The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 2, 1941, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, AUG. 2, 1941. ¥ NOMINATIONS SEAITI.E I Chicago 2; Washington 8. A ! al' ( Io n STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS FOR ‘o A"DAS | [] ” I ol 3 thFrame waoe In Argenfina NT ' OFFICERS MADE Sacramento 76 43 639 | u FT. San Diego 66 53 585 u‘LLy 6 10 ° OTHINNING :=-.. ¢ @ = veriar s Meeting Also Elecs Dele-| - Meels Rebu ACT Oakland 54 63 462 - gLy Los Angeles 53 63 457 —_— ga'es fo Convemmfl | Onl Y $5 w ‘lfif m°nlh Easy : H so¥ San Francisco 52 66 441 : San Diego Wins Giv : Veteran Si Johnson Cred-; Picnic IsPlanned U, §. Blacklist Causes Ger- . Torms Portland 45 72 385 : H National League H H H i Terry 17th Victory- st ¢ vee| ied with Victory-Brook- | T . . | man Consuls in §. i St. Louts 62 3 69 |un Gefs Ouf of Slump for officers at their meeting last A. Grief | Acorns Lose Broon o1 30 | /OIS P et i i Asierksas T te: | g o incinna - 4 ——— i | ! (By Associated Press) Pittsburgh 51 42 548 (By Associated Press) S o ‘2?,’;“1.‘5‘;"2,.'3&‘".,25!3 BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, Aug.| San Diego’s Yank Terry got his New York 45 46 495 Benny Warren's eleventh-inning is scheduled for the first i)fll't of 2. — Latin American action against | 17th victory of the Pacific Coast Chicago 4 53 454 | homer yesterday gave the lowly . .°0 oneh | Nazi influence in the Western| League season last night by reg- Boston 38 57 400 | Philadelphia Phillles a victory over Nominatioln.s were as follows: Hemisphere increased today &s two istering 12 strikeouts over Los An- Philadelphia 26 69 274 | the leading St. Louis Cardinals and Chef de Gare, John MECO;’mk‘K }Germnn diplomats were shown that geles and scattering only four hits American League saved a well-earned decision. for . " " g bl “orer ge Train, |thelr doorsteps point home and a to the Angels. Won Lost Pet.|veteran Si Johnson who gave up John Walmer; éorrespondent nnz{ third is under fire with a fourth| Portland pushed over three runs New York 68 30 694 |only two hits before the ninth. Comilhsaire Ir;tendnnt George Gul- not for hampering anti-Axis co- | in the seventh inning last night, Cleveland 55 4 567 | Brooklyn, batting out of the worst \'e.o 5014 etuer, Homer Nordling, operation with the United States. | stopping the Oakland team and get- Boston 50 46 521 | slump of the season, squeezed past Gmrzé Gullufsen nhd Royal M.Shep- Although Mexico has rejected the | ting 10 hits off Ananicz. Hilcher Philadelphia 47 49 490 Chicago yesterday. Brooklyn got 16 4. "y monier, Bert Lybeck; Che- | German request that she protest to “m)e ey e 447 55"; il hlgixlctnatl's Vander Meer turned in DR L. T SRR ROl ‘E:I:’(:egioms;:vfilr;sm;;r Lt:anbl:cx:-‘ game. Detroit 5 § 450 Newman. | @ Seattle booted away a decision to < a two-hitter over Boston yesterday | erica, diplomatic quarters in Buenos | Hollywood last m,my in the ninth ;f‘sg":gwn g: :g :;g; afternoon. It was Cincinnati’s fourth wg;':)“"g‘:;;‘c‘g::f' hs‘x;ul;(,"gr::g | Aires said Argentina intended to m}m:g ::::r h’rurp:: had px“cr‘lw il e straight v_/fim Cheminot, James Sorfoulis; Comis ‘]vivsl:hhold suppert to the U. S. black‘ what wi ave en a winning Voyagure, Lew Williams; ll.n’l te, game. All of Hollywood's runs were ,o,{n‘c,,,k i Chile, which is housing ousted | unearned. The winning run for Hol- Deltates to the Seward convention V;—‘vvir:;;t; l\:::zistir Jt: aB:l::aShl;:m:lsf lywood was in the ninth inning on were elected at the meeting. They | D: p a single, a pass and an error, are ‘John Newman, R. M. Shepard rives to take him away, ordered the ’ Bert Lybeck, and J. T. Petrich. ' German Consul General at Val- H e 4 ting. also appointéd a | PATelso out of the country for the GAMES FRIDAY or o ary ls L Pola‘second time. Wendler is accused Pacifi 4 acific Coast League ley, Waino Hendrickson and Fred | of complicity in plans for a Bollvlan Hollywood 4; Seattle 3. San Diego 5; Los Angeles 2, Portland 4; Oakland 3. N.Y. YANKS Derby af Sitka Cameron to take charge of a picnic | being planned by the 40 and 8 forl Chile charged the Consul Genernl with falsifying passports to help San Francisco-Sacramento, not me:l‘jb::’sr 10: m:fl:s A’;’::;:?e ;‘;E:?: ‘mrewmen of the scuttled battleship S D play ing. I - o National League Gomez Walks 1 ' M en BU' picnic will be selected by the com- ;‘:’:t’“:r" i::inirlfie e:;:p:a sln;i:: W York 3; Pittsburgh 6 SITKA, ALASKA, August 2 — mittee. |stayed the time originally alloted Boston 2; Cincinnati 5. g Gets Ou' of Jams_ Pros Ganty, chairman of the Ro- /him to wind up his affairs. Brooklyn 5; Chicago 4. ‘a:i" tf}:fi'h d]“"’b-" 'c‘;m"","‘e:i 3“"‘0“;"“ | In Argentina the Foreign Office Philadelphia 2; St. Louis 1. Game i cect: ot SLLARATER (108l JULE after answering repeated German . " “ i went 11 innings, I‘eonard wms at midnight, and that the follow- | protests of the seizure of a portable und |h|s OVERSIZE SIX P ROT E C Your Health! (By Associated Press) The Yankees rolled over the Browns yesterday afternoon on Lef- ty Gomez’s five-hitter for the second shutout of the season. Gomez, who has won eight straight games, walked 11 men, but he work- ed out of all of his jams. ‘Washington's Dutch Leonard turn- ing contestants garnered the prizes: Hugh Tate, largest Dolly Varden, 251/2 inches, 4 lbs. 10 ounces. Prize: $25.00, donated by the Sitka Rotary Club. Mrs. Robert Dyer, largest trout in the women’s division. Dolly Var- den, 201/2 «inches, 21/2 lbs. Prize: Rod and reel, donated by Marme Supply Company. Louise for This Port | tina as a “diplomatic outrage,” | denly demanded the Germans either | radio transmitter carried in a plane from the German Legation in Peru to the German Embassy in Argen- sud- re-export the set or destroy it. PAAFLIESTWO - Insu{fd Here are a few of the you get in this BIG Frigidaire ® Glass-Topped Sliding Hydrator ® New Meat Tender O”t ® FULLY-FITTED in De Luxe Sl‘yle 30 features that Frigidaire Here's Lowest Price in History fora —New 1941 Model R-6, with so many features ® Double-Easy Quickube Ice Trays ed in an eight-hitter over Chicago yesterday. Leonard blanked the Sox until the seventh inning. RECORD-HOLDER L. Smythe of Aurora holds all long run women’s skeet records. means that with each gauge gun Paul Audette, largest rainbow, 21 inches, 3 lbs. Prize .22 rifle, aonated by P. 8. Ganty Store. ounces. Prize: Creel donated by the prize winners and their catches, as ‘This an added prize. Much enthusiasm was evident Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- cess Louise, due in port from the son. Oscar Banfield, Claude He1ge<en, Heuduck, Neola Johnson, | Ronald Wiley, Arno PLANES SOUTH banks early this morning and flew at 12:30 o'clock had aboard se through Juneau this afternoon Through passengers were Greg ® New Larger Frozen Storage Compartment : south at 7:30 o'clock tonight, has| 2 Mrs. Marietta Pn!chm'd‘ largest ::‘el‘mn‘:wmg p:sse:gers nbgoard t‘m\jl FROM I"IERIOR ® Super-Powered Meter-Miser PA TE" lzzn cut-thiogk, 301 ey, 1 b H Juneau: | ® New Facts Label (You Know What 3 Two PAA planes are flying south You Get Before You Buy) IUNE U ALASKA FANS READY | cast critical eyes into the clouds. Convenient Terms Sitka Mercantile Company. DbD"ts gea:;x‘,":/‘lrs.;fllr]l‘fl 9 ld’;lr‘- from Fairbanks today as weather J. H,, Gilpatrick announced that Bo f’r O nl p ;m Wil conditions continue to improve. AURORA, O. August 2—Mrs. M. he would take a picture of the hauser, D. Nicholson, T! Dm's "! The Lodestar which left Fair- ————PHONE 17 used she has broken more suc- over the first annual Rotary Derby, Serge Merkoorieff, Sk ars” and siokad b otie. Das I R I E s { cessive targets than any other and possibly another contest will be Sisters Mary Alena and Majy Al- ;,nge,gi; ‘,unefu ST ' ! woman shooter. held in other classes later this year, freda. g a clear start as weather experts are true and can be regarded as facts: i Y 500 5 !Marion J. Braafladt Fred Lind- S Empire Clussifieds Pay! | Gtk Orlando. 'Wish. Mrs. Batty And with weather, park and fans' 1.—The Moose and Douglas nines — —_— i N | waiting for the first pitched ball,| will play tomorrow. e IS ra |on Bridges, Lena Bahnke, William [t e | BEE L e Ceubnesel geiting S.on | Moose manager Stan Grummett to-| 2—They will start ¢ : D ene G Smddurdb i FOR pENNA | day casually shifted his chew of| 3—The series is to be the best 1 Patjiecton;ode - due hin, Juneau | before predicting that this years| 4—Stan Grummett says ihe He j I -I- . —_— at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon, - | lchamplonsmp is in the bag for Moose will win. avy July li"l( TS, Techt : Westware, | SHEAID] B N G 1 SERIES G AM Eime first-flight Moosemen. Without o : gfmg‘e c‘;’:‘gb‘z‘l ful;;f: I:l'e‘etmt;{ Newsprint production in Can- a snicker, Grummett, speaking as n onore A tof i ¢ 4 SEEIW) |ada for the first four months of |smoothly as a Japanese diplomat, M C H d e r . d visitors $1gned gvening with seven Passengers| jou was 102,670 tons, compared said the Moosemen ‘“undoubtedly | s.Lrone It takes many an hour and many a dollar to build an automobile . . moment it may be destroyed . but in one swift and, worse still, your savings may follow it if a lawsuit is brought against you, Get comp‘etc AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE TODAY from this agency. Shattuck Agency Seward Street JUNEAU at all times PHONE 57 PHONE 249 the register at the Territorial Mu- seum here during July, it is an- tries, provinces of Canada and ter- ritorfal possessions of the United States, the registration book showed. Only states not represented by museum visitors during the month were Vermont, Rhode Island and Mississippi it was revealed. In July of 1840, 2,272 visitors called at the museum, attendance registration at the museum was in 11938, when 3,341 visitors registered. —————— IIUY DEFENSE BONDS aboard. The 87 foot pleasure boat' chartered by Joseph Desloge of to 1,003,081 tons for the same Members of the party making the cruise are: Joseph Desloge, Jowph‘ Desloge, Jr., Bernard Desloge, Jos-| eph Hercules, Patty Hercules, Ar- thur Hoskins, and Christy Farrar. ‘The two Desloge sons and Mr. Hercules left this morning for Skagway on the Mount McKinley while three others in the