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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE SATURDAY APRIL I9 1930 Primo Carnera as his job in dis- ing of 13 opponents in 50 min- Phillies collected 153 home runs last year and Babe Ruth 46 | but they don’t pay off on t The Bambino's 1930 sal $80,000 probably exceeds bined pay checks of a the Philly regulars this outside of the pitchers. has taken another swift | stride toward a place in the South- | ern athletic sun by engaging Wal- ¢ Benny Friedman,|lace Wade, Alabama’s famous foot- merica quarterback | ball coach, for a five-year period, professional star | starting in 1931. The “baby” of regular ad-| the Southern conference is already ching staff,| full-grown so far as sports compe- 1 for spring | fit is concerned. Wade de- 't of Eli old;veloped championship teams, Rose ope to see longer and| | Bowl winners and All-Americans better passing by the boys in Blue | Such as Winslett and Holm at Ala- this fa. (bama. He will take a fine repu- Eli sentiment harbors no further | tation as a coaching genius to the fualms about the engagement of 1‘“ealthy North Carolina school. non-graduate coach. When some- \ thing needed to be done about the‘ rowing swstem, Yale signed Wash- | ington’s Ed Leader and has nev er regretted it. When a better lmc Manager of Cisiinnati Reds cmart, keen field general. If Albie| Is Said to Have Only coaching was needed, Notre Damcsr Adam Walsh was persuaded to Ior- | Booth had any weakness last Fall One Worry it was in the passing game and| [ T the eight year, Duke his visi practice grads wh Friedman was one of the bett of all college passers, the firing cnd of the Friedman-to- -Oosterbaan | combination when he was at Ann Arbor, in addition to being a sake Santa Clara, California, fill the job. n may help the Blue streak | By BRIAN BELL in this respect | (A. P. Sports Writer) — | NEW YORK, April 19—Dan How- The Ambling Alp scored another|ley, who has moved from the| triuiph in negotiating a crossing ' American to the National league to of the Rockies. At least this was|manage the Cincinnati Reds, has about as dangerous a er for [only one worry and he is not alone {in that for most managers at this; season of the year are wondering | what their pitchers will or will not do for them later. “I am sure we have the punch to make things unpleasant for other teams,” said the genial Dan. | “In addition to the hitters the; Reds had last year we have bou | DRESS UP FOR EASTER 1 Washington |Cleveland GAMES YESTERDAY Pacific Coast League Los Angeles 2; Hollywood 1. Seattle 4; Oakland 8. Eleven in- nings. San Franecisco 5; Mission 1. Portland 5; Sacramento 4. Fourteen innings National League Philadelphia at New York—rain. Boston at Brooklyn—rain. Pittsburgh 5; Cincinnati 3. Chicago 1; St. Louis 11. American Leaguc Cleveland 7; Detroit 1. New York at Boston—rain. St. Louis at Chicago—postponed on account of cold weather Washington at Philadelphia—post- poned on account of wet grounds. STANDING OF CLUBUS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet. .800 636 636 600 400 Los Angeles San Francisco Oakland Sacramento Mission Seattle Hollywood Portland . .364 > .200 N:monal League Won Lost 1 0 Pct. 1.000 1.000 New York . Philadelphia Pittsburgh Chicago 8|St Louis Cincinnati Brooklyn Boston 500 500 .250 .000 | 1 3 2 2 1 0 0 American League Won Lost 1 0 Pct. 1.000 1.000 Philadelphia Chicago Detroit 667 Boston New York St. Louis HOME Rl, HITTING CURBED | DALLAS, Tex., April 19.—Shoving | the ‘ball park Iences back has put .000 000 C O oo i |a crimp in the style of home run | hitters in the the ! the exception of the Waco park|of Texas league. With where 266 circuit blows were hit last year, it takes a healthy wal- lop to clear the fences in other in two great long distance hitters fields of the circuit. ithentic new st\'l(‘s in Harry Heilmann and Bob Meu-| P WD % sel and Tony Cuccinello, the young- | 1n Spring il]ll"dl‘('l for ||ster from Columbus, has shown that | 1 , R . he can hit about as far as anybody. | iae 7 Fesse 1an | ¥ the well dressed ma | “We have added some fielding ) | strength, too, for Leo Durocher HATS las capable a fielder as I have seen | lin my many years of baseball and CAPS | certainly Hughie Critz can go get ‘em with anybody in the game. SHOES SUITS TOP COATS SHIRTS iFrom the limited chance I have| NECKWEAR 'feen to observe the others in a SOX is ‘Uon I have seen nothing' to wo about the defense. “The pitching is important nnd |that is where I am giving my ef- || forts now. . We started by run- | ning. Everybody ran but the pltch-{ 'ers most of all for with the legs ‘in shape a pitcher is well on the road to condition. | “All I can promise is that the team will hustle every minute of every game. There’s nothing like | dashing in and at 'em and then dashing out again to battle 'em in| | the field. This cannot fail to show ‘[results." e — ! WINNER OF CONTEST Let us fill your needs for Spring John C. Lund, jr., has been an- nounced as the winner of the award offered by Piggly Wiggly for guessing the number of pennies in |a jar. There were 2967 pennies !in the jar. SABIN’S C. 0. SABIN, Prop. OUR FEATURE SUIT VALUE! ALL WOOLEN fabrics, noted for their shape perm- anency and long wear, are offered in a well selected assortment of either single or double breasted models. The cloth is woven from the famous OREGON WOOL by the Pendleton Woolen ills and the suits are tailored in New York City. You'll be agreeably surprised at the quality and tailoring of these suits and they come with TWO pairs of pants. $35.00 to $38.75 (Two Pants Suits) The Leader Department Store GEORGE BROTHERS 364 | 750 | 837 | 500 | 333 | Attractions At Theaires ! COCK EYED WORLD” IS AT COLISEUM SUNDAY )A couple of leatherneck Dox.n Juans! That's a trite way to char-]| acterize Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen as “Sergeant Quirt” and ‘Top Sergeant Flagg” in the Fox Movietone all talking production, by Raoul Walsh and day at the Coliseum | Based pn a story written by Lau- | rence Stallings and Maxwell Ander- son, who co-aut ed the unforget- table “What F e Glory,” Lowe and McLaglen are still in the ma- rines, though it peace time, but plenty of fighting in the tropics— and between themselves. | Pals, buddies thers, everything |is great until one falls for a “fem- me.” Then each claims priority and | the innocent cause of the trouble must stand by while they tell each |other aplenty. Of their many lom affairs, three | stick out promin ; one in the tropics with the gorgecus Lily Da- mita, another in cold Russia with | fascinating Lelia Karnelly, | third at Coney Isle | flip American g by | Around these \('Jxl‘hu]fi lmc af- |fairs are incidents of a most hu- man nature, with pathos, tears, tsmiles, romance and thrills. In addition to the five featured players mentioned, the supporting | cast is one of first rank when one {recalls the fame of El Brendel, the| Swede comic of vaudeville and mus- ical comedy; Bobby Burns as “Con- ners,” Ivan Linow, former heavy- | weight wrestler known to fame as “The Russian Lion,” and “Solidad Jiminez, Spanish character actress “In Old Arizona.” | opening Sun- is AT PALACE TONIGHT OUR Alaska Lumber Service has just one purpose - special atten- tion to every Alaska or- der. large or small. Write us - or, if you're in 2 hurry - wire. Your order will be shipped on the first boat. Fine finish stock - lum- ber for boat building whatever your require- ments, Farrell has it. And you can be sure of First Quality and Special Grading. Specify Farrell. Wnte - or wire your specifica- tioris - we do the rest! | Westlake and Prospect - SEATTLE Sheet Metal 0il Tanks Gas Tanks Fox Feed Pans Smoke Stacks Stove Pipe Canopys Down Spouts Septic Tanks Air Pipe Yukon Stoves Pipe Furnaces Pipeless Furnaces Silby Tent Heaters RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will cost” Fy Tt | “stars on parade! | Stars of stage and screen; stars of vaudeville, opera and radio, stars | 101‘ all our wonderful twentieth cen-| !tury amusement media in the great- | e3t cast ever assembled for one mo- tion picture! One by one they pass before you | with dance, sonz or comic skit in| Metro-Gol n-Mayer's “The Hol- lywood. Revue,” the gigantic full-; length' all talking, singing and| | dancing feature coming to the Pal-| ace 'Theatre tonight. | Twenty new song hits and novelty dances, abundant “gags” and laugh, Morris Construction GENERAL CARPENTER WORK |“The Cock Eyed World,” directed | ,|No one among the picture stars is; annyual | thing | ever gathered, POLISH PRI HISTORIC tuneful melodies and dialogue that sparkles to say nothing of the largest dancing chorus of beauti-| ful girls that ever dazzled the| TORUN, Poland 1 bald-headed row. | honor of Poland's markma This is the material Metro-Gold- | been retrieved wyn-Mayer has compounded into ' the republic 200 the greatest all-star musical at-|the Great of Ru traction ever produced on stage or gust IIT of Pol screen The talkie era moves fast | der the ausg indeed! It is a Ziegfeld, Earl Carroil and George White show rolled into one with many deft motion picture touches, and because it is a motion picture, many cities and towns of the country off the beaten track of | road productions, will witness a great revue of revues for the first time L Scund technique's rapid develop- ment, the startling success of “The Broadway Melody,” the transplanta- tion of Broadway's stage and muci- cal comedy stars as well as its “tin pan alk to Hollywood—all these backed by the resources of a great! studio; have wrought this wonder. M. G. M.’s “Hollywood Revue,” more than redeems the promise of “musical movies” made with the ing picture. BULL'S EYE w u'd his fi at Great whether hand With shot he h y exact spot scored the -~ . BATTLES ROO FOR JOB WITIl GIiANTS NTONIO, Andy SAN fact that second him no adva April 19.—The Reese held down the Giants gives over Eddie Mar- shall, the rookie, in their scrap for the keystone position, declares Manager John MeGra | “They can fight it out,” caid the Little Napoleon, “and the one that shows me the most will get the job.” NOwW COLISEUM 0! QU ST” I SHOWING, - -e o AGFA-ANSCO FILMS AT ALASKA SCENIC VIEWS D LUDWIG NELSCN'S Sale will be held 1st. u’i{ome Blue appears in “Con quest,” his latest Warner Bros. star- | ring special, as pilot of an airship| which is bound for the South Pole. | adv as I as well suited for the heroic part—'tpe past —adv. since he has for years been an) amateur flyer. “Conquest,” at the Coliseum, is replete with thrills and adventures extremely timely just now, with all| of us interested in Compander| Byrd’s recent exploration of the Antarctic regions, for it recounts| the hazardous attempts of two/ ) V ACTED friends to do the same heroic! FOR EASTER and there are countless amaz- ing scenes amid the ice fields of| BUY THE BEST . .. the South Pole. The story is hy' from Factory Mary Imlay Taylor, adapted by Eve| —at— Uneell, and directed by Roy Del| Ruth, at the hands of one of the best casts the Warner Bros. have| including Mr. Blue, | H. B. Warner, Lois Lilson, Edmu-ul Breese, Tully Marshall and a host of others, all making “Conquest” wTelephone 2 emphatically a big time show. JOHNSTON’S Fresh Free Delivery Fre NS S TS S S MABRY’S CAFE SPECIAL Turkey Dinner o EASTER SUNDAY (TOMORROW) Starting at 12 o’Clock Noon Continuing Until 8 P. M. Phone 62 PO PSS S SRS G U S A L | l | | Valentine Building PHONE 397 Special for the month of April — Safest Perfected |! Method of Permanent Waving $10.00 Under New Management DODGE BROTHERS ‘Announce Two New Models A NEW SIX A NEW EIGHT At amazingly low prices McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction For $1.00 | { + { | | | ) ! | and WHAT a Feeling! WHEN you look at a last years’ suit and wonder how in the world you're going to make it serviceable this Spring — and you send it to The Alaska Laun- dry—and it comes back spic and span—incredibly New-—oh, boy — “Ain’t it a gr-rr-and and glo-r-r-ious feeling?” We Call For and Deliver ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 It Beats—As It Sweeps—As It Cleans Alaska Electric Light and Power Company JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS, ALASKA Phone 6 Phone~18 Dependable 24-Hour Electric Service V_Old Papers for sale at Empire Office TELEGRAM ND THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE: CABIN OWNERS GLACIER HIGHWAY "ALASKA THE SINCE LAST FALL NIGHTS ARE COLD BUT CABINS ARE COLDER JUNEAU, ALASKA, APRIL 18, 1930. CLOSED STOP IF YOU ARE GOING OUT SATURDAY CALL AT OUR BUNKERS STOP WE HAVE JUNIOR DIAMOND BRIQUETS STOVE SACKED AND READY TO BE TAKEN ERVICE RENDERED ON ONE OR TWO S STOP CHEERFULLY AS ON A TON. X D UTAH AWAY SACKS AS PACIFIC COAST COAL CO.