The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 13, 1938, Page 5

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13, 1938. By CLIFF STERRETT THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. with the aid of Dal Weyend, will do all the electrical work. On the F: entertainment committee are Pete 5 Publications Hop 1 ¥'SAY ¥'WERE AN' HOW ARE YUH HELD UP ON T KIN TELLYUH 50 SURE OF TH' Cuz PAW AN! PAW'S AN'TH! e L YER WAY HOME TUAT ! T WUZ TME, MaDAMEZ) (WUZ IN LINE CLOCK!S HANDS WUZ er1or ug flon, and. Zaida_ Casisots Publilly FROM TH MOVES it WITH TH! N EGGZACKLY THI o i et o LAST NIGHT ¢ MINNI 1 is be 1 »d by Lola La Pangh, SAME POSITION! o 3 chairman, and Isabel Parsons and f Setting next Friday night as the Everett Hobson. Hallie Rice heads { ite, the committee in charge has {he clean-up committee, with Ver- nnounced that plans for the fourth non Hussey, Frances Doogan, John annual Publications Hop have heen | Garcia, and George Martin help- ( v:*, »IL ponsor “nu_ the affair jng him. Betty Wilcox has charge 4‘;| ‘\..\ ito ul nd business l-"'f\ of a special edition, which will h em, and the gppear as scial. Tentiive Gulll and Scroll, Hiridtary SRR Gttt L pane soclety. o —_— -> o - - 1ty advisers are Miss Mar- jorie Tillotson and Mr. Kenneth Ferguson, under whom the com- FINE SKl RUNNING IS mittees are working, SHOWN AT CAPITOL Invitations will be issued by the “ { 4 = e s R o o v i invitation committee, with Olga IN “WHITE MAGIC 5 Paul as chairman, and Catharine| ,. ., . "~ 3 e Winn assisting. Campbell and Sus thrilled at stra- e superh demo | play; Joe Snow, veteran of the Ju- than 90 runs, hit 20-odd homers Heath got a late start with the number of geese Chairman of the entertainment - TWENTY-THREE neau court is also back at the hoop and fielded sensationally. Dario Indians but ceame along stronv. He Hu"ters Get Back Yk Drurifirs. ware. Ofiatles GIO1A% | oommibice,. Dete Warmir, pomises | LoD of I8 BTSKLISHOIULRATY SONHE game. Lodigiana and Stanley Sperry nlay- wound up with a high stick aver- stein, Guy McNaughton, Ed Jones an entertaining intermission. A1 the'Capitol J0LHE [RSs TR The more the season progresses, ed well for the Athletics, while age and propelled more than 100 40A'Dr. ©. O, Oarter.!.They made!| Other compiittsss WhIEh aré work-| L eih under:; the, “Utie JEVERike ] the trip on the vessel Arden ing on the dance, which will be PR . MORE CASABA really will be a good basketball year. ler. Washington's Case was one ol - > X &g e Keltner stood out among third the fastest men to enter the Am- & e ] H s i R N R b sackers. He knocked in more than erican League in years. The Sen- Ea"ur s ous'n Relchl, Bonnie Erickson, Mary changes to Sun Valley, Idaho, and I 100 runs and was among the bat- 'ators also had another fine hitting I u Iml s Fukuyama, Erling Oswald, Harry ’\hl;“'\ ',"Im" ‘livmmk,"mc gt 11 | e s 8 ec e ] ting leaders. rookie in Taft Wright. oS F) WALEINS, 6T oas, and Tottise Pete h\_(\t‘v‘lxlp:‘z;;;p l;x‘alt“)xlfi:nl‘)].(;l‘l \rl:x‘nnmg, —_— a Amble Was the ()lllbli\lldl]lg There was an abundance of }qfld 3 5 J | TU: ALOOSA, Ala., Oct. 13 b e v 18 and refreshments, not fail to ll'V])l'\‘('l.lli“ the .grfl::fl:;l M L | o e B e hitting flychasers. Henry Stein- Four Juneau men returned to Ch: Holm, University of Ala- Bernice Waugh, chairman, and La- porformance of the ‘skisrs aniiidl anagers Trying to Dope - ar ufl IB Tms"‘v;; SN gnt NIUer pocher of the Chicago White Sox, town yesterday after several days b"“‘lfl halfback who averaged five|nore Kaufmann and Mildred Kend- | breat oharm that skiins holds. When : o b e R et /in Mazzera of the St. Lou i Rook % *® |yards per try last season and is ler. Programs will be designed and |yjec col thic short, ] Out Plan for Balancing Sl 50-odd games last p,ung Ernie Koy and Goody ‘:: ;3‘5 ‘,U:,\] 1:3“;_ (}l:‘l‘]’]‘rCl‘::kLOd[:Z‘r'mmlml o Hdayily s falit 1h, | mans Ibyh Batty WIS SRR ke |0 Rt e By O Tositi Tflam hy Graham vear. Rosen ot Brooklyn, Ssm Chapman ™ BI§ Join Bay, near Eake, 10| distant cousin of Eleanor Holm Jar-|cominitice of Tina Lepetich and | Lede and placer location aefess L] Rizzo's timely blows led the Pitts- of the Philadelphia A’s. Enos report limit bags of ducks and arett, the swim star. Esther Johnstone. Herman Forter, | lor sale at The I-upire Office. l With basketball preseason prac- tice going into its third night to- night, managers in the League ar planning a meeting tomorrow nigh! at 7:30 in the high school to shape up a plan for balancing team the more it looks as though this By DILLON GEAHAM AP Feature Service Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 13. — This ear’s crop of fine rookies was |about evenly divided between the |two major leagues. the Phillies liked Emmett Joe Muel- burgh attack. This Italian young- ster was the first Pirate in years to hit 20 homers and he batted in upwards of 100 runs. W hat Is Your runs across the dish Slaughter of the St. Louis Cardi- nals, Max West of the Boston Bees, and Craft of Cincinnati. Manager Bill McKechnie believes Craft will become one of the National League’s . outstanding outfielders. Hershberger and John Peacock the B n Red Sox were the of From Rocky Pass informal, are, decorations, with Don The short shows glimpses of win- ool WooksicZ & DOUBLE YOUR ENJOYMENT... strength. | While there were several good | eabte Only the pr o It appears as though the plan inficlders and outfielders for every | | News I Q ? e e bl et IT'S AN ALL-AMERICAN CUSTOM to be accepted, should the effort be |position, the freshman pitchers were b ** |lbardi kept Hershberger from the WITH DOUBLY-SMOOTH made to give fans a list of more hardly up to standard, even though N‘n 1 bflcksm;;{un«v bj()l) with . ths e fM evenly matched teams, will be one in which managers will be allowed five men signed up in open compe- tition with other managers, the re- mainder of the players to be doled the season produced baseball’s first |double no-hit hurler in Cincin- nati’'s Jchnny Vander Meer. | The Reds possibly had more good |rookies than any other club, with Reds. The right-handed Bob Klinger and Southpaw Johnny Vander Meer were the pitching leaders.” Others records America is fast finding out that Ten High really does Double Your Enjoyment! This fine bourbon is becoming é e R i g 3 ® i | who made good first-year out to respective teams with an eye| First-Baseman Frank (Buck) Mc- : T ot ion’ i to giving each team a fair break. |Cormick, Vander Meer, Catcher included Jim Bagby of the Boston the nation’s leading seller JRZARR i More players have signed the willard Hershberger and Outfield- IEH S0 J('h\“ ”“n,‘,l?l“‘_ms of. I““ because it's doubly smooth, s managers’ roster at The Empire in | ers Harry Craft and Lee Gamble. g:jbnfl‘l;f(” Dick Errickson of the doubly rich in bourbon taste. o: the last two days. % Rookies played a conspicuous part 2 AT e O Ten High is free of rough Recent Signers |in the pennant races, too. Cincin- edges becau it's distilled The recent signers are as fol- nati's recruits kept the Reds in the . ge: ause it's distille lows: Henry Behrends, of Juneau, National flag race up until the Ta" T'mhe by HiramWalker'sfamed for a guard berth; Phil Bertholl of |fina) week. Joe Gordon tightened doubly- careful control Juneau for a center job; Fre%Bt’Ck- the Yankee infield and added a LS intheworld'slargest dis- a guard, played with the fffllll)_n_ punch that helped the New York- : NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 13. — The tillery. Be bourbon-wise National Guard in the Corvallis ers garner their third successive Each question counts 20; each top tackles on the Tulane Uni —buy Ten High at % ity Teagis. bz L prd e : ion counts 20; each | | six top tacklcs on the Tulane Uni- uy Ten High at your A g |bunting. Johnny Rizzo's big bat | | part of a two-part question, 10. || 0050 goothail squad weigh : 3 THE 1 p——) Robert Wood, another guard, Won | qarkeq the Pirates. Third-Base- | 4 score of 60 is fair, 80 good. || ”-mi‘ i N‘w(h“ bk ]\ liquor store right away. MBLEM P f NG % pounds or more. Not one is sho W > ¥ Healht a frosh numeral at the University ypy gen Keltner and Qutfielder | of Wisconsin. Carl Erickson, Krause | Geoffrey Heath strengthened the | than 6 feet 1 inch. The la: is 6-4 BEST BOURBON BUY . 1. Identify this leading Dem- ocratic representative who seeks re-election as a Republi- can after a “purge”? 2. Where did the American Legion hold its national conven- tion? Where will it meet in 1939? 3. What is the Workers Alli- ance? 4. What does “Drang mach Osten” mean? 5. How many national tennis titles has California’s Don ley McCollum, and weighs 235 pound They Sleep Footall KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 13. The University of Tennessee opened | a new concrete addition to its foot- ! | ball stadium this season, increasing | the seating capacity from 22,000 m‘ man, is back in suit for a guard|cjeveland Indians. job. Walter Scott Jr., another Ju») Now that the long campaign has neau guard, is also turning out. |run its course, an accurate check- Art and Elmer Hautala, brothersmp on the rookies can be made for of Walter Hautala, Juneau High|,oootion of o mythical all-star coach, are trying for positions at| . forward or guard with high school "k o b and a little college experience be-) T po T Y Bk MeCormick, hind them. P A i Gil DeVault, last year’s strong Second Base: Joe Gordon, efensively for man offensively and d m,smw?' T | New York Yankees. STRAIGHT BOURBON the local high school v : ‘ wearing basketball shoes agalng Bofi Third Base: Ken Keltner, | | Budge won this year? 34,000. Underneath the new stands| |E#=E y Davlin, fast MIKS DALl Lauwics - Oleveland. ! |gxe. ragmiiery, facilities for 120] 90 PROOF. HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC.. Peoria, llnois, “lsm *still young enough for the game. Shortstop: Wayne Ambler, | (Answers on Page Six) students. 'Walkerville, Ontario) Glasgow, Scotland i Leonard Bishop, former Tulsa Oil- | Pl:l:dell:hli; :sl:l B itk T At — - & e : er and Universal forward is in suit | et Fislls Son D, TIbea- B2 : burgh. 4 for anyone who can dish up a job| ‘or him; Dale Druliner is back on| the court. For Guarding Job Right Field: Geoffrey Heath, Cleveland. Center Field: George Case, Washington. Oliver Torkelsen, from North Da- | kota, is bidding for a guarding job; | Dick May, Royal Blue driver who| handles himself nicely on the maple Catcher: Willard Hershberger, Cincinnati. Pitcher: Pitts- Bob Klinger, _is again out; Stan Hill is wearing| burgh. “a basketball suit once more. | Pitcher: John Vander Meer, | 2 Dave Turner, Signal Corps man| Cincinnati. | who played here a few years agc McCormick was the outstanding a and more recently with the Signal|rookie of the year. He was among | 1 Corps squad in Anchorage, is sharp-{the league's big five batters vir- ening his firing eye; Bud Foster, last | tually all season. He led the loop | year’s unruffled referee, is groom- |in hits and batted in more than ing his pins for basketball playlwo runs. George McQuinn of the | » shonld he fail to get the ref’s bid |St. Louis Browns was another fine b again. | sacker. | 3 Bill Robertson and Frank Carmo-| Gordon had no competition at L dy have signed, and a newcomer by second base. He batted in moref A | the name of Bill Pendergast,! o | y smooth-looking cage hound even?_ L for an injured knee, is trying for a | [ berth. | i Eddie Hoch, forward and guard | 5] who hails from Ellensburg Normal, | Win a showed speed and accuracy the | 4 4 other night and will enter Juneau nal | Natio 1 ; [ 3 Marching Ensemble | : * » To the Dinner Set | | o | 1 | = Majors FREE' | ¢ & i THE BASEBALL 28 Pieces stars of tomorrow are the rookies Pl marching to the . majors today. ‘ More smokers everywhere are ; Who are they? Ask for Your . ) . ‘ . « Wheio o theyl] Coupens Vi turning to Chesterfield’s refreshing MORE 1 , m? Every Wednesday Evening M g T i Frery Mo L mildness and better taste Gronow Guacis ) A series of five During October . PLE. A SI]RE i e articles tells you ot ‘ I Wt Pilor Eiioe ,‘ | . k ons 5 out them, where | t takes good things to make a good 77,0 | . o : $ ¢ $ fi?‘ millions EDDIE DOOLEY ! ! Football Highlights i A they began play- ing, and what they did in 1938. The first of the articlesstarts to- day in THE EM- PIRE. | Butler-Mauro Drug Co. “Your Rexall Store” product. That's why we use the best ingredients a cigarette can have—mild Every Thursday and Saturday ¥ 52 Leading N. B. C. Stations ripe tobaccos and pure cigarette paper— to make Chesterfield the cigarette that smokers say is milder and better-tasting. B LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.

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