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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 30, 1929. " BRINGING UP FATHIR By GEORGE McMANUS YOU TALK ABOLT HER BROTHER: HE 19590 POOR AND HAD SLCH SHABBY CLOTHES- HE CAN'T GO ANY WHERE - >/,\ BOT DALGHTER- HE 1SN HONEST | 0 the general baseball overhaul- and reconstruction work for > major league campaigns of 1920 should be noticed that neithe | the worl champion Athletics nor the National league champion Cubs dispiaying any tendency to} stand pat and congratulate them- selves upon the results of 1929. | Both nant-winning outfits I on strengthened for ially the Chicago which y become as famous book that con- to pennant-vinuing cams, has been tapped sub. since the close of the 1929 race. are Cubs parted with consider- cash, possibly as much as 100,000, besides several players, to vo star pitchers from Maleclm Moss of the Louis Wally Schang (left), veteran ¢ Nelson Wis 2t guls Browns to the Philadelphia A MAY BE SHE 1D ] RIGHT HE NEVER HAD A CHANCE - o e ed Press Photo ; has heen traded by the St. for Sammy Hale, infielder. Ate! thiet WRANGELL BOWLERS WIN OVER VALDEZ| | The Wrangell bow defeated Valdez with a score of 2195 to 2245 at the bowling tournament | held at Elks Hall Saturday night. Both teams rolled without handi- ,cap and Council rolled high single score of 202 and high total of 574. The scores were as follows. Wrangell 180 106 150 in the American n last year. Moss came up fr Vanderbilt Universi showed sufficient stuff to ju. a $40,000 price tag, even though his record was not up to Nelson's by a wide margin. Associa | | In the Nelson deal, the Cubs dis- patched Norman McMillan, third baseman, whose place will be taken in the 1930 lineup by Rogers Horns- by’s old pal, Lester Bell. Bell missed only one stop, New York, in following his old teammate around the circuit from St. Louis. Council | Herrmann G. George 202 138 143 162—574 | 161—405 The A’'s have strengthened their 190—483 pitching staff by the addition of Mrs. Dufresne 161 153 117421 Leroy Meahaffey, iron man right- |Mrs. Petrich 80 121 111312, hander of the Portland Ducks. —_— — & With youth predominating in the | Totals 667 771 2195 lineup of the world’s champions, | Valdez Connie Mack needs to do little'Andrews 167 juggling. If he needs an infield Van Atta 150 replacement, especially around Bernard 135 shortstop, he has a star ready- Noland 179 made prospect, in Eric McNair, who :Mrs, ‘White 136 made his debut with a flourish last | el ey September, but was not eligible tor\ Totals 67 760 the world's series. | 154—498 | 145—449 135—405 142511 | 142382 | 718 2245 ——————— EGERMANY LEADS NOBEL LIST| The Yankees are due for consid- crable revamping under Bob Shaw-| BERLIN, Dec. 30.—Award of the key. Two of the main replace- 1929 Nobel prize for literature to ments obtained are from St. Paul Thomas Mann was the fortieth No- —Eugene (Bubbles) Hargrave, back- bel award to be given to a Ger- stop and manager of the Saints last /man. France is second in the list| season, and Allen (Dusty) Cooke,|of winners with 23. Of the two| hard-hitting outfielder. score German Dprizes, 31 were for The figures show Hargrave batted scientific achievement. 369 in 104 games and Cooke .358 —————— in 152 games, leading the Ameri-| SOUTHWEST TEAMS ON TOP can Association home run hitters IN INTERSECTIONAL TILTS with 33. Cooke also hit 39 doubles | and 16 three-baggers, so that he! DALLAS, Texas, Dec. 30. — The| may furnish the long range stuff Southwest conference, whose 1929 needed, if, as expected, he is to football teams were touted as the step into the left field post vacated best in the circuit’s history, step-“ by Bob Meusel and keep Babe Ruth ped outside its own bounds to win company. eight of 12 tilts against represen- tatives of other conferences. | Quite a few of the gridiron herces| Of those dozen intersectional | may be noticed tossing baskethallsigames, eight against southern out-i around during the next few months, |fits and four with mid-west elevens, | “alma mater” of city teams he partis thusiastic vax as e the rooters for big league nines inj the States. An over-energetic Neapolitan sup- | porter paid with his life for his exultation over victory at a recent match here. When Naples fin: subdued Turin, 2 to 0, he rose in the stands and yelled so lustily that he broke a blood vessel. He died on his way to hospital B Old Astor Dining Room To Be Put in New Hotel NEW YORK, Dec. 30.—To pre- serve a quaint tradition the old dining room of John Jacob Astor will.be preserved in the new Wal- dorf-Astoria hotel. When William .Waldorf Astor moved to England in the early '90s and became a baronet, he decided to wreck the home of his forebears at Thirty-third street rather than let it fall into unknown hands. He | erected the Waldorf-Astoria on the site, and stipulated that the his- toric family dining room be taken from the house and set up in the hotel. Now it is to be transported to the new hotel, there to be used for small social occasions. The wood- work is black walnut, carved in somber early Victorian -elegance, bearing the carved initials of the house of Astor. - GEORGE SAND'S RECIPES PUT INTO COOKERY BOOK PARIS, Dec. 30.—The kitchen re- cipes of George Sand may one day be as well known as her love affairs. A book just brought out here en- titled “George Sand, Cook,” gives some of her favorite recipes, in- cluding this one for an omelet named for her: even though there is not quite the the Southwest lost only one game glamour to tossing a LWO'DOintE!‘:\vhile three were tied. The Texas' through the hoop as there is in Aggies alone lost to Tulane. | ploughing over for a touchdown. Against teams of Southern Booth is among the “cage” stars'conferences, Southwest elevens had | at Yale. He captained the fresh- the edge by two to one. They won! man basketball team. tevens of two games and tied onz against Big! Cornell, Tys of Columbia, Baker Six cpponents. | of Pittshurgh and Wittmer of | In all interscctional games this DPrinceton are others making 2 past son Southwest teams scored | Guick hop from the gridiron to the 259 points to 82 for opponents. | court. | Asiegnaigp Harmeson of Purdue, Schoonover SOCCER BRINGS OUT { of Arkansas, Rothert of Stanford.| “OLD GRAD” SPIiRIT] Clark of Colorado College, Church- “Take eight eggs and three table- spoons of thick fresh cream “Make an ordinary omelet place a mixture of candied fruits and chestnuts, blended with apri-| cot marmalade. Roll the omelet and put it on a plate surrounded by half chestnuts and eandied cher- ries. - “On top put a paste of sugar, cream and chopped almonds oOr crushed macaroons. Put a little butter on the plate and heat up the omelet very quickly and serve Inside (HE CANT GO AN \WHERE. WELL HES BEEN ©OME AN'ITS A CINCH 1T WOZ A JEWELRY STORE" — MY OLD SUVTS rLL POT SP:YE OF N HIS CLOSET: STANFORDWINS 'FROM ARMY IN | FOOTBALL GAME Western Eleven Crushes Score 34-13 'ALO ALTO, Cal., Dec. 30.—Sev- ty thousand fans saw the great| ford football eleven beat down | U tbborn defensive of the Army | €l last Saturday afternoon to crush the soldiers under a 34 to 13 {The amount involved was not disclosed. International Newsreel Earl .Adnms, better known as “Sparky” who has peen utility infielder for the Pittsburgh Pirates has been purchased by the St. Louis Cardinals. | i NOTICE office of Dr. Outrushed and outpassed, witn [TePlaced, new premiums were exact- |thelr All-American half back ms - |ed for the new plane. s | Vi “Re Cagle, the Army wa Tha reinstatement clause overwhelmod by the Stanford of-|Sent under the new terms and in- fensive that rose to now brilliant [Surance is carried over even in the | 'h hts and in the two final pe-| eplacement of a destroyed plane by the soldiers wilted under the |insurance underwriters. i z attack the Stanford| The plan is heralded as the first | o timos,|Step gver taken to perpetuate the ! . made activities of a flying club. o half ended!are more than 100 clubs r of Stanford. |country. Formerly, w 4 on2 touchdown, but |ance protection, cluk to 30|forced out of es i planes ‘were destroyed. The R. E 16th to Jan y 26th, inclusive, Exclusive Agency Helena of e run held ce when thz s on a punt. | o~ AVIATION RISKS | ACCEPTABLE T0 UNDERWRITERS was D - CRABTREE’S NAME SPREADS GAINESVILLE, Fla—~"'Cannon- ball” Clyde Crabtree, Florida quar- terback, has made a name for him- self. The registrar received a let- ter from a prospeetive student in Michigan, who had addressed the envelope to “University of Florida, Crabtree, Fla.” Cosmetics 25 25 Phone Rubinstein’s The Nyal Scrvice Drug Store We Deliver South- ab- |well will be closed from December adv —Ar— ——— WASHINGTON, Dec. 30—Increas- > ing safety in aviauon is recognized in the development of protective in- surance for flying club members by the National Aeronautics associa- tion. A form of coverage has been evolved which will release clubs and iclub members from all legal lia- |bility, as well as assure them of continuous flying regardless of the number of accidents or “washouts” attending instruction of members. Risks which a year ago were not | remotely considered by aviation in- |surance companies are included ml Repossessed $100.00 lthe plan, the joint work of an as- sociation executive committee com- {posed of Edward P. Warner, Wil-| {liam P. MacCracken, jr., and Dr.| George W. Lewis. The new plan assumes risks| iwhich have not been taken by in- | s GORRE®T! OTHER LEANING TOWERS IN EUROPE. NAME THEM = NO% AND Yer THEY SAY IT DOESNT PAY T0 ADVERTISE McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction {supance companies — protection |students on solo flights and contin- uance of coverage even after the iplane has been destroyed and re- placed. Formerly, insurance was avail- able for licensed pilots only. Liabil- ity was also only assumed for one plane. When it was destroyed and Clean- MEN’S GOODRICH KINGFISHER HIPY BOOTS, pair ... MEN’S GOODRICH LIGHTWEIGHT SPORTING BOOTS il p Prices ... 3645 5.45 YOUTHS* RED STORM KING BOOTS, size 12 to 2 MEN’S MACKINAWS AND STAG SHIRTS AT......... HALF PRICE Suits and Overcoats at Half Price ONLY A FEW LEFT Ford Coupe ML e U ! jll of Oklahoma, Fesler of Ohio State, Truskowski of Michigan, Tan- | ner of Minnesota and Bergherm of | Northwestern also rank high in the two sports which have the arts o(’ passing exnd blocking in common. 2 > — | New, select lne u +lsiling carcs Empire. \Italian football fans. by professionals and is not ax Miller, of uadlsoh, who is 100. |immediately.” - TURIN, Italy, Dec. 30. — Some- thing akin to' the American “old| grad” spirit is beginning to seize! Jowa farmers, on the average, % |have a fixed capital of $18170, of Although soccer, a slower game which $1,499 is in machinery. than the rugby variation played in it e L S American colleges, is the sport they| The oldest Congregational minis- follow, and although it is played ter in Wisconsin is the Rev. H. A. GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM Illlllllllllllllll”mlfl'llllllllllllIlIHlIIlIIfIIIIIIlIlIIIIlllllIilllllllllllll:lllllllllllA LT T H H E El E CECIL B. DeMTLLES KING of KINGS Adaptation by JEANIE MACPHERSON Ice Creepers For MEN and WOMEN Juneauw-Young Hardware Company THE NUMBER OF FORD TRUCKS SOLD DURING THE FIRST 8 MONTHS OF 1929 EQUALLED 49: % OF TOTAL SOLD OF ALL OTHER MAKE OF TRUCKS COMBINED IN SAME PERIOD OF TIME. There’s a Reason Ford Trucks Now Have the Four Speed Transmission Juneau Motors, Inc. FORD DEALERS Between the North Pacific Coast and Chicago the *North Coast Limited” na savesa full business day at each terminal. Extra Comforts No Extra Fare Leaves Seattle 6:15 p. m. Arrives Chicago 9:30 a. m. 61y Hours Eastbound KARL K. KATZ Alaska Representative 200Smith Bldg.,Seattle (AA-17) Northern Pacifie Ry If you plan a trip anywhere '{mts' "’ let us help arrange b i OUR REPAIR SHOP Is Equipped to Handle any Repair Job on YOUR CAR If you damage the Body, Top, Fenders or Doors we can turn the job out looking like new. If your Motor, Clutch, Transmission, Differential or Brakes require attention we are prepared to render Expert Service. Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts WINDOW SHADES —at— Juneau Paint Store £/0ld Papers for sale at Empire Offi