The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1938, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LIL, NO. 7916. JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1938. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS _.PBICE TEN CENTS OMERS BRING SECOND WIN TO YANKS Hitler Is Given Another Big Czech Area GERMANY GETS TOTAL OF 5000 SQUARE MILES Prague Protests Demands Far Exceed Munich Four-Power Pact DWINDLING REPUBLIC PLEADS TO LEAGUE Declares Demands Made for Industrial and Com- munications Centers (By Associatea Press) As the International Sudetenland Commission handed Adolf Hitler a new section of Czechoslovakia half as large as that given him outright by the Munich four-power confer- ence, the government of Czechoslo- vakia learned today that its sacri- fices are far surpassing its expecta- tions of what was required of the dwindling republic. The Commission marked out the fifth zone which Hitler's armies could take over without formality as the German troops marched into the already set aside fourth zone. With the fifth zone defined there has fallen into Hitler's lap approxi- mately 5,000 souare miles of rich land. In Prague, as General Husarek of the Czech army brought back word of what the Commission had done, it was said in government circles that the terms of the decision of the International Commission were a “drivel” of words. In the meantime at Geneva, the Czech delegation to the League of Nations declared the German mem- bers of the Commission, which is meeting in Berlin, had drawn up new demands for cession of Terri- tory far beyond that contemplated in the Munich accord. A commun- ique issued by the delegation said the Germans were demanding in-| dustrial and communications cen- ters where there was a total Czech population of 815,000 and wanted them occupied immediately by Ger- man troops or made subject to pleb- iscite. In Berlin yesterday the Commis sion, bowing to German demant decided to hand over to Germany the fifth ceded zone to be occupied by the Germans by October 10. The area takes in half as much terri- tory as all the first four zones of occupation together. —— | Earlier a Labor Party motion dis- IN FILLING IN C. S, POSITIONS Only Nine li:asTdents Found to Fill Twenty-two Jobs —Report Is Made WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. — The Civil Service Commission reports that Hawaii and Puerto Rico lead |all states and territories in the ;n\lmbcr of unfilled positions in the Civil Service. California, Texas and Alaska next in line. Alaska has been allotted 22 posi- tions but residents of that Ter- ritory are occupying only nine of them. f SR TYPO UNION CONFIDENGE IN PEMAINS IN CHAMBERLAIN 1§ PARENT AFL V[)TEU,[EEMMQN Green Pleads for Printers Before Convention | and Wins Out {Labor Party Motion Con-| , icron 1 demning British Policy : as Humiliating Is Lost are SPORTS EDITOR Tea McDaniel of Emporia, Kas., may become Lyon county coroner at November election, thanks to write-in campaign of his friends —or “enemies,” he says—in pri- maries. No one had filed, and he won Republican nomination. Texas, Oct. 6. — The American Federation of Labor’s convention, acceding to the plea of President William Green not (o throw out one of the oldest affili- ates of the AFL, voted unanimously to seat the delegates of the Inter- national Typographical Union. This action served to keep the Typographical Union's 80,000 mem- I bers in the Federations’ ranks on probation for another six months until the printers’ union decides by a referendum whether to pay the special assessment levied by the AFL a year ago to combat the CIO'S in- dustrial union drive. - Foreign Agents Are Registering With §t_ate Dept, Law Making Requirement Reaches Peak Hour— Deadline Midnight Goudie Going to Washing | WASHINGTON, Oct. 6—A flood LONDON, Oct. 6.—The House of | Commons today voted confidence in Prime Minister Neville Chamber- lain and approved of his bargain at Munich in keeping Europe out of war. The vote was 366 to 144. approving of the policy as one which “led to the sacrifice of Czech- oslovakia under threat of armed force and humiliation to our coun- try” was defeated 369 to 150. The House of Commons, late to- day, took adjournment to Novem- ber 1 amid a tremendous ovation to Prime Minister Chamberlain. AERONAUTICS ENGINEER ON | RADIO MISSION ALASKA BEHIND 1 BOX SCORE CROSETTI AND YANKEES AB R HPOA | Crosetti, ss. 4100 5 &) Rolfe, 3b. 400 0 2| Henrich, rf. et B TR O % DiMaggio, cf. 4 2240 Gehrig, 1b. 3116 0| HERuEs OF DAY | Dickey, c. 4006 2| | Selkirk, 1f. 30100 ks Gordon, 2b. 4 01 4 3] . | I S 20008 New Yorkers Lambast Diz- iMurphy, p. 0000 1 zyDean for Lusty Six tPowell, If. 00000 to 'rhl'ee Victory i Totals 33 6 77 27 i; | *—Batted for Gi z 11 ighth in- Batiea for Games in eigit - B STOCK DROPS —Replaced Gomez as pitcher in! AWAY BELOW PAR eighth inning. il {—Replaced Selkirk, injured, in left field in ninth inning. furd LIl o Lefty Gomez Sets New Rec- | Hack. 3b. 4 2 2 o0 3| ord of Sixth Series Game Herman, 2b. B (e 1 [ oA Demaree, rf. 3070 10 thou‘ Defeat OVER A BLEAK SEA, Alaskan Eskimos were towed in whale boats to Walakpa lagoon near | Marty, cf. 40320 t to Will Rogers and Wiley Post. R 1ds, 1f. Barrow, to dedicate there a granite nfi:numm i H?l"lt]x:)eus, 5 i g g ; 8, SHORT SCORE 4 = | Collins, 1b. 4 0 110 0 Yhukees : l: Ez Former Brain Truster Divorced BANKER RECK, 2. 1.0 641l S el Bl | | *French, p. 00002 Ea ko - OF JUNEAU, AT [ 22 2 2 9 COMPOSITE SCORE ’ Totals 33 3112715 (two games) | *—Replaced Dean as pitcher with R H E | GHURGH MEET none out in ninth inning. Yankees 9 19 3 t—Batted for French in ninth in-| Cubs LA ning. s it e |Recommends that Luth-| SUMMARY SCORE BY INNINGS | | - erans Estal)}lsh Negro ERRORS: Yankees—Rolfe, 2.~ |Yankees'' 123456789 T Missions in South | Sacrifice hit: Demaree. Two-base | Runs .. 020000022—6 | 8 hits: Gordon, Marty. Home runs: Hits 020100022~7 BALTIMORE, Md, Oct. 6, — A|Crosetti, DiMaggio. Runs batted in: | Errors 100001000—2 special commission has recommend- | Crosetti 2, DiMaggio 2, Gordon 2; | Chicago 1272 6789 T led to the United Lutheran Church|Marty 3. First base on balls: Off | Runs et 10 0000—-3 | Convention the establishment of Gomez 1 (Reynolds), off Muphy 1| Hits 2 0111—11 negro missions in strategic centers| (Jurges); off Dean 1 (Gehrig), off | Errors [ 0000—0 French 1 (Selkirk.) Struck out: by | Gomez 4 (Hack, Herman 2, Rey- | nolds), by Murphy 1 (Demaree); by Dean 2 (Rolfe 2), by French 2 (Gehrig, Gordon). Pitching records: Gomez 3 runs 9 hits 26 at bat against in 7 innings, Murphy 0 runs | 2 hits 7 at bat against m 2 innings; /Dean 6 runs 7 hits 30 at bat | against in 8 innings, French 0 runs |0 hits 3 at bat against in 1 inning. | |Earned runs: Off Gomez 2; off |Dean 6. Credit victory to Gomez. | |Charge defeat to Dean. Double |plays: Yankees 2 (Crosetti to Gor- | don to Gehrig), (Gordon to Crosetti | to Gehrig); Cubs 1 (Herman to | Jurges to Colllins). Left on bases® Yankees 2; Cubs 7. | of the south. John Reck, banker of Juneau, Al- aska, traveled 4,000 miles to attend the convention. . MANY FEDERAL . WORKERS T0 &0 ONC. S, STATUS Eighty-one Thousand Gov-| ernment Empolyed Slat- The aext yime will probably be played in the Yankee Stad- fum, New York City, on Satur- CHICA¢.O, Oct. 6.—Booming home runs by Frank Crosetti and Joe DiMaggio in the last two innings, each with a man on base, drove Dizz; Dean from the mound and g:ve the New York Yankees their second straight victory over the dis- heartened Chicago Cubs today by a score of six to three be- fore 42,108 fans. Although he had been taken from the game in favor of a Mrs. Florence Tugwell Rexford Tugwell Rexford Guy Tugwell, former “brain truster” in the New Deal “little cabinet”, was divorced by his wife at Yerington, Nev., on grounds of mental cruelty, terminating a marriage which took place in ed fOl' Advancement | pinch hitter just before Crosetti Buffalo in 1914, b | PLAY-BY-PLAY smashed the winning homer in ——— | WASHINGTON, Oct. 6.