Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1932. sl NOT 50 LOUD LET ME 9EE THAT- DOES 1T MENTION ANY NAMES? DADDY- DID YOU KNOW THEY RAIDED DUGANS POOLHALL LAST NIGHT? BY GOLLY=- THEY ARE GOIN' TO MENTION THE NAMES N TO-MORROWD PAPER" I'VE GOT TO STOR IT- |2 THIS THE EDITOR? WELL! | DONT WANT Bv GEORGE McMANUS THANKS FOR THE TIF WE DIDN'T KNOW YOU To VSE MY CUP TOURNEY GETS | UNDER WAY TODAY | The third annual cup tournament | between the Elk bowlers of Juneau, | Ketchikan and Anchorage starts today. According to the conditions of the contest, five days have been set aside for play, March "4, 17, 18, 21, CHINESE GIRL 1S ASSAULTED IN HONOLULU DAILY SPORTS CARTOON AT THE SIANTS' TRAINING JL\ CAMPIS «w HAS CRIIZS ey ARM REGAINED ITS fi i i i | strongly {frem interest in imen: this month. | Capt. the HIGH SCHOOLS ____*__,____—hl | GU lN STRONG conference welterweight title, is a 4 sophomore and has los tbut one THE B'G QUESTION § |fight in two years. BOXING GAME BATON ROUGE, La., March 14. | Louisiana’s high schools have very endorsed boxing, judging state tourna- Francis Brink, coach f HUBHIE DOESNT AS A SECOND BASEMAN | PLAY 'SECON® FipoLE" i o ANY MAN . - led in totals, 515. Mrs. Lavenik, a Chipmunk, and Mrs. Faulkner, NOGHIE- == {Cougar, staged a private duel of —THE GIANTS' PENNANT CHANCES OEPEND LARGELY ON THEIR STAR, "7OND RASEMAN'S RETURN 1O FORM / | Louisiana State university's boxing |team, who initiated a state high school tournament, reports that in- |terest in the sport has increased | throughout the state among- pre- colleg? youngsters. | Lake Charles high school was the winner of the championship |title last year, and will be back ! again this seasor e CHIPMUNKS CHALK UP FIRST PIN VICTORY HAVE TO | one this ] SPORT BRIEFS The Southeaster baseball league will open its season of 140 games | April 19. 1‘ At Ohio State wuniversity 332 turned out for handball. | { i William Ragan, former Toledo sandlot star, has been a profession- al umpire 18 years | Charlie Garner, North Carolina state boxer who won the Southern Dick Marchisio, 10, probably the | youngest angler, landed Florida's biggest s=ilfish of the 1932 season. | Lyle Tinning, rookie Chicago Cu bpitcher, has attracted attention in the Catalina Island training camp because of his close resem- blance to Carl Mays, famous “sub- marine ball’ patcher of other years. labama wili nave 10 football players next fall that weigh more | than 200 pounds. over 195. Five others scale Drury college, Springfield, Mo..| will resume track and field activi-' ties this spring. The Atlanta Crackers will play night baseball game a week summer, . After dropping the first two games ; to the Cougars on the Elks’ club| | | 5 Saturday night, the Chip- ! | munks finally got going and won | their victory of the tourna- lment. ! I Harry Sabin’s 191 was the high| g first SEE YURMAN New Fur Garments in New Styles { Cleaning, Repairing, Remodeling | Yurman, the Furrier | ! ‘Triangle Bullding . | | |ecore of the evening, and he also|- thelr own, with honors about even. Mrs. Lavenik won in total pins,| 434 “t06° 483, but Mrs. Faulkner | shaded her nival in best score, 182| \to_the other's 179. | | In the first match tonight the Beavers will try to run their string | Al Rights Reserved by The Assoctated Prows SRR G R R e L e N e s S o witiories Uik 0 sring: SEIENNENCRY | | th nse of the Panthers, who ‘clime of California, Bucky Harris i "hj,:):vlfn only one game. Muskrats | Wrote me he has high hopes for land Bears are on the second card. | | developing his Detroit Tigers into | 4 I’ Soores! 1 || 2 real pennant contender this sea- | d e aks s - > MAKE TUUR TU | Lavenik 161 177 172 510 | That is, he qualifies, providing 'H. Sabin 173 151 191 515 || the club shakes off the jinx that i, 120 171 170 461 cost them the srevices of the star GET IN SHAPE Mrs. McCormick 73 98 96 267 | second baseman, Charley Gehrin- Mrs. Lavenik ... 154 151 179 484 2 A ger, most of last season and at one 5 s o It is no longer news when Yale | time compelled Manager Harris to P 681 748 808 2237 turns out a star pole vaulter. | step back into active harness again. o Ao y s g | . g 5% v Cougars The situation hae now been| Fortune has not smiled with Will VlSlt' .ID Cities P“m,’nobcrtson 6o 165 165 405* rcached, however, where the Elis|much consistency on Haris since| to Training for Shar- . messer. .. 156 156 -36 468 have about a half-dozen -beys on|he led the Washington club Oi k Boib \ Petrich 133 156 165 454 ; the track and field squad capable 1924-25 to two pennants and one ey ou |Mrs. Pullen .. 