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| THINK I'LL SURPRISE- MAGGIE AN’ STAY IN TONIGHT- 'LL GO IN AN’ MAGGIE-| WANT TO SAY SOMETHING - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1928. | KNOW YOU DO-BUT | WONT LET - _You- 1JUST WANTED TO TELL (g o fi;a (g | KNOW WHAT YOou WHATS THE McMANUS ARE GOING TO DAY~ ‘ ,) YOU ARE NOT COING Sl 7 / TG 4O OUT:DOYOU ol 7 HEAR THAT? i ? # / gk kil PLEASANT? ) | o ‘\—"“( (] T 1 \ (\(,:?m' { / ©_ . - / pgiiii . o\t 0 3 g,a > = 1,{{% 2= e " 55 Italy Bars Spectators From Certain Trials May 4—The goo phrase “in camera henceforth be applied to more ARCHIE" HAHN midhT CHARLEY PADDOCK ; ‘»Gm itin 1920, ‘in 1928? Archie Hahn in wos won the Olympl Hlmdmd for the seccend time, nccomplxshmg the unique feat Paddock this year hopes to dnpllcate Hahn is now assistant track coach at Prince- and just about to ‘break’ the gun barked," calls. “Another fraction of a ond and he false start but as it was he the PITCHERS PUT Close Game Is Played in Portland with Seat- tle Losing PORTLAND, Ore., May Dave Barbee singled scoring day afternoon, the Beavers from {Ruble doubled in the |the Indians’s lone tally. third | tle, { hits. The batteries were: Seattle—Collerd and { Portland—Yerks, Warhop (Ainsmith. GAMES THURSDAY Pacific Coast League Seattle 1; Portland 3. Los Angeles 3; Mission 8. San Francisco 4; Hollywood Sacramento 6; Oakland 3. National League '('in(‘!lmflll 5; St. Louis 7. Boston 5; Pittsburgh 4. American League Philadelphia 1; Boston 3. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League when Robertson off like a race-horse and won all UP 6OOD FIGHT runs in the sixth inning yester- enough to win for the Indians. i Borrenai. sec would have made a was 4,,_\ two| for | The game was a pitching bat-|Kiki Cuyler each team getting only eight Seattle made one error. | and 5. TRAFFIC COPS NEEDED ON BIG LEAGUE FIELDS shortly after crashi ca as both sped af (tire can be inflated. An order of Minister of J Rocca decrees that “closed will be the rule ev I'{ publicity of the “might produce a w J {the moral tone of the ————%) Moreover, cogrt future to be more super Bailiffs, us | others charged with | order before the tribunals a structed -to see that no prev convicted persons, or “under speclal surveillance the , or women of quc i 8D ,and has only recently returned to night by Prohibition Office the lineup. Ed Morgan, being 1, Chidester and Warrer groomed to fill Tris Speaker's,,n Horse Island. He w. shoes for Cleveland, collapsed | nis morning in the T into Fonse- | r a pop fly. missioner's office the columns of The Em ton. He is no relation to Lloyd Hahn, distance running ace of Won Lost Pct. the present United States team. San Francisco ... 21 10 .677 By ALAN J. GOULD 2 - Sacramento 19 12 613 (Associated Press Sports Editor) B 3| Hollywood ... 18 12 '9“0 NEW YORK, wMay 4—Charley 100.METER CHAMPIONS | Los Angeles .. 16 15 516 Paddock will attempt this yvear to et e i L accomplish a feat only one other NEW YORK, May 3—The | Oakland 19 ‘”7 athlete hes ever achieved—win the| | Olympic 100-meter champions | 2‘"“;’"“ “““ 29 - ¥ « classic Olympic 100-meter dash for| ' and their times: o o i 19 .206 the second time, 1896 Birke, U. 8. :18 | National League {8 More than a score of years ago| | 1900......Jarvis, U. 8. :1045 | {y o v oAt el Archie Hahn, crack American| | 1904 ..Hahn, U. 8. :11 i ‘ew_ n‘rk 4 'M,“ sprinter and no relation to the! | 1906.... Hahn, U.S. :1115 | [omeinnat 8l present distance running Lloyd| | 1008.......Walker, S. A, :1045 | [5G g Hahn, registered a dual triumph| | 1912... Craig, U.S. 11045 | [pr BOWS Sartl but only two years separated his| | 1920.......Paddock, By it 3 .467| (4 victories at St. Louis in 1904 and | | U. 8. :1045 | |Gpreos 12 429 Athens in 1906. 1924........ Abrahams, | “""’l e " o A “« It was eight years ago that Pad- | *Eng. :1035 | FARBOpI 4 ¢ e s dock leapt into the tape first at| | +Equals Olympic record, | American Leagnlfo“ PiL # Antwerp, a foot ahead of his fel-| | made in 1912 in preliminary | New York 1 1(;;1 / low Californian, Morris Kirksey.| | heat by Don Lippincott, Amer- | ,.lew 1 Od 7 656* ® Four years later the stocky blond| | jca. World's record, 1025, by | ‘he" d‘"]‘ G (e flier ran no better than fifth in| | paddock. Philadelphia . St the 100 meters at Paris but helge B FRIUY A% came within an eyelash of beating| ey | DOLEOI : da . i Jackson Scholz for the 200-meter|recalls, “but he ran a great race(Washington .6 9 * .400 championship in a hairraising|and deserved to win anyway. In Chicago .7 12 .368 ¢ duel on the Colombes track. Apite rLEis fhuiD bt LU0 ARMLELN Boston B AL A Now Paddock is getting in trim | was caught halfway by Rector, our for his third Olymplc. venture, | big star, but dimmy ipay uabls 1 91d phgers tor Sate 8% The Sukie along with his old rival Scholz.|keep it up and Walker fought his o i ® ' The life of most sprint aces is|way to the tape first.” GEO. ANDERSON short but age has dealt kindly| Abrahams, the British ace who Expert Piane Tuner L with these two veterans, both|Wwon the “100” four years ago in Phonograph Re; counted upon heavily in plans de-|such sensational fashion, got the We call and deliver signed to bring back to the United | benefit of a perfect start in !he PHONE 143 States the 100-met€r laurels that|final heat. Anderson Music Shoppe now belong to England. “He was as nervous as a km.an ! Sprinting supremacy is one or|,_—__————-—- the things Uncle Sam has cherish-| Y ed most when it comes to Olympic| d " Comeion. 1 wee 4 aoi | Galvanized Corrugate - therefore, to Yankee pride when| the rangy 'Harold Abrahams, Cam- E > bridge University star, galloped in; ROOFING ahead of Scholz, Bowman, Pad-| dock and Murchison at Paris four years ago. ! 6 and 8 foot lengths Now out of compemlon Abra-' hams will be at Amsterd only | \ ¢ s in the role of “nonplaying” cap- ROOFING PAPER—TAR PAPER tain of the British track team but America will do well to be pre- pared for some unexpected threat. It seems, as the pages of Olym- pic history are reviewed, that some sprinting meteor has usually come from nowhere to harass the concentrated speed of Uncle Sam’'s boys. American sprinters have al- ways outnumbered their foes but not llw'ys outrun them. Such was the case in 1908 when Walker, the South African flash, upset the Yankee favorites in the 100-meter final at London, among them the great Jimmy Rector and Nate Cartmell, intercollegiate champion. “Walker beat the gun,” Lawson Olymplc head. coach, and ROOFING PITCH HARRIS Hardware Co. SHEET METAL and PLUMBING Open Evenings court cases than heretc time in the audiences refully | mainta indivi with posse as Dangerous to Morals| many for us! loors that case of ng tors, in and aining re in fously uals of I able a shall be admitie Finally, special séats shall set aside only for the press and the members of the bar, thus do-| ing away with the “soc gal-| " of highly placed ladies The ! |standing rule that “any public Ed Morgan Hack Wilson | papifestation of any sort shall he Collisions with team mates have | Strictly forbidden and severely re- put these two crack outfielders sed” is reiterated with renew-| out of the game right at.the start )€l Vigor. of the season, ¥ T Hack Wiison, heavy hitting Cub, | pROHIBITION OFFICERS | suffered a sprained ankle and ARREST E. J. MERWIN bone chip when he collided w'th|. oy in chasing a fly balli g j Merwin was arrested lact ssion iy : h of a still. The officers also found | Fonscca's knee caught him overfy deer on Merwin's place. which the heast and he probably wow't paq apparently heen killed by him | {be ab’e to play for a month ‘m violation of the U. 8. gamc L % laws, The difference betwcen a flat _ > ftre and a flat calf s that the| Advertisms mways pa THOSE of us who have never lived in the shade of a peach tree know But a part of the exquisiteness of a fully ripened peach. " THOSE who have yet to taste the perfect flavor and mellowness of Frye’s “Delicious’ Brand old | will{ be | LONDON BRIDE GIVES FRIENDS “HAG PARTY" i LONDON, May 4.—Bored ¢ girls have invented i g party,” feminine counterpart of the stag party. The term was invented by the Honorable Ruby Hard- inge, ster of Viscount Hardinge, aide to the Gover- nor General of Canada, to ! describe a gathering of her "} women friends whom she in- vited to celebrate the pass- ing of her “bachelordom” on | | the eve of her marriage to | | Major Beaumont Besbitt of the Grenadier Guards. The “hag party” differed, | | however, from its masculine equivalent in that the guests were Fugene Permane | American Beaaty THE ROCKLAND BOARDING HOUSE is now open for business. | | Room and Board. Home Cook- | ing. Mrs. Shor( Trop. e — ——— ] T — Phone 149 Res. 148 COURTESY aad GOOD i SERVICE Our Motto | | !| RELIABLE TRANSFER | { Service Transfer Co. 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Call at Juneau Motors, Inc., and seg the reason for this increase in sales.. We have the reason. JUNEAU MOTORS, Ine. Service Lucas J