The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 14, 1931, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 14, 1931. By GEORGE McMANUS SO\ COOKED SOME CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE FOR YOU- BUT | THREW \T OUT, AD YOL ORDERED - BRINGING UP FATHER SLPPER 1S READY- SIR~ LU T T T LU WHERES MY FAMILY: GONE TO THE OPERA" \ SLPPODE? TWVE BEEN SNoozZw || FER TWO HOURS AN’ BY GOLLY- I'M HUNGRY- Q4! DONT WANT ANY SLPPER- WHEN | GO OUT-V'LL QI'T WA T | WANT: You Kin THROW OUT MY YESSR THeY | THOLGHT Yoo \WouLD LIKE To EAT AT HOME BY NOLRSELF — MONARCH RANGES MONARCH FLAMO RANGES il Tights reserve DIXOLA HEATERS i - DAILY SPORTS CARTOON —By Pap STRIBLING TG MEET SCHMELING; WINNER IS TO FIGHT CARNER A NEW GYMS BOOM World’s New Pocket- Billiard Champion 2 7 S L L TR T T T T T T T T Juneau-Y oung Hardware Co. | | NEW YORK CITY, N. Y, Jan.‘ 14—Max Schmeling is to defend | the heavyweight title against w. | (LTI LHLHE i > ! THATS SOMEWHING FOR— GhEBY ARARTNETT OF THE CUBS \ © e A&éoT” Business conditions will accom- | plish what the Carnegie Founda-| tion’s report failed to do in respeLL, to some features of alleged over- emphasis in college sports. ’ Lack of funds, for example, will’ force many an institution to curtail | cr eliminate altogether the spring | junkets of baseball and track squad into warmer climate. The same in- fluence likely will bring about econ-, cmy in spring football practice. | In short, the luxuries that accom- | panied the boom days of big sur-| pluses in the college treasuries will! be conspicuous by their absence | this year. | Training tables, coaching staffs| and equipment requirements all will be scanned a little more closely | by those who handle the athletic| funds. | In the main essentials, business on the campus will be going on as usual, but with a few exceptions it will take more juggling in 1931 than in any recent year to make the collegiate budgets balance. i More than one loyal alumnus of the dear old college must have fclt a twinge or two when Dr. Nich- clas Murray Butler proposed alum- ni endowment of athletics to do away with the “harmful influence” of gate receipts. The good doctor must be aware that at his own institution, Colum- bia, only the most generous sort of endowment by prominent alumni has made it possible for the Blae and White to engage such coaching talent as the latz Percy Haughton, Young Dick Glendon, Lou Littl> and, several years ago, to make an offer that had Knute Rockne all ready for a jump from South Bend to New York. All over the country alumni have been taking the blame for many of the alleged collegiate athletic ills, also footing many of the bills. They menopolize the tickets for the “classics,” such as those involvinz §\the old eastern Big Three, thereby furnishing much of the “endow- ment” for sports at Harvard, Yale and Princeton. It is because of the virtual isola- tion of the general public from the‘ ticket sales for the most tradition- al of the big football games thqt‘ other enterprising institutions h"u'c. been able so successfully to -bally- “Woody” English, Chicago Cub shortstop, and Mrs. English, who boat record. was, before an elopement to Crown English met Miss Golam during a hoo for fandom at large. Some colleges have attempted at times to discourage the publicity given to individual performers; but, generally speaking, they welcome the headlines and the cameraman, consequently stimulating public in- terest. Without this interest big stadia would be a curiosity and athletic plants would be far from furnishing the student advantages they do today. their games Speaking of the old Big Three, there is a distinct movement on Ifitis Printing wecandoit * J§f anddo it right |i# © 1531 T A, P AN Tighis Reserved CUPID o, nothing to do with each other. Associated Press Photo Point, Ind., Helen Golam of Chicago. Cub game last summer. I foot to patch up the differences between Harvard and Princeton, which broke off relations afier their memorable fcotball battle of 1926 at Cambridge. Alumni groups have been busy for some time trying to smooth things out, and a conspicuous figure in the latest peace move is Devereux Milburn, famous polo player and Harvard alumnus, It may result in nothing more half-mile tracks. L. “Young” Stribling in June, the winner to face Primo Carnera in September under terms of a con- tract signed by rep: the three principals and the Madi- son Square Garden. The matches will be staged as benefits for the Hearst Milk Fund. The survivor of the two matches is also to defend the title next year for the Milk Fund The cite for the bouts is under- stood to be Jersey City, in a sta- dium seating 100,000, if it can be completed, or Detroit, with the pos- cibility of Chicago. The agreement leaves Jack Shar- | named contender by the New k Athletic Commission, out in the cold. The New York Athletic Commis- sion has also suspended hoth Car- nera and Schmeling. R Sl i FATHER AND SON BATTLE ON TURF ON RIVAL MOUNTS CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 14.