The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 29, 1935, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. MONDAY, JULY 29, 19 BRINGING UP MR. JIGGS WILL SHOW YYOU WHERE | THE LUGGAGE IS. BIANTS TAKE DOUBLEHEADER FROM DODGERS Brooklyn Held Scoreless in Both Games Played on Sunday BROOKLYN, N. Y., July 20— The New York Giants did some- thing Sunday for their place in the National League by walloping the Brooklyn Dodgers 6 to 0 in the first game and squeezing out a 1 to 0 victory in‘ the second game behind the four-hit pitching of Clydell Castleman. Carl Hubbell bested Earnshaw and Vance in the first game. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Oakland 6, 10; Portland 4, 2. Los Angeles 11, 4; Hollywood 3, 3. Missions 10; 17; San Francisco 5, 0. Sacramento 11, 1; Seattle 7, 0. National League New York 6, 1; Brooklyn 0, 0. Cincinnati 7; Chicago 11. Philadelphia 4, 10; Boston 1, 11. St. Louis 4, 4; Pittsburgh 3, 5. American League Chicago 14, 3; St. Louis 6, 4. Boston 11; - Philadelphia 3. Detroit 14; Cleveland 6. Washington 6, 7; New York 7, 1. Juneau City League Moose-Legion, rain. CUBS TAKE TWO GAMES FROM CINCINNATI REDS CHICAGO, 11, July 29—The Chi- cago Cubs ran roughshod over the Cincinnati Reds Saturday afternoon to win both games of a doublehead- er 9 to 8 and 12 to 1. The twin triumph made it eight in a row for the Cubs. GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Missions 9; San Francisco 7. Los Angeles 9; Hollywood 2. Osakland 2; Portland 3. Sacramento 15; Seattle 2. National League St. Louis 4; Pittsburgh 10. Philadelphia 5; Boston 0. Cincinnati 8, 1; Chicago 9, 12. New York 4; Brooklyn 6. American League Detroit 6; Cleveland 2. Boston 6, 2; Philadelphia 7, 0. First game 15 innings. Chicago 8; St. Louis 5. Washington 8; New York 7. Pacific Coast League (Second Half) Won Lost 17 19 19 20 20 22 26 25 San Francisco Missions Los Angeles Oakland Seattle Portland Hollywood Sacramento National League ‘Won Losi 59 31 60 35 36 42 51 New o¥Yrk Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Brooklyn Cincinnati Philadelphia Boston 52 Detroit New York ... ,Chicago . Boston Cleveland . Philadelphia Ww!hlngmn Loufs - Juneau City League (Second Half) Won Lost AE0 ) 2 .5 3 1 5 e VISITS MRS. SHEELOR 667 625 167 Mrs. Homer Settle, President of the Business and Professional Wom- en’s Club of Payette, Idaho, visited with Mrs. Edith F. Sheelor while the Victoria was in port. Mrs. Set- tle is a member of the “Gold Dig- gers’ Party” and is highly pleas- ed with Alaska and the reception accorded the members of the cruise. ——wo—— More small trout “planted” by the government in streams are killed by other fish than by the big birds commonly believed to be the fish’s ‘worst enemy. w .|Snow, L FATHER COME WITH ME. YOU AINT SEEN ANY- THING YET. THESE ARE ME WIFE'S THINGS. GOSH! YYOU FOLKS ARE, SURE TAKIN A LOT OF LUGGAGE TO EVUROPE. CARDINALS 3-2 |Rousing Ball i G Called, Saturday Night on Ac- | count of Darkness KING LAWKy - — A ROUGH, TOUGH TRIAL HORSE WHO IS LIKELY TO MAKE JOE LOUIS LOOKL BAD EVEA HHOUGH THE BROWN BOMBER. WINS o In a rousing ball game last SuL»j urday night which was called at thej end of the fifth inning on account | of darkness, the Federals, by a| score of 3 to 2, downed the Cardi- nals once more for this season. The Federals now have 3 wins and 2| losses, Cardinals 2 wins and 3 loss- es. The game which was scheduled for 6:30 o'clock did not actually get under way for about an hour later. Koshak, of the Federals, made a fine two-bag drive during the game and Erv Hagerup, of the Cardinals, made the only safe hit for his team. | The batteries were: Payne of the Tallapoosa, pitcher, Turner, of the Moose City League team, catcher; | Elmer Lindstrom, pitcher for the Cardinals and Al Bloomquist, catch- er. The game was umpired by sea-| man gunner Wesch of the destr { er Twiggs, for four innings, and his decisions were fair and square. | Roy Thomas held the indicator dur-| ing the fifth inning. | Both Cardinals and Federals are in hopes of a game with the Talla- poosa just as soon as the Coast| Guarders are induced to come out of retirement and take a crack at the National gflmP HAGERUP LEADS BATTING RACE; HAS 13 FOR 33B0Y BRUTALLY ‘BEATEN;FATHER | ~MGHT DO WELL TO TAKE. HIS @0UT WITH e KINGFISH SERIOUSLY — 7HE “EASY* ONES OFTEAN CAUSE' THE MOS7 TROUBLE o _ ila pilfered bag |L; Livingston, E |each have nine, Jernberg, E, and _Rollm L, are tieh with' éight each. ! e Legion Rookle Continu in Stick Competition Lead with .393 A few weeks ago, when the rmal batting statistics for the first half of the City Baseball League wcre released, young Erv Hagerup, Le-| gion rookie, was found to be in the lead. Most fans, however, didn’t take much note of that lead, re-| COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., garding Hagerup as a non-regular. |july 20.—Physicians are making des- | Today, Hagerup continues to ’efld‘perutc efforts to save the life of the individual batting race of the Corwin Hull, City League and, now, certainly is| with a sharp plank, as his father| .|entitled to his spurs as a regular,| john Hull, 30, was spirited to pris- for he has appeared in every Le-|on to avoid possible mob violence. | gion game in the second half. The | The father is charged with assault | El young out-fielder boasts an aver-|ywith a deadly weapon with intent| 'B age of .393, representing 13 hits|to kill, and will be kept in prison | in 33 times at the plate. umtil the boy's injuries are determ- | W Not far behind him is Bob Boyd, | ined, IN ‘ong-distance Legion slugger.“The| . lice said Hull admitted strik-|A Doughboys’ catcher has .378 for an average. In the third spot is Stan Grummett, capable Moose outfield- .|er, with .362. The eight regulars hitting 300 or| better: Name Team Hagerup, L Boyd, L Grummett, M Koshak, L Andrews, M Junge, L Erskine, es IS HELD IN JAIL [Plank Is Used by Enraged Man—Mob Causes Offic- | ers to Act Quickly ! is W had been beaten by thugs. They B Hull recently took out a $1,000 life J. insurance policy on the boy, whose | F. | mother is dead. ——,———— MEAT PRIGES CAUSE RIOT Housewives Use Fmger-[ nails and High-heeled Shoes, Demonstration AB .33 H 13 25 21 20 R 10 17 13 17 8 1 13 13 Team hitting scansuc.s again the Legion in the lead. The ures: Team Legion Pet. 393 378 .362 | 357 357 | 344 309 .300 find fig- e AB R H 605 126 164 Moose . 556 100 127 224 Elks i......490 63 93 189 i The leu!mg homerrun hitter 1,,1 DETROIT, ‘July 20— Militant! the circuit is Boyd, with two. Oth- | housewives, «demanding & reduction ers, who have hit homers each, | Of meal prices, brought. trade in are: Snow, L; Junge, L; l"os'.er L: | that commodity almost to a halt in Jernberg, E; J. Orme, E; Koski, E; | Hamtrack, after many cusmmers‘ Grummett, M; and Andrews, M. }‘who attempted to go through pic-' D Joe Snow, Legion, heads the |Xet lines; were roughly handled and _ three-bagger parade with four, Oth- | thelr packages snatched away. i ers, each with two, are: Boyd, L;| “We haven't dusted off our roill- Foster, L; Jernberg, E; and Tur-|iDg Pins yet,” said Mary Zuk, lead- ner, M. er of the demeonstration, “but if Hustling John Koshak, a Legion-|We don't get what we want, watch naire, is on top of the two-base hit |0ut!” pile. He has four to his cred“"! Fingernails and high-heeled shoes Three others, each with three, are: | Proved effective. Snow, L; Grummett, M; and Liv-| Victims of the pickets' onslought ingston, E. |declared that most of them are Four players are tied for the|Dusbands of non-pickets. highest number of :sacrifice h1Ls.’ R I IR ‘ ' LUDWIG NELSON ’ i JEWELER Pet. .269 They are, each with two: Koshak, and F.| Waich Repairing L; Foster, L; Lowe, L; | Philco—General Electric Agency Schmitz, M. | “Rabbit” Ellinsburg, fleet-footed | PRONT STREET Elk, still continues far in the lead of the stolen-base competition with ANDREWS BEST {Moose Player’s Lead Over \ second nearing an end, honor of being cla: ter { Teday, four-cornered battle, with Walt An- 11, brutally beaten|dr¢Ws: man, ing the boy in a fit of temper. He Jernberg, M had previously claimed’that the boy | Koshak, L . also said they had learned that Snow, L |Manning, M mc erstwhile Moose club linto the lead with this release of | statistics. 1m1'ted 61 errors, the Legion, 69, and averages is the subject of double | prays. | Moose are tied, e(ch with ten dou l- Ible killings. The" Elks have com-| pleted five such plays. tilled from’ grapes—not raisin that makes it better. dealer. DINE and DANCE YES! AN THESE ARE ME DAVGHTER'S THINGS, PUT ‘EM IN STATE- ROOM EIGHTEEN- YOU SAY TO PUT YOUR WIFES THINGS IN STATE- AN’ THIS LUGGAG IN STAT 'FER 1T By GEORGE McMANUS 35. 1S MY E- PUTIT E-ROOM TWENTY, IF YOU KIN' FIND SPACE |Consulting Enginm‘r Claims B) Pap /. GuEss IVE.BEEN VR ’ MAX BAERY & RUINED #IS HANDS N "sOeT" EXHIBITION BOUTS —AUD LOST HIS CROWN WHEN HE FIGURED BRADODOCK. 7O 8 A "PUSK-OVER 7. i vod by Tha DOROTHY FISHER IS FIELDER; HAS 366 AVERAGE of Juneau, teach the the terri- according A. Miss Dorothy Fisher, has been contracted to second grade classes of torial school in Kodiak, to Commissioner of Education E. Karnes. ’ Miss Fisher, until recently the state of Colorado, membered as the accomplished art- ist who entertained the Chamber of Commerce with a chalk talk re- u'nll} She will leave for her school from Three Others Is But Slight One With the City Baseball Leaguc TO TEACH AT KODIAK will be re-| W'ALISTER IN ] PITCHING LEAD OF BALL LOOP Legion Star Drops First i Game, But Still Rates Top Spot Although Ward McAlister of the Legion still can lay clear claim to the title ef most effective pitcher in the City Bascball League, two others—Ken Junge, Legion, and Claude Erskine, Moose—are staging a merry fight for the hurlers with > least earned run average. MeAlister feat since the last release of hurl- ing statistics, but he .still com- mands an impressive lead with | seven victories in eight starts. Near- {est him in this comparison is Ers- kine, with five wins in seven games. However, the earned run race—a good test of a pitcher's efficiency— is a battle between Junge and Ers- kine. The big has allowed .16 runs per inning, while Erskine has permitted .17 runs per inning. Both figures ap- proach 144 runs per nine-inning not so bad, Other per-inning earned run av- ers are: 1.30; MecAliste 43; J. Schm Spadden, E, Complete hur | pitchers: iNam:- Team J. Schmitz, McAlister, ine, M . Foster, L Turner, M |Junge, L C. M'Spdn, Koski, E Jensen, E . Manning, M | Yarrow, E Mosher, E Grummett, M P. Schmitz, E Converse, M Lowe, L Foster, L, *27; Turner, M, Jensen, E, 0; C. Mac- ng statistics for all In So W Ht Er WL 14 9 215 3.6 52 31 50 2 51 42 24 28 62 11 25 37 24 2 M L E | SENATORS MAY met his first game (le-‘ Legion moundsman | | game, which, it may be conceded, is | erages of seven other regular hurl-| top which had to be destroyed T opening the bottle, But, he saldy | the glass industry did not want ¥t | adding “the glass industry is in the ‘h;m\l‘ of a bootlegging ring.” . Asked who was in the bootlégs ging ring, Barlow named the Na= tional Distillery. He declined to di= vulge the basis for his charge. He mny be cited for contempt, Senators, said. g CITE WITNESS ~ FOR CONTEMPT - e NO AMERICANS 3 RATE SPOT IN SNNIS BIG 10 i LONDON, JHL\ " 20-No American player was deemed worthy off8 place among the world's “first ten in table tennis in a semi-officigl ranking prepared by W. J. Pofe, general secretary for the recent ins | ternational tournament here. h caded by Viktor Barna of Hund Distillery Is “Head of Bootleg Ring” WASHINGTON, asserting before the Senate com mittee that the National Distillers Corporation is “head of a bootleg ring,” Lester Barlow, engineer, ha been {hreatened with citation for contempt, if he refuses to tell the source of his purported information Barlow, who said he was a con- sulting engineer for the concern,|gary, the world champion, the ligs showed the committee a design of a|included four Hungarians, two | bottle which he said could not be|Szecho-Slovakians, two Austrianj refilled because of a special lock-|one Pole and one Briton. b July 20.—After You can do it better with a CHECKING ACCOUNT A Checking Account provides these essentials of security, system, and convenience In handling your finances . . . . INSURED SAFETY for your funds on deposit. Legal receipts for each expenditure. A double record of all disburse- ments and deposits. The convenience of writing checks for the exact amount of payment. Time saved by sending payments safetly through the mails. You can do it better with a Checking Ac- count! We invite you to open an account here this week——then pay by check! It's safe and businesslike} @ “ 5) The First National Bank Juneau, Alaska GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. half competition rapidly the race for the ed as the play- with the best fielding ave becoming a nip-and-tuck aff: statistics show that it is a first-base- lead veteran Moose commanding a slight ith a .966 average. Right behind are Bob Jernberz 1ks; John Koshak, Legion; and ob Boyd, Legion, The figures of the ten regulars ho are fielding above, .900 ame - Team , Att. Po- A E Pet ndrews, M ... 118 4 966 28 964 22T 963 133 962 147 939 31 935 85 929 110 927 103 912 22 909 In the matter of team ficlding bounces oyd, L Schmitz, M Schmltz M The Moose have com- Dlrec'.ly conwrned with fielding VING a General Electric refrigerator in yous kitcheft #01d, instead of waite ing until next spring ot summer, will save you at least $50. ¢ Ask any G-E owner in your nugbborhood She will tell you how easy it is to econs omizc on food purchases by buymg inquantitiesat bargain y prices, how you eliminate foo waste and spoilage, how to preserve left-overs with the Herg, -the, Legion and. the e THREE dROWN BRAND Y is dis- and you: —adv Ask e AILY EM.P[BF WANY ADG PA" | General M‘ft“m * By actual check these savinj figure from 98 10 0?:-«5; Mfll of the yéar. : O‘.& — winter as M'o Theze's a model and " ic refrigerator for every home, every ing -Monitor Topy Flat-to; qu.«lrk- ..,.m..'.’;.'_fiss..)o | GENERAL@)ELECTRIC ALL-STEEL REFRIGERATORS ® Easy . Pay Plan Alaska Electric Light . and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 N e B . R e SO TS DR Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward GET IN THE SWIM! Spend Your Vacation at Sitka Hot Spnngs, oddard, R BOATING FISHING Rates UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver ~Meats—Phone: 16 CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM ok Lunches Dancing Every Night ’g Private Booths INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898

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