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THE DAILY ' ALASKA EMPIRE MQx\’DAY AUGUS BRINGING UP FATHER GET UP-YOU KNOW YOU ARE oo Tolow 1= TO GO DOWN AND SIGN THE wAH, PAPERS TO BECOME A AL THE COMPANY IS MAKING MONEY BUT ILL JOIN ANYHOW DIRECTOR. IN THE WIDEAWAKE COMPANY THE WIDEAWAKE. COMPANY, EH ? GIANTS WIN TWIN GAMES FROM BRAVES Ace Hurlers Schumacher| and Hubbell Both Turn | in Victories NEW YORK, Aug. 5—The New York Giants started their aee hurl- ers, Hal Schumacher and Carl Hub- bell, on Sunday and both came through with fine pitching perform- ances as the League leaders whip- ped the Boston Braves twice, 9 to 2 and 3 to 1. The doubleheader was played be- fore a crowd of 20,000 fans. | The wins were Schumacher’s 16th | and Hubbell's 15th for the season. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League San Francisco 5, 1; Los Angeles 7, 4. | Oakland 11, 1 ;Seattle 2, 4. | Hollywood 4, 4; Missions 5, 14. | Sacramento 2, 1; Portland 4, 11. National League Boston 2, 1; New York 9, 3. Brooklyn 4, Philadelphia 1, 5.| Chicago 1, 4; Cincinnati 5, 3. | Pittsburgh 3, 5; St. Louis 4, 6. | American League Cleveland 0; Detroit 7. New York 10; Washington 11. Philadelphia 6. 4; Boston 7, 3. St. Louis 10, 4; Chicago 2, 1. Juneau City League Moose 6; Elks 5. Game called at end of eighth on account of dark-| ness. HAS FOUSHT HIMSELE BACKK INTO A PLACE AMONG THE LEADING CONTENDERS FOR THE TTLE #E ONCE HELO 27 BEATING WALTER. NEUSEL, STEVE HAMAS AD FAOLINO VZCUDUN IN GERMANY / a AT |every step of the way. In the first THA frame, they combined singles by Rabbit Ellinsburg, Curly Li on Tand Vern Sledman for two res. A walk, the [irst of three singles for Bob Jernberg, and an error brought in two more in the third. Then, as a vain last-inning ral Jernberg singled again and was | brought around on two errors. CARDINALS, BACK AT HOME, BEAT FPIRATES «... ST. LOUIS, Aug. 5—The St. Louis | Cardinals, back at home after a| disastrous road tour opened a three HUME RUNS FUR game series here Saturday after- | noon with the Pittsburgh PiraLes; by shutting them out 6 to 0. | LUGKY vlcTnRY | m“ SATURDAY | Incidentally, Erskine staged a ic CMft League | . K .| Deat bit of strategy in that last San I"rancist.:o 3; Los Angeles 44iGrummell, Mannmg €€P inning. Dave Turner had pitched a Hollywood 5; Missions 2. Black Sox in Race with [ereat game, whitfing 11 men, but, REMANS - VNAVENG ED - WHAT A MERRY TME MAX'S MANAGER HAS BEEN HAVING WITH THE RIVAL. PROMOTE] WHO ARE BIDDING FOR SCHMELINGS SERVICES) He SQUARED ws Account WITH HAMAS AND PAULINO — ONLY THE LOSS 7O MAX BAER, o BOYD CAPTURES HITTING LEAD . WITH END NEA LEgiOl’l Calcher Heads Bflt" the only reason his wife, a famous | ters with .403— Just THE PRESIDENT OF |'Walter Johnson has resigned. | dians are interested. ‘seriously than did Max Schmeling| T 193 By GEORGE McMANUS 'LL JOIN ‘WITHOUT SIGNING THE PAPERS e 5. | who hold Joe Louis’ signature. With only a y of professional boxing to his credit Joe Louis can | afford to bide his time. He may f | have to wait until 1936 for his | chance at the championship but on Ithe strength of what he has al- | ready shown he can't be held off very long i DAVID SLOAN DIES IN VANG, VANCOUVER, . B. C., Aug. 5& | David Sloan, Managing director at il s the Pioneer Gold Mines of Bri | Columbia, Limited, died in the h | L l T T L E B 1 L L P l C K S pital yesterday from injuries | | ceived at Alta Laké on July 30 BIG BILL TILDEN AS| i cain'in which Dean R, FRED PERRY’S MASTER |Brock, mining authority; Mrs. Br and Pilot William McCluskey w SAN FRANCISCU, Aug. 5—wil- | Xilled i liam M. “Little BUI" Johnston, U.| o™ 0™ o T | 8. Davis cup hero along with Big| A X . ciy | MOre tennis than any man livi e Bill Tilden in 1920 and for s and is still going at 42 . I N n | yoats. thareaftat, befluras tden a3l yper sy forlo Hljhil "I'mye(zm‘l;l 513 {# |his best would have beaten Eng- |y o .t : it | touche |land's great Fred Perry. lor Hinee e o SN t"b JOHNSON QUITS AS MANAGER OF CLEVELAND CLUB Big Train Resigns—>Steve | O'Neill, Coach, Nam- ed Successor | CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 5—Steve O'Neill, coach of the Cleveland In- dians, has been named manager as Johnson will investigate progress | being made by players in the min- or league teams in which the In- The Big Train for years was a lmaqm’rul figure on the mound with the Washington Senators. | Johnson said he had suggested his| resignation to the owners of the! Indians and they had accepted. In a statement Johnson praised the ability of O'Neill the length of whose tenure is not immediately | specified. i SPORT SLANTS No heavyweight champion of the world ever took his title more while he held the crown, nor did| any regret losing the honor quite as much as the phlegmatic-look- ing German lad. So it would not be at all surprising to see him eventually line up with the group which has. control of the heavy-; | weight” campionship£the Madison | |Square Garden Corporation. | More than anything else in the| world Max wants to regain the pre- cious title. Only that ambition Jbrought him back to the ring after is crushing defeat at the dyna- ihite-laden' fists of Max Baer. And German movie actress, gave her consent to continued campaigning in the ring was that she, like Max,| Tilden's cannon ball serve, he| his title against | says, would have meant the dif-| THREE OROWN BRANDY | ference, the two otherwise being aged in the wood eighteen montHhs for the upper|about equal. Perry goes to the net —Ilonger than any domestic brand hand is now being waged between |more frequently than did Tilden at made sinc the repeal of prohibi- the Madison Square Garden folks|his amateur peak. |tion. Ask your dealer to show and the rival group of promoters| Johnston calls Tilden the tennis you. —a champion to defend the Bomber, The little battle 3 WISE MEN —are Ancient H istory. Sacramento 5; Portland 12. | ardless i 3 BlOWS L Elks LOSC regardless, that fifth run had been | Three Games Leh Oaklant;:,‘l‘:)';useatue 1, 10. | |scored against him and the tying, Pittsbiirgh 0; 8 m& tally was on the bag with only| B : ; Chicago 11; Cincinnati 3. | RESULTS YESTERDAY one away. So Erskine moved in to| With just three poatponecs gases 7 2 Moose 6, Elks 5 (called end |the pitcher’s box and sent Tur-|to be played before the regular City eighth, darkness). |ner to first. Erskine’s speed, aided | League baseball season is com- £ by the gathering darkness, was good | Pleted, Bob Boyd, husky manager- |felt that some day he would win| IT’S a fact—and it's high time we men faced it. |back the championship. In addition to serving as a pos- |sible step toward his goal—a title (match with Jimmy Braddock— i Schmeling's contest with Max Baer Taken by-and-large, there isn’t a more generally intelligent, wholesomely intervested,* accurately informed group of people in the world than the modern American Brooklyn 1, 1; Philadelphia 2, 5. Boston 2; New York 3. American League | i o i is heading i § y i i the|enough to strike out the next two |catcher of the Legion, is heading|would offer him an excellent op- housewives. \ ga‘r:x::vflza?:m‘x;gi' e F“St\M(I;iiy :;u;;l;b:;’lt Z’]’IH) S;:uegh:ncnv batters and retire the side. Tur- 3 the individual batting race with an|portunity to square accounts with ve h | : % ol ner, however, justl i average of 403. He is the only regu- |the clowning former champion. R St. Louts 7; Chicago 7, game call- | League Yesw;dfly-t h“fiflfi;’"‘;‘;i:{f pitching victory? i Lheilar who is in the 400 class. He i i gFr: . Bmdnp Even there, we do them an injustice, They've made edN::nt‘k(l&r:n;;ne;t“:‘i:‘h t:li‘ezsoore.;'é“:ixh:‘!sb“;es:;"aay: ehE fhnig i lcarned his high average by col-|' . LU fnixgs Whsie ‘up the “housewives” as antique as an antimacassar (whatever ' S game at Baseball Park, Lady Luck| . lecting 29 hits in 72 times ab bal.|qoapg case is, indeed, far from that was!) and we have to admit “home-makers” expresses Philadelphia 4; Boston 5, eleven 5 The only other feature of the| Two teammates trail him for sec- e he ‘first innings. charmed the Moose and saved them same’ wak B FSEa iy Hio T v hopeless. Many who saw the irs| what they really are a lot better. from a startling upset at the hands|® e yan's three-for- ond and third places. Erv Hagerub, |y t10” o6 the Maxes on that blist- Pt HDIN g o itk A4 four hitting for the winners. rookie outfielder, has .384 for sec- ering hot June night two years Pacific Coast m?m The Moose won the game, 6 to 5. Mgz;g”'c"‘l bk s TR 733«1505:,2:;; :h;’:m‘:‘;g“ u‘i‘f{::x’; ago are anything but convinced Men who understand the women of today (commer- (Second Half) | Two bona fide—but, neveflhel?sli. P. Schmitz, 2b...4 0 0 8. 0. 1|has:370des third. spot, et thfltiBfler :Vouldbobetfl certain win- cially, at any rate) will tell you this: “feminine intuition” ‘ Wkl cLodt pet. | Iucky oy SE0 sc:)i:}iig e ek | Grummets, 1t 8 1 11 0 0| The averages of &ll Tegular bats-| o (ot - weasion. Baer did. not went by the boards with the rest of the old-fangled ideas. fi;;siprmasco 7038 go 583 'leitts: V:Jl;thoub A el run; e Haines, ¢ 4 1 112 1 1|men who are hitting .300 or above ;0w jive o probable winner in the ons ... 1 580 lies. e b Erskine, 1b, [ R i i Portland 22 551 |last place Elks would have won the| =t 1 p" Sk il il g;:‘:;efig“"i_éa; B R i po|fiTst elght rounds. Tt was not un- Today, the woman with a top-ranking as Homemaker Sesttle 22 .54a|final regular contest of the seasonlyp,,,ny“oe 403 1 3 g o|Boyd, Legion T8 20 sl die dauded.uls (erushing yight is a clever budgeter. She reads the DAILY ALASKA Los Angel | and would have sent- the Moose into ol 4 f on Schmeling’s jaw that the pic- Y b 7 - il -,2»: ':g},fmis ks Dlkyoie ot tsed puts itevcnsun» 3 4 1 1 0 0 0|Hagerup, Legion 39 11 ke suddeniy. inaioe /All Baer. U EMPIRE and believes what she finds there—and, what’s Srilrwiod 3. '3a|poned games greatly handicapped| ooy S5 £°0.300.5 ¢ | Koshak, Segine 6220 until that time Schmeling had an more, follows its information when she sets out to buy! 38Q T £ Covels, rf 3 10 0 0 ofGrummett, Moose ... 70 17 edge in boxing even though he Sacramento 32 .360/in the race for the second-half pen- — — — — — —|Junge, Legion 64 11 appeared s)uggifh and off fogm nant. Totals 3 6 824 6 5|Erskine, Moose 69 16 y | N i R ) - <791 After the disappointing showin . National vlv.euum o mfi';’-"f{afifi"::wf:?m three | FLKS ABR H PO A E|Livingston, EIks ... 55 15 17 309|of Baer i his bt with: Braguocs *—or interesting! on s! t.| % ) Ellinsburg, 2b .3 1 1 9 0 1|J. Schmitz, Moose ...... 50 13 15 300 it is quite likely that Schmeling New York . .64 33 fiao&l": ty:t ;oe }:e p;:ci;;hiung:: Blake, ¢ .......3 0 0 4 0 0| In team batting, the Legion con-|might qeme, mey ring a mom: 2 ‘82133;] e - gq:;) prisliza s e C. MacSpadden, p4 0 0 0 3 0|tinued to slip, but not enough to|oyer Baer.” It is a question whether * %;afi;&: wi Livingston, 1b .. 3 2 1 8 0 o|lose their leadership. The figures: |Baer can nurse his injured hands . | & 5 Shaw, If .1 0 0 0 0 0o|Team - AB R H Pcl.p i | . ack into perfect shape in time to 444| Big Stan Grummett and Jimmy| g, o0 ¢ 3 2 31 0 0|Legion train for a September bout. The 440 Manning are Moose heroes t0day.|gieqmqy gp 4.0 2 01 1/Moose questionable condition of his hands g S 4 l("l 4 H Lol D l' Awlin the fitth Roger eenson|Koski, of, f .4 0 0 0 0 o|Eks. SEHRRANY 't Puer’s s where Bk p(?aa acwer lg lway e u)ery 253 ::;:t y Bl:c :m:o‘: rau"“gB“i ;ryaninuck_worth. $s...4 0 0 05 0/ A complete release of leading|depends so completely on his punch 2 S ks e aa | HAs, o .0 0 0 0 0 ofbatters, fielders and pitchers, in|to win, is not likely to instill much S . i L T O e el o -3 0 0 2 0 0|addition to a compilation of other |confidence in his suppbifers. eroice s | cholce, After Fred Schmitz was out — — — — — —|interesting data,, will be released| |1t Schmeling manages to get y -:g: g e i B stege il GTomls =) :u;. ]ih 7d24‘k 9 2 wlhendzhe final postponed game is{past Baer he would be faced with The Daily Alaska Empire is delivered daily to all points on the E {4 \ *Game called end eighth, da .| played. . e 7% 'S 5 5 A » 554 set. for Grummett’s ack. A ball Was|gpor coorc Al o i ' ;*(‘fer’e':i“”ag“’r’:’“;‘; ‘;l;p":::‘:x;;:: Glacier Highway as far as Tee Harbor daily, and Eagle River on Sat- 3 'i:g*:fl: ';hix;‘em:fblé o}\;t:lgd‘:r :at:;iM""sc 000030036 iLE IS WINNER |champion attempting to regain his }xrdayn only, at the same delivered price as in the City Limits or syl ol O et et andiE",‘: . e flaho 2To 000 1—55 ALOF WASHINGTON former laurels. With all due respect|' in Douglas, Treadwell and Thane . . . . or at the regular subscription | Phil . hings pite : 3 ASHING " i § g . : | ‘Washington 41 57 41g|hoisted it past the telephone pole’ noqn tes I Y Tumer T 1-8: | ;‘;m‘i'::mé S Ao ‘:‘fmf;‘;‘”g price, $1.25 per month. And when we say delivered daily, we mean daily, St Louis . 62 347|in center field, scoring"three runs.y oy 1O P SIS SEUCL oAt LINKS TOURNEY| AND RIGHT AT YOUR DOOR. Juneau City League 5 Schmeling, . v o 3 : s am (Second Half) yhen Sipnil e h‘; NOMET. | Grummets 3, Manning 3, C. Mac- | L&) leading player from this City,|pi™ bloqaing™ persistent attack is ized DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE delivery service, and START YOUR imm: | ¢ Lo ygoned ! Won Lost Pet.| o wut them aheaq|SPadden, Stedman 2, Jernberg; | ¥OR the Washington State AMA-|oxactly the type of boxer to give SUBSCRIPTION TODAY. Legion Laro Qan<'S ;00| Still, P \ (home runs, Grummett, Manning; '°Uf 20lf champlonship here yester-|graqdock the most trouble. Moose 7 3 700|80, in the cighth, with a slight driz- | opnoy ryng Moose 6, Elks 3; left|93Y from Carl Johnson, runner-up What About Louis? Elks ... .1 9 .100|zle adding to the increasing dark-|o, yages Moose 5. Elks 6: stolen |[FOM Seattle. ’ 4 tess, Tom Siaines #ok m'base'bnses B}ya.n Cove’ls Efnm;b : e:‘ All this chatter about the world's . R S G | 3 . ¥ rg 3, JACOBS WANTS BAERS Mike Jacobs, noted New York and things were ready for Manning p,..voo boxing promoter, is angling for the!to do his stuff. He took a cut at Nostrand, | The Moose needed that trio of | tallies, for they were trailing, 4-0, ply down the first-base line. Claude | Erskine drove one through short, services of both Max and Buddy one, fouling it. However, on the next Baer, California fighters. Max is a pitch, “Big Mac” only needed to former heavyweight champion,|listen to the crack of Manning’s bat while Buddy is his “kid” brother|to know that his ball game was, him by several|lost. All three runners came circling . Who outweighs Spadden 4; walked by, Turner 2, C. MacSpadden 1; runs batted in by, , Livingston, Stedman; sacrifice hit, Blake; time of game, 1 hour, 45 i umpires, Boyd, Porter, ————————— CALL FOR BiDS Painters wanted to bid on re- | BELLINGHAM, Aug. 5— Leslie | - GOMEZ’S RECORD | An idea of Lefty Gomez' short- lage of pitching luck this season | may be gleaned from the fact that, | when record stood at eight wins fine srun average of 3, oné against 10 losses, he still had thell be sucessful in defending his title against the first top-notch heavy- weight he faces. with heavyweight title without a single mention of Joe Louis' name hard- ly seems right. Where does the Brown Bomber fit into the pic- ture? ‘While no heavyweight bout that does not present Joe Louis as one of the principals is not entitled to rating the fact is that, for the present time at least, Louis is tied Call The Empire or contact the HIGHWAY DELIVERY, author- Daily Alaska Empire ! “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” | pounds. YORTH in, the ball having gone over the decorating interior of cottage: ai|of the best in the majors. o i i TR | center-field fence on the fly. 417 Franklin St. Call at 403 Frank: - e up’ with a group of promoters who | ', SHOP IN JUNEAU FERST! ! The Elks were in the ball game lin Street, Y —4dv.! SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! lmtV—e no means of getting the F o