The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 28, 1937, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, 1937 MR JGGS SEE YOou N ACE UP- I'M AWFULLY WILL R o WELL-| BROUGHT IT ALL ON MY- Y FOR ‘Yyou- SELF - i Y IT LKE A r MR, JIGGS - 1| KNOW YOU) BOUGHT THE FIRM THAT | WORK FOR- | JUST WANT YOU MHOT TO THINK TOO HARSHLY LL TAKE ‘1 OF ME- | WANT _NO PITY= | MA} ESEE”\éEN\\N E-ll B HAT'S COMING By GEORGE McMANUS | ONLY ASK ONE RS- DO FIRE ME-JUST LET ME TELL MY _FRIEMNOS 1 RETIRED- | JUST CANNOT STAND THE DISGRACE - CUNTS TAKE DOUBLE GAME, BOOSTING UP Chicago Cubs Also Win But They Slip Back—Games Yet to Be Played (By Asscciated Press) Like a man trying to go up and down on an escalator, the Cubs are cliding g each time they take a forward step. They thought they {ock a good one when they whipped the Reds yesterday until the Giants took both halves of the doubleheader with the Bees. Today the Cubs are four and one half games behind with six left to play to the Giants nine. If the Gi-| ants win four, they are in the top! and the pennant winners, no mat- | ter what the Cubs do. \ The Dodgers yesterday dropped the twelfth game to the Phillies. | GAMES MONDAY National League New York 5, 6; Boston 4, 2. Chicago 7; Cincinnati 4. Brooklyn 3; Philadelphia 11. American League Boston 6, 0; Philadelphia 2, 6. Sec- ond game called at end of sixth inning on account of darknes | Detroit 2; Cleveland 1. | | STANDING OF CLUBS | National League Won Lost | Pet. | New York 628 Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Boston Brooklyn PhiladelpHia Cincinnati American League Won Lost Pct. : SHARPSHOOTER ts Cartoon Da ily Spor THIS PAIR OF VETERAK) FRESHMEN HAVE HALF BEES TOTAL VICTOR/IES FOR YEARS THEY LANGU/SHED IN THE MINORS UNT/L- BOSTON PICKED THEM UP - BOTH ARE OVER- “THIRTY 2] MR JIGES- YOURE: A GREAT_MAN-IVE BEEN A FOOL ALL MY_LIFE - BUT MY EYES ARE OPEN NOW = MORRIS CARRIES OFF HONORS A 'SHOTCUN EVENT Lou Hudson and Dr. W. P. Blanton Tie for Second Place—Results Given At the last shoot of the Jun:au Shotgun Club for the year held Sunday morning, L. F. Morris topped the field with a score of 24, followed by Lou Hudson and Dr. W. P. Blan- ton with scores of 23. Lou Hudson carried off the hon- ors in the doubles event, turning in a score of 18, and followed by Blanton with a score of 17. The shoot Sunday marked the last shoot before the opening of the duck season Friday morning at 7 o'clock. The shotgun club is back- ing the 7 o'dlock law for only by the cooperation of all the sportsmen will everyone be able to bag game, officials stated. Plenty of ducks are reported and a good display of sportsmanship by strict adherence to the 7 o'clock law will assure a duck dinner for every hunter that turns out. Individual scores for Sunday's shoot were as follows: Singles: L. F. Morris Dr. Blanton Lou hudson Charles Goldstein W. B. Kirk E. E. Ninnis L. Constantine M.Daniel D. Able (20 ga.) HAS TURNED N FOUR SHUT-OUTS WON MORE THAN OF 7HE AN Rights Resorves * *he Assoctated Press Robert Simpson Doubles: Lou Hudson Dr. Blanton L. F. Morris M. Daniei Don Able TWQ PAA PLANES quired to keep the totals from get- ting diluted or clipped off by book- keeping accidents. Then the President promptly put political critics at a disadvantage by inviting a Toledo, O., Republican to admirdster the “census.” He 13| John Biggers, a s ful business executive. To avoid other snipers, L. resident insisted tie tally must be voluntary and theretore pcsses-; sed of now power to “brand” citizens ¢I'hat voluntary provision makes tally resemble a straw vote.) tie | It Has Iis Faults A crilic would find himself in| pessession of a lot of arguing ma- terial by charging that any census of the unemployed is a negative and therefore, relatively pointless thing And the question would be put to every citizen, not mercly to those perscns who actually are or may be( or think they are unemployed. Admittedly the scheme is not per- fect, but it is quite possible that the states, cities, and the Federal governiment will get a good $4,000,- 00(1 worth of information about unemployment. York