The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 1, 1935, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER THI®S HOUSE AIN'T B1G ENOUGH FER TWO DOGS AN’ MAGGIE'S INSECT, 1S THE ONE THAT S GOT TO GO | FOUR CLUBS FORM KETCHIKAN LEAGUE Ground work for the formation lof a four-club baseball league at Ketchikan was recently laid at a meeting of enthusiasts at the Elks |club. The four teams are to be |the Cyana, Marine Station (Grav- {ina Island), Eagles and town team Lieutenant C. C. Knapp is to be |in charge of the Cyane nine, Will- fam Boos is to guide the Eagles, |Ed Hume the Marine Station and !Mu‘kcy Maclsaacs the town group.| LEGION GRASPS | LEAGUE LEAD WITH VICTORY Moose Lose Close Contest, Marred by Delays, in 3-to-1 Verdict CALIFORNIA'S GREAT CREW IN ANOTHER WIN RESULTS YESTERDAY Legion 3, Moose 1. In a closely contested game, mar- red by delays, the Legion took a firm grasp on first place in the sec- ond half standing of the City Bas- ketball: League by trimming the Moose yesterday at Baseball Park 3 to 1. The victory gave the Le- gionnaires as many wins in two starts. The game, 15 minutes late in| gettinz under way, found the Moose | jumping off to a good start in the first game when Walt Andrews| pumped a single to right to score| LCNG BEACH, Cal, July 1—In Frcd Schmitz, who had walked and |so close a finish that there was no| Bears, Poughkeepsie Vic- tors, Nose Out Washing- ton at Long Beach | been moved to second on Stan|open water between the first and Grummett's neat sacrifice bunt. fou; lace crews, California’s| But that was the extent of the|gre rsmen won the national | t atta here Saturday. | Washington was second, six feet | Black Sox offense yesterday, and the Legion came back to score once each in the fourth, fifth and the|behind the Bears. Syracuse was | sixth innings. third and Pennsylvania, eastern| sprint champion, took fourth. Wis-| Errers Huri consin and University of California | Joe Snow opened the fifth With |ap Los Angeles had been eliminated | a scratch single. He went to third | v. | when Pitcher Dave Turner’s throw| c, the 2,003 to second on Erv Hagerup's roller | 5 Wos RIS T Every was wild. It wa cinch " double in the race bettered the oi: play. Snow romped home with the|mark of 6:28.2, set by Italy in the tying tally. follow Al Lowe's 1ong | 1952 Olympic Games, fly to left, The Bears, who also.were cham- iminary heats on Fr ia’s time f. co An 2 by Shortstop Claude|pions over the four-mile course at Erskine scored Bob Boyd for the|Poughkeepsie, N. Y. took a slight winning run in the next canto. at the start, then sl d | Then, in the sixth, just to make behind Washinzton. Howev ord all the better, Legion | went to the front aza Wilson Foster rammed one f mark and 5 offerings over the cen-|was headed thereafter. terfield fence for home run.| Washington's time was 6:16.2. Shortly after that, the Anchorage = - lad retired and Erskine finished on! - The game was stopped twice for | periods of several minutes. In the fourth, John Koshak was hit on the D 28 arm by one of Turner's pitches, and | required first aid before going first Then, in the sixth, a fiasco result- B ed when players and managers ar-| (0 @ most interesting and highly gued with volunteer umpires over a |- chtested game, with plenty of fans decision. A search for a rule book| 'lling on the sidelines or in park- proved futile, and the game did not |4 ¢ars, the Federals defeated the| commence until a several-minute | CAdinals