The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 5, 1931, Page 5

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3 wn -t THE DAILY -ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 5, 1931. II"I!HIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIlIIlll|l|I|||"||lIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll_’_ “FIRST SH YOUR HOME- IT TELLS WHAT YOU ARE” BR;NG]NG UPMFATHER By GEORGE McMANUS IR . 1 HAVE CANDLESTICKS ROW T OW P g e 5 ART FROM KING 5T ( TATUARY AND : /ES, MR.0I6GS, T ) | YES, 1 SAaw i S STA N WHERE MAGEIES AM A GREAT YOLR WIFE s SNDTHE ANCET AT R = SPOONS WENT ANTIQUE COLLECTOR (Z:-'QTC’ OF DARKEST LOST CITIES OF MEXICO We read this slogan in a magazine—some- where — But sentiment applys as much in JUNEAU as in the States. Let us help you select your Rugs and U T H T Home Furnishings. A few minutes DAILY SPORTS CARTOON —By Pap|QERRIC BATS “ by, psimemr peare | N MOST RUNS COMPETITION HE LOWERECD il 4 Coi_ugsm- Y JOHNNY WEISSMULLER'S NI THENEW Yok " BATTALINO STOPS CHOCOLATE spent looking over our stock will re- pay you. Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. £40YD. RECORD First Sacker of Yankees FROM 4-MN 57 SEC . Carried Off Honors, = | TO4 NN 55 F szc. /K/\'\) Amer. League o/ £29 Z)— ATRARNARAA LT ANAR RS RAAR AR AR R LR L A S A LA R DR R VIIIIIIIII"!IIIl!lll""ll||IIHHIII!III!Hl}lllllll"llllllllIllllIIIIIIlllll'llllllllllllllh- e : | ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING | | S | NEW YORK, Jan. 5—Lou Geh- !rig, hard hitting' first sacker of | the New York Yankees, carried off the American League honors 1n P 1930 when it came to driving in Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Taffales § runs in platoons. Columbia Lou PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:39 | twice drive in eight runs in a | e st e ] {single game, five runs three tima [Torme o | o and four runs four times. Earl | Averil of the Indians and Oarl ! = iR: nolds of the White Sox NUST A Kip — HE'S RATED | the only others to drive in ¢ THE BEST WATE R PoLO ' in a contest. Four all ago no American CLAYER IN THE GAME an drove in more th Goslin, another vhose initials are “ next to Gehrig in cunding runs acr " had no eight ARCADE CAFE CHRIS BAILEY, Proprietor A Restaurant Catering to Those Who Want Good Things to Eat OPEN DAY AND NIGHT ] Associated Press Photo | , Bat Battalino, featherweight champion from Hartford, Conn,, suc. | nor/ football coach, has a journalistic «Marchie” Schwartz, the Mlssis-\Junenu. Ketchikan and Anchorage, background, whether or not he goes | v - the western pin stars rolled 2,835 ; b ppi boy who galloped to All-Amer- (+ in for the by-products of gridiron ;.. r,me for Notre Dame this year, |Vesterday afternoon in the second | 00Aric prominence. Eddie worked his Way |y .o well on his way to @ gridiron |match, Juneau made 2746 pins| (cepsfully defended his title in New York by winning the decision in 2 | i © his credit, but he had five, ISAro:ndyengagement with Kid Chocolate of Cuba. The picture shows fives and six fours, | 'the Cuban reaching the champion with a long left before he danced Al Simmens was the only Ameri-| way in the third round. | can ‘Leaguer to score five runs ini®_ | S 4 shifivol a game during the 1929 campaign, |, / Tnuk? tyingfiie: AmeriGans olgtattily "7 ¢ R e Cn TRt o ey { record. In 