The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 5, 1935, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- _ington relay carnival for the preps. GRACIOUS! WHAT 1S THAT THE CHEF 15 COOKING? THE ODOR 1S TERRIBLE- REDS ALMOST BY HIS OWN PLAYS Cub’s Catcher Makes Hom-' er, Triple and Single to Score Eight Runs | CHICAGO, June 5.—Catcher Gab- | by Street powered the Cubs in a one-sided 10 to 2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds yesterday afternoon in the opening game ¢f the ser-' ies. Hartnett hit a homer, made a triple and a single to drive in six runs and score two others himself. GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Ccast League Sacramento 4; San Francisco 12. Oakland 3; Los Angeles 4 Hollywood 2; Seattle 6. Missions 1; Portland 4 St. Louis 5; Cincinnati 2; Chicago 10 New York-Philadelphia, American League Boston 3; Washington 2. Chicago 1; St. Louis 11. rain, Other scheduled games rainod out. Junezu City League Moose 4; Elks 3 STANDIN ! TLUBS Pacific Coact Leagus Won Lost Pct, Los Angeles 2 18 100 Oakland 35 22 614 San Francisco 30 28 517 Hollywood 29 28 509 Portland 26 31 456 Seattle 25 32 2439 Miscsions . 23 36 390 Sacramento 22 37 373 National League Won Lost Pct. New York 26 10 122 St. Louis 24 17 585 Pittsburgh 25 19 .568 Chicago 20 17 541 Brooklyn 20 19 513 Cincinnati 16 22 421 Phildelphia 13 23 .361 Boston 10 27 270 American League Won Lost Pet. New York 27 15 643 Cleveland ......... 23 16 595 Chicago 22 16 579 Detroit 21 18 538 Boston 21 19 525 ‘Washington 17 23 425 St.'Louis 11 217 289 Philadelphia 15 23 1395 Juneau City League Won Lost Pect. Moose 4 1 300 Legion 4 2 667 Eiks 1 6 143 BAHRAM WINS ENGLISH DERBY FOR AGA KHAN Favorite Gallops Off with 156th Running of Fa- mous HOI’SC Race EPSOM DOWNS, England, June 5. Bahram, the favorite from Prince Aga Khan's stable, won the one-hundred and fifty-sixth run- ning of the English Derby here today. Robih Goodfellows was sec- ond, while’ Field Trial was third, in a field of 16 horses. Bahram! was a 25-fo-4 choice. King George and Queen Mary were among the half million peo- ple at the track. Aga Khan's Tfert was fourth, but his other entry, Hairan, was far back. Fairhaven was fifth, fol- lowed by Sea Bequest. The only American horse in the race, As- signation, trailed badly. Bahram’s time was 2:36, two sec- onds slower than the track record.| American ticket holders won sev- en of the major prizes of $148,000 each on Bahram. - High school athletes in Seattle raced to many “records” recently in the annual University of Wash- Then somebody discovered that stu- BRINGING UP FATHER ITS CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE, BUT WE ONLY SERVE |T TO THE CREW- About twenty-five years ago Mike Gisbons was earning the appelation of “The Phantom” by beating men like Willie Lewis, Young Erne, Jack Denning, Sailor Burke and others in eastern rings. His success stirred the followers of the fistic sport in his home town of St. Paul into a campaign to have boxing legalized in Minnesota so that they might see the local boy in aclion without having to travel hundreds of miles. The measure permitting boxing in the state was passed in the spring of 1915, thanks to the Twin Cities by Mike’s ring success. | Hard on Mike's trail-blazing ring campaign a wave of fistic enthusi- | |asm swept over the youth of that part of the country with the result that Minneapolis became a veritable hot-bed for building rinz prospects. Many a fine fighter came up in the jrush to emulate the Phantom. | Mike's younger brother Tommy, !Mike O'Dowd, Billy Miske, Jock Nichols are but a few of the flock that came on to win national fame in the ring. Ancther Gibbons Gets ’Em roused interest in boxing in that section. son Jack this time. herited a fair share of his famous father’'s ring wizardry, for he has won 47 successive fights and has brought back fans who had lost in- terest in ring battles years ago. If young Jack: continues to im- prove as he has done in the last six menths—and there is no reason why fans of Minneapolis and St. Paul to fever heat:justias his daddy did a generation ago, along slowly—carefully picking the spots but at the same time increas< ing the caliber of his opponents with "each start. % The younger Gibbons is rapidly picking up poise and confidence with the result that he is not only improving: defensively but is putting more snap into his punches. Jack