The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 25, 1939, Page 5

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. Ve “« vesterday which made the game| just a passing fancy for the White Sox. GA MONDAY area are born in hospitals. POLLY AND HER PALS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRI L 23, 1939, JESS BEEM TALKIN' T' . YOUNE ~NEWT NEWE BEEN EATIN' OUT ) DD HIS W—E'S LAD UP AN' HE'S _ P IN LEAGUES | t Pennant WTm?ers of lasi‘ Year Continue fo Stay | Out in Front (By Associated Press) The Chicago Cybs and the New York Yankees, pennant winuers last vear, stay out in front in their spective loops With no signs of bein overhauled. The Cubs knocked off the Pitts- burgh Pirates yesterday afternoon with an ex-American League, Earl Whitehill, turning in a six-hitter The YanKkees' crooning Cowboy Monte Pearson twirled a four-hitter {0 beat the Athletics in the Monday game. Tommy Bridges fanned five men in tossing Detroit to a victory over the St. Louis Browns, Despite Jimmy Foxx's homer, the tors nipped the Red Sox in a ten-inning game yesterd Cleveland’s pitchers walked 15 men National League New York 6; Philadelphia 5. Boston 4; Brooklyn 1 Pittsburgh 2; Chicago 6 American League St. Louis 2; Detroit 4 Philadelphia 1; New York 2 Washington 10; Boston 9 Chicago 9; Cleveland 3 Pacific Coast League No games scheduled NG OF CLUBS | Coast League STAN Pa OUT OF 14 STARTS last Yale o'N lecting $10,750 for T. D. Taggart and French Lick Springs Stable, l Jack Reper is ion Joe Leuis standing over first reynd blasted Roper’s title hepes with a 4 (UBS’ YANE{S }Iélvu'ylr('vighl C!mm,fiou .]m; Loui: STILL 10P5 [ hown on the floor, knocked out in two minutes and twe nty sccends of a scheduled te : BRUNSWICK TRIO him. QUITE TH' OPPOSITE, OL' P/ 1 EGG S ( LOOKS DOWN YUH SEE ,WOT INTH' DUMPS | N WITH HIS WIFE ( FROM DODGIN' ) I~ b INTADINERS. / 4 ¢ I T round bout at Los Angeles, with Champ- Y(' SHE'S CONTRACTED WOT ) > " TH'DOCS ALL CALLS (_ CAN-OPENER'S CRAMP/ e SR, 5 L. ) r Jack Roper MOOSE, DOUGLAS "~ WILL OPEN BALL ~ SEASON MAY 14 Thirty-six Regular Games| | Set for Three-a-Week | PlayDuring Season Gastineau Channel's baseball sea- son for 1939 will get under way on Sunday, May 14, with last year’s champion Moose entertaining the runner-up Douglas Islanders in the Juneau Fire Department’s new park, according to the official schedule for sed today Thirty-six games will, as usual, comprise the schedule, which is di- vided into two parts of eighteen' games each. Following completion of the first half, the three league ms, Moose, Douglas and Elks, will get off to a fresh start, with the two “half winners” meeting in a post-season series to decide the champions. Likewise i following the established procedure, games will be played three times weekly, seven-inning contests on Tuesday and Friday eve- ings and tull nine-inning ball games on Sunday afternoons ( Each of the Juneau squads will be entertained by the Islanders on the Douglas diamond one each half. The {111 échedule follows F I HA May 14—Douglas-Moose. May 16-—Douglas-ElKks. Moose-Douglas. Moose-EIks. inday, Kevy Men of Busoba" Bees. No longer sprinter, the former American-leaguer Al Simmons can still larru the apple. o ! i inelude: Skigper, Mrs. Raine John on; Boa n, Mary Pukuyamag Coxs Belty Wilcox; supe IoMoRRow HONOR 10, Sue Stewart, and Yeoman, Ethel ] | Fukuyama | Affair for iihienRev. W. |t - = } Fizgerald Will Be at |+ oo A Parish Hall (Continued from Page One) - oo Licyd € medical ¢ ital today, o was giemisded fr re at (he St. Ann's Hoiss Adron F, Ward was a § |admissicn to St. Ann’s Hospital: 5 ornia, i-- gracuared from Gonzaga [ i £ University in Scholastic philosophy Mrs. Borje Skov was dismissed and later studied theology at Im-|from St. Ann's Hospital last night maculate College, Montreal, where|after having received medical care he was ordained in 1918 for an attack of the flu. £ The Reverend Fitzgerald was ac-| el i companied north by the Rev. E. A.l James Snook. of Ketchikan, was & McNarama, professor at Gonzaga|surgical admis: today at th University. The latter will return 0| Government Hos the states within the next few days. Coadjutor Bishop Fitzgerald pians’ Dolma Willilams was dismissed to leave for Fairbanks either on lh»: from medical supervision today a#f steamer Baranof, Saturday, or the|the Government Hospital. § Yukon next Tuesday. - Godflh S Trv an Empire ad. MANGALAO LEADS HARDIER SKIERS FIND PLENTY OF WITH 633 TALLY SNOWON SUNDAY i HUNT AT KODIAK Myer Prussian, stocky Detroif big ! game hunter and fisherman, passed | through Juneau today on the Yu- ady. Secretary. ——————— 514 547 About 75 percent of the babies! T % st e et | born in the New York metropolitan| Try The Empire classifieds for Lresults. | kon, making his fourth trip to Alaska for game and fish Prussian a “Santa Claus” to guides who -often find their “worl consists of making a comfortable camp and swapping stories over the pipe—is following Alaska’s lure to Kodiak this year to hunt with Guide Fred Henton But, listening to fish stories of the gigantic rainbows of Kodiak and the ka Peninsula, it seems a good € s that Prussian will mostly with rod and reel the summe X e |BILL WILLIAMS ON | WAY BACK TO MINE | | Bill Williams, well known in Ju- I'neau where he used to operate the | 0ld Salmon Creek roadhouse, passed !thmugh Juneau on the Yukon to- | day, returning to his placer mine in | the Moose Pass area. | Williams is working a hydraulic | proposition and “doing very well,” ne is a bay gelding sired by Peter Hastings, will en- counter stiff competition at the Louisville classic, year, Yale o’Nine won six, col- | ; he says. b D Try The Empire classifieds results. for BE DEVELOPED, | pigGowLope Looms for $5.00 a ton to $80.00, he said. ning at 8 o'clock. JERRY WAITE, —adv. Secretary. . ———— | than men’s colleges from lack of “omesis and gifts during depres- STATION KINY— Daily except Sundays & Wednesdays Referee George Blake rushes up to send Joe to a neutral corner. An audience of 25,000 witnessed the Tuesday, M Douglas-Moose. ve-k-cut. Threughout the course of the battle, Roper lan ded only one solid punch—a hard right to the head. Louis rallied and PFriday, May 26—Elks-Douglas es of devastating rights and lefts. The bout was staged at Wrigley Field. Sunday, “May 28— Eiks-Mooss ko __| ‘Tuesday, May 30—Douglas-Elks, | Friday, June 2 Moose-Elks BLUFF MINE "'0 H Sunday, June 4-—Moose-Douglas. ' e ou Tuesday, June 6—Elks-Moose. Friday June 9-—-Douglas-Moose. Sunday, June 11—Elks-Douglas. Tuesday, June 13—Moose-Douglas, at Douglas. | Friday, June 16—Douglas-Elks. | 5 ety W.(.Zl LZM Pet SRR i Sunday—June 18—Moose-EIKs. 408 - » 5 Tuesday, June 20—Elks-Douglas, - | at Douglas. San Francisco 1P -43 i with Mangalao H P | H " SEC LR o o, f o :COND p fan v ok dicted-Ski Tow Help- | During Summer-Values it FRE. S LB, Sacramento 10 14 el hEARY bawiems) wot hre - : | $ 5 NEW YORK, April 25.—Promoter ; P o g Beetiand B iuina e L - match the winner of the June 1 24 ¢ g 5 National League lv} Ho L R (f‘.,, e Fifteen skiers found plenty of snow | Jerry Galvin, widely known Sew- |bout between Lou Nova and Max i:_':r‘i‘,"“y'd'fll'\"72"1,130",'1’15' nflks.' Won Lot onight's games are Georse BIOw | ¢y, (e second meadow this last Sun- | ard Peninsula mining man, revealed Baer with the winner of the Louis-| £rieh¥s JUIb TDOIE S MO08: Chicago 3 1 vs. California Grocery and Case LOU| qay, aceording to reports. New snow | in Juneau today that the long hoped | Galento bout on June 28 for the T“esdy' 5“: % Lflk ‘;";“' Cincinnati 2 L sores are as fol.|@bove the Ditch had to be packed for development of vast gold lodes heavywelght title in September. folpyis <l B e Boston /i o Jrreh. e down, but after that was accom- |near Nome, at Bluff, will material- —— A iy New York 4 | American Meat jiished the hardy souls that braved | ize this summer in a several hundred | o 4+ . 'I'uc;d:;; Jvli‘v 18 Molgiee-_nosm,“ i : o American Meat - ihe inclement weather were able 1o son stamp mill, Miss Karinen Is b Philadelphia 3 e S8 wo i put the ski tow to good use in prac- | Galyin arrived here today on the Priday, July 31—Elks-Moose | Pittsburgh 1 4 TN - oo |t their ill technique | Yukon with an eastern mining en-| Sh H - ' iy 23 Do : | Carnegie 163 216 190563 | S July 5, 5e. Brooklyn . 'y RN i e prospects of excellent corn- | gineer, W. H. Loerpabel, and flew ower rionoree T‘.',L'f;l‘ ;::i 2253 él);:%’: fia".“ i Amcrican League { 487 599 500-1586 ahead through the o the Interior with PAA, on his} A5 r)oxxgin y, July 28 5 uglas, al Won Lost Pet.| Co-operative the q-’ll»trlx'“ “; ’\I\“ ||”| :,xl‘u-“"" way to .Blutl to get operations under | @oy Miss Aileen Karinen, bride-el- Friday, July 28—Moose-Douglas. New York PSRRI T ] 150 187423 R | o . {ect of Bert Bertholl, Mrs. Wilson| Sunday, July 30— Douglas-El Detroit 4 2 667 Zinck 146 133 135—414 eAc ;\,. or et en ; x‘\m By the end of the summer Galvin | aocter will entertain this evening Tuesday I\\‘Au 1-—Moose-Elks. Cleveland 2 2 500{Radde 80 193 197570 ) The crilics are unanimous it | poljeves installation will have been | with a bathroom shower at her home | Friday, Aug. 4—Elks-Douglas, Philadelphia 2 3 400 o the 71"""'“ i “1“' "'P‘:“” ,!‘"l“f“’ completed on a “five or six hundred | on Hermit Avenue. St Auy. 6-Tikb M(‘)‘w‘.' Boston . 2 3 400 42 485 aabao Pl T HiHEh: D GevO D O | o, mAlL.” Chinese checkers will be the main e 1 ot AEls Whshington B85 400)Bennell 1p8 108 L e et Tous feat, of-Baiakad o | beach, and mining may be done with | Guests for the occasion will in- ey G T e St. Louis . 1 2 333 Harper 168 134 o iy R e el e v | the open cut method. | clude; Mrs. Myrtle Lindegard, Mrs. M L AT { Reach 120 160 157437 on 1o venorted. in Atibae alia b o | tnE operkan, will be year around, | Roal Copstead, Mrs. Jack Cremin, ATTENTION O. E. STAR | R b with the ocean expected to furnish | Mrs, Ruth Plant, Miss Roberta Doo- Regular meeting Juneau Chapter | 456 459 463-1378 | x B h o " '7'”4 operating water shoul(j creek levels|ley, Miss Helen Allen, Miss Gerald- No, 7 Tuesday, 8 pm. Initiation | Brunswick |- sink too low in the winter months. | ine Bodding and Miss Helen Junes. d refreshments by Nugget Chap- | Ugrin 170 153490 | Ore in the big body that Galvin - it 5 7k _ter No, 2. e | villaganao 169 ‘spoRISMAN wlll has been seeking development of for ATTENTION REBEKAHS LILLIAN G. WATSON | Mangalao 208 | |many years, runs in values -1rol | Regular meeting Wednesday eve- 5:30 P.M. Schedule for = ~ PresentWeek