The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 30, 1930, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THIS PICTURE OF A FONNY LOOKING WORLD ARE YoU g LAUGHING AT? BAB HO S Slais HELEN WILLS MOODY, like Bebby Jones, has one more big| Adrnament to win in order to| agka a clean sweep for 1930 Unlike Bobby of Atlanta, howeve! YOUR FATHER'S TROUNK:- | NEVER | Saw DucH a £ HA MAl | SUPPOSE ITS A PICTURE OF ONE. OF HIS BROTHERD THIS PICTURE 19 DATED FORTY- FIVE YEARS \ N 1 FOUND IN TELL ME BEFORE | DIE OF HYSTERICS: WHO IN THE \WORLD 1S THAT A PICTURE OF 2179 TOO FUNNY FOR WORDS MELY CHILD ANGELS WON BY NEAT BASEBALL IN FIRST HALF GAMES TUESDAY LOS ANGELES, July 30.—Smart Pacific Coast League ‘bm;eball still holds sway over nu- Sacramento 4; San Francisco 7.|merous basehits, if the Los Angeles Day game. club, winners of the first semes- Mission 6; Seattle 3. Night game. ter in the Pacific Coast split-sea- Oakland 3; Los Angeles 6. Night son pennant race, can be set up as game. {an example. Hollywood 5; Portland 4. N;g:\ti The Angels could muster no bet- game. jter than a .304 team average which |put them fourth on the list during |the first half. Their leading hurler, {little Berlyn Horne, was fifvh from National League Fhiladelphia 5; New York 11. St. Louis 5; Pittsburgh 6. Helen of Berkeley has been making Cincinnati 4; Chicago 3. an annual habit of sweeping every- Brooklyn 3; Boston 4. Game went thing in viomen’s tennis. 10 innings. The cdds should be at least 10 to| American League »k.on Helen to wade through the Detroit 7; Cleveland 14. naticnal championship field at New York 12; Philadelphia 3. Geh- #oForest Hills in August. Jones at! rig made his 30th and 31st homo Merion will be about even money,| runs, also~a triple. Ruth was which is remarkable enough, con | on base and scored on both of cidering the difrerence in hazards| Gehrig's homers, in the two sports. Chicago 6; St. Louis 2. Helen Wills Moody has now won Juneau City League eleven national tennis champion- Moose 14; Elks 4. ships in succession in France, Eng- | the top among the leading pitchers. An-almost airtight veteran infield | cleverly handled by Lelivelt, mana- ;ger. tided the club throygh. | Lelivelt moved Ray Jacobs from second base to the initial sack. Francis Sigafoos, who came to the Angels by way of Portland from the Chicago White Sox, took sec- ond. Harry “Truck” Hannah, started [the season as a coach but soon ! moved into the regular catching as- ! signment. | Fred Haney, ex-big leaguer of land and America. She has won| STANDING OF CLUBS !note, and chief base stealer of the 13 altcgether. She has captured the | Pacific Coast League | circuit, received third base position, 8. crown six times within the| Won Lost Pct with Carl Dittmar posted at short. seven years, being unable to Mission 1 4 133| To these guardians of the foot- compete in 1926 because of an op- Hollywood 10 5 637 paths goes the greater share of the cration for appendicitis. {Oakland 8 7 533 honors for a firs§ half victory. She has not lost a set to any LOS Angeles 8 7 533 what heavy hitting was done, for feminine opponent since 1927. The|Sacramento 7 8 467 the most part, came at the hands Californian has been pressed to s"? Francisco ... 17 8 487! of Wes Schulmerich, the outfielder win even a set so seldom that it‘imi“lmd 5 10 333 who hankers to become a profes- has removed the element of un-‘Lea o % 4 o 267! sional wrestler. certainty in women’s tennis wher- | N"““""‘lwl;?g“‘: ost pey| Wes led ihe loop with a 404 av- ever she happens to be involved. g o w)o . 58 38 (‘Lm"(:‘uqc‘ but only four of his team Mot -even the greaf- Susanne Lenf-|opipeyy 58 41 ',m‘m:m\s were able to crash the .300 len in her prime dominated the|y.. vorg 53 44 ‘545 mark, with Johnny Moore, the best ccurts so completely as Queen Hel- g4 'y 040 48 47 '505'0f these, hitting .354, thirteenth A {Pittsburgh 484 | from the top. The big winning streaks of 1930, (Bogton ; 22 ;? '4231 Next to Horne among the Angel up to the middle of July, have been |@incinnati 44 527 458 hurlers was Ed Baecht, with a those of Bobby Jones in golf, Gal- iphiladelphia .31 61° 337 dozen wins and seven defeats. lant Fox in horseracing and Hclen“ American League i o Wills Moody in tennis. They have Won Lost Pet.