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@ COAST LEAGUE SEASON ENDED; CHAMP SERIES Sacramento Remains at Top, San Francisco Sec- ond, San Diego Third (By Associated Press) After a week of upsetting base- ball, the Portland Beavers are headed for Sacramento with the first game of the Shaughnessy play- offs to decide the Pacific Coast League championship listed for Tuesday as the regular schedule for the season ended Sunday. Only two teams held the same positions of a week ago. Sacramento will start the play- off series at the top spot and the finish there meant the team was $2,500 richer. The Missions remained in the cellar although they took five out of seven games from the Padres which forced the later into third place. Sacramento lost five out of seven games to Seattle. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Sacramento 1, 2; Seattle 4, 11. Oakland 5, 1; Portland 7, 4. San Diego 2, 4; Missions 5, 5. San Francisco 2, 6; Los Angeles 6, 2 National Leaguc New York 4; St. Louis 3, ten in- nings. Brooklyn 1; Chicago 2. Boston 7, 0; Cincinnati 6, 2. Philadelphia 8, 1; Pittsburgh 1, 5. American League “hicago 4, 9; Washington 5, 1 Cleveland 4, 3; Philadelphia 8, 5. Detroit 8; New York 1. St. Louis at Boston, doubleheader posiponed on account of rain. GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League £an Diego 2; Missions 1 Sacramento 11; Seattle 3. Only games scheduled. National League Boston 6; St. Louis 7, ten innings. Brooklyn 2; Pittsburgh 3. Philadelphia 3; Chicago 9. New York 3; Cincinnati 4. American League »troit 5, 4; Philadelphia 2, 5. veland 7; Boston 6. Chicago 8, 0; New York 12, 4. St. Louis 2, 3; Washington 6, 10. D STANDING OF CLUBS (Corrected to date) Pacific Coast League (Final P.C.L. Standing) Won Lost Pet. Sacranmento 102 76 575 San PFrancisco 98 80 551 Sin Diego 97 81 545 Portland 90 86 511 Los Angeles 9 8 506 Seattle 81 96 458 Oakland 79 98 446 Missions 73 105 401 National League Won Lost Pet. New York 84 53 613 Chicago 83 57 593 st. Louls 565 536 Pittsburgh 7565 532 Bosten 7110 504 Erooklyn 61 79 436 Cincinnati 55 84 396 Philadelphia 55 85 .393 American League Won Lost Pet. New York ... 8 45 674 Dotroit 83 56 591 Chicago 78 62 557 Boston . 71 63 530 Cieveland ... 74 66 .529 ‘Washington 67 3 479 Philadelphia 47 91 3 st. Louis .41 98 295 JUNEAU ATHLETIC CLUB OFFICERS BE ELECTED AT MEETING IN FUTURE Postponement of the election of permartnt officers for the Juneau Athletic Club pending a further membership drive was announced | today by Organizer Lee Rox. Until the membership roster has been swelled, he said, temporary officers will continue to serve. The Club will sponsor a dance this coming Saturday night starting at 9 o'clock in the Union Hall, for- merly the Moose Hall, to raise funds for the outfitting of a gymnasium in the basement of the Union Hall. Permission has been obtained for the use of the basebent for gym- nasium purposes. Rox said the outlook of the club is bright. He says a special effort is being made to enroll business and professional men as members of the organization. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 20, 1937. Don Budge Is Winner of Daris Cu I; | The Dwight F. Davis international {lawn tennis trophy has become an award to the world’s outstanding lamateur netter . The country | ithat ‘produces the No. 1 ranking {tennis player almost always owns| ‘the Davis cup (above right . . . . From 1920 through 1926 the U. S. (Bill Tilden) won the trophy . . . From 1927 through 1932 it was France, mainly Henry Cochet . . . |From 1933 through 1936 it was Great Britain (Fred Perry) ... In 1937 it was the U. S. and almost entirely by Don Budge (above left) . . . The Oakland, Calif. redhead didn't lose a match in Davis Cup competition this spring. He won SOVIET WRITER FEELS FLIERS | ' WALLOPED, BOWLING; === | FAST GAME TONIGHT The Triangle walloped the Gas- Trophy |GASTINEAU GROCERY tineau Grocery in the Commercial s last night by a score of 2385 to 2294. Two of the Grocery five i bowled over 500 but all of the Inn . team rolled them over 467 Leo Khvat, Pravda Avia- Tonight the Columbia Lumber 1 Xper Coempany and the Brunswick five iy l'_x;l)ul, Lells meet. Both have three victories to Why n Juneau their credit and not a single de- s feat so the game is expected to be (Continued irom Page One) a hot one Last night's scores are as follows: also have guns and ammunition Gastineau Grocery | with which to kill game which is Woody 100 known to exist in the Polar regions. Specks They also have sufficient warm Jay j | clothing Jud Where Search Made Huntiig ton 156 158 165— 479‘ “We have confined our search to —— the radius of the section from Team average 2294 | which the message was heard.” i angle Inn Mr. Khavat said there are now |E. Batelho 152 146 178— 476 |four Russian fliers operating in the 1J. Schmirtz 195 152 137— 484 | Arctic regions in addition to Sir Hu- |J. Snow 170 157 140— 467 |bert Wilkins and Alaskan fliers. He F. Schmitz 158 164 140— 465 |was especially pleased with the qual- | Ollie 134 172 187— 493 ity of Joe Crosson and other Al- —— |askan aviators in the search. The 2385 people of Fairbanks and other parts . of Alaska have been “very hospit- Mrs. Gooper I able,” he said. Party Hostess | A pretty luncheon Saturday at {Percy’s Cafe honored Mrs. Gladys |Overby, who will leave on the Yukon | next week for a vacation in Port-| a The Russian newspaperman, who i land. Mus. James C. Cooper was ssed through Juneau seven weeks | hostess for the affair. GIVES OLYMPIA ITS Cards were played during the atternoon, Mrs. G, Hoemumm re. CONSTANT PURITY? ceived high prize, while Mrs. Wal- . ter Hellan was awarded second * 1 high. Consolation prize went to 66 p_ 9 [T} M Mrs. w. W. Council. Mrs. Overby Its the Water received a lovely guest prize. A rare. and special type of natural brew- Present at the party were Miss- ing water, combined with skill and fine os L. Kemper, Pearl Peterson, Clara ingredients, has made certain European Alkins and Alice Palmer and Mes- l’?“" "m’,ld "m"!“ for quality . dames J. C. Michaclson, Walter Likewise, in Americs, our subterranc Ballin, C. Hbenum, 5.5, Shep- wells at Tumwater have made Olympia Beer internationall ard, W. W. Council, M. E. Monagle, Seaoahiiaditor fin: J. Mullen, C. W. Hawkesworth, W. ¢ flavor, clean taste, con- T. Mahoney, Robert W. Bender,! stant purity and re- Team average b fiingifi;: mli:? .ry?":n?;h e ‘ the honoree, Mrs. Gladys Overby| freshing goodness. e : g ) e i ot s s SN O O Kmuaum“ the Gexmm':;. the Brit- and helped in the doubles for the | gar Hare in the decisive singles and the hostess, Mrs. James C. Coo ‘ 3 ish He helped win the doubles three wins the U. S. had to have match . . . In between cup match- per. { oLYMP n eve It st S imbledon o - | lin every match . If Budge had against the nazis . . . The only three es, Budge won three w_lm ke i {lost his 5-set ;iii)glcg contest to Wins the U. S. got . . . In the cup crowns—singles, doubles, mixed dou-| United States exports of pun‘ -EER Sran : ¥ finals, Franzie Parker of Milwaukee |bles—and became the first men products are reported now to be SR |Germany’s Baron von Cramm it would have been fatal . . . It was against Germany that Don won (the cup . . . He took two singles | Sport Briefs Quintin Arnold, 31, Wakefield, R. I, recently won the 105-mile bi- cycling race around Oaku Island by 15 feet over three rivals. His time was 5 hours 16 minutes, 17 sec- onds. Lou Gehrig and Tony Lazzeri are the only members of the Yan- kees who were with the team in 1927, Col. E. R. Bradley has occupicd the same room in the United States Hotel during each Saratoga Springs | race meeting since 1900. estimate that an average of each at baseball Concessionaires spectators spend about 25 cents games. New York wants the National Public Parks Tennis Association | championships for the 1939 World's Fair year. i — e | [MISSING MEN ARE | FOUND, LIMESTONE; | JUST LOG TROUBLE! Robert Burns, Juneau gasboat op- erator, and Henry Olson, prospec- | tor, reported missing—were located | Saturday afternoon by the Coa.st; Guard cutter Cyane at Limestone | Inlet, according to word to U. S.