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B e e e s & THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1934 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PL By BILLE DE BECL o | ' 8 , e PVRETRTPTIVRIN i , % My Beauty Hint WELL- 1T MUST FAT HE'S GOT-- NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP, hereby, .given by the d that the co-partnership BE,_ GOING--- sting between us under Tk Ve C'MON OUT- HEAQAS [ :‘G ame and stylé of Yukon TELL YOUR WIFE SWEET WOMAN!! CHAUFEEUR - . enigaged in the busi- T'M SORRY THE CoAsT & MY - MY - HOW HE STILL sporteiion of freight SHE WASN'T IN- 1 OKIT;I,E 1S CLEAR - HE'S CHANGED = M‘\gf& ETHE of go:ds o anc: [ B SQu e in the Territory of E?S‘S‘E—TSEEV“’,':“ | and in Seattle, County of 5 IE THAT'S ANY e of Washington, was on == e ’ e ; \ CONSOLATION- 12th day of January 1084 dis~ <olved by muitual consent. The unfinished business and af- said co-partnership will be to by Theodore R. Ras~ one of the undersigned, d Theodore R. Rasmus=- reby authorized to collect, receive and receipt for all moneys, jcods and properties due or ae- to said co-partnership, and e all obligations of said co-partnership and perform all its unexecuted contracts. Dated a{ Seattle, King County, sen DOROTHY DIX 0 har, To give your sk thai lain” appearance, without blemish- of any kind, try drinkir his value, leadir ik 919 to Ryan's 83: the list with 2 and Durocher’s ] GEORGE BROS. BEAT FIREMEN IN SEMIFINAL Title to Be Prize Next| Tuesday when Grocers Play DeMolay Brot/ h(’r: DeMolay for rap. at - question was settled last right by the peppy overtime battle between: the George Brothers bas- ketball team and the Juneau Fire- vhich was won by the George by a score of 45 to 43. of overtime were It's Georg the title T ve at the end of the urth quarter was 40 to 40, | Get Meney's Worth | The customers—about 150 of them | their money's worth of them spent a whole lot of in rooting for But it was worth it. It was a nip and tuck er the f rter when the Fire- | men were in the lead 9 to 5. At the | } piremen were still ahead | 19 to 17, but the George Brothers! jumped into the lead 33 to 31 in 1 rd quarter. From then on ne was see-saw until the n, when the score was tied. necessitating an overtime ttle aft- DeMclay-High The opening game' between the D2Melay High School teams was also @ hair-raiser, with the DeMolay team leading at the end he first quarter 16 to 8. The up the lead in the next quar- . however, and the High School quint was ahead 25 to 20 when the half was.over. In the third quar- ter the DeMolay five forged ahead 32 to 26 and were never headed from then on, the game ending DeMoliy 45, High School 35. The finals—DeMolay -George Brothers—next Tuesday night promises to be a bang-up affair and the largest crowd of the sea- son is expected to see the title earned in the Channel Cnampvon- ship Series. The Channel series schedule was ended last Tusday with the victors, of the DeMolay and Firemen but it | only got them into a three-way tie with the George Brothers aggrega- tion, and the playoff was arranged LAYTON WINS CHAMPIONSHIP AT BILLIARDS by Run of Fifty to Twenty-three NEW YORK, Feb. Layton, of Sedalia, Missour}, 'wo: Defeats Welker Cochran 24 —Johnny the ' three: cushion billiard cham- ionship last nighi, derennng Welk- 3 =, LUQUE HAS RARE CONTROL -IN 35 GAMES LAST SEASON HE DIO NOT HIT A BATTER- QR MAIE A WILO PricH . THE MASTERFUL VOB OF RELIEF HURLING THIS ‘43-YeAR | OLD CUBAN DID LAST FALL GANE THE GIANTS TUE VICTORY NEEOCEDC 10 WIN THE WORLD "All Rights Reserved by Tho Assoclated Proms = of er Cochran, to 23. It was the eleventh time Layton has won the championship in 30 years of competition. FROSH HIGH SCORER HAMILTON, N. Y., Feb. 24—/ Johnny Lenhart, six-foot, four- inch freshman center at Colgate, has averaged 20 points per gamc this winter and against the Syra- cuse freshmen netted 24, one morc | than the Orange yearling's total. { et i ! CALL GEORGE ANDERSON Expert piano tuning, guaranteed service. Phone 143. —adv. et Daily Empire Want Ads Pay n to decide th> winner of the cham- e pionship. 1 DaMolcy (:5) ..Pos Schoal (3%) al y ross-wor uzz e L'rivry=(12) rf B. Lindstrom3) | 1E,' gy ;,» ind (20) ACROSS Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle [ Astralian % 1. Spider's home { “,(d;w!,! Tight 4: HOCORIEe Seots Law 8. Swing from . side to side ;; ,‘;:::‘"m N S| : Word of con- " Alaska SN ME m (SITIRIO[P) . St 14. Sheel of glass EE. -n (WAIRIP] Afrlea, an 16. Prebistoric uncle wnimal m-g. Lil EBB!JI! . collegtion of 17. Finishes L|A[CIAIT] Washin > for B. Lindstrom. n“ 18. Settle money ole] coreste : DeMolay 20, High b e ‘eremony. . . Witnessed 5; free throws made: De-| 1% Burp it bot {FIRIEIE] . Thin piece of Hizh Scho e, ol (1| T|E[M[S] plistevoasd H!Z 21. Came together > . Declal 23, Goes in A[NJAID[A] . Remedfal 26. Eccentric R agent | . rotating 3 . Pikelike fish 2, molece . Smacked . Floor cover- 5. Tier . ng . Meshed fabric Torgeyrson (11) _.rf. Brown (16) | 31. Nest of a bird 44. Contorted 58. Write 40, Thorns . i Gamn (2) | of prey 46. Shelters for 59. Stained 43, Vegetable ex- Davlin (11) 8 {22 Prayers small ani- 60. Short sleeps udation Baken Cee. Jensen (4) | :ss: gbsu;ucl 5 N g\als ’ 61. Corrode fi g:_s‘;mt . Nerve net- rder of 2 Erskine (11) .....Tg. Blake (2) worl architecture DOWN 49, Back of the 3 . Stea 3 music s - . Substitutions: Burke (9 for| 4 Lair 56. cofnnoser of rick's land Copper coln Burke for Baker, Moyer for Erskine, automobile . Roman. rnad 5. Necknlon. . Corded fabric (8) for Jensen, Jensen Hollmann for Garn, Metzgar for Orme. aad Al A A T H T Vi e il Wl ANNG o T Ficld goals: George Brothers 18 Firemen 17; free throws made George Bros 9, Firemen 9. Officials: Regele, referee; Dun- ham, /timer; Douglas, scorer. BOWLING CENTERS 4 KEEN ON NEW DOPE| MILWAUKEE.—Hlnk Marino, a/ local bowling ace, returned from an | pastern trip to report keen interest all along the line in the “big ex- periment” being couducted here. | ©On a dare, a newspaper sports writer here guaranteed to produce, within 90 days of expert instruc- tion, a 190-average bowler from a mere novice. “Philadelphia, Syracuse, Roches- ter and New York bowlers all want- ed to know how the experiment was coming,” reported Marino. “In sev- eral places they have started ciass- “*“%s with the same end in view.” # —_—————— Shop in Juneau Blgp m turor 7)//aEEm crL | III/II, /andmn/ ANEENE Al HI/HIII ll%fllll /RN i/ AnEnn il JEEE i Anm il il IEIIIII 1 SERIES - o San Francisco, £0} HAS BROUG OUT LEAGUERS i | | Seventy Men in the Big| | “Baseball ‘Show Found ‘ by ‘New System | | e | ST. LOUIS, Feb. 24— Branch | Rickeéy, directing genius of the Car- ‘(hl‘lfl\a i3 not much of a bragging | man, but he will admit that the | team’s famous “chain store system’ | is responsible for a least 70 current big leaguers being in the big show. Explaining the system which built jthe Cardinals into a regular pen- nant-contending outfit when other | methods had failed over a consid- enable period, Rickey said that only one current outstanding star had | “got away” from the Cards | to be purchased by another Nation- al league. team. ‘The Cards have sold many play- ers to other National league teams, jof eourse, but the case of this player—Lon Warneke of the Chi- | jcago Cubs—was the only one, he | said, where they permitted the | player to slip away before giving | him a good looking over. Rickey's club purchased Warneke in 1928 and Houston shipped him Ho the Laurel, Miss, team of the Cotton States league. Thence he was transferred to Alexandria, La, and it Wks while with this club that the Cub scout found and signed him A “slip” like this is unusual Rx ckey says, because every player !in the chain is watched closely |and at the season’s end Rickes goes over the whole list with {scouts and managers present. He | never turns a player Icose, he says. |as long as one vote for retention lis cast. This gives the team a 10- |man check on almost every player. Larry MacPhail, general mana- ger of the Cincinnati Reds, was quoted as. saying that the Cardi- nals owned some 250 players and that at least- 50-.of them were oi fficient caliber to be of real ‘use to the hapless Reds, if they | were available. 'Rush of World’s Gold | 20 New York Marked by Deft Trading Maneuvers Amang e potenual deals that | struck a temporary stumbling block | at least, during the National league !b\enmlv gatherings in New York were: The attempt of the Boston Braves to get together with Brooklyn on 2 transaction by which the Hub outfit, would get Tony Cuccinello, |an infielder with the punch badly needed by Bill McKechnie's tribe. The dicker between. the Phillies and Reds; involving a swap of pitchers—Flint Rhem for Syl John- son., The bid by the St. Louis Cardi- nals for Dick Bartell, peppery shortstop of the Phillies. The attempt of the Brooklyn club to unload Hack Wilson, either on Cincinnati or Boston, if not in A trade with Chicago for the re- turn of Babe Herman, one-time idol- of Flatbush. WHAT OF GELBERT, DUROCHER The surprise attempt of the Car- linals to land Bartell indicates, first, that they are doubtful of Charley Gelbert’s ability to come sack completely recovered from the zunshot accident that put him out of commission a year ago and, sec- ondly, that Leo Durocher is n cnsidered an adequate substitute wer the full season's Stretch. The livelier ball may help Leo's Satting. And it would seem his de- fensive skill largely offsets habits f weakness at the plate. At that Durocher hit for 253 last year and Irove in 44 runs, seven more than Bartell, whose batting. mark was 270. Blondy Ryan of the Giants 1t for only 238 but drove in 48 “uns. Durocher lived up to his reputa- ion on the defense last year by ‘cading the regular shortstops with 1 flelding mark of 960. Bartell fin- shed. fourth among the regulars yith 951 and Ryan was next with 808. Bartell f Durocher ed in 100 double and Ryan in 95 The months have elapsad | since he dominated baseball's most | | dramatic show have not diminishea | the high esteem in which Carl | Owen Hubbell, talented Giant south paw, is held by associates and rivs | als alike. | | - In fact one big league manager, Bob O'Farrell, who caugfii Hubbell | on oceasions when he was backs stopping for the Giants, considers! Carl the greatest flinger “in the clutches” that he has ever secn. “You can talk all you want to about Mathewson, Johnson, Bender, | Plank, Alexander and the rest of | them,” said O'Farrell, in effect,| during a fanfest. “They were all! very, very good, but I would per-| sonally like to have this Hubbell | in there heaving for me in a tight spot. He is not anly as cool as they | come but he can make that screw- ! ball of his do its stuff when he| needs it.” I e [ S R . BOWLING Nothing liké the «&hrill of a ten-strlke! Develop your game on the finest alleys you ever played on. Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billlards Bowliug Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks Barber Shop in connection 950, In ithe wital column of total shances, however, Bartell revealed AN to dine well Lower Front Street, opposite Winter and Pond .nd rest well at glass of fruit juice or tomato ju —one half hour before meals variably. (Continued from Page 8ix) Tests are made on the gold tc determine whether it comes up tc gpecifications, and the owner I paid $35 an ounce, the legal price set by .the President. Bub there:is.a deduction by the | government of % of 1. per cent fo. handling, and' other charges which vary with each shipment. Determining Profits All prices guwoted for the various services are gubject to change and also vary with the size of the.ship- | ment. Gold coming from the other end of the earth could be handled in the rfame manner in Seattle, Wash. the only other U. T. aSSay office but most of ithe gold now being raced to America comes to New York. The secretary of the treasury purchases the gold according tc law, and from the assay office it i sent to whatever point the treasury desires. The trader in gold deducts the cost of bringing it from London |to New York and determines his profit, usually in fractions of one per cent. He also fmust deduct in- terest lost in shipping. “The Gold Point” Many of the charges for shipping change from time to. time, and the price of gold in London and the | foreign exchange ratio between the I,pcund and the dollar change con- stantly. Variation of the price around the “gold point” determines the direction in which the gold could be shipped for profit. One “gold point” roughly figured {by a New York banker was $34.83 | which means gold could be pur- chased profitably in London* no higher than that point for shipment to New York for sale at $35 an ounce. If the price should pass the low *“gold point” and go to $35.17, it might be profitable to ship from New York to London, an exact re- verse of the process. St — Daily Empire Want_ Ads Pay Mr. F. S. Scobee, Manager, Mutual Benefit H. & A. Ass'n, Juneau, Dear Mr. This will thank you for check handed me today in full and final settlement of my recent claim. Altogether you have paid me eight hundred sixty-nine dollars eighty-two cents ($869.82). ice and satisfaction was received from your office at Alaskan Headquarters—Ask for Permanent Rates. HOTEL NEW WASHINGTON ‘ Sehttle's Most Distifiguished Address $869.82 For a Burned Heel Alaska. Scobee : all times. Very (Signed) SEE SCOBEE FIRST Seattle’s most distinguished ad- dress. Here, you will find all the modern hotel conveniences ne- cessary to your complete comfort and all those old fashioned ideas of friendliness and hospitality that are mecessary to a good hotel well operated. ADOLPH SCHMIDT, Managing Director. AEREETEREETEEIESIEEERSE TSN N NN NE TR TN SAN SRS BABIRRRRRTRZRAR Juneau, Alaska, Feb, 7, 1934 Serv- truly yours, CLETTIS H. GROVES e[ W 1ngton, January 16th, 1934. WILLIAM A. SNYDER, THEODORE R. RASMUSSEN. publication, Feb. 3, 1934. | Last publication, Feb. 24, 1934. gl g s 1 “This has a tonic effect and im-| | proves the complexion almost in-|F Shop in Junean Daily Empre Want Ads Pay Dine! Dance! Eat! Drink! ® Every night you will find a gay crowd at the— SALMON CREEK ROADHOUSE TONIGHT! SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTIONS with “OLD MAN” PHILLIPS and His Orchestra assisted by son Harold An EXTRA Finé Stock of ¢ Domestic BEERS