party leave for the south on a commercial boat. Captain of the Westward is J. I. McDonald. Chrysler MARINE Engine ACE 6-CYLINDER 45-8511. P Enginesin Stock A Marine Engine for Marine Use Enquire About (Not a Conversion) Designed and Built for Marine Use by Chrysler Corp. CROWN 6-CYLINDER 55-110H. P, ALSO THE NEW 4-CYCLE AIR-COOLED LAUSON OUTBOARD MOTOR The New Sensation in tlie Outhoard World! owling-Davlin JUN EAU. AI:ASK ROYAL 75-143 H. P. Our Financing Plan 8-CYLINDER i P Vs Alfred Wells Heavy police guard has been placed about the cell of Alfrec Wells, hunchbacked ex - convict awaiting trial at San Bernardino, Cal,, for the slaying of two wom- en and a man, all relatives, in the desert last May. Wells attempt- ed suicide while in the Spokane, Wash., jail where he was held af- ter his capture in a hobo jungle Montgomery Ward Co. Procter & Gamble Products Gatner & Mattern Knit Goods 0. Walt Disney Producflons I'UNEAU CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL Affiliated with American '~ Federation of Labor We Do NOT Patronize Modest Grummett Says Eager baseball fans are sitting E tensely on the edges of their chairs |today waiting for the umpire’s “play ball’ to open the first game lof the Ljttle World Series, sched- juled to start between the fortified {Moose and Douglas nines on the jthe skies for the second consecutive ‘dny after an extended vacation that |saw consistent rain pour over Jun- eau, the four out of seven game |series for the 1941 Gastineau Chan- nel pennant has good chances for |will win” and oh-so-modestly cackled that the “pennant series will spokesmen as silent as a Nazi com- munique. Hints that Big Bill Ram- sey will step up to the mound under George Willey’s signals was offset only by the official report that catcher Stan Grummett has zone into retirement for the final series and will be replaced in the >adding by John Skok, former Elk records revealed, or 112 visitors took a !Piremen’s ball park at 6 o'clock ) plane to Sitka.. The West- & k-st f‘fwel than in the same month ward will remain in Juneau until| {tomorrow evening. gl this year. Record all-time July August 5 when the party will With the sun beaming down from| Inside info concerning the line- ups was non-existant at a late time ‘oday, but fans plunged into debt with bets on the oply two remain- ing squads on the Channel, Sift- ing down of the dope brought the conclusion that the following facts, At Luncheon Today: nounced today by Curator E. L. pyorissan " | period in 1940. Keithahan, sy r e t, Missourl, left ' Seattle — | MOOSe Canno' lOSe_ be sewed up by next Sundaw” They . AR (frem 45 of. the 48 Saturday and has made u{‘“ way: “K:“ Q] | Meanwhile a vicious cycle of ru-| Mrs. Vena Crone was compli- states and from 15 foreign coun- ;?:bch‘llkl:f:r passage stopping. & Guardv flyel'OfThl'CCI In the Bag mors cycled around ball circles| mented at a luncheon today by 2 { about the Islanders, with Douglas| Mijss Nell McCloskey at 1 o'clock | in the Iris Room of the Baranof Hotel. Eighteen of Mrs. friends were present. Mrs. Crone is leaving Juneau for the south on the Prince Rupert this weekend. LEW LIKES BIKES NEW YORK, August 2—Procper- ity note: Lew Jenkins, the light- weight boxing champion, who turned motorcycle rider several months ago, has just acquired two new cycles. Crone’s oM Russians in Minsk Surrender Firearms to Nazis

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