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POLLY AND HER PALS YUH'VE BIN FLITTIN' THROUGH THAT FLOWER BOOK TH' HULL DERN THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT I'M TRYIN' T' FIND A NEW KINDA FLOWER WOT I DISCOVERED, poLT/ s | cincinnat 56 30 e81' ] [ SEATI | Chicago 49 43 533 M | St. Louis 6 41 52 | | Pittsburgh 45 43 533 | | Brooklyn 43 43 500 ‘ . EN lII | New York 42 46 Exd ’ | Boston 41 47 466 | Philadelphia 28 57 313 American League 7 [] | ‘Won Lost Pct. Ix o a | New York 6 25 122 | v Boston 55 33 625 | | — Chicago 51 41 554 | » Cleveland 47 41 534 ROME, July 29. — When Hitler I'OS Angeles Loses Groun Detroit 45 46 594 has a birthday the whole world | H Washington 38 56 404 hears about it. When his axis part- n Pennant Race as | Philadelphia . 34 54 .386 ner, Mussolini, turns a full year | Sea's W",| “st, Louis ... 25 64 281 older, it's sort of “hush-hush” mat- | | Gastineau Channel League ter. But whether he wants to talk | Lo (Second Half) about it or not, Il Duce is 56 years | (By Associated Press) Won Lost Pet. old today. It's his custom to ban Hal Turpin pitched his tenth Douglas PR 714 public observances .of his birthday straight victory last night for Se- Elks 4 2 667 and hold the anniversary, at most, to | attle, winning the second game after | Moose 1 6 143 8 quiet family celebration. | Sacramento had taken the opener, - Dy e Mussolini is as sensitive about I » for the third straight win in the . age as the average woman “ov present series. B d _l h f 21" because he has long glorified | Turpin yielded six hits for his n ge uncneon tor youth as a national ideal. Il Duce ' seventeenth victory. | . has not only been getting older Los ‘Angeles: et grownd in m,.' Mrs R'(kefls Today but he has become a decided “sec- pennant race last night as San| ; p a f g cnd fiddle” as a “strong man o Francisco tallied four runs in the n[F(’;: !\(Is; ’:]oble ;-kR:fkensfv “l):e Burope.” ‘True, Bis SurerRpent i ; eighth inning. San Francisco out hit ' gopet ca entte fn. apre y SUll on the iron fist, square jaw the Los Anges team 38 to 1: llu uard cutter Haida, Mrs. I. model, characterized by nationalist Boll§wiods worb his the: ik s Q(. dstein is hostess Llus' anemoa_n and militarism. But Germany ha ning last .night on Catcher Bill with a bridge-luncheon in the Iris stolen its thunder as the leadin: Brenzel's four straight hit of the RO Of the Baranof Hotel. Fascist power. i Wk ¥ game. He drove in the winning run. Twenly%\yo guests are present for The past year in Mussolini’s lifc 1 Portland collected 13 hits, beating the occasion. : has been marked by furthe: _un[ eon o ay for San Diego by concentrating on three Mrs. Ricketts wil leave for her strengthening of the axis ties. Italy | runs in the fourth frame and ditto 1€ Pome in Norfolk, Va, during and Germany recently signed a mill- M J J D I h t | in the fifth inning. ‘[hp latter part of next week on tary alliance against the democrat- fS. Js 0 0 an y { thie ueaminar WORtH: Son. ic bloc. The Italian sphere ha: R | GAMES FRIDAY ‘ Efeexlb:’“f‘"d“d with the conques! | Gomplimentary to Mrs. John J.| Pacific Coast League 3 st 3;“-}:[’1‘,’“’{]‘;"? after the con- | polohanty of Chicago, Mrs. J. G| Seattle 7, 5; Sacramento 8. 0. M F k F t d b pia, tallans were | shepard was hostess today with Portiani 5. Sar DIg0 8. ‘ ISS Fu Uyama erel ok Spain. This vear Wit | juncheon in the Gold Room of the | Oakland 6; Hollywood 7. . A gt ‘;‘i‘C‘w‘;‘_‘(‘;S‘::g‘-“;t(i;‘" Baranof Hotel. Twelve guests were | 5 geles 5; San Francisco 8. 1 ur¢ d y troops which fought on the side of i]‘)z::f(]llr)?;r:::]fi.n““00" et National League The all-church party at the (€ rebels along with the Ger-| "y Dolohanty, who arrived carly Boston 7; Pittsburgh 1. | Methodist Church drew thirty guests ™0% this week, will spend some time in | New York 4; Chicago 5. | last night who went to honor one e dictator of the Italian cor-| e city visiting her cousin, Miss | Brooklyn 5; 8¢, Louls 4, lof the young ladies of the church, ?‘fi:w. state was born above hie|ve; MeCloskey. | Philadelphia - Cincinnati, rained Miss Mary Fukuyama. e R s 1 out, regular Juneau weather. Miss Fukuyama will leave soon b, "pclien i { for Tokyo, Japan, to attend school. 'N¢ Romagna. ' i American League | In order that she might have a re- Bu"eiv upper leen | St. Louis 11; Boston &. “minder of Alaska, three Alaskan pic- . 5 | Chicago 1 New York 2. tures were presented her at the H G | ' P lJ d ‘ Detroit 0; Philadelphia 3. | close of the party. ousewarm'n 'ven orrau u es p] | Cleveland 0; Washington 2. Mrs. Roy Murphy directed the ere Las ven H —— Gastineau Channel League entertainment of the evening. The t E Ing > ; As a compliment o Mr. and Mrs iy ‘;‘Ti:fi:}‘:"gf“N‘;’res‘"ev“:";fdl,::ed” the | Paul Judge who will leave for the R Zi-x:i‘:lg las, postponed, on ac- b 8_- Y. A housewarming was held last|South Tuesday on the Princess | o L. ‘R I f d G. {vening at the new Gold Street home il e PR o r. and Mrs. H. R. Sprague, rtaine ast evening al er STA:;?::; 31' d:?':)!m! | ulaioras uiven and during the evening Trefresh- | @Partment in the Baranof with a . . . ments were served and a gift was | buffet-supper. | acifio Cow;n!mfit i Ann'versary Dlnner presented to the couple. Those attending included Dr. ot i - 6?)6' | Those attending the party in-|and Mrs. W. W. Council, Dr. and Los Angeles 69 52 .5’10i i aaleiran it nt _cluded Mr. and Mrs. H. Zehn, Mr. | Mrs. John Carswell, Mr. and Mrs. San Francisco 6 57 i celebration of twenty-two years anq Mrs. Art Peterson and children, | George Sundborg, Mr. and Mrs B 5 E of married bliss, an anniverary din- Mr, and Mrs. Henry Wood and | y Sacramento 59 56 513 ner was given last evening for Mr. son Mrs, Walter Hill, M | Oakland 55 66 454 and M c £ e Wi i s Jakland ant rs. C. C. Rulaford by their jotte Wright and Miss Mar, t & San Diego 53 64 453 daughter, Garnetha. Wright. i Porltnd 51 63 447 Eight guests were present at the | | Hollywood 52 68 433 family home for the evening, and, | National League the honorees were presented with M C | o won st et many gitts Mrs. Carpenter Is: Coming Here for Her| ‘Daughter’s Weddi : aughter's Wedding| | Mrs. J. W. Carpenter of Hoily- | {wood, Cal, sailed from Seattle to- Idny on the steamer Aleutian en-| |route to Juneau. | : : | Coming north for the wedding of her daughter, Miss Clara Carpen- | ter, bride-elect of Dr. M. J. Whit- ] tier, Mrs. Carpenter will remain 4 ‘hete until after the ceremony in | ’ ' September. During her sojourn in the Capital City she and her , AMERICA’S FINEST dubier vl reside 8t he Siacy Norman residence on Fifth Street., e | i : | OPULAR PRICED A little less than half the Ameri- cans in China live in 8hanghai. e v Gun-Type Oil Burning | »rn FURNACE UNITS parged, Now On Suier $100. Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. . the new model : Goirsen n ) UST BONDS $100 PAR PLUS ACCRUED INTEREST Maturity—]June 1, 1946 ZONE KING and ZONE QUEEN We will gladly furnish you complete v . K A information about these low cost units! , SANITARY PLUMBING & HEATING CO. WILLIAM ]. NIEMI 222 WILLOUGHBY PHONE 788 Room 1 WAL, ACCORDIN' T' TH' WAY MY CROSSWORD PUZZLE WORKED OUT, IT'S A GXZDWZYX TIPS FOR TIPTON—Baseball’s “grand old man,” Con- nie Mack of the Philadelphia A’s, gives fatherly advice to Eric Tipton, new outfielder from Duke. At his first Shibe park “night- cap,” Tipton got two hits in four times at bat. Hugh G. Wade, Miss Jane Alex- ander, Miss Magnhild Oygard, and | Waren Eveland. Mrs. C. A. Sund-|ten-game losing streak in combing Warren Eveland. Mrs. C. A. Sund- borg of San Francisco was the only out-of-town guest. —— .- - — Don't Drive On Willoughby Unless Necessary Chief of Police Dan Ralston an- nounced today that Willoughby Avenue traffic will be closed dur- ing paving work, for other than work vehicles that must use the arterial Half of the roadway only is open to traffic, and with dump trucks and delivery trucks forced to use the road, traffic congestion is bad enough, Ralston said, without other | vehicles. - e —— TWO-TIME CAPTAIN NEW YORK, N. Y, July 26— Seldom is a college athlete twice captain of his team, but Henry Remmer of Columbia will again captain the crew in 1940. LARGE MINING . PROGRAM WILL ! HELP CORDOVA Big Pilot Mill Going in on | McKinley Lake Lode ? Deposits Large ore deposits near Cordev on McKinley Lake will be opencd this vear, it was revealed today by Walter Gilkey, manager in { charge of the operations. Gilkey, going today aboard the steamer Mount | McKinley, said he and a group of | otiier mining men will launch ex- through Juneau ing a 35-ton pilot bal! mill, min- | eral jigs, amalgamating equipment, | flotation cells and complete assajy | laboratory materials. A large mineralized zone on defs inite shear zone contact characters izes the ore body to be mined, and the ore is said to be simple, with | good gold values. For the time ! being only about twelve or fifteen men will be employed. A 00 horsepower power plant 1S to be installed, Gilkey said, and all equipment is being purchased with a view to putting in a 150= ton mill eventually. - | With Gilkey on the Yukon, is his brother Mark and L. E. THt- hill, mining and metallurgical en- gineer from Seattle who will handfe engineering and milling detail Father of the Gilkey brothers was Willlam Gilkey, famed pioneer of the early Klondike for whom Gilkey Pass to the Kuskokwim _is named, and who was | | | | JAMES C. COOPER, C. P. A. 5 paid by the Detroit Tigers to the Cleveland reccat 62a) whereby Tigers Pitcher Harry Eisenstat (al iraded for Earl Averill of the Cleveland outfield. MPAW HURLER—An unnamed amount of wam= dians in a ve) Was Shattuck Building e e rr e reed | H | tensive development work this sum- o .. «gwittwater Bill's o ers In var on the well known lode that ... is located at the head of McKin- ley Lake, 22 miles up the railroad from Cordova and three miles back | from steel. Aboard the McKinley, Copenhagen, Denmark, has u!e largest harbor on the Baltic. : PR Lode and placer location notiges sale at The Empire Office. 9'h 'n n i n g is considerable machinery, includ Ken Chase Bests Bob Feller, Yesterday - Browns | End Losing Streak | billed to Cordova for the development work 1. for (By Associated Press) The New York Giants dropped their ninth game in 15 starts ves- terday as Firstbaseman Glenn Rus- sell’s ninth-inning homer gave Chi- cago a victory. The Yankees won in the ninth inning yesterday on Red Rolfe's single with the bases loaded, after Chicago had scored on Joe Kuhel’s homer and the Yankees on Joe Gor- don’s circuit drive. Ken Chase, young Washington lefthander, bested Bob Feller yester- day in allowing Cleveland only two hits while Feller yielded eight. The St. Louis Browns ended a IS HIS FACE l!D?-;nuswm.w a Merrill h::h::y;' May (left) registers amazement as whizzes pas Pr:lylllu-l)odlen game won by the Brooklynites, 7-1. And tha the Dodgers’ Mel Almada pulling up safe on 3rd. three Boston pitchers for 14 hits. MAKE WHOOPEE TONIGHT AT MIKE’S PLACE IN DOUGLAS Special Music — Dave Burnette and His Orchestra DANCING * REFRESHMENTS THE MENU— | — THE MUSICIANS DAVE BURNETTE i Homios?’i}g) CHICKEN Sax and Clarinet ' an HETTI q (Italian Style) DUDE HAINES ) . Banjo and Guitar ' : KELLY BLAKE TURKEY, VEAL, Pg&g C‘;‘l‘gs And His Drums BAKED HAM SAN VIC KELSO L At the Piano ¥ i POTATO, MACARONI and JOHN NIEMI VEGETABLE SALAD Saxophone COME AND HEAR-This 5-Piece Band-Ii's a WOW! Discard that old-fash- ioned stand-up meth- od of hand ironing. Be modern with a New General Electric Ironer and shorten your ironing time. LIBERAL TRADE-IN FOR YOUR OLD IRONER % LARGE IRONING SURFACE 'ALASKA Electric | swoe Light & Power Co. | 1 owmros SECOND at FRANKLIN Phone 616 J IRONS AND PRESSES ALL MATERIALS