The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 29, 1931, Page 5

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THEDAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1931. » Bv GEORGE McMANUS PHILLIES BEAT ATHLETICS 50 IN EXHIBITION Chuck Klein Drives in Four Runs—Champs Get Three Hits PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 29 —With Chuck Klein, National League home run king, featuring his specialty, the Phillies pounded out a 5 to 0 decision over the champion Ath- letes yesterday afternoon. Four thousand fans paid $8,520 OUR STUDIO WHERE. YOU WikL HEAR, PROF wiLL 8 LouD / e WikL TALK to see the exhibition game for un-| employment relief. Klein drove in four of the Phil- lies’ runs with two home runs, both off Waite Hoyt. The Athletics played all regulars and got only threa hits. — e Five hundred boys participated in supervised playground baseball this summer at Wichita Falls, Tex Thirty-six non-conference foot- ball games are on the schedules of the Pacific Coast conference’s ten teams. e —— The total land area of North Dakota is 44,917,120 acres, of which 86 per cent was in farms in 1930. — e Traveling talking picture shows are being organized in India. ON WIN DOUBLES TENNIS TITI.E Vines and Gledhlll Defeat Allison and Van Ryn in Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, Cal, Sept. 29.— Ellsworth Vines and Keith Gledhill defeated the national doubles cham- pions, Alison and Van Ryn, yester- day afternoon to win the Pacific| Southwest doubles title by 6-4, 6- and 7-5. o S G o esd ISN'T THAT WONDERPEUL 7 Ill!!" HE'S TAKING AN INTEREST | IN LITERATURE — (LL NOT THE 4LADIKTORS OF ANCIENT ROME~ b LA GOULD ~ ‘m%“ {than there will be touchdowns all Whether those old time gridiron |season. rivals like it or not, the demand| The unsatisfactory part of the for another Army-Navy game this‘situatlon from the viewpoint of year for charity will be even stronger than it was in 1930, when they battled at Yankee Stadium |tions. Again they have proceeded for the benefit of the Salvation | to map out their football programs | Army. without taking each other into 4| OCharity certainly will be in a | consideration, since they have no |receptive mood by the early part | diplomatic relations and therefore of December. The receipts from |Temain in a state of open disa- |last winter's game exceeded $500,-, 8reement. Old papers tor sale at The Em-|000. There will be more uses of it This obstacle can be overcome by pire. in the forthcoming winter months the expedient of putting on a post the cadets and midshipmen, is the| uncertainty of their present rela-| Cochet has the type of game that always will beat Tilden. Billy John- son could have beaten him, too, if only he had played differently, that is, down the center line more, and not fed Tilden cross court corner shots.” It is all very well to make Little Bill feel good now by telling him such bedtime stories, but Johnston resourcefulness, stamina and va- riety of shots at a time when Big Bill was at the zenith of his ama- |teur career. 1 Johnston, on many an occasion, hammered them down the middle, as Brookes suggests, with good re- {sults, but he was not consistently \.Ablc to maintain an offensive of |this sort against an opponent of Tilden's or Lacoste's class. | Speed! , Even though Kaye Don, the | British speedboat king, fails to take the Harmsworth trophy back to season contest between them, as| England, the British now have was done in 1930, but this is alfull claim to the principal speed hardship for players and spectators honors of the sea, as well as of the |even though not for charity. (land and air. again is with Notre Dame the | Harmsworth records in capturing game to be played at the Yankee! |the first and only competitive heat | Stadium November 28. Navy's cam. 0 the Detroit river from Gar paign extends a week longer, with Wood’s Miss America IX. It already Pennsylvania listed as an oppon-'held the world's record of 110 ent December 5. jmph., made in Italy. Bouquet for “Liitle Bill” | Malcolm Campbell shoved the au- e e - L |tomobile straightaway record up A. L. T, the tennis magazine, ', 745 mph. at Daytona Beach brings back a voice from the past last February and the British that of Norman Everard Brookes, | Schnelder Cup seaplanes have set in a pungent paragraph of C"m"mans fastest pace at something ment that links up with the pres- like 360 m.ph. e | The answer is that the British “It looks like a waste of time (build superior motors, generating to me,” remarks the famous Au<- {the speed as well as possessing the | tralian, “to hold an open wunm-‘smmma under severe mechanical | | ment now to determine the world's strain. Their intricate secrets are greatest player, the way Tilden is as-jealously guarded as the crown playing, but I believe that Henri jewels. ine, 0000000000000 * UTOMATIC! KELVINATOR Electric Refrigeration THE CHOICE OF THOSE WHO DEMAND THE VERY BEST . . . AUTOMATIC wAY COLD Four-Way Cold means four separate and distinot tempera- tures delivering four separate services in one refrigerator— each wholly automatic and independent of the other. No manual control is necessary—a feature which places Kel- vinator Standard and Deluxe lines far in advance of all other refrigerators. 1. Automatic Fast Freezing—Remarkably fast freezing in all ice compartments resulting in far more ice per day. 2. Automatic Super-Fast Freezing — Exclusive to Kel- vinator. A new invention—Iso-Thermic Tubes—provides the world’s fastest freezing of ice cubes—in 80 minutes—and des- serts in a special compartment—automatically, without at- tention or regulation. 3. Cold Storage—The large Frost Chest with below-freez- ing cold is just the place to store ice cream, extra ice cubes, frozen salads, desserts, or those new frozen meats, fish and fruits you now find at many stores—a feature first introduced by Kelvinator during the past year. 4. Automatic, Safe Preservation of Foods—Constant, scien- tific refrigeration in the food compartment—always below 50 degrees. Not affected by lower temperatures of ice-freez- ing compartments. Each of these four services is extremely important to me home and to the housewife. So important, so necessary, that once you know fully what they are, you will inevitably demand the Four-Way Cold Kelvinator in preference to any other refrigeration. CAPITAL ELECTRIC COMPANY SECOND AND SEWARD Preference for Kelvinator has a very defin- ite and sound reason behind it—the repu- tation for traditional quality and depend- ability which has merited the confidence of all. Kelvinator—the pioneer—is time proved. For seventeen years it has enjoyed year- after-year leadership. Today, as the largest exclusive manufacturer of electrical refrig- eration equipment in the world, Kelvinator stands as always, pledged to ideals which have made this success possible. SEE The model now on display at our SHOW ROOM YES Terms can be arranged to suit “THE ELECTRICAL SHOP” OFFERS ALL THESE FEATURES 1. FROST CHEST Automatic cold storage in several com- partments. 2 KOLD KEEPER Creating a reservoir of cold. 3. KELVIN CRISPER Keeps any vegetables crisp. 4. KELVIN COOLER A dual purpose container—for drinking water or crisper . 5. RUBBER TRAY For easy removal of ice cubes. Also “the little watchman” thermomstat, bar type shelves, rounded corners, electrically lighted interior, chormium plated hardware, EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS DllIllllllllllllll|||llllIIIII|IIIIIIIIIlllIIllllIIIIIIII||IIlllIIIIlllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlllIIllIIIlIIlllllIll|IIIIIllHlllllIIIIIIlIIlllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIlIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllIlllllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllfllllllmlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll simply could not cope with Tilden's | Army's regular season climax Miss England II broke all the | LAST WEEK OF COAST LEAGUE This is the last weck of the sea- son of the Pacific Coast Baseball League. There were no games | played yesterday as the teams were traveling to open this afternoon on the following schedule for the week: Seattle at San Francisco. Portland at Hollywood. ¥ Mission at Sacramento. Los Angeles at Oakland. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Po'. San Francisco 37 538 Oakland ...... 41 504 Los Angeles 40 581 Portland 44 522 Hollywood 47 412 Seattle ... 52 A4 Mission ... 50 .43 Sacramento % 52 429 —ee SPORT BRIEFS | Portland, Ore., the city which calls itself “the greatest golfing town in the world” opened its 20th golf course in August. A tackle by the name of Walter Camp is a member of the Wash- ington State grid squad. Henry Iba, cage coach at North- west Teachers college, Maryville, Mo., played baseball with Danville in the Three-I league this summer, Seven all-conference southwest Missouri high school football play- ers are enrolled for this fall at Drury college, Springfield, Mo. 000 S i

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