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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT . TRAIN SLEEPING =" \ — WAR SAFETY IS ijon which bridges the gap between @H,DEAR, IT'S GETTING FRIGHTFULLY] : | =/ LATE.T SUPPOSE I'LL HAVE T' 2T\ _TELL ANGEL A BEDTIME STORY, SAVE YERSELF TH' TROUBLE, COUSIN CARRIE. ard ha from a corset t |dirigtble is stiil t *prin ANKARA, March 27 Air raid stage, but the Iront-is orsels | precautions in particular, and the she desi, i A 1 >t ol of natio defer in pening zener will form the subject of a be introduced s chools and uni- the stud [ is a sleeping b 1 be neetle 1 xtension who must spen I 1 of the volunt HEILMAK 15 REASON BEHIND [TRAPSHOOTERS MAN i3 FOR'SREQUEST 10 BUILD NEW ANNOUNCING XOW EXPLAINED HOUSE, RANGE % % . £ s ; ‘: 7 3 : Ry (Continued from e One) N . I.EAG. GAMES i g e e | (Continued trom Pase 029 Work to Begin Inmediate- ! g P 2 ! ' 5 cause it was cheaper and simpler. H | 4 . Sl 3 3 And the dole )n pert 1sd ln‘ rrr)tlmu IY at N?"W EIUb S”e | on Highway ,' ; States, counties and cities, whether When Rotarians visit Juneau Is Reported Making More RSGREC b . Sl o they call i general rellt, divct . i & 3 8 5 & relief, or any other name. Money than He Did as ; : ‘ BREI By arusts Wil Hav Baseball Player | TWO RELIEF POOLS | £ In 1933 Congress faced the ques- OPportunity to indulge in the' sce } : : R ,»» tion orain, This time the nation ter gun sport on a new Juneau : o had shown a dislike for the dole. Shotgun Club range i DETROIT, Mich. jMarth ‘27--8ix Sl i Even though cities clung to it so| Milton Daniels 'Secretary of the | years have passed since ‘Harry > B money would go farther per un- old club, now in process of reor-| Halman wore, 8. {1404 dasgue uni- P ‘ employed citizen, it was not the ganization, today said work will Tochit bibxthe <bigLONEW SWhe« won red way. The national law- begin immediately on a rock fill 1005 -Angrican IeasTITINEIN, chiat, & g e : : rs, therefore, chose work re- and eclub house ncar the Salmon | PAGUSLIDS: 85 0 DeGolt i TIger - pits- : » - lief, despite its higher cost, and con- Creek powerhouse on the Glacier | fielder is still collecting a star’s sal- firmed the precedent in semi-perm- Highway ary from baseball. ONLY THE BIG FELLOWS COUNT among the hardy trout fishermen who brave ice= anent P A to8 YRRl e AT - ik quarters of the club,| For the last four years Heilman, cold winds to go after the northwest’s scrappiest fish, the steelhead trout, in Washington’s Skagit \l Government, it has been formerly to the rear of the Ju- now 44, has announced Detroit (above). This 15-pounder is being netted by Cecil Jordan; it was caught by Hugh B. Dobbs. Two ie Rk reiit svhe dhhe: BB Datey: orlll e erecter! R d games over WXYZ and a Michigan SHcitmave St whetcliggatves the helligerent Wicolliogl | Gradually two pools of unemploy- rock fill. 20 feet by 50 feet, near net work of eight stations. A net- ed citizens formed at the bottom of Barneson's about t blocks south HE DIDN’T KNOW nhis own strength, and so Lennie work official says Heilman is the countr highest saldried sports olD FAVORITES broadcaster and collects more money from radio than he ever made as It was just 15 seasons ago that Heilmann authored the fattest bat- BA(K ‘"."S YEAR ting average of his career—a .404 mark that led the loop ' He set a unique record by win- D|Zzy Trout, Paul Dean, ning the American league batting 7 title in four straight odd years. In S(hOOlbOY Rowe Trylng 1821 he topped the field with @ 394 average. His 1923 figure was 404 10 Make GUOd In 1925 he hit 393, while in 1927 he was on top with .398 5 i z His 14 years as a Tiger ended, NEW YORK, March 27. — Once after the 1929 season when he was 2%ain Dizzy Dean and Paul and sold 'to Cincinnati, despite the fact Scholboy may be the Texas league's that he batted .345 the previous sea- Mst interesting rookies in basebail’s son. Heilmann, never fleet-footed, Big Show. stayed with the Reds until June,| Fans will be pulling for success- 1632, when he was released as the ful comebacks by Paul Dean and club adopted a “rebuild-with-youth” Lynwood (Schoolboy) Rowe, and policy. 