| 5 romped off with about all the!Philadelphia .. 671 34 65| SALANCED - GRIDICON RACK main prizes that could conservative- | Washington .. 59 38 608 | SEEN IN SOUTHWEST LOOP ly be expected of them in the short New York 56 43 566 space of a few weeks, each start- Cleveland 52 49 515| DALLAS, Tex., July 30.—An even- ing out in May to do things and !Detroit 47 55 _4g1 | 1y balanced grid race Is in store for go places rapidly. Chicago 4 56 L4p3 | the fans when the Southwest Con- |St. Louis . 40 60 _400 | ference football season gets under “Never, I believe, at least while I|Boston ... .35 62 361 Way less than two months ahead. live, will women equal men'’s records Juneau City League Of the seven schools, only Ar- in sports,” writes Mary K. Browne Won Lost Pt |kansas and Rice are being counted in the magazine “Tennis.” “They |Moose 10 1 909 |out of the championship fight, are nearer men's equal in swim_;American Legion.... 4 8 _333’wh‘xle the other teams, Texas Chris- ming,, next in golf and further {EkS ... 3 8 213, e — = away in tennis; in polo, baseball, ¥ AR R i e B g 41 4 g foetball and ice hockey, still fur- L] ther.” As each game increasingly/, k. e’ .¢ requires stamina, physical strength and speed, women are outdistanced| Ed Roush, hold-out Giant out- . but there will always remain fielder, is reported to have entered a'few optimists who think there|negotiations with Manager John will live super-women who can de- |McGraw for re-instatement. feat men-at any sport. fOn August 6, 1926, Gertrude Ederle conquered the English Chan- nel and broke the best records of five men by two hours . . . But In a recent tournament at Phila- {delphia, Gene Sarazen, ‘Open golf champion, birdies in a row. shot five former| Gertrude Ederle held her unusual swimming record for only a short Bryan Grant, Jr., of Atlanta, new National Clay Courts champion, will time engage in his first -varsity college| “Helen Wills Moody is better, I competition next year. | kelieve, than the vast majority of | men, but T do not think she would| When Hartford dropped out of ‘are as well in our men’s national the Eastern league this season, the iennis championships as Miss Joyce [city was without organized base- Nethered would in a men’s golf ball for the first time in 35 years.| ANOTHER SPOT! No need to worry!— It’s not ruined if you ‘hampionship. 1 “It is conceivable that in golf al super-woman might acquire the, same accuracy with a longer club: that the men attain with a shorter one. Francis Ouimet claims that| Joyce Wethered is as good a shot-| “maker as any man when she is: within 100 yards of the green, but | ‘ténnis is entirely different and I| eannot conceive of any woman being able to develop a game equali to Tilden's for instance. i +When Suzanne Lenglen was in| her prime and, as so often happens | there was no woman who could give her a game, Tilden defeated her 6-0 in a friendly encounter.” e, SEATTLE G32L DIES IN CORDOVA HOSPITAL ~ Miss Mwry E. Tietgen, age 20, daughter ¢f Dr. and Mrs. A. H Tietgen, of\Seattle, died late yes- terday afterwoon [July 15] at the Cordova General Hospital after suffering for\ many months with diabetes. Miss Tietgeh was visiting her friends, Mr. Asd Mrs. Emanuel Tsom at the time of her death, raving come here about three weeks ago, hoping that the change of climate would prove beneficial ¢ to her.—(Cordova Times.) e — . Try the Five oClock Dinner Epeelals at Mabry’s. ~-adv | + send it to us. Through many years of experi- ence and careful study, we know just how to re- move spots without det riment to the color or texture of the fabric. . Phone 15 ALASKA LAUNDRY Fred Heimach, new. pitcher Mthl the Brooklyn Robins, has yet to| participate in a world series game, though he was a member of the 1928 championship Yankee club. ! | The Coffee Shoppe | | MRS. K. HOOKER | | Home cooked meals as you like | ' | them.” Featuring Chicken Din- | | ners every Thursday. Rice & | | Ahlers Bldg., Corner Tkird and | | | Franklin Streets. | REAL BARGAINS N USED CARS BIGGEST VALUES EVER OFFERED IN JUNEAU CONNORS MOTOR CO. 30 IS tian, Southern Methodist, Baylor | and Texas|! University of Texas A. and M. will be more powerful than usual. Conference schools will engage in more intersectional clashes than ever before. The big day will be ct. 4 when Southern Methodist meets Notre Dame at South Bend, Baylor ties into Purdue at Lafay- ctte, and the Texas Aggies invade the Nebraska Cornhuskers’ strong- held at Lincoln, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1930 By All scven confer: e squads will v their initial workouts Sep- tember 10, S e — COLLEGE TEACHES BUYING JLLEGE PARK, Md—EBelieved the of its’kind in his- [ole o b tory ers of food in making their selec- tion of products has heen added by | the University of Maryland. GEORGE McMANUS [ a course intended to help buy- | YOOR FATHER GAVE TO ME- TS A PICTORE OF YOU- MAGGIE- WHEN | YOO WUZ A WEE BIT 7 ‘MOST FISH FROM LAKE ERIFE ERIE, Pa. — Lake Erie was most important area for comm cial fishing among inland 1 duri; 1928, the Bureau of eries reports. Of a total of 63 467 pounds caught in Great I 19,643,170 pounds were caught in Lake Erie. - S e o Real Courteous Service AT LOW COST Our shop is as clean and sweet-running as a new car itself. It up-to-date in equipment and man- ned by specialists in vicing and repairing new or old cars. Our purpose is to save you time and money here. Get our prices for repairs, accessories, greasing, and servicing. You'll like our prompt, courteous, efficient service. Cars greased by genuine Alemite service. Drive in for LUCAS SERVICE that saves time, money and worry. JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. DAY FONE ¢ NITE FONE 421 “SERVICE LUCAS” Manager TRAVEL BY AIR FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED FOR RESERVATIONS—Hangar Phone, 29; Gas- 3 I Big Kernels In Small Shells In addition to the advertisements of the big department stores, of the grocery and hardware stores, of the millinery, clothing and shee stores, there is another kind of advertising that is being read more and more by readers of this newspaper. That kind of advertising is the Class fied Columns. A man or woman wants a job. They read the “Help Want- ed”” columns and probably insert an advertisement of their own under “Position Wanted.” Employer and job seeker soon get together to the benefit of both. A man may want an automobile —possibly he cannot afford a new car, so he looks in the “Used Car” columns and finds just the car at the price he can afford ) I to pay. even a pet dog. Someone ha The “Lost and Found” columns soon bring loser and finder together. lost a pocketbook, valuable papers or The Classified Columns are so arranged that anyone can readily find what he seeks quickly—business news, machinery and tools, houschold goods, horses, dogs, cats, canaries, etc. They ' enable you to locate what you are looking for in short order. So in reading advertising do not overlook the classified columns —the individual advertisements do not take up much room, but, tineau, Phone 10. A. B. HAYES, Agent. PAYING BY CHECK is the Safest Way The Safest way to pay bills is by check Household and Personal checking accounts are welcome at this Bank. Special courtesies to women depositors. st First National Bank USED CAR BARGAINS Used Truck Bargains If You Don’t Believe It SEE McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction Frye-Bruhn . Company Featuring Frye’s De- licious Hams and Bacon like the meaty nut, they may contain a big kernel in a small shell —just for you. PHONE 38 - “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Read the advertisements for your own good . . . classified columns as well as | display advertisements THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Phone 374 | prrtrrrrrr st Phone 136 Corner 4th and Franklin St. | THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY ‘ 4 LUMBER QUALITY and SERVICE Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PHONE 358 THE NEW AND LATE STYLES OF SHOES——ALWAYS —at— ARNOLD’S BOOTERY GOLDSTEIN'S BUILDING PiGoLy WicGLy SO < )

Other pages from this issue: