The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 1, 1930, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1930. By GEORGE McMANUS WELL, THAT'S THE BEST MAGGIE- ARE Y T NEWS 'VE HEARD YET- GOIN' TO PUT THE PIANO IN THE MUSIC " CONSERVATORY | CONSERVATORY ? | \(meoaeo INTO T-«EJ AND SEE THE LARGE ORGAN I JUST BOUGHT- You Can Achieve anything you set out to do ially if you have the backing of a good bank account. espec- Great NOTE THESE LOW DELIVERED PRICES Ford Roadster Phaeton Tudor Sedan Sedan Coupe 05 Convertible Cabriolet Sport Coupe 35 Town Sedan $635 Two-window Fordor Sedan. $805 Three-window Fordor 835 850 880 | 1oops, made by Dorothy Stocker of | Houston, Tex. TROUBLE AHEAD | FOR HIS TEAM, SAYS A°S BOSS These delivered prices include bumpers and extra tire and tube. Rumble seat is included in the price of both the Sport Coupe and Convertible Cabriolet. - - 4 MELLON'S SON WINS OAR IN RACES AT CAMBRIDGE 7 CHOICE OF COLOR COMBINATIONS CAMBRIDGE, , April 1 —Paul W. Mellon, son of the sec-! {retary of the treasury, was one of McLeod, the Purple Hurricane of |those to win his oar rowing in the |Furman swept unchecked over state |second boat of Clare college in the |opponents to win phe South Caro- }annual bumping races between col- | - |lina crown and also knocked over !leges of Cambridge. | champlon Athletics to have a much | Georgja, Clemson and South Caro-| This coveted honor is awarded to | harder fight this year than last. |y, “sonference teams. ithe members of a crew which _ “We won 17 games from Wash-|" pyrman is unaffiliated with any bumps the boat ahead of it on ington in 1929. Such a feat Was|athietic group, having withdrawn |cvery night of the days’ rgein entirely unexpected and is not % |from the . I. A. A. The first{A. A. Aiken of Philadelphia and be counted on this year. That (g squad includes three juniors,Breck Moran of Franeisco | margin, however, gave us a big|ang gix sophomores. rowed in other les ssful Clare jump on the Yankees last year, and e | eights. was a great help in our winning of H. B. Cannon of Ch the pennant. | “LOOPING MILDREDS” VIE N. Y., former Yale oarsman and s 3 “I feel that I must fight over-, FOR HONORS IN STUNTING Roches ic players of no previous Ma- | ¢, figence among my players. You | ffm‘(‘fi }rzgfgigxi]mcxiv ):“r’vlllltf';:'{;r‘sl:éu:'(.'. league experience, the SUr-ipnoy pow it fs—a team wins the ST. LOUIS, April 1 Kosk al e hlih) N oo dave ¥ of &t ‘Teaw . 980 sty y K wins | ST. IS, April took @& crew which won three days out o iven trials in the train-|PchRant and then the world series.|Milgred to take the woman's loop- four and just failec to win its oars |The following spring the players|ing record from a Mildred - |get to thinking they merely will| Mildred Stinaff, 18-year-old pilot. | are that no more nave to walk out on the field andimade 42 consecutive loops in a'e ten rookies flifl{l’dl po: fibly as the opposition will curl up. As a;p:am at Akron, O, but 20 d: 3 > = | : o ¥ jold, boosted the record by four, to|distanced pennant races. It takes,come back to earth. 146, | fight £ work by a newcomer| “The Athletics must play beiter| Miss Kauffman may have added Braves 1 th ck. Many of those ball to win the pennant than they|is loops to Miss Stinaff’s record | enough to make impressiveldid a year ago. If we play only asiput haze obscured her ship from| Stela Wal Cleveland’s great s are not fortunate enough to|well as in 1920 we never will fin-ic P, Schory, official observer for|girl sprinter, expacts to compete in L TR UIAS jish in first-place for every club inltne National Aeronautic association,|the 1932 Olympics are the few players most the league has been strengthened'png the count was . to step into the spotlight|which will make it just so muchlinose he could see ‘ Babe Ruth accepted only three|last night by a fire which swept |came here on business on the Prin- April 15 as regulars, on the bnsls‘hflrder {6: us to repeat. | The looping Mildreds ‘almostiof a shipment of six new bats that |the loading docks of the Willys- jcess Norah Sunday, left for the it they' have shown in camp:; "It will not be a runaway race goupled the previous record of 28|reached the Yankee training camp. |Overland Company and burned south on that steamer today. burgh—Gus Suhr, first base. for any elub. Naturally I belicve | S p “CHECK! York Yankeces—Ben Chap- the Yankees will be our principal| . third base; Allen Cooke, out- opponent but they as well as we | v l » —and A COOLER SMOKE IN A DRIER PIPE DOUBLE CHECK! You Save $75.00 in Extra Equipment JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. Ford Dealers By BRIAN BELL (A. P. Sports Writer) FORT MYERS, Fla, April 1.— Connie Mack expects his world Last year when the major league ims trotted out for their opening fame. fter the band-playing. and 1la a quick check of the cituation disclosed exactly ten re- cruits making their debut in the lar lineup. ‘This comprised NEW 1930 MODELS ELTO ENGINES NOW San -raising suce on Carnegie Lake, k Logg. They are collegiate rowing their trai coach, Ch Princeton vz crew doing under the expert guidance of their hopeful of scoring high honors in the comi competitions this year. A few of last year's varsity veterans have been retained, but for the the 1030 crew will show 1 that has been developed f last new mater season’s fresh- 100 NEW AUTOS DESTROYED,FIRE TOLEDO, Ohio, April 1 thah $280,000 damage was more than 100 new cars and 30 box cars, also the 700 foot loading dock. Alfred Qualy, Overland official, estimated the company's loss at $125,000 and the freight cars were valued at $155,000. MO 5 More J. A. Wocdland, branch manager done |of the Imperial Oil eompany, who | téen seems to have out- George Sisler in the r the first base job with the Ask to see the new 14 e 1920 h.p. Senior Speedster renomenal JUNEAU YOUNG HARDWARE CO. T — New York Giants—Marshall, sec- opposition than in 1929. Cleveland,| ond base. Detroit, St. Louis and Chicago are; Detroit—Elias Funk, outfield; Bill Rogell, shortstop; George Rensa, catcher. (Funk and Rogell were up with other clubs.) St. Louis Browns—Fred Bennett, outfield. Boston Braves—Walter Berger, outfield. Boston Red Sox—Tom Oliver, out- ficld; Bill Sweeney, first base. Chicago White Sox—Smead Jol- ley, outfield; Irving Jeffries, in- field. Brooklyn—Alfonso Lopez, catcher. This list does not include the pitching prospects, which are more difficult to make any forecast about until they have been put to actual test Among the twirling new- comers who seem slated for regular employment are Mahaffey, Ath- letics; Moss, Nelson and Teachout, Cubs; Gomez and Polli, Yankees; Hogsett and Wyatt, Tigers; Frasier, ‘White Sox; Lindsey, Cardinals; Campbell, Reds. There was a time when a gentle toss of 50 feet with the 16-pound shotput was good enough to win in nine out of ten track meets. Now- adays it appears hardly enough to gain even a place in the scoring column. John Kuck pushed the world’s shotput record beyond 52 feet in the 1928 Olympics but Herman Brix, Harlow Rothert and Eric Krenz, three of the Pacific Coast lads with bulging biceps, are in aot pursuit of this record. Rothert, Brix and Krenz, -in a Jual meet at Stanford, recently put on the greatest shot-putting exhi- bition since the Olympics when they registered heaves of 51 feet, 8 inches, 51:4% and 51:00%, respec- tively. Rothert’s toss, within five inches of Kuck's world's record, was the best of his career. Brix later surpassed 51 feet again to win the national indoor title. Krenz has done better than ever before with 2 mark of 51 feet, 7% inches thx‘s Spring, in addition to 160 feet with the discus. ——vo— 500 POINTS IN ONE SEASON NAPOLEON, O., April 1.—All but 153 of the 653 points scored by the Malinta-Grelton girls' basketball team were netted by Miss Eleanor Heckler. She averaged 25 points a game for 20 games. ———————— Larry Johnson, Chicago negro, will get another crack at Maxie Rosenbloom, following Maxie's fight with Jimmy Slattery in Buffalo, on April T. going to be tough while Washington | and Boston, the clubs that we fat- itened on a year ago, are not going | to prove such soft pickings this| |season. | “As for my own club, I am con- |fident I will have more infield re- |serve strength as I intend to re- tain First Baseman Keesey from Portland, Willlams, the young sec-' jond baseman from Little Rock and McNair, the shortstop from Knox- ‘vflle. Tarr, my rookie third base- |man from Nebraska, also looks good ibut I may have to place him out on ‘option for a year. i “In the main, the pitching staff will be the same as last year except |that I hope to have at least two | of the new men with us all season. | Mahaffey of Portland should bcs |able to help us. And, say, Howard | Ehmke may be able to pitch al |game every week. He says he willi {and I ‘am hoping’ he is not mis-| | taken.” — e —— | i FURMAN SHARES SOUTHERN ! CAGE HONORS WITH 'BAMA/ ATLANTA, April 1.—Furman uni- | versity of Greenville, 8. C., with a perfect record of 17 successive vie- | | torles, shared Dixie basketball hon- ors for 1930 with Alabama, South- | ern conference champs, and South- ‘western Louisiana institute, South- jern Intercollegiate athletic associa- tion winners. Under the tutelage of ROLLER RINK Open Every Afternoon from 2:30 to 5 p. m. “Dizzy” Every Evening* from 7:30 to 10:30 p. m. THE same old story? *Friday, Saturday and Sun- days open until 11 p. m. ADMISSION Afternoon—10 and 25¢ Evenings—25 and 50c JUNEAU AMU MENT CO. A. B. Hall Absolutely NoT! Yes, sir, we know ... many pipe tobaccos .. . many packages . . . many claims . . . —Dbut here’s a tobacco made by a time-tried method, cut to smoke cool, better packaged, fairly priced—and vouched for by a name which has always meant “good tobacco,” and always will! Granger Rough Cut tells a new story to pipe-smokers—and it’s cer- tainly one worth hearing! Liccerr & Myers Tosacco Co. { ! { ¢ ! i Give the public what the public wants—and it responds—every time. We've proved it once again with our “1930 Model” Diamond Briquets. For furnaces, heaters and grates, these briquets are the best we have ever made. And the public, in recog- nition of their superiority, has ordered and ordered and ordered. Let us send you a load. 1930 Six Cylinder CHEVROLET The Greatest Dollar Value in Automobile History CONNORS MOTOR CO. SEE THE NEW MODELS IN OUR SHOW ROOMS ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter PHONES 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 0 PSS " ARRIVED w Stock of Wallpaper JU Another | Juneau Paint Store |OId Papers for sale : Austin Fresh Tamales s} |

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