The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 19, 1932, Page 5

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1932. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY. SEPT. 19, - By GEORGE McMANUS OREGON STATE NEW PLANS T0 BRINGING UP FATHER 1 KNOW YOU DON'F LIKE MR. BLAH, BUT YOU GOT TO TREAT || WELL,'TS A HM NICE. - YO NEED His VOTE - REMEMBER, THERE ARE VOTES WN KIS FAML~ / You MUST TAKE HM TO LUNCH- WIN HIM OVER /. TOUGH JoB, BUT L TR (a4 TEN YES, BRING US SOME CIGARS / '™ SORRY, WELL, YES, } GENERALLY WE ARE Al TAKE A BIG INTEREST N ELECTIONS AND HAVE FOLLOWED THIS CAMPAIN TO DATE - AS YOU KNOW, THERE ARE TEN N MY FAMILY WHO voTE WELL, L SUPPOSE \ CAN RELY ON THEM ALL| TO SLUPPORT Me For -} MayC 1‘-;‘_:) (¢ ‘ @ 932, King reatures Syndieate, Inc., Great Briuin rights reserved.. Q GOWNG TO EUROPE AND WON'T BE HERE TO VOTE I BuUT ol 'BEATS GONZAGA IN GRID GAME o— | Comes from Behind in Last Quarter with Five Minutes to Play SPPOKANE, Wash,, Sept. Fighting in a terrific dust storm last Saturday afternoon, Oregon State defeated Gonzaga by a score of 19 to 16 in the first football |game played here this season. The 19.— and Slam:.Series/ THE STORY OF BABE RUTH, RECORD WRECKER Above jis a cleseup of the eyes of the greatest slugger the world's erics have ever seen. Back 4 in the days when he was a hurler, Babe Ruth’s knack of getting his eye on the ball and slapping it PITTSBURGH IS | TAKING SPURT, PENNANT RACE |Pirates Take Doubleheader ‘ from Giants on | Sunday NEW YORK, Sept. | burgh ¢ a gain ih the pen-| nant race taking two games Sun- oay from ‘the New York Giants, |7 to 4. and 6 to 3. | Lindstrom and Vergez both made Jack Sharkey is the heavyweight {home runs during the games. champloa of the world, but you | wouldn't guess it by chatting with | scme of the fistle fans in and| |’round the territory that has seen | meny a scrapper come and go| since the well known tea party. { Go so far, for instance, as to mention Sharkey ‘and John L. Sul- | livan in the same breath and your | taxicab driver is liable to uttter a loud protest or even hecome threai-| ening. | Bos‘cn is nmot a “Sharkey Town,” although the champion is one of the local squires and a good sub- stantial citizen in many respects, apart from his erratic record in the ringz. The fact is that Boston, like most big towns in the United States, has lost most of the edge (cff its irterest in professional pug- ilism, beset as this sport has be-| come with racketeers and {fixers (within the past ten years. 19.—Pitts- | GAMES SUNDAY | Pacific Coast League San Francisco 2, 2, Pm'll:md} 3, 6. Cakland 7, 0; Missions 1. 1 Sacramento 5, 1; Hollywood 6, National League Pitishurgh 7, 6; New York 4, Philadelphia 5; Brooklyn 1. St. Louis' 2, 5; Boston 3, 2. Chicago 4; Cincinnati 3. American League ‘Washington 8, 9; Cleveland 7, Philadelphia 4, 7; Chicago 3, Boston §; Detroit 6. New York 7, 1; St. 4 3. Louis 2, 2. PHILADELPHIA AND CHICAGO SPLIT EVEN ON 2 GAMES SATURDAY PHILADELPHIA, Penn, Sept. 19.—The Phillies stopped Chicago 9 to 2 in the first game last Sat- urday afternoon. Chicago could touch (Pat Malone. In the game was a non-conference battle, Oregon dropped behind Gonzaga |until the latter’s line weakened, then with five minutes % play and the score 16 to 12 in Gon- zaga's fuvor Oregon marched down from hner own 15-yard line and scored the winning touchdown. OTHER GRID SCORES UN SATURDAYI OF SATURDAY'S GAMES e O Stanford 6; Olympic Cilub 0. Big “Bam” Says Will Be in fagh 0 o . outher: aliforni ; Trim for World Series Ny % vy 0. Sepember 28 | RUTH WOBBLY West Coast CONSERVE GAME BEING STUDIED Redington Says General Plan for All Alaska Animals Be Evolved OLYMPIA, Wash,, Sept. 19.— A general game plan to conserve and protect wild animals in Al- aska will be piaced in effect ul- timately, according to Panl & Redingfon, ‘Chief of the United tes Biological Survey, who ifs ere enroute east afte~ spending weeks in the north. added that the Federal Gowe ernment in co-operation with thg Alaska Game Commission and tQg Forest serv has * dnstituted i@ s Yy to determine the status of ‘lhc brown bear, particularly ol Admiralty Island near Juneau. From the survey that is expaets ed to be completed in about six | weeks, the authorities expect to learn something of the populatisn, jand the’ rate of incr or des {crease in the brownles. He said NEW YORK, Sept. 19. — Bab2 Ruth tottered forth on wobbly legs last Saturday afternoon and. field- | ed a few grounders, hit a few| balls and then retired to the dug-| out, perspiring and trembling with | weakness as the result of his ap- pendicitis attack. | Babe said it was like starting | the season all over again and .hcn said: “I'll get back in Philadelphia next Wednesday and finish out zhc; season. I've got plenty of flml" by the 28th to get back in shape.” ——eeo——— GOLF CROWN FOR CANADA Ross Somerville Bea's Johnny Goodaan for |Alaska Bone Dry Law, Frank Tor- |the move to give bears more pro- itection is the beginning of what | eventually will be a satisfactory plan to control all of Alaska's ani- mals. Mr. Redington said some Alage kans think the brownies should be exterminated but most of them believe they are not dangerous enongh for such drastic action. He POSTPONED TO NEW YORK, Sept. 19, — The €ration of the attitude of the peos second postponement of ths Wal- Ple of Alaska.” ' ker-Schmeling bout has been made ; PN . The bout is now scheduled for Monday, Seplember 26 accordinfl,flMINNIE FIELDS THANKS | HER PATRONS; PRAISE IS to an ennouncement made by the 5 . officials of Malison Square Gar- GIVEN FOLGER'S COFFEE den, BIG BOUT IS ' ' Well, my friends, legions of y« {I want to thank’ you heartily f¢ SITKA MAN GIVEN HEAVY i the splendid support you gave SENTENCE BY O’ARMOND at my concession at the South | Alaska Fair. You were certai loyal to me and that I appreci your patronage would be putting mildly. You came often and wer most liberal. —_— e - Charged with violation of the stensen was arrested at Sitka Sat- urday by Deputy United States Marshal Frank Price, according to | advices received by Marshal Al- |bert White. He pleaded guilty in !the United States Commissioner's | Court and was sentenced by Judge R. W. DeArmond to serve five Amateur Title BALTIMORE, Md., Sept. 19.— The Amoteur Golf Championship passed into Canadian ‘hands for | And I also want to thank th‘ J. B. Caro & Company for thejt courtesies and also to praise Fols ger's Coffee. All of those served at my booth declared Folger's Cof- fee the best they ever tasted. It the first time in history, last Sat- months in the Juneau Federal jail is the best, in my estimation, and ocut of the lot made it inevitable that he would switch to a job letting him in the li £l not £ @8 Job Joting Bl In fhe Fotip overy 483 .| . RED' 850X REMEMBER nightcap, Chicago_whn by a score Babe Ruth’s prospecilve entry Of 5 to 1 boosting the lead in linto the world's series arena for|the pinnant race by half a game. urday afternoon, when Ross Som-|and to pay a fine of $300. lnlso in the estimation of those whe erville, aged 29, outclassed Johnny ——t e idrank it, and they were hundre WORLD’S SERIES PITCHING RECORD RUTH LEFT BEHIND i Goodman 2 to 1. | It 102¢ will call, the electric ies relating the prodigious - | This is the third of tcn stor- | | | world’s series feats of the one and only Babe Ruth. Nearing the end of his career, the Babe this vear will make his tenth and perhaps last appearance in the classic.) By EOWARD J. NEIL _ (Ascociated Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK, Sept. mighty blow, the first Babe Ruth ‘@ver struck in a world’s series, turned his baseball career from the pitching mound toward the outfield, headed him in the direc- tion of the New York Yankees, and inin such slugging fame as no otier ball player ever has known. It was the fourth inning of the fourth game of the 1918 world's and Ruth, in three short ¢ , nad become one of baseball's areatest left-handed pitchers. He had tossed back the Cubs in the first game with a brilliant 1-0 shutout and had run his string of scoreless innings in world's series play to 22. The Red Sox led 2 to 1 in games when Ruth started the fourth game. 1916 Inrings Basescn Struck L Pitched Balls 0 14 3 w 1 |2 1 1 4 0 9 [ 8 0 31 (Ore Game) Cut Batsmen Pitches Runs Hits 1918 - (Two Games) the tenth time since the days when he was a star left-hander with the Red Sox seems once more 1o} |stir the current cup of e 1000 5 Lx;y»fm‘ Boston’s -America 1099 "\ Bug there's mot profit-taking in memories nowadays and the mag- (rates will have to effect some Hit Wild Allowed Pet. [ 0 1 6 1,000 0 2 6 ;| 2 19 1,000 19. — One | As the big lean youngster walk- (ed out of the box at the end of |the third inning he was still a | pitcher his shutout siring intact. |Shean walked to start the Red | Sox fourth. Strunk flied out to | Paskert. Whiteman Stuffy McInnis forced Shean at | third The Big Moment Ruth, still a pitcher, picked up |iis hitting tool and walked to the |plate. Eill Tyler, in grand form, as thouya the uprising was over. As Tyler whipped a fast curve at the outside corner of the plate, the lanky youngster faced his first great batting crisis in a career of hitting glory flying toward him on the wings of that speeding base- walked and | was tossing for the Cubs. It looked | |manipulation this winter to save ball. The Babe swung cleanly, the Rad Sox from dropping out rythmically, the ball soared for of sigat altogether in a league to right center field. Two runs they once dominated. ! scored and the triumphant, pani-| The talk that the great Ruth ing Babe drew up at third base. would be sent back to his old| Kissed Hurling Goodbye {stamping grounds to manage the In that brief wallop he left the ¢lub and revive interest of Fen-! bulk of 2 great pitching career be- iway Park seems to have faded. kind him. Baseball needed his; The American Ieague might hitting ‘more. {make it worth while for Colonel “Bullet” Joe Bush stepped in .%|Jacob Ruppert to part with his| relieve the Babe with two on and most valuable, even if somewhat | none out in the ninth after the [aging piece of ivory, but the Red Cubs had scored twice in the eighth {Sox can't do it. The color of | to end Ruth’s scoreless inning!their stockings now is the same; sireak at 29, still a record for ser- as the color of the ink on their | ies play. 1 books. Ruth never appeared again s a | world’s series pitcher. By 1019 he} had started his home run splurge with 29 for the Red Sox and a ALWAYS A WEAKNESS i ‘When the Sox had pitching dur- ,ing the last few seasons they did not have the hitting. Now they DAILY SPORTS CARTOON PRE-SEASON VOPESTERS HAD ASSIENED HIM . To BeENCH _#& OUTY BECAUSE H\S LEGS «- BT Rises FOOLED 'gp » —HE'S BEEn T™E <oy’ 8@ GON ALL SEason Ly s 24 L -If THE CUBS OONT @IN THE NAT L LEAGUS® PENAIANT TS %EASOH AT @on' 6= HE FAULT OF RIGES AnND His B\& BAT /) {bave sockers like Alexander and, _B»y‘ Pap {Jolley, but their pitching has fal- - len apart again. Bob Quinn and his forces de- serve a better baseball fate than they have had handed to them| this year. They will continue in a tougn spot until they can muster the strength to scrape being beat- en to a frazzle each spring by the| preponderance of strength in the other three eastern clubs before they (the ‘SBox) have a chance to lget stacted. | hitting average of .322. That year he was sold to the Yankees for $125,000, the greatest cash pur- chase n baseball history. He was cff in a blaze of batting glory. — FOLLOW WILDCAT BROTHERS OHICAGO, Sept. 19.—Two lead- ing candidates for Northwestern’s|? 1932 football team are brothers of Wildeat heroes of other days. Lyle Pisher, a promising end, follows Waldo Fisher, who starred in 1925- 27. Bl Riley hopes to-.succeed| his powerful brother, Jack, at a| tackle job. —————— MOOSE HUNTERS! | MAKE RESERVATIONS now for| a complete hunt or for transpor- tation to Taku hunting grounds. Cruiser with comfortable accommo- dations for four, connecting with| fast speed boat service on river. Also deer and duck hunts. Low rates, Phone 444 or address P. O. Box 1299, Juneau. ! . Pittsburgh 4; New York 7. Portland Hollywood ... San Francisco Sacramento ... Los Angeles Seattle . Oakland’ Missions Chicago ' .. Pittsburgh Brooklyn ... Philadelphia . {Boston “~..... New York St. Lou's Cincinnati New York ... Fhiladelphia . ‘Washington Cleveland .. |Oklahoma City were reported in Somerville’s superior steadiness K critical stages plus his ability Fasilio Lioaw Loagng ‘o produce the best shots down g ttle 2. 'gskl::ge:’.s ;I’\szg:;s 3 i | the home stretch eclinched the de-| ewm‘mn“; 7; Hollywood cision. He is the first to'win the 2 rancl s tland 3. crown since Harold Hilton, British San. TFrancisco 6; Portlal it PR e National League 3 2 P i . Somerville lifted the days’ vic- 1 icago | Aisddte 91 0 tory in the fourth tournament in which he has been able to qual- ify. GAMES SATURDAY st 2, 5. St. Louis ¢; Boston 1. Cincinnati 3, 7; Brooklyn §, 6. American League Boston 0; Detroit 5 ‘Washington 4; Cleveland 5. Philadelphia 4; Chicago 5. New York 6; St. Louis 4. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League won Lost . 100 5 98 i 90 83 90 85 90 85 .. 80 86 i 96 65 109 National League Won Lost 88 60 81 65 8 M 6 72 5 4 67 9 [ 80 59 90 Grasshoppers Fought With Sheets of Zinc BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 19, Zinc sheets are the Argentine method of grasshopper control. More than 90 million feet of zinc sheets are utilized in a cam- paign against the crop pests, trans being made by digeing trenches and placing the zinc as high curbs on the far side. The trenches are an effective barrier to the “hop- pers” before they hatch wings, the pests collecting and beirg gathered and burned. Recently a bill was sent to Congress by the President of® the - | Argentine Republic f¢f an approp- - |riation to defray costs of recon- ditioning the sheets used in the 1931 grasshopper campaigns. GLORIFIED TRADING STAMPS ADVERTISE CHICAGO WORLD FAIR CHICAGO, Sept. 19.—The Cen- tury of Progress exposition has adopted the “trading stamp” idea in a glorified form as a means of Pet 5T 560 520 514 514 500 445 American League Won Lost 104 45 91 57 87 60 83 63 2 n 61 85 46 41 here. Eight hundred million water- marked “merchandise certificates” are to be printed and broadcast to merchants in denominations of 1, 5 and 25 cents. The merchants will issue them as premiums with sales, and they will be convertible into cash for paying admissions o the exposition, railroad and taxi fares, theater admissions, restau- rant and hotel bills and allied items during the period from June 1 to December 5, 1933. Chicago Merchandise Certificates, Inc., will issue the certificates uu- cer a contract with the exposition and through a trust agreement with a downtown Chicago bank. - eee GRID COACH QUITS GAME SPOKANE, Wash, Sept. 19.— C. B. Canup, Spokane University football coach, resigned just as the players were starting to think sas City golfer, toured the Old|of fall practice. He decided to Mission course in 76 strokes devote all of his time to teachinz —_————— other subjects. J. P. Laird, for- 0ld papers ror sale at Empire/mer Washington State player, was Office. picked as the new mentor. 105 SPORT BRIEFS University of Tiinois football teams have lost only six games to in 19 sea- non-conference teams sons. Golf ' course greens in and near the worst condition in vears this summer. For the fourth successive year G. W. Duvall, Sr, and G. W. Duvall, Jr., are father-and-son golf champions of Kansas City Marvin Dailey, one-armed Kan- PHONES 83 OR 85 THE SANITARY GROCERY “The Store That Pleases” advertising the 1933 world’s Fair |~ KITTIWAKE LEAVES FOR SEATTLE EARLY SUNDAY The . Kjttiwake, .United States Bureau of Fisheries patrol ship in the Prince Willlam Sound district. Capt. J. M. Crawford and Engin- eer Ben Burford sailed from here early Sunday morning for Seattle | where 1t will tie up for the win- ter. It arrived here Saturday from Cordova and spent the day in port. K. 0. BUR Perfume Sticks Delightfully Fragrant Juneau Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY™ Post Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 stove will be delivered. Again thanking you all, not fors getting to mention Folger's Coffeé, I am grateful for your patronage, —adv. MINNIE FIELDS." DOBBS HATS NOW $5.00 The same quality that sold six months ago for $7 H. S. Graves The Clothing Man DUPONT DUCO for Furniture, Woodwork, Floors, Walls, Autos Juneau Paint Store Second Street, Near Main Juneau Business College COMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSES m Shorthand, Typewritin, g, Bookkeeping, ete. 420 GOLDSTEIN BUILDING Phone 554 for fur ther information Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacon * Three Deliveries Daily Phone 38 UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH IS KING”

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