The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 4, 1939, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNE w\ OCTOBER 4 : <53(>. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS \/”)L LIV., NO. 8224. 'YANKS WIN FIRST GAME, WORLD SERIES g For Maginot ‘‘Putsch’ TS TIGHT TEST CINCINNATI Nazis Now Preparin . UPPER RHINE | oo™ U.S. NAVYTO {2 3 | ABRHPOAE| * 3 q ‘ Werber, 3b, 300 «; 1 3 OF HURLERS | Frey, 2b. 300 2 | MAY SEEBIG PATRO. ZONE L | ‘ Toohd o B B | ool # FOR AMER'(A ewaea0tiie \WITNESSED AITA(K MADE Berger, If. 300100 Myers, ss. $ 0101 4} Derringer, p. 300100 g Swiss Report Germans Are )N;uiramy Ag‘?"fe’e"A‘a i s w1 s o) Derringer and Ruffing in Movi"g Up for Bur. | apama Bjou;lns. ! :(‘F(N‘(ll. ss. Af l;l-;?zo';\g Top Form for IO. ’ qundy Gate Thrust A T moie & 400120 day'sConfest _— PANAMA, Oct. 4.—The Alm*x‘u'x(\in_ DiMaggio, of 8001 %004 e epublics’ neutrality conference ad- Dickey c REICHSTAG SPEECH || Fommed inst might. atter adoption| Seikivk, It S 0040 o KNOTTED SCORE OF 1-1 MAY START BATILE| B T L G, 3t 2o BROKEN, FINAL INNING s 4 around South America and nml-)lh to | | Ruffing, p. 80 108, 0} —— v H he ashing ton-Canadian oun- | e i S - o Italian Spokesman _&ays fie aipe ("b“ it Toats 31 3o is o/ Double Plays Are Made by Door o Peace Still porai s Mg gentrs ) Strike outa: by Ruffiiig 4, By Der- ‘ Yankee Infield - 50,- Open fo Alles e T o o R L 000 Witness Contest - The zone extends 750 miles off | gren; three-base hit: Keller; hits: | Nev\ York and 600 nom Seattle. | off Ruffing 4, off Derringer 6; stol- | (By Associated Press) en bases: Goodman, 1; double pl Verbal ammuntiion, felt by many SHORT SCORE to presage the “real” outbreak of | Yanks 3—Rolfe-Crossetti-Dahlgren, | E war shortly, was most in evidence ‘ JUNEAU ELKS To Ruffing-Crosetti-Gordon -Dahigren, | REDS AR 4 0 Gordon-Crossetti-Dahlgren; leff on YANKS 2 6 L today in the European conflict which‘ Julled on actual battlefields as the| | world watched what effect Cham- | ‘lmses‘ Yanks 4, Reds 1; wupives: | Bill McGowan at plate, John Rear- ! don on first base, Bill Summers on - VISIT SOUTHEAST > berlain’s House of Commons speech HIS THREAT ON SHIPPING United States Not fo Re- WASHINGTON, Oct. 4.—Secre- Atlantic and Baltic waters atja- cent to European belligerent shores. The government of the United States does not recognize the le- gality of unrestricted interference with American ships and commerce. “It is understood from a reliable but unnamed source that Hull be- gan preparation of the statement following receipt of a warning from Germany against suspicious behav- jor, against American ships in the waters around England and France . s | mine. | “The first explosion seemed |1ift the whole ship out of water,” Plimpton said. to |Chinese Raiders Carry and dropped bombs, damaging at starting fires. that the Chinese have carried the "undeclared war” to the invaders. D DFPI'TY THROUGH Joe H. Bell, Chief Deputy Mar-| shal at Anchorage, was a through| passenger on the Alaska yesterday, returning to the Third Division af- ter a trip Outside. Mrs. Bell ac- companies him, the | least 50 Japanese planes and also| This is the first attempt in months | The Seamen, Marine Firemen, Oil- ers, Watertenders and Wipers Un- ions have agreed to an extension |of its contract with waterfront em- | ployers, pending negotiations. The | contracts expired last Saturday | night. | extension, leaving only the Smlorq MAYFIELD, Ky, Oct. 4—Work- men cleaning a well at Mrs. Sarah | Waller’s farm homeé found an eafth- at the bottom of the well. jwas dropped accidentally while be- |ing hung in the well to keep the| | butter cool and fresh—30 years ago. Yet, she said, the same butter, found by the workmen, apparently rancid taste or odor, | Strikes and lockouts require 60| en jar of butter submerged in mud‘ | Mrs. Waller, now 92, said the jar| was in good condition and had no| an electric fan, Out West we used to cruise about and scarcely ever did we fail to find a Bible. It became sort of 1 rite with us, first to turn on all the lights and then to hunt for ft. 1 Capt. Driscoll estimates that the whale was between 80 and 100 feet long. It spouted once and then dlsapp(-ared 'FayTempleIon Colonial Hotel in Denver, the Bonne- Toast of Decade Ago our luck in finding Bibles has bL‘(‘H increasingly | taking the Bibles, a warning we| have always felt obliged to heed. We have some special feeling that is an extraordinarily evil thing to steal & Bible, even from a hotel oom. ‘\ Our first discovery of the abser »f Gideon Bibles was in Washing- BOB BARTLEIT FLIES T0 FAIRBANKS TODAY | Secretary of Alaska E. L. (Bob) | Bartlett flew to Fairbanks today by PAA plane to represent Gov. John | on. At that time we lightly uunb» | W. Troy at an aeronautics meeting | 6ed 1t to the chance that hotels and starting today at the Golden Heart | the Gideon people had limited faith city. He plans to return to June politicians. In Washington they by plane on Saturday. (Continted on Page Seven) snee We have found the Bible in the| Jay Britten month ago, Creek Valley. Ralph C. Vogel, FBI representa- tive in Alaska, with his headquarters at Juneau, has arrived here and will continue his Investigation. and Dick Francis, in the remote Cache Jenkins and Britten Gives Order WASHINGTON, Oct. 4. — The Comptroller of Currency has is- |sued a call for the condition of Dahlgren. | second base and Ralph Pinelli on a|was the first Yank hit, Crossetti | fanned swinging, Lombardi grab- | bing the foul tip. No runs, one hit, left on base FOURTH INNING REDS—Werber grounded out to no errors one balls. Goodman stole second on left on base. FIFTH INNING REDS Craft singled, beating Rolfe’s throw to first. Berger fan- ned, swinging. Myers hit into a double play, Gordon to Crossetti, to This was the Yanks' all national banks at the close of | yhiq twin Kkilling. | business on Monday, October 2. No runs, one hit, no errors, none | The PFederal Reserve Board also|jefe on base. issued a similar call on 1,126 state banks belonging to its system, addition. A total of 5203 banks are af- m 5y |fected by the calls YANKS--Selkirk out, McCormick unassisted. Gordon singled to left. Dahlgwu doubled to the left field (Continued on Page l“lve) was cool crowd, estimated at 50,000 kept warm by watching the two best right hand plichers in baseball, Red Ruffi Paul Der sporadically the game, - SCORE BY INNINGS would have on the continuation of | AlAsKA loDGES * hostilities. AifsflRaitophne . | third base; credit victory to Ruf- BEDS Both French and German com- A patient is carried down thy —_— fing; defeat charged to Derringer. | :‘l'.l;! samseas muniques reported “calm” on the gnpgplnnk as the German hospita’ . . | Western front. The French said SGhlp Stuttgart arrives in St/ettij Pany Of E|gh' LeaVIng on, 1 Errors there was “artillery fire on both| e'rmnny.VCensored disp.atch . | plAv BY plA ! sides” south of Zweibruecken, On f:{'e‘{m*f? gl“i,ethfunhh'"hdewl]:{ bul Aleuhan for PeterS' | YANKS saste nt Germany said is believed the ship brought cas | ANK! e dosiarn S Y S| ‘ualties of the Polish war back from burg, Wrangell ‘ R b a mopping up action took place Dansig. ‘Phate'finghed-frem Berliy v FIRST INNING : s invalving fignts Wit ahacered Jos: to New York by radio. e REDS—Werber flied to Selkirk on | o' ° tions of Polish troops. - Led by District Deputy L. W | tirst pitched ball, Frey flied to . ATY, Oct. 4 Fight Brews Turoff and Exalted Ruler Herb Red- DiMaggio fn short canté alter take NEW YORK CITY, Oc e Switzerland heard reports of an man, a party of eight officers and 10 tha BoUAE ikee sl e Bioclls] In a very dramatic and noisy impending German thrust into | members of the Juneau Elks lodge man fanned swinging: ending, Charley Kellethrlm France through the Alsace Bur- | will leave on the Aleutian tomor- { " No runs mo hits, no errors, none | and Bill Dickey ‘"“1" & gundy gateway near the Swiss [ | row for a fraternal visit to lodges at left on base, 4 | home in the ninth innl "‘N L frontier. Petersburg and Wrangell. YANKS — Crossetti flied out to| 5o the Werld Champion New Germany's upper Rhine garrisons | | The Wrangell lodge will be visit-| Goodman, Rolfe groundsd out to| York Yankees a 2 to 1 yl(‘tof!d were said to have been strengthened | |ed Friday night and the Petersburg | Prey. Keller flied to short left to| today over the Clm'll’llm:lll RI-;S; for this purpose, heavy troop move- [lodge on Saturday. The group Wil The American classic in basehall, the World Series, is off (o a start today. The first game and the | Berger. | w"::'i" s’:::' e bl I’?J.'.'('f I?r ff“;“.xi‘s’iuif«f‘iv,;’x‘l iy :;;"“;\,‘0:’1‘;] lsh:a ‘;“Y‘ut;l‘:‘e’- elther | second game are played in the Yankee Stadium in New York City. Friday will presumably be a day off | IN" runs, no hits, no errors, none | qpe yudden ending of one of ROLe i i | the 9 i IR y i 4 e & AV atl starting Battirdey. Aotibnul ek eft on base. A Norwegian shipping brokers an- Those making the trip include :, lr'u\;l ;hpdl‘hlrd‘ dourth and fifth games to be played in Cincinnati starting Saturday, continuing Sun; SECOND INNING | the tightest hlvxrlm; tests in re- nounced they had been asked by Turoff, Redman, John Walmer, M ay an onday. REDS—McCormick lined & smglc‘. cent World Series came with - Russia to furnish ships for carmm e | E. Monagle, Howard Simmons, Ar-|~ " i oter: Olrodistiin: hasn 16 Jeth naittas | W8 out in the final !um_u. cargoes from the White Sea . |[thur Adams, Martin Lavenik and " M M . ! | on a right pitch. Lombardi hit into | FINAL WIN SCORE Great Britain and France, NOfweglafl Vessel n A((|- Mervin Sides. ROBBERY IHEORY 4 dotiblo, lay, Rotte to Oromstsl, 1o Keller sent a tremendous fly jerms | . + Y00 almost to the center field wall, Germany seized such cargoes in| H [ | Dahigren, Craft fanned on three . the Baltic as contraband. | dent at Entrance fo |S u I“ D I S palin 407 feet from the home plate Lol . Betiee Btaem | : : | No runs, one hit, no errors, none and Lval, Geshmag barsly K0% Great Britain is apparently chart- Smgapore | n y al ors | 1 i 3 his hands on the ball. Joe Di- ing her course of action in the be- | AlASKA SlAYlNGS YANBS - DiMagglo, fifed oub to| “23¥10/ wey purposely passed lief that the present diplomatic man- b bk Goodman. Dickey fanned. Selkirk | and then Bill Dickey rifled a euvers are merely a lull before aj SINGAPORE, Oct, 4. — Britlsh Y | tanned i g liner into short center to send iy fficials announce that the 4,900-| , 3 Kollor hots, greater slum. o “wariave. i | anglng u /) No runs, no hits, no errors, none The British press today backed ton Norweglan steamer v]{ocgh\ r wmle Whale Is 'ON (.umnc Gold Dust Found in WOOd e ) } | HITS HELD TO 4 AND 6 the stand taken by Premier Cham-| Transporter sank yesterday after ON, Oct. 4.—M pe MR Red Ruffing held the Reds to berlain that any peace proposal from |Striking & mine in the harbor en-| a | Repfl"ed Seefl, out o Jnlhm\‘l'mn\x arn ”nn(m‘::l p||e in Mys{ery Case REDS. Berger tanned swiging.| 1°°F :l.m and t'hep Y:n:;::‘ ot Hitler be “tested” in the light of | trance. e I but 1t 1 ] <‘\\ynlx‘m.’ Ilf,m()-,;‘ 4 lBlhl 4 t c h C k Myers singled to right. Derringer’s | Just six hits off Paul Deringer, previous Nazi pledges which he said| Nine of the crew were hurt A' a“h( (oas' e not. often finding Gideo es at Lache Lree drive deflectsdl; off Rufting’s hana,| ‘0% Cinciavast ase. D04 ‘basn tsfaotilage ]A_ l!3,.m.sh dN.':Xval Patrol d(',r:(i}h 2 [ ir ‘]‘m‘lt Tooms any gL T Crosatt abBng 1t Taenstnd "l“::e Reds battled every step Hitler Stumped which rescued the crew, said the! People who live abou notels| o R AR e it ¢, L land tarra b of the way. i 5 BOSTON, of. & — Anc ande ke § o A as . n to a double play, R Hitler was described by mnformed Ship failed fo obey signals on en Other UfllOflS Join |.0|'|g Capt, ) 1:[,:;.'0"‘"(;, b fake o moment ' Prank Hutfman, caretaker of the | Ruffing to Crosseitl, to Gordon, 0| p The Jete tered ::‘m‘h:':h (Continued on Page Three) | tering the hasbor. . shor Extensi e B A s bl hale | reas dimwor il el yont: thes | Ta .o JENKINE gty has | oimd| Danigen. iniing. when Goodman walked !%alsck(].v: "b:ly‘ :]1::\;;?: ! h:rzoflfmtlr:é shoremen in Extension s sighilod oft Goucgen Bank, | once up«:lu 2 time you could bank |3Pout $5,000 imigold dust hidden in | ~No runs, one hit, Ho errots; none rleed‘to set:nd and going home |8 3 E . g0 | £ ¢ ¥ 0 K dpile. left on base. o iab: o6 i ik bout 200 5 e i P s “there. printed | % 20oar . ) [that he was in the:forecastie heac| 8o i 4 e nt: AC eliminated the robbery theory in|McCormick. Dahlgren grounded out ¢ e + {on duty when the ship struck the| 4| fishing. by a light swaying to the blast of : i 3 T BRI 4 . 8 | SCORE IS KNOTTED SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct. | the murder of Mr, and Mrs. Jenkins, | to Frey. Ruffing singled to left. It The Yankees knotted the score in the last half of the fifth inning as the result of a sharp single through third by Gordon, and a hard liner to the left field corner by Babe Dahl- gren, good for two bases. Both pitchers were at top from | i Indications are that the Ship | It is now believed that Francis| Crosetti. Frey flied out to Keller. | ville Hotel in Idaho Falls, and the e bR : ¥ ‘| in today's battle of the diamond. Clerks Union also will agree to the| Sir Francls Drake Hotel in San undoubtedly shot and :():ltl;xdrt)lx‘;nnlrf Goodman walked on four straight Both offered a dazzling as- sortment of fast balls, curves | Franci; That sort of proved the| 4 . - | | Union of the Pacific holding out Dles ln Sou'h T s ted suicide. Francis and Jenkins are | Dickey's throw and evaded Cros-| ' | demands. R e mick singled past Rolfe, scoring . ¢ ) A EAST IN A BAD WAY e 3 Derringer struck out seven Neufral Nation ‘ RS | e sators st trat new con-| Theafre and Music Hall our recont cruisings nave peen B ANK ( AI.I. Goodmar, Lombardi groundsd out| aers, every player i the 0l P ) the East. And A | this week. mostly confined to e Ee n o e SRR e S Yankee lineup except DiMaggio and Red Rolfe, and gave only one base on balls. tary of State Cordell Hull said to- H 1 | | poor s & Bl Cotll B i o= Fighbio Jnvaars, Dis- . | o cotn fuder ibe seseided oot | Passes Away Bon e aniecstasi et we IS |SSUED e, Balle cial on ok sen,| o A NS S W i i ! cep the Bibles when we - : % el ly AR N o el airons Raselly [oue o e (i et o Gideon, oty - called, the fourth {unnInE VI, | L tneee of the. frst five. in- rights as a neutral nation. | SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Oct. 4 find them 1e Gideon So o DiMaggio dribbled ‘s single past n three of the first five in- Said Hull: “Information reaching |A theater and music hall career "rl‘b‘l“’s them as ; I””I“‘f““"l’:“‘ i fhivd base whils Weeber walted Zor| Tnes l:ll’i:ll:le game, New York's 1 the. garemyieny.. Gf DA DRl | HANEQW, Opf./4~Oninset ipvc) B “ 30 Y old {almost as long as her life has end- | enterprise to provide traveling sales- it to go foul. Dicke, t, Mocar-| 5% Radnoed waentoh- States indicates the probability|bombed this Hankow Japanese air- U er ears ed. for Fay Templeton, toast of|MeR and an occasional newspaper| COmDIm"er of cufl’efl(y, i st Plokoy ouf, Mool | of denlly Disie that there may be unrestricted|port. Is Found 'o Be Oka a decade ago. She died in quiet man with something elevating m Federal Reserve Board No' T A Mk o e bk 5 The ;eal:ly:me of the ser- r t shipping in the| Eight iders s y retirement yesterday at the age| 99 ;) ! ‘ ies wil P! here tomorrow. war on merchant shipping ight raiders suddenly appeareds ! y = ;i yes terday at the a | There is a stern warning against| left on base. today's attendance, official, i was given at 58541 and re- celpts $219,000. Cool and Cloudy The weather for the World Series and cloudy but the g of the Yankees and inger of the Reds. A miid northerly breeze blew in from left field dun‘n;

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