Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1931, BRINGING UP FATHEKR WHAT 1D THAT Y WHY-DADDY-THATS WILLIE Bv GOLLY! SO THATS By GEORGE McMANUS SAY- CASEY! TAKE SITTIN' , Int'l Feature Service, Inc., Grv at Britain rights reserved. - DAILY SPOR ~ BROOKLYNS NEW MANAGER > / BN S c All Riglts Reserved oy 7 TS CARTOON ' _HONESTY (S NOT Alwavs Tie VAND 1928 _ N THE 3 MAX WAS ONE oF THE GAMES BRIGHTEST ) STARS BETWEEAN 1910 AND THE BEFST B8ASE sSTeaLE= \ THE NATIONAL LEAGUE \\ HAS CHJrLo QED 4 UNCLE RopBIE (S OUT' AFTER. EIGHTEEN NEARS OF SERVICE 1/ your &port Slanis column you stated that Syracuse a candidate for All-Ameri- ca honors. I would like to point cut that Joe Moran, a backfielder on that team, seems to be headed rather strongly in that dn‘ecaion,”‘ wr on the M. J. Quinlan, sports writer Niagara Gazette. “Although the Syracuse elevep has yet to prove any claims to greatness, but its coming games with Michigan State, Columbia and Colgate, yet Moran has been nding in all the Orange's victories thus far and is, I believe, about fourth in the national scor- ing list with a total of 68 points. Should Syracuse win all its re- maining games or all but one and, at the same time, should Moran centinue his scoring spiurge, it would appear he could be consid- ered for a second or third team berth at least, if not the All- e ward his own goal while his inter- ASSOCIATED i IATED PRESS | yards, often more than an entire backfield gains in a single game.” | Brawn Plu Brains | Add the name of William Barry ‘Wood, jr., to the candidates for the |James E. Sullivan Memorial Medal . for 1931—the A. A. U’s award to ‘l!he American amateur athlete who 1"by his performance as a competi-, itor and by his example and intiu-| |ence as an amateur, did most to (advance the cause of sportsman- |ship during the year.” | The all-around brilliance on the gridiron this year of Harvard's ) captain and quarterback may jcrown a remarkable collegiate ce-| reer with All-America honors. | Wood is a fine student, a Phi +Beta Kappa man, with astonishing {poise and balance. He has excelled at every sport he has tried, playing on the varsity hockey and baseball ference forms. “Sugar” “master mind.” FESRRE ) e C BATTERIES Another shzpment U. S. L. bat- teries on hand. 13-plate junior type, $750; 13-plate, heavy-duty type, $9.50. We have 12-volt batteries in stock for old-style Dodge; also 12-volt service batteries for your conven- ience. We can order for you any special U. S. L. radio battery you may need and furnish you with a serv- ice battery till your special battery arrives. Alcohol and glycerine for your radiator. adv. ECONOMY GARAGE Quartz and placer location no- tices at The Empire. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL SURVNE-HES BEEN AT COLLEGE FORTHE LAST FOUR YEARS-DONT HOL REMEMBER HiM ? has been renamed the WU2 BEFORE WILLIE SURVIVERWHAT A FINE-LOOKIN' LAD HE MY A.‘D\I\CE AN’ DONT SEND YOUR HE LEFT- BoY TO COLLEGE- DOUGLAS NEWS MAYOR KILBURN SPEAKS ON “ARMISTICE DAY” A patriotic Armistice Day pro- gram was held yesterday in the Douglas schools. Mayor L. W, Kil- burn was the main speaker for the occasion. The rest of the pro- gram included music and recita- tlons. The Douglas schools were closed today. eyt e BABY BORN IN DOUGLAS Mr. and Mrs. D. Martin are the proud parents of a baby girl, born at their home here yesterday. The couple are newcomers to Douglas,’ and reside in the Goss house. Dr. Kirby reports mother and baby getting along fine. - CLUB MEETING POSTPONED The regular meeting of the Douglas Island Womens' club, to have been held this week, has been postponed until Friday, November 20, on account of the League Ba- zaar. — e SNYDER BAGS BIG DEER What is said tc be the largest deer ever killed on Douglas Island was bagged last Saturday by W. . Snyder, local veteran hunter. The animal, a four-year-old buck, waighed 175 pounds, dressed, when it was brought in after four hours, hard packing by Nick Moratoff| and John Marin, who were with Snyder. The deer was killed at a' point about two miles beyond Mt. | Juneau on the opposite side from Douglas. Several other deer were! reported seen by the hunters but the one was enough for them. | Al S | CATHOLIC LADIES MEET The Catholic ladies will meet to-| night at the home of Mrs. August Olson. | H . | FIRST ROUND IN | BASKETBALL SERIES | The Round Robin Tournamen' opened last night with the girls’, basketball teams playing to a score o f30 to 26. The H. Pusich team won from the R. Africh bunch. i ‘The boys' teams also played, the A Gair outfit defeating the H. Lundell hoopsters by a score of 15/ to 14. | - e — | “BODY AND SOUL” IS AT COLISEUM TONIGHT | Headlining the bill at the Doug- las Coliseum tonight is ““Body and Soul,” a new story of love, of going away to war, and the results of that going away. Several good ,short subjects add to the enter- | tainment. | —_— . i NOTICE ) | ; ‘When down town placing your |grocery order with George Broth- \ers please remind them of the Jlime account due me, and they | his feet and pulled off his hat with that.” | something? Would you mind tell-| BY FREEMAN LINCOLN (% uuld ¥4 SYNOPSIS: Sam Sherrill “Would breaks her engagement to Peak mind explaining?” Abbott, when she learns that | “Well, it was this way. Contrary he provided the money that |[to expectations, I happened to go! made her step-father suddenly | back to your native city. While I| rich. She belleves it is an | was there, I heard something. 1 Bway to a house by the sea, heard—" away to ahouce by the sea, “I can guess,” said Sam quietly. where che is followed by Fred- “You heard that my engagement | «dy Munson, whom she formerly to Peak Abbott was broken off.” Icved. “Yes.” Chapter 37 | “And so you came way down A DIPLOMAT COMES CALLING here to see me. Why? It can't do “Hello, Sam.” Freddy got to any good, Freddy. You must know | | Sam was firm. you | | a grin. “It's a small world, 't| “Can’t it? I'm not so sure.” He it? Who'd have ever taought that looked up at her with a grin. “In you and I would run into cach the first place, Sam, don’t get any other like this?” 5wrong ideas into your head. Don't Sam stared at him. Then she think that I came down here laugked. la-wooing. I didn’t. I'm off wcoing “What's this?” Freddy demanded permanently. It doesn't agree with aggrievedly. “Is this a nice way to me.” greet your friends? Am I, indeed,! “Ch.” She frowned. a comic figure?” really mean that?” “I'm sorry.” She laughed again.| “I promise.” “It must be your hat I imagine.' “But I don’t understand,” Sam It's so—urban!” Isaid. “Why did you come at all Freddy regarded the hat and re-|if not for that?” placed it on his head. “Perhaps “Ah,” said Freddy ruefully,“there you're right; 'he admitted. “It's a you have it! With uncanny pre- good hat but incongruous in this'cision you have thrust straight into peaceful sitting. You'll grant me, the vitals of the problem. Why did Sam, that the setting is peaceful.” I come. I wonder.” He got to his “It's grand. I've slept here as I've feet and shook his head sadly. “Do never slept before.” |you know, Sam, I'm beginning to “Really?” He gianced about him think that perhaps the old brain and then said in a low, confidential is slowly softening. Perhaps I have “Do you “What's all the shooting about?” Freddy demanded. “Why the heroles?! Why the big fiight scene?” tone: ‘“Wouid you mind telling me |begun to slip the long slip.” She sighed. “Would you mind ing me what you do for noise?” |talking sense?” “Noise?” “I'm talking the most imperial “Exactly.” I've been sitting her: kind of sense! I'm telling you that for an hour and ten minutes, and |something cataclysmic has hap- not once during that time has a{pened. I'm telling you that I, vibration tickled these famous ear- Freddy Munson, have traveled a drums, Not a tickle. Not even the |matter df four hundred miles for BIG TURKEY DINNER AT THE Catholic Bazaar NOVEMBER 14—FROM 5:30 to 8 P. M. PRICE ONE DOLLAR Make Your Preparations Now! Bazaar Nov. 12,13 and 14 Thanks to the ladies of the parish, the hall and booths have been artistically decorated and stock- ed with useful and tempting articles. Free ticket on half-ton of coal to all guests EVERYBODY WELCOME!! You will surely enjoy yourself BRING YOUR FRIENDS P -as today =80 tomorrow IF YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU MUST UTILIZE -THE “SURPLUS OF TODAY” IN THE CREATING OF AN “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING AND BUILDING A SUBSTANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK First National Bank FURNITURE OVERSTUFFED SETS DINING ROOM SETS BED ROOM SETS KITCHEN SETS CONGOLEUM RUGS and LINOLEUM SIMMONS BEDS, SPRINGS and MATTRESSES Thomas Hardware Co. at BAILEY’S teams as well as three years of “M s £ Ni Fall tvarsity football. He is a sensa- 1 1“1‘“ lls amcl:rmerfl ‘“f‘“”‘ :‘ ;!l nal tennis player, capable of here since Frank Mount Pleasam‘mnoem“‘ed o) Wis L ape |weary soughing of the immeasur-|an entirely altruistic purpose. I able sea.” have no axe to grind and no ap- She smiled. “It's quite all right.” |ples to sell. I'm rushing about do- old s for sale at The Em- Qulet?” He shivered expressi-|ing good. I've become self-sacri- e o [vely. “Tvs awful.” | ficing, saintlike, noble! It's won- America. ! And You'll Jnmp QOut of Bed in | will gladly give you a receipt. y . . D. B. FEMMER, 114 the Morning Rarin’ to Go v B Ehone It you feel sour and sunk and the world looks’ don’t swallow a lot of salts, ‘water, oil, laxative eandy or chewing of Tuscarora Reservation here played with the Carlisle Indians. “Moran still holds the state in- terscholastic pole vault record and is also probably the best 160 pound boxer in intercollegiate circles, win- ning 14 out of his 15 bouts. Inthe annual Syracuse-Colgate game last year, Moran gained a total of 274 i TORRIDAIRE HOT PAD Gets Hot—Stays Hot $1.25 each - .| Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. 1 (B3 cPTsneis S ssreise e o sy ~ 'sports achievement for 1931! Barry radiates “class” on or off ithe gridiron. He has shown that !good scholarship and athletic skill! ‘can be combined to an extraordin-| ary degree. His sportsmanship has! !won widespread admiration. | Boy, bring back my ballot and | post the name of Barry Wood with that of Francis Ouimet and Ells- ,worth Vines as the “top three” in| “Master Minds” for Coach New York University, one of thel best football teams in the east, hasi one play which, reversing prison procedure, has a name but noi number. It is called the “Hugret Special.” { A couple of days before the game with Rutgers, “Sugar” Hu-’ gret, 200-pound end of the Violets,| came into the dressing room after a hard practice with the anncunce- | ment he had thought out a now| forward pass play. Chick Mechan, N. Y. U. coach, was skeptical, but afler Hugrat had diagrammed it for him he thought it might work and had it tried in practice. Tt diin't. “Sugar” was in that the play was a ma. ce s0 hefore the Rutgers ganc M2ehan .old Jee La Mark, Violet quarterback, that he could use it if the opportunity arose. The opportunity came. Hu- gret took the pass and mads a touchdown. | ‘The play is the usual forward' pass except that the receiver, on! getting the ball, circles back to- gum and expect to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn't get st the cause. The reasan for youe down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out t pounds ol’l'l‘quid bile into your goweh daily. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stumach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath iz foul, Skin aften breaks out in blemishea, Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned. 3 It takes those frfld. old CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PII LS to get these two ds of bile flowing freely and make you fei™dp and p.” They, contain wondertul, harmless, table extracts, amazing When 1t éomes to making the bile flow freely. But don't ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills. Look: for the name Carter Little Liver Pilia on 15e red label. Resen! substitute. ©1931C. M. DOUGLAS | S35 i, COLISEUM 8Bhe opened the front door into a TONIGHT tiny hall. Directly in front, a flight of stairs ran upward at such a CHARLES FARRELL and ELISSA LANDI in precipitous angle that Freddy gasped. “Now, those,” he said ad- miringly, “are what I call some- thing! A playground for the moun- tain goat.” “Steep, aren’t they? All these old houses have them.” She led % L) the way to a square room on the BODY AND SOUL right which served as the second COMEDY ACTS of the two living rooms in the NEWS house. Freddy removed his hat and coat, lit a cigarette, and sank into a chair with a sigh “Well,” he observed with an air of wonder, “here I am, and who| Mrs. Munson's . | would believe it? hoy goes exploring.” ". “Yes.” Sam was watching him curiously. “Have you ever before been so far from a subway” “Never,” said Freddy emphatical- LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. P o ly. “It is a new and terrifying experience.” | “I'm honored,” Sam remarked. “Would you mind telling me what brought you?” He sighed. “I had a feeling that sooner or later we'd come to that” he said. “You can hardly blame me, can you?” Bhe shrugged. “ rather surprising, you know. I thought you were in New York or some- where gathering news.” | “I know. The old world whirls at a dizzy rate. The unexpected is always happening.” | derful!” “It’s wonderful, all right,” said Sam, grimly. “You talk and talk ‘and yet nothing is said. In four words, why did you come?” “Have it your own way. Be prosaic. “I came, since you must know, in order to tell you that your mental processes resemble those of a child of six.” “Really?” Sam laughed with real amusement. “How interesting!” she commented. “It isn't interesting at all,” he contradicted severelly, “It's dis- tinetly annoying. Your mental processes have put me to no end of bother.” She laughed again. Freddy.” “I doubt if you're sorry at all.” He frowned. Then he said abrupt- ly: “What's all the shooting about, |anyhow? Why the heroics? Why | the big fight scene It's all foolish- ness. You love this bird Abbott jand he loves you. That being the (case, why not marry him? Why not act like an adult?” Sam answered him in a low, even tone, but her face was flushed yl,oo& here, Freddy, I hate to be rude, but does it occur to you that ! perhaps you might be butting in? Don't you think that it might bel | possible T don’t want to discuss my | personal affairs with you—or with | anybody?” “I'm sorry, “I came here,” Freddy tells Sam temorrow “because I know something that you don't. ‘ YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY CLEANING PRESSING Telephone 15 TO ALL CONSUMERS OF WATER: Notice is hereby given that all water pipes must be pro- tected agalnst freezing. Under the ordinances of the City of Juneau waste of water is prohibited. Patrons ignoring this law next winter and allowing water to waste through open faucets will have their service discontinued until such time as all danger of freezing weather has passed. This regulation will be strictly enforced after November 1, 1931. All customers are hereby notified to the end that they may take the necessary precautions against frozen water pipes. Old Papers for sale