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s o R TS, i 4 i BRINGING UP FATHER 1INSISTED ON YOUR FATHER CALLING ON BARON HISDOME HE 1S SO REFINED-HE LOVES MUSIC AND ART- | TOLD YOUR FATHER HE MUST REMAIN | WITH HiM ALL EVENING - HELL LEARN A'LOT FROM THE TS OH.YES, MR- JIGGS-I LOVE MusIG ¢ PLACE, AND WE ARE GOING | PLACES-1 GET SO FILLED LUP \WITH ", i SOCIETY-1 MUST | HAVE RELAXATION- GRACIOUS! 1TS TWO-A-M- | TOLD HIM TO 'PHONE ME WHEN THE BARON '™ JUST, i SAID GOOD-NIGHT il FoLLowiN THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAYfi JUNE 17, 1933. By GEORGE MecMANUS o N\ LisTEN, MAGGIE.- KIN | COME HOME? THIS GUY AIN'T NEVER GOIN HOME. HES A GOOD SCOUT BUT '™ BROOKLYNBEATS) ANOTHER € GIANTS IN DUEL OF MOUND MEN League's Leaders Lose 3 to 1—Mungo's Delivery [Piedmont Star Even Has Heinie’s Funny Stance, at that DURHAM, N. C., June 17— There’s a little third baseman with Durham of the Pledmont league named Bobby Schleicher who fans Is PUZZlmg lare calling a second Heinie Groh.| | Bobby even looks like the great i NEW YORK, June 17— WIh'gainie s the same hustling type of | Sam Leslic setting the pace player and has the Groh stance at a““‘"i‘ his {°;me"rw"r‘:£:"‘§5whe plate, faced squarely toward Brooklyn vyesterday al - the pitcher. feated the National League’s lead-| genlojcher’s minor league batting ing Glants 3 to 1 in a p;;?;;‘g‘record—.%s with Selma of the duel between Van Mungo, {Southeastern and .365 witi Decatur lyn, and Hal Schumacher and Dol-ljn the Three-I—indicates he has a fo Luque, Gla;)“s.Glat it |real sock despite his unorthodox Bill Terry, the Giant’s mal \'style. He got his start at batboy was the only New Yorker to solve wiyth Nashville several years ago. Mungo’s delivery, making three of . his team’s few scattered hits. WE DON'T KNOW WHY LOS ANGELES, June 17.—Mel \Keneally, racing at Ascot Speed- ,way, in Los Angeles, always car- iries his name written in Chinese ,on his race car. GAMES FRIDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 5; Los Angeles 3. Mission 5; Sacramento 6. Seattle 12; San Francisco 5. Hollywood 0; Oakland 4. National League R NS S Brooklyn 3; New York 1. Pittsburgh 1; Chicago 9. 'l‘o COACH ARlZONA American League No games played. | TUCSON, Ariz, June 17.—Tex :011vcr, formerly of Santa Ana, Cal, ‘has been named football coach of |the University of Arizona. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pct.| S e Sacramento 43 30 589 | ' Hollywood 40 31 .563 | FIRST TITLE P B % 3| MINNEAPOLIS, June 17—Frank Los Angeles 38 33 _535’McCorchk‘s third baseball team Mission 38 36 ¥ at the University of Minnesota, Fhe Seattle .28 40 ‘412 1933 edition, won that school's first San Francisco 26 46 .361,Bi3 Ten championship with a rec- National League ord of six wins and one defeat. S eee R Won Lost Fe!MR. AND MRS. HOLZHEIMER St. Louis . T3 21 .504{ TO ARRIVE HERE JULY 1 g}:i{'::;;gh 3 % % wWinam A Holsheimer, whose Cincinnati 21 27 500 | appointment as _United States At- Brooklyn 23 27 460 |torney for the First Judicial Divis- Boston 23 32 ‘418 lon was confirmed by the United Philadelphia 19 36 ‘345 States Senate last Saturday, and American League |Mrs. Holzheimer, expect to ‘mlve Won Lost Pot.|in Juneau to make their residence New York 33 20 623 by July first, accqrding to word re- Washington 33 23 . 5e3;oeived by the Emipire. Chicago .29 25 537 Philadelphia .26 23 531 Juneau City League Clevelund .20 .26 527 Won Lost Pet. Detr@it-© ..ok 26 28 481 |American Legion ... 8 4 867 ‘Boston .19 34 .358 MOOSe ..o T 4 636 20 36 357 Elks i ol 9 182 St. Louis MEN PREPARED | WINNER, LARGE . FORNEXT FALL ~ SUM IN RACES | | | ! NEW YORK, June 17.—Steadily climbing toward the top, C. V. . L3 A | Whitney's Equipoise has a little ing Speed in Spring matter of $100,000 between him and the world record for thoroughbred Workouts money winnings, held by Willis MINNEAPOLIS, June 17.—Specd, Sharpe Kilmer's Sun Beau. 8 precision and timing are thres' Equipoise had won $278,310 after essentials in Bernie Bierman's plans he captured the Metropolitan han= for Minnesota’s football offensive dicap at B:lmont Park. Sun Bcau's! next fall—and he has a picked Winnings, when he retired two years squad in track suits running ago as a six-year-old, amounted to through maneuvers daily. $376,744. ; Abandoning the moleskins fol-| Should the Whitney champion | lowing the regular spring drills, overtake Sun Beau, his perform- | Bierman has eliminated all sem- ance would be remarkable in that | ‘blance of scrimmage and is strcs-;'Eqquolse raced very seldom as a Bernie Bierman Is Stress- GETTING GRID EQUIPOISEIS | i WHEN MONEY IS ACTIVEI m @ There is more