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, 1933. PRS- WHAT HAVE YOU THERE MAGGIE ? . /////,/\ BRINGING UP FATHER 1TS THE LATEST SOQOETY FAD- DOWNG JIG-SAW PUZZLES OF VERY PROMINENT PEOPLE- '™ JUST CRAZY TO SEEWHO THIS ONE 1S~ NO- THATS i THE WRONG PLACE~-PUT- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 22 OH, WELL GOIN' TO GVT IN. & FIGHT OVER'R VIG-Saw PUZZLE - TN YOUR EYE \F YOU OONT GO AWAY- GET OUT OF HERE - | WANT TO DO THID MYSELF - N h & | ~ @ ). Kow Fewnre Syndicase, e, Great Boaie nghts rescoves: i e By GEORGE McMANUS ITS A PICTURE = PRIMO SHOWS | WELL IN WORK FOR TITLE 60 1 5 S T NEW YORK IS WINNER OVER ST, LOUIS 5-3, Game Runs: Thirteen In- nings—Gehrig Makes Seventeenth Homer ST. LOUIS, Mo, June 22—New York put over two runs in the thirteenth inning yesterday after- noon to defeat St. Louis 5 to 3. Lou Gehrig hit his seventesnth home run of the season in the seventh inning. Tony Lazzari cracked out a circuit drive in the twelfth mning. GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Hollywood 3; Los Angeles 7. Quits Baseball 77 homer came in the third inninglto end the game. 'ERSKINE HURLS i ball pitched by Schmitz for the he fanned Famsay, threw out Bill! Italian Develops Speed, Bunch and Boxing Pow- Two Moose batters saw the bases| ~ ers— I rainers Elated in the second. Collins was hit by a pitched ball and advanced to sec- l POMPTON ond on Fraser's sacrifice bunt. SHUTOUT BALL; & sz They were left the Carnera training camp as the = ]| stranded when Pet> Schmitz fanned giant Italian challenger begins his [ y. and Orme snared Ramsay's fly in tapering off preparations for his sy £ i right. center. stitle battle with Jack Sharkey at down on the baseline for the third out. LAKES, N. J, June rr WL After that the Moose didn't come Madison Square Garden Bowl on Elks Take Second Succes- ¥ithin striking distance of the June 2. : Rt i 9 plate until the sixth inning. Cough-| This optimism is due chiefly. to sive Gamg ,by"Hltllng lin and ‘Cooper opened with sin-|Carnera’s excellent physical condi- P Schmitz Hard gles. With two men on and no tlon and the wonderful improve- : g hands down, - Erskine pitched fine ment he has shown in both skill S i ball. He forced Collins to foul out and speed in his workouts. For a Pitcning afrtight oall, Claude %o Big' Mac.' Fraser grounded to.man of Carnera's enormous size the Erskine shut out the Moose last short and Livingston forced out Ting speed he has developed is real- night while his teammatés pound- Coughlin at third. Jack Schmitz'ly amazing. ed Pete Schmitz for 11 hits, in- grounded to Nello at second whose | “T am well pleased with his prog. cluding two homeruns and two throw to Little Mac’' at first got ress,” says Billy De Foe, his train- doubles, and won 7 to 0, in one of lost in the sun. Molly muffed the er. “We can't risk taking him along the prettiest games of ball of the ball, and the bases were filled, too fast.” season. - __ |Erskine fanned Pete Schmitz for| Uses Up Partners M. MacSpadden hit the first the third out. In the final frame “Primo has responded wonder- circuit, driving it past the score- Schmitz at first and Orme gobbled'::?yA‘mne?;;:o:: o ot ine’ . [ presentative. “He is board in right center. Erskine's up F. Schmitz's fly to short cenzer’dfimg everything we tell him and J. 22— A spirit of optimism pervadss' work with him. The first assort- ment of sparring partners have be- come too battered to continue. There hasn’'t been an afternoon during the last ‘week that Primo could not have knocked out all jthree in the first round. 1 “What we need now are boys who can absorb more of the big fellow's punches. He has been pull- {ing them too much, and all of those boys weigh around two hun- (dred pounds. I believe his new |partners, Frankie Edgron, Harold {Mays and Jack Livingston will give him stiffer opposition.” Weight Comes Down Carnera’s road work has had much to do with his excellent con- dition. He is out at 6 every morn- ing and does from six to eight miles. He has reduced in weight from 272 to 264. DeFoe expects him to enter the ring at about 260. | The most temarkable improve- ment in the Big Boy is his speed. He is wonderfully fast for one co |large, He is ‘quick to'learn and can readily overcome any fault called to his attention. You don't |have to tell Primo twice. Those who have worked with him say he carries a punch in either hand that will stop a mule. There can be no doubt that Car- nera fights. He has learned a lot, too, about {the defensive end of the game. Even werz he not so big, the Car- nera of today would not be an easy man to hit. The way he has developed his Missions 5; San Francisco 6. PR 3 ith ratrag) d. jthe results have been all we could|left will .surprise those who see Portland 8: Seattle 6. Bill Klepper, president and own. "' "NCrS on Hirst and secon Second for Bills wish for, him when he meets Sharkey. He Oakland 13; Sacramento 6. Night ,’;:L:&:,fz‘::':‘ t‘e'.‘;‘;'.” :':“.b r‘;’ Two Big Innnings The -phaie: |/ “We are having a little trouble |nas learned to shoot his south flip- game. x‘u.-.d from the game after weather. The Bills, short several of their| ELKS AB R H PO A E'In getting boys strong enough to|per home with such rapidity that National League | ing several storms. He became the regulars, had two big innings, the|{McSpdn, M, 1b U EET N Renn > he completely bewilders everybody Chicago 1; New York 3. | club’s president in 1920 and regain. first and third. They scored three Nel's, 2b 321 0 2 0'Ramsay, If 80 03 o j|Who has trained with him here. Pittsburgh 5, 3; Boston 6, 5. | ed control in 1928. (Associated runs in the opening canto and|Livingston, ss e BT W SRR, 0 1R o St. Louis 7; Brooklyn 5. l"’“' Photo) four in the third. Except for these ,McSpdn, H., ¢ 3125 2'0, Totals 25 0 613 5 1| ©Old papers at ‘Tne Emplre. Cincinnati ?’; Phimhia 101572 t}‘wodfrzmes, :ebe held Lh:lm down ‘P]ks)(‘!ne, ;;r 4 e lh s e ‘ovf_mplued Killewich. R I American '3 d ard, but the way “Erskine was|Jernberg, 3 02 0 0°0] Summary: Earned runs, Moose ¢ ANI Boston 10, 3; DeQFOiL 9, 5. TUM LuUGHRAN chucking one-run would have been Orme, cf 3 00 4 0'00; Elks 7; two base hits, Livingston IF YOU REALLY w Washington 9; Chicago 0. [ plenty to have won. Johanson, rf 301 00 0'and H MacSpadden; home runs| TO STOP THAT COUGH Philadelphia 1; Cleveland 11. | | Little Mac' opened the game by|Wold, 3b 3 0 0 1 1 Q"M MacSpadden and Erskine; bases New York 5; 8t. Touls 3. il GETS BEB'SIU ‘driving . the: first .ball pitched, out ) R P ~'on_balls, of fErskine 1; hit by| ¥ou can do it with & couple of:} Jupeau City League ‘ ] of the lot. After Ncllq fanned, suc-| Totals 4 28 7112113 1,pitched ball, Collins by Erskine;|{doses of Bronchuline Emulsion— Elks 7; Moose 0. H cessive doubles by Livingston and |MOOSE— stryck, out, by Erskine 5, by|with half a bottle anyway. Never, RS, | Big Mac' followed by Erskine’s|3chmitz, B. 2b .. 4 0 1 2 0 u;Schmitz 5; left on. bases, Moose mind the smell (though that's STANDING OF CLUBS | grounder fhgt‘fflmed the latter at|Schmitz, F. ss 3 01 03,08, Elks 3; stolen bases, M. Mac-|worse far than the taste). As a Pacific Coist League /third, Erskine's steal of second,|Coughlin, ¢ 3 0 2 5 0 0,Spadden, Erskine 1 each; sacrifice| matter of fact, it feels great going Won Lost pet NEW YORK, June 22—Tommy 2nd Jernberg's single to left, scored|Killewich, 3b 1 0 1 1 0.0 hits, Fraser 1. down. Gives INSTANT RELIEF. Hacramants 46 32 590 Loughran, of Philadelphia, veteran Livingston and Erskine. *Cooper 3b 2 0,1 0 1 0}, Umpires;. Boyd at plate, Lotts-|Soothes a hacking, racking cough Hollywood 42 34 ‘558 neavyweight, was awarded the de-' Only three men faced Pete in|Collins, 1b 2 0 0 5 0.0 felt;and Hermlee on bases. almost while you are swallowing it. Portland . 