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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1936. " 3% ifth British Party Assaults Mt. Everest in Defiance of Mighty Natural Forces SUMMIT, 294 OFT. Thi imate stages and route by which of (he world." Three members FULL HOUSE “You can get a FULL HOUSE for a dollar or less — and It's # Winner! Ask your liquor deaier.” OTE or AV f TR ! M'SPADDEN ¢ Will Be Appreciated! REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE for TERRITORIAL e < A AUDITOR on the { REPUBLICAN i TICKET! g Primatriés, April 28 ® Hear of MacSpad- © den's qualifications ¢ over KINY Saturday and Monday at 7:15 P. M. SR v drawing illustrating the far as the outfitting point at Darjeeling, India; her husband and Hugh Ruttledge, leader of the party. rive of the fi/th British Mt. Evercst expedition, shows, the approxi- e explorers will make their final effort to scale the unconguered *roof the expedition are (left to right) Nirs, Noel Humphreys, Who goes as ‘ o the effect on climbers’ mental atti- | ! ARJEELING, India, April 24— y TIE *:‘ly):t:locke:i secret Of"ML. Ev- ‘ tudes—the utter depression and fits - s which make erest, still inviolate after four des- | of irritability h | perate assaults by man, may soon quarrél savagely over trifles and at be revealed at Iash |the same time become so careless A new British expedition, headed by the veteran Hugh Ruttledge wh tions against danger. o o%p;mmd the luckless 1933 venture, | E\_Pn after long fncvhmauzauon. has left here in the fifth attemps |the hiuman body revolts at such alti- to scale the 29,140-foot monarch of Ruttledge’s party will face e for many weeks, and in the last \ i, A stages of the assault it will take | f Ay S i m‘“““n“j the climbers more than an hour for "'1‘(1.nIeO:];:uzf~:|x~1(:u¢l;.-2:;lx‘;(in:1(m ‘:rw:( each hundred feet of lung-pounding ,the Himalayan giant has vepelled p’f)‘if“EEl] AR one. dE every onslaught since the St ex= i, i, "handicaps, but the weight of pecditlon in 1921 }Lh(‘ ga ontainers makes it out of “Demons” Tibetans Explain ! Roaring avalanches, precipitous ice cliffs, the hedrt-suffocation of ing heights and the ' blasts that forever rage around the | peak, have proven insurmountabie {hazards to climbers—hurling them again and again, until some t believe U native Tibetan superstition that “demons” rule the ! enshrouded pinnacle and pre- vent man from reaching the top. One of the chief aims of Ruitledge | and his band will be an attempt to solve the 12-year-old mystery of the | fate of Mallory and Irvine, . physically-fit man staggers -pound pack. a husk: under sub-zero | EXPERT'S POLL SAYS FITZWAS CREATEST HEAVY two them | jthat they fail to take vital precau-; {the question, since at that ¢ltitude | { members of the 1924 expedition who " vanished into the mists when le | than 100 feet from the top. { “Demons,” said the natives. |Ringsiders - from All" Sec- tions of Country | Give Opinions NOW YOU.GAN-ENJOY SEAGRAM'S | To that, the white man can only shrug. All that is known is that one ‘m.smm Maliory and Irvine were| oy pitzsimmons, the freckled Cor- clearly seen by other members of nishman who left a blacksmith's | jthe party below. In the next, they | gleqge in Australia to become the | had disappeared—apparently SWebt | yinepin of American prize rings in | off the face of the earth by a fiwefpfmer 90's, has been named the| of the white-vapor plume. “world’s greatest Heavyweight” to Their bodies never were found. !date in a consensus compiled by | Two Men May Reach Top Harry R. Smith, veteran sports ed- | The actual ascent' of Mt. Everest, | jor of the San Francisco Chronicle. | launched by a successive series of The balloting brought out the | five or six camps to a height of | ghinjons of boxing experts from all | about 27,000 feet, probably will start | sections of the country, many of | in the middle of May. Porters and | yhom were ringsiders when the | even cooks will go as high as 24,000 | 150 “Ruby Robert” was compiling feet. and from there on the main |, recorq that won him titles in the party of twelve expert climbers will middleweight, light heavyweight “carry -on. _ ‘,and heavyweight divisions. Their great struggle will be over | james J. Jeffries polled a few less the last exhausting 2,000 feet. Only | yotes than Fitzsimmons,to become two men will attempt the final dash. | second choice, while Detroit’s cur- Experienced Alpinists say that yent negro sensation, Joe Louis, was after 20,000 feet, the slightest €Xer- | pjven third place. tion is almost beyond human endur- |~ mne Jate James J. Corbett, first ance. The effort of §tooping Lo_uo | heavyweight champion under the a shoe-lace causes violent palpita- Marquis of Queensberry rules, was tion of the heart, and even Slow | foyrth-place choice, while the man walking induces nausea and a feel- he conquered, the late John L. Sulli- ing of suffocation. 