The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 2, 1932, Page 5

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. - » - TR S THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 2, 1932. . Bv GEORGE McMANUS WELL, | FIRED THAT CHEF THAT \WAD COOKING CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE EVERY DAY. 1 HIRED THE COOK WAS WITH THE DE PUOYSTERS. NOW WELL HAVE %WL\%H DisH ! KNEW THE GooD TIME WOULDNT] LEARN WHO JUST THINK. WELL . H SOCIETY AT THE TABLE. BRINGING UP FATHER THAT MUST BE HIM ARE YOU THE cook?’ ALL ABOUT AND PARDON, SIR. | AM A CHEF. 19 MR%. 1 GGS AT HOME? BY GOLLY. IF HES A DPECIMEN, I T LOOKS A% IF WE WONT GIT MUCH TO EAT -ByPaP $0. CALIFORNIA C'C'LUSKEY FoQD-(AM — THIS FIGHTING YOUNGSTER, 'S Goine To B | A HANDY MAN i WAVE BY 21-12 |Tulane Loses to Trojans i m‘ Annual Rose Bowl | O HAVE Tournament Afofmo Al | PASADENA, Cald, Jan. 2—In E COMING fone of the best football games! |oeen in the Rose Bowl, the Uni- OL\{Mp(C | versity of Southern California suc- GAMES |cessfully turned back the Green Wave tide of Tulane 21 to 12 be- jfore 83,000 spectators in the New Year's game here. | The Trojans now claim the Na-| /) ’/ tienal intercolegiate grid title for| Tulane went through the regular eleven game schedule in 1931 un-' defeated. { Ernie Pinckert scored California’s touchdowns. | Tulane scored late in the con- | test after trailing 21 to 0. MAIER WINNER I 10 ROUNDER | two of | | | | DEFEATS GREEN [NEW TULANE COACH SHAPES PLAYERS WITH OWN BULK ON PRACTICE FIELD Ted Cox, Assistant Coach at Tulane, has been named “head man” to succeed Ber Bierman, who the first of the year is leaving to take over the coaching reins at the University of Minnesota. Cox. like Bier- man, a Minnescta product, has been drilling the line during the Green | Wave's last three undefeated years By RALPH WHEATLEY HE'S THE™ EVEN A NATIONAL. AAU. . STEERLE CHASE //‘““\\ CHAMPION LAN GOULD ~ In connection with the All-Am- erica discussion, the University of Uiah's contributions are comment- ASS IATED'PRESS “&'& EDITOR. touchdowns, besides doing all kicking and passing. Christensen of Utah is (9~ ed upon for us by Les Goatés of | blocking back, although he le the Salt Lake City Desert News|the Rocky Mountain conference as follows: scorers.” “Walling of Utah is regarded as Southwest Stars the outstanding lineman in the west, Six feet four inches in From what Bill Parker and the other eagle-eyed observers report FALL COULONT SToP RIM FROM WINNING THE &) INTE RCOLLE GIATE ~~=msfy LMILE TUILE the! _iThe East registered the third vic- ieight and weighing 208, he has been the bulwark of a great Utah line on which he carried along five ,gndlron season there are Weldon from the Southwest conference, the cutstanding two performers of thel Gets Declsnon in Fight in Milwaukee with Rosenbloom e Mo | MILWAPKEE, Wis, Jan. 2— Maxie Rosenbloom, of New York, light heavyweight champion, lost a 10-round non-title bout to Dava Maier, of this city, here yester- day. The judges voted 2 to 1 in favor of Maier FLKS' TRI-CITY TOURNEYSTARTS TOMORROW P. M. Juneau, Ketchikan, An- chorage Elks in Mixed Bowling Contests BAP EAST DEFEATS WEST, ANNUAL CHARITY GAME SAN FRANCISCO, Cal,, Jan. 2.— tery in the seven years of compe- | tition with the West here on New | Year's Day defeating the latter's football aggregation by a score of |6 to 0, in the Shriners’ annual charity game. The eastern stars scored in the first quarter and dominated the | NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2—Tu- ilanc's football mantle has fallen to |the shoulders of the good natured, :blnnd 230-pound giant—Ted Cox. Three years he has been the Green Wave's line ccach under Ber- ‘m“ Bierman, master coach, who leaves for the University of Min- Iresota and hands his coaching baton to his chief assistant and fel- |low Minnesota alumnus. | During the three years that Tu- w'ane campaigned the Southern con- wfexeme without defeat, the lin2 bore the brunt of battle and opened the way for fast backs to get through for their brilliant runs that lifted the stands to their feet. And back of that line of iron was the tutelage of Ted Cox, himself jin his colleze days one of the greatest tackles, all-conference in |the Big Ten and captain at Min- | nesota in 1925. Like Bierman, Cox is a