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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, UGUST 25, 1937. BRINGING UP FATHER WELL: AT LAST | MOVIE - g‘:VERf\\ I SONEME AR STuby HOW TO USE IT — _ll_ WITH A LO] THIS CAMERA - THS 15 ST S ARTRENY FEDERALS WIN IN FAST GAME FROM MINERS Great Brand of Softball Seen—Allstars, Rock- ets to Meet Tonight best brand of of the season, according to s tors, the Federals beat the Miners/ 10-7 in last night's softball gamec in Evergreen Bowl, bl The Federals piled up a five run| lead in the first inning that pro too much for U come. Sper worth and Neish starred for victors. Bavard hit out the longest straight | drive of the season when he hit a homer in the seventh. Other Min- ers to star were Gudbranson, Ford, Harron and Baskaskie. The lineup in last night Playing the the HE APPEARS 70 BE HEADED FOR A STORMY SESS/ON WHEN | #E DEFENDS HIS CROWN AT H. Sperling, p; 3 R. Duckworth, Turner, 1b; L Hendrickson, 1f.; G Prucha, 2b.; W. Kimball, ss; C.| Forward, cf. (replaced by Noble in| the sixth); D. Naish, rf; L. Holm- quist, 3b. i A. J. Miners—Peterson, p; (first inning), ss.; Ford, 1f.; Gallemore, 1b.; Bavard, 2b.; McDonnall, ss.; J. Harron, 3b.; J. McDaniel, cf.; (replaced by G. Gray in second) ;| Gudbranson, rf.; Dilg, c.; (replaced| by H. Krause in second); Bas-| kaskie, p. | Score By Innmings | BeliiD o xea 010 " SHORT FIGHT IS PREDICTED ONTHURSDAY Federals, “ A.J. Miners0 0 0 2 2 League Standings Won Lost Pet. 2 1 666 2 500 2 500, | Rockets Miners 2 Federals 2 All Stars 1 2 Tonight's Game | All Stars vs. Rockets, 6 o'clock, ! Evergreen Bowl, | — e i 1 Early in Go DIES SUDDENLY | NEW YORK, Aug. 25.—Nearly ev- TACOMA, Wash,, Aug. 25. — Dave eryone interested in prize fighting Miller, manager of Champion Fred- thinks Joe Louis will hang one on o Stecle, is dead after a mastoid Tommy Farr's jaw early in the eve- X lning tomorrow night and then call , SACRAMENTO .lout by defeating the San Diego Pa-| THE. CINCINNATI YOUTH LEARNED HIS GOLF AS A CADDY -HE WON BIG TEN AND NATIONAL. COLLEGIATE 4 TITLES BEFORE y WINNING THE NATIONAL: AMATEUR. TITLE AT GARDEN CITY ' LAST YEAR. £ v_ ATl Rights Reseived by The Associated Pisss ' G 'm the pay-o‘fllz;é ‘wlndow for his’ 4 140 percent cut. ,WEllllnxton h Re Manager Jaeobs promised Louls]‘ C‘pi(a] of N.fion; the money would Ve forthcoming! 3 d pronto and the only argument| New York Loses Out |around this big burg is whether ! {the fight will gross the necessary: ¢ {230000. Farr is guaranteed $60,-| (Continued from Page, On! 000. H TSR 2 R i, e e A ,large measures upon 'the outcoime IN TOP PLACE COAST LEAGUE {Porlland Helps Senators by Defeating Former Leaders (By Associated Press) The Sacramento Senators yesier- day took possession of first place in the Pacific Coast League when they defeated the Missions by a score of 4 to 1 and Portland helped dres, in first place for some time, winning by a score of 2 to 1. Los Angeles and San Francisco are practically in a tle for third place, San Francisco defeating Se- attle by a score of 5 to 4 and Los Angeles losing to Oakland, 3 to 2. GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast. League €an Diégo 1; Portland 2. Los Angeles 2; Qakland 3. Seattle 4; San Francisco 5. Sacramento 4; Missions 1. Nationav League Pittsburgh 0;" Boston 1. Only game scheduled. American League New York 8; Chicago 9. Washington .9; 8t.. Louis 6. 4 Boston 3; Cleveland 4, ihirteen-in-| nings. 3 . Philadelphia 3, 9; Detroit 6, 8 3 Channel Title, Series H (Pinal) Moose 3; Douglas 2.’ STANDING OF CLUBS Pacilic Congt Leagus Won Lost 8 62 .8 6 "mmn 75 . 0 72 72 Pet: 518 574 520 518 500 Bacramento San. Diego |Los Angeles Ban_Pranolsco Portland- By GEORGE McMANUS Chiannel Champs By 2:3_ Triumph Moose Down Fighting Ddufi- las Nine Last Evening for Third Win, Title Series Run down between first and’ sec- ond by the Moose was SBamNelson, and tagged out with hith ‘was the last of the pennant hopes for this year. of an eéver-fighting Douglas baseball team. ! With his only. effective pitcher, Claude Ersking, unable to fake ‘the mound s0 Soon aftet pitching “Hils |heart out Sunday for ten innings t6 keep the Island . penhant. flame klowing, Manager ‘Walt’' Andrew! took the brunt. of the battle on his |own shoulders and Iast evéning at- tempted to hold . the Juneat Moosk n check. - But, it was not to.be i Four Moose blows and a fatal error |by Bonner, sealed a thiree to two verdict for the Moose and gave them the Gastineau.. Chanhnel Ledgue ¢hampionship for the second year ‘ln a row, s i | { Fatal Foueth . Qoly four safe hits ‘did- Andrewn dllow ‘the Paps, ‘but .the: wildness . |that slowed . the, ‘Pap bludgeonery, {proved & boomerans -to “Blg. Ay A, wild ‘pitch advancing . two Mbos | runherd - just. far nough to enabla them. to score -tha runs, tHAt sahk th eDoliglas cause 1o the lasp of the The ‘$irst’ of the foutthhadseexr; when'. Erskine - reached (sécund : on Jock Sohmits'- throw into /the - igk at ‘first; -and - Bonner. cracked: out a double, fo send , Erskiné. home. ‘That’ even acore .went s throtigh the last of the fourth when | Bonper's , misplay " let : Snow. reach {first. with out out. - Addleman 1aly : 1788 Mpose Tas .0 00 fi'fi&" ST ] Douglas - the - the ‘aégre. at.: one-pll,’ Fly from SEATTL E or VANCOUVER | to CALIFORNIA and the EAST—low fares United Air Lines, oldest, most a-minute service with twin-ei popular in U, 8., offers 3-mile- ngined Boeings or Douglases. Only 5%¢ a mile (including meals) from Seattle and Van- couver to California and 200 major cities in U. S. FROM SEATTLE (Your air fare includes everything — meals—"'no extras.”’ 10% oft on round trips). Portland . . . $ 882 1 hr. San Francisco '43.98 5 hrs. Los Angeles . 62,93 7 hrs. Denver. . .. 77.74 9}hrs. 135 pounds Baggage Allowance. Chicago. . . . $105.00 1334 hrs. New York . . 149,95 18} hrs. Fast service to Detroit, Cleve- land, Washington, Boston. Information and reservations: Alaska S.8. Co., Juneau, sny steamship purser, ot United Air Lines 1514—4th Ave., Seattlé, Wash. -UNITED AIR LINES drews lined the ‘pellet toward right fleld to. put Evskiné on third, : though Joe Snow made & remark- able stop to fetire Andrews. How-| ever, Snow ‘lost’.his. glory on the, fiext play when he dropped the ithrow to first to spbil a nice stop| |by ‘Weftier and -let Erskine count ;thé last ' Douglas run. | " Erskiné took his last fling on the Hill in the Iast of the sixth, swap-| ping places with' Andrews, and turned - back the 'Moose one-two-| thrée.. Then it looked as though Douglas might yet pull the series lout of the fire, whien, with two out in the first of the seventh, Roller seratched a Singlé past Smith, But, with-the last Redskin, Gray, in the “batter's. bok, Bmith ‘caught Nelson tunnirg for Roller, napping off first ‘;fi to second on a passed ball. An- game 1 hour 38 minutes; umpires: Nowell, M." MacSpadden; scoref, Clark. i Sport Slants . 2 Johnhy ‘Fiseher, the slim son of % Cineinnati letter carrier, 15 not Hkes 1y to give up the U. 8. Amateuf crown without 4 struggle on the field now assembled .at Portland, Ore., for the national tournamenti Fischer typifies the slugging you Igeneration of American golfers. i one of ‘the longest -drivers und Snow ran him down for the fi- i way to win last! evening, when, in their first time at. bat they drew first blood. With one away, Haglund Waited = Andrews out for a walk, #tole second and Snow singled him ;" : | 'glll that I8 now left of th;fllm astipean’ Ohannel Baseball edson hm'undu:lwbcqqudt. v ¢ I <" SCORE BY INNINGS ' 5 8 1~T 103 0 %8 oo | i > ] wl asce gusrbe:'rs e it o f-a'ef-gwe é_a}._»fl‘fg? 3 - “1 Wiei; ef, Nelsotl," #1 -0 R e bamovwmon 3 4 I [ ne tak thw;&mg'mfin 14 1l inated by - Frariots - OUImAY i amateur ranks, and for all his dis¥’ tance, is remmrkably accurate. He® a fighter, too. AR Like many of the youngsters whi will be shootirg for the title he holds, Pischer learned the gameé a8 a_caddy. He simply leurned golf=s he ‘wasn't taught. i He 1s 6 gambler on tne falfways, He doesn't know what. it ts to safe. He 8! ever ready ta | chances. . Withéut. thé slement Tigk 'the gamé. would lose 1ts th o, il Ty e L G RRRET Johnny ‘stepped into the' spoel in 1032, "when, aftér Winning Ten, and natiotal - collegiite U.-§, Amal Parms, - timore, with'a 69-73.° He: was elimy matoh play: but. ot ;dm He' 1 3 yeus and set n oW quits {fymg’ faark ot 141’ in the test. of - Kenwood,’ Gtheitnafl! . Lagt year at Garden City, N.U he osme . into his own. ~ After -des ‘feating Ohick - Evins ::a Johi Qoodman’ on the way to the Oakland Seattle Missions 0 66 52 18 81 2 National League -| apléce. 474 lowed.- Snow - with - - single; - then Totd ‘a4 came the wide heave thet let Bnow . | ‘361 and Addiemar tove’ up. & noteh MQOSE of the mayoratty fight in Neéw York Won Lest Pot. Schmitz’s Squepee [3"«:;-':.1@&4—.;-_{_« ,found he évened an old ‘score Jock Mcleari by taking the in- & thrillthg 37-hole 'contest, Lean .had ‘put Pischer out ‘of {1934 British Amateut. (=} vy | #, Bchimitz, 2b. . } B Martin, p, tf. . |INA J. BRINGS IN g BlG SALMON CATCH‘ They figure that if anti-Roosevelt % iAlfred E. Smith and Tammany Bringing 20,000 pounds of salmon Leader Christopher Sullivan win the to W. O. Carlson, New England Fish mayoralty nomination for Senator Company Agent, the boat Ina J., Royal Copeland over Justice Jere- | Capt. 8. E. Anderson, was the only miah Mahoney, backed by New Deal arrival on the Juneau fish market Democrats, they might gain control | today. lof the ‘entire party organization in ‘New York City. | Even if Mayor LaGuardia, sym- ___ {pathetic to the New Deal, defeated IGO0 L | Try The Empire classifieds for | results, Start pouring from. your bottle of BUDWEISER slowly. Then lift the bottle freely into the glass. That will release BUDWEISER'S natural carbona- Copeland in the finals, Smith and * | Sullivan ' might: be able to retain |control of - the party organization. !in the city and take an antisRoose- velt delegation to the 1940 Demo- cratic convention. Combined with conservative Tem- |ocrats from the South, the Tam- many delegation might make the 10 64 .61 60 55 45 43 45 49 52 59 64 819 581 558 536 482 413 404 402 ‘Chicago New York ... Bt. Louis Pittsburgh Boston Cineinnati Brooklyn 4“4 65 Philadelphia 45 67 Amerfcan League Won - Lost .. 18 35 .. 65 60 . 53 Pct. 685 589 565 556 491 472 321 315 New York Detroit Chicago* Boston .. Cleveland ‘Washington .. Philadelphia ......... Bt. Louis ... 35 Channel Titie Series (3 wins out of 5 games) 2 3 1 1 3 ' 150 250, Douglas Three down with eight holes | play’ against McLean - &t City,, Plscher staged a 'great otoueonthemh. The break cam o on the 34th green when Johnny 0 lald McLean the much-discussod stymie. Fischer ended the matoh with birdies on the last three sinking a 20-foot putt for a With the scoring trigger .cocked, . |Jack Schmitz made the squeese SDOW,.1b. ... | with 4 beautiful bunt down the first Addleman, c \base line, on which Show slid home J- Sehmitz, ss. ... ito put the Moose again in' fromt Converse, If. while Addleman reached third and Werner, 3b. . |Schmitz arrived safely at first. Smith, g. Schmitz - stole second, then Con- {verse scored Addleman with the ~ Totals winning marker on a grounder ‘n - lon the 37th. | Bonner. Though Conyerse was, re- . THE SUMMARY i tired on the play and Schmita died . Stolen bases: Bonner, Manning, ton third, the die had been cast— Haglund, J. Schmitz, Werner; sac-, the Moose were on_ the throne. .. rifice hit, J. Schmitz; two-base hits | | Atter being blanked in the fifth/ Bonner, Addleman; runs batted in: | ‘the Islanders made their last big Bonmer, Snow, J. ‘Schmitz, Con- |stand in the first of the sixth, and verse; innings pitched by Andrews did put across one more run. With 5; Evskifie 1; at bat against Andrews Miss Donle Taylor, who is thit |one out, Erskine was credited with 18, Erskine 3; hits off Andrews 4; fall returning to her teaching posh his second hit when- he rolled .one runs off Andrews 3; struck out by 'in the Juneau Public Schools, after |past. the mound and Smith missed Andrewé 1, Erskine 1, Smith 3; spending last year as exchange'tea- 'his stab. Addleman let Erskine walked by Andrews: Haglund, Snow, 'cher at Paia Maiu, Hawaiian Islands KRG g ccocomikcrow cos b S o it OB S sasovoc0Os)y TAYLOR BACK OM HAWAIAN IS., TO VISIT IN SITKN goihg tough for any New Deal can- didate for the Presidential nomina- Ition. . TOO SOON TO PREDICT Such appraisal of the possible pow- er of anti-Roosevelt forces at the| 4 : » [ e e R R higher and let the beer flow AR E EREPEL AT AT AR AN NNAY Werner 2; walked by Smith, Roller; earned runs off Andrews 1, Erskine B 0; charge defeat to An- drews; wild ‘pitches: Andrews 2; hit by pitched ball, Bmith by Andrews; passet! ball, Addleman; left on bas- es: Douglas 5, Moose 6; time of "arrived in Juneau from Seattle aboard the motorship Northland. Miss Taylor is, however, continu- ing on to Sitka aboard the vessel After visiting st Goddard Hot Springs, she will return to in time for the opening of |next convention is predicated upon a sizeable contingent ' from the South being hostile to Mr. Roose- velt or any candidate he favored for the nomination. . Veteran politicos, however, believe it is a bit premature to begin count- ing on’ formidable‘southern opposi- tion to the President,.patticularly at a time when-he may be prepared to give the go ahead signal op mil- lions of dollars in loans to Dixie's cotton” farmers. - ookt Vo Some old-line: Democrats, who have no particular liking for the Cope- land-Smith objectives, are fearful nevertheless that a second victery for Fiorello “Little Flower” La- Guardia might turn out to be a sprig of poison ivy for the Demo- cratic party from a national stand- | point. The building up of a strong La- | Guardia organization, ' combined with a continued split in the Demo- cratic forces of New . York City, might deprive the Democratic party of a long-time bulwark of strength in Presidential contests. Between elections the tiger fre- quently has been lookgd upon as an'E unsuitable running. mate for the donkey; but when that quadren-| |nial crucial day in November rolled around, the tiger could almost in-| |variably be counted upon for an |effective vote-getting performance. ! - eee - - FLEISCHMANN'S GINS (Dry of|~ Sloe) cost no more than ordinary ey AR gins! —adv, CONNORS MOTOR CO. OF JUNEAU 'ANDERSON BUICK CO. r " OF SEATTLE '. ! WILL BROADCAST LOUIS-FARR FIGHT AFTER 5:30 TOMORROW AFTERNOON OVER STATION KINY tion and bring up its rich, creamy foam. Now hold the glass to the light. Note BUDWEISER'S clarity, brilliance. See its soaring bubbles! As you lift it to your lips, enjoy the delightful hops bouquet that hovers over the foam. Then taste...and taste again. 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