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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT POLLY AND HER PALS MY NEW FISHIN'= SOMETHING . WRONG, ASH?2 A GALLON O CIDER, <=+ batti game National League Won Lost 30 40 40 43 43 45 47 57 ‘ Cincinnati | st. Louts | Pittsburgh | Chicago | Brooklyn < REDSTAKE = BOTH ENDS 483 460 56 46 i | defea | back 40 313 TWOGAMES _; |and 33 Wins for Cards ted Press) Frenchy Bordagary's single in the| eleventh inning of the nightcap of yesterday’s doubleheader gave Cm»‘ cinnati both ends of the twin con- test with the Boston Bees. | Harry Craft, Frank McCormick, | Max West and Al Simmons got) The following are scores of base- | jn the seventh inning of the game ago. ball games played this afternoon in | yesterday afternoon to give the Qu the two Major Leagues: National League the Giants. ’ Birthday Won't Win Even Manager 33rd birthday was not a sufficient for t incentive yesterday to pull the Boston 17; Ptitsburgh 1. {to ki American League St. Louis 11; Boston 6. Chicago 1; New York 2. Detroit 0; Philadelphia 3. e ATEN | New York | Boston S E N ATORS Philadelphia American League ‘ | Lost Pet. S | New York 25 19 H 32 632 Win Puts Sacramenfo Info| Besten R Tie with San Francisco | gieveiand -- E i Washington 56 398 for Thlrd Spo' Philadelphia 54 .3’19! T | st. Louis 64 213 (By Associated Press) ‘ Sacramento made it two straight Gastineau Channel League yesterday over the Pacific Coast (Second Half) League's leading Seattle when Tony Won Lost Pet. Freitas out-pitched Bill Walker. poyglas 5 2 14 Sacramento is now tied with San ggg 4 2 667/ Francisco for second place honors. npoose 1 6 143 The Solons have won 21 out of the il i iy, i last 25 games played. | Jess Flores, Los Angeles fresh- man righthander, completely sub- dued San Francisco last night, giv- ing the Angels a victory in a see- saw game in which seven pitchers paraded to the mound. Portland defeated San Diego and rookie Al Olson is charged with the loss. Oakland made it two straight shutouts over Hollywood as vet- eran Ben Cantwell humbled the Stars. ‘ = BRI | The Book ALASKA, Revised and with the Cubs. )denr“ Snap Losing Streak - | Enlarged, Now On Sale: $1.00. The Phillies made a courageous GAMES THURSDAY I Pacific Coast League | Seattle 1; Sacramento 2. | Oakland 4; Hollywood 0. | Los Angeles 2; San Francisco 0. Portland 8; San Diego 6. National League Philadelphia 9; Pittsburgh 8. Brooklyn 1; Chicago 3. Boston 1, 8; Cincinnati 6, 9. New York 4; St. Louis 3. American League Chicago 12; Boston 7. Detroit 8; Washington 1. —and enjoy Kentucky’s “Double-Rich’’straight Bourbon! STANDING OF CLUBS (Official to date) Pacific Coast League Won Lost n 47 69 51 57 Pet. 602 55 513 513 457 449 442 429 Kentucky Straight Bour- bon Whiskey. 90 Proof. Seattle . G Los Angeles ... San Francisco . Sacramento San Diego Oakland Portland Hollywood IT SOLVES Your Banking PROBLEMS Our system of Banking by Mail makes it practical for you to deposit here, wherever you live. The Behrends Bank has depositors located in many of the farfung towns and villages of the Territory who conduct their banking business by mail as easily as they might do if personally present in our bank. To open an account mail your remittance with a note indicating whether you desire a savings or commercial account and we will do the rest. No further correspondence will be necessay as we will furnish you with the stationery necessary for conducting your account. COMMERCIAL SAVINGS The B. M. Behrends Bank Oldest Bank in Alaska Capital Funds $306,763.90 Total Resources $3,072,153.39 as of statement June 30, 1939 The win of the Cardinals | | tional League standings. j | la relief role, checked the Red Sox tried | A H !for the White Sox. The first Boston | nels Homer by Pinch Hitter, i, e, Jimmy Foxx’s 24th homer| Finally, with Bases Loaded, > ¢ 0ld Murder MOUNT HOLLY, N. J., Juiy 28— | ty. | homers during the games. ;A Burley, Idaho potato harvester,|best player. BASEBAll IODAY ! Pinch Hitter Homers |Charles Quigley, was sentenced to | cakes and three lemon pies over | | Pinch-hitter Don Padgett smashed 20 years imprisonment today for | to them the other night. One time | | out a homer with the bases loaded the murder of his mother 12 years |y fried a chicken for them, fixed it Four 12-0z. tins BOAT JESS CAME --- AN' ASH, TH' IDJIT, CHRISTENED IT WITH .5 BASEBALL WASNT _ ...