The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 7, 1933, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY. JULY 7, 1933. LET THINGS WORRY ‘YO YOUR WORRY OUT OF YOUR SIGHT, REMEMBER THE SAYING SIGHT;, OUT OF MIND! ONLY Look AT THE CHEERFUL S|DE OF LIFE- > 'BRINGING UP FATHER AH,MR.JIGGS! YOU HAVENT INSOMNIA. YOU JUST CANT SLEER BECAUSE YOU U PUT ALL ,* QUT oF A el o % é‘l qoLLY. I THAT QGuY MIGHT BE RIGHT- SWAT KING 1 WINNER OF BIG ALL-STAR GAM League Victors CHICAGO, July 7—Out of the shooting stars in Baseball's Big Dream Game, blazed the mighty club of the one and only Babe Ruth yesterday to hoist the Amcr- jcan League to a 4 to 2 triumph over the National League in the first all-star game in the Ma- jors' history. Before a crowd of 49,000 fans, that jammed Comiskey Park, the aging Sultan of Swat, strode to th: plate in the third inning, bristling with anger because of a strike-out on his first appearance, and smote one of Wild Bill Hal-! lahan’s looping slants into the lower right field stand seats. The blow came with Charley Gehringer, of Detroit, on base, and clinched the game. Ruth’s home run won the game but to top it off, Babe raced back against the right field wail to haul down a drive of Chick Hafey in the eighth inning to save the ‘.)at-l tle. - t GAMES THURSDAY Pacific Coast League Sacramento 8; Oakland 3. Hollywood 5; San Francisco '13.: Seattle 1, 6; Portland 9, 7. Missions 4; Los Angeles 5. ALL STAR GAME | American League 4; Nationall League 2. P i | STANDING OF CLUBS | Pacific Coast League i Pet. | Won Lost Sacramento . 51 31 Aml Portland 54 89 581 Los Angeles 53 39 576 Hollywood .51 41 554 Missions .. 43 52 453 Oakland 41 50 451 Seattle ... 35 65 389 | San Francisco ... 36 57 ,38'1i National League Won Lost Pct New York ... 27 .620 St. Louis 34 541 Pittsburgh 35 527 Chicago .. 38 506 | Boston 31 38 493 Brooklyn 33 38 465 Cincinnati . 33 42 440 Cincinnati . 33 43 434 Philadelphia 31 43 419! American League Won Lost Pot. ‘Washington . 41 25 653 New York .. 45 28 616 Philadelphia .3 36 507 ‘Chicago . 31 38 493 Cleveland . .31 40 481 Detroit . 36 39 480 Boston .. 31 42 425 St. Louis ... 29 50 367 Juneau City League (Second Half) Won Lost Pet EIKS ..o 3 0 1,000 American Legion 1 2 333 Moose 3 1 3 250 el FIGURES GIVEN TO SETTLE BE Sporting Editor, The Empire.— ‘Will you please give the ages of Sharkey and Carnera, to settle a bet, in fact two bets, for there is also a dispute as to the reach of the two fighters. (Signed) TWO ALASKA FANS. THE ANSWERS Sharkey is 30 years of ag2, reach 74% inches. Carnera is 26)ers are talking to themselves years of age, reach 84 inches. agin;_——_ - NOTICE! T_MW—_T The Juneau Water Works have, 1 moved their offices to the First [ BEAUTY SHOP I l National ‘Bunk from where it will 107 Assembly | transact all business. i PHONE ‘lmllheli i ady, JOHN RECK, Manager. E : ' Six Years in Baseball, on Winner 'Every Time ‘ e i \ SPRINGFIEL, IIl, = Freddy Hyers, infielder with the Springfield Red Birds, has been on a pennant-winning club every one of his six full seasons in baseball. In 1926 he was with Spring- field, in 1928 with Fort Wayne, and in 1929, 1930 and 1931 with Rochester in the International League. Last -season he managed Greensboro in the Piedmont League and led his charges to a championship. e WALKER BEATEN BY BROUILLARD IN 10-ROUNDER BOSTON, July 7.—Lou Brouil- hard, of Worcester, 160 pounder, spotted Mickey 'Walker ten pounds last night and then gave the vet- eran a terrific lacing in a 10-round bout. | — July T - . | SPORT BRIEFS | - . A plan is under way to obtain a representative number of coun- try’ clubs as members of the Tex- 'as State Golf Assofiation by re- 'ducing the dues. “Bargain Night,” with 40 cents admission to the grandstand, prov- ed so popular that the Kansas City baseball club will repeat the attraction. | Oscar Melillo, Brownle infielder, handled more than 250 chances without an error, beginning May ¥ i F. Springer, after establishing himself as leading rider