The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 16, 1930, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1930 BRINGING UP Ay, THERED NJO OSE TALKINY' I'WVE GOT TO GIT o0 T- FATHER PLL GON AN TRY TO QT MAGGIE TO | GO OUT- THEN \ WINLGA\T - -~ ——— _\ (MAGGIE- ) THINK YOURE YOURE RIGHT-| I NEGLECTIN' THAT BUT HE CAN | 1.7, | BUT NO ONELNS TO BEALTIFOL VOICE OF COME OVER 1. | BLAME BUT MESELF- \ | | YOUR S -YouU SHOLLD HERE-1'LL v v o ¥ GO OVER TO YOULR CALL HiM 1o 1& i TEACHER AN’ TAKE Y 49 [ 2 LESDSON NAVY DEFEATS GOLDEN BEARS EASTERN RACE Middies Flght Off One of Greatest Closing Spurts Ever Seen PRINCETON, New Jersey, 16—The Navy crew, rowing like | eights of half a dozen years ago, fought off one of the greatest clos- ing spurts ever seen in this part of the country last Saturday after- noon and beat the Golden Bears of California on Lake Carnegie, with | Princeton third, in the season’s | first battle between the East and, | West, Frinceton’s Freshmen won - the yearling race, the Navy Plebes were second and California Cubs third, The Navy Varsity won by half a length, the Tigers being four lengths behind California. e GAMES SUNDLAY Pacific Coast League Misston 15, 8;* Hollywood 4, 13. Seattle 3, 7; Portland 0, 4. Sacramento 9, 5; Oakland 3, 4. Los’ Angeles 6, 5; San Franclscn 4, 10. National League New York 7; Chicago 4. Beston 4; Cincinnati 3. St. Louis 9; Brooklyn 4. American League New York 17; Cleveland 10. St. Louis 3; Washington 2. Philadelphia 10; Detroit 1. Juneau City League Elks 11; Moose 10. GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League Portland 6, 9; Seattle 4, 5. Hollywood 0; Mission 2. San Francisco 3; Los Angeles 1. Oakland 7; Sacramento 5. Twelve innings, night game National League Pittsburgh 19, 4; Philadelphia 12, 5. Chicago 8; New York 5. Cincinnati 0; Boston 2. St. Louis 5; Brooklyn 6. American Leaguc Washington 4; St. Louis 5. New York 11; Cleveland 7. Boston 8; Chicago 4. Philadelphia 2; Detroit ‘11. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coas!. League Won Lost Pet. | Bacramento 41 26 612 San Francisco 40 31 563 Los Angeles 38 31 557 Oakland 36 34 514 Mission 36 34 514 Hollywood 31 40 437 Seattle 29 41 414 Portland 42 400 National Lca{ne | Won Lost Pet. Brooklyn 33 19 635 Chicago 31 24, 564 New York 28 24 538 St. Louis 26 27 4 Pittsburgh . 25 26 490 Boston . 2 25 479 Philadelphia . 20 28 417 Cincinnati 20 32 .385 American League Won Lost Pet Fhiladelphia 34 21 618 Cleveland 32 21 .604 Washington 31 21 596 New York 30 21 588 St. Louis 23 .30 424 Detroit 23 32 418 Chicago 20 29 408 Boston " 17 35 327 Jnneau City League Won Lost Pct American Legion... 6 2 50 Moose ..., 5 4 556 Elks i 8 273 — eee- TO TELEPHONE PATRONS A new telephone directory is now in course of preparation. Patrons contemplating change of address or persons who wish to have tele- phones notify the Telephone Company. Tele- phone 420 before June 25th. adv. - .- LET Almquist Press Your Suit. We call and deliver. Phone 528 June ]| installed are requested to | | Billy Arnold, young Chicago driver, piloting car entered by Harry | 1 { ! | { Joe Mani classy Ketchikan L. Coleman; Mr. and Mrs. A. C.| fighter, has accepted an offer from Adams; M. B. Dahl, Hood Bay;| the local American Legion post to J. H. Frederickson, St. Anthony,| bmeet Soldier Olson in the miain Idaho; Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Pinker- event on its Fourth of July card ton, St. Paul; Margaret Pinker- at the Legion’s arena in A, B. o1, St. Paul; R. G. Wilms, Atlin; | Hall, it was announced today by Mrs. M. Wilms, Atlin; Mrs. Jl Post Commander Claud Helgeson, | Smith, Atlin; Miss D. Smith, A!-; Manila has been® forwarded ‘a|lin; Mrs. Flora Ttate, Petersbur[z:i eontract by Matchmaker “Red” J. Choquet; Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Campbell. Olson last week con- Mead, Point Retreat. sented to take on either Freddy, ~ Alaskan |Mack or Manila. Mack was not| T. McQuillan, Ketchikan; H. R.| available. With the headliner out|Roberts, U, S. Navy; Peggy Gambel, of the way, Campbell will proceed Benjamin Island; Luiz Giacoletti, {'at once to make up the rest of his Funter Bay; pick from, and his.objective will be ' Island; Ito get the best sf it in the ring|Arini Nyman, Funter Bay; Joe Me- THIS 1D TERRIBLE ! \ i i AT THE hOTILLS Gastineau Mr. and Mrs. John F. Chamber- | MANILA AGREES William L’ndley\ S’a{- Glbbon Taku River; ibbon, Taku, River; E. ning, Premier, B. C.; F. E. Walker, M. O. Man- Ketchikan Baltler Aceepts' v Seattle; E. Johnson, city; M. B. Legion Offer to Meet Riley, Ketchikan; Mr. and Mrs. 9 |Theo. R. Hyatt, Seattle; Mrs. M.| SOld]er Olson |Manko, Seattle;' J. D. Wallace, | Petersburg; A. R. Scott, Seattle; H.| | | ! ‘ JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. Official car registration reports from King County and the City of Seattle for the month of May give Ford 51.9 per cent for all cars sold. For this great record FORD has again given the public the benefit in nature of a reduction in price from FIVE TO TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS. FORD leads in sales because he leads in motor car FORD CARS ARE SOLD AND SERVICED BY S.—We now have a small quantity of AMMON- IUM SULP: 11;—\'1[‘5 Come in and get your share. DEALERS FORD always in LEAD } REAL BARGAINS IN i USED CARS BIGGEST VALUES EVER OFFERED IN JUNEAU CONNORS MOTOR CO. Ludvig Thoren, He- He has plenty of talent to Cata Island; Thor Thoren, Hecata card. H. Strom, Hecata Island;| B. Metz, Hoonah; J. B.| Seattle; Tony Muchni, for the Fourth of July fight crowd. calo, cit Hartz, is shown getting checkered E flag, as he crosses the finish line, the winner of the 500-mile speed classic at Indianapolis. ns, three American open cham- | ips, two British open titles one British amateur trophy. | He may yet be obliged to accept that invitation to play in Japan, cxtended. to him at Brae Burn in 1928, by native enthusiasts, if he | desires more golfing worlds to con- quer. | 18 10 REMAIN WITH ENGLISH I s . | One of the main reasons why the Britain’s Women Tennis pacitic Goast universities turn out P[ayers Defeat Plav_ |such fine track and field teams, in . |the opinion of California’s head ers from Amerlca jcoach, Walter Christie, is that the {high schools have developed re- WIMBLEDON, England, June 16.| markably keen interest in this —Great Britain’s women tennis|branch of athletics. | players regained the Wightman cup! “Many of our boys are close to' from the American women by win- |finished products by the time we |ning four of the seven matches in get them in college,” said Christie. | the play last Friday and Saturday.|“On the average I think the high | Helen Wills-Moody won the sin-|schools have better facilities and gles from Mrs. Phoebe T. Atson. attract the interest of more boy | After losing five straight games, in track and field sports than is ! {the case in the East. And, you know, | Helen Jacobs beat Joan Fry. | Miss Moody and Helen Jacobs |there is no widy to avoid our good | {lost the doubles to Mrs. Watson and climate. We can work outdoors the | Mrs. L. A. Godfrey in Saturdayslyenr around and that's a big ad- matches. vantage.” e, | To which Bill Bingham, Harvard 4 ‘graduate manager, somewhat ruc fully added: “Why, when I was out | coast this past winter, I saw those | | Stanford boys, Krenz and Roth } |tossing the shot and discus und | on a balmy day in January. How | Ican we beat 'em when they get the | jump on us like that?” Charley Paddock and Charley Borah, two of Southern Califor nia’s greatest sprinters, rarel showed at their best in the East, but not so Frank Wykoff, their on The members of the Bebby Jones Marching and Boosting Association of Atlanta who wagered a sockful at 1 to 10 that the Georgia wizard would win all four of the big Brit- ish and American golf champion- ships this year probably have been breathing a trifle more freely since | Bobby emerged with the Britisn! | Amateur title for the first time. This figured te be the toughest| barrier of them all for Jones to hurdle and it may well turn out| to be for it required the character- istic fortitude of Jones golf toj overcome the opposition offered in! succession by Tolley, Johnston, Voigt and Wethered, probably the four best amateurs on either side of the Atlantic outside of Bobby | himself. The odds on the great Georgian | will be shorter, %s.a result, in the remaining three major tilts—the British Open at Hoy'ake, which he has won in his last two attempts; the American Open at Minneapolls, in July, in which he was winner in 1929 and in every year but one since 1922; and the American Am- ateur at Philadelphia in Septem- ber, in which he has triumphed four times in the last six years. , For a young fellow just turned his 28th birthday, Jones in an eight year period has done pratty well by capturing four American amateur this summer, have Th by mail. If you are going THE E office in Alaska for the summer months The Empire sent.to you, by mail. UNCLE SAM WILL CARRY suece Wykoff beaten on an East ath, more partitu- )« larly the Harvard track, where he has done all his sprinting in the| |East, and has yet to taste defeat.| Flying Frank won four succes- | sive 100-meter dashes there in the final Olympic tryouts in 1928 and| returned to Cambridge this year in the I. C. A. A. A. A. championships to capture three more races at 100 yards. Wykoff equalled the Olympic record of 103 for the 100 meter: all four times in 1928 and equalled the intercollegiate meet mark of 9.7 for 100 yards twice this year. TUROFF LEAVES FOR HYDER FOR ROADWORK L. W. Turoff, Engineer of tihe | United States Bureau of Public Roads, left today on the tender | Highway for Hyder where he will be jent engineer on the Texas| | Creek extension of Salmon River | Highway. Mrs. Turoff and their little son will join him there to remain for | several weeks and then go south to visit relatives for sometime. Mr Turoff will be in Hyder until late next Fall. ——,——— TO VISIT IN SKAGWAY ) Mrs. George L. O'Brien, with Hal- vorsen’s, left on the Alameda for Skagway on a two weeks’ visit with | her sisters, Mrs. Vincent Mulvihill| and Mrs. Charles Rapuzzi, and her| brothers, Jack and Lee O'Brien. UNCLE SAM WILL CARRY THE EMPIRE TO YOU If you are going to.the States for a visit e Empire sent to you, h’ost ave any place near a MPIRE TO YOU Keep in Touch with Your Horhe Town Manila has never been seen in| Williams, } |action here. His battles with Joe City; V. Propst, Anacortes, Wash. & Co! have become sort of a Zynda | cla: and his frequent fights at 6 Sidney Hagen, Newhall, Cal. H Ketchikan have given him a first —— \rate standing here. He and Olson MOOSEHAVEN LEGION 25 |are well matched and the fight |should be a “natural.” | Meeting Tuesday night at Moose | ————————— Hall, 8 p. m. Initiation and lunch. Silque Hand Zotion. Juneau Drug | G. A. BALDWIN, 1Co., Agents. —adv. —adv. Herder | W.P. FULLER & Co . perfects a 4 hour Floor Enamel that will not water-spot It driesin 4 hours—a glossy, good- [ looking finish, heavier bodied than } the usual floor-finish, very resistant | to water and to hard wear. . .'. . % FULLERWEAR .. Quick-Drying Floor Enamel.. | isideal for all intesior floors—wood, cement or linoleum. It may also be used on canvas decks of water craft. | Tune in to Zena Dare’s talks on home decoration, | Fuller radio program, every Wednesday morning {5 at 11:10, “Woman's Mag.zine of the Air”, NBC petwork; and KSL and KGIR. s, Buy Fuller Products here ’ Juneau-Young Hardware Co. | Fl,&];”flZER FOR EVERY g‘m PURPOSE It has these proven features—Force feed oil system; oil filter; air cleaner; oil pressure guage on dash; fuel pump or Stewart vac- uum tank; lightweight pistons; four springs on chassis; Fisk tires; Continental Red Seal motor; Spicer universals; Auto Lite electrical equipment. If you know cars you will know that Durant's claim to quality is no idle boost. We expect a late model this week. Four cylinder coach $695 here. Six cylinder coupe $815 here. We predict you will see great things in Alaska aviation—but watch Durant. WATCH DURANT—The Quality Car l ECONOMY GARAGE—Telephone 146 USED CAR BARGAINS Used Truck Bargains SEE If You Don’t Believe It McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction BEDS ——— SPRINGS ——— MATTRESSES Ask to see the Nachman Spring Filled Mattress JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. TRAVEL BY AIR Seaplane “Takw” - FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED Booking may be.made with Larry Parks or at desk of Gastineau Hotel Ala.ska-Washington Airways Hangar, Phone 429 Gastineau, Phone 10 You Can Achieve anything you set out to do—espec- ially if you have the backing of a good bank account. First National Bank

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