The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 26, 1929, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY JULY 26, 1929. LoOK! LORD AND LADY DE BATE- “YOU GO AND HIDE-IDONT WANT YOULU TO DISGRACE ME BY MEETING ERE COMED ALL RIGHT V'Ll BE N GO QUICKLY AND LET THE MAID KNOW THAT You) ARE DQUPPOSED ©1929, Int') Feature Service, Inc., Great Britain rights reserved. I'M SO GLAD THEY ARE CALLING- THEY WiLL MAKE | DINTY MOORE S WIFE FURIOULS WATH ENVY- F;y CFVOR GE McMANUS YESSUM! | TOLD THEM MR-JIGGS WAS OUT-THEY SAID THEY WERE DORRY AN' WOULD CALL AGAIN- THEN THEY WENT UPSTAIRS TO CALL ON) THE MOORE S - | ers—thinks Prof. S. C. Staley, phys- P ical education instructor at the | BEDROOM FURNITURE DINING ROOM FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE KITCHEN FURNITURE METAL BEDS MATTRESSES SPRINGS FURNITURE l ! THE | PROFESSOR WOULD MAKE and Connecticut—substantiate his ALL GRANDSTAND COACHES | prediction. | Thomas Hardware (:0 o e ° URBANA, 111, July 26.—The ath- We mawe ana wic: il kinds o | |letic coaches’ place is in the grand- | fur garments. Goldstein's Em . | stand—alongside the pay custom- |Dorium. —adv, | University of Illinois. across the road in center for the | Shifting of managerial duties Skl Ifrom paid coaches to students, a| | circuit, scoring Heinke ahead of | Summary—Earned runs, Leglon GAMES THURSDAY 1 s g Bt aa ol W b LEG'ON BEATS him. Cunningham and English 2; base on errors, Legion 1; two- ™ :rcvcrsnl of the evolution that took eyen Prg lsingled in succession but Roberts |base hits, Burda 1, Reeves 1; three Pacific Coast League | place from 1883 to the present time, \ipeared Ramsey’s fly to right re- base hits, Reeves 1; home run, Hollywood 4; Seattle 2. “lis pl:cdlclnd by Staley. \ 5 { H nrmg the side. That was all of | PAWliakowski 1; sacrifice hits, Gre- San Francisco 12; Oakland 5. Iy Hé 5““‘1 the instances of remov- Docto_ C(Ilc T"/e / r,he scoring. ber 1; struck out, by Cunningham Los Angeles 10; Sacramento 8. ng coaches from playing field to The Moose just couldnt find|7 DY Junge 5; left on bases, Le- Mission 8; Portland 1. ‘gmndsl.md———m New York, Detroi 2 “Pick” for enough hits to pro- |8lon 5, Moose 4. Nl_“onal ul“}fl":! ! A R F. 3 duce runs, and the Vet hurler did-| Umpires—Manning and C. H.|St. Louls 1.0, Philadel phia 3. ey lrst 't issue a singl i MacSpadden. Scorer, Barragar. Chicago 8; New York 5 5 o s 51 b Cincinnati 14; Boston 2. S & singled in the first and died on Ame;'lcln X;enfin A,lsco Cunningham Holds Paps to the initial sack. Roberts singled ‘FR ANGE w| Ns Chicago 3; Washington 1 ! N anonal N : in the third. F. and B. Schmitz < 5 i | ( ! § g — - 4 | hil Iphia 21; Cleveland 3. ! Four Hits—Pawliakw- oa"ue"™ sunge "ot nis second Philadelphia 217 Clevela ‘ .ameras f 2 B ski’s Homer Wins single, advancing Roberts to second | . SPANDING OF CLUBS | Black and Tan ! base. Both runners expired when Pacific Coast League | fll)I] Ba'lk | Benedict “Pick” Cunningham Burda scooped Pete Schmitz's| Won Lost Fet.| i hurled brilliant ball last night and grounder out of the dirt and threw | San Francisco 19 6 160 CAMERA $6 00 was given perfect support in the him out at first. The Moose had TENNIS EVENTS Los Angeles 18 7 20 " LIV . field, and the Vets defcated the & man on in the fifth when Holl-| | Mission 17 9 654 e ” Of Moose by a score of 2 to 0. But mann singled past short but he| Hollywood 15 9 .625 SUPPLIES | 25 men faced Cunningham in the remalned anchored there while 5 # Oakland 10 15 400 s [ scven inning game, only one getting “Pick” fanned Roberts and F. Frenchmen Deieat Two |Portiand 10 16 385 —_— ’ { as far as second base. Schmitz and Bill Schmitz went uut‘ A . . T D . Seattle 6 19 .240 uneau “Pick” held the Paps to four Burda to Greber. | Americans In Iwo DVavis | Sacramento 5 19 208 BUTLER-MAURO bingles, one in the first, two in the' Box Scorc ana Summary ! Cup Features Nationa: League | % third and one in the fifth frame. LEGION " ABRHPOAE| L | Won Lost Pct.| DRUG CO. In the other innings the Moose Ramsay, rf 30010 0l paRrs July 26.—France blasted C!flca;zo 56 30 651 S were retied . one-two-thee or- Burda, 2 30125 0 lumricns iennis hopes of winming | PALBIIED % 3 6%} pree overy Phone 104 101 e, urda, Vet second sacker, McLaughlin, ss 0 0 0 0 0the first two Davis cup challenge b WHEN WE SELL IT > starred on the defense, accepting Reeves, cf 30 210 0jrounds. :L lfiuis :? :: ig: IT'S RIGHT The Clothmg Man § seven chances perfectly and one, Heinke, 3b v9-% 119 Henri Cochet crushed “Big Bill” rooklyn . & K a spectacular leaping catch, robbed Greber, 1b 3 0 010 0 0|riden 6-3, 6-1, and 6-2, after Jean g}‘f:lw: ek gg f; :(1}3 Sub Station Post Office No. 1 Hollmann of a hit in the last can- Pawliakowski, If .3 1 1 1 0 0/gotora had vanquished George cmj,,fi,"u” : 36 ;4 ‘400‘ BERGM 4NN HOTEL H to. | s ? & Cunningham, p 30,3 :] 2 0‘L01t 6-1, 3-6, and 6-4. Siliioan: Longie ! Pawliakowski, Vet center fielder, English, c 3015 2 0| prance needs to win but one e gl SAUE 10 ‘N [/} 4 | won the game in the second inning, =0z 00— — — — — more match out of the three re- ¥ g ~ Ly l when he homered into deep center. Totals 752" 1510 01 e crin hHe Davis Glip, ;?:,“d‘fl')‘l_’}’{“a gi ;i 73;1 MODERN STEAM HEATED ROOMS field, driving Heinke across the pooSE— | e e e a ‘Bas | . ’ rubber ahead of him. <R ORI B O s Hot and Cold Running Water Except for the second frame, junae 3 0 2 0 3 o] Frank Duelberg, bike racer, was| . o | o e Junge was as effective as Cunning- p. Sohmitz, 1f .3 0 0 2 0 olknocked insensible in a local ‘accl- |UeUOt Lo S8 AT A DINING ROOM IN CONNECTION ham. The Legion's heavy hitters p; M‘Spad"n. ¢ "3 0 0 6 2 oldent. Four days later he went out Chi‘cago & 46 i got to him in that inning for four yaje g 3001 2 1]/and won a 30-mile motor paced|p oon" % 6 500! PHONE 205 safe blows, including “Polly’s” cir- gijewich, 1b 3 00 8 0 ofcontest ¥ Gastintin Unaabii Tas gty 2 . ) gue . ———. cuit clout. Burda doubled in the ponman, '2b .3 0 1 0 1 0 | Won Lost Pet. THIRD AND HARRIS STREETS first; Reeves' triple in the second, g Roperts, rf .2 0 1 1 0 0| Blue Larkspur has won $200,000 Moose 47 0g i Heinke's single in the fourth and p gehmitz, 3b ..2 0 0 2 1 0|in purses. Only six other horses|Douglas ... £.0 - S i Reeves: two-bagger in the sixth, = "o . _ _ in the history of the American turf |American Legion.. 2 3 400 wenl. b ‘”%‘Edde“;’l“ e dr Totals .25 0 421 9 1'have earned that sum. Elks T e i ; Reeves started the fatal second ___ A J P Y R 2 o e i N S S | with a triple to right center. Hein-' ew uper lx § ke shot a grounder to short and JEjenipssenfimmsenflamsenflmmrenfrmenflym ~ftf stme/lf st sl st msrmeltfoaf ] i Vale whipped the ball to the plate Essex Clmllenger i to catch Reeves. Heinke took second on a passed ball. After Greber popped out to F. Schmitz, Pawliakowski smacked the apple Special rubber reinforce- ment inside the skirt at the fold climinates chafing wear on the lining; the rib rein- forcements over the vamp Coupe—$985.00 Coach—$985.00 Fully equipped, delivered in Juneau—Liberal terms. f FINAL CLEAN SWEEP-Remaining | e BT RN A " ~ Stock Must Go Regardless of Cost and e Tomure ove o, For Yaps Peviys s bzt | McCaul Motor Company otettes 1 COAT—Size 46 was $45.00, NOW $15.00 oot designed especially for i1 3 i : Y . e ; — ALASKAN HOTEL g Dvlzc;?::iiltfrlsp, DRESSES—Regular $18.50, $7.50; Regular $25.00, $12.50; Using Sesrie Mipbu b sy MODERN REASONABLE RATES l ot and Regular $37.50, $15.00 AT AL@ALERS Dave HouseL, PROP. H 4 The New Superior Whippet A small group of tl.ese models left lli. L 2 5 > 1 3.50—$1.00 i Callfornla SMOCKS—Regular $ $ / SIX e Grocery MILLINERY—A few Fall and Summer models—ALL 75 cents “THE FINEST FOOD STORE RAINCOATS—Women’s, a few yellow slickers, 50 cents; Chil- Combines Costly Car Beauty with Costly 3 IN TOWN” 7 e Car Engineering. PHONE 478 fecs, nen.to, S1A60 MERSR IR 9200 More car for your money than any light six car on the market. “Finger Tip Control” meaning the startes, i 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. GIRDLES—A few in all sizes, values to $10.50. Two groups— $2.00 and $3.00 Free Delivery GIRDILIERES—Sizes 34, 36, 42, 44, 46, 48, values to $10.25 We Sell the Famous Three groups—=$1.00, $2.00, $3.00 Pig’n Whistle Candies Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires WOMEN’S SWEATERS—clean sweep—$3.75 CHILDREN’S SWEATERS—all to go at $2.00 ARE MOST ECONOMICAL ON ALASKA ROADS Juneau Motors, Inc. Willys Knight Dealers The Gum-Dipping Process gives a tire a KNICKERS—Tweed, $2.50, $1.50; Khaki, $2.25, $1.00 S ies flexibility without friction: Made for those who Every strand in every cord of a FIRE- STONE TIRE is Gum-Dipped. demand the Best ONE TABLE OF ODDS AND END “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” REAL VALUES—2 FOR 25¢ Most Miles Per Dollar Dry Cleanmg and Pressing Juneau Drug Company H. M. HOLLMANN R. R. HERMANN Free Delivery Phone 33 ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattaek Wav ‘THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST" Connors Motor Company Goldstein’s Emporium e rrrreerersd

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