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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1932. T e BRINGING UP FATHER St : Ly CEOR(".EJNL‘;SL\& 5. v PIRATES LOSE ;S'rfliifc“éiagFufié;‘."‘s NOW LISTEN- 1 TOLD i + NOW- | HAVE FORGOTTEN | , B NEEDS INSURANCE | Won Pet YOUL | DONT WANT ANY o 3 WHAT 1T WAS- You 4 BOTAES To0 BIC A | Portland 64 589 WHY DONT YOU LEAVE - THING AN MOUR X | BE R D i | |San Francisco 57 538 ME ALONE? X AGO WHY DIONT \ FORGOT 1% \\ s VST to i | Los Angeles a4 503 ¥ 5= YOU ATTEND TO ABOUT 1T ‘Q\““ THAT BATTLE- R GAME MUNDAY Bestile - 453 Y J MAGGIE - : ) Sacramento 50 459 M 5 24 D/ Oakland 48 444 % A ¢ : Ry f Missions 44 407 Philadelphia- Wins Eleven P e o Contect. v | National League rame Lontest by | Won Lost Pt 5 to 4 Score burgh 8 3 | Chicago 47 38 PITTSBURGH, Penn., July 19.-.|Boston 6 42 The Pirates extra inning winning | Philadelphia 4“4 45 treak was snapped by Philadel- Brooklyn 2 4 phia yesterday 5 to 4 in an eleven | St. Louis e e Syndicare. I Grean Briais dights seined inning game, Tt was the. first|New Yark 38 44 time the League's leading Bues|Cincinnati 40 54 e T S AR F S wve surrendered an extra inning| ) - ume since May 9. Amerfoan League JACK GETS THE CHAMP'S BELT e May 9. Jeague | NtosAlE Sisapte | New York 60 28 .68% i Coloigs: 3. Philadelphia 52 38 518 Pittsburgh 4 Cleveland 51 38 578 ROAAL entiny | Detroit 47 38 553 Auiketian . Lanks | Washington 9 40 551 Louis 1; Phi.adelphia 8 | St. Louis 39 46 450 New York 6. | Chicago 30 56 340 ] 8 Washington 6, 1, |Boston 21 65 244 o d 2; ‘Boston 4. | —— ’ ~ — = - Pacific Tonst Laazue ! Juneau City League | } My association colleague Harri No games were played in the| (Second Half) | M L O p I " | Larva, “the Turko grey-hound,” re- Pacific Coast League yesterday as | Won Lost Pet;, ! Y I F E an d tll e LY M C S minds me in many ts of | ims were traveling to open | E ¥ 2 667 Peltzer, He is almost as good a | s afternoon on the schedules |Moose 3 3 500 $ | tactician as the German, and as for the week. / American Legion 2 4 333 Real Bargain far as nerves are concerned, f _/ ahead of him. His running car- | % g PAAVuU NURMI [ soae |eer up to now. is about the Same as [Peltzer's, in other words he has so far only been one year at the very top, 1928. Before the Am. sterdam games his speed was ter- rific, and although his condition | had already begun to deteriorate This j¢ the ninth of a serles ~ ——————— . — of articles by Paavo Nurmi in | which the great Finnish run- ; | I i ) ner in his own way tells the story of his life. Jolc at the actual games, he still e By PAAVO NURMI i managed to beat Ladbumegue and (Written for the Associafed Press.) | RAY to take the gold medal. Later on,. - IX. OPINION OF OTHER RUNNERS ' I have now an experience of 12| years on the cinder track and the wooden floor. In this time I hava| bpened to meet with both the ! one and the other runners. I bs-| the man has remained at an or- dinary dead level, because he has not found out the training meth- od best suited for himself. If the signs do not lie, he will be how- ever, in the summer in the Olym- pic year, a dangerous man High cost is unnecessary for summer heat. Start your fire with INDIAN for quick heat. Bank it | well with CARBONADO. Your fire will require little attention throughout the day. | lieve I nave a better knowledge ) | Ray “Hangs Hi 1 ‘ Per Ton ¢ t j 1- | | s | 2 (l’omnr»rv:hehf:n:eti ;::n’;m’tlliset ;:!-i | In my running T have seldom ) 3 A it - | I",0.B. Bunkers aias » | met with any real surprises, but Associated Press Photo | e side. : i once in a while they do happen Jack Sharkey Is shown holding the balt emblematic of his new title | INDI 1N LB il Seen $11.50 My worst opposition I have met | | Among others, Ray once placed me | a8 world’s heavyweight boxing champion. It's part of his reward for | Nut 11.25 on the mile, the 1500 meters and | distances than those.! ous reason is that 1500/ meters has always been the short- | est limit for which I have trained.| Quick, runners who run say 800/ meters as their speciality have no| difficulty in competing with long! distance runners on 100 meters. Both for the mile and the 1500 ters my strongest opponents werie; ide, Peltzer, Ray and Larva. I} cannot venture to state which of them was the best. As a runner Wide was no doubt the greatest,| but in tactics again Peltzer wds No. 1. | The mile belongs to the extrems: lo end of Wide's scale of run-| ning distances. Twice he managed | in a situation which had never | his much-discussed victory over Max Schmeling. expected. It happened in Madison Square Gardens in the winter of 1925. The time of training for this maten | had been very short. Short was| also the wooden floor and also for | anyone not used to it, too elastic| and springy. From the very be-! ginning I was aware that I might: lose the engagement. For that . reason T endeavorded to prepare | | Sore, Aching Feet myself carefully for the match. I| ’'Wimbledon has never provad TR reckoned that the only means of much so.far as American Davi:| Especially in Hot Weather beating my hard competitors on!Cup chances ar d, .4 e such a floor would be hard run-(least in recent y ning from the very beginning. I Call Us Direct—PHONE 412 Pacific Coast Coal Co. how the game is going against' them.” | And that, my friends, happens | to hit the uail right smack on tie head. | | : How Policemen Rest Takes any decoration! You can paper Sheetrock— paint it— panel it. Or you can apply Textone, the new decorator that gives hand- some texture finishes. And Sheetrock does not warp, is weather-tigat, dur- able and fireproof. Ask us about Sheetrock. Reg. U. S, Pat. Off. SHEETROCK ‘THE Fireproof WALLBOARD JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, Inc. Phone 358 The minute they get home, they | % M Wilmer Aunson walloped Henri |kick off their shoes and rub their | could not think of having my|oochet early in the British sin- |tired, burning feet with— | watch with me on this floor with|gies championship one season, but| Moone’s Emerald Oil to beat me—in Berlin in 1926— | ‘its short curves. Well, there must (it was 5 qifferent Cochet who| Instantly it takes out the sting, but no more. And yet we have, 2 be some way, I thought. I had|turneq back the U. S. challenge |reduces the swelling, cools, soothes | et one another on the cinders| Cocky liftle Joie Ray of all the American track stars is the one ‘t’,"e of my friends to sit in the jaeer in paris. and refreshes. 1In hot weather | very often, at one time it was| singled cut by Paavo Nurmi for special praise. He could run a half m‘ur::‘l Tow ot “}?FS at ‘J‘" Wf‘l’;““; Last year the Yankees had the |there’s nothing like it to keep your quite the fashion to have a duel| mile and he could run the marathon, Nurmi says. Photo shows |%o h':f' lf::g a:: ‘:flm‘,m""m‘m:': Wimbledon singles final all to feet comfortable. . an Nurmi-Wide. He has better bod- ' Ray in 1928 during his marathon days. B i are' 2 '"how | themselves, with Wood and Shields ‘No wonder Butler ymur_o Drug | '%‘y qualifications than I have to .50 ey e Al me{topping the whole field, but these [Co. and other good druggists sell e S i sl ) by your fingers, whether T am |y, ¢ 0 res e Chal- |Emerald Oil with a money-back B I Menay| Strategy and Newve Power |than ‘then, 1 was overtrained, ahead of behind time, and how|jmeye meang o = ro o R Ohal- | ntee that 1t will end. your of a master, but his use of the' Otto Pelizer's name is well known | Which 5 Dl'O’V?d already by the many seconds. If T am ahead of | pgqin this year Cochet was an- |hot weather troubles. —adv. upper body, and particularly of his all over the worid. although ne“fncv that I only weighed 62 kilos Ehc table, one or 'more Imgervs _u.p,im“. round victim, this time a: g DA s hands is uneconomical. Then he Was only for one year a runner|(139 pounds), my normal weight and if behind, down. So that’s i”|iho hands of an Englishman, Tan| Old papers ror sale 8t Empirs | was pursued, in a manner of speak- of the really highest class. But be_mg 66.5 kil (147 pounds). Ix.‘]‘?j{ter a couple of rounds I was,(ml]ius, but anyone who thinks |Office. iz by bad luck, Thus in our|in 1926 he was truly excellent, all¢Pite of all this, T led the race for |leading, as far as I remember. MY the Jitile Frenchman is headed for |~ s ‘ match in 1926 at Stockholm on the through in perfect condition. That|three and @ half rounds, at a Wide-awake friend was watching,'y payis Cup beating on that ac- | fr—————————— | 3000 in stretch he all but filled |¥ear he ran world's records on the speed which I knew would lead to E’jd fli was ‘:‘mhmé’ him. He had aoung probably can get twenty for the gap of 50 yards between us in % mile and 1500 meters. For thesz|a World’s record, which also hap- two tngn';rst \i\med up:args, ‘l”hm“;cvery five he cares to wager on the last 300 yards; the difference |Tesults the German Doctor may | Pened. | mean! a was ahead of my {the proposition. & the goal was only 2 yards. Al-|thank his good helpers, amonz| Peltzer has all the qualifications f;;heduled hblme Zylz }s]e(l:jonds; flAL! The improvement by Ellsworth most the same thing happened iz Whom I also counted. to become an absolute ace in run- '€ seventh roun I‘e ad one fin-|yines is the best news from the Amsterdam on the 5000 meters.