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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, FEB. 22, 1930. By GEORGE McMANUS | DONT © BLAME Him) AT AF! 15 1T YOUR NWIFE | HEAR I sNnaiNnG? I \ 'M YOULR | NE\GHBOR- 1 LIVE 1IN THE APARTMENT RIGHT BELOW WELL DIR- | WHAT CaN 1 DO FOR i MR- AL LEGRETTO-THE FAMOUS COMPOSER-LIVED OVER US| WANT YOO TO GO UPAND INTRODLCE TYOURDELF AND ADK HIM \WHAT HE THINKS OF MY VOICE -HE I T ML)‘JT HEAR \T OP THERE - — I\F HEHADN'T HE MUST HAVE BEEN | OUT OF TOWN ),_J [ Sport (Slants ALANJGOULD 1 [1020's football stars are s | Mickey Cochrane toots a mean saxophone. And the favor- ite razz for the A's peppery back- stop: “Don’t call me Mickey, call me Gordon.” BIG TEN GRlD STARS ARE KEEN FOR BASKETBALL CHICAGO, Feb. 22—Several of ng ac- 1 cam- on in the Big Ten basketha | paign. “Do yeu think Babe Ruth, t the salary ln want. failing . E. 8, Amg as the Babe can tod- dle up to the nh' . He is neitk foolist enough than take a two-year {DJ“A(' 1r $75,000. There not much ba s clain he can quit 000 annual income as- The Babe would find pid decline in his earning without the aid of his daily appearance on the diamond Out of baseball, he quickly would be-| come just another corpulent ex- athlete. Jack Dempsey can tell him something about this angle. is no parallel between Ruth u The former heavy- weight champion never liked the boxir racket, exc s a means to an end. Once financially clea Tunney did not hesitate to his gloves for good. Ruth, other hand, lives baseball He is £mart enough now to get all he can out of it but he has no more idea | of quitting that he has of cmp; lenging Bobby Jones for the or)cl‘.i golf championship. ‘ is 1 him The Scott-Sharkey match is the first international heavyweight balw tle of importance to be held in| Florida since Jim Corbett, them world’s champion, knocked out Charley Mitchell of England at Jacksonville in 1894. Scott and Sharkey, working on| percentage, each may draw down ! from $75,000 to $100,000 for ten| rounds or less at Miami. Corbett nd Mitchell fought for a purse of | $20,000, winner take all. The American won on a knock- out in the third round of a fight marked by unusual display of bit- terness. Mitchell kept Corbett waiting in the ring until the latter chilled, also enraged. 1n| second round, Corbett hit Mit- i1 as the Englishman was com- ing up from a knockdown. At the end of the round, Mitchell suddenly walked over to Corbett's corner and belted the American behind the | whereupon they slugged each er merrily until pried apart. A ht-hander to th& jaw put Mit- “cold” in the third round. rig chell out Here and there: The full name | s new head football coach Ralph Irvine Sasse and | 1 prefers it that way . . .. ion Keener Cagle has about decided to go into the infantry in- stead of the air service . . . This will enable him to return to West Point as a backneld coach nest |will bowl against C. Sabin, {Mrs. Duncan The most famous, Wesley Fesler, America end. |and is one of four veterans 'last year's Buckeye quintet back the fold. ©Ohio has another gridder on the cage tecam. He is Dick Larl guard on Sam Willaman's eleven, Larkins teams with Fesler on' the courts. Michigan also has a pair of foot- ball experts on its basketball five Joz Truskowski, who captair perhaps, is hio State's All- Fesler plays guard from n played end on the f gation, performs at for Veenker cagers. Daniels, on the gridiron, plays a guard. Illinois has Gaga Mills, its qua terback Mills is captain of Illinois cage entourage and hol: down a guard post. Indiana has Ross, ace. Purdue has Glenn Harme:on flashy halfback He Boilermaker five and p: - ONE PIN SEPARATES WOMEN BOWLERS IN a backfield | a h MAKING HIGH SCORE Mrs. While, Mrs. Coughlin and Miss Barragar took two games out | of three from Mrs, Olson, Mrs. Mc- Lean* and Mrs. Duncan in the women’s bowling tournament held on the Elks alleys last night, rolling u pa stotal score of 1340 to 1256. Mrs. White made high single score of 200, but lost high average to Mrs. Olson by one pin. Mrs. White scored 504 and Mrs. Olson 505. There is no tournament tonight iOn Monday, at 7:15 o'clock, Ber- nard, Hermle and C. W. Wilson Simp- kins and \Noland. At 9:30 o'clock Henning, Pullen and Blomgren will compete with Lavenik, Robertson and Kirk. Scores made women'’s teams Mrs. White Mrs. Coughlin . Miss Barragar last night by the are as follows: 157 147 200—504 130 181 127—438 . 