The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 25, 1939, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

POLLY AND HER PALS YEP THEIR HOME YT BURNT DOWN T TH' GROUND, 7 'T DID/ Oopt 1910, Rind Fesrures Symdhcate Ioc. Woe | rights mowrid REDS WIN SUNDAYAS | DO CARDS it i Pennant Race Not Yet De-! cided in 1939 Na- | tional League | (By Associated Press) | Cincinnati added up 11 walks, a hit batter and six safeties for a vic- | tory sweep of the five-game series with the Pirates as Paul Derringer scored his ninth straight victory Sunday and his twenty-fourth of the season. | Cards Also Win | The brilliant pitching of Max Lanier, rookie left hander, backed ! by a 16-hit slugging attack, gave the Cardinals a victory over Chicago Sunday and kept them in the run- ning for the pennant. Brooklyn Is Victor ! Brooklyn took the second straight doubleheader in as many days from Philadelphia. Yanks Tune Up | Tuning up for the World Series, the Yankees defeated the Wash- | ington Senators Sunday with the aid of a triple play and a two-run rally in the ninth inning. | ive-Hit Barrage | A five-run barrage in the eighth innitg Sunday gave the Boston Red | Sox a victory and also a clean sweep of the series with the Ath- letics. | gown, Denise Wright, an English White Sox Climb Up The Chicago White Sox climbed into third place in the American League by. beating the Browns. wedding ceremony. lilies, too. The bridegroom left Prof. Freud ~ Passes Away While Exile Famed Originator of Psy- chonanalysis Dies Prac- fically Penniless (Continued from Page One) GAMES SUNDAY National League Pittsburgh 2; Cincinnati 11. Chicago 1; St. Louis 9. Brooklyn 3, 6; Philadelphia 1, 1 Boston 4, 5; New York 5, 3. American League New York 3; Washington 2. Philadelphia 4; Boston 9. St. Louis 9, 3; Chicago 11, 4. Detroit 2 9; Cleveland 1, 1. Pacific Coast League Playoff San Francisco 3; Sacramento 4,/ eleven innings. San Francisco is eliminated from championship ser- ies. Seattle 3, 1; Los Angeles 12, 5. GAMES SATURDAY National League Pittsburgh 5, 1; Cincinnati 6, 6. Boston 1; New York 4. | Brooklyn 22, 8; Philadelphia 4, 0. ous fears and wishes” of the people Chicago 3; St. Louis 7. |in the Bible. American weague | Scornfully Attacked St. Louis 3, 4; Chicago 6, 9. Sec-| He left Nazified Vienna, where he ond game called at end of eighth ! had lived for 78 years, to the accom- inning on account of darkness. paniment of scornful attacks upon Philadelphia 8; Boston 10. | his thecries in the government-con- Detroit 6; Cleveland 3. | trolled press. The newspapers sup- New York 7; Washington 1. pressed mention of his name in tell- |ing of his departure and denounced STANDING OF CLUBS | nis International Institute of Psyco- (Official to date)- | analysis ‘a pornographic Jewish National League | specialty. Sy Won Lost Pet. | Hooted by Doctors Cincinnati 93 54 633 1t was not the first time that St. Louis 89 57 810 preyd and his works had been the Chicago 81 68 subjects of sneers. There was, for Brooklyn 8 66 example, the time in 1906 when his New York 3 |ideas were new and he presented Pittsburgh 67 81 453 | thom before the Vienna Medical So- | Boston ... 59 8 415 sty The conservative pundits who | Philadelphia 4 100 | heard him listened with icy coldness American League when they did not break into de- Won Lost Pet.|,sive Jaughter and Freud vowed he New York 104 - 43 | never would set foot in the place Boston 81 60 | again. Nor did he, even when in 1931, Chicago 8 65 564 |, pjs 15th birthday, the society held Cleveland 82 66 945 special meeting to elect him to Detroit ... 1. 0, 524 honorary membership. ‘Washington 63 . 88 423\ Tyrough the years, too, there was Philadelphia 53 9 358 | 4 considerable public element on St. Louis 4 1 21 poth sides of the Atlantic who v o scoffed at Freud or considered his theories essentially Godless. He had but scanty followings in Latin coun- tries, found comparatively few ad- 06 ROCHESTER WILL plAY loulsvlllELh‘etronL; in his native Austria a{n(.i, after Hitler gained power in Ger- H 1 many, was on the proscribed list of I'""e world Se"es.s'a"swhe Nazis. Great Britain and the TOI“OITOW-Red ngs | United States were his chief strong- holds, His Theory Versus CO|0nels | It was Freud who first broadcast | the theory that all the mental ills of humankind could be traced di- ROCHESTER, N. Y, Sept. X The International League Roches ter Red Wings qualified today to| evya) meet the Louisville Colonels of the | American Association in the Little | World Series. impulses. People generally were slow to take to this idea but in the years following the World % War his adherents became numer- The Red Wings eliminated New-|ous and constituted a veritable cult ark 2 to 1 yesterday in the final|preudians