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BRINGING UP FATHER SINCE CASEY GOT THAT 'S NEW BUSINESS, HE'S HIGH- || THAT SO, HAT AN’ HES BEEN MIKE ? SAYIN' YOURE NO GOOD/ it THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1935 LL GO DOWN AND GIVE CASEY © 1935, King Features Syodicate, loc, Geeat Beitain righls feséeved. |DAILY SPORTS CARTOON- RED SOX GAIN - WITHTWO WINS PITCHING WIN OVER INDIANS i s oht | Boston Clir:l_l:;s— Into First Koski of Elks Loses Tight Division“Lekty Grove Hurling Duel in 3- Cops Another to-1 Decision LEGION COPS: MALISTER IN BOSTON, Mass.,, July I'ne home-town Red Sox regained the first division in the American League at Cleveland’s expense here yesterday, turning the Indians back 13 to and 3 to 1, in a double- header. There are several kinds of pitch-| By (Lefty) Grove galned his ing duels, but the battle that Ward | qeventh win of the season in the McAlister and “Shavey” Koski Wag- | seoond game, ed out on the Baseball Park mound‘ Bill Werber, with four consecu- last night was a real bonafide en-|yjye two-baggers, and Risk Ferrell, gagement. Neither pitcher allowed | yiip g single, a double and a-hom- more than one earned run, buller were Red Sox heroes in the cur- when the figures on the scoreboard |¢qin-rajser, were added, it was found that Mc-| Alister's Legion team had beuLen\ Koski's Elks, 3 to 1. Undoubtedly, Elk errors at criti- cal moments aided McAlister in| his seventh straight victory this season. However, the Legion star| was just as unbeatable as ever last night. He had a tight squeeze, but, he has yet to admit defeat. Both hurlers pitched cautiously.| Brooklyn 5; Pittsburgh 4, 0. The results were that the Legion| New York 6; Cincinnati 3. could nick Koski for but four| Boston 1; St. Louis 2 blows in seven innings, while Mc- | American Leazuc. Alister was holding all the EIks| Cleveland 5, 1; Boston 13, 3. hitless, except one. That one was| St. Louis 4; Washington 8. Bob Jernberg, who found his pitch- | Dn(x'uu-th\dt'l_phm. rain. ing for a single and a home run.| ~ Juneau City League This blow, the only Elk tally, came| Legion 3; Elks 1. Game postponed in the fourth and was a solid smack | from July 2. over a fence in left field. Sl T Young Erv Hagerup equalled um‘ Pacmc‘“(‘;oa;'r OLURBS circuit clout for the Legion, though.| (Second Half) In the second he rammed a fast Won Lost Pet drive close to the left field foul hno.‘s Franci =l rancisco 18 621 By the time the ball had been AiRsiona 19 mfl tossed into the infield, Hagerup was | Seattle 15 ‘,”‘ scampering across the rubber for a| | Oakland 15 500/ D | Hollywood 484 | The Legion won the game in the 145 Angeles 483} fourth. Al Lowe had walked. Bob|portiand Boyd, capable catcher, was up next.| gaeramento He let two go by, then cracked out National what looked like a solid single to right field. But, in playing the ball, | New York . Outfielder Jernberg came up with st Louis his first error of the season. Result: | Chicago Lowe scored and Boyd pulled up at pittshurgh third. He scored, himself, a mo-| Cincinnati ment later when Koski erred ‘n‘Bmoklyn fielding Hagerup's roller to the|philadelphia . 10— RESULTS YESTERDAY Legion 3, Elks 1 (postponed game). 5, GAMES WEDNESDAY Pac Coast League | Missions 6; Sacramento 1. Seattle 10; Hollywood 4. Portland 6; San Franclsco Los Angeles at Oakland, poned. | N post- | tional League Phiiladelphia 3; Chicago 2. | i i an Pet. | 684! 628 575 512 | 33 I»\ ( EORGE Me¢ \l ANUS I'M ACHIN FER A FIGHT- | 1 HAVEN'T THROWN A BRICK THIS' YEAR (i c .“ — -4 }\g& S, THEYRE AANDY THINGS Sl 1 GUESS 1 MISUNDER>TOOD WHAT MIKE SAID — | IS NEVER TOO MRS. HLC =~ w ey NEVER GRIPPEO A~ ~~ma CLUB ULNTIL- SHEWAS 37 . ~ SPORT SLANTS You can go right ahead and be- lieve any golf yarn you hear, how- 433|ever exaggerated or impossible it |hand, was something of a golf Prod- | pidrikson 355 may strike you, Anything can and igy, for 20 years ago at the age|finals were sadly disappointed when does happen im this game which | probably pays greater premiums on orthodox form than any other sport. Its participants range from in- fants little removed from the crawl- ing stage to the other extreme in T veteran Mrs. Opal Hill of itnppml a fine field to win the Long |Island women’s championship in convineing manner. An- injury last threatened to ruin her golf | er but her: comeback this year| slled any fears that the| ent might interfere with | morrow was an infant| a tiny hands instead | tutored her from | the time she was able to walk and |the game came naturally to her.| If Mrs. L an control her usually erratic putter as well as she did in the Long Island she will have plen- y of backers in the national test a long and accurate driver; beautifully off the fairways,| and is deadly with her :l))pru;u‘]l’ shots. | Ambidextrous Champ | Alfred Perry, the new British open champion, presents a new one ! for the golf book. A natural left- 1 hander, Pc played golf with a years and de- ‘.'rln])"fl his Teft-handed game to the | degree that he became an assistant | pro. When he came to the conclu- sion that his game was limited as long as he hit them from the left side he switched over to the right The fact that he now British open title is proof enough {that the move was a wise one His experience as a left-hander might come in handy on such oc- casions when the lie offers an awk-| ward impossible starice for a right-handed swinger. There are many golfers who carry left-handed niblicks for use in cases where the ball rests on the side of a trap in| such a position that a right hander| weuld have to reach down to make the shot. Swinging left-handed in such cases permits the golfer to stand on the level of the ball. mg hie into her a rattle. He 1 v Y/t Miss Helen | veloped, golfer (ho,| phree years. ago took her {theé national amateur champidn- |lesson. She won the Texas [hip in 1931, in the semi-fina title shortly before the powers that | Mrs. Hill never gripped a golf club|be. ruled that she was ineligible to | until she was 37 years old, yet she|take part in amateur golf tour ted on¢ of the outstanding ments. woman golfers in the country to-| day Mrs SRR b T st S S B AND PATRICK tafter having disposed of Miss | Hicks, busin oman Didrikson less than | first, golf state VICTORIA, B. C, July 18~In less than a year after his first fight Murray Patrick, son of Lester Pat- rick, manager of the New York| Rangers hockey team, won the Can-| adian, British Columbia and Wash-| ington tate heavyweight boxing championship: ‘ | Those who looked torward to the tmeeting between the two play-for- | pay golfers, Miss Hicks and Miss in the Western open Reinhardt, on' - the olkmr of 15, she was runner-up in the na- l¢he two favorites were shunted to tional championships. Mrs. Rein-|the sidelines, because the Western hardt won the Western closed event | js ahout the only women's open three times. {event scheduled for this year. Any Bzbe Reaches meeting between these rivals must The fourth golfer to make the|take place in an exhibition match semi-final round of the Western|and that hardly carries the same meet was the 21-year-old Babejinterest as would their meeting in The Semis A WHISTLING PUTTER NEW ORLEANS.—Fred Haas, 19- |at last, holds the 1S HIS NAME 1ks t le in two criticai, contestsy A double win for eithef teany ould mean much . in «determining the second half title and the right to challenge the Legion in the Lit® tle World Series. But a split de- | cision would give the first-place Les gionnaires just that much moré clear sailing toward victory in boti .ml\(‘s. ‘The Moose, MOOSE, ELKS T0 TANGLE TWICE; MUCH AT STAKE [Double Wln for hthm Team Could Change Baseball Picture At Baseball Park—Moose Elks at o'clock (postponed ganie). GAME TOMORROW Baseball Park—Moose at 6:30 o'clock. by copping a pair, could steam up to a first place Jl‘ with the Legion. Two straight for Elks would keep them withia mathematical chance for the title: Tonight's tilt is a postponed omg rom July 9. Tomorrow’s is a reg- arly scheduled contest. While there was a steady drizalg ng this morning there were < dications that tonight's game, | scheduled to start at 6:30 o'clogk, | would be played Averill "of Cleveland, missed this year's game was the | best runs-driver-inner in '33 and ‘34, scoring one with a pinch sin= gle the first year and three with & pinch double and a triple in '34. D You can't Klrl Millions, vs At Elks vs The week-long rainy spell broken| FEarl who City League baseball fans were hoping for clear weather to- night and tomorrow so that pest- | poned games may continue to be made up. Last night, the Legion nosed out the Elks. Tonight and to- night, the Moose and the adv, [ F OR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. BAILEY’S CAFE o D “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" 2¢ ilour Service Beer—Iif desired Merchants’ Lunch —— GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING I'rench-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer . SR ORI IS SN TS U VPG SOOI GLACIER TAVERN WINE DINE DANCE TOM CASEY Vs Spring Chicken on Toast, 50c ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN'S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND: TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8, Government Inspected 7 C =3 «...and here’sthe Proof!”’ v cancelled check, showing endorsement and payment, quickly settles any argu- ment as to whether or not that bill has = 423 | ganzas City recently won the Wom- box. Boston 259 However, poor fielamg did noL“ Amenvan 8. Louis |en’s Western open golf champion- |r: Didrikson, a recent recruit to the’fan open tournament, anks of business-women golfers. | Mrs. Marion Turpie Lake’s chance The greatest track and field fe- |to win the national title took on a year old former’ southern amateur golf champion, whistles quietly as he Mnm up and-strokes a dllflcull been paid, League [ship by defeating Mrs. ‘Won Lost PCtuR(,mmm', j Providing legal receipts for payments is PRSNGAY omly 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 thats reason enough for anybody to have a Checking Account. Come in—open yours this wéek—then pay by check for safety d convenience, predominate. Both hurlers had good support, support which at times New York sparkled brilliantly. For example, Detroit “Rabbit” Ellinsburg, playing sec-|Chicago ond for the losers, turned in three|Cleveland sensational snares of hard-hit fly Boston balls. One, especially, robbed Wil-|Philadelphia son Foster of a blow in the fourth. Washington Ellinsburg earned applause from St. Louis - the small crowd when he went off <cuneau City League the ground to grab the hall with | (Second Half) one hand, his back turned t,o home} Won Lost Pet. plate. Legion 4 1 800 While the Legion defense didn't|Moose ... 2 1 667 turn in such scintillating plays, Ed- | Elks 0 4 000 die Roller, at shortstop, showed a game record of eight hard stops‘TRAVIS SURE with nary a bobble. The box score: LEGION Koshak, 1f Nowell, cf Lowe, 2b WASHINGTON, July 18—Cecil Travis, Senator third baseman, may lay claim to the most-hit bats- man of the year. He already has been dusted off nine times, the last occasion on July 4 in Philadelphia. 'WAKE UP YOUR - LIVER BILE— | ' WITHOUT CALOMEL Foster, 3b Roller, ss And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go McAlister, p 11 you fes! sour and sunk and the world fooks punk, don't swallow lot of salts, min- 3 -n; water, :u Iua’fi" sandy or !e’htvlnl gum __R | and expect them to make you suddealy T—R | (a4 buoyant and full of -th::.. - d scorz | male athlete this counLry has du‘decidedly brighter hue since she .598 560 503 531 447 425 303 \\7 NS [ ] The First Neiional ‘Bank Juneau, Alaska oSE W 2N 3 B®Nvoom~oOy \3 - comolwwmm A S S ccororrooN coco~onvoo~T ~oo~ocoNOON FRIEND: “Mean fo tell me this is the painting you began today?’’ ILLUSTRATOR: ““Certainly, Ed. That (CALVERT didn't bother me a bit." ILLUSTRATOR: *No more, Ed. . starfing a painting in the morning. FRIEND: ““Oh, it's barely midnight,Bob. Another CALVERT won't let you down. Totals ... ELKS Ellinsburg, 2b .. Livingston, 1b . P. Reed, ss Jernberg, 1f, rf W e ccococoxocooila C. M'Spadden, 3b Blake, ¢ Stedman, cf ... Koski, p Alaskan Hotel Liquor Smre Dave Housel, Prop. Eme Single 0-2 rings Dental X Ray Labratory OUTSIDE PRICES AND 6 TRIANGLE BUILDIN Tonight’s the time to think of tomorrow. Usevgo‘od L R et cocoo~oae Nom~_><°..¢3‘: »-couc—-cool’ih judgment. Call for (‘ALVER’[‘ exclusively. Enjoy it Totals ... Score by innings: Legion Elks " e Struck out by, McAllswr 3, KoS- | fosling is. e e 1 ki 6; walked by, McAlister 2, Koski | bounds of lia e into your daily, * : |1 this bile is not fl 1; hit by pitched ball, McAlister by | gomnt digestTe st denr i o0 ws, food Koski; runs batted in by, Hagerup Gas "’g'-'; = 2, Boyd, Jernberg; home runs by, mnolunbnnluuufln{olnh ’mn‘.fi in gentlemanly mod(-rallon. You’ll salute the murnmg with a smile. Better blending is the reason why. . ., ROOMS 5 For that special D Hagerup, Jernberg; two-base hits| by, Koshak, Boyd; earned runs by, Legion 1, Elks 1; left on bases by, Legion 5, Elks 4; sacrifice hit by,| Koshak; stolen base by, Livingston; | " time of game, I hour and 25 min- | utes; umpires, Guln!son J. s:h:mt.z, and*Sabin. aches lnd you feel down and out. Your whole | system is ned. l! !lkol thul’[uod. old.EtARTER'B d bile l!u'lnl freely and make you m ’up and up.” They contain, wondertu, barmiess, gentle wh CALVERT'S and CALVERT'S whiskioaaresmasingln flavo . achievements of perfect bleading. extracts, amazing ‘when it comes to making the bile flow freely. Butdo-ulllul!ulplh.llk for Carter's Little Liver Pills. Look h-nmc;r\!‘ -bdbu. © 1935 The Calvert-Maryland Distilling Co.. ine. Distillery: Relay, Md., Exeeutive Office CLEAR HEADS M,é Chanta Bidg., New York. N. Y. Calvert . LORD C H()TIIH) IN-BOND BOURBON or RYE . 100 Proof. UNITED FOOD (0. 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