last Saturday night by a| deiay had ensued. core of 3 to 1. The Federals lost| “he previous game to the Cardinals| but come back strong Saturday Foster Checks Moose The Moose were weak at the plate and could not solve Foster's deliveries for more than three scat- nighi demonstrating that the prac- | tice they were able to indulge in| gave them a chance to show some| speea over their young rivals. Both teams were willing to go the | full nine innings, but when the| shades of night began to fall in the tered singles and a double. The two-base ply came from the big| ba’ of Grummett, who also collect- ed one of the singles. YOU POODLES KIN SETTLE T l\:(M GONNTAOF EEP OU THE ARGUMENT: THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. MONDAY, JULY I, REDS DEFEAT CARDNIALS, 3 GAME SERIES Umpires Appear on Field, in New Uniforms—Com- plete New Ensemble CINCINNATI, Ohio, July 1.—Be- hind the four-hit pitching of Tony Freitas, former Pacific Coast League pitcher, Cincinnati swept the three game series from the World Cham- pion Cardinals by winning the game Sur.day by a score of 5 to 2. The feature of the game was the appearance of the umpires in light| y civies for the first time in many years, a departure from the heavy, dark blue woolens. Coats of balt backed, sport modeis, and grey caps completed the new enscmble, GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Oakland 5, 6; Hollywood 3, T Sacramento 18, 11; Missions 8, 1. Los Angeles 3, Portland 8. Second jame postponed, rain. National League New York 7, 5; Brooklyn 4, 4. St. Louis 2; Cir nati 5. Pittsburgh 9; Cheiago 7. Philadelphia 3, 15; Boston 9, 5. American League Boston 9; Philadelphia 10. Washington 8, New York 17, nnings Chicazo 2, 8; Cleveland 3, 0 Detroit 18, 11: St. Louis 1, 6 Jun-au City Leagus Lezion 3; Moose 1 | CHICAGO CUBS TAKE CLOSE DOUBLEHEADER FROM PITTSBURGH PIRATES | 1— Larr n Warnecke literally g0 Cubs from th d place in e Na- al League standings last Satur- afterncon, turning back the ittsburgh Pirates in two diamond s, 1 to 0, twelve innings, and ! to 1, a regulation game, before 17,600 fans. There was sparkling defense work n which fielders handled 41 chanc- LUCK SMILES ON LEGION IN - BASEBALLDRAW Winner Meeting Hen- ry’s Club July 4 Lady Luck smiled on the Legion baseball team yesterday afternocn when the drawing was made for the annual Fourth of July special mon- ey-prize doubleheader. President William Holzheimer {called the three team managers to- gether at Baseball Park: near the end of yesterday's game. He put three numbers in a hat, and the bosses drew, each hoping for a bye. Manager George Henry of the Legion pulled out the “bye” slip. That leaves the Moose and the announced today that this first i ontest will be contested at 6:30 o'clock Wednesday night, July 3. It will last seven innings. To the loser will go a cash prize 12 of $25, to be divided among the playe; The winner will advance {to meet the Legion in the second | doubleheader of the Fourth pro- | heduled to start at 3 o'- hursday afternoon, July 4. game will be of the regulation {nine innings in length. he players in this final contest vill be battling for a real money It has not been decided teams will split or of 60-40 basis, with the taking the 1 end, or hether the teams will play “win- |ner take all.” e —— PHIL SNYDER - PASSES AWAY Phillip W. Snyder, pioneer of |Skagway, passed away at Los Mol- rianer Lodge of Red Bluff. The deceased es without an error and completed |was a member of the Skagway five double plays, pitchers. aided by the GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Cakland 6; Hollywood 11. Sacramento 8, Missions 11. National League Philadelphia 3; Bostonl. New York 2; Brooklyn 3. Pittsburgh 0, 1; Chicago 1, 2. St. Louis 6; Cincinnati 8. American League Washington 3; New York 6. Boston 6, 13; Philadelphia 4, 6. Chicago 5; Cleveland 6. Starring afield was Schmitz. '\’”‘fimh frame ‘me game was called.