The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 31, 1931, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1931. BRINGING UP FATHER By GEORGE McMANUS D T 13 WEAK AND EXHAUSTED | ARRIVED HOME -MAGGIE FELL FOR THE. SCHEME , AND NOW FOR THE HAPPY LIFE OF )‘l A CONVALESCENT - LET SHERLOCK HOLMES FIND MAGGIES LOST DOG - 'M ON A VACATION - YESTERDAY 1 HAD DINTY MOORE CALL HER LP AND SAY HE WAS DR DUMBGLYSKY, AND THAT | WAS IN HIS PRIVATE HOSPITAL = i A W Yod, o) (,, 3 ), 1L CORRECT i g6 . 7" ) | e misTARE. B . 3 ,.:? & H o IMMEDIATE LY 5, DAILY SPORTS CARTOON © 1531 The A ¥, All Rights Reserved - —By Pap BASEBALL FANS ~-<-A FAVOR(TE N THE GRAND NATIONAL | SIEEPLE CHASE ’/ Take Place at 7:30 i City Hall Soon spangles will glisten on the diamond on Willoughby Avenus. Crowds will ride “his umps” again. So the time has arrived to make arrangements for the approaching haseball season. For the purpose of organizing the Gastineau Channel League for the current year, electing its offi- | cers and determining the number of members clubs, all players of IN 1920 He was LEADING THE EVENT WHEN HE SPRuNG A PLATE ABOULT HALF A MILE Feom intersted in it are requested to THE FINL meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight in SH the Council room of the City Hall. Last season there were three / /< teams in the league—Moose, Elks and American Legion. This year, these organizations will be repre- sented again, and there is consid- erable likelihood that Douglas may organize and ‘enter a fourth club. Availability of players and the opening date of the season will be tentatively discussed at the meeting tonight. YRS AR ATTENTION MASONS re will be a called communi- 1 of 1 Lodze Wed ne y > purpose of holding ces over the body of our late Bro. A. E. Eggersgluess, of Sitka. By order \ - of the w. M. i i /‘/ p J. W. LEIVERS, | FAST YEARTALSO THE mavoriTe, HE Tooke: WILL WIS Ldce) | TRV Becrepar. | SICIC AFEW DAYS BEFORE THE RACE - CHANGE 2 AL “The ball was actually hidden | under his clothing—right next to | his stomach. We played it from a close formation lineup by hud: dling in a ring, as Mr. Wa DA AR g says. When and where Mr. Wi = ner had HIS man hide the ball | under his clothing I cannot | NEW YORK, March 31—The Poughkeepsie regatta, in which practically every crew in the coun- try except the “Big Three,” Yale, Harvard and Princeton, will com- pete, will be held about ten days earlier than the historic event usually is held. THE MATTER RESTS In the same mail I have a letter from Halfback Harry Smith, now a Richmond business man, relaying his “check-up” wish Quarterback Tichenor of the fact that Aubuw | used the trick play only twice in This column dislikes to end a|jggs and not at all in 1896, as| when the b_oard of stewards of good argument on any subject, but | Warner recalled. | the Intercollegiate Rowing Associ- the clinching evidence is at hand | “hidden-ball” mys- | ation met in January it selected at the much-discussed “football- ems to be solved. It _,:hm“‘mi«)une 17 as the date, the earl! den-under-the-jersey” play was ated by Mr. John W. Heis- while coaching at Alabama y (Auburn) in 1895, not by Mr. Glen Scobey (Pop) Warner at Jornell in 1897. This evidence is from Mr. Heis- man himself, who noted what Mr. ‘Warner had 'to say recently through this pillar of sports opin- es me as follows: t Mr. Warner saw of Au- 'n’s play he says he observed | vhen he scouted Auburn in 1896. | But that was just one year too late, because I invented the play | in more than 35 years, but it was | learned the date for the event had been changed to the day ahead, June 16. June 16 was the cnly day found | to be favorable from the middle of coaching Cornell in a game wiln:the month until after July 1, so Penn Stgate, I[etl!m was gLurrect. he | ;‘a:her Hisn ol thes Saekii ol was two years behind Heisman, D July, the board selected the ¢ | former date. And e you are, gentlemen. | " e ),,,-i | The tide is the main factor in lOKLAfiOMAFSCHOOL PR e e e 1 IS OUT FOR POLO ™~ in October, 1895, and my Auburn | NATIONAL TOURNEYi CUE FLOWERS team of that year played it suc-| NORMAN, Okla, March 31— | Flenty of Cut Flowers “d"“l‘. pobted sfully against Vanderbilt at|The southwest will be represented |Plants for EASTER We deliver. hville in that same month and |at the intercollegiate polo tour- | JUNEAU FLORISTS year. Iney at Rockaway Hunting eclub, | 34V Telephone 311 “That same year—still 1895—we | Cedarhurst, L. I, June 13 to 20, by played the University of Georgia, |the University of Oklahoma quar-{ v WIS TED with Mr. Warner coaching the lat- | tet. | ter team, at Brishane Park, At-| Opponents of the Sooners' sched- | Hazel James Madden lanta, on Thanksgiving Day. The |ule, which opens April 9, include | Teacher of the Pianoforte and second half of that game we again | the Colorado Aggies, University of | exponent of the Dunning System pulled the play and Harry Smith, | Missouri, New Mexico Military In- | of Improved Music Study be clear that this column holds no brief in the matter other than an interest in producing the facts. Warner made no claim to originat- ing the play, but his friends claim led he first used it in 1897 while BB S R A R Old papers at The Emplre. SLCH DOCTOR OR H THE CITY - THERE ML SOME MISTAKE BUT, MRS JIGGS, THERE 1S Ni/! N © 1931, Int'l Feature Service, Inc., Great Britain MEET TO FORM LEAGUE TONIGHT ‘El-ect ionm)fficers Will, the national game and all persons | sensation. e f o ( ‘EM s reserved { . |1 SPORT BRIEFS . Miss Diana Fishwick, Brilish’ women's golf champion, waited \upi til her last rcund to show her best game during her visit ml America. She shot a 78 on the; Homestead course at Hot Springs, | Va., two under women’s par. | Alble Booth, captain of the Yale| | football team, set a record for the | school during his freshman year| | when he was elected leader of the yearling grid, basketball and base-" | ball teams, When the New York Rangers three years ago won the Stanley Cup, emblematic of world's su- emacy in hockey, the team fin- i with the same mark as this season—I19 victeries, 16 defeats and nine ties. Johnny Kilbane, former feather weight champion, thinks Tomm Loughran should become the heavy weight king. Tommy should culti- | vate slugging, he says. | The Duluth, Minn., hockey club | recently broke scoring records by, caging 13 goals in an American league game with St. Louis. FAR EAST “PERIL” ARRIVES SAN FRANCISCO, March 31.—A htly built fellow who claims the stern featherweight cham-, pionship has landed in the United ! States after bouts. Syd Keenan | has a record of a long series of fights in the Far East and at on2 y time’ met Pancho Villa, Filipino slig] >es 1 ELEVEN O'CLOCK CLUB Annual meeting, Wednesday, Elks | Audiforium. Election of officers. | M. H. SIDES, ’ | —adv. Secretary. GOOD-BYE ,DINTY-TEL.\ ] RISKO LOSES [EMANUEL RE-ENTERS TO RUSH THAT AMBULANCE — Eil YES, MAM, WE SELL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS Viz— ROY AL, HOOVER, PREMIER and GENERAL ELECTRIC PRICED $14.50 AND UP NI T T T Can be rented and rentals applied on purchase later Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau Juneu, Phone 6 10 ROUND 60 TO YOUNG MAN Poreda Too Skillful for Old: Warrior — Spectator Dies, Excitement Douglas Douglas, Phone 18 SR U AR UMD R T L ] LU T T T NEW YORK, March 31.—Stanley Poreda, of Jersey City, last night easily punched out a 10 round decision over Johnny Risko, of Cleveland, veteran fighter. | There were no knockdowns. : Pcreda weighed 189% pounds and Risko 194 t Poreda was too young, strong nd skillful for the old warrior. | Rudy Hassie, aged 50 years, Por- eda’s guest, died from excitement after the bout ended. RING; OWN MANAGER SAN FRANCISCO, March 31.- Armand Emanuel, barrister-boxe: who dropped the pursuit of law to enter the ring and gravitated back to legal practice after a clip on the jaw by Mickey Walker, has an- | nounced his intention to try to' come back as a fighter. | Emanuel formerly fought as a iy light-heavyweight but now welghs‘ " i around 200 pounds and will train, F N l B k in the upper divislon. His father rst (Nationa an managed him before but this time, | Emanuel says, he will manage him- | self. WHEN THINGS WAKE UP Spring—hanging up another worn-out Winter— unlocks the sunshine, flowers and bunnies. Mankind seems to begin again with new hope, new ambition, and new determination to be prudent, learning what to seek and what to shun. A bank account of your own is a thing worth striv- ing to have. Make this your Bank. [O—— THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat g s ASTnR LILIES ‘Will be cheaper this year. See JUNEAU FLORISTS ‘lelephone 511 adv. \ \ IR NOVELTIES Chocolate Eggs, Candy Filled Rabbits, Ducks, Chickens, Baskets [T 2 ARCADE CAFE CHRIS ‘BAILEY, Proprietor A Restaurant Catering to Those Who Want Good Things to Eat OPEN DAY AND NIGHT I Taken over Sharick’s supply of SEWING MACHINE NEEDLES—For sale at Juneau Paint Store PRINTING AND STATIONERY Desk Supplies—Ink—Desk Sets— Blotters—Office Supplies Geo. M. Simpkins Co. ECONOMY CASH STORE Featuring Trupak and H. B. Brands L T T T T TR T T T T left halfback, * ik time” rax 40 | stitute and the Unive by AT SRRy, st Riakin || Front at Main St. Telephone 91 yards with the ball under his jer- | zcna, Negotiations also have been | y sey for a touchdown. | opened for a meet with Princeton ’ Studio, 206 Main St. Phone 196 EASTER CARDS “It happened, however, that | university. i : | Geergia was offside on that very i iiiandedias | . play and the ball had to be called | S INTING TROPHY |} HAVE YOUR FURS CLEANED ] Pu) P l H ll ima‘c:;(.aanheAuhurn flw:al’decda elrflf i il iz | i od STATIOI\ERY SPECIAI‘ : neer 00 a yards for the offside play. In those | MORAGA, Cal, March 31—Freq | § ¥itit modern machinery. The Telephone 183 POOL—BILLIARDS days, you will recall, one could not | Stennett, star halfback of St.l better way. . . . We invite you D, 5 " 4 decline the penalty. | Mary's 1920 football team, has | §to Inspect this new equipment POUND PAF ER—60 sheets, very fine bond EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Chas. Miller, Prop. “Where Mr. Warner's attention | been awarded the James M. Smith | {in operation. iveted on that particular day | trophy for punting, with an aver-, on I can have no idea, | age of 58 ygrds. He won a simi- || New silk linings are here now but certain it is that the Georgiu"lar prize in 1928. | {1n & big variety. rooters yelled very derisively when | P — the referee called the Louchdown’ GOODIE SALE off and shame-faced Harry Smitli| The Ladies Lutheran Aid wlll‘ was thereby forced to pull the | hold a GOODIE SALE SATUR-| ball out from under his jersey. | DAY, APRII. 11th, —-adv.l w1 Yurman’s The Furrier Triangle Building PHONES 83 OR 85 flTIw Store That Pleases™ THE SANITARY¢ROCERY paper and 25 envelopes for NOVELTIES EASTER EGG DYE GIFT JEWELRY THE CASH BAZAAR T e w5 sz | LA AR 49¢ THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin St. Phone 136 ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:3¢, 4:30 SN i

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