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i DR R N AL N, BB e i) G S D A g SRR B BARNFY GOOGLE AND QPARI\ PLUG T PSSST It ; r . T'S SHERIFF TAIT, = 'i"‘NE. frgN:‘:f;,’ HE THINKS MEBBE [~ CORNSI BLe | IT_WAS SAIRY WHO (=g ' STOLE THE MONEY. I SEED YO' WITH MY OWN EYES, SAIRY HOPKINS ... LUCY - BELLE - THAR_THAR, SAIRY, VORE WERRIED oOUT COMPLETE . YO' WUZ AIMIN' I DUNNO EZ YO' LAY DOWN BRING TER. HIDE YO' HEV ENNY ON THE BED HER OUT, ¢ SUNTHIN' CALL TER YANDER AN' V'L LUCY.... KNOW ™My BIZ'NESS KIVER, YO' WP NICE 'N' WARM For more than thirty years Reliance pure s estandard of quality W -’ [vquawk. Us stars and presidents . B, . o | must have our fun!” " 3 “re |. - “ThisH cost you 10 dolla jroared Gardner. And to Dizzy's| /e ¢ ¥ surprise, it did. if Who's Who, Anyway? | At the very start of his popu- | s ‘larity, he gave a different birth- | day and birthplace on several oc- | casions. When he first jolned the | SCHRAMM SURPRISED Cards, _hl- said he was born in| A group of friends from Juneau Holdenville, Oklahoma, on January |and 'Douglas surprised City Mar- 16; 1910. Later he claimed he Was | shal Charles Schramm last Sat- | born in Lucas, Arkansas, and sub- | urday night at his home, the octra- | sequently gave his birthday as|sion being his birthday. An unique |Auguct 14, 1913; July 11, 1912, and | cpelling contest and other entet- | November 9, 1911. 3 tainment was enjoyed and dehcmvu It was pointed out to him that | refreshments served by’ M cne of these, August 14, 1913, was Schramm, who was a very qm,m_ Daffy’s birthday, and he was ask- |ing hostess, made the evening a i ed if they were'twins. “No," Dizzy | delightful one. ‘fadmitted, “We're not twins, but I LRSS Rabiubidid *I'think that date really is my birth- day. Paul don't know when he HALLOWE'EN CULPRITS wuz born. He wos born in Janu- Friendly condonance of the privi- ary, 1910, I think.” lege of children to celebrate Hal- | Peor OI' Elmer! lowe’en with harmless pranks in | Later accused of lying about his the ‘past, which has gradually ‘n< ¥ .iblrt’hdny. he said. “I wuz helpin' crea'ed as the years pass until ¥ Athe writers out. Them ain't lies; abcut two days of celebration was them’s scoops.” being ‘allowed, has this year been But to start at the beginning of placed under too much strain. For . - (- {the family story, it must be ex- the past week the young-uns have 3 - i - e AR | plained that Dizzy and Daffy have been out with their soap and last ~ L - P Y | @ brother, affectionately known as night several of the boys ganged CORNER THIRD E\SEN ECA “Goofy” or “Eimer the Great.” El- up to do real mischeif, in the form mer has been a source of at of anncyance and damage o prop- ttribulation in the house of Dean, °rty. i A H i ANCHORAGE MAN IS ‘ed his assailant off who went to izzy e e R i BRUTALLY ASSAULTED | the marshals office and gave him- the entrance to the teachers’ resi- | selt up tearing he had killed Mar Tonwrrow: Earl s i e | dence caus lamage, : : onorrow: Farly Days in the | dence causing damage, and the| up .. ogtland, one of the best tin. He said that he had not eaten i known oldtime Anchorage residents | for some time, was desperate and and proprietor of Martin's Trans- ‘decided this was the only way he fer, was the victim of a brutal and | could get some money. Martin's in- unprovoked assault recently in that | juries were attended to by Dr. city. He was returning home fromwmmlg and the former is about town where he was seen to change | again. Peterkoff was bound over to i some bills. Fred Peterkoff, a young |the grand jury by U. S. Commis- § QRN morning seven youngsters were tak- en before City Magistrate Felix Gray and sentenced to clean up around the teachers’ residence, also they were put on probation, minus Hallowe'sn stunts under pen- of real arrest. e 0 i s 0000 000 . HOSPITAL NOTES . (@00 000000000 | 8. Swift entered 8t. Ann’s Ho: pital this morning for medical | Miners premises generally marked up. This | | | { World series’ games are not exactly a novelty in Sportsman: Park, St. Leuis, pictured above, but world series’ games with two vy g e treatment. 2 1L native of Russian extraction, was |sioner Thomas C. Price. H brothers pitching such perfect ball are a novelly anywhere. Dizzy | R to smiiant wille Wbt %o vob. | g i : Dean, left, and his brother, Daffy, right, are mot likely to forget | prank Luyckfassi, who under- INTERIOR GOLD MINERS Martin's calls for help frighten- | Dally Empire Want Ads ¥ay! H | the drama staged in this past class pwent a tonsilectomy at St. Ann’s HAD A GOOD SEASON EDITOR'S NOTE: the first of a serie: timate artiglec on Dizzy and = e e TRES % AT - ————————\ Hospital several days ago, left e 4 the Cards'| the Tigers. And Henry Ford and{of Wichita Falls, Kansas where “ohe hospital this moening for his J. H. Gagen, “who passed ‘through thusiasm and assure Daffy Dean, St. Louis Cards turn By changing its rame to | Will Rogers were .1 gm‘it: the club was playing, at the ‘m_‘humf‘ .::;;c.nurrp(etnhny, tI" jeme to the pitchers. The stery of their nville. A judze in San Juan, St. Louis. “Me an’ H pals,” | quitous hour of 3 am. And not! R % ;1cf'jiid°r & e ;Vnt.{l. reports a Py heime lifo ang experienc. | Pucro Rica, deciered a recess 5o |says Dizzy joulsiehat, but he bumped into .o ue ey Reatarasy o ik i e i ,pm" s in the nsnors will be dis- | Uhat cour attendants could waich “I Wuz Robved!” Alvin Gardner, president of the U ospital yesterday to receive g operators in the Flat-Idit- treatment for an infected hand, arod-Innoko-upper Kuskokwim re- league. td left the hospital today. gion. Ere leaving for the outside cussed in the other imstall. | & Scoreboard description: of thelr | 1n 1931, when with the Houston | et ‘ triumph. A new born baby in|cyp, he managed one night to get : g o Detroit was named Marvin Dean 5 few dollars ahead, and started ‘Good morning, president,” Diz-| he made a visit by plane to the i zy beamed. “So the old boy is. Mrs. Willilam Poole underwent a Bristol Bay country. i By JAMES B. RESTON ‘gffl{m(xg:f,i,;:“fnmfmg‘ A;‘er"l}c]: ;’;:,';, t/_}tm:(r)x;l;(ctmt;]\l%]O\;l:tiuilk‘::ltu:; [ prowling around himself tonight, major operation at St. Ann’s Hos- | Mr. Gagen is in charge of the (Associated Press Sports Writer) | how easy it was for him to beat | expected and he was on the streets | |en? Well, sir, I'm not one to pital today. She is reported to be Felder and Gale mining operations Four years ago, the American | - getting ' along nicely, near Takotna. Comedy, written, directed, acted and publicized by Dizzy and Dafty | IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI||IIIII||IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlHIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I||liIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIlllIlIIIIIIlIIIlIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIlIll!lllmllllllIIlIlIIIllllIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IID Dean, was playing in a vacant lot‘ DON’T MISS THIS GREAT SELLING ments. OPEN ALL NIGHT . ./ = FREE DELIVERY Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single Q-2 rings In the supporting cast were num- erous large, lusty individuals, whose courage was attested by their will- ingness to risk their necessary mnecks swinging at the pitches of . . the Deans. - And in the audience one day was a scout of the St. Louis Cardinals, who blinked every time a great, gangling country boy sent the dirty ball thumping into the catcher’s| glove. At the end of the game he approached the pitcher and dis- covered that his name was Jerome | A Dean and that he was in‘the army, | quartered at Fort San Houston. e Oh, Those Banquets! Today the army posters pro- claim: “The Army Trained Him,” but the honor of ‘training Dizzy | Dean, if he is trained, properly' | belongs: 1—to Branch. Rickey, vice ! president and general manager of ; { the Cards, who has talked to him and disciplined him, and fathered 4 him; 2—to Joe Schultz, manager of T8 Yy J unedu Lumber Mllls Ilu:. AT IllIIIIIIIIII[!IIIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIlllllflllllmllllllll|lllIIIIIIIIIIIIIfilI|IIIIMTHIIHIIIIIIIIIlIII|IIIHlIIIIIIIllIIIHIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII!IIIilIIIIIlIIIIIIIiIIIIfHIIIIIIIIII MEN’S OXFORDS MEN’S ()XF()RDS MEN’S SHOES BED ROCK the Houston club in the Texas The famous W. L. DOUGLAS The Nationally known A. A. RAINIFR CURRIN, GREEN % . ho called him, oth- y 5 4 } ;aa:}e“:gs o “m.m“[;::yrfg o SHOE, regular $5.50 value, 3 85 CUTTER SHOE. Regular 3 DRESS SHOE. Begul ar value . | broke him of the habit of riding S o value $5.00, NOW ... $6 75, NOW" . a bicycle between innings; 3—to Al Todd, a catcher on the Dallas ' club in 1930, now with the Phil- lies, who used violence to teach him that he should throw the ball across tHe' ‘platé "and not at the | ¥ Dpatter's head, 4—to his wife, who o astounds the players in the Na- I tional league by insisting that he | take ‘hér on all road trips; and 5—+ to Clarence Lloyd, the Cardinals’ | # traveling secretary, who pointed | out the difference between soup‘ spoons and tea spoons, and suggest- | ed that he wear his coat when eat- | ing in the main dining rooms of swanky hotels. “Me an’ Henry” ) Since the vacant lot days, Broth- er Paul has followed Dizzy to the majors, has acquired the name Daffy” because it fits' in headlines and rhymes with Dizzy—and has led critics to believe that he is even a better pitcher in his first year than Dizzy was when he came up. Between them, they have won a National league pennant and a y world series for the Cardinals, and have “made the American Comedy i$ the most successful show in the entertainment business today. “80' great was the excitement over their.. séason’s/performance that - training quarters, displayed its en- SHU-PACS SPORTING B()(),TS MEN’S OXFORDS U. S. RUBBER ROYALS. Extra heavy. FLY WEIGHT. Live Rubber. New_ stock. RAINIER, CURRIN, GREEN. Regular All sizes. 16-ineh top. Regular value $6.50. value $5.50. ,5 HECLA - EXTRA MEN’S RUBBERS |' CUTTER HI-TQFS WHITE SOLE. Cleated Shupaks. 12 inch MEN’S REGULAR WEIGHT " 16-IN. FULL SOLID LEATHE! top. Regular $5.50. 4 Were $1.40. $16.50 values. All Now $4.25 . Now95¢ Now $9.00 LEOLOGISTS tell us that even bed-rock moves. But it shifts so graduatlly that it makes a safe, sure base for the largest structure. This bank, too, is moving with the times. But the movement is always gradual, along predetermined lines. Every succeeding move has merely served to further strengthen and consolidate its underlynig stabil- in even better position to serve its many chents and depositors: & First National Bank < __AR=A* AF R = > NG I~ N A X ¥ 2 Here’s your big oppor- tunity to outfit your feet at “once-in-a-sea- These are but a few of the many. savings we THE]T bt 13 1L3: 4 FRONT STREE,T this great sale.. ST, R BAKERY NON-ACID BREAD DAILY * SALT RISING BREAD SATURDAYS Phone 546 J. ‘A. Sofoulis Front filIIIIllIIIIIIIHIIII|||I|||||II||IIIIIII|||I||||]IIIIIIIIIIIII|||||III|IIIHHlIIl||I||IflllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIHlIIIIHIu §