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THIRD PLACE RACE, COAST LEAGUE, HoT Seattle, San Francisco Bat- tling Daily for Posi- tion in League ated Press) | Seattle and San Francisco are| having a hard time trying to de- termine which team really belong in third place in the Pacific Coast League. Seattle starts today back in third place by taking a thirteen-inning game from San Francisco last night Dick Barrett started for Seattle He lasted eight innings and then turned the mound duties over to Walter Beck. The Los Angeles Angels still hold n lead as Joe Berry limited the Stars to seven hits and won The second place Senators an easy time beating Oakland. Pertland nosed out San Diego coring both runs in the first inning. (By Assoc GAMES WEL DAY Pacific voast League Seattle 6; San Francisco 4. teen inning: Pontland San Diego 1 Oakland 4: Sacramento 6. Los Angeles 3; Hollywood 1. National League Boston 2: Pittsburgh 6 Philadelphia 1; Cincinnati 3 'New York 1; Chicago 6. Brooklyn 0; St. Louis 5. American League Detroit 5, 2; Philadelphia 10, 11. Chicago 8, 1; New York 5, 11 Cleveland 5; Boston 3. St. Louis 6; Washington 8. thir- STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Wen Lost Los Angeles 86 facramento 2 Sleattle San Francisco &an Diego Portland Hollywood ©Oakland National League Pittsburgh Mew York Cincinnati Chicago Boston Jirooklyn St. Louis Philadelphia 69 64 64 62 54 53 52 34 American League Lost Pct 682 BT 576 509 496 444 357 .355 New York Boston Cleveland Washington Detroit Chicago Philadelphia St. Louis TRIPLE WITH BASES LOADED " AIDS PRATES Yankees Are Now Twelve| Full Games Ahead in Pennant Race (By Associated Press) Pittsburgh trounced the Boston | Bees yesterday afternoon largely through Pep Young's triple with the bases loaded. Curt Davis allowed only one hit to give the Cards a victory over the Dodgers. Cincinnati chalked up the seven- teenth win in thirty starts with a victory yesterday over the Phillies. Vance Page tossed a four-hitter for the Cubs over the Giants. The Yanks split with the Chi- cago White Sox to climb full twelve games in the lead. The Indians climbed into prac- tically a second place tie by top- ping the Red Sox on Campbell's two homers. Washington remains in sole pos- session of fourth place with an edge over the Browns. — e, — OFF FOR ANCHORAGE Mrs. J. B. Kirkham and Mrs. Ro- bert Rice are passengers aboard the Mount McKinley for Seward on their way to Anchorage for a visit,’ had | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1938. YUH'LL BE FEELIN'FIT SOON, SAM e AS A FIDDLE YEAH, BUT I SURE \ WUZ COLD-CONKED. FACT IS M'WHOL IFE COME UP BE- FORE ME LIKE A HULL SERIES O PHOTOGRAPHS ! La. 1 Negre, was de ncthing mere than a puffed cye. dict. Armstrong knocked Amt across the str all over the ring. cne is feather Highest Speed Land Record Set |op Water Held BONNEVILLE SALT FLAT Utah, At 25.—Capt. George E. Eyston, England, yesterday drove his ponderous automobile nearly six miles a minute but the hot sun threw the delicate time device out of order, thus depriving him of an official record. The Englishman flashed throu a measured mile as a speed of 34 155 miles an hour, faster than any man has ever traveled on land be- fore. The standing speed record, pre- viously held by Capt. Eyston, was 31142 miles an hour. -ee - The manufactured products of Texas have begun to exceed the farm products in value, moeuth bleeding, beth eyes ba d winner by decision of the lightwei ng with a terrific biow to the chin. The winne ght, welte Armstreng brought over his punishing right which put ttered and one cu , his cheeks down twice for In the thirteenth [ ight and now lightweight. Ambers on Iilustrated News Photo. . MINERS-ROCKETS GAME CALLED OFF; NO MEN Last night’'s game beiween the Miners and the Rockets was called off when heads were counted and both teams were found short of full teams. The game will be played next week. Tonight the Rockets are sched- uled to meet the Haida ball club in an unofficial exhibition game, beginning at 6:30 o'clock. e PARTY ON MT. McKINLEY A Howard Brown Christian En- deavor Union party of 29 members are aboard the Mount McKinley, making the Westward tour. 90 PROOF Hiram Walker & Sons Inc., Peoria, |1l Distil Yattvr; TEN HIGH «wellen, Henry Armstrong, Los Ang title bout with Leu Ambers, who escaped with At the conclusion of the beut fans booed for ten minutes cver the ver- the counts of ene and cight and again slammed him Ambers the enly man in ring history to held three established titles at Photos show a magic eye strip ¢f how t L % ONE O' THEM PHOTOS DIDN'T HAPPEN T' SHOW ME LENDIN' YUH THAT FIVE BERRIES THREE YEARS AGO - / DO TELL 2 LISSEN, SAMBO-) 3 / ~—— tacular Batile §AY CITY OF SOUTH GIVEN ITS_ WRlTEUP w Orleans, as Columnist Sees It, Is Great Con- glomerate Mass By GEORGE TUCKER NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 25.—This +is New Orleans, city of a thousand gallantries, a city that has under ten flags, rich in and rum is Bienville's New Orleans known then as La Nouvelle Or] ned so in honor of the Reg of France, who was Philippe, a'Orle Thi Don Antonio de Ulloa's New O ns, and Pierre Laussat's and Napoleon's. It is Jean LaFitte's New Orleans, and Andrew Jacl son’s aureguard’s. It i dah nin's, 6o, v Orleans” and it bt Duc s called it of that and nuns, of W of Frenchme n, African, masters 1, Spaniard 1d Choctaw. from Versailles \dees from Madrid. City dwelling masters, ayfish and magnolia. City of eman and slave, of black-robed ts and the Inquisition Cajuns and cooking of ¢ of car- United Louis Prima Louis Armstrong City of blues, Blues, Basin Street Blue Uniformed born here was born Canal Blues, soldiers. of Mardi Gras, of h Night, City of Comus and . Of cotton and cane and Lafacdio Hearn lived Jefferson Davis died , City of patios and cape j nine, of sycamores and pom- granates, the Crescent city, the city that care forgot” . . . City of the Mississippi, of the “Big Mud- dy,” city of red beans, rice, law and Huey Long. City of the pelican and the king- fish, city of Pontchartrain and mo- las of chicken and cornbread, of mammy dolls and pecans, of 1 niappe and Oysters Rockefeller. here eet Butler's the rallied and punched Arm- bananas, here. twice. — International 1o he canvas Health Menace MIAMI, Fla., Aug. 25.—Add to the list of America’s terrible mis- takes: Ice Water. “You reckless Americans,” said brown berry, of 'posum and musca- Dr. Arnold Lorand, health special- 9in€. of Spanish moss and honey- ist of Carlsbad, Czechoslovakia, to Suckle. . . . City of tradition and an audience here recently, “You are 20iquity, of moonlit gardens and the finest people in the world, but S the most reckless in the matter of health. “Ice water is a terrible mistake. It stops the natural elimination of toxic poison through perspiration.” ST R T Lode and placer location noticet for sale at The Empire Office. JACKIE COOPER In His Newest and Greatest Picture! “Boy of the Streets” at the COLISEUM STARTING D. LE YOUR ENJOYMENTI Doubly-smooth and doubly-rich, Ten High Doubles Your Enjoyment. Ithas"NoRoughEdges” to mar its true bourbon taste. TEN HIGH is dis- tilled under doubly- careful scientific con- trol in the world's largest distillery. Buy Ten High at your liquor store or bar today. Sur- prise yourself and friends that whis- key so good sells for so little. THE HIGH SPOTS OF LIFE CALL FOR TEN HIGH STRAIGHT BOURBON By CLIFF STERRETT WHISKEY STABLER THE JUNEAU, ALASKA BAR OF NS S United S REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR SENATOR TERRITORIAL LEGISLATURE FROM THE FIRST DIVISION tes At- Judicial And former for Division of 16 the athedrals City 1 of the wrack and t f ghost |river packet | dle-wheels of the Cabildo, unbscrew, city 1aunted Mis of ca and houses, of sippi General ion tfish pad and Neptember City of Count ander O'Reilly James Pitot And of | named fc | Royal, Dauphin named for sain St. Louis) ned from Gre Melpomenc. generals n: ywfi§zflsdhms =""v0 GE i to for Lee) Philippe x Saxon are here. Let the gumbo be and the pompono ai Pl punch. And if they are, and T think they are going I sing with Stever 1 wide and starry and let me die. sailor from the sea home from the kill CO-HOSTESSES WITH TEA THIS AFTERNOON Mrs. J. G. Shepard and M G. Wildes are entertainin ternoon with 1l home of Mrs Street. we will the wder hun Thrift Refr now on display. Check low the th current cos low upkeep, long ks * wild ; food, £ AN . Thrifty in CURRENT! UPHEEP! « d rele A large variety of cut fiow decorate the reception room guests calling between the 4:30 and 5:30 o'clock. -so ELKS DEDICATION s! Compare values! 1928 CEC.Figerator wl any price. neral AMfiaE%H SOLD ON EASY PAYMENT PLAN ic Lieht & Power Ce, AT, ASK/ DOUGILAS nk Mapleton represent ing the Grand Lodge, Fairbank Elks, No. 1551, recer dedicated their new $14,000 building at Fourth and Cushman With Streets ALASKAN FISHERMEN We're at youn sewvece / City of coffee, city of the little ' ...TO SUPPLY DEPENDABLE PETROLEUM "RODUCTS THAT CUT OPERATING COSTS Your profit on a trip depends on your catch and your costs. Haundreds of fisherman the length of the Pacific Coast are keeping costs down and profits up by using time-tested Union Marine Lubricants and Fuels. Every Union Oil product is scientifically correct for its job... peifected through years of testing in the laboratory and on the high seas. There is a Union correct fuel and lubricant for every type of engine. Note below the locations of the 11 convenient Union Marine Stations to serve you in Alaskan waters. (There are 16 more operared by Union Oil Company of Canada, Ltd., in British Columbia, where you can get the same quality products). Tie up to a Union Oil dock next time you buy. Or if you have any special fuel or lubrication problem, talk it over with the Union Oil man. We're at your service! UNION OIL COMPANY . . . ¢ NOYES ISLAND SITKA PORT ALEXANDER PETERSBURG JUNEAU HOONAH CRAIG CHATHAM TENAKEE . . . e« KETCHIKAN WRANGELL