The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 31, 1930, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1930. BRINGING UP 8Y JOVE' THIS NYACHTING 'S GREAT HOPORT- EH- WHAT - MR-CRASH? SO = PN ép b 4 < /i \? :5 INDEED \T 15 BOT } UNDER- STAND WE ARE FATHER NG ADHORE TO-NIGHT: \/ BUT WEVE HAD SLCH A DELIGHT- IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII||l|||lllllllmlll , SPORTS M GOING TO TRY TO PERDUADE OUR HOST TO STAY OUT A FEW DAYS LONGER* ® 1930, Int Feature Service, Inc., Great BILLY ARNOLD IS WINNER OF AUTO CLASSIC Leads Practi?lly All of Way in 500-Mile Race at Indianapolis CASH PRIZES TOTAL FIFTY-FIVE THOUSAND Paul Marsm Mechanic on Brother’s Machine, Killed in Accident INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 31.— Billy Arnold, youthful Chicago driv- er, won ‘the 500 mile automobile classic on the Indianapolis Speed- way yesterday before a record- smashing crowd of 165,000 cheering him to victory. Arnold won close to $55,000 cath‘ in prizes. His time was 4 hours 48 minutes and 3972 seconds. Arnold led from start to finish with the exception of two laps, and he stopped only one, after he had made 278 miles, to take on fuel and change tires. J Paul Marshall, of Detroit, riding, as mechanic for his brother, Cy Marshall, was killed when the:r machine, crashing into a wall, fell 25 feet to the ground below. 3 Stants R ) Affairs of love and war popularly are supposed to allow of some lati- tude. For that reason there will be no move Christion Keener Cagle, whose mar- riage in the summer of 1928 was/| revealed a month before he was to get his commission, forced his res-| ignition from West Point. This may be especially so because Ex- Cadet, Ex-Football Captain and Ex-All-American Cagle, despite his| unceremonious ouster, faces good business prospects as a football coach and bond salesman. The whole incident, however, al- together aside from its purely per- sonal aspects, represents a severe blow to Army athletic pride and prestige at a time when West Point held fondly to a belief that it had the upper hand in any further arguments with Annapolis. To appreciate just how severe this blow is, it is necessary to re- call, briefly, that one of Navy's chief attacks upon Army at the time of the break in relations in 1927 was based on the charge that West Point recruited sta rathletes| | having no special ambition to re- main in the service after their| academy careers. The Navy pointed to the football stars who left the Army immedi- ately or within a few years after ending West Point carsers—mmer Oliphant, John McEwan, Eugenc| Vidal, Ed Garbisch, Mort Sprague Thus the case of Cagle develops, further to embarrass West Point,| first because of his unusual promi- | nence; sécond, because of the ethi- to condemn Cadet| ball field. be emphasized that the great red- | |head from Louisiana did more to popularize West Point athletic foot- ball, fill Army A. A. coffers than any other individual in the acad- emy’s career. Cagle’s daring daz- | zling exploits on the gridiron made' him the greatest drawing card since Red Grange. Never sparing himself, Red often played himself to a point of exhaustion. Nor was' he himself a limelight seeker. West Point will recall as one of the fin-| est examples of sportsmanship, Cagle's remark to the Army quar- terback when his signal was called on a goal line play with Navy: “Harry Wilson's making the touch- downs today.” In losing Cagle, Army regains | Light Horse Harry Wilson, who will go back to help coach the Wast | {Point eleven this fall after two | years in the flying service. BIff | Jones once told me he regarded Cagle as the most instinctive ball- carrier ne had ever coached, Wil-' C: |in three years at Penn State, four with the Army. His return as a ‘coach may be significant of a pro- sspective revival of relations be-| a SHARKEY HAS LITTLE FEAR ~OF HIS S0CK {Principal in ]une 12 Tus-| sle Boasts of Ca- pacity in Ring it A | ORANGEEUR,G N. Y, May 31— | |Max Schmeling will have to dem- | onstrate greatly improved punching ability if he hopes to win ovnr. Jack Sharkey by a knockout at‘ wreck any considerable damage. “Stribling, too, was a great punch- er, 1 believe,” the Lith continued. “In our fight at Miami Beach last cal issue of his negotiations, long before possible graduation to make, coaching and business connections! in the South, even though these| negotiations take on a different; light in the interests of a marriec\ man. © Moreover, the tranquility of i mind among those having West Point’s athletic destinies in hand, is not aided by the knowledge that | Cagle, under academic rules, was ineligible during his last two and ni year Strib hit me squarely on the jnw. but excent for going back less [than an inch, it failed to feaze me. “Other great artists of the punch whom I have met were George Godfrey, Jimmy Maloney, Harry| IWills and Jack Delaney. I can’t remember being hurt by any of them. “I have witnessed the moving pic- .Lures of the Schmeling-Paulino| nght on many occasions, and am J u er, Shattuck. ——————— | Five 0'Clock Dinner ' —adv most conspicuous years on the foot- (convinced that cven should I per- ‘mxt the German to hit me squarely on the jaw, the punch will bounce On Cagle's behalf, it can alwa)s off the Sharkey frame without ef- fect I was at the ring and left 'after the 12th round. I believe that i were Schmeling he would |ino in five rounds" MOOSE SWANP 23 to 3 Victory Gives Paps ing pounded out ‘snn as the brainiest and most in- |after five innings against the Le- | |spiring to a team. |gion team, both outfits trooped | Light Horse Harry harassed Navy ' from the field with the Paps ahead 23 to 3. in the City League. | tween WES‘ Point and A“““P""s ever staged in the City League. The | {result was due partly to the fact| |that ball players had not-been no-|en, Everett, [ tified ‘of the contest. As but a few \shawed up for the afternoon game start to finish. {fourteen men at bat in the opening ka; ‘camo and with six hits and four|Louis Guecelette, Anchorage. ierrors piled up ten runs. The Le- . /gion made three in the same in-| {ning on one hit and three miffs. |sacks barren. | Vets another in the 'second. ithe third the Paps got (more fat ones on four swats and three errors. the Yankee Stadium on Jpne 12. :;:;gl: x:rlltl;:: f.;%x;?:cuon Rie tae That, in effect, is the statement; special edition of the paper| of America's vrepresematjve in the would be necessary to give the| coming world's heavyweight cham- game play by play. Here's the box pionship bout as he prepares here Siore and summar);‘ at Gus Wilson's training site for 5 the all-important fray. Box Score The Lithuanian points out the | MOOSE ABRHPOAE fact that he has tasted the deadli-|B. Schmite, If ... 3 5 1 2 0 0| est punches of the ring’s best dur- % Schmitz, 2b . g 11001 ing his six years of fighting with-|Andrews, p, 1b .. 3 3 1 5 2 1 out losing the boxer's coveted per-“Lansmg, c 82 33 1.0 pendicular position. M'Spadden, ss ...4 2 1 0 1 1 | All of this taking place since|B. Keaton, 1b 100000 his knockout at the hands of Ro-|Cunningham, 1b,p3 1 0 3 3 1 mero Rojas back in 1924. Kearney, 3b 4% 32010 Sharkey points to his fight with|Bus Orme, cf . 41 1 009 Jack Dempsey at the old Madison | Goss, rf 82 2.0 0 0 Square Garden in 1927 as the best|Geyer, rf 00109 example of his ebility to absorb : 0000 o - the hardest punches the modern( Totals . 36231215 8 3 ring has produced. LEGION— ABRHPOAE| “I was not knocked out that|Niemi, cf 21,0003 night,” says Sharkey. “And I was|Roller, rf 511198 not hurt at any stage until thelgabin, 3b, ss, p 200003 former champion hit me what IjLivingstone, 3b ey PN T EN still insist was a foul blow. The{Coughlin, ¢ 30011 0 0} left hook he landed just before I|j gchmitz, ss, p..3 0 0 0 0 0 went down in that seventh round Murray, 2b 200002 did not knock me out. In fact, Iinorgan, 1f 2.0 21.0:3 did not feel it. P. Schmitz, 1b 20 1+1:0%9 “Several times during the fight|gogski p . 0000O0O Dempsey. landed his left hand to] * = _ _ — — - the head, but not until the next| mgta)s 22 3 515 1 9 day did I feel the effect of the! gummary—Earned runs, Moose punches. I remember the nextly; yegjon 1; two base hits, Living- morning having difficulty putting|gione Lansing, Orme ;three base on my hat, due to a bump almost|pi¢ yansing; home run, Kearney; | the size of a baseball on my fore-!jart on bases, Legion 5, Moose 6; | head, but aside from that the'h" by pitched ball, Coughlin by 'deadly Dempsey punches falled tol opgrews, Kearney, B. Schmitz, An- drews by i Koski 2, J. Schmitz 2, Sabin 1; struck out, Schmitz 6, pitched, by Koski 1, by J. Schmitz | 2, Cunningham 2; | Koski; Specials at Mabry’s, a great puncher have knocked out Paul- VETERAN TEAM LAST EVENING Tie for First Place in City League While scorekeepers cried for add- machines like babies cry for asteria, the Moose baseball. men run after run, until,| The win gave the Moose | tie with the Vets for first place It was one of the wildest fiascos was postponed until 6 p.m., but |evening found the Vets still short man, Hidden Falls; Arthur Dennis, | ‘so they filled in with what they Skagway; Gilbert Wilson, Skagway; |could pick up. | Louis Wills, Dundas Bay; Karl Nel- | The mixup was a laugh from The Moose had | | | In the second, Kearney knackml: homer for the Paps with the| Two hits gave the | In| in nine| Two errors and a| J. Schmitz; wild pitch, | by Andrews 1, by Cun-| ingham 2, by Koski 1, by I by Sabin 3; innings| by Sabin 2, by Andrews 3, by, winning pitcher, . Andrews; me of game 1 hour, 45 monutes; ! mpires Davis and Nostrand; scur-’ Try the | {taken out when his arm went hay- | wire. | Seattle; Hans Floe, Hawk Inlet. charge defeat, to ;% LEGION-ELKS TILT SUNDAY Short«handed Vets, Minus | Star Pitchers, to Face Bills at 2:30 PM. | | Badly bent, but not broken, the: American Legicn baseball team will take the field at 2:30 p.m. tomor- row against the Elks outfit in a| scheduled nine-inning game. Fred Cameron, Legion skipper, is hard put to secure a favorable line- up for the tilt. Manning, one of his best pitchers, is in Whitehorse, while Koski, the other standby, is the possessor of a stiff arm. Koski started last night’s game but was He had pitched the pre- vious game, Wednesday, and had; not rested up sufficiently. At any rate, someone will throw the balls over the plate for the Vets. The Bills will go into the fracas with Junge on the mound and Blake catching. PRI I & A, T'LE [iOTELS Gastineau L. Larsen; Mrs. D. H, MacDonald, Portland Island; Miss B. M. Crav- Wash.; W, W. French, Alaskan E. E. Mead, Point Retreat; A. Ny- son, city; M. Gerand, city; Mrs.| Jack Lee, Killisnoo; R. Grant, Sit- Henry Pennoyer, Fairbanks; ritain rights rese By GEORGE McMANUS rved, i - You Can Achieve anything you set out to do—espec- | ially if you have the backing of a good bank account. . First National Bank GAM Mission 1 Oakland 1, 2; od 3, game 12 innin Chicago 17, 3; 15 Detr FRIDAY gs. Philadelphia 1, | First game 12 innings. Boston 5, 3; New York 6, 7. t 5, 9; Cleveland 2, 6. Moose 23; American Legion 3. Pacific Coast League 10; Los Angeles 2, 7. Portland 3, 6. , 9; San Francisco 2, 10. 10 innings. Sacramento 3, 6; Seatle 5, 0. First National League Philadelphia 1, 9; Brooklyn 11, 11. Cincinnati 9, 6; Pittsburgh 1, 7. £t. Louis 0, 8; Chicago 2, 1. Second g 10 innings. New York 5, 5; Boston 6, 6. American League St. Louis 4, 4. First game 10 innings. Washington 0, 11; STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet.| Sacramento 31 22 585 | Los Angeles .28 23 549 Oakland 29 25 537 Mission ? 25 San Francisco ... 28 27 509 | Hollywood 25 27 481 Seattle 23 31 .426\ Portland 20 33 371 Nauonnl League Won Lost Pect. Brooklyn 25 14 .641 St. Louis 24 15 615 Pittsburgh 21 17 553 1 Chicago 21 20 512 Boston 17 18 486 New York - I 21 447 | Cincinnati 15 23 395 ! ‘Philadelphia . 1 22 333 American League | Won Lost Pct Washington 217 13 675 Philadelphia ... 26 14 .650 | New York .. 17 .553' Cleveland 18 A550 Detroit. 23 439 [ St.Louis 23 410 Chicago 422 405 Bostornt 12 25 324 Juneau City League I Won Lost Pet.| Ameértican Legion... 3 2 600 | * Moopse ... 3 2 .600 Elks 1 3 250 | e GOLDSTEIN'S FUR STORE Reppens at 8 p. m. tonight. Public | D e e is invlfied adv. ! ~—Bobby IBOBBY JONES TITLE WINNER ST. ANDREWS, England, May Jones has added Bnush Amateur championship his string of major golf titles, when | he defeated Roger Wethered. GOLDSTEIN STORE RE-OPENS TONIGHT| Charles Goldstein's fur store, su-! JUNEA U MOTOR’ Inc. | uated opposite the Winter and Pond | studio, on Lower Front Street, will re-open for the summer season at 18 o'clock this evening, it was an- today by Mr. Anyone who is interested in see- nounced ing Mr. furs is invited to attend the open| Goldste * CHOICE OF COLOR COMBINATIONS F.0.B. Juneau, tully equipped. Rumble seat, $25.00 extra. 1500 MILE FREE SERVICE The new Ford cars combine beauty of line and color with out- |{ standing performance. In addition to low cost amd ecomomy of | operation, they bring you unusual’ safety, comfort, speed, power, | { ease of control, reliability and long life. | The Ford leads in sales because it leads in VALUE CALL OR TELEPHONE 30 FOR DEMONSTRATION ‘ S T T — { More Value for Y our Money i Ford Delux Coupe .................... $755.00 [t Ford Standard Coupe ............e..... 705.00 Ford Sport Coupe .................. 735.00 the| i to| DEALERS in. FRE —Hat Stand with every purchase of Goldstein’s fine stock of house this evening. | The furrier department is ready, 5371 o alter or make over old furs m'{‘ | to manufacture new ones. partment, Preparations Phone 25 The Nyal Service Drug Store HELENA RUBINSTEIN’S Beauty Arthur | Malacky is in charge of the de- and is assisted by Mlss | Mary Burke. We Deliver | QUICK STEP FLOOR PAINT Juneau Paint Store New stock overstuffed furniture just arrived | I NEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. Frye-Bruhn cost. "Phone 374 We can print anything from an ordi- nary post card to a large Broadside. Before you give out that next print- ing job you have in mind, get our esti- mate — Be convinced that you can buy Quality Printing from us at the cost of ordi- nary printing, Empire Printing Co. Quallty Printing Why buy ordinary printing when you can get Quality Printing at the same identical PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon PHONE 38 “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for DryCleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING |{ Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales | PHONES 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 ———d LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE 358 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and Ead at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Car~ying Boat e P e bt

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