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WELL:- DAODY, KEEP UP YOUR GOOD WORK-THROW HIM OUT LIKE YOU DID THE OTHERS— HUH-THERE GOES THE BELL- | SUPPOSE 1T 1S ANOTHER COUNT OR DUKE CALLIN/, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1936. BY GOLLY-LL KICK THIS ONE OUT OF TOWN- By G NEVER MIND-ILL ANSWER THE DOOR AN' DON'T IN- TERFERE-I'M DOIN' ME DALY DOZEN- EORGE McMANUS WHY, ER- A~ YES-BUT IM NOT BRAGGIN' CONTINUED — 'go the six-round limit, because |icng before that, one of the boys "mll be peacefully sleeping on the icanvas. | The blond Siberian, Yokuba Bum- NUVEMBEB ]fl bullevitch, awaits with glacial calm the attack of Douglas' Alec Demos, Who resembles nothing so much as Wrestling, Boxing Are on Big Bill—Participants a brick windmill in a gale. The bold Mamaluke has never before Are Training Hard wrestled with anyone who lacked a long Russian beard and felt de- cidedly at a loss until he learned | that Alec had plenty of hair on Monk Keaton, one of Juneau's leading boxing and wrestling im- rios, desires to make it known he is offering action and his chest. “I feex heem now,” he excitement in great, large .red chunks when his men of the mat and gloves tangle in the Elks' Hall on November 10. Monk claims that he can't sleep at night after watch- ing the s work out, because of horrible dreams of twisted legs, and dislocated arms, and kicks in the solar plexus. “And think of it,” he shudders, “they are just p: ticing now What a gentle massacre this is going Welterweigh But evidently not the four original on his list, he has recently signed up a couple of welterweights to raise the curtain on the scenes of carn- age. Ted Price, of Haines, a handy young lad with his mitts, has been chosen to test the mettle of a classy looking newcomer, a two- time winner of the Golden Gloves Tcurnament: in Detroit, a chap nam- ed Alec Papp. Both boys are train- ing hard and their gym perform- ances are, satisfying even the crit- ical eye of Promoter Keaton Heavyweights Matched Bets are about éven on the two heavyweight fight Bob Corey, champion of Wyoming, and Ford Butler, who has fought many aiplenty of trouble getting out of good man, but everyone seemed his famed Turkish twist, hold agreed that with so such dynamite |that usually leaves the victim in loose in the ring the bout will not a semi-paralyzed state and not at Byingicn That hollow y round one hears from time to time, is only Bill Byington pounding himself on the chest as he plans his method of assault on the rubber-faced Doc Webb. “Tarzan” Byington is work- ing out in private but is making no secret of what he intends to do to Mr. Webb. The gentlest thing he has mentioned so far is his plan to break that gentleman’s neck. Doc says that none of Bying- ton's bragging is going to scare him out as long as he has two hands that will pull hair and choke windpipes. He considers the Bying- ton ribs ideal for kicking and has decided that Bill will look better with his ears cauliflowered or torn loose. “Texas Jack” Morrison, who has !made something of a name for | himself as “tough people” has igrown no tamer since the cash |customers last saw him in action, and considers it his duty and | privilege to beat up Bill Walther |beyond recognition. He resents the wall talk Bill has been making, . the way he parts his hair, nice and and chews his gum. | Walther Training Walther is training hard says Longhorn Jack will and have SHE SAYS: “We've never been disappointed in Hills Bros. Coffee, have we? 1 remember when we started to use it years ago . .. when you were saying people wouldn’t change from horses to those new- fangled automobiles.” - CASTA 'all interested in further wrestling. Both of these grapplers can dish jout no end of misery, and imm‘ jall reports, they can take it too, |and they scem very, very eager to 'meet cach other in this legalized brawl. Such will be the menu served on the night of November 10. Re- served seats, all so close that {everyone can hear the breaking ‘bun and groans and grunts and jother noises dear to lovers of this ancient sport, are on sale at But- ler-Mauro Drug Company, the New York Tavern, The Imperial, and | Juneau Liquor Store. : - - WAYS OF 'WHITE SOX IN. - NEW LINE-UPS 8 |Cleveland Indians Take Tip from Chicago | —Get Busy ‘ Z7ALIAN ACE MACE A SHOW OF HE HE 300 -Ml CLEVELAND, Oet. 27.—The C ILE VANDERBILT CuP RACE ago White Sox had good luck last eascn w'th other team’s pitching astoffs, so the Cleveland Indians are try the same stunt on the | Due to report to C the 1937 American Lo season are Whitlow Wyatt, Carl Fischer and Joe Heving. All three were with the Chicago White Sox and the first two also have hurled for De- troit i : yatt was drafted from Kansas City of the American Association. Fischer was a big factor in Buffa- lo’s win of the International League crown, while Heving paced the Mil- waukee Brewers in ‘the American Association championship. D Today’s News Today—kKmpire. veland e for SPORT SLANTS s Bl =1 stars of this country and Europe declined gentleman formally. It's this way: When a racing driver meets Mr. Gilhooley he gen- erally finds himself in the middle |of a ditch with what used to be a racing automobile draped around this shoulders and otiher parts of his anatomy. In the process of be- coming tangled, the driver invar- iably has undergone a most un- comfortable 30 or 40 seconds. “Doing a Gilhooley” made its debut in racing nomenclature dur- ing the hectic competition of the Indianapolis 500-miler in 1914. The identical circumstances of that per- formance will never be repeated. Mr. Gilhooley, whose first name MAX SCHMELING CAME OVER. FROM GERMANY TO KNOCK™ OUT OUR. PUGILISTIC FET; WE Lowls. When Mr. Gilhooley of the In- dianapolis Gilhooleys put in an ap- pearance at the Roosevelt race- way, Westbury, L. I, the scene of the 300-mile race on Columbus day, more than half a hundred racing invitations to meet the ‘DAILY SPORTS CARTOON~- INVADERS i ,% FARED WELL AGAINST AMERICAN ATHLETES | FELD N ww,v//ve b 7 ) ARs 20 7 WITH NE Y, ol GOLF Y CHAMCION NTINA OFF Cup oF ‘ ) 7HE A@CAS Tcamc along behind me and just avoided the Gilhooley merry-go- ;ruund, running down on the safety |apron. Old Joe Dawson was not ,as fortunate. He attempted to get |between me and the outside wall but didn't allow himself enough clearance and over the wall he {went. Louis Disbrow just managed to get down on the safety apron. When Rick, Dawson and Disbrow had decided where to park them- |selves, my car picked out a con- venient spot to hurdle and over lwe went. Outside of getting a section of steering wheel through {my shoulder, I hadn't a scratch. : Another Honor | Gilhooley, a tall, husky, gray- ihah‘ed man with twinkling blue |eves, grins reflectively. “I had an- other claim to attention in those days,” he says. “I drove Barney Oldfield’s famous Green Dragon for the last time. This was a specially built job with a 150-horsepower’en- gine that could perk up to 110 miles an hour. I got off to a flying |start, over in New Jersey, lost con- Itrol, went through a fence, turn- 'All Righis Resorved by The Assoct OLD BATTERY "~ GOES STRONG Baseball Records Believed Established by Two Plfiy‘ers MARION, Ohio, Oct. 27.—Samuel M. Mclntyre, 57, and William G. Koontz, 53, have been playing on | baseball teams together for 25 years and are still going strong. They believe they are the oldest active baseball battery in the | business. | Sam and Bill joined the Morral | team 25 years ago. The team faced |the necessity of running a double- header every Sunday for several |weeks to catch up with the rest of the amateur league. Scarcely |a fan gave it a chance but, nine weeks later, the Morral team had 18 victories, The McIntyre-Koontz combina- FOLLOW the sun to California! Leave Vancouver or Seattle any day. Be in San Francisco the next evening, in Los Angeles the following morning. All our trains to Califyrnia are com- pletely air-conditioned. You'll arrive at your destination fresh and trim, ready to enjoy the white-sanded beaches, delightful desert resorts and the many other playgrounds of the th, With rail fares at 2¢ A MILE AND LESS, reduced Pullman charges, tray food service for 5¢ and 10¢, low pticed dining car meals and other savings—we offer an economical, comfortable way to California that's hard to beat. 31-day 3-month Il-mj $-month Roundtrip Roundtrip Roundtrip Roundtrip SAN FRANCISCO *29.50 ¢35.00 924.00 929.00 LOS ANGELES.. 39.50 46.00 34.00 40.00 o0d in couches and chais cars, Also In tourist sleeping o s Derth: Fares in standard Pullmans are low, (oo, Southern Pacific For folders, tions, additional information, write B.C.TAYLOR, oneral Agts 1405 Fourth Ave., Seattls, Wash.; or C. G. ALTON, Canadian General Agent, 474 Granville Street, Vanco C.; or £ A ORMANDY, Gon. Pass. Agent, 708 Pacifie Bldg., Portland, Ore. AFTER 6:00 P. M.!!! 226 If your Daily Alaska Empire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY. : JUNEAU CASH GROCERY CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Streets PHONE 58 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS They Stay Brighter Longer 10-15-25-40-50-60 Watt inside frost 75-100 watt inside frost . 100 watt clear 150 watt clear or frosted 200 watt clear . 200 watt frosted . 