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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1936. BRINGING UP FATHER s L ) | CAN'T_SEE WHAT BY GOLLY-ILL GO WILL YOU STOP | CALLING YOU A DOZEMN HARM THERE IS \F DOWN TO THE OFFICE TALKING SO LOUD ?| MORNING— A MAN WANTS TO AN’ SLEEP-DO YOU'LL WAKE UP | WELL-'M NOT SLEEP A LITTLE N YOU GIT THAT? SICK-BUT 'M THE MORNIN/ TIRED OF HEAR- By GEORGE McMA e . AUTO NEEDS Have It Done Right! Save yourself TIME and MONEY by bringing your automotive problems to us! We Guarantee Complete Satisfaction! CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. BUICK PONTIAC CHEVROLET [ GASOLINE SHOVEL and 2 DUMP TRUCKS——————now 1936, King Features Syndicate, Ine. World rights reserved ' PARMELEE IS WILD BUT IS GAME WINNER ) Cardinals_TX’in Fourth Straight by Defeating Dodgers 7 to BROOKLYN, N. Y., June 4—The St. Louis Cardinals won their fourth straight game yesterday afternoon by beating the Brooklyn Dodgers 7 to 3 as Roy Parmelee turned in his fifth victory of the season. Parmelee allowed nine hits but the Dodgers failed to take advant- age of his trouble with control of the ball. YANKS BEAT WHITE SOX CHICAGO, Ill, June 4. — The New York Yankees shelled Babe Phelps from the mound yesterday afternoon, winning 14 to ‘6 from the Chicago White Sox. PADRES FINALLY WIN SAN DIEGO, Cal, June 4—San Diego broke the four-game losing streak yesterday afternoon by de- feating Los Angeles 5 to 1 behind the five-hit pitching of Itally Herbert. GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League San Diego 5; Los Angeles 1. San Francisco 6; Missions 1. Sacramento 6; Seattle 3 Oakland-Portland, rain. National League St. Louis 7; Brooklyn 3. Boston 4; Pittsburgh 3. New York 3; Chicago 0. American Leaguc New York 11; Chicago 6. Cleveland 2; Boston 6. Detroit 7; Philadelphia 11. St. Louis 4; Washington 7. STANDIL O CLUBS PACIFIC COAST LFAGUE Pet Oakland . 561 Seattle 552 Missions 545 San Francisco ... .530 San Diego r~ 478 Portland 468 SPORT SLANTS { Tony Lazzeri was on the sunset side of his baseball career and the Yankees were in the market for a replacement. The legs were less spry, the batting eye somewhat dimmer . they thought Push- 'Em-Up Tony was through. Then in one day against the ill- fated Athletics, the old Lazzeri rose up and knocked major and Am- erican League batting records all over the place. It was a field day just about |DAILY SPORTS CARTOON-- HEY CAN s-ropj______l S| TONY RAN HIS STRING s OF HOMERS To SEVEN IN | As ‘tis well TONY IT LOOKED LIKE OLO TIMES WHEN THE YANKEES POUNDED cS ATCHERS FIVE ATHLETICS o FOR 19 HITS_AND RUNS AUl Rights Reserved by The Assoclated Pross of a homer, thus giving him the | American League record of 11 runs | batted in in a single game. The major league marks Tony set in his recent grtat exhibition in- cluded: Most homers with bases filled, single game, 2. (Babe Ruth is clos- est to this mark, with homers while the bags were loaded in two con- secutive games, in 1927 and 1929.) Most homers in four consecutive jgames, 7. (The beaten mark of 6/ was made by Babe Ruth, Ken Wil- |liams, Chuck Klein, Jim Bottomley and Bill Terry.) Most homers in three consecutive| {games, 6. (The previous mark was| - LAZIER] - -THE VETERAN YANKEE SECOND BASEMAN PROVE | |and IN ELEVEN RUNS WITH ing at Newsom Is One Up in Fued with Former Manager WASHINC — Buck talkative njoying pence of Hornsby around the love ON, June 4. gangling pitcher, is ffaws at the manager, R known American League, there's no Icst between the pair Horrsby has said Newsom was the dumbest pitcher he'd ever seen end couldn't carry an idea across the rcad. Newsom has been just as complimentary in his retorts Hornsby scld Newsom to the Sen- ators last year for a soon thereafter began laugh- the deal he'd pulled over Clark Griffith, the old fox. THREE 1%%25 ot } But in their first meeting in St.| |Louis a few days ago, Buck stood the Brownies on their heads. He won his game handily—his sixth of the year—aud turned in the best strikeout performance of the sea- son, fanning 11 It may be Hornsby's turn to chuckle before lo but ! now Buck is in the jester’s seat, and is making the most of it R - Washington hearty gt his old NURDERERS RO COME BACKK TO - AT THE HOTELS Gastineau Rowe, Honolulu Werner, Yak Lenore B, wail; Joseph R dames T. Effler. Alaskan relgiris, Chichagof; G 1], Chichagof; K. Cascy, acau Sheriff O. L. Betts of Floyd Coun- . ty, Ga., is said Ater riding the same 8 s ; iy 1k for 26 vears, John E. Teter, are witl obliged to walk when his old-fash- foned, high-wheeled bike was stol- to be as accurate a rifle. He always carrie one in his pocket and has amio. in his desk " DOUGLAS TEAM nd $40,0000 OPENS SEASON HOME GROUNDS Opening the hor:2 season in Doug- las, the Islanders at pres smoothly in first place in the Chan- nel League standings, meet the up- and-coming Moose team tomorrow evening at 6:30 o'clock A real pitchers’ battle seems due in tomorrow’s contest, with the two outstandin; urlers of the League, Claude E e of Douglas and Pete Rogers of the Moose, slated to op- pose each other on the rubber. Ers- kine to date has to his credit four victories and no defeats, while Rog- ers with a late start has two wins and no lesses, every turn in the box. Much work has been done on the Douglas diamond this spring and it is now in quite creditable shape, ready for a hot game. Bus and taxi companies are arranging to handle all who wish to go over to Douglas for the game, from six to six-thirty tomorrow evening. - BREMERTON GRID SQUAD IS TO PLAY HONOLULU ELEVEN BREMERTON, Wash., June 4.— A contract has been signed by of- ficials of both schools which as- sures the Bremerton High School football team a trip to Honolulu > next fall to meet the McKinley High School there. The Honolulu foot- ball team will come to Bremerton in '37. Coach Harold Shidler's Bremer- ton squad went through last s unbeaten and he claimed the S title - SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! nt riding | Telephone 478 Both chuckers have I been way ahead of the batters in Juneau open for hire on any dirt, excavating and moying jobs in or about Juneau. GASTINEAU CONSTRUCTION CO. ——ALWAYS! California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Established 189§ A. B. Chapman You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- Fruits and Vegetables Prompt Delivery INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Alaska self and a friend or relative to see “The Melody Lingers On” As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering ) | Sacramento ........ 453 Los Angeles 409 |for all the Italian-derived si.ock}5 by Babe Ruth and eight others.) \ NATIONAL dressed in the Yankee livery—Di-iy Mym oy T gconmum'c . Loul 4 1 New York ... 605 |that more than matched the last o) rob APSOR in B8 ond: Ty Oobb Pittsburgh 512 grea! day of Ruth when the Bfl.m-: It's still Push-Em-Up Tony, now Chicago 488 bfno. wearing the unfamiliar trap- | ih the batting firm of Lazzeri, | Boston 467 |pings of the Boston Braves, got| g Crosetti and DiMagglo. | Cincinnati 465 |three homers off Red Lucas and| ¥ i H Brooklyn 400 {Guy Bush in a single game at The First National Bank Philadelphia .400 | Pittsburgh on May 25, 1935. R.uth's!s' HENRY BURGH i N LEAGUE last great stand almost 15 J JUNEAU AMERICA! ast great stand was a year, most 1 % % | Lost Pet.|to the day, before Tony's great' PASSES IN NOME el Amfl.wa ; ; ; [ ] New York 689 |day. } Boston .609| The Ruthian bat is stilled now,, Cleveland 558 [but Tony's partisans figure there’sidough and business man, passed | Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE Detroit 522 ‘Washington -500 Chicago 476 Philadelphia 333 St. Loui 273 GASTINEAU CHANNEL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. Dauglas i 4 800 Elks 4 867 Moose % el 400 American Legion 1 167 KOUGAROK CLAIMS BEING DEVELOPED Mining in the Kougarok section takes a big stride forward this year, according to the Nome Daily Nugget, which lists among the most * important developments that of the Harvey Grant Mining Company, which has acquired a lease on a large tract of gold mining ground on Coffee Creek, for which 36 tons of mining machinery recently was imported from the States. Part- ners with Grant in this enterprise are Cy Wallin, E. K. Johansen, W. M. McDonald, and Henry Wuhr- man. Among others operating this year in the Kougarok region are Ed Hoven, who has been mining for several years on Coffee Creek; Sam Godfrey, who recently took over the Wells Bros. ground; and Carl Hal- berg, who is bringing in a 2% cubic foot pontoon dredge for use on Taylor Creek. ———————— PAA Plane leaves for Ketchikan Sunday after arrival of Electra from Fair- banks. Returns Juneau following morning. For reservation make in- quiries of PAA at Gastineau Hotel. —adv. plenty left in his big stick, that the blast against the *A's is not {his final salvo. New “Murderers’ Kow” This new order in the Yankee setup, sparked by young Joe Di- Maggio, the prize rookie from the coast, is bringing memories of that old murderers’ row—Gehrig, Ruth, Meusel and this same Lazzeri who won attention back in his Coast League days by socking out 60 homers in one season. The Yankees, who were supposed to be overstocked with experience and a bit light on agility, now are thinking they may take the Am- erican League flag away from the floundering world champion Detroit Tigers—and the new triumvirate is expected to lead the way. Young Joe, no doubt, is getting a lot of good advice from his coun- trymen, and their own work is im- proving on a comeback scale at a hot pace. Lazzeri batted a mere 273 last season, and Crosetti .256—signs that they were getting near the old-age limit so far as baseball usefulness is concerned. With young Joe as their protege, the old mas- ters are taking a new lease on life and having a lot of fun out of slamming the Yankees to the top of the heap. At 32, Lazzeri collected all sorts of batting marks against the Ath- letics in that wild, 25-2, game at Shibe Park, which Connie Mack didn’t even attend. Three Circuit Tours Tony belted out three homers, two of them in succession, and missed another by inches, the hit going for a triple. The bags were \loaded when he got two of these round-trippers and two Yanks were aboard when his triple fell short jaway at his home May 18 in Nome, | |the cause of death being diagnosed as cerebral hemorrhage. i Burgh, who was born January 1, 11870, in Detroit, Michigan, spent lrhis early life in Montana railroad- |ing and in 1898 joined the stampede to Dawson. When the news of the | gold strike at Nome hit Dawson, he joined the gold rush stampede | ito Nome, where he had resided ever since, and was wellknown as the proprietor of the Nevada Bar. He (was a member of the City Coun- | cil for many years, served as May- or, and also represented the Second Division in the Alaska Legislature. He is survived by a wife, three children, all in Nome, and a broth- er in Naches, Washington. U RS SCHOONER ALEUTIAN HERE FOR ICE, BAIT The halibut schooner Aleuuanl from Seattle arrived here this| morning at 10 o'clock and after | loading ice and salmon bait at| Cold Storage Dock, sailed for Tee Harbor to load fresh herring at| |the Tee Harbor Herring Company, ' enroute to the fishing banks. Capt. | Paul Peterson is master of the! Aleutian. | HALIBUT SOLD HERE | ony The halibut boat Flynn sold 3,- 500 pounds of halibut to Alaska | Coast Fisheries today at prices of | 6% cents and 4.10 cents. | The Northlight, Capt. Nels Lan- | din, sold 1,000 pounds of king sal- | mon to Sebastian Stuart Fish Com- | pany. >, — SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! o Sz dow— You get @ barrel of quality in every bottle Old Quaker knows you want good straight whis- key—what you'd really qall rich, mellow straight whiskey. And as far a8 Old Quaker knows, there’s just one way to give it to you. Stick 1o each and every rule of fine distilling! Old Quaker has al- ways done that. Is doing that now. And always will! Make a date to meet Old Quaker today! ; 90 PROOF STRAIGHT WHISKEY As you prefer in BOURBON or RYE It bears the Schenley Mark of Merit Copyright 1936, THE OLD QUAKER CO., LAWRENCEBURG, IND. DIVISION OF SCHENLEY PRODUCTS CO., INC. S. Henry Burgh, wellknown sour- | : ‘ v b B T v CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$50,000 [ J ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2%% Paid on Savings Accounts THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS The Ideal Summer Fuel JR. DIAMOND BRIQUETS $13.50 per ton PHONE 412 summer months. Pacific Coast Coal Co. COAL BUNKERS closed at noon Saturday during