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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB. 4, 1936 3 By GEORGE McMANUS MR MARK TIME, THE DIRECTOR, QUR HOME SO MUCH WHEN HE five times as much| About 50,000 wanderers “rode the horsepower per mile is required to!rods” through LaCrosse, Wis., dur< drive an automobile at 70 miles an ing four months ending in Novem- hour as at 20 miles an hour. ber, it was estimated. BRINGING UP FATHER WELL THANK GOODNESS-IM OUT OF THE MOVINFPICTURE BUSINESS-IMGLADOF I T- | M GONNA TAKE 1T EASY WHAT DOES FROM NOW ON-ILL JUST GO IN THE PARLOR NOW AND TAKE A SNOOZE - BAVARD BOWLS BEST SCORES INELKS LEAGUE Krafft, Heinz and Del Monte | Win at Elks Alleys Last Night cx Bavard of the Heinz team —19-YEAR-OLO CHICAGO WGH SCHOOL- ~OUT WHO 'S RATEDO IF HE COUL.D USE —VISITED US THAT HE ASKED ) NEXT PICTURE-SO ISENTED - (—'Q 6 T INHIS =3 IN ALASKA IT'S By Pap IGRIN TOPS o N PIN PLAY ATBRUNSWICK Vukovich B;v;g Best Single Game But Places Sec- ond in Totals M. Ugrin of the City team bowled WASHINGTON U BEATS OREGON STATERS 51-33 Huskies Score Seventh Consecutive Victory for B. B. Title CORVALLIS, Oregon, EXPORT OR ALE In the Popular Stubby Feb. 4.— the best total score, 548, in the City |The University of Washington last League match play at the Bruns-|njont trounced the Oregon State wick Alleys last night, but placed | ygsketballers, 51 to 33. The Beavers, third in the game scoring. S. Vuko- | jefending Northern Division titlists, vich of the Brunswick team was trailed 28 to 18 at the half. second in the totals with 510, and The win was the Huskies' seventh led 213, 163, 214, for a total orj AMERICA'S BEST BET 590, the best three-game total in| N THE OLYMPIC. SPEED the Grocers League bowling at the | SRATING BUENTS Elks Alleys last night. Bavard plac-‘ i first and second in the indi-| 1 game scoring or Regular Bottles Carey Tubbs | the Del Monte team was second | the totals with 566. Only three | howlers beside Bavard -broke 200! last night—F. A. Boyle of the Del Monte team with 205, J. B. Caro| f the Happy Homes with 203, and | Mrs. Bob Kaufmann with 201. | Krafft won from Wesco, Heinz| beat the Happy Homes, and Del| Monte defeated S. & W. with the| following scores: Wesco vs. Krafft WESCO 146 174 182 502 KRAFF. Kaufmann 201 178 175 Totals 554 503 452—1509 ‘Happy Homes vs. Heinz HAPPY HOMES Miss Hanson 152 129 Caro . 157 144 F. Barragar . 149 153 458 426 HEINZ 183 123 213 Totals 519 460 505—1434 Miss Paulsen Blomgren Barragar, Jr 139 192 Totals 4481473 [ Mrs. Evans Metcalf 145 179 179 126— 472 145— 502 181— 535 203- 182— 489 537—1421 Totals 153 144 163 144— 147— 214— 480 414 590 Mrs. Caro Sterling N. Bavard Leo WON HE MDDLE ATLANTIC TITLE WITH A TOTAL OF 50 PoinTs -AND ME WITH A 62-0!7’51\1 LEG Yt I i w130 M i i INJURED PERRY PLANS DEFENSE in an automobile accident last year but even that blow could not keep this courageous athelte from skat- ing. The fact that Olympic speed skating races will be conducted on a time basis is not going to weigh as heavily against the American Ed Radde was third with 505. Vuko- vich bowled an even 200 for first place in the individual game scor- ing, and Duncan of the Alaska Laun- dry team was second with 195. Brunswick won two out of three games from Alt Heidelberg, and Lha‘ city team beat the Alaska Laundr; three straight games. Complete scores were: Alt Heidelberg | 135 123 127— 385 146 132 154— 432 158 167 180— 505 | Matheson S. Baker Ed Radde 439 422 461—1322 Brunswick 148 162 200— 510 125 189 133— 441 140 158 156— 454 413 509 Alaska Laundry 144 101 144 126 195 167 483 394 City Team 174 122 135 157 179 191 Totals 8. Vukovich A. Galao E. Galao Totals —1411 Darnell Magorty Duncan - 369 - 412 - 482 TO END HiS SKATING CAREER HARD FOUGHT Totals —1263 Hagerup 437 164— 456 Ugrin 178— 548 Totals 488 470 483—1441 — | wracked With pain, - already dissolved, ALSO ON TAP AT ALL LEADING DISPENSERS consecutive victory. e .—— NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP Notice is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing be- tween the undersigned, doing busi- ness under the name of the CEN- TRAL BEER PARLOR has been dissolved by mutual consent. E. P. RUNDICH, SAM LEPETICH. First publication, Feb. 4, 1936. Last publication, Feb. 5, 1936. L J ALASKA TRADING CO. John T. McLaughlin, Local Agent RHEUMATIC PAINS TEAR YOU DOWN You can't PHONE 10 do your best work when and no longer is there any need to suffer torturing, stab- bing, stmple muscular rheumatic pains without the benefits of the doctor’s pre- scription. known as Williams R.U.X. Com- pound. Take just a few doses and see how uickly you are relieved. The first bottle t produce results or money back. Wil- s R.UX. Compound, being a liquid, starts to work immed- intely. It contains pain-relieving ingredi- ents which are absorved into the blood, and carried to sore, inflamed muscles and parts, giving ease and comfort which is a blessing to sufferers. Don't let muscular rheumatic pains tear you down. Get a bottle of Williams R.U.X. Compound today __ and get relief. On sale at BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. GAME IS DUE Tonight the City League will bow! the following games: Sanitary Gro- cery vs California Grocery, 7:30 p.m.; All Stars vs Columbia Lumber, 8:30 S. & W. vs. Del Monte S & W. Mrs. Duncan 109 115 Van Atta 142 -53 Benson 190 182 ~ AT WIMBLEDON 123— 347/ [ ONDON, Feb. 4.