The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 7, 1937, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 7, 1937 BRINGING UP FATHER I'LL PUSH YOUR CHAIR OVER BY THE WINDOW- THEN YOU CAN PUT YOUR FOOT ON THE WINDOW-SILL-THE SUN WILL DO YOUR GOUT GOOD - 'LL GO GET YOU SOME LUNCH- HOW DOES THAT NEWAliK EARS 'Dail:)::Sporté arrtb(;hi ARE CHAMPIONS | -7 2 - MINOR LEAGUES gt ad Players Now Take Over| $600 Each from ‘ Big Pool COLUMBUS,‘O]’L\O. Oct. 7. — The Newark Bears, the Yankee Inter- | national League farm, won the Lit- tle World Series championship yes- | .Nash Garrison. terday by defeating the Columbus Red Birds, of the American Asso- ciation champions, 10 to 4, for the fourth straight victory. As a result of the win, the Bears took $636 each from the players’ pool. I - eee SPORT SLANTSS The 1937 Pittsburgn football ma- chine is virtually the same one that rode roughshod over the Washing- ton Huskies in the Rose Bowl. Three ' starters have been graduated, but Coach Jock Sutherland has fine re-| placements to plug the gaps. i Pitt possesses @ team of seniors., They have been playing as a unit since their sophomore years, and, [ should be at their peak this fall. | As usual, Pittsburgh has a bruis ing schedule, so it behooves the, boys to be on their toes. Pitt will face Notre Dame, Duquesne, Ford~' __ " "~ ham, Wisconsin, Carnegie Tech, Ne-' L 3 braska, Penn State and Duke. A hardy group, indeed, but it is con- e ceivablp that the Panthers can stalk through this fall without tast- ing defeat. That is, of course, un- These replacements may prove just the tonic for a senior eleven which 3 v * is inclined to feel that it knows ‘Gibraltar-Like Saloon enough tricks to get by without ex-| + ertion. There is nothing iike a bat-| Equ1pmer{t Nf’w for Juneau’s Diners less somebody catches the team off guard. (Remember Duquesne.) | Coach Sutherland has a flock of promising youngsters coming along. tle for the starting berths to keep a team alert. | To offset some o1 the Iosses THE LAZ/IEST MAN ON THE SQUAD WHEMN +T COMES TO PRACTICE - HE CAN SLEEP THE CLOCKC AROUND AFTERNOON j PLAY BY PLAY | (Continued ;:): Page One) YANKEES—Gehrig beat out an infield hit. Dickey singled to center. | Gehrig stopped at second. Hoag, attempting a bunt, forced Gehrig at third. Selkirk doubled off Mc- Carthy's leg, the ball bouncing into left field, scoring Dickey and Hoag. | Lazzeri was intentionally walked. Ruffing doubled on the first pitch [to left, scoring Selkirk and Laz- zeri. Dick Coffman relieved Gum- 'bert. Crosetti flied out to Chiozza Where Juneauites in the closed and Ruffing moved to third. Rolfe through graduation, Pitt has Paul book of yeswtrday roared for their out, Whitehead to McCarthy. Rever: Shaw (the Bomber to team- drinks or sipped and munched with Four runs, four hits, no errors, mates), a regular end in 1935. He pretzels and beer, today’s Juneau- one left on base. was forced out of action last fall ites quietly order “ham and—" because of injuries. Paired with The meaning of all this is that | SEVENTH INNING GIANTS—Chiozza fanned. Man- smashing Bill Daddio, he’ll give Pitt'the old saloon bar of the early days cuso out, Ruffing to Gehrig. White- cne of the greatest pairs of ter- on Gastineau Channel has gone head wa'lked. Coffman fanned. minals in the U. S. {elite. Restaurants, for the most No runs, no hits, no errors, one Shaw literally stormed his way part, have taken over, back and joet o pase. into the Panther Now he has returned to grab a'bar-maker’s pride and starting post from right under the lasting handiwork. nose of Fabian Hoffman, a regular| The old Alaskan Hotel bar, fold- last year, who was delayed in get-'ed up in business after the Vol- ting to practice because he was on 'stead Act, was taken out of the old a world cruise this summer, {hostelry in 1923 and divided into The Bomber is strictly a Satur-two parts. Kaufmann’s Cafe has day afternon player. He hates prac-:a portton, and the Alaska Grill has tice games and simply cannot show.the remainder. lo advantage in workouts. He isi Percy Reynold’s Juneau Ice Cream the laziest kid on the squad. He parlor has what oldtimers say was ean sleep the clock around. A full- |one of the finest bars in the North. back in high school, he is a depend-|It was once the elbow-rest of many able pass catcher and is dynamitela booted drinker. Today, it is as in going down the field to cover|solid and as unscarred as it was punts. He hails from Bradford, Pa.,|many years ago, standing where it in the heart of the oil country. does now as the bar of the old Ju- B S st A {neau Liquor Company. And another bar that has not . |moved from its solid foundations is that in Bailey’s Cafe. This still- shining veteran of the swinging- |door days was the focal point of the K‘old Germania’s patronage | But there is one bar in town that tops them all not for size or OAKLAND, Cal, Oct. 7. — Max|actual beauty, but rather for its Baer launched a comeback Ittempt}antiqunuy and its heavy carvings. last night. The former champion|It is a bar that is still a bar, proud clowned his way to a decision in 8 | possession of Matt Logan, at Matt's four round exhibition bout with|Place, down mear the Cold Storage. It once was splashed on the Douglas lineup in 1935. front, the old bars that were some Jjoy and |side of the Channel. Its age is 42 THREE MEN SHOOT years'o sal e saloon ays were 30 DUCKS, 3 HOURS oy ¢ 10 sio0n o Hunting may be difficult this sea- | GOING TO SEATTLE son in Juneau, but in Anchorage they set a new record last week | when C. E. Richmond, Ed Dodd, and Fred Carlquist made a plane trip| to Lewis River and in three hours returned with ten ducks apiece. The party left town at 6 a.m. and returned at 9 am., having had to walk only about 250 yards to bag the limit. DENTIST VISITS Dr. J. H. Wheeler, Petersburg den- tist, is a Juneau visitor. He arrived Mrs. Leslie Almquist, of Fair- |banks, accompanied by her chil- dren, is a passenger aboard the Al- aska for Seattle. She visited Ju- neau friends while the steamer was in port. e e ON VACATION TRIP Among round 'trip passengers on the Yukon are W. R. Nichols and U. W. Kiliingsworth, of the Alaska Steamship Company staff at Seat- tle, now on vacatien. Mr, Nichols is accompanied by his wife and daugh- ter Charmaine. YANKEES—DiMaggio singled toi left. Gehrig walked. Dickey singled over second, scoring DiMaggio and sending Gehrig to third. Hoag flied out to Chiozza and Gehrig scored after the catch. Dickey remained at first. Selkirk forced Dickey, By GEORGE McMANUS { A WOOD-PECKER LIT ON ME FOOT AN' STARTED TO HAMMER ON IT=— l —By Pdp'C‘horitfwfs i:lfitrr“lwin at Ten 4 | To Be Pretty in Morning like Carole Landis __ dis came out with a after six monihs in pictures. . . By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, cCal, Oct. 1. Questionnaire . . . Questionnaire . . . |What are little chorines made of? A R RN Sugar and spice, of course—and curves . . . And for the rest, let’s a" 0 “g a" question their questionnaires: | y First of all, the chorine of 1937 is an All-American girl. She hails Steel Fortress !from Alaska or Texas, from Bos- Iton or New Orleans, from the land | of the pine and the land of the . . Carole Lan- longtermer [ tion about the Territory. s 1 Mr. Arnold's journey took him to | Seattle, San Francisco and Los Ans LA Nn UF NGHTH geles, thence to New Orleans, from which port he proceeded by boat to New York. He also visited in ,Philadelphia, Cincinnatti, Chicago, “nnd Kansas City. Makes Two Radio Talks in' PR New York City—Local .MRS. MOI ARRIVES Station Plans | HERE ABOARD YUKON C. B. Arnold, manager of station' Returning to Juneau after a three KINY, returned to Juneau aboard YCAS residence in Seattle, Mrs. E. the Yukon last night after a busi- K: Mol was an arrival on the Yukofi ness trip of several months in the !ast night. M States, arriving here well equipped A Mrs: Moi reports that her daughs with plans for the recently approved ter Marie has wholly recovered from enlargement of KINY to 250 watts, ® Serious illness, and is now at< In addition to other station im- tending Broadway high school where provements, Mr. Arnold stated that she is a senior. Another daughter} Work 18 to start soon on the instale U I(l a, is residing at. Edmonds; lation of a program amplifier which WAsh- will reduce to a minimum, lapping | iover to other bands. While in New York, Mr. Arnold conferred with National Broadcast- ing Company officials on the pou.si-'me i, L . bility of hooking up KINY with the A A T National network programs. He! The mocking bird is the siate found the officials interested, but|bird of Arkansas, Florida, Mississ of the opinion that the Alaska field, !Sippi, Tennessee and Texas. at present, does not justify the exA‘ 3 Ceee PETERSBURG MAN HERE % L. B. Cornelius, prominent busis ness man of Petersburg, arrived on |pense of such a venture. Quite by chance, Mr. Arnold had, ? n an opportunity to boost Alaska to 7L a nation-wide radio audience, while /’ he was at the Hotel New Yorker| where an NBC Vox Pop program was on. Without warning he ®as/ hustled to the microphone and asked to 300 Rooms . 300 Bati: LONDON, Oct. 7.—The eXpression next night he was asked to make talk about Alaska. The success of | . om "2, 50 the talk was evidenced when the g Spocial Woerly Mutes LIKE THE A RESUL AR- palm. ‘safe as the Bank of England” has another appearance on the Eastern PAN THE R Chances are she’s the daughter taken an added significance. WHEN THE WHISTLE BLOWS ON SATURDAY COMES 7O LIFE ~ 7HEN Look our! END N 19385 of a mayor, an attorney, a banker,| An army of close to 1,000 work- HE WAS OUT LAST FALL_ daughter of just plain folks. Many Are Educated BECAUSE OF /WJURIES | Shes the wiolesome type. She the place is virtually an impregna- | sn'| i ol ble stronghold. {doesn’t drink champagne from a J |slipper. But she swims, plays ten-| Every one of the building's fifty Inis, rides horseback, likes to watch