The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1938, Page 5

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POLLY AND HER VUH SAY Y'CAN'T COME TOMORROW, BUT TH! AGENCY'LL SEND A MAN T' TAKE YER PLACE 2 HOME RUN IN FIRST, WiTH 1 ON BASE, WINS That’s How San Diego Beat Sacramento — Holly- wood Trims Oaks (By Associated Press) Dominic Dallessandro, diminutive i Diego outfielder, sluzged out a homer yesterday in the first in- ning and scored Niemic ahead of him. This defeated Sacramento. Freitas limited the San Diego team to four hits and Chaplain held Sac- ramento to five The four-hit pitching of Johnnie Babich gave Hollywood a win over Oakland. A homer by Abreus was the only effective hit off Babich. sl GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast League Sacramento 1; San Diego < Oakland 3; Hollywood 6. Only games played National League No games played. Anierican League New York 12; Boston 5. Gastineau Channel League Douglas-Elks, at Douglas, rain. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pe! Sacramento 35 26 574 San Francisco 33 27 550 San Diego 33 28 541 Portland 32 28 .535 Seattle 30 31 492 Los Angeles 29 31 .483 Hcllywood 29 32 475 Oakland ... .22 40 355 National League Won Lost Pc! New York 25 1 694 Chicago 24 15 615 Boston 18 14 563 Cincinnati 19 18 514 Pittsburgh 17 18 486 St. Louis 14 20 412 Brooklyn 14 25 .359 Philadelphia o 21 344 American League Won Lost Pct Cleveland 24 12 667 New York 20 14 .588 ‘Washington 22 18 550 Boston 19 17 528 Detroit 18 18 .500 |+ Philadelphia 14 20 422 Chicago 12 18 400 8t. Louis 11 23 324 2 L | Gastineau Channel League Won Lost Pet. Elks 3 0 1.000 Moose 1 2 .333 Douglas 1 3 .250 S e ROSS BEATEN 2| THE PALS I BET HE AIN'T WASHED UP SINCE HE WUZ BORN'! ‘ sl R GABY HAS REAL PROCF, BIG STUNT Blueprints Show He Was First Backstop for Wash- ington Monument - ST. LOUIS, June 1.—One hot Au- gust y in 1908, Charles (Gabby) Street stood at the foot of the Wash- mitt ing engineer, after the catch, pre- senting him with the building blue- prints and chirped: “Mr. Street, in honor of your hav- ing been the first person to catch BROOKLYN, June 1.—Waite Hoyt and Heinie Manush, baseball vet- erans released by Brooklyn a short | while ago, didn’t help their chances | a baseball thrown off the monu-|any this year by pre-season out- | ment, I would like to give you the bursts. Pitcher Hoyt wrote a maga- | blueprints.” | zine story kidding the National| P.S. Gabby still has the blueprints | league while outfielder Manush wd;{ and <he baseball—and has refused a stubborn holdout. considerable cash for both. - eee — s o o oo DON'T——-MISS | . Marye Berne and Ernest Ehler in | Ive a | concert, Masonic Temple, Friday | adv. | night. Tickets 60 cen CHICAGO, T1I, June 1.—Manager | Charlie Grimm of the Cubs admits Dizzy Dean didn’t show him many | fast balls after he came from the | cardinals, but Grimm said Dizzy | under a doctor’s care in Juneau for It's expensive to say f 1938 DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE By CLIFF STERRETT GARDENIN' EMPLOYMENT) AGENCY 2 YUH SURE TH' MAN YUH SENDS TOMORROW'LL BE A ABIT CLEANER! HE'S BOUND TO BE, MRS PERKINS-- ision of daughter Stephanie, due to arrive| here about June 7, and Miss Vera Kirkham who is booked to leave Se- attle June 18. SR = MRS. KIRKHAM RECOVERING Mrs. J. O. Kirkham, who has been the past three weeks, returned to her home here last Saturday. She is feeling much better, she says, and will soon be entirely recovered. . D MOVING TODA Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Edwards to- day are moving to the Gray house I'had a “live ball.” “There’s a lot of idiff(‘ren(:(‘ between that and the ball | thrown by a p.tcher whose arm is | gone. Plenty of cifference if you get what I mean.” BY ARMSTRONG IN 15 ROUND 60 ™" =~ — Los Angelemgro Nowj Blg Flem Holds Two Titles as | DENVER, Col, June 1. — The | U. 8. National Open golf champion- |ship here June 9-11 has attracted NEW YORK, June 1—In the 1160 entries. These will qualify in Long Island Bowl last night, Henry tests throughout the country for the Armstrong, Los Angeles negro,|130-0dd positions open in the tour- shattered all ring tradition by win- Dament proper. ning the world’s welterweight title SR = o o Stymied from Barney Ross, and adding to his featherweight crown. Hammering Armstrong won the decision over the 15-round route, giving Ross the worst licking of his BATON ROUGE, La, June 1. — entire SE e, Paul Leslie, Louisiana State uni- Armstrong’s tireless attack was toC yorsity golf captain, hopes his third much tor the defending champion gitempt to capture the national in- who won cheers however from the ocojjegiate crown at Louisville, Ky.. shivering crowd of 30,000 fight fans. j,ne 27-July 2 will be luckier Charles (Chuck) Kocsis of the Uni- vertity of Michigan beat Leslie in the 1936 finals. His teammate, Fred- Aia Haas, put him out of the 1937 by taking a terrific bombardment finals. Result of Decision of fists all the way but refusihg to quit. From the fifth round on to the end, the battle was all Armstrongs. With his right eye closed and his face a mass of blood, Ross was so hopelessly beaten that he could hardly lift a glove in defense over the final five rounds but, at that, e ASSESSOR STARTS ANNUAL SURVEY ‘““$100 WORTH of Insurance, Please” ... That'’s the way thousands of men buy insur- ance. Sounds simple, doesn’t is? But insur- ance against what? How will it be paid? There is one man who reads insurance poli- cies with interest and understanding. He is the experienced insurance agent. He knows what he is buying for you — insurance against what, and when and how it will be paid. When a loss® occurs he is your representative. Insurance that minimizes the agent’s func- tion may lessen your protection, your service. Insurance is dollar protection. There are no cut-rate dollars for sale. Let our experienced agency care for your insurance needs. SHATTUCK Armstrong could not knock him out. Ross weighed in yesterday after- noon at 142 pounds and Armstrong tipped the scales at 133% pounds. The bout had. previously been postponed twice on account of rain. —— P The first cutlery factory in the United States was established at ‘Worcester, Mass., in 1829, | AGENCY PHONE 249 City Assessor H. R. Shepard to- day started annual assessment of property in Juneau, covering real, peronal and automobile. The asses-| sed valuation last year totaled, slightly more than $5,683,000. e Only 466 of the 7,000 islands in, the Philippine group have an area of one square mile or more, Office Ne WHAVE © INS. CO. N. & w York Life A MEMBER e e e e s | D ARy HE'S YOUNGER. n H Street, where Miss Baker and | ;u% Bllott hmd the residshbe ‘the Mary Joyce Named past winier |Radio Operator DN BURGER GOING SOUTH ‘A‘ Taku Lodge Howard Burger, of the Douglas N i school facuity, is preparing to leave| . her Taku River I on' the North Sea for his home in| rcc youoe woo yamed Spokane, Wa “o.- { %} the new Territorial o ion which was being WILDLIFE EXPERT | iy vy suporvicing WILL SPEAK BEFORE | - of the Ak CHAMBER TOMORROW | 1¢ win e marvs i s 2 weather reports and mi Reglonal Forester B. F. Heintzle-| information- to pilots on man, just i from Washington nd in the air Dr. H. L. Shantz, Chief of the Div- R r Engincer b oper dio installed ilenn Aeronautics « to cellar the Wildlife Management for JAZZ TAKES THREh wor sta- to- ive 1eous water ington monument—catcher’s bihe 1. s. Forest Servide and Walthr " poised and eyes rajsed upwards B. King, Keichikan Attorney and FOR FISHING TRiP Up on the top floor was Preston danE) Foh T e ¢ Qibton, ; theh woalety ditor] of the - speakers for the weekly| Last Sunday night, Cash Cole Washington Post. Editor Gibson “The Best Boxer of 1937" symbolizes the medal recently given Henry o Juneail, Ohambar ot] Tem" Gole Royal 1 lett had a bucket of baseballs and the Armstreng (right) by Nat Fleicher, editor of a boxing magazine which commerce (omorrow noon in Percy’s tboard the Jazz for part oW idea was for him to chunk a ball picked the featherweight for the honor. Last night Armstrong also C.ro where they will do some real hunt- ; ad minnosed “‘:'"}“ Street was supposcd 0 won the welterweight crown from Barney Ross. AR A ng and fishing, The party is expect- catch 4 g Spes g BTy amvrs s s - = DON'T——-MISS 5 return sometime June 5. Editor Gibson devised a chute e .) . ‘\l‘l\\ ot d to return sometim une which he placed in the window I B — — SRR -3 arye Berne and Ernest Ehler in i and rolled the balls down into A8 (’U(Zr | :;i;;\: e ‘l;:\ "“ll;\mpk Plf.d(f\? I.{::lxw The Emplre cl eds o space. It didn't work. The balls | 8 % Lacha il bounced against the side of the l’ | building. Street telephoned up and an | told Gibson to throw the ball—a . | curve, preferably W'll.zz"r | | On the 13th try—and the fourth P R Y for which Street actually made a e R e U stab—the gabby one speared 8| AYDEN, Col. June 1. — John V. o> FRASER COM e Moening hads X , Bernard, who has coached them “‘1";;1"‘“1"_‘.‘}"?‘11‘ r:: _m““{ “”‘(“‘1‘ Street, now mnna:‘m of the S both, calls Walter (Bud) Lyons, now as the occa ,o> af 3 1ich Louis Browns, had his calm inter- o oo P00 T o state col- WAS given in her honor last evening rupted recently when a Texas col- lege, “a better football prospect by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner ai umnist, after all these years, boldly 2 Whizer White was in high tDe€ir home asserted Street had not been the ., o0« ¥ Contract for two tables and first man to catch a “foul tp” off| [oon: was a star tackle on Ber- “tricky sticks” provided the enter- o the Washington monument. The yo o Havden high school teams,| tAnment for the guests assembled columnist wrote at length that one gernarq coached “\vnm\ at Well- Prize winners w Mrs. Elton Eng- Pop Schriver had pulled the trick jnoton Gol. high school before com. ST0M and Leonard Johncon for long before Street had. i m;,l‘ A “" high and low bridge scores. Mr. E Street sputtered and told his fore is the way Bernard de- SUOM Was winner at the sc story. It seems that the monument ciripes Iyons: “A combination of S&Me: *utodian, who had been on the goming ‘speea it Seine sl s Pink and white was the colox job since 1884, rushed up to Street : - : . scheme used in decoraiions. Pres- v perfect dicposition, ideal coordina- after he had made his catch and jon and genuine love for the ent were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard said: game.” b Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Engstrom. “There was some guy named PoD " pouone js 6 feet 1 inch tail Misses Elizabeth, May and Jessie - Schriver who got his hands on 2 weighs 190 and can run 100 yards Fraser, Jenny Johnson, Ray Bavard ball shortly afted we finished this jn close to ten seconds — ., job, but he couldn’t hang on. That - VLS DOUGLASITES RETURNING doesn’t count in our books. You're the first.” Amoeng those who are expected Furthermore, Street argued, get- W " urs s home this month from Seattle are ting warmer and warmer, the build- Mr. and Mrs. Mary Africh and)| 5 Percy Reynolds and Dave Dave | Bros., and Nugzet Shop, inclusive, both sides of street, starting next Charles W. Carter, H. R. Vandez- Leest. Everett Nowell and Howard l Simmons—California Grocery and K Yurman’'s Fur store south to and including the Alaska Junean. = A Legion committee will cover the Federal Building and citizens Citizens Committee Will CanVaSS Cll} fol' T\VO Days to Guarantee Celebration who are not contacted by any of the solicitors are asked to make their contributions to the Fourth of July Citizens Committee, care of the American Legion, to any of the above committeemen, or to Adjut- Tomorrow the Fourth of July Cit- izens’ Committee starts out to find ant * Gullufsen in the Fed- out how much of a celebration the eral Building residehts of Juneau want this y -ee — The Committee announced today ¥ that solicitors will start canvass of the city tomorrow and will continue through Friday so that none can be ric Estim were being made that from $1,000 to $1500 would be raised the first day to rrantee a full-fledged eelebration, The various seliciting teams h been formed and tomorrow will take the field as follows H. O. Adams and Waino Hend- rickson—waterfront from Juneai Motors to Winter and Pond's, in- Dish- . Rob- cluding the Alaska Laund aw and Company, Oscar Har ert Sommers, Pacific Coast Co., Pa- cific Coast Coal Co., Alaska Steam- ship Co., Olaf Bodding and the Columbia Lumber Co. H. M. Hollman and Alfred Zeng- er—Willoughby Avenue from Ju- neau Motors to Home Grocery, in- cluding the West C ry, Bus Company and etc. Ralph Martin and Russell Clith- Franklin Street from Carter's the Gastineau Hotel, inclusive C. D. Beale, John Jones, Guy Me- Naughton and R, R. Hermann—area from Fourth Street at the Assem- bly Apartments to Irving's Market and the Juneau Drug Co., both sides of the street. Curtis Shattuck, William Garster, ero A1STORIC role may be slayed by this infant daughter of Prince Pu-chieh, brother of em- peror of Manchoukuo. The child- less emperor, Kang-teh, may be succeeded by this girl. to Try cl: fiecs for results, The Empire WASHINGTON and the world . . . All is not quiet along the Potomac. The scene was never busier. There are a thousand governmental ques- tions, a thousand governmental problems, a thousand governmen- tal bills. At the nerve center of this busy national capital is The Associated Press. It maintains the world’s larg- est news staff devoted exclusively to the coverage of governmental activi- ties. Its trained men finger a thou- sand pulses to catch the country’s heartbeat. Traditionally impartial, accurate and swift, these experi- enced newsmen daily report the Washington goyernmental scene in direct and simple language that all can understand. Fourteen hundred newspapers— members of The Associated Press— rely on this great non-profit, coop- erative news gathering association. For complete coverage of Washing- ton and the world read THE EMPIRE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THE BIGGEST-BUT ALSO THE BEST

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