The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 26, 1936, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BRINGING UP FATHER THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 1936 SAY, CASSIDY: MAGGIE JUST LEF " AN' LOCKED ME INl M ROOM-SHE HID THE KEVYS UNDER THE FRONT DOORMAT COME UPR AND GIT'EM-THEN TIEEM TO ABRICK AN’ THROW T IN MY WINDOW-GIT DUGAN TH BALL-PLAYER, TOTHROW TH BRICK- STEELE GETS DECISIONIN TEN ROUNDER ; Tacoma M{d—d]eweighl Cutpoints Stuhley of Chlcago LOS ANGELES, Cal, Feb. 26— Freddic Steele, of Tacoma, was given the decision over Hayden “Young Stuhley, of Chicago, at the cnd of a ten rounder here last n'ght The ringsiders gave the up-com- ing Tacoma middleweight five rcunds, Stuhley three rounds and two rounds were even. Stuhley rallied gamely in the last round and caught Steele with a rard blow to the mouth but Stezle bad piled up sufficient paints to give him the decision by a good margin Steele weighed 155 pounds and Stuhley weighed 160 poun - SPORT SLANTS “Never have I an exhibition ley.” The spea etta D. McCutcheon of Colo., the greatest of women bowl- ers and the teac of thet of women every ye She had just watched five sight- less young men, of ages averaging 2, bowl a match against a team of full-sighted opponents in the ¢ n- nual sports tournament of the New York Guild for the Jewish Blind Led by Christian Wuria of Glen- dale, Long Island, who scored 143, the blind boys made shots which had the big gallery behind them cheering as a college football crowd vells for a varsity eleven. Guided by Rail With the aid of an iron railing at the left of the approach to the foul line on the alley, Captain Her- bert Holmes and his team—Chris- tian Wuria, Dominic DeJohn, Jos- eph Maior and Louis Briller—ad- vanced with a rapid run-up to d livery. The railing gave them their E of direction. On the first ball of each frame they rolled for strikes, and they succeeded in get- ting strikes on an amazing number of occasions. As the 16-pound ball crashed through the pins, they listened with keen preception which is theirs. Invarial if a strike re- sulted, they could tell by the sound. Often they could tell how many pins remained standing. From his perch behind the pins, the pin-boy called the numbers of the pins re- maining. With that as a guide, they shifted their direction on the second ball to “pick up the spare,” as the bowlers say As Captain Holmes stepped to the ful-line for his second ball in one frame the pin-boy -called, ‘Number 10!" That meant the one at the extreme right of the alley remained standing. Holmes, shlft- I complished this HERBERT HCLMES / CAPTAIN OF ' THE BOWLING TEAM OF THE NEW YORK GUILD FOR TE i ONE MEMBER OF TiE BLIND TEAM , CHRISTIAN WURIA, BOWLED 143 IN COMPETITION RECENTLY ing direction ever so slightly, his sta delivered the ball and hit the 10-pin cleanly with the im- pact is evidence of rolled On another occ: g ped a sion, i 5-6 split.” “Spo sut oaching, aua despite the great handicap they face, these boys have picked up the funda- of bowling in a remarkable aid Mrs. McCutcheon, who ling with ten perfect 300 to her credit. “In , they excel most sighted bowlers. One of the difficulties I have in teaching bowling is to convince the average person to be a ‘spol bowler’ rather than a ‘pin bowler” In other words, the way to bowl properly is to learn how to put your ball on the same spo* on the alley time after time and to pay no,attention to the pins as the release is made. The principle is the same as that of a golfer who is told to ‘keep his head down,’ rather than looking up at his ob- Jective. “These sightless boys are ‘spot bowlers’ to the ultimate degree be-! cause they cannot see the pins. They must learn through E)(pe"l— menting the proper spot at which| to release the ball. They have ac-‘ ith amazing suc-| ment way,” the nation’s ackowledged le bowler, of weman games one w | CAN ALWAYS RELY ON ME PAL,CASSIDY- took | a well| AID OF AN RAILING ve Y4 Al Rights Reserved by The cess. Their delivery, even with the necessity of grasping the iron rm]— ing at the left as they approa the line, is well-nigh perfect. Tt should be a real of us who worry troubles from day to day real champions.’ SIS, CANADIAN TO COACH ANCHORAGE HOCKEY TEAM FOR CARNIVAL ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Feb. 26.— Joe Moreno, Canadian hock=y play- er, is expected to arrive here today @nd he will coach the Anchorage team preparatory to the Fairbanks Ice Carnival next month. Anchor- age expects to have a hockey team that will capture the honors. about minor They are 'CHARLES TAYLOR AND BRIDE LEAVE, HONEYMOON TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor are through passengers aboard the Princess Norah from Skagway on a honeymoon to the States. er of a chain of trading posts | the Yukon Territory. - SHOP IN JUNEAT! FIRST! LIPS SllOl’ IN JDVE STARS AND STRIPES PARADED AT OLYMPICS Members of the Unltod States teams that participated in the wi shown as they paraded into the crowded stadium Mhlnd the flag. inter Olympic Games in Germany are (Associated Press Photo) PRINCIPLE AS IN GOLF WHERE TFEPLAYER KEERS HIS EYE ON THE BaLL, AUD NOT HIS OBVECTIVEZ Mr. | Taylor is the son of I. Taylor, own- | in By (’EORGE Mc’VI l\NUQ By Pap - NUMBER (D= THESE SIGHTLESS 10 < BOWLERS APPROACH “ THE FOUL LINE WITH THE > 1_RON ON THE LEFT ° ~THE PIN-BOY CALLS OUT THE NUMBERS OF THE PINS LEFT STANDING AFTER. THE FIRST BALL AND THE BOWLERS ROLL ACCORD- s INGLY SR> ARs NeCuTchEON , LEADING WOMAN BOWLER- OF WE COUNTRY, EXPLAINS MEIR SUCCESS AT WE GAME 3 9 ALLEY S/INCE THEY CANNOT SEE THE PINS cee * IT /S THE SAME - WASH, STATERS AGAIN DEFEAT ™ WASHINGTON . | | ; } Mus.s Hanson College Five Wallops Husk-' ies—Championship Still in Doubt PULLMAN, Wlsh Feb. 26.—The Washington State College walloped the University of Washington last| night in a Northern Division Con- ference basketball game by a score (of Staters squeezed through with a 36 {tc 35 overtime win Monday night. | Despite the defeat, the Wash- | ington Huskies are still a game and one-half ahead of Oregon State which, however, can win the North- ern Division championship by tak- ing both games in Seattle on March 6 and 7. Washington State the standings. i — -, is third in | HOSPITAL ‘GUILD l DANCE ON MAY 9 | The annual Hospital Guild dance ‘v.xll be held this year on May 9, ! according to announcement today 1by Mrs. W. A. Holzheimer, Chair- |man with Hospital Day being ob- served on May 12. | Early announcement is made so as to assure reservation of the dates. It was also announced that mem- bers of the Hospital Guild will be the luncheon guests on Easter Mon- pital at the Guild meeting. { Mrs. Holzheimer, who will direct the Hospital Guild’s arrangements, leaves on the Victoria for Ketchi- kan, where the presence of her husband, District Attorney Holz- heimer, is required in the present term of the Federal Court there. MRS. H. C. SHIPPEY | the Fern Beauty Parlors, returned {on the Northwestern from a hur- ,opened her place of business. ness of her father, Mrs. Shippey reports his condition at present to be satisfactory. .- THATCHER IN JUNEAU | | | T. A Thatcher, Hunt, Mottett| Hardware Company representative, | |arrived on the Northwestern from | | Ketchikan. f7ome, Mabei Monson of the Uneedas buys thousands of rough poles of 47 to 28. This was after thej day of the Sisters of St. Ann’s Hos- ! BACK FROM STATES| Mrs. H. C. Shippey, proprietor of | {ried trip to Hollywood, and has re- | Called south by the serious ill-| BOYLE BUWLS Coast Ski Boom BEST TOTAL; Boosts Profits ELKS ALLEYS of Boy Atisan 1A, W. Hennmg and Mabe! . 2 SEATTLE, Feb. 26. — Skiing, a' | comparatively new sport in the| : Monson High Game | Scorers i thriving business to the basement- workshop of 17-year-old Elton Leith | of Seattle. He has so much work he keeps his father, mother Blld} three pals busy. | bt 'none of them »AL the ug_e of 14, Elton madc‘ hed the 200 mark in the indi- himself a pair of ski poles. Young-| iusl game scoring. F. A. Boyle Sters in his neighborhood wanted {of the Del Montes fook first place S°M€ and he made more. { with a total score of 542, Art Bring-| During the National Ski Tour-| dale of the Libby team was second D2ment at Mount Rainier last' win- with 527, and George Benson of the (% & coach of an Eastern college | Pacific Northwest, has brought a| ‘ More than half the players broke 1500 in the three game totals in the | Greeers’ League bowling at the Elks Aligys last night, S & W