underground vaults is surrounded &, |football, baseball, wrestling and by a wall of steel and concrete 'is proud of her stamina. Generaily eight feet thick. Massive steel doors Ispeaking, she’s a 10 o'clock girl, Which swing shut at the touch of [8he has to be or she will be too tired @ button, are able to withstand Ito look her preftiest next day. bombs and even dynamite. It is | She’s been to high school and 8ls0 possible to flood the vaults sometimes to college . . . Arlene Am- Should such an emergency ever pre- {brey went to the Massachusetts sent itself. | Fields school and thence to Sacra- T {mento with her father, a wool- |buyer. She had played featured |roles in short films in New York Barber, 867 |and had been on the South Amer- . W |ican stage a year, but she had to Qults Ork | {Lake a chorus job to break into Hol- lywood. Arlene’s the girl who took' the place—in the chorus—of the! NEW YORK, Oect. 7—A “to let” girl who took the place of Jean sign hung today in the window Harlow in “Saratoga.” Mary Dees of Greenwich Village's oldest barber was in the line for “Varsity Slmw"bShUD- owned by August Plagpank, |when Jean Harlow died and Mary eighty-six. {Dees was called to finish her pic-| The man whose name sounds | ture. like someone plunking a banjo is HE Al Rights Reserved by The Assoclated Press | Bartell to Whitehead. Lazzeri out, | |closing up after a fifty-year assault Ott to McCarthy. | Two runs, two hits, cne left on base. : EIGHTH INNING | GIANTS—Moore doubled to left. | Bartell fanned. Ott. flied out to DiMaggio. Ripple out, Crosetti to Gehrig. | No runs, one hit, no errors, one |left on base. no errors, Moore, Coffman to McCarthy. letf on base. NINTH INNING 1 GIANTS—McCarhty flied out to| |Hoag. Chiozza singled to left. | Mancuso fanned. Whitehead singled to center, Chiozza stopping at sec- | ond. Sam Leslie, batting for Coff- | man, walked, filling the bases. Moore out, Rolfe to Gehrig. [ No runs, two hits, no errors, three left on bases. ' - e BARRAGARS MOVE | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Barragar have their new home in the Bernard Many Are Blue-Blooded The chorus of 1937 may posed for national advertisements, have on the village’s long-haired gentry. “So soon as it's let I'll retire,” ‘ke Dorothy Claire. Like Dorothy, be said, looking at a row of forty who has appeared on stage and old-time night clubs in New York and Chi- adorning one wall. shaving Why? gilden mugs “Too cago, she probably hopes to win many barber schools—and too many featured roles. She may come trom an old south-| Like Florence O'-| !Aquin, whose household dates back YANKEES—Ruffing flied out to more than 200 years in New Or- Crosetti fanned. Rolfe out, leans ... Or an old northern family, Draper, No runs, no hits, no errors, none 'whose grandfather is H. M. Bron- ner of 277 Park Avenue, New York | Ol e s She may be writing a book about “chorus girls in pictures” e |Nancy McMahan of Portland, Ore., |says she is . . . | And she’s more than likely to have distinguished ancestors . i Dorothy Dale of Salem, Ore., )nee Beyerl) lists Capt. John Smith and |Lord Baltimore among hers, along with Daniel Webster, a cousin of her grandfathers’s . . . LaNita Smith of Oklahoma City is the grand- | daughter of Governor D. H. John- ern family . . . like Natalle and Mabel | moved from the Snow White Apart- (ston and the miece of former Gov- }ments and are now established in er But she very probably won’t act right away, 1 young barbers.” R PR W MARRIED Peter Beierly and Eva Martin, both of Juneau, were married late Felix Gray. omething New! Someone Different! SONJA HENIE in “ONE IN A MILLION” i STARTING SUNDAY COLISEUM Gala Prevue Saturday Night Matinee Sunday Afternoon and Loan Association | Accounts Insured Up to $5.000 | P. O. Box 2718——Phone 3 COLUMBIA LUMBER CO. . | | nor W. H. Murray of that state.| { Temporary Office: | P Apartments, on Main and Front. i “JUNO- ICE CREAM “Product of JUNEAU DAIRIES, Inc.” get a movie contr A SURE HIT .... That Means a Home Run By All the Family! They'd swap a seat behind third base in the Yankee Stadium for a seat at your table—IF they knew dinner is to be top- ped off with—— MAID” yesterday by U. S. Commissioner a social leader, if she’s not the men have been making a few Arnold received scores of letters changes in the world famous build- and personal calls ffom all over the ing in the heart of London and now country, requesting more informa- ' Alaska Federal Savings | 1 chain program. After the two radio talks, Mr. Fresh Fruit and Vegetables HOME GROWN RADISHES, ONIONS and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 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,) | 3 WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48% INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 — FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON » Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. I3 1

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