| ‘ oy 00 3. gy Touts'p, Black Sox sscond-baseman, who| ¥he Cardinals made one run m‘ robbed Snow of two hits. the f] inning, then Pitcher Har- v The summary: is held them down. The Federa's smz:lvgfl:r&l:s LEGION AB R H PO A E|scored one run in the fourth tmme! (Second Half) Koshak, 1f 2 0 0 1 0 o|nd two in the sixth. | Won Lost Pet Soen ot 40 2 3 0 0| The batteries were: Cardinals—|\o. Hrieid iy Fires. 2 5 0 1 2° 3 o|Elmer Lindstrom, pitcher; Hagerup | g, Fre;ncisco Sy 5 $ 583 Boyd, ¢ 3 10 4 1 o|2nd Bloomquist, catchers. 1Hoi1ywood 8 6 511 snow, 1b 51 111,0 1f Federals—Harris, pitcher, and|; . "snoeles Sl Hagerup, rf 4 0 1 2 0 ofTurner, catcher. Portland 6 7 462 Yowe. 35 4 0 0 0 2 1| Koshak umpired the first four| 1o, 87 g ‘420 Roller” 5s 4 0 03 3 ofinnings and Everett Nowell the g...\o & e Foster, 'p <3.1° 141 3 offemainder of the game, Sacramento ....... 5 9 357 —————— National League . Toias 3540 SIDNEY WOOD Won Lost Pt. i New York 4 18 710 g, Schmx:z.”% : (1) g ; g g LOSES MATCHmmcago 36 28 563 rummett, : | Pittsburgh 39 31 557 Erskine ss, p 3 00 1 3 1| WIMBLEDON, Eng., July 1.—48&:}(\5[ Lo\ligs 36 29 554 Asicrewy " 1h 2 0°112 0 o|Crawford, Australia’s best tennis Broakivn 29 34 460, Tanining -3b 4.0 0 0 0 ofPlaver, eliminated Sidney Wood, top | ooy i 2 36 446 Turner, p, ss 4 0 0 3 4 2|ranking American star from New Phi - 2% £ Sork Tha B | Philadelphia 38 406 Nello, ¢ 4016 30 s re today in the quarter- B 20 46 0 ) finl round of the Wi B i N Converse, cf . 400110 oam the Wimbledon In s Vit | American League Oovelxi o8 400100 ational Tournament,. 3 . b, 1 Won Lost Pct. & BB ot ol & 7 New York 40 24 625 s:;vzans;cm . 233141» 64721 194 }: CAMPBELL DEFEATS | Cleveland 31 26 587 r e 5 A4 | Detroit 38 29 587 gl L o001110003| GIVAN IN SEATTLE |Deiro g0 a8 28 533 Moose ~100000000-1 GOLF TOURNAMENT soston 32 33 462 Innings pitched by, Turner 5 1-3; Washington . 20 35 453 charge defeat to Turner; struck| SEATTLE, July 1.—Albert (Scot-| Philacelphia 26 35 426 out by, Foster 5, Turner 5, Ers-|ty) Campbell, Seattle department St. Louis 19 43 .308 kine 2; walked by, Foster 3, Turner 5, Erskine 1; hit by pitched ball, Andrews by Foster; Koshak (2) by Turner; passed ball, Nello; double plays, Roller to Junge to Snow; F. Schmitz to Turnér to Andrews; store clerk, defeated Harry Givan, also of Seattle. for the Pacific| Northwest golf championship in an! extra-hole match here yesterday. | Miss Barbara Beach Thompson, Palo Alto, Cal, nosed out Mrs. Vera runs batted in, Lowe, Hagerup, Fos- | Hutchings Ford, Seattle, at the ter, Andrews; two-base hit, Grum-|same hole for the women’s title. | mett; home run, Foster; earned - ruas, Legion 2, Moose 1; left on PROUT LEAVES bases, Legion 11, Moose 8; sacrifice J. Prout left for Ketchikan on the | hit, Grummett; stolen bases, Ko- | Juneau City League (Second Half) Won Lost Pet. Legion 9740 1008 Elks 4 17 000 Moose 0 1 oo e S— MRS. HOLZHEIMER LEAVES Mrs. William A. Holzheimer, wife of the District Attorney, and her granadaughter, Mary Gregory, left