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* omcm BNTRIES Z‘t‘d?. :: :: (mnvnmm:mwu HOOE AND MOUTH FROGEAR FREDDIE JAY WHOCRER, M ok Two OF EM TopAY - 43 mesnTsnenmu ’(’%fit “ BRAS CoLA’ QUEEN'S CANCRENER .0 MUMPS MOONEY. EINING CROWS -0 T 0P HANDED MAMA. - THE smssnso kw J ° Tolo SEUAW FLAG “QUESIE L] SlDEK\C LAR, o«;fit‘n IRE /// FARTHINCOALE JAu cluding 15 home runs. right field. He plays CARDINALS WHO'S WHO Ear]l “Sparky” Adams, third base- man, only 5 feet 4'2 inches tall, will be one of the shortest men in the s. He is a dangerous hitter ¥ g P pinch and was for six years, Ocorse Fisher, likely - with | ANA- ORidagd Cubs, will see duty as a pinch hitter in | i the series. He is a slugger, but| is too poor at fielding for rogular‘ |duty. He was obtained from the| New York Giants in the Roettger| trade. “Wild Bill” Hallahan, southpaw speedball pitcher, formerly was a commuter to the Cardinals’ Hous- ton farm, due to his lack of con- trol. He can get 'em there 'this season and is a likely. choice for the opening game. outfielder, Jess Haines, right handed pitcher. won two games and lost 1 in the Cardinals’ 1926 and 1928 world's; | series. Haines, now 37, has won| | e o b Sylvester Johnson, right handed‘ pitcher, in 1921 cost thz Detroit| Tigers $40,000. He was a flop with the Tigers. All this season he has| been one of the Cards' starting pitchers and has won about a dozen| :game:.. Burleigh Grimes, 37-year-old spit- baller, came to the Cardinals this season in a trade for Sherdel. He pitched for Brooklyn in the 1920 woerld’s series, against Cleveland and lost two games and won one. Chick Hafey, left fielder has been| GUs Mancusco, whom the club bothered with sinus and had a bad | ¥anted to farm out ‘earlzer ”"5“ ankle this season, still he has hig|Y°ar may do the entire catching| around 30 home runs and’ batted B the series for the Cardinals. 11: close to .350. He is 27 and comcs‘al1 depends on the condition of ficih. Ghlitorata, ankle of Jimmy Wilson, first string catcher. Flint Rhem, was born in Rhems,! South Carolina, in 1902. Until thi: Frank season he was known asthe “Peck’s baseman, is being placed on all of Bad Boy” of baseball. He is althe “all-star” teams this year. He right hand pitcher with a nice curve has helped the Cards lead in double and fast ball. |plays and has batted around .340. i I'I‘h(,\ “Fordham Flash” now is 32. Jim Lindsey, right hander hns“ shown great promise this year. He| Jim Bottomley, first baseman, has has been kept in the background been with the Cards since 1922. only through the plenitude of hurl- |Until the late pennant drive start- ing talent of the Cardinal staff. jed he had gone through the most |disastrous season of his career. Taylor Douthit, is one of the best | defensive centerfielders in the game| Charley Gelbert, shortstop, under and has been hitting around .300 the tutelage of Frisch, has develop- this season. He was signed by the ed into one of the best in the Cards in 1923 while playing with game. He is 24 and came to the University of California baseball Cards last year. This season his team. ‘batting improved about 40 points. ————.—— Frisch, Cardinal second | George Watkins, is a. product of| LET Almqusv rress Your Sult, the Cardinals’ Rochester farm. Thxs We call and deliver. Phone 528 season he has hit around .360, i Good tobaccos speak ons |ror by {San Francisco 6; Seattle 7. | Hollywood |Los Angeles | Seattle | Portland THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 2 |930 /7~ ook - LADIES ! CAN YA (MAGIA THAT 222 THE BOARD © GOVERMORS CUGHTTA KEEP EM OFFA THE EXCEPT (A TH MORNINGS » SPOILS SVER THING F W@ 1930, King Featores Syndicate, Inc, Great Br HOLDS You ©F tain_rights reserved. ’ WATER COLD; QUITS SWIM DOVER, England, Oct. 2.—Mer- cedes Gleitze, British woman swim mer, failed in a new attempt toda to swim the English channel. Sh stayed in the water only four hours and then abandoned the swim o1 account of the intense cold of the water, WHITE SOX BEAT CUBS CHICAGO, I, Oct. —Tey Ly- mastered the Cubs yesterday ernoon and sent the White Sox ahead in the battle for the Chicag: City chimpionship, defeating th Cubs 5 to 1. Lyons permitted the Cubs seven scattered blows. An er Kamm in the ninth inninp resulted in the Cubs only score. — eee GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Day game. Los Angeles 8; game. Sacramento 7; Mission 8, ten in- nings. Day game. Oakland 5; Hollywood 6, ten nings. Night game. Portland 3. Day in- STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost 56 26 45 32 41 40 39 42 35 42 317 45 34 45 34 48 (RSTGHE WA - S Pct 683 584 506 481! 455 | 451 j 430 San Francisco Sacramento Oakland Mission |as 415 Try the ¥rive oClock specials at Mnbryn. Zanner v for themselves playing 'Ss‘ifiti Shumgoun When the celebrated ice and pig- ikin toter, Red Grange, left the University of Illinois, the ballyhoo sprang up for a young man known as Frosty Peters to carry on for he Tilini where the redhead had ‘eft off. Peters, who presumably got his aickname from the frigid manner n which he went about the yridiron business, proved to be a sery capable performer but he never duplicated the feats of Srange. His forte ind drop-kicking, iential items in the success of iy college team, but not so spec- ‘acular as a 90-yard gallop for a ouchdown. Nevertheless the career of Fros- y Peters developed some interests ng features. It seems he has alé ways been a trifle fragile and when the Army team reached Illi¢ was field generalship two highly es- nois for the battle last November, ¥ Peters was discovered in a hospital with a bad ankle. At least Bob Zuppke told meé it was very unfortunate that young Mr. Peters had seen fit to gallop a quarter of a mile and pull a tendon or something. This seemed like a break for the Cadets, but so often happens with grid- |iron casualties, Peters was out on 'the field the next day, in very geod health and able to contribute considerably to the defeat of the | soldiers. . ‘The next heard of Frosty, he was in the all-star charity THAT BIG MULLET 'S GONNAGET A [ BRASSIE WRAPPED ARGUND B COLLAR (F HE MA ONE MORE (_v:r\\ ey ThaT's v )P TWIEE / 7~ WP IN v-reou" TA GRIEF A vl;\\«A ["ame around the Christmas sea-|e son at San Francisco. He played \uy well for the victorious eastern but subsequently he sued for n.un ages because, he said, he had| nut obtained the lucrative work "numlscd him for is benefit contest. This must have been very dis- xcsdmv for an amateur football) |star, so much so that Peters went . |East and I note that he opened nhe professional season as a mem- | |ber of the Providence Steam Rol- llers, an aggregation of very rug-| ged and experienced football Ldl-‘ {ent. | 3 Among his team-mates is Tony | Hoim, | back at the University of bama, where he was labelled thel |“Big Blond Blizzard” in all dis patches to the press from the uni |versity publicity offices. | In many respects the most re- markable managerial stunts of the year have been turned in by the old battery of Walter Johnson and Gabby Street. Tactical wisdom is taken as a matter of course from such sea-| soned leaders as Connie Mack, Wilbert Robinson and Joe McCar- | thy, but Johnson's direction of the Washington Senators and Street’s sensational work with the St Louis Cardinals have furnished the twin-sensations of the 1930 major league campaigns. Last spring the consensus was that the Senators and Cards each would be lucky if able to br into the first division. If I re- call correctly the Cardinals we picked to finish fourth and the Senators fifth Al twins, in < EC T U L s David and John Towers, have been servants in a family land 54 yeal ALASKA MEAT C() QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 UNDERWOOD TY ) participation in | |8 the 1929 All-American full- p Deliveried—12:30, 2:30, 4:30 Nou SEE oT FINISHES SWING \ Dok / fifi STRAGHT l)ou,n Ml D\) li'~ N | nifty outfield' Frank Waddey ! Memphis of tha| association, couldn't make | baseball team in his high school! pound end m} Young Stribling’s | ta, his home town, 0 for Willio. | Julian Foste Vanderbilt, is double. In Al he is frequently a great halfback lafl!’ play quarterback for| n university th!s‘ Cy Leland, season, will Texas Christ | Reinking, Butler univer- | mid-west small mo- Michigan at Arthur sity, won the rboat race on Lake Chicago. North Carolina State two veteran linesmen “Coon” Silver, end, and Stout, guard. e, has only | this fall, | Capt. M SEA LEV GETS HIGHER TOWARD NORTH, DISCOVERY WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—Surveys | of five nations show that sea level gets higher as the surveyors pro- ceed northward. These surveys have been made by the United States, Russia, Eng- land, France and Japan, s: jor William Bowie, Chief of the Division of Geodesy of the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. i Sbhuth of the equator no tests have been made, but Major Bowie cays ' “it is possible that there| the mean sea level would tlt upward as one approached the uth Pnlt‘ EL Austin Fresh Tamales i PEWRITERS and TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES GEO. M. SIMPKINS CO. STATIONERY and PRINTING I's a Matter of Prid e . With Us—- That our Classifi umns pl‘o(lll('l' bul'h and day out! Not that we claim belongs to the hunc who read and use regularly. ied Advertising col- good results day in all the credit—this Ireds of local folks our Classified Ads But we do see to it that our Classified columns are as readable and usable as possible — which n YOU when you telej fied Ad to 374 weans RESULTS for yhone YOUR Classi- Let Us Serve and Help You! The Empire Telephone 374 o e s s s e s o i et 45t Attention—-Ford Owners A LARGE SUPPLY OF FRANCISCO CAR HEAT- ERS JUST ARRIVED—AND ARE READY FOR INSTALLATION IN YOUR CAR 2 to 5 times MORE HEAT—Quicker Action—F Air Heat—Complete Change of Car Air Every 3 Minutes. Recommended by leading.car manufacturers. Guar- anteed to deliver more heat than any other car heat- er regardless of type or price. DRIVE IN AND HAVE ONE INSTALLED IN YOUR MODEL A Price $3.75 to $4.00 (installation extra at low cost) JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. DAY FONE 30 NITE FONE 421 “SERVICE LUCAS” Manager >sh 2 to TO ALL CONSUMERS OF WATER: Notice is hereby given that all water pipes must be protected against freezing. Under the ordinances of the City of Juneau waste of water is prohibited. Patrons ignoring this law next winter and allowing water to waste through open faucets will have their service discontinued until next spring when the sup- ply will be abundant. This will be strictly enforced after November 1, 1930. All customers are hereby notified to the end that lhuv may take the necessary precautions against frozen water pipes. - JUNEAU WATER COMPANY REAL BARGAINS I USED CARS BIGGEST VALUES EVER OFFERED IN JUNEAU CONNORS MOTOR cCoO. AT NOMINAL YEARLY COST YOU CAN HAVE A Safe Deposit Box FOR KEEPING Jewelry, Deeds, Leases, Bonds, Notes, Mortgages, Wills, Contracts, Letters, Keepsakes, Diaries, Army Papers, Mar- riage Certificates, Insurance Policies, Birth Certificates, Receipted Bills For FIRE INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 Valentine Building USED CAR BARGAINS Used Truck Bargains If You Den’t Believe It——SEE McCAUL MOTOR CO. , Service With Satisfaction TRAVEL BY AIR FLIGHTS TO ANY POINT DESIRED FOR RESERVATIONS—Hangar Phone, 429; Gas- tineau, Phone 10. A. B. HAYES, Agent. | | Old Papers for sale at Empire Office