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» .. ney’s ace to victory in the Ken- " a gleam of lonesomeness THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JUNE 4 1931, BRINGING UP FATHER | WOLLD BUGGEST, ety A GOOD SUGGESTION WOULD BE TO EAT \N AMOTHER RESTAURANT THERES THE FELLOW THAT EATS GLASS AND SWALLOWS SWORDS IN THE CIRCULS By GhORGE \lc\l \\b S WA\TER' BRING ME SOUP, A BIG STEAK POTATOES, ONIONS TEA AND PiE (] THE FI VERY GOOD TO DAY, SIR e NG Fion i AFRAID OF THE SH 15 QPEZ" ’ — BROOKLYANS STAR ~(ou~e,cATcufe. You NAUGHTY BASE RONNERS ~~— 4y ALAN GOULD ~ This race horse, Twenty Grand, was named for the dam’s side of the family—Bonus and All Gold. The big bay colt can run all day faster than any other three- year-old in America ,if you care to have the opinion of chunky little Charley Kurtsinger, the Louisville boy who rode Mrs. Payne Whit- tucky Derby. “I don’t think there’s a horse that can beat Twenty Grand at upwards ¢f a mile,” said Charley, after he had recovered from his incoherence of the hour or two immediately fol- lowing the Derby. “The colt is a little hard to get going, but travels like an express train once he is in real motion. 3 “Twenty Granc’s nervcus and high-strung at times, but not hard to handle. T used my whip only lwice. In making thatnew record for the Derby you must remember that I took the horse out and around the field over on the back- stretch, also that I was positively last going around the first turn, in spite of everything I could do. “But it was all over as soon as Twenty Grand felt like running. What a horse!” Turfmen are apt to be a trifle enthusiastic after any great per- formance, but there is a widespread conviction among the eastern crowd that this Twenty Grand is the fast- est hoss since the renowned Mah ©' War, although so far the Green- tree colt has not been as consist- ent as Gallant Fox. SANDE LONESOME Speaking of the Tox, we caught in the eyes of Earle Sande the day of the Derby. Earle was sitting in the sun on the roof of the grandstand at Churchill Downs, waiting for his turn to broadcast, where the year before he had been up on the win- ner of the big race. “rd sure like to have been out there on that track again,” Earle admitted, “but it's getting increas- ingly tough for me to keep any- rhere near riding weight. T've yesn sick this spring and My weight is up to 130. It's just plain torture to keep down to a jockey’s size. Tt always was tough for me in that respect. Every time I ate anything substantial I didn’t enjoy CAN'T AFFORD To TAKE" " LIBERTIES WTH HIS ARM ! @ SSOCIATED PRE. ASPORTS EDI‘I’OR..Ss it because I knew I'd have to run the extra pounds off. I starved half the time when I was riding regu- larly.” | FOX DIDN'T CARE “It's a funny thing about horsss,” Sande went on. “Take the Fox. He almost went/to sleep at the post in the Derby last year. Didn't seem | interested. Kept leaning up against |the sides of the starting gate and | 1 was afraid he would lie down. “The Fox never seemed to cars much whether he was first, last or in the middle. I had to shake him up to get him going. Just the op- posite of Man o’ War. T rode the Big Red just once, when I was a kid, in 1918. He was never satis- fied until out in front. “Zev was a bully and sometimes hard to handle. The easiest and probably the smartest horse I ever rode was Osmand. Almost seemed to sense what it was all about and do the right thing without urging. I rode him in the Derby in 1926 | and finished second to Pony Mc- Atee on Whiskery.” —By Pap HE WS Tue FIND' OF LAST . YeARS ROOKIES d ALL THE BROOKLYN FANS HAVE TO BoAST Aol | r— - - © BT A B AN b JOE CALDER WINS MATCH ‘Referee Awards Decision in Third Round; Carter Outs His Man, Too SEATTLE, June 4.—Joe Calder, sensational Seattle Filipino feath- erweight, scored a technical knock- out over Johnny O’Connell, of San Francisco, in the third round of a | scheduled six-round main event here last night. Calder took the first and second swarmed all over the Californian in count knockdowns before’ the ref- eree gave him the fight. Leslie Wildcat Carter, Seattle ju- nior welterweight, knocked out Tommy Comiskey in the third round of a scheduled six-round semi-final. e A fleet of motor trucks with fa’k- ing picture apparatus is planned |in South Africa to bring entertain- ment to rural audiences. HOW ONE WOMAN LOST 102 LBS. OF FAT Almost Unbelievable— Nevertheless True | Deat Friends: You advertise Kruschen Salts for | reducing, so I finally tried them | and when I started I weighed 219 pounds and when I took them for a year and 3 weeks, I lost exactly 102 pounds. I am 23 years old and I look at least 5 years younger now than I did when I was fat. I have a pic-| ture of myself before and after so if you want to’ see them let me know. y I am always telling my friends about the wonderful s 'ts. I am ‘al-| ways advertising them. I took 2 bottles evary mon'h for| a year and 3 weeas. I madualed to $25 for reducing 102 pounds but it was worth it. If I can be of any help to you let me know. Yours. truly, Miss . Simpson, 1903 Wayne Street, Swissvale, Pa., Oct. 31, 1930. | The Modern Safe Way— Right Way to Lose Fat Just take a half teaspoonful of | Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water every morning before break- fast. You can hasten the reducing ac- tion of Kruschen by going lighter | on potatoes, pastry and fatty meats. Unlike other | doesn't reduce by rushing food thru | your system. Rather it's an ideal blend of 6 separate mineral salts which help every gland, nerve and body organ to function properly. Women everywhere are overjoyed | with this marvelous reducing treat- of surplus fat leaves and soon you possess that trim, slender rlgure you've always craved. An 85c bottle of Kruschen (mu 4 weeks) is sold by leading drug- gists the world over—so start this SAFE method to lose ugly fat TO- DAY Juneau Drug: 09 BY KNOCKOUT rounds by a. good margin and| | the third round to score two 9-| Salts, Kruschen | ment. Frequently pound by pounu, ELKS WIN FROM MOOSE TWO 0 Mannng and Erskine Tan- gle in Duel in Season’s Best Game | | | | Before .the biggest week-day crowd of the seascn, the Eks won from the Moose last night by a score cf two to one in the pret- tiest staged this year. Tt was another battle between star pitch- ers with Manning and Erskine al- most evenly matched. Manning held the Pap sluggers to one hit, a two-bagger by Jimmy | Ramsay which was wasted. He fan- | ned eight, walked one and hit an- | other batter. Erskine was'ni | for but two singles. He fanned! | nine Bills and neither walked nor | hit a batter. | ‘ One In First i { The Moose tally, which was | chalked up in the first inning, w | the product of a hit batter, a poo choice by an infielder, one e ! all of which took| ‘ named. It' \happflned in this f on. ! Bill Schmitz lead-off man fm‘ ithe Paps, rolled gently to Manning | who looped him out at first. Jim- | my hit Fritz Schmitz with a shoot, | | puttir m on first. Jimmy Ram- | may g d first. Tt was| 4 Andrews, who | fic 'ld"i it perfectly, ‘ d u‘ Ramsay. And both runners em‘ / || safe when Fritz beat the throw. u)mlkmc P cond. | The two on bases Increased tn lhree when Junge, with a duuble } murder setup, did a Houdini ! Little Mac's grounder. , With h( bases as full of runners as a mul- | berry tree is of squirrels, Jimmy | worked too hard on Big Mac and passed him to first, forc\ng Fritz | across the plate with a, gift run. It was the first and last for the! Moose. Manning pulled himself to- gether to fan Pete Schmitz and Henning to end the inning. | Elks Chalk Up Two i It wasn't until the fourth inning; that the Elks got a man to fir {The first nine men ‘o face Er Hvue never moved beyond the plate. | Roller, head man of the Eiks'| betting order, smacked a slzzlmvj line drive at Erskine who manag- | {ed to partially check ifs-speed bu. didn’t stop it. F. Schmitz grab. {bed the ball back of second a {threw to first. Roller crossed the |bag ahead of the pill which sailed | over into the bleachers and the Eks' shortstop. raced. to.second. | Coughlin, catching his first game of the season, shot a grounder it short and J. Schmitz let it trickle through his hands, Roller going to third. He scored from there on (Manning’s sacrifice fly to center, while Bobby held to second. Junze popped out to Erskine for the sec- ond out. With the count two and two on him Boyd smashed a grounder between suort and second for a single and Bobby scored. Pete Schmitz let the ball get through his legs and Boyd went' to second where he passed away when An- | drews whiffed. That was the nd | } building sured of construct [ THE S 1, WEDNESDAY - are just a few of the pi SOOTHING Tl T, 7uaki fize: Aabers baikde al | pleasant evening’s entertainment | REFRESHING for cash customers. | Revenge Is Sweet i BEAUTIFYING The game: | ELKS ABR HPO A E Roller, 3 by T A gt Spring is the season of the | Coug ,C 3 107 1 0| Year when every woman should Manning, p 2 0 0 1 4 o | arrange for a series of beauty Juhge, 20 .. 3000 2 1| treatments. Enliven the skin | Boy 301 0 0 o and the hair. Glow with health || Ariirews. 1b 3009 1 0| and thril with the joy of liv- McGrath, 1f 3002 0 0| ing Our personal service rates Bonner, 3b 2.0:00 0 1 are most reasonable—and our Niemi, cf ... 