1930 four players turned ! ;the trick. Simmons again, Earl ;C'mbs and Tony Lazerri of the ;Y‘\nkces and Bib Falk of the In- ;dians. Combs and Jimmy Fox each 3 s 3 v r runs twice, Joe Boley, Why not make the New Year Lyn Lary and Reynolds'} . } 3 < Lo X\ : | Brighter, Happier and Easier 3 r tied the JE p B SRR IRt for the Housewife? W ¥ { there who made five in | /& UVVY— i five times at bat, Simmons, Falk, S / | Ed Morgan of Cleveland and Joe WHAT REGULARITY DOE RAYS FAMOUS FATHER | Cronin of Washington. Earl Webb A NEW AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC U S — THE GREATEST STAR. TWE |of Boston and Carl Reynolds each ‘ G e ot : e A little water now and then keeps MIRDEROUS GAME OF WATER_ grabbed five safeties in six times § | WASHER T . s | at bat. ] Al life in a flower, but if watered regularly PoLo #AS EvER_~ ——puerti H it abounds in living strength with great- SE 7 er beauty and fragrance. <ol | S mity Would be a great help \ ¥ SRR S A = 3 B > LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 5-- It is the regular additions to one’s = T it g "7 '7——|Saturday night the University of | | saving fund that make it grow. May 16, 1894. It was the hub of Montana defeated the U. 8. C. 29 | ! track and field athletes in the early !to 25 in a basketball game. The days when Jack Moakley, Keen trojans won Friday night 28 to 21. 4 5 3 ~ Fitzpatrick, Walter Christy were in | - ———— Al k El > L l d their youthful prime. Tn F R I s cu UNIV OREGON DEFEATS GONZAGA askda ectrie lg it an F. N . N Bill Cunningham, sports editor of 1 3 lrst atlonal Bank o ALAN GOULD the Boston Post and a pretty fair | EUGENE, Oregon, Jan. 5—Last P C Wm&zs&mm center himself at Dartmouth in ye 23 Saturday night Oregon University ||| ower Ompany ‘ olden days, heaps a lot of praise defeated Gonzaga at basketball by | Not the least of the reasons why (on Harvard’s Ben Ticknor, two- a score of 48 to 27. i Ralph Irvine Sasse turned in ainme All-American. T e, ] . great season for his first term of | “Just as Florida connotes sun-| PALO ALTO, Cal, Jan. 5.—Com-| play Indoor GoIZ at Tre Alaskan | | Overhaulln g Season responsibility as head coach at shine, green apples suggest equa-|INg from behind in the closing min- | pote). (adv.} West Point were his modesty and !torial anguish, lobster thermidor |Utes of play, with a tie score, 22 L ? ¥ % bis concentration on the task in|waves in midnights and music, Ca- | &l the el A Srgncl - || During, the winter months is a good time to hand. {pone means machine guns, and so |0 basketball teal Q o § e R R O A Tl : : Major Sasse wrote no hiZh-pow- forth and so forth, the name Tick- |ford 27 to' 24 Saturday night in| SPECIAL : have your automolple thorough!y inspected ered articles for the newspapers or nor, from this date henceforth and |OVertime play. i and put in good repair. ; JANUARY SALE the magazines. He broadcast no' forever, means HOW TQ PLAY RIS SRS £ | o §e ! 