The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 24, 1931, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER [ &Y GoLLy-DUGAN-YoL HAVENT CHANGED A BT IN TWENTYY RIGHT YOU ARE - REMEMBER WHEN WO WOZ WORKIN' INTHE FIRE ENGINE HOUSE AN’ WUZ WISHIN' A JEWELRY STORE WOULD CATCH ON FIRE? NO- 8UT | MIDSS THE THE ALASKA DAILY EMPIRE, WEDNESDA Y, JUN E 24, | 931. By GEORGE McMANUS AN’ DO YOU REMEMBER WHEN WE WOZ LADS-HOW.WED GO EVERY DUNDAY TO SEE YOUR FATHER AN HOW WE'D TALK TOHIM THROUGH THE CELL DOOR? AN’ HOW YOUL USED TO WaArT AT THE LAUNDRY FER TO MEET KATIE- AN’ AF YOU GAVE HER THE RING RAN AWAY AN’ MARRIED MU SHY" B GooD oLDf | CouvLD DAILY SPOR TS CARTOON ~AND I CAME D UERE O KNOCK K\\E = —By Pap @‘\\ / b - HARVEY HAS KNOCKED THE SKEPTICAL RE0 FANS OUT OF Tz, SEATS WiTH His BATTING HE HnS BEEN LEADING HE NATIONAL LEAGUE nN BaTTive SINCE HE CAME ToTHE s N THEM DAYS AGE THAT CINCINNAT| PCKED OP FRoM BROOKLYN AT THE WAIVER PRICE - { THE DOG- CATCHER ? 100 Ay T ALWAYS HATED TTHAT GUY- \T OERVED Him | RIGHT- | HAD IN THE PATROL \WAGON! WHEN THEY RAIDED oLD MOONEYS PLACE ? Lou ’SNO JOKE! Bring in your old flat iron, electric or any other | jond. Jimmys mi was a rifleshot ELKS AGAIN LEAD ; g | two bags until Kearney knocked it| LEGICN Y HPO A F any new Electric Iron that pleases your fancy. And | down. Andrews singled to Livingston, ss § 30Y 05 here's the list to seleet from: HOT POINT—WEST- VETS AND WIN score Boyd. Hollmann 31041 0] INGHOUSE and THE WHITE BEAUTY. Nickle and | | Vets Uncork Avalanche Kearney, 3 8788 SRy color finishes. Each Iron carries the regular guar- | An avalanche of hits, mixed with | Worth, rf 5 2.2 e antee. four bases on balls gave the Vets Haines, 1b L ) ) | BY ]3']2 SGURE eight runs in the fourth frame and B. Keaton, If 4D 05101 OUR TELEPHONE NUMBER IS JUNEAU 6 AND | made things take on a yellow t > Lowe, cf-p 411020 e ¢ 2 | R |for the Bills. Lowe worked An- Blake, ¢ 512520 WE DELIVER THE GOODS | In an old-tasroned sigeing beo | GTEWS 10T @ pass. - Brodle ran’for |Kaski, p 30200 ¢ Y T v 5 i |1ast night, the Elks came from be- | s ey g e (P, | “Brodie, of i S ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT E“fl“‘\d to win from the Vets in thegoski duplicated, scoring Brodie.| Totals 371212 x189 4 & l’()“vlLR (\() |seventh inning by a score .of 13 iyjyingston singled and Blake couni-| (*) Brodie went to center in the s ‘}21_1{2.6 :;1:’ Bill ‘x:tlat‘e*;“‘et?“}_‘c‘_“:‘od,k Ho]:mlz;nn twmfmll. :mh‘m\s fourth when Lowe relieved Koski Juneau, Alaska b o > .- took himself out of the box and in box. 3 SPEC FE n] rQ TV : edited 12 safeties for 15/ gespatched Junge to the slaughter| (x) Nome out when Elks scored THIS SPECIAL OFFER FOR 10 DAYS ONLY :“A‘]M” e ___aipen. With the bases popul | winning run ip seventh inning | — ; JMI"“_"-‘»_ o CERGE “]“"v‘l‘}{f‘una'_v grounded to third and| ELKS ABR HPO A E| 2 |the way for the sluggers with t%a| Bonner picked off Koski at the |Niemi, cf 470 AT homeruns and a single. He dr plate. Worth singled to left, and |Coughlin, ¢ 505380 across the plate five of the rubs pjyingston and Hollmann scored.