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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5,-1929. BRINGING UP. FATHER BY GOLLY. | FERGOT | WUZ TO MEET MAGUE AT THE OEPOT 'M GLAD SHE DION'T ASK ME To | GO ALL THE WAY INTO THE CITY TO MEET HER A'T THE DOCW: —-HELLO MAGGIE' 1M GLAD TO SRE YOU HOW ARE THINGS N SHOT UR WHY DION'T YO U GET NICE RECEPTION ! GET FROM™M YOUL YOUL NEVER OD Oo ANY THING RUGHT OON'T &COLD MAGGIE OR 'L DROP “TOUR By GEORGE McMANUS WIGGAGE ? YOU IDIOT: THAT I1IS5N'T MINE - 3 =) © 1929, It Peature Service, (ne. Great Britain rights reserved MOOSEWINON | ELKS MISCUES IN 10 INNINGS, Paps Defeat Bills 4 to 3 in 10-inning Struggle Tuesday Evening t The Moose beat the Elks again| last night, winning in 10 innings by a score of 4 to 3. Errors cost the Bills the game and gave the Moose all of their runs. ' Koski deserved to win although Pete Schmitz his opponent allow- ed fewer hits and struck out more men and had better control. | Koski was stingy with hits when'gacramento ... they meant runs. |Seattle ....... Score in First Frame The Bills scored all their runs in the initial inning, four hits, one a triple, and one error giving them three. The Moose shoved over two in the second, tied the score in the sixth and put over the win- ning run in the tenth. Little Mac’ started off for the Elks in the first with a single. Big Mac’ bunted safely sending him to second. Jack Schmitz fanned. Brown smashed out a three-bag- ger scoring the MacSpadden broth- ers and scored himself when Vale juggled Kearney’s hard hit ground-| er. After that not a Bill crossed the plate for the remainder of the | game. Two on Errors The Moose got two of these runs[‘ back in the second frame on one hit and three errors. Vale fanned for an inauspicious start. Killewich hit to left for three bags. Shaw | dropped Hollmann's fly in center, Killewich scoring. Doc’ went to/ second on a wild pitch and third | when Orme dropped Bill Roberts's | easy fly. Big Mac' missed Shorty Roberts’s grounder and Hollmann scored. Nello singled in the sixth and| advanced to second and third on' two passed balls. He scored on Junge's single. With the count knotted, the teams battled on even terms until; the tenth. Hollmann singled and went to second when Nello walked. MacSpadden missed Shorty Rob- erts's grounder at short, recovered and threw wildly and Hollmann crossed the plate with the winning run. Box Scorc and Summary MOOSE ABRHPOAE, Roberts, L. W,, 2b.4 0 0 0 2 3 Junge, 1b. .......5 0 3 8 1 0 Schmitz, P, p. ..4 0 0 3 1 0 Schmitz, B., cf. 401100 Ashby, rf. 8 53 X 00 Vale, 85. ... 5.0 0 3214 Killewich, c. ... 4111210 Hollmann, 3b. .5 210230 Roberts, B., If. 200100 Nello, 1f. e R G 0 B 1y Totals ... .40 4 930 9 4 ELKS ABRHPOAE M’'Spadden, M., ¢..5 1 1 5 0 1 M‘Spadden, CHss. 5 1 1 2 3 2 Schmitz, J, 2b. .4 0 1 2 0 1 Brown, 1b. 4111010 Kearney, 3b. .40 2120 ghaw, . .....401201 Orme, If. .4 00201 Nelson, rf. . 400300 Kiski, p. 300020 Totals ... 31 3 721 86 Summary: Earned runs—Moose 0, Elks 2; three-base hits—Killéwich and Brown; two-base hit — B. Schmitz; wild pitch—Koski 2; bases | on balls—off Koski 3; struck out—| by Koski 6. by Schmitz 10; muffed! fly ball—Shaw and Orme; sacrifice | hit—L. W. Roberts; stolen bases— Vale and Killewich, M. MacSpad- den and C. H. MacSpadden; um- pires—Ryan and Manning; scorer— ° Cunningham. ,————— CAPITAL DYE WORKS Very latess methods in Frencn Dry Cleaning and Dyeing. See “Aeldner, Professional Cleazer and Dycr. Phone 177. adv. — Pt ATTENTION; For Carpenver Work of any &ind —shop or city—Call Handy Andy. Phone 498, i T | SPORTS GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast League Sacramento 10; Seattle 3. San Francisco 7; Hollywood 0. Osakland 6; Portland 2. Pittsburgh 9; Pl elphia 5. Chicago 10; New York 9. Boston 4; Cincinnati 1. Brooklyn 7, 1; St. Louis 8, 3. American League Washington 8; St. Louis 7. Detroit 8; Philadelphia 4. Cleveland 4; Boston 0. Gastineau Channel League Moose 4; Elks 3. innings. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pct. San Francisco ... 41 Los Angeles . 38 Hollywood . 33 But Oakland .. 38 30 25 Portland 23 INew York 4; Chicago 2. Game went 10 %"NT MINE EXPRESS [; , S8 National iveague »«. |PURSES OF $1,000,000 Won Lost St. Louls » 15 e AT CHICAGO TRACKS Pittsburgh 25 15 625 | Dhtijongo 2 17 5711 CHICAGO, June 5—The golden New York 20 18 526 | trail for America’s thoroughbreds Philadelphia ........20. 19 B13 | stretches on through Chicago's five Srokiyn by b 359 ' race tracks this season. g?:z?:m““’ }i 3,57 gg? These tracks offer more than - 5 $1,000,000 to the winners; 30 stake American League races alone having an added value Won Lost Pet.|of $412,000. Philadelphia 31 10 56| Arlington park, reorganized by St. Louis 21 16 628 | wealthy Chicagoans, arranged the New York .. 24 16 600 | most ambitious program. During Detroit - 25 23 521 |jts 29 days of racing, commencing Cleveland - 21 21 500 July 1, there will be 11 stakes with Washington 15 25 375 an added value of $137,000. Fea- Chicago 16 30 348 | turing is the Classic for three-year- Boston -, .. 13 29 293 | o1ds, July 13, with an added value 607 Gastineau Channel League of $60,000. 517! Won Lost = Pet. Washington park, closed for re- ‘551 | Douslas . 3 0 1000, ieling last year, has seven stake ,50&‘:‘1‘;;“ ;. : : ggz | events worth $90,000, topped by the 4 el " "0 | $50,000 American derby on June 15; p7| American Legion.. 0 3 000 3. yinorne has five stakes of $55,- S i . 385| Try a TOASTET: SANDWICH &t 000, featured by the Hawthorne 1354 | the Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. adv | handicap for $25000 on August 8, ..in the ring it’s .o 1929, LiGGaTT & Mreas Tosacco Co. MILD and yet arette its TAST THEY SATISFY PUNCH/ TASTE above everything Wby are Chesterfield tobaccos “cross- blended?” Why are they so thoroughly aged? ‘Whydo our leaf buyers watch gualitysq closely? Why is the Chesterfield blend so accurate? You get the answer when you light up; you while Lincoln fields has four stakes worth $100,000. Aurora Exposition park’s spring season program included three stakes of $30,000 added cash. HUSKIE CREW COACH AFTER HEAVIER MEN SEATTLE, June 5—In the last 15 years only four men have made good in both football and crew at Washington and all were tackles. One of the quartet was Ed Leader, now head rowing coach of Yale. Two of the men were No. 5 sweepsters, the seat for which an- other grid star, Henry “Boscoe” Wentworth, now is trying. Went- worth stands 6 feet three inches and weighs 200 pounds, but has cleared the bar at close to six feet as a high jumper. Coach Alvin Ulbrickson, in a des- perate effort to add power to his varsity shell, hopes tha{ Went- worth can be developed for this purpose and help him to overcome at Poughkeepsie the weakness dis- closed in the defeat by California. e We are now serving SANDWICHES and SALADS. The best yet. Ju- neau Ice Cream Parlors. —adv, MR Try a HOT TAMALE after the show. Juneau Ice Cream Parlors. E/ get out of your Chesterfields exactly what we put in—"taste . . . above everything.” hesterfield FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED COLE’S CRUISER JAZZ MADE FINE TRIP TO SEATTLE, Cash Cole's cruiser Jazz, the Alas- kan entry in the Capital-to-Capital race, arrived in Seattle at 2:20 o'clock the afternoon of May 31 ac- cording to a letter received