Giants, is shown here with hits in four trips to the plate in contributing to the final score of Texas. o JO-JO IS SO-SO. Joe Moore, outfielder for the New the bat with which he made three a game against the Chicago Cubs, 5 to 0 for the Giants. Moore's from SECOND DAY OF PARALYSIS BAN IS ENCOURAGING ROCKYPASSTO ECHOWITH GUNS The Rocky Pass Gun Club will] take the field Sunday aboard Al Weather’s gasboat Deutsch, bound for Big John Bay below Kake, where | !the club has its lodge. | Guy McNaughton, vice-president of B. M. Behrends Bank, who has been anticipating the duck season — longer than any person in town,| (Continued trom rage One) says the party will get away some-| — " {time Sunday to be out 12 days. violations of the regulations | ‘Those planning to make the trip been made. are, Charles Goldstein, Ed Jones,| “We find the children and parents Tom McCaul, Allen Shattuck, Guy|are willing to work with us on thi McNaughton, Dr. W. T. Blanton, Dr. problem, and their cooperation is Robert Simpson, Judge George F. to be commended,” he stated. Sev- | Alexander and Tom Evans. leral children who were to have left e - | Juneau by steamer during the com- JIM CON ling week have postponed their de- Improving from Disease | Jackie McClure Reported ‘ have BANNER YEAR "IN FORTYMILE . PLACERFIELDS Charlie Murray Developing Ground Near Jack Wade Fortymile mining outfits have had the best season in many years this {past summer, according to Charlie Murray, mining man from that sec- tion, stopping over at the Gastineau. No operation experienced any dearth of water and all operations produced well, Murray said. Mr. Murray is prospecting ground 1 he holds options on near Jack Wade AT FIELD TODAY | | | | | New York Detroit Chicago Cleveland Boston ‘Washington Philadelphia NORS’ ‘IR |parture in keeping with the ruling on Uhler and Canyon Creeks. In TAKING LONG TRIP which prohibits all persons under the past year's work. Mr. Murray 118 years of age from leaving the and his crew have put down between Leaving Juneau on the Princess city until after two weeks of iso- 50 and 60 holes to bedrock on Uhler | Creek, using boilers, thawing and 'What It Means This Unemployed Counting’ {Louise, J. J. Connors Jr., general lation. ___,manager of Connors Motor Co., had' Ingenious Device "mucking out, as the ground on Uhler six weeks of combined pleasure and| Ingenious among amusement de- Creek, contrary to that on Canyon The Pacific Alaska Airways shin- All along, Bill McKechnie has been ing Electra swept into the airport recognized as a mighty smart base- field on the Mendenhall Flats this ball manager. The excellent man-lafternoon with five passengers from| _ (Continued trom Page One) ner in which he has brought the g,y ohoard. Pilots S. E. Rob-| 7 St. Louis .299 ——to—— FOUR HUNTSMEN PLANNING TRIP For the fifth consecutive year, the ducks and geese, and trout and deer are going to get visitors from Simpson MacKinnon’s forty-foot | gasboat Nora. The visitors, burd- ened with guns and tackle, will be Simpson MacKinnon; Minard Mills, Dr. George F. Freeburger and Earle Hunter. | The four hunters will leave this week-end to make a leisurely cir-| trout a fling at Lake Eva and Warm Springs Bay, dropping an- chor wherever the will moves them, for two weeks away from the cares | that be in a booming Capital City; deer-hunting on a mountain that takes the fevered eye, duck and goose shooting on flats that stir with the beat of web-footed fowl.: There is one sad note to this symphony of a sportsman’s dream. It is a case of four staunch friends going out and one hapless friend staying home. It is Joe Johnson of | Thomas Hardware, whose work will keep him among the furniture and paints, and Joe is sad for once before this thing has happened to Joe. That is the tale of four hunters who are jumping with expectation —and one who submerges in waves of sorrow. SIMMONS HOPS WITH THREE ON SITKA RUN Sheldon Simmons took off this morning for Sitka and waypoints with three passéngers aboard, B. Benson, for Tenakee, William Lai- kenin, for Chichagof, and Al Clith- row, for Slocum Arm. On the