The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 18, 1932, Page 5

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| g - > NO BRIGHT LIGUTS FOR M THiS SEASON THIS 1S A TERRIBLE HOTEL-EVERYTHING INIT S MADE OF WOOD - F'LL BET THEY SERVE SAW-DUST FER BREAK-FAST FOOD- B R S L e T ] _THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, 18, 1932. ARE YOU THE DaopRvg?'roR NOT YET- BUT | HOLD THE FIRST AN SECOND MORTGAGE- SO | SOON WiLL. BE- WELL TELL ME - WHAT 0O You OO 1N CASE OF FIRI [— WELL-TO TELL YOU THE TRUTH 1 DONT KNOW- By GEORGE McMANUS /M(Hmb % L1 5-2¢ WE HAVENT 1S A “TURNOVER BATTER NOW — AND HIS AVERAGE IS SHOOTING UPWARD » grounder and Haines' wild heave to the plate, scored Mac and Jimmy in the sixth, | Erskine and J. Schmitz singled,' sEND 65 MEN ‘!in the seventh and advanced al ] ’ peg on MacSpadden's out at first.! © |Grummett again heaved wild to first and Claud and Jack romped quEN Tu LIAI home. Keaton took no chances on Ramsay's grounder to the box. — |He grabbed the ball and ran t0|A nnouncement Is Made Worth and Haines singled in suc-, first ahead of Jimmy for the third| . E & i —By P QP cession, scoring Grummet, ana Ut 10 end the game. Regarding Entries in Gern. et "eYS A Olympic Games | The Paps were presented with | el ST the tylng runs in the second Ar-| MOOSE ~ ~ ABRE PO A o { !ter one hand was down, MacSp;xd-‘T‘ A o LOS ANGHLES, June 18—Win- |den was safe when Worth dropped ! 138 S5 - %£.0.1.0 2 Olners of six titles in the 1928 Olym- JM Inis fly in right. George ran in|ivingston 3b 40022 100 Syeden has informed the Or- |under the ball ethnahd mfwypp g:cr;ku;o, l;’“b\ R u“gamzanon Committee the nation under the ball then had to put ‘VISm b;l Hl’ b1 ; ¢ 2 0 Olwin be represented by = approxi- his hands over his head to keep ~acopadn, H.c 4 1.5 3 0imgtely 65 men and women in ten from beinz beaned. Hoben missed WNello, C_f b 4 1 Lig e 8L of 16 events of International con- Nello's fly. Ramsay singled through oy 5 " 3 5 5 3 0 lltests nere from July 30 to August ishort to center, scoring Mac' and .y pbe 114, |sending Nello to third. Osborne, SR, pecl. 100 00 2/ 70 Swedish sportsmen and wo- - fanned and F. 'Schmitz grounded | ET R e b men are due to arrive here July 6/[0’(6{/35011”!/6 to short. Abby fumbled the ball| 1o - S 1 s eh. “ IOLgROUEMENT |and Nello scored. Keaton Iann:d’ Bin EEp e il s P S ENEaE e - | Tiete hs 3 ¢ . suofm&f-r %m‘.uw | e ::: S | AM. LEGION ABRHPOAE| THE State of California alone EX-MARINE HAS @EEN ONE | With the count knotied ab two (S}Chm“z'f ‘mil’ § i ; 3 fi' el a& thfoqmu = g;frgmf OF THE SEASONS SURFRISES | all, neither scored until the g s oo 2 2 2 1 3{million bottle of Sargo a year. it T _team .sogred ‘untll .the \Garh G 3 21 2 2 2|ler Mauro Drug Co. —adv. ——} (fifth. In the last of that inning, Worth, rf. N O the Vets scored eight runs. Blake Haines, 1b. 8 sl — — - }op:ncd it with a ripping liner to Hoben, 2b. 310202 ILL BE !left for a single, Osborne walked'ghagw cf B0 OBt NEARER || Bill Schmitz. Grummett blasted | epathison, cof. 010000 Yo la single to left, scoring Kelly and Keaton, B., p. 800100 iy FIRST ‘Bm went to thrc%. Stan' stole gjake, c. o1 157 300 second. Osbornel Wes ‘litted from | ~NEesg T Uy R the mound after he had thrown| wmqgtate 2610 721 4 9 three straight balls to Garn. Hen-| _ganices “shaw in fifth, i ning replaced him. His first puchi SUMMARY: earned runs, Mooss ' walked Garn to fill the bags. i1, fon 8; two-base hit, Mac- As Henning warmed up w“h;Sper;i?gn; hit by pitched ball.‘ Twigg at short, Bill stole home. | gaines by Henning; wild pitches, Grummett third and Abby second Hexml‘& 2; struck out, by Osborne when Art’ lost the ball in the sun/ g 3, in four plus innings, by Keaton er Osborne; stolen bases, B, Bchmitz Henning ‘was then throwing themlans Grummett 2 each, F. Bchmitz, high, wide and harfdsomo He hit Garn, «Worth, Halnes and Blake Haines somewhere in France and|,ne each. filled the bags again. | Umplres, Nostrand, Thomas and e ———————— i Fritz to Rescue { Finley. { After he had two balls and no | strikes on ‘Hoben, Henning walked Al Rights Reseryed by The Associated Press ~SPQ the trick and made it look easy. Many had poled three circuit clouts in a single combat. Ruth ,and Gehrig three times each. No jdoubt the Babe is still burning with jealousy, for it has long been one of his ambitions to be the first to post his name alongside those {minutes. out of the box. Fritz Schmitz went |to the mound, Henning to right, ’Ramsay to left and Erskine to (second base. Hoben walked, again LOUISVILLE, Ky. June 18— icrowdmg the bags. Mathison walk- jed and Garn scored. leingston‘Two golfers who have had much ———————— PUBLIC COURSE GOLFERS LEGION TRIMS i er, Garn's bobble of F. 'Schmidt's' and let it roll past him. A wild left on bases, Moose 8, Legion pltch _advanced both runners fi5; hits 6, runs 3 off Osborne, hits bag. (Worth walked. Another wild yone runs 3, off Henning, runs 4 piteh scored Grummett and shoved pits 1 off F, Schmitz; losing piteh- | Garn and Worth ahead a base | | Time of game, one hour and 62 % MAKE KENTUCKY COLONELS' 1 jof Lewis and Delhanty. He will | all runners were safe. Living- ston snared Blake's foul fly in front Kentucky Colonels in honor of their work for success of the annual L 1 Gehrig must have felt it reflection on the abil- ity of major league sluggers when me he read that Buzz Arlett, thiel castoff, had belted four home runs for the Baltimore Internationals. Otherwise, his exploits against the Athletics, in clubbing four in a row out of the park, might be t down as sheer brutality. By now, too, it should be clear | © the elderly Mr. Mack that his ace right-hander, George Earnshaw s the best in the league at tossing |home run balls to the Yankees. Big George has had everything but his ears knocked off by the drives have to make it five now, to satisfy himself. WATCH 1933! The Cardinals, their dynamic field marshal, Branch Rickey, would have us believe, can take their penrants or leave them alone. “We would be satisfied,” he con- fessed, “If we were so successful as to win the pennant every other year over a ten-year period, rather than take three or four in a row and then, a la Athletics, slide way down to the cellar for seven straight years. “In other words, our policy is juggled Keaton's grounder near|to do with growth of the public Jack Schmitz |of the bleachers. |captured Brother Bill's foul in the bleachers ba¢k of first after a hard {run. l Grummett smacked the apple to left for his second single of the |inning and Hoben and Mathison Defeating the Moose last night|scored. Garn flied out to Ers- by a score of 10 to 6, the Ameri- kine to drop the curtain on the can Legion baseball aggregation comedy. Fritz held the Vets with- advanced its lead in the bunting out scoring in the sixth frame. chase to one and one-half games| Moose Add Four over both the Moose and Elks., The Moose added four more runs, It was the most loosely played two each in the sixth and seventh, game of the season, featured only but lacked the punmch to over- by some steady chlicking by Bob come the Legion's big lead. Mac- Keaton who chalked up his fourth!Spadden's two-bagger, a wild throw third too long, Worth scored and [links game have been appointed' Vets Tighten Grasp on First Place When Win Ragged Game the New Yorkers have rifled off his delivery this spring. It is a remarkable circumstance tr this post-war slugging age, paced by Babe Ruth, failed to touch the old-time record of four homers in a single game for a dozen years, until Gehnig Lumedi | “Tomorrow’s Styles || Today” ‘ SWAGGER SUEDE JACKETS | Presenting the newest mod- els in Suede Jackets for Street and Sport wear. Assorted colors and sizes. Priced from $9.95 to $13.95 Juneau’s Own Store I of them come and go to feel sure the trick is possiole, with five days one flat race and the relay.” the “double™ but likely take a short always to anticipate a decline, to plug ‘the gaps, to have replace- ments ready when the regulars slip. “That, in large measure, ex- plains most of the deals the Car-! dinals have made this season— except the Hafey deal. That in- volved other matters. | “We may not win the pennant | again, this year. We haven't look- | ed like winners so far, but watch | us closely in 1933!" i 4 | SUPERMAN? | “Bastman may make a mistake if he tries for both the Olympic 1400 and 300 meter runs,” remarked second. ‘the astute Mr. Daniel- Ferris, who ingston. ‘helps direct athletic affairs from |and Bill tried to rescue him by | his A. A. U. office in the WOOl—i worth building, overlooking lower' New York. “But he’s tough,” we countered. | “He has shown himself far and/ away -in front of any rivals at either distance and his style and stamnia seem adequate to the ex- tra work.” “Mebbe so, mebbe so,” admitted Mr. Ferris. “It would be nice to see him do it, but he will have to keep that fine edge and also be a superman. T have seen too many of hard Olympic competition in six. He would be better off to try Our guess is that Big Ben not only will try and probably score nap and gallop the relay, just for fun. He's that kind of a runner, apparently. —,—— France has 20,320,884 females " and 18,444,565 females, | 1 | Stan’ victory of the season. {by Grummett on Ramsay’s ground- public links tournament to be held in Louisville, July 19-23. They are Ganson Depew, Buffalo, N. Y., public links section committee of the United States Gold Associa- tion, and C. T. Hass, of Portland, Ore., for the northwest. of the Western Golf Association, came to Louisville last winter and helped organize facilities for the tourna- ment. e e i France will spend nearly $21,000,- 000 on port extensions, improve- | ments and restorations. Ragged support, however, didn't} prove expensive largely due to the {~""""""" wildness of Osborne and Henning, Moose hurlers. Osborne lasted un- til the fifth, was replaced by Hen- ning with none out, and Henning gave way to F. Schmitz after pitch- | ing to four men. Fritz finished out the game. | Legion Scores First | Keaton held the Moose score-| less in the opening half of the; first frame, and the Vets chalked up two counters in their half, Bill! Schmitz singled, and stole second. | A wild pitch advanced him to third. Grummett walked and stole | Garn grounded to Liv-! Grummett ran for third! dashing for the plate. The latter was run down on the line while went unmolested back to]| second. ‘Garn was safe at lirst.; NEW STOCK of Men’s Wear _ AT NEW LOW PRICES A complete line of W. L. Douglas Shoes S WINDOWS CLEANED Reasonable Prices Your place of business or home will be complimented if your windows ARE CLEAN PHONE 513 Estimates Cheerfully Given! chairman of the| member of the committee| (Haas, who also is a director of | SWEDEN WILL With Joy ELKS Ball Room TONIGHT LRAETRZEIE® ELKS’ BALL ROOM BAND -LOOK!!- JULY 2d will be a Big Night — Don’t Miss This—Start the FIREWORKS at the ELKS’ BALL ROOM JULY 2d Serenaders SAM TAILOR PHONES 83 OR 8 - bl “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY ) SILVA FLOORED JIM LONDOS 3 TIMES: LOSES | THROWS BIE BOUTTOSENCIO ~ OKLA. INDIAN CINCINNATI, Ohlo, June 18— STOCKTON, Cal, June 18. —|jim Londos, recognized in some oung Sencio, 126 pounder of Ma- |states as the heavyweight champ scored a technical knockout |ion, th Jim Clintsock, 240 pound |over Tony Silva, 128 pounder of | Indian from Shawnee, Oklahoma, | Oakland, here last night in the|last night for two straight falls ‘N‘ ond round of a scheduled 10- — - | bout. VIRGINIA ATHLETE GIVEN The referce awarded Sencio the| SPECIAL AWARD FOR WORK t after Bilva was floored three| CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. June ion. | 18.—The University of Virginia ha: |voted a special award to Herbers | Bryant in recognition of his con- | GAME UNHURT BY GRID RULE |tribution to athletics. —_— { ~ Bryant has won le SOUTH BEND, Ind., June 18.—|major sports—in football Perhaps the new rules forbidding |times, in baseball and tr twice use of the hands in a football|and in boxing once. He o play- }ldmo are not so bad after all.|ed basketball. When “old timers” of former No-| Bryant began football as a full- |tre Dome football teams played|back, but last season was shifted Freshmen, reserves and Varsity|to the line as regular guard He | stars who will make up the 1932 |was an outfielder in baseball, and team, but one infraction of the|starred in the weight events of |new rules was called and that w for use of the hands. track. He was a heavyweight on the Virginia boxing squad. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS T AEADQUARTERS % QPAIN Beautiful Floors AreEasytoHave With This Fast- Drying Varnish You don't need to be afraid to use and enjoy a floor when it's made beautiful with MAR- NOT. Scuffing doesn't ruin the finish. Mar-not keeps the floor Im of it remains. Extreme toughness protected as long as the thinnest fi makes this possible, also being unaffected by water. Mar-not makes vrinted linoleum wear as long as expensive inlaid, in fact, Mar-not sutwears any floor finish we know of. 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