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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUEQD’\Y JUNE 14, 1932. " g ]2 300 POUNDS - DF FISH COME AND 17,000 GO ,almon Bnngs 3 and | Cents Per Pound and Halibut 3 and 2 BRINGING UP FATHER UPSTAIRS THAT 1 KIN GIT TO BUSINESS AS EARLY AS HE DOES-I'LL SHOW THESE 4uvS IN THIS NEIGHBORHOOD: 'M JUST, ‘\:’__,l_/ EARLY A B\Ro /\— 1 A)AN\( L\ \! BUT VLL WAIT LNT ILL JUST TIP THE HALL-BOY OFF TO TELL THIS GUY- MR-EARL LEEMAN THAT | WUZ OUT OF THIS HOUSE BEFORE HE WUZ JUSTLET HIM KNOW WHAT TIME LEFT THE HOUSE WHEN HE GOES OUT THIS MORNIN'- National I duled 4 American _OF‘EM- League D City Le: Le Juncau theusand, three hundred h were received in in the past 36 hours. Sev- housand pounds of boxed mon and 14 tierces _of almon were shipped to OF CLUB: ‘oast League Won Lost S 507 46 458 431 .380 39 41 44 HOYT FIRED BY DODGERS alm brought 3 pound und cents cent a halibut, 3 cents, second ENTRY LISTS BEING SENT BY NATIONS Cal sacramento 3 M. auctioned for ade, and 2 cents, League Won Lost B 30 )4 Boats, Captains, Catches Boats, captains, catches and buy- Thlinket, James Martin, 3,000 5 of salmon; T-3044, Henry 700 pounds of salmon; Sa- BROOKI Waite H ANGELES June 1 " most ess- Clul k 2 0 it ympiad' in history [ te _ Hoy t s Sandy Stevens, 1,600 pounds five more of salmon; Fane, Ole Johanson, _By Pap‘EMU[]SE Tu PLAY | f thelr 1list U-ut"l this Spring. He 2% 3 3. 5000 pounds of halibut, Mabel, . B"-I-s TUN'GHTI b pig E M Rhodes, 2,000 pounds of hal- \ all bcught by E. E. Eng- P i S | he fi T A ith Af: representing the Sebastian- . Zealand, rxnw la, Bwe Company of Seattle, for nd, athletes in mild curing or freezing. of the events during the Shipments of saimon s from July 30 to August 14. The salmon that was shipped rty-six other nations were ¢; s was put into 3G boxes and was sent 1 their entries soon by the Juneau Cold Storage Com- of compeling > pany to the San Juan Packing than 2,000. and Fishing Company in Seattle. v (o)} vd Of the 14 tierces of wild-cured ing wide int is mani almon sen! away, 9 were shipped by the thousands of visitors from by the Cold Storage Company to other states and countries who the Atlantic and Pacific Packing y are visiting the unique Olym- ' Compa Seattle, and 5 by Mr. where the a bes v E 1 to Sebastian-Stuart. DA ILY SPORTS CAR TOON " You WERE" SRIGHTY To C‘M <~ AND SOt THE '-o BOTH Fmvs BEAT WORLD'S RECORDS IN THE RECENT WESTERN CONFEREANCE TITLE MEET le WAS QND |/ more than 25 , po and comir out frame m, n/ 1)’ *‘ . 2, |League Officials Schedule|me: é E~ i ‘22t | Another Postponed Game |*% ‘g Nl '@ } for This Evening | The City League today moved ! |ahead to clear its schedule of its | postponed games, scheduling for to- night a game between the Elks and Moose that was originally set for last Frid, and called off on ac- count of rain. he play will start at 6:30 p.m Junge probably will start for the |Bills as Manning pitched last night. |Manager McKinnon is expected to pitch Claud Erskine whose arm is said to have completely recovered. | The Elks Lodge, which holds its |annual Flag Day ceremonies |night, will defer them until ilhl‘ game, it was announced ame of th but He Juneau League Won Lost 4 p 4 Am Elks Moose rican Legion | B bureau nowed . : NOTICE that v X " i o g -— —— the sold all my intersts would inbow Cafe on Front St. I from TI lwaukee Club not be responsible for any n has ebts in connection with this busi- Juneau, Alaska, June 13, JACK T. KING, f past year: prospects were 100 out-of-town Olympic be conducted with rain “Ideal weather"” to- | cast, after to o in e o om was Amer- | will Texans | d Jack and H. Ash- | fore- ur ness. - eee Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Hillin, ~ JUST TO FURTHER HIS CLAIM FOR A PLACE ON THE OLYMPIC SQUAD — HE HOPPED OVER THE HIGH HURDLES N /4 secowos / __"E_._ et -NO OMNE _HAS, BEATEN HIM IN THE SPRINTS THIS SPRING / (h! WAS AIDED BY 4 STIFF WD) ¥ Tlie Arsociaied P | ing at a bad ball or tirely. If it's a fast ball that extra chance to judge S |how fast it is. Sometimes, that |good. ‘Sometimes there's nothing |can help you if the guy is throw- J,”“; fast enough.” missing en- I ge | ot | | .Slants Sport ; ar 4A LANYGOULD the cmrub-':cd (couple of them are only 36 ounc-1 Mary; east .eady has offered as his phenomenal hit- | ny tk mmmn an eagerness to g=t his bat on any pitch close to plate. He