The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 30, 1931, Page 5

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__THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1931. By GEORGE McMANLS e e e et e BRINGING UP FATHER > \ WHO IN THE WORLD CAN BE RINA4ING THE DOOR-BELL AT THIS HOUR OF THE- Y MORNING 2 T DAILY SPORTS CARTOON /Loy HAS DANNY=YOU KNOWY BETTER THAN TO WAKE ME AT THIS HOUR! - —ByPapBOYD'S HOMER RS ST %/ /boéox LoV // ."/ BEEN SETTING A HOME RUN PACE THAT HAS BASE RUH WORRIEO HE AASN'T MSSED A GAME SINCE HE BECA ME A REGULARY EARLY IN 1925 i <Y THE ' YANKEES . ‘SLUGGING FIRST BASEMAN AP AT Fights Reserved by The Associated Pross | | 'h GOULD ~ S5 tages S crASH ! | STOPPED BY DINTY s CORNED ~-BE MOORE'S AND HE ASKED ME TO &IVE- YOL THIS ! 23 5 ) © 1931, Int7 Reature Service.dnc., = Great Britain rights reserved. top speed away from the dia- mond. Both Osborne and Junge heaved splendid ball. Junge yielded eight hits but he kept them well scatter- ed. Osborne's showing was more impressive as he held the slugging Bills hitless for five full innings, allowed but one in the sixth and one in the seventh when he was yanked. The Bills got three hits off Erskine in the two-thirds of | ? an inning he pitched, and was, of | |couise, «(aigez Wwith the loss of | the game. 0 | .\Manning was knocked out for a| few minutes in the seventh when | he and Bill Schmitz collided as Bill tried to steal second. Manning was out cold, but he tagged Bill out before he went daisy picking. Elks Regain iead MOOSE— Schmitz, F., Zb . Sthmitz, B, 3b Nello, cf ... McSpdn.,, M., 1b. McSpdn, C., ¢ J. Schmitz, ss Sabin, rf Erskine, 1f-p ... Osborne, p-1f WITH TWO MEN | ON WINS GAME Elks Defeat ivicose 5 to 2 Winning in Last of Seven Innings | | | | | | | | | | | | ‘; The big bat of Bob Boyd, Elks | catcher and outfielder, last night | broke up what was probably the | most exciting ball game of the | year, scoring two men ahead of him |and giving the Bills the game 5' to 2, after it looked almost hope- lessly gone. The breaks came | the” Elks' way in the final frame |and as usual they made the most |of them. Up to that time the Moose werc | leading two to one. Osborne, Moos2 pitcher, had the Bills feeding out of his hand. He had allowed them two stingy singles in six innings. "Lne bottom end of the Elks batting | order was next up and the game seemed as good as in the Moose bat bag. ' Error Uauses Break | Then the break came. Roller, first up, was safe at first when Fritz | Schmitz fumbled his grounder to second. Coughlin’s speedy roller went for a single although J. Schmitz, Moose shortstop, made a fine stop of it. He couldn’'t re- cover in time to force Roller at second or catch Coughlin at first. | Then Big Mac MacSpadden, | cooorrvoorn Totals . *—Two out when winning run was scored. ELKS— ABRHPOAE Niemi, cf ... ‘ 0 Manning, 2b Boyd, rf Andrews, 1b Junge p Orme 1f Roller ss Coughlin ¢ Bopnner 3b Totals 271 5 52116 2 AND CABBALE ! |resorted to strategy which proved | to be poor tactics. He called Ers- kine in from leftfield to pitch and | sent Osborne to left. ‘whe Bilis welcomed Erskine like a check ~ ~AND OUT OF THE 1oT IT GOES// Summary: earned runs, Moose 0; Elks 0; homerun, Boyd 1; three- base hit, Nello 1; two-base hits, F. Schmitz and M. MacSpadden 1 | plays " SPORTS BRIEFS Ronald Mundell, of Uvalde, Tex., scored two holes-in-one on his ome course in three months. A girl pitcher, “Lefty” Langlo-rd'!MBnnlng waited them out and drew , with a semi-pro baseball team in Dallas, Tex. It probably was the neat or the| “At every opportunity in those humidity that recalled the occasion | years I gained information about | to Gene Tunney’s mind. It was un- Gibbons. I sent for men who questionably hot enough during his | knew him, like Jimmy Delaney. I visit to the Scioto Country Club |studied every fight of importance at Columbus to remind the former |Gibbons had won and how he heavyweight champion of the night|won them. I discovered he had a he knocked out Tom Gibbons in trick of feinting twice, with his the steaming crater of humanity at left, and then crashing in with a the Polo Grounds in 1925. lone-two on the third shift. He If he didn't know it before, Gib-iwon something like a dozen fights bons may now learn that Tunney on knockouts with