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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURS DAY. JULY 26.] 929 BRINGING UP. FATHER COULD YOU TELL ME WHERE CAPTAIN 1'LL NOT ONLY TELL YOouU- "Ll SHOW You- You ARE VERY KIN NOT AT ALL-MISS- \T % A PLEADSURE Fistic OutbrequAir;zdi Before Heyr”er PETE DONOHUE Reds *HACK”WILSON ~Cul Here are the principals in the war between the Cubs and Reds. challenged the whole Red team and later flattened Donohue. ficial hearing. Heydler, President, at the subsequent of- 4 JOWN A HEVDLER D sesNat. League RAY KOLP-Red~ Wilson, angered by Kolp's remarks, s By JAY VESSELS (A. P. Sports Writer) drive later by cracking Pete Dono- hue on the chin. officials John A. Heydler, league' president, made a personal investi- Cin { NEW YORK, July 25.—What Ray Kolp said to Hack Wilson before the Chicago slugger made his fa- mous one-man charge against the That, in the minds of the real vetérans of the game, many of whom work around the New York ball parks, warranted no more at- Red's dugout now has become a | matter of official record. What some old-time major league ball p s think of the excitement over a rather mild brawl scarcely would make proper material for the records. Hack got a single in a game at Chicago. Kolp, the Reds’ regular Jjockey, yelled at the Chicago clout- er as he reached first, whereupon Hack lunged at the Cincinnati bench. Repulsed, he renewed his tention than any good sociable scrap. They will tell you that in the old days a ball game without a battle was as scarce as a game today without a home run. But baseball has changed. In- stead of shaking fists at each other players shake hands. Anyway the Chicago incident was dignified with unusual official at- | tention. Wilson was fined $100 and | suspended for three days. At the instigation of the Cincinnati club’ SECOND GUESSING = BASEBALL == By BRIAN BELL (As80c1aTED PRESS SPORTS WRITRR) | ALL EYES ON BASEBALLS IN THE MAJOR LEAGUES WHAT, if anything, should be done about the baseballs being hit hard and often in the major leagues is concerning managers and play- ers. Donie Bush of the Pirates thinks the ball is closely related to a rabbit and should be toned down. “Somebody will get killed,” says Joe McCarthy, leader of the Cubs, on the other | hand likes the ball first rate. “They can't make one tco live for us,” he remarks. Brooklyn fans thought they were sceing an experiment being con-| ducted right before their very eyes in a game at Ebbets field. thn} the umpires tossed the balls out to start play, fans and reporters decided | they were different. | The game went along with few hits and runs for several innings and it was decided on the spot that a “dead” lot of balls had been substituted for the fast flying pellets of other games. More than a dozen | 1uns were scored later by the two teams in one inning, although errors figured prominently in the counting, and there was some doubt as*to how dead the balls were in that inning. { President Heydler exploded the idea of an experiment. The lcaguc" executive said that several days before the excitement over the ball, Brooklyn's supply of balls was exhausted and a shipment was made for . one day. Through a mistake a number of balls were sent that had| not gone through the process by which the gloss is removed through a special treatment. When the players returned to the usc of the} standard ball, in contrast to the slick ones used previously, it scemed | much less alive. 5 R 1 SOME SCORING RULES BUILT ON STRANGE PREMISES In compiling major league pitching averages of games won and| lost, by a strange quirk of the rules in vogue in the National and American leagues, a pitcher can be credited with a victory if he is in- effective but will get no credit if he pitches perfect ball. When a pitcher is relieved with the score in favor of his team, the retiring one gation, calling players of both teams to his New York headquar- ters. Meanwhile the Cincinnati press quoted Jack Hendricks, Reds’ man- ager, as promising some excitement “when the Cubs visit Redland field.” ‘That is a long time for the weary fans to wait since the next Cincin- nati date for the Cubs is August 25. Regardless of what happens the tailend Reds deserve credit for challenging a strong pennant con- tender. S e e s 0cee0000er0 0 . SPORT BRIEFS ° 0 ceecev0000 000 National horseshoe pitching championships are held each win- ter at St. Petersburg, Fla. Steeplechasing started as a sport among English cavalry officers over a century ago. Asheville, N. C., School for Boys boasts of the only crew in the southeast. Johnny Dundee, former world's featherweight champion, won an- other fight the other night and then returned to his corner to find a robe, he had worn into the ring for 19 years, missing. Mortimer Jaffee, 16-year-old schoolboy, holds the municipal golf champjonship of New York. Hoosick Falls, home town of Bill Carey, successor to the late Tex Rickard, is finding a place on the map. Paulino trained at the little northern New York town. Tommy Loughran trained there and if the proposed Sharkey fight in New York September 26 goes through one of the principals will pitch camp at Hoosick. —e———— RICONDA IN COMEBACK; HELPS BLUES SET PACE KANSAS CITY, July 25.—Harry will be credited with the game if his successor prevents the other team from scoring enough runs to tie the score. But if the new pitcher is| a bit erratic and the score is tied before his team goes on to win, the | newcomer will be credited with the victory. So all a relief pitcher has| to do when his team is ahead is to give up enough base hits to manu-| facture enough runs to tie the score and then clamp down hard, and | if his team-mates rally around with enough runs to win, his name will be carried in the box score as the winning pitcher. { INTERCOLLEGIATE GOLF GOOD TRAINING GROUND | Don Moe, the Oregon sophomore, could not win the intercollegiate golf championship but he went west and captured the much sought western amateur title in a blaze of glory. Maurice McCarthy, jr., de- fended his title as intercollegiate champion with the added honor of being metropolitan amateur champion, a title he won in a great field of ‘stare. His net title did him no good in the defense of the colleze champlonship. The returns are not in fér the others beaten in lhei‘ ty drag for golf honors but certainly before the season ie over Fin- Tolstad, Bush and others will win something somewhere. ltuner. Riconda’s powerful bat is one rea- son why the Kansas City Blues ex- pect to capture the American asso- ciation pennant this year. Association hurlers still remem- ber the damage Riconda caused | when he was Milwaukee’s heavy | hitter two years ago. His timely | blows now are boosting the Blues’/ By GEORG E Mcl\fl\NUS L% THERES THE GENERAL AN' ] M LEAVING BEFORE THE BATTLE! © 198 Great Britain rights reserved. GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Hollywood 9, 0; Seattle 4. 5. Mission 3, 9; Portland 0, 0. Los Angeles Sacramento 2. Oakland 8; San Francisco 2. Nationa! League Chicago 8; New York 7. St. Louis 6; Philadelphia 4. Boston 5; Cincinnati 3. Brooklyn 6; Pittsburgh 4. American League Philadelphia 5; Cleveland 3. New York Detroit 5. Boston 9; St. Louis 7. FORMER FEATHER CH/ AFTER LIGHTWEIGHT CROWN Washington 3; Chicago 2. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost 18 6 17 ;i § 16 9 14 9 10 14 10 15 6 18 remento 5 18 Nauonai® League Won Lost 55 30 32 Fet. 2150 108 840 609 417 400 :250 217 San Francisco Los Angeles Mission Hollywood Oakland Pet, 647 636 538 500 461 424 409 .393 Brocklyn Boston Phila American veague Won Lost 25 Pet. Philadelphia New York St. Louis ... Cleveland Detroit ... Washington .. Chicago 34 Boston . g 63 Gastineau unanner League Won Lost 4 1 625 565 505 489 402 370 2300 T3 Pect. 800 667 1250 200 Moose ... Douglas : vy American Legion.. Elks .. RS AT THE HOTELS ZynCa Mons Anderson, city; Miss Anna R. Beatty, Pittsburgh; Dr. Elizabeth McLaughry, New Wilmington, Pa.; J. A. Durkin, Fort Herbert; Lieut. and Mrs. Philip R. Garges, Alaska Road Commission; Charles Wil- liams; Mrs. F. B. Fleming, Lincoln, Neb.; Geraldine Fleming, Lincoln, Neb.; Viola Royce, Lincoln, Neb.; John Glass; Robert Fosdick, Cin- cinnati, O.; Mrs. 4 2 1 3 1 4 Croks, Willard, O.; Dr. and Mrs. W. 8. Cooper, Minneapolis, Minn.; Chester C. Roys, Moline, Ill.; Fran- ces E. Andrews, Minneapolis. Minn. Gastineau Richard Wakelin, Seattle; and Mrs. A. R. Buttérfield, Seatiie; Miss J. H. Smith, Binghamton, N. Y.; F. S. Gordon, Seattle; Mr: C. Call and Olga Call, Hoonah; Edith F. Sheelor, Juneau; Emma L. Portland; J. B. Warrack, Mrs. J. B. Warrackk, J. B. Warrack, Jr, and Jdine Warrack, Seattle; McKay, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. C. . Line, Howell, Mich.; F. S. Hauff- man, Toronto; Tom Hall, Seattle; Rac Hebenthal, Ogden, Wash.; An- |nie Hall, Ogden, Wash.; Norrie R. Benischke, Aynoz, B. C.; A. E. Hogue, Seattle; Ed Holcolm, Ju- neau; Carl W. Wiley, Juneau. Alaskan . Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sundling, Ka- talla; Pete Povich, Cordova; Sam McPhee, Fairbanks; L. Kendall, Victoria; Joe Miller, Latouche; Alex Berardini, Chichagof. - et PETE SAYS: Local Strawberries from Douglas picked fresh daily. Two baskets for 45 cents. —ady. LODE MINING CLAIM LOCA- TION NOTICES AT THE EMPIRE GET RID OF YOUR CORNS Just a minute of time and “END-O-CORN” — Presto! Corns run column. Riconda returned to Kansas City | from Pittsburgh, and immediately ' began to demonstrate that he had not lost his former eye for asso- ciation pitching. He plays either third base or shortstop. —————— | Dell E. Sheriff, Juneau's piano Hotel Gastineau, —adv.’' disappear. No Pain. No more suf- ierix‘:’gpf: Walk with ease. Don’t fool with those so-called “corn cures” any longer. They are dangerous. et END-O-CORN at the follow- ing druggists TODAY or if the not near you write to END-O-C | LABORATORIES, 4 Garfield Blvd, Chicago, who will see you ze~ eeive a jar promptly. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. 31 Lillian Fosdick, | Cincinnati, O.; Mr. and Mrs. H. E.| Reitz, Portland; Mrs. Mary Case,| i . qu Wil 2, Int’l Feuture Service, Inc, IMPION Sammy, the champion, and Tony, the chalienger, meet over the 10-round roule in Chicago, August at stake. By PAUL MICK CHICAGO, July 2 zoneri, the chesty little fighting machine from New York, brazenly invades the senior lightweight ranks August 2 in an attempt to topple |Sammy Mandell from his rock rib- bed throne. The skirmish of flying fists will be .10 wreunds or less and will be decided dn Paddy Harmon's stadium before what Paddy hopes will be a record throng of 25,000 cash cus-: | tomers. | It will be the third time in as many years the “Rockford sheik” | |Rocky Kansas in Chicago in 1926. | Mandell, following the Kansas bout, | which some folks thought Rocky couldn't have lost, steadily estab- lished himself by clean cut victory {over Phil McGraw and Jimmy Mc- | Larnin. | Although, Canzoneri, the former ‘rentherwelght king pin, is fighting |the fastest and biggest man he ever ymet, he is granted even a better chance to beat Mandell than Mc- | Larnin, who were routed by Sam- |my’s steady fussilade of blows. Can- lzoneri is both a shifty boxer and a puncher. Since loging his featherweight 'he entered; the junior lightweight division and defeated everything |he met. In his last start he gave I McGraw an even greater thrashing than Men8ell administered. Speed will be the champion’s Ichief weéapon. any cli ¢ faster than the clean- hat me title-holder. While the does pack a knockout punch, {he beat$i# tattoo on his opponent | with great’ effect and then dances jaway pf danger. Seldom does he stal {1l long enough to ab- |sorb pi ent, but when he does . dn his last fight with e, he was floored for a but he won on his ag- and clean punching. | gressiveness Our i ment is i furrier. ring Depart- | charge of an expert dstein’s Emporium. adv had defended his title, won from | !nrown to Andre Routis of France, Few fighters in; | with Sammy’s lightweight title SPLIT SEASON POPULAR MONTGOMERY, Ala., Jul The split season bug is biting the hapless minor leagues. The Soulh‘ Atlantic, Eastern Carolina, South- castern and Georgia-Alabama all have taken the plunge as a last ef- fort to bolster attendance. B | LET Amqum rress Your Sult ;We call and deliver. THE JuNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street, between Front and Second Streets PHONE 350 e [ - Novelties For Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s CARD PRIZES Jarman’s | | can advertise profitably... Thefirststeptoward success in advertising is the choice of the proper medium. If you decide upon special folders or circular let us aid you in the choice of paper, ik and type. The result will be a finished product that will attrace attention and be read by your prospects. « « o o » o | Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires “ greater flexibility STONE TIRE Most Miles ARE MOST ECONOMICAL ON ALASKA ROADS The Gum-Dipping Process gives a tire a Every strand in every cord of a FIRE- qonnors Motor Company without friction. is Gum-Dipped. Per Dollar FURNITURE BEDROOM FURNITURE DINING ROOM FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE KITCHEN FURNITURE METAL BEDS MATTRESSES SPRINGS THE L Thomas Hardware Co. S First National Bank of | .! 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