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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, -SAE?DAWY“, YOURE TELLIN'ME? HOW OID | KNOW THAT MAGGIE WOULD TAKE IT SERIOUSLY AN SEND FER A DOCTOR? AN WHAT A DOCTOR! FATHER *YOU VE MADE AN AWFUL MESS OF vt - PRETENDING SU PIRATES BEA CARDINALS BY RALLY IN 9TH Four Errors Costly to Grimes—Four-Game | Series Even Up H, P o PITTSBURGH, Penn., | Aug. Four er spoiled Burleigh Grimes' first pitching start for St. Louis yesterday. - Pittsburgh came through with a ninth inning ral- ly to beat the Cardinals 5 to 4, evening the four game series. Pacific Ceast League Sacramento 10; San Francisco 9. | Oakland 1, 1; Los Angeles 5, 10. “ 1 WONDER IF | AM S1CKE HE SENT FER ANOTHER DOCTOR TO HOLD A CON- WHAT HE 1S SITTIN THERE WRITIN ABOULT? T LTATION - | WONDER YES-1 AM DOCTOR CUTTEM- WHAT 19172 SOMEONE CALLING LP ABOUT ONE OF MY PATIENTS? THEY ARE NEW SWIMMING QUEENS T at Games Seattle and Portland rained out Lenore Kight (left), Homestead, ton, Pa., captured championships ticnal League New York 18; Philadelphia 1. Breoklyn 1, 0; Boston 4, 3. St. Louis 4; Pittsburgh 5. American League Chicago 2; Detroit 3. Juneau City League i the 220-yard breast stroke title. (A Juneau City League (Second Half) Fet Legion-Elks game postponed on | Won Lost account of rain. American Legion 6 5 545 Moose 6 B 545 STANDING OF CLUBS EIks .. 4 ;8 400 Pacific Coast League PR Won Lost Pet. 7549 .605] 72 50 590 | 71 51 582 .0s Angeles 72 52 581 | i OCakland 56 67 455 1 Missions 51 13 4111 San Francisco 8 75 -390 | Seattle 46 T4 383| NEW YORK, Aug. 5—The possi- National League | bility of a return heavyweight bout Won Lost Pct beiween Max Schmeling and Max New York 99 39 602 Baer in California. next February Pittsburgh 58 45 563 is seen by Joe Jacobs, Schmeling's Chicago 56 46 -549 imanager, after a long-distance tel- St. Louis 54 47 535 ephone talk with Jack Dempsey. Boston 53 50 515| Dempsey, who promoted the first Philadelphia 41 56 423 bout between the two in Yankee Brooklyn 40 58 408 Stadium, July 8, said he believed Cincinnati 41 62 398 another match would be success- American League {ful and thought it would draw at Won Lost Pct.|least $300,000 in San Prancisco. Washington 63 35 639, Jacobs plans to leave for Ger- New York 60 38 .612/many in a few days to discuss their Philadelphia 49 49 -500, future with Schmeling. Dispite re- Cleveland 51 53 490 ports that Schmeling would retire Detroit 48 53 475 following his marriage to Anny Chicago 47 53 A70 Ondra, German screen actress, Jac- Boston 4 53 454 obs said he believed the German St. Louis 39 67 .368 |'would return to the ring. Pa., and Margaret '4offman, Scran. at the Women's Nafien_al A. A._U. imming meet in New York. Miss Kight's performance in sweeping ::l free :tyle events was the feature of the meet. Miss Hoffman won ssociated Press Photo) BAGS NEAT T; MAKES RECORD KANSAS CITY, Aug. 5—A T4, | scored by Mrs. O. S. Hill over the Swope Park links is believed a new | women's record for the short but | tricky layout. Men's par is 70 for | the course, which features narrow, rolling fairways and much tim- | ber. TRY T0 LAND JEWISH STAR NEW YORK, Aug. 5—The Gi- ants, who for years have been try- ing to acquire a Jewish ball player Kof major league calibre, believe (now they have their man in Har- ry Danning, rangy young catcher. Danning, who has trained with the club the last three springs, has been recalled from Buffalo to as- sist Gus Mancuso with the catch- ing chores and to act as a pinch- hitter. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON = To SINK ocr SwWim 2] .. ) QONT FOREET 1 Too< (B SECONDS OFF ME AMERICAN MLE RECORD 2 AS PART OF RALPHS S FOURTH eicTroay A CELEBRATION HIS 23 FATHER. TOSSED HIM OVER BOARD “™ FLANAGAN . :By Pap 7 @ 2 MILE AND TE 300-MeTer. MEOLEY TTLES, MissinG THE HALF MILE CROWN 8Y INCHES AT THE RECENT NATIONAL TiTLE MEET /N CHICABO, A ~FLORIDA'S FIFTEEN. YEAR--OLD SWIMMING GENSATION « By ALAN GOULD Naturally the first thing we wanted to be “filled in on" when Gene Sarazen got back from the British golfing wars was just how the world’s champion goifer of 1932 happened to take three shots in a bunker for a six on one par- three hole at St. Andrews and | then an eight on a par-five hole, losing the British Open title n s0 by only one thin shot. | Gene was mnot only still willing to talk—and smile—over one of the toughest pair of breaks in his career, but he got out paper and | pencil to chart the harrowing de- tails for me. | “I was out in 33, got another - birdie on the tenth and felt like a million when I hit No. 11 at St | Andrews on my second round,” | said Sarazen. “My tee shot was ! pulled a little, just enough to catch the side of a deep, narrow| walled sand bunker at the left ap- proach of the green—and then the fun began. The ball was buried in the light, powdery sand. I couldn’t use my sand wedge. “My niblic got the ball out of the sand all right, but it caught the grass at the top and trickled down in again. I made a gesture with my club—mentally trying to help that ball stay up—and that's the thing that started people sdy- ing I had taken another shot— | four shots, they thought instead of | three, which I actually took. Twice | the ball rolled back into the same | spot before I finally hoisted it i one side and I putted eight feet | short, getting that one down for| a six! | | | In “Hell Bunker” “That was discouraging enough but No. 14 was what ruined me. It wasn't only the eight I took on| the last round—the first eight I have ever made in a major tour- nament. I actually four -putted | that rolling green—it was just like | a billiard table—on my first round | and my scores were 6-5-5-8 on that hole in four successive rounds “I had almost given up hope of keeping the title until I began to g24L reports about how the boys were blowing up around the fin- ish. Hagen wes sky-high and so were most of the others. I figured 290 was good enough to win and set out to make it. T needed par for the last five holes, but I n felt more confident that I ¢ when ‘T stepped up to old No. 14 “To be on the safer side and avoid that ‘Hell Bunker’ I hit my {tea shot to the adjoining fairway the fifth hole, figuring to come in the ‘back door’ with my third and get a sure five. It was blowing al | most a gale by this time, and, be- lieve it or mot, my second shot the wind, aimed 100 yards to t left of ‘Hell Bunker,’ took a rour house ride to the right and fir ly caught the roll into the v trap I was trying to avoid. Bloody But Unbowed “But T still had a’ chance reach the green, for the lie was 1o bad. I was sure it would do m no good t0 play safe. I went fo it, the ball failed to clear ti {of the bunker, became imbed and T was forced to play back | ward to get out. ! “I accomplished this all riz | but my fifth was barely on |then I took three putts for | eight. Par on the last four ho | didn't do me any good then. | “But that's golf. Denny Sh | deserved to win, the way he pi ed, and Tl be back next year win both .the American and B Open Championships again. T challenge the winner of world championship match tween Johnny Goodman at Miami Biltmore this winter.’ —_————— WILL ROGERS SUNDAY CAPITOL “STATE FAIR." ————— ENTERTAINS FOR SISTER Last evening Miss Eva Kay entertained with seven tab bridge in honor of her sister Valjean Austin. Miss Helen Hi bedt assisted, M | DONT KNOW-: DIR- 1Ty MR-BERRY, THE UNDER- TAKER ON THE PHONE- { onto the green. It was away off to| " York Yankees have signed Geor Don King, diminutive hurler f ST ey 62 TGN Oklahoma City in the Texas league, | | has one claim to fame if he nev i Exclusive I crashes the big leagues. He once A | pitched a no-hit game, the score gency of which was 109 (correct) to 0 King was twirling for Atlantic KABO Ta., high schoel against Griswold ) ~ ~ | high at the time, so you won' E CORSETS i find the record of that Homeric i encounter in the archives of or- | l ) ganized baseball. t f | Besides holding the luckless Gris- E | wold lads hitless, King collected £ 15 safe blows out of 17 times at | Seyns Boed bat, I 3 AUGUST 5, 1933. By GEORGE McMANUS I'LL BET HE DID CALL LUP ABOUT ONE OF S PATIENTS AN I'VE GOT HIM FER MY % I CHIGS Ml 707 4 Joe De Maggio, 18-year-old oyifielder with the Sap Francisco Seals, | has batted his way to the statuséof a major league prospect since the start of the season. The club first signed Joe's brother, Wincs, and at the latter's urging gave the youngster a chance. Me heat ¥ince out of % { N N { i l PACIFIC COAST Gl Chucklts S\LvesTeER KnAPP N IS ONE WISE CHAP./ THERE'S MORE THAN CLOCK. WORK, ‘ 'NEATH y ; e il HIS CAP; AIE |BEFORE HIS = ex&it.. ~AND ORDERS | ?COAL BIN GETS " COAL HE E \TOO LOW—. KNOWS WiLL | JTO THE -, HEAT ~ 7 | TELEPHONE | e FOR OUR| | \He ooes: S8 ) GOOD COAL. | NGO~ . JUST CAN"I'/\ ‘ SUSC W T B gEAT/ FI6URED IN HEAT UNITS-our CoaL coss Less?, PACIFIC COAST COAL Co. 4]2 ‘YNEau ALASKA WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Blde. it e IS SN a steady job and hitting in 40 consecutive games threatcred to break the league record in this respect. (Associated Press Phate} SPORT BRIEFS A marble fountain, installed just ELKS AND PAPS |1 [ e S FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Com pany 9 3 Telephone Prompt Delivery -3 late Willlam Wrigley, who owned | the club for year: | Lodge Teams Clash Sunday Afternoon in Playoff of Thursday's Tie Michigan, Northwestern and Ohio | Hostilities will be resumed Sun- State probably will be the only| Big Ten schools to retain a $3 top | for their big football games this | fall, day afternoon in the torrid battle for second half honors in the City Baseball League, the Elks again| Three large breeders of racing meeting the Moose to play-off the(horses in California will combine tie game resulting from the game|in the building of a horse breed- A Portsmouth, O., wrestling club | has been named the “Toe Twist- ing Club.” R e — TG 7 i THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL’-of course! Harri Machine S[mp Plumbing Sheet Metal ———— Heating last Friday night. Last night's con-{ing and training center near San test between Elks and American|Jose, Calif Legion had to be called off on! account of rain. “Little” Lloyd Johnson, whom Sunday’s game will be a nine-|followers of the Mission club of inning affair, and is due to start|the Pacific Coast league ‘regard as at 5:30 o'clock. The Elks are ex-/one of the year's likely major pected to start Claud Erskine on|league prospects, stands 6 feet 5 the mound, while the Paps have|inches and weighs 215 pounds. He | Pete and Jack Schmitz available. |was signed from Santa Rosa high | If the Elks win tomorrow they |school three years ago. will be within one game of a tie with the Vets for first place, and a vietory over both the Moose and Vets would put the three clubs in! a tie for the second half champion- ship, necessitating a nered playoff. A e —— YANKEES SIGN UHLE FOR DUTY NEW YORK, Aug. Wisconsin football ticket prices with a $2 top for the three “big- gest” games, will be lower this {year than for 10 years. three-cor-: e WILL ROGERS SUNDAY CAPITOL “STATE FAIR.” adv TEN&TS HELPS GOLF AKRON, O., Aug..5. — Perhaps| tennis helps to get distance into a olf drive. Miss Mary K. Browr ' {former tennis champion, who un- 5—The New| gyccosstully defended her O women's golf championship here this year, is the state’s longest driver among women players. Mrs, Thornton Emmons, the new cham- |pion, and Mrs. Burt Weil pressed iMis, Browne for distance off the {tee, and both are former tennis players, Uhle, veteran Cleveland and De-| troit right-hander, to a contract Uhle was signed by the New York Giants early this season, but was cut adrift after a few weeks. To make room for Uhle on the roster, the Yankees sent Johnny Broaca, former Yale pitching star, — e, — to the Newark Bears of the In- WILL ROGERS SUNDAY ternational League on option. CAPITOL “STATE FAIR.” adv el e ——— | _ORE SENT TO SMELTER For the first time in about 20 years gold quartz ore is being | hauled down Gilpatrick Mountain, at Mile 14, Moosz Pass and the e ) | first tonnage is being shipped on I'the Yukon to a smelter in the| 5| states, says the Seward Gateway. OKLAHOMA CITY, Aug P WHITE LINE CABS | 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. £ g 3 HEN the weather is bad, or when for any reason you are unable to call at the bank in person, the U. S. Mail will _, make the trip for you.g The only charge is the cost of a post- age stamp. Banking by mail is safe, convenient, and easy to do. All tmu-: actions received in this manner are given prompt attention. We invite you, to bank by mail at this bankl ~ First National Bank T a2 T2t s S s d NS