| INTERESTING — TIL into second place in the Na- teran Clint Brown, making his| LOUISVILLE, Ky., July 28—For appearance of the season in|years Mrs. C. C. Petty’s husband in vain to interest her in pulled a victory out of the fire | baseball and the Louisville Colo- of the American Ass tion. Mrs. Petty | “gave up ‘and went to one game ust to please him.” “That was four years ago,” she | said, “and I've missed only eight |of the Colonelss home games | since.” She has seen the Colonels in ap- prozimately 300 games—and she's s 0“ esse unofficially adopted the whole | ng stand to snap a seven- e losing streak and defeat the Teams >witch About team. “I like all the boys, d pert, diminutive, white-haired Mrs. Pet- “I couldn't say which one is the I brought three jam > ¢ . j:l" up, and did they like it!” igley walked into a Burley| g yeturn, the club has given her | S8t. Louis Cardinals a victory over police station last month and con- a baseball autographi all the | - {fessed he had intended the blast B SIS By Bl the | players. ill a boarder in the Quigley SRR L I, DR. STEVE5. CHIROPODIST, Leo Durocher's home and that he was responsible | he blast that killed his mother. | New Jersey police had always | gives quick reliel to paining feet Dodgers up to a win in the game considered the explosion an acci- |Office, 10 Valentine Building. Phone 648. adv The ARROW points to Tremendous Savings during Piggly Wiggly’s MONTH-END DELIVERIES BABY FOODS 12 for 95¢ GRAHAM or SODA CRACKERS 2 Ih. pkg. 3¢ MARSH- rALLOWS Full Pound Package 1Sc FR00MS MrA5 by the Lighthouse {or the Plind. Give them a helping hand by using their nroducis. THREE GRADES 49 79¢ 99c LIBBY'S PINEAPPLE TIDBITS 3 cans 25¢ ORANGE JUICE We pride ourselves in carrying the very finest in fresh fruits and vegetables at all times. Drop down and look over our display and compare our prices with others. Free prompt delivery. LETTUCE—Fine large 29 solid heads—3 for....... kY0 Whit Hoods 12 1029 L CARROTS—New Wash- ington—per bunch ... CASABAS—TFine Ripe 8 C NEW POTATOES— 25 Fine White—7 Ibs. .. 400 SEEDLESS GRAPES— 29 Fancy—2 pounds ... C Fancy RIBIER or Red 38 Malaga Grapes—2 lbs. C PLUMS—AIl varieties zg Extra Fancy—2 Ibs. . 40 TOMATOES—Fancy 29 Rosy Red Field, 2 Ibs.&dC STRAWBERRIES Local z while they last, 2 boxes, 90 CUCUMBERS—Fancy ln c Lmq_.—oach Large assortment of every other item on the market arrived today on the -Yuken. Get your fresh fruits and vegetables from PIGGLY WIGGLY 25¢ _— PHONE 16 . N —— said, e | "The Night Belongs ~ To Sleep, Tomeals" DENVER, July 28—“Every dog is entitled to his day and his bark | but the night belongs to sleep and | tomeats,” said District Judge Floyd F. Miles recently in a decision. Tie told a dog owner he would hnw" to lock his 15 pomeranians in a reasonably sound-proof place at, night to keep them from barking fand annoying guests at a nea v | | tourist camp. GARBLED GROCERIES | DALLAS, Wis in Dallas's large: were at their wits' end after a flood. Labels were soaked off canned goods stored in the base- ‘ment so no one could tell which | were beans, soup, peas or corn. i July 28.-—Clerks grocery store The Book ALASKA, Revised and | | Enlarged, Now On Sale;: $1.00. Tomorrow's Lunch Delicu;" ! VEAL FRICASSEE 1 || with EGG DUMPLINGS Lo the BARANOF T ROYAL GELATINE or PUDDINGS 5ceach OVALTINE Large Tins 69c VALAMONT PRESERVES All But Strawberry 2 1b. jar 3% Fisher's Blend FLOUR 49 Ib. sack $1.89 241b. sack - - 93¢ 101b. sack- - 49¢ OATS QUICK or SLOW 10 1b. sack 53¢ TOILET SOAP MAXINE 4 bars 25¢ PHONE 24 — eee - | Wear Utica Dux-bak 100 Per Cent Woolens for Comfort and Durability B Sport Coats, Mackinaws, Cruisers,Long Pants,Breeches, Hats and Caps in All-Wool and Water-Repellent Duck. B Newton-Duxbak Wool Flannel Shirts: Sox and Mitts: Spring-Tex Body-Guard Underwear in all Weights. B See your