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CARDINALS AT | TOP AGAIN IN NATIONAL LEAG. Take Double Contest on' Sunday from Cin- cinnati Reds CINCINNATI, Ohio, July 6.—The | St. Louis Cardinals shot back into first place in the National League Sunday by taking a double contest from the Cincinnati Reds 8 to 6| and 17 to 7. An overflow crowd of 30,000 fans | witnessed the doubleheader. | | | GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 6, 10; Seattle 1, 3 San Diego 1, 3; Los Angeles 3, 4. Missions 8, 5; San Francisco 5, 1 Sacramento 3, 0; Oakland 4, 1. National sue St. Louis 8, 17; Cincinnati 6, 7. Chicago 2; Pittsburgh 4. Brokolyn 3, New York 1. Boston 6, Philadelphia 7. American League Detroit 18; St. Louis 9. Cleveland 11, 2; Chicago 4, 4. New York 3; Washington 9. Philadelphia 2, 2; Boston 16, 8. |first time losers, receiving $50 Per|gjiott's double, a single and a RED SOX BREAKS JINX OF LOSING GAMES, DEFEAT ATHLETCS IN TWIN MEET BOSTON, Mass., July 6.—Million- aire Tom Yawkey's Red Sox came out of a seven-game losing sireak last Saturday afternoon, July Fourth, and whipped the faltering Philadelphia Athletics twice before a holiday crowd of 25000 fans, 1 to 0 and 5 to 4. The Red Sox victories ran the Athletics’ consecutive losses to ten games. GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 8, 15; Seattle 9, 3. First game twelve innings. San Diego 3, 3; Los Angeles 4, 4. Sacramento 2, 3; Oakland 4, 0. Missions 0, 10, San Francisco 8, 4. National League Chicago 3, 4; Pittsburgh 2, 7. Brooklyn 5, 0; Philadelphia 9, 4. Boston 6, 11; New York 7, 3. St. Louis 2, 9; Cincinnati 3, 10. American League Philadelphia 0, 4; Boston 1, 5. New York 4, 5; Washington 3, 0. Cleveland 2, Chicago 9, 8. Detroit 8, 10; St. Louis 3, 13. GAMES FRIDAY Pacific Coast League Missions 1; San Francisco 5. Sacramento 8; Oakland 2. Portland 5; Seattle 4. San Diego 9; Los Angeles 14. National League No games scheduled. American League Detroit 9; St. Louis 5. Cleveland 5; Chicago 6. Washington at Philadelphia, rain. STANDING OF CLUBS PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. DOakland 55 42 567 Seattle 55 45 550 Misions . 53 47 530 Portland .. 49 4“4 5217 Los Angeles 51 49 510 San Diego ... 48 53 475 San Francisco 46 54 460 Sacramento . .39 60 394 NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. St. Louis 46 28 622 Chicago 43 27 614 Pittsburgh G T Cincinnati 38 33 535 New York 39 34 534 Boston 34 41 453 Philadelphia 27 46 370 Brooklyn 24 50 324 AMERICAN LEAGUZ Won Lost Pet. New York 23 689 Detroit 33 554 Boston 34 553 Washington 35 533 Cleveland .. 37 513 Chicago - 38 479 Philadelphia 24 48 .333 St. Louis . 23 47 329 GASTINEAU CHANNEL LEAGUE (Second Half) Won Lost Pet. Elks 8-l 2 1 667 Moose 2 1 667 Douglas . - 2 1 667 American Legion ... 0 3 .000 B SEE FEMMER For nice, fresh, dressed chickens. —adv, e, — SHOP IN JUNEAU! MOOSE TEAM TAKES MONEY, FOURTH GAMES Paps’ Nine Musters Full Strength to Take Holi- day Series Twenty-seven hits and twenty- two runs in two games put the Moose team out in front of all opposition as it walked off with this year's Fourth of July money series by defeating the Legion 12-0 on Friday evening and taking Doug- las into camp 10-3 in Saturday afternoon's finale. Douglas won in the holiday morning game in the Island city. The Moose, with full strength mustered for the series presented the strongest baseball aggregation seen in Juneau this season and easily held a big edge over all the other teams. Tal Picinini, Moose hurler, was the main cog in the Pap machine, appearing on the | The $275 pot put up for the series was split among the four teams; the Legion and the EIks, team, Douglas $75, and the Moose as winners $100. Each player on the Moose squad received approxi- mately eight dollars FINAL GAME | Four Douglas chuckers were un- able to hold the Moose sluggers in the big holiday ‘afternoon game, being nicked for fourteen safe hits and ten runs, while Tal Picinini had an easy time with the Island batters, allowing but five scattered |hits and fanning thirteen. Jensen . started ,on the hill for the Islanders and lasted through the first frame with but one mark- er being counted against him, on a walk and steal to second by For- sythe from where Hawkins singled him home. An extra mighty circuit clout to left field by Stan Grum- mett to open for the Paps in the second was followed by a walk and a double off Joe Werner's bat to count two more Black Sox tallies and send Claude Erskine to the pitcher’s slab to relieve Jensen. Erskine was still tired from his ten-inning hurling in the morning game and was touched for a single and Forsythe’s double to add two more scores before he could get the side out. Double Play The Moose opened in the third with a single, but a nice double play saved Erskine before any more damage was done. Andy Balog went to the rubber for Douglas in the fourth but was got to for three counters on a walk, a sacrifice and three singles in that inning, a double by Grummett and a single to count two more before he gave way to Jimmy Manning in the fifth. Manning proved that he should have been on the rubber all the time by blanking the Paps the rest of the way, allowing only three scattered singles. But the damage was all done, as the Black Sox al- ready had ten runs, more than enough to win the ball game. Douglas counted their first score in the sixth on Erskine's double, Andrews' single and a Moose error; then added two more in the ninth on a hit batter, a single, a walk shortstop to let two runners across. Score by Innings Batteries: Moose — Picinini, p; Hawkins, ¢; Douglas—Jensen, Ers- kine, Balog, Manning, p; Williams, c. Charge defeat to Jensen. Um- pires: Groppenbecher, Shaw, Bo- telho. FRIDAY'S GAME The Moose hitters were too much for the pride of the Legion pitch- ing staff in their Fourth of July Eve meeting, taking three Legion slingers down the line for thirteen hits and a dozen tallies, while Picinini and Rogers, the Moose hillmen, gave out only three safe- ties and nary a sign of a run. A double, a single, a walk and a hit batter were good for three Pap runs in the first to win the ball game right there. A couple more were added in the fourth on a walk, a pair of one-basers and a mass of Legion boots. Another quintet of Moose markers came in the fifth on four singles, a double from the Elks, 6-5 in ten innings| mound in both his team’'s games.| and | to fill the bags and an error at i | 123456789—-RHE Team Moose 140320000—10143 Douglas.. 000001002—3 53, A COLLESE MR, HLIGH KHOW- EM- EXCUSE ME A MIRUTE, | WANT TO SHOW HUGH MY NEW FOOTBALL= and a stroll. - The final Pap scores were counted in the sixth on two singles, a hit batter, and a bobble. Lowe pitcher four innings and McAlister .and Junge each one for the Legion. | Tal Picinini started on the hill | |for the Moose and pitched four in- | |nings until the Paps had a long! lead, when he retired in favor of| Pete Rogers to save his arm for the big final game. Picinni allowed! one hti and Rogers two. Score by Innings Team 123456 7T—-RHE Legion 0000000—0 38 Moose 300252x—12134 Batteries: Legion—Lowe, McAl-| |ister, Junge, p; Gray, c; Motxse~f Picinini, Rogers, p; Hawkins, ‘ Charge defaet to Lowe; credit win| to Picinni. Umpires: Groppenbech- | er, Botelho, Shaw. ! DOUGLAS GAME The best ball game of the series| |was the Elks-Douglas conflict in| | Douglas Saturday morning. Both | | MacSpadden for the Elks and Er- skine, the rival hurlers, pitched fine ten-inning ball under a blist- | |ering sun and before a big crowd | of holiday fans. | | The Elks counted first in the | fourth inning, making three safe- |ties good for one score, and added |two more in the fifth on a double and two singles. Bonner lost a ball |in the leftfield bushes to circle the | |bases and open the Douglas scor- ing in the last of the fifth, but | “squeeze” were good for two, more {Purple counters to give the Elks a | ‘rn'e to one lead, with what was| 1Slamd for the last half of the sev-| |enth and last inning coming up. | |Elk errors and a two-bagger and | | single filled the bases to set the | |stage for the star, Erskine, who | | duplicated Bonner's feat by losing |the ball in the same clump of |brush for another freak homer tying the score. The payoff came |In the last of the tenth, when Wil- liams doubled and Livie singled to |drive him across, with the winning | {run for the Islanders. Erskine fan- | (ned fifteen batters and MacSpad- | |den nine. | Innings | | Score by |{Team 123456789 10—-RHE {Elks .000120200 0— 5114 Dolas 000010400 1— 6131 | Batteries: Elks—MacSpadden, p; | Clark c; Douglas—Erskine, p; Wil- | |liams, c¢. Umpires: Groppenbecher, | | Botelho. { HELEN JACOBS ~ WINS BRITISH TENNIS TITLE Helen Wills" Rival Finally‘ Victorious on Wim- | bledon Court WIMBLEDON, July 6. — Helen Jacobs, in a furious Saturday after- noon's play, finally captured the elusive all-England tennis cham- pionship, defeating Frau Hilda Sperling, of Germany and Den- mark, in the final round 6-2, 4-6, | | {7-5. | | | | Four times previously Miss Jac- |obs had reached the Wimbledon | final, only to be defeated, twice by Helen Wills Moody, and twice by | Dorothy Round. e *. | AT THE HOTELS Gastineau Lew Kay, Seattle; George Mea- | ghor, Seattle; M .C. Lockwood, Se- | attle; E. J. Bentley, ecity; M. O. | Smith and George Nelson, Atlin; | J. McDonald, city; William Barera, | Victoria, B. C.; John H. Dimond, | Valdez; Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Lewis, | San Francisco; Frank Wolfe, Seat- tle; Mr. and Mrs. Chester H. Kimm, Sand Point, Idaho; Mr. and Mrs. 8. M. Strohecker, Jr., Dupont, | Wash.; George Barnes, M. C. Math- | |ias, Ernest Anderson, Wilfred Hen- | derson, Harold Fleming, Taku Har- bor; Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Grassey, Mr. and Mrs. 8. O. Morse, Joyce | Hutton, Ludwig Brath, W. G. Swift, A. Campbell, Winifred James, Dor- othy Durie, Mrs. C. Sands, Miss M. K. Sands, Atlin, B. C; H. C. Willamette, Vancouver; B. M. Field, Tulsequah: Edythe Johnson, Port- |land, Ore.; Bill Knox, Fairbanks; lA] Monson, Fairbanks, Ed F. Riley, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Franz- |heim, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Arnold, |Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. John Hardy, Farrar, Montana; Mr. and Mrs. P. {L. Mountloy, Los Angeles; Barbara ' | STRANGE - YOUR | B0 ARV THING ham, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. A. M.'city; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1936. By GEORGE McMANUS | = TR ROTIER HIEVER ABOUT. HAVING A SISTER- . oLD | pair or‘Munsfl(rld‘ Portland; H. W. Gx'ifiln,,;@‘.“: ! Bellingham; Phillip Armstrong, Un- { Sewar alaska; Cloud, Ed Berndt, | Adams, Excursion Inlet; Mrs. J. M. Olson, city; Mrs. Jerry Waite, city. F. A. Me- [Harold A © and Mrs. Seattle; Mr | Alaskan | Max saul, Sitka; Mae Fitzgibbon, Zynda i A. B. Calhoun, Herbert River;|goonah. Joe Moore, Andy Osborne, Myrtle [J. Eason, Hawk Inlet; Ben Jones, | PR Fearey, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Brown, | Tee Harbor; Charles Parker, Gus- Salmon pack in the Cont- 7 city; M. T. Bagby, Bronx, N. Y.;jtavus; Jack Lane, Peden, North|gistrict through last week included Maude Buckley, New York Oity;|Carolina; E. A. Torgerson, Joe 13781 cases of kings, 77 reds, 48 Jack Hanson, Seattle; V. C. Bing-|Moore, A. Pacator, Evan Zaloff, |pinks, 120 chums and 4 or cohoes alcomb Chapman, Sheridan, [or a total of 14,683 cas whe ScH tion ScH the SUNSHINE 4“BEER! NOwW HE HAS NEVER |Major and Mrs. C. D. Soper and |T. | E.-M. Rowan, Chilkoot Barracks More than - refreshing - swirling eddies of a sparkling stream... if you have felt,across your cheek, the tingle of cold spray Then you know how a cool, brown bottle of It cools. It invigorates. It gives you Sunshine Vitamin D* — important aid to summer vitality. This precious element of buoyancy and invigora- ing to refreshment! Beer is good for you— but Modern living; clothing; hours spent indoors or in mid-summer. SCHLITZ in brown bottles or cans gives you the SUNSHINE VITAMIN D so important to health and vigor—plus the tangy, old-time SCHLITZ Aavor and bouquet safeguarded by PRECISE ENZYME AMIN? [\ Miluraukee The Beer That Made M HE'S WITH YOUR SICTER- HE WAS ENOLIGH THEY SAD THEY WOULO' DINE OUT= Mire, | Wyoming; Charles Hansen, Andrew Ivan Darnell, Ed Wade, Spokane Marie La B. Iverson, Taku Harbor; | Mitchell, Lahtonen, Taku Harbor; |Ketchikan; J. R. Mcllroy, Seattle; C. Chapman, A. Schlor, A. | Strickland, Taku Harbor; George W. Wallace, Howard Guffey, Haines; | 4, F you have watched a trout fly dance aown the re rapids break against the boulders. .. LITZ BEER refreshes on a hot summer day. adds more /asting benefits—gives new mean- LITZ is extra good for you. shade—rob us of sunshine benefits even in CONTROL— and at no increase in price. * Each 12-ounce bottle or can of SCHLITZ .contains 100 U. S. P. X. Units of Sunshine Vitamin D. SCHLITZ brewer’s yeast contains the pro-vitamin D which is activated directly by the ultra-violet rays of the sun to form Vitamin D. (Protected by U. §. Letters Patent.) JOs. SCHUITZ BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukes, Wisc. ") = Copyright 1936, ].S.B. Co.—13 vkee Fam DISTRIBUTED BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE CO., Inc. 356 South Franklin_St. JUNEAU, ALASKA Phone 262 | A . —_— FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON /7// | 2 . v/ -/, Save yourself TIME and MONEY by bringing your automotive problems to us! We Guarantee Complete Satisfaction! CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. BUICK PONTIAC CHEVROLET EVERYTHING FOR A PERFECT VACATION: AT SITKA HOT SPRINGS The fishing's really good And just look at all these way= to while away your leisure hours . . . swimming, hiking, boating. All accommodations to suit every at exceptionally low rates. . and so’s the food canoeing, taste Reservations at Alaska Air Transport or Irving Airways LOCAL GROWN GREEN ONIONS, RADISHES FROM OUR OWN FARM California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. e s .GRAYBAR. Electric SEWING MACHINES You are always in STYLE when you dress with SIMPLICITY SIMPLICITY SEWING BOOK goes with each machine. Anyone can sew on these machines: Sturdy, simple and reasonably priced. LARGE DISPLAY $50.00 Portables Consoles $70.00 Sold on Easy Pay Plan Alaska Electric Light & Power Co, JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 g bttt ey A.M. Geyer You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- self and a friend or relative to see “Strike Me Pink” As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE COAL_F or Every Purpose_co AL PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY Phone 412 ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF —DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected THE TERMINAL “Deliciousiy Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties