The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 26, 1932, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JAN. 26, 1932. ~ By GEORGE McMANUS MAKIN' BRINGING UP FATHER DADDY! YOU CAN'T BE DO YOUL CALL HIM DUMB? HE MAKES MORE NOISE THAN 'Ll GO AN'CALL ON OH,YES' I'M DOIN'A DUGAN AN'GIT ME | GRAND BUSINESS. I'VE pow’ HUMAN IF You DONT LIKE DLMB ANIMALS. YOUL ANI' YOUR MOTHER CALL MAGGIE DOES. I'M SICK OF LOOKIN' AT THEM INSECTS MIND OFF OF Mg FAMILYS PETS, DAILY STROKE ON THE s SPORTS CARTOON Tom ;l;; Pap (OMBARDY - GIANT TACKLE WHO HAS BEEN CHOSEN TO LEAD THE SYRACUSE TS AMYSTERY How HE OPENED LP A CARPENTER SHOP \ GIT A LOT OF WORK FROM THE SOCIETY PEOPLE IN TOWN - A~ /J 7z © 1931, Int') Feature Service. *ac., Great Britaln rights reserved. GORILLA JONES 1S NEW CHAMP [ i Sco | | | res Technical Knock- out Last Night Over Oddone Piazza MILWAUKEE, Wis, Jan. 26—/ Gorilla Jones, Memphis negro, won the world’s middleweight cham- pionship by scoring a technical knockout over Oddone Piazza last night in the sixth cround of a scheduled ten round match. SHRIMPS CLEAN UP; CRABS WIN 2 GAMES Th2 Chums put up a good fight against the Shrimps on the Elks’ alleys last night but the latter won jall three games. In the second game only eight pins separated them, and in the next game the | Shrimps’s margin was cut in two. In the s2cond match of the even- {‘ng the Crabs took two out of |three frcm the Clams. Some good scores were turned in. Nick Bavard, Clam, led the crowd | {with high score for single game, 1222, and high average, 195. Other | good averages were: Lavenik, 103; | ;Me[calf. 191; Pullen, 187. Bill Pul-| len’s six-weeks' sojourn on the golf | {links of Seattle does not seem to| have affected his bowling eye. Tonight's schedule brings to-| g-ther the Sockeyes end Chums at | {7:15, and the Shrimps and Cohoes lat 9. | DOG HOULSES — PIRATES' OLD. FOES HELPING T0 COACH NOW Ous Crandall and Grover Hartley Aiding to Pilot Dreyfuss Ship PITTSBURGH, Penn., Jan. 26.— Two old baseball warriors who have done a lot in their time to defeat the Pittsburgh Pirates’ aspirations will do all they can this coming season to win the flag for Forbes Field. Otis. Crandall, one-time star pit- cher, and Grover Hartley, veteran catcher, were among the Pirates’ greatest foes not so many years ago. Both wore New York Giants uni- forms in the days when the ap- pearance of the McGrawmen in Pittsburgh was the signal for bat- tling both on and off the ball field. Te Coach Hurlers Now these two, graying about the temples, but rich in the knowledge of the me, are prominent figures in the sifategy aboard the Pirate brig. George Gibson, another old-timer who has come bkack to Pittsburgh to pilot the Dreyfuss ship, looks to his pitching staff, above all else to pull the Bucs up higher in the National league standing. Himself recognized as one of the smartest catchers of all time, Gibby pins his faith in the old New York battery to teach the youngsters and to keep his staff in line, Youngsters Look Good With Brame, Meine, French, Spencer, Kremer and a flock of promising young hurlers on his roster, Gibson believes that Cran- dall and Hartley will be able to build his staff into one of the finest in the league. “I look for all around improve- pennant| o 123 CARNERA VICTOR OVERFRENGHMAN Knocks Bouquillon Down Four Times in Second Round to Win PARIS, Jan. 26—Primo Carnera floored Mose Bouquillon, French heavyweight, four times last nigh® in the second round of a scheduled ten round bout, to win on a tach- nical knockout. -~ PACORADIEIIAIIG & £500 SPORT BRIEFS Abilene high schoo: placed four men on the all-Texas 1931 football eleven. A sports equipment store in Jop- lin, Mo., recently sold seven dozen baseballs to a South Dakcta semi- pro team. Arthtur Ravensdale, sophomore ‘Marquette university trackster, is Joint holder of the world's record for the 120-yards low hurdles at 13.2 seconds. Laurie Scott, center-ice star of the Duluth Hornets American lcague hockey team, leading scorer for two seasons, failed to get a goal or an assist in the first 11 games this season. a 15,000 DEMAND SARGON DAILY Vast Growing Army of Sargon Users, Marching Single File, Would Encircle Globe in Only Few Years Time. More like a tale from the Arab- ian Nights of old than a record of modern business achievement reads the story of the marvelous growth and development of Sargon, the New Scientific Compound which has become the sensation of the drug CANCELLED CHECKS Tell the Story A checking account in the First National affords a customer an efficient service which cannot be equalled in fundamental business procedure Pay your bills by check and you always have a receipt in your cancelled checks. Joint checking accounts for husband and wife is but one of the popular service to be had, services which can be enjoyed by merely maintaining a nominal balance in your account. First National Bank el YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY CLEANING PRESSING Telephone 15 Dri-Brite Wax NO RUBBING—NO POLISHING Juneau Paint Store ‘W’HEN you remodel your house, be sure you use Sheetrock. It gives you the safety, privacy and comfort that good walls must provide . .. solid, durable wallsthat takeany decoration and preserve it. We'll supply you and instruct you fully. SHEETROCK ‘THE FIREPROOF WALLBOARD JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS Phone 358 EVER GETS MIS 20 UNDS INTO A s«?epu_?z_ 5 8% Rights Reserved by The Associated Press | Last night's scores: Chums 192 ORANGE CREW LAZT YeAR ment,” said Gibson o friends here : {recently. “Both the infield andthe 204570 |outfield should be stronger. But trade throughout the United States, | Lavenik Canada and other countries. At least one of the prospective Olympic come-backs, of which the | wcods are crowded these days, can be checked off the list. Douglas G. A. Lowe, two-time | British winner of the Olympic 800- | meter race and as smooth a piece | of running machinery as ever| steppad on the cinders, has no idea | whatever of defending his laurels | at Los Angeles this wear. i Our ‘Loadon sleuths tracked Mr. | Lowe to his legal lair where he | made it clear that he was too busy as a barrister even to consider an| tiempl to return to competition. | subts very much whether be able to come to the| United States, as an Olympic spec- | talor or official. He can .have a} job th ihe British team if he wang it. No greater half-miler or better sportsman ever trod the track than Douglas Lowe. Slim and handsome, he was the picture of gracefulness in action. He had a tremendous stride but also superb form. On the boiling hot day at Stam- ford Bridge four years ago when I saw him run fwo relay races, the lasi one a half-mile anchor ‘“leg” in 1:51, I believe*Lowe was the greatest half-miler of all time. Otto Pelizer, Lloyd Hahn, Sera Martin, Ray Watson, Schuyler Enck and other top-notch half- milers were not in Lowe's class| when he was in his prime in 1928. The British star retired shortly after the Olympics that year and hasn't appeared in competition since. Hcldout Nine Tt will be possible t opick a pretty fair all-star All-American heldout team(if the argument be- twzzn the major league magnates| and their hired hands continues to | gather momentum. i For the outfield already there is. Hack Wilson, Mel Ott and Babe| Herman. Bill Terry will do for| first base, maybe Glenn Wright for | shortstop, and Freddy Lindstrom ma Grant, Dell E. Bheriff, Arthur Farmers State Bank of Sumner, | & | near here, failed to open yesterdly‘ ‘Tests by tha Forest Service have | for either second or third base.| Frank Hogan, another Giant, could | Lyohsns and a few others on the pitching staff. Oldfield Annoyed It irks your old pal, Barney Old- field, to have these Euglishmen coming over every year to cap- ture all the speed honors of th: automobile world. Barney is througi with the speed stuff himself but, at that, he would like to take the wheel for a run along Daytona Beach again, if some enterprising American builder would put out a car equipped to go as fast as the Napier-motored }Brltish thunderbolts. { “Why should we be so far be- hind in speed?’ ‘asked Oldfield. “We have what it takes and we have plenty of good drivers but you can't blame a fellow for being' unwilling to risk his neck in some of these contraptions that have been tried out.” i NANCY ANN IS | VISITING HOME Daughter ot Alaskan Sour-: dough, Now a Hindu Returns to Seattle SEATTLE, ve.. 26—Nancy Ann! Miller, daughter of an Alaskan sourdough, returned home last night | for the first time since she became ' a Hindu and one of the three wives of the multimillionaire prince, ' the former Maharajah of Indore. | She journeyed in an nutomobnel from Vancouver, B. C., and went to bed immediately upon arrival here. ———————— PR bl B3 RN Ny | AT THE HOTELS | . Gastineau R. L. Carlisle, Haines; Lydia' Fohn-Hanson, Fairbanks; Mrs. Al-! Chindahl, Juneau. EDDIE STINSON 18 VICTIM OF PLANE CRASH Dean of America's’ Aviat- ors Dies as Result of His First Injuries CHICAGO, Iil, Jan. 26—Amer- {ica’s Dean cf Aviators, Eddie Stin- !son, who flew 20 of his 38 year: died in a hospital today as the re- sult of injuries received when a huge Stinston Detroiter plane fell to earth at the public golf course in Jackson Park. Three companions were less se- ricusly injured. Motor trouble developed and the plane struck a flag pole while : landing was being attempted. The accident occurred while the plane was on the way to Wayne, Michigan, the plant of the Detroit- Stinson Corporation, First Time Injured It was the tirst time Stinson had been injured in his 20 years of flying. the distinction of being in the air longer than any other man in the history of aviation, more than 14,000 hours and near 1,500,000 miles. He had never used a parachute. Earned Wings at St. Louis Stinson earned his wings at the Kinloch Field, St. Louis. Although he built planes for the | trans-Atlantic flights for Ruth Eld- er, and George Halden and the round-the-world machines for Wil- liam Brock and Edward Schles, he oppos:d trans-Atlantic flights, call- ing them stunts. —— FARMERS BANK FALLS T0 OPEN TACOMA, Wash., Jan. 26.—The morning. The State Banking De- Alaskan be used behind the plate, with| C. A. Broulette, Haines; A. J. partment is in charge. Dazzy Vance, Pat Malone, Charley Root, Fitzsimmons, Ted Goodman, John Lunrden, Funter;! Ed Cox, Juneau, —————— Andrews Luncan Shepard Mulvihill 156 147 159 137 91 Shrimps 208 193 116 . 118 . 140 184—471 | 136—439 148488 | 142407 814-2384 . Totals . Metealf 'R berison Davis Stevens Kirk 186572 181—530 | 140421 | 171—485 140-+420 | watch my pitching this year. If all goes well, I think our staff will round into one of the finest and cne that will be able to take the teem up among the contenders.” -~ B. P. 0. ELKS Regular meeting, Wednesday, Jan- uary 27th. Balloting. Committee reports. Other important business. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. —adv. Totals 823 818-2428 | Clams | 172 186—561 222 192—584 155* 137—480 | 150 150-450 | . 132 120—406 | 785-2481 | Pullen N. Bavard T. George Selby Worth 831 Crabs . 197 . 184 156 180 127 Totals 865 M. Bavard {H. Sabin VanderLeest G. George Petrich 152 178 155 160 122 Totals 844 1767 —Average; did not bowl. WILLIAMS TOUGHEST IN AMERICAN LOOP, GOAL TENDERS VOTE| ST. LOUIS, Mo. Jan. 26.—The hardest shooting player in the Am- erican hockey league—by a vote of | opposing goalies, who ought to know | —is Burr Williams, star defense man of the St. Louis Flyers. Every goal tender but one agreed comer in the St.Louis lineup, puts more power behind the puck than anybody else. i Wiliams, who stands six fee! tall and weighs 185 pounds, is playing his fourth season of pro- fessional hockey. A native of Shawnee, Okla., he is one of the few players in the professional leagues to be born in the United States. He learned the game as a boy in Canada, however. | Last summer, he also followed | the ice game, delivering the com-| modity for a Tulsa, Okla. firm. | St. Louis fans give Williams much of the credit for the spurt| which recently carried the Flyers! 179—528 | 174—536 147487 | 142391 | 821-2432 ARNOLD’S BOOTERY from the bottom of the list well up into the running. | ————— (shown that hickory is the heaviest wood grown in the United States and western red cedar, when green | /DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAX [the lightest. 179—490 | B - Quartz anc places Jocallon no- tices at The Emplre. ei‘e//%//j 2 ///;f/f/)}c;g }%N)u I Every Month in the Year SALES DATES 1932 February 16 March 15 April 19 May 17 June 21 July 19 August 23 September 20 October 18 November 22 December 20 Advances will be made as usual when request- ed. Transferred by ‘Telegraph if Desired Special Sales Held on Request of Shippers SEATTLE FUR EXCHANGE | | The old illustration of the pebble dropped into the pool best describes the phenomenal and unprecedented demand and its fame is rapidly spreading over the entire American Continent like a great tidal wave. Recently compiled figures reveal that apprximately 15,000 men and women are marching into the drug stores dally for Sargon and Sargon Soft Mass Pills, the marvelous new treatment that is restoring health to countless thousands by new and remarkable methods undreamed of only a few years ago. Already more than 5,000,000 suf- fering men and women have put it to the test and have told other millions what it has done for them. Marching in regulation U. 8. Army fashion—single file—this vast army of Sargon users would reach from New York to San Francisco and at the present rate of sale— would, in a few years time, encircle the entire globe. The only explanation of Sargon's triumph in the Medical World is Sargon's true worth. Back of its triumph in the drug stores is its| triumph in the homes and it is the grateful endorsements of its mil- lions of users that has made it the most widely talked of medicine in *he world today. Sargon is extensively advertised, it is true, but no preparation, no matter how extensively advertised, could possibly meet with such phenomenal success unless it pos- sessed absolute merit and extra- ordinary powers as a medicine. ‘There can be but one possible ex- planation for Sargon’s amazing suc- oess: and it can be told in one word, MERIT. For sale by Butler, Mauro Drug Co. —adv. P EXPERT ESTIMATES GIVEN PAINTING, DECORATING, REFINISHING PETERSON AND PADDOCK Shop Phone 354, Residence 402 o | FRONT STREET Near First National Bank FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. CALIFORNIA GROCERY THE RIGHT LAMP IN THE RIGHT PLACE You Cannot Make a Better Investment You Cannot Buy a Better Lamp THAN THE EDISON MAZDA The Sun’s Only Rival Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. PHONE 6 Frye-Bruhn Company PACKERS—FRESH MEATS, FISH AND POULTRY Frye’s Delicious Hams and Bacon Three Deliveries Dally Phone 38 Old Papers for sale at Empire Offic !

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