—Father and son riding horses in the same 5 Froggate, 43, and his son, | Donald, 18, make up the father-son naticn. In their last start defeated his dad by a nose Young Froggate has the distinc- tion of having booted home the longest price winner in the history of Jefferson Park, New Orleans. He flashed past the judges' stand on Clapper, which paid $269 for $2. Father Froggate, a trainer and 2 jockey, taught his boy how to ride, schooling the youngster in turf lessons at county fairs and sentatives of | BASKETBALL IN BIG 10 CIRCLES CHICAGO, Jaa. 14—Basketbal {no longer is considered one of fo |ball's poor relatives around the | Western conference. | During the past three years, six |of the Big 10 universities have built |new field houses, chiefly to house | basketball crowds while three oth-| ers are planning bigger and better! basketball homes than their neigh- | { bors. 'Basketball revenue is an im-| portant income. The six gymnasiums completed seat 46,000, a total that will be boosted to 80,000 when the new/ buildings are completed. Minnesota’s field house opened in 1929 is the largest, seating 15,000. ' Michigan has two field houses, the principal one being devoted to bas- ketball and the other to intra- mural sports. \ Wisconsin dedicated a new $500,- 000 field house this school year. It accommodates 9,000. Towa built one in 1927 to care for 10,000; Indiana dedicated its field house, seating 6,000 in 1929 while the Illinois gym- | n m with a capacity of 6500 | was opened in 1927. Northwestern, Chicago and Ohio | State are planning new structures, to cost $2,000,000. Purdue, where {only football and basketball seem to be having an easy time surviving, |is-the only conference member so far without a new basketball home, or one on blue prints. | e, | Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. | tured the laurels as world’s pocket- : rd Edwin Rudolph, of Chicago, recap- billiard champ in closing play of the world tournament at New_York | City. Rudolph defeated Ralph Greenleaf, who has been champion | for many years, the score being 125 to 121. The new champ ‘won seven times and suffered no defeats in the round-robin teurnament ~hich was played. * ELECTRICAL WORK Call Schombel. Telepiione 4502. R e The Serenaders Juneau’s Best Dance Orchestra Dancing Every Saturday Night at ELKS’ HALL Open for Engagements - “HARVARD-PRINCETON"’ ROW ALSO IN ENGLAND LONDON, Jan. 14—One of those Harvard-Princeton rows has broken out in England. Two of the lead ing public schools—Uppingham and Haileybury—have decided to have Each accuses the other of rough- ness in a rugby game at which Up- pingham maintained its unbroken, record by 6 to 0, which has grown tiresome since 1909. Cricket matches on a schedule started in 1860 are also off. DON TO MAKE SPEED BOAT TRIALS, IRISH COAST, FOR RECORD BELFAST, Jan. 14— A 5-mile stretch of water along the Bally- ronan shore of Lough Neagh has been selected for preliminary speed s before Kaye Don takes Miss and II to South America for a new assault on the world speed- Fred Cooper, designer of the boat examined the course and said that| if conditions were suitable about the middle of January Don may make an attempt on the record then. BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. SELL CREOMULSION LTI LU T T |than some polite conversation for [jeniismmmenfimmsenfrmsenlrmrenflynmmenln PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY the time being, but Milburn has a habit of seeing things through. Certainly it seems that many of the animosities of four years ago have vanished, stirred up as they were by undergraduate jabs, so that | the moment may be ripe for recon- | ciliation. | | e | | 100 PER CENT ATTENDANCE | OAKFIELD, Wis., Jan. 14—All of | Oakfields citizens witness its bas- ketball games. Twenty are on the | girls’ and boys' teams and the other 130 go along as spectators. [ N Oregon penal officials are mak-i |ing a sociological survey of the| 1penitentim—y in cooperation with | Cregon State College. A Good Place to Buy COAL e Juneau’s Pacific Fuel Merchant Coast Wharf Phone: 412 for 35 Years LT Suit and Overcoat SALE ENDS TOMORROW You still have a chance to pick out a BARGAIN i LU T T AT n |Illll!IlIIIIIllllHIllllllllllllllllle Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes H.S. GRAVES The Clothing Man [ s All Grades of Coal and Diamond Briquets S | PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY LU U OO O T ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 Austin Fresh Tamales ARCADE CAFE CHRIS BAILEY, Proprietor A Restaurant Catering to Those Who Want Good Things to Eat OPEN DAY AND NIGHT WHAT REGULARITY DOES A little water now and then keeps life in a flower, but if watered regularly it abounds in living strerngth with great- er beauty and fragrance. It is the regular additions to one’s saving fund that make it grow. First National Bank Overhauling Season During the winter months is a good time to have your automobile thoroughly inspected and put in good repair. We are equipped to make any repair whether it is a general overhauling or a minor ad- justment and will be pleased to give you a flat-rate on any job. Connors Motor Company, Inc. Service Rendered by Experts ECONOMY CASH STORE Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands Front at Main St. Telephone 91 Pioneer Pool Hall Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. GET THE BEST AND CLEANEST MILK Handled by the Sanitary Perfection Milking Machine at Lowest Prices Alaska Dairy BOX 1134. Place your orders with Sanitary Grocery or George Brothers Old Papers for sale at Empire Office

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