The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 2, 1930, Page 5

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T TS M 0 ST G R SR 5 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, BRINGING UP FATHLR THURSDAY, JAN. 2, 1930. By GEORGE McMANUS (HELLG | MY HOMIDOR AT HOME. NOW < rLL CORE MACGGIEDS BROTHER OF STEALIN THEM- 1 PUT A LOT OF LOADED CIGARS LORO HERE i | YOL COME RIGHT HOME? )| TS SEEYOU YOU'LL BE RIGHT = HOME - MR-DIGGD WILL \ L DESTILLERY 1D ! AND WANTS [T ) sl LU TELL SR Ho! NTACC.IE_% W OTHER ION' ) BRESRE Ne- | ¢ One of the best ways to commit listic suicide that we can think of off-hand is to swap punches with young Mr. James McLarnin. The baby-faced kid celebrated his 23rd birthday on Dec. 19 and if there is a more dangerous socker in the ring for his weight, inches and age than this Celtic clouter, he can’t be located at the moment. | McTarnin is one of the most de- centive and at the same time most | & uctive fighters in the game. Jimmy has a mild, almost inoffen- e manner. Before. a fight, ne unsmiling in his corner, i TITLE ! S, CALIFORNIA WINNER OVER PITTS ELEVEN Panther’s Defense Beateni to Shreds—Score i Is 47 to 14 ROSE BOWL, PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 2.—The University of Southern California ripped and tore the| Pittsburgh Panthers’ defense to shreds yesterday afterncon and| routed the previously undefeated ' mystical champions of the east by | a score of 47 to 14. It was the| most decisive beating in 14 years of the classic play. Only twice did the Pitts' drives equal to reputation and both times brought a score, in the third and | fourth quarfers. ! | In the first play of the game,/ Pitts landed on the 14-yard line for | CUBS' SLUGGER BAGS A DEER PARLOR FURNACES PRICED TO MEET YOUR POCKET BOOK See our stock before buying elsewhere J uneau-Young Hardware Company If It's Hardware We Have It THE NUMBER OF FORD TRUCKS SOLD DURING THE FIRST 8 MONTHS OF 1929 EQUALLED 49: % OF TOTAL SOLD OF ALL OTHER MAKE OF TRUCKS COMBINED IN SAME PERIOD OF TIME. There’s a Reason Ford Trucks Now Have the Four Speed ansmission Juneau Morors, Inc. FORD DEALERS Associated Press Photo Hack Wilson, slugging outfieldcr for the Chicago Cubs, keeps his He is shown here at his home in Martinsburg, W. Va., with a 200-pound buck shot near eye in trim during the off season by hunting. his camp in Gettysburg. At the bell s about the ring, arms’ d in a manner all his own. e is little waste motion in the McLarnin technique. Coolly he fences, cide-steps, and blocks with natural grace At the sign of an| opening, however, he shoots for the mark with both hands and” with | stunning force. In his graceful foot | work and lightning handwork, the welterweight Irishman is a pocket- — a goal but failed to carry the ball s over, The California team scored twice wASH STATERS “ WOMEN OF MOOSEHEART : E- o 2 h | LEGION |in each the fi second and thArd‘ 1 [ There will be an open installa- |quarters and once in the fourth. | tion of officers tonight at 9 p. m. ° SPORT BRIEF . i e R | DEFEAT HAWA"M se members, their wives and ®© 0O 8 0 0 0 00 0 00 0 0! ladies are invited to attend. adv { HONOLULU, Jan. 2—The Wash- Safe and Economical ELECTRIC APPLIANCES 4 0000000000 60 Associated Press ‘Phota | Jimmy Slattery (left) and Lou Scuveca, both of Buffalo, will meet there in January in a title bout. The winner will be recognized by the New York. boxing commission for title of 175-pound division. fia —_— ington State College football team The Jjacwie Telds-Young Corbett |Vesterday defeated the University of Make Useful Lasting ith McLarnin have escaped being ried to their corners. Jimmy's victims have included sluggers like | Kid Kaplan, Stanislaus Loayza and | Phil McGraw; boxers like Sid Ter- | I five series of three games each. The fight in San Francisco on January (Hawail by a score of 28 to 7. | Juneau and Anchorage teams will 22, has been sanctioned by thef | Northwestern. | ! | Football relations between the! The, Washington Staters scored | retura on the next trip of the California State Boxing Commis-three times in the second period, |sion, lusing ptraight football, and again in the Repossessed 1 period, THé Hawalian's only score came | GIFTS Few who have chosen to punch |Haskell Indians and the University |in the' third period in a series of of Kansas will be renewed October end runs and off tackle plays. {11 this year after a lapse since . BT e Ford Coupe ris, Ruby Goldstein and Jackic Fields, now the welterweight cham- REV. PROKOVSKY pion. iAnnual Shriner’s Football 1904. McLarnin knocked out Fields in! Game PYOVCS to Be 1925 in two rounds at a time when‘l each was a comparative novice, al- Upset to Dopesters though Fields had won Olympic henors as an amateur the year be-| SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jan. 2.— fore. Both have grown from fly- The East rode roughshod to a 19 weight to welterweight poundage. to 7 victory over the West in the Fields is the first to climb the title Shriners’ Benefit Football game yes- heights but he can’t rule the 147- terday afternoon. pound ranks much longer without: Only once did the West, which accepting the challenge of Irish entered a favorite, show a sem- Jimmy. blance of form expected and that was at the start of the second half McLarnin's extraordinary record when passes and brilliant dashes shows he has fought champions by Lom, of California, brought the or ex-champions all the way up to ball to the two yard line, and Sloan the welter line. He has victories crashed over. over Pancho Villa, Bud Taylor, Kid| Peters, Illinois quarter, played an Kaplan and Sammy Mandell to his impressive part in the eastern vie- credit, but no title was involved on tory, twice booting the pigskin for any one of these occasions. In his field goals from the 35 and 45 one real title bid, McLarnin in 1928 yard linesTn the second and fourth ' absorbed a scientific beating at the quarters and one try for a point hands of the dapper lightweight after a touchdown. ruler, Mandell, who was entirely too ' fast and clever at the time for the ! Irish lad. | LEDON TENNIS The Blue and White of Columbia GOES T SITKA in Charge of St Michael’s Cathedral The Rev. Antonin Prokovsky, Archimandrite of the Russian Or- , bury | o |sity of Chicago, is spending his va- 'St. Louis Browns from the Balti- | cation in California. Burleigh Grimes, Pittsburgh Pirates’ | pitcher, iIs to Relieve Rev. PYOSO[’, nonsupport in a case filed in Pitts- | oach A. A. Stagg of the Univer- hander, has been obtained by the | | With one exception the govern-' is to make a hard try to capture | the Eastern Intercollegiate Basket- A 3 ball Championship this winter and 18 BoCHBNIOf dogertion and {atone for defeats on the gridiron. O e g Florence -Grimes, wife of | { Pitcher Holshcuser, young right- | ymore Club of the International League. .- $100.00 McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction Juneau on the Queen a few days Champion Chicago Cubs will be the ago, is to relieve the Rev. G. . Same this year as last. P. K. Wrig- Prosor, of St. Michael's Cathedral €V replaces Adolph Speilmann as Sitka, according to the Rev. A, p, director. Speilmann died last year. ther Prokovsky for a few hours! The batteries of the Chicago Cubs | while he was in Juneau. accompanied by Manager Joe Me- | Father Prokovsky was formerly a Carthy and Coaches Burke and | chaplain in the Russian army and Schalk, will leave Chicago for Cata- saw service in the World War on lina Island February 18 for train- the Eastern front. He was recent- ng- 11y in charge of a parish in Vancou- | |ver, B. C,, and it is said that it was | |through -his efforts that a large P - Commercial printing at The Em- fre. thodox Church, who passed through ment body of the National League | Kashevaroff, who entertained Fa- | Good boys get a break in Neva- da. The state university is offer-| |ing a scholarship to some chap who neither smokes nor drinks and can |make a passing grade. — Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau—Phone No. 6 Douglas—Phone No. 18 :Old Papers for sale at Empire Office WINDOW SHADES o | Juneau Paint Store Jimmy evened the score with Sammy a t catchweights in a 10- round match at Chicago a year and a half later. At least a partial explanation is at hand for the surprising way Ok- lahoma City University’s Gold Bugs walloped the previously unbeated Davis-Elkins football team. The Gold Bugs, it seems, took advantage \of the rugged boys from the West Virginia hills, using a variation of end running described as the “slick- er play” to account for two touch- downs. Bronko Nagurski, the versatile Minnesota footballer, may be par- dened some surprise at being named All-American tackle for 1929. The Brenk, according to the agile sta- tisticians, played exactly 30 minutes all season in the line as compared with 268 minutes at fullback. He may be induced, however, to accept the nomination with the under- ctanding that he can carry the ball! now and then when the All-Ameri- ca team neceds a few extra yards. Add to the flowery 1930 gridiron intersectional prospects: Stanford ond Minnesota; Iowa and Penn Etate. Incidentally, all that Notre Damc will do as a climax to its 1930 cam- raign is play the Army in New Vork one Saturday and Southcrn California in Los Angeles the next. jchurch was built and dedicated in 'August. Father Prokovsky wanted |to come to Alaska to rest and to jobtain the benefits of the hot NEW YORK, Jan. 2—Important springs which are located near foreign lawn tennis championships Sitka. ,listed for the 1930 season include{ Father Prosor is leaving Sitka in ,the Australian championships, Jan- order that his two children may at- uary 15 to 27; Egyptian champlon-lzend schools of higher learning in (ships, March 16; South African, the States. He will be assigned {April 12 to 21; Grecian, April 21 to|to some parish in Seattle, Sacra- 28; French hard court champion- mento or Los Angeles, He was ships May 19 to June 1; Belgian,|well liked in Sitka and it is said June 6 to 11; All-England cham- that he leaves the Cathedral in pionships at Wimbledon, June 23 to 'much better condition that it has July 5; Holland, July 28 to August been for years. St. Michael’s Ca 3; German Champlonships, August’thedral, as most Alaskans know, 2 to 10; Jugo-Slavian, August 27 to)one of the oldest churches on the September 1, and Hungarian, 8ep-|Pacific Coast, and contains many terdber 1 to 6. |treasures of the fine arts brought >, ——— | from Russia. BOWLERS TO LEAVE TOMORORW ; TOURNEY STAGED, KETCHIKAN i TOURNEY SET FOR | JUNE 23 TO JULY 5 | 5 i A picked team of bowlers from! the Elks’ alleys, will leave for Ket- | chikan on the Northwestern tomor- ! row to participate in the Elks’ bowl-, ing tournament there. The local| team is composed of the follow members: Frank Metcall, Martin Lavenik, Ed Radde, Harry E£abin, W. B. Kirk and Bam Guyot. The Anchorage bowlers are aboard the | Northwestern. The threc quintet, Ancherage Juneau and Ketchikan are to p."x.l PRINTING increases the pulling power of any printing | job.Weare equippedtohan I dle colorprintingquickly and satisfactorily ElllllllllllIlIIllllIIllIllIlllll LT LT LT Clean-Up Prices MEN’S GOODRICH KINGFISHER HIP BOOTS, pair ... ... MEN’S MACKINAWS AND STAG SHIRTS AT MEN’S.GOODRICH LIGHTWEIGHT SPORTING BOOTS . BOYS’ RED STORM KING BOOTS, size 3 10 6 YOUTHS* RED STORM KING BOOTS, size 12 to 2 OUR REPAIR SHOP Is Equipped to Handle any Repair Job on YOUR CAR If you damage the Body, Top, Fenders or Doors we can turn the job out looking like new. If your Motor, Clutch, Transmission, Differential or Brakes require attention we are prepared to render Expert Service. Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts FUR AUCTIONSALES {1930 SALES DATES LU LT T T T T WESTCOAST FUR SALES.INC. TACOMA WASHINGTON

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