team was thid with 525. Two 551 team saw some of the poles iof the women bowlers, Mrs, H, I, and liked them. He prevailed| { Faulkn>r and Mabel Monson, were UPon an Eastern sporting goods. store to order 500 pairs. Since then Elton's business has by leaps and bounds. He also in the 570 class | A. W. Henning of the Amocats | bewled 198 for the best individual 8rown was second with 194, and C. B. Hol- tonkin cane from Siam, and rattan lend of the Del Montes and Earl frem Singapore for the “snow Cleveland of the Uneedas tied for rings.” He's a little, big, business- third place with scores of 192 man now. | INFLATION"IS { Libby, with a handicap advantage of 15 points per game, won three pemes from S & v, the Happy ff Homes won two ot of three games from the Uncedas, and the Dol Montes beat the Amocats by a fwo | e AGAIN ECROING, Complete scores were Lidby w. CONGRESS HALLS Mrs. Sten 1683 133 - 1 Mrs. Faulkner.. 190 148 et | Bringdale 187 190 | Spot - 4 Fxghlmg Word Once More ! Totals w2153 Looms Before Senators iy entatives [ Mirs Dunsan . 144 184 and I“’P_Yfi 4v1“ o 131 "’3 (Continued from Page One) Bensen 7% 175 " s TI; 4;1; 470 -;;;47} the great middle class was impover- ished, and hunger and intense suf- fering swept over the land. Infia- tion is not new. Rome saw it Happy Homes Uneedas Happy Homes— 105 110 167— 382 In the 1780's the infant American Caro 191 123 17'— 489 Republic suffered from it. In Bos- F. Barragar 182 182 182—*5%6 ton, Samuel Adams found that a { PSSk — new hat and a suit of clothes cost | Totals 478 415 524—1407 him $2,000. i Uneedas-— H Money's Value Declines .Mm Monson 126 194 188— 508 Very broadly, the economists soy, | Herrmann 134 156 143— 423 inflation means a decline in the | Cleveland 192 153 16— 514 yalue of money, and a consequent Spot 15 15 45 rise in the price level. It occurred S F S “—— in Rome when Nero reduced the Totals 437 518 515—1500 'metallic content of the coinage That was easy to understand. With Amocats vs. Del Montes less precious metal in each coin, Ambcats — ¢ the seller of a new tunic naturally | Mrs. Bringdale. 153 141 137— 431 4onanded more coins. But today, ‘Dr Whl!.ehead 178, 13h, M- Ab5 when we use chiefly paper money, jP-BfsLng 138 182 198— 518,14 more important still, transact 2 aca amm_1ans AbOUt 90 per cent of our business D;I;O;;:;;ll?&-—- % 43?._14'\1‘ by use of bank checks, inflation is v g more illusory. ’}llollp/nd L0 16t 1 30 One of the most commonly ac- 1 Tubbs 168 168 168—*504 Boyle 183 180 179— 5“‘cemnd theories of inflation is that e __lit occurs when the effective volume Totals 462 475 539—1476 of money and credit increases fast- “—-Average—Did not bowl ler than the physical volume of There will be no bowling at thplzoods. " | Elks Alleys tonight. The Brewers'! Mass Emotion | League will bowl the following | Thus, if the number of dollars games tomorrow evening: Olymp- available to purchase a quantity of ians vs. Ramiers, 7:30 o’clock; Blatz goods doubles, but the quantity of vs. Blue Ribbons, 8:30 o'clock; and goods remains unchanged, the price | Horlucks vs. Golden Glows, 9:30 o'~ |of the quantity of goods doubles. | clock. This of course, is an extremely| - |simplified version. It might seem | FORMER ANCHORAGITE from this that effective control of money and credit could be accom- lS ON OLYMPICS TEAM plished, and prices kept stable. In-| |deed, that is one of the objectives An army officer well known in|of recent monetary and banking | |Alaska and formerly stationed at legislation. Anchorage is a member of the' But a vital factor which is be- Army team now preparing for the|yond control, economists explain, pentathlon event in the Berlin is mass emotion. If confidence in Olympic Games. ithe effectiveness of the controls He is Captain Richard G. Bas-|ghould vanish, the result would be a sett, who was prominent in athlet- .,ch (o spend money for fear it ics in the westward city when he‘tmay be worth less tomorrow. Some- was at the infantry barracks there. thing of that nature happened in The pentathlon event includes run- Germany. Once such a movement ning, riding, swimming, fencing starts, ‘mone; 4 y is spent faster and and pistol shooting, and Capt. Bas- faster, prices rise, sett and the other eight members more and