| I remember that 1500 meter |Ding—excepting his nerves, I be- 8€T dow’nwa.rd;. . t was thus onelgoreion courts, The slender Cali- There he caught me up just when match in Berlin in 1926 as if it|lieve that it is just his nerves ?C;":’h ‘“‘ei-t . °T°efd ‘mYR:P"ed—d‘ro»n..n has *had his admirers up- I had crossed the line. But Wide had happened vesterday. I have|Which have brought about that he “Ph h_en o ppen : v ;’;‘ most' of the spring but the can blame his poor self-reliance never before been so absolutely|Das never come back to his con-| %1t ) Hean - Pasec e Ml [ A still hold the conviction he will jout any difficulty and even add-!pe ot his best when ‘L(hr l‘)u‘\?is Tnb NEW CHEVROLET SIX quite as much as his bad luck. 'convinced of losing beforehany dition of ' 1026. | 6t 40, itk atoed b » Koae Tk The Great American Value stakes are involved. i ek T L el e YT 2| 9 e (| pon 000D STEAKS DAILY SPORTS CARTOON By Pap S s, oo o b T | o e S £ y ap common sense however won. 1t T 5. | S |the two factors go hand-in-hand. | |sald: “Rely on your time table,|y, nas everything else in the o gas e | *Iman! World’s records are not Coupe 735.00 ¥ |of strokes, stamnia and tempera- Cabriolet $30.00 GO TO FRANZ ( - |broken in this way by a second|ment necessary to become a world Sedan (4 door) ... 840.00 PouPA Q & o twot; 1 relisd i, dhie cRoM, 'chamgthi; Free Wheeling and Syncromesh || o |2nd let the others do what they | i BAILEY’S CAFE “2ECHOSLoVAKIA S |lked. Ray hung Himself up by .no maTTER HOw ITs suicen|| CONNORS MOTOR | his speed, and it was an easy job | 0 3. (for me to correct things, so that| Among the numerous backhand CO., Inc. |1 won. {shots ‘brought out by the Sharkey Ray was one of the safest run- Schmeling fracas, this Towa post- it script is worth nothing. Tossi ners of the world. If he had only ScTiP h 4 ; 55.,.31-5 -r.“‘E {been 10 centimeters (four inches)| “If the opinion of an experf, OVER EUROP, {talled, it would have meant a few Who is really expert at ading g E \seconds 1n his results. Conger, between the lines and inconsisten- !for instance cannot be compared cies and illogicalities of the accept- A 2 N j\\?i:h”}\:im.n 1 count Joe among the ed experts, were to be voiced, 1t MODESS ’lnounc"ng a ew OF THE WORLD'S - ' ; J A ‘ jrunners whom T honor. He could |Would be that a cheese champion KITCHEN LIGHT run half a mile, and he could nm‘)wa\ fairly closely defeated by an- S“OT~QU]' \ ; ] v : ‘ 7 BL ; ; Y ithe Marathon. other champion of the {romag: genus, Recoep d g 4 A “And T mi nat 1 nave|{ FINEST SANITARY 3 (Copyright, 1932, The - And I miight add that I have| o) (8. 2 ) { . ; ited Press. All rights reserved |& S/0gan that all experts migh!| F E . 02T 7h /y) 3 5 rnuall countries, including Fin- | profit- exceedingly by chanting ev-| NAPKINS I XTUR land, Norway and Sweden. Re- “Pl'}‘ time they -take up their nu- | productions in whole or in |merous task of experting. It part forbidden.) {‘Be logical or be a reader.” at Complete with One 150-Watt Lamp PRI | The answer, of course, being | . o | that if logic prevailed, there would SPORT BRIEFS [be o tights, fistic or political. | A NEW PRICE | P rice $2-00 L : | KEEP CHINS UP Night soccer footbaii has been !inaugurated at Ogden, Utah. | The British have been asking 25¢ Pko. INSTALLATION FREE | | themselves this spring why theu | One hundred fourteen boys en- athletes fall so often in comba. |tered the St. Louis district junior with Americans, at home as well | |golf tournament this year. |as abroad. Especially were they | upset by the defeat of their Wight- J ‘The vietory of Gus Moreland cf man Cup team in women's ten-| uneau Drug |Dallas, Tex., in the 1932 Trans- nis. | Telephone Juneau No. 6 and we’ll do the rest v . . | Mississippi ‘Golf Tournament was, “An impression forced upon me ! C la nd { !his. 22nd in 27 matches. | during the play, “remarks one Lon- 0‘ A Ska EleCtrlc nght a i | |don critic, “was that the Ameri- | | { BET I THE | stanley Coveleskle won three' caus were much the steadier. Their “Thire Is No Substitute || ower Lo. Geid: 1 |games in one ‘world series for the mistakés were fewer. Tt is their | for QUALITY” NP | Cleveland - Indians in 1920, consistency which tells. | | o X |1 P . {1 eat et ekttt W EDISON MAZPA LAMPS _/! » 'Honolulu. the largest in Hawaii, [sport—is that they rarely develop | AT : lm been roofed, 7 i ldajan inferigrity. complex, 10 mAUEr | & oo s SUOl NUMBERS The Schofield boxing arena at icans—and this applies to every PHONE 33 J