The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 11, 1932, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER LWSTEN- ARE YOU POSITIVE THAT 'M NOT ELECTED? 'M GLAD YOURE PHONIN' FOR A DOCTOR- | \WUZ JUST GONNA PHONE FOR ONE FOR YYOUL- '™ SORRY-BUT YOU HOLD THE RECORD FOR THE \WORST DEFEAT IN THIS | BOY STUDENTS FORM GUN CLUB | AT HIGH ScHoOL DATES OF THER HOOPCONTESTS Juneau and Douglas Boysf and Girls Start Basket- | ball Next Month Basketball games between boys teams and girls teams of Juneau and Douglas high schools will be-| gin late in December. | The scheduls for the contests was| arranged this week by R. S. Raven,| Superintendent of Juneau Public| Most Valublé Diémqm’in Stars to National Govern- ment for Rifles Boy s:ude [ the Juneau High School and application will be made for membership in the National Asso- clation ¢f such organizaiions, R. S. Raven, Superintendent of Schools announced yesterday. Schools; E. G. Wentland, Athletic N -.','\m’:p a‘d;:»e- ,1;“\7,(:,‘ 33,',‘ Coach at the Juneau High Schocl; Chtuon dEereby - and Bod . i C. H. Bowman, Superintendent of \]’"Ili ‘re\a urer. : n n B shall, & er. Douglas Public Schools, and Llovd A 12:a, Frincipal of the Rinden, Athletic Coach at Douglas High School. the ub instructor. expected to be f v s f producing the two most To the City of Brotherly Love goes the honor of p g Applications now valuable baseball players of the 1932 season, according to the judging The first game between the boys’ to 20. teams will be played at Chilkoot| ecommittes of the American Baseball Writers’ Association. They are Dues are $1 a year. Barracks when the boys will go| Jimmy Foxx (leit), first ]b:\sglman nz}t; tl;\e Ph.nlade}phm Atlmvlie&w: t\;m Clubs arz lished ait o & 5 o 4} judg e in the American League, 1 ks taere the week of December 10 o i g 8y ouk ot B0y ahd Ghuile Kleip, vno patrals the ght fied for N omogs e 2 to participate in the Lynn Canal Philadelphia, was given the corresponding honor in the National League St Wl Al !"h{‘ i e with a score of 78 points out of 80. Lou Gehrig, of the New York jpliissbions ave on | the Rest of Boys' Schedule Yankees, was second to Foxx and Lon Warneke, of the Chicago Cubs, | to be accepted by the st ¢ ys' Sch was runner-up to Klein, fon. The Juneau rest of the boys’ schedule{ _ expzacted to be ther association by the national Yerk outfit which with the Ne sponsored the ame at Douglas, Janu- game at Juneau, Janu- o ary 13; i T fourth game at Douglas. 5 A R » L s als - ticnal Association a ciub, a - January 20; fifth game at Juneau, e » there is also the rea in i aagd) 10 580 O January 27 Jacobs does mci; want his on to the Fe xment, nuary 2 ! iy " o on the filing of suitable The first game between the girls' P ¥ %o remain out of the argu e (fliing of B sUib teams will also be played at Chil- - is with 22 calibro les for indoor use end also with 30-0-6 bolt action vifles for outdoor use. The indoor range of the Juneau Citb will be the High School gym- naslum. No outdoor range has yet been selected, and until such selection is made no request for 30-0-6 rifles will be submitted. helds the coitract under which Jack Sharkey must defend his ti- tle mext summer, even though that contract does not give Sharkey the right ‘o name his own oppo- xment and there is some evidence up Boston way that the Squire of Newton would judt as soon it be cther than Schmeling. But is just so happens that there are only two heavyweights at the ment, or any argument, if he hap- pens to be out of the country. A cember 19 to 24 if the girls go there to participate in the Lynn | AND §-0-0-0- Canal Tournament. F7 oo ends, wt It may be just a coincidence 80-0-0-0, my friends, when Mr. Same as Boys' and then again it may be just a S('hf"“‘"’{_ et Oor il bi-an. If their first yame is played|Winter's fireside turn of the well ““‘: ‘L“r?