return trip from Sitka, he will pick up C. Sandborn of the | Warrack’ Construction Co., at Sitka. — President Jackson in 1826 launch- ed an attack on the Bank of the U. S. as he considered it a detriment Boston Bees along this summer has added a new feather or two in his agerial changes which are threat- ened to take place after the cur-| rent season has run its course, Mc- Kechnie finds himself in a nice spot. The most amazing developments in connection with the Bees' sud- den rise off the floor was due to th manner in which McKechnie handled his hurling staff. Starting out with a group of hurlers who | promised little, he juggled his pitch-| ers so that his team proved any- \thing but a doormat for the rest of the league. His particular de- light all season has been to wreck the hopes of proud contenders for the pennant. L It wasn't just luck that enabled McKechnie to turn up with a pair of rookie pitchers who have proven| real finds and between them have |turned in more thon half of the Itotal victories scored by the Bees, Jim Turner and Lou Fette are the pair. They are “veteran” roookies in asj much as both have celebrated their thirtieth birthdays. They had been toiling in the minors for years, other managers having felt that they were not big league pitchers. Under McKechnie’'s guidance they blossoomed out into stars and as the teams rolled down the home- stretch into September, each boast- ed 15 victories, including four shut outs apiece. Turner won 12 games for Indian- apolis last seasqn. Back in 1924 he had a brief try-out with the Red Sox, but since that time major league teams overlooked him. Start- ing with Winsom-Salem in 1925, Turner Portsmouth, Norfolk and Hollywood before moving on to Indianapolis in 1933. Fette grabbed most of the American A: ation pitching hon- ors last year, winning 25 games for St. Paul. He is a bear for work, having pitched 38 games last sea- son. Fritz Waskowitz is captain and left half of the 1937 University of Washington feotball team. He is the kingpin passer of the squad. e LOADED SCOW GOING | UP TAKU TO POLARIS | Early tomorrow morning another scow load of mining equipment and supplies totaling about 40 tons will| be taken up thé Taku river by Capt. Wiiliam Strong. The equipment is geing to the Polaris-Taku mine near Tulsequuh.‘ e BRUNSWICK BOWLERS TO MEET GROCERS ON ALLEYS TONIGHT The Gastineau Grocery ten-pin artists will lock horns tonight on e g— the Brunswick alleys with the| Guy Fawkes was hanged during Brunswick team at 7:30, according the reign of James I as a conspir- to Emil Galao. ator in the Gunpowder Plot to — ., blow up the Houses of Parliament. berg, for Whitehorse: {worth, PAA radio operator who is played with Greensboro, { |questions within a scant tw bins and Murray Swuart were at the jo.o 0. ¥e0xs, cap. And with the wholesale man- controls, with beautiful weather| A compromise was Mr. nousovelt‘s'in 'holding throughout the trip. Passengers arriving on the Elec- tra were W. P. Sharp, H. R. Justice, H. J. Mesta, Mrs. B. B. Green and Mrs. A. A. McCandless. Early this morning, Pilots Al Munson and Walter Hall brought in the weatherbound Electra from Whitehorse with Charles Murray, Fred Ordway, Dick Ordway, Miller and Massey, and turned back to Fairbanks shortly afterwards with four passengers. Passengers going to Fairbanks on the morning plane wefe Jwck Jef- ford, who is going to Nome to fly for Hans Mirow there; Carl Strand- J. Hollings- jobvious out. First, he decided to limit the cost as Tar as the Federal 000. Then he figured out a tenta- tive plan to have the states, coun- ties and towns set up election ma- chinery for an ‘“unemployment census day” late this year and pre- sumably bear the cost themselves. (Election machinery usually costs about a dollar a vote.) PR A Cagey Appointment That little trick will leave the Fed- eral government free to spend $4,- 000,000 for: 1.—A poll by extra rural mail car- riers in country districts: 2—A recheck of the 55,000,000 persons listed with the Federal Em- ployment service. 