The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 16, 1935, Page 5

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BRINGING UP F COUNT SLICKEM 1S TAKING YOUR FATHER. TO HIS CLUB THIS AFTERNOON SCHUMACHER'S LONG JINX 18 ENDED AT LAST Reds Pound Old Enemy in Monday's Game to Win, 13 to 6 CINCINNATI, Ohio, July 15— Hal Schumacher’s four year jinx over Cincinnati and his eleven game winning streak were broken Monday as the Reds blasted the| New York Giants for a 13 to 6 vic- tory. ARE YOU SURE FATHER WENT WITH HIM 2 ATHER AND COMPLICATES ~ BASEBALL SKED Slate Now l:s:s_ 13 Regular Games in 20 Days Be- | fore Season’s End | | | | | GAME TONIGHT At Baseball Park — Elks vs. Legion at 6:30 o'clock. With the scheduled arrival of |“the Navy” this week-end, Juneau’s |baseball program becomes all the Schumacher beat Cincinnati four- more complicated. Undoubtedly, the teen times and tied them once since visiting destroyers and cruiser will May 19, 1932. have baseball teams desirous of The loss of the game cut the competition with squads from Ju- Giants’ lead in the National League to five games. GAMES MONDAY National League New York 6; Cincinnati 13. Philadelphia 1; Chicago 2, innings. Boston 6; St. Louis 13 Brooklyn-Pittsburgh, rain. American League St. Louis 3; Washington 2, eleven innings. Pacific Coast League No games were played in the Pa- cific Coast League yesterday as the teams were travelling to open the following schedules this after- noon for the week: July 16-18—Oakland at Seattle; Sacramento at Portland; Los An- geles at Missions; San Francisco at Hollywood. July 19-21—Sacramento at Se ten neau. | Ordinarily, the prospect of extra | games with out-of-town teams is a |good one to City League players, \but not to such a pronounced de- !gree this year. The records show that there are now four postponed _contests on the schedule, and nine | regular contests remain to be pl {ed before the “little World Seri |after August 4, just 20 days from today. | | Thirteen games in 20 days is a |tough enough assignment without crowding in too many outside con- tests. Of course, some Navy games must be and probaby will be play- ed, but many Juneau fans today {are beginning to wonder just how the City League is to overcome the rain jinx which has dogged its steps for the last week. | For this morning the scheduled instance, for the game prospects attle; Oakland ‘at Portland; San Francisco at Missions; Los Angeles at Hollywood. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League (Second Half) ‘Won for tonight between the Elks and the Legion were not good. A steady |drizzle was falling, and there was {no muchly-needed sun to dry out {the soggy Baseball Park field. How- ever, the go is scheduled to start Lost Pet..at 6:30 o'clock. .593 586 519 500 483 483 463 319 San Francisco Missions . ! Seattle 3 Los Angeles Oakland Hollywood Portland Sacramento National 32 36 38 42 Chicago Cleveland Boston Philadelphia Washington 45 St. Louis 54 Juneau City League (Second Half) Won Lost Pet. 3 1 150 2 1 667 000 Won Lost Pet.| | Legion New York St. Louis . « Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati Brooklyn ... Philadelphia Boston NICE LUMP OF GOLD 408 Egan Petrokvo and Jess Taylor, 266 who have a lease on the Ramsey- Rutherford Mine over the Valdez ‘Won Lost Pct. Glacier, recently arrived in Valdez 48 28 632 with four pounds of gold millec 49 32 605 by them. Amernan New York Detroit THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TU ‘SDAY, JULY 16, 1935. I'LL CALL LP FIND OUT = G = 60 VICTORIES= AVED Hi = way o / AR ™HE ToR HELLO, CHISEL CLUB- DID MR. JIGGS ARRIVE THERE YET ? NAVY ARRIVAL |PAILY SPORTS CARTOON- DANILL, - THE. YOUNG- IRISHMAN TOOK THE WRESTLING TiITLE OF THE TITLE WHICH M LONPOS HELD, PINNED WE GREEK N 8OSTON Onle o By GEORGE McMANUS YES-BUT HE IS NOW DEPARTING- IN THE PATROL WAGON- THE CLUB IS RAIDED/ By PapT0 INVESTIGATE | % ARLINER CRASH OR 7wAT ,Psel cently Experienced Series, Disasters 4‘ WHEN HE / N | AMSTERDAM, July 16.