—Eighty- | the eighth inning, Lefty Gomez one thousand Federal workers, most | First Inning was credited with victory which game him a new record of winning six world series games of them employed by emergency agencies, will be given Civil Service | YANKEES—Crosetti flled out to - America Has Eighteen Mi_llion 4 7 AT Reynolds. Rolfe bunted out, Dea: | status on February 1, next year, the 3 D | without defeat. ‘ Telephones But Try and Civil Service Commission an- |t Collins. Henrich popped to BUMPS FOR DIZZY | nounces. Jurges. Dean was a hero to the home ton in Connection with |of last minute registrations of | e agénts of foreign governments pour- | Commission Requests | C8% 0 2 et o pariment as | the deadline at midnight tonight approached for complying with the | law passed at the last session of | % ' | Congress. | :fi:xlz: r‘:’o“ v‘;’e l)‘i‘;’r 'J;nseg !zda};hzr;;t This law requires that agents of | g ,a“‘mg ! mection witn foreign governments must register | B8 S08 e with the State Department or a| s | speeding up licenses for airway ra-| e g penalty of $1,000 fine or two years! dio stations in the Territory and the | prisonment. will rebult. | Animal Keeps New JersenyWA application for assistance in| building five major stations at Ket- CIRCUS LION | G E. Goudie, gineer for the Alaska Aeronautics |and Communications Commission. supervising en- rior Over 2 Hours |age and Nome. Find Oneina Jam {about every year somebody comes | NATluN Is ON | out with a tabulation to show that ' telephones for every one they have | PGRADEN“ in Afghanistan or Tibet and as; many as all the rest of the world | By PRESTON GROVER | | Americans are living on the fat| i { BUSINESS OF | WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. — Just| ! of the land because tirey have 1700 | put together. | 'Telephones are always computed; per capita. This gives the United . i Coast Resort in Ter- | chikan, Juneau, Fairbanks, Anchor- WILDWOOD, N. J., Oct. 6.—An escaped circus lion clawed to death a man who tried to halt it, and kept this south coast New Jersey Temporary quarters are now being prepared at Fairbanks and Anchor- age for the stations but if the PWA two other points, Gov. John W. Troy, Chairman of the Commission, GHAREFSFILEI] EGains Are. Reported. Made| AFTER HEARING, | | States a whopping edge, for the | latest tabulation coming to us in-| | dicates there are 18433,400 tele-, phones in this country. That 15‘ | —These Will Be Mod- fi erate During Fall WASHINGTON, Oct. 6. — The about one for every seven person: e = STEAMER CRASH | :;Sg"onl:.h:“gr;,l:mg: ;:;:O;i;?i ';:.(_) Goudie will accompany Shell | American Federation of Labor re-i":“irgz o l::‘:t “’E'jp"' ""’I“" "rtl‘]"‘* fore a member of the police and Simmons, Secretary of the Com- e, ports that the nation's business l:m;n' e ) firemen’s posse killed it with a mission, as far as Rochester, Minn., | ]( A d BI | ms_pects are brighter but the p: " Glasscock, Anderson Blam- |giction is made that gains this| Now 18433400 telephones is a| pistol shot when the lion was cor- nered under fhe ocean front broad- walk. The man who was clawed to death where the latter is going for spe-| cial treatment following his recent airplane accident. The two will fly/ | from Seattle to Rochester and Gou- | ed with Negligence,— Widow Asks $42,000 | lot of numbers to call and it is the | proud but honest boast of the tele- :phone company that any one of | these telephones can telephone any [all will be moderate. Among those to come under the new status are 36,000 employed by the WPA or paid with WPA funds. BRITISH USING PLANES T0 HUNT OUT ARAB BANDS : Two Such Equipped Ex- peditions Are Reported to Have Killed 22 JERUSALEM, Oct. 6. — British punitive expeditions have killed an estimated 60 Arabs in two engage- ments in Galilee. The soldiers were aided by war planes. DR. MRS. VOLLERT | left on base. No runs, no hits, no errors. None’ CUBS—Hack singled to left field. | Herman fanned. Demaree singled! into right field, Hack going to| third when Rolfe fumbled Henrich'’s | throw in. Demaree took second | but Hack held third base. It was | an error for Rolfe. Marty backed | DiMaggio against the left center field wall with,a long fly and Hack scored after the catch and De-! mare went to third on the throw- | n. Reynolds fanned. | One run, two hits, one error. One left on base. Second Inning YANKS—DiMaggio singled to left town fans up to the eighth and was given resounding acclaim as he had allowed the slugging Yanks only five hits. He appeared to be coasting to certain triumph until Selkirk opened the fatal eighth with a single. Two forced outs fol- lowed and the great Dizzy even then appeared to have the situa- tion well in hand. Crosetti stepped up to the ‘plate and Dean began bearing down even harder. Eight times the Yanke shortstop fouled the ball and the count