3 —Elimination in the returns of 1,500,000 persons now receiving re- lief, and their relatives; and 4—The huge accounting job re- going o Cold Creek to operate a radio sending and receiving set there, and Ray Robinson, former Alaska Air Transport mechanic, bound for Fairbanks to work for Pollack Air Service at Weeks Field.' | 1 'l Turn a paroled convict loose in &nother state with no ® strings on him, says the 42-year-old strongman of 2 government is concerned to $4,000,- A CANDID TALK with Carl E. Bailey Under this law, he explains, ® Arkansas is ready to promise business ahead of him. |vices conceived by the children dur- Mr. Connors will spend a few days ing their enforced vacation is the Seattle, then go to Chicago, and | “Special Communication System” from there to the automobile fac- nNOW operating from the homes of \tories and Firestone rubber plants Chee Hermann, Florence Hawkes- at Akron, Ohio. Leaving there, Worth, Frankie Olson, Erling Os- Washington, D. C., New York, Bos-|Wald, Bobbie Phillips, and Mary ton and Montreal will be on his Stewart. The arrangement consists itinerary. 1In the latter two cities Of @ series of string lines between he plans to visit relatives. Inci- the homes, in series formation. The dentally, he plans to be a rooter at sender clips a note or a bag of one or more of the World Series cookies on the string with a gabeball games. |clothes pin, and the recipient pulls | S ORE | the string (clothesline style) till the SABLE AND HALIBUT izu'ticle arrives. | Frankie Olson and Erling Oswald | SOLD, SEATTLE MARTihave added airmail service by clip- ‘ SEATTLE, Sept. 28.—The Polaris ping model planes to the lines, and {came in from the western halibut|the only disadvantage which now | banks today with 39,000 pounds and clouds the pleasure is that someone isold for 10% and 9 cents a pound. may think of putting text books on ‘The Sunset, with 36,000 pounds, sold the circuit. for 11% and 9 cents. | | Local arrivals were Merit with, MISS KOLATS ILL 14,000 pounds of sable, Jane with, Miss Etta Mae Kolasa, assistant 18,000 pounds and Husky L with 7,- city clerk, has been confined at 1000 pounds, all selling for 5% cents home since Saturday with a severe a pound. vcold. > Since he became Govern Creek, is frozen throughout. Bedrock along Uhler Creek, where Mr. Murray is working, is 12 feet deep on the aversge and has shown fair yardage values in gold. On the strength of the values received from the shafts put down, it is expected that drill work will be started this fall. Checking of the drill sheets will then determine the coure of further development work. Uhler and Canycn Creeks are new creeks as far as mining opera- tions go and the claims on which Mr. Murray holds options belong to J. R. Morris, Jack McHugh and Charlie Johnson, the original lo- cators, HOLDEN FLIES TWO IN FROM POLARIS-TAKU On his return trip from the Polar- is-Taku mine yesterday afternoon, Alex Holden of the Marine Airways, flying the Fairchild, brought in Jack R. Clark and C. H. Metcalfe. or of Arkansas last January, he has gained considerable attention for his parole reforms. Now he’s a candidate for the late Joe Rob- inson’s seat in the Sena 3 “In the past, a paroled pris- e oner leaving the state felt 4 te. 4 “Now he will feel the restr: * of supervision aint The Empercr Tiberius made an The earliest complete clock of Arkansas Democratic politics, and he probably will soon edict against marriage by women which there is certain record was over 50 or men over 60 but it was made by a Saracen mechanic in the to state banks. soon repealed. llSth century. | be back behind bars. To prevent that, Governor Bailey had this year’s session of his state legislature adopt the “uni- form parolee compact law.” | other states to “see that your pa- rolees go straight in Arkansas if youw'll supervise ours when they come to your state. ... somewhat out from under restraint. This led him oftentimes to become a second offender. He knew he wasn't being watched. . . . in the state where he takes up residence.” Ay kansas has concluded its first pact with Indiana and is negotiating for others.

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