The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 18, 1940, Page 5

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THE DAILY: ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, jUNF l§, l?4q. £ Girl Carfoonist - Wrifer Says Sporfs Needs Touch 0f Woman; She's Proving If KOSKI SETS MJOSE DOWN FIVE-THREE Eks Get Or&fized fo Take Paps in Seven Innings Shavey Koski reached down into his bag ol tricks last night anc came out with so many dipsy-doos that the Moose ball club garnerec but five teted blows and went down before the Elks, 5 to 3 Which all means that only one more postponed game is lett from the first half of the baseball sea- son and that it will be played off tonight. If the Moose win, they| are tied with Douglas for honors,| but if they lose—. Fans were unanimous in declar-| ing it was a good game last nigh*,| although Koski didn’t receive all| the support he should have. All in all, it was a good ball game and the return match of wiuse teams tonight shiould’draw a crowd. Box score and summary is as fol- | lows: ' R | | | DODGERS GO BUMP;CARDS WIN AGAIN Boston Bees Take Jump| == Upward - Dean Scores Victory for Giants (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) | The Brooklyn Dodgers committed | four costly errors yesterday uth'-l noon and dropped the decision to| the St. Louis' Cardinals that meant | the loss of first place in the Na- | |tional League. It was the fifth| . | i Values to 1.50 straight triumph for the Cardinals | Big Summer Sale DRAPERY FABRICS 600 —— Elks A w vl ommocoommml 0 JEEYT o W P 2. X Ellenburg, cf ‘Taguchi, 3b Waldron, 1f Addleman, ¢ MacSpadden, 2b Lewis' ss Nielsen, rf Pasquan, 1b Koski, p E. ol | )~ ALY 0 N & Ove Over yards of glorious drapery fabrics in a great Summer Sale . . . Many importe Is of which no more are obtainable YOU SAVE 50 materic LD e voomwooNO D & at great savings in this sale. =3 CENTS TO $1.60 A YARD, Lawson, Guy, 2b \ Martin, 1f | Snow, 1b ! Kimball, Werner, Converse, cf Grummett, cf J. Schmitz, rf Blake, ¢ Coliins Sharek* s o0 p 3b Values to Values to 1.95 2.95 1.00 1.95 Yard |who have not been beaten since | Billy Southworth assumed the man- agement last week. | ol Boston Bees Go Up | J)] A combination of effective pitch- ling and timely hitting boosted the | . |Boston Bees yesterday from last | “|to sixth place when they swept | for Converse 1w |a doubleheader from the Pittsburgh . | Pirates. “Sailor Bill" Posedel fanne: fl,nuemuug...aigtuuuwuu.wn Cro~OOO~C mmo R Totals Batted Batted Taguchi, second man up in lhe: game, rapped out a flat bingle to| right and Bob Waldron, following| him at the bat, boosted the white sphere over the centerfield fence for the first scores. Moose Come Back | Moose came back in the last of| the first when Lawson scored, mak- ing second on Lewis' error at short| and coming home when Pasquan wouldn't permit hjs foot to be pulled from the bag to reach ifor a Taguchi toss, and consequently hardly leathered it. | Elks scored again in the fourth when MacSpadden walked, stole | second, and came home on a nice single by young Eddie Nielsen. In the next inning, Elks got twoi more runs, Ellenburg and Taguchi going aboard by the walk route and came home for tallies when Ensign | Summary | Two-base hits: Waldron 1, Kim- ball 1; home runs: Waldron 1; bases on balls: Koski 1; Kimball 5; struck out: by Koski 5, Kimball| |6; stolen bases: Addleman 1, Pas-| quan 1; double plays: Moose 2,| Lawson to Guy to Snow, Schmitz to| Snow; balks: by Kimhall 1; credlt; victory to Koski, charge defeat to| Kimball; umpires: Shaw! at plate, | Iffert on bases; scorer. Bob Hen-| ning. | eee- - | MERIT SYSTEM | EXAMINATIONS Bob Waldron Slapped out a dou-' e ble against the right field fence. | g 5 okl ' Applications May Be Filed! In the sixth inning, Guy, who | had gained first on MacSpndden's‘ 'or Firs' Tes's Under | error, went to second when Snow | New Se'up | was walked and came home when| Kimbail doubled, followed by Snow, | ¥ * coming in when Collins, batting| Pirst examinations under the new | for Converse, came through with a |Alaska Merit System Agency of the, single ‘Depnrtmem of Public: Health, De-| That was the end of the sccring, | PArtment of Public Welfare apd Un- but Jack Schmitz, playing rigm!evmpl(\ymem Compensation Commis- field for the Moose, committed|Sion Were announced today robbery that got a hand in the{ The qualifymg and competitive | AeventH |examinations will be for the posi-| Taguchi, coming to bat with El-|tions of Clerk at $140 to $155 per lenburg aboard at first by a walg, month; Senior Clerk at $155 to slammed into a fast one and the|$185 per month; Clerk Typist at ball lined into the patch between |$140 to $155 per month, and Clerk- | right fand “center. -Schmitz - went |SteRographer at $155 to $185 per after it on a dead run, scooped it MORth: -4 with one hand and whipped the, The purpose of these examina- | ball to first to pick Ellenburg off |tions is to provide qualifying tests before ‘he could return to the bag.|for present encumbents of these po- | sitions, to provide a promotional | iz ——— |register of encumbents, and to fur-! nish the agencies with a register of | WAKE “P vou eligible persons when vacancies | | arise. lIVE R B I L[_ ; Residents Only 2 Only United States citizens who Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of |have had residence in Alaska for Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Ge |one year preceding the date of ex- The liver should pour out two pints of | amination are eligible to make ap- liquid bile into your bowels daily. 1€ thif | plication, ‘r’lgfd‘l'le':::!lc‘:n‘;‘jui?;:;;y’y?:rflelbowez Time and places of examinations | ;as bloats up your stomach, You get consti- i X Sated, You Teel soar, sunk and the worl‘d Z’:;’ege ) :{‘L’;g‘m:: lflml:; bfi";r:d d:y L Ak e B00 (ese two pinta of |addressing the Alaska Merit Sys- bile flowing freely to make you feet “up and | tem Agency, Box 2661, Juneau, AI-1 up.” Amazing in making bile flow freely. | ocq Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by name. _ 3 Stubbornly refuse unything else. Price: 26¢. Closing date for receipt of appli- cations is July 20. ITS TIME TO CHANGE YOUR HEAVIER LUBRICANTS! CONNORS MOTOR LUBRICATION COMPANY i “THE,PRICEZS'NOT EVERYTHING'! PHONE 767 PHONE 767 THRIFT COOP - STREET RETAILERS OF FAMOUS SHURFINE and TASTEWELL PRODUCTS 3—FREE DELIVERIES—-3 Our Store Is as Close as Your Phone—SHOP EARLY | Cleveland 11 of the Pirates and limited them | to six hits in the opener. Paul Dean Wins Paul Dean mastered .the Chicago Cubs yesterday for the second time within a week as the Giants Hofmann firml, scored a victory to move closer to where there is steady job for the second place. Dean yielded only girl sports writer-cartoonist in the six hits. country, and she's doing her best to Reds Move Up find it. The Cincinhati Reds jumped| Some six years ago Miss Hofmann, back into first place yesterday by then a Los Angeles High School stu- rate pitching of Lloyd Moor and dent, looked over the possibilities Jeane Hofmann: “I want | 65 By ROBERT MYERS LOS ANGELES—Willowy Jeane believes that some- rate pitching of Lloyd Moore and one of the least crowded—sports. a homer by Eddie Joost with two In fact, she couldn't discover a single | aboard in the second girl in this field. She started her career as the sports editor of her High School pa- per, although some of her young male rivals didn't like the idea very much, Now she contributes a cartoon and story a week to the Hollywood Cit- izen-News, and until recently had had a woman's page in a weekly | sports’ magazine issued here. It fold- ed up, much to Jeane's disappoint- ment. inning, GAMES MONDAY National League Pittsburgh 3, 1; Boston 5, Cincinnati 6; Philadelphia St. Louis 3; Brooklyn 1. Chicago 1; New York 2. American League No games played. Gastineau Channel League Moose 3; Elks 5. Pacific Coast League No games were played Monday as She Likes Baseball the teams were traveling to open| At one time she covered the Holly- on the following schedule for this wood baseball club’s fortunes in the week : Pacific Coast League for the Citi- Sacramento at Seattle. zen-News, and discovered that base- San Diego at Portland. ball was one of her favorite sports. Hollywood at San Francisco. |It still is, although ice hockey— Oakland at Los Angeles. “pecause it's faster and tougher’— her top choice, but— “I like all sports, although I'm strietly a spectator participant.” Does she run into much opposition from the hgrdier, males in purswing 563 | her careet?’ 4 '513| “Well, yes. Sometimes 506|in a press box, but after they get 500 |@t first seem to resent my presence 481 |used to me everything is fine. The 474 | only real rebuff I ever got in trying ‘365 | to land a job was from a San Fran- cisco sports editor. He told me—and 1 appreciated his frankness—that he wouldn't have a woman within two blocks of his department.” Jeane, just turned 21, visited the Chicago Cub baseball camp at Santa Catalina igland this spring, and had a_great time with Gabby Hartnett and his players, It was there, she said, that she met her “most inter- esting sports personality.” His name? Dizzy Dean. The Woman's Touch ‘Tall, blonde, with eyes a little bit, green, a little grey, Jeane displays marked talent in her drawings and gives her story material a distinct feminine touch. “I think,” she explains, “that since there are so many women who follow sports, they would be interested in the impressions, angles and views of a woman writer. I just know I'm right.” Miss Hofmann was born in Los Angeles, but her parents came from Savannah, Ga. Both are hoping she fulfills her ambitions, which are: “To get a job and to be famous. [ want to be famous most of all,” concluded the only girl sports writer- cartoonist in the country. COINCIDENCE APPLETON, Wis,, June 8~ Wini- fred Fowler of Minneapolis and Barbara Boyce of Wawautosa, Wis., Lawrence College freshmen, live together in the same room on the STANDING OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pect. Seattle 595 Oakland Sacramento San Diego Hollywood San Francisco Los Angeles Portland National = League Won Lost Pect. 673 667 643 509 408 370 362 340 Cineinnati Brooklyn New York Chicago St. Louis Boston Pittsburgh Philadelphia American League Won . Lost . 31 16 .30 20 32 22 .21 24 .28 30 23 30 Pet. 660 .600 593 Boston Detroit New York . Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia ...".. 20 31 ‘Washington .21 34 Gastineau Channel League Won Lost 8 4 1 4 2 e P. 0. Clerk Solves Phonetic Puzzler MARQUETTE, Mich. June 18—A postal clerk with a penchant for phonetics deciphered a puzzling ad- dress on a letter received here. He mutered the address, “Alice Nye Dock,” to himself a few times after learning no person of that name lived here. Pet. 667 636 182 Douglas Moose Elks the boys | to be famous most of all.” HIS BAT DOES HIS TALKING By FRANKLIN BANKER AP Feature Service | defeating the Phillies on the first-|for women in journalism and chose | PITTSBURGH.—Frankie Gustine, | who says he is a descendant of Daniel Boone, is using a baseball | bat—not a rifle—to bang his way | to fame. | - This ‘mere lad. only 20 and in }l\is fourth year of professional Ybasebnll, is hitting the ball at a | .320 clip and doing a swell in- | fielding job for the Pittsburgh Pirates in his first year of major league competition. Frankie seems imbued with |some of' the spirit and determina- Inon of the great Kentucky fighter {and woodsman. And his sparkling I play is ‘sweet balm to the Pirates’ | financial’ department — smarting | undér the hurt of a $150,000 double ‘flop in the persons of Pitcher John Gee and ' Catcher Ray Mueller. They've both gone nack to the mindrs” '#hd - Gustine, picked up for a song on option from Gads- den of the Southeastern League, is one of the year's prize rookies. You'd 'never guess it, though, from Frankie’s behavior., Out to Make Good He's as quiet as a mouse. After a hard "day's work he slips off to the movies or a game of pool. He shuns all bad habits -and performs on the diamond 'with only onc thought: “I'm going . to make good.” | It was an important decision that he made’ back - in Parker| High School, Chicago, four years| ago. Adept at basketball as well} as baseball, he, was offered a four- year university schgiarship. me“ chucked that to sign with Paducah of the Kitty league as a third| baseman. He's glad that he did. | Pilot Frankie Frisch put him on| second bgse this year. And is| Frisch plgased! [ “He's t a great future” says| the Bucs' chief. “Why, he's play-| ing they bitters better in his firsi| year tham 1/did in my third. | Bad Runner | “He must correct his running, though, He needs a longer smdn“ instead of that puppy run.” Unlike ' ‘most ball players, Gus-| tine had to be told to eat more—| steaks, ‘beef, potatoes and vege-| tables. He:lost 12 pounds during| the first six weeks of the season. Like ‘most ball players, he’s| gobbling up the biggest steaks he‘; can find, now. | He's 'six feet tall, weighs 175 He's a good' looker, with the kind of blue' eyes and long eyelashes no time for girls, he says: ‘ “I'm just out to play ball.” | e | |case this summons is published, that girls go for. But Frankie has o TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY AT THESE REDUCED PRICES. Floral prints, monotones, stripes and novel ties, in a thrilling array. Every color and type to harmonize and By all means see these ® Imported Linens ® Linen Crash ® Silk Repp all color schemes remarkable values. ® Damask ® Printed Patterns ® Soft Colors 50 INCHES WIDE B.M.BeurenpsCo. SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION | No. 4519-A IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUMBER ONE, IN "JUNEAU. R. E. ROBERTSON, on behalf of himself, W. S. PULLEN, J. F. MULLEN; WALTER B. HEISEL,| IKE P. TAYLOR, H. L. FAULK-| NER, CURTIS SHATTUCK, J.| T. PETRICH, T. L. ALLEN, M. 8. WHITTIER, and all othets similarly situated who may jmn‘ herein, | Plaintiff, | Vs, FRANK A. METCALF, as represen- tative of himself' and ajl others similarly situated, the CITY [OF| JUNEAU, ‘an incorporated muni- | cipality, CASEY-SHATTUCK AD- | DITION, INC,, a corperation,and | also all' unknown persons, and all unknown heirs of all' un-| known deceased persons, and also all other persons or parties un- known claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the com- plaint herein, . Defendant. THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.“ To the above-named defendants, GREETING: You are hereby required to ap- pear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, at Juneau, within the First Judicial Divis- ion, within thirty days after the last publication of this summons, namely, within thirty days after the 3rd day of July, 1940, in or within forty days after the date of its service upon you, in case this summons is served upon you personally, and answer the com- plaint of the above-named plain- tiff on file in the said court m the above-entitled action. The said plaintiff in said action demands the following reliel: That decree may be entered herein quieting the title to Lots 6 and 17 Block 209, Casey-Shattuck Addi- Soon he came up with the right answer—“L. S. and I. Dock” (Lake campus which their mothers shared Superior and Ispheming ore dock). when they attended the college. > The girls' fathers were graduated ""THE PRICE I'S NOT EVERYTHING"' e e i e Daily Empire ciassifieds pay. from Lawrence, t0o. BRINGING UP FATHER HUH ! BECALISE IT WAS NEXT TO MINE ? WHAT [tion to the Town of Juneau, Al- The Daily Alaska Empire has the aska, in the name of plaintiff for | largest paid circulation of any Al-lhlmsell and for said W. S. Pullen aska newspaper. J. F. Mullen, Walter B. H'M..scl, Tke By GEORGE McMANUS: QUALITY SINCE 1887 P. Taylor, H. L. Faulkner, Curtis| Shattuck, J. T. Petrich, T. L. Al-| len, M. S. Whittier and for all others similarly situated who may join herein, and that the clouds | upon the title to said lots created by .that certain deed made on April 18, 1922, by the defendant City of ‘Juneau ‘to the Juneau Tennis Club to said Lot 6 certain deed made on September | 22, 1926, by said defendant Casey- | Shattuck Addition, Inc, to the| Juneau Tennis Club on said Lot | 7, may be cancelled and held void, |and that the claims of defendant | Metcalf and all others similarly situated as well as of all other| unknown persons and of all of the unknown heirs of -all such un- known persons now deceased mn’y be decreed to be null and void, and that said defendant Metcalf may be adjudged to be represeri- tative' of all former members of the assoclation similarly situated to him, and that plaintiff may be directed to sell said lots and to apply the proceeds derived there- from to the payment of said as- sociation’s debt of $125.00, with in- terest thereon at 8% per annum from July 28, 1938, to the B. M.| Behrends Bank, and to reimburse | plaintiff for municipal taxes which he has personally paid on said lots to the City of Juneau, and to pay the costs and disbursements herein! including a ‘reasonable at- torney’s fee, and to expend. the balance in the building or helping to build another tennis . court in the recreational play-ground of the City of Juneau or to give it to said city to be used for said pur- pose, and for such other and fur- ther relief as may be meet and equitable in the premises. And in the event you fail to so| appear and answer, the plaintiff will take judgment against you for want thereof, and will apply -to the Court for the relief demanded in his complaint and as herein- above. stated. WITNESS, the Honorable GEO, F. ALEXANDER, Judge of said Court hereunto -affixed, on this10tit day of June, 1940. ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, ¥ and by that | SOFT-BALLERS BEGIN SEASON First Game Scheduled for Tomorrow Night in Evergreen Bowl The first softball’ game of the season is to be played tomorrow eve- ning in Evergreen Bowl at 6:30, it was announced today by Playfield Director Harold Roth. The first game is scheduled be- tween the Haida Blues and the All Stars, called to begin at 6:30. Scven teams are in the league of the kitty-ballers this year, the Haida Blues, Haida Whites, Henning’s, Federals, Douglas Rinky-Dinks and Independents. e ANOTHER CACHET FOR JULY FOURTH There will be a special cachet, used on all first class mail at Wash= ington’s birthplace, Virginia, on July; 4th, 1940. Anyone wishing thig cachet may send his mail “ready to go" to: Postmaster, Washing- ton’s Birthplace, Virginia. —— e -+ Subscripe to The Daily Alaska Em- pire—the paper with the largest guaranteed circulation, el Sweet Kitchens by WEST WIND Fighters ‘ Clerk. Publication dates: June 18, 25, July | 3, 1940 —adv. | Family Certainly —let us show you the West Wi Veatilatiog Face CLARKSVILLE, Mo, June 18— | Bertram Julier of Clarksville has 26 nephews and great nephews in | the military or naval service of Great Britain. Another nephew, Henry Julier, was killed in the| battle between the Exeter and| the German pocket battleship! Graf Spee off Montevideo. Ber- tram, himself, was born in Eng-| land and served in the Bri!lsh! navy during the Boxer rebemun' and in the United States vayl RICE & AHLERS (0. during the World War. PHONE 34

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