shak, Nowell, Roller; time of game, Alaska. He arrived here on the Es-|Juneau on the Alaska to.visit her 2 hours, 20 minutes; umpires, Jern- berg and Adams, e tebeth from Chichagof and intends|son-in-law and daughter, Lieut. to prospect near Prince Rupert, B,ian‘l Mrs. Sam Gregory, in Bremer- toa, Lodge of Elks. He had been ill for a number of years. Mr. Snyder went to Skagway 1897 and invested heavily in real estate, also operated a lumber yard and owned much stock in the Home Power Company. About 18 years ago, Mr. Snyder went to California and located in Los Molinos where he owned large estate known as and operated a hotel. Mrs. Snyder passed away last year, on Septem- ber 14. Both were well known in the North. Mr. Snyder leaves one daughter Mrs. Roy Gault, of Skagway. ST HOSPITAL NOTES Baby Thomas Miettinen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Miett of the N. Y. Clothing Store, enter: St. Ann's Hospital yesterday medical treatment. in the rioting on June 24, and An- thony Sharkey, who entered the hospital on June 28 for treatment of an injury received at the Wi ham Bay Gold Mining Co. botn reported to be recovering & Mrs. Malford Soley of Sitka, who arrived on the North Sea yester- day, was admitted to the hospital for medical treatment. John Chudecki and Roy Jackson entered the hospital yesterday fo medical treatment. ——————— MRS. RUDIO LEAVES Mrs. Pauline A. Rudio, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Grove C. Winn for several weeks, left (o the south, via Sitka on the Aleu tian. ————————— THATCHER ON ALASKA J. A. Thatcher, Hunt, Motteit Hardware Company agent, left Ju- neau for Ketchikan on_the Alaska —_————- SPORTS EDITOR COMING Harry B. Smith, sports edito th® San Prancisco Chronicle and one ot the leading athletic critics in the nation, leaves Vancouver, B C., today for a round-trip vacatior trip on the Prince Rupert to South east Alaska. . — STOESS ON GEORGE P. C. Stoess, mining engineer Juaeau on the Prince George (0 lv‘mwu\'fl, B. C, and Seattle, Elks to play the first game of the| doubleheader. President Holzheimer in the Inn,| Samuel Elstad, who was injured 1935, By GEORGE McM/ FER HEAVEN'S SAKE- | GUESS HE THINKS ITS N\ ES|{i{A MOSQUITO: [ AT THE HOTELS ® 8 & 0 0 00 80 0 o FISHERMEN FLY TO HASSELBORG ; BRING BACK MANY TROUT E. F. Ninnis, Lynn E .Tucker and Gastineau Nadeau, Excursion Tom Inlet; Charles Burdick left Juneau Sun-|L: D. Moore, Wrangell; A. B. And- St © N the Alaska Alr Trans- | €rson, Wrangell; Leonard M. Ber- port scaplane piloted by Sheldon |!ni Ed Gustafson; Wm. Dahlgren; Simmons on a fishing trip to Lake | Mrs. Manhall Jeffries, Twin Falls, Has:el The fishing party re- Mrs. Elizabeth J. Smith, Twin |mained at the lake all night and b _”kw- pi“"“““‘"hr’“‘“a ;rel'nnu\ to Juneau this morning Angeles; Kernick Smith, San Fran- with a |eisco; O. T. McShane, Sacramento; fine catch, about 140 trout. 3 {FORD DELUXE TRUCK oe Crosson, Fairbanks; Al Mon- sen, Fairbanks; R. J. Gleason, Fair- banks; Lucius E. Burch, Jr., Nash- ville, Tenn.; J. D. Copeland, Park- Anderson, Hump Island; I. Chud- ecki, Juneau; J. Prout, Ct Harry Mabry, Juneau; Chris Dahl, Ruby; John Reilly, Cordova; R. D. Stockton, Los Angeles; A. Bennett, Juneau. L. F Company \rived here on the Alaska from the Westward Hebert, Schwabacher Hard- representative, ar- jwa.e o > BAKER TO SEATTLE Zynda 1 77777 dale, Ark.; Blanch Phimister, Se- attle; Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Berry, A new deluxe Ford panel deliv-|&'¢; Mr. and g8, ery ick, D hased through the Seattle; Mr. :md Mrs. (rt,o,. A Juneau Motors Company, has gr-|Lachman, Scattle; C. Prahl, Pled- Shed for' the Totem Grosety. James | D00t -Cal; B. F. Kennaxd, Port- 2 &y atid’ Bot m,omficm The land, Ore; B. F. Raymond, Salt on the truck is by Lu,"2ke City. Alaskan DRSPS J. M. Crawley, B. P. R.; Harold | HEBERT ARRIV Grimstad, Hump Island; J. O.|' M. Baker, National Cash Register| M. Soley, Sitka; Mabel Huntorn, Ccmpany, is Lravelling from Junezau|Billings, Mont.; George Weglin, Jr., to Scattle on the Aleutian | Sea R. E. Alvord, Portland. e i i — FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. | 7: ‘(/77111 jjen \i\‘?é UOX OPEN ALL NIGHT Hotel Liquor Store Phone Single Q-2 rings ——eee ) | | Alaskan { Dave Housel. Prop. inos, Cal, on June 22 and fun- — g eral services were held June 25 feeeemeee ettt et ettt e under the auspices of the Elks| ! HERE'S THE BEST BUY ON THE MARKET AT ITS PRICE! A G-E MOTOR- DRIVEN BRUSH CLEANER il gels AL the Lot ! Dust . . litter . . grit . . . they’re all the same to the new G-E ‘“‘Popular’’ Motor-driven brush Cleaner. It gets them all—quickly, easily, thor- oughly—and leaves your rugs clean and fresh as new. If you want the best on the market in its price class, you’ll buy this General Electric ¢‘Popular.’”” Let us demonstrate it for you today—also the new “Tidy,”’ a hand clean- er you need to com- plete your home cleaner service. CALL US TODAY & GENERAL ELECTRIC CLEANERS Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 \ \ ) ¥ N \ \ ) ¥ N b ) N ] ] 1 \ ) ) \ \ ) ) ) ) ) ) ) \ \ ) \ ) ) ) \ ) ) \ \ ) \ \ ) \ \ | | N ) N \ \ ) 3 3 3 \ \ ) ) ) \ ) ) ) ) ) ) ) \ ) \ ¥ y ) ) \ l} \ } ) \ ] \ ) ) \ \ \ } ) ) ) N N ) \ y ) ) ) \ \ - - NOTICE W ork will be resumed on July 5 Men having employment cards will plea report at the Employment Office on July on the shift marked on the card. Men who have filed an application, but have not received employment cards, should watch the office window to see when their names are posted. Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company For Every Purse and Every Purpose PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 412 GLACIER TAVERN WINE :-: DINE DANCE TOM CASEY Va Spring Chicken on Toast, 50c¢ “....and here’s the Proof!”’ A cancelled check, showing endorsement and payment, quickly settles any argu- ment as to whether or not that bill has been paid. Providing legal receipts for payments is only one of the many advantages of a Checking Account at this bank. For in- stance, there's the time-saving convenience of having the money you need whenever you need it wherever you are; there’s the businesslike efficiency provided by com- plete check stub records; there's the as- sured protection of Deposit Insurance for your funds; and there’s . . . but that's reason enough for anybody to have a Checking Account, Come in—open yours this week—then pay by check for safety and convenience. ® The First National Bank Get a Move On, Cabby There’ a two-bit tip in this for you if you can get me down to the Cafe in five min- utes. That’s where the gang is meeting for lunch, and (this is inside dope) they are having a case of HORLUCK’S VIENNA STYLE BEER. Juneau Liquor Company PERCY REYNOLDS, Manager “Imported Quality at Regular Prices” Dental X Ray Labratory OUTSIDE PRICES AND 6 DS * TRIANGLE BUILDING T R OB RO TR 5 Old papers for sale at Empire Officg

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