The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 23, 1929, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, AUG. 23, 1929 By GEORGE McMANUS | » & Vs N [ soriy mice oF Rt YOU TO CALL ME WP AND 'NVUITE ME HERE- ™M GLAD YoU THOLGHT OF ME BUT ONLY ONDER 1ONT THAT NICE? ) THINK: MR DELIGHTED- s"' ~ CONDITION: MR-IIGGS 1D ON | r; S\ MPLE ; 2 ) SEE I'M ON T, Too THIS 1S | > SHOULD RIPPING THE EIGHTEEN- HIS MELBA # STAY FER IDEA OLO DAY DIET- 950 TO-| | TOAST paY- Ao TEA ( [T5T FaH | TR 3 TGN A | NE WONT MAKE ME STICK TO | AGHY SHE'LL i | © EAT LIKE HE DOES { i\ AND MELBA TOAST- P A e ;%2 Beds, Springs, Mattresses . s {)"\'{/; C See Our SIMMONS BEAUTYREST i MATTRESSES | | Killewich 2; missed grounder, Rol- e 3, mied s 52, ROY DOUGLAS 18 Thomas Hardware Co . iMann?ng 4; bases on balls, n{l‘l VlSlTlNG JUNEAU ¥ | Manning 4; hit by pitcher, Ras-| Roy Doug:as, wei known South- Imussen and Dickson by Schmitz.'east Alaska canneryman, now op- Umpire—Barragar. ating a cannery on Prince Wil- === = o e = | Scorers—J. Schmitz and H. Mes- liam Sound, and Mrs. Douglas, | | [pessctuie | Juneau visito Mr. Dougla - s ——————— cannery has closed for the season | — ———— e e e | GAMES THURSDAY | f ack of 30,000 cases Roller rolled to Vale who tossed| FPacific Coast League | glas will leave tae pill to Shorty Roberts. With g Hollywood 14; Oakland 13. {herc on the Prince George for Mission 6; Sacramento 3. Mr. ¢ { | | | i i — bl ng a set-up, Shorty muf- ¥ + 4 Prince Rupert. From the ln:u--" | the vow and both men were :r. \:)(: 10; San Francisco 3. point they will visit Jasper P: ' } afe instead of out |Seattle 8, 9; Los Angeles 7, 1. |for a time and proceed to Seattle | n S . % i ¥ apparenily chicago 16; Philadelphia 7. | Mr. and Mrs. Douglas are well 1mitz, unscttled Pete S as he hit ‘gt 1ouis 5; 1 nexi two batters up, Rasmus- |Brooklyn 1 Boston 4. Cincinnati 9. and Dickson, and forced Bon- pjitsburgh 6; New York 2 wcioss the plate with the first Athérican | League i of the game. With three st I men on the paths temoted 2 trick thr | known in Juneau. , For sev years Mr. Douglas was superin- L Credi ‘ redit | tendent of the Tee Harbor cannery. 10; New York 0 | Later he w the Ketchikan dis- | . Is no l\r;])oil ulmt a I‘n]l‘ l)m': I])N'n paid but ; New York 0. \ s esERGar e r e | 1 cancelled check that has been accepted Killewich at- | Chicago 4; Philadelphia 3. STih R Eou AL yoaus &8 QCRNNELY wnd paid is positive proof. : / to Vale at'washington 6; Detroit 1. e v Y short and heaved the pill into left TS SRR ! 3~ PE: 164 field and Roller rambled acre STANDING Ur CLUDS NOTICE TO EAGLES AND y rubber. Pete tightened up| Pacific Coast League AUXILIARY n and fanned Balog, Niemi and | Won Lost Fet,| Special meeting tonight in Duu,:-} OPEN A CHECKING ACCOUNT ing. ILos Angeles 31 22 595 |1as to meet Conrad Mann, organ-, izer, at 7 o'clock. Ferry leaves Ju- | This convenicnce and protection is yours for the asking. Pay your bills the modern and safe way ders ch v 1 wo | San Francisco 31 22 585 pers: oY ‘d"‘:m“:ri’ ollewad 30 o» syimeau at 6:15 oclock. Al mem- AL more tallies in the th With one away, Andrew's fly was Portland 30 22 5y7|bers requested to be present. adv. THE FIRST NAT.CNAL {dropped by Nello in Jeft. Bonner | Mission o ) e RONERIT g ‘ ingled Andy went to third.,Oakland L L ntr : BANK Joughby Ave. with the best TO- Sacramento 21 30 412 BACCO and SNUFF CURE. Hours He scored while Killewich tried to Vel l,‘\ stop Bonner's theft of second Ban-\SL‘“'“C 13 420 A e 7D, m. Oall and We OF JUNEAU { iner romped home a few seconds | Natwnat League /Il demonstrate, P.O. Box 327. adv ater with the fourth and last! O LN B ehiveams e sty o run made by the Islanders. onio T | B i 8 | Box Score and Summary ;’(":Sb;;“‘f‘ ?Z : ?3:} e ! o A . New York 3 55 534l : S SR A; !; 111 (? :”; St. Louis 58 ' 58 500} CALL THE \ 2 0 0 50 gfErookim 53 63 457! | { y 2 0 0 82 olcmcipau 50 67 421 200 0% ofuagons @ & A8 Juneau > W, e 0 Lar0 1{‘ i American veague i et e e R e lumber | THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY ad nia 3 36 692 | fo e S N:':";Yfll‘?kn ® 4 ;’O‘z’ v T | “The Last Scrvice Is the Greatest Tribute” 1000 0 0 clevelynd 61 55 526 D. M. GRANT | P ! iy e 3 & T ALY ...k 62 57 521 4300 i Cavel ! Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 ‘)(;g(lr = 121 4‘1)8"0" ' .. BB 64 467 At Newman-Geyer | oY LA DOUGLAS— i Seabie 7 e L it A g i s I Connie Mack (left) and Alan J. Gould, General Sports Editor of The Associated Press, whose daily|Niemi, cf 300000 Ch‘,’m::,g o 4}, 22 2;2 PHONE 154 - 4 column—SPORT SLANTS—is a daily feature in this newspaper, starting today. Manning, p 2 0 1 1 4 0/Boston 0 7 34 i B Sarvh 1 i e e - SRS S S 3 Lo I'sespdn, © 2705008 T 0] T i Rk Leages . ] 0il Burner Service a " o . 2 O e anarews, 1b .2 107 0 0 ol O Specialty Old Papers for sale at Empire Office d found the strain too much DUUGLAS BEAT it 2.3 2008 0Moolgs 6 3 8011 poiinates Give J | i | when we finally caught up with the { Roller, 2 1 0 2 1 1 Douglas 8- 8 625 L"“m"‘t}"‘ f'”‘\"“““rk | Yankees, --.c club is playing steady Rasmussen, 1f ...1 0 0 1 0 0|American Legion.. 3 5 37 Guaranteed | ball now and ought to win, but we MUUSE |N FIVE ""’kfi’“‘-h"f ; 0 g g 0 giElks .3 6. 33 don't take anything for granted o ! ' g o Y 1 2 C’ l T k R O R e el s o ‘ 927 Chevrolet Truc ves twinkled, “we kind of s otals 19 4°315 6 1 ! prised 'em this year. They didt SUMMARY—earned runs, Moose | GOOD RUNNING ORDER | think much of us in r 1, Douglas none; three-base hit, y | training, TTI admit we 3 Ki\l{(}\x‘;ch: tlwol-lbas]s .?lt.lMannirx?gl;} 125 00 s0 good and I talked pessimi } . muffed fly-ball, Neilo 1; muffed . ALAN J.GOULD Bt T Rea it TV e iz veas I_Slandcrs Win Thursday 4|nrow, L. D. Roberts 1; wild throws | § . & | ! | —_— and T just wanted to prevent and| to |—Moose Errors .. By ALAN J. GOULD chance of over-confidence or the . : @. . Sports Editor) folks expecl?u:: t(cm_ Koo ot uail Factors in Loss / YUKON STOVES McCaul MOtOr Compan'y N Sometimes the first 66 years are the hardest. Four years ago, I sat with Connie Mack in the tow- How. do the “folks” feel now? | 'The Islanders trounced the “Well, you know sometimes | Mcose last night at City Park by, ered, neatly ordered office he occu- | 8stonishing, They come to gelia score of 4 to 1 playlng better pies at Shibe Park when not poised autographs and pictures every ball all round for the victory. The on the edge of the dugout, score- |Some Dpeople think we have won |game was called at the end of the card in hand, directing the field|already. They send me all sorts|first half of the fifth frame, ow- play of Philadelphia Athletics. | 0f @ifts” and Connie waved his ing to darkness. “T though this was to be our year |hand at an assortment. “I get let-| Manning held the Moose to two but it seems that fate is agninéfi ters {rom all over the country, ad-|hits in the five frames, one, a us,” said Connie He looked old | Vising, warning, even threatening. | three-base blow by Killewich, com- and weary. His youthful team had |A lot of them as much as tell me|ing after a walk to Bill Roberts, “blown” n good lead; cracked in|lf We dém't win this year they arciscored the latter for the only run SHEET IRON g PIPE ALASKAN HOTEL FITTINGS . SHEET IRON FLUME | MODERN REASONABLE RATES Dave Housel, Proprietor \ the streich under the sirain of a |'off us.” ; | made by the local team. tight pennant race. What's the main reason for the| Was Only Earned Run Two years later, in 1927, I sat A’s big lead? | And it was the only really earned New Ford Fordor Se‘la'l for an hour in the same oftice,| “Well, good, steady ball. ~ Buf|run of the game, all the Islander’s listening to Connie label the Yan- ;"‘OSUY‘ COr(llfid(:nce rmw.\lzl.i ?n(‘n t;w {markers coming on misplays. Doug- e Keos as one of the greatest teams |boys found they could beat thellas shoved over two men in the i i | of all fime In & year in which Babe Yankees and beat them decisively, |sccond inning. ~ Bomner singled PEERLESS QUALITY | Ruth & Company made the Amer- | they hit their stride. We beat the | — i i g ; jean league race a runaway. |champions in their own ground J “But for bad breaks we might and we beat them here. And when have made it closer; but I''do’notWe Woniit was by good m think ours or any other club could While they just barely beat us have stopped the Yanks this sea-{they did, like that 2-1 game Jack son.” Quinn lost to Waite Hoyt, due to| two misjudged flyballs.” ! Shift the scenery to. imdicate the| Connie dwells upon the i lapse of two more years. It's Au- things that have meant improve-| gust, 1920, and hot; hotter in Phila- .ment, greatness in Grove, anx.’n-‘ delphia than most places. Connie Shaw and Walberg, his pitching removes coat, collar, tie and final- “big thr in Simmons, Cochrane, | Jy his shirt, somewhat apologeti- and “Fo: as Mack calls his cally. His visitor perhaps would sensational young first l;nsoman.: like to do the same. Yes, they are all great, but the old | There is a gleam in the Old Mas- master deftly parries any attempt| ter's eye that wasn't there four to have him say they are any years ago, or two years ago. In greater, if as | at as the Y:t'nc,us‘; his 67th year, Mack's step is machine be guided to four pennants | springier, his kindly eyes twinkle. and thres world's chumpmnshxpa’} Soft-spoken, quict and courteous. ,from 1910 to 1014 ! This is THE year. You can sce' “With old A's it was epeed | what it means to Connie in nearly and dcfense, though wo(n)so had | every word and gesture. Too many rood hitting. ; Now it's mainly| disappointments, the caution of 2 tting, and we have plenty of that, | old campaigner keep Conrie som but we also have good piiching for | what reserved, But it takes no defense.” | scientist to tell that to this lean, s i jovable man of nearly three score Commercial jop prirting at The! and ten, the American league pcn-lwmpira | fant that now scems certain to be 5 oo 29 means more than any T e 3 T {::s }:?: ;:st achievements. | I The Arcade Cafe i Do . t) nnant Special Dinners on Sundays | coadsih ot -l l and Week Days { Is An Economical Car to Drive ECONOMICAL because of its low first cost, and low | cost of up-keep. Economical because it has been !l made to stand up under thousands and thousands of {7 VO yNSREy W y W Y SRR 7 VR TR T o | miles of steady running. ! e | 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. J Wholesale and Retail PLUMBING HEATING ~ SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will cost” HYDRAULIC PIPE P TANKS ! " RICE & AHLERS CO. % Come in and learn about the safety, comfort,™ smoothness and -alert performance of this car by | driving it yourself. Youwll know it’s a great auto- ! mobile the minute you take the wheel. 33 1-3 Per Cent More Mileage Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires hold the greatest Tire economy records made. Actual records on 5000 ve- hicles equipped with Firestone Gum-Dipped Truck and Bus Tires, in all classes of service, in every part of the country, show savings which mean.at least 33 1-37% more mileage. WOOLSEY’S COPPER PAINT Per Gallon, $2.90 MARSWELL’S MARINE PAINT Per Gallon, $3.30 e e HARRIS Hardware Co. Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires are the toughest, strong- est, most endurable tires in the world—tires that hold all world records for safety, mileage; economy and endurance. “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” 2 for : Dry Cleaning and Pressing Connors Motor Company SERVICE RENDERED BY EXPERTS ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” | 8rda Fountain in sonBectint | : W n P { the way the . t o prandr. ? | Come tn and lsten to the | | ! i radlo Mary Youog, Prop JOSION NOW. ail the ;cv.;.nm‘ge this year, La ) B

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