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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY JUNE 5, 1933. BRINGING UP FATHER |1 WISH YOUD PUT THEM | | ROLLER SKATES AWAY WHEN YOU TAKE ‘EM OFF- THIS 1S THE SECOND TIME I'VE NEARLY BROKEN ME NECK STEPRIN'ON'EM By GEORGE McMANUS GET UP AND SHUT UP- IF YOU Look WHERE “You ARE GOWG, You WOULDNT STUMBLE OVER THINGS- [_ # LR eac Bricain rights rescrved. © 1933, King Fearures Syndicate, Inc., Gry ST. LOUIS, June 5—‘Pepper Martin can take it—and come back for more. ‘A disappointing 1932 season, dur- |ing which a let-down from his SENATORS WIN GLOSE BATTLE WITH BOSTON Washington Keeps Right Ceast League Los 1; Portland 6. Oakland 9; Hollywood 5. Sacramento 9; Missions 5. | San Fracisco 4; Seattle 13. National League Brooklyn 1, 4; Boston 3, 2. MOOSE DEFEAT BILLS SUNDAY St. Louis 6; Chicago 8. | g 2 g American _Lecague [Mix 10 Hits with Four i Errors to Get Six Runs Chicago 11; Detroit 6. jamazing world series performance combined with injuries to make him look bad, *had some of the fans iriding him this spring. To make matters worse he failed to show up well in early games after being Nello workec hard on Grummett and forced him to tap to the mound. Joe forced Killewich at the plate and Blake killed off Stan’| irst for the third out. Mn[:usme St e again |shifted from the outfield (o third ) e found Nello easy. Jensen was safe | 2%®: s Had a ‘Pitcher’s’ Average in Haines' miss of his groun |and stote second. B. Schmita was| Iis batting average looked ike |thrown out by Haines, Jensen tak- (2 Pitehers—ihis sturdy socksmith who had lined up a dozen safe jing third. F. Schmitz singled to| score Jensen. He took second on i tiie Collins’ single. It was the Moose He iicked -more. than ‘one hot wallops in a single series for the “Peppér” Co;ur)sr UpSn:lm g To Master Third-Base Job IF YOU SAY ONE \WORD, vLL COME \N q' 58 | in the pan. | But “Pepper” stayed with it. Ser- geant Gabby Street, grizzled man- ager of the Redbirds kept him at] third base despite the howls of the| mob, and his faith was rewarded. Martin bhegan to win ball games again with the strong right arm,! | the batting eye and the speed which had made Cardinal scouts acclain him a “natural” Boosted Mark Is .375 Before hot weather rived to WHEN MONEY IS ACTIVEI . @ There is more money in this count today than there was in 1929. The trouble is that it isn’t circulating fast enough. It is free and rapid eircula- tion of money that makes “good times.” Patronizing home enterprises is im- }:urtaul because it keeps money moving ere at home to the benefit of the entire community. Keeping business active in our cily is atask in which all of us can share....and this bank is an instrument through which local people and business houses can work together to their mutual advaniage, FIRST NATIONAL BANK stay he had lifted his average at the plate to .375 for second place in the league and was covering the| |“hot corner” in a way that won, |the approval of experts. | His efficiency on the base paths! boosted him into league leader- on Heels of Yankees in Pct. Column Boston 5; Washington 8. % s | H ; g first bas successiv s | | Philadelphia 11; New York 17. rst baseman’s third successive hit. Bialiné . Bint in, grounder away, and threw the ball |ship in runs scored, and those who L F“St Four Flames | over the first baseman’s head. The |“knew him” predicted that Johnny | WASHINGTON, June 5— The Senators clung on the heels of the| fast going Yankees Sunday by tak- ing a hard fought 4 to 3 decision from Boston in 13 innings. Pipgras was forced by heat to give up after 12 innings for Bos- ton. Welch went to the mound in the last inning and gave Schulte a walk. Kuhel sacrificed, Schulte oing to second. Bluege broke up same by a single to right, oing home with the de- score. lte GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League San Franci 12, 1; Seattle 5, 10. Oakland 5; Hollywood 12. Los Angeles 2, 11; Portland 3, 0. st game 13 innings. Sacramento 15, 7; Missions 10, 5. National League St. Louis 4, 2; Cincinnati 2, 6. Pittsburgh 2; Chicago 9. Philadelphia 1, 6; Boston 0, 9. New York 2, 6; Brooklyn 0, 1. Amcrican League Detroit 1, 4; Cleveland 2, 3 Chicago 13, 10; St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 2, 0; New York Boston 3; Washington 4. Juncau City League Moose 6; Elks 5. RECORD FOR SLUGGING GAME IS SET BY YANKS AND ATHLETICS SATURDAY NEW YORK, June 5—The New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Athletics set the season’s record scoring last Saturday afternoon as New York won 17 to 11 and made 2. 3, 6. Cleveland 5; St. Louis 8. | STANDING OF CLUBS | Pacifrc Coast League Won Lost Pet. Mixing 10 hits wiun four crrors the first four innings Sunday, in the Moose defeated the Elks 6 to Fortiaid e 5, to tighten their grasp on first Hollywood 3 2 -583 place in the City League. Nello, STen s 6= 26 581 who started for the Bills, was yank- R _Angeles 32 28 '?33 ed after one was down in the ARition " fourth and was replaced by Ers- R 21 3? kine who held the Paps to one pee oo G °9 scratch hit and a- single run for S Teencic 525,740 355 the remainder of the game. A S Uahgue | Jensen pitched gooz oall for ihe Won Lost PCt. aooss but was wild enough to have titw oYerE Lty 605 155t the game if Nello had been S Louls .18 600 given good suppo: Only two of kg g8 581 the Paps’ six runs were earned Fhisago 24 22 522 yhpe the Bills earned four of their Cincinnati 23 22 511 e Brooklyn 18 24 429 " Boston 20 21 426 One In First Philadelphia 16 31 340 Bill Schmidt, first man to face | American League Nello, smacked a double to left. ! Won Lost Pet,|He was shoved across the plate by New York 20 13 690 Collins’s wickcd smash between | Washington 27 19 587 first and second. Hv\mes» knocke: Oléveland 26 21 553 the ball down bu? couldn’t recover Chicago 23 20 535 in time to stop Bill at the plate or Philadelphia 21 20 512 get Collins at first Detroit 19 25 432! One hit and two errors gave the St. Louis 17 30 362 Moose two more tallies in_the sec- Boston 14 28 333 ond. After two hands were down Grummett singled through second Tynes C“yw{:fgl':t pot, |10 center. He went to third when . ; Jernberg muffed Jensen's twisting | Moose 5 2 . { 5 ifly to left. The Moose pitcher went | Amer. Legion #5508 B8 D | Elks 276 ‘950 t0 second before Bob got the ball back to the infield, stole third and |both scored when M. MacSpadden Imissed B. Schmitz's grounder. 3 Elks Get One ! ne Elks scored their first run in the second. With one out, Little Mac’ was hit by a pitched ball. He e e MUVES ABuu 'had stolen second and went on \to third when Killewich's peg was i | ‘\ It was also the end of the day for Nello. He was benched and Erskine sent to the mound. Kille- wich caught the Elks’ field flatfoot- ed when he dumped a bunt along the third base line for an infield hit, filling the bases 3 Then came the break that cost the Bills a chance to win. Blake let one of Erskine's fast ones get through him for a short passed ball. He was a little slow in golng}® after the ball and F. Schmita scored from third. That was the last tally the Moose scored, the only one they got off Erskine and! Killewich’s bunt was the only sem<| blance of a hit they got off himy | Only 16 men faced him in they last five innings. He fanned eight | men and walked but one, and that | one in the fourth. The only mani to reach first in ‘the last five frames was Killewich whose low, hard fly was muffed by Jernberg| who made a hard try to get the ball before dropping it. And Bob; The aggregate receipts from the died at first. national open, amateur and wo- But the Elks weren . witting Jen- |men’s championships in 1930, the crowd gave him the “bird,” assum- ing his 1931 form was just a flash —SPORT: 'SLANTS = By ALAN GOULD | The treasury of the United States' Gold Association has been hard| hit within the last two years, due! first to the retirement of the| greatest “gate” attraction in thel ‘game’s history, Bob Jones, at the height of his fame; and, secondly, to conditions which have discour- aged the cash customers and com- pelled a reduction in ticket prices at the national championship tour- paments. e sen hard enough to wipe out the!last year Jones was in competition, | | five-run margin of the Paps when |exce2ded $53000. They were bare-| Claude took the mound. If Jen-[ly $20,000 in 