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BRINGING UP FATHER WHO ASKED FOR YOUR OPINION?-| SAID WE WILL 60 TO THE SEA- SHORE -OR WE WILL NOT GO ANY WHERE- JUNEAU BALL PLAYERS LOSE T0 DETROITERS Locals Unable to Connect| with Southpaw Offer- ings Last Night Swinging and missing ai the'first | pitching they have met| southpaw with this season, the Juncau Fire Department All-Stars went down before the U.S.S. Detroit baseball team five to two last evening on THAT suITS e VL NOT GO TO TH' SEASHORE-| . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1936 By GEORGE McMANUS YES-KITTVY-1 HOPE MOTHER CONVINCE DADDY THAT THE LUINDERSTAL '?EéugATHING BEA BUT WE'LL HAVE Fi BEAUTIES FROM THE SCHOOL—~ IT'LL BE A GREAT CONTEST— GLENN -~THE LOUISIANIAN IS AMERICAS HOPE IN THE OLYMPIC 400~ UTY CO IETY. HARDIN - Wi L AFTER ALL=1 WANT SEA- TO PLEASE JIGES—~ A "rHE. SEAD! e-rLu NTEST- GO WHEREVER HE OF OUR . DECIOE: | in charge of room and board ar-| rangements. A leading Berlin ho- tel man estimates there are 25,000 | rooms regularly available in hotels and boarding houses. Even allow- ing three or four persons to a room, this regular supply will not nearly suffice. Many Berliners, therefore, will be | renting rooms for the duration of | the Games. To this the rooming | committee is turning its special at- tention. Prices will be strictly reg- ulated. On the biggest days of the 2-week Olympic period seating space will be available for 385000 | persons, assuming that, when a number of events are run off in| | parallel stadia and courses, all | | seats will be taken. | | LONG-LEGGED, | TICKET SALES SURGE GAMES FRIDAY Pacific Coast League Missions 3; San Diego 4, ten in- nings. Sacramento 2; Seattle 5. Los Angeles 4; San Francisco 7. Oakland 5, 0; Portland 1, 1. National League All National Leagues games post- poned Friday on account of un- favorable weather. American League : Boston 7, Detroit 4, ten innings Washington 10; St. Louis 4. Philadelphia 3; Cleveland 16. | - Local Game | U. 8. S. Detroit 5; Stars 2. Juneau All- AN INVITATION to dine well and rest well at Seattle’s most distinguished ad- dress. Here, you will find ah the modern hotel conveniences necessary to your coizplete com- fort and all those old fashioned ideas of friendliness and hos- pitality that are necessary to a rood hotel well operated. Manager. RAY W. CLARK, Alaskan Headquartexe—Ask for Permanent Rates. HOTEL NEW WASHINGTON Read the Classified Ads in THE EMPIRE! W. T. Brown You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the STANDING OF CLUBS | PACIFIC CGAST LEAGUE | Lost Pet. Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for your- self and a friend or the Juneau ball grounds. The game, | a six inning affair, was played in| some dark misty weather and was| cramped by the intrusion of the carnival tents in right field. Both teams are levelling for the| big nine inning contest tomorrow | Of course, not all of the expected | Seattle 385,000 will come from outside Ber- Oakland lin. Berliners themselves may be|portland depended upon to form a large | Missions contingent. There will be a con- | Angeles stant coming and going, depvnd»,‘Sm, Diego | ing upon each visitor's interest In gan Francisco 572 538 530 521 \ .500 488 | mwan AT5 relative to see “Charlie Chan’s Secret” NO TIME TO START LOSING, NOW, and figured last night's fray as a warm-up. Manager MacSpadden of the local squad, used all of the several players which turned out in order to get a real line on his squad for Sunday. Spots Weakness Mezenski, the sailor’s hurler, early spotted the Juneau hitters’ weak- ness on outside left-handed curves and smartly concentrated on that ad the local batters where nted them until the last of the sixth, when he let two doubles and a single go for two runs. Captain Rastin of the Navy team then gave Juneau a look at his top fli it pitcher, Inman, sending him to the mound with one away. Ilainan fanned the next hitter and gath- ered in a pop fly for the last out How Scores Made All the scores of the game were made in the last frame; the sail- ors getting theirs on Jones' double followed by two strolls to fill the sacks. The next hitter rolled to McAlister on the mound who tossed to Hawkins for a force at home. Trying for a double killing, Hawk- ins had to hurry his throw to first and threw high, letting in one run and the other baserunners advanc-| ing. Demastus, the next hitter, popped to the hill for the second out. Dennis walked to crowd the paths again, and Inman got his second single to drive in two run- ners. Clovis singled to Picinini in right, who juggled the ball long enough to let in Dennis from third With two balls on the next batter, Picinini, who had sunk the Navy for the first four frames, returned to the hill from right field, and added two more balls to walk the hitter, Jones, on his second trip to the pilate in the inning, walked to fill the bags again, but the next batter went down, shortstop to first, for the third out. Juneauw's Markers Picinini singled, Forsythe and Gray doubled, to count Juneau's two markers in the last half of the chukker. A walk and a hit batter filled the bags again with only one out, and it looked as though the home towners might even the count but Inman got the next two bat- ters as recounted, to end the rally and the game; umpire Erskine call- ing because of darkness. The first four innings showed some mighty nice baseball, with neither team threatening. McAlister took the mound for Juneau the first of the fifth to give Picinini rest. Two errors and a single put him in a hole, but smart playing nipped two runnerg at the plate to keep the slate clean tijl the sixth. Dennis and Rastin loked best in the field for Detroit. Jones| showed Juneau its fastest fielding of the year at shortstop, but was a bit wild and missed an easy one. SCORE BY INNINGS Team 123456-R DETROIT 0000055 JUNEAU 0000022 Game called because of darkness at the end of sixth inning. BOX SCORE DETROIT AB R Jones, ss. ... Benavides, cf. Rastin, 1b. (Capt.) Ohlandt, c. Demastus, 2b. Dennis, 3b. Inman, If., p. Clovis, rf., 1If. Mezenski, p. “Paschal, rf. . ormnpoo ool TR cmormorcony co~ocooococont Totals *—Substituted - for sixth, JUNEAU F. Schmitz, 2b. Forsythe, ss. Gray, If. Mezencki in i » | HE HAS NOT BEEN 4 PEFEATED IN HIS SPECIALTY) SINCE HE FINISHED secoNp W ] THE 1032 § I OLYMPIC GAMES 1b. Grummett, Foster, 3b. Elliott, cf. Hawkins, ¢ 'Hagerup, rf. :Pimmm, p. rf. | *Bradley, 3b. { McAlister, p. | iLowe, cf. §Converse, rf. ! TNowell SRS 0 0 1 0 1| ol 0 ol cocococorooocoo Totals 4‘1 | *Substituted for Foster in fourth. | iSubstituted for Hagerup in| fifth. Ran for Nowell in sixth. | iSubstituted for Elliott in sixth. | $Substituted for McAlister in | sixth. fBatted for Grummett in sixth. | SUMMARY Stolen base: inman; sacrifice hit: | | Benavides; two-base hits: Jones,| | Forsythe, Gray; double plays: Ju-| {neau (Picinini, Grummett, Hager- | |up); runs batted in: Jones 1, In- {man 2, Gray 2; hits off: Mezenski | 13 in 5 1/3 innings, Inman 0 in {2/3 innings, Picinini 1 in 4 1/3 innings, McAlister 4 in 1 2/3 in- |nings; at bat against: Mezenski 20, {Inman 2, Picinini 12, McAlister 9; struck out by: Mezenski 5, Inman 1, Picinini 5, McAlister 1; walked |by: Mezenski 1, Picinini 4, McAl- ister 3; earned runs off: Mezenski |2, McAlister 3; credit victory to | Mezenski; charge defeated to Mc- jA]iSler; hit by pitched ball: -Brad- |ley by Mezenski; left on bases: Detroit 6, Juneau 5: time of game: one hour, 30 minutes; umpires: |Nowell, Kirkendall, Erskine; scor- \er, Clark. SPORT SLANTS Four years ago, in Los Angeles, | Glenn (Slats) Hardin, tall and | handsome Louisiana State Univer-| | sity graduate from Greenwood, Miss., missed winning the Olympic 400-meter hurdles by inches when Robert Tisdall of Ireland beat him out. The lad from the South was | credited with a new Olympic rec- ord because Tisdall knocked over | the final hurdle on the way to vic- tory. Since that day Hardin has not been beaten over the 400-meter | flat quarter-milers | { try, having run the double furlong hurdles. Hardin was just a freshman in college then. He has dominated his speciality the past four years. In! 193¢, while touring Europe, he hopped over the 400-meter sticks in 50.6 seconds to set up the present world mark. To show how completely he rules | the roost in his favorite event one| | has but to point out the Penn re- lays of 1935. A fine field of hurd- lers was assembled to face Hardin in a special event. The lanky Southerner made & show of the field. He enjoyed such a great margin that when he tripped over one of the homstretch hurdles he hed time to pick himself up and| win. THE NATIONAL CHAMPION HOLOS THE WORLD AND OLYMPIC RECO FOR WE 400- METER HURDLES 1| Princeton this year, Hardin ran off with the title in 51.6 seconds, exact- ly the time he predicted he would ‘do before the race, and two-tenths of a second under his own cham- pionship record O:COULI) HAVE RUN FLAT RACE Hardin is one of the outstanding in this coun- in 36.9 seconds. He has the speed, some particular sport. Hence. though concerned about the problem of housing, the spec- ial committee is by no means in! despair. “German genius for or-| gamzation will solve this problem, | wo, President Theodor Lewald of | | the .German Olympic committee re- cently told a group of newspaper- | men | | Lewald points wivn pride to the Tacy what wie advance sale of tick- | ets for the Olympic already total| | more than two million marks| | ($800,000)—the largest sum ever vealized before an Olympic event. | | Of this sum, all tickets bought by | foreigners were paid for in for- | élgn exchange, a most welcome | item. of news for Minister of Kc-| j | onomics and Reichsbank President and power to rank with the! Hjalmar Schacht. | in the world. The chances For the track and field events all| are that he could have won a place| tickets are completely sold out 'x- on the Olympic Team in the 400| cept for standing room. meters flat had he not been deter-| mined to win the hurdles title which | 7 | eluded him in the 1932 Olympics. \T—C. W. “Red” WRIGHT o PLASTERING | of-town visitors expected for thn“ STUCCO imotngy ol commiiee| | Telephone 316 | I How to house some 250.000 out- | ] 1 S e 6 e e e Even If You Can'‘t n R l N K After One o'Clock Yau Can Still D A N c E ALL NIGHT AT Dreamlan IN DOUGLAS Sacramento NATIONAL 378 LEAGUE Won 55 54 47 46 4“4 42 Pet. Chicago 632 St. Louis New York Pittsburgh Cincinnati Boston Philadelphia Brookly! A 522 517 512 467 34 386 31 352 LEAGU3 | Won Lost Pet. New York Cleveland Chicago Detroit Boston Washington St. Louis Philadelphia 29 61 323 GASTINEAU CHANNEL LEAGUE (Second Half) b Won Lost Pet.! 3 150 667 1333 250 | Moose Douglas Elks American Tegios e, Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire office. 2 0 R, SHOP IN JUNEAU! 4 2 & AFTER 1 A. M. for a nominal charge of 25c on Week Nights and for 50c on Saturdays and Holidays, you can dance and make merry all night long at CHICKEN DINNERS, as well as a variety of Delicious MIKE'S DREAMLAND SANDWICHES, can be had at all hours. BEST OF MUSIC! BEST OF FOOD! An All Night Dancing Palace! WELCOME SAILORS! In the national championships at ‘MMWM As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE co AL—For Every Purpose——co AL FACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY Phone 412 ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN'S BABY BEEF —DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected EVERYTHING FOR A PERFECT VACATION. SITKA HOT SPRINGS The fishing's really good . . . and so's the food. &nd just look at all these ways to while away your leisure hours . . . swimming, canoeing, hiking, boating. All accommodations to suit every taste . . . at exceptionally low rates. AT Reservations at Alaska Air Transport er Irving Airways e e oo ey o s ‘,, o FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. For Quick Results Try assified! An Empire Cl WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48% INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 Juneau Alaska THE TERMINAL “Deliciousty Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties JUNEAU CASH GROCERY CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Streets Free Delivery PHONE 58