The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 6, 1940, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 6, 1940. s I Yanks A | | - TANKs Are - | 3 ( g o L] Going Up; FLAYS CLINCHES For Men Who Have a Taste For Fine Things ~ HitSecond "ISMS” ; . HitSecon r ENNANT y/ s 3 — Conven e ew UYortket Worsteds ; onventioners Also En- i . ~»Indians Lose Fourth Con- dorse Bill fo Sef Up | Dick Barrett Chalks Up His : secutive Game - Reds Comioslstre i "" ‘ | Twenty-third Vicory TAILORED IN ROCHESTER . | Aid Vander Meer kol of 1940 Season , by MICHAELS-STERN ’ (Continued trom Page Ome) | " (By Associated Press) - - BRI, . X The New York Yankees, the mocracy faces in tne light of cur- “ | The é:‘:ttl:’;‘:ln:éi ;.:l;:)dnrhvd A R E A w 0 R D T 0 T H E w I S E i v team that will not be downed, bat- rent developments and urges en- | their second (,mm,éuuvc Pacific M tled back yesterday into second actment of compulsory military | co: “'m"m, m‘m"‘mt by last night place in the American League by training, declaring “there is a grave defeating. ‘Bacramento antd giving . Erabbing two decisions from the| possibility that the war may soon b | Dick Barrett his 23rd pitching tri- Washington* Senators, | spread to the Western Hemisphere { umph of thie ve’“' g 3 The collapsing League's leading| Last resolution passed this morn- | Behind (m'”“jm‘,(, pitching of v Cleveland Indians sagged to with- | ing, Number Five, endorses the Al- ‘mulh;)aw Ray Prim, Los /Ang!‘lcsl in two games of the Yankees by aska National Guard plan whereby | swamped Hollywood iast night | dropping their fourth consecutive companies have been established at | " Portiand, i ftith ‘Al rail | game to the Detroit Ti | Retchikan, Juneau, Anchorage and Carvell Rowell, 24-year-old rookie | e I T Dy e i The Chicago White AP b e 4 e Ja. ®econd baseman of the Boston Bees last night, fell just three runs short| ne Chicago ite x defeated | Fairbanks, and urges the Legisla who is leading the national league |of a tic as San Diego took both - the St. Louis Browns yesterday be- | ture convening in the spring to g, batting is a native of Citronelle, !ends of a doubleheader | hind Ed Smights' four-hit pitching. | “make the required appropriation| Alabama. He was brought up by The Cincinnati Reds gave Johnny | for armories.” the Bees from Hartford late las® THURSDAY | Vander Mcer a push along the The convention was to go into season. . oh League ‘o comeback trail by coming from be- | business session again this after- 0 0, 1: Portland 6, 0. | hind to defeat the Pittsburgh Pi-|noon with a number of other reso- Hollywood 2; Los Angeles 160 rates for his first major league lutions slated to come before the | Seattle 3; Sacramento 2. ® | tory of the year. body beforc recess to prepare for Oakland<San' Francisco, Falh | The Brookiyn Dodgers were yes-| the Grand Parade, starting from | National Lfaxn.r i | terday forced to ten inmings to| the Legion Dugout at 6:30 o'clock | Brooklyn 8; Philadelphia 5 whip the Phillies. | this evening. | Pittsburgh 3; Ctneinnati 8, The G wept a double con- -+ | N E Boston 7, 1: New York 8, 4 test - fr ton by a three-run| The Dally Alaska mmpue guaran- | Kiiiican League djv] rally in eighth which cinched tees the largest daily circulation ot Philadelphia 7; Boston 9. | the nightecap. any Alaska rewspaper FRANK A. BOYL New York 2, 8; Washington 1, 1 Cleveland 3; Detroit 10. St. Louis 2; Chicago 4. "SCREWY* STANDING OF THE CLUBS sometimes emerge ‘The only unpleasant thing about| the business is the occasional swawking fan. It's this w; “Two guys come to th one’s wearin’ a straw hat. Then| Hal Trosky wallops one and the thrown—but always > it ANB CONVENTION SET FOR NOV. 10 ame and WRANGELL, Alaska, Sept. 6.—| Annual convention of the Alaska by Native Brotherhood will be held in| Klawock, starting on November 10, | |it was announced this week by | Grand Secretary Willlam L. Paul hat gets the guy who wasn't wea e oo Menw’s B. M. MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES ARE PRESENTED EXCLUSIVELY IN JUNEAU BY Shop BEHRENDS CO. QUALITY SINCE 1887 Groundkeeper of Cleve- Pacific Coast League il Won Lost Pet DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE land Indizns’ Park Has seawe 106 56 ke P f Y(Al i Los Angeles 92 72 561 —- Y055 Oakland 81 M 530 FOR roo e, Sir San Diego 8 T %0 P iy Sacrice Sacramento 82 81 404 Aunrron or ALASKA CLEVELAND, Sept, 6.—Emil n.»