Thé Pacific Coast League opens| | today on the following schedule for} this week: Oakland at Seattle. | Hollywood at Portland | San Diego at San Prancisco. | Sacramento at Los Angeles. | - Social Meeting |~ Plan fqr £:D. A'- A social meéting will be held to- night by the Catholic Daughters of America at the Parish Hall. All members are urged to attend, the meeting scheduled to start at 8 o'clock. - Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock a meeting of the sewing group will {be held at Parish Hall. D Try an Empire ad TRY US None Better Built? None Better Priced? And Features Galore in the 1939 | GIBSON REFRIGERATORS On Display in Our Salesroom HARRI MACHINE SHOP FIRST! Mariners Set — Course Again | Last Evening Last evening of the third meeting of the newly organized Mariners troop of the Girl Scouts was held at| H.J.BAKER | PIANO TUNING Contemplates only One Week in City the home of their skipper, Mrs. Raino Johnson, at which time work was started on Midshipmite badges, | Barbara Hermann has been select- ed to give a demonstration of how | to use the United States Govern- ment life belt, and Mariners Sue Stewart and Betty Wilcox compose | a committee of two to arrange for a | tour of one of the Alaska Steamship Company's steamers, | Silvia Davis and Betty Wilms, two | recent landlubbers, have joined the | Mariners. | Officers for the Starboard Patrol ! Please call early GASTINEAU HOTEL | Case Lot Grecery | "LOWEST PRICES BY FAR” Phone 704 240 So. Franklin § I i ENUINE Duxbak-made 100% wool Utica hunting and work clothes win every wear- er's satisfaction. Warm, durable, thoroughly shrunk, highly water-repellent. Hunting plaids and other colors. Mackinaws, cruisers, cossack laced pants, caps, hat-caps, socks, . Ask your dealer for gen- uine Utica-Duxbak Clothes. Style Book FREE. “Puxbal. 850 Noyes Street, Utica, N. Y. 205 East Mr. Jesse Newton Duxbak-Newton Shirt Co., Homer, N. Y. Dear Sir, | | And I thought you ought to be | as that. truly yours, (Signed) Harold E. Roy. Scoteh enough to buy Duxbak-Newton Shirts even if not one of the Scotch Roys. (I have some emm—— 0 an Noonan, Juncau, Alaska Representative SuS—-——=— DR. HAROLD E. ROY Brooklyn, New York I have found that you must have a lot of black sheep up there in Central New York, though I didn’t see them when I was there, not even in the Winter of '46 (below). For a time I suspected red ones, but finally managed to eliminate them from the picture. This is a tale of a shirt, one that may not sound new to you,'but I thought it would be interesting enough so that T would make it sound official, The shirt was a red and black plaid (the old Scotch ‘Roy’ plaid) that was purchased from Burns of Homer when he was having a special sale of your produets. Finally tir- ing of red, 1 decided to change its color; having been washed many times without any fading at all, it should have been a | warning to me of the job ahead. - It took three boilings in color remover to take out part of the red; the black didn’t even show a fade after that. Then T boiled | in deep blue dye, and salt pickled to wind up with; which totals a full hour of actual boiling—and when I put on the shirt it is still the good full size 16 it was when new. Made on the Square to be sure. 17th St. Aug. 29, 1938, told the tale of a shirt as good light wools as well as the heavy ones, and they are just as good.) . . | Dan Noonan, Alaska Revresentative of Duxbak-Newton Shirt Corp.

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