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MORE TRAINING — MORE MONEY Many men are earning more money today because they acquired more training by spare-time study of IC.S. Courses. Choose your Subject! Architecture Accounting Advertising Air Conditioning Aviation Engines Building Contracting Cartooning Drafting Chemistry Diesel and Gas Engines Electrical Engineering Highway & Civil Engineering High School Subjects Mechanical Engineering Salesmanship Sign Painting and Show Cards Refrigeration Traffic Manarement H. J. WAUGH, Representative International Correspondence Schools Baranof Hotel Phone 800 BEESGIVE CARDS ONE HARD BLOW Have Taken Three of Four- Game Series-Yanks Win Streak Nipped (By Associated Press) The only National League game played yesterday saw the Boston Bees inflict another damaging blow | to the St. Louis Cardinals’ sagging | pennant hopes It was the Bees' third game in the four-game series and the defeat dropped the Cards | five and one-half games behind the league’s leading Cincinnati Reds and placed them only two games ahead HOW WHAT'S INSIDE? Fire never d ys a house without k ing up what's inside of it. Fire insurance pro- tects the building. To protest your household possession: loss or damage by fire, 1eed It surpris idence Contents Insurance. singly little. you ® SHATTUCK AGENCY TELEPHONE 249 Office—New York Life THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1939. Low Blows Defeat Armstrong Lou Ambers is pictured bruised and battered as he was awarded a decision over Henry Armstrong to regain the lightweight champion- ship crown in the New York title go August 22. The Los Angeles negro, who had not lost a battle in 47 fights, dropped five rounds to Ambers due to low blo Ambers is attempting to smile in v but finds it difficult b ise of deep face cuts. RETURNS TO JUNEAU Mrs. J. A. Thibodeau and her children, ' Cecilia, Mary and othy, returned today on the North Coast after spending the summer on the Pacific ast, prineipally in Yakima, . o - RETURNS FOR SCHOOL Miss Betty Rice, daughter of Mr. Mrs. George B. Rice, was an 1 on the North®Coast. She has spent the summer visiting with relatives in Washington and Oregon. of the third-place Chicago Cubs Yanks Nipped The Tigers blew a five-run lead in the first half of the ninth inning yesterday afternoon but came back to nip the Yankees and end he champions’ 10-game winning streak DiMaggio his his 23rd homer with two men aboard in the ninth frame. Ted Williams, Boston rookie out- fielder, lined out a homer off Pitch Harry Eisenstat with the bases loaded to give the Red Sox a vie- tory %étwuvwzmadé over the Indians. | 1939 "RPM" a new KIND % molot odl Careful chgck*of repair shops proved automotive experts were correct in saying that old-type oils make trouble in modern engines. Automotive authorities have been speaking and writing widely —and with alarm—upon the problem of old-type oils depositing ex- cessive gum, carbon and varnish in today’s highly finished, tight-fitting engines. And the correctness of their findings has been established by a careful check in auto- mobile repair shops. Clearly, a new KIND of oil is needed for modern motors. And Standard engineers have solved this problem. Abandoning old- type oil conceptions, we started at the begin- ning and employed an entirely new refining process. And we backed that new process with a new $3,500,000 plant. THE NEW KIND Our 1939 RPM Motor Oil, therefore, is a new KIND of oil—new in conception, refined by a new process and manufactured in a new plant, to meet new engine conditions. Result: 1939 “RPM” will not *break down” under high temperatures. It gives mileage equal to or better than any other oil, regard- less of source and regardless of higher price. And, since “RPM?” stays clean, it keeps the engine clean and assures longer operating efficiency — which means maximum power, low fuel consumption, and long engine life. Buy “RPM”— get the full advantage of today’s new KIND of motor oil! STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA N How olls, until recently satisfactory, are trouble-makers in modern motors Is proved by a newly-completed Repair-Shop Survey, by an independent research company. These experts found that in modern cars brought in for repairs, 77% of the oil-return passages in oll rings are clogged with gum (the first stage In varnish formation), slvdge, car- bon, and other deposits. OF MOTOR OIlL Dor- | SEATTLE IN | SWAT FEST Ray Prim Wins for Los An- geles-Padres Are Southpawed (By Associated Press) Portland’s homecoming after two weeks on the road, turned into a mered two pitchers for 17 hits and a four-run barrage in the first in- ning., This started the Rainiers’ attack. Southpaw Ray Prim chalked up his seventeenth victory when he shut out Hollywood to keep Los An- geles in step with the Seattle Rain- iers. Sacramento’s diminutive Tony Freitas southpawed San Diego into submission last night to register his I eighteenth victory of the season. Oakland trounced San Francisco by bunching three of their nine hits in the fifth inning for three runs. GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast Leazue Ceattle 14; Portland 1. Los Angeles 2; Hollywood 0. Sacramento 3; San Diego 0. San Francisco 3; Oakland 5. National League Louis 1; Boston 2 American League Boston 7; Cleveland 4 New York 6; Detroit 7. St STANDING OF CLUBS (Official to date) Pacific Coast League | Won Lost | Seattle 92 61 Los Angeles 84 69 San Francisco 69 Sacramento 4 Hollywood 83 San Diego 84 Portland 82 Oakland 85 National League Won Lost 3 45 68 51 68«55 60 55 59 58 53 63 Pet. 604 549 537 513 454 451 450 444 Pet. 619 572 563 517 504 457 441 .330 Cincinnati Louis | Chicago Brooklyn New York | Pittsburgh i Boston 52 66 | Philadelphia 38 | American League Won Lost . 87 35 4 46 67 54 65 56 63 58 52 n 423 41 9 342 .34 84 .288 Pct. M3 617 554 537 New York .. Boston Chicago Cleveland Detroit Washington Philadelphia , 8t. Louis . R " BASEBALL TODAY The following are scores of games played in the American League this afternoon as no games were played in the National League: ‘Washington 2, 4; Chicago 5, 3. | Philadelphia 9, 2; St. Louis 8, 0. 1 Boston 8; Detroit 7. | | Tomorrow——Luncheon Veal Fricassee WITH DUMPLINGS at the BARANOF | i Are You Tired of Ordinary Food? Drop in at the Newly Renovated BRUNSWICK CAFE WHERE YOU'LL FIND Chinese and American Dishes at Their Best! Special Breakfasts, Lanches, e ) YOUR SAVINGS ARE INSURED, ARE INSTANTLY AVAILABLE AND EARN GREAT- ! ER RETURNS | ALASKA FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assn, of Juneau TELEPHONE 3 LAST NIGHT rout last night when Seattle h:\m-‘ PO beautiful. Handsome looking street VITALITIES—long recognized as the mding ladies’ shoes for those who wish real comfort and the ulti- mate in footwear. fashionable, Built by master craftsmen, long-wearing true artists in their trade. Designed by the foremost fc THE NEW AUTUMN STYLES are truty suedes, the glove-it look, unusually clever designs in calf and crushed kid. Good and walking Sport types with new Dutch toes. 53.95 — 6.95 VITALITIES are our with shoes. »otwear stylists. own exclusive shoe, and may be purchased in Ju- neau only at BEHRENDS. The models shown here are in stock, and in addi- tion a variety of other attractive styles. Wolt M. BEHRENDS CO. Quality Since 1887 éa-lréinlo Must Wait fo Show Nova His Stuff HeavyweighI_Scrap Post- poned Between Two Until Sept. 15 PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 30— Tony Galento, “Two Tonner,” will have to wait another eight days to show Lou Nova what he says he is going to do to him in their heavyweight fight at Philadelphia. The fight has been postponed from September 7 to September 15 to permit the Californian addition- al time to recover from a severe cold. - PEKOVICH IN Sam Pekovich, operator of the Alaska Empire gold mine at Hawk Inlet, came to town last night |aboard a small boat. He is at the Baranof Hotel. © An inadequate, old-fash- ioned refrigerator is a wasteful expense in these hot summer months. Let’s make a deal. We'll show you how little it actually costs now to own a beauti- ful, big, new G-E, the first choice of millions. 14 New G-E Models up to 16 cu. ft. size. R |JACK DEMPSEY SAYS LOU NOVA IS WHITE HOPE Picks Cal ifornia Boy to Beat Champ Louis, in Time CHARLESTON, West Virginia, Aug. 30.—Jack Dempsey has nom- inated Lou Nova as the only heavy- weight white hope with a chance to beat titleholder Joe Louis. Dempsey is not giving anyone a chance against Louis right now but he said the California boy looks good, perhaps within a year, to beat the Brown Bomber. Sl e BUD BODDING ENROUTE Bud Bodding, son of Mr. and Mrs, Olaf Bodding, is returning here on the Alaska which sailed north from Seattle yesterday. The Ju- neau youth has been attending aviation school in California for the past year. -eee Empire Want Ads Bring Results. It now takes Jess money than ever before to own the finest refrigerator General Electric ever built! RAL/ 3 ELECTRIC ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. Caesarean On Baby LONDON, Aug. 30.—A successful caesarean operation upon a six- week-old girl is announced by the Coventry and Warwickshire Hos- pital. British medical records showed only two similar cases, the most recent in 1814. Hospital authorities said the girl was discharged in good health. The second baby, incapable of life, weighed two pounds. i (Scientific sources said the baby removed liy the operation was & twin who had failed to develop properly. Twins of this sort, one growing inside the body of the other, are uncommon but well known in medical literature, they said. These buried twins do nof as a rule reach full development.) ————————— HAGERTY FAMILY ARRIVE Mrs. Don Hagerty and her ‘two children, Don Jr., and C.aaron, are back in Juneau after a visit in the States. They returned here on the Aleutian. : L eee —— The Book ALASKA, Revised and Own a New G-E, the refrigerator that’s “built for keeps” with Selective Air Conditions!