The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 27, 1933, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER GEE- THE MOSQUITOES ARE CHEWIN ME LUP- VLL BE GLAD WHEN WE GO ON QUR VACATION TO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY_Z], 1933. ; GEORGE McMANUS YOU SARY YOUVE BEEN VACATIONIN' N THE MOUNTAINS? HERE COMES \I\I\\_‘?\«E NOCK= 1 N T 5 SEEN WM FER A MONTH- By ~EP! BYT E VORTy & E SHORT MY STAY-— 4 COULDNT STAND | | THE MosQUITOES~ N, i S )i third. Boya rad Ronayne out a 'mils on an attempted steal at sec- ond, but Junge again let the ball !get through him, Junge Atones Junge made ample atonement in the last of the third. After Kille- wich and Andrews had singled, thz Firemen's second sacker tripled to deep right cenfer to send both runners home, tying the count for the second time. From then until the eighth neith- er side could score. Erskine's su- perb pitching and the great sup- port the Navy gave Claxton kept The Navy played smarter base-|the count knotted. The locals hit ball both in the field and on the | everything that Claxton offered bases last night than the All- | put always some ficlder was camp- Star Fire Department team and ing under the ball. won by a score of 5 to 4, in one| 1In the fourth after’ Erskine had f the most spectacular games walked, Bill Schmitz rifled a drive played here this year. Credit for toward left that looked good for at winning is due to the Sailor out- |least a single, but Smith, playing field who ranged into the hinter- | deep, made a leaping catch and jlands to pull down long drives by)shot the ball to first to doubls up AVY OUTPLAY ALL- STARS AND INS IN FINAL Crskine Outpitches Claxton but Loses Close De- cision Five to Four e locals. Erskine outpitched Claxton all| he way and deserved to have won. [He had speed, control and curves. [He fanned ten men and walked none, while Claxton whiffed but three and hit one batter. Each itcher yielded eight hits. Navy Geis Lead The Navy, playing ball like an| entirely different club than the| jgne that was snowed under in Tuesday’s game, jumped into an| learly lead by taking advantage of | some poor playing by the locals in the first frame. With one hand down, Fisher got| to first when Garn juggled his grounder at short. Ronayne sin- gled, Fisher going to second. Fish- er stole third and Ronayne second.| Becker doubled to left to scorcg Poth Fisher and Ronayne. The Firemen tied the count in} their half of the frame. With two} out, Bob Boyd homered over the store back of center, a real Ruth-| ian clout. Andrews hit to second and Fisher heaved the pill over Ronayne’s head, Andy romping| down to second. Killewich advanced | him to third with a single and| ‘when Fisher dropped Junge's fly,! ‘Andy scored with the tying run. Navy Gets Another The Sailors scored another. when Jackson lined down- the left field | foul line and the ball got lost in| the grass along the walk. They added run number four in the! third in some weird baseball. Garn missed Fisher's slow roller to short. Ronayne hit to the mound. Fisher, off to a flying start as he attempted to steal, was safe at| second when Junge missed Ers- kine's throw. Fisher went on to |that l (:riplo. but Quittken was playing Quittken, rf Claude. Just a Sample And that was jusy a sample of what was to some. In the fifth after Killewich had singled, Junge smashed a hard drive to deep right was earmarked for another on the bank of Gold Creek and garnered it in. In the seventh two circus catch- os again saved the day for the Navy. With one away, Boyd blasted a drive to right center that was headed for the tall grass, but Me- | Cann, playing back of the road, went back across the walk and pulled it down. It was pure robbery. Then Andrews . crashed one . into deep right, but Quittken was camping under it near the site of the old flagpole when it descend- ed. Win in Eighth The Navy put the winning run across in the eighth. After Ro- nayne had flied out to Killewich, Becker singled. Grand, running for Becker, stole second, Boyd's throw being wide. Smith fanned. Quitt- ken singled to short center and Grand came all the way home, beating the relayed throw by a fraction of a second. Quittken went to second on the play and took third on a passed ball. He died there when Erskine fanned Nosari. The locals went out in one-two- three order in the eighth. Kille- wich was thrown out by Smith who made a fine stop of his grounder. ' Junge’s long fly to right was speared by Quittken. Little Mac's hard hit grounder hopped right into Ronaynpe's mitt™ for theé third out. Locals Load Bases Erskine retired the Navy in or- der in the ninth, and the All- Stars prepared for a rally that didn't go far enoiflgh. Manning grounded hotly across the bag at| third. Nosari made a nice stop of | the ball but fumbled and Manning |reached first safely. Smith again' starred when he leaped to cap- |ture Erskine’s hot liner at short. | Bill Schmitz grounded out to first. Livingston worked Claxton for a {pass. Then Bob Boyd strode to the plate brandishing his war club.| [Claxton was nervous which called | for a conference between him, the catcher and Captain South. - With Boston, Mass., July 27.—The New Ithe count two and two, Boyd was York Yankees yesterday failed to |hit by a pitched ball, filling the close a one game lap separating |bases. With the stands in an up- them and the ‘Washington Senators iroar, Claxton pitched carefully to before moving into Washington to- \Andrews and forced him to ground day for a four game series. to South who tossed him out at. The Senators were rained out first to end the game. in Philadelphia. Here's the Details The Yanks took The game: {game from Boston 2 to 0 but NAVY— dropped the sccond game 9 to 4. |McCann, cf { Twenty-five thousand fans, a | Fisher, 2b record midweek crowd for Boston, |Ronayne, 1b |witnessed the doubleheader yester- | Becker, 1f day. Smith, ss YANKS SPLIT DOUBLEHEADER WITH BOSTON Move Into Washington To- day for 4-Game Series with Senators the opening ABR H 3 MooMOwWOOROR GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Oakland 3; San Francisco 4. Missions 8; Seattle 7. Twelve in- nings. Sacramento 3; Los Angeles 9. Hollywood 8; Portland 6. National League Brooklyn 3, 3; New York 5, 4. Cincinnati 2; St. Louis 3. American League New York 2, 4; Boston 0, 0. Cleveland 7; Chicago 1. St. Louis 7; Detroit 9. Nosari, 3b {Jackson, ¢ | Claxton, p | *South, 2b COoOWoWN MG w | Totals —Replaced |FIREMEN— Schmitz, B, /Garn, ss *“Livingston, s ‘Bayd, ¢ Andrews, 1b Killewich, 3b Junge, 2b {M'Spdn, cf-rf Schmitz, J., rf xManning, rf-cf ... Ergkine, p STANDING OF CLUBS Won Lost Pacific Coast League Sacramento 69 46 E Portland 68 46 ’ 596 Hollywood 61 47 587 Los Angeles 66 47 E Oakland .53 59 473 Missions . 48 68 414 San Francisco 43 70 379 Seattle <AL .366 National League ‘Won Lost 55 36 53 42 .51 43 543 48 45 516 ... 41 45 511 .37 52 416 Det, Totals *—Replaced Garn in x—Replaced J. Schmitz in eighth. Summary: Earned runs, Navy 3, Firemen 3;. two-base hits, Becker (and Erskine, 1 each; three base hits, Junge 1; home runs, Boyd and Jackson, 1 each; double plays, |Navy, Smith to Ronayne 1; hit by b pitched ball, Boyd by OClaxton; |gioyh passed balls, Boyd 1; struck out,ig ¢ by Claxton 3, Erskine 10; left onfg 0, bases, Navy 4; Firemen 5; stolen |, g, bases, Fisher 1, Ronayne 1, Becker ‘Philadelphia 31 52 416 2, Junge 1. M i Umpires: Lottsteldt, Thomas, Lei- | SPCNM ~oe B B4 432 vers and Hermle. Won ILost Pot. Scorer; Jernberg. 59 33 641 Time of game: Two hours. 58 Pet. 604 558 New York Washington New York DAILY SPORTS CARTOON - THE ATHLETICS YounG SHORTSTOP wAS A SENSATION IN THE 1931 WORLO SERES - HE | FLOPPED BaDLy LAST BEASON 8UT TH(S Year 4€ HAS Come Back. To PRONE HIMSELE A REAL &G LEAGLER> 1/ NG WLLER ATHLETICS # SLUGGER, HAD MADE | AUTIER OF WILLIAMS | 3 AROCUND ¢ A s 32 5 RIGHT No® e Philadelphia Detroit ‘Cleveland 'Chicago ... A ‘Boston o St. Louis » .. 35 63 Juneau City League (Second Half) Won Lost 6 3 4 5 3 5 .. 46 . 46 .43 Fct k.| American Legion . 444 375 Smith Flectric Co. | Gastineau Building | EVERYTHING | ELECTRICAL | | WAKE UP YOUR . LIVER BILE— i !! i f':sé -jl i 2 / : Co\s WON BACIS HIS JOB AT SHORT BY HIS CLEVER- FIELOING AND CLNGHED T WTH HIS_BAT.. HE'S MITIING 1 - i t e ‘wg‘spnnu and summer at home and GETS. DECISION OVERLOUGHRAN i i | 1‘ CHICAGO, Ill, July 27.—Tommy \Loughran, . of Philadelphia, con- |ceded to be the most scientific of ‘the present day heavyweights, drop- | ped a close ten round decision last night :to. Johnny Risko, Cleveland rubber man. ~SPORT+ 'SLANTS By ALAN GOULD The back room of a sporting goods store in Cincinnati is hous- | ing & seét of matched golf iroms, clubs which were made to order for one of the country’s leading 'amateurs, but which that player will never use in competition. ! And the story behind the irons, writes our Mr. “Jim" Renick of /Columbus, shows what happens when two ‘strong minds clash: | The clubs were made for Johnny; Fischer, Cincinnati's ranking play- er, Western conference champion, | |recently defeated in the National intercollegiate when he strained his side, but a real threat in the lapproaching national amateur at | |nis home course—the Kenwood Country * ¢lub. | Knew What He Wanted g Johnny rose to national promi- ,nence without owning a set of | imatched irons. He won tournament {after tournament with a “mongrel” (set of {ons. He collected his clubs |one.at, & time, adding a club as_he \found, one which suited his swing! land felt good to him. But with the National amateur 4commg on in his home town this |year he thought he would step out lwith a set of matched irons and so ‘orderer set. He made the order to th ?Txbmakers specific: Hickory 'shafts a certain length and what is known to the trade as ‘‘punch” {markings on the face. The clubs !arrived O. K. in all but one respect. jIn place of the faces being punch |marked they were ribbed. | The | factory boss explained his | firm WS hot making punch marked clubs any more and Johnny ex- {plained heé was not using ribbed iclubs any more. And so he hasn't. The clubs are collecting a fine cov- |ering' of dust and Fischer will be shooting’ in the amateur with his 1 “mongrel”. clubs. Burning (¢he Links The ‘golfing woods have been [full of ‘astonishing low scores this |abroad; ‘including a 64 for Fred Bannerot] Jr., of Charleston, West 1 Virginia”amateur champion, in the qualifying play at White Sulphur Springs. Bannerot set a new qualifying record’ dor the West Virginia tour- \nament with 138 for his two rounds, land Bill Hart, the WMorgantown sports observer, thinks the 64 sets a new low. for any major amateur As we pointed .out recently, Au- brey Boomer’s 61 in the French Open several years ago is the best professional mark on a standard course. I can't locate any amateur who ever shot below' 64 over & full-length, .standard = course, in- cluding Bob Jonses, but there have been some astounding nine-hole tallies. One was a 27 by an Eng- lish amateur, Corbett, in ‘1916, Jones had a 31 for one blazing stretch, and Francis Ouimet, in the national amateur at Five Farms last year, shot a 30, five under par, on the outgoing nine against George Voigt Ouimet had 44 for 13 holes, six under par, and needed to do the last five holes in par for a 64, but the match was over and he chose the clubhouse instead. K['ITE&BALL POPULAR AT VANDERBILT UNIV. NASHVILLE, Tenn., July 27— Kittenball is the most popular sport in Coach Jim Buford's intra- mural program at Vanderbilt uni- versity. Figures prove it. MDuring the short spring season this sport drew 300 players who take their kitten- ball very seriously and engage in furious competition. That was more than engaged in jany other single sport and 971 took Buford's varied calendar. - e GRAB MARTYNIK DETROIT, July 27— Mickey Martynik, rookie pitcher being given a tryout with the Tigers, compiled a phenomenal record