Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 7. 1929. " BRINGING UP FATHER CLANCY 15 GONNA HAVE A SWELL BLO! OUT TO-NIGHT: YOU OON'T WANT TO MISS ' DINTY Tl BE RiGRT "]\ WITIH YOU - 1 JUST WANT TO N STOP IN THE "LL BE RIGHT QLT ) WANT TO TELL THE HOUSE A MINOTE Qe \ n ( N - A By éEORGE McMANUS s. There really wasn't anything to| the game in the way of competi- tion. The Moose scored in every inning except the first and third, shoving two men over the rubber | in the second, one in the fourth, seven in the fifth and two in the sixth. GAMES TULSDAY St. Louis 55 48 534 Pacific Coast League Cleveland 55 48 534 | Los’ Angeles 3; Hollywood 2. | Detroit 49 54 476 Sacramento 4; Portland 1. Washington 40 60 400 Mission 7; San Francisco G. | Chicago 40 63 .385 Oakland 7; Seattle 5. | Boston . 81 0 307 Natiobal. Tokguwe | Gastineau vusnner League | New York 5; Pittsburgh 3. | Won Lost Pet. Brooklyn 5; Chicago 4. Moows. ........ o 2 150 e s s - ——— - -— o8 American League | Douglas .. s 3 571 [ Box Score and Summary [net ace modestly mentioned that|e e e e e o e e 0o 0 0 0 0 @ IClovcland 6; Detroit 5. |Elks .. » 3 5 -375| WAL P | LEGION— AB R H PO A E he made personal friends with th o | St. Louls 8, 3; Philadelphia 3, 11, |American Legion.. 2 5 .28 ‘[gar:seyébrl‘ 3 0 2 0 0 0 court representatives of 27 nations “THEM VIOLENT RAYS" e Washington 13, 0; New York 9, 8 jww AL R' iy o urda, 3 0 0 2 4 2 during his recent tour abroad. He's URGED BY PUGILIST e LU MAN 0’ WAR BECOMES rUESDAY | Pawlikowski, 1f .1 0 0 0 0 ofpmyeg o MHAItbrs Jatid. YolbRRL e e s‘;_‘““lg”&l"!"dl‘"“s EQUINE ART MODEL | Schmitz, J., 1f 2.0 0 1 0 Ojments in 13 countries. NEW YORK, Aug. 7.—Two ® i ;m ‘E::t Pet. | Reeves, cf 30100 0f Coen plans another European ® boxers were chatting outside ® |gan Francisco ... 24 13 .64 LEXINGTON, Ky, Aug. 7—Man IN EASY GAMEH’IM""& 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1}jaunt next winter to gain 2 second ® the sanctum of a New York @ |nfission 24 13 ‘a9 O War, the “horse of the century” Standard, ss 8:0:2. 11 Uilcg on the famous Macomber cup. promoter. ® Hollywood 23 13 639 will interrupt his regular routine at }McLaughlin, b ..3 0 0 6 2 1 to further aspirations to gain per Boxer No. 1 asked Boxer ® !pLos Angeles 22 15 g5 Faraway. farm here for the next lgun]m:mham, P .3 0 0 3 0 0lmanent possession of it by winning No. 2 how he felt. He said ® |Portland 1 20 4590 fflwl ‘:00‘*«‘ :10 P‘St for a NE: tY‘"k i . . s Inglish, ¢ 2 0 0 5 2 0'it three times. Coen won th he had a sore back. ® | Oakland 16 21 432 Sculptor and a European artist. Schmitz in rln‘e FO.l‘m, . — = — — — -~ year by defeating Maier of ‘the “Why,” said Boxer No. 1, ® |Sacramento 13 23 ‘3g1| Shortly after plans to have a life- Holds Vets to Five Hits | Totals 26 0 518 9 4 Spanish Davis cup team. “doncha try some of them e |Seattle i et 216 Sized bronze of the famous thoro- . MOOSE— | ———e————— violent rays.” PS Nationai League |bred modeled by F. G. R. Roth —Moose Win 12 to 0 |Roberts, 2 £°9°0 371 30} - Won Lost Pet.|of New York, had been announce !, Junge, 1b 4131 9.0 nyYoUTll EMULATES DAD eeeseee oo o e e el Chiago 67 32 677, Ignac Konrad arrived from Paris to Pcte Schmitz held the Vets help-|Schmitz, P, p .. 4 2 3 0 3 oi AS SUCCESSFUL "URLER‘» — Pittsburgh 59 39 602 but Man O' War on canvas. Kon- les: night and his support was:Schmitz, B, ¢f .. 4 1 2 1 2 0 i , e New York 58 45 553 rad was commissioned for the work almost faultless, and the Moose{MeSp'dn, M, rf .3 2 1 1 0 0| BELL, Cal, Aug. 7—Jack Cr?"-}}fi:’"l:fil? ;fi:’lst‘;ik}:"h;ljg s ba,;i St. Louis 53 50 515 by Ralph Beaver Straussburger, walked away with the seven-inning | Nello, 1f 4 3 3 1 0 o,dall, 16-year-old boy, is tollowmg‘x d",,7 Vathird i test, | Brooklyn 4 59 427, European turfman. contest by a score of 12 to 0. But|Vale, ss 4 1 2 2 1 1;in the footsteps of his father, Otis|anned 27 batlers in one contest. | gunoinnagi 43 59 422/ Konrad’s painting of the fa- five hits were registered off the|Killewich, ¢ 3 11 5 1 0 “Doc” Crandall, former big lcaguc} o Boston ... 43 61 413 |mous horse is to be on a canvas Moose pitcher, all of them singles,|Hollmann, 3b 3 0 1 1 2 1,twirler, and now pitching in the| B. P. 0. ELKS Philadélphia 40 61 396 | measuring 40 by 50 inches. One vhile’ the’ Modse founll. Gunming-1- @, | e s | Pacific Coast League. | American veague of Konrad's best known paintings ham and McLaughlin for 14 safe| Totals 32 12 14 21 10 2/ Playing with the Bell high schooll Regular meeting Wednesday. Won Lost Pct.|of animal life is that of Asteroide, blo four of which were two-| Summary—Struck out by Cun-team this season, young Crandall M. H. SIDES, Philadelphia 76 28 .731,w11mcr of the Grand Prix de Deau- S 626/ ville in 1927, How It Was Donc Little Mac’ went to second on Burda's error to open the second inning. Nello clouted a thLy' double scoring Mac, and Vale's single sent Nello over tHe rubber. Nello got his second double to open the fourth and scored when Killewich's grounder got through| short. Then came the unholy fifth frame when the wmoose hit every ball that came anywhere near the plate, driv ing Cunningham from the mound. Junge opened with a single. Singles followed by Pete and Bill Schmitz, Little Mac’ doubled, Nello singled, Vale fanned, Killewich doubled, Hollmann rolled out, Shorty Rob- erts was safe on Burda's error and two wild pitches sent him arouni. Junge ended the agony by rolling to the mound and was thrown out at first. The score sheet shows ten men batting with Junge, Pete and Bill Schmitz, Little Mac’, Nel- lo, Killewich and Shorty Roberts making a racetrack out of the base- lines. i Two In The Sixth i ‘The Moose added two in the sixth to keep their hands in practice. Pete Schmitz singled to right, went to second on a wild pitch and scored while Burda threw out Bill © Schmitz at first. Little Mac’ walk- ed and took third on Vale's single. Billy stole second. A wild pitch scored Mac' and sent Vale to third but he was nabbed trying to come home on a short passed ball. ningham 3, by Schmitz 6, by Mc-|won the six games he pitched, al- |—a Secretary. New York . 62 37 Laughlin 1; two base hits, Nello 2, Killewich and McSpadden 1 each; left on bases, Legion 4, Moose 5; bases on balls, off Mc-| Laughlin 1; losing pitcher, Cun-| ningham. Umbires— H. McSpadden and Hel geson. Scorer—F. Schmitz. | ——————— COEN ACQUIKES RGYAL BUDDI ON TRIP ABII()AI)i KANSAS CITY,*Aug. 7.—Wilbuy F. “Junior” Coen is convinced that a European tour is broadening in more ways that one, even for i a tennis star. | The 17-year-old Kansas City GOODRICH | Hi-Press Crepe Soles | Pacs ‘ A light weight, hard wearing pac that is made to fit your foot SABIN’S The Store for Men Better-looking, better-built than highest priced tires of many makes. But you pay us no more for guaran- teed Goodyear Pathfinders than for gyp, mail order or little known brands. Benefit by Goodyear’s power to produce for less due to making millions more tires than any other company. STANDARD LIFETIME JARANTEE—FREE MOUNTING 29 x 440 o 30.x 5000 L 19.90 [ | 29 x: 490y 8.25 [ ®© 1929. Licererr & Myzrs Tomacco Co. | ...HNac YOU MAY TRY a cigarette for any one.of a thousand reasons—but you'll continue to smoke 1 it for its taste. And if, along with mild and pleasing taste and aroma, you get that satisfying quality which tobacco men call “character,” you are getting cverything—no cigarette can give you more. It’s all in Chesterfield, because the good tobac- cos are blended and cross-blended, the standard Chesterfield method. One rule governs everystep: “TASTE above ever_ytfi[/zg o e JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. | GOODYEAR DEALERS { = il 5 ) hesterfield FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED garette ifi:fs b ¥ ~...at the finish its SPURT/ MILD...and yet THEY SATISFY Stoves and anges SEE OUR SPECIAL RANGES IN COLORS GREEN—BLUE—WHITE— AND GREY ' —_———— THE Thomas Hardware Co. — Mg The ' First . National Bank of B s ’ | Juneau b sk THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY { “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 Old Papers for sale at Empire Office DODGE BROTHERS SCHOOL BUS SEATS 25 CHILDREN $1,480.00 f. o. b. Seattle McCaul Motor Company . ALASKAN HOTEL MODERN . REASONABLE RATES Dave Housel, Proprietor New Ford Fordor Sedan Is An Economical Car to Drive ECONOMICAL because of its low first cost, and low cost of up-keep. KEconomical because it has been made to stand up under thousands and thousands of miles of steady running. An indication of the built-in quality of this car is shown in the extensive use of fine steel forgings. More steel forgings, in fact, are used in the new Ford than in almost sny other car, regardless of price. Come in and learn about the safety, comfort, smoothness and alert performance of this car by driving it yourself. You’ll know it's a great auto- mobile the minute you take the wheel. Juneau Motors, Inc. “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressing 4 ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way ; “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST”