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> . DAIL BRINGING UP FATHER I'M GONNA GIT OUT OF THE HOUSE BEFORE MAGGIE MAKES ME TAKE HER SAR LIKE I'™M FREE [T |_© 1932, King Features Syndicate, Inc., Great Brifaif rights reservad. — Y SPORTS CARTOON THERES ANCTHER POOR. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1932, MESELF-BUT TO-DAY:+ (L= T [l i —By Pap "CHAIN STORE” PROVING GREAT SOMETIMES | IMAGINE | KIN HEAR THAT PUP WHININY EVEN AFTER | LEAVE THE HOUSE- Bv GEORGE McMANUS F oés of Basketball Stail to Demand Rules Committee | Eliminate ‘Menace to Game’ ;‘ CHARLESE GRUMICH Miscsourians idly toyed with thcf KANSAS OITY, March 8—That ball or passed it among themselves. popular American phrase — “there! Coach Edwards contends the outght to be alaw"—will be ap- 0dds were too great against his plied to the so-called “stall” when ' team so long as Kansas played only the National Basketball Rules com- |defensively. mittee gather at New York in| Coach Allen says his players sat;‘ mid-A |down, adding travesty to the spec-| Opponents of “strategical passiv- |tacle, in order to test the rule and | ity” are determined to legislate the ;Show what a ludicrous performance | stall out of basketball on the ground | Was possible. that it is ruining the game from Demands 40 Minutes' Action the spectators’ viewpoint. ‘I C. L. Brewer, Missouri at‘hlctic Locker m dissertations for and director and 5th district chairman | ' A Win-Some Olympic Quartet Four Olympic champions, each supreme in one department of Winter s::m?nyrepshown -2 they told the world over the radio how it feela to be an Olympic hero. They are, left to right: Irving Jaffee, of the U. S., Winner of the 5,000 and 10,000-meter speed skating events: Karl Schafer, of Austria, men’s fancy figure skating champion; Sonja Henie, of Norway, who took the honors in the women's fancy skating, and Jack Shea, of the U. S. winner of the 500 and 1,500-meter specd championships, They broadfist t‘rn&n EPE Olympic stadium at Lake Placid, N. Y. s ) d | ap S .(of the rules committee, believes| Cardmals hl!mmate pren— uninst the spTSETRS T Pah | something should be done to assure | INSURANCE |cific coast and in the midwest. Bot OF WE RECROLS WALTER JOHNSON 'S COUNTING QA T HELO WE SENATORS IN T COMING RACE™ COLLEGINTE LAST YEAR . The basghall clan of Bowman may be t)° next to help maintain family § .ditions after the style of the Fatrells, the Waners, the Meu- sels, the Knothes and the Barnes pair . The leader of the Bowman clan, Joe, is moving right into the pitch- ing ranks of the WAthletics this spring with every intention and prospect ;of making himself useful and af Zsome. All Joe has done is to get himself in a spot where he has to break in on the twirling firm of Grove, Earnshaw and Walberg, with Ma- haffey, Krause and a few others already seeking junior partnerships. Bud Bowman, second of three brothers on the