at River- |side, was sent in mid-scason to Lincoln Fields. | At six of Missouri’s 15 State parks fishing is the principal at-: traction. i Columbus, O., has not won a| baseball pennant in the American Association for 26 years. Polly Boyd, champion golfer of Chattanooga, Tenn., prefers flsh-! ing to golfing, he says. ( Frank Riley, whose brothers, Jack and Bill, have been tackle heross at Northwestern for five ‘years, will be @ freshman at that school next fall after a great prep record at'St. John's Academy. —— COAST FANS ARE WORRIED Louisiana State’s Win Has Caused West to Prick Up Her Ears LOS ANGELES, Cal, July 7.—| State's surprising victory over the University of Southern California track and field team in the Na- tional Intercollegiate meet at Chi- cago has caused the far west to prick up its ears. Pacific coast institutions, Which pride themselves .on their athletic; superiority over other sections of the country, ran into trouble from football teams from below the Ma- son and Dixon line for several years until Southern California hit its stride in 1931 and 1932. Now a little band of five ath- letes from the boyous has chal- lenged the coast's best in such an emphatic fashion that far western- [ g RUSTAD LEADS |WARRIORS PLAY INBATTING AT | BILLS TONIGHT GI_I]SE]F HALF ;League siiders and et ‘ Place Team Scheduled | Boyd, However, Has Best| to Meet Tonight Record, Leading in Hits | the miks, out i front in tne 3 |City League's second half with & and Runs in 14 Games | clean sheet, will take on the Ameri« [ Legion toni L Batting averages ifor the first o N gt At Rexem e half of the City League's season,' Park in the wusual seven-inninz ccmpiled by Bob Jernberg, official f:‘ze‘;c;;;nm:;dh‘;g ?xgng:?nr;: scorer, put Norman Rustad at the qy. Vets, in second place, have top of the list of sluggers with an won one and lost two. | average of 523 for five games in, mgkine probably will be sent in which he took part.. Collins, MOOSe goqinst the Warriors by Manager. first baseman, was second with 486 Koski in an effort to make it in nine games. !four in a row. Manning, who beat “Grassy” Lowe was technically the Bills so handily last Tuesday, third, with 417, but he had played jg expected to oppose him., in only three games. Bob Boyd, Jimmy held the Elks to three American Legion backstop, had an hits and shut them out in nine average of 416 for 14 games. innings in the Fourth of July Has Best Record money game which, however, doesn’t Boyd's record was the best at| count in the League race. Erskine the half's end. He had been 53 pitched the last three innings for times at bat, hit safely 22 times the Elks and was nicked for two and scored 19 runs, leading in all doubles but wasn't scorzd on. departments. | AR S ‘There were 14 players hitting| 300 or more. Six of them were Moose players, five Vets and three Elks. Manning: and Boyd were| tied for home runs with three each. Averages. Are Given The averages of @l players listed| 2 " by $corer Jernberg are as follows: cHI WHITE snx Player, Team G AB R H Ave. 1] Rustad, AL ....5 17 8 9 523 Collins, M ......9 37 11 18 .486 4 Lowe, AL 312 1 5 417Deal Makes Third Transac- Boyd, AL .....14 53 19 22 416 - 2 s (el 320 o s 4| tion of Indians Dur- Killewich, M .10 34 8 13 .382 Ing Week Fraser, M 11 42 8 14 .333| H.M'Spadden,E 13 47 4 15 319 SEATTLE, July 7.—Hal Haid, Manning, AL ...13 47 12 15 .319 veteran Seattle pitcher, has been F. Schmitz, M..13 48 15 15 313 sold to the (Chicago White Sox, Worth, AL ....14 49 15 15 .306|according to an announcement J. Schmitz, M .13 43 10 13 .300 made today. The price was not Haines, E .7 20 4 6 .300'made public. Ramsey, M .....6 20 5 6 -300| The sale of Haid makes three Garn, E .1l 3709 11 .29'7|deals the Indians have made dur- M.M'Spadden,E..13 48 10 14 .292'ing the past few days, Fred Mul- Allen, AL 45 10 13 .289|ler, second baseman, and Mel Al- Junge, AL .. 32 8 9 .281|mada, outfielder, having been sold Niemi, AL ... 