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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1931, T 5 BRINGING UP FATHER { A YES, IT5 SOMETHING HELLO, DINTY, DOUBLE WHATS IN (] CHARITY 2 72| YW\ GOING TO GIVE A THAT CORN BEEF AND THAT BOX ? | &£77| POOR WOMAN WHO CABBAGE ORDER-AND Ko ¢ RUSH IT RIGH? UVER / T © 1931, Int'l Feature Service, Inc., Great Britain rights reservéd. JUST SOMETHING ™M GOING TO GIVE YO A POOR HUNGRY MAN WHO NEEDS T T T T T T T T T 1] [ By GEORGE McMANUS I ALWAYS SAID- CHARITY BEGING ANNOUNCING A SPECIAL SALE ON ELECTRIC HEATERS ALL ARTICLES OFFERED ARE NEW AND QUALITY GUARANTEED T T G S IR L CARTOON —ByPap'SKIMS OVER WATER; SETS NEW RECORD Millionaire Speed Boat Rac- | er Sets World Mark i —Is Timed MIAMI BEACH, Florida, March 21—Gar Wood, millionaire speed- | boat racer, sent Miss America No. 9 skimmed over the water yester- day and claimed the world's speed | boat records for a statute mile of | 101.15 miles an hour and a nautical mile of 102.25 miles an hour. Odis A. Porter, of the Ameri- can Automobile Association, was the timer. “DAILY SPORTS RUSSELL— T “TEAAPMAN- 2 \ A5 e o3, CAMBRIDGE WINS FROM OXFORD IN | i 8-OARED EVENT LONDON, March 31.—Cambridge | defeated Oxford today in the eighty-third annual eight-oared race on the Thames. | | It was Cambridge's eighth straight | victory and the forty-second victory | Oxford. | o r—— ——y / CHARPMAN - over . RECENTYMBSEC | Tne race in 1877 ended in a dead| THE HALF-MILE heat. l RECORD By | e '/IO‘!"' 5 i ENTERS HOSPITAL ASECOND | BECAUSE 4E | Cole, father of Cash! i entered St. Ann's AL WORLO'S | PULLED uP I THE ik dcintap f Hospital {RECORD FOR THE He has a severe KETCHIKAN 1S | AHEAD IN PIN TOURNEY NOW The Ketchikan Elks' bowlers| forged ahead last night after the third game in the present tele- graphic series with Juneau and| Anchorage. | The scores last night were as follows: Ketchikan 3340, Juneau 3106 and Anchorage 2862. | The previous scores were: Ket-| chikan 3156 and 3169; Juneau 3246/ and 3226, and Anchorage 2823 and 2049. Juneau scores last night are as follows: Howard 235, Lavenik 214, Barra- gar 213 and 200, Boyle 212, Metcalf 211, 205 and 204, Sperling 208, 206 and 202, Gov. George Parks 202, H. Sabin 199, and Radde 199 and 196. 200 PASSENGERS TAKEN OFF LINER WHICH IS AGROUND GLASGOW, dcoiland, March 21. —Two hundred passengers of the Canadian Pacific Liner Montclare have been landed safely on Cam- brae Island after the steamer went aground inbound from Greenock, on a hidden reef. The passengers were taken off in lifeboats and picked up by tugs. They will be taken to the main- land Sunday. The liner is lying at a 45 degree R8O 1 A, Fe ik LAST Two STRIOES cold. list and believed to be badly dam- aged. I RECOGNIZE INDCOR MARKS 1 { FEDERATION DOES NOT | | A The A B, AN ROBINS BOWL 'LIKE CHAMPS ON - ELKS’ ALLEYS \ 1 §Sperling Qualifies for Hall of Fame with Three 200 Games ‘ It's all over but the. shouting. The Robins look like a sure win- ner of the second half of the Elks’ tournament by taking three straight games last night from the Eagles who were winners of the first half. The Robins made the second high total of the tournament with 2209 which is only 23 pins less than their previous high mark. Sperling is now a candidate for {the Hal of Fame. He rolled three 200 games which has been | done only once before in the tour- nament. Sperling’s total was 616 and was high for the evening. Bar- ragar maintained his sensational scoring with 583. Other 500 games were Lavenik 552, Boyle 540, T. George 536, Sabin 509, Lavenik made high score for the evening Among the first of the veteran baseball observers to report in. Florida, Ed Wray, sports editor of the St. Louis Post Dispaten, thinks that the eminent Mr. Horns- by and his Cubs will be the out- fit to watch in the forthcoming National league pennant race. | “Hornsby has a great club and | he will get the most out of it,” remarked Mr. Wray. “He has' already made a smart move by | deciding to switch Kiki Cuyler to: center-field, where he will do the most good. { “It is certain to be a great flve-i’ club race, involving the champion Cardinals as well as the Cubs, Giants, Brooklyn and Pirates.’ | Jack Sharkey, who adorned him- | self with no wreaths of roses in playing his part in the last two { = ./ ~INSTEAD OF DRNING = o e r oo Ay » On TiRouGH RAN 1:51%5 Inooors e her | s | THE INTERNATIONAL— 2) Do You Play Billiards . . . If you do there is something for you in THE EMPIRE Next Monday | ARTHUR THURNBLAD Not only tells how to play Billiards-- (T KASSAY CASE IS POSTPONED § TO NEXT WEEK} Important Witnesses Are Wanted at Prelim- inary Hearing Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau Douglas Juneu, Phone 6 Douglas, Phone 18 R LHHTHTHTHTTE R T ETR LR 2 * AKRON, Ohio, March 21.