—Authori- e | ties have ordered a rigid investiga- 4 | tion of a series of disasters to the ) Netherlands air liners as a result of Sunday's tragedy in which persons were killed when a Schiphol Airdrome giant Fokker plane cmsh-‘l ed into a dyke and burst into flames | soon after taking off from Ham-| | burg. | | The Fokker air liner is the third | Foreign Company Has Re-|_ | | “flying hotel” of the N(".h(‘l”]illl(l.s“l wrecked in little more than mortths. Thirteen passengers and one | member of the crew escaped from | the plane through a small rear door. | Two English passengers and four of | the crew were killed. There were no Americans aboard. [times a week just as I have been! | | to settle this title business with Ed | Don George as soon as possible.” Did He Make Jeem wQuit? Many were inclinea to dismiss | O'Mahoney's victory over Jim Loa- | dos in Boston with a knowing wink And maybe these wise ones know a ; d |thing or two, but the fact thai THE il ‘\u | “Jeem” announced what ke claims| coae goeos RE is his permanent retirement from ) weestimie o | the mat shortly after Danno muss- - : ed him up makes it look like a bona fide whipping. THREE FLOWN TO FAIRBANKS Gen. A. D. McRae, Ira B. Jorale- mon and Mrs. R. L. Castleton were passengers aboard the PAA Lock- heed Electra flown by Pilots Jerry Jones and Walter Hall on the scheduled flight to Fairbanks this| afternoon. Three passengers were reported to be waiting at Whitehorse for passage to Fairbanks on the El- ctra. — - UN FATRGL The Grizzly Bear, Alaska Game Commission boat, left today for a| two weeks’ patrol in the Baranof| and Kuiu Island districts. Game Warren Homer Jewell heads the party aboard which inecludes Cap- tain Krough and Bill Peterson, as- sistant. DAILY PIRE WANT ADS PAY! PA ~ CALIFORNIAN WINS won the Pacifi Miss Barbara Beach Thompson of Palo Alto, Calif., x times hol: * pionship when she defeated Mrs. Vera Hutchings Fo i”* NORTHWEST TITLE c Northwest Women's golt cham- der of the title, an extra hole mateh in Snmt,.‘v‘luh. Scotty Campbell (right) of Seattle won the men's amateur. (Associated Press Photos) ‘ | times he even breaks out into sng | | B M. Jacques Curley is S0 Bappy these fine days that he walks around humming to himself. At when he suspects no one is near. When a man achieves one of his | pet ambitions hc has a right to be happy—and even sing if he cares to. It seems tnat all his life. or at least that portion of his life that has been dedicated to promoting | wrestling matches, M. Curley has more or less secretly grieved ba- cause he could not find a great Irish wrestler. It made him very unhappy to think that the Cana- | dians, the Germans, the Poles, the Ttalians, the Swedes, the Bulgar- ians, the Turks, the French, and |in fact every nationality except the | Irish had a standout wrestler to | cheer. | True, there have been some fair ]Irisll grapplers, but until Danno | O'Mahoney came along to topple | Jim Londos and take over that por- tion of.the world's wrestling crown which the Greek possessed, there was no Irishman entitled to the stamp of greatness as a mat per- | former, Now that O'™ahoney has “ar- | Curley 1s too delighted for wonds? O'Mahcney came here last win- Art Classes Sketching Hand Crafts W ater Colours Clay Modeling The examining physicians reveal- and fanfare. He is on a from the Irish Free State | notices furlough | army Rise To Top Speedy The 22-year-old, apple-cheeked Irishman won about 60 matches in this country on his march to th “title” without having to suffer the embarrassment of feeling his| broad shoulders pinned to the mat. | His. style of grappling is spectacu- | lar and it caught the fancy of the| crowds around Boston, where he| began his American career. In short | order he developed into one of the| |best drawing cards in the tug and| | grunt game. Some 38 states, including New | York, recognize Danno as the boss of the wrestlers, while the remain- |ing few lean toward Ed Don | George. O’'Mahoney insists that he| will not rest until he forces George | |into a match to settle the cham-| pionship. A match between the pair| would crown the winner undis-| puted world’s heavyweight wrest- | !ling champion. That's what Danno| wants and more than likely Curley| | will 'see that the lad who brought | |him so much happiness (and mon- | ey) gets his just deserts. {4, ©O'Mahoney is nsi burdened down too heavily by the importance of | his newly won honors, even though he has announced his determination | to avoid any action tat might brand him one of those safety-first cham- pions. Danno wants to wrestle any rived” is it any wonder that M. man who thinks he has a chance.| One of the greatest ambitions of “Naturally, T am glad to be cham-| pion,” said Danno, “but it makes; | ter from County Cork, Treland, with | RO difference in my daily routine. his old Kansas coach, Bill Hargiss, | out benefit of the usual advance Ill go on Wrestling three or four on the links, | ed that London had suffered frac- ture of two ribs and a broken ulna bone of the right arm in his losing bout with the young Irishman. | Jeem, who had held pre-eminent | title claims for five years after a title bout victory Dick Shikat, sailed !for a long-planned vacation in his native Greece with the declaration he’d had enough of the mat game. Maybe he meant he'd had enough of Danno. e cecececse0eses e SPORT BRIEFS | ce 000000000 0 In an exnmitlon, Gordon “Sling- | er” Dunn, ex-Stanford, whirled the | discus three times beyond the world | record of 171 feet 11% inches. His| best toss was 176-6. i Dave Mitchell, 1934 national pub- lic links golf champion, will be de- fending his title over his own home course, Coffin, in Indianapolis this summer. Eddie Phillips, catcher brought on by Cleveland from Albany to help out during Frank Pytlak’s ab- | sence, is a Boston college gmduatu{ He was gray-haired at 26. Three sons of Joe Wood—"Smoky | Joe” when he hurled for the Boston | Red Sox 23 years ago—had three| sons in an all-star team which | played the Yale vai'sity this sprinz. Glenn Cunningham, great miler, is to learn to play golf, and then whip six | = six | six (T Reports from Amsterdam say that the betrothal of Crown Princesss Juliana of Holland, daughter of Queen Wilhelmina, to Prince Charles of Sweden (both above), will soon be announced. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. BAILEY’S CAFE o g SO “WHERE YOU MEET. YOUR FRIENDS" 24-Hour Service Beer—if desired Merchants’ Lunch R GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING F'rench-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer [ d0ing and I hope WILNING. T'd lKe | §oereros et oot o et it GLACIER TAVERN WINE DINE DANCE TOM C Va Spring Chicken on Toast, 50¢ ~ i o i i o i st o et N o o et ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’'S BABY BEEN-—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected “....and here’s the Proof!”’ s 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 st 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 d convenience, o The First National Bank Juneau, Alaska N VA W OPEN ALL NIGHT | Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Specializing in Kindergarten Classes for Children Lessons in fashion design for women and girls FOR FULL PARTICULARS SEE MISS LADDIE KYLE Room 434, Gastine au Hotel - Phone 10 for Appointment PSS Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single 0-2 rings Dental X Ray Labratory OUTSIDE PRICES ROOMS 5 AND 6 TRIANGLE BUILDING UNITED FOOD (CO. i CASH GROCERS . 0000406666666660660060000000000000000000600000000050660460000000005006905 _.Pl“’“" 16 We Deliver = Meats—Phone 16 i

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