2 000 0 0| work is first-class in every _______ detail. Phone for appoinment. Totals 24 2 221 9 2 Permanent Wave—$10.00 MOOSE ABR HPO A E |B. schmitz, 1t 300200 ERONE e ¥. Bchmitz, 2b ......2 1 0 1 0 1 ) ATEA Ramsay, rf .......83 0100 0 M. M'Spdn, 1b 300500 H. M’'Spdn, ¢ e AMERICAI\I P, Sehmitz ot .3 0 01 0 2| BEAUTY PARLORS Henning, 3b R R J. Schmitz, ss g 001 AT MRS. JACK WILSON SAELSE e, Totals 25 1 %21 4 41- Summary: Earned runs, Elks 1; rwo-basm hits, Ramsay 1; first on When you come to our yard or phone us for prices which eliminates all tieup of work and Name it . . Juneau Lumber Mills, PHONES 83 OR 85 . sale at The| of ball Old Empire. the score geitir for game, Fielding Plays Sparkle Despite the miscues cha the fieldi ab time | ner's lm papers ed up,| ng of both teams sparkled Henning's catch of Bon- like ilmer in the fifth grand larceny. 1In the ning, Roller went back into eld and robbzd Jimmy Ramsay of at looked like a bin- gle. Cn Jimmy's next previous ap: pearance at the plate he had clou ed the sphere through a fence and against the side of the “little green” | house on Ninth Street. | In the sixth Fred Schmitz dug a scorching line drive from Cough-| lin’s bat out of the dirt near sec- ond. In the seventh Andrews raced over between the pitcher’s second base to grab a groun of |Jack Schmitz’s and chucked him out to Manning at fi 3 | balls, off Manning 1; hit by pitch- ed "ball, F. Schmitz by Manning; missed grounders, J. Schmitz, P. Schmitz, Junge and Bonner onc each; missed fly ball, P. Schmtz; !left on bases, Elks 2, Moose 5; stolen bases, Coughlin 1; sacrifice fly, Manning 1; passed ball, Cough- “Heart Action - - - OKAY—" Says DOC lin 1. OnUl‘:I;;lé‘;zs—DaVls £, Bsiel, BoSgo ’ \]Nhen the battery lnlyour car ails . . . you go no place . . . gkt 1"‘2“?5’5 6 7—T1 (| ¥ many have no doubt learn- ks 0002000— 2|]2d Good battery service elimi- | Moose 100000 0— 1]|]nates many disappointments and A LB Al sften irksome and expensive de- lays. Promp% and regular bat- s ATTENTION tery service is the policy which 2as made our shop headquar- ters for motorists. If you have a good battery in your car give it the attention which it de- serves. Tell us to check on it segularly. We rebuild batter- es when parts justify such ac- tion. Let us add your name to our list of customers who en- trust the care of their batteries 2xclusively to us. ALL BUILDERS We haul building materials to all parts of the city, or on the road. For, speclal hauling rates telephone 3 NORTH TRANSFER, or &u’ pm call 81 —adv. PHONE 487 MARK()E STUDIO I’hotnmphs of Quality {Portraiture, Photo Finish- ipg, Cameras, Alaska Views, Ete. " Pirst National Bank Bldg. ¢ . JUNEAU, ALASKA Connors Motor Co. Chevrolet Agency materials and supplies, you are as- first quality grades at lowest market ion. " Building material of all kinds. . we have it. Inc. TELEPHONE 358 “The Store That Pleases” O T 'lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllll!lllIIIllllllllllllllllllllll NANAIMO WELLINGTON SCREENED A mighty good resolution is to call your full dealer for a ton of this surprisingly BETTER coal—NA- NAIMO-WELLINGTON—it is especially satisfactory for the heater and range ;Uhnllp‘h it is largely used for the furnace as well. This coal well deserves its reputation for being one of the most desirable coals on the market for the furnace, heater or range. Price, per ton, $18.00 (RN T T TR Nanaimo Wellington Mine Run Quality as in the above but loaded from the pile of coal and contains just enough fines to make it more desirable for the furnace. Price, per ton, $17.50 Pacific Coast Coal Co. PHONE 412 3 2 - z T L e e e T Cosmetic Forecast By Helena Rubenstein These days, Fashion colors the skin in the glowing tones of the out-of-doors girl. The lovely shades of the Valaze cosmetics are a colorful com- plement to the new costumes. Valaze Powders, delightfully perfumed and exquisitely fine and clinging, in ten flat- tering shades. 1.00, 1.50, 3.00. Brilliant rouge is required to complete the effect of the new dark powder make-ups. Helena Rubinstein’s Red Geranium is a youthful lovely bloom. Try it. . Valaze Rouge en Creme Valaze Rouge Compact Lipsticks must harmonize and be the final accent of ity in your Personality Make-Up. Valaze and Cubist Lipsticks . Water Lily Lipstick ndividual~ -1.00 Tel. 25 We Deliver e - UNITED FOOD COMPANY CASH IS KING —— YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY Tel. 15 ‘We call for and deliver INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska PiceLy, WiceLy THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Ovur Services to You Begin and End at the H Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat e et e e et LADY BARBER 174 Front Strect Near Goldstein’s Store Specializing In LADIES’ and CHILDREN’S HAIR CUTTING ) ANITARY GROCERY Old Papers for sale at Empire Oflicé