--i_“"-”i""“_ 80 85 485 sard, the Cleveland Indians’ grounds- | a0 Francisco 74 8 '435‘ ELECTION SEPTEMBER 10, 1940 Keeper, lifted off a straw hat “just| Portiand ... L LI L 4 like new.” Baseball fans, he said, KARMODAL. SERkiy | Al Won Lost Pet % g e iy Cincinnati 83 46 643 “Well, already this year T got| Drookn (L 500 like it. Al my men get one, ii“\ll’i‘:f?h :’}: %‘: 552142‘ even a couple players. I could get ' =0 H% ; : | Oldest Bankin |7 55w mme g8 o OUR NEW FALL | Boscard's hats come sailing 4 p: i | whenever the Indians going if:‘;i;’(‘i‘umm ‘;‘: 'g“i ;";51 Miehaels Stel’n s P | good. Clearing the field nets him i Lo . ! ] t A R d \ A'“Sk“ his nice “free, gratis” enterprise,| Amgriananiee o | uies re ea y | | all income and no outgo, although |y oo A 3 Pl | i 2 /3 he's quite surc any punster can see | .o 5o - 566 | A SURE SIGN OF FALL . . The arrival of cur new Michaels-Stern Clothes . sure | ] CommerCIal Sav1ngs there's a little overhead. Detroit w5 565 pennant winners this and every season! Tailored in Rochester with the skill of over four i To keep things on a strictly ef-| g/ o/ ey aenerations of quality craftsmeanship A stronger lineup than ever before . . . ‘ Saje De Osii :)‘"‘""']l ‘::'”"‘mfif‘ ':::(‘I 'l;‘ml“'l‘:;&“';‘)"‘v:i"“ Chicazo &1 61 523 P{nw (:clurs‘, in your 1:xvo{|h: Worsteds, .Homcsrums, Imported V'T'woods, and Shetlands. p k-vip “;; i Slelbrate s iaknsat Washington 55 75 423 New models, single h!:w:_nml, doub 1(75;, English drapes Everything new except their z 26 ke A A e b u'um'?.t Louis ... 85 M .417L 93-year-old stundard of highest quality. % f . that two of his nimblest atdes hover | 1i1adelphia S i . i Banking by Mail Department Sohintly bk e o thent cdita P 35.00 to 39.75 ’ ] 3 from which “five buck” mode! Pe ° | | | ] Subseribe for The Bmplre _ |of Juneau while he was here en-| |route to the west coast. With a| membership now of more than 1,000 | delegates will be on hand from all ¢ |the camps, the secretary reporled.} e ANt e A8 2 2 | - Charge. A u S DESIROYERS Commander Schoppe will take BARNES ARRI ES Now v u T [ | charge of a magnetic observatory U RPRLSECIIT S W e, gaeroneaer. wpn GRahy o ssems | |in bringing out that bargaining ag- | e activity was responsiple in | . ‘ |large part for the increased mem- bership. Bargaining agency agree- ments are now in effect in all the camps north of Kake, he said. | Among major matters to come be- fore ‘the conventin, Secretary, Paul [outlined, will be resistance to the “apparent extension of authority by | in Puerto Rico. 1‘ Lieut, Robert Knox, Executive Of-| ficer 6f the Surveyor, has been named commander of the vessel,| succeeding Commander Schoppe. | SUDDENLY LEAVE PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Sept. 6.— Four ‘destroyers left the Philadelphia | FROM WRANGELL; CANNERY TENDER Frank S. Barnes, candidate on the Republican ticket for the Senate, _Tell One WALDPORT, Ore., Sept. 6. — THATS THE BUY/ A message to Mr. and Mrs. Juneau: the Indian Office”; the land suits; Wheeler-Howard act and fisheries! and game. Commenting on the In-| dian Office authority theme, the; | secretary said there was a growing tendency on the part of the Indian| Office, “to force us to lead through teachers, a tendency we are strongly | Navy Yard last night under sealed | ordefs. - Rumors floated thick "“WAI.KER A"D nautical circles of the East Coast this ‘'morning that the four naval ships were enroute to Canada for transfer to the British Navy. The Navy Department refused to make any comment. jcame up from Wrangell this after- |noon on one of his Wrangell Pack- DAVls (OME | ing Company tenders, the X-L. | | With Barnes was Mike Monagle, IN BY plANE | who has been on a business trip to | Wrangell, and Ernie Sarff and Fred | (Doc) | Nelson from Petersburg, coming to | Norman Walker, Demo- attend the American Legion Con- | Mrs. O. V. Hurt has two young turkeys that were hatched from eggs never laid. The eggs were re- moved from turkeys that had been in cold storage two weeks. Mrs. Hurt, curious to see what would happen, put them under a hen. The poults are healthy and nor- opponir. cratic Senatorial candidate, and vention. Capt. J. V. Davis, Democratic House | candidate, both for reelection, flew | in from Ketchikan with Shell Sim- mons today. | OF SURVEYOR GIVEN PUERTO RICO POST| simmons ast nizni s entoree | Territorial Treasurer’s office, to Ket- Lieut.-Commander R. L.Schoppe, chikan, stopping overnight to return commander of the U. 8. Coast and | with Walker and Davis this morn- Geodetic Survey vessel Surveyor, ing. | now working in offshore waters' Walker is wearing an American near Yakutat, is to be transferred Legion cap and arrives in time to to Puerto Rico shortly, it was|take in the last two days of the announced in Seattle this week by, convention, winding up tomorrow Capt. F. H. Hardy, Inspector in night. ;. By GEORGE McMANUS DIMOND 10 SPEA ON RADIO MONDAY EVENING AT 8:15 Alaska’s. Delegate Anthony J. Di- mond will speak over the radio sta- tion KINY Monday evening from 8:15 to 8:45 o'clock. General Electric is now offering the Greatest Washing mal, Machine Bargain of the Year — A beautiful white, stream- lined, full skirt washer with LOVELL WRINGER—PERM- ADRIVE MECHANISM — 8-pound capacity — GENERAL ELECTRIC GUARANTEE. SEE IT FOR YOURSELF'! $64.95 AlaSka Electric Li ght alld Power Coo |""An address delivered by the busy n iDelegate in Washington will be P Ay repeated at that time by means of electrical transcription. GLACIER HIGHWAY DELIVERY DAILY TRIPS C(OMMANDER SCHOPPE : BRINGING UP FATHER COAL——WOOD LUMBER—GROCERIES ® PHONE 374 "SHORTY" WHITFIELD ) gt it

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