—On the shelf 190— 485 for three months by doctors’ orders, 184— 556 | Fred Perry says he will be ready . lagain to defend his tennis title at 441 450 497—1338 | wimpledon next summer. MONTE | And barring accident, he will 148 112 104— 364{q04in Jead John Bull's campaign- 195 179 192— 566 ers jn the 1936 Davis Cup cam- 169 205 171— 545 paionc — — — | “I'm confident we can hold the Totals 512 496 467—1475 cyp another year—if not more,” he Tonight the Brewers League Will \saig on his return here from Aus- bowl the following games: Olym-| i pians vs. Horlucks, 7:30; Alt Hexd-: “The United States is our most elbergs vs. Blue Ribbons, 8:30; Eas"‘probable opponent, and what we Sides vs. Rainiers, 9:30 o'clock. |did last year, when we beat them,| Totals DEL Holland Tubbs Boyle skaters’ chances as some seem to' believe. They should win their share |of titles, although they aren't like- |1y to sweep the four races as Jaffe |and Shea did for the U. S. in 1932. The major opposition at Garmisch- Partenkirchen is likely to be fur- nished by the Norwegians and the Finns. THIS EVENING DeMolay and Eagles, Un- eaten rives, Clash— Substitute Event GAMES TONIGHT 7:30—DeMolay vs Eagles (Con- ference). 8:30—Krause vs Sabin’s conference). SKI MEET AND |baskeiball game begins at 7:30 Juneau C]Ub F]anning Wil’l' o'clock tonight at the high school (Non- o’'clock. est contenders for the second half crown. Both teams are reported to be at full strength, and the prize game | of the second half is anticipated by fans. Krause Substitutes Owing to the absence of the U. S. Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa, Krause's Concreters will substitute against Sabin’s Ciothiers. Twice | beaten by their larger opponents, the haberdashers feel that the law of averages will be in effect tonight | when they meet the Krausers. Both defeats were by small margins, how- | ever, and breaks of the game may —————— | | SPORT SLANTS Bill Taylor, veteran Olympic skat- | ing coach, singled out Leo Freisin- ger, 19-year-old Chicago school boy, as America’s greatest Olympic skat- ing prospect. Freisinger had just| skated off with the Middle Atlan- tic speed title, piling up 50 points on Polly Lake at Newburgh, N. Y., in competition with a great field| which included the U. S. Olympic skating teams. Just about a year ago Freisinger had serious doubts as to whether he would be able to skate again, much less hope to win a place on the Olympic team which is to com-| pete at Garmisch - Partenkirchen, Germany, this winter. He was hob- pling around on crutches with a| broken leg, the result of a very un- usual accident. Shortly after he had broken just sbout every intermediate record in the skating books he was posing for the photographers. They were shooting Freisinger through a sheet of plate glass for a below-the-ice- five matches to one, can be accom- plished again.” Perry cut short his visit “down under” to undergo medical treat- ment for the shoulder injury he suffered last year, when he fell on his racquet during the finals of the American championships at Forest Hills, L. I, while playing Wilmer Allison, The injury took a turn for the worse while he was playing in Aus- tralia, and on his return here he said he was unable to lift his play- ing arm high enough to drink a cup of tea. A manipulative surgeon here told him he must not play tennis for three months. hop around on crutches, feeling that he might never skate again he' did not appreciate how much he loved the sport. He had a tentative post on the Olympic team when he skated out|of the men’s event in the four-mile | on Polly Lake in the Middle At- lantic championships, but before the smoke of the battle for first !honors cleared he had made it a definite one by a series of sensa- tional time trials. On the strength gym. Both teams have been unde- ter Sports Events for [reated in conference battles, the yery oo o of U Tohnsan will {Dnug]as team having downed the referge, Concreters 45 to 41 recently whil> | the fraternal boys beat the Firemen 43 to 33. However, in a non-confer- ence tilt in January, the FOEmen easily defeated the DeMolay and by 5o doing, became one of the strong- February 16 [ The week-end of February 16 ’wul be a busy one for members of the Juneau Ski Club. Featured by a downhill race to be held under their auspices on the Douglas Ski Trail on Sunday, February 16, the | winter sports session will be cli- maxed by a gala banquet and dance Monday evening. The affair is to be held at 7:30 awarding of prizes to the race win- ners following the dinner. Vice- President Ernest Parsons will pre- side at the affair in the absence assisting him in preparations for the banquet will be Orrin Kimball, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Caro and Lu Liston. | A gold cup, donated by Dan Mol- | ler, will be presented to the winner race, while a pair of skies and bind- ings will be given for first place in the junior contest. Second prize for juniors is a pair of ski poles, and third a pair of ski bindings. A pair of skis will be awarded | p.m. in the Terminal Cafe, with the| of President “Sandy” Smith, while; - SAVE THE DATE Rainbow' Girls will sponsor a Silver Tea Saturday afternoon, Feb. 15, from 2 to 5. —adv. T BASKETBALL e STYLES OF PLAY, new rules introduced this season, the possibility that the tradi- tional center-jump may be cast into the dis- card entirely. . . . The maple-court legions are concerned with these problems. The game is played on an intersectional scale now, but styles are distinctive—and changing to meet new conditions. The fast- breaking offense, the slow break, even the “fire department” game, all have their ex- ponents. Leading coaches representing every sec- tion of the country, the men who have stud- 'SENTENCED! "To a Life-Time of Poor Business and Mediocre Financial Returns” COUNSEL FOR THE DEFENSE: "It it please your honor, will the court review the findings in the case of this merchant, and explain just why he has been given such a severe sentence.” HIS HONOR: “YES, GLADLY" The Defendant got up this morning, from an Advertised Mattress, Shaved with an Advertised Razor and put on Advertised Underwear Hose Shoes Shirt Collar Tie Suit Ate an Advertised Breakfast Food Drank Advertised Coffee {of his showing at Newburgh Freis-| the winner of the children’s race, !inger has been nominated as our with a pair of poles for second and most likely candidate for the Olym-;a ski cap third prize. The awards effect when the glass cracked and ki to th d ied the problems of thesgame from every dropped the skater to e ground, angle, detail their impressions of basket- Put on an Advertised Hat crushing his leg. Mishap “A Blessing” 1 While this misfortune threatened to push him out of the Olympic| picture for a time it proved a bless- | ing in disguise. His string of rec-| ord breaking triumphs had left him | trained far too fine. He was wor-| rying about everything in the wo;‘nul and as a result was pressing bamyl into many skating errors. The enforced lay-off enabled him | to recoup his vitality and gave him ample time to reflect on his skat-| ing sins, something an 18-year-old youngster found impossible when engrossed in competition on the ice. Best of all, it brought home to Freisinger just how much his skat- pic 500-meter title. Sideline Encouragement On the sidelines when Freisinger was skating to his Middle Atlantic triumph, was the crippled veteran, Van Bialas. Bialas was fervently rooting for the youth to make his comeback complete. He had even given Freisinger his own hat to |wear as a good luck token in the races. And when the Chicago lad ran up a winning total Bialas was as thrilled as the new champion. After the championship events Bialas, a veteran of three Olympic meetings, drew a tremendous ova- tion from the crowd by skating once around the track with the aid ing meant to him. Until he had to of an artificial limb. He lost a leg jare now on display in the Juneau- | Young Hardware Company. PR i G o SAN DIEGO MAN TO BOSS .YACHT TRIALS LOS ANGELES, Feb. 4—Samuel Dauchy of San Diego, veteran of- ficial of the North American Yacht Racing Union, has been named to head the Olympic Games yacht race committee for the American trial races to be conducted Feb- ruary 22, 23 and 24 off Los Angeles harbor. Trials will include race series for six and eight-meter sloops and monotype (one-man) class. ball's present and future in a series of articles brought to you, starting tomorrow, by The Associated Press in the Daily Alaska Empire. The coaches, including Craig Ruby of Illinois, C. N. (Nibs) Price of California, Hugh McDermott of Oklahoma, Dr. H. C. Carlson of Pittsburgh, Lewis Andreas of Syracuse and others, also will present dia- grams and explanations of their pet plays. No college or high school coach, player or fan should miss these illustrated artic basketball. } IIIIIHIIIIHI"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIlllllIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIiiIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII . Lighted an Advertised Cigar Drove to his place of business in an Advertised Car And then turned down a Newspaper Ad- vertising Solicitor on the ground: “IT DOESN'T PAY.” Sentence has been passed—Case dismissed!”