The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 11, 1930, Page 5

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1930. By GEORGE McMANUS P R 1S THERES NO Loty 5 | DOLBT ABOLT f 1 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 11, BRINGING UP FATHER WHERE WOULLD You BE TO-DAY |F | 1T WASNT FOR ME? | TRY AND Y { TO TEACKHYOUL-BUTITS NO VSE-ALL TOU THINK ABOLT: IS “TOLR LOW-BROW FRIENDS-ITS =} LVSTING-| GET SICK AND Care Will Save Your Car “CHECK” YOUR CAR’S MECHANICAL SYSTEM \ The motorist who does not have his car’s mechanical TIRED OF TALKING TO YOUL- - ; sysvem inspected regularly is taking a chance on loss e — & 8 J B £ ° i | of time, loss of money, and serious annoyance of / ¢ X \! % roadside delay. MANBE YOL THIN | I'™M NOT TIRED OF LISTENIN OH SHLUT LR FER AT LEAST A MINOUTE - Drive in today. Let our staff of skilled automotive mechanics give your car a thorough inspection. Let them tighten all connections, replace worn out parts, check the ignition system, fill the batterw and check your brakes. Care Will Save Your Car Have your car CHECKED today. Our experts are ready. They'll do the job right—quickly, and at a reasonable cost. JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. — - - DAY FONE 30 NITE FONE 421 . U. S. White Cla(i Ri;l—ers “SERVICE LUCAS” Manager Stage Comeback, Defeat British Team, Win Cup MRS 87 'AMERICA’S CUP DEFENDER, HER SKIPPER AND CREW Pacific Coast League < % e, v | San F‘rancxscu 1; Mission 3 Day HEIE;;::@(J 4; Los Angeles 1. Nighz} }’ogr:gfxa 7; Oakland 11. leht| game, Seattle 2; game g | ! | - RICE & AHLERS CO. He’s the Babe Ruth of Plumbers International League . WESTBURY, N. Y, Sept. 11. —Tommy Hitchcock’s white- clad riders staged a comeback yesterday, after trailing for five periods, in sensation polo and brcke up the British attack, producing a free scoring barrage that clinched the International Pclo Cup, emblematic of world polo supremacy, for the fourth successive time since the World War. The scorc was 14 to 9. Eric Pedley, American, scored goals from all parts of the field. - e GAMES WEDNESDAY “We tell you in advance what the job will cost” Sacramento 1. Night | Natwona: Leaguc r Cincinnati 4; Philadelphia 5. The | Phillies made it two straight. Chicago 0; Brooklyn 6. Luque held Chicago to 5 hits but gave four e bases on balls. Great support, i ing three double plays, kept ®— Chicago scoreless. & P , St. Louis 5; New York 8. St Loms\ In the first 20 games he worked | scored four runs in the eighth this year, Herb Pennock, Yankeev ! inning and evened the series with |1ft hander, issued only 12 hases‘ | the Giants. The game was a|O" balls. ’ dusl between Fitzsimmons and | \ i | | i SPORT BRIEFS Johnson to the elghth, then foiir | More than 45.000 persons witness- | hits of which the last and de-{€d the first match between the ciding wallop was a home run by American and British polo teams| Bottomley with two on overcame | September 6. the Giants's lead. Hogan also| made a home run. Boston 5. TRAVEL BY AIR FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED FOR RESERVATIONS—Hangar Phone.. 429; Gas- tineau, Phone 10. A. B. HAYES, Agent. The candidates who failed to Zachary|make the first British team for| held ths Pirates to four hits. the international polo matches are Berger made a home run, his|playing in this country under the 34th, in the first inning with/name “The Rest. | two men on bases. | Pittsburgh 0; Wilbert Robinson, manager of the| Dodgers, ordered the players to go! |out and find amusement in the eve-| nings, in an effort to dissolve the! club’s staleness. Amcrican League & Washirgton 2; St. Louis 3. ‘8t s limped back into sixth Weshington's place was disturbed Assoclated Press Photo Here is the America's cup defender, Enterprise, while final preparations for the ‘races with Sir | | | | Thomas Lipton’s Shamrack were under way at Newport, R. I. Her skipper, Harold S. Vanderbilt, is i | 1 ! fighting at the wheel. Members of her crew are shown in inset. mainsail, Shants ALan J.Gomn The Naval Academy should be able install some of the old spirit into its football campaign this fall with Lieut Paul Moret, U. S. M. C, on the job as end. coach. Moret, an end on the 1929 eleven, also was captain of the undefeated Middie boxing team. His job will bé, to teach the wingmen how to spaw successfully with the opposition without, however, resorting to any lefi hooks or right crosses to the University of Washington has contributed three of the finest com- petitors of recent years to the track and field whirl in big, blond Her- to At right, the i i man “Brix, the "national “shotjut champion; bigger Paul Jessu W discus record bre E € Anderson, rangy hurd] They reached the peak of their careers at Pittsburgh when Brix heaved the iron ball a distance of 52 feet, 5% inches for a new Ameri- can record, Jessup tossed the plat- ter to a new world mark of 169 feet, 8% inches, and Anderson skimmed over the high hurdles in the world record time of 14.4 seconds. Two years ago Anderson was good enough to miss beating Sig Atkin- son of South Africa for the Olym- pic high hurdles championship by |the breadth of a hand. He is un- |questionably the greatest timber topper since Earl Thomson, the |big Canadian, was in his prime ten years ago. No one touched Thompson’s record until Ande n came along. Genung’s victory in the 880-yard title race at recognition of Ralph Hill's mile |mark of 4:12.4 as a new American intercollegiate record—actually |also the fastest outdoor mile ever |run in the U. S. A.—gives the Pa- cific Northwest plenty to cheer about for 1930 in track athletics. Pittsburgh and the | s | American Enterprise Is trying out her new |\t K o eland 2. |Boston 6; Chicago 2 a home run in the second if- ning and tied the score. The game was won in the fifth in- enung xmj ning when Regan made a home \ | Hill has another season at the University of Oregon to prove this, was no flash in the pan. a Washington product. run. one of the longest of the season, with two men on base. Al Espinosa is still the champion | Philadelphia 0; Detroit 4. Doluack, runner-up among the professional recruit, made a home run in the golfers, despite the strong efforts of Macdonald Smith to grab the| distinction this year. Al ran true base to win the game. Webb madle ; fourth inning with two men on}“Hack Driver.” gt =u | During a recent visit in New game of golf. He went a round! with Walter P. Chrysler, the auto-| mobile magnate. i | The big bat with which Hack| Wilson of the Cubs tied the Nation- | al league record is known as the| | | | York, Bobby Jones played only one |f By hitting three home runs in 2! recent night game against Jer: City, Joe Hauser (above), fir: baseman for the Baltimore Orioleg broke ‘or the International League run recnrd of A4, cstab-| K.l o by Wiliias Playing at its present gait the| s | | STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Lost to form and second to Gene Sara- zen in the low scoring featuring the ‘Western Open. | Won | Als total of 285 for 72 holes was Hollywood 41 34 good enough to win most tourna-|Los Angeles ments, but Gene happened to be San Francisco 32 enjoying one of his blistering streaksOakland 30 and scored 278. | Sacramento 20 On the same day that Earl White- Mission 26 hill's winning streak was stopped Portland 25 after 11 triumphs young Wesley Seattle 25 National League Won Pect 672 576 542 492 Pet 668 DORNIES Neb iR Using the flying boat Whale in which the English flier Courtney was forced down on an attempted flight to America in 1926, Capt. Wolfgang von Gronau, German airman, and three companions crossed the north Atlantic from Europe to America. their flight from Warnemunde, Germany, to the Faroe Islands, thence to lceland, Greenland, Labrador and Nova Scotia. SERMAN FLIERS CROS el S ATLANTIC IN FAMOUS PLANE - . \ o [CaRTwRIGHT] £ Their seaplane is shown above. 616 512 532 | Ferrell, Cleveland’s right-handed | ace, hung up his own 11th straight| |by beating the Yankees, his 22nd ‘S:hml*f"_ 80 all told for the season. gB‘r-Dok]“:‘s ;‘; Ferrell, considered by many ex- Y & Zisih New York 7 | perts as ‘another Mathewson,” has Pittsburgh 7 a chance to equal or break the % league's best winnirg|2oston 65 straight, registered by oincinnati 55 {stzeak, 16 -siralght, reglsie V' Philadelphia PR Smoky Joe Wood for the Red Sox | A | erican League |in 1912 and equalled in 1916 by Won Lost Malter Johnsan, {Philadelphia ........ 94 47 2 | Washington .88 53 |New York 79 59 |Cleveland 75 66 | | Detroit 61 12 482 Ist. Louis 55 84 396 |Chicago ... 53 84 387 .41 90 343 NOTICE | i | L On ana aiter this date I will not |be respensible for any debts con-! |tracted by the 183 Taxi. | | September 11, 1930. ! W. ULRICH ! —adv. o~ VAPURE A wonderful relief for HEAD COLDS In two convenient sizes 50¢ and $1.00 BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. free Delivery Phone 134 WHEN WE SELL IT IT'S RIGHT Express Money Ordery Map shows course of e e e e - Cincinnati Reds probably will fin-| "~ ish with a .500 percentage for Dan Howley, first year pilot, FOOD SALE | The Martha Society will hold a (food sale September 20th at the | |Sanitary Grocery from 11 a. m. to /5 p. m. —adv. | Of a squad of 50 grid men at Duke this fall only five will be se niors. - 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. First National Bank | —————. Gambler? DO YOU RISK the loss of your home and personal belongings through failure to carry adequate insurance? WHY FLIRT WITH FIRE-LOSS? LOW RATES ARE NOW EFFECTWVE ALLEN SHATTUCK, Inc. Established 1898 REAL BARGAINS IN USED CARS BIGGEST VALUES EVER OFFERED IN JUNEAU CONNORS MOTOR CoO. For FIRE INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 Valentine Building USED CAR BARGAINS Used Truck Bargains If You Don’t Believe It SEE McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction Old Papers for sale at Empire Office

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