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JULY 6, 1931. . Bv GEORGE McMANUS [ o0 THE Bo®S WENT | SUT LOOKIN' FER THE \ 004G AN' SO0 AM |- SO LONG- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, 10U MOORE © TIEFORGOLF MILE AHEAD TITLE ROUND FOURTH RACE National Open Sees Favor- California Auto Racer Wins ites Slump or Fail to Event on Altoona Show Strong Speedway VONELMIN OH-A 4QUY WLZ N HERE AN PUT ( AN AD N THE L) PAPER OFFERIN' FIFTY DOLLARS FER THE RETOINOF A LOST DOG- WHERE®S THE OWNER AN' BOSS OF THIS PAPER ? “‘.‘\c BY GOLLY! ) GOTTA GO BACK . TO THE NEWSPAPER OFFICE: &= \ FORGOT TO SAY THA NO QUESTIONS g . WiLL BE ASKED OF THE FINDER- | WANT TO PUT AN AD IN YOUR PAPER: | LOST A DOG AN'I'LL GIVE FIFTY DOLLARS FOR HIS RETOR(N_)V-J FIFTY DoLLARS! ] i TOLEDO, Chio, July 6. — Von Eim sank a 15-foot putt home on the green to tie with Billie 100-mile Fou Burke, ‘of. Greenwich, Connecticut, bile race on t for. the National Open GoM cham- finishing a S nited States last Gleason, -of 292 totals for miles d Indianap Moore averaged 108.7 miles per hour and his time was 53 mihutes and 10 secon he 100 miles. TWENTY GRAND EASY WINNER ALTOONA Moore,_gf Los 6—Lou won the automo- eedway, Jimny two Shaw, of and waged al- Burke exclusive and Von Elm, such favorit Hagén, MacSmith and Diege! slumped or failed to enough recoveries t thick of the battle between € Murphy tried hard Ln“l-‘rcd(ly was game and crowded on he button with both left and |top of Miles only to get pounded He nailed Freddy coming |with a left and right. both hands, and Mack | Miles drew blood with a right The referee broke tnem“smash to the nose, He ripped his nded two more, taking |left to the head repeatedly but it the head in return. |lacked the steam it had in the [olows lacked their usual accur: otherwise he might have dropj rind his man. Mack was hanging on to | right | the ropes near his own corner when |in_with |the gong ended the round, and was | hung on. groggy. and Haines singled. Livingston and Keaton counted. Brunes Loses Control Brunes, pitching for the Vets, | held the Bills well in hand until the sixth. Niemi scored in the first after Haines dropped his pop-fly ELKS WIN TWO MONEY SERES BUILD NAVY and Miles He came up in the sixth GAMES, FOURTH Plaster Moose 7 to 5 Here| and Win from Vets 9 to 8 on Island they were the all players Sat- | the first leg in prize money offered by 1 Chamber of Commerce, ing the $100 offered by The Bills won from the City -Park by a score channel and defeated can Legion 9 to 8 in uphill struggle. Rain prevented the Elks and Legion from playing the deciding game of the local series. Jimmy Manning was credited with wining both games. He hur led nine innings hers to set th Paps down and relieved Wilson t 2las to pitch the last three The Douglas game was 0 Jack® Kearney, former player, who, owing to a nt inju mised the game at glas for the first time in years. Iks Get Breaks | Bills got all the breaks in| me here Saturday. Not a le one of their seven runs was fied by scorer Mize as earned. airtight support the Moose usually give their pitchers was not forthcoming. Infield and outfield cracked at critical spots and the were smart enough to cap- the breaks that came their a touzh Sunday ated | The ing was unhittable until the when the Paps registered | bing but failed to score. weir first run crossed the rubber the sixth when Little Mac’ ted one down left field foul line into the auto line and | he raced over just ahead of the ball ners by Nello and Jack Sch-| ; in the eigth gave them two and triples by Erskine, Fred and Bill Schmitz gave them two more in the ninth frame. Manning whiffed Pete Schmitz in the last frame when he was inserted as a pinchhitter for Nello. Elks Score First The Bills scored first, chasing four runners over the plate in the second frame. With one away, An- drews and Junge singled, Rodland was safe on a fielder's choice, Nello dropped Bonner’s fly to center, Mc- Grath singled and the ball got away from Nello in center, Niemi singled, and the net result was scores by Andy, Rodland, Bonner and McGrath. The Elks added another in the fourth when Bonner was safe when Henning overthrew first and scored when Niemi’s hit over left center rolled across the walk and through a fence. They sewed up the game in the fifth on MacSpadden’s drop of Henning's grounder to second and Rodland’s corking' single to right. Boyd and Andrews were + the scoring runners. McGrath, in left field for the » Elks, made the most sensational play of the game when he made a running, one-handed stab at Big Mac's line drive in the fourth frame. It robbed Mac of at least a two-bagger and possibly a home run. Come From Behind In the second game, the Bills came from behind in the seventh and last inning at Douglas to win after trailing the whole distance. | 4Wilson, who started for the Bills was no puzzle and the Vets found | him for eight solid smacks and five | runs in the first four innings. Man- ning, who had just pitched nine innings here, took his place in the fifth and held the Vets to four hits and three runs. ~ His mate~ pounded out the victory in the last stanza. The Vets scored twice in the first frame in the island game. Liv- | 4 ingston singled. Blake was safe on Bonner’s error and both scored on Ted Keaton’s two-bagger. They added another in the sec- ond on a single by Ellis, an error by Junge and Livingston’s second safety. They added two in the fourth on a single by Brunes, a two-bagger by Livingstoh and Blake's single. In the sixth the ex-soldiers chalked up three more. Brunes homered to open the ses- 4 sion. Junge juggled Livingston’s »n a stolen base, Manning's out and Boyd's single to left. Boyd scored in the fourth on a pass, a two-bagger by Andrews and Jung sacrifice bunt. In the sixth, when the Vets were leading eight to two, Brunes lost zontrol of the ball, and the Elks ook advantage of his wildness to, reep up on them. Boyd walkad, Andrews hit his second double, Bonner singled and McGrath and Rodland walked; Niemi singled to score Boyd, Andrews, Bonner and McGrath. Manning singled to open the sev- enth. Boyd was safe on T. Keaton's error and Andrews walked to fill the bases. Junge doubled, scoring Manning and Boyd to tie the count at eight all. Bonner hit one over a store building back of left and Andy ambled home with the win- ning run. Bonner was only credit- | ed with a single on account of the ground rules. Mocsz Take Walloping The box score of the first game | follows: ELKS— Niemi, cf Roller, ss Manning, p Boyd, ¢ Andrews, 1b Junge, 2b Redland, rf Bonner, 3b McGrath, 1f HPO AE Totals MOOSE— Schmitz, F., 2b € Schmitz, B., 1If | Nello, cf McSpdn, M., McSpdn, C., ¢ Schmitz, J., ss Sabin, rf xRamsay, rf Henning, 3b Erskine, p *Schmitz, P., i | ‘Totals Summary: earned runs, Elks 0, Moose 5; homeruns, Nello, M. Mc- Spadden and J. Schmitz; three-base hits, Erskine, F. Schmitz and B. Schmitz; two-base hits, Niemi; bases on balls, off Manning 1, off Erskine 1; struck out by Man-| ning 8, by Erskine 8; left on bases, | Elks 9, Moose 7; sacrifice hits, Boyd; first. base on errors, Moose 1, Elks 4. Umpires, Nostrand and Davis,| balls and strikes, Davis, Nostrand and Botelho on bases. Scorer, Mize. Time of game, 2 hours. Second Gamie Score The box score of the Douglas game was as follows: LEGION— ABRHPOAE Livingston, 3b .. Blake, 2b Keaton, T, ss ... Worth, rf Haines, 1b ... Heinke, 1f Brodie, cf ... Ellis, ¢ .. Brunes, p ... N PMHOCCOME® woocooomwmo coocororoo Totals 36 812 x18 x—None out when Elks scored ning run in seventh inning. ELKS— AB R H PO Niemi, cf Roller, ss Manning, 1f-p . Boyd, ¢ ... Andrews, 1b . Junge, 2b ... Bonner, 3b . McGrath, rf-1f Wilson, p ... xRodland, rf . R T ORI Gy coorwE®OO M oMomHoORO My cocomwooocooM Totals . 27 x—Rodland substituted - for. Grath 'in right, McGrath went to left and Manning replaced Wilson in box in fifth inning. Summary: Earned runs, Legion 5; Elks 7; two-base hits, Livingston and T. Keaton, Andrews 2, and Junge 1; home runs, Brunes 1; stolen bases, Blake 1, Niemi 1; Struck out by, Brunes 3, Wilson 6, Manning 3; hits 8 runs 5 off Wil- son in four innings, hits 4 runs 3 off Manning in 3 innings; winning pitcher, Manning. Umpires, Davis, Nos'rand an! Do- telho. Time of game, 1 minutes. —— s 1 The Women of Mooseheart Le- glon will give a dance at Moose |as a substitute Scorer, Mize. | Hall on Saturday, July 11th. Good | music, - Scandinavian - American grounder and T. Keaton, Worth dances featured. SEAT@EB(]XERJi Vicious Rally in Fifth and Sixth ‘Rounds Wins Over Freddy Mack aging a savage two-handed a tack in the fifth and sixth rounds, hy Friday night batterad to a well-earned decision jover Freddy Mack of Seattle and turned back that challenger for the iddleweight crown of Alaska. It was a preity battle that was w ually even terms for first four rounds. Pat Terrell, after losing- the first fall to Gene Hulk in the wrestlin; feature which opened the Am can Legion’s Fourth of July sport card, came back to crusa Hulk to the mat in the third and la: round. He won with a body that knocked Hulk out for tw minutes. Semi-Final Is Draw Jim Thomas, local bos went in for Harry Berke- urg man who failed to rt and could noi be loc: d fought way to- a draw with Slugger Weaver. Thomas oui- weighed Weaver 10 pounds and wa; too tough and strong for the little fellow. This match difficulty for stalled and the almost resulted in both men. The; bluffed their w {through the first round and Refe Billy Franks had to admonish them they would be thrown out of th before they tled down to their knitting. ring Jack How: d Sailor Sharkey who uted for Billy James, Hoonah boy who sent word he was too busy fis] e time to fight. Pos- sibly he’s e at that. Murphy Too Fast Murphy was entirely too fast and too accurate for Mack, although the Seattle lad worried Miles in the second and third rounds with a vi- cious body attack. He couldn’t sustain the pace Murphy set in the final stanzas, however, and lost his bid for the belt. The first round was even with neither man doing any harm. They were content to feel each other out Miles landed two lefts and a right to the head but too high to hurt. Mack flogged Miles’ body with both hands and tried for the head with hard left swings but Murphy ducked easily.” Both men fought every second of the second round. Miles stopped a charge by Mack with a straight left to the head and crossed his right to the jaw as Freddy worked in close. Mack kept on top of the local boy and pushed his at- tack to the body. Murphy had a slight edge in a wild rally on the ropes but Freddy made him cautious with a right- handed chop that just grazed Miles’ nose, The round was even. Mack Wins Third The third round was easily Mack’s best and he scored twice to everyone for Miles. He took the aggressive at the outset and with his hands playing for the stomach, and mixing his attack with lefts to the face, he kept Murphy dodging into clinches most of the round. Freddy landed three hard lefis to the head and narrowly missed a vicious left uppercut to the chin. He ripped a left to Murphy’s nose that drew blood. Murphy rallied just before the bell and stoppzad Mack’s aggressive rush almost dead with a stiff right to the jaw just as the bell rang. The fourth round found Miles speeding up to meet Mack. He came out with a stiff right to Freddy's head and followed it with a left that missed its mark. He drove Freddy to the ropes but the Seattle boy was too clever to be caught. Freddy smacked Murphy twice with solid clouts to the stom- ach and slowed him down for a few seconds. At the end of the round Murphy was doing most of the landing with Freddy standing him off on even terms. Murphy Takes Lead Miles took the fifth by a wide margin. He covered Freddy like a blankst, smothering his attack and lashing his face and head with a relentless two-fisted onslaught to th2 head that had Mack on the verge of a kayo just before the bell sounded. He landed seven suc- cessive- straight lefts to the face without a return. Freddy's punches ‘_ijflllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIliI|IlIIIII!IIIIIIIiIIiiIII!IiilIIIiIIIH!|IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIlIIIIIIII-IIIIlIlIIiVIIIIiI“IIlllIIIIIIIII YOUR HOME 4 TESTING GROUND for UNTRIED PRODUCTS? HAT can any one gain by buying unknown products? And why should anyone buy them, when you can always be safe by asking \ for brands of recognized guality? The lure of unknown products is often a “bargain price.”. The clerk may say they are “just as good” as the popular advertised brands. people worth more than the word of one? But isn’t the approval of millions of Advertising can not create character for a product. But it does place established character on trial. The advertised product has a repu- tat_ion at stake. If must make good to hold your confidence. One false claim would be fatal. The substitute product is an unknown brand, with nothing to lose. In appearance, it may imitate the product you know. Over the counter, any claim may be made for it. Only by sad experience can you prove that claim untrue! . Think of this the next time anyone tries to sell you something “just as good.” only one reason. There who permits and encourages substitution is looking at Not at tomorrow’s loyal customers. These facts are newspaper to protect its readers. Such “just as good” products are urged upon you for is more profit in selling them. The merchant today’s sales slips. published by this Whenever you shop, ask for standard advertised products. Insist on getting them. Be warned by the words “just as good” that there is something better. When you are guided by names you know you can be sure of constant quality. Of definite purity. Of honest weight. Of full value in return for the money you spent, THE ANSWER TO SUBSTITUTION IS ALWAYS . . . “NO” EMPIR The Daily Alaska E . st and.feeble: A 000000 OO i e N SAYS O'NEIL | | |Legion Commander De- f clares Pacifist Element Maust Be Stopped | } MURPHY, North Carolina, July | 8—America, in neglecting to b 1up a navy is gambling with the curity of its citizens, Ralph O'Neil, American Legion Commander, told a gathering of Legionnaires here |on July Fourth. “Permanent peace large portion of the Legion and patriotic men who abhor war from personal experience, but the time has come when the Pacifist ele- ment in America must be stopped in its efforts to strip the nation of its _defensive forces,” said the American Legion National Com- ly tired. The bell rang Miles trying to break Freddy’s hold. of the judges wa smoker and the crowd went home in high humor. Bil Franks and Harry Sperling refereed. Karl Theile and E. C. Adams were judg- es. Dave Housel was timeke good big holiday QUALITY AND SERV Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 | attracted a DWYER STAKES NEW YORK, July 6. — Twenty ,Grand galloped home last Saturs day afternoon an easy winner of |the Dwyer Stakes of $11,500, fine ishing a length and one half in |front of Blenheim. Barometer wag third. The total earnings to Twenty Grand is $175. DR. J. W. date of Dr. J. W. Seattle prominent s 11 take his Annual Vacation in Alaska and will be at the Gastineau Hotel from June 9 to 14, inclusive. It will pay you to consult him regarding your headaches, nervoug- ness, stomach trouble, neuralgia, etc, such as are commonly caused by eye-strain. A pair of properly fitted Glasses will very likely re- lieve you of your trouble. Jrossed-eyes straightened withont . Consultation and exam- ination Free! Charges reasonable. Come carly! Dr. Edmunds will be very busy! Phone for appoint- ment. Can test your eyes daytime or evenings up to 10 o'clock. 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