with Rhode Island State College the last three years, losing only three games out of 30 pitched. — e, part in . SPORT BRIEFS | . Fox hunters of the Ozarks have offered $26 reward for-arrest and conviction of any person poisoning or stealing a dog belonging to a member of the association. The Missouri game and fish de- partment will discontinue stocking streams with brewn trout, having found results unsatisfactory. Estimates of game officials pu the deer population of Missouri at 15,000 to 20,000. Joe Hauser, home run hitter of the "‘Minneapolis Millers, was the first player to hit a ball over the deep right field wall of the Kan- sas City park. For the second-year in succes- slon George Rogers of Fort Worth is archery champion of Texas. Marchmont Schwartz, Nordy Hoffman and Tom Conley, Notre Dame gridders, are working for a Chicago oil company this summer. —e,———— NOTICE! The Juncau Water Works have moved their offices to the First National Bank from where it will transact all business. LONDON MEET GIVEN PRAISE BY ROOSEVELT American Chief Executive Pays Compliments to British Premier (Continued from Page One) The delegates to the conference were like 'school boys released after a severe lectureé then a word of praise from their teacher. The delegates laughed and chatted Bitter 'Criticism The Russian delegate had launch- ed a most bittér ‘and broadside criticism of the - entire session, saying the practical results were zero and a comparatively small shock may be sufficient to let loose a terrible disaster and even war. He outlined his views of the conference declaring it was a fail- ure. Continuance Entreaty American Secretary of State Hull, in an earnest and vigorous en- treaty for continuance of the work of the conference, pleaded for re- duction in economic armaments which he asserted had become scarcely. less dangerous than mili- tary armaments in their wildest rivalry. Scores Opposition “We cannot falter. We will not quit: We have begun and we will go on,” declared Secretary of State Hull. The Ameérican official scored the | malignant opposition of those who “blindly or selfishly oppose all in- ternational economic cooperation.” { Adjustments Necessary President Roosevelt, in his mes- sage to Premier MacDonald, said: “You recognize with me that new adjustments are necessary to meet world -and national conditions which never before existed in his- tory. You can count on our con- tinued efforts toward world re- habilitation because we are con- vinced continuance of ‘the World ‘conomic Conference will result in practical good in many fields of jour joint endeavor.” LONDON, July 27.—The World Economic Conference has adjourn- ed to meet again after a recess to {make a new attempt to restore world prosperity. - D | TAKING RECESS The rumber of horses in Tennes-- see decreased 7 per cent in. 1932, and mules decreased fiz: ent, Watch and Jewelry Repairing | at very reasonable rates | WRIGHT SHOPPE | PAUL BLOEDHORN i - e | Resurrection Lutheran | Church | REV. ERLING K. OLAFSON, [ Pastor Morning Worship 10:30 A.M. fi . FRESH FRUITS Local Vegetables CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Delivery / CHECKING ACCOUNT STAND GUARD over Your Finances! A Checking Account at this bank will safeguard your funds; it will eliminate (the risk of loss or theft of cash; it fure nishes a legal recelpt for each expendis ture; and it supplies a record of each disbursement. Let a Checking Account stand guard over your finances. In addition to the, protection, you will enjoy the convens {ience of paying by check. Come in—; { your check book is ready. ~ First National Bank " Moril For Your |: |competition. White Sulphur meas- lures 6,300 yards and par is 70. Lo EXCURSION “ISLANDER WRECK” Marmion Island Beach GASBOAT “WANDERER” LEAVE CITY FLOAT FRIDAY—4:30 P. M. SUNDAY—10 A .M., 5:30 P. M. Round trip to “Islander” and the Beach, $1.00. Fare to beach 25¢ each- way. 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