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. . BARGE OVER AN! BORROW TH' BEAZLEY'S BOOK ON BOTANY, WILL YA, PAW 2 WASHINGTON TAKES GANE: CHISOX LOSE New York Gets to Two De- troit Hurlers for Double Victory (By Associated Press) In the American League yester- day, Dutch Leonard held the Chi to six hits and Washington won Young Jim Bagby duplicated a six-hitter for Boston over the St.| Browns yesterday for a win. York blasted Detroit pitch- Foffenberger in the first game | den Auker in the second game n twice 1 outlasted the phia bunch to win in a home battle. SAFETY FIRST CHICAGO, June 3. — Horton Smith, veteran professional golfer, ays his mottc in medal play i “I don't try to offset recklessly for that isn't Philadel- run “safety first.” going h a club suited to the le.” - TAKE CHANCE NEW YORK, June 3.—Ralph Cui- cahl, the NMational Open champion thinks it takes a gambler to win tournaments. “In these days of fast fields and sub-par scores, you've got to take chances to win. They pay off on boldness,” he says. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR SURE,YUH CAN, USE TH' BOOK, PERKINS, BUT YUH'LL HAVE T/READ IT HERE. I NEVER LET THINGS OFFEN THE PLACE = == ? e O3 FRUIT-FLAVORED BRANDIES BASEBALL TODAY The following are scores of base- ball games played this afterndon in the two major leagues and received up to 1:30 o'clock National League New York 5; Pittsburgh 6. Boston 0; Chicago 4 Brooklyn 5; Cincinnati 4 American League Detroit 1; New York 5. Cleveland 10; Philadelphia 5 Chicago 1; Washington 5. - BOSTON, June 3. — Pilot Casey zel of the Boston Bees ranks his Johnny Cooney and Bobby Reis 1s the most versatile pair of utility »all players “on any team.” “I can ase Cooney in the outfield, at first base or as a relief pitcher. Reis can play the infield! outfield and also sitch,” Stengel explains, - - GEHRIG'S SAY NEW YORK, June 3.—Lou Geh- rig encountered quite a few boos in Yankee stadium during his long slump at bat and he explains it thi way It's the movies. The current crcp of haywire pictures with goofy patter and wise-cracking characters has turned our kids into ruthless comedians.” - .- - Presidents of a score of students’ unions of universities and colleges of Britain ha issued a manifesto attacking the government for “com- placency in the face of international barbarism.” - London’s figst fire brigade was established in 1791 80-PROOF 4 kinds... Apricat, Blackberry, Cherry and Peach. THE E. G. LYONS & RAAS CO. San Francisco, California Distributed by NATIONAL GROCERY CO. Seattle 814 [/ SEATTLE IS WINNER OF Construction fo " TWIN GAMES Sacramento Finally Gets to Salvo’s Curves—OQak- land Again Loses (By Associated Press) Seattle dumped the Portland Bea- vers twice last night. Barrett pitched the first game and heid Portiand to nine hits. Gregory held the Beavers to two bingles in the second game for a shutout. Edo Vanne, Seattle rookie, banged out five hits in both games, Los Angeles won yesterday when ger” Statz walked. was sacri- ficed and went home on Johnny Moore’s fly in the eleventh inning. Sacramento last night snapped Manuel Salvo’s eight-game winning | streak and hammered the San Diego chucker in clinches for a win. Oakland last night lost the third succe ve game to Hollywood des- nite a three-run rally in the ninth inning. . GAMES THURSDAY Pacific Coast League Los Angeles 7; San Francisco C. Oakland 4; Hollywood 9. San Diego 3; Sacramento 6. Seattle 6, 5; Portland 3, 0. National League Philadelphia 5; St. Louis 12. Boston 6; Chicago 2. Brooklyn 11; Cincinnati 7. American League New York 5, 5; Detroit 4, 2. St. Louis 1; Boston 6. Cleveland 10; Philadelphia 5. Chicago 1; Washington 7. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pe Sacramento 87,726 581 San Francisce 34 28 543 San Diego 83: ¥ ‘40 524 Seattle e | 516! Portland 3 3 508 Hollywood 81 83 508 Los Angeles 30 32 4841 Oakland 2 42 National League Won Lost Pt New York o S 875 Chicago 24 16 600 Boston 19 14 576 Cincinnati 20 19 513 Pittsburgh 18 18 500 St. Louis 16 20 444 Brooklyn 15 26 366 Philadelphia 1L s 324 American League Won Lost Pct Cleveland % 18 658 New York 22718 595 Washington 24 18 571 Boston U T 553 Detroit 19 20 487 Philadelphia ... 15 21 417 Chicago 12 20 375 St. Louis T 28 306 Gastineau Channel League Won Lost Pct. Elks ... el 3 o 1.000 MOOse « . ............ 1 2 333 250 Douglas . ; 1 3 will play ADMISSION ONE DOLLAR — Ball Park Fence Beginfll Monday Contract Is Given to Boyer and Jensen at Fire- men’s Meeting Boyer and Jensen were given the contract at the Juneau Fire De- partment meeting last night, to build approximately 700 feet of fence around Firemen's Park baseball field Total cost of the project will run around $900, Department officials said. Work is to begin Monday, and when completed, will completely en- close the playing field with an eight-foot fence. In the construction of the fence, allowance will be made for grand- stand construction projected under a PWA loan now pending. e — Seattle Bowler Urges Pinsters To G_ume South G. H. Hudson, on North Sea, Invites Juneau to Big Pinfest Making his first visit to Alaska as the best way to rest up from the arduous work of managing the big 26th annual tournament of the Northwestern International Bowling Congress at Seattle last month, G H. Hudson spent today in Juneau as the North Sea remained in port He was accompanied by Mrs. Hud- son “The tournament this year, held from April 27 to May 8, was by long odds the biggest thing of its kind ever pulled off on the Coast,” said Mr. Hudson, who is Secretary-Trea- surer o fthe Congress. “There were 224 five-men teams. 363 double teams and 695 single bowlers enter- ed, the entry fees totaling 14,000. Of this amount 70 per cent was paid out in prizes. Winners of the five- man team entries were paid $300, $225 and $175 for first, second and third prizes. “The women’s division of the Congress was also well attended, with 83 entries alone in the five- member teams.” Hudson wants Juneau and other Alaskan towns represented by teams at the next bowling congress meet- ing, to be held at Spokane in 1938, and spent considerable time discus- sing the matter with local bowling enthusiasts today. He said that Ocean Falls had a team in the Seat- tle tournament. California was also well represented. Hudson is manager of the bowling department of the Washington Ath- letic Club of Seattle. e —————— The Matterhorn peak in the Swiss Alps ‘was first ascended in 1865. Your - - - - - - DANCE! with the Juneau Wrestlers’ Association. SATURDAY - - - - attheELKS’ HALL Wesley Barrett and His Royal Alaskans at 10 p.m. E, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1938. By CLIFF BUT YUH'LL HAVE T'USE IT RIGHT HERE, OL' TOP, HAS TH! SAME T POLICY YOU HAS! ) | |“Sox” Takes Over Snow White Meet He's five or about six inches of fuzay blue fox, a month old, but only half as big as his eleven brothers and sisters out at Charles Rudy’s fox farm on the Glacier Highway. Charlie didn't think the little fellow had much of a chance and figured he needed the care of a | woman’s hand, so he gave him to Mrs. Vera Bruce, bookkeeper at the Snow White Laund Mrs. Bruce is feeding “Sox” with a baby bottle part of the time and with an eye dropper the remainder of the time. She keeps him in a shoe box, and before placing him into his bed. puts him into a wool sock— hence the name, “Sox.” PAPS-DOUGLAS WASHED OUT IN RE-DATED MIX Rainy Fatc'Seems in Store for Moose-Elks Slrug— gle Billed Tonight One exceedingly large puddle of water, exceedingly ill-placed in the middle of the Firemen's Park dia- mond, yesterday resulted in the second postponement of the Moose- | Douglas ball tilt re-scheduled from May 21 Yesterday's battle was the third straight to be called off this weck, and but little more hope is held out for a let-up of rain in time to let the scheduled Moose-Elks fracas under the wire this evening in Ju- neai, Pitchers Lefty Smith, of the Moose, and Ward McAlister, of the Elks, have been named to mount the hill for the game tenight, but all ions will be in vain unless drizzle has broken by 6 o'clock this evening, one-half hour before game time. INFIELD 0UTS BROOKLYN, June 3. — Frankie| Strafaci, the Brooklyn youngster who won the Pinchurst North and South Open this spring, says he's | putting and hitting his irons bet- ter than ever. But his drives, they have him wailing. “I can’t hit any- *| thing but hot grounders to short- HANG NEGRO IN PUBLIC SQUARE COVINGTON, Kentucky, June 3. --Harold Van Venisson, 33, negro, night club entertainer, was today hanged publicly in the court yard of the court house here for rape of a white woman. —— . Empire classifieds pay. LADIES FREE Clothes Inspire Debate LONDON, June 3 clubwomen dowdy « Yes, declared a woman M. P., Mrs Henry Tate, in an address to the Women's Advertising Club here, tactfully excepting her audience Many women in clubs and move- ments become too earnest to care about how they look, Mrs. Tate as- serted, and thus detract from their value to their causc No, came back Marion Reeves, prominent member of the Women's Freedcm League. It may be true of a few extremists but not of the majority of clubwomen, she declar- ed Are ers English - Goats Keep Gardener from Breaking Back JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 3.~ J. A. Browning used to wear him- elf out pushing a hand plow oves his three-acre truck garden “It was awful tough,” he tecalls. ‘T just about worked my fool self to death. Then I got to thinking about my two goats.” The goats were living an easy, carefree, aimless sort of life. \Brown- ing didn't mind that, of course, but it was hard on his back push- ing that plow He just couldn’t see anything else to do but harness up the goats and let them pull the plow. ‘It's easier for me now,” he ‘and as for the goats—well don't seem to mind it much.” - /s they BOSTON MOUND = Z I'wo Homers Set Pace for Brooklyn to Get Vic- tory Over Cincy Lode and placer location noticet (By Associated Press) In the National League yester- Chg, we Nraa day afternoon, Johnny Lanning re- \Q, 4” Schilling Vanilla gives lieved Milt Shoffner in the second you fine, dependable fla- inning and then hurled shutout ball vor! Delicious in any for the balance of the game, Bos- dessert — and especially good in ton defeating Chicago. home-made ice cream. Schilling Two homers led the pace and Vanilla never freezes out nor Brooklyn won from Cincinnati yes- bakes out. Next time you make terday afternoon Ducky Medwick poled four singles vesterday to lead St. Louis to a win from the Phillies. — e Electric feeding machines ice cream — try it! ed in Alsace to make geese fatter For added flavor use Schil- and produce more “pate de foie ling Spices. They are rich gras,” Alsatian liver paste delicacy. in fragrant, spicy goodness. SR A T The first Protestant missionary They cost no more—so why . to China was Robert Morrison, sent a0t enjoy the best! out by the London Missionary So- ciety to Canton in 1807. SCHILLIN TEA 39c Half Pound Package KNIGHT'S BRAND Tomato Juice 3 tins zsc HAPPY HOME BRAND WHOLE (:RAIN CORN 3 tins SOc FRESH CHOICE M-E-A-T-S CUT TO YOUR ORDER! [ ] BEEF POT ROASTS Center Cuts of Choice Beef Pound. zsc PURE PORK SAUSAGE Our Own Make, 1b. 35c SWIFT'S WEINERS Pound—;oc VEAL ROASTS Fancy Shoulders Pound z’c FANCY CHICKENS—For Roasting, Stewing, Broiling, Frying LOCAL EGGS Dozen4°c FRESH DAILY FROM OUR OWN RANCH! BUTTER EGGS 12 cans 95c JELL ALL FLAVORS 3 pkgs. l9c ALBER’S BRAND CORN FLAKES large pkgs. 39 Fould’s MACARONI, SPAGHETTI, NOODLES pkgs. zSc NU BORA WASHING POWDER wargepke.39¢ The Best Always! OUR PRICES - ARE NEVER TOO HIGH! FRESH FRUITS and VEGE- TABLES The Best or None! HOLY JOE Singapore Sling 2 pints 25c Quarts—each l,c PHONE 478 “The Modern Pure Foods Store” CALIFORNIA Grocery & Meat Department The Quality Will Be Remembered. Long After the Price Is Forgotten!