128 167 103—398 |/ W "HW/ F‘ (RS AT MATE ASKS ALL 4 ARE DEAD FUT HIS WIFE SAN FRANCISCO, Calil., Feb. 22, j—A!l that pertains to the Murphey family Joseph Leon Murphey wants except N Anna C. Murphey. for divorce on file in A he charges cruelty Murphey s the court to award him cus-' tody of the two children, Alta, 14,] and Leon, 12, and the community | pu)prm\ which he says consists of | model automobile. l\m >hey alleges that she endea- \ PETE LATZO LINDSEY SAFE WINS MATCH IN GALIFORNIA i : Proves Bu Su\ orise of Ivored to alienate the children’s af- | b o I : No Action to Be Taken on Hishions Tor ek et fesent ., MA0OL cos Disbarment of Judge N Y k 'and cctful of household duties. E V g 3 N At his place of business, in the SOk "'_‘Svf o in Southern State : { presence of William Smith, he avers Mrs. Murphy threatened to Kill LOS ANGELES, 'e Disbarment action proposed muxmsl NEW light YOI 20, heavyweight and once ti holder of the welterweight crow —Peld Lat- he e 22— him : former Judge Ben Lindsey, of Dei furnished one of the big surprises | °C HCEE “2E gt of the indoor season by last night ‘;cL’I"wr}(l’:le All]l;l;cl;l‘g ":,rlm‘“:“'ns; ‘2 SHR!NE DANCE lS 1 winning & closs ten rownd deciion | S ® DR 0C o Gon| ON THIS EVENING from Larry Johnson, of Chicago, & ¢ the “State Bar of O “'; negro. There were no knock- |TROrS O e Ly 'downs. POriig Y SR ged | The annual Washington's Birth- ! PR LA “I am very mucn gra at the day dance will be given tonight It costs money to peek into the [decision and it does not surprise in the Scottish Rite Temple's ball- future in Birmingham, Ala., where e,” Judge Lindsey said. {room under the auspices of the a tax of $500 must be paid to prac- It is understood that the Judge Juneau Shrine Club. The affair phrenol palm reading, for- |will file an application for rein- is invitational. Dancing is sched- e telling and psycho- anal)sx. statement in Colorado. uled to start at 9:30 o'clock. anu Becomes Fistic Capital; Bouis May Draw $400,000 Gate 7 | Here's the seiting for the clout frolic at Miami, February 27. Jack Sharkey and Phil Scott are match ed in the 15-round headline event but the stars of the evening will have to step fast to keep Vitorio Cam- polo and Johnny Risko from stealing the show. These slugging supernumeraries have contracted to box, 415 495 430 1340 179 166 160—505 134 179 136—449 109 86 107—302 . 422 431 403 1256 —————te——— Total Mrs. Olson Mrs. McLean Total LOS ANGELES, Cal—Mistaking a gas station beacon for a land- ing field marker, R .B. McQueen | Stockton aviator, ran afoul of tele- phone wires and wrecked his open biplane. He escaped with a cul lxp. JPECIAL SERVICE TO ALASKA CUSTOMERS o matter W hat the size of vour ¢ you can be sure of shipmen: o first boat if yo u order from Farr Farrell is your guarantee of First Qua and Special Grading . . . fine finish stoc boat building lumber or any other Jumber requirements. Just write us - or, if you're in a hurry, wire your specifications - we do the rest! FARRELI. LUMBER/. Westlake and Prospect SEATTLE Final Clearance Prices $25.00 and Marx Suits, reg. $50.00 values Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Suits, reg. $35.00 values Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Suits, reg. &?()3.()() values ... 32.50 Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Overcoats, reg. $50.00 values ... 25.00 Men’s Hart Schaffner and Marx Overcoats, reg. $45.00 values ... 22.50 A few Men’s Mackinaws, $10.00 values Men’s Soft Collars, Van Heuszn, 25 cents each, 5 for Men’s Goodrich Kingfisher Boots, hip, pair Bou Long Cord or Wool I’dms, pair . \ll Picce Goods—Silk-Wool Curtains Scrims, Velours at HALF PRICE. Ginghams, in plain colors, 45¢ to 60c values, 5 yards Men’s Hart Schaffner LULRULLEULHE LT LA DL AL E e reg. T T L L O L L Draperies, Velvets and GOLDSTEIN'S EMPORIUM LU DR DR L UL R T R FE ATt T T TR LU T TR R LT LTS - PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY FROM SPREE Drank Radiator bolullon‘ Believing it Was Wine | —Another D}'mg ‘ LYONS, Nebraska, midnight spree du which the participants celebrate with what | they thought was wine but which | proved to be a poisonous automobile | radiator solution, ended fatally for | four young men and one other is| near death this rNoon. Lawrence Kohlmler, aged a farm hand; Nelson Jar d 20 years, a pool hall employee; | Leon Jarvis, aged 18, brother of | Nelson, and Hollis Cleveland, ch‘ 17, are dead. Rueben Roberg, aged years, section hand, survives the party. ; The young men obtained the so- lution by breaking into the home of Ed Snethen, railroad station agent when he was absent. They tasted the solution and thought it was wine and poured it into small| bottles, then went to a dance. Noj ill effects were felt until 12 hours| later. ; Feb. 22—A| 22 NON-CONFERENCE TEAMS | ARE JINX TO OKLAHOMA' NORMAN, Okla, Feb. 22—The, teams the Big Six left behind them when they quit the Misouri Valley | | conference to form their own sel circle have proved a jinx since| then. | Take the University of Oklaho- | ma’s basketball team, The Soon- | ers won the Missouri valley title in 1927 and 1928. Last year they swept through the Big Six. In) | non-conference games, however Ok- | |lahoma was beaten twice by Wash- ington university, champions of Lho mother conference. The Sooner cagers started a vic- tory march this season in non-con- | ference games until they ran afoul | of the Oklahoma Aggies, another member of the Missouri Valley | league. The Aggies pasted flnolh- er defeat on Oklahoma’s record. R TR T 255 | LEI Almquist Fiess yous Sult | We call and deliver. Phone 328 r DODGE BROTHERS Announce Two New Models A NEW SIX A NEW EIGHT At amazingly low A Big Word .in banking that is empha- tically pronounced here. First s’\“vuliu;:‘uf Bank inother Concession More New Low Fire Insurance Rates THE ADJUSTERS CLAUSE which provides that you pay a part of the adjuster’s expense, if one be sent, herctofore attached to all policies, is now no longer required on poli- cies covering Dwelling Houses and their Contents. NOTE: About the While it very rarely happens that an adjuster is sent from Seattle, this clause has been objectionable partic- ularly to the small policy holder. Allen Shattuck, Ine. 25 ()ULS"[IOI\b AND ANSWERS ON THE GREATEST CHEVROLET IN CHEVROLET HISTORY A Six at the Price of a Four! ENGINE : Does the clutch release bearing require lubrication? : No. It is self-lubricated. : What changes have been made in the transmission? : The main shaft now has six splines which permits manufacturing to closer limits and eliminates any pos- sibility of the gears being accidentally disengaged. The shape of the transmission gear teeth has been chang- ed to give greater strength and quietness. Connors Motor Compan Service Rendered by Experts i “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” for Dry Cleaning and Pressing 4LASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck \\?Vny “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” CLOSED ALL DAY WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SATURDAY prices McCAUL MOTOR CO. Service With Satisfaction We Sell Goodyears Always on hand—your size and type of Good- year All-Weather Tread balloons—The World’s Greatest Tire — and Goodyear Pathfinders, sturdy, quality cords at lowest cost. Our standard Goodyear service with both. Buy from us, and get more mileage. JuneauMotors Inc. PHONE 30 fine, FEBRUARY 22ND TEP-—the best floor paint on the market. Juneau Paint Store THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and FEad at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Casrying Boat PIGGLY Ilh m». [ i 'v _,iOld Papers for sale at Empire Offié_e