The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 24, 1932, Page 5

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e —— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR!: WLDNESDAY FEB. '74 1932. YA-AS= | LEFT MY HUSBAND IN EUROPE LAST WEEK= BRINGING UP FATHER THERE WWZN'T RooMm ON THE BOATT Fri BY GOLLY- THAT WOMAN KIN TALK- I'D JUST AS 00N LISTEN TO MAGQIE- YOU MEAN TO TELL ME THAT SHE 1S A SOCIETY LEADER? | SUPPOSE THATS BECAUSE NOBODY KIN QIT BY HER! BOTH OF YYouL-1 SUPPOSE? HER FIGURE- HUM ? SHE LOOKS AS IF SHE WUZ POURED INTOHER CLOTHES ~ N' FERGOT TO J L SAY " \WHEN e American O‘\m. led by Dart- flashy Jack Shea, is the what is quite likely to along the Olympic war year. uth's on s and girls, en- wn back yard of tion, have a big advantage) in conditions alone t, the invading talent Of course > any run-| 5 Al Los £ e Finn brizade, led by Paavo Nurmi, Laur Lehlinen and a few others, will if the others don’t cans, in full force and admn:a to ould moan 2 bigg 1d field titles r«,r the U. S.| 1 in any Ol h is not in boom is no need fo the good ol hape. up. Thrill Man Dempsey Two of ¢he most thrilling sport in 3 I have covered,” wrot of the Phoenix 1 answer to our question- the Willard-Dempsey o and the Dempsey- ht at Shelby. That first Toledo when the bell and saved Willard from a t after Referee Ollie Pe- Increase Your Sales! You do not have to in- crease your sales force, but merely supplement it with good printing for which there is no substitute. Our printers and pressmen are artists at their trade, they know how to put punch in your printed sales Prices are al- in keeping with Empire Printing Company Phone 374 1\ “Hard courts are replacing grass (Ariz.) | 2 DOUGLAS BOYS Wednesday, 12:50 even play Fox, Ha - TITLE TROPHY ames D J T and S 3% {Bring Back Cup, Having Cashen, ard Coach |cord had counted him out was one — - W S arrived {of the most dramatic scenes in L SPORT BRIEF on Chanlplons.]lp pugilistic history. (By ithe way, did &b | £ i |you know that Pecord has r“tlred of SE. Alas“‘a N 43 years of referesing?) DE I IUN Duke Slater has completed 18 S p.m. i Lib he Dempsey-Gibbons fight ga\e years of football competition—four| Th* Dou h School basket- urday evening bea me a thrill, not beeausz of the figl in high school, four at the Univer- | 031l boys returned home thismorn- o 19; at 11 p m t because of tae m,ens«a sity of Towa and 10 in professional 9:30 o'clock from Ketch Gym., of the crowd toward Demp- | ranks. won the Southe: and Kearns. There was elec- Hi School basketd: |tricity in the air and had Dempsey Final tryouts for water polo, § nship. 9 CAE S B |siopped Tommy there might have LOUTSVILLE‘ Ky., Feb. 24.—Jack | marathon, gymnastics and 50,000, o " AR |been trouble.” Dempsey easily outpointdd Frank | meter walking events for the 1932| " i 3 Wine, Butte, Montana, blacksmith, | Olympic games will be held in Los| While the games, play | Shadow On Wimbledon |and won the newspaper decision. |Angeles bl battered Wine at wull goria I:’s little short of heresy in Eng- | pDempsey | Sl {land to talk of subordinating the|for four rounds last night. | : lassic grass courts of Wimbledon e | Although to hard-court play in tennis, but the | | British already are facing the prob- WATCHDOG IS STOLEN, Too tec] ‘:\mc‘ : cf Alabama p! he failed d a ) lem. curts in hundreds of clubs,” Stan-'ing became general in Bob Chap- to make ‘k..cr in baseball at Virginia Poly- Institute, Coach Hank Crisp p ar of pro- | GADSDEN, Ala—Chicken steal- | fessional ball with only one hand. | it a e way but h |the world as snrs\ — R vho play well enough to compete m nternational tournamsnts. One can | ingers of one hand | r o clubs in this country have grass couris good| for tant champion- | The ‘Wimbledon | anges from grass to hard courts | the better it will be for tennisgen- gh Happy Days | ch for a new H‘Ck'lflln\.\ r the ooklyn base ace the Robinsonless “R« ncwspaper fancy has hit upon the | label “Knights.” { Why not make it ‘Knu,ht.s" BOROTRA ON WAY TOU. . PARTS, Feb, 24—Jean Boroira,| one of France’s now scattered| | “Three Musketeers” of the tennis| |courts, has left for the United| States to defend his indoor singles title. Borotra’s appearance in outdoor | competition is unlikely, though French tennis fans hope to per- | suade him to participate in the de- fense of the Davis Cup, where it is | felt he wlil be sorely needed. Rene | | Lacoste has definitely announced |he will not be available, and with | Borotra also out it appears the | chief burden will fall on Henri| ‘Cochet. | - eee— BROTHERS GRID RIVALS | { BERKELEY, Cal, Feb. 24—When | the University of California and | Southern California meet on the |gridiron next season, the Sparling tribe should be well represented. Fred Sparling, member of Cali- fornia’s undefeated freshman team, is almost certain of an end berth on the varsity, while Ray Sparling, 1931 regular, will be back at end for the Trojans. ——————— Fur farming in Canada has now | developed into a $30,000,000 indus- try. Mink, marten, fox, muskrai and skunk are raised on the 5,520 | farms at.a/blishsd in the Dominion “Daze and reasomn $10 STYLE m FREEMAN’S Five and Six $ SHOES at SABIN’S The Store for Men j Just think what this means for Chesterfield | smokers. It means that the larger part of 90 mil- lion dollars is invested in Domesticand Turkish | tobaccos that are being properly aged in Na- ture’s way, and cured so as to make them sweeter and milder. CHESTERFIELD tobacco is packed in wooden casks, each containing about 1,000 pounds,and stored for two years in modern, up-to-date warehouses, © 1932, Licertr & Mveas Tosacco Co, RIS T 90 million doliar W Oéw@ Gelds A SECTION OF A LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO WAREHOUSE These warchouses, if placed end-to-end, would be about four miles in length. From floor to ceiling they are filled with these casks of fine tobacco, ageing in Nature’s slow but sure way. It takes a lot of money to make a good ciga- rette—money to buy good tobaccos and money to age them properly. CHESTERFIELDS are milder, and taste better - theze’s a 90 million dollar reason why! Just lry "them! ‘RiMNWW’fifij % atte given Petersbu had no ) going had calm ‘we Soutl ley N. Doust is told in The London |pell's neighborhood, so he put a| Rufus Kiser, former University |in i fourth D; y Mail. “They are more su dog in his barnyard to guard his | of Washington track star who won | sna high school to club tennis than grass, Prize rooster. Now he's looking for the national collegiate mile cha 1m-‘§. i hich weats ont,. quickiy. Iboth the dog and the rooster. picnship in 1929, has decide Had Fine Time pionship. They | “Afler all, we have to con TRl = to tryout for the United S\nles Gone an entire woek v me with th -~ | the millions of club players all ov r o papers for sawe at ’I‘he Emplre, Olympics team. le: an fou donated to the winner THEY'RE MILDER ¢ « THEY'RE PURE o o« THEY TASTE BETTER o o to stand up un die Miller at It was made n the third rou eferce ended ¢ pros n clearly Ba second knock down minute when Ba {WASHINGTON TEA FOR THIRTY GUESTS show that Dou 1922 phy champic i now 1932 1 b t} v 11 A while J tersburg won one each - e PARTICLES CAUSE wship in added W uggest: ntment. of DISEASE the ast Alaska ST. LOUIS—Only dust particle nid Burns and Miss E brou the less than one-two-l ith- | Yurman poured, assisted by m which wa h of an inch in di re | Belva Williams and Mrs. WHERE TOBACCOS ARE STCRED TO AGE AND MELLOW W m [ ® “Music that Satisfies.” Hear Nat Shilkret's 35- picce orchestra and Alex Gray, soloist, every night except Sunday — entire Columbia Network — 7:30 Pacific Time,

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