| Roller, ss 841102 made by his team and scored tWo Haines walked. Keaton fanned. Boyd, 1b-2b-1f sl sy tan o ad | %, {more himself. Roller contributed, 1owe singled, scoring Kearney and | Manning, 1f-p SN0 4 a cireult & for the Bills andworth, Blake singled, his second | Andrews, p-1b 429401 Fack Kenst for the Veterads. pi; of the inning, and Haines,Junge, 9b-p 40031 2| | .. Use Five Pitchers . !scored. Koski singled and Lowe|Rodland, rf 302000 : 3“P;W;"u£”"ml’(f, '~I:“m“>[’:’ fl;{ :hl scurried over the plate. Livingston |Bonner, 8b 4 g gt oo wo _clubs. ski started for the engeq the attack by grounding to| o — | All S’ k I y | Legion and was succeeded by Lowe 'Boyd at second and was tossed out| Totals 34131621 5 7 en “lllllc 2 ne. {in the fourth. Andrews starting fOr ot first. | | the Elks, lasted out the third and SUMMARY . Earned runs, EXKs| {after the Vets made a racetrack Bills Gnaw At Lead | Manning tock up the burden in the h. He was credited win g the and its loss was charged to land drew a pass in the fourth off Lowe but was forced at second by Bonner who was safe at first. Af- ter Niemi fanned, Bonner scored on Coughlin’s timely three-bag- ger down left field foul line The Vets came right back with wo more tallies in the first of the {Elks 8; bases on balls, off Koski |Lowe 3, Andrews 4, Junge 1 ning 1; 3, Lowe | game Lowe. | The Bills scored in every franic The Vets tallied twice.in the irSt, eight in the big fourth and two th | the fifth, after that Manning turn- Innings piiched, by Ko 4, Andrews 3, Junge 11, Legion 10; home runs, Andrews Legion 11, | prm— ,» Man- |Manning 3; hits 7, runs 4, off Kos- | ki, hits 7, runs 9 off Lowe; losing | pitcher, Lowe; hits 6 runs 4 off An-| | drews, hits 4 runs 6 off Junge, hits Established 1398 Juneau, Alaska | out of the baselines in the fourth| The Bills refused to be discour- |2, Roller 1, Kearney 1; three-base |gave way for Junge. Kenny fin- aged and began to gnaw away at|hits, Coughlin 1; two-base hits, | > ished out the fourth and Jimmy the lead amassed by the Vets. Rod- | Bonner 1; left on bases, 1 ki 1 Arcade Cafe CHRIS BAILEY |ed them back hitless and runless. fifth, Roller muffed Kearney's|2 runs 2 off Manning; winning! We cz | g5 cater to S v V. | skyscraper. Worth singled, advanc-|pitcher Manning; hit by pitcher, .thoqe who want ‘ ing Jack to second. Haines sin-|Manning by stolen bases, good things to eat. gled and Worth went to third, and Kearney scored. Worth scored when Hollmann 1, crifice bunt, Hollmann 1. Umpire—H. C. MacSpadden plate, Botelho on bases. Scorer—Mize. lay of the season. While | Playing first base ho made a leaj Junge missed Coughlin's throw head off Haines on a steal 6f s ond. And that was the last for the ex-soldiers. a sure single. Andrews Hits Two Homers Kearney Socks Homer ‘ ‘The Elks scored seven runs in the one-handed catch of Livingj~ | |ton’s line drive, robbing the Vet shotstop of what looked good for, | five minutes. Blake 1; sa- Time of game—Two hours and OPEN ALL NIGHT at | | THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY The hitting started. early in the fifth and sixth, mainly on two |game. After Livingston had walk- ! circuit smashes by Andrews. Boyd | ed, Kearney socked the onion .info walked in the fifth and Manning o Jess Harper has been welcomed back into the collegiate athletic cir- cle. He came east for.the first time during the I. C. A. ‘A. A. A. meet at ladelphia and has rap- taken hold of Notre Dame'’s eaching program. He has re- ed old friendships and made many new ones. “Notre Dame made the greatest ible move in persuading Har- to come back and carry on kne's program,” remarked an ern athletic director at Phila- a. “Jess has kept pace with e times and his ability to han- llp men and situations now is no less marked than it was when he built up the system that Rockne nade nationally famous. “Harper developed Rockne. 1 would not be surprised to see him ilo the same thing with Hunk An- derson, who will have charge of football ‘this fall.” Harper thinks very highly of An- derson and will give the former line coach a fre¢ hand in the di- rection of the 1931 Fighting Irish. He believes that Anderson, knowing this and having the full respon- sibility for the first time, will jus- tify the confidence placed in him. idly T p B c INTENDS TO STICK Harper will spend this summerat his ranch in Kansas. 8o long as he can keep his own business going satisfactorily and still devote suffi- cient time to the direction of ath- Jetics at South Bend, he will ‘be glad to stay as long as Notre Dame wants him. This more or less dispels the no- tion that Harper went back tc South Bend strictly as a temporary measure. was 18 years ago when Harper went to Notre Dame. He was hing at Wabash College, Indi- a, when he accepted an offer to 2o to South Bend in the fall of 1013, This was Rockne’s senior ason, vear that Notre Dame 2 east to startle the matives with a smashing victory over West Point, and the turning point for the Fighting Irish on the road to na- tional renown. CHECK THIS LIST Lonz Beach, Cal., seaward from Ios Angeles, enters the open com- icn sponsored by some mistake ALAN GOUL | ASSOCIATED PRES SPORTS EDITOR. ¥ i D~ lpride in athletic production. “The Queen of the Beaches,” I| am advised by Mr. Art Cohn of {the Long Beach Press-Telegram, | not only contributes to all major fields of sporting combat, but has the distinction of being the home | of virtually every national cham- pion at horseshoes and roque for the past fifty years. Perhaps this should be investi-| gated. At any rate, Long Beach has part or full time claims to such conspictous figures, past and pres- lent, as Morley Drury, Southern! California’s ~former All-American | quarterback; Earl Thomson, who | set Long Beach school records be- fore hurdling to world fame for‘ Dartmouth, 'Canada and the US.A.; | Bill Carls of U.S.C., present inter- collegiate low-hurdling champion,/ and Dick Barber, another of South- | ern California’s champion track| and field team. The distinguished list continues| with Mortie Dutra, of the Dutra Bros., Inc., golfers; George Capron, one-time Michigan football star Dick Rutherford, who performed or | |the gridiron for Nebraska; Dick| Loynes, the speedboat driver and | garage owner, and Frank Hawks,| the fellow who flies from one place |to another in almost no time atall. Long Beach, we are advised, also | has contributed Jim Lawson, Ray | Tandy, Corwin Artman and Ray Hulen to Stanford’s football teams in recent years, Southern Califor-, |nia should see abcut an injunction | for this, if it hasn't already doneso. — e |GEORGIA HIGHWAY IS NAMED TY COBB county rton city |of baseball fame. Wilks | commissioners and Wast council have indorsed the pro- |posal, and at a meetingy of ropre- | sentatives cf 12 counlics recemily ’the Ty Cobb I y ass | was formed. | The largest crowd -~ wiod races -at Riverside Pask, - Kanms | City—nearly 15,000—watched the 1931 Memorial Day program. lin this column dealing with civie:** STRIBLING IS WORKING HARD FOR BIE BOUT Pa” Outlines Course of Training and Sees That " It Is Followed GEAUGA LAKE, Ohio, June 24. —Three hard workouts a week is | “Pa” Stribling’s prescription for his son Willie who is preparing for the Schmeling-Stribling championship bout at Cleveland’s municipal sta- dium, July 3. “Pa,” who has traveled the length and breadth of the \country with Willie for his 295 fights is doing everything a manager should do to get his boy into the best possible condition. The contender for the heavy- weight title was in good shape when he started his workouts here, for he seldom has been idle since he started to climb from the lighter divisions. Each of his tri-weekly workouts consists of five rounds of boxing, a round of rope-skipping and some shadow boxing. Between the heav- ler workouts he was doing a lot of golfing, but now Strib is doing his work at night under floodlights. At the start of his sparring here he appeared in need of more fi- His blows did not carry the needed snap, but his training gave promise of much improvement. His breathing and footwork in- dicated that he needed a large amount of roadwork and plenty of boxing. ‘The best sparring partner he has tender step at a rapid pace. e NOTICE! The partnership heretofore exist- ing between H.O. Hanson and L. WASHINGTON, Ga., June 24— A "Olsen is from now on dissolved. | A paved hjghway, from Tocc0a, ganson has no ownership what-| i Ga., to Washington is to be named gpeyer and I will not be responsi-| for Ty Cobb, the “Georgla Peach” pie gor any debts contracted by| him, on or after June 20th. (Signed) L. A. OLSEN, Wrangell ,Alaska. (adv.) — “The Flood” a yard beck of leftfield for thecif- was hit on the knee by a mLchei: ‘Icu , spotting the Vets to two rums. ball, Roller ruaring for him. An-| | The Elks got one of them bagk drews cracked one of Lowe's twists | |in their half. Coughlin singled to on the nose and lost the ball in the | | center but was forced by Roller bushes back of center, three runs | Who was safe at first. Boyd walk- coming in. ;cd. Manning singled, scoring Rol-| He repeated the stunt in the| | ler. ixth. Bob Keaton muffed Rol- Only three Vets' faced Andrews ler's low fly to left and Ed went in the second. The Bills tied the to second. Boyd singled and scor- count on a double by Bonner and ed Roller. Manning singled. An- a single by Niemi. |drews hit the first ball Lowe pitch- While the Vets went runless again ed and drove it over Gold Creek in the third, the Bills grabbed off’buk of rightfield, tying the count a two-run lead in their share of ‘at 12 all. that stanza. Roller homered into| The Bills won in the seventh on a yard_back of leftfield. Boyd's ter- itwo errors, a walk and a single. | rific grounder almost took Liv-'Bonner was safe when Kearney's| "ingstcn off his feet and while the throw pulled Haines off first. Nie- Vet shortstop .was recovering the mi walked. Coughlin singled to fill ball, Boyd raced to first ahead of the sacks. Kearney missed Rol- the throw. Manning’s single off ler's grounder and Bonner came | Kearney's drive senj him to se¢- home with the money tally. | LUMBER WHEN YOU WANT IT i | Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Phone 358 | Bery HATS MANY NEW STYLES NOW ON DISPLAY $5.00 DISTRIBUTORS OF MONARCH ‘QUALITY FOOD PRODU | | | Pioneer Pool Hall Telephone 1¢3 POOL—BILLIARDS || EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. | | | | | | Yl;UR | ALASKA LAUNDRY | | Tel 15 We call for and deliver UNITED FOOD COMPANY CASH IS KING H. S. Graves The Clothing Man “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 SHERWIN WILLIAMS DECOTINT A Sanitary Wall Finish for Use with Hot or Cold Water Decotint is an ideal wall coating for the decoration of all interiors. It gives that soft velvety, water- color effect so essential to refined surroundings, and can be applied on plaster walls, wood, or any of the various wall boards. ‘55 cents per package $10.00 per case ' Thomas Hardware Co. | JUNEAU MOTORS Exclusive Dealers s ,0ld Papers for sale at Empire Offi

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