is learning how to relax and husband his strength and to pace himself to go the route. The experi- ence he has gained in the last six months has greatly improved his general effectiveness. Dad Will Be Careful Ringsiders report that he put up a well nigh perfect fight against the hard-hitting Lee Savoldi in ringing up his 46th victory. He dent managers had erred in staz- gering the chalk lanes, so all the marks were tossed out. boxed the ten rounds with out Malone, Johnny Ertle, Fred Foulton, | Kink Tut, My Sullivan and Johnnyi The youngster seems to have in-! Old Mike is bringing the youm‘ CORNED BEEF AN’ CABBAGE, EH 2 AN’ ONLY FER THE 8ouTs AL "OLD All Rights R a Babe Ruth Shot a LEGION COULD - TIE FOR LEAD - WITH VICTORY City Baseball League ‘ Clash Tonight | GAME TONIGHT At Baseball Park—Legion vs. Moose at 6:30 o’clock (postponed game.) GAME TOMORROW | At Baseball Park—Old-Timers vi. Cardinals at 6:30 o'clock | (exhibition). | A chance for a first-place tie, in the City Baseball League is of- fered the Legion at 6:30 o'clock to- night when they meet the Moose. | The Legion slipped a cog in the | race Monday night when they lost | one to the Elks. That put them a Today another Gibbons has ar- nhajf-game behind the Moose, Last| night they slipped to a full game It is the old Phantom’s p.hind the Moose when the Black | Sox nipped the Elks. But all that can be erased tonight |if the Legion can defeat the high- | | stepping Moose. ‘3 ‘The Legionnaires may depend up- |on the trusty right arm of Ward | McAllister for pitching strength. Dave Turner, the Moose recruit, is 5 | due to oppose him on the mound, | If Turner performs as well as his he should mot—he may arouse the icammate, Claude Erskine, did last| | night, the Legion will find the go- {ing mighty tough. The, clash is a postponed one | which has been re-scheduled twice | However, continued fair weather to- | |day promises that it probably will be played. | ' Tomorrow, there will be no league | game, with the diamond being turn- |ed over for an exhibition between the Old-Timers and the Cardinals, {junmr aggregation. This tilt is slat- ed to start at 6:30 o'clock too. e were faultless. i He spotted Sovoldi 14 pounds and ithen out-boxed, out-smarted and cut-punched him at every turn. Mike intends to let the boy follow in his fistic footsteps only so long as he shows definite promise of having the stuff to carry him to the | top. One thing is foremost in the for- | ~~JMKI55 i_‘g&g:fi»s {Black Sox Drive in Three _flsog"ws_nc iy | Scores in Final In- BLAZED BY #iS FATHER, 25 YEARS AGQCoon HAS WON <7 JACK COOLDN'Y #ND A TEACHER) SMARTER Through with Baseball, Vooose Are FCCS n Critical‘ nowing this year, and the great i lucular reason why he should sud-| making a single mistake. His timing |/ mer Phantom’s mind and heart—the idenly lose his cunning where his of punches, footwork and suategyiboy's welfare. He has no intention son’s ring future is concerned. 1| KNOW, BUT | WANT TO BE A SAILOR FER JUST AN HOUR- BUT, MR. JIGGS- I'M JUSTIA SAILOR AN ARE. THIS WAY- AMH, BOYS'! PASS ¢ | ANOTHER DISH [ OF THAT UP - "l / By PapRALLY ONES | MOOSE &-3 WIN OVER ELK NINE ning for Victory { RESULTS Y| Moose 4, Elks 3. ERDAY riters are likely to use the {word “battle” too often in describ- |ing baseball games. But when the Moose trimmed the Eiks last night at Baseball Park in the Battle of iAnle' no mistake about it, IN A ROW, | there 1 “battle” royal. The | Black thanks to stirring last-| |inning three-run rally, defeated the| | Elks, 4 tc 3 The victory gave the winners a firm grasp on first place, a full| game ahead of the Legion. Ths {second largest crowd of the sea- |son witnessed the contest. | ‘Rejuvenated from their upset de- feat of the Legion Monday night, the ‘Elk uted like a ho afire and slipped across a tally in the { first when “Rabbit" Elins- “HE | burg iume on a fielder's . JQHAMTOM' | eheice alter landing on first on an { infi o ox | But, back came the Moose with & A RING {gfing score in the second, and the GENERATION |pattle was on. Jack Schmitz sin- AGO lgled and spiked the platter wh ” 1] | Jimmie Manning rifled a double to| MicE % {left that Eiks ficlders couldn’t lo-| 1 ved by Tle Associated Press " "€ late. cate until too I Then, in t he secend, the lozers scored again. C. H. (Big Mac) MacSpadden took advantage =40l Lwo bobbles by She:tstop Man- t Former Bosses | pace until the sixth, when the Elks half of t went into a 3-1 lead as Cu lin n, who had doubled to center, d ball. 2ing for a seventh to save the day, had cheers answered as the league NEW YORK, June 5—A seethingt mountain of man who is done with' ;’(‘"fibaul' AG?;’"“L Hfrmnn ;Bnbe);; aders came from behind to drive| e b i B“’ff |Pitcher Mark Jensen from the hil-| a parting shot at the Boston Base-~\,, , preq Schmitz singled, Stan| ball Club, which gave him his un G ett drew a walk and then conditional Telease Monday after 21| o Liin! Wik ’; 9 |Claude Erskine slapped a hard sin- b ‘ff major league COMPEUUON. | 1\ yhyouen short to score Schmitz. Manager Bill MacKechnie of the wpyo¢ wag enough for Jensen, and 1 Braves Iymd sam‘an Ruth was mgjpm Schmitz, who had been play- in trouble with the team's POOL | rirsy pase for the Elks, traded places with him. Schmitz whified dangerous Walt Andrews for the first out, but Tom' Haines rolled one to first, enabling Grummett to score the tying run. The brilliant rally ended when Jack Schmitz banged one of Brother Fete's cfferings on the nose for a bard-hit single past short to bring in Erskine with the winning tally. The Elks couldn't do anything th |Bambino had plenty to say about that here, where he had become a ‘ndliclm] idol with the New York Yankees. The Babe said there was no basis | for MacKechnie’s blast. | The main thing, in a nutshell, is this,” Ruth -said. “This Judge Fuchs, president of the Braves, got all he could out of me. He wanted to get rid of me because he 1N0|against Erskine in their half of the | longer could pay my salary of $25,-|seventh, so the ball game was over. 000 for three years, but he didn't|as a matter of fact, they didn’t do k how to go about getting rid|{much to Erskine the whole game. of m The Moose hurler was ‘“right,” al- “He started passing stories around, lowing no earned runs, giving but trying to force me to quit. I told|three hits, striking out 12 men, s and MacKechnie that I was|walking but one, for his third through before we started West on|pitching win in as many starts. (our last trip. Fuchs said, ‘If you| oOn the other hand, Jensen, who quit now, I might as well toss in|was playing his first game of the the sponge, t00.” season after returning from a sur- “Sc, 1 caid, ‘Okeh, Judge. vey party, was in hot water every ] T go! run was scored. Every one of the Moose scores was earned. Hitting bouquets went to Fred, Jack and Pete Schmitz and to Manning for each hitting two out of three. The summary: Old- | Once Played | published a short of Dick Turner, University of Wash- ell was found inderground at Pfi imer Turner cently Hill, 8. C inland On Skagway Nine With the last run of the Yukon to Juneau from Seattle, The Empire article that told ington tennis and winter sporis star, being employed on the vessel as a freight clerk Apparently, The Empire didn't get quite all the facts, for with the current visit of the Yukon this week, it was learned that Turner's father, now in business in Seattle, is a real old-time Alaskan. Dick Turner, Sr, was a mine operator in Rainy Hollow and Haines from 1907 to 1909 and was a player on the old Arctic Broth- erhood and White Pass and Yukon baseball teams of Skagway. | Turner, Sr,, in asking to be re- membered through his son to his friends here, wrote he wore a full beard in the “old days.” He played third base on the team that had THE BEST TAP BEER : IN TOWN! ® THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors || such ‘“stars” as Charlie Mullen, and “Butch” Belford, Mert Hemming- | L- s way, Alec Blanchard, Charles Mc- 1quor Store Guire and Manager Bill McKay. | BILL DOUGLAS p =1 § SPEND or SAVE? WHICH . . .. 2 MCOSE ABRHPOAE F. Schmitz, 2b. Bk g 0.0 Grummett, 3b. ...2 1 1 0 2 1 E.:kine, p. 2138 e Andrews, 1b. 404 700 Haines, rf. 4 000 00 J. Schmitz, 1f. 312000 P. Nello, c. 30012 0 0 Manning, ss. 30210 3f Rus:ell, cf 20010 0 *Turner, cf. 100000 Totals 26 2 321 9 3| S | BELKS A= R H PO A E| Ellinsburg, rf. 31000 0 Jernberg, f 30030 0 B. Orme, cf. 20021 0] Livingston, 3b. T T T 8T C. MacSpadden, ss3 1 0 0 1 0] J. Orme, 2b. 300340 P. Schmitz, 1b, p..3 0 2 4 0 1 Blake, c. 300811 M. Jensen, p, 1b. .3 0 0 2 0 1| Totals 28 3 321 9 3 “—Batted for Russell in sixth. Score by innings: 12345617 Moose 01000034 Elks 11000103 Innings pitched by M. Jensen charge defeat to P. Schmitz; struck cut by Erskine 12, M. Jensen 6, P. Schmitz 1; walked by Erskine 1, M. Jensen 6; wild piteh, Erskine; paszed ball, P. Nello; runs batted in Ly Manning 1, Erskine 1, Haines 1, J. Schmitz 1, B. Orme 1; two- baze hits, Manning, Livingston; left bases, Moose 8, Elks 3; stolen P. Nello; time of game, 1 nd 45 minutes; umpires Bo- Thomas and Porter, ENGLAND’S LAWS HELP WINNERS OF FOOTBALL POOLS LONDON, June 5—Competitors | in England’s numerous ‘“football pools,” wherein the man who can pick winners stands to win upwards of $5000 for a sixpenny (12 cent) ! entrance fee, have found that they enjoy the full protection of ize law. In cther words, the law is willing to wink at the operation of the big | soccer lotteries but wAll not stand for any “welching” on the part of the proprietors. They must pay up. A test case was provided by a waiter, who claimed to have picked 15 winners on one Saturdav's Jro- gram and to have $2,500 due hing carned runs, Moose 4, Eks 0; on | for the feat. The defenaants pleaa- | ed that they had received a torn and incomplete coupon, hence were not liable for payment. A King's Bench special jury not only awarded the waiter the full $2,500, but declared that the pro- prietors of the pool had torn the ticket themselves. ANOTHER "SCHANG IS COMING FORTH| SACRAMENTO, Cal, June 5. —| Like as not there'll be nnothm'! is more likely to help YOUR Prosperity? is frequently con- Nowadays, nearly everyone fronted with this problem. It is obvious that spending ALL cannot bring lasting prosperity. As for saving All—well, it just cannot be donel ~. The common sense solution is “Spend Wisely— cave Something.” And having a Savings Account here will be a helpful guide and assistant both in spending wisely today and in safely accumulating a cash reserve for tomorrow, (Deposits here protected by FDIC Insurance.) B N The First National Bank Juneau, Alaska N ZENE LN 2 N 2 W VS W Y Ry (3 CAPITOL BEER PARLORS | AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night Private Booths e PARIS INN PEARL and BILL Light Wines INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska Lunches Beer - Established 1898 Schang wearing catcher's equipmem‘ in baseball's better circles before | long. He is Bobby Schang, Jr.,| star backstop for the Sacramento high school nine this season and the son of the former Pacific Coast | and major league player. His uncle is Wally Schang, another former | on the trip’ inning. However, he didn't lose the ‘We had big crowds. I hit threeipall game, as that charge went to in Pittsburgh. It was like|schmitz, off of whom the winning old s and I felt great. We got ek |to Cincinnati where the diamond | was hard and I hurt my knee. Then iu Philadelphia, their second-base- man, Chiozza, hit one to me and| ore I got to it, he was crossing! plate. | ‘I knew I was done. “MacKechnie and I got along like a couple of kids. What a guy he| turned out to be.” | | ———_—— | An unusuul situation is develop- ing as the University of Washing- | ton crewmen train for their annual! appearance at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., | in search of a national four-mile rowing title. Coach Al Ulbrickson | can’t decide on a varsity between | "i;m scphomores who rowed/ |against California this spring or the| eight veterans who rowed in the| varsity last year. T | of leaving his son in the ring game |to become cut and battered while| | going nowhere. There are too many | other things to which the youth can apply his talents if he is not of |ring championship caliber. . | ©Old Mike was always rated as 4 | “smart” fighter so there is no par-| GENERAL@ ELECTRIC we catcher of the great Philadel- | phia Athletics teams of 1913 and 1914. DS S A WASHER For Only $60.00 Cash $6.00 Down BALANCE MONTHLY FEATURES S Never Requites Oiling—ACTIVA- ‘OR—One-Control Wringer—Quiet Operation—Gravity Drain Hose. MADE 8Y GENERAL ELECTRIC AT BRIDGEPORT, CONN. | ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO0. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 UNITED FOOD CO. ; CASH GROCERS Phone.16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 ¥ - ALASKA’S FAMOUS HEALTH RESORT Ideal Spot for Vacations SITKA HOT SPRINGS GODDARD, ALASKA FISHING HUNTING First Class Accommodations % BOATING Reasonable Rates THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the 4 Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat | — FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. L

Other pages from this issue: