The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 31, 1939, Page 5

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T HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 31, 1939. 5 a POLLY AND HER PALS o WAL, WHEN MRS. HYTOPP A FINE SIMPLE POOR. PA .- AST ME WOULD 1 LIKE SIMON T'STEP OUT TELL ME T'SEE HER FAMBLY TREE WITH IN SWELL ABOUT IT. I SAID,YES,INDEEDY.- SASSIETY ! ® ' Copr_191, King Ferures Syodicte. o, Wasld nghs reerved . . BEAVERS IN YEAR'S BASEBALL RECORDS (iier . When Pensions FIFTH SPOT | PROVE THAT JOB SHIFTS e Goidhun TUCSON, Ariz., July 31—Aged L] prospectors admit they like to re- LEAGUE OFTEN HELPS THE PLAYERS 73 oot © W | that “it cramps our style.” | { Under pension la pensioner leaves town he loses his pension. s So prospectors petitioned the Social nt | L Security Board to let them use their A% ! hills for gold H Small Mine Operators backed the - e federal government should let the I (By Associated Press) | “desert rat” use his pension for a The Portland Beavers, in last place | grub-stake for “just one more a little more than weel® ago, are in | in the hills. fifth place in the Pacific Coast - - o s League after winning from the San Diego Padres five games to two. The Beavers finished the week by I_osllI AND FOUND splitting a doubleheader yesterday. Angels Blanked Twice “'EM FOR 'I'OD AY The San Francisco Seals blanked the Los Angeles Angels in both | —_— v . games Sunday, knocking the former | ETOWAH, Tenn., July 31.—Five pd league's leaders to four and one- years ago Mrs. B. C. Brackett of half games behind the Seattle Rain- the Coghill community lost a high- iers. Two veteran hurlers turned | ly-prized pin. back the Angels, Sam Gibson Win- She had won it in a county-wide ning the first of the twin contest contest of the Girls' auxiliary of and Ballou allowing only two hits the Baptist Church. p in the nightcap to chalk up a vic- She was slicing potatoes from tory. her garden recently. Out fell the Seattle in Split pin when she halved one of the The Seattle Ralniers divided a “spuds.” + twin bill Sunday with the Sacra- | - - mento Solons. Dick Barrett won his | @ 100th game in a Seattle uniform in | pROSpE(]’OR SOUGH the first game. Tony Freitas held | the Rainiers to two hits in the night | cap. | Hollywood and Oakland divided a doubleheader Sunday: GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League | Seattle 7, 0; Sacramento 5 ,10 T0 SETTLE ESTATE sought by his sister, Mrs. Hilma Hoten of Seattle in connection with settling of an estate in Sweden By CLIFF STERRETT AN THAT SHE MUST COME OVER 'Chemist Expresses REDS KEEP Inferest in UP STREAK Devil Club_ What good is “fatsia horrida”? That's Latin for Devil Club, the | pesters one erywhere in South- east Alaska woods. —_— As for what good it is, scientists have been especially interested in this malicious plant. contains insulin, for The v treatment it of Cardinals Jump Info Sec- ond Place-Hutchinson Wins First Game . T~ (By Asscciated Press) . '“purifier,” and general physic. The Cincinnati Reds won thelt| “a¢ any rate, Charles Goldstein third consecutive doubleheader Sun- yaq received a call from a chemist day, the fourth in one week, defeat- ;, 1, Angeles, asking how much ing the Phillies. Bucky Walters won peyi) club root he could get his eighteenth victory in the first| Goldstein told his game and Billy Myers clouted in! ., pave all of it.” four runs in the ninth with a homer R «' Adrienne Glass Cardinals Sneak Up into second place by winning from good medicinal qualities. Indians of Southeast Alaska have used Devil Club shoots, sieeped as for tea, for many years as blood friend: “You St. Louis Cardinals sneake the Brooklyn Dodgers twice on Sun- | . South for School The Pirates lost one game Sun- e d“\: to ‘the Boston BP“N. and \,”“; Miss Adrienne Glass, daughter of trailing when the 6 o'clock law Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Glass, will sail Sionpad the galsn for the south tomorrow on the Hubbell in Form Princess Charlotte in expectation Carl Hubbell of the Giants held the bs to a handful of hits Sun- day and won his fourth game of the year. | The Yankees split a doubleheader with the White Sox yesterday as George Selkirk pounded out tWO copoo) Mg Glass plans to visit homers in the opener. ThOMtON per”Gaughter sometime during the Lee beat the Yanks with 7-hit pitch- .0 nonths, d {ing in the nightcap. et of spending the winter in Portland Oregon, with her grandmother, Mrs. John Bergstrand. Well known among Juneau's younger set, Miss Glass will enroll as a Freshman in a Portland high Hutchinson' Wins | RS M | Albert Leandar Strand: 40,4 Alfsi i | nson Wins | s intnier: and DIOOAMOr T bemz) | oake; HuGhiiaco | svoted (blE An(horage Has first Major League victory Sunday as Detroit beat the Athletics twice. Jimmy Foxx paced the Red Sox victory over the Browns New Weekly to diabetes, and has other apparently | Los Angeles 0, 0; San Francisco . 2 Portland 2, 3; San Diego 3, 0. Oakland 16, 3; Hollywood 7, 4. National League Philadelphia 2, 1; Cincinnati 9, 5. | Boston 7; Pittsburgh 5. { New York 3; Chicago 1. Brooklyn 2, 2; St. Louis 5, 5. g“fox;efl' x(;‘;‘f“““ office here Was | ;o0 \with His 25th homer. - sn- Newspaper | Volume one, number one, of the Garner Chats With Labor Heads Res ® - Harry C. Bates Vice President Garner William Green Vice President John Nance Garner, center, injects a touch of humor into a conference with leaders of the American Federation of Labor by stroking the gray hair of Harry C. Bates, president of the Brick- layers’ union. At right is William Green, federation chief. The labor leaders sought revision of the new relief law that caused wide- spread strikes among WPA employes, SENATOR DEVANE SELLS STORE AT the Fairbanks News-Miner and the Anchorage Times, one of the best known newspaper men of the North Manager is Roy L. Lee, long time resident of Anchorage and former- 1y s foreman with the Anchor- ,c]li"z::mcd with lively and homey Throuqh on CO'UmbIB WI'h hbe Wife - To Live at KOMEN T0 BUILD 5-ROOM HOME N WAYNOR SECTION Jacob W. Komen, shop foreman Seattle Now Thomas J. LeVane, trader at Ruby for many years, has sold his store there and with his wife went through Juneau today headed for Seattle and retirement. for Kenyon MacLean Metal Works, : X DeVane is a former Territorial has purchased a lot in the Charles Benntor. e a0l Bis. store th vtk Waynor Addition and ground is to be broken tomorrow for the ereclion of a five-room modern dwelling. Contract for the building awarded to Boyer and Jensen builder Harold M. Foss Co. the architect. nmercial Company. - Northern was local was BOWER IN TOWN Bruce Bower, Schwabacher Hard- ware representative, came in on the Yukon from Lynn -Canal ports. He is stopping at the Baranof - | NO GAME SUNDAY Hotel. : ot b s BUCKY WALTERS: Mediocre Infielder—Great Pitcher % b s — | By DILLON GRAHAM Padgett and Bill Sullivan still Strand was last heard of several years ago at Fox. He wrote at that time he was going into the Koyukuk country. Previously he had worked |at Wiseman and Cleary. SN A, O The Book ALASKA, Revised and ‘L’\l(‘SL addition to Alaska newspaper | files arrived in the mail from An- W. D. Gross returned from chorage. It is The Alaskan, pub- Haine aboard the Yukon, He went lished in Anchorage as a weekly | there to look over the damage done ‘ newspaper. to the Coliseum Theatre in Lh(‘] Editor of the new sheet is Roy | GROSS RETURNS | There was no game played in the | Gastineau Channel Ledgue Sunday | as the grounds resembled a water polo field. If the rains lets us and thie sun comes out, there may be a game tomorrow night - maybe—between Old Fashioned BEEF STEW with NEW VEGETABLES — tomorrow for Tunch at the " BARANOF | . | | Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. !recent fire. Southworth, for any years with' the Moose and Elks. AP Feature Service Sports Writer jmp around from one spot to an- other. Garms and Martin play| either third or the outfield, Padgctt | American Leagpe Chicago 3, 5; New York 4, 1. Detroit 14, 5; Philadelphia 0, 3. | NEW YORK, July 31.—Baseball Z‘:“'};:.g“;“ g‘%ffi'eéfmd % { players might well adopt a slightly XS UP “-Vs“‘;l‘f‘.“‘i ‘“}d HBPKBLIR | Gablliiin. Clidnal Leagme. twisted version of the old pr ll’l‘"“‘; i lud_“,“"l‘“’ ]P“Y’ ‘L_V 73 Douglas-Elks, postponed, on ac- | verb: If at first you don't suc- Afi_m‘cl‘ f"r‘: “']‘ mice. count of rain. Makes five consecu- |Cced, try second, third or the . ;2‘ Y :d_do ,0“ e go{:‘ ;‘xam-w tive games that have been rained |Pitcher’s box. Lc(our 0 e R L] For the pitching and batting are Babe Ruth, Boston Red out. Sox pitcher, and Bill Terry, who was a‘pitcher back in the Ameri- can Association before he joined the “Jints.” So maybe a lot of other ball| leaders of the staid old National League this year are athletes who | switched positions and quickly found the road to stardom \ Five years ago William Henry GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Los Angeles 2; San Francisco 1. Portland 7; San Diego 2. g | Seattle 6; Sacramento 0. (Bucky) Walters and Morris Ar- Players who havens g f o t I easure ! S 4 5 vil. ¢ ha ey're just in the Oakland 4; Hollywood 5. novich were infielders, and not e s h brln a Io [o) p a National League doing so well either. One day|¥IONE slot. And, with porential) St ey 9 - M in - Tils ve! S pitchers a-hanging arount Philadelphia 0, 2; Clncinnati 3, 9.|Jimmy Wilson, then manager of| i 1 d d New York 5; Chicago 2. the Futile Philles, stuck Walters| third base or fire-ball tossers try- fo more men an women ever y GY ing to stop grounders at shortstop, into the pitching box. Bucky wasn’t | an immodiate ball of fire with his|{€Ven the managers may have to hooks and dippers but Jimmy was | ¥ their rookies at all positions | convinced he'd make a flinger. | before shunting them back to the| After three years at hard lahm‘bush leagues. It surely may com-| with the Phillies, Walters was sold | Plicate spring training. Brooklyn 7; St. Louis 3. Boston 5; Pittsburgh 6. American League ! Chicago-New York, called second | inning, * because of rain. Smokers everywhere are finding out that Chesterfield’s HAPPY COMBINATION of Cleveland 5; Washington 2. | ! s Detroit 7; Philadelphia 6. ito Cincinnati in June, 193% and | ko 0 T » . . . % St. Louis 4; Boston 3. |quckiy became u winner. s, Ly A DY BRIDGB, mild ripe American and Turkish tobac | year, with the league-leaders be- . . . STANDING OF CLUBS hind him, Bucky is setting the | cos gives them just what they want . . . (Official to date) . pitching pace. He’s won more ( ASE RES“MI“G | o BETTER TASTE .REFRESHING MILDNESS Pacific Coast League | games than any other tosser In| i Won Lost Ps(:-Iml'd—July he had won 15 and lost 6. | | seatte U 4 s Foxx o Pt - NEXT WEDNESDAY MORE PLEASING AROMA Los Angeles ... 70 54 563, Arnovich was a shortstop with | | san Francisco ... 63 57 -gfgiSuperior in the Northern League! U " w— I | " Sacramento ... 60 57 513 | put he started moving up once he | m You Portland .53 64 ~:5g‘transrerred to the outfield e nwitling "fless De ays Whe"you try the N 68 45 il- i S o PR b kS Hearing - Defense | know whysmokers all say, M0 S cmecnevie. B lies during the past two seasons _ | 9 o Hollywood ... 54 69 439 ang this year he's been a case.| Making Plans \ . “They’re Milder National League | Morrie slugged at a better than| | FORGET " 13 Won Lost Pct| 400 clip for many weeks and he's| oo 0ie0 “rom Dage One) | They Taste Better Clncinna;stt i) :0 -gg;ihuggmg *380 now. A Do, Y. SOMETHING, 5 <| St. Loul - 48 2 4 Jimmy Foxx came up to the! | 2 3 Pittsburgh 46 42 523 piladelphia A's as a catcher but!tion hearing. Landis is a dean of | ABERCROMBIE ¢ Chicago .49 40 coon waddled down to first base p!a¥ at Harvard and was named as . ew rl E n o . ense eys ins a y | fielder, played second base for the 2 . | 1 P Boston 42 48 467| o tive years ago. And, believe alone can summon him to the wit- BIRTHDAY 2 ¥ Philadelphia .2 61 299 7 0r not, Babe (Blimp) Phelps, the tand after they begin pre-| ANNIVERSARY? |/ American League . O‘H vn' c.;lcl'wr started. his base- senting their testimony in the de- v Won ' Tiost - Pet | D00k e et 5€” | "endant’s behalf. Examiner Landis New YOIk .......66 26 qu7 Pall lfe as a fiy-chaser. = - lmust decide whether Federal at- o Boston 56 34 gag| Jack Wilson who tosses a fast]iomeys can exercise the right of " Chicago 52 42 o3, fast ball for the Boston Red S0%.|yging Bridges as a witness to testi- | ) \Cleveland 48 42 533 Was once an infielder. Hal Trosky| ¢y against himself. W"etroi'. 48 46 511/ 0f Cleveland had visions 0% being a SR e AR | s b ielder, Washington .39 57 406 Pitcher, and then an outfielder, Philadelphia ... 3 57 31 before someone ea mim o sirsc| CHILD WELFARE | 8t. Louis 26 65 .286, base. | Gastineau Channel League ] Changes Work Wonders (HIEF AI NOMEf (Second Half) Mel Ott was a bnckwofl; catch- | Won Lost Pot.|er from Louisiana when John MC-| pehorah Pentz, Child Welfare Su- Douglas 5 2 14 Graw brought him to New YOrk| pervisor for Alaska, is at Nome to- Elks 4 2 667 but it, didn’t take the le Na-|day in-the course of a tour of the| Moose oo b @ 143 poleon long to put an ouulielder’s| Territory on Dziartment of Public - —— tag on him. Ott still takes a turn| welfare administrative business. She DR. STEVES., CHIROPODIST, |t third base now and then. is expected to return to Juneau gives quick relief to paining feet. Ben Chapman was an infielder | shortly. Office, 10 Valentine Building. Phone when the Yanks first ecaugnt him. —e—— 648. o i adv. Garms, Pepper Martin, Don| Empire Want Ads Bring Results, Copysight 1939, Livoaix & Myans Tomacco Coy 3 \ | 8

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