Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 11, 1930. By GEORGE McMAT YOUR BROTHER SAID NOT TO DAY ANVYTHING A% THE GUY THAT STOLE THEM DONT KNOW THAT YouR BROTHER 'S.]o‘r THEM FROM ) BRINGING UP FATHER YES THATS FIingE GGE WILL BE TIC~t ED TO'OBATH WiLL YOU BRING THEM HOME THID EVENING? DONT WORRY ) MAGGIE YOLR BROTHER GOT THEM FROM l THE GUY THAT STOLE THEM | OH TO THik THAT MY BROTHER | 1D MIDDING' OW* | WHO CouLD HAve TAKEN THEM? ; o no' L NOTHIN' HKE THAT BROKEN WINDOWS REPAIRED PHONE 1-2 Complete Stock of Window Glass, Doors, Sash and Roofing Papers Juneau-Young Hardware Company If It's Hardware We Have It (et l12.6 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and FEasd at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Ca»ying Boat LOCAL BOWLERSH ARE WINNERS IN ANCHORAGE GAMES {years that he has given to football compares favorable with the best \and despite a few bad seasons ithere are few coaches in the coun- try whose success has been so con- itinuous and whose victories are so |numerous as the Cornell mentor’s,| In the telegraphic bowling tourna- The quiet Scot of Lake Cayuga|Mment between the men's and wo- unique in that he has taken msimen‘s teams of the Elks of Juneau i |1s —~— |setbacks in the same fashion as his{a0d Anchorage, the locals emerged victorious in both games. 110 ¢ triumphs. But best of all, in the 1 8 1 lean years when victories were few| The Juneau men defeated An- chorage by a score of 2680 to 2607 111 8 and far between, he did not come forth as a reformer and stress me‘and the Juneau women, rolling high |scores, defeated the Anchorage| 6 53 24 moral values in football. | Substitutions: Juneau, Mangan| Bob Zuppke once remarked that POWIers by a score of 2507 to 2447. for Blake, Junge for Gallwas in ' When a coach has a losing season The scores are as follows: third period; Blake for Junge in he usually emphasizes in his talks JUNEAU MEN fourth period. Douglas, none. |to alumni the “intangible benefits 151 183 | ’ | Officials: Engstrom, referee; J.jderived from the sport.” 203 191 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 Motors, Inc. FORD DEALERS 16-14 in favor of Ketchikan at the end of the third quarter. In the last canto F. Peterson |scored first, followed by Brandt,! |both shots being from the fieldA" {Bailey converted. Bayers sank' one for two points making the count| 19-18. F. Peterson sank a free throw for Ketchikan's last point and Nelson did likewise for Juneau. | The Ketchikan boys were led by | {H. Peterson who made ten points. | They showed good teamwork and |have a good checking lineup which , Bonner Cashen |Niemi Totals DROPS BATTLE T0 KETCHIKAN Hard-Fought See-Saw Tilt Henning N. Bavard Stewart Hendrickson M. Bavard Barragar 144—478 170—564 | Islanders One Point Better ‘Total Olson |Bavard White Lavenik Faulkner 170—460 146489 167—506 179—505 Summary 180—519 KETCHIKAN— Murphy Albrightson |F. Peterson | H. Peterson Bailey Hall o] R®EO e (5 vl omromocom L BheRn g R T | ow ol orovord Totals @ JUNEAU— Nelson Hurley | Brandt Bayers Perggren Messer Rodenberg %) | Safe and Economical ELECTRIC | APPLIANCES Make Useful Lasting GIFTS | ®®m oy lcoowvnwond locormowmmpn 7 i rme and Valeson, timers; Shat-{ Not so with the exponent of the 22? 140 176—545 tuck, scorer. ]"o{f—mckle" play. He coaches a 165 196 195—556 : . ; PSR AT team with as much regard for ethic 165 —135 Ends g Ol:le._Pomt than L Is in Fi | A “ns the best mentors ?: the game, 194 178372 Win for Visitors \kept the locals from scoring many O‘Cfl S.m re- { |but Dobie is honest enough to say —_——— — |points. Nelson and Berggren wer2 | men s Mlx-up | that he coaches with the idea of 913 904 863 2080 Juneau basketball fans were'the c{rensive‘and defensive main- | iwinni_ng the battles uppermost in JUNEAU WOMEN treated to one of the hottest fought stays respectively of the Juneau Piling up 18 points to iheir Dp.; Ihls mind. 14(_) 150 and closest battles seen on local |Hi8D School. — Seven personal fouls ponents' 6 in the first and third | If he loses he is frank enough to 155 188 courts for years when the Juneau|Were called on Juneau and eight on quarters, the Douglas Firemen quin- | say what he thinks and if he wins 176 163 High School five dropped a hoop i Ketehikan. tet nosed out the Juneau Firemen| 'he is usually ready to give you his 140 188 tilt to the Ketchikan City bunch team by a single point in the open- | !opinion. 166 173 20 to 19 in the second game of a - ing game of a doubleheader in the | Is Smart Coach | S SR doubleheader in the High School High School gymnasium last night. ! | Those who know Dobie well real-| otal T 00, ML e Although the local outfit was fav- | In the Tri-City bowling tournsy 1ze that no man in football has Mr:,_ogfi,ew:a;ozd ;xs -f“;;}"s'g By the time the whistle blew ored to win as the two teams went at Ketchikan, between Juneau, Ket- |been more completely mxsunder-imlg 165, Baker 472, Weiefs 27 B o cading the game, the fans who had on the floor, the Islanders upsct chikan and Anchorage, the Juneau [st00d than he. No man knows the |28 ~ o AT (o WEsS 927, Bra- Q}mn »d cut were undoubtedly more the dope in the first meeting of five last night defeated Anchorage intricacies of mass play or the‘ig wome'n Sa 550 Wendler 548, | faiigued than those who took part this season of these rivals, andin the first game by a score of 2720 jsubtleties of a smart attack better|, ' w;“&g'{’t s, e ::9 Ao in the game, for the first game on = 5o |Won the tilt largely on their close|to 2614 and also took Ketchikanthan the producer of the Big Red /%0 " Ll st ;Z:‘: ]progunm was equally hard S 20 L;xecl;ing orl the firing activities of into camp in the second game by a “t’cflm Football is his life's work, |*™ P TR ocught and ended by the same the Juneauites. |score of 2686 to 2563. {but unfortunately fate has placed | margin—and a Juneau team had | 1t looked like a one-sided affair| The scores of the games rolled [him in a workshop where there is! R lost 4 'in the initial canto of the fracas,|last night are as follows: a dearth of material. AT THE HOTELS That Ketchikan could repeat their 1 'for the Douglas bunch was himng_ Anchorage—MacDonald 557, Beran!, Considering the quality of \‘.hci R victory over the Hilltoppers would |the hoop. When the quarter 497, Ostrander 505, Mathewson 499, candidates at Ithaca, that is, their| Gastineau { be at least an even bet, for the ended the scorcboard read. Douglas Larson 556. Total 2614. ifoobball ability in general, Dobie| Alex Bigelow, H. A. Haynes, Lil-| First City men outweighed the lo- 14, Juneau 6. Manning and Bon-| Juneau—Lavenik 537, Sabin 531, has done a remarkable piece of llan Kennedy, Jacob Batoff. cals 15 to 20 pounds to the man. nar shared honors in this big Metcalf 500, Kirk 502, Radde 569. Work., He has made better than| Alaskan Long Shots Count l (period with six field goals each. {Total 2729. average players ont of men who‘\ Hans Hansen, J. B. Joseph. Three lcng shots put in by H. Juncau Comes Back S s in the Juneau-Ketchikan inever believed they were cut out! TR Peterson, yj}g center pmr Thr: )visi- Totals 6 73319 l Coming back strong in‘the sécond !mmc:)l:.eswex;e. G i g {for the strenuous game. { Ttaly has instituted a competition tors, were psychological and matho-| AS the tables show, Ketchi- period the locals were good for 12! juneau—Lavenik 528, Sabin 522,| Hugh Bradley, a well-known sport [for farm machinery designs. The matical matters of importance, but kan depended a great deal on shoot- ichalkers to a single point by their Metcalf 598, Kirk 463, Radde 575. Writer, says that there are various Itallans are tired of importing had the weight of the locals been |Ig percentage, although their aver- \opponents and led at the half 18 Total 2686. igentlemen in the football world Ploughs. enywhere near even with the Ket- |38¢ is lower on field shooting, their to 15. Hollmann and Gallwas| Ketchikan—Ziegler 571, Sawyer |Who give ample cause for the be- | e | chikan boys there is little doubt‘:a"empt total 45 so much hllhcr;did all the scoring for the Juneau 477, Boos 506, Libe 310, Paulson 172, lief that they do not like Gil Dobie| Selling blood for transfusions has the outcome would have been re-than their grand total is corres-(aggregation in this period. iZurich 527. Total 2563. lor Major Frank Cavanaugh, to become a business for 300 residents versed. ;gzgsmgly higher than “hat of Ju-| Thmgls switched r;,gh'. :ack km- The Anchorage-Ketchikan game name two gentlemen who are con- of Long Beach, Cal. R A where they were at the end of the'ywas |stantly coming in for adverse criti-| < % i Substitutions: Ketchikan—Al-|first quarter after the second half| Anchorage—MacDonald 569, Be-|cism. Possibly, that is because | Conversions by Brandt and Nel- son opened the scoring and the second “lead jumped to four points when Bayers sank a field goal. F. Pet- erson scored a minute later and was followed by Nelson, who put the score at 6-2 for Juneau where it was at the quarter. Ketchikan came back in the sccond frame hwen H. Peterson cas- ually dropped a pair through the hoop, one from the middle of the floor. A conversion by Brangt immediately after counted one for Juneau. Towards' the end of the period Brandt counted two points from the field but H. Peterson cut the lead down to 9-8 in favor of Juneau with a beautiful shot from mid-court just before the half ended. Second Half Berggren converted to open the second half. Balley sank one from the field to tie the count. Brandt converted. Ketchikan took the lead | |Uzcudun made a splendid come- on Juneau, 9 on Douglas, when H. Peterson treated the fans with another sensational mid-floor shot. Bayers reversed the lead with a short field goal. Hurley , converted. Murphy tied the score from the field and H. Peterson sank a short one to put the score at LiTe rekecper Is our bread appe- tizing? My good- ness, yes! The very smell of it as it comes from our modern sanitary bakery invites your immediate attention. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” § | Dinner Specials at Mabry's Cafe? brightson for F. Peterson, son, half time; Albrightson for Mur- phy, fourth quarter. Juneau—Ro- denberg for Messer, second quarter; |Messer for Rodenberg, third quar- ter, Hurley for Nelson, Nelson for Hurley, third quarter; Rodenberg for Berggren, Berggren for Roden- |berg, fourth quarter. t | Officials: Lowe, referee; Eng- 'strom, umpire; Gilbert and F. Orms, |timers; Stewart and Shattuck, scor- |ers. —evo—— UZCUDUN WINS "IN PORAT BOUT NEW YORK, Jan. 11.—Paulino| |back last night to whip Otto von |Porat, Norwegian, in a 10-round |heavyweight matth. Paulino weighed 196% pounds and Von Porat 203': pounds. body, then Uzcudun carried the fight to his opponent and won all the remainder of the rounds, but the fourth. There were no knock- downs. i RS S Have you tried the Five o'Clock JUNEAU— Gallwas Junge Killewich For three rounds Von PoratOsborne |pounded Uzcudun's head, chin and{Blake Score 19-18. ‘The last canto saw things picking up and it was a standstill fight to the finish. Mangan and Killewich converted in succession to give Ju- neau team a one point lead. Bon-| ner tied things up at 20-all with a conversion for Douglas. Unusual Ending Blake sank a short field goal to give the locals the edge again. Manning sank a short one for a 22- all tie. Cashen and Manning con- verted in order to finish their team’s scoring. Just before the game ended Hollmann was fouled and given two shots after the final whistle had blown. He sank the first but the second took a bad hop from the hoop and the game ended. Eleven personal fouls were called Summary Mangan Hollmann Totals DOUGLAS— Gray Manning We Do But One Kind of Printing No matter bowwmall the .|by Cornell Ketchikan—Total 2525. { The total of the scores in the ’bowhng tournament, which has con- Ecluded‘ are as follows: | Ketchikan Anchorage Juneau CORNELL 1 " BEHIND GIL DOBIE, COACH 26,566 26,236 26,178 NEW YORK, Jan. 11.—Edwin B Dooley says ihat the finest tribute Ithat has been paid to Gil Dobie, coach of Cornell, came from the | committee of seventeen appointed alumni to investigate the athletic situation of the un- dergraduates at Ithaca, when the committee reported that in a con- sensus of opinions taken among Cornell football players past and present, there was “a practically unanimous sentiment in favor of him as a man and as a coach,” and “that under him the Cornell foot- ball team has won a greater per- . |centage of games than under any other coach.” Dobie’s record over the span of Quick Shipment to Alaska Write or wire your or- der - it will be shipped on the first boat. ‘Our com- plete lumber servicetakes care of every detail. Far- rell Lumber is your as- surance of Speed, Quality and Satisfaction. Just send us Good Materials - Careful Grading - Fine Finish Lumber - These Are Qur Specialties, your specifications « we make all shipping arrangements, Farrell Lumber Co. Westlake and Prospect 'began, for the visitors plunked in'ran 542, Ostrander 551, Mathewson Cavanaugh and Dobie have shown |quarter; F. Peterson for Albright- (two field goals while Juneau re- 417, Larsen 599. Total 2678. !mained idle. themselves better football coaches | while avoiding the usual slush with |unusual frankness. 1 R A NS CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Jan .11 Sports at Harvard brought in sl,-‘ 070,617, out of which there was a |surplus of $217,171 for the year {ending June 30, it was revealed by the treasurer of Harvard College. Football contributed $618892, {which helped cover the deficit on |all other sports on the program. | | | ———sn e Repossessed Ford Coupe Free Delivery Pinemulsion A SOOTHING EXPECTORANT Recommended due to simple minor bronchial for coughs colds and irritations 75 cents Juneau Drug Company Post Office Substation No. 1 Phone 38 $100.00 McCAUL |, MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction | GARBAGE HAULING ! W. E. TARR Inquire bullding below Cable Office. The Florence Shop “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- anent Wave BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone 427 for Appointment Old Papers for sale at Empire Office Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. junenu—l’hone No. 6 Douglas—Phone No. 18 B — | — I | 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 DOUBLEHEADER————TONIGHT BASKETBALL Douglas Nat, 8 o’Clock DOUGILAS FIRE DEPARTMENT vs. UNALGA s. DOUGLAS HIGH SCHOOL KETCHIKAN ««: Admission—50 cents and 25 cents “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressin g 4LASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” TABLE OIL CLOTH —at— Juneau Paint Store