3 | van, last title holder under the Old Equally, if not more, troubling I8 | London prizé ring rules, ranked| | seventh. 1 Gene Tunney and his arch rival, | Jack Dempsey, rated fifth and sikth | | positions, respectively. Three negroes, Jack Johnson, the late Peter Jackson and Pudgy Sam Langford, round out the “first ten” |in the order named. | Fitzsimmons earned his niche in the hall of boxing fame by winning the middleweight crown from Jack | Dempsey, the Nonpareil, in 1891, the | heavyweight title , from Corbett in 1897 and .the light. heavyweight championship from George Gard- | ner in 1903, after he had lost the iT 'AR"’- | heavyweight laurels four years be- .+] | fore to Jeffries. REDUCED PRICES ;| " st Built along the lines .of an. in- AN I b verted triangle and never weighing { more than 170 pounds in his prime, Fitzsimmons capped 35 years cof fighting with a. six-round no-deci- sion bout with K. O. Sweney in 1914. | “Ruby Robert” was 52 years old at the time. OLYMPIC POLO BUENOS AIRES, April 24.—Man- uel Andrada,. hard-hitting 7-goal back who led the Santa Paula four to the United States championship in 1932, has joined Argentina’s Ol ympic polo squad. With him are An dres Gazotti, the country’s high- ranking star, at eight. goals,: and Joe Reynal, T-goal player. Thiree | others are trying for the fourth place. - e SHOP YN JUNEAU, FIRST! | | [ SAN FRANCISCO, April 24._1 BESTSPRING SEASONIN 5 Ink Botile Started T;wliu;l.;s On Stormy Political Career WASHINGTON, April 24 hary- YEAHS LMMS]mnm slender, ruddy-complexioned | young Senator Millard Tydings, un- ool til a few weeks ago the Senate's most: eligible bachelor, was still o By 2 o honeymooning when Congr swung 7 ,AUthen“C Busmess S'UIVC_\ into action, but keep an eye on Reveals Splendid (nim duing this session. Next to the 78-year-old Carter Trade Pickup | Glass of Vi & ydings is prob- jably the most outspoken Democrat Recent authentic business sur- in that body. There are a lot of veys from eastern centers advise | things about the Roosevelt Admin- that retailers are making frantic|istration he doesn't like and he jefforts to get goods delivered forisays so on the slightest provoca- + what appears to be the best spring | tjon. iseason in five years. The flood in He's likely to provide some real | populous eastern states hash't | greworks as the session progresses. :_helped matters, for besides increas- Quick - tempered; he more than i ing the demand for replacemeut'mmp has locked horns with both | goods frloxlx; :)l:e :ll":’d“ld “eg;le‘;‘h“s {is Democratic and Republican col- | aggravate e delivery. pr - |leagues. As a matter of Retailers who have not brokenfigoes pis public career from ?waz tf,(l;o::o:xll]lt: d;[::;s:;ona]:zhc{m(:‘f’iday he was made a target for an hand-to-! { Jottl | caught be_twgen impatient consum: inll(: k’:;‘;p'“_hm he was trying his O e o, | flrst case in_ court. Opposing coun- }wholesale markets at the height l)flsel had charged him _wnh misrep- the busy season. Many are bemg‘reseglmvg the facts in tl\o_ case. { rejected, getting the retailer in bad {1i%ings reply, so enraged: Bis op- I“'i“‘ the disappointed customer. ‘gg::jnl that Le let fly with an ink ! e | : Premium On Dehvery « o | & | My political career dates from i Coat and suit markets found the |y .4\ oigent he says. “People got | sales of women’s wear fabrics had'to for | “Glad Tydings.” {be withdrawn. Price pressure hns"‘he A T b fact, he the {4 Millard Tydings of Maryland —~one of the most outspoken Democrats in the Senate. ) sobriquet among the Democrats of | ‘dopamnvm of a big eastern rail- Fr“hm R.i‘e‘ stock |road. Law and politics, however, o g o to Pay Way at Colleg ‘sm)n claimed him. ) K His seat in the Séhate is in the| 1 HBROCK, Tex, April 24—Carl rear on the Democratic side: of|{Right, Mm}n, at Tekas -Techno- the Chamber. Most of the time|logical College, is “raising” his way he and listens to debates with{through school. an air of amused tolerance. When| An uncle gave him $5 for Christ- 'he takes part, however, it is with mas in 1829. Carl bought & pig fire and force | - He raised the pig; she had a fam- His carroty hair, slender build | ily of six. !and ruddy complexion make it easy| He gold five; the renaining (wo to pick :m out from his more | presented him with 11 more. elderly colleagues. | He sold his pigs and hought = | i Ax'el.i,stel'ed cow and ecait ey | He accumulated a herd of 16 reg- BOOTLEGGERS APPEAR | 'stered cattie, sold two for 3200 and | IN SARDINE INDUSTRY!enmued in Tech,. The otheryl4 he | values at more than: $1.000, aud he | thinks, .the ., calves = will /put him |/ Sardine/ fisheridh Jot's tha paditic | 2 ouEn WL, oo, U J | Coast. .agriculture’s pnly, source ¢f {sardine meal and’ sardine oil used | |in animal and poultry feeding, is the | latest industry, to feel the menace | »f bootleg operations, The inroads of . unregulated ‘floating reduetion plants” outside the three-mile limit on the sardine | and piichard supply have caused | | the established industry, . through | the Sardine Products, Institute, to | work up a wave, of mdfignaunn'y unong agricultural groups in the Middle West and the West. They want to persuade Congress | to pass a law giving the three Paci- | tic Coast states control over all sar- dines taken from contiguous waters. Four bills are under consideration by the Merchant, Marine and Fish- eries Committee of the House, and ibeen relaxed in favor of delivery pxubhc“ office. They've been doing it the Commerce Committee of .the pressure, with premiums atlamed]snce' HE PAINTS AND WRIT Senate. jon some pieces. v Despite the fact he repr Before 1930 -all sardines =‘were Womet's: - clothing 15 hele.” gt} % um";,":fir‘;:’z:f’rt:”s to]@ State adjoining the District of |caught, packed, and- reduced by | [ il (e doe ' somewhat .as it was in the Gay | hob the -y A 7 f 'Columbia, thus making him one of plants regulated by the State of But you've got to do Nineties, and is assuming the m ‘Lim\w l“‘ POLLII “ELgRYEY. ST most harassed men in the Sen-| California. As a conservation meas- . I colorful aspect since the boom days, | e Maryland House of Delegates| .y "0 i congtituents, he still| ure, the annual take was limjted,| YOUF Paft (oo, . This wide range of brilliant colors | the United States Senate. And|q, .%o " " her things than| 3nd out of each ton of sardines, it| Buy che cortecs Schilling in both clohting and accessorjes 1€ toOk time along the way to rise o 0o o0-"0 oo | was required that 13': cases (48 AR . has'nt made either the retailers’ |{rom private to Licutenant Colonel g | one-pound oval cans per case) be Coffee ‘or vour cofize pot. or the manufacturers' job dny eas- |dUring the World War and win the| He is a porirait and landseape .. ..q o5 food for the table '$ T 3 S ohy oM ¥ cell| painter of real ability. He writes| ™ » about | That's the acucious secret. fer, but it has stimulated the sales | distinguished service medal as well.| Painter o F¥ront 62 per cent of each ton. Him 7 | of accessories in groups. | dA:Xil7 of this was before he reach- :;d 'mb-u‘l‘l’}:nr“nr‘)ilel:‘(l)()kgldi\‘:rlfi)\‘: Cuttings from the canning opera- | Schilling prepares two kinds. B | ‘The woman who buys a red hat to | © Now only 45, he is one of the|conclusion of the World War, he tion, and the remaining 38 per cent, | One for an‘ contrast with the preennial navy- blue outfit will also incline toward ;buying a matching red bag, red 'gloves. and perhaps a red carnation. i THREE CROWN BRANDY | most popular men in the Senate| Wrote a history of the machine both among his colleagues and out- | un units in France. During the siders. In 1932 he served as Chair-|War he commanded a machine gun man of the Senatorial Campaign|battalion which saw heavy fight- Committee—the year the Demo-|ing “PHREE CROW: BRANDY has | crats captured control of the Sen-| He was graduated from college been aged in the wood for two!ate. |as a mechanical engineer and for {years! And the price is very low.”' Ever since he has borne the|a while was with the engineering | | .. Jor downright goodness ‘and taste... fley Sdflw could be reduced to meal and oil | With the discovery that the meal | included 65 per cent protein and | F efdge | that it was valuable for animal and | ; l poultry feeding, demand grew. | C l ln Expanding markets furnished an | C ff One for petcolator. incentive for limitless high seas | operations, and the bootlegger ap- | | peared. PG P N o e . . ...she knows the timé of day <y | s < g