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- - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 3, 1930. BRINGING UP FATHER i GRACIOUS. HATS PUG RILEY- LOOK AT THAT| |lOME OF THOSE HORRID MAN) | |AwWFOUL CREATOUREDS | COMING TO | QUR HOUDE THRO THE © THAT MAN AT THE FRONT DOOR 1F HE ISN'T GONE N TWO MINUTES: V'L W HIM OFF ROPERT Y- Whether or not slock market | decline affected the sock market, | the spects for another heavy- weight extravaganza 'neath the palms of Miami have become dis- tinetly bearish i ‘The Madison Square Garden Cor- peration has gone to all the both- er of transplanting the Flamingo Park arena from Miami Beach to | Miami. Contracts were signed with' the city of Miami on a five-year | basis after the successful promo-| tion of the Sharkey-Stribling fight | las, February. Option is held on __ By GEORGE M HES GONE-HE SAID HE WANTED TO SEE YOUR BROTHER - \g__J SHUT VP-LISTEN TO ME- IF YOU EVER JHAVE THAT. ROWDY- PUG" RILEY CALL HERE AGAIN: YOU WikL BE SORRY: [ nA- YANKEESTO | May piot et Sox HAVEDRILLS @~ SPORTS TO ARMS, MEN! JIMMY’S RARIN’ ‘ the services of Jack Sharkey, now | the chief American heavyweigns | contender, for a fight in Florida this winter. 1 All of which comes under the; N head of serious business but unless | ; VERKE S a match of undisputed drawing| o .""; "‘;:u“ | power is made, the Garden’s mil-| . Sperts, i”’" e lionaire directorate is likely to de- ! (Atsoclated Press Feature Servics) cide uvon a diplomatic retreat from | NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Call him Dixie. the Belfast Bomber, Clouting Celt | For obvious reasons the Stribling- OF Whatever you wish. = You can’t| | It's going to be a hard tenders. next summer. Sharkey match requires no encore. 80 Wrong using strong pi The elimination mateh between Picknames on this man Jimmy Phil Scott and Otto Von Porat ap- Larnin. pears to have resulted in the elim-| Young Jimmy absolutely is one ination of both. Scott has returned jof the choicest little fighting ma- to England and Von Porat is under chines of the era. He is just good | suspension. Max Schmeling, the enough to be rated in the east an German clouter, is signed to fight even money bet to uncrown Jackie for rival promoters at Atlantic City ;Fields‘ the welterweight champion. Feb. 22. | MeLarnin supped to the brink of | The solution might be to sign|disaster a few months ago by losing Arthur (The Great) Shires for a on a technical knockout to Ray Miami engagement but, unfortu- |Miller, then waltzing ten miserable nately, the White Sox train next rounds with Miller in a return bout. spring in San Antonio and the| His real worth as a fighter w Great One, if he survives the win- shown in a comeback as a welter- ter fisticuffs, will be obliged to ex- fwgigm when Jimmy -flattened sev- change left hooks and right crosses |eral of the boys in the 144-pound for ‘ball bat and glove. He may !division. Notable among these be quite willing to do so by Febru-|were Sergeant Sammy Baker and ary. Ruby Goldstein, who lasted two| ;'rounds each against the Vancouver The Southwest Conterence ap- annihilator. parently intends to make a con- | That inevitable McLarnin-F\elds! certed raid upon the twin football championship scrap has the boxing citadels of the State of Indiana |writers tuned up like the thing was next Fall. Southern Methodist will |coming off next month. open the season in Notre Dame's| From this angle it looks like a! new stadium while the Baylor Bears cinch for early summer in one of | will invade the home grounds of the New York ball parks. And it| Purdue, Big Nine or Ten cham-|is safe to assume that if Madison | pions. |Square Garden already hasn't sew-, Jimmy McLarnin will see to that. winter for the welt rweights bidding for attention as championship con- Jimmy is a suréshot to CHAMPIONSIN SPORT CIRCLES The following are the champions lin baseball, basketball, professional crd)—Pittsburgh and Colgate. boxing and football at the end of the year 1929: Baseball | World Champions — Philadelphia Athletics. | National League pennant winners ' —Chicago Cubs. American League pennant win- ners—Philadelphia Athletics. Leading batsman (National)—T" 1J. O'Doul, Philadelphia, ave. .400. fornia Southern California, Oregon ' years. 3 Leading batsman (American)— Lew Fonseca, Cleveland, ave. .369. Leading pitcher (National)—Chas. | Root, Chicago, won 18, lost 6. 3 Leading pitcher (American)—Tom | Zachary, New York, won 12, lost 0 | Most valuable player (Natlonal)~‘1 Rogers Hornsby, Chicago. i Most valuable player (American) | —Lew Fonseca, Cleveland (unoffi- cial). Western Conference (College Team)—Michigan. Eastern Intercollegiate League— o Dartmouth. i Eastern Intercollegiate—Holy Cross (best record). Quadrangle Cup—Dartmouth and “NEXT SPRING NEW YORK, Jan. The Yan-j kees of 1930 are g get more exercise than is to be acquired in| running around the ses, chasing the elusive fly or sv a ball bat. | When they report for duty at the| St. Petersburg camp a few weeks| hence, ey will be introduced to| a flock of systematic calisthenics, | designed to make them more physi- | cally fit for the task of chasing—! or even overtaking—those militant | Mackmen, | Mr. E. V. Painter, new trainer of | the Yankees, will direct the drills. If the former champs li the new | idea they can cheer Bob Shawkey.| If they don't care for the extra €X-!ton Red Sox, may become manage! ercise they can sue him Mr. Painter is described as i\‘nan, who resigned. quadruple threat. He is a doctor | of calisthenies, chiropractor, a| Associated Press Photo a masseur and an athletic director. En?g:;ncrcml Job printihg il Last season he had charge of the = " e b i] Boston Braves and the fact that i j| his patient did not do very well has apparently not interferred with | the ability of the good doctor to| grab off another patient, or set of | same. | | The Braves, it may be recalled, finished far down the National ELL the people League ladder. Perhaps the sub- . . b meet Jackie Ficlds in a title bout jmg s e i é’aod doctor| about timely merchandise with Worked had gone beyond the range| good printingandwatch your sales ¥ ~———— of calistheinc help before he got to' wolume grow. Other merchants it— Panama | them. have proved this plan by repeated | At any rate the Bambino, Herb | v “rankie Ge- |Pennock and a few more of the| tests. We'll help with your copy. ognized by N.|older help will have to go through | the same paces as the kid member ATimelyTip - World naro, New Yi B. A). Heinie Wagner, coach of the Bos- r |of the club succeeding Bill Carri- | at The| Football lof Shawkey's troupe, The {reat-| pem————— National League (Professional)— |ment is designed to make legs, arms en Bay, Wis., Packers. |and stomach muscles tough for the Eastern College Teams (Best Rec- | strenuous days of pennant fight-| |ing. After the team quits the| | training camp there will be a let-| ;down in these setting-up exercises. | | The early photographs from the ! Big Six Conference—Nebraska. Yankees camp will show the good, Southern Conference—Tulane, |doctor and his class at work in} Rocky Mountain Conference— leg, arm and belly bending. Utah. | Painter takes the place of Doc Southwest Conference — Texas|Wood who has been in charge of Christian University. the Yankee charley horses and the Pacific Coast Conference—Cali-|growing pains for the past W«'N\'c} C Middle West (Best Notre Dame and Purdue. Western Conference—Purdue. Record)— Repossessed Ford Coupe $100.00 and Oregon State tied. (Southern | Cal. tied last two years). ‘WOMEN’S CLUB TO CUBS PURCHASE | LUNCH ON SATURDAY The regular monthly luncheon of | the Juneau Women’s Club will be DES MOINES STAR | HURLING VETERANihcld at the Coffee Shoppe Satur-| |day afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. An DES MOINES, Jan. 3—Pitcher | noresting program is promised, LeRoy Herrmann, star of the Des \p.. catherine D. Ross, the Secre- Moines club of the Western League ¢, o announces. ! has been sold to the Chicago Cubs. L A President E. Lee Keyser had sev-| pey g Sherim, sumeaws plano offers for the player, but (mt! uner. Hotel Gastineau. —ady ally accepted the Cub proposition.| e McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction He will probably go to the Cub| farm at Reading. Keyser also an-| PARLOR FURNACES PRICED TO MEET YOUR POCKET BOOK See our stock before buying elsewhere Juneau-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 Transmission ‘ Juneau Morors, Inc. FORD DEALERS Safe and Economical ' ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Make Useful Lasting GIFTS Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau—Phone No. 6 Douglas—Phone No. 18 | iOld Papers for sale at Empire Office To add to the intersectional gay-yed up the bout, it is in there con-| WINDOW SHADES Inounced the purchase of Outfielder | OUR REPAIR SHOP Is Equipped the few major groups not figur- ing heavily heretofore in the