by Mrs. J. M. Chase, whose husband Iis making the trip as engineer of the Jazz. The cruiser left Juneau Sun- day morning, May 26, for Seattle The only trouble encountered on the trip was a dirty spark-plug be- fore they left Gastineau Channel. This was soon repaired and during the remainder of the trip the cruis- er speeded along without mishap, the letter said. On Monday, some stormy weather was encountered wind in Chatham Styaits and they went through four hours of rough weather on Thursday, according to the letter from Mr. Chase. Queen Charlotte Sound was smooth and altogether it was a fine- trip. The Jazz will leave northbound, on June 15, when the yachts in race leave that city, with Gov. George A. Parks aboard. — e — TENDERS SOiJGHT FOR KODIAK SCHOOLHOUSE Bids are being sought by L. D. Henderson, Commissioner. of Edu- cation for the construction of a new Territorial school house at Kodiak. An appropriation of $17,- 000 was made by the recent Ter- ritorial Legislature for this bulld- ing. ‘Tenders for the job will be open- ed by the Commissioner June 19, and the successful bidder will be required to begin work without de- lay. The plans and specifications sall for a one-story frame bulilding. There are four standard classrooms, an office room for the principal, separate lavatories for boys and girls, cloakrooms and a corridor on the main floor. 1In the base- ment will be the heating plant. The structure will be 60 by 72 feet, outside measurement. It will be heated by steam and elec- trically lighted. It will have a full concrete foundation, shingle roof and a drop-siding exterior fin- ish. Fir or Alaska spruce is desig- nated for the framing with fir for the floors and interior finish. D et “Antiseptis” 16 oz. bottle 75 cents BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. Free Delivery Phone 134 WHEN WE SELL IT IT'S RIGHT Sub Station Post Office No. 1 Vaults and Safes furnished for storing your Fur Garments FUR COATS MADE TO ORDER Latest Styles Alaska Seal and Otter Coats a Specialty. MURESCO or WALL AND CEILING’ DECORATION 55c¢ Per Package THE Thomas Hardware Co. TAR POT FOR RENT when they ran into a quartering | Olympia, | the Capital-to-Capital | YURMAN’S Remodeling and Repairing at Summer Prices WHEELER & 0SGOOD LAMINEX FIR DOORS WILL NOT SHRINK, SWELL OR WARP Good Assortment of Sizes One, Two and Five Panel for Inside One and Four Lights Glazed for Outside 15 Light French Doors We Invite Inspection Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE 358 LUMBER FOR EVERY PURPOSE A USED CAR IS UNUSED TRANSPORTATION We have a few used cars on hand and every one of them a bargain. If you are in the market for thousands of miles of economical transportation come in and inspect our stock. LIBERAL TERMS Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts New Super Six Essex Challenger Coupe—$985.00 Coach—$985.00 Fully equipped, delivered in Juneau—Liberal terms. Mchul M otor Company The New Superior Whippet SIX Combines Costly Car Beauty with Costly Car Engineering. More car for your money than any light six car on the market. “Finger Tip Control” meaning the starte:, lights and horn are all operated by the horn button. The most notable advance in driving con- venience since the self-starter. Now on display at greatly reduced prices. Juneau Motors, Inc. Willys Knight Dealers “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for | Dry Cleaning and Pressing | ALASKA LAUNDRY | In New Building on Shattack Way h A ‘THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” Y Pioneer Pool Hall MILLER TAXI IN CONNECTION iy Telephone 183 Pool—Billiards Meet your friends at The Pioneer. Chas. Miller, Prop. !