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oo ST 5. R — -y A _THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1940. CHARGES OF FRAUD FACE FISHERMEN Seafle Times Derby Win- ners Allegedly ‘Planted’ Indian-caught Fish Winners of offered ir Derby toem resi- Ot » automo Tim all out of zrand larcer planted fish” hile Salmon M. E. Smith econd pri who g Anthony Zuanich of n fifth prize lden, of Aneta ar awarded an woman catching was held ed the salmon, witness rities said Zuanich, Smaaiden confessed they participated in a joint to win prizes in the derby by id They declared the salmon which prizes were purchased prev- from Snohomish Indians and alive in a live box off Hope i until a few hours before the as a Dupue icusly kept Isla cente: PLAY BY PLAY (Continved from =age One) runs, one hit, no errors, none lett on b: REDS -Mnnrc out, York to New- some who covered first base. Wer- ber flied out to Campbell. M. Mc- Cormick fanned and was thrown out Sullivan dropped the ball, Sulli- van to York No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. FOURTH INNING TIGERE—Sullivan popped out to Joost. Newsom fanned, Bartell walk- ed. McCosky singled to center field, Bartell going to third. Gehringer out, Joost to F. McCormick. No runs, one hit, no errors, two | left on bases. REDS—Goodman doubled to cen- ter. F. McCormick popped out to Gehringer. field scoring Goodman. Wilson hit into a double play, Higgins to Geh- ringer to York. One run, two hits, no errors, none left on base. FIFTH INNING TIGERS — Greenberg fanned. York tripled against the right field fence about 370 feet from home plate; Goodman jumped futilely for the ball. Campbell home runned to the right center field bleachers, scoring York ahead of him. Hig- gins backed Ripple to the center field scoreboard for a fly ball out. Sullivan fanned. Two runs, two hits, no errors, none | left on base. REDS — Joost singled to center field. Myers fanned. Moore fanned and Sullivan threw the ball to Bar- tell trying to double Joost in an attemped steal but Bartell dropped the out, Higgins to York. No runs, one hit, one error, left on base, SIXTH INNING ll(;ERb-—Ncwsom out, Werber to one L . ' GLAMOBOUS HAIR | { for more beautiful, more-last- | ing permanents , . For love- i lier hair styles . . . nnd artistic ‘ shaping and cutting . . I | o CHARLES | 1 ngnd s Beanly Salon ‘, E 318 Ripple singled to right | ball and Joost was safe, Werber | Rumors Out, Chamberlain IsRes igning Big Shakeup in London Is | Thought Near-Lloyd (eorge in Picture Oct. 3.—Reports of the resig! ion of Neville Chamberlain as Lord President of the Council and Cabinet of Churchill is declared imminent in current political cir- cles These reports said Chamberlain will go into relirement because of ill health, the retirement to be an- nounced tonight or tomorrcw It is said the resignation of Cham- berlain might involve several Gov- ernment changes, among them a poscibility that Lloyd George, who ed the natiow in the World W mizht return to office in some a visory capacity, LONDON Bartell fanned. Mc- out to F. McCor- F. McCormick Cosky popped mick. No runs, left on base REDS—M. McCormick popped out to Gehringer, Goodman popped out |to Bartell. F. McCormick walked. Ripple fouled out to Sullivan. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left on base. SEVENTH INNING TIGERS — Gehringer walked on | the fourth ball—a wild pitch—but Gehringer was unable to get bevond | first, Greenberg fanned for the sec- «md straight time. York walked. Moore’s control of the ball is ap- ! | parently gone and he walked Camp- bell on five pitches to fill the bases. | Higgins popped out to F. McCor- | mick. Goodman's sensational one- handed catch of Sullivan’s liner re- tired the side. | No runs, no hits, no errors, three | | left on bas REDS—Riggs, batting for Wilson, | |fanned. Joost lined out to Green- | |berg. Myers flied out to Campbell | No runs, no hits ,no errors, none left on base. | EIGHTH INNING TIGERS--Baker is now catching for the Reds. Newsom out, Myers | !to F. MeCormick. Bartell singled to |right center field. McCosky flied out to M. McCormick. Baker threw | low attempting to catch Bartell stealing second, the ball going to | center field, Bartell reaching third | base but unscored as stolen base. | Gehringer lined out to M. McCor- | mick. | No runs, one hit, one error, |left on base. ! ‘ REDS—Craft, batting for Moore, flied out to Greenberg. Werber doubled to right center field. M.