3 Detroit's hor of sideswiping the During the early, part of the de-'New York Yankees in the Ameri pression Heilmann saw most of league stesplechase will depend la savings vanish when he was unable | €1V on the Schoolboy and Paul (Diz- to keep up large payments on an|Zy) Trout. apartment house he was buying and | _After a session at Dallas, Paul = Tradite e ViR Dean, who was shunted to the min- He made a little money in 1933|Ors by St. Louis when he developed by organizing an independent team | SOre arm, returned to the Cam‘.nalw and playing Michigan sandlot nines, | !até 1ast season and looked fair in He also tried selling insurance and | Winnihe three games and losing one. unsuccessfully ran for city treasur- | He thinks he's ready to stay up for er. ¥ | good. Following a suggestion from a, 6 AnD ailing arm drove Rowe out of Detroit sports writer. Heiln]anx\“‘}“ A}xnerican loop. At Bmum:unt sought the radio baseball job in|Dis flinger respended so nicely that 1934 and his audition was So suc- he authored a fine 12-nd-2 hurling cessful he was hired on the spot,|MArk. But whether he'll ever be the He's been broadcasting games ever |Star he once was is something no since. | one knows. - eee | And Trout is about due. He's had s = ixwu short Lyans with the Tigers and B'nhday D'nner ‘couldn'! stick. Last season Dizzy struck a fast stride to win 22 games F B bb Ph-". !{r;r Beaumont while losing six. | Detroit also will have Pitchers! or Bobby Phillips' > | Lloyd Dietz and John Tate |er Ed Parsons and Infielders Bar- Bobby Phillips, son of Supt. A. B. ney McCosky, and Frank Croucher. Phillips of the Juneau Public land outfielder Frank Secory from Schools, is entertaining with an|Beaumont. Croucher, the lad who thformal dinner party this evening was out last year after breaking his at his home on Calhoun Avenue in leg at training camp, may give the celebration of his thirteenth birth- | Tigers the power and speed they de- day. sire at shortstop. Parsons will be No. After dinner the guests will at- 3 catcher. tend the movies. The Cardinals also will have Mor- | ton Cooper, a young right hander. and Hal Epps, an outfielder, from Houston Jim Winford, who tossed right- handed slants for the Cardinals a couple of years ago, caught on with Brooklyn. He had a 17-and-10 av- erage with Houston 1 season. las Monaco, Oklahoma City in- lder, goes to Cleveland and George ck, Shreveport pitcher, to the Chicago White Sox >ve - McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY WILL CHANGE HANDS Bob Cowling to Take Over Garage on Front Street April 1 Robert W. Cowling, well known young Juneau man, announced to- day he has concluded a deal to pur- chase the McCaul Motor Company at 115 Front tSreet from T. J. Mc- Caul Cewling, who has been on the of- fice staff of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company for several months, said he will take over McCaul's business April 1 with plans for ex- tensive remodeling. The firm will continue to be known as the McCaul Motor Company and will carry its five lines of automo- biles as at present, dealing in Ply- i mouths, Dodges, Chryslers, Hudsons and Terraplanes. 4 - ,—ee - RETURNING TO FAIRBANKS | Dr. F. B. Gillespie, of Fairbanks, accompanied by Mrs. Gillespie, is a passenger for Juneau aboard the Yukon. They will go by plane to their Interior home. ———--—— . PEKOVICH ABOARD YUKON W. 8. Pekovich, mining man, is a |passenger for Juneau aboard the Yukon. Claim 80,000 Square Miles In Antaretie for Un right) : Fred G. Seid, of New York VANCOUVER, B. C.— Eighty thousand square miles were added to United States territory by the recent Lincoln Ellsworth Antarctic Expedition, aceording to the three sun-tanned. young explorers pic- tured as their party arrived in Van- I R P R 43 City, radio operator; Burt J. Tre- rice, of Nova Scotia, pilot; and Dr. H. T. Rhoads, of Everett, Wash. expedition surgeon. Dr, Rhoads announced that the new lands explored have general mineral possibilities, They are not volcanic. - +Ellsworth made contact with the’ new territory at the 69th latitude ited States some 500 miles east of Enderby Island. i Several narrow escapes from disaster were experienced by the explorers. The closest came when ice stove a large hole in the bow of the 400-ton expedition ship Wyatt Earp, which the crew were able to patch up before the vessel could fill, . Germany also is claiming lands ‘n the Antarctic as result of am ] fitupedifionflunintbps the economic ladder of the Salmon Creek power plant. One was the work relief pool The side of the building facing sponsord by the WPA. Into it went the water will be fitted with drop- To FORM wiTH citizens conforming to an unem- dcors to give shotgunners a warm ployed standard labelled “employ- and dry place to shoot from in any ables.”” The “employables” are cared weather. at a cost varying around the $2.- pe made to provide ample parking 000,000,000, mark annually. Just NOW space for shooters and spactalors, Ed Radde, with a bad bowling there are about 3,000,000 persons in, Coincident with the announce- finger evidently healed, smashed that pool, with more than twice ment of the new project, a mem- pins at the Brunswick yesterday that many dependent on them bership drive is under way, Daniels afternoon to lead his Alaskan Hotel In the other pool are the dolees. gaiq the thirty members of the five to a 103-pin victory over the They include all the destitute Who )agent clup expeting to ewell their Brunswick can't work .and the WPA Walting yqnpg considerably with devotees of Radde roller 632, even though he list of employables as well. JUSt ;o o nosting spost tallied but 172 in the second game. now there about 1500.000 per- s expactsd Work will be Goms His third game was 247. S0HS in this less desirable pool, With \eteq on the new project by the In another match, bowling wasn't so many more dependents. firsi of May. spectacular, but Alaskan Hotel took The fellow on the dole gets an et ; Juneau Lumber by 54 points. average of $24.88 a month, depend- | Scores are as follows: g on the state or city he lives in Alaskan Hotel The fellow on relief receives an Hendricks 163 143 169— 475 costs little more than $25 a month Benson 154 177 175— 506 to keep a man on the dole, at that Hudson 226 190 194— 610 rate. But it costs $75 a month (in- AT lIBRARY Lavenik 170 193 194— 557 cluding wages and materials), to i bl furnish a man with work relief Totals 926 875 979—2180 Therefore, the dole is the way of Brunswick rigid economy; it makes a dollar| The Juneau Public Library has Carnegie 148 168 126— 442 20 @ long way. Work relief is the the following new books on the Hildinger 173 191 181— 545 Way of higher cost and greater sat- shelves ready for distribution: Rayela 171 192 232— 595 isfaction. Sl | Howden-Smith, “The Dead Go E. Galao 183 177 201— 561 MAY. BE CUT SOME Overside”; Lofts, “Colin Lowrie"; | Seston 158 202 174— 534 As times get better, the popula- magon “Konigsmar Banning, | i ___ tion of those two pools may dwindle “Too Young to Marry”; Wodehouse, | | Totals 833 930 9142677 some, perhaps a few hundred thou- wpne gode of the W ; Walk- | Juneau Lumber Mills sand by June 30. But the actual o .y Norton's Wife Tffert 150 181 176— 507 humber really doesn't alter the White, “The Sword in the ! Hagerup 180 223 164— 577 fundamentals, Stone”; Faulkner, “The World | Holmguist 149 201, 146— 496 If the President gets the $150-|py)ngn miglg Al This and Heav Stewart 192 180 158— 530 000000 he has asked for to carry o0 FOth AL 1S SAC BOR ES!E\'mann 137 161 161— 459 WPA to the end of the fiscal year | | — — — ____ On June 30, that will merely mean Totals 818 946 805—2569 the Federal pool will be kept just Alaskan Hotel as full, proportionately, as it ! Radde 189 205 164— 558 IS ’I‘herel will be no ch;nwe }in “‘l‘:“lorles | ricks 6 o, Congressional policy to furnish work * ¥ % g | I;:::(:Xllcks ;Za :2; i;g‘ ;gg relief to employables ar:n;:mglktht nf:v'nn(;!-.mm’;.m: bJ‘uk.s Hudson 169 170 158— 497 But if Congress does not vote the Tl au lrllerr “qo -carving As n{ Lavenik 189 215 182— 5ge money, then people turned away by .0 v .‘f:izh. ‘Frontier i of En-| the Federal Government will simply ¢hanment”; Stefansson, “Unsolved g 268 916 sa8_seme drain back into the dole pool oper- Mysteries of the Arctic”; Corrigan, | s g 868 916 8902023 [led Dby the States, counties, and |"THaUS My Story’; Lawes, “Invisi- | cities. Intentionally or otherwise, ble Stripes.” Congress will be leaning toward the Sadler, “Piloting Modern Youth"; Hos PITAL NOTES jole. |Van Paasen, “Days of Our Years"; That’s why a mere $150,000,000 in James, “The Life of Andrew Jack- these times of billion-dollar budgets son”; Burt, “Powder River”; Bald- Mrs. M. Cass was admitted to St. j; o jmportant. It becomes a yard- Win, “Admiral Death”; Hennery, “Frost Flower"”; “Rocky Bend”; Brand, There are also eight new mystery Ann's Hospital Saturday night for gijck of economy at a time when the | “Color Photography for the Ama- | medical attention. national debt is reaching toward the teur.” : : ~ statutory limit. Tt becomes also the | BB s W. McKenzie was a surgical dis- emblem of the principle of trying | missal yesterday afternoon from St. 4o give every unemployed worker a Ann’s Hospital. job. & Those are questions Congressmen | Edward James is a dismissal from will be worrying about when they BA(KS HUNCH oF care at St. Ann’s Hospital yote on the $150,000,000. For the | issue is work relief versus the dole— Charles Ashby was dismissed from — - (St. Ann’s Hospital today where he TR | 5 had been receiving medical super- v'klngs Hold card AMARILLO, Tex, March 27. — e spending versus economy. I tsion. | Since pioneer days amateur weather |prophets of the Texas Panhandle | . o o i - PAY SatUTday EV Rt vt it v | southeast - wind for three days | brought "rain. “And it's a good rule,” says H. T Collman. U. 8. Weather observer at Amarillo. “If a wind blows for three days missal yesterday afternoon from St. S le.m's Hospital. Saturday night, members of the ! g Viking Club were sponsors of a pub- | Mae James, of Kake, was ad- lic card party, in charge of which| ,‘:rln_l.led to the ‘Govere:men'- Hospital were Mrs. Gertie Olson, Mrs. Oscar | | this morning for medical attention. oy 5 y Oberg and Mr. and Mrs. H"""yirrum the southeast it brings mos- | —_———.—— Anderson. " | | ool e won ‘4 pinoetle by{“"e from the Gulf of Mexico and W . |when the moiture reaches the cool rs. John Carlson, ladies’ high; | Mir over the, Panhas Frank Olson, men’s high; Mrs. g, ot i s clouted a mighty one Joe Fitzgerald The Marble Hill s while Joe Fitzg it ¢on- 1 JESSE jAMES IS Frank Olson, low; Andrew Hilde, 7S &nd we have rain.” low. Bodding, low. Prizes won in whist included: Bert Mork, high; Mrs, T. MAYFIELD, K March 27—A. Hagerup, low. O. Smith, farmer living near May- ————— field, drove to town in a hor JR. TRINITY GUILD drawn buggy and entered a thea- MEETS TOMORROW NIGHT steamer Princess Louise yeslerday ter to see the movie, “Je et e For bridge, John Newman was NINE Go ou' REvEAlED' KY. awarded high honors; Mrs. Olaf |ered the horse .and. buggy Wwere meet in the Trinity Parish Hall for illa, D, E. Knapp, Mrs, D, Skuse, G. thieft in more than 10 years, Jure urged to be present, | Greenwalt, | Nine passengers went south on the ' King George VI Tomorrow night at 8 o'clock mem- morning. They were, C. V. Telquist, James." After the show he discov- bers of the Junior Trinity Guild will G. Ingman, Geoige Martin, R. Matt- | and, sumimer. |stolen. It was Mayfield's first hosse further work on the puppets. All Fisher, H, R, MecLeod and George l pointiig to Sault Ste. Ma Merullo, one-time shortstop at Villanova college in Pennsylvania, nd broke the bat, This was during his prac- tice with the Cubs on Caialina Island, California, Claim Manhattan “Sudetenland” President Lyons tion of New York, once a Harlem river island but now continuous with the Bronx, has become a Manhattan “Su~ detenland” claimed by the Bronx. J. Lyons is scen planting the Bronxian flag in the disputed territory erald, an assistant, lends support. ~ Bronx Borough President James' Vincent Massey Just lke the rest of us, King George VI of England is all excited about his vacation trip to the Uiited States and Canada this spring Vincent Massey, Canadian high commissionsr, i sean oue of the stops on the tour of King George and Queen Elizaheih,