300 watt clear medium base 300 watt clear mogul base :‘? ‘:Ve‘{hand’rhknorcrkedt w,';‘ al ““;‘l‘_l:non is interchangeable. One pitch- v 4 L;e Z“ B b“ 5 dc les and the other catches—then they st chassis bowed in,| o, “pach insists he will keep at and when they got through look-| o) 1 he i d ing for missing parts they decided Soscrall unl X e gz:;t eare oy Ask about the Light Meter MAKE SURE THE LIGHT YOU ARE USING IS CORRECT is Ray, has allied himself with the racing team headed by Dave Evans, ironman of Indianapolis, and spon- scred by the wealthy Brooklyn sportsman, Mac Hallery. Ray acts changed a Iot of my : change from sither of For fifty-eight years Hills Bros. have main- tained a tradition of superb and unvarying quality, It's not the first nor the hundredth cup of Hills Bros. Coffee that brings you the maxi- mum delight. Continual enjoyment through as racing agent for Mr. Hallery. Now, a "Gilhooley” at Indian- apolis, Roosevelt raceway or any ’olhm' speedway in this country, is 'a spin which ends abrutly in a crackup. A driver is not eligible to say he did a “Gilhooley” if he rights his car. He must go through txl] the motions, including winding |up in a convenient ditch. { There has been a lot of discus- sion as to how the term was in- Ilroduced into the daredevils’ dic- tionary, Stepped on the Gas ! “I happened on Decoration day, {1914 explains Mr. Gilhooley. “In that race at Indianapolis I was | piloting an Isotta-Fraschini with |a chain drive, a heavy, cumbersome car, but one which, for those days, had plenty of speed. It was in the !the south turn when—bang!—there was a crack like a cannon. I knew jthere had been a blowout, and felt the car going into a spin. In such a situation, a race driver will ac- celerate. Down went my foot. Un- 105 mile, and I was speeding around | that the Green Dragon had quit racing for keeps.” - .. Football Game Sounds Like Real Battle | MANGUM, Okla, ¢ ct. 27.—Hol- lis High School and 1fangum High School played a night football game |recently to the accompaniment of “$5 explosions” in the rain Homer 8. Reese, Superintendent of Mangum schools, said the rain falling on 1500-watt floodlight bulbs caused them to explode. Nine of the bulbs blew up during the game, .- - Lots in Talkeetn Township Are Up at Auction, November 9 Between games Sam drives a ltruck and Bill works for a rail- |road. iWell Dressed Gridders Wear {“Gold” This Season COLORADO SPRINGS, Col, Oct. 27.—Maybe they still remember the comment of a New York sports writ- er, “The boys from the west, dress- ed in Halowe'en uniforms.” That was after the Colorado College football team of the Rocky Mountain conference journeyed to West Point for a licking at Army’s hands five years ago. Anyway, there is neither orange nor yellow in the C. C. uniforms| (this year. They are gold—as near- ly faithful to the door of the metal as fabric can be made. The jerseys are gold with black 230 South Franklin ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 27— numerals; the pants gold with black | C. E. Shirley, Superintendent of striping, the stockings solid gold;| Land Office sales, announces that' the helmets gold with black stripes. | 120 lots will be sold on November|C. C. followers think they have the| Ala]ska Electric Light '&DPwler Co. uneau ouglias Telephone 411 CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc Distributors the years makes you realize that Hills Bros. Coffee never varies in its goodness...and you know that it never gives any disappoiniment. i ,GOOD COFFEE DESERVES CARE IN BREWING—————————| The Cownect unn&mcm..numnaadmuyaummdmnumumdmmgnm' "than half a century of roasting and packing coffee. The Correct Galnd is as fine as coffee should be ground. Finer grinding sacrifices flavor and aroma, as well as keeping qualities after the can is opened. Hills Bros.Coffee should not be reground. The Covaect Grind is guaranteed to produce the finest-tasting bev- eragein anytype of coffee-maker. Directions for making coffee by the method you use will be sent on reques. known to me, when the tire blew jout it had gone with such force that it blew inside out, wrapping itself securely around by chain idrive and locking the rear wheels. | Thus, when I accelerated the result | was to spin me even more furious- ly. All in all, my car made six complete revolutions and then went over the wall. I had done the first ‘Gilhooley." “But that’s not the end of the story—not by any means. While I was spinning, Eddie Rickenbacker another race driver then, not the flying hero or speedway official, 9 in the Talkeetna township at public auction. Yes, But What Are the Poor Dogs to Eat? COLOGNE, Germany, Oct. 27.— The Nazi government has told houscwives to “stop wasting food,” and brought attention of house- wives to the practice of throwing away scraps which might be made into_leftover dishes. best dressed team in the high coun- itry. | s 1Escape: Grid Injuries, | But Golf Is Too Much ‘ s EL RENO, Okla., Oct. 27.—Cecll ,Wright, El Reno high school foot-| ball and basketball player, never had been injured in competition— until he tried golf. Caddying at the country -club here, he was struck by a golf ball. Several stitches were required to Iclose a gash in his face. CHEVROLFT PONTIAC BUICK WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48% | | For Quick Results Try An Empire Classified!