in- tersectional strife but they seem about to take up the march in a ety Colorado University has con- ceptrating on a show that should | Pennsylvania (tie). Pred Berger from the Mission ‘club cluded a two-year agreement with be good for a gate of upwards of| Home runs (American)—George m”,fm P;Lil“c Coait LeaPu'c —at— Missouri for 1930-31. $500,000. {H. Ruth, Yankees, 46. | s il | A ; The Scuthwest and Rocky Moun-| Since Jackie Fields avowed he' Home Runs (National)—Charles| DANCE DANCE ( J " 5 tain Conferences have been among would be a fightin’ champion, his Klein, Philadelphia, 43. Moose Hall Saturday night. Musicl{ uneau al"t tore ! quick acceptance of an opportunity | Little World Series—Kansas City. |, Junior World Series—Buffalo. s Basketball The Serenaders. to meet McLarnin is anticipated. Four years ago when he was S | | i to Handle any Repair Job on | YOUR CAR If you damage the Body, Top, Fenders or fighting as a bantamweight Fields lost to McLarnin on the only knack- out of his career. Jackie was only ! 18 then. His eagerness to do over . an assignment bungled in his ju- venile days is taken for granted. - CHICAGO CUBS TO SHORTEN UP ON PRACTICE GAMES big, way. The lineups reveal a few of the main reasons why the Memphis Tigers upset the previously unbeat- en Green Bay Packers, national professional football champions. The Tigers took the field with an all-star array that included two All-Americans of former years—) Larry Bettencourt of St. Mary's, | all-American center in 1927 an:l!' Ken Strong of New York Univer-{ CHICAGO, Jan. 3.—Curtallment, sity, All-American fullback in 1928, '0f the usual prolonged training trips them were such stal-|Cf the Chicago Cubs has becn an- Sapporting warts as Tiny Roebuck, the giant jhounced by Manager Joe McCarthy. | former Haskell Indian lineman, Fhe Chicago club has decided to confine all of its exhibition cam- paigning during the coming year tc {two citice—Kansas City and Los Angeles. Inconveniences and the danger to players resulting from ,playing on \the diamonds of small cities was given as the reason for the cha in prscedent. Williams of Texas Christian, Doug Wycoff, of Georgia Tech and Stra- der, former St. Mary's quarterback. Among the reserves was Jess Tin ley, Louisiana State's former al Southern tackle. This collection of talent pushed over two touchdowns in the last period to beat by; 20 to 6 the team Chicago. | | American Professional league— Cleveland Rosenblums. Men's National A. A. U.—Cook: Kansas City, Mo. Women's National A. A. U— Schepps Aces, Dallas, Texas. Eastern Intercollegiate—Pennsyl- | vania. Western Conference — Michigan and Wisconsin (tie). Big Six Conference—Oklahoma. Scuthern Conference—North Car- olina State. Southwest Conference—Arkansas. Rocky Mountain Conference— Montana State. Naticnal Interscholastic Athens, Texas, high school National Catholic Interscholastiz (Boys)—De La Salle high school, (Boys)— Boxing—Professional World's Heavyweight Open (Leading American contender, Jack Sharkey, Boston). Woerld's Lightheavyweight— Open (Temmy Loughran, Fields, Los Angeles. § that had charged through the Na- | oo — retired). tional Professional league season | 'vw- Woerld’s Middleweight—Mickey undefeated. | Walker, Elizabeth, N. J. .- | LETTERHEADS World’s Welterweight — Jackie i BOXER ATTENTION Boxers interested in smoker Jan-| rary 25th meet tonight, 7:30. atb| as we print them evidence your Arena, A. B. Hall. —adv.i business pro o e ——.—— gres: Old papers ior ser: ar ‘11e Im ! 4 pire oftice. | R D . 5T World’s Lightweight — Sammy Mandell, Rockford, IIL World’s Junior Lightweight— Tod Morgan, Seattle, Wash. World's Featherweight — Christc: pter Battalino, Hartford, Conn. Philadelphia, | BOYS’ RED STORM KING BOOTS, size 3 to 6 YOUTHS* RED STORM KING BOOTS, size 12 to MEN’S MACKINAWS AND STAG SHIRTS AT P Suits and Oveicoats at Half Price ONLY A FEW LEFT DA GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM e T R T T T T T O T LT T T TR U P LR TR ‘=|lllllllllIIllllllIllllllIllllllllllllllIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll"lllIIIIIIIIIIIllII"II IIIIIIIIIHlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIE‘ IR Doors we can turn the job out looking like new. If your Motor, Clutch, Transmission, Differential or Brakes require attention we afe prepared to render Expert Service. Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts l FUR AUCTIONSALES 1930 SALES DATES WESTCOAST FUR SALES.INC. TACOMA WASHINGTON