began to talk about their game of the playoffs to give them became conscious of four victories against three de-|«repressions” and chatted glibly feats about “inhibitions.” As the cult The Little World Seiies begins|spread thousands set themselves up tomorrox in Rochester. as psychoanalysts and probed into GAS MASK IN BRIDAL WHITE_carrying gas masks in special containers painted white to match the bride’s | man, leave London's Church of Notre Dame de France after their But the bride didn't forget her bouauet of | rectly to civilization’s restraints upon | BUT THEY. SAY HE ACTED LIKE A MAN ABOUT IT | | 1 their girl, and Serge Cadier, a French- | next day for war duty in France. | the thoughts and even the dreams of patients. Freud held that dreams were an attempted outlet for ideas and im- pulses, held back in the subconscious mind by inhibitions. By persuading his patients to confess their dreams, he said he gained confirmation of many of his theories and, meanwhile, brought relief to troubled minds. Personal Life Colorless | Freud's personal life was virtually | devoid of the abnormal. He was born May 6, 1856, at Freiburg, a German | community in Moravia, of Jewi parents. When he was four the fam- ily moved to Vienna, and there he remained until 1938. He studied medicine at the Uni- versity of Vienna, was a prize pupn]‘ !in physiology under Bruecke and in anatomy under Meynert, and won his doctorate in 1881. His record brought him a lectureship at the university, then a scholarship which in 1886 enabled him to go to Paris for study under Prof. Jean Martin Charcot, creator of the world's out-| standing neurological clinic. It was in Paris that Freud first persuaded neurotics to whisper their inmost thoughts into his ear, enabling him, | he said, to explain away their trou- | | bles. For ten years he worked alone on his theories, In 1906 he was joined | by a number of colleagues, including !Alir('d Adler, Carl Jung and Ernest Jones, and in 1908 the first Interna- tional Congress of Psychoanalysts was held in Salzburg. The congress met biennially. thereafter. International Society | In 1909 Freud and Jung delivered | | | ia series of lectures at Clark Univer- | sity, Worcester, Mass., and interest in their subject grew so rapidly that in 1910 an international association |of psychoanalysts was formed with| branches in most countries of the 1d, the chief ones being British land American. Freud married in 1886 and be- |came the father of three sons and three daughters. Frau Freud kept his household moving peacefully.( They lived in one apartment 45 years and she accompanied her aged hus- band into his London exile. One of the sons, Martin, handled most of his father’s business affairs and a daughter, Anna, became his chief stant and was regarded by him probable successor in the field choanalysi JOE SNOWS HAVE BABY DAUGHTER ‘Home Run King” Joe' Snow is passing out the cigars today. The occasion is the birth of a nine- pound, eleven ounce baby girl at 1St. Ann’s Hospital this morning. Friends say Joe is investigating possibilities of a girls’ baseball league. The baby and mother are fine. s O THEY SAY, AM'L == AN' GUESS HE REALLY DID! Will Be in Final Games Eliminates San Francisco in Playoff-Angels and Rainiers Race | R I (By Associated Press) | Sacramento eliminated San Fran- | | cisco from the $10,000 playoff series Sunday with an eleven-inning vic- tory. Ira Smith, who relieved Tony, Freitas on the mound in the tenth inning, drove in the winning run with a hit single i Winning the doubleheader which wound up in rain and artificial| lights, Los Angeles Sunday forged ahead of Seattle in Los Angeles and is now leading three games to two. Weather permitting, Seattle and Los Angeles will play a double- header tomorrow to see who meets Sacramento. ! - - KFAR on Ai | NexiSunday At Fairbanks Dedicatoryi Isr;)gram Will - Be Broadcast at 7 in Evening FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 25.— On the dial at 610 kilocycles, KFAR, America's “northest” commercial broadcasting station, will slice its first groove into the airw at 7 p.m., October 1. A studio staff headed by Manager Jack Winston will bring to the mi- crophone an impressive array of Fairbanks, Territorial, and visiting outside dignitaries for a dedicatory program calculated to springboard KFAR into the attention of radio listeners throughout Alaska and beyond. Regular daily broadcast schedule will swing into operation the fol-| lowing day at 8 a.m. Programs will| be released thereafter from 8 a.m.| to 1 p.m., and 5 until midnight. Sun- day's releases will be broadcast from 2 until 10 p.m. | Among guests tentatively listed to appear on the dedicatory broadcast are Mayor Leslie Nerland of Fair- banks; Dr. Charles E. Bunnell, presi- dent of the University of Alaska; Leslie W. Baker, general manager of the Alaska Steamship Company; Col. Otto F. Ohlson, general mana- ger of the Alaska Railroad; James W. Wallace, chief engineer of the Puget Sound Broadcasting Company | and consulting engineer of the Puget | Sound Broadcasting Company and, ~onsulting engineer for Western United Stales, and several others. Honor cuest will be Capt. A. E.|° Tathrop, Alaska pioneer and Presi- ent of the Midnight Sun Broadcast- 18 Company. A e e — -+ HOSPITAL NOTES ‘ ——— —% Mig~ W-cal'na Lanada of Wran- ell is ec ng from a major op- ratio' a' the Government Hos- sital this morning. Harold Bates entered St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday for medical treat- ment. He returned to his home to- <day. E. Johnson received medical treatment for an injured foot at St. Ann’s Hospital Sunday. He was dismissed this morning. Mrs, J. C. Thomas was admitted to 8t. Ann’s Hospital for surgical treatment this afternoon. Polish Submarines Infern in Sweden STOCKHOLM, Sept. 25. — The third Polish submarine to take re- fuge in Swedish waters was in- terned upon arrival here this morning. — ., —— Empire classifieas bring results i J SONG MAN WHO HE IS OWBOYS driving Texas steers up the Chisholm- trail to Kansas used to chant melo- dies that John A. Lomax liked as a boy. He remembered some, collected more, and in 1911 ublished a book of them, the Srs( in the U. S. with words and music, he says. Now, as curator of the Con- gressional Library's folk song archives, he and son Alan, who works there_too, have collected 2,800 records with 10,000 folk songs on them. Besides cowboy songs, col- Jector Lomax has recorded the folk ballads of the “Cajuns” in Southern Louisiana, songs of farmers, soldiers, sailors, ox drivers, laborers, housewive: guitar strummers, mountain eers, who tell the story of what they think and feel in song, of- ten composing as they go. He particularly likes Negroes and their music, and has visited eve Negro prison in the South to get the songs they sing on work gangs. He has traveled 300,000 miles since 1931 and is wearing out his fifth automo- bile. He is 68, bald, father of two boys, two girls. Son Alan sang cowboy songs for the King and Queen at the White House. HE BLAMED IT ON HER/ “I'm an absolute ignoramus about music except that I like folk songs. “I think swing comes out of jazz and jazz comes from the ‘ Negro — probably brought it [ with him in. barbaric African | chants. Ignorant Negroes had no way to get it from Broad- way. Breadway get it from them. A “But American. Negroes give us lots more than jazz. They're the hope of American music. They make up words and mu- sic about things they feel. They can get joy out of jazzing their spirituals and dancing in (he.ir churches. They see no harm in that because they’re singing holy songs. “Negro blues are their most characteristic songs outside of spirituals. The blues have come to the city now, but I don't | know whether they have any relation to jazz or not. “A Negro sings real blues songs to tell about his troubles. Usually they're about his wo- man—and how he wants to get back to her. “One Negro I knew sang himself into a prison pardon. I took a record of his song to the governor of the state. It went, ‘If 1 had you where you got me, I'd wake up in the mornin’ | and set you free.’ And the governor did. “J don't copyright all the fall-enngs we find. I've always had the idea that you can’t copyright a fc'ksong any more than you can bottle up the perfume of a flower —Jack Thompson, AP Feature Service Write | STock QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Sept. 25. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 6%, American Can 111, American Power and Light 5%, Anaconda 35%, Bethlehem Steel 92, Commonwealth and Southern 12, General Motors 54, Interna- tional Harvester 69%, Kennecott 42, New York Central 20%, Northern Pacific 11%, United States Steel 77%, Pound $3.99. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today's Dow. Jones averages: Industrials 152.64, ities 24.70. - AL COMMITTED Herman Garmatz of Skagway ha been Sanitorium, according to word re- ceived by U. 8. Marshal William T. ahoney. rails 33.81, uti committed to Morningside | | | The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.08. L3 e Ld Swift's | Premium Ham | and Local Cabbage I Baranof Tomorrow | » » x ad BOWL FOR HEALTH AND PLEASURE AT THE BRUNSWICK Completely Refinished Oldest Bank in Alaska Commercial Savings ! Safe Deposit Banking by Mail Department The B. 1. Behrends | Bank Juneau, Alaska | ers for the British Government since | NAVY COUNTERPLOT_When the “Middies” started practice at Annapolis, Capt. Allen A. Bergner of Kankakee, I, took orders from Maj. Emery E. “Swede” Larson (right). who was recruited from the marine corps for the naval academy. PLANE BUILDING FOR NATIONS AT | WAR SPEEDS UP California Plants Keep! Rushing Their Orders | for Britain, France | | chines out as fast as their capacity | will permit | The completed ships are stored at the Alhambra airport hangar under armed guard. The contracts for the planes provided that the foreign governments would accept them even though they might not be able to ship them out of the United tes. They will be rushed to' Europe if Congress repeals the em- bargo. : - —es Mexico Turns Down | 0il Deal with lialy ) LOS ANGELES, Cal., Sept. 25. Production of fighting planes for the British and French governments | 1| continue at full speed in southern| MEXICO CITY, Sept. 25—Presis California aircraft factories in spie | qent Cardenas reveals that Italy of the fact that the planes cannot | woo dickering with Mexico for # be shipped from the United Statos | because of the neutrality act. The Lockheed Aircraft Corpora tion has completed 32 huge homb- million barrels of oil on a basis of rayon exchanges. f The Mexican Chief Executive said that the negotiations struck a snaj > 3y because of Italy’s demands for iong President Roosevelt has clamped | yofin’ deals, Cardenas wants spog d’{‘lf]":“"‘)x’q"‘:; “"“:“"“l“l"-‘;):"'; 2 | cash war prices payable on load= PS8, urning the ma-|;,. of the tankers. Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal,, Sept. 25.-~The protracted war-of-nerves took its told in the movies too. All the world has been too much a stage of late for anybody’s comfort, industrially or individually. Hollywood is going right ahead making pictures, even with- out any assurance that the completed films can be flashed on a large portion of the world’s screens. The prospects are that they'll finish the currently launched “colossals,” simply because it would cost the studios more to drop -them than to go ahead. They've spent too much in story prepara- tion, actors’ contracts which would cost money to break, and other details, to stop now. After that, it looks now as if the pro- duction schedule will settle down to a strictly “uncolossal” basis, to pictures which can return a profit minus the normally expected receipts from countries engaged now in other activities than en- tertainment-buying. And the big ones, which will play this country and South America, surely, will go back to the film vaults after their peaceful tours of exhibition to be held for a happjer day in the other regions. The “uncolossal” business would probably last “for the dura- tion” and—although looking for a bright spot for Hollywood at the moment is like diagnosing a mosquto bite on a man with rn?i(s\t}r: reception charming hostessess give thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delicious Van Duyn Candies. Little NOW AT ey Perey’s FRESH 7 ’fl ) @u yn exclusively CHOCOLATES VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS cancer—it might in the end be a good thing. If for no other reason, it would re-emphasize to the town that good pictures can be made without cramming them with everything that is costly. On the RKO lot, they've proved it notably in the past couple of years, with pictures like “A Man to Remember,” and “Five Came Back,” and the more recent “Full Confession”—a dramatic study of a murderer (Victor McLaglen) and a priest (Joseph Calleia) to whom his crime is confessed. The picture was made quietly and efficiently, with no fanfare, and it should ride on its own to a deserved success. In it McLaglen (I quote a confrere, Jack Grant, who ex- presses it perfectly) “earns the Academy Award he was given for ‘The Informer.’” And Calleia’s job is no less commendable. The best other example of the comparatively inexpensive but really entertaining movie comes from Metro, where the latest of the Hardy films, relative to Andy and spring fever, has cleaned up—and justly. Even the least amusing of the series—in my opinion “The Hardys Ride High"—contained more entertainment than many a more ambitious and costly production. That goes too for the adventures of the Joneses, at 20th Century-Fox, although they neglected to include a Mickey Rooney in the family. To think in terms of story and direction rather than in lavish sets and other costly movie frou-frou will afford the local genuises some healthy exercise. Meanwhile, the American movie fan can look forward to a goodly flock of peace-made local “colossals,” typical of which are “Gone With the Wind,” “The Wizard of Oz “Elizabeth and Essex,” “The Rains Came,” and “The Women.” Any one of these should provide the movie-goer with a little forgetfulness of the times the world moves through.

Other pages from this issue: