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DRAMATIC MOMENTS; EVERY WORLD SERIES HAS THEM; HERE SHOW AP Feature Service Every World Series has had its| drama and down the long list of stirring incidents old-timers like| to recall are a rew that stand out' the Yanks 1-0. Stengel w: i b T e e Yanks, 10 Sieneel was no Sik Errors Made | WHAT A GRAND FINALE . . . Tremendonsly Im- Jjike the one in the wvemn game | great fun telling how he huifed i in 100, Joss ines was hlnfrms. and puffed to beat thab Ball home.| i Sestie. Eatisrs hattined the poriant Savings! Stock up now for months to come! or the Cards. St. Louis had three ‘Su two rI(\ late I Cs = : = rune, New YOk twobut the an | came 1o tat i the. NG e, ouy " AnfEits AGola g ‘cett by You know CANNON long-wearing quality, their kees had had men on base inland the score tied at 4-4, a chorus . : : . . every inning and were DIDDING At of cheers-and Jeers—groeted him. L b iliee-EAme lead in the Pa- superior make and service, the safisfaction their that lead. Stengel swung twice and it looked| " ne Angels used five = pitchers Haines, weakening in the seventh, suddenly found the bases filled But his next effort sent the ball . 1 with two out, ey Rainiers who collected 21 hits and EVENT and we guaraniee these prices fo be the o the right field stands for a were also aided by six Los An- And up to bat came doughty homer. His trot around the bases geles errors. LOWEST You’LL FIND ANYWHERE Tony Lazzeri — the “poosh-‘em-| was & » Lo . : was_onhe of, eXAggerated lajsure The teams play a adamishoadir| upteisanes. ordinary < batior That 10-Ran Haming tonight unless Seattle wins the e hcl_-am}; a slugging terror in| There Was drama aplenty in firt game. : Fia — @ clutch, Haines shook his head that famous seventh inning of !4 g i :ll{d stepped off the mound, | the fourth game between the Vi c nnon cavalller Percale sheels EARLY BIRD SPECIAL 120 cannon Then there was a roar from Chicago Cubs and the Athletics T ‘ the arowd, That tigwrs bl fa. 1009, e’ A% R4 e oo of| THE FINEST AND MOST SUPERIOR SHEETS MADE— . . in from the cistant bull-pen’ wes'fhe first’ thids < gabies. In the| c ngs Laundxy tested for 4 years household wear. Smooth, econ- e Musiin Zld. Grover Cleveland Alexan- jourth, at Philadeiphia, the Cubs| omical and less expensive to launder. oy ;e;msmt;ii:mpl:: rolled up s e-do i;ad going ul;n) 81 ‘1089 Beg. 2.25 % . 1.790 72x108 SECOND SELECTION already al 3 g seventh an e most rabid ey to pull this cne from the fire, He tic fans had conceded the as pee R Res SH (] Zzul beaten the Yanks just the 5 victory and a tied ,w,-j(:s_ 7‘-«‘1 3, e&o 1095 L J L4 .5“ EE.'I"sl negula‘ 1050 . . ay before. | Al Simmons, first Athletic up, e micn: o Falive. appuue | CINGINWATL Gt 1. — some Bopular L5 & oo o ANN HEE Lazzeri set himself. Alex pitched. knowledged his useless effort, cOmpetent baseball observers think fi3x108 "SLB-'“" Called. But Foxx singled, an outfielder| that Johnny Hutchings, 24-year-old ¥ “Ball.’ lost the next man’s fl Cincinnati recruit from Pensacoln R 54 54 S S y, there| Alex stretched, let go, and were some more hits, Hack Wil in the Georgia-Florida League, has P a n“ oT s H EET s “‘I,Xlfla, eg. 109') El o l..’“ every Cardinal fan groaned. Laz- son misjudged a fly which went|MOre speed than Bobby Feller. R zeri had slammed a wicked drive for a three-run homer, and the| That is & matter for scientific 8IXI08 7~XI08’ eg. 1.75 » » 1.35 down the left field foul line. score was suddenly 8-7. Coch-|determination, but Manager Bill neg 2.25 ¢ [ But it was foul. | rane walked, Simmons' b McKechnie believes in the 200- Mgk S H H H b £ alked, ounder | ———————————————————————————————————————————————————— Alexander, still the method- went over the third baseman's|Pounder and gave him several » cannon Flne “uslln Plllow cases ical workman despite the fu- head, Foxx singl | starting chances. He showed lack c H sl! h dP l Sh l head, X. gled and the| rore, uncorked his next pitch. crowd went wild as Cochrane|©f seasoning but he also demon- annon iemsiniche ercale