The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 10, 1939, Page 5

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CHATTER, CHATTER ., L~—kCHATTER E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT THAT'S ONE THING MY WIFE NEVER DOES --- GOossIP! V: Seattle Is Winner ii Los Angeles Pennant - bound Club Is Thumped - Home Runs by Oaks Defeat Solons (By Associated Press) Los Angeles, pennant-bound on! a couple of weeks ago, took anothe thumping last night when they we beaten by = the second-place St team by a score of 12 to openin ame of this Bill I e a got homers for Seattle | A ninth-inning rally s Diego a victory over Hollywood yes- terday afternoon. ' San Francisco overcame a three- run Portland lead last night in the seventh and eighth innnings to de- feat the Beavers. Three homers over the left fence aided the Oaks in de the Solons last night. g gd week'’s George Archie gave field TUESDAY Coast League San Diego 9. San Francisco 4 ; Sacramento Los Angeles 5 jonal League Cincinnati 8; Philadelphia 4. St. Louis 13; Brooklyn 1. Chicago 11; New Yo Pittsburgh-Boston, rain. American League New York 8; Chicago 6 Boston 10; St. Louis 8 Other scheduled games rained out Pac Hollywood ¢ Portland Oakland Seattle 12; 1. P G OF CLUBS c Coast League Won Lost 24 22 21 19 18 17 16 15 National League Won Los 10 6 9 Pet 615 564 538 500 486 Los Angeles Seattle San Francisco Hollywood San Diego amento Portland Oakland Cincinnati St. Louis Brooklyn Boston Chicago New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh American League Won Lost 10 11 11 Pt 14 688 611 438 438 Boston New York Chicago St. Louis Washington Cleveland Philadelphia Detroit -+ - FREAK HIT RUINS PERFECT GAME BID White Sox pitching in| Ind, Industrial League, two rs ago, he all but pitched a no-hitter. Not a hif was made by the opposition unti¥ with| two out in the ninth inning. He had the batter two and two. The next pitch was high and inside. The bats- man fell away and as he did so, the ball hit his bat and bounded over the first baseman’s head. The next batter was easy. - HOME PARK NO AID DECLARE BATTERS pitching recruit, was the Hammond NEW YORK, May 10.—Maybe it’s true that playing on the home grounds helps the batting , but in 43 of the 83 shutouts recorded in the National League last year, the home club was the one getting whitewashed. e CLEVELAND'S PARK SMALLEST IN LOOP CLEVELAND, May 10—The In- dians have the smallest park in the gues and also the largest mallest is League Park which ,000; the largest is Munici- | Stadium, which seats 78,811. S e Try results. The Empire classifieds for | CUBS BEAT GIANTS IN FRE: Y P A ) 7 ,er" [ e - A Mered ic MCwWers—keus Win by Home Runs (By » Chicago Cubs w York Giants weird ball game with the Cubs Asscciated Press) defeated yesterday in o the first four innings and addi three in the sixth to see the Giar come back and tie it in their of the same inning. T clinch ed the decision in the ¢ The St. Louis Cardinal Freddy Fitzsimmons yest showers in then went on to defe Two ho by Ber by McCormick gave the Cincinnat Reds a victory over the Phillies The put on a ninth-i ning 1a erday to defeat White Sox Theo Williams' homer yesterd afternoon, with two men on b gave the Red Sox a victory over th St. Louis Browns. - HIRST MINE FOREMAN RETURNS AFTER TWO less than yes OLD HEADS AT THE GAME of baseball, now in its 100th year, are Connie Mack (left), Philadelphia Athletics’ man- ager, and Clark Griffith, owner of the Washington Senators. The two veterans are shown as their teams met in the first 1939 re- wewal of their rivalry. BOLIVIA, GOING - TOTALITARIAN IS TOUGH FOR U. §. One) = rrom Page | ost hat is one of Busch MONTHS' VACATION =~ Willard G Hirst C 3 esterday ¢ by plar at June: M1 pent and M Vancouver Island att Mrs. Gallemore is outh for another month her parents, Mr, and M S in Nanaimo, B. C montl nd remainin visitir ing on in Se 1gic - D EVERY WOMAN FOR PEACE (AP) to WINNIPEG hould be ganization V Mi Every ome peace Mary Boliert of Van er, President of the Pan-Ame can Peace Union, told ¢ club women here - -ea Try The Empire classifieds fo: results. for peac Live 5;/'01/ ANHEUSER-BUSCH Makers of the World-Famous C-10 Pete womai 2 definite program | the up of EMPTY POCKETS | Another is the desperate impover- hment h from the ruitless Chaco war with of country Busch will | anism W time. He hange companies reign exchan port mineral United vill be has jim control to d e po as an Ameri- mining corporation owns the of the tin mi there whick reent of the world’s tin. controls are the America rather than Socuth American re- - | hublics have been using that totali- 5 1 device for 1 years. It to keep wealth at home. So far the change in Bolivia is 1l in a name, totalitarian, which tasted good in these parts | vecently. * South se T | hasn't Supt. Alexander Orders School Fire Drill A fire d Juneau Publ 2 , held today at the Schools, much to the of both the faculty and nts. The drill was the first cial act performed by Acting Su- e Forrest Alex- (The full name Senior announcement 3 official was busily sing at his desk in the High )1 office this morning.) xander, along with other mem- of the DeMolay, took over the government today and he is perintendent of Schools. - w intendent ander, Jr. oticed on hi h the yot DREAMS OF DISAST LIVERPOOL, land (AP)—A woman who said she still dreamed of a ship collision two years ago in which she was pinned upright by debris, wa rded £1,800 ($8.478) in an action against a steamship R e e il | “GOOD OLD— CORNED BEEF & CABBAGE for Lunch Tomorrow at the BARANOF Those who burn the candle at both ends are borrowing tomorrow’s pleasures for today. If a candle had three ends they’d burn them all. Then, there’s the fellow who never lights his candle at all. He’s bluffed by his fears of tomorrow. . The destiny of our America depends upon those who can see today’s needs clearly . . . who ean await tomorrow with confidence. Such was the spirit of our gallant fore- fathers. Had they burned the candle at both ends, or, had they failed to burn it at all...they would have accomplished nothing. Instead, they left us a priceless heritage . . . a land and opportunities that other nations envy. 7 golden drop Budweiser MAKE THIS TEST A o prINKk Budweiser FOR FIVE DAYS. ON THE SIXTH DAY TRY TO DRINK A SWEET BEER. YOU Witt waNT Budweiser’s FLAVOR THEREAFTER. COPR. 1938, ANHEUSER. BUSCH, INC. 7. Louis, Mo, was | WOT DOES YOUR WIEE CALL 1T/ ALASKA SPORTSMAN FOR JUNE ISSUED :lafe Pat Hoileood Has | Interesting Story Re- ; garding Guide's Work 1 2 What | besides a guide does in the field the hunter the and an interesting guide to game story of {anv hunting trip is told in | Guide's Story {lywood in the June number of The | Alaska Sportsman, just issued Pat Hollywood of the ! foremost guides of Southes Al- ‘aska before he lost his life recently at Ketchikan in a fall from a lad- Ider. The story is illustrated with nine very atira photographs Another featured article in the magazine is “Anchorage Fur Auc- !tion” by Joseph Lester in which the activities of the Fur Rendez- veus are told in a vivid manner. One can almost see the bidding on the 50,000 worth of furs as it was car-' 1 on at the auction, and picture ithe other attractions at the event almost as though one were present “Teller Fréeze-Up” is an unusual story by D. L. Sancrant which des- cribes how the motorship Sierra was nearly frozen-in while unloading at Teller, Alaska, when the ice rose around them from the depths. “Outdoors at Ohogamute” by Inez E. Moore, describes life at this little | Yukon River village and how one by the late Pat Hol- was on? is ive | | woman occupied her time in trap- ping Other fact stories include “On a Summer’s Day™ by Mrs. Maxcine Williams, wife of V. F. Williams guide at Juneau; “Earthquakes and Windstorms,” the seventh of Ken- neth L. Cohen’s Letters of a King Cove School Teacher; “From Ket- chikan to Barrow,” “Flora of