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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1930. By GEORGE McMANUS ; BRINGING UP FATHER BY GOLLY- 1 SO-YOU WENT QUT-EH? | [ ~WELL |F | DON'T SEE | ‘ TOUGH LuCK- g [ ) ES:OER'EC"’:“'AZ%T‘E‘ $HE'<$' R WELL, TELL ME WHERE THATS THE THAT Y31 ANY BELTER OOES- | ToLD GUESS I'm IN TYOL WENTLDON T LG CASE-vLL Nl HER | WOZNT FOR IT- TO ME OR 'L BEAT TELL THE | . ! GOIN'oLT TROUTH- | 4 WOZ AT ol o ] L "/ — AVAS /g : s PAYING BY CHECK i . it = - is the Safest Way g | iy T it it | The Safest way to pay bills is by check L | o | Household and Personal checking accounts are Y 3 A | welcome at this Bank. Special courtesies to (S el O, el women depositors ) © 1930, Tnt" Feature Service. Inc., Great Britain rights reserved \ : o =4 % L= = o | L i s R First National Bank may who was injured after the| FIRE n E STRUYS season got under way. Black re-| 1 covered, but stays on the benc ch | PURTLAND PLANT whlle Bill leads the team in hitting |er, beat Mandell with the first | punch, even though it took a few more wallops to put Sammy down | for good. Joe Gans won the lightweight crown by knocking out Frank Erne at Fort Erie, Canada, on May 12, 1902, in the first round and with the first solid punch. The famous negro held the title for six years. losing it to Battling Nelson in 17 rounds on July 4, 1908. Under the conditions of the bout, Gans was compelled to make the class limit at that time, 133 One-Hlt Game Alds Clark in Decision To Shun Farm Life If You Don’t Believe It QORI Pape SR P USED CAR BARGAINS “It is certainly good to be back PORTLAND, Oregon, Aug. 12—| former fire today destroyed the plant and branch, who returned Saturday and McCAUL MOTOR CO verely when a blast of flame struck | Y, MTS: Baman and their son. . ¥ JUNEAU LOOKS GOOD, | —Damage Estimat- . |in Juneau, and very pleasing to sec | USEd Truck Barg ains { Sweeping the entire plant of me‘dccmmd ety ey caused damage estimated at 3'150.-'is s L ey o B d his family . . . : r. Baman and his fam Service With Satisfaction AVERS HENRY BAMAN ed at $750,000 1the town's appearance of progre ! F. C. Stettler Paper Box Pactory, |- 8% Of the local Frye-Bruhn SEE 000. Two firemen were burned Se_.‘pany. e " them in the face. They were rush- | JEAS o Most of the| ed to the emergency hospital. [Dare thres years Nys: _g. y. Pl |time since they have resided in WRESTLERS “TAKE” TEXAS |Mentdna. They came to the ('mhl; AFTER BOXING IS BANNED‘ ALAN J.Gonp S R RN AT In spite of the fact that Pat Ma-| |about five months ago. i - e “Jone and Gabby Hartnett of the Cub" were at the ringside, Beller- I, Joe Humphries could have an- nounced the batteries the other | night at the ball park: Al Singer, pitching; Sammy Mandell, catching. | pounds, with his trunks and shoes included. The effort sapped his vi- tality. ! S ! Onme of the most famous light- j weights of the old days, Billy Meyer, {known as the Streator Cyclone, now DALLAS, Aug. 12—Swarming! over the state almost like a cloud ! of locusts, the wrestlers have “tak-| en” Texas} all in the space of a \ A surprising factor in Brooklyn’s | great showing this year, is that the !l club has stayed around the league | |top with Dazzy Vance, star hurled, Frye-Bruhn Company year, Since Gov. Dan Moody's anti-box- | | ' pitching little better than 500 ball. ; Featuring Frye’s De- ) In the first inning, Mandell's i % 1has charge of the track and the ng edict, the popularity of the s e ;);g‘x(xea;};;s out and caug htsa'\ml;]l‘: irhands' &% Obisagos BAsuirl ‘buit nat Bohls A IR S oo S licious Hams and Bacon immediately went into a trance,| stopped a lot of wild pitches, and wound up flat on his back in 1 minute, 46 seconds, very fast time on any track. The champion’s finish, at least, was strictly on the level. A good time was had by all who bet brisk- | center—Arlington Park. | Myer fought two sensational bouts with Jack McAuliffe, who retired nearly forty years ago as the world. The first went 64 rounds to a draw at North Judson, Ind., on Feb. | | undefeated lightweight champion of | tent that public agitation for the return of the glove game has be- come scarcely audible. Hardly a town in the state large enough to support a paid fire de- partment that does not have its weekly grappling cards, with at least one ‘“champion” appearing on PHONE 38 | THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY | “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” ‘ 123, 1889. McAulifee fractured a ' |each program. T }{1_:;‘35(1““‘ glving long odds be- [} i his right arm early in the One reason for the rapid growth c 46h and Fratiklin S Ph b e 2 | fight but saved his backers’ money of the mat game in Texas lles in ! orner and Franklin St. one 136 v 3 $2,500, by boxing on the defensive the fact that it was organized on I'é S 55574, reserve. the priviege of squawiing IRl the referce stopped the maich ot " tretion. amons the womnes. | CLEANERS | under any c?‘cums‘iincess‘l S| with both men exhausted, of friction among the promoters. — L . 2 i 3 Three years later at New Orleans, PR oy Pl 3 Up to now it has been the foul| A ALABA! S ) up : |in the famous carnival in which MA STAR GLITTERS 3 L Y ea ourteous dervwce ; i ffought* a~return” match ‘with Myer / : e for biood and knockouts. | »]and knocked out the Cyclone in 15| BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Aug. 12— Everything that is en- AT LOW COST i % | Another Alab: is- 8 s is the same week, and in champion- |TOUnd% Tk:zd‘:’;ggozzst;?,'o:&:nd bW foin tfie“s’g‘zef{’fliifi,‘:,f’;’};; Eg:&:ss toalnlzhj;iturflfig Our shop is as clean and sweet-ranning as a new Bl | ship bouts, but the chorus of booes|®ach Wagered $5, ] Stephenson, Tke Boone and others | New : |§ car itself. It is up-to-date in equipment and man- reverberated just the same. By in big league baseball. : ned by specialists in servicing and repairing new or Neither the five-round knockout» GAMES MONDAY He Is Bill Bancroft, Birmingham We are experts! old cars. Our purpose is to save you time and of Ferdinandez by Battalino, the National League i second baseman, playing his first . money here. Get our prices for repairs, accessories, ( feather champion, at Hartford, nor 4 Our prices are always ’ S Pacific Coast League playing as they were. Wins Tennls Tltle by De- TRAVEL BY AIR Won Lost Pet| Clark, however, did much to| feating Seattle Man— A | Hollywood 18 10 .643|change that jn one short afternoon Has F Titl Insurance costs something to be FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED iLos Angeles . 18 10 643 at Ebbetts field. Only 28 Pirates as Four litles e, We can tell' sou t St A l San Francisco 16 12 571 |faced him in a regulation nine in- ; . y n a minute P resSSUreless |misson i; :; <Z‘£ ning game, and but one of them HBSXEX‘:OTDTI(;’IE'T::sx-n:aye_ste?;fl;lq»: y‘l"‘ jut how much for the amount you Sacramento R got a hit. )y ay WO 7 ¥ | Portland 12 16 42| His subsequent shut-out victory xl_le Pacific Coast Tennis Cham- need. ; {Oakland 8- A 393 was called the best pitched game |Pionship defeating Henry Prusoff A e FOR RESERVATIONS—Hangar Phone, 429; Gas- ! s Toogi. | PAR : Jo J8 ot the year, and it was recalled ;fiat’iexflu‘f—‘;‘a:m:h: e o v But, without this insurance, an tineau, Phone 10. A. B. HAYES, Agent. Pressurel National ague last year he ranked tenth in the g9, And V-4 acer ake 2 vy t T » 2. D .} - geo; 8. Pulker! Shiots Won Lost Pet |National league in the number of [Harlson tmenftly N thb Paclfif e ident may take your entire oy .mprovelr‘fr\;“easmp“_ |Chicago ... . 65 :-; 598 earned runs he allowed a game. wt:m‘rv:séflnz‘mancolumbm and ings, your home, even put you in wri les. / o Ductaid wesm You LKL T @ W en| Thet ble ebikeout ecord debt for years to come. REAL BARGAIN write without finger [ ZEW ZOH 51 52 l5g3|Vear was greater than that of Daz- ELEVEN FRi r ! 4 b ;Piiubu‘;ghm i al WHV::ct;keout record is due in a OM HERE | Ask for Parker Duo- | Boston 50 60 455( ikeout reeord saet tnat ne| DEPART ON ALEUTIAN! 2 3 IN i folaPens...fveRashiog (Cincinnatl . 48 5o ss|lsTee messure to the fact Hhat e | .THE CHOICE BETWEEN Moderne Black | Philadelphia . 65 3 SRS e 9 h Eleyen passengers embarked \ colorsor Moderne Blact e e in there. ~If he has an inclination | EICHen Passenge : el CERTAINTY AND ED C R and Poctl ¥ Parker o Won Lost Pt |t0 let up, he has a memory of the| T FI0 SIeRtAsbIP < oo o) 24 ND for yours il Mississippi river rising up and ruin- noon | | Presaureless Writing ;svfi;?;lgfi:: ! z; 353 ~$: ing his father's 1,300 acre cotton f’:;:“; ;:dJX:Y poru‘a. T(};‘I]L bookgy UNCERTAINTY | BIGGEST VALUES EVER R - o 3 Mlxne leg norng e a1 |New York 61 a1 '587|farm in Mississippi. Miss Relert B5anciiand P, G. C o S W | Lady $5. | s one ex ¥ N Junior $5. Lady 8 | Cleveland 58 56 .508| Thi amplelgfiftie fribula-is | e - LIES WITH YOU | ' ;b:l’nknl’:nco | Detrott ... 56 58 “ag1 |tlons of the farmer is sufficient to sty Elkzibethanc'h:rlx] \ ry OFFERED IN JUNEAU N US.A i o A Ve 1 o " ” Janesville Wis., 1:E;!mc£,‘.:);ox 2 :’; ng;;lr:;e?im on to hard work as a bal K _Camahhn, e b ’ 9 |5t Louls 1 began with | Heintzleman, F. B, Chibaum. Alf| | 5t 3 Clark’s baseball career beg: G ]1,0 on ... B M s e e university, where he|KJjer and Ed Dolan for Sea the one-round victory of Singer! over Mandell at New York satisfied the onlookers. Yet they are bored if a contest gees to the limit. Lightweight history repeated it- ¢ self when Singer, the Bronx Bomb- ~|the clubs were traveling to open |Boston 2; Chicago 4. +Philadelphia 2; Cincinnati 4. New York 5; Pittsburgh 8. Brooklyn 6; St. Louis 7. Brooklyn went into the ninth inning with two runs ahead. Bissonette's two errors and three hits gave the Cardinals three runs. Chicagd takes the league’s leadership by one percentage point. American League Cleveland 2; Washington 9. Chicago 8; Philadelphia 3. Detroit 1; Boston 5. St. Louis 10; New York 5. Pacific Coast League No games were played in the Pacific Coast League yesterday as {this afternoon on the following schedule for this week: Los Angeles at Sacramento. Portland at San Francisco. Mission at Oakland. Seattle at Hollywood. STANDING OF - GiUBS | | | | e . | | Butler-Mauro Drug | Co. Sell 24 ~!" PARKER PENS | e TRIUMPH WENT TO POLE ANN ARBOR, Mich., Aug. 12— Mlch)gan s‘u -12 defeat of Harvard was the only football score which William Watson Clark, best pitched game of the Pirates with one hit. BROOKLYN, Aug. 12.—Shaded by the erratic brilliance of other Rob- | ins for a time it looked as though | convince the public that he also| shone for Brooklyn. And Clark has tried hard to sparkle in baseball, because he has finished with farming in Mi i and he knows that a succe: league career will be insurance that he remain so. .Clark’s pitching has done much this season to put out and keep William Robinscn’s band of eccen- trics at the top of the National | league. At mid-season he had won 1 games while losing 7. But the crowd could hardly see a work-a-day left-hander, with Her- Brooklyn hurler, season, William Watson Clark never could man Bissonette, Wright and Lopez. recently turned in the by setting down the Pittsburgh ‘sunday closing. All of the gro- |cery stores in the city are expect- led to be represented. At present a number of the |firms remain open on week days until 10 and 11 o'clock, while others close promptly at 6 o'clock. {Some also, keep open part of the day on Sundays. It is hoped an agreement can be reached on uni- form hours, HARRISON IS COAST CHAMP won 32 games, pitched two ties and lost four during four years. Clark is over six feet tall and weighs around 180 pounds. He was born at St. Joseph, La., in 1904. reached Little America by radio, Prof. Lawrence Gould said here in discussing the radio touch of the Byrd expedition with the our.side; | world. ———t 1 RESERVE THE DATE Moose Cafeteria Dance — Augis! 16th, —adv. | 'GROCERS TO DISCUSS UNIFORM STORE HOURS A meeting of representatives of |the retail grocery stores of the {city will be held at 8 p. m. today in the American Legion Dugout to | discuss weekday closing hours and | i J | | { | i year as a Southern association reg- ular and who got his early baseball training at Howard college here. Bancroff, signed by the Barons and farmed out in the Southeastern . league last year, was placed on the roster as a utility man when the 1930 season opened. His chance came at the expense of Jiggy Black, regular keyalono reasonable, too. Phone 15 Alaska Laundry A Small Known Expense or A Possibly Ruinous Levy PHONE 249 ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. Established 1898 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 30 NITE FONE 421 “SERVICE LUCAS” Manager CONNORS MOTOR Co. lBc;w WicoLy h N