eels 42x38% Lazzeri swung, the catcher non- ijed the score. Jimmy Dyke, “trated that he could put a hole 72x108 81 108 : chalantly rolled the ball back o double a' little later in the in-| @ barn door if you asked him X X \ Begnlan 65¢ . » ¢ O “Had PGy (L the box and the Cards had Won yning was good for two more rum‘w R 2 25 ® Re 2.35 ® the series. Not a Yankee reached There were other sudden, un-| More control, both of the ball eg. &. g. & first in the next two innings. |expected moments ' of' drama. | and” 6b B Derved*Wisets 'the "telsss e e T . L g HEHSTITCHED CASES There hardly has been a more rjke the time Connie Mack sur-|2re loaded, will put the boy N“ T WELS dramatic moment than when pyisingly stuck old Howard Fh,,,ke’across et coaches sny | Regular 750 S i Bt Babe Ruth faced Charley oot in against the Cubs ‘fn the first FORMERLY A LUXURY AND NOW DOWN RIGHT LOW > 5 e 2 nir 9 o | e e g S i s B DEDS' PITCHING. RS Aotubunl Do, Whie o« P oo CANNON DISH TOWELS and the taunts of the Cubs. SOme grikeout record. vies| muleh any roozps .)‘Lr.()il)}] fans l.saw‘ Ruth, @t the or that 1920 series, when «Bill| A(E Also WHIZ > LARGE BATH SIZE A point g bat " to the dl5- Wambsganss turned in a triple| e “‘as;l:nfljh jculling bis shol” piay, unassisted, for Cleveland 7 Regular60c . . . . . = e 4 Teal- against the Dodgers '00 . Y oy Lo 0 Sy o ih. e | onvomns” e mon] | HAND TOWELS PAST LINER UESR TRRELS about to that spot. A £ | o .1 — Bucky R B ;;ntli:dwri(;: Cleveland in that| wajters, the National Teaue’s most . 35¢ b 3 Package of 6, Regular 135 . ® ning of the 1924 seventh game A A W A vaiuable player of 1039, - started g L R e when Walter Johnson replaced jout this year:as if he was going S— Fred Marberry. Johnson, most TRAVELING PAIR | o repeat for the Cincinnati Reds. WASH anTHs glsn cLoTH Package of s' popular and greatest pitcher of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Burriss are| H¢ Won his first nine games in a his day, had been beaten in two guests at the Baranof. They came|fOW. then stumbled four times| Beg 15¢ A e egular 500 B A N e other starts, The Washington in from the Westward last mght before getting the tenth. Veoppriepribtr=) T i outlook was dark. But_ Walter Burriss is a traveling man. Th‘;‘n he started another 3"“"3‘ " . held the Giants scoreless inning oo, 1o o o g but had to make four tries for ] after inning until Washington AT BARANOF his 16th. The fact that he. couldn't| SALE SALE won_'in the {welfth when Mc- M. P, Munter is a guest at the| 6Pt his 1939 record of 27 vie-| ] ™) - Neely’s grounder bounced over Baranof, having arrived here yes. | '0les nd 10 losses doesn’t mean VAL“E [ vALuE Lindstrom’s head and scored terday. that Bucky is slipping though. (1] l.t s."ce 1887 Ruel. T o About half his' defeats this year| anty St The year hefore, Casey Sten- Subscrive for The Empire. resulted from light hijting by his| gel was the drama-maker, Casey homered within in the seventh inning of the park| that first | 1923 game and the Giants beat like “Casey at the Bat,’ literally. Nazi Bombs Puzzle This Tot SEATTLE IS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 1, 1940. WINNERBY 18-4 SCORE Five Pltchers Used by los Angeles Last Night- a lopsided score of 18 to 4 to but they all looked alike to the teammates. He's a top-notch fielder. He treated himself ‘to "an unassisted double-play on an attempted sac- rifice early in September. Off season he goes duck hunting with Jimmy Wilson, who made an ace pitcher out of a run-of-the- mine third baseman, named Wal- ters. Smashing Oct. WHITE SALE CANNON SHEETS - TOWELS - PILLOW CASES THE LAST WHITE SALE OF THE YEAR AND f FAMOUS This Mrs. Roosevelt is a small Goes places woman, with silvery hair, a soft [} | voice and a love of pretty clothes. She married young T. R. in 1910 and |is the mother of four children—a L] Does Thln s}marrir‘d daughter and three sons. For years ‘she played the role of political wife while her husband et “.s.“rvcd as Assistant Secretary of the | 1 _ | Navy, as Governor General of the Republican Eleanor Roos- |3t = Soremer Soveret puerto evelt Keeps Active by | ® : 4 Various Duties i Only Scared Once Needlework is her hobby. Quen- By ADELAIDE KERR AP Feature Service Writer tin, her youngst son, works out her | designs and she turns out samplers | |and waistcoats which make one- | woman shows and win prizes. ) Some of her worid wide activities mand of a regiment of regulars dur- of America’s busiest women and her | o 1 “Woild War and Mrs. your wife in Paris today.” | £he remained throughout the war, | worked in YMCA canteens and leave areas and was on hand to nurse her husband when he was wounded. | Bcouts activities, raises funds for 'Chmesc war orphans, wins needle- | work gold medals, plays hostess to | famous weekend parties at Oyster | Bav She has traveled 2ll over thP sheets, fowels and pillow cases give. It'sa GRAND scared in 1937, when she and an- tin, traveling in Shanghai as Sino- | Japanese hostilities broke out, made their escape down the Wang Poo River in a little boat. That time, she says, she shook. | The hoat went on to Manila, ar- | | | rived in" time for an 'earthquake. That night she received a cable from her hushand: “Next time, you stay hom WO OLDTIMERS ARE ADMITTED TO HOME Two pioneers with more than 40, years' experience in the north have been 1900 and was a long:col an, en- WARPINCH HITS ITALY ‘Rationing Laws on Fals and Oils Are Put Into Operation Now £ ROME, Oct. 1.—The Italian gove ernment this morning put into effect rationing laws effecting fats and Here comes the other Mrs. Roose- 4 e admitted . to the Pioneers’'|oils most commonly used on the velt. {]’_”-‘};e f:;v“: the 1;amlly ‘z‘ 'few Sho;"" | Home. table and for cooking. ‘ake the time she went to war. Her Vou may not know her, but a few l'usll)nnd was sent to France in com-| Daniel P. Gage, 80. native of These included butter, olive 0‘!, million other people do, for she’s one Aot Michigan, who came tc ka i Mmargarine end lard. Each person will be allowed hal{ activities cover the world. téred from Sewm-d a litter of olive oil monthly plus T . 1 Her name is Eleanor, her husband Sfie:&:;"fi;ofiz zr‘l’:ng‘:?o:;’:'l:‘ Harry Hapnel, cotive of Gee- three grams of butter, margerine or is Cel. Theodore Roosevell (son of | 4 “capied her twice not to come. M2ny, who came i Liaska in 1898 Jazg, § ;:::, ;:::.‘Le zr‘elsli:l)evx;e?g:s:vzlt; and | S0 she went. First thing he knew of ?:“dd“’h a prospectcr, entered from M £ e ” | “I saw Cordova, Subs ribe 1 e 3 AREYivis: Mectures. difols: Ol [izines hen e friend said, T 5 e Subscribe for The Empire 3 In 1926, Colonel Roosevelt went to | Asin in search of Marco Polo sheep 0 Campaignin; for the Field Museum. Mrs. Roose- ' SH6 cnmmot e for the | velt joined him In Kashmir for Republican candidate this fall, { three months of big game hunting. | | speaking whenever party head- £hot a counle of tigers and kept her | quarters routes her. (Her husband ;balnncc on an elephant when it ran and the President are fifth cousin: 1“‘”"-"' | but as vou doubtless know, they be- She | long to dxffcrcnt polmcul campw but that wasn't the ume By GEORGE McMANUS Great Britain’s King G‘or‘e ll snapned by the: camers - he steps from:-one of the Rn’n.l Alr Force’s new Flamingo planes which he inspected on a-n,lltcn.lz factory assembly. line. “king s weparing.a Rtoynl Air munb- form. world, shot tigers and gone to war. Now she’s going into politics. POSTMASTER_Frank C. Walker (above), 54, new post- 1/ general, was Born in Pl.vma Pa,, was griduated n-m;:¢ ! Dame law . school, chain of theafers. Even the baby seems to know something is amiss as,on air-raid 'warden | The Daily Alaska rmpue guarag | wrecked'b: th ily circula "“"f-‘ hj. mftfuiitf“ fljm R s 7/ bmb“ u::s)' A:I:::g::w::l;; i Empire Clnsslfl‘e.ds Pay! BRINGING UP FATHER OH-ME-OH-MY-NOwW I'M TIRED OF LOOKIN' AT WATER - | WISH WE WOLILD AT LEAST COME IN SIGHT F LAN GLACIER HIGHWAY DELIVERY i DAILY TRIPS HAUL IN THE ANCHOR - WE ARE LEAVING- WELL-WHY DIDN'T YOU GO ON THE ST COAL——WO00D DOCK FOR ABOUT AN HOUR- LUMBER—GROCERIES ® PHONE 374 “SHORTY" WHITFIELD Sy