The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 26, 1931, Page 5

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RRIN G Uup BY GOLLY: THE ©L.D GQOUT 1S SHOWIN' LR AGIN - 1I'LL PUT ME FOOT OUT THE FATHER AN' LET THE DUN BAKE \T- QOoSH! THAT FEELS qOooD- © 1931, 1nt'l Feature Serviee. Inc., Great Britain righss rcserved. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON oz _ — ST. JoANS GREAT LACROSSE AND FOJBALL STAR— . & B 23 IN WO YEARS HE ?__Smcmso ELEVEN 4 NSuiNG Like A MILITARY el LOCAL BOWLERS TAKE BIG LEAD OVER KETGHIKAN Elks’ Bowlers Here Win Six Straight Sunday Games for 811 Lead Juneau’s maple busters got away to a flying start Sunday in the! opening matches of the Elks Inter-' City bowling tournament, and took a lead of 811 pins in the first two of a five-match series. The local Bills won both matches, taking six straight games, winning the first three by 399 and the second set by 412 pins. { POINT. 2 OF GUNMAN IN Evening Match JUNEAU 182 181 . 180 . 176 195 914 933 ETCHIKAN . 147 136 145 148 162 134 Metealf Henning Lavenik . Radde Barragar 212 1980 163 201 167 151—494 164—541 | 167—529 Total 863 2710 K 164—447‘ 15844 One Night Club Owner Is Taken to Hospital After Shooting i | NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—Two rival Total ... 95 Zfla,groups of gunmen shot it out in |a club alley Saturday but the Po- {lice arrived after Charles Sher- !man, night club owner and reputed - GEBRGE Lul I |gambler, had been taken to a hos- A 'pital. The police found the night GHAMP AGAIN club abandoned. Sherman had been bruised, shot and stabbed. The Thibodeau .. Boos . Ryus ... Paulson Chapman Zurich i 134134 | 182467 | 157505 | 159 126 165 183 8 725 interior of the club was wrecked | ~ —By Pap| " e ///////////////// J FIGHT IN . Y, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 26, 1931. ALaN J.Gond | i | Ty Cobb cost Detroit only $700 | (When he was plucked from a min-| jor league club. Tris Speaker was a |mere $500 baseball chattel. Jack |Dempsey was clumsy when hej made his debut in the east, Thel folks were at one time discoufagel | about Bob Jones ever winning a big golf title. \ So, after all, it isn’t co strange] to find out now that Knute Ken- neth Rockne, when a $1,200 as- sistant coach, at Notre Dame, 14! years ago, was considered too young and inexperienced to succeed Jesse, Harper as the man in charge ofj | the “Irish" destinies. i Harper seemed about the only| one convinced Rockne had the| |stuff to make a first class head| coach. He had developed the young | Norweglan as a star player and had him as an assistant coach for four | | years. | Harper was ready to step out after having put the Notre Dame | em” on a thorough-going basis. He suggested Rockne, then only 28 years old, for the job but the university heads objected strongly. |In effect they said to Harper: “We've built up a fine system now. Why run the risk of having! 11t spoiled by a young, inexperienced | |and impetuous fellow? We need a 1s:asoned veteran to continue our work.” Other names were suggested but | Harper discovered flaws and point- ed them out. He always came back {with a recommendation for Rock- ne. Why, they finally asked him was he so persistent about it? “I've got to be. I promised Rock- ne the job four years ago,” Har- per replied. And so, like any other hero of |fact or fiction, the boy from Voss Norway, got the job and made good. Frequently, the anvil chorus is out for any figure in sports so suc- cessful as Rockne but not so in |his case. Coaching friends and |rivals, men who have worked with | him or under him, unite in a chor- us of enthusiasm for “Rock.” One prominent southern coach, who did not go to Notre Dame, said to me: “Rock’s a wizard. It isn't that he has any secrets of play. He teaches his boys how to do the ordinary, fundamental things better than most of the others. He makes the split second count. I've never known him to miss a chance to do some other fellow a good turn, or neglect an opportunity to help the game. No wonder we are all “for” WHATT 'S THE MATTER? Band Pass Tuning PreSclector . . . Four Screen Grid Tabes.. . . Linear Pow¥r Detec tor . . . Push-Pull Péwer Amplifier . . o Improved PowerFilter System (no hum). .. New Electro Dynamio Power Speaker. .. Tone Control (except on low priced models) + + + Local - Distance Switch, © W. E. & M. Co., 1930 Westinghouse Radio PIONEER OF RADIO IN THE HOME By GEORGE McMANUS SOME FAT-HEAD N TTIRE ARPART- MENT ABOVE DROPPED A FLOWER:- POT ON MY FooT- s E VEN if your favorite radio station put on a broadcast of Swiss yodelers, with their highest of high tones and lowest of low tones, you would still get each tonal extreme with complete exactness on the new Westinghouse Radio just introduced. The world’s first radio pioneers... have created the last word in eets . « . hear them at this store. radio TWO CONSOLE MODELS |two,” said Duffy. |system at 356 years. He can't be-| JACK DEMPSEY READY FOR COMEBACK; ASKS PURSE OF $500,000 NEW YORK, Jan. 26—Jack, Duffy is one man in the fight Dempsey will fight again next sum- | game who really knows what is mer if some gentleman will lay 80ing on in the ever changing mind $500,000 on the line, Billy Dutfy of the old mauler. says. | The man Dempsey wanis (o “You can safely say the former | fight, one of the fellows he believes champion is ready and eager for °An help mold a gate to returnj another comeback. He wants only |Dim $500000, is Primo Carnera,i one fight, but he might make it Duffy said. j | "Dempsey is the one man who will have a chance to whip Cars nera within a year and no one but and f Tex Rickard was stil alive, | 1i° Blant Itgllan will do/ eald] Jack would be in tralning today. | i LR “Dempsey feels he has at least | one more great fight left in his| SUTEL Ladies of Altar Society will hold} lieve that he is through. I can’t | & Food Sale Saturday January 315:“ elther. Properly trained, Dempscy!a" the Capital Electric Company,’ should be at the peak of his phy- e sical powers, but where’s the pro- { moter?” Play 1naoor Go:f 80 1ue alaszan ¥ “I have talked with Dempsey several times. He is ready to go ey ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 ARCADE CAFE CHRIS BAILEY, Proprietor A Restaurant Catering to Those Who Want Good Things to Eat OPEN DAY AND NIGHT WHAT REGULARITY DOES A little water now and then keeps ife in a flower, but if watered regularly it abounds in living strer.gth with great- er beauty and fragrance. It is the regular additions to one’s saving fund that make it grow. First National Bank Overhauling Season During the winter months is a good time to have your automobile thoroughly inspected and put in good repair. We are equipped to make any repair whether it is a genmeral overhauling or a minor ad- justment and will be pleased to give you a flat-rate on any job. Connors Motor Company, Inc. Service Rendered by Experts MONTREAL, Jan. 26.—For me‘and furniture was broken. Bullebs‘ ‘The third match was played off this afternoon. scheduled for tonight and the fifth and final is slated for tomorrow evening. The evening games start at 8 o'clock. Ketchikan Off Form The Ketchikan squad is com- posed of bowlers who recently de- feated Juneau and Anchorage in a telegraphic tourney. way below form in the Sunday gdmes. Only two men on the team chalked up 500 scores or better in the afternoon game, and only one in the evening match. Barragar was high scorer in the afterncon game for the local team, rolling a total of 585. Lavenik had high single game with 217. In the evening game, Metcalf captured the honors with 212 high single game and 595 for high match score. Here's the Sad News The & follow: Sunday Aftcrnoon Match JUNEAU 201 20% 189 139 155—561 181—579 —283 217217 Metcalf Henning Stewa v Lavenik Radde PBarragar 185 202 919 919 KETCHIKAN 161 168 120 136 147 124 173 189 168 181 Total . Thibodeau Boos Ryus Chapman Zurich Total 769 797 1784 2351' fourth time in five years, George The fourth is y,it " voung Davis Cup- ace, won|blood stains were on the floor. the Canadiun indoor tennis cham- |pierced the walls and floor and |him. Mavis King, cigaret girl, told the| Joe Nutter, in the Providence They were! | by game and match 164529 | 201585 919 2750 pionship. | Police Sherman was in front of the | Lott last Saturday afternoon de- |club and she took him to a hospital !feated John Van Ryn of Philadel-|iR & taxicab. She was detained hy phia three out of five sets. \the Police. It is believed numerous iy gl others were shot and the Police are ‘Two fiios BREAK {watching the hospitals. INTO 'GOLF FINALS Manero, of New York, a pro, and| Ralph Guldahl, of Dallas, also a| | pro, won their way into the finals of the Motion Picture $3,000 match | play in the golf tournament,.last, Saturday afternoon. ;. Manero defeated Mortie Dutra Estebeth Has Quick, Pleas- of Long Beach and Guldahl down- | N ed Fred Morrison, of Glendale. | ant voyage from Sit ka and Way Ports Thirteen has no terrors for the } GULDAHL WINS { LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 26.—| Ralph Guldahl, 19-year-old pro- Estebeth. The number is lucky | fessional, defeated Tony Manero, for her. That many passengers veteran, yesterday afternoon 1 up were aboard when she arrived in in 36 holes in the $3,000 Motion Juneau this morning after a quick Picture Golf Tournament which'and pleasant voyage from Sitka drew many star players. |and way ports. A s = | Persons coming here on the ves- COLORADO MAN ON VISIT |sel were Mrs. J. Faucett and child, |Gus F. Johnson, Fred Johnstone Colorado busi- and C. Murray from Tenakee; Mrs. nessman, is enjoying a trip to A. Judson, S. Hellenthal, E. Rogan, Southeast Alaska. is the father |[E. Scharklain, John Wilson, F. of Mrs. Donald Armour, and is in Townsend, O. G. Wolde and W. R. Juneau with Mr. Armour, presi- Singleton from Hoonah. dent of the Piggly Wiggly stores of | ———— William Briggs Alaska, who makes his hendqu:u--; ters in Ketchikan. e ne, o oo cuneoeeennd Daily Empire wacy Ads Tay. Dr. R. J. Wride, of Whitehorse, Bulletin, points out that Willlam Wallace Wade, Alabama’s sensa- tionally successful head football |coach, is one of the very few prod- ucts of Brown university to take up |coaching and by far the most fa- | mous. Wade was an effective, though not a great lineman when he wore the Bruin colors, in 1914-16. His coaching success was swift at Tull- ahoma, Tenn., then as an assist- ant to Dan McGugin at Vander- {bilt and finally at Alabama, start- ing in 1923. He leaves the Tusca- |loosa Terrors, after their greatest season, to take charge at Duke, newest member of the Southern conference, ’ fR— {CHORAL SOCIETY | MEET POSTPONED ’ UNTIL FEBRUARY 9 The meeting to discuss the pro- posed Choral Society of Juneau, scheduled for 8 o'clock tonight, has been postponed until Monday night, February 9, according to announce- | ment of those in charge. Various | conflicting dates preclude a meet- |ing for this evening. | ————— | MOOSE OFFICIAL IS BACK S. Wallstedt, deputy supreme dic- tator of the Loyal Order of Moose |Y. T, was a homebound passenger its to towns in Alaska to the lon the Princess Norah. He has been S0uth of Juneau and to Prince Ru- \visiting British Columbia cities, pert, B. C. One Combination Radio and Phonograph BEAUTIFUL CABINETS ALL ELECTRIC VERY LATEST IMPROVEMENTS Will be sold ve 9-TUBE SETS cheap for cash or attractive terms may be arranged. - THESE ARE REAL VALUES Call and Hear These Wonder Machines CAPITAL ELECTRIC CO. |for Alaska, has returned from vis-| COND AT SEWARD ECONOMY CASH STORE Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands Front at Main St. Telephone 91 Pioneer Po:)TH all Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. GET THE BEST AND CLEANEST MILK Handled by the Sanitary Perfection Milking Machine at Lowest Prices Alaska Dairy BOX 1134. Place your orders with Sanitary Grocery or George Brothers PiccLy WicoLy Old Papers for sale at Empire Office

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