this strategy. prepared tor tnis wous for more‘ “When we fought at the Polo than three years. It's a high com- Grounds, T was not only fully pliment to Tommy's ability even at ’equjpped to meet Gibbons but I this late date besides furnishing|was even able to turn his own| further evidence of the meticulous | weapons against him. care with which Gentleman Gene| <you may recall that very early, fashioned his fistic career. IT almost upset him by drawing, y |away from his feinting leads, then | | stepping in myself with a one-two The Studious Tunney. | “I first saw Tommy Gibbons in that jarred him. the winter of 1921 at the.old Pio-| “I had perfected a left to thei will storeroom 9: John Jacobs, Oklahoma to graduates as Olympi Several dozen special coaches have been chartered to take Texas fans to the Harvard-Texas football! game at Cambridge October 24. - GODDIE SALE Lutheran Ladies Aid A GOODIE AND FOOD SALE! be held Saturday by the| LUTHERAN LADIES AID in the formerly occupied by starts at —adv. ALENTINE'S. Sale 30 a.m. O papers at the Emplre office neer Club in New York,” said Tun- |kidneys that weakened him but I!® ney. “I was beginning to think pelieve I landed the one-two more ! | then that I might get sumewherc‘chan 100 “imes to the head before | but T was at least smart enough the knockout in the twelfth round.| | to know this fellow was a master; <Tommy was dead game right| craftsman and much too good foriup to the finish. I have always re- me. | garded him as the cleverest heavy- “I recall remarking then, perhaps weight of his time. I prepared for LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET track coach, suggests midwestern relay, carnivals open their 1932 special events training. each; bases on balls, off Junge 2, off Osborne 2, off Erskine 1; struck otit, by Junge 2, by Osborne 3, by Erskine 1; hits 3 runs 1 off Osborne in 6 plus innings, hits 2 runs 3 off Erskine in two-thirds innings; losing pitcher Erskine; stolen bases, B. Schmitz 1, M. MacSpadden 1; first base on errors, Moose 2, Elks from home. Bonner ripped 'off a.single to right which scored Roller. Coughlin | was nabbed at third by a quick re- lay from Big Mac to Bill Schmitz but Bonner reached second. Niemi fanned for the second out and the Moose rooters breathed easier. free transportation to first. Boyd Breaks Up Game Then came Boyd's mighty blow.| Erskine might have taken a chance' and passed him but as that would have filled the bases and brought & .. 3 o ahoma City golfers tendered a e | Andrews to bat, 1t wouldn't have 'y, i nial dinner to Henry Rob- |improved the outlook any. S0 he opoon T T roce from caddie to elected to pitch to Boyd. The lat- greens worker and then state ter fouled the first ball viciously. champion. | The second pitched ball he me:, 3 squarely on the nose and drove it | Empire offica out of the grounds over rightfleld'£zkmmr' bl P! ilnto the line of cars. It was a real ' " IRulhlan clout and Boyd trotted | I:Umpires Nostrand and Botello. Scorer: Mize. Time of game: minutes. el 1 hour and 40 | home behind Bonner and Manning. ‘The Moose scored their two runs EHONE 451 ' in the fifth frame after two were MARKOE STUDIO out and after the third man should have been retired. Thus neither Photographs of Quality was of the earned variety. After Osborne and F. Schmitz were in- field outs on easy chances, Man- ning dropped Bill Schmitz's pop fly between second and third when o |he tried to take it with one hand l Nello slammed a triple to right- field, scoring Bill and himsell | |scored on a single by Little Mac. Roller Fielding Star Roller, Elks shortstop, with five ~ putouts and three assists, was the fielding star. He pulled & spec- e Best Laundry ks At a Fair Price ! Portraiture, Photo Finish- ing, Cameras, Alaska Views, Ete. First National Bank Bldg. JUNEAU, ALASKA | | — a bit confidently, that I wanted my fight with him over a longer | Gibbons but not until T was fully |period than I did for Dempsey.” | prepared for him. | “It was more than three yefln[l’lugs Football, later that we were matched N pjcy ganley, Northwestern's foot- New York for the bout that led to ball coach, kept the gridiron topic | . chz}noe 100 14be chsmp&onship{a“ve despite the hot weather, at’ fight ‘with Dempsey. ' Columbus. Dick spent most of one blazing day in the rough of the ! Scioto course but came up to the 19th hole and a shower bath still insistent that the Notre Dame- Northwestern game this fall at Sol- | dier Field, Chicago, will be one of; the classics of the year. ! “We have lost a flock of stars such as Bruder, Woodworth and Baker, but the Wildcats will be 2 ready for the Irish,” predicted Han- We are the exclusive | ‘- i this line. ;\lgents fortri d .. | OLD VAULTER'S SON FINDS ave you tried a pair {| comMPETITION 1S STIFFER of AUTOGARTS, their newest line . . . Holeproof Hosiery ! SAN DIEGO, Cal., July 30—Dan Deacon can offer expert testi- mony on the advance made in athletics during the last quarter of a century. | Back in 1907, Deacon then 2 resi- dent of Stoughton, Mass.,, pulled ‘oh‘ a pale vault of 10 feet 6 in- A ches, and it was con idered qui.c an achievement. Now he has a son, “Bud” Dea-' con, in Stanford who rogularly| clears 12 feet. The boy is con-j | sidered as merely “promising” ma-| < rrereerrrrrrreeer—eme |terial for Olympics competition. " SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men FOUND A GOOD $6.00 Man’s Shoe “It neither crimps your “roll nor cramps your style” DEVLIN’S PHONES 83 OR THE —ltacular catch in the seventh in- ‘WHERE? CAPITAL LAUNDRY | Phone 355 Franklin St. | Ining when with a man on second he pulled down M. MacSpadden’s seeming Texas leaguer in short left, making the catch running at CALIFORNIA GROCERY Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 I i DISTRIBUTORS OF ” MONARCH QUALITY FOOD PRODUCTS THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” —_— | TAXI SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Booth e Phone 3| 85 “The Store That Pleases” SANITARY GROCERY WHY DIDN'T You SAY SO N THE FIRST PLACE ¥ EF TARAHUMARA TRIBE GOES IN TRAINING FOR 1932 OLYMPICS MEXICO CITY, July 30—The famous running Tarahumara In- dians of the remote Slerra Madre mountains of the state of Chihua- hua, are preparing to compete in| the Olympic long distance events at Los Angeles next year. Sports writers, however, believe the Taharumaras will not make much of a showing, because all the Olympic distances, even the mara- thon, are too short for the famous I[ndians. The belief is that the Indlans' great endurance and stamina will not offset their lack of experience in the Olympic events and that the 26 miles of the marathon is en- tirely too short a distance for a| runner who is accustomed to run 100, 200 and 300-mile races. Famous for centuries for their long-distance running ability, the Tarahumaras live remotely from the rest of Mexico and seldom have been seen in the United States. Running is a passion with the tribe, and visitors tell of seeinz teams of neighboring villages run barefoot over stony mountain trails for two days and nights in compe- tition. Thelr last appearance in the United States was in 1927 when teams of men and women runners competed in the Texas relays, run- ning from San Antonio to Austin, and in the Kansas relays, running from Kansas City and Topeka to Lawrence. RS 0N SO MONTANA SP:. VNI CATCH IS LARGE HELENA, Mont.,, July 30.—Al- though weather shortened the spawning season in this state, the game department obtained 35398,- 479 native trout, rainbow trout and grayling fish eggs for hatch- ing this season. ——————— For fallen arches or aching feet see DR. FENTON, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING. —adv. 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Sit and ride in the wide, restful seats and you will realize that just as no restrictions have been put on mechan- ical performance, so no limits have been placed on comfort and beauty. There is much to interest the careful buyer—a choice of sparkling colors, a variety of rich uphol- stery materials, Rustless Steel, safety class, Houdaille double-acting shock absorbers, one-piece welded steel wheels, slanting windshields, and many other features which make the Ford a happy investment. JUNEAU MOTORS CO. FOOT OF MAIN STREET UNITED FOOD COMPANY CASH IS KING WATCH GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92—95 J. B. Burford & Co. Gastineau Hotel Larry Parks . W. T. Farwell, Skagway R. P. Peratovich A. B. Hayes, Manager, Alaska Division. Headquarters at vt B = ) |

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