The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 4, 1930, Page 2

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ALL SUMMER SILK ai Final Sale P A 3 la in 3 B. M. h(*h; of Juneaw's-Leading Department Store Mary Ford, Graduated to Seniors, Is to Make Try F or W(’st Mary Greef, Kansas City girl tennis Mary Elizaboth Ford, 16-year-old, is strek- ing in the low cighties waiting for the womew's western title play fame in the home town, there, August 25-30 = KANSAS CITY, Aug. Elizabeth Ford of Kan graduated from high rimultaneously entered scpjor women championship tenders. The 16-year-old girl hopes to go | far' in golf before she enters col- lege next fall, in the low eighties at the Milburn | club here in preparation for 1930. women’s western title play at the’ Hillerest Country club in Kan- sas:City, August 25-30. 4.—Mary City was school and the ranks of con- | Following the plan of Mary Greef, :clean off a bit of mud and was de- Kansas City’s young mistress of the | tennis courts, Miss Ford will spend her. college days in California so | |circles. The group includes Roland £he. may play the year around. While her classmates at Paseo High school were receiving di- plamas in June, Miss Fard was in, Tulsa, Okla, pondering her quali- 39 inch &9 5() cr Il shades. ple and mow+is stroking | s the |t at Chicago in 1929. Through a mis- | ces ANTELOPE SILK silk-wool combination of 10 1d mohair. inches . Regulax .50 yard. Schmitz Outpltches Koski ond and the first two batters in ller, ss 40383 333 MUOSE DEFEAT the third. Vale doubled but was sabin, 2b 45009 850 thrown out trying te steal third aton, rf 300200 In the fourth, Manning went out, , P . U0 348 3 VETS IN FIRST F. Schmitz to Andrews. Brown was = = = @ — — — — — b safe when F. Schmitz juggled his Totals 34 2 52713 8 grounder. He advanced to second Summary—BEarned runs, Moose |on Haines’ H Vets 0; two-base hits, Vale and single to left. Roller | bounded one to third which Kear- ney booted out of the lot and Brown scored. That was the last time the Vets crgssed the plate, Andrews Hits Homer and Moose Win Sunday’s | 4 eme put the game on ice for the Moose in the fifth. J. Schmitz v Game by 10-2 Score | worked Koski for a walk. Shaw Pete Schmitz held the veterans to | ddvanced him to second on a hit S |and run, Shaw being thrown out J Schmitz; home. run, on balls, off Koski 5; struck by Koski 7, by Schmitz 10; left bases, Vets 5, :Moose 9; double Manning to Roller;, wild hes, Koski 2; passed balls, Mac- rdden | d; first base,@n errors, 5 4, Moose 5; stolen, bases, B,| hmitz 1, F. Schmitz 1, Andrews Schmitz 1, Roller 1; sacrifice ;r.w hits Sunday, and the Moose 7 won the first game of the Little | 3¢ first by Roller, He went to third B Bl NOW $2.45 |World's Series by a score of 40 to 2. |07 B. Schmitz’s sacrifice fly to Umpires—Davis, Nostrand, Her- e plain and figured Regular wecked T NOW $1.95 3 inch plain and figured de e chine. Regular and $2.50 a ird NOW $1.95 ' ) inch Charmonse Satin d Prinec Satin. Regu- r §2.95 and $2.75. NOW $1.95 V’Axldr(".\'w. {men on bases when the Paps were | trailing on a 2 | ter headed. did in any inning, fanned 10 men and | wild and that was partly responsi- |ble for supy even perfect support could not have|| | won the gam: iManning, |play, was the fielding feature, Itto double Mac' off first, threw the ;.. jcame in the fourth frame. Schmitz opencd the game by fan-iito second. J. Bchmitz singled, send- | I ning. Big Mac walked and advanced |Ing Mac’ to third. Jack stole sec-| to second on a wild pitch. Lan-jond. 8haw grounded to third. Vale's! sing smash | left a cinch the ball in his glove on a dead run | land threw to second doubling Big Mac, who had already crossed the nn and Botelho. Scorers, Mize and Paguc” SALMON RUN IN ICY STRAIT IS center. Koski grooved one for An- drews after giving him three wide ones, and the Moose first baseman drove the apple to deep center. It | hit, the top of an automobile and bounded across the road into the bushes and three runs crossed the plate. The Moose scored another in the Moose first sacker, hom- red in the fifth inning with two' to 1 score, and af- that the Moose were never Schmitz pitched stellar ball. He not allow more than one hit | walked none. If he had been given]Seventh on a walk to Bill Schmitz, , ! | reasonable support he would have|F. Schmitz’s two-bagger and a| N T L EN N 'had a shutout. fielder’s choice. Five more were added eighth when every man on th», Moose team faced Koski. Four of (reatest Run on Record them hit safely and three errors Continues to Block ‘ aided in the run getting. MacSpad- | den singled. Lansing drove a hot Plants and Gear Salmon canneries and traps con- | liner into Roller's hands. The Vet A running, one-handed catch by/|Shortstop made a nice datch then, converted into a doubleWith lots of time to make the play ;,ue to be flooded with fish in the rait area, seiners are making lerful hauls, and there is no pparent diminution of the run,| cording to reports coming herrzf er the week end. All run records Koski Was Witd Koski, pitching for the Vets, was the loss of the game. His faltered badly at times but Pete , ball to the fence and Mac went on throw to the plate to catch Mac was wide and he scored while Jack | ..mendous fish movement of the| Schmitz went to third. Shaw stole ..t two weeks, it was said. seoond. Bill Schmitz popped out to| w. K. Keller, special deputy mar- | {sccond. Vale juggled F. Schmitz | ;.1 on fish patrol, who was here grounder, J. Schmitz scoring and ! .cr Sunday, reported all canneries ed a line drive between| center that looked like home run. Manning took and plate. Shaw taking third. Andrews sin- the district blocked with fish g > IV | Vets Take Lead jgled to right, scoring Shaw and|,,q working at full capacity. Tan i inch Baronette Satin in The Vets acquired an early lead F. Schmitz on third. Andy stole ps in the district were closed Fugi Silk, 30 of one run, | |long. In the first frame the Moose |Fritz and Andrews. Pete Schmitz's | Kearney's single scored but it didn’t last very | second. cown by their owners to relieve the | stion. Tenders taking fish from ches wide. scored one run. Bill Schmitz was|fly retired the side. lother traps, in a number of in- safe when Brown dropped Sabin's!MOOSE— AB R H PO A E stances, brailed only enough fish ' o throw to first. Bill went to second |Schmitz, B., 1f 4 2 0 0 0 Oito relieve the weight pressure, and NOW 85¢ on Andrews hit after F. Schmitz(Schmitz, F., 2> . 4 2 1 2 2 1'in this manner were able to keep fanned. Kearney popped out to;Andrews, 1b 5 2 311 0 0!fish moving from traps to plants.| Koski. The Vet pitcher turned and |Kearney, 3b 5 9 1T 1 2} O. S. Sayre, superintendent of | threw to second which was covered |Schmitz, P., p 6, 0 TR A A and Puget Sound’s plant i inch Rayon Fabrics, only by the base runner, and /Bill|McSpdn, H, ¢ ...3 1 110 1 1 : ion Inlet, who was here . & Schmitz scored and Andrews wenb"Lnnslng, 8S 6§ 01 1 4 2 today, id he had packed 110,000 ain. and. colored. to third. Pete Schmitz fanned for|Schmitz, J., rf .4 2 1 0 0 0 caces up to last Saturday night. the *third out. | Shaw, cf 51 1 1 0 0,The same cannery two years ago} NOW 75e The Vets scored the tying run| — — — — — —'put up 124,000 cases for its biggest | in their half. Niemi fanned. Vale's| Totals 40 10 9 27 13 7 pack. is year's output will break grounder went through short and]AM. LEGION - e e said. he pulled up at third. Manning | Nlemi, cf 40010 1| Seiners are making fine catches, singled to score him. Vale, 3b 4 1 1 0 1 3 he said. One small boat Saturday !(IS (‘0 I"(- Koski shut out the Moose in the Manning, 1f 4 0-1 1 1 0ftcok 14,000 fish at one set, filling its ik bt » second, third and fourth. Pete!Brown, 1b 4 1 010 1 2jgwn hold and loading two other Schmitz fanned three in the sec- lmmcs (] 4 0 1 7 2 0 small boats. Another seiner last BB BR3P S iahal ern Golf 'Title‘ star, has a rival for athletie Mi s toumxmenl her first major | The commencement absentee sur- rendered to the tourney medalist in the third round after a hard battle at the gighteenth holé where her par five wasn't good enough. Before her senior year in high chool, Miss Ford attained note on the links by reaching the finals of the Western Junior championships understanding of the local rules she lifted her ball on a green to feated in the title play. Miss Ford comes from a family well known, in Kansas City golfing | E. Ford, former city amateur cham- | pion, now a professional at Salina, | Kans., and Claiborn Ford, erstwhile member of the University of Mis- When . it comes to reak dollar-for- dollar fuel value Endian lump-l\Tut Coal is in a class by itself!? Order from ' YOUR TRANSFER COMPANY - PACIFIC COAST C()AL CO. Andrews; |- {Jumps Ten-Mile Trench| ive gone by the hoard beforz the|. {trench. The fire covers 1,500 acres [te the {Hood River, Oregon, |stroyed the cold storage and ware- week made a haul so large that the purse seine had to be brailed like a trap, said another report re- ceived here. Mr. Sayre said there was no indi- cation of a let up in the run. Fish are still coming:into Cross Sound! from the ocean. Weather Conditions As Recorded by the U. S, * Weather Burean Forecast for Juneaw and vicinity, beg~ning 4 p. m. today: Cloudy tonight and Tuesday; gentle variable winds. The fish are running heavily in LOCAL DATA ‘Chatham Strait and other waters Time Barometer Temp. Bnmlluy wl-l Velocity Weathe connecting with Icy Strait, Mr, Kel-,4 P. m. yest'y ..30.02 68 4 Clear Jer repcrted. 4 a. m. today _30.11 52 sz NW 3 Clear e i s |Noon today .30.15 62 kid w 1 Cldy. CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS GHIGAGD HAS | g~ cE LEfiRAT] DN Stations— temp. temp. | emp. temp. Velocity 24 hrs. Weather Barrow 44 44 40 40 10 0 Cldy | gz&;&l . . B4 54 | 50 52 10 40 Rain €] 54 54 | 50 50 CHICAGO, Tlfinol& Aug: 4°~Am- | Fort Yukon . % 74 | 48 48 1—8 .eg Fctfdn; erica’s second largest city is 100|Tanana 64 64 58 60 — 01 Cldy years old today and a Slfltflblv“gl-‘airbanks i .12 8 54 56 4 ‘I;raoe Cldy celebration is in progress. Bagle % T 465 88 el g cldy On August 4, 1830, the river|(st. Paul .. 46 44 | 42 44 8 32 Foggy mouth and marshland semement.;putch Harbor 66 64 | 48 48 - 02 Cldv known as Fort Dearborn, becameéKodiak 58 58 i 50 52 4 .02 ngy Chicago although not incorporated 'Cordova 64 62 | 52 52 » 0 Cldy juntil three years later, the cen-|juneau c8 51 53 3 Trace Clear tenary of which will be celebrated Ketchikan . 66 66 52 52 0 0 Clear m 1933 by a World’s Fair. ,prtnce Rupert . 72 68 52 58 . 0 i T o TR | Edmonton TR ek | 52 58 * 0 Clegr | Seattle Bl | 8 54 56 0 0 Clea~ Portland . 82 82 | 60 60 L 0 Clear {San Francisco ... 64 60 54 54 5 0 Cldy 60 60 & 0 Clear *—Less than 10 miles. !Spokane ‘Wi 86 86 | AG IDAHG:Vancou\vcr, B.C w1 4 | 5 After Fighters Believed Blaze Surrounded jocean southeastward from the Alaska Peninsula. It is high ow the middle Northern Pacific Oecan and along the coast from Cordova |tu San Francisco. Showers have- fallen over most of the Terrltox' c'(c(m the Northern and Southeistern portions. Temperatur LEWISTON, Idaho, Aug. 4.—A|changes have been slight during the past twenty-four hours. strong wind spread a forest fire| in the Selway National Forest| after the fire fighters believed it had been- surrounded by a 10-mile of heavy timber. several mile The fire jumped of trench and spread westward. Smaller fires ave been caused by flying embers. Over 300 men are fighting th2 fires and more are to be sent. TR < s S 3 Has $100,000 Blaze HOOD RIVER, Oregon, Fire late Saturday 3 de- Aug. afternoon PRESERVING TIME NEEDS house of the Hood River Apple Growers Association. The estimated loss is $100,000. The fire started on {the roof of the warehouse where workmen were pouring tar. | F. A. BOYLE OPENS OFFICE ENAMEL AND ALUM M UTENSILS IN GOLDSTEIN BUILDING | >LASS JARS—RINGS— TRA TOPS———ETC. Judge Frank A. Boyle, rm-m»rl_\" United States Commissioner here, who recently returned home after a tour around the world, has opened law offices in the Goldstein Build- ing. He is located at Room 514, in‘: that building, the same quarters he occupied before he was appoint- | Juneau-Young Hardware »d Commissioner. - ’| ‘ Company Burford’s Corner | J | CARNATION ICE CREAM \ { | | TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314 PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY Quality Printing flit_; Why buy ordinary printing when you can get Quality Printing at the same identical cost. 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. We can print anything fn;m an ordi- nary post card to a large Broadside. PHONE 412" $14.50 Per Ton Delivered fying score in the Women’s Trans- souri golf team. Phone 374 Empire Printing Co. [ The pressure is low over Western and Central Alaska and me-' :

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