The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 14, 1933, Page 7

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1933 Sm— —— - — BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG By BILLE DE BECK Eel [ new - Endeavor: Like “Veshedar OUGHTTA SEE Ay N iy ‘ IN BIG RAGE ~“DRAKE UNIFORM, '34 3 | | ) Endeavor Off—ers Another Stern Challenge to DES MOINES, la, Nov. 14— My URL, seriously injured last-yea while a member of the University of Minnesota football team, will be in a Drake uniform in 1934. | e ! America’s Cup Ul transferred to Drake this year after li on th brink | LONDON, Nov. 14 — Another of death for many days following chapter is scheduled to be written|a chest injury. He will be eligible e next year in one of the keenest| for varsity competition next year. :fi' oo (@ - |and most protracted rivalries be- . O R % \ <. R @:; tween nations in the history of TICE v ( (7 5 ! Spurred by the success of “Vel-| mye practice of dumping garbage I | la,” which established herself|,, roryse within the city limits FORBIDD[N VALLEY [ | s year ?slme clfass toli lirm*?'fl must be stopped. Violators will be 10 ya a challenge for “the Amer-|.;, : prosecuted. %&‘* Wwdha,m Bynon Moworuy | | ik a's cup® Hascbeen sent o the] i ";1.’» Bhvia . A % s X Inited Sta y ationa A Cinder Paths or Peaks No GASABA SEASUN‘F“]{E‘Y Names Mati Hari to| IN TENNIS Is e e e o | Secretary. SYNOPSIS: Curt Tennyson has returned to Edmonton after @ win- ter spent in the sub-Arctio hunting wolves in an ¢ 'vplane. le finds a Note from his former superiutend- ent in the Mounted. Police, A. K. Marlin. asking Cw-. not to tie wp with any proposition before seeinn Lim. Curt gocs to darlin's rooms in the hotel, and finds pleasure- Joving Rosalie Marlin. his fiancée. % | miston, University of Washington cluded in the 20 horses from Chas. hen Rosalie's fathcr comes in. say nothing about this other mat- | 4 . of Hoo e- | rgbenisti s el o 2 Is Fifteenth Challenge | tor. But mecessity left him no |mMile runner this year. A ash Leagu | T. Fisher's Dixiana Stud which| » Sopwith, who thus marks the : Edmist regul the U | ace at Hialeah Park, M avis Lup choice. Last September a big case | Iison, aiTefUERION the, M Double Header i tack U GERE L fifteenth challenge to be given to Jhapter Two DANGEROUS JOB HE sight of his old officer sent a warm glow through Curt. Dur- ing those seven years with the Police, Marlin had been his fine friend, a kind of second father to him. His engagement to Rosalie seemed a fitting climax to the un derstanding friendship between ber the Mounted without ever having a | dime ahead or the pleasures that other young men had: and his year down north had been the figst sunlit period in bis whole life. His affection for Curt, his broad human sympathy, prompted him to had burst upou the Vancouver di- vision, their biggest since the war, and the worst failure in their bhis- tory. The Silent Squad had worked on | it all winter, he had worked on it himselt, the Commissioner had sent two specials from Ottawa; but no- body had got anywhere with fit. When he thought of the brilliant Difference to This Athlete SEATTLE, Nov. 14—Conquerer |on cinders and snow fields is the sports achievement of Friel Ed- versity of Washington track team and holder of the All-City high school mile record of 4 minut 236 seconds, has been cited for | mountain climbing feats by the Washington Alpine Club. The club | honored Edmiston for his ascent | of six major peaks in the Pacific Northwest. . ——— THIS EVENING Will Officiate at Opening/ The second season of the Gas-| tineau Channel Basketball League cwill be launched tonight in The High School gymnasium with double-header in which the Moose ):\nd Douglas Firemen meet in the opener and the local Firemen ! and George Brothers quintef tangie | in the nightcap. Campaign at Hialeah in Winter 14— BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. Futurity at Lexington, will be in- a. he Detroit sportsman will cam- P arry his colors in winter racing,| among them several candidates for the $10,000 Florida Derby. tion | next summer. ON SCHEDULE Mati Hari, winner of the Breeders'|Teams of Nine Nations to da's Compete for Own at Roland-Garros The challenge was issued, how- ever, not on behalf of “Velsheda” and her owner, W. L. Stephenson, but on behalf of a new craft, “En- deavor,” to be built along “Velshe- lines for T. O. M. Sopwith, ion pioneer and sportsman. PARIS, Nov. 14—A professional the United States in the history g Davis Cup, to be known as the of the trophy, first won in 1851 n the largest division ever 10| Bounardel Cup, has been created and ever since successfully defend- here and will be put in competi- ed by American yachtsman, is the; stadium owner of “Shamrock V,” the last {craft with which the late Sir | Professioanl tennis teams repre- Thomas Lipton attempted to break | senting nine countries so far have America’s continuity of victories. e EB 5 | agreed to come here for the inau- 3L | | guration of the first pro series) Gosport to the design of Charles “Endeavor” is to be built at E. Nicholson, designer of “Sham-; “All being well' Nicholson says,: Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. e @ MONEY The money you spend on & washwoman 52 times a year; the cost of soap and wash- ing utensils that have to be frequently replaced; the wear and tear on clothes far | father and himself. Jobs that young Tennyson used to Mayor 1. Goldstein will offic- | among national teams. g greater oy home methods; “It’s mighty good to see you agaln, | turn in, of his uncanny skill, of how jate at the opening, and will toss | The countries entered are the | rock IV,” “Shamrock V" and “Vel- the possible illness due to son!” Marlin greeted, with a strong | they all used to depend on him in | == A up the first ball of the season, | United States, France, Germany,| sheda.” unsanitary processes or over- handclasp. “You're looking as fit as a high-power rifie! The North must have agreed with you tremendously, Curt.” Rosalie flitted intc the next room to dress. As the two chatted for a few moments in the casual way of men who once had been very close to each other but had drifted apart, hopeless cases, he felt that Curt stood at least a chance on this search, where the others had long since thrown up their hands and quit, “URT”—he glanced around and lowered his voice, plunged directly into the business— and then | SLANTS In the wid football pre e of col- power this and referee for the first minute or two of p! After that he will be relieved by Chief Referze Harold E Regele, High School coach, who will handle both games. Seven teams comprise this sea- son’s league. The three members in addition to the four clubs show- ing their wares tonight are De- | Austria, Great Britain, Hungary, | Holland, Belgium and @zechoslo- BOSTON, Nov. 14—Wally Ber-| vakia. ger's twenty-seventh home run, which beat the Phillies, 4 to 1, in’ the final game of the season at Boston, was a very important con-| tribution to the history of the| Braves. The first series will differ from Davis Cup play in that prelimin- ary rounds will be played off over three week-ends, Garros stadium. will be along Davis Cup lines, with all of Roland- Otherwise play “we hope that the race may be | sailed next summer. Mr. Sopwith has proved himself a born helms- man and always skippers his own boats, so that he will most likely do so in this race. While it is expected that var- jous refinements of design will be taxing of your own vitality .. . just add these up and then compare the result with our low-priced laundry serv- " Aladba lege - s flo@ el ¢ the winning nation holding the | incorporated, the new yatcht will “what | wanted to see you about 18 Molays Elks and Tallapoosa. They It was worth in the vicinity of| Marlin studied Curt searchingly. A year ago, when Curt Teanyson resigned from the Mounted, he had this: Over at Vancouver there was a man called Farrell, a speculator | {of the most interestinz as well as factor that has contributed to one} | will The curtain-raiser tonight will swing into action next week. $10.000 | position in the championship race s it gave the Braves fourtk Bonnardel Cup for a year. Exact dates have not been set, follow the lines of “Velsheda” which launched last April, came through Laundry . CHICAGO, Nov. 14.—This being| : . the time of year for all good foot-| Henri Cochet and William T. Til- Ball fans to rush forward with their | den are the moving lights behind |ty of athletic materfal with which to challenge any and all available {lina (coached by “Uncle I'Moran) 27 to 0. North Dakota | airs and by the wires to the lee- This principle| | ward in fresh airs. “How did you get this data?” asked Marlin. fcally as in spirit. As head of In- telligence for the western divisions, he had led a hard life, fraternizing with gangster cireles, following trails to Europedh eapfitals, anc liv- ing for months with the narcotic traffickers on the west coast. Three years of that work usually put & man on the rocks; but Tenny- sonhad been in daily contact with it, and the very worst of it, for seven years. Besides nearly wrecking his bealth, it had distorted his whole outlook. He had seen so much of crime, he had looked down into depths of depravity so long and so steadily, that be had lost faith in human virtues. “Thank God, you've come out of t, son!” Marlin thought fervently. For he saw that Curt had completely shaken off that miasma. A year in the far North prospecting, flying, hunting the gray phantom packs, had put him fa shape again. “Haven't had breakfast, Curt?” he asked. “Neither have L Let's go down. We can talk there.” He took a document from a locked brief case and thrust it into his pocket. “Ro- salie’ll excuse us; she has hers sent up.” S they went down the corridor he inquired, “What sort of an offer did the Consolidated make you, son?” “Oh, nothing to write home about,” Curt stalled, wanting to find out first what Marlin's “proposition” was. “It’s just fair, and rather un- expected.” “When would you have to be on the job with them?” “By the end of this week. The ice is out now, and the summer in that country is so short that every day counts.” Marlin said nothing more just then. They went down to the break- fast room, found a window table to themselves. When the waiter had brought their cotree and taken their order, Marlin dropped a lump of su~~r 1nt0 Dis cup and thoughtfuily watched the bubbles come up. He could see that Cuft was eager about the Consolidated job, and for several reasons he hated to break into those plans As he well knew, Curt’s boyhood on that bleak Mani- toba farm had been harsh and exig geot; he had given seven years to gave out that he was an English- man, but he's not. He's a Russian, and his real name is Karakhan, lgor Karakhan. I'll give you a bit of his background: Lord knows it cost us enough work. During the Soviet Revolution in ‘17 he got out of Rus- sia and went to—to—" Marlin reached into his pocket for the docu- ment—"and went to—" “Germany,” Curt supplied lacon- jeally. He had glanced up with sud- den interest at the mention of Karakhan's name. Now he smiled at A-K's sudden start. “In Berlin, in 1920, he went on, coolly taking the story away from Marlin, “Karakhan had a hand in that Engelmsyer money-printing scandal. In Paris he swindled his fellow-émigrés on & confidence game and then cleared out for Buenos Aires—" “Wait a minute!” A-K gasped. “Why, you must know the man! Where—when—how under heaven did you get this data on him?” “From the Justice Department of the States. I used to trade informa- cion with them.” Marlin leaned back, looked at Curt with amazed eyes. “Well! I thought | was pulling something out of the bag that’d be new to you, and then you begin telling me things about it! D'you know what Karak- han did in the Argentine?” he de- manded, as though be expected to stump Curts “Yes, | know, A-K. And 1 know what he did afterward, too. The League of Nations investigators got too hot after him, so he skipped north to Mexico and ran whisky to Los Angeies. The States nicked him for two schooners, and he came on to Vaneouver. I was keeping tab on him there when I burned out and re- signed.” Marlin did not speak till the wait~ er had refilled their water glasses and withdrawn. Then: “I've got a departmental report on him here, but there’s no use showing it to you; you know as much about him al- ready as our men who've worked nine months on the case.” “Let me see it.” Marlin handed over a ten-page dossier, (Copyright, 1933, William B. Mowery) Tomorrow, Curt takes A-K's re- quest under advisement. University 27 to 6, Auburn (1932 Southern Conference co-champion) by 19 to 6 and then ran all over West Virginia Wesleyan 33 to 0. JUST AN OVERSIGHT A scoreless tie with appears difficult to explain until it is shown that seven of the best G. W. players were on the lines that afternoon. Our r do not spzcify why they were thus spending the afternoon while the old alma mater was struggling against the South Carolinans, es- pecially as all seven were largely instrumental in the victory over Auburn the following week. Maybe it was just an oversight. The George Washington slate for November calls for games with son, University of Tulsa (which defeat>d Kansas) and then Kansas itself. to just where the capital c Clemson | Tennessee, Washington and Jeffer- This covers @ lot of ter-| ritory and will furnish the index in company with C. C. Pyle, the E. S, business meeting 'I‘uv»(lrn,\" promoter. He is not quite so fast Nov. 14, at 8 p.m. In Fullback Don Bom- d Halfback Nig McCarver, its i team now has two of the busiest rriers in the East. Bomba well up among the leading scor- | ers. | GHOST STILL GALLOPS n years after he first flashed across the Big Ten gridirons with some of the most sensational ball- carrying on record, Harold (Red) Grange still can tuck the pigskin undzr his arm and go places. The one-time University of Illi- nois star played a big part in the victory of the Chicago Bears over the New York Giants in a profes- sional league game, outshining Harry Newman, Michigan's 1932 All-America quarterback, who was in grammar school when this fa- mous redhead was running rings around the Wolverines in 1923. Grange made and lost a fortune = HIS SEUEN GOALS 1IN THE FINAL GAME CLINCHED THE NATIONAL OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP FOR THE AURORA FouR. 2 o~ ~THAT SMILE WEVER LEAVES HIS 8 | FACE o DAILY SPORTS CARTOON -HIS GRA [ | cOmES FROM | AFANLY OF POLO PLAYERS FOUNDED THE SANTA BARBARA pet mid-season “all” teams, the following “all-literary” eleven is| submitted: | Longfellow, Northwestern, end; Erskine, Southern California, and Conrad, Ohio State, tackles; Scott, Ohio, and Lamb, Washington guards; Yates, St. Mary's, center; Wells, Harvard, quarterback; Fon- taine, Wisconsin, and Clemens, Southern California, halfbacks, and Shakespfare, Notre Dame, full- back. | now as in his college days but pro players say the redhead is 2 much better all-around football player than when he broke into the pro game in 1925. His straight-| arm still leaves 'em a trifle dizzy. ————— - | EASTERN STARS | The Juneau Chapter No. 7, O dv. EXCUSE AY DUST,__~ HE OUTPLAYEC CECIL- SMITH ALt NDFATHERY the new C€up competition. Tailor In moving to my larger quarters, the room formerly occupied by the Olympic Pool Hall, opposite the store of 1. Gold- stein, I feel that in the larger quarters I will be better able to care for my trade properly. I am adding to my lines of gentle- men’s furnishings, also shoes, both dress and work shoes. A complete stock of mackinaws, socks, work shirts and work clothing, gloves, underwear, dress caps, etc., will' be shown and the high' class shoe lines of Currin-Green, W. L. Doug- las and A. A. Cutter. A full stock of woolens will be car- ried for strictly tailored suits at reason- able prices. THANK YOU. SAM THE TAILOR NEW LOCATION — Room formerly occupied by Olympic Pool Room on Front Street. uncertain campaigns in many &/ — ) baen sick man, not so much phys | and promoter of the shady type. He | mo | George Washington Univer- | Start at 7:30 otclock, and will be and a share of the world’s series but Promoters hope to select Week- | the 1933 season with 20 first); & { sity of Washington, D. C., demands | followed by the night-cap without coin. | ends between the close of L_ho places out of a total of 44 races. | | and hereby receives some of the|d2lay. Popular prices will prevail For Bill McKechnle, the Braves | French handcourt championships | Boom Bends Readily | PIONEER CAFE ! | e M B A the first of J d thy ing| “Velsheda's” 65-foot boom is very| | ERTARIRL o §attntion which it is entitled | All of the net proceeds from the manager, it meant a bonus. For|the f78% B SHie @HC the opening| “Velsheda's” §5-foot boom is very} | . <o "p ) Nick Novak | | ™ Coached hy Jim Pixlee of Mis-|game, as was the case last year, Jimmie Neary, the club trainer,|Of _Wimbledon. A professional | narrow and is made weak enough ‘Tt . ou govm op | souri, George Washir feam | are Tecelved by the Public School ‘and Packy McFarland, custodian SIngles championship also is in the | to bend readily to leeward so as ARt | | has jumped from ob- | Student fund of the clubhouse, ft meant about|Cards. to give free play to the lower " ! Bii $400. The Bonnardel Cup resembles | part of the mainsail. The curva- |- | scurity to the fo the g the Davis Cup in appearance and | ture or deflection is controlled bvI <t A ‘f]au ‘:‘;)" 1p“‘:l‘}dulvmo'm«:x:xxy(»‘- “}\_‘,r y?::::f.] stands at the close of the is in silver. It weights twenty-| wire stays from end to end of the|: - —5 a decidedly intersectional flavor. | With an enrollment of approxi- ALL-LITERARY’ ELEVENifllfm,f"dc(.z::e?alf;of:::fi‘ l:rh: Z{’f,,’{: R s | ] GORDON’S | Up to the November | mately 6,500 students, onz of the e =4 5 4 § George Washington largest in the Middle Atlantic re- HERALDS SILLY SEASON| former president of the French| The curvature is regulated by | g;djes’ Ready-to- | tawb; College oi the: Mo il G ve Washingt }‘] e Al professional tennis players' Asso-|the amount of tension created by | - i s e f i A ol B g i clation. the wires to the windward in light | | Wear | Seward St, near Front | | 2 18 ‘expected to find a place in the | J Real THRILL! Nothing like the thrill of a ten-strike! Develop your game on the finest alleys you ever played on. {! Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billiards Bowling Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks Barber Shop in connection Lower Front Street, opposite Winter and Pond HOME-LIKE Surroundings Quiet, homelike surround- ings add the ultimate to the dignity of a conducted funeral service. A beauti- ful chapel with organ. Pri- vate retiring room. Skilled arrangement of flewers. The GRACIOUS, complete service this community expects. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-3 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute”

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