protege {of the late “Doc” Williams, the mentor who developed football at with the same system. Must Show Players Minesota, and he plans to carry on new players. Ccach Tke Arm- strong declares him to be the best all-around lineman he ever coached. “Mason is the one outstanding “Christensen (halfback) has nev-|back in the conference,” writes er been stopped within the 10-yard | | Parker. “He is at his best on off line in his career. Coach Jeff tackle plays where a cut-back Cravath of Denver university, lm-,needed and on returning punts mer star with U. 8. C. who played | through a broken fields. This y against Nevers several times and, he has played quarterback, passed with him in all-star games, squflfld punted. This has been nece: the former coast flash is far in-|sary because of an injury to Bob ferior to the Crashin’ Chris who Gilbert, regular quarterback. With-! passes, kicks, runs, rams the line out Mason, Southern Methodist and skirts the wings for the Red- would have had a hard time win- skins. ning games for he is the spark “Johnson, wWho received nation- | that keeps the team going. | (Speedy) Mason, Southern Metho- dist back, and Johnnie Vaught, 194-pound Texas Christian guard. " i “Vaught is the ‘iron-man’ of V] or his bulldoggin ;?::5 p;:gl;w{acfk]mg \an oppoimg the Southwest conference forward 3 +} | walls. He has played superb foot- | halfback child's play after spring- ing from a galloping horse anu grabbing wild bulls by the horns. ! He is the most sensational tackler | ever seen out west. Six feet, three LENHART WINS inches tall and weighing 212, he is fast as the winds that sweep the | Wasatch mountains under which | BL DY FIGHT he cavorts.” he has been running interference most of this season, except when | SEATTLE, Jan. 2—Freddie Len- Utah needed a yard or two IOr nhart, of Spokane, light heav. first down or a touchdown. And|weight, won a decision over We: Frank Prawley reports to us that ley (K.O.) Ketchell, of Salt Lake| the best back in the Rocky Moun- | city, in a bloody free slugging New tain area is “Foots” Tedesco, Utah| year's Day eight-round battle here. quarterback. | Lenhart weighed 172 pounds and “Tedesco is an Italian boy, buill| Ketchell weighed 161% pounds. e, along the Carideo lines,” he writes.| “He does all the passing, punting| EGYPT HAS SMALL DEBT and most of the ball carrying this| CAIRO.—Egypt has cne of the year for Utah and is a junior. Red [smallest national debts in the en- White of the Colorado Aggies I tire world. It totals about $360,- would classify as the next best. He 000,000, or less than $30 per per- is a wonder in a broken fields and | son and equal %o the state revenue| has made numerous long runs for for two years, | ball “thro’ ,nauu the year o Than Chri Christensen, most ohservers agree, is a fine ball carrier but due to his size—he weighs 195— | is| 'Mn the bull ring here on New Yea.rs, game throughout. | TOD MORGAN . BESTS VOLK. - PORTLAND 60 Ushering in bowling for the new year, the Elks bowling clubs of Juneau, Ketchikan and Anchor- age start tomorrow afternoon their egraphic mixed tournament. The first and second ‘teams will start their first game at teams will bowl at 3:30. It is an- nounced that the women will play their games each afternocon at the came hour until the conclusion of men’s | 12:30 o'clock, and the two women's | To ceach football, Cox beliaves' |it is necessary to show the players |how it should be done. In practice, he may be seen in uniform creuching on the line and plough- ing through his students. H2 tackle sthe dummies harder than any of his students and so far he, has not had 2 stop him. He takes candidates for each post ‘on the line and gives them special |coaching in handling their jobs. PORTLAND, Oregon, Jan, 2— \h¢ tournament January 12. The |Then he lines them up as a unit Tod Morgan, of Seattle, won a Me¢ Wil probably bowl in the and synchronizes them with the six-round decision over Eddie Volk, °Vering, Monday's match starting backfield. at 7;15. The four quintets that will re- present the local Elks in the tour- nament are made up of the fol-| | lowing bowlers: of Portland, in a New Year's battle. | Morgan had the edge of nearly every round. He dropped Volk.for the count of eight in the third |round. } Morgan weighed 140 pounds nnd Men’s first team—Radde, Barra- | | Coxdonned his first football uni- 'fcrm in 1916 and made tackle on |the St. Paul, Minn.,, Central High eleven. sota and was greeted as ‘“perfect tackle material” by Coach Williams. | Volk welghed 138 pounds. |gar, Metcalf, Stewart, He played on Minnesota's varsity i Second team—M. Bavard, Lavenik,|in 1922, '23, '24 and '25, before the i H. Sabin, Robertson, Blomgren.|freshman rule applied, and was a i RB sEs | Substitutes, Andrews, H. Messer-|marvel. He weighed 210 pounds | schmidt and could run a hundred yards in i en’s first team—Mrs. Lave- MEXICO CITY, Jan. 2. — Babe Mrs. Peterman. Substitutes, Miss Arizmendi, of Mesxico, gained an Barragar, Mrs. Keller. ,unpopula: decision over Fidel La- —————— | Barba, Los Angeles featherweight,, SPAIN’S SERGEANTS STUDY Day. Newspapermen at the rlng- |side credited LaBarba with win- | ning seven of the ten rounds. R 20 | INFORMATION IS WANTED MADRID.—Hard boiled sergeants | are doing home work these muhhs |following a decree democratizing |the army and making non-coms | eligible for commissions. Under the (monarchy all officers were arls- Richard Nagle, of Marcus, Wash- tocrats. {ington, writing to Postmaster Jose- | |phine Spickett, asks for lntorma.—‘ Snow was a foot deep on the |tion concerning Thomas Nagle, | gridiron when Whitman college de- lawyer and niining man. He is feated Williamette university, 7 to said to have owned mining prop-|0, to win the Northwest conference lerty in Southeast Alaska at one’ football championship this season. time, |'rh¢ players wore mittens, ———————— (11.3 seconds. mkv Mrs. Faulkner, Mrs. McLean, Wins His A. B. i ¥ Mrs. Olson, Mrs. Bavard. Second| He won his A. B. and his “M” in | team—Miss Monson, Mrs. Cough-|football, basketball and track. !lin, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Goddard,|Then he went to River Falls State | Teachers' college as athletic direc- tor and football coach for a year,| | - American | Beauty Parlor i Mrs. Jack Wilson | Telephone 397 pupil who ccould | In 1921 he went {0 Minne- | in the Southern Conference. JMEMBERS KIDNAP GANG UNDER ARREST Authorities me Raids in Three Cities in Middle West CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 2. — The Chicago Tribune today said 20 members of a kidnapping gang which spread its activities all over the Middle West during the past two years, are in custody of United States Attorneys and investigators. It is said five confessions have been obtained which involves 17 kidnappings and demands for ran- som. Twelve of those under arrest are women. | The kidnappers were rounded up in raids in Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis. |when he was called to Tulane as freshman coach. In 1929 he took over the varsity line, and Tulane’s great teams sprang up. In 1927 a school boy and girl ro- | mance culminated in the marriage of Ted Cox and Miss Josephine Hewson of St. Paul. Ted, Jr., is how two years old. The elder Ted is only 28, being born June 30, 1903, at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. “All this talk about the big husky | linesmen from the woods of the northwest being the best in the world is the bunk,” said Cox. “The South has produced some of the greatest linesmen in American | foctball. You just tell them and show them how to do it and they will get in there and do it.” | To prove his case he points to 'some of his graduates, Jerry rymple, All-America end; |er” Roberts, All-Southern center; |“Baby Brand” Scafide, All-Southern guard; Charlie Rucker, Hclland and Haynes, ends Lodrigues, center. tackle and old papers &t The Emplre J OB Printing Quick Service if you want it—selisble seevia always, We always place our guarantee of satisfaction back ot every printing job we do. We 1 ars good printers—know it— l and are willing te back ous P -as today -=$0 tomorrow IF YOU WOULD REAP THE “HARVEST OF TOMORROW” YOU MUST UTILIZE THE “SURPLUS OF TODAY” IN THE CREATING OF AN “EMERGENCY FUND” BY OPENING AND BUILDING A SUBSTANTIAL BANK ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK First National Bank S e et e i i YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY CLEANING PRESSING Telephone 15 ————— —— INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. 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