145 114 136 895 ! of doing around 14 feet. They don’t [ World's championship. |Mrs. Faulkner 157 182 144 483 | feel they need to take off their He was the “boy manager’ ’then,| NEW YORK, Marcn 14. — Max s AR R e sweat-shirts until they get beyond 13 feet, a height that was a world's record not so many years ago. One of the new Yale crop, Ted Lee, vaulted 14 feet at Boston. An- other, Kenneth Brown, who is only a freshman, scared 13 feet 9 inches to beat a field of veterans in the New York A. C. games, including Tommy Warne, former Northwest- ern star, and Fred Sturdy, Eli prod- uct now with the Los Angeles Ath- letic club. Brown, incidentally. is a nephew of Bob Gardner, who made a rep- utation at Yale as the first 13-foot vaulter before the war. Gardner later became a natioral golf cham- pion. Brown was good enough while at ‘Andover to set an interscholastic vecord of 13 feet 4% inches and did 13:9 in his first open competition. He may be the boy to push the “ceiling” up around 14:6 before the season is over. The Great Carr Through Among the Eli “Old Grads” of vaulting fame, Sabin Carr of Du- buque, Towa, who set world’s indoor and outdooor records at 14 feet and over, has retired from competition since winning the 1928 Olympic chown. His most prominent suc- cessor, Sturdy, is still doing very well. Sturdy is one.of the handful who have cleared 14 feet. His ex- perience should make him an Olympic favorite, even with a rising younger generation beating him at this early date, and Lee Barnes,the present outdoor record - holder, ready for competition again. Before he left for the balmier riding the crest of fame and popu- | Schmeling will make an exhibition | larity. He took over Detroit at a |tour of 15 cities in preparation for | time when uane Tigers were wadly .n | his ferthcoming heavyweight cham- need of a complete overhauling. |pionship match with Jack Sharkey. | The reconstruction process has No Western cities are included in been slow, the opposition has been | the itinerary. Max will start tram-,‘ extraordinarly good and the com-|ing for the Sharkey bout on Mayf petition for star minor league tal- 10. | ent has been very keen. | - e | ‘The combination of these circum- | CALLAND NAMED HEAD ( stances has multiplied Bucky's dif-| MOSCOW, Idaho, March 14— ficulties. He still has a big job to Head Football Coach Leo Calland, do to drive the Tigers into first di- |[of Tdaho, has been named ninth | vision company again, but he is district representative of the Na-, tackling it this spring with all his | tional American Football Coaches | customary enthusiasm and ability. |association. | — e —— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay | saliaat e JUNEAU FROCK || SHOPPE | “Exclusive but not Expensive” Coats, Dresses, Lingerie Hosiery and Hats BRIDGE, HOCKEY RECEIPTS i SWELL DULUTH IDLE FUND DULUTH, Minn., March 14—A hockey game and a bridge tourna- ment have helped to swell' this city’s unemployment fund. | When the city staged its bridge| tourney with a $1 fee charged, the| fund was enriched $168 after ex-| ==+ ltories in a single day. It happened 56 7713 766 2295 ! TEXAS CAGE COACH BOASTS RECORD OF NINE WINS IN DAY o | FORT WORTH, Tex., March 14.| —Coach Francis Schmidt of Texas| istian university is ranked as the wizard of Southwest conference | basketball, but winning repeated| titles is really nothing compared to/ Schmidt’s work while coaching in 1914 at Arkansas (City, Kas. | He coached high school basket- ball and his feams won nine vic- this way: | He took his second string boys’ teams and two girls teams to Wichita to participate in the Ar- kansas Valley league round-robin tournament. His boys’ teams won three games and his girls’ teams two penses were paid. Policemen and firemen engaged | in a hockey battle and more than $$2,500 was added to the fund. L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS 1| J. B. Burford & Co. [ i i | 7 apiece to win the championship in |their divisions, Schmidt and his | basketeers returned to Arkansas lCity that afternoon to see his | “Our doorstep worn by satisfied | |eighth grade team trim Winfield ——,ee—— | STAR OWNS 17 WATCHES 9 BUSINESS SUPPLIES? COMMERCIAL PRINTING BINDERY customers” k4 { INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, March 14. —Herman Phillips, Butler univer- sity track coach, winner of the na- ticnal intercollegiate quarter mile for three successive years and 400 meter man in the 1928 Olympics, has 17 watches in his collection of trophies. To keep them all run- ning would ruin a coach’s salary, he says. PHONES 83 OR 85 THE SANITARY GROCERY Geo. M. Smwpkins Co. “The Store That Pleases” and then he directed his first string to victory over a strong Wichita team that night. [ SR Juneau Public Library Free Reading Room City Hall, Second Floor Main Street and PFourth 8a m to 10 p m Circulation Room Open from 1 to 5:30 p. m.—7:00 to 8:30 p. m. Current Magazines, Newspapers, Reference, Books, Ete. FREE TO ALL v rrrerrrrerereereres) GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates HEMLOCK WOOD Order Now at These Prices Full Cord ...$8.00 Half Cord $4.25 50 cents discount for cash per cord E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 NUGGET CAFE J. F. McDONALD At Your Service with the Best Foods at Popular Prices HOURS: 6 a m ‘till 1 a. m. Chicken Tamales, Chile Con Carne, Ncodles, Chop Suey, Special Sandwiches OPPOSITE THE WRIGHT SHOPPE, FRONT STREET JACK DEMPSEY HAS FLU; STOPS COMEBACK TOUR Cancels Bouts for Tuesday Night—Expects to Con- tinue Wednesday TOLEDO, Ohio, March 14—Influ- enza Sunday stopped Jack Demp- sey's comeback jaunt toward the heavyweight throne that he won here in 1919 from Jess Willard. Dempsey has cancelled two bouts scheduled for tomorrow Youngstown but expects to be able to continue his tour and appear at Clarksburg, West Virginia, Wed- nesday night. CARDOZO IS GIVEN OATH WASHINGTON, March 14.—Ben- | jamin N. Cardozo took the oath to- day that made him Associate Jus- tice of the Supreme Court of the | Unitzd States. The new Justice smiled as he was escorted to his seat. The oath was administered by | Charles Cropley, Clerk. | e e Arrow Trump | SHIRTS NEW SPRING Patterns and Colors $1.95 $8.75 SABIN’S “The Store for Men” Overhaul | JOB Come in and see us about our SPECIAL WINTER MONTH OVERHAUL Ph.CES CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. MAJESTIC Electric W ashing Machine A Clothes Washer of unlimited fine qualities, may be depended upon to prod exacting results in clothe: kept loose so the suds can uce the finest and most s washing. Clothes are pass through the fabric. It forces them away from the center and spreads them out where the water action is most vigorous. Thomas Hardware Co. {sion. night at |- and 24. The fifteen highest scores | Third Attack on Woman rolled on any of these days by any . . atd &1 bowiéns, Wil b crsdxed w{’ Within Past Three the score of the respective cluus, total pins to determine the final| Weeks Reported winner. The Ketchikan Elks have won"”HONOIi'nghlI:' v M,:IYChBy’_lA the silver cup the other two times |1 ' Jcor -0 coioat) d'm o3 it has been up for competition. If | LT Was brutally assaulted last they win again this year the mpISamrday aignt, Jugte Niusii I e ol _ . |third attack upon a woman within remains in their permanent posses- | three weeks, planninlg}u‘:') l;h;g {:Zefruaptil-k:u f;gl Two hours after the assault, the N s i | police arrested J. Joseph, young Hoeal club oo, Korean-Hawailan, whom the city's BRI S |new Chief of Police said he would S. HELLENTHAL HOME |co all in his power to have hanged, FROM SOUTHERN TRlpi The Legislature recently passed a |law making an attack on a woman After a brier pusiness trip as far |a capital offense. south as Los Angeles, S. Hel!onthal,,] The assault on the Chinesse girl member of Hellenthal & Hellen- occurred when the girl and her thal, prominent local legal firm ‘r}scort left a private dance for a returned home late last week. | brief walk. He visited briefly with his son,| g John, at Santa Clara, Calif, Ur versity, where he is in his rresn-‘[DR- G. L. BARTON RESUMES PRACTICE man year. John is the youngest pupil in the university and is | doing well in his work. | Dr. George L. Barton, Chiro- BT R w4 YU | practor, who has been in St. Ann’s NOTICE | Hospital several days for the pur- After several days spent in the|pose of undergoing a complete rest, hospital have now returned to myilvfi the institution this forenoon. office where I shall be glad to rc-‘Hc has resumed his practice in ceive my patients. 1 his offices in the Hellenthal Build adv. DR. GEO. L. BARTON. |ing. INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Ine. Established 1898 Junean, Alaska INDIAN LUMP $11.50 per ton at dock CALL US DIRECT PHONE 412 PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. Plymouth Floating Power The engine floats in the chassis with the freedom and stability of a dock or pontoon bridge. It floats on rub- ber supports which function, how- ever, in a way that rubber engine mounting were never before em- ployed. JUST ARRIVED—Another new stock of WALLPAPER ; Juneau Paint Store A Laundry EAN I Ns i TELEPHONE 15 A S A S S S | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Qur Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat b f 4