“dw"f Wx};g . ‘g’kfm‘:? at Chilkoot Barracks, the remainder | known ballyhoo, but it i P e g of their schedule will be the same able the semi-defiance toss o & b ;{ N A as that of the boys. |Madison Square Garden by th “,}“i;emoggoe‘}; e L If the girls do not go to Chil-|manager of Max Schmeling is fol- | inlni‘&d i q\;‘;‘*a‘:{‘;‘"iug koot Barracks, their first ggmgv]()“«?d by the abrupt assertion of/ e G hesd gge will be played at Douglas, January |the manager of Jack Sharkey that | ] ‘i 6; their second at Juneau, January|Sharkey wil pick his own 1933‘2‘;:“:‘“"“: h;‘)‘; o b‘:‘:‘z: 13; their third at Douglas, January | heavyweight title cpponent and v o : R & “ right hand. 20; their fourth at Juneau, Jammylhsht him only in Boston. | ;'H‘e, Hias ?o"u‘h, perhaps ten times 21, and their fifth at Douglas| For no other good reason than i e United States in four years, oy 8, [that he suspects the Garden of anq only once outside the confines Officials for the games have not | harboring intentions of bringing| s the Garden and its affiliated yet been named. |Max Baer east to fight Sharkey|properties. He took a ferry over for the crown that has been Kick-|to Jorsey one evening to pop over The total amount of German for- | \P8 around under Schmeling's f“i;one Petro Corri when things wers Moment who can be taken serious- ign indebtedness has bgen placed for the past three years. Schmel-|c) qull between seasons he had to 1V by that part of the public still by the German statistical bureau :ng's rn.mgggr declared he was a“‘h:\ve some small source of in- Affluent enough to buy fight at about 26600000000 marks. |/Proush finished done and abso-'come, |tickets. One is Sharkey the other lutely disembodied from any Besides, Madison Square Garden Schmeling. the youngster without ever an over- DAILY SPORTS CARTOC ' TOON { Baer or some one else may pop BY Pap‘up to get the big shot just as Tom o | Heeney took it away from Shar- |key himself in 1928 in one of the late Tex Rickard’s “elimination carnivals” but it behooves Shar- if his title defense is to get +him any comparatively large cur- rency this year, to fight Schmel- ing. ! Similarly it is just as important e for the Teuton to find himself in S |there with the Sailorman if Max| prefers his next engagement to be| both a financial and an artistic | | success. | | |WEST POINT GOAL | OF ROBERT GIBB, :‘ WESLEYAN’S HERO | ( LINCOLN, Neb. Nov. 11.—If the | United States Military Academy ' (has a pair of shoes to fit a good student, a soldierly, industrious |young man, an all-around athlete, | | Robert Gibb wants to try them on. Especidlly if there are a pair of .football-cleated shoes suitable (tor a lad 6 feet 1': inches tall |and weighing 195 does Bob hope [to qualify for it. By running 107 !yards for a Nebraska Wesleyan | touchdown against Oklahoma City | university that he hopped imoi |the headlines in a big way. His near-record dash, however, was by no means his first athletic feat. He has already won eight | athletic letters at Wesleyan and by the end of the current school |year should have acquired three more. He has despite his heavy uild, done 100 yards in 9.7 seconds. | Gibb, son of a Methodist minis- , has earned most Of his col- ©g2 expenses running the gamut from dish-washing to radi osing- ing. Dics HAS HELD THE INTERCOLLESIATE BROAP WOMP TITLE FOR THE PAST TwO YEARS - HE 1S ONE OF THE FASTEST MEN ON WESTERN SRIDIRON S 4] | OF @ SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA | i .o a2 BARBER b NEVER FELT BETTER AN'| AINT DIPPY- lter, in the of Application_\i’;ll Be Made| have organized a Gun Club HELLO-DINTY- I'M JUST ONE OF THE BOYS AG'IN- COOK UP ABOUT SIXTY DOLLARS WORTH OF CORNED BEEF AN CABBAGE- | VLL BE R\GHT %’J {177 \@‘\ 1 AINT PHONIN : FER NC DOCTOR: | ] ot {0 AR | i Orr an Dool, Treasurer; and J. W. Tinkler, Mary K. trustees. ALASKA NEWS is gray in-teaq |those of George O. Ryan, aged 69, | Spanish - American war veteran; Willlam Edward Hague, 59, pioneer of Alaska; James Gall 49, and A. E. White, 77. The fin were residents of Anchorag fourth had recently been brought , & o of an open win- ion of sourdoughs, the Seward Gateway says. | Ia a urday, when the o campaign was at its height, ifferences v > secmingly for the ent by Domocrats Republican: attended a meoting in Ketchikan df the Ketchikan Bar Among present ¢ pital. e wera thony J. Dimond, George Grigshy, th tho: Theres No Mystery in our Prescription Department ! . . A. H. Zieg Frank A. ‘Boyle, William A. Holzheimer and J. W. Kehoe, Demccratic lawyers, and James Wickersham, Walter B. King, |Harry G. McCain and W. C. Ar- |nold Republican lawyers. | school graduates from Alacka were entitled o be among | the 55 Freshmen at the University |of Washington who had been vale- valute 3h schools formally pra dent M. Lyle Spencer of the Uni-| | |versity. The Alaskans in the group ere Lillian L. Peterson, valedic- an, Juneau; Robert Dahl, vale- | torian, Skagway; Lief M. Harris valedictorian, Ketchikan; Ashjorne Norman Nil:on, salutetorian, lard; Ot Sanbeck, ledictoris Seward. Robert Abernetty Knapp. Come into our ftore with your next prescription and watch how carefully we compound. There is no mysterious ritual | valedictorian, Anchorage, was un- | thac we charge for. But che i extra care and accuracy in (0 e alio prend checking will amaze you. tion, This excra care is the protec- tion we guarantee you. And thac is why our prescription | department is most important. Licensed pharmacists, and a checking system that guarantees absolute accuracy. | 'Good skating is offered on the |Power Creek Basin pond near Cor- dova. | Dreamland Hall at Seward has |been rented by Superintnedens of | Scheols DeBolt for use as a gym- | rasium for pupils. | Plane service at least once a monthi is given the Shushana dis- | trict flom Copper Center, north of | Cordova, by the Gillam Airways. Mail and provisions are carried on | these lights. | BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. Finishing touches are being made % the two-story hangar and shops of the McGhee Airways at An-| chorage. Offittrs elected for the ‘ensuing vear by the American Legion Post | 1t Wrangell are: Harry Neitleton; | Post Commander; 'C. P. MacCreary, Adjytant; James ‘D. Nolan, First Vice-Commander; Julius H. Mason, Second Vice-Commander; Van Fisk, | ® Chaplain; L. M. Campbell, Service | Officer. SAVE with SAFETY at Rexall DRUG STORE > ¢ ICE CREAM Always Pure and Fresh A HOME PRODUCT McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY Forget-Me-Not Rebekah Lodge | 8-A at Cordova has elected as| officers Catherine Urghart, Noble | . Grand; Ceceilia Haltness, Vice Recent deaths at Anchorage are from Flat to the Anchorage hos- ol JUNEAU DAIRY Grand; Agnes Phinn, Secretarv;|® Christine Anderson, Treasurer; C. J. Iverseth, trustee for three years. JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES Rebekahs of Anchorage have ?lected Gertrude Johnston Noble | CGrand; Martha Nichols, Vice- | | | | | I | | | Grand; Sarah E. Hugg, Secretary; ~— PLAY MIDGET GOLF! The Indoor Health Game for Young and Old SECOND FLOOR, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING Open 3 P. M. to 11:30 P. M. \ THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Jur Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat I | GET OUR PRICE BY THE JOB— Not by the Hour 30 Gallon Range Boiler $9.50 Toilet . . . . $15.00 (Standard New Pattern Bowl) RICE & AHLERS (CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what job will cost” b | | z Fun for Everybody TONIGHT AMERICAN LEGION Armistice Day Dance ELKS’ HALL Serenaders’ Orchestra A REAL GOOD TIME PARTY FOR EVERYBODY! Use Alaska lumber JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS y { § ! ! PHONE 358 ~——the Mango Tree Trick MAGIC The Indian conjuror plants the mango secd in the soil, covers it with a cloth, makes o few magio passes, mutters weird incantations, then— ‘prulol—nmovu the cloth and there's the mango tree—magically grown up. The economy and satisfaction you get from JUNIOR BRI- QUETS is like magic. +$16.00 per ton delivered PHONE 412 For Expert - Window Cleaning Phone 485 e "BAZAAR CATHOLIC PARISH HALL Tonight and Saturday Music by Four-Piece Orchestra Each Night—DANCING FREE Complete Turkey Dinner 5:30 to 6:30 Saturday, Price One Dollar FISH POND—BEANO BOOTH—WHEEL OF FORTUNE—NOVELTY BOOTH BARGAIN BOOTH Everyone Invited—Admission Free Prizes for the Lucky i rd | | ! Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office }

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