The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 22, 1929, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TLI;SDAY OCT 22, 1929. ————— e " BRINGING UP FATHER GEORGE McM \\l Q ‘ - ' , ’ M SORRY, MR.. JIGGS, E, DONT GIVE ME [ WHERE ARE OH, M. QUITTIN' 2GS, 1M QUITTIN' AT BT M QUIITIING YHID $ ANY WORK AS | You Gon'? DIS JOB- I'M 4 FOF 0 | : AFTERNOON - I'VE L AM QUITTINSS - L S — | mAT , GONNA WORK. FOR g = { ACCEPTED A POSITION \ AM GOING TO DINTY MOORE - Wt e J WITH DINTY MOORE Aa WORK. FOR i ; ( ! NGRS ONTY MOORE Failure to Receive Credit . no proof that a bill has been pald but cancelled check that has been accepted and paid is positive proof. This convenience and protection is vours for the asking. Pay your bills the modern and safe way OPEN A CHECKING ACCOUNT AT no matter whether it|been a weak link, finar y a Rz\L\l\ ompetitively for sor 0| OF JUNFAU much so that there I t Z|of shifting the franc ing the world series. |a city as Detroit. Among e comeb. ter part of 1929, t none more conspict ‘ “No player on the club is for sale and there are at least three, Red | | Lucas, Hughey Critz and Swanson, | \th new outfield star, who could | e Bt S e = | not be bought for any price. When | °f_ Jack Sharkey in ‘ol the Cardinals, who abruptly sent burgh under circumstances reminis- |club out of St. Louis Browns, ‘lelnm Wrigley, Jr., asked me to|Bill Tilden on the ¢ SENIGH GAGERS the former to the minors after the |cent of McKechnie's leave-taking of | but resigned attor son of some |put a price on Lucas, I just laugh- |n@ Collett on the 1i ulel;arle against the Yankees in the [the Pirates a year after winning |discontent, to be replaced by Bill|ed. Lucas s the greatest pitcher| Miss i“l(ll‘:“,'s pe no comebat in or 1928 series. Hhe 1925 pennant. Donie lost lit- | Killefer. A change in the Cincin- |in the league. There is no reason s 3./0% . ? WI N TlTI.E I N Now McKechnie has a four )ear‘ue time signing a two-year con-lnan ownership involved the with=|why we can't put baseball back g e, tar ane e s figorh W('t("', Yoll/r R([l’l([t()"_ tract with the Braves, a jub‘tract with the White Sox, replacing | drawal of Jack Hendricks as mana- |its feet in Cincinnati.” | premacy- in Aw olf for the n at may easily take that long to|Lena Blackburne, while Jeyel Ens,|ger, with at least a half dozen can-| The rest of the National League |Second succe and fourth . get the Boston club lifted out of |a coach under Bush, assumed the |didates in the ficld to succeed him.|club owners will watch the efforts | time altogether, et it ¢ series Autflm()bll(’ ()’lvners its long decline. leadership of the Pirates. j e |of Mr. Weil to reguild, with con-|Of courageous uphill fights “We will have a winning club in |siderable interest, for his club has | t0 even reach the . 3 i : ~ Hills against Mrs. Leons ;“ PREPARE YOUR CARS FOR THE Sophomore Girls Wm_ T S ST i e : B WINTER Championship for Third | & Time—Defeat Seniors & We have a complete stock of Aleohol, ST, That Brutal Overseer Roasts in Hades! b« il feating the Sophomores 20 to 12| g plons of the Juneau High School | & ! r 30. The Sophomore Girls, even up things for the % class trouncing the Senior Girls, | § C M C 18 to 12, and won the girls cham.- | [ onnors Motor Company picnship for the third successive | §§ it ne [ Service Rendered by Experts for second place : night they stood off | 1 Donie Bush departed from Pitts-| Dan Howley made a first-division | th heavier and more powerful Scniors in great style for the first Wise legislation has halted the ancient prejudice that dictated the exploitation of child labor for selfish gain. two quarters, holding them to a| 8.5 6 Cadese voe. the it rate N Guided by AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE it has routed greed. No longer are little children forced into slavery. In the second half, the Seniors'| i weight and experience outbalanced | the cpeed and team play of the | § L JHCT ! B 14 i ¥ 3 3 oo | Edo M d L way in came. At the mlr.‘ time whi the score was 15 to 7' t.the Seniors, The latter| § 3 : d up in the final half, scor- | 2 2 £ 4 Fi = . A points while the Sopho- | : %0 \ ; ABSOLUTELY THE were held to three. Amy | 4 ] i Y ¢ e, | ving guard for the Sen-| § 3 27 Rk ¥ 5 \ "8 ; \ falsN S T D injured in the first half.| P S ) y id # - ~ e R \ i STANDARD OF w:m no substitute available from | # % ) i f! & - d ) Vs D ~ the class, the Sophomores allowed | 4 2 3 i / < 5 ) J COMPARISON the Seniors to choose any player | - 8 4 without limil. Barbara Winn fin-| f ished as a subsmute for Bates. SpOF‘t AWK i ol 5 \ ',, S\ a2 Alaska Electric Light Slmtts : = . ‘ AL PY. BN e a (( & Power Co. Juneau—Phone No. 6 LANJ GouLp | = L Douglas—Phone No. 18 Baseball will feel the effects of “ to as ting did it ’ , i history when the major league cam- 4 . 2 > $ . one of the biggest shakeups in its - Gone is that ancient.prejudice against cigarettes—Progress paigns get under way. Since late y Fyon B . 2 this season and through the ex- has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes citement of the world’s series, more . . e managerial/changes hav feveloped,| } when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri- than in any single year on record, 4 with no less that seven of the 16 tants) f rom the tobaccos. clubs reorganizing for various rea- sons. . . . . . . The death of Miller Huggins de- EARS ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of prived the Yankees of a pilot who * could have held his job as long as | modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against he wished but internal warfare, as . CPE . . . s i e s ol oo all cigarettes. That criticism is nolonger justified. LUCKY STRIKE, contributed to most of the other 3 . thanges’ ek asratity - SAC" Hove the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, b effected or are about to be. 2 R ot} ” . e’?}‘le big turnover began with the properly aged and Skl‘ufuuy blended It's TOaSted. 1l of Bill McKechnie to replace % 2 Pily Southworth in the leadership “TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, T removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are pres- - Ex ert ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned wa: Automobile Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTIN e Let us show you the new Ivory-Tan Enamel , i LUCKY STRIKE'’S extra secret process—removes harmful cor- Monarch — A beautiful full enamel finish R epau‘lng ;] rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES whxch in the with just enough color 'to add to any kitchen. - old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and 2 v « L. 3 2 “It’s Toasted”’—the phrase that describes the A ct}ughmgg. Th.us TOASTI%\IG has destroyed that ancient preju~ extra “toasting” process applied in the manu- Nothing Too Small | ¥ dice against cigarette smoking by men and by women. facture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest Nothing Too Large : é y tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are scien- AN o . 9 99 tifically subjected to penetrating Heat at mini- “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” recking Car Service || § ; mum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. The il d [ exact, expert regulation of such high tempera- Dry Clealun g and P re.SSlng 4 tures removes impurities. More than a slogan, McCAUL : & . . “Ie ” g ized by milli No Throat Irritation-No Cough. (e Toumed” s recmised by millowsmel| 47 4GK 4 LAUNDRY TUNE m_-m LucLy Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N. B. e. : In New Building on Shattuck Way © 1229, The American Tobucco Co., Mira, “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” —— and OVERHAULING | § MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction

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