3 s speeches in the interests of any|CENTER, in capital letters,” writes p ! ; We are equipped to make any repair whether eommercial project or chamber of | Cunningham. I i : on all SCHUMACHER P h . . i ies WiE Gldied? nb” Al | 1 ' it is a general overhauling or a minor ad- American teams. wa no| SPeaking of centers Clarkl . FUR GARMENTS justment and will be pleased to give you a 4 In short he had consider belshaughnessy tells me he has never | | 5 Pl of W llb d . had enough to do as Army’s head’:mn a better pivot man than-Rob-{ at (ISL(/r a Oar » flat rate on any JOb' ! coach, plus other duties at West'o4s of Tulane, the All-Southern | . ) o Point, without roaming into the).noice This boy, says Clark, was| Y i C M C I S B o ML e oo T . Chee b ' urman’s i onnors Motor Company, Inc. | tions. Sasse believes the coach’si ;g nad a lot to do with the way“ | ) X ] " place is on the side-lines. Tulane manhandled ~Georgia at | e ' s f PERMANENT ECONOMICAL Service Rendered by Experts { v |New Orleans. In the telegraphic bowling tour- 4 B i Eddie Casey, Harvard's new head nament between the Elks lodges of | ARTISTIC FIRE RESISTANT H SOUND PROOF and ECONOMY CASH STORE through Harvard as campus COTIe-|..rser at-Loyola of the South-when 'and Ketchikan slumped to 2575. | - ¢ ipondent for the Boston Traveler.\y. Gent into a Rockne shift. He| The following are the individual| S’we Pacs SANITARY Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands f Casey comes from the little town|yo¢ on the freshman squad at the scores: Fisat at Muin S, Telephone 91 gt Natlok, Mass“:“s“;' Wh;”h fOT | New Orleans university, but was | “" Juneau g i « 4 half century has been famous ,o.c.qeq to transfer to South| Metcalf 534, Henning 620, Stewart| . : D L e e - i ‘ & - for its production of men conspficu-}%end_ /552, Bavard 535, Barragar 505. i ng}lt and Schumacher a 4 . ¢ ens in many heaneticg of athietics | ————— | Anchorage Durable Plaster and Labor, and insures a permanent, o It was turning out great athletes, | | Pfeil ' 644, Qstrander 586, Bayer | d A 5 . . ¢ % Plone r Pool H ll \ long before Eddie Casey became the ELECTRICAL WORK 537, Romig 549, Larsen 539, : _subst:imual job that will give lasting sat C a seventh son of James F. Casey on| Call Schombel. Telepnone 4502. | Ketchikan “ Fresh Stock ;lsfactlon, Telephone 183 POO! BILLIARDS s bl oo I | Bold 493, Thibodeau 326, Boox| 541, Chapman 529, Zurich 557, Dan-! = ’/F ”L’ - Cr IO ‘ g o ; ‘ i 3 | / éfi%%‘%wg s AREKILLED, || S4BIVS Y Thomas Hardware Co. | 5 “Everything in Furnish- { ' EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas, Miller, Prop, e e et B 3 ; “Learn the MODERN Way” ! FuuTBALL GAME ings for Men” i . ARNOLD’S BOOTERY PLAY REAL JAZZ PIANO IN 3 MONTHS { | T ——— — ; | o g il s 4, A Personal Course Taught by Mail | & 2 [ £ Sl . \ LEARN POPULAR MUSIC—SYNCOPATION e R 2 i e Old Papers for sale at Empire Office| Store Open Evenings o \ Our Free Bczfilet. Tell§ Htl){w Yt])udManyleuarn. Dgecglsy: the end of & football miskols be- ) bri | i t . o Kn usic Nec 7 i - - o e o . S e i el 3% / / ¥ ?H?Yr? S‘};:: Pla‘;'m: Popular g;vn; fieosewnd Lesson. :::x;: ;:::g;:xyz::y. l;hde ;m;:’ SO lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmlllll1 “The Latest Styles in Women's Shoes ALWAYS’ _ We GUARANTEE to Teach Y%u to Play in })ZOVIgE%(’;‘ . of the Footbjall Assoctn:;onmwuude- 5 #b* i s i . | livert Iver cu e Uru- = | VT THE HALFHILL STUDIOS RS 2R CALIFORNIA GROCERY B S e . o ¥ stands started a demonstration and = ) = _4 ' . OF JAZL PIANO 7 | Imetsstas solbed. e poice a2 PHONE 478 The Home of Better Groceries £ ; =3 . Miwum spread to the streets. EHMIMNMINILIIN T e ey Old P apers for sale at Emplr € Ofllm

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