money in this country today than therc in 1929. The trouble is that it isn’t circulating fast enough. It is free and rapid circula- tion of money that makes “good times.” Patronizing home enterprises is im- ortant becauvse it keeps money moving ere at home to the benefit of the . entire community Keeping business active in our city is atask in which all of us can shar .and this bank is an instrument through which local people and business hou 1 work togetEer FIRST NATIONAL BANK It looks as if Seaman Tom Watson, B sing crisp execution of plays, with three-year-old, when he went lame. speed and timing the Xkeynote Equipoise, now five years old, must | instead of brute force. win almost every stake for older To Cut Down Fumbling |horses in sight if he hopes to over- But that doesnt mean climinat-, 2k® Sun Beau this year. | A e A fact little known is that a trote {ing power plays, Bernie insists, as {ing G TERER |he shouts at the squad for more::}:’f‘n "_‘;:e xls "};10 .wondc,: lse-w&d speed. And those husky linemen, Mwi(;yw nnsgg’ ogxsdc. 3 ul a:n "] i TusERes SER. Sice m""‘;n;g nax::algn :f almlt;:]izv.cn: y;:r; track trunks, look longingly but |, s i *lin the latter part of the ninetzenth futilely for something to hit. uBlflr)man i runnigfl the squad century, when stakes were small endlessly through all variations of :;‘:flpr‘ef"“” was worth a lot of |plays, aiming to cut down fumb- Third in the 113t i5 Ksar, a |ling, one of Minnesota’s worst foes i last year, and to put a finish on|French thoroyghbred which won the execution of formations that|$335.340. Fourfhi is Phar Lap, Aus-~ iralian campaigner which won the |will speed up practice in the fall. On these warm spring days, the[Agua Caliente handicap in America ‘Ametica backfield man, featherweight title, is enjoying a pr tion is the result of h of his title bout with Kid New York, T ut. But the above posi- left hook in the 10th round | Madison Square Garden, | ision on point; | before he died suddenly after win- ning a total of $332,250. SPORT BRIEFS | il Gallant Fox is fifth in the world | FPresbyterian college of Clinton list with $328,165, Zev is sixth with | WOR the South Carolina track title | $313,630, Isinglass, an English thor- [in 1927, 1930, 1931 and 1933, and| oughbred, is seventh with $291,275 |the 8. I A. A. meet in 1927, 1929 and 'Bquipoise, almost $100,000 be-|and 1930. hind Sun Beau, the leader, is| ‘A 15-foot puit gave Harry Root,| cighth. r, his second straight city golf Bt i | championship at Tampa, Fla. | H. J. Mimer, Fresno, Cal., golfer, Jenmy Hitencock, Auburn’s All- | celebrated his 74th birthday by| wifl professional baseball when his col lege days end this cummer. shooting 79 holes. He began T)]H.V-" o :jng 33 years ago and now shoots | jaround 100. head coach and his aides work out with the squad in a limbering up drill but the group is soon split up into individual teams and the reall drill - begins. Precision Makes Power Bernie does not expect to elimi- nate a powerful running game but insists on perfect execution to make the power effective. “Those touchdown runs are not made by luck,” Bierman said, “and every,time a play is executed with precision, it is a potential touch- down. We must have precision, rhythm, and timing—or else.” And he figures that this track idea may do the trick. et Illini track fans say Hudson Hell- mich, their 6-4 basketballer, is the tallest top-notch dash man the Big Ten has known. Hellmich ran|d a good second in both the 100 and 220 in the Big Ten championships. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON WALTER -BERGER -~ FEW BATTERS HT A BAU:—GER‘ ¢ HARDER. HAN, IS BIG SL yari o RHE €03 ToN BRMIES — Y] i —By Pap THIS YOUNG GIANT CAN 60 AND GET 'EM IN THE OUTFIELD ~ HE MADE DQE PUT-OuTs LAST SEASON B3P0 ues eeew LEAONE TIE HOME RUN Obportunity Doors at Cost Builders Supply Co. 100 A. DISHAW & SON LUMBER JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PACIFIC COAST COLLECTORS GOLDSTEIN BUILDING Under New Management HONEST—PROMPT—EFFICIENT: Not Connected in Any Way with Former ‘Management Phone 554 for Collections FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Austin Fresh Tamales Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 WHITE LINE CABS 25 centsin 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 FREE—With every two gallons regardless of size of General Paint Corp. Paints we give away Water Pitcher and six Glasses. Now on display at Juneau Paint Store e e THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL’-of course! Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Sheet Metal Heating Old Papers. for Sale at Empire Office iy