The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 29, 1938, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1938 v POLLY AND HER PALS By CLIFF STERRETT SINCE ASH 1S REPORTING FOR THE EDITORS OUT 2 7 TP T A PAPER, I'M SURE I CAN WILL YOU BE SURE / IN FACT, I'LL CALL o 't GET TO THE EDITORWITH | P ¢ YUH . I HEARS TO TELLHM I IN AN' TELL HM/ ot i A STORY T'VE WRITTEN | [\ PAPER PEOPLE CALLED 2 AT ONCE . | &= [~ 1S PLENTY U T AN PESTIFEROUS By THE AP FEATURE SERVICE ) ‘ Next you may be able to step up to your travel agent and | get an airplane ticket to Ei pe. Because long before Howard Hughes proved how fast you can get there, aviation companies were planning rans-Atlantic hops on a paying basi Fifty or more survey flights are scheduled this summer and four ountries are North Atlantic business. Here are some of the j | | . \ | | RED SOX BEAT : " SALVO, WHO IS REAL TRAGEDY ‘ ) ‘ - WHITE SCGX IN 'GOING UP, HAS | NOW REVEALED; | | ! ’ \ ) | - TWINCONTEST - BLOWING TIME JUST INCIDENT SERR%S | | | BRITAIN'S ENTRY is this fames 1-back combination of the bt | B { | Imperial Airways. The little plane, Mercury, is launched in mid- T , . . 3 . | air from the big plane, Maia. Such a scheme lessens the danger a f Three HO}'“"’ Runs Don't 1Fre£i([1v Hutchinson Wins 5h<1WS .H"“" Anonymity l-*l heavily-loaded |)l:|‘m- faces on the take-off. The Mercury is m».:'gnm i Hclp Yankees Who } hlg]lh‘cnth Vlctm‘y for | Fashioned Into News- | to carry 2500 pounds of mail or freight. Lose to Browns Seattle Last Night I paper Headlines | S S i ’ (By Associated Press) (By Associated Press) ‘ By GEORGE TUCKER | | The Boston Red Sox handed the | salvo, San Diego speed-' NEW YORK, Ji Sometime: | , Chicago White Sox a double beat- | currently rumored s in this town you sit down with pe ing yesterday. going up to the Boston Red Sox ple and never know (hat you are The Yankees dropped a next scason, blew out the Hollywood gazing upon a prelude to tragedy | to the St Leouis Browns Stars like candles last night. Salvo You see them casua you three home runs made by fanned 12 men and limited the S miss them f{rom your nd, anc during the game. to four scattered hits to win his perhaps you never think of them | The Detroit Tigers simpl eightesnth game of the season aeain—unless, as happened to me. | i the Washinzton Senators yes Freddie Hutchinson, Seattle huri- you notice little paragraph in | ‘o a 12 to 4 wallop er, won eighteenth victory he paper next day. i The Giants epded a five night when he allowed Sacramento: This by no means is an unusual | losing streak by nipping the only nine hits. happentiig ' i0. ‘New. York. 1t ha inals | San Iancisco whitewashed Oak- pappened before and will happen . The Pirates pounded out seven | |land. rain, and so I relay it now, no | THE FRENCH are counting on this 64-passenger seaplane, Lieuten- i runs in a big seventh inning | Los Angeles had an easy time gq news, but as something that un ant de Vaisseau Pa This is the ship that turned over in a squall 4 (o trample the Phillies. | last “":, like taking a nurs-’ fortunately wppens to be a pari off Florida two years ago, but it's been rebuilt. France, the only in- L e b iR ',"" from a sick cat, and beat of Jife in this and any other terested ntry that made no survey flizhts last year, has ord h ‘ f:?'::,'““' for the third stralght metropolitan center, T suppos two 66-ton seaplanes (the Lieutenant weighs 40) for passenger serv- | .I-fl“v Gale“tn | G o o ice to New York in 1940. | Pac town. It i nall bar but it | E[y a" Seattle 6 cozy and pe like to go there i San Diego 3; Hollywood 1. i for a quiet bit of refreshment beforc R o b Portland 1; Los Angeles 9. wandering off to bed M ik i o San Francisco 1; Oakland 0. One night last week I wanderec L)ghl “eavywe)ghl'(onl(,sl | ional League lin there with Jimmy Wallington Scheduled Last Tues- ‘ 1; New York the radfo announcer who was in v Pos &) ati 4; Boston New York for a bit of a vacatior ay, Fostpone urgh 9; Philadelphia 2 It was his last night in the city. A g Asmcsican League we sat down we noticed ;s The Sporting Editor of The E Beston 13. 