has quit waiting| for the good balls and has found | he can hit those “a little bad” just as well as as far. But there’s something else be-| nd the 400 batting average and‘ home runs Connie Mack’s ouse has accumulated. Jim-| has changed the weight of his and the new sticks probably | hA\C more to do with his btendyw mauling than his eagerness to take | anything within reach. | HOW FAST IS FAST? i Speaking of speed, it seems re-| ‘Well, they've made all the dif-|markaple sometimes that a batter ference in the world in my bat-leyer hits at all the kind of fast ting. T use a thinner grip any- yaj5 George Earnshaw or the left- way than the Babe does, and more jo5 Grove, Gomez and Walberg | weight out around the end of the'iy.ou bat. That gives me more Wood| geientists at West Point one day on the ball. So I found that these ' tested the throwing arm of Mark new clubs, even though they were Koenig when he was short-stop- lighter, drove balls further than ping for thé Yankees, and by the heavier ones I'd been using. |meacuring the speed of a thrown “I've been trying t ofigure it out 4.5 cutting it up into the 60 feet and in my mind it gets doWn 0 ¢nat stretoh between the batter two things. % f the hurler, they found out | “The lighter the stick is the tngy g fast ball hits a catcher’s | faster you can swing it. Tt's MOV~ | it less than 1-5th of a second ing just a little more briskly than, aanr leaving the pitcher’s hand. a heavy club when it meets the |ball. That sends the ball a\\ay A LIGHTER BAT |faster. Faster away means far- HARRY HEiLMANN Foxx pondered |ther. sev II:nmfi ~:‘é§efore he demdecll “Then, with lighter sticks, !\ RELYEEASED lfl%g !r40l)‘ to tell, seem to be able to wait a tiny, “Everyone thought,” he said fi-|fraction of a second longer befm'_c‘ nally, “that because I was big and |I have to start my swing. Thal’s| GINCINNATI, June 14. — Harry had plenty of power T should swing jbecause the lighter clubs gets there ponmann veteran of fourteen a heavy stick. They gave me batslfaswr, too. But, more important, A .erican League campaigns and about the heft Babe Ruth uses,|it gives me that extra time 10’ .., entereq the National League 40 to 41 ounces, and T didn't do |judge a ball as it comes up 0 the ,u wou 6f the Cincinnati Reds in so well last year. | plate. 1921, has been given his uncondi- “This Spring, without saying any-| “If it's a curve I get an extra 'y, release by the Cincinnati to anyone T ordered a half |glimpse of the way it's breaking olub, the hix fand sticks for myself and the only requirement I made was that scale under 37 ounces. A | before T let go. Maybe in that |time I can see it's going to break HEATING High cost is unnecessary for summer heat. your fire with INDIAN well with CARBONADO. Start for quick heat. Bank it Your fire will require little attention throughout the day. INDIA Nut Lump . Per Ton F.O.B. Bunkers $11.50 1125 Call Us Direct—PHONE 412 Pacific Coast Coal Co. outside anyway and I save hit- ;) ype’ twenty-three player limi: Heilmann was released in order to bring the Cincinnati squad with- by June 15. Hellmann was an out- fielder. - HUNGARY GETS BACON ORDER | BUDAPEST—As a result of a strike in Danish bacon factories Hungarian producers of English type bacon have received an unexpect- ed rush or orders. NOTICE TU CREDITORS In the Commissioner’s Court for! Juneau Precinct, Territory (\r" Alaska, Division Number One. In Probate. In the Matter of the Estate of Alexander Brkovich, deccased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned was on the 27th day of May, 1932, appointed Adminis- trator of the estate of Alexander Brkovich, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate| are required to present them, with | the proper vouchers, within six| months from the date of this no- tice to Henry Roden, attorney for Administrator, at his office in the Valentine Building, Juneau, Alaska. DAN POZMAN. First publication, May 31, 1932. Last publication, June 21, 1932. s for rolling The kind of tobacco that rolls right, lays right on the paper, and tastes right. A real “live wire”—Ilight up and get the sparkle of that wonder- ful Velvet flavor! -~ 01931.l-mfl‘-flvm’l‘omwcrh ‘ Enough Velvet for 50 cigarettes..15c! Beat this if you can: Fifty bang-up good cigarettes in each snappy red tin! Finest fresh tobacco and 30 cents saved in the bargain. Roll ’em yourself—and roll ’em of Velvet!