The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 9, 1939, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1939. POLLY AND HER PALS By LB S JESS LOCK OURSELVES IN.-- AEBUDDY'S WNSTAIRS / 0 PLENTY O 3 PLAGUE <TAKE-=IT TITMOUSE I THOUGHT YuH HAD National League Won Lost 15 Pet 667 595 511 500 500 457 419 333 SEATILE 15 LOSER:BASE HIT WANTED | Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Brooklyn | New York | Bcston Philadelphia | American |New vork ! Boston Los Angeles Can't Swat cuicaco Ardizoia and Loses— |petroi Oaks Take Two Philadelphia Washington A 31 | Gastineau Channel League | Won Lost a Elks {3 to Moose SR | 4 Ascociated Press) by (By For war a I attle lost an aneisco last night 1 twice in the ad the loac hit in ther ALY The Rain- ! Douglas 2 ninth in- | > d with Catcher Bud was th the Rai base n »d out. It at for aight de niers Holiy - Los An- He did until the of the s tentn the hit hit ugger Ard wood Stars, W last night by n I limitin t> four ingle yund a b1 four ramento f punch and pounded hurle 20 hits [} batting rs for land defeated San Diego yesterday in San Diego. nonc GAMES THURSDAY Pacific Cs: wue d 6 ento 16 1 10; Lo Angele 1 le 3; San Prancisco 4 and 10, 7; San Diego 8, 3 National League Chicago 3; New York 5 Boston 2; Pittsburgh 0. Cincinnati 3; Philadelphia 2 American League Boston 8; St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 4 9! Lode and placer location notices The Empire Office. Clev Z land 7. STANDING OF CLUBS i (Official Standings) Pacific Coast League Won Lost 42 Pet Angeles 600 ti1 — Le | Fetie Hurls To Victory )| e Tigers Have Two Casual- ties in One Inning-Di- Maggio Has Great Day (By Associated Press) Pet.| 1ou Fette celebrated his recent -800 | mnarriage by letting Pittsburgh down 400 | with three hits yesterday, which 333 | put the Boston Bees in the win | Cincinnati won 3 s’ duel | between Paul Der r and Hugh . Mulcahy before a crowd of 16,000 efroitGefs - | Fred the De- | troit Tigers, hed his knee sliding into sccond base re on en yesterday and Bill Rogell, short- | stop, was spiked on the index fin- Both casuslties occurred in the st ing but the Tigers we EUGENT, Ore., June 9 gl \d defeated Philadelp seniors on the championship Uni-| DiMagg a homer, double and of Oregon baseball team have | single to lead the Yankees in the igned contracts with Detroit and |second straight triumph over the | will report for trials June 12 | Chicago White Sox yesterday. The The players were Bob Hardy. @ |last part of the game was played in seuthpaw who won eight games and | the rain los in assisting the Webfoots| The Boston Red Sox defeated the win the Northern Division Pacific | St. Louis Browns yesterday. Tw Coast Conference title; Gale Smith. | homers by Jimmy Foxx and anoth first base, and Ford Mullen, second | by Lou Finney drove in six runs. base. | T Although no figures were an- | i A A 2 e nounced, it was understood they| WEP AT WRANGELL TODAY would receive bon ranging, from| ., Min: BEliy, Bawes and: Giaimo A0 1 S1an toTe E. Henning will wed this afternoor e e {at Wrangen the Presbyterian s e Vo e Church. Following the ceremony Hirly A et s s ;pllb!:r reception will be held in the of the national championship Ore- | CHUrch parlors gon basketball team | N - YTICE Skagway, Alaska, Ju 7. 1929 will not responsible for any debts contracted in my name ex- cept by myself personally adv. HOWARD YETTER 565 SWEDISH SATURDAY AT THE 557 473 San Francisco Oakland Hollywood San Diego Sacramento Portland THE STORE WILL BE CROWDED WITH BARGAINS IN HIGH QUALITY GROCERIES . . . COME AND LOOK FOR YOUR- SELF ... YOU WILL BE SURPRISED AT THE SAVINGS YOU CAN MAKE ... , Saturday, Monday and Tuesday BUY LIKE THIS AT THE C0-0P! FANCY TTER 2 POUNDS 3>9¢ Silverdale 2 cans TOMATOES 23¢ Size No. 22 Tender, Sweet CORN 3 cans 27c Schilli g e 93 Score Heinz SQUPS all kinds. ... 2for 27¢ CIGARETTES - - - - -Carton $1.19 Luckies—Chesterfields—Camels WOOL SOAP—BOB WHITE 3 BUNCHES " CARROTS ) WATCH US GROW! THRIFT C0-OP PHORE 767 10 POUNDS SUGAR a9¢ MOOSETOPLAY | Musto Drops DOUGLAS SQUAD russ S the field | last the | ol It wasn't raining, but was too wet for a ball game night between the Elks and Moose, and so three games in row go on the postponed record. Tonight, on the regular schedule, the Moose are to meet Douglas. Weatherman Howard J. Thompson says it looks favorabie—but ball ers will decide ck. CHICAGO, Ill, June 9. Tony Musto, young Italian heavyweight, | last night dropped a ten round de- cision to Gunnar Barlund of Fin- land. It was Musto's second defeat in 29 bouts. se, Sl BB A POOR LUCK ON GREENS. GIVES at 5 - (CALLS HALT T0 GALENTO STUNT Tony Just éu}ls and Cuffs Sparring Partners Around Ring ABURY PARK, N. J, June 9 Jacobs had to call a halt Tony Galento's boxing today after allenger had butted and cuffed his sparring partners around | before a crowd of 500 spectators. : - in National Open by Three Strokes doe Ol | PHILADELPHIA, Pa. June 9 Defending champion Ralph Gul- dahl's rebellious putter tricked him today into a four over par 73 in the second round of the National Open. The bad putting round gave Gul- dahl a 36-hole score of 144, three strokes behind Craig Wood, leading the field with nearly two-thirds of the roster in. - The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. the ¢l CARD OF THANKS With deep gratitude we wish to thank our friends and the staff of | tha St. Ann’s Hospital for their | kindness and sympathy shown us in the loss of wife and mother. HENRY ANDERSON and CHILDREN. Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Babbin Cosss HOLLYWOOD, Cal., June 9.—The toast of Hollywood today (for a lovely performance in “Goadbye, Mr. Chips”) is Greer Gar- son of London, a red-haired, green-eyed young woman who has the town on its ear. She is a discovery of the where-has-she-been type—meaning that is what producers always say when a picture reveals a star they didn’t know about before. The answer, as you've doubtless heard, is that Miss Garson was here for a year, under contract to Metro, before Director Sam Wood happily thought to look at one of her old tests with the “Chips” role in view. Miss Garson is a serious actress and a gay, clever young per- She lives with her mother in a Beverly Hills bungalow— their third since Greer’s arrival from three years of triumph on the London stage—and the two of them are a smart and merry pair. son Born in Ireland, Greer had no shamrocks-and-wild-roses life. Her father died when she was one; when Greer grew up and won a scholarskip (London University) she took her degree and forgot about acting because business offered immediate money. Mother * was a great sport about it when Greer, who had always wanted to act, chucked the job and talked her way into repertory. Soon she was knocking at London's formidable gates, and savings were running low. “We never had any dramatic poverty,” she put it. “I never had to sell violets or warm my hands by matches while the cold winds blew—but we had the more limiting kind of circumstances, the sort that tempts one to stay in the safe rut and take no e - D e we can serve you better NOW —our newly rebuilt kitchen and paniry enable us to improve that service to our diners on which - we have always prided ourselves. ‘ PERCY’S ] { Corrrrrrree chances. That's where mother was such a help; she never tried to swerve me from the stage, although we had always been a strictly untheatrical family.” The break came with an unsuccessful play, “The Golden Ar- row,” in which Greer began collecting the critical flowers that bloom in her scrap-book garden today. Miss Garson (and mother, too) will learn some day what Hollywood already knows: that she couldn't have had a better introduction to film fans than “Chips” has given her. If she had played the first role considered for her, in support of Luise Rainer in “The Toy Wife,” she might have found herself just an- other actress with “possibilities.” If sHe had had the publicity build-up usually arranged, she'd have had to live up to it—a task that another Metro actress, Hedy Lamarr, is wrestling now. As it is, Greer Garson slips in through the back door of fame, catching the fans by surprise, playing a role in itself radiant and heartful and ingratiating. It's a small role, true, but it is one of the several memorable things in the film. And that's the way stars are born for the screen—the way Hedy Lamarr burst into stardom with “Algiers.” Unlike Hedy, Greer has her certain path ahead. She is going into “Susan and God,” her first starring picture, based on the Gertrude Lawrence stage success. Greer's comment: “It's a grand part. I feel rather ridiculous playing it—because the opening night here I told Gertie she was the only one who could do it for pictures. And maybe she still is!” HULL DERN COMMUNITY / Ten Rounder CLIFF STERRETT SO'D TH' 9 Al o’ Fun! SATURDAY NIGHT at the Elks PUBLIC DANCE KLONDY’S ORCHESTRA Admission $1.00 O [ Juneau, Alaska, June 7, 1939. SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and tion, under date of May 29, 1939, 148, | gave authority to change the name jof gas screw DONNA G. to HYAK Said vessel was built in 1929 at Seattle, Wash.: her official number is 228275; her gross tonnage is 14; { her home port, Juneau; owners, G | F. Freeburger and J. S. MacKinnon, ! Juneau, Alaska JAMES J. CONNORS, Collector of Customs. First publication June 7, 1939. | Last publication, June 10, 1939. P R0 The Book ALASKA, | Enlarged, Now On S: - - Revised and e; $1.00, ELECTRIC RANGES REFRIGERATORS LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT WATER HEATERS at S| pice & Ahlers Co. Seattle Brewmg X Haltng Lo s Sl e Third and Franklin PHONE 34 GEORGE BROS. $10.00 Coupon Book $9.50 $20.00 Coupon Book $19.00 Just Received—Shipment OF CANADIAN MEATS on PRINCESS LOUISE HAMS — BACON — PIG SAUSAGE . AT NO ADVANCE IN PRICES! BABY BEEF POT ROAST 25¢ GROUND BEEF oa.x rouno 23 € RAW SHRIMP TO FRY . .. GO¢ FLUFFO BULK 2 i 29¢ PORK CHOPS Diamond Back RATTLESNAKE MEAT $1.49 FROGLEGS - - - - - - - - - fin%c PEANUT BUTTER . 2 i 33€ - BATH TISSUE . 4 ..25€ WAX PAPER 200-FootRolls ... ......... .2»11. 65(2 GRAPEFRUIT JUICE -2 - 49¢ ORANGE — GRAPEFRUIT- TOMATO JUICES 10 - 95¢ NUB”RA ncncsl”é- TUNA FLAKES | NEW DELIVERY SERVICE STARTING MONDAY—10:30 A. M., 1:30, 3, &30 P. M. GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92-95 PHONES 92-95

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