8; Chicago 8, 5 at the bar. I imagine she Diggaihdsodpeteliod e BB - IOIDH Philadelphia 0; Cleveland 0. Game ; She was the only girl in the | query cailed at end of third inning on e sat ar alk or awhil “Will you please tell me what be- "'accotnt of rain u“:“l‘lll\»-;lx a Jnyvi:u Ir"nn:("( nr\,n\- ‘I‘ll»lmA eatpe "of la. Lagky GO H0nn Detroit 12; Washington 4. selm. The woman looked up. She Henry Lewis fight scheduled for St. Louis 4; New York 3 e s by el st e - and walked down to the end of the i weight championship? Did it get ANDING OF CLUBS ‘h';_‘ <n'(|> ’“hwnm Sendierore g b % A S s E - crowded out by the Steele-Hostak Pacific Coast Leaguce the Bicletder.” The En, 6 GERMANY usually launches its trans-Atlantic boats by catapuit. of, - AR 2 Won Lost | while, ordered a drink. He shot This is the 16-ton Nordwind, one of the planes with which the Luf- I Here is the answer: Tony Galen-| Los Angeles 1. 60 furtive glance at the woman. He| thansa expects to conduct weekly experimental flights from Portu- to is precariously ill in the Orang IT’S A MATTER OF TIMING when six divers start down just as balloons begin trip up. Sacramento 68 53 followed this with a brief, though| gal to New York by way of the Azores i Memorial Hospital in Orange, N. This was a stunt at National Aquatic show in Olympic Swim stadium. Los Angeles. Seattle 64 56 sweeping, glance, if he were & \ He is suffering from bronchial pn 2 | san ‘Diego 64 57 HERR i ihe Miee HE Awavited Thinis; Bl T AU LR YN A . |San Francisco ... 63 59 5 to see who was there, He may he Baseba"s Fll'St | Hollywood 5 66 Meanwhile the bar captain wa [] H . Osakland 3 M mumbling someth into a te ssl" NUW Y MENU'N F e | phone. Then, casually enough, he | | Won Lost Petlger gtood. Perhaps he mixed him % HYTHE, England, July 29—Mo- By, GARDNER SOUL [ peer ysc ke { Pittsburgh 5 31 640 g drink: I don't recall ; s O et [Caaw iAW = AL WENeED PARIS, July 20.—When no tri-| LONG BEACH, N. J, July 20. — New York 38 578 Bug § remember. this: in about toring to police stat s e A LOT MORE BUCKETS color waves at the peak of the Tommy Farr last night announced | Chicago 50 38 568 two minutes two detect walked that windows of his hut had been AND WED HAVE A RIGHT thousand-foot Eiffel tower it sim- he had renounced his British heavy- | Cincinnati 49 40 551 ;\,:, the bar. They walked over: W smashed, Samuel Howship went NICE COOLING SYSTEM ply means that Madame Henri Gas- | weight crown as a means of help- Brooklyn 49 47 465 "1’"‘ hosisy gl ,“k,?‘,,‘, SEEA the wrong way on a one-way street FOR THIS PARK / sion is busy with the sewing she ing his campaign for the world! Boston 38 46 452 three \\,ulk’wl 1”"' H)HtIull' / and was fined $2.50. | has done for the last 35 years. title and clearing the boxing situa-| St. Louis 37 49 4801 e AHRRRH A ot —_— e, — | Mme. Gassion, whose husband tion in Britain. | Philadelphia 26 59 306 afraid of this man, the strang . i o NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS {{operasadiie Easeleat velnstar o) VRIS SR | Ty | for at one time he used to be hes ED 8 less busy over the Atlantic The City Council will sit as a fithe twan:hins J4iibdh, 1t Hor ginios { Smarichs Geagne | husband. The cops wanted to | this summer than other nations. For Pan American Airways com- Board of Equalization August 1, ‘;‘; :‘}:‘etywfid:"w 1 Abo Thgatorn L VZ;)" leghl Pr(;q her to the station house, 50 that| Liereq survey flights last summer and is awaiting its new super- % 12{95}a::jei'nirr::?fgolx’fimérl:pe?tf s Usually the wind gets five or six | | Cleveland 51 o0 0 ::;}“r’:‘u)::yxll:‘v«' gie |4 CHPPEIS: hotng hyllk 10, eatiles syl he Seay M He"j ers and to make necessary adjust- | flags despite her efforts. The French | n'Es cH|CAGO Boston 50 33 .602| would be safe, she felt, So they lett| %€ of them during a test—it weighs 41 tor ] 1’14.& 'n‘n'fnxlmum spee ments on the 1938 assessments government reFf{fltly_l'PCOB"lzed her ] Washington 46 45 505 her alone and she went home by of 200 miles an hour, can fly 4,000 miles with a payload which were completed July 20. After position as official Eiffel tower flag | Detroit 43 46 483 herself. = — - ———— final meeting of this board no fur- repairer by awarding her a small Chicago 35 41 461 And that's about all one | far enough, They are- dead. Both|simply encourages further produc- ther adjustments will be made on annual salary. CHICAGO, TlI, July 29. — Bert|Philadelphia 2 51 363 knows of the story. The inside|of them were killed with an ice-| tion. Teal or personal assessments. RN E. Collyer, 61, race handicapper St. Louis 26 58 .310|facts of the story, I mean pick.” H. R. Tolley, AAA administrae ETTA MAE KOLASA, 5 and sports writer, died here last e But the next day, when T saw| And that’s the way it happens.|tor, concedes that without crop adv. City Clerk | Re urted Esca B night. Gastineau Channel League Jimmy Wallington again, he said:|You walk into a place, you see|control and other guides the buy- ———— | CHRISTY MATHEWSON had o : ] | (Second Half) “Remember last night? Remem-|people who mean nothing at all to|ing would be useless, He says the China invariably “swallows up” way to handle excited spéctators, Bert Collyer gained newspaper Won Lost Pct|per that girl at the bar? And the you or to anyone you know, and you | purchases do not ordinarily raise 3 its invaders. The settlement of shortly after the beg g e | DARWIN, Australia, July 20.—In | recognition for his exclusive story| Moosé 6 2 750 | cops walk out again, little realizing that|prices, but prevent slumps. WPA North China by the invading| 20th century. A Giant-Phillies | jail here awaiting trial for malici-| O the 1898 Chilkoot Pass avalanche | Douglas 3 3 500{ “I saw a paragraph in the paper their anonymity is being fashioned|claims that by its $10,000,000 ‘cloth- Hsungnus and Suenpes invaders| game ended in a riot of cushion | ously damaging government prop-|in which Hearly 100 stampeders to Elks 1 5 167 about a man and a woman being | into headlines for tomorrow. ing investment it benefited 160~ began in the first century and by | gheovioo “\When a fan rushed onto | erty, a man escaped, borrowed 50 the Klondike were Killed. | S |injured in a fight. Were they the ————— 000 clothing trades workers at the the end of the fifth century those .= & jq Christy empfisd the | cents from a constable, bought him- s b e O | g ones?” ame time it obtained clothes for tribes showed no appreciable dif-| L% MP ey EANSW SR self drinks and gave himself up,| Lode and placer location noticel us ra Ia ee s “That’s right,” repliecd Walling- Prunes, Pants and | velief distribution ference from the Chinese. ) He was then freed. for sale at The Empire Office. but that paragraph didn’t go Cabb Put FSCC Lump figures show purchases 2 ) BT T Y e 3 z = St T s | . N R RODARE LA 5 | totaling about $17.000,000 in fiscal Z . B"tun mr Army o 7 In Big Business 197 on up to $45000000 in 1938, ‘ | stly in the three months end= | p (Continued from Page One) |ing last June 30. The estimate for » | CANBEPRA, Australia, July 29.— | - - — 11939 is $79,000,000, and more if The commonwealth cabinet has boxes of oranges and grapefruit, 10,-| the next Congress wills 5 asked Great Britain to send Maj. | 110,000 pounds of cabbage, 8320,000| The system Is a short cut od the Gen. Ernest Ker Squires to Aus- | pounds of butter and like quanti-|Standard business pattem, Ht [tralia for two years as inspector ! ties of numerous other commod many ll“"“‘e‘fbpweml spenily general of the Australian army.| ties. The operations reached into 45 % ". popu‘tar!w'l}t]h General Squires has been director | states; et 51'\“‘:\":1:: oger :) ijnc.:fta‘!;”duues at the war office ?mnimmis the q-mv‘,un':mm‘x ,h“ 1 tate relief agencies, they favored . directly from individual farmers| " oa0 " iooram of $175,000,000. e e —— or processors. More often it buy: i ‘flTuE VII-I-AGE from central markets, trusting| that benefits will trickle back (o] 1] o FSCC says it is difficult to esti-| L] affect prices. There is no way of| Y guessing the drop if the surplus, BUTTE, Mont, July 20. — A OTOE, Neb,, July 20.—All during Temsings [ 3t Bt ‘l'l‘:‘r‘:;“";“f :;;g;:’h: | the long drought years the viliage Rt R . rasi i ol |t ONERRE S Nov, wiih the N I Y s s T R ‘}\’1\(“;1‘ l:"d‘l":’;:l;lllu:n l:::]r;:. al::‘p v:(nmx-‘ nied lower prices but FSCC retorts| Breen was appointed chief of ering, Bllbcmoblle's go unfashed that low farm prices help nobody ;mhcv soon after he annoi 5 land water has been restricted to in the long run. Arguments are| his candidacy for the Repul 3 endless. Merchants say the govern-|nomination for sheriff. He tried | human needs. CUB ERRORS are ana- | tharaw " 11 litical | Mayor R. R. Irland doesn’t know| lyzed by meditative Prof. Jack ment artificially holds up pm-»i;uu_hmm ‘jxuxn ‘(he ;:o cam- % I the answer. But, he says, unless a| Sterrett, who applies psychology with cne hand while with the other | paign because he pre erred the po- B : o ) hing test Wl S:eing idug produces. .8 1o his job of “psyching” Chicago | it distributes free goods to the mer-|lice job but the law prohibited the DO THEY WAIT FOR THE WAR TO GO BY? Little Chinese youngstets, elothed by relugeqsistions, sit 95 4 < o bl e e er| Cub players and correcting thelF | chants' customers. Further, theylremoval of his name from tho to offer. Meanwhile, Japanese soldiers advance along a front about miles away. #ood S Aixoruga faulty plays. argue that buying up the surplus ballot. ; ‘at Hankow and wait placidly for what fate has o

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