more money to carry on ;‘elztiru;';‘m?;;m Feasping ot Yous the movement tends to speed issu- S ance of paper currency. No one 7] '3 " wants to hold a fixed income secur- SHOE S VIIRAY, IOR 87! ity like a government bond. Gov- ® ernment treasures cannot finance themselves by selling bonds, and are forced to print still more| money. Such a movement soon be- comes inflation in its most virulent, form. The renewed flurry over infla-| tion in the United States has de- veloped over the continuing spend- ing and borrowing by the Govern- ment, and the proposal in Congress to pay off the bonus by printing “WORK GUARANTEED” Supreme Radio Service CALL 634 | FOR SERVICE AND FREE | TUBE TEST | | e = _4-—.,—-———6 Tlle Juneau Laundry l | known in Juneau, having spent the the need for|™- strained? And if money is printed, will it not destroy confidence in the currency? Defenders of Gov- ernment spending answer that Am- erica’s per capita debt is still well under that of England or France, and those who propose printing money answer that there is nearly twice as much gold reserve as money in circulation ST. ANN'S BUGLE MAKES ITS DEBUT Newest scholastic publication to appear in Juneau is the St. Ann's Bugle, weekly newspaper of the St. Ann’s Parochial School, which con- sists of a one-page mimeographed sheet and bears the modest slogan, “Most. of the News Most of the Time.” (Tomorrew — The causes of past periods of inflation in the United States and other coun- trics.) Sister Mary Agnes ic ‘.lvisor. Members of the staff are fol- Editor, Pete Schenider, Jr., sher, Harley Turner,Jr.; Jokes, Marjorie Doogan; Business Man= ager, Ted Smith; Reporters, Kath- leen McAlister, Bob Westby. Ceclila - MRS. VAN DER LINDEN DIES IN CALIFORNIA —_— Thibodeau. Death in California of Mrs. Jane| A continued story wnich ends, Van der Linden, 63, mother of|like movie serials, in the most George Shaw and Mrs. Hermann breathtaking places each week, IS one of paper Porter of Juneau, was reported to- day by Mr. Shaw, who returned on the Northwestern after attending his mother’s funeral in Linden, Wash., the family home. Mrs. Van der Linden the features of the new i JOHNSON IN TOWN Chet Johnson, National Grocery Company representative, arrived from Petersburg aboard the North- western. . RHEUMATIC PAINS TEAR YOU DOWN is well- ummer of 1931 here as a guest of her son and daughter. She died in Bellflower, Cal, shortly after the arrival of Mr. Shaw and Mrs. Por- ter at her bedside. Mrs. Porter, who also attended l'fl(‘ funeral, remained for a short visit in Washington before re- ti can’'t qo your best work when urning ‘north " d witu pain, and no longer is 1 here any need to suffer torturing, stab- ing, simple muscular rheumatic pains HEBERT ARRIVES vithout the benefits of the doctor's pre- on, known as Willlams R.U.X. Com= Tnke just & few doses and see how v you are relieved. The first bottle L. F. Hebert, Schwabacher Hard- ware Company representative, ar- ust produce results or money back, Wil (f R Y i Compound, being & liquid, rived on the Northwectern from lved, starts to. work immed- Petersburg. ns pain-relieving ingreci- el are absorved into the blood, ed to sore, inflamed muscles and Although one of the most pro- ng ease and comfort which {s NOATIEA o S ataths, , Nost Oares to sufferers. Don't let muscular h fc pains tear you down. Get a bottle of Williams R.U.X. Compound today and ret relief. On sale at BUTLER-MAURO DRUG |lina sometimes is referred “the wine cuuntry." to as co. \ SPARK IN OUR NEW: HOME WHEN WE GET MARRIED Y =N JUNEAU-YBUNG HARDWARE GO, The inexpensive way to keep warm in any weather is to burn the “Economy Brand”. INDIAN EGG-LUMP 1 Ton, delivered 1, Ton, delivered Y Ton, delivered ... ... . Excellent for FURNACE, RANGE or HEATER Start your fire with INDIAN then bank with——— "CARBONADO” The Coal That Makes Other Coals Last Longer PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY —PHONE 412— CAPITOL CAFE : AND BALL ROOM v Private Rooths Lunches Dancing Every Night s THE TERMINAL “Deliciously Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. } Franklin Street between | Front and Second Streets I PHONE 33 money. Conservatives ask, how long can Ithe credit of the Government be i

Other pages from this issue: