnlies Nippon Coast Swept by Disasters, Destroying Feed and Ships .. INFINALS IN SLAN Barney Ross started his fighting career under the wing of Gig Roo- ney. At the time Rooney had the welterweight champion, in his stable and natur- ally spent most of his time hand- ling the titleholder. Barney was just so much excess baggage. ‘When Barney found he was get- no place out in California he him loose handle his affairs he was referred to Sam Pian and Art Winch. Ross won tne lightweigit title. Later he added the welter crown. He gave up the lightweight cham-| pionship when he found making weight too hard a task. He lost the '5“!*' e e e e o Iy Mchrmn‘ from whom he had won it. He re-' gained it, On his way up, Barney was quite a puncher. After winning cham- ing. He seldom added a knockout to his record. Suddenly his old punch returned. Training at Grand Beach with Jimmy Braddock he found his old punch. Sparring against a couple hit. In great shape and hitting hard-' er than ever, Ross found himself without a match on his hands. Fi- nally he lined up a bout with; the Braddock-Louis fight. Bamey dropped Woods in the first round | just to try out his punch. He put Chuck down for the count in the fourth. A B ENS AT THE HOTELS * | Gastineau Livingston Wernecke, Cal.; Charles Gropstis, Cal; E. West, Douglas. Alaskan V. L. Varnaway, Seattle; Wally Mny‘ Charles Johnnie, Laurie Metz, Walter Williams, Hoonah; Mike Lucas Juneau; Homer Williams, Petersburg. Berkeley, Alameda, -ee lar session 10 a.m. Monday at the Charles Correll, Andy of Amos and TUBERCULOSIS MEET home of the Rev. David Waggoner, 814 Gold Belt Avenue. . BECOME NATURALIZED 1 Naturalized m Anchorage recently before Judge Simon Hellenthal were Andy, and Alyce Mercedes Mc- Laughlin, feature and stage dancer, were united in marriage here. ———.e— SHOTGUN CLUB TO SHOOT The Juneau Shotgun Club will hold one of its regular shoots to- TO BE HELD MONDAY An important meeting of the Tu- berculosis Association will be held Monday evening at 8 o'clock in the Department of Heallh offices. All directors of the organization Siami Kalasnemi Makela. formerly morrow morning, starting at 10 o'- are urged to attend. of Turkey, and Henrik Grootveld, formerly of Holland, clock, at the club range back of the Juneau Dairies, BN T g Today's News Today.—Empire, and has held it ever since. | BULLETIN — TOKYO, Sept. 11.—Over 100 are dead, hun- dreds are infjured, scores are missing and extensive property damage has been done by a 75- | mile-an-hour typhoon in the Ka- gawz Perfecture. Shikouf Island has been the hardest hit. Thousands of homes have been inundated and 200 shipping boats overturned. TOKYO, Sept. 11.—A raging ty- phoon, a tidal wave and floods spread destruction through wide {today from St. Ann's Hospital after pionships he concentrated on box- sections of war-excited Japan, de- |stroying crops that had been in- tended to feed Nippon invaders of | China. Inland damage to the Japanese Empire’s shipping was extensive in some sections as the storm swept A girl was born at 1 a. m. today of old mates he was surprised to away untold crops and ruined ships. {to Mrs. E. L. Boise at St. Ann’s see them drop to the canvas when The storm and tidal wave struck H‘erocmu.sly along the southern coast of Japan's main islands near Nikko, 80 miles southwest of To- kyo. Fifteen men were buried alive by Ann’s Hospital for Ghuck Woods a few nights before \a landslide. Fifty-two ships were shattered at Okayama. The tidal wave of waters raised the flood height 25 feet in some sec- tions. In Osaka 600 houses were inun- dated. Kobe reports 500 houses water. Two hundred fishing vessels were sunk at Takamatsu. under + - | STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Sept. 11. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock at today’s short session is 10%, American Can 94%, American Light and Power 7%, Anaconda 49% Bethlehem Steel 82%, Salumet 12, Commonwealth and Southern 2%, Curtiss-Wright 4%, General Motors 50, International Harvester 93, Ken- necott 55%, New York Central 28%, Southern Pacific 33%, United States Steel 95%, Cities Service 2%, Pound $4.94 11/16 Republic Steel 30, Pure Oil 16, Holly Sugar 25%, U Y Treasury bonds 2'¢s 97.14, Atchison General fours 108%. CHICAGD CUBS MOVE GLOSER T0 TOP PLACE iants—Other Close ]mporlanl Games (By Associated Press) ! | The Chicago Cubs moved close to |the first place New Yoikers as the, iresult of their thirteenth victory in 16 stars over Si. Louis Boston took advantage of Hal | Schumacher sing up in the |twelfth inning and whipped the | Giants. Lloyd Waner came through with |a single with two men on base in the ninth inning and gave Pitts- burgh a margin victory over Cin- cinnati In the American League Cleve- land nosed out Detroit in a seven- inning duel as the Yankees were beaten by Boston in the seccond straight game. The Athletics down- ed Wash mgmn yesterday. - NEIMI, EDWARDS " TOGETHER AGAIN, DOUGLAS RESORT | Once again, tonight, the Douglas Inn and the popular team of dance musicians, John Niemi and Glen Ed- wards, are to join forces. Niemi and Edwards long proved an at- |traction to Juneau and Douglas dance lovers when they held sway in the old Douglas Inn and Eagles’| Hall, before the day of the fire Tonight in surroundings of the fine, new Douglas Inn, Niemi and Edwards should prove even more popular. A big turnout is expected for the homecoming of the two musicians. FLOWE .- RS TO BE GIVEN TO SICK Announcement has been made by members of the flower committee at |the Southeast Alaska Fair that any mny not wishing her flowers will have them presented to persons con- | fined in both Juneau hospitals. The bouquets of beautiful Juneau blooms will go to make some sick person happier, it is said. All those who wish their flowers | returned may call for them after 10] o'clock tonight. They are quues(ed’ to call Mrs. J. L. McCormick or any | Genevieve Jonas, daugher of Mr.| member of the Fair Exhibit com- and Mis. Fred Jonas, is a passenger | waboard mittee. luation was employed in Goldstein's| |Emporium. She now resides in Bel-i Out on the Fritz Cove Road, ripe lingham where her husband is one 'of the High School instructors. | be pleased to Here is an oddity. blueberries are found on the same branches as new buds. Believe it or | not. | ——-—— | Rattlesnakes can develop several sets of fangs. When one set is jerked out another pair grows like fingernails. | ing Lumbermen Take 2nd Commercial League thury‘ |Boston Takes Game I’lom}TwoKaufnlanns]om Forces| tion to Columbia Rollers Continuing the pace they set in | their opening match, Columbia | Lumber Company pinmen last eve- ning bowled over the Kaufmann's Cafe quintet in the Commercial Alley League fracas at the Bruns- wick Recreation. Led by Schmidt, who hung &P 4 523 total for the three games, including an opening game of 215, the Lumbermen roll- ed up an aggregate score of neuar- ly 2,400 pins, In the lead-off spot for the Kaufmann's aggregation last even- ing was Mrs. Dolly Kaufmann, the first lady roller to crash into the Commergial League fray this sea- son. Mrs. Kaufmann showed her- self to be no “weak sister,” wind- up third best on her team, eing topped only by Gunnar Blom- gren and by her husband. Robert Kaufmann made a valiant effort to uphold his team, marking up the high score of the night; a 547 that included two games over 200, | Commercial League play at the Brunswick this evening will bring together the Arctic and Triangle Inn squads, two first-round losers, as opponents at 7:30 o'clock. To- morrow evening at 7:30, the Signal Corps five will meet the Gastineau Grocery rollers. Scores in last evening’s match Kaufmann's Cafe D. Kaufmann .. 130 179 Blomgren 155 166 King 122 119 Hudson 147 155 R. Kaufmann .. 201 143 13 163— 484 137— 439 203— 547 Total Jolumbia Lumber 173 154 154— 481 215 150 192 134 142 143 172 158 Rands Schmidt Halm Clark Carnegie 176— 361 Total FORMER JUNEAU GIRL RETURNING Mrs. James E. Bowen, the (onnel the Alaska coming to Ju- Ineau on a visit for the first time/ since she left here in 1922. She attended the Juneau High School and for sometime after grad- Mrs. Bowen will renew acquaintances with former friends during her visit here nndI may be found at the home of her parents at 410 Twelfth Street. e Today's News Today.—Empire. USED WASHERS? Who Wants a Used Washer When You Can Buy a NEW GENERAL WASHING ELECTRIC MACHINE s55 SEE THESE GE FEATUREL —Activator Washing Principle —Permanent Lubrication —GE Silent Gears —Lovell Wringer Sold On Easy Terms ® Alaska Electric Light & Power Co JUNEAU—DOUGLAS 156— 397 | 158— 523 | 121— 47| 152— 492 i JOHN G. CQVICH, Secretary. 2394 | | MUUNT PAVLOF ERUPTS AGAIN Scenic Spot to Wc\'lwm'(l I8 Mapped by Geo- logical bulvv Mount Pavlof, one of highest volcanoes, on July ingly demonstrated that it is still active by showering the land and sea for a distance of 50 miles around with a thin layer of ash This mountain, only seven miles |from the Pacific Ocean, rises to an altitude of 8900 feet, more than twice the height of its famous cousin Vesuvius, on the other side |of the world, which is about 4,300 ~ |feet high. Pavlof stands near the southwest end of the Alaska Pen- {insula, not far from the center of (l\c great arc of volcanic mountains |that stretches from Cook Inlet to |the tip of the Aleutian chains of ‘1<ldnd~ Hundreds of miles of this stretch have never been mapped in detail, /but a topographic map of the Pav- |lof district, covering the Alaska Peninsula from Port Moller to Deer Passage and the adjacent islands on the south, can be purchased | to Present Strong Opposi- |srom tne Geological Survey, United | States Department of the Interior, { Washington, D. €, at a nominal price, The scale of the map is (about 4 miles to the inch. It was prepared by the Geological Survey in cooperation with the National | Geographic Society and has just been reissued, incorporating addi- tional information Stern Scenic Beauty trasts and stern scenic beauty. The |imposing mountain mass of which |the active Pavlof Volcano is a part contains also a northern cone call- ed Pavlof Sister and Aghileen Pin- nacles, which dominate the scores of lesser but lofty peaks. Glaciers extend down the slopes of Mount Pavlof, their accumulated winter snow intermixed with volcanic ash. The mountain slopes are deeply cut by short, rapid streams. The {adjacent lowlands are dotted with lakes. Mount Dana, east of Pavlof Bay, shelters a crater lake more than 2,000 feet above sea level Sparsely Populated The Pavlof district is sparsely | populated, but the deep harbors that indent the Alaska Peniinsula both from the Pacific Ocean side and from Bering Sea are frequent- ed each year by the hoats of fish- ermen and the yachts of hunters of big game. Caribou, bear, and fox are the most abundant game ani- mals. Cod .md salmon are taken Nomination of offi Il meetings. be present. | This area is one of striking mn—' by the fishing. boats, and there are several large salmon canneries. Some coal has been mined in the eastern part of the area, and gold has been recovered in small amounts from both lodes and placers. The settlements of Belkofski, King Cove, and Unga are ports of call for steamers operating from rd, and the district can be reached by airplane in a few hours from towns along the Alaska Rail- road - “DOC” WEBB WILL INSTRUCT IN MAT 'GAME OF J. A. CLUB ‘Doc” George Webb has been se- cured by the Juneau Athletic Club to instruct in wrestling. He is a former professional lightheavy wres= tler and was in the mat game in the lightweight circuit on the west ast; also participated jn 375 pro- fessional bouts. Some of “Doc” Webb's opponents have been Jack Reynolds, Bull Mon- tana, Dory Detton, Husky Bird and Bulldog Jackson Lee Rox( publicity agent of the Juneau Athletic Club, declares om oath that Webb has a genius for helping one to takeoff weight and that the club is fortunate in secur- ing his services as instructor in wrestling. Webb will be one of the principal speakers at the club meeting tomor=- raw night at 7 o'clock at the Union Hall when the sporting plans of the organization will be more fully ex= plained. D RECEPTION FETES i THE VAN ACKERENS Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Van Ackeren and small daughter, Barbara, will sail Monday on the Yukon for Washington, D. C., where Dr. Van Ackeren will act as Hospital Ad- ministrator for the Bureau of Ins dian Affairs. Mrs. Van Ackeren and Barbara will go to Norway to attend a family reunion at Mrs. Van Ackeren’s par= ents’ home in Oslo. As a delightful farewell gesturg for Dr. and Mrs. Van Ackeren, Mrs, R. W. Bender entertained yester= day afternoon’ with a small recep- tion at the Governor's House. | Many friends cali\1 during thg afternoon. - e GUYOTS ON ALASKA Sam Guyot, who has been sout!{ for medical treatment for several months, Is returning to Juneauw aboard the Alaska accompanied by Mrs. Guyot. ) sl e e Lode and placer location notices for sale at ’l'he Emplre Ol’llce. —NOTICE — ! Attention Members of the Local 203 2308 | cers will begin on next regular meeting, Monday, Sept. 13, and continues for three successive All members are urged to Telephone 478 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables HOME GROWN RADISHES, ONIONS and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Prompt Delivery Remember!!! [f your “Daily Alaska Empire” has not been delivered By 6:00 P. M. PHONE 226 A copy will be sent you IMMED- IATELY by SPECIAL CARRIER. (Do not call after 7:15 P. M.) WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485