| McCormick out, York unassisted; | Werber going to third. Goodman singled to center field, scoring Wer- ber. F. McCormick flied out to Mc- Cosky One run, two hits, no errors. one left on base. | NINTH INNING TIGERS—RIiddle is now pitching | |for Reds. Greenberg .fouled out to | | Baker. York fanned. Campbell fanned, | No runs, no hits, no errors, none | left on base. | | REDS—Ripple flied out to Green- ‘heu, Baker, batting right handed, ‘smgled by Newsom. The ball was {too hot to handle. Joost grounded | | to Higgins, forcing Baker at second; | | Joost safe. Myers out to Campbell. \ No runs, one hit, no errors, one | left on base. no hits, no errors, none one | 'DEPUTY MARSHAL LEAVES YAKUTAT Deputy U. S. Marshal Sid Thomp- | ‘~nn has returned here from Yaku- tat, where he was stationed during the (mhvng season. - Emplre Class'neds Pay' | time as well as other veteran-made | Oswald and Mary Hagerup. e o e T e | Grand Exalted Ruler of Elks | New | Commi | sociation. ON HIS WAY _joe Hunt of Los Angeles, who staged & sitdown protesting Frank Kovacs’ tennis antics, shows good verti- cal form as he tries out for Navy backfield at Annavolis- | ‘Lrn\s drive, and agreed to provide AUXIUARY HOlDS shorts for the quota to be sent owing are the standing com- mittees seclected by the president for the year’s work: Membership— Edith Davis, Catherine Davenport,' Florence Mutch, Marian Hendrick- son; Junior Activities—Mary Hag- erup, Catherine Davenport, Betty Mc ‘mick; Rehabilitation—Aileene OClson, Ted Johnstone, Dorothy Manthy; National Defense and Americanism — Esther Gullufson, Sylvia Zenger; Legislative — Dolly | Kaufmann, Myrtle Neate, Ida Car- One of the busiest sessions to be negie; Community Service and held by the American Legion Aux- Birthday Anniversary-—Mable Ly- iliary since the convention was beck, Marie Oswald; Child Welfare that last evening, Mrs. Catherine Marien Hendrickson, Catherine | Davenport, newly elected president Lavenport, Elizabeth Nordling; prcrlch and the session was held Poppy Sales—Florence Mutch, | at the Dugout. Catherine Davenport, Marian Hf‘n { Main issue of business was the drickson; Colonial Study (replacing selection of standing chairmen, Fidoc)—Lucille Stoneino Hattie with plans for a food sale and sil- Peterman, Selma Vukovich; Pub- ver tea on October 12, also made. licity and Radio—Betty MecCor- Baskets will also be on sale at this mick; Music and National News| (official publications of the Legion Auxiliary)—Et) Johnson; Consti- tution and By-laws—Edith Sheelor, assisted by execulive committee. | 10 REGULATE FRENCH JEWS VICHY, France, Oct, —Pre- mier Petain’s Council of Minis- ters drew up a special “statute” regarding Jews in France at a| thrée-hour s on. The statute is not immediately published but it is expected to out- line restrictions to be Ostablmhed. on the Jewish populauun ~ BUSY SESSION AT LEGION DUGOUT Standing Committees Se- lected-Plans Made for Silver Tea and Sale articles. Mrs, Aileene Olson will be in charge of the sale and Mrs Betty McCormick head tea committee, Assisting with arrange- ments will be Mesdam Catherine Davenport, Ted Joh one, Marie The Auxiliary agreed the Gastineau Health Council in the purchase of glasses for needy children in Gastineau Channel Mrs. Myrtle Neate was selected to represent the Auxiliary at the Tu- berculosis Association and members will assist her in addressing envel- opes for the association during the Seal Sale this year. The group also voted to assist in the local Red Atused oi Husband Slaymg to assist Sixteen OII; Cities Are Mrs. Carolyn Sulivan, 30 (left), and her friend, William Albert Cain, (30) _right), were ordered into Superior Court for arraignment after the grand jury returned an indictment accusing them of murder of Mrs. Sullivan’s husband, Dr. William Sullivan, 30, Merced phyxm a dozen opportunities for fire 10 get & start how 1o get rid of these _SHATTUC - Office—New York Life K ‘AGENCY: Phone 249 THE WBI.E-IIICI" BOURBON lflNGm BOURBON WHISKEY, 90 PROOF » SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CORP, N. Y. C. | Commiss [ New Je: | the Board JOEBUCH - COMESHERE €2/ / s —foores e Sweokoss @M NEXT WEEK fo Arrive in Juneau Next Monday m ruage One) (Conunuea 1 Jers Crippled Children’s and a member of the y Rehabilitation Commis- on; is Chairman of the New Jer- y Unempoyment Compensaiion ion; Chairman of the Leg- islative Committee of the N Jersey tate Hotel Association and Chairman of the Pretec mittee of the American ldocel As- Other In additicn of the Ceoorge cil, Boy Scouts of man of the ment Committee, Physically Handicapped Boys and Girls of the Trenton Kiwani; Club Past Dictator of the Loval O:cer of Moose of Trenton; member of of Directors of the Chambersburg Trust Company; member of the Legislative and Fin-| ance Committee of the National Society for Crippled Children; member of the Advisory Committes| from New Jersey of the National| Youth Administration and a mem-| ber of the Advisory Board, Chil-| dren’s Country Home, Westfleld,| N. J a convalescent center for| crippled children, | His many humanitarian activi- ties led to his selection in 1528 as the recipient of the Trenton Times Civic Cup, which w presented by the then Governor Morgan F. Larson, Elks Nearest Heart But the Flks have always been nearest his heart, outside of his orippled children. Initiated into membership in Trenton Lodge No. 105 in 1906, he was named Exalted Ruler in 1909, In 1916 he was elect-| ed Treasurer of his Lodge and| has held that position since that| time. He was named President of the State Association in 1921 and| |in 1939 was selected as Grand Lodge | Trustee to fill a vacancy. Later in the same year he was eclected for a full term but resigned to become| a candidate for Grand Exalted Ruler, He has held membership on| Affil he is Vi Washington Coun- Amer; Chair- sident | Sonytighn tou. i r & Myems | "There’s a whole World’s Series of good smoking in Chesterfields. it’s the smoker’s cigarette. The best tobaccos in all of Tobaccoland . . . blended together for MILDNESS, COOLNESS and BETTER TASTE. that’s why Do you smoke the cigarette that SATISFIES PAuL DERRINGER, one of the game's great pitche pleases the crowds.. .just as Chesterfield satisfies millions. of smokers! stertie MORE AND MORE... AMERICA SMOKES THE CIGARETTE THAT SATISFIES i | e - 8 Tomacco Co. many important Elks' Commluccs and in 1929 he was named a wec- ml deputy to visit a number | Middle Western and Western Sntev N Z I R I D to explain the New Jersey Associa -, E | tion program for caring for crlp- pled chfldren BERLIN IS FREN(H TROOPS BEATEN BA(K‘cxhausted French soldiers have ar- munications there. rived here from the Chinese fron- % ‘tier of French Indo-China. The men reported that entire lcompames had been wiped out in ‘hgmmg the Japanese. They said probably several thousand men had been taken prisoner. The soldiers came from the Lang-son zone, where there was 2—Wcunded and fierce fighting over the rail com- ARE WIPED OUT BY JAP FORCES, HANOI, Oct. Four Early M—orn ing At- tempts o Reach London Reported Failures AIRRAIDED NIGHT TIME | (Continued from Page Ore) | R | | more evident both by the British | {and Germany. | Reich Being Lashed | Germany is now suffering great| material damage, scmething abso- lutely different from the World War when the Reich was not scratched. Now not only Berlin but all other ‘from. the German capital to Nazi |secticns are being hombed by the | belly Tepa e, | British and these assauits are being RAF fliers returninz to the “*‘mad( at night. | sault said the red glare of fires sel| mhe British Air Ministry reports| by bembs in the industrial Ruhr | ipay¢ Germany is bezinning to feel | ey could be seen for sixty miles. | (he jash cf the British raiders and The Alr Ministry said: “From|ine Ministry reported huge scale| very shortly after dark until wcll‘mm; by RAF bombors are pressing ‘fter midnight, Br ish forces kept | the new autumn counter offensive. up hma sing atta ainst poten- Strafed by Royal Air Force 1 (Continucd from Page One) \ LEAVING SPAIN ALONE Along with this tipping of the air fight scales, the Axis powers have now definitely abandoned the idea of drawing Spain into the war, at least for the moment, informed quarters at Madrid are claimed to |have said. Spain’s economic sit- {uatien is so black as an aftermath of the Civil War that any military i |venture might be disastrous. It is| I beijeved Spain will continue as a non-belligerent. .. - — ATIEMPTED RAUD, COUNTRY HOME, U.S. AMBASSADOR LONDON, Oct. German coastal | 1 special atien. on from It is add guns receive _the bombers. | - —— Subseribe for The Bmpire i 2. — A German| Messerschmidt ~fighter was shot | down in a fight over Windsor Great Park and narrowly missed| the country home of American Am- | bassador Joseph P. Kennedy. | The German pilot had appar-| ‘ently tried to make a landing on 'the front lawn of the Kennedy| home but he missed the house by inches, skimmed over the trees and landed nearby in the Roy'\l‘ park. | I HEADS G.A.R.-A civil War veteran from Jewell, Kan., William W. Nixon, 94, was elect- ed national commander-in-chiet of the G.A.R. at the Springfield, s 1L, meeting, >oo - — Subscribe to -The Daily Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation, Launch Largest Car Ferry ‘, | be the world's largest car ferry, the City of Midland is pic- Sl aa it was launched at Manitowoe, Wis. The ship, which cost will be the flagship of the Pere Marqu ro! 's o Michigan fleet. Wherever finest vanilla beans grow, there the Schilling quest for qln.luy ocver ends! That's why Sdnlh-gm Vaailla has that exquisite, delicate flavor which won't bake or freeze out. 37 SPICES—19 EXTRACTS Schlllm