The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 25, 1930, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1930 BRINGING UP FATHER g OGHT DOME PROPERT HE EVIOENTLY DION T 1JLTT BO! “le TELL HER ABOUT THE TTHOUT SEEING T FROM MR L :n’éwmo—vn&‘: A SOCIAL LEADER: HE SAID | ROADS NOTHIN TO 1T WAS 1N THE MOST EXCLUSIVE PART ) [ REMIND HIM OF A ROAD TR ili (| R T r~ OF TOWN ' | WANT YYou ( T 2 o ERORE.! —-L N — D] HE'S RIGHT- 1T CERTANLY ' l EXFL;U%\VE - | TO GO AND LOOK AT 1T —— Your Progress is measured by where and how you bank. First Natiornal Bank [ PP NOTE THESE LOW DELIVERED PRICES Ford Roadster Phaeton Tudor Sedan Coupe Sport Coupe TO PAY SCHOOL TAX | iNOTl('. | IS HEREBY GIVEN | NOTICE DECISION FOR RISKO IN TEN = ‘Na\'y or Revenue Cutter SEX'ViL‘G.‘ _ |volunteer firemen, paupers and in-| > |sane persons, are subject to t:\xi in sum of Five ($5.00) Dollars. | appointed Schoo! Tax Collector for jJuneau, Alaska, in conformity with 29, $635 Two-window Fordor Sedan. $805 635 Three-window Fordor ] 705 Sedan 5 Convertible Cabriolct 35 Town Sedan Chapter Se 1 All male persons between Alaska n Laws, | 835 . 850 880 19! e ) ithat the undersigned has been duly | | the ! | These delivered prices include bumpers and extra tire and tube. Rumble seat is included in the price of both the Sport Coupe and Convertible Cabriolet. | Décision Is Booed by 11 g 5 I v o ! | LOOMS FOR THIS YEAR: + 000 Fans Who Are | s | : | Should you be living in Alaska! him if m‘t Wlll’] Camp()lo len or prior to the first Monday it il L lin April, 1929, said tax shall be| of manager | o > |tender for championship honors in s Natlgnall NEW YORK, March 25—BY 2idue and payable on said first date| the newly formed eastern h\:er(‘cl-{!,a.luuc fran btained. He split YRR of the ‘judgks ax!\d rf'_‘el:»"-'nnd shall be delinquent after May | | legiate baseball league composed of {told them he would consider it, |oor ) Risko, Cleveland baker bov, |ist, 1929. Should you arrive in! | Yale, Dartmouth, Princeton, Penn- - {von [a 10-round verdict last night Alaska later than first date above livenla nid Colurbiar 10 iaaist |over Victorio Campolo, in a vicious | mentioned, tax will be delinquent to the big red team from Ttaca, | ® ® ® © ® o o = a o o e o Slugging baitle. |thirty (30) days after your arrival, Twb Vet srhin. Owikend i Bob;. SPORT BRIEFS o Eleven thousand fans took r within ten (10) days after notice | CHOICE OF COLOR COMBINATIONS At Southern College 1 ‘ ITHACA, U. Y., March 25.—Co {nell may prove to be a serious con- year wrote Rowe would accept th there in the You Save $75.00 in Extra Equipment JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. Ford Dealers po! even a de- ALAN J.GouLp Oxford and Cambridge, Yale and Harvard have more rowing tradi- tion behind them but neither of these classics offers any greater compet excitement or thrill than annual battle on the water Pacific Coast supremacy California and Washing- the for nia, with one of the fin- t llege crews of all time, has held the edge over the past few years but the Bear Oarsmen who won the Poughkeepsie blue ribb: and the Olympic laurels in 1928 been lost by graduation and y Bbright is shaping a new com- bination on the Oakland Estuar The 1930 crew is a sophomore out- fit Up North, Al Ulbrickson has the makings of another great W: ing- eight of the type that was for a long time supreme on the coast and 1-2 at Poughkeepsie consistent- ly. The Huskies managed to finish second to Columbia last year, after losing to California on the coast. They will have at least an even chance in all probability to turn the tables on the Bears in the big race about the middle of April. No matter what happens then, both teams will be East again to chal- lenge Columbia and the rest of the Armada. | | 1 The ‘history of the mile speed record for automobiles is one of the' most dramatic in all sports annals. | It has been centered almost exclu- sively on this ten-mile strip of beach at Daytona, where William K. Vanderbilt in a Mercedes in 1904, first set a mark of 92.307 m.p.h. This surpassed the achieve- ment of Henry Ford in his Ford ©999” which traveled at a pace of 91.370 in 1903 Ford failed in 1905 at Daytona to surpass Vander- bilt's American record. Since then, the exception of 1926 when J. G. P. Thomas and Captdin Malcolm Campbell shattered the record at Pendine, all the mile records have been made at Day- tona. Oldfield and Burman in the Benz, DePalma in the Packard and Milton in the Duesenberg, all famous American drivers, monopo- lized these records until 1920. Milton that year roared down the beach at 156.046 m.p.h. Since then with the single exception of Keech’s performance in the White Triplex, all the record-busting has been done by the British drivers—Guinness,' Thomeas, Eldridge, Campbell and Segrave. | Mickey Walker's middleweight crown is in more than a little danger at the moment. Mickey must tangle with Rene De Vos, the azing Belgian, to gain reinstate- ment in New York State. The bout itself does not look particularly dif- ficult. But Mickey is having great difficulty in paring his weight down even close to the 160 pound limit. The wise ones believe Mickey will make the weight only at the cost of his strength, leaving himself a, mark for the canny Belgian. ] .- | BIG TEN MILE RECORD 1 ORVAL . MARTIN'S AIM LAFAYETTE, Ind., March 25— Orval Martin, Purdue’s long legged runner, hopes to close his college career this spring by setting 2 new ‘Western conference record in the mile run, a mark he has approached for the past three years. | The record, 4:15.8" set by E. H.| Fall of Oberlin, has stood since 1917. Martin clipped off the mile in 4:156 at the Penn Relays last year. i The Purdue stepper began this year where he left off last, winning the Big Ten mile and half-mile events. At Minneapolis he won, J Louise Lee, of Hackensack, N. J., captain of the baseball team at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College, Lynchburg, Va,, is wearing the costume which is considered quite proper for play on the diamond. Louise is said to be g, veritable female Babe Ruth in'the Little College League. (Tuternntiewa) Newsreol) ' —— L ¢ both indoor distance runs. Last year he won the mile and half-mile outdoors and the mile indoor In! his sophomore year, 1928, he was| first in the half-mile indoors and | the mile outdoors. Martin is captain of this year’s Purdue tcam. — ., i | MRS. GODFREE PLANS WIMBLEDON COMEBACK LONDON, marcn zo.—British ten- | nis fans will see their old time fav- orite, Kitty McKane, now Mrs. A. Godfree, at Wimbledon agzain this year. H Mrs. Godlree has been out of the | game nearly two years owing to ill- ness, but she says, having recovered, | the call of the game is too strong for her and she will go into prac- tice immediately. “I have not touched a racket this year,” she said, “and I do not know how far my absence from the courts has affected my game.” Mrs. Godfree won the women'’s singles championship in 1924 when, playing for England against the United States, she beat Miss Helen Wills and Mrs. Mallory. She also won the championship in 1926. - eee RUMMAGE SALE The Martha Society will receive donations at the basement of the Presbyterian Church or telephone 2734. —adv. —_—— —————— DODGE BROTHERS Announce Two New Models A NEW SIX A NEW EIGHT Ar amazingly low prices McCAUL MOTOR CO. Lewis of basketball fame, and Car! Boies, give Coaches Paul Eckloy! and John Haddock assurance of | capable performances in the box.! A spring trip to the South in which Cornell will meet George- | town, Maryland, Duke and the Uni- | versity of North Carolina will start | s |hurler, expects to keep on pitching three rounds with two rounds even. [vided by the Act above quoted for on March 31 when the Red meets F | |those who fail or neglect to pay tax | § | the latter in the first of a two- game series. P AP | BUCK MANAGER GETS OFFER TO ! TUTOR MAJORS| | PORTLAND, Ore., March 25.—Bob ! Rowe, owner-manager of the Port- land hockey club, today declined to deny or affirm the well-substanti—,‘ ated rumor he had been offered the | managership of at least three ma-| jor league hockey clubs next year New York Americans, Pittsburgh Pirates and Chicago Blackhawks were. reported to be after his serv- ices. Philadelphia business men last 1/ @ ® e o0 0o es e e e e cidedexception to the verdict, boo- s given you P ;lng the decision lustily Raleigh Drennon, guard on Geor- ' T the ringsiders it appea gia Tech’s undefeated 1928 football Campolo had more than eleven, has received an appointmeng | Petter - of the battering. to West Point. |were no knockdowns. | that Jack Quinn, 44-year-old Alhlm,c"perts gave Campolo five and Risko | Campolo weighed 225 pounds iand Risko 196. | _ until he’s 50. “Lefty” Watwood, White Sox out-, |lielder; Ben Sankey, Pirate rookie TEXAS TO HAVE BIKE RACES DALLAS, March 25¢—Bicycle races | may ‘spon take their place along cide sother sports in Texas. Plans | are under way for tracks at Dallas, ! [s.-m Antonio and Houston. He may | stop, and Hal Lee, Brooklyn| in some ad- Alabama ie outfielder, got vance tralning with the Puly baseball team. I All persons, firms and corpora- tions employing labor shall furn- sh list of employees to collector | nd are authorized by law to de- duct amount of tax from wages of | The corcensus of opinion of ex-|employees. Fines and imprisonment are pro- or furnish list of employees. | Dated at Juneau, Alaska, March | 25, 1930. H. R. SHEPARD, Schol Tax Collector Juneau, Alaska. Tirst publication, March 25, 1930 for ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowhrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONES 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 JUST ARRIVED Another New Stock of Wallpaper Juneau Paint Store ast publication, April 19, 1930. If Jack Dempsey does return to|al$é try to promote the sport at| he ring he will probably promote Oklahoma City and Tulsa, Okla. | his own ¢ ' Field, —_—————— Chicazo. POLO FIELD PLANNED | works Giants 25~-This city :0ld days as well as warm days o | field. C. H. Featherstone, supporter accustom them to the cooler cli-|of{the game and a star in winter | mate in their own home town. play at 8an Antonio, is laying plan: " —_—— {for a regulation field which will b:“ Dell E. Snermi, saneau's ‘pmno the home of the Wichita Falls Polo | uner. Hotel Gastineau. —aadv |club, i John Me( A COOLE pipe Service With Satisfaction Kindlings burn faster than logs, and tobaccos cut fine (for cigarette rolling) burn faster . . . and hotter . . . than Granger Rough Cut’s big shaggy flakes ¢ —cutsolely for pipes. R CUT fof pipes, as tobacco should be! with the first fragran clean pipe-bowl, and !t’s Granger’s own; You’ll notice Granger’s coolness | WICHITA FALLS, Tex, March 7 ©clock for the accommodation of is to have a turf polo Odd Fellows visiting the Douglas | NOTICE A special ferry will leave Juneau for Douglas Wednesday evening at| lodge. —adv You get results from printing done by us | | | t puff; its dry ash, 1 clear stem; and especially the rich full-bodied flavor. * no one else can use our secret Wellman Method. Liccerr & Myegs Tosacco Co. —— e “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY S¥PVICE” for Dry Cleaning and »*: ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” -] ROLLER RINK OPEN DAILY AT 7:30 P. M. Beginners afternoon—4 to 6 p. m. each Tuesday. Ladies afternoon—each Friday from 2:30 to 5 p. m. Admission Free. All First Class Patronage Solicited Juneau Amusement Co. “CHECK! —and DOUBLE CHECK!” Give the public what the public wants—and it responds—every time. We've proved it once again with our “1930 Model” Diamond Briquets. For furnaces, heaters and grates, these briquets are the best we have ever made. And the public, in recog- nition of their superiority, has ordered and ordered and ordered. Let us send you a load. Pacifie Coast Coal Co. PHONE 412 It is the POLICY behind the POLICY that COUNTS This Agency has been in continuous success- ful operation since January first, 1898. It is the POLICY behind the POLICY That has made this possible. We have no diversions. Insurance is our all day business and there is no kind we do not write. When you want insurance, see us. We are always here ready to answer your insurance questions or to write a POLICY for you. Allen Shattuck, Inc. INSURANGE—Every Kind

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