Al- aska” and “Forests and Trails,” by Wellman Holbrook. The cover is a reproduction of a photograph of three black bear cubs and the fron- tispiece shows the entrance to the ‘Glacier Mine” at Hyder. >+ STAMP (OLLECTORS' MAIL GOING ABOARD ATLANTIC CLIPPER F flight covers for regular Transatlantic air mail service may be sent by stamp collectors to the Postmaster at New York City, under . with a request that they be d for the first flight, it was an- ncunced today through Albert Wile, Juneau Postmaster. It is not known yet just when the first flight will be made or what route will be flown. Rate of postage is 30 cents per half ounce, which includes service to any point in Europe., A special cachet will be used at New York. Covers may be addressed to the sender’s home ad- dress. - s classifieds for results. The Empire | NATION'S OLD-TYPE OILS WONT DO~ Lubricants. ed...now found deficient for modern * motors. Standard answers with a new KIND of oil, the 1939 “RPM" = built ——y— formerly recom for today’s operating conditions. * ® A newly completed Repair-Shop Survey, by an independent research company shows that in modem cars brought in for repairs, 77% of the oil-return passages in oil rings are clogged vasnish formation), and with sludge, with gum (the first stage carbon, and other deposits. type oil, we're going to d justice—by sayi TODAY’S NO.1 MOTOR OIL “BUY"! mend- rown Seven hiskey Blende Seagram’s own [Phiskies CROWNS TUSTE BETTER BECAUSE THEYRE MASTER RLENDED SEAGRAM'S 7 CROWN BLENDED WHISKEY. 60% neutral spirits distilled fro *from 0 Proof SEAGRAM'S 5 CROWN BLENDED WHISKEY. 7216% neutral spirits distil arains. 90 Proof. Seagram-Distillers Corp., New York. A 10T OF PROTECTION FOR A LITTLE More and more home-owners are coming to realize that fire is not the only hazard they have lo worry about. That's why so many are taking advantage of the “whole- sale” protection afforded by the Extended Coverage En- dorsement, which covers damage by windstorm, hail, explosion, falling aircraft, “wild" vehicles, riot and smoke. You'll be amazed to learn how little it Office—New York Life SHATTUCK AGENCY “ Telephone 249 | ?MOTOR EXPERTS are facing problems today that oils, once favored in spite of higher prices, cannot answer. | These experts report that modern motors, with their new metals and new metal finishes, close-fitting parts, tiny openings for oil flow, high compressions, high speeds, and high tempera- tures, punish oil as never before. That brings up a brand-new problem! Varnish may form, sticky at first and soon baking to a hard film. Pistons and piston rings stick. Oil grooves clog. Friction increases. Motor drag develops. En- gines are hard to start. They lose power and consume extra gasoline. “Engine varnish” is no problem with “RPM”. Our engineers threw away old production methods —definitely planned a new KIND of oil. We knew about the varnish problem. We employed new oil-manufacturing methods. We have just completed a new $3,500,000 plant and have made “RPM” today’s most modern motor oil. ' “RPM” has all the long mileage you ever found in any oil,—plus the new qualities that keep it clean and keep your engine clean under the punishment of today’s operating conditions. Try “RPM”, the NEW KIND of motor oil. . “RPM”’ gives your motor new advantages OIL MILEAGE —Un- GREATER POWER — surp: by any oil, Because your motor —regardless of source. stays clean. NO HARD CARBON STABILITY —"“RPM” —And use of “RPM”’ has much greater re- will reduce existing sistance to change than carbon deposits from ordinary high-grade former oils. oils. QUICK STARTING—And “RPM" reduces engine wear with its instant flow of oil. y WE BREAK A TRADITION By tradition, Standard Oil advertising is conservative—it un- derstates the merits of the products advertised. Because & new kind of motor oil is so necessary today and because this NEW KIND of motor oil, STANDARD OIL COMPANY- OF CALIFORNIA

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