1931, and totalled sen hadn't been wild in spots, he around $30,000 last year, with the never would have been in danger./open played within the metropoli- Two passes, a hit an an error|tan New York aree. gave the Bills two scores in the| Thus it has taken two seasons to fifth. He walked Jernberg and!collect as much at the gate as was Haines, the first men to face him {done in the best year of the Jones A wild pitch advanced them to|Era but, the U. S. G. A, neverthe- (third and second, and Johanson, a|less, has made no cut in the prize ' new outfielder for the Elks, smack- {money offered the professionals in ed out a line drive to left to score |this year’s National Open, to be both men. |playzd over the tough North Shore In the seventh, Jensen repeated!layout in Chicago’'s suburbs. the performance on Jernberg and|. Haines. Again he uncorked a wild | A total of $5,000 will be distrib- .and Cochet ! Martins comeback had begun earnes in, leaves the ultimate issue of mas- tery very much in doubt. | At the same time it must be recognizzd that Vines is on top, perhaps yet well short of his peak, undoubtedly slipping. MIDDLE DISTANCE | RUNNER WINS 18 OUT OF 19 RACES SPRINGFIELD, Mo., June Eighteen victories in 19 starts is the season record of Captain Joe Kill-| ion, middle distance runner for the Southwest Missouri State Teach-| ers College of Springfield. ITn most | meects he won the 880-yard, mile and 2-mile runs and his, only loss was in a 2-mile duel with Smith of the Kansas State Teachers of | Pittsburgh. | Killion holds the conference rec- ord for the half-mile in the Mis- souri Intercollegiate A. A. at 2 min- utes flat, although his best time at | that distance is 1:58. His best time for the mile is 4:25 and for the 2-mile 10:01, made when he took care of other assignments on | the same program. ‘When pressed to win he loses as much as four pounds in a single| 2-mile race. His weight drops be- | tween 10 and 15 pounds during the | (track season. | LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. I*:REE—Wit.h every two gallons regardless of size of (.gneral Paint Corp. Paints we give away Water Pitcher and six Glasses. Now on display at Juneau Paint Store FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 Gastineau Pool Hall RUDOLPH TENCICH, Prop. Front Street Telephone 183 “Meet Your Friends Here” — [ . CHICAGO, June 5—Coach Jim- bad. Jernberg walked. While he was uted, of which $1,000 and a gold| { BIRDS PREY ON FISH | an exhibition of slugging. pitch. Orme came through with | The Athletics apparently put the game away in the third inning by scoring eleven runs, but the Yankees fifth inning and picked up six more in the remaining innings. Babe Ruth hit his tenth homer of the season tying Lou Gehrig, Wally Berger and Chuck Klein for the major league lead. my Austin of the White Sox once trapped between first and second, made a put-out at first while play- Little Mac’ stole home. 'ing third base for the St. Louis, The Paps hit Nello hard in the chalked up ten in the|Browns. He ran over to first when ‘third but only scored one run. Col- ‘ ithe batter lifted a soaring infield lins opened with a double to left. fly. First Baseman George sisler‘;l(mewich singled past third, ad- signaled for the catch but m\lffedlvancmg him to third. J. Schmitz {the ball. Austin picked it up and singled to left, Collins scoring and tagged the runner, who had just Killewich going to second. P. rounded the bag. |Schmitz singled to short right to DAILY SP — VETER AN PICHER. OF THE CHICAGO WHITE SOX. ORTS CARTOON :-By Pap TM WEAS , FROM LAUGHIN ~ (@27 SADsam HAO A LOUD LAUSH WHEN HE BEAT THE YANKEES FoR RIS THIRO \IlCT,ORY / a single through second to score them. i Little Mac’ singled in the eighth ned Jernberg and Haines in the ninth ‘to start it. Blake revived the Elks' hopes with a hard singl to deep left. Johanson was robbed but went out stealing, Jensen fan-| medal goes to the winner, and if| you think the pros won't put up a| POCATELLO, Idaho, June 5.— real battle for it, you don't know Predatory birds on the Snake River how important this much money and American Lake in Idaho, a |is to the clan that plays for what |sportsman’s organization found afi- it can get. {er checking the Kkill of 475 cormor- ,ants, 97 pelicans and 229 fish ducks, lcarry an average of a half to two- Don’t Sell Cochet Short | of a hit by Collins who dived and| knocked the ball across the field into F. Schmitz’s hands and Fritz tossed Johanson out at first to Jen- sen to end the game. Moose Win Another The lanky, slouching tennis phe- nomenon from Pasadena, Henry |Ellsworth Vines, Jr., is credited with the remark, before departing on the 1938 Davis Cup war, that his goal was to turn the tables on Jean r | | MOOSE— AB R H PO A F|Borotra, the volatile Frenchman (Schmitz, B, ss .6 1 1 2 4 0|whose defeat of the American 12cl;xxxlnitz.ml"\, 2b ..5 1 1 4 3 0 champion saved the trophy for \Collins, s .5 1 3 8 2 1|France last summer. |Killewich, ¢ .......5 0 2 8 3 0| .Vines assumes that Borotra will| {Schmitz, J, ¥ .4 01 0 0 ‘irecant his retirement from singles! \Schmitz, P, of .. 4 0 1 2 0 0|competition. He may be correct Ramsay, rf .. -4 0 0 0 0 9and he may succeed in gaining | *Dawson, rf .. 0 0 0 0 0 0/revenge from the Basque, but lel1 |Grummett, 3b . 4 11 0 0 !him not forget, in doing so, that i.lensen, PR 4 2 0 3 6 O/the toughest obstacle for him to |hurdle overseas will be grim little | Totals ... .40 6 10 27 18 2 Henri Cochet, with a score or two| {*—Supstituted for Ramsay in tI’|to settle himself with our Masber“ eighth inning. Vines. | ELKS— Let there be no misunderstand- {Orme, cf 4 0 1 1 0 Oling now or in July; if France keeps Nello, p 2 0 0 0 1 0/the Davis Cup for the seventh year *Erskine, p 2 0 0 1 3 0lin a row, it will be due to Cochet’s Garn, ss .. 3 0 0 0 1 0lability to play two or three match- McSpdn, H, 3b .. 4 0 1 0 1 0 es at top pace. MeSpdn, M., 1b ..3 1 1 8 0 ! i i Jernberg, 1f 12 0 0 0 2It's Far From Settled i Haines, 2b 20370 1 3 ‘Whether Vines himself shares it, Blake, ¢ .........4 0 112 1 0|there has been a mistaken idea that Johanson, rf ... 4 0 1 1 0 0 that Vines has the “Indian sign” ————— on Cochet and can beat the French ‘Totals ... 29 5 52710 4/stylist any day in the week. Maybe Summary: Earned runs, Moose 2 [so, but T'll believe it when Henry Elks 4; two-base hits, B. Schmi'z Ellsworth turns the trick, with the and ‘Collins one each; stolen base: Davis Cup at stake and Cochet in Jensen, 2, M. MacSpadden 2; bas top-notch condition. on balls, off Jensen 5, off Ersk Don't forget that it was all over 1; double plays, Nello to Blake (0 at Roland Garros last summer (Bo- M. MacSpadden; hit by pitched rotra having won the deciding ball, M. MacSpaaden, and Garn point) when Vines polished off Jensen; passed balls, Blake 1; Cochet in the challenge round. Lat- pitches, Jensen 2; struck out, 0 er at Porest Hills, the Frenchman | Jensen 8, by Nello 4, by Erskine ©|was dynamited off the courts in | left on bases, Moose 6, Elks 2; h' - straight sets in our National Cham- 9, runs 5 off Nello in three 21 pionship final a short time after | jone-half innings; hits 1, runs 1, o'’ being obliged to play the fifth and | Erskine in five and two-thirds |deciding set of a very tough semi- nings; - losing pitcher Nello. |final engagement with Wilmer Al- | Umpires: Boyd at plate, lison. and, Hagerup on bases. | Whether or not the result might | Sgore: have been altered, on either occa- | | Low r—Pegues. Time of game—Two hours and 2| j Davis, sion, the fact is that circumstanc- | and-a-half pounds of fish. It was estimated a pelican would eat ap-| |proximately 20 fish a day, destroy- | ling 6,000 yearly. FINALLY WINS ONE SAN FRANCISCO, June 5—Curt | the Pacific Coast league's most effective pitcher in 1932, got credit for his first victory this sea- | son after seven straight losses. —— The advertisements are you guide to efficient spending. | | Have your car checked after the wear and tear of winter driving. REASONABLE PRICES Expert Workmen CONNORS Motor Co., IN C. es gave Cochet a splendid alibi and WHITE LINE CABS 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL”-of course! Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Sheet Metal Heating UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 Phone 16 Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office