The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 5, 1939, Page 5

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POLLY AND HER PALS YUP ! PAW AN' ME HAS BIN LIVIN' IN WEDLOCK FER AT LEAST THAT LONG. THIRTY YEARS ! DEAR ME ! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUN ACQUAINTED WITH HIM?2 WHEN DID You FIRST BECOME A HOOSE Wi YESTERDAY Douglas Goes Down, 12 fo §-Many Hits, Many Errors Made The Moose pulled up in the Chan- nel League standings yesterday eve- ning in & wild nine-inning mix with Douglas, winning 12 to 8. The Moose garnered 14 Douglas’ 12 and scored in while the Islande innings with en started t ne for Doug- las, but after getting knicked for three walks, seven hits and six runs, l hiis to six in- ad only tal 88 turned over the hox to Erskine in | the fifth inning, who in turn, drop- | E ped five hits and six runs with one walk. { The home Moose also garnered ¢wo | runs, Joe Snow clonting one the fence with Lawson and ard in the eighth in- | le Joe Werner slapped one h in e ninth inning to s trailing, 12 to 5 in' of the ninth when but three runs they could push Douglas w t frame ame to bat, as many as across. Out of thos d I Paps making glas seven runs, Moose € earned thi the six errors ani Dc The box score and summary is as follo FREDA SAVONA scored 15 points a game as Polish Fil- ® grets beat many men's basketball teams. 9,:1939 Ty By CLIFF STERRETT “TH' VERY FIRST TIME I SHOWED HM TH' HOWSE - HOLD BiLLS / THEY PLAY MEN'S GAMES——AND THEY OFTEN WIN AT IT, T00 Seals and Stars Split Double - Games Sunday ““«y' MRS. LELA AM- { MON HALL, trap- ! shooter, frequently defeats masculine champs in shoot- ing matches. Sealtle Rainiers Confinue Runner-up fo Angels of Los Angeles (By Associated Press) Twenty-two thousand fans, an ob- servation crowd, probablv iiie largest ever to turn out to a game here, Zan Francisco divide a double- header with Hoiiywood on Sunday at the Bay City grounds. The oc- casion for the large attendance was the annual Lefty O'Doul Day in hon- or of the Seals' popular manager. The Seals won the opener by pushing over two rune in the eighth inning on four hits. Hollywood won the nightcap on the smooth pitching of Rugger Ardizoia. Los Angeles could get no better than a split with the Oakland bunch Sunday. Jimmy “Ripper” Collins, Chicago Cubs' outcast, wrecked out a home run in each game, lifting nis total for the season to 16. A home run by Centerfielder Lawrence with one on in the sixth inning of the second game gave Seattle a victory over Sacramento Sunday after the Solons had won the first game. In an eleven-inning game, San Diego knocked over Portland but the second game was postponed on account of rain. saw B w5 Ix,m\ Davis and Miss Francis Kar~ inen were presented with white Rainbow Bibles for selling the the perfc badge most !Rainbow Delegate . To Grand Assembly | Is ElededflSaturday Mary ickets year merit hw during worksshe had done he past term, For the purpose of balloting Miss Stewart was ¢ 1 to Ass rls to n 1 meeut night at attend the Grand held Saturday the Order held in July Do Ut next of Tudnbow | & il Wois a - For somethmg -different” bake gingerbread in a large sheet, and, while warm, spread sliced ba- \ frost 1t quickly ve with- smbly of be and Miss ed as ting Saturc Rainbow coltish Rite renort n the School," sponsored recently by the Jly, was given, and Miss Ann elec it The Book ALASKA, Revised and nlarged, Now On Sale; $L00, 3 g RED was his face as well as his name when Russeli “Red Evans (right), rookie now with the Dodgers by way of New Or- leans, recenily overlooked Pep- per Martin who stole home to give the Cardinals a 1-0 vietory | over the Brooklynites. [ | | | i | I l MRS. BOB SEEDS, wife of a major- . league plaver, is baseball’s only woman business manager. She runs' the Amarillo (Tex.) club. @ = IMOOSE F. Schmitz, 2b. (E. Lawson, 2b. Haglund, 1f. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Oakland 7, 9; Los Angeles 10, 7. Sacramento 11, 3; Seattle 9, 4. - ALICE ABBOTT is the first co-ed to play varsity ten- - Grummett If. Martin, cf. [Snow, 1b. Marfkuardt Orme, r Converse, :Browns Win . Double Game; Tigers Lose |Red Ruffinfiurls 6-Hit- ter on Sunday for Eighth Victory (By Associated Press) S8, rf. 3b. B! , C. Smith, p. oW ComocOoRMRO NN R | Crmommmpn IR | 1 Totals DOUGLAS TS o Roller, 2b. [Manning, 3b. Niemi, cf. »1‘\:‘ b memmaewo 0N wavvowamw e B mrommuponER | o e 8 14 27 20 Summary | Moose 5, Douglas 3; | Smith 1, Jensen 3,| The St. Louis Browns swept a : Turner; | doubleheader Sunday in spite of the home runs: Snow, Werner; double fact that their victims, the Wask ¢ Marquardt, Schmi ington Senators, made three hom- , Turner, Andrews; wild pitch- ' ers. The Browns came from behind Jensen 1; struck out: by Smith | both times to w'n. 4, Jensen 4, Erskine 6; left on bas The Yanke [Moose 8, Douglas 9; errors: Schmitz, (Grummett, Marquardt, Werner 3,| Detroit on Sunday. Turner 2, Andrews 2, Gribble, Jen-| Red Ruffing scored his sen. Iffert; scorer: Gil Prucha; time of | Sunday which he game: 2 hours, 55 minutes. 'to Johnny Murphy in the eighth Totals Earned run ases on balls [Erskine 1; three-base h eighth tri- | he pitche “damb—that | which you have s forged the fifth link | in a new victory chain by beating [Auarter of a teaspoon of oil of pep- frame because ¢ finger injury The day's outstanding pitching peformance was another 6-hitter by Bob Feller. Lefty Grove quieted the Tribe in the second section of the double- header with seven-hit twirling. The Chicago White Sox and the Philadelphia Athletics split a doubleheader. There were 35 hits made in the first game and 24 more in the second. Cincinnati resumed the trium- phant tour in the National League by belting the Giants and forcing Carl Hubbell out of the box after to three men. The Chicago Cubs crammed six runs - into the first three innings | Sunday to beat the Phillies. R Minted pears with roast veal or something! Simmer canned pears added a few drops of green coloring and a third of a cup of granulated sugar for each | two cups of juice. Add an eighth of teaspoon of cinnamon and a four the min- pears cooking remove permint. After utes, carefully Roller; umpires: Nowell and|umph wi‘h a six-hit pitching job |and let them cgol on a platter, had to turn over | Tod: Today—Empire, THREE LITTLE FISHES swam right by Paul Tullar, 13, when he tried his luck in a stream near his Chafee, N. Y., home, but see how his patience was rewarded. He snagged this huge jawbone, and Geologist Irving R. Reimann of Buffalo identified it as an authentic mastodon relic. “Some catch,” agree Paul and Mrs, Reimann as thev examine tha 5.000-vear-old hana Skagway and Juneau Play Even Series Bearded Visitors Take First | Game-Locals Win Sunday Skag /'s ball players came down to Juneau in one of the largest air- craft in the north Saturday and | moth eaten uniforms, bearded, and wearing painters’ hats—but showed they knew a lot about baseball when they split a two-game series with Juneau. The first game, Saturday after-| ncon, Skagway started the game | with a lone tally in the first inning |and came back in the second to | play merry-go-round with the Ju-| |neau snappily-dressed until five | more runs had crossed the plate k From that inning on, with Kim- !ball and Turner relieving Foster it the pitchers’ box, Skagway was held scoreless, but Juneau did no la run until the seventh and eighth inning and couldn’t close the gap. Yesterd Juneau came back to trounce the Skagway squad, nine to six and drive one pitcher from the mound. | Kimball started the game for the Juneau squad, dropped five hits and two runs in four innings, then turned over to Turner, who gave three hits and as many runs in one inning, while Converse pitched the last four innings with one hit-one hall Hit of the game was homer in the fourth inning nobody aboard. Again a difficult sun in a cloud- less sky, made ball handling dif- ficult. Skagway's ball team looked like a page out of yesteryear, with most of the team adorned with luxuriant beards in celebration of Skagway's mass staging of Days of '98 party for the coming National Editorial Asso- ciation conventicn cruise, but there wasn't any doubt in anybody’s mind that Skagway bhas t of clean playing, fast ball players- all good sports. The box scores are as follews: | Haglur witl FIRST GAME £l v AB B. Anderson, 1b L. Selmer, ¢ G. Blanc iu. Blanchard, cf | Erskine, 2b 2| Wednesday evening 1| been seen since 10 0 2[ on the waterfront, W. Price O. Selmer Olsen, 1f p 1 0 0 0 Lee, 0 Totals Juneau Foster, p Kimball, p Turner, p 0 Marquardt, ss £ 1 Koshak, rf 1 Snow, 1b 0 0 Hautala, 2b 3 1 Werner, 3b E 1 Henning, cf 0 Ellensberg, cf Gribble, rf-c Haglund, rf Addleman, ¢ 8 H 0 0 in their juice 1 (ook the field at Firemen's Park in| motals = = SECC B. Anderson, 1b L. Selmer, c-cf-p G. Blanchard, 2b B. Blanchi , p-ef Price, ss 0. Selmer, Mageau, rf Rapuzzi, 3b Lee, cf-c . > 1 2 2 1 1 it 1 Totals Juneau Haglund, clf \farquardt, 2b Hautala, 2b Petersen, MacSpadden, Werner, 3b Grant, ¢ Blake, ¢ . Kimball, p Turner, cf-p Converse, rf-p Whiting, cf Mailer, rf Gr¥mmett, rf » e Priads DR N DR R 0 0 1 9 H 1 2 1b 0 ol omorccocorvoco~wlal vocoo: Totals & 3 D HOPE FADING FOR FINDING MISSING BOY Pursuing the for missing Ted Tanaka, 9, Chief of Police Dan Ralston, Mayor Harry Lucas and Assistant Fire Chief Will- | med out a 1ot /iam Niederhauser were making the | rounds of abandoned buildings in Juneau today. No further clues have been un- covered as to the boy’s whereabouts y remains unclaimed. Young Tanaka disappeared last and h: ock that night 0, San Francisco 0| Oakland 2| san Diego 1 Hollywood 1/ Portland - ‘1) Sacramel 0 Cincinnati 0. 8t. Louis 0 pittsburgh | Brooklyn f*se-day-old search | |and the $500 reward for his discov-| Hollywood 7, 4; San Francisco 9, 3. San Diego 8; Portland 4. Second 1 game postponed on account of rain. National League Cincinnati 4; New York 1. Pittshburgh 7, 1; Brooklyn 3, 14, Chicago 9; Philadelphia 4. American League Bosten 2, 7; Cleveland 10, 1. ps | SOAP TEST FOR PLANES is used at the Boeing plan( ! in Seattle where a soap film is spread (above) over metal seams | while air_pressure is built up inside the cabin, Any leak is in- | dicated by soap bubbles; leaks are then sealed. Philadelphia 9, 11; Chicago 14, 6. New York 8; Detroit 4. Washington 4, 3; St. Louis 5, 11. Special Game Juneau All-Stars 9; Skagway 5. Gastineau Channel League Moose 12; Douglas 8. GAME SSATURDAY Pacific Coast weague Cakland 4; Los Angeles 2. Hollywood 7; San Francisco 8, ten 0 innings. Seattle-Sacramento, rain. San Deigo 3; Portland 5. National League Chicago 10; Brooklyn 5. Pittsburgh 10; Philadelphia 7. Cincinnati 3; Boston 4. St. Leuis 5; New York 6. American League Philadelphia 5, 8; St. Louis 3, 6. Washington 7; Chicago 8. Boston-Detroit postponed, rain. New York 3; Cleveland 2. Special Game Skagway 6; Juneau All-Stars 5. *STANDING OF CLVBS (Official Standings) Pacific Coast League Won Lost 41 26 39 27 36 31 .. 30 34 .28 33 - 30 36 27 35 i 26 35 National League Won Lost 28 14 23 16 22 19 22 19 19 Pct. 612 591 537 469 459 455 Los Angeles Seattle | Chicago New York | Boston +| Philadelphia | American | | New York | Boston Chicago Cleveland Philadelphia Detroit Washington 15 | 8t. Louis 13 Gastineau Channel League Won Lost 4 1 2 3 2 4 —— .- —— Pet. 800 400 .333 | Elks | Moose | Douglas ‘summer slip covers sce that the |furniture has been well aired and lcleaned to remove any traces of moths. Before you put on your furniture | THEIR FIRST HONEYMOON takes Orchestra Lead- er Ozzie Nelson and Singer Harriet Hilliard out of New York with their young son, David Ozzie. Married in October, 1935, they de- clare that they've never had time for a honeymoon—what with | band contracts, personal appearances and film engagements. Nel- | son is a native of Jersey City; his wife hails from Des Moines, Ia. A Visit from The Boss | | | G . | | i United States Attorney General Frank Murphy (right) visits Vine H. Smith, United States attorney for the Kastern District of New York, Auring the aztorney geneval’s tour. of inspection in New York and Brook- lyn for a checkup on the investigulivn of the Iudululvi.lld}cl;ng. |

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