The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 3, 1933, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER WELL WHAT DID THE LAST HE WUZ WORSE THAN THE OTHERS - HE WANTED TO SEND ME TO A HOSPITAL- I'VE SENT FER ANOTHER ONE- ILL CONVINCE MAGGIE THAT I'M WELL— THIS 1S MR- IGGLS | GUESS! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY,' AUGUST 3, 1933. By GEORGE McMANUS | DIDN'T SEND FER YYOU TO COME HERE AN’ QUESS -V WANT i TO KNOW IF I'M "~ N GOOD HEALTH CARDINALS NOSE OUT PIRATES IN 12-INNING GAME Two Players Are Ejected from Diamond for Fight Over Decision | | | 3 | PITTSBURGH, Penn., Aug. 3.— With hostilities flying for the sec- ond time in two days, St. Louis| trounced Fittsburgh 4 to 3 yesmr-l day afternoon in a 12 inning game, | requiring threc hours and twenty *eight minutes to play. Bill Walker, Card’s pitcher, and | Arky Vaughan, Pirate shortstop,! were ejected from the game for a! fight over a decision at first base. GAMES WEDNESDAY Pacific Coast League Sacramento 5; San Francisco Hollywood 14; Seattle 12. Oakland 4, 0; Los Angeles 9, 2. Missions 5; Portland 3. National League St. Louis 4; Pittsburgh 3. New York 6, 18; Philadelphia 13, 2. Cincinnati 6; Chicago 10. Brooklyn 3; Boston 8, 1. American League Chicago 2, 4; Detroit 1, 3. Boston 1; Washington 2. Cleveland 16; St. Louis 8. Philadelphia 16; New York 3. STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Lost 49 Det, 519 5871 518 58] 458 415 396 386 yvSacramento Portland Hollywood Los Angeles Oakland Missions San Francisco Seattle 48 Natlonal League ‘Won Lost 39 Pct. New York 598 f ‘K. P. Right in éoi(l; Lmo And How It Saves Their Cash! 1SS JONES, CAN YoU EXPLAIN THE BINOMIAL THEOREM P “<And a pinch ef salt.” DELAWARE, Ohlo, Aug. 3.— Thank Ohio Wesleyan university for a crop of college-bred candi- dates for kitchen duty that is big- ger and better than ever. More than 40 co-eds gained pra tical experience this year in home. making through a successful e: periment in cooperative housing— so successful, in fact, it will be re- 44 564 545 .535 500 427 421 402 Pittsburgh ¥ Chicago St. Louis Boston Philadelphia Brooklyn Cincinnati American League Won Lost 62 35 60 37 4849 - 50 53 47 52 .. 41 53 4 52 St. Louis : 39 66 Juncau City League (Second Half) Won Lost 6 5 6 5 4 6 Pet. ‘Washington New York Philadelphia Cleveland Chicago Detroit Boston Fct ¢ 545 545 400 American Legion Moose Elks BIG WAGER IS NOW ACCEPTED Bets $5 Against $5,000 He'll Swim the Channel DEAL, England, Aug. 3.—~Capt. George Dixon Morris accepted a bet of $5,000 against his $5 while playing cards with a friend that he would swim the Channel some time this month. : ! He is in training and generally has three swims a day. One day | rzcently he swam out four and| one half miles to the South Good- | o Win lightship, hailed the crew and | swam back to breakfast. | | i BRI ENES Daily Empire Want Ads Pay PIGGLY peated on an even bigger scale next year. Not only were the woman stu- dents taught their way around a kitchen stove and cabinet; they also were able to save approxi- mately $100 each in the two se- mesters. To be sure, life in the “co-op ‘house” was not exactly a sinecure, but many of those whe withstood | day night, August 3, at 8 o'clock.|18 football lettermen returning at —adv.'Towa this fall. | its hardships think it was worth NO, PROFESCOR, BUT TWO PIECES OF TOAST. xlgthiDoBvoNE ES66 AND F HAM MAKES SWELL SANDWICH 8 Thus, ccokbeok in hand, Cornelia Sawyer (left), Ohio Wesleyan University, takes her turn in the “kitchen police” detail at cne of the co-op cottages where co-eds learn housekeeping and save money. The girls even swing a ham- mer, as the photo of Phyllis Niewchner shows. the inconvenience—or will be, they add between blushes. There was one cooperative cob-| |tage at Wesleyan in 1931-32. Last | fall two more were addod. | All the work is done by co-eds— | . f |‘ers sweeping and dusting. ‘ Each girl gets one free weck a | month—a week when she is just a star boarder. Each house has an |older woman who acts as “house ‘mo!hcr." —-——— ATTENTION Women of the Moose There will be a regular meeting of the Women of the Moose Thurs- some cooking, others waiting table, | others washing dishes and still oth- | BODY BLOWS CATCH THEM Foreign Boxers Unable to Take that Punishment Says Petrolle | | | | | | puLuTH, Minn, eign boxers, avers | the “Fargo Expres: |in the body. { Billy, who has outgrown the lightweight division and is now battling welterweights, should know whereof he speaks, for he I has had consistent success azainst imported fighters, lis latest victim being Bep Van Klaevern, the Hol- lander. Other foreigners who have to Petrolle include Justo Argentine; Jackie Kid Berg land; Hilario Martinez, Spain; Murray, Australia; Stanislaus Loay- za, Chile; Armando Shackles, Bel- gium; Eddy Ryan, Poland, and Bil- ly Towhsénd, of Canada. “Those foreign (i 'punches ‘downstairs’” Petrolle de- clared. “I belted each of them out with body punches. Body belts may not get immediate results, but t use of them is the safer and surer method.” Aug. 3.—F¢ Billy Pet B ' can't take it lost Suarez, Eng- i —————— | FOOTBALL INFLUENCE | sl | GRIMSBY, England, Aug. 3.— Football enthusiasm must have an outlet even in the fishing industry. !Six trawlers which are being built for a Grimsby firm are being nam- !ed Aston Villa, Arsenal, 'Spurs, Ev- erton, Huddersfield Town and ‘Der- |} by County, after football teams, i S e overcevocscnoe e AT THE IIOTELS 0 es00e0 000000 the prominent | Gastineau | L. J. Vestal, Juneau; Anna D. | Brown, Juneau; M. W. Sasseen, Ketchikan. Zynda H. Anderson, Juneau. Alaskan J. George, Chichagof; Gus Mat- tulat, Juneau, J. W. Wilson, Ju- neau. | | | | — Ten seniors, each with two years'| varsity experience, will be among DAILY SPORTS CARTOON "“MARBLE - SAN FRANCISCO You WON'T HAVE To LOOK N /... OUTSIDE OF . CALIFORNIA For. J\ HELEN WILLS MOOOY'S Successor. J78 WHEN TUE L o> S TIME COMES ALICE RECENTLY WON THE CALIFORNIA STATE T(TLE BY DEFEATING THE VETERAN, MR3.L A HARPER. CAROLIN ~By Pap BABCOCK - 1o ANGELES Ei= CAROLIN WAS T 13SEN SATION OF TE | HE 932 NATIONAL TOURNAMENY;.FMLHSH ING RUNNER-0P, ¥ o0 Wi Reserved by The Asociated Fross ——— ers don't Jike | BEFORE COMING INTO YYOUR HOULSE | CAN SEE THAT You SHOULD BE A HOSPITAL- NATIONAL GRID LEAGUE FLASHES BRIGHT COLORS -T! to PORTSMOUTH, O, Aug. 3. Natjonal football lcague is nothing "if not colorful this b teams of the circuit will we Portsmouth, purple; Boston, roon; Brooklin, green; Bea ange ‘and white; Cardinals, cardi- nal;' Green Bay, navy blue; New | YérK, red, white, blue; Cincinnati, | crimSoh; Pittsburgh, green and| white; and Philadelphia, light bluz and" yeliow. ma- | Al | By ALAN GOULD Helen Wills Moody's loss of her first’’tennis sot in six years to Dorothy Edith Round cof England| in“the finals of the Wimbledon hampionships may have been due argely to the unfortunate incident of ‘the linesmen in calling a de- cisivé’ point against her, but the detailed analysis we have just re- ceived' from London shows a rela- tively close malch all the way. Mits. Moody margin in games was 18 to 15, but she scored only 20 'more points that Miss Round in the three sets. The baseline charac- ter'“of the American s game is 'réflected by the fact that while Miss‘ Rounds winning strokes (z and“placements) were consider y zreslér, 31 to 10 in ti cond set and?18 to 11 in the third, Mrs. Moolly, made only half as many errors | (“nets” and “outs”). Miss Round won 12 and lost four service games while Mrs. Moody won 14 and lost three. There were 14" Heuce games, including seven second set, but all four of games were won by the American. “During the seven times Mrs. Moody has entered for the singles hampionship at Wimbledon,” notes a British commentator, “she has | lost altogether 165 games. Mlle Lenglen, in her eight years of com- petitfon, lost 101 games, but in two of those years, 1920 and 1921, Suzanne as the titleholder did not play through, competing only in the challenge match. Mille. Leng- len's best year was 1925, when she rificed only five games in five Here are the games lost . Moody: | K Games | i he “lov | still Have One In 'these days, when our rec- ords in sport are being snatched rom us by invaders,” remarks an- er' 'British writer, “may I re- that we still hold the record the women's singles champion- p of lawn tennis? This is not by Mrs. Moody and Mlle. len, with six wins each, but Mrs. Lambert Chambers, with | severt wins. Mrs. Chambers won n 1903, 1904, 1906, 1910, 1911, 1913, 1d 1914—three times as Dorothea Douglass and four times after man;lage.” the title 'WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— g Features Bradicate, Tnc.. Grear Britain (ughis rese fall, | {3 Here are the colors the various| WELL YOURE NOT coMIN' IN AN \F ANYONES GOIN TO A HOSPITAL, ITS GONNA| Commissioner Albert S. Goss (above) of Seattle, \wash.,, has been appointed federal tand bank commissioner to succeed Paul Bestor, resigned. (Associated Press Photo) SPORT BRIEFS When Ray Brubaker, manager of the Oakland, Cal, baseball club, broke his collarbone, an injured catcher, Art Veltman, acled as manager. ° ) ) L { ) | Pe The Chica Cubs league champions in 1933, by mid- June this season had twice suf- fered two shutout defeats on suc- cessive days. National Duane and Jim Purvis, current and ex~Purdue football stars, -are spending the summer selling maps to motorists on the Chicago-Lafay- ette (Ind) highway. Only one game of Northwestern’s 1933 football schedule, that with Ohio State at Columbus, will be played outside of greater Chicago. Two foes, Towa and Stanford, will be met in Soldier field. oo — over the door of the $3,000,000 courthouse at Asheville, N. C., are these words: “Men 1o match our mountains. Inscribed Classificd aas pay. S o e Exclusive Agency KABO CORSETS “Fordon Seward, Street i z BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOP 107 Assembly Apartments | PHONE 547 ¥, L ] | Smith Fleetric Co. | Gastineau Building EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL [ Want to Make a Good Steak Taste Better? Then order a bottle of Ex- tra Pale to go with it! Our Beer is just bitter enough to sharpen a wilted appetite— yet full-flavored, creamy and mild to make a bottle for its own sake a pleasure. BAILEY’S PACIFIC COAST Gl Chucklss SYLvesTeER KNAPP . IS ONE WISE CHAP./. THAN CLOCK. WORK. 'NEATH nis cap/ R 5 SMiaine. ~AND ORDERS f}BEFORE HI1S COAL HE S {COAL BIN GETS {ToO LOW— TO THE KNOWS WILL HEAT ~ 7 FOR QUR. GOOD COAL PACIFIC COAST COAL Co. 4]2 pNEAy ALASKA Leader Department Store Store Open Evenings GEORGE BROTHERS LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. T e S D FRYE’S BABY BEEF s “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company P 3 Telephone Prompt Delivery DT T D P S Y P S S THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL”--of course! Harri Machine Shop Sheet Metal Plumbing Heating it i [ e e WHITE LINE CABS' 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. 'HEN the weather -is bad, or when for any reason you are unable to call at the bank in person, the U. S. Mail will make the trip for you.‘ The only charge is the cost of a post- age stamp. Banking by mail is ufe,‘ convenient, and easy to do. All tmu-: actions received in this manner are 'given prompt attention. We invite you to bank by mail at this bankl First National Bank

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