The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 8, 1938, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LIL, NO. 7918. JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1938. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS YANKS WIN THIRD STRAIGHT FROM CUBS Steamer North Coast Runs Aground in Fog 36 PASSENGERS ON BOARD FOR ALASKA PORTS Vessel Not Damaged and| Expected to Be Refloat- ed on High Tide 8.—The North- Company re- | SEATTLE, Oct. land Transportation ports that the liner North Coast with 36 passengers aboard for| Southeast Alaska ports, has gronnd- ed in a fog at Shelter Point, nea: Cape Mudge, B. C. The weather is calm vessel is not damaged, to a survey made by aboard. It is expected that the North | Coast will refloat at high tide at 4 | o'clock this afternoon and proceed | io Alaska ports. | the (vfil(‘“' S The North Coast sailed from Se- | attle for Southeast Alaska ports at | 10 o'clock yesterday morning with | the following passengers aboard bocked for Juneau: Joe Gomez, Charles Triplett, Miss Virginia Carlson, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Yaden, Miss Eileen Janey, Mrs. N. M. Triplett, Mrs. Howard Zehm, Stanley Zehm, Carl Vereb, John Cheha, Vincent Hrovot, G. M. Grasty, Foster Buss. ——.e- - DIES PROPOSES DRASTIC MOVE BY PRESIDENT Would Outlaw All Organi- zations Controlled by Any Forelgn Govts. WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.-—Repre- sentative Martin Dies, of the House Investigation Committee probing | unAmerican activities, is urging | President Roosevelt to recommend | legislation outlawing “any organiza- | tion which is under the control of a foreign government.” Representative Dies that the President is improved methods to eign spies The President’s remarks, yesterday at is gratified | considering | thwart for- | made to the 5 officials The d foreign 3 are trying hard to get details of the new American defense pro- | gram. — e Disarmament of Germany Is Not To Come AS Yet | | Berlin kamg on Agree-| ments with France and Great Britain Instead z l 18 BERLIN, Oct. 8.—All Inter- | national talk of hopes of dis- | armament plans Hitler may l have, have been branded “decid- ‘ edly premature,” by a Foreign Office spokesman. ‘ The spokesman said, “Our top | men and those who determine | our foreign policies with other capitals have so many immedi- ate things to worry about that | the armaments question is nec- | essarily in the background.” The official asserted that with gradual normalization of Ger- man-Czech relations, Nazi dip- Jomats have centeréu on at- tempts to reach a French-Ger- man understanding and seek an accord with Great Britain to never fight each other again. — The Colorado River Basin in- cludes parts of seven western states and a small area in Mexico. | The oil fields of Cass country,| Tex., are assessed for taxpurposes| at $13,000,000. Europe’s Big 4 Whe Came to Terims Over Czech Dismemberment Here are Europe’s big four as they met Eurcpe. Left to right: Prime Mi: Germany; Premier Benito Mussolini of Italy, lle Chamberlain of England; and Count Galeazzo ster Ne no of Ttaly. ROME RECALLS TEN THOUSAND MEN IN SPAIN Who Have Fought 18 Months to Go Home WITHDRAWAL IS SMALL INUMBER OF WARRIORS| | Communique Says Commit- | tee for Non-Intervention in Munich, Germany, and draft ed a plan of dismembering Czecheslovakia to preserve the peace of Premier Edouard Daladier of France; Chancellor Adolf Hitler of AP Photo. The Pen Proves Mightier Than the Sword This historic picture, sent by radio from Berlin to New York, shows Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain as he put his pen to an agreement with Chancellor Hitler giving Germany parts of Czechoslovakia without war, and expressing “the desire of our two peoples never to go to war with one another again.” At left is Pau! Schmidt, Hitler's Broad E In U. S. Now ngh Wall PATRICK HENEY DIES, SEATTLE |Capitalist, Once Interested in Alaska Mining, Passes Away A SEATTLE, Oct. 8—Patrick Hen 72, capitalist and high in | Catholic Church circles, is dead. He came here 55 years ago from Can- |ada and spent much of his time in Alaska where he had mining in-| terests. He was a brother of the late Mike Heney made famous in a book by Rex Beach. Patrick Heney received from the Pope the highest Papal honor for a layman, Knight Commander of the Order of Saint Gregory. interpreter, and at right, AP Photo. ‘onomic Recovery Predicted b Strvet Ctr(,les NEW YORK, Oct. 8.—High circles in Wall Street predict a bread economic recovery in the United States. This prediction is made on | the indication that the Federal | Government is about to jnten- sify the recovery program af- fecting heavy industry. It is believed in Wall Street circles that a gigantic plan is to stimulate spending by elec- tric and power companies as a part of the National Defense measure and consideration of measures to facilitate heavy equipment purchases the railroad systems. - by Julius Schub, the Chancellor’s adjutant.— (GONCERN FELT OVER AMERICAN JEWS IN ITALY Straight ngég(;n Is Put Up to Highest Authonities by United States ROME, Oct. 8—Ttaly’s tional relations have been unmlem by America over the new anti- | Semitic regulations. he United States embassy today aits a reply to a note asking| | whether or not American Jews will Means Committee, of which he ls be given the same consideration in Italy as Italians are given in Am- erica. The note pointed out that Ital-| This picture was radioed from Berlin to New York— HANKOW BEING * CUT OFF FROM - SUPPLY BASES Japanese Bombardlm_., Rail Systems—American Mission Shelled HANKOW, Oct. 8—An official Chinese communique says the Jap- {anese are within 10 miles of the Hankow-Peiping Railway, 100 miles north of Hankow and within 50 miles of the Canton-Hankow Rail- | road, 60 miles south | The Japar are reported to have dropped shells on the Hankow- | Peiping roadbed, breaking down |Hankow’s connection with north- wwr'sl China, one supply base. | The American Consul has been informed that the American Metho- dist Mission and Hospital at Nan- chang has been damaged by 4an aerial bombardment but no Amer- icans were killed Chinese Communists, Chow Lin Lai, told the newspapermen there is no r:uunn or split in China's united resistance ul the front. PENSION PLANS T0 GET AIRING WITHCONGRESS Rep. Doughton Promises Townsend Plan, Also So- cial Security Hearings | WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.—Repre- |sentative Robert L. Doughton, |Democrat of North Carolina, has assured that a wide variety of pen-‘» mbemamsxon plans will get Congress:onal‘ attention at the next session. Should Be Satisfied | | ROME, Oct. 8.—The Government | announced the recall today of | about 10,000 Fascist Legionnaires |who have been fighting with In- |surgent Spanish forces, for more than eighteen months, The announcement of the with- drawal of the Italian warriors came in the form of a communique from |General Franco's headquarters in ‘Snlamanca, Spain. | | The communique said, “General |Franco is preparing for the im- | mediate repatriation of Italian Le- |gionnaires having more than 18 |months’ uninterrupted campaigning \\\ith Nationalist Spain. “In effecting this substantial \wuhdla\ml of volunteers, the order |conmbutes in an efficacious man- nex to the reestablishment of inter- | national confidence while at the |same time satisfying the Non-In- 1te|vencion Committee.” ign observers. éstimated there |are 80,000 TItalian troops fighting nlthough Italy says only 40,000. e SPANIARDS GET RELIEF VESSEL FROM AMERICA Fighters with Insurgents |; BOX SCORE | CUBS Hack, 3b. Herman, 2b. Cavaretta, rf. Marty, cf. Reynolds, Hartnett, 0 0 1 | 1. c. 3| *Russell, p. Galan French, $O'Dea fLazzari 0 [ p. 2| 0 0 | | il Totals 34 2 52410 Replaced Bryant as pitcher with | 1 out in sixth inning. t—Batted for Russell in seventh in- ning. ~Replaced Russell as pitcher, out in seventh inning. §—Batted for French in ninth in- | ning. | £—Batted for Jurges ih ninth in- ning. YANKEES Crosetti, ss. Rolfe, 3b. Henrich, rf. DiMaggio, cf. Gehrig, 1b. Dickey, c. Selkirk, If. Gordon, 2b. Pearson, p. 0 R HPOA Totals SUMMARY ERRORS: Cubs Herman; Yankees—Crosetti, Gordon, Two-base hit: Hack. Home runs: Marty; Gordon, Dickey. Runs bat- ted in: Marty 2; Rolfe, Dickey, Gordon 3. First base on balls: off Bryant 5 (Crosetti 2, DiMaggio, Dickey, Selkirk), off Russell 1 (Pear- son); off Pearson 2 (Hack, Her- man). Struck out: By Bryant 3 (Crosetti, Selkirk, Gordon); by Pearson 9 (Hack, Herman 2, Rey- nolds 2, Hartnett, Collins, Jurges, Bryant). Pitching records: Bryant 4 runs 6 hits 21 at bat against in 5 1/3 innings, Russell 0 runs 0 hits 2 at bat against in 2/3 innings, |French 1 run 1 hit 8 at bat against in 2 innings; Pearson 2 runs 5 hits Red Cross Sends Soap and| Flour to ", t Disease | and Starvation | WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. — The| | American Red Cross has dispatched | a cargo of flour and soap to war icken Spain, beginning Ameri-| ca's first large scale mercy errnndi in Europe since the post World War | period. The cargo is intended to relieve widespread disease, starvation and misery among Spanlsh civilians. PICKABACKER ~ FORCED DOWN UPON OCEAN ‘Mercury Out it o Fuel After Nearly Making Cape- town from Dundee l CAPETOWN, South Africa, Oct. 8. | —Great Britain’s pick-a-back sea- ! plane Mercury, short of fuel, was forced to make an emergency land- ing 380 miles from here on a flight from Dundee, Scotland to this southern metropolis. In the greatest experiment with long range bombing planes ever | made, the plane was forced down Earned runs: Off Bryant 4, off French 1; off Pearson 1. Credit |victory to Pearson. Charge defeat to Bryant. Left on bases: Cubs 7; Yankees 9. PLAY-BY-PLAY First Inning CUBS — Hack walked. Herman gio. Marty glove and the bases were loaded. |Reynolds fanned. Hartnett fannec, | No runs, one hit, no errors. Three | {left on bases. YANKEES Crosetti fanned. Rolfe popped out to Jurges. Hen- rich flied out to Marty. No runs, no hits, no errors. None left on base. Second Inning CUBS — Colllins fanned. Jurges fanned. Bryant went to second when Crosetti took his easy ground- er and threw the ball over Geh- rig’s head. Pearson took Hack’s roller and beat him to the bag. No runs, no hits, one error. One left on base. YANKEES — DiMaggio walked. Gehrig forced out DiMaggio, Her- man to Jurges. Dickey walked, sending Gehrig to second. Selkirk fanned. Gordon fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors, Two left on bases. Third Inning CUBS—Herman fanned. Cavar- etta singled into right field. Marty singled to center field, Cavaretta taking third. Reynolds fanned. Doughton said among those plans | by 1501 of fuel while attempting to|Hartnett grounded out, Gordon to which are certain to be discussed |is that plan which will give $200 a month to pensioners. He said the House Ways and | Chairman, will start exploring the | |whole field of Social Security after |Congress meets in January. | “The advocates of the Townsend |ians in the United States are not|Plan and the so-called® ‘general KARNES IN KETCHIKAN discriminated against for any rea- ".xrms of race or religion. A. E. Karnes, Commissioner of | Education, is now in Fairbanks on his annual inspection of territ schools, according to word rec ed | by his office here this morring.| He flew to “Fairbanks yesluday from Anchorage, | .- Approximately one quarter of, rolled in schools and colh.ges - Spanish is the native tongue of 55,000,000 people, ‘we!!are plans, will have an oppor- | tunity to be heard fully along wnh |other persons proposing changes lni Repre- | the Social Security act,” orial | the nation’s total population is en- sentative Doughton said. | —_——— In the Boston fire of 1872, |acres were devastated, with 60 ) property loss of over $60,000,000. and 13% cents a pound. break the world’s distance fnghu record. | As it was, the plane covered near- |1y 6,000 miles in its long flight. ; ——————— ONE HALIBUTER SELLS, SEATTLE SEATTLE, Oc!, 8. — Only one halibuter arrived in port today and that was the Sonja from the west- ern banks. The schooner brought in 26,000 pounds and sold for 14% Gehrig. No runs, two hits, no errors, Two left on bases. YANKEES—Pearson out, Jurges | |to Collins. Crosetti walked. Rolfe flied out to Marty. Crosetti out, stealing, Hartnett to Jurges, deupite Hartnett's injured hand. No runs, no hits, no errors. None |left on base. Fourth Inning CUBS—Collins flied out to Sel- kirk. Gordon robbed Jurges of a hit with a leaping catch of a line drive. Bryant fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors. None left on base. (Continued on Page Pive) 34 at bat against in 9 innings.| walked. Cavaretta flied to DiMag- | singled off Crosetti’s | MONTE PEARSON " HOLDS CHICAGO TOFIVEBLOWS 3Gordon ananickey Come Through with Circuit Swats for Yankees 9/MARTY GETS HOMER FOR FADING BRUINS Near Field Fi ght Occurs when Selkirk and French Cross Tempers SHORT SCORE R H 5 7 Cubs Yankees 1|COMPOSITE SCORE (Three Games) Cubs Yankees SCORE B CUBS Runs Hits Errors YANKEES Runs Hits Errors 25 E = © ] ||;TTT_ u mooNo o oW " cce~momo~ scowomeow coomocoonz P e cunwmcoo® cocowsoe= © R w2 YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Oct." 8—Monte Pearson struck -out nine batters and yielded but five hits as he pitched the New York Yankees to a five to two victory over the Chicago Cubs in the third game of the World Series. Joe Gor- don, rockie second baseman, knocked across three runs with a single and a homer as the Yanks drove Clay Bryant from the mound | to gain their third straight triumph, Fight!!! Tempers of the two teams were near the breaking point in the eighth inning when Selkirk, Yank | outfielder, ducked a fast throw in- side, but the ball struck his bat and rolled to French who tossed him out. This angered Selkirk, who strode toward French as Umpire Ziggy Seats jumped between them., In an instant, both benches wera emptied as players piled from the dugouts and out onto the field. It took sevéral minutes for the umpires to calm them. Cubs Handcuffed Pearson, pitching his third world series victory in three years, had | the Cubs handcuffed most of the way. Only Marty with three hits, finding him no puzzle, The big righthander struck out four in a row in the first and second in- nings and did not fail to whiff at least one in each frame until the sixth, The Cubs had opportunity ta score in the first and third but failed to produce the batting punch to put it over. The bags were load- ed in the first with only one away but Reynolds and Hartnett both fanned. Again in the third the Cubs threatened with men on first and third but Pearson again stood them on their ears. Homers Hack scored the first Cub run in the fifth after leading off with a double and scoring on a force play with the aid of Gordon’s er- ror. Making up for his error, Gor- don blasted out a homer in the Yank half of the fifth to tie the score and Rolfe’s single drove Pear- son over with the second run to give the Yanks the lead. Marty came through with a hom- er for the Cubs in the first of the eighth and Dickey stepped into the first pitch for a home run as the Yanks came to bat in the last half of . the eighth. The Yanks also scored in the sixth. FORMER JUNEAU MAN IS DEAD IN SAN JOSE Archie Bielich, former resident of Juneau, died Thursday in San Jose, Cal., according to word re= ceived here by Nick Petievich. Bielich, who was 60 years old, lived here for 15 years prior to 1924 when the family moved to Cali- fornia. He is survived by his wife, one son and four daughters.

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