—Inab- y to assemble important witness- es caused a postponement of the preliminary hearing of Paul Kassay accused of planning destruction of the giant dirigible Akron. The hearing has been assigned for next Thursday. Kassay, former Austrian Navy officer, is held under a $20,000 bend. Kassay denies the chargs insists he iz being framed. e Tulsa and Oklahoma City now are connected by a paved high- way. and WHEN THINGS WAKE UP Spring—hanging up another worn-out Winter— unlocks the sunshine, flowers and bunnies. Mankind seems to begin again with new hope, new ambition, and new determination to be prudent, learning what to seek and what to shun. A bank account of your own is a thing worth striv- ing to have. Make this your Bank. First &ational Bank e, — Fees and commissions received by 82 Mississippi sheriffs in 1930 approximated $1,030,000. | 183 | TAXI | STAND AT PIONEER POOL ROOM Day and Night Service | - THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS ! THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat J ARCADE CAFE CHRIS BAILEY, Proprietor . A Restaurant Catering to Those Who Want Good Things to Eat OPEN DAY AND NIGHT BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME WITH DECORA- TIVE TRANSFERS—Sold At Juneau Paint Store PRINTING AND STATIONERY Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— Blotters—Office Supplies Geo. M. Simpkins Co. St BB T B g |Vith 214, Detailed resuis follow. HE DOES IT. has gone as far away from ‘acve “Associated Press Ph Noe— as he can this winter and still| g0 dl"l" S 'm Lavenik .. 178 160 214—552 g . . . h stay In these United States. | 0 g2 diminitive rookle from |Boyie HLAS e He is the current world’s champion in the three- ECONOMY CASH STORE On his way to the Facific Coast, ! spirited bid f;rl:'pll:ca ll" the Boston Slmlfi(ms - *150 150 *150—450 h. f. ]d the Boston heavyweieht stopped Red Sox outfield. He hita home run g . off in St. Pail to second Ernie|#nd a triple In a training game. i 5oy e cushion neld. . Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands Schaaf to a cne-minute knockout T G Al » victory. In reporting the latest T RO 1 g:::‘;; 200 313 170683 2 4 4 - Front at Main St. Telephone 91 3 innsset R . ., met 'S . ) from the JMisbesia frent Ja¥|goid opponent, apparently none oo | Sperling .22 206 208—616 THURNBLAD IS WRITING “Tho old Gob Sort of stunned the Ppopular locally, seemed to be a|Sides .......... 164 151 150474 — boys with his reticence. They Dit too eager to please the fans|T. George -....... 156 102 188-536 A l P 1 P lH ll oughi o Snarkey as he was 804 g0 o grand ruming Jaeks T Three IMlustrated Articles ioneer Pool Ha = o 3 ing | €ars Te e e ey Somng Just a bit bewildered. | But it|* Average—did not bowl. 1 Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS buzz compared to what is used to hearing battleground in ary to talking with him. Jack did| Was & mere 3 cpen up and say that he would the big fcll.ov.' like to fight Carnera in New York|in his favorite STANDING OF TEAMS Won Lost Pct. ix 2 y W Gotham. His relief was perceptible, Robins ... 16 2 .889 & ;;;nsifiigmmikif dw;‘fi::, l::r ,fol:,lf;zhcugn. when he was assured that | Sparrows 18 6 - 000. |cne of the combatants, and not|Crows 8 ; :gg “Introduced as the uncmwmd!mmse:f was the intended target. g?lfel:rds : p _500‘ heavyweight champion, Sharkey re-; owl S Ay H “ ‘400 fereed the semi-windup on the pro- | Ed Dickerson, the sage of Granfllwv",:d i Tl gram featuring Schaaf and Dick ! Rapids, thinks Jim Jeffries, in msjpmof:c bt Daniels of Minneapolis. He did prime, would have been the best a swell job but ran into a mess possible cpponent for the Wander-, | late in the fight which flustered ing Alp, Primo Carnera. | Billy Madden, Ruhlin‘s manager, him a bit and doubtless reminded ' “Carnera resembles Jeffries in|threw in the sponge to save Ruh- him of the hazing he geis paid ' many Respects,” said Ed in an|lin's life, Jeffries was in my opin- for taking in New York. ! unguarded moment. “Jeffries was | ion the greatest heavyweight fight- “The underdog in the bout who,|very fast and agile for a man ofler the heavyweight division has cf courss, had the fans with him his weight. The night he beat|ever known. Next to Jeffries, the sot smacked out of the ring. He Gus Ruhlin so badly in mechanic’s 'big man from Italy is the fastest barely got back in time and was pavilion in San Francisco that big man I ever saw.” PHONES 83 OR 85 For the Empire The first appears next Monday “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 P ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKIN Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh T: PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30,