stood at three and two. Again the old pill came down the valley, and Crosetti stepped into it for a long, hard |drive into the left field bleachers, |field for his first hit of the selson.;good for four bases and sending Gehrig walked. The Cubs’' dugout got excited and Pitchers Larry French and Jack Russell started to warm-up. Hartnett and Dean held a conference. |Jurges and Selkirk flied to Marty |in short right ffeld. Marty held up;and DiMaggio followed him to the the game to'get smoke glasses as the sun came out. Hack and Dickey popped to | {Selkirk across the plate ahead of |him, giving New York a four to three lead. Anti-Climax The anti-climax came in ninth. |Henrich g6t aboard with a single |plate. Joe had only one hit to his credit so far in the series, but he die will go on from there to the| s Thomas ito, 37, 1- Wos Fomen oa of Philadel-| - tional capital. | SEATTLE, Oct. 6—Judges in-| ‘Major Carleton |Jurges collided going after Gohimet one of Dean’s pitches right on ione of the other 18433399 at al-| !don’s easy roller and DiMaggio and |the nose and drove the ball out of VACATION IN CALIF. Sharpe to | Territory’s Bank RN ten xna Ot | 0“ nl’egun jnhltelwhl’"e While stranded on a dark| Dr. and Mrs. E. . Vollert lett|!eft gzl;eryo;om’ bases. Gomez flled(‘:;‘\: o ;nr:e definitely sewing up Wuhington for Balance Down from ;firelman, wased}cilledl,] have af;:,e(:\ Ly J;‘:}‘:v‘:r{h;ffl:mitoi:t ':;; L"llee‘:';“:;ve'fi‘zzsmfa?&h ‘?]l:stl:o?rm‘r:erl;fl n;} Two runs, two hits, no errors.| Crusher for Culss Directors’ Session jkecord of August 1 fi?fi“fi;‘:‘j;fi’: é:i; e o 'of | LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 6. — | has it. He wants to know how many month’s vacation in California. fo':ul;’st_o;.:;z‘u B ak _“ The second straight defeat on | Major H. A. R. Carleton is leaving | there are per square mile of dark| Dr- Vollert is physician in charge | out to Hen- their home grounds was a crusher |the Yukon and Capt. Anderson of Collins singled off Rolfe’s|for the Cubs, who looked utterly Walter S. Sharpe, Executive Di- rector of the Alaska Unemployment Compensation Commission, sailed on the Mount McKinley early this morning enroute to Washington, D. C., where he goes to attend a called meeting of unemployment | | The Territory’s net &ash bank the Columbia. balance at the end of September| Both captains and Arne Ferking- | stood at $1,168,381.66, according to |stead, lookout on the Yukon, had I report of Treasurer Oscar G. onsonfnnnhea their testimony when the submitted to Gov. John W. Troy. board recessed today. This - compares’ with a’ ‘balance 'of In the meantime, Keeley’s widow 1$1,468595.75, the largest in history, has filed a $42,000 damage suit compensation direteors. He expects | which was reported on August 1 of [against the Alaska Steamship Com- to be gone several weeks. this year. pany, which operates the two ships. here to become Oregon Director of | countryside and what his chances| At the Government Hospital in m“%""“ an organization with headquarters are of finding one. at Portland. He assisted in the es-|cally tablishment of the Matanuska vm-i ley Colony project. | we were informed that the United 5 States has 18,433,400 teleph (it In 1929 over 19 million families i¢ even mo,eaby ekl sl had yearly incomes of less than|iioned) alsp informed us that Eng-| $2500, and in 16 million families the income was less than $2,000. (Continued en Page Eight) , That, statisti- is different. | The same tabulation by which| city. PR e S GUCKER BACK | | glove, batting right handed against Southpaw Gomez Collins is a switch hitter. Jurges forced Col- |dejected as they wandered from |the field. The Yanks were so hilar- |ious they threw all the bats onto Jack Gucker, veteran Alaska tra- lins at Second, Rolfe to Gordon.|the grass after DiMaggio’s wallop veling man, came in from the West- |Dean rolled out, Crosetti to Gehrig. and did a war dance in front of ward on the McKinley after a No runs, one hit, no errors. One several weeks’ trip that took him to left on base. all the principal towns of the West~ ward and Interior. (Continued trow fage One) |the dugout. The trams leave tonight for New York where tie third game of the series will be played Saturday. ¥

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