18 2 5 .278/to the Boston Red Sox. Muller Andrews, AL ..13 46 10 12 .261|reports to the Sox immediately Nello, E .. 11 36 6 9 .250/and Almada will report on Sep- Cooper, M ... 7:°20 6 5 .250|tember 1. Jernberg, E....11 35 5 8 .229 St e Ww. schmitz, M .13 49 12 11 .22¢ MOUNTAIN WATER ; Coughlin, M 5 18 0 4 222 Erskine, E 12 43 7 9 200 REACHING SOF IA Gr n 12 36 7 7 .194 P. lggg:::zb{{ .2 30 5 7 an4| SOFIA, July 7. & The longest Dawson, M . 5 6 1 1 .67 3aueduct in the Balkans has begun Koski, E ... 3 7 0 1 .4p|delivering drinking water to this} Blake, E 12 43 5 ¢ .39|capital from the Rila mountains, Orme, E 7 23 2 3 131|40 miles away. Ten miles consist Johanson, E 3 8 0 1 .a25|°f tunnels. The work requi Stedman, AL ...9 33 2 4 .121|¢ven years. moller, AL 14 48 5 5 104 ATTENTION Wold,’E 7 "4 13 1 1 .7 See the announcement of Dr. Ed- Rodenberg, AL .. 6 .16 0 1 .063|™unds on page 8 of this paper. The Leaders iy, Home Runs—Manning 3, Boyd 3, '_—_::7 Baker 2, Jernberg 2, Runstad 2, ‘ Andrews 2, Grummett 2, Erskine 2, 2 Nello 2, Worth 1, Roller 1, Liv- ingston 1, Collins 1, Hermsen 1, J. Schmitz'1;, H. MacSpadden 1. Triples — Killewich 2, Cooper 1, Jernberg 1, H. MacSpadden 1, Bak- er 1, Allen 1, Junge 1, Boyd 1, M. MacSpadden 1, Manning 1, Nello 1, F. Schmitz 1, Worth 1, P. Schmitz : 4 , Doubles—Collins 7, Allen 4, B. i P Schmitz 4, H. MacSpadden 4, An- “The Cand drews 3, F. Schmitz 3, Worth 3, Y You Manning 2, Grummett 2, Junge 2, Love” Boyd 2, Haines 2, Blake 2, Jern- berg 2, Cooper.2, Steadman 1, Fras- s er 2, Baker 1, McCloskey 1, Ram- 5 say 1, Garn 1, Lowe 1, Neimi 1, i 4 pound Rustad 1, Livingtson 1. 75¢ Colonial ' C.hoco,lates - e — LIMERICK, Ireand, July 7.—The safety of the great Shannon power station is threatened by muskrats. Their existence, unknown until recently, was revealed when three were shot near the Shannon works. It is stated that two of the animals escaped from capavity in 1929 and that hundreds of thou- sands are believed to. exist now in/ Ireland. The Government has started a campaign of extermination and has prohibited importation of the ro- dents. ' Juneau Drug Co. “The Carner Drug Store” ———e— Daily Empire thm Ads rrrd 4 | By ALAN GOULD So the big tournaments were just, to be a happy-hunting ground for| ‘the “hard boots,” the playing pro-! fessionals of the royal and ancient| game, when Bob Jones retired from competition? So what? So it's a sad story, men, and maybe we haven't heard the last of it. ‘The first year after the Georgiun‘ | By GEORGE McMANUS CAPT. MURRAY {of capt. T PASSES AWAY SEATTLE, July 7.—The funeral years, who died June operating * the tomorrow. Dawson last night. Insult te Fnjury Picture the following embarrass- ment of the professionals during the Open Championship of the | Third Year After Jones: Not a one of them within six full brassie shots of the bantam- John Murray, aged 63| 25 while| steamer Keno on| ithe Stewart River, will be held| The body arrived from| VINES LOSES —Jack Crawford won from Ellsworth a score of 4-6, 6-4, Fields that Andrew Jackson trod, about the Hermitage he ] being tilled this summer by un- CHAMP TITLE American Tennis Player Is Defeated at Wimble- don by Australian WIMBLEDON E Australian, today Champioship land, July 7. the ‘Wimble n “0Old Hickory’s” Acres Used for Relief Pilots NASHVILLE, Tenn, July MUR We Carry frmploy-:d who receive wages for | their work raising garden produsd that will be distributed to the needy next winter. 4. { One hundred and fifty acres not in use by the confelicrate soldiers’ home I ted on part of t nal Hermitage farm has % tained rent free by sponsors of the | project Across the road frem th: church that “Old Hickory” built for his wife to attend is a ten-acre patsh of onions, In the big field easf of the “big hou:e” potatoes arg planted. 4 el i HALIBUT BOAT AVONA ! SELLS FARE LOCALLY The halibut boat Avona, Capt) Olaf Larsen, brought in 17,00 pounds of halibut from the banks which was sold to the San Juan Fishing and Packing ©Co., this morning for 6 and 3 cents a pound. e Daily Empme Want Ads Pay ESCO a Full Line Juneau Paint Store DRAUGHT BEER left them to themselves the pro-| Weight amateur star from Omaha, fessionals had George Von Elm,|Jchnny Goodman. Not a single the big “business man,” riding hard| Mmember of the P. G. A. with aj on them. Finally the issue was puL‘.chanco to overtake him down the squarely up to Bill Burke, the Con-)Stretch or take advantage of his Equipment necticut iron worker, who outlasted George in a record-breaking 72- hole playoff at Inverness in the 1931 Open Championship. The professional organization, known as the P. G. A, was so iraterul for this magnificent fight y Burke to make the Open safe once more for the boys who play- for-pay that they forgot him al- most entirely in selecting the 1933 Ryder Cup team and only managed to squeeze Bill into the tenth and last place three days before the team sailed for Europe. It took a political campaign to put Burke on | It's a Sad Story E Now let's wanaer back to Fresh Meadow. First there was a swarthy Jfellow from he Argentine, Jose Ju- rado, who threatened to romp off with the big prize. Then there was T. Phillip Perkins, ex-British ama- teur champion, leading the field on Championship until Gene Sarazen oame alon ‘ BY SE ATTI.E Tu the final day of the 1032 Open g with a record score of 66 on ‘his final round to make the titale safe once more for the pro- fessional democracy. | Sarazen had also won the Brit- ish Open. He was the king, at least for the year, and optimistic enough to think he should be given ‘the honor of captaining this year's Ryder Cup team. The others didn't |agree with him, however, and se- lected Walter Hagen agair. Anyway, ten good professionals and true sailed out for England and the international matches with England, but was the Open Cham- pion of the United States among‘ them? Not by a jugful of Johnny Goodmans! | the squad, at that, but he made it.' " last round slump. The one and only pursuit of the winner, a chase that came within inches of creating a tie and sub- sequent playoff, was staged by a rangy ex-Texas amateur, Ralph Guldahl, now the professional of the St. Louis Country Club, but not eligible either for membership in the P. G. A. or on the Ryder Cup Team. Worrying about Bob Jones was a pleasure compared to this situa- tion.* When the Georgian whipped them, the professionals needed no alibi. o New Books ‘ . o ‘An Arctic Village” By Robert Marshall A Literary Guild selection. This new book is a very in- teresting account of life in the Arctic. . “Gabriel Over the White House” A story of an American Presi- dent who went sane. . JEANNE’S LENDING LIBRARY Located with J. B. Burford & Co. on Seward Street 3 - DELICIOUS! ROGERS hocolates At a Very Special W eek-end Price 2 Pounds 31 arry Race Druggist rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrevel Block Tin Pipe Rubber Beer Hose Pumps Chromium Plated Beer Faucets Gas Regulators Double Distributor Valves Chromium Plated Picnic Outfits We have in our organization Mr. Ahlers, Mr. Baker Complete and Gee Bee, all old-time plumbers who thoroughly understand the installation of Beer Equipment and the handling of block tin pipe. good job installed as it should be Phone 34. RICE & AHLERS CO. Plumbings, Heating and Sheet. Metal “We tell you in advance what the job will cost” If you want a real For Your Money IF . . . you want an invesment that will not tie up your funds for a long period . . . IF . .. you want SAFETY with a solid backing of sound re- sources . . . IF . .. you want a substanial in- terest return on your money .. THE N ... Invest in our CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT . . . the ideal short-term invest- You can buy them at any time in any amount. FIRST NATIONAL ment. BANK THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat e THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL”-of course! 4 Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Heating Sheet Metal

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