| Commissioner Felix Gray, who au- thorized the search. Both are well| and safe. { Burnls with his vessel Typhoon, | was enroute to Juneau and was/ picking up some logs off the beach | when Olson came along in a small| boat, also en route here, according | to information from the Cyane.| Burns asked Olson to help him get the logs rafted up and he would | bring him on into town. Both were at work on the job when the cutter found them and later left them to; - e complete their task. P S * > | AT THE HoteLs | MRS. BERNHOFER 1 — GIVES LUNCHEON Gastineau Mrs. J. A. Berg, Miss Louella) An enjoyable birthday luncheon| Lynch, Henry C. Musett, W. A, Sherman, J. A. Dochar, J. Gladen, B. Paget, Vancouver; G. E. Spor- leder, Charles Dinsdale, M. Heis- wolf, Polaris; Leo B. Khvat, Mos- cow; Emma Disel, Fairbanks; Ida Sprenger, Nome; George L. Boyd, Joe Crosson, Bill Knox, Fairbanks; Korl Strandbere. Whitehor<e* F. G. Milligan, Bartholomew, Fairbanks; E. J. Maloney, Chichagof; W. L. Simonds, Kimshan Cove. .- It is estimated that the people} of the United States spend about $200,000000 a year in the fight against insects of various kinds. was given Saturday for Harriet Stonehouse. Mrs. J. B. Bernhofer was hostess for the affair at her home on Capital Avenue. | A profusion of pink flowers made a pretdy setting for the party, while| 1 large birthday cake formed the| central decoration for the table. Following the luncheon, the young people attended a matinee. — - MRS. DRULINER COMING ! | Mrs. Dale Druliner, the former Aimee Lou Guerin, is returning to her Juneau home aboard the Yukon ‘nner 8 brief visit in Seattle. (right) carried part of the load. in history to monopolize the Brit- double the shipments abroad the Parker beat Britain’s Charles Ed-jish tournament. S —_——————— depression years. [ 7014«’1 Wdldt lO énow Wé? —and you'd learn why through The Associated Press. Millions daily depend on it for the whys and wherefores of current happenings. This great non-profit, cooperative press association, with correspondents in every corner of the globe, gives Amer- ican citizens a swift, accurate, and impartial report of every human event that affects them directly or indirectly. The Associated Press brings the news of the world everv day to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i | | | A WICKET SWING is lots better than setting up ¢ cer- : cises for shapeliness and more fun, too, insists youthful E seth | Callahah, a leader of the south’s revival of backyard eroqu tour- | naments. Young and old are joining the mallet “swing” m..cment | back to “pedestrian polo.” 14 ago barely able to speak English, formed about the search activities, has acquired a fine working know- Using many signs with which to of the language. He studied two aid in his English expression, Mr. hours daily on an English-Russian Khavat had added three words to grammar and read Jack London’s his vocabulary that most Americans books in an attempt to master the find indispensable. They are “Okey, language, you betcha and hoky-dok: Nice-looking and affable, he made i 5% many friends in Fairbanks. One nr‘consfipa‘ed 30 Ycars these is George Karabelnikoff, son r of Frank Karabelnikoff. He enjoys Aided by Old Remedy “For thirty years 1 nad constipa- American movies. | Returning to Moscow He is returning to Russia, he said, tion. Souring food from stomach on instructions from his newspaper, choked me. Since taking Adlerika because the Soviet representaives, I am a new person, Constipation Vartanian and Behlokov in Fair- is a thing of the past” — Alice banks and Smirkov in Point Bar- Burns. Butler-Mauro Drug Co., in row can keep the Pravda weli-in- Douglas by Guy’'s Drug Store. adv. James Orme Yon are Invited to present ~a18 coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre nnd receive tickets for your. self and a friend or relative to see “After the Thin Man” As a pald-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for currem offering. Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE Aetopefoebobnbfefefe bbbl o] b b1 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. 4 (Do not call after 7:15 P. M.) | WINDOW CLEANING ' PHONE 48% ettt HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION