The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 22, 1932, Page 5

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— BRINGING UP FATHER THE DI\ILY ALASKA EI\/'PIRE THURSI) AY, SEPT /22 1932. By GEORG: [VF M HALF AS BADG A% THIS PAPER SAYS | SHOULD HAVE BEEN SHOT TEN “YEARS AGO. | WISH I'D NEVER ENTERED THIS RACE FER MAYOR A\_\\/t King Features Syndicate. Bricsir. righs seserved .“TT YTI« ! PERSON E McMAN \TS A CINCH THAT GUY WONT VOTE FER ME. BUT WHATS ONE VOTE { PAPAL WE WERE { JUST GoING POWN TO YOUR | b S )] OFFICE é— | LIt 875 J iLiltle Nxck. Auto Viclim, iy the visito: had to be “PULLED” FOR GHICAGO CUBS Cheered by Favorite Team Triumphs CHICAGO Sept. 22.—He's never been inside Wrigley Field, but no- body pulled for the Chitigo Cubs more ‘than 10-year-old Nicholas o His budy paralyzed, lttle Nick lies in a hospital bed and dreams about Cub victories and his own ambition to be a baseball playe It was nearly two months ‘that Nick and three playmates| g0 | Now he is abl He still ta ta, r $ nothing P ball, knows the details of evs lery Cub victory and swells with pride when his autographed bas.g- ball is mentioned. “D'va suppose Kiki Cuyler really: will come to see me when he gets back?” asks Nick, and he add¢ | confidentially to each visitor, “You; (know I'm going to be a baseball® playez, too. . | It would have been the biggest! dizappointment in Nick’s young life, if the Cubs had falled to win thel National League pennant and fail in the world’s series. i i L B0 ! The Florence Sho | %ermanent Waving a S |~ Florence Holmquist, Ptop ied with a single victory and |set out for the Cubs ball park to! d see & game through a peephole y have to admit you rear cne of the exits. For four Americans play better golf,” said|innings Nick cheered the Cubs Tony Torrence, captain of the against the Giants. l { i | Phone 427 Triangle Bldg. 1 Juneau Beauty Shoppe . | 4 SYLVIA BRUMBERG | Britisa team. “Cop Coming"” BY HOME DRIVES The Walker cup, ds prove| Then one of his pals yelled, J he exactly right. When Bob|“Hey, here comes a cop” and Nick ones, George Von Elm other |dashed away. As he crossed the| stalwarts were leading the par strdet a car ran over him, frac- in <his competition, the U. S. uring his skull, paralyzing ‘lis[.. scored few itriumphs so imj ght Fand, one leg and mce." g ° JUNEAU-YOUNG sive as that gained by tt Somehow the Cubs heard about ful telent at Brookline, ed \little Nick's plight. The other day | from Richmond, Dallas, Portland,|a package came in the mail for| , Funeral Parlors Los Angeles and New York |him-—a baseball autographed oy ! Licensed Funeral Directors The average young American jall the Cubs. Nick's joy was un- and Embalmers golfer nowadays is in the habit of boumlcd he started to get hetter Night Phone 1861 hanging around in the low 70's,|at once. whereas the majority of the top-| flight British boys have difficulty often in breaking 80. T That's the main reason why 54#h hom? ui0 walker cup has never home, reco is | Specializing in Permanent and Finger Waves—Facials de Telephone 384 A Foxx, Simmons and McNair Get Circuit Clouts During Game Ruth was up with the bases full. Ryan curved over two strikes. McGraw, on the bench, saw the anxiety, read rightly that | ncd not let another ball past' him \-.H.hout taking a cut. and Slam . Series/ - THE STORY OF BABE RUTH, RECORD WRECKER ety b TGl ik — Rosy did. The Babe took a migh- 4y swi Back to Yae bench he trudged. Muesel, the next batter; singled to save the day. It v.as the last triumph of Mc- Grawian mind over Ruthian mat- ter. They never met again on world's series fields. FORMER PITCHING ‘ STAR IN NEW LINE WAPAKONETA, O, Sept. 22— |“Long Bob” Ewing, pitching ace with Cincinnati and Philadelphia in the National League a genera- | tion azo, is grooming some trot- ters for the harness races and PNz an eye on the career cf| Wesley Ferrell, Cleveland pitcher. | Ewing's interest is in Ferreil |because he has heard that he ds the nearest modern approach to the gveat Christy Mathewson, and Mamcwson and Ewing were rivals when the former was at his best, He has never seen Ferrell per-| | form. 3 ! Mathewson defeated Bwing in several p ng duels, buf Ewing was 10. always at the losing side. He pitched for Circinnati f 11902 tu 1909. For several Ewing was riff here. PHILADELPHIA, Penn., Sept 22—Thrce home runs aided the Philadelphia Athletics in a 8 to 4 victory ‘over the pennant winning New York Yankees yesterday af- ternoon, behind the seven it pitching of Merritt Cain. Jimmy Foxx hit his run of the season. Al Simmons hit his 34th cf clout and Eric McNair made 17th four-baser. | i fooi This is the sixth of ten stor- ies relating the prodigious world’s series feats of the one and only Babe Ruth. Nearing the end of his career, the Babe this rear will make his tenth and perhaps last appearance in the classic.) VOTE THE REPUBLICAN TICKET STRAIGHT NOVEMBER 8 Don’t change horses in the middle of the stream. President Hoover is gaining in strength every day and will be trinmphantly re-elected. Our platform will be in the hands of every voter in the Territory. Read it! Study it! the lef? oult | 1 o SAME STORY IN POLO i | From all indications in our bes: | polo circles the U. S. A. is pretty | ‘ure of retaining custody of the | un International cup another celebrated 8" 8. trophe de sport, providing the| 6. times are such as to make possi-| ble a British challenge again nex! | year. Whether it is because many of our young men have more time and energy nowadays to devote to ¥ oping game, the fact s, | nevertheless, that the so-called per- | jod of depress has witnessed faster and better polo-playing, not | only in the east, but particularly in the southwest and in Southern | California. 'l‘|~ last “Big TFour” to ride |agai Britain, consisting of Pod- ley, Hopping, Hitchcock and Guest, probably remains the best combin- ation this country could get to- ¥ and would be well-nigh atable. Yet there are plenty of hard riding young horsemen able and willing to challenge them n ‘tryouts are called for by U. S. Board of Strategy. - HUNTING TRIP "sgo| Schooner “Sitka” leaves Saturday ;,7, night, back Sunday night. Make 523 ; arrangements at I. Goldstein’s. adv. PrmEES e By EDWARD J. ociated ¥ress Sporis NEIL | | NEW YORK, ®tpt. 22—The “Re- | { [ i Wriler) GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast Les n Francisco 6; Sea Sacramento 9; Missions Los Angeles 5; Portland 8 ©Oakland 1; Hollywood 4. National League Pittsburgh 9; Chicago 6. Cincinnati 0; St. Louis Boston 1; New York 2. Amcrican League New York 4; Philadelphia St. Louis 4; Cleveland 3. Chicaga 11, 3; Detroit 3, Washiihgton 1, Boston STANDH\G OF CLUBS Coast League won Lost 102 99 91 -92 90 87 % 65 (Ags " a legendary, almost drama nowadays and ap- o nily needing only wunanimous opinion that the great one is| throt to start a revival, was a magnificent thing at its incep-; tion ir 1923 | | | 2 Relcgated to the ball players’ 8. bony 'rl duktbed the “busted phe- nomenon,” the Babe suddenly braced. A m spirit, inspired mild, kindly little Miller Huggins, suddenly swept over thes Yankce club. H An idly desciplined mob of tem- peramental stars, each playing his' was transformed into , sincere, closely knit | team h Ruth, the contrite,! howing the way. Beaten off the Glants in two successive worl series, humiliated, the Yankees! came back to sweep the Ameri-| can League again in 1923 with Ruth hitting .393, greatest average he ever compiled, along with 41‘ home runs. \ Not the Same Ruth | Info the third straight series| with the Giants swept the Yan-| kees, and this time Ruth was the! deadly spearhead. He rallied such| mighty pitchers as Hert Pennock, home runs, the first he ever hit! 1 0. 2 For Delegate to Congress— JAMES WICKERSHAM For Attorney General— JOHN RUSTGARD For Auditor— CASH COLE : For Commissioner of Education— W. K. KELLER For Highway Engineer— E. F. WANN For Senator— J. E. JOHNSON, Ketchikan For Representatives (vote for four)— GROVER C. WINN, Juneau R. N. SCRUBY, Wrangell H. P. HANSEN, Ketchikan H. KUBLEY, Ketchikan REPUBLICAN TERRITORIAL COMMITTEE First District of Alaska (Paid Advertisement) INSURANCE Allen Shattuck; Inc. Established 1898 § entire Pct Portlar o Missions SPORT BRIEFS o Paul Pirrone, of Cleveland, and Ben Jeby, of New York, middle- Chicaga, | Weights, have signed to fight eight Ppittsh |times but never have gotten into Brooki !the ring together. Philagelphia. .. Boston There are two red-headed cen- New York ters on the Alabama football squad St Louis | —Fllis Houston and Willlam Fran- Cincinnati Today 'his home run record McGraw's Last Laugh s. ng“k‘s’u‘e;;‘d ;‘o‘: Sé;‘ugfa‘:g &:tl(]’y, four for one sm'w:, mal de aumzxt Al s aeried. howeta | l Bino, - Whitsy Wi and. - Karon! 0o Bl Sos Oerdinals ~“M_19_3 the first $1,000,000 post season clas- | The total weight of the 1932 as- ward. and (_f‘llmlled ‘by _I—m; BGMU-: sic in baseball’s history, the mas- prm*s for the ‘Bama Crimson New York Buth Wit three homil it al TIME 8 Gargs. 10 1038, ter mind of the Giants found Tide is 11,004 pounds. Philadelphia triple, a double and two singles—| ‘The manner of Rutn’s home run Ruth's second weakness. The first | ? Washirgton in (ha games the Yankess!Ditting subdued the scoffers who always has been a base on balls,| Bill Porterfield will call signals Cleveland ada t had waved farewell to the Babe ! something the Giant hurlers fed from the pivot post of the Vir- petroit . ,D,;;“ia,,‘,’e,b i s ffm"hfi‘in 1922, They sald then thatihim lberally after the secod ginia Polytechnic Institute clever. St Louis . hombe runs, the first he ever hiz John McGraw knew the big fel- |game. Chicago ... in world's series play, came in the 10W'S Weaknesses, that Ruth could | Leading Pennock 4 to 1, pitch-! Joe Johnson South Carolina Boston second game of the series and DO Il a low inside curve ON 4 ling peautifully, Art Nehf suddenly tackle, spent the summer work- won i* for Herb Pennock, 4 to 2, change of pace. ‘v.eakened in the eighth inning 'ing as a constable in place of his‘ His distance smashes opened hii| In the second game, off Hughie | Two singles and two walks filleq father, who was {lL assaunlt on world's series hitting McQuillan, the Babe smashed a | the bases and forced in a run. | records. No one before him had low, inside curve into the stands.|“Rosy” Ryan took Nehf's place| Besides Carmen Barth, who cap- | hit two homers in successive times His next time at bat, against Jack land wslked Joe Dugan, forcing in’ tured middleweight boxing honors at bat, nor three home runs in ' Beniley, he wafted a slow balilthe second run to cut the Giants' at the Olympics, one other Cleve- tNallonnl League Won Lost 89 62 83 66 9 72 kg 6 69 69 59 Pot. The Bix Bam is shewn above jllat before starting his mincing trot arcund the bases after laying into one. Head pictures are of team Ruth led to a world’s series triumph cver the Giants after wallopings the two previous seasons. Ruth smacked three homers in the series, .513 500| Old papers vor sale at Empire _46310111“. American League ‘Won Lost 104 46 93 90 85 72 62 48 DRUGGIST “THE SQUIBB STORE” HAAS Famous Candies The Cash Bazaar Open Evenings | I | | — e | Russian Steam Baths ! Hot and Cold Showers ‘ Open Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Frldays Saturdays from 1 p.m. | 1 a.m. Gastineau Ave, rear | Alaskan Hotel. Phone 349. | | i out of the k. lead to 4-3 ilander has won an Olympic box- | v by = {ing title. He is Johnny Karr, DAILY SPORTS CARTOON s T ever brought up the subject of HURLER FOR BEER; cver brousm: up we subject ¢ TRADE IN BASEBALL i g voie e st Seasans iworth ocup to speed boat racing. KANSAB CI‘['Y Sept. 22—The| The jinx pursuing British chal- recent ftrade of a Western Asso- lengers in these two affairs is ciation pitcher for four basebails amony the most persistent on rec- has revived tall tales of deals of ord anywhere. Seven straight times other days, but 1907 seems to have in each contest, the British Lion been the record low. (has been beaten off until popu- That was when a hurler wh' 'lar interest has reached the point later gained Major League recog- o( diminishing. 2 nition was traded for a bottle n( Sympathy undoubtedly was with beer. |Kaye Don and his Miss England Harry “Skinny” Horton, a south- III this year. The popular Amer paw with Hutchinson, Kas., in the ican feeling was that if the Brit- jold Western Associabion, aroused isher actually did not receive a the wrath of his manager, Jay‘bad deal at Detroit the year be- Andrews, by jumping the elub. An- fore at least he was the victim drews sent him to Topeka in the'of an unusually poor break in| same circuit in return for the racing fortune just when it look- brew. (ed as though he was due to win i Nosi year Horton went w the the famous trophy o Washington Senators, and’' played, This time however, Gar Wood's in organized baseball usitd@ - 1917..apprehension, if al was. quickly He now makes his home in xn.nsas relieved by Don's ms ical dif- City. 31§ |ficulties and the veteran Ameri- | |can driver, in his Miss America | x.. retained the trophy without Frrmey |so much as a real race in either IOWA OITY, Ia., Sept. 22— of the two heats. Bdward /Gordon, Olympic broad’ jump champion, will attend the| AMERICANS JUST BETTER | University of Towa during the first, American spectators 100, ('hee.rc-"l‘ semesiler this year to finish his the Evitish golfers at Brookline requirements for a teaching certi- in their gallant attemp’ save ficate. | something - out of the eck of their Walker Cup hopes but ap- DId papers for sme ar “he Empire. plause doesn't sink any long putts, " PHONES 830R8 . | : “The Store That Pleases” UNITED FOOD CO. THE SANITARY GROCERY | 55 By now, perhaps, Britain sports- men may be sorry that America |o | [ to | . — Third and Franklin. Front and Franklin. Pront, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apta. Front, opp. City Whart. Front, near Saw Mill Front at A. J. Office. ‘Willoughby at Totem Grocery. Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s Garage. Front and Seward. Front and Main. Second and Main. Fifth and Sewargd, Seventh and Main. Fire Hall Home Boarding House, Gastinean and Rawn Jpneau, Alaska DUPONT DUCO for Furmture, Woodwork, Floors, Walls, Autos Juneau Paint Store Second Street, Near Main RIGHT Now wWE's STTING OW ToP OF T™E FooléaLL QoRLO Juneau Business College COMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSES in Shorthand, Typewriting, Bookkeeping, etc. 420 GOLDSTEIN BUILDING Phone 554 for further information PYeS POBWOWW wwN g - — o SHAMP TO TEACH > ® Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Deliclous Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Dally 'l"alflh. BPR. w Hmm BSeater Tract. - % TROJANS WERE “ CONCEDED TuE MATiONAL TTLE LAST Season- R b HOWARD JONES- SOUTHE M

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