dealer or send for catalogue. Utica Dux-bak Goods Are Dependable “Shed Water Like a Duck’s Back” UTICA DUX-BAK CORPORATION UTICA, N. Y. D. A. NOONAN, Juneau ALASKA REPRESENTATIVE ) Enjoy this zestful bever- age. Creamy, smooth, sparkling. On draught at taverns . . . in bottles everywhere. Be as Comfortable ALL Night in your W.OODS ‘oe SLEEPING ROBE ] Tm campfire comfort to bed with you = ' enjoy the all night warmth of a Woods “Eiderdown” Sleeping Robe. The North's fae vorite make for more then 30 years. Now made in weights for all seasoms—1-Star, 2-Star, 3-Stage ' Insulated with genuine waterfowl down. Drafte proof design, Water-repellent cover, Wool lining. i ASK YOUR DEALER H Buy a Woods 1-Stas 2.Swar NOW. 870" 10 ok, Bavare you g & geniine WOODR WO0QDS MFG. CO., LTD . OGDENSBURG. N. Y Hollywood Sights And Sounds 8y fcbiin Cosm HOLLYWOOD, Cal,, July 28.—Tt's nice, after meeting so many movie stars, to meet one like Big Boy, a rugged individualist who will never be a rug. “Gotta cigarette—or a chaw?” growled Big Boy in greeting. At least, so his interpreter told me. Big Boy was reclining in his studio boudoir. It is equipped, as many a movie star’s boudoir should be, with iron bars. 1 obliged with a cigarette, which Big Boy calmly ate. “Good for worms,” he explained again through his interpreter, one Char- ley Oro, o Charley, like many another star’s stooge, and bedyguard, is a' | character in his own right. ‘He is tall and raw-boned and lean, with the benign face of a Boris Karloff in that actor’s unmons, . sterish moments. Charley occupies quarters next to Big Boy. | Charley is not behind bars, however. He has a bunk in a lean-to near Big Boy's cage, along the studio’s French street, - Charley and Big Boy have béen together for years. Charley has been “in bears” for 30 hibernations. But Big Boy belongs to Gus and Stan Stevens, brothers who have lived bearishly all their ' lives. The story of the Stevenses goes back to 1830 when one Gus- tavo Stevanovitch found a deserted bear cub somewhere in the Pyrennes and brought it back to Madrid where he reared it to’ happy young bearhood. The family went bearish from that time on establishing a dynasty of bear-fanciers. Gustavo's son, Fran- cisco, and Francisco's son, Franco, kept on breeding and rearing bears. Franco came to the American middle west about 1880, and began exhibiting his bears In a sort of wagon show. Stan and Gus are Franco's sons, and Gus, at least, can't remember “Come and Get It Has a Special Meaning Tasty food, efficient service and an atmosphere truly home-like sound . the old call of “Come and Get It” . . . «PERCY’S when they didn't have a bear to play with as children. Big Boy. is the 27th trained bear in the long line of household pets. % “I have seen Big Boy cry like a baby at the sight of somes. thing being hurt,” avers Gus with feeling. 4 “There is no harm in him,” says Charley Oro, who leads him about by a haiter attached to a nose ring, wrestles with him. .l'r: lows Big Boy to use him for a pillow on occasion. The nose ring- comes off when Big Boy, a Russian brown bear of seven years' and 640 pounds, emotes with Akim Tamiroff, Ray Milland and’ Patricia Morison in an epic called “Untamed.” As an actor Big Boy’s role is “wild.” ¥ With a wing-stretch like Dempsey’s, Big Boy lumbers about: the Paramount lot like an amiable, playful mountain of fur. He ' has a street bum’s nose and eye for cigar-butts, discarded cigar— ettes, and tobacco in any form. He is, in fact, a'frightful moocher.” Since Big Boy came to the lot, the still photogs naturally have piloted all the girls over 1o pose with him. Mary Martin, whose heart belonged to daddy until “Vietor Herbert” came along, got her introduction to movie stills and to Big Boy simultaneously. He gave her an affectionate tap that knocked her off her feet. Patricia Morison also was the recipient of an endearing shove from here to Sunday. The bear’s private life is colossal. Four baths daily, in water and disinfectant. A strictly vegetarian diet. He has been touch- ed neither by romance nor scandal. “My career comes first,” I think he said.