43 35 ‘551 Cision last night over Steve Hamas,: the §e€°nd frame. Fraser got|Fraser, rf ... 2 0 0 2 0 0}, Scorer: Pegues. Money back if it doesn't give you Los Angeles 40 36 ‘525 In & ten rounder. It was the fourtb Orme's fly in right, and Ramsay|Schmitz, J., cf 2 00 0 0 0 Time of game: One hour and 50|relief. Harry Race and all other Mission J 3 40 ‘494 Meeting of the two boxers and, snared Johanson's and Wold's flies|Schmitz, P., p 3 0 0 0 10 minutes. good druggists guarantee it. adv. i 38 39 480 €vened up the series, two victories in left. S - — — Seattle o9 m -380 for each. The third was disastrous. Little San Francisco ... 30 47 .ggol Loughran weighed 186 pounds Mac' fanned to start it. Nello sin- ] National L and Hamas weighed 187% pounds. 8led, and Divingston and Big Mac Won Tost Pot. duplicated his blow, Nello scoring 1 fon Mac’s hit. Erskine then drove New York 3% 21 625 Cleveland .. 33" 28 541 out a four-baser down the left field St. Louis 236 23 610 Chicago e 3129 517 < foul line to score Curley and Mac Pittsburgh e 3327 550 Philadelphia .28 28 .500 ahead of him for the last runs Chicago .. 32 3 508 Detroit 30 31 492 scored by the Bills Cincinnati ........28 33 459 Boston e 23 38 311 3 ‘Brooklyn SRR 446 St. Louis ... .- 21 40 43“’ Two Hits ‘in First 3oston .21 4 443 Juneau City League | The Moose had two' on bases in F Philadelphia 23 39 3m (8econd Half) : lthe first with two‘down. Coughlin |.4 H American League | on Lost ' Pet {singled and advanced to second on |- June zotl‘ . Won Lost Pct.'Elks ... STREEY 0 1.000 Killewich’s single. ‘With two strikes New York ... .37 22 627 American Legion o 1 000" on Collins, Bobby triéd”to sneak 36 23 610 Moose ... 0 T ‘Washington {000 to third and was trapped .and run|, LS FEL s S S DAILY SPORTS CARTOON to July 4th “All broken sizes and discontinued stock to go $ MEYER WON {$18,000 FOR HIS EFFORT THIS YEAR- TOMMY. *MILTON: ./ -THE ONLY QTHER. JOUBLE WINNER ~ HE = L SET-AKNEW REEORD | WITH AN AVERAGE SPseD OF 104 4672 MiLes A 4 7 / . W HOUR.. By Papis. WOMEN'’S DRESS SHOES, values $7.50, Sale Prices ........ WOMEN'S SPORT OXFORDS, V to $6.00, Sale Prices .......... SOXFORDS .. i s 1112 4.5 CHILDREN'S.SPORT SANDALS "OXFORDS?all ‘sizes ........ OXFORDS, all sizes ........ BOYS’ SHOES and OXFORDS, S: Prices ... ualld it Lov ‘MEYER: ,, ~REPEATED HIS v VICTORY OF 1928 INMIMNING THE * MLE L INDIANAPOLIS CLASSIC FRONT STREET Arnéld’s Bootery before arrival of Fall Styles. A real opportunity to buy quality shoes at old prices—new stock will be higher. to .$2.95 to $4.95 alues .$2.95 to $3.95 WOMEN’S SPORT SANDALS and - and CHILDREN'S,DRESS SLIPPERS and ale .$2.35 to $3.45 Near First National Bank <] X FOR fi YOUR MONEY L you want an investment that will not tie up your funds i for a long period . . . i IF...you want SAFETY with a solid backing of sound resources . . , IF ... you want a substantial in« terest return on your money . .. THEN.. . . Invest in our CERTIFICATES of DEPOSIT « o « the ideal short-term invest- ment. You can buy them at any time in any amount, 'FIRST NATIONAL BANK LUMBER JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS | Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska l trroe UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS {}. Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 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 89 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:20 . | 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 FREE—With every two gallons regardless of size of General Paint Corp. Paints we give away Water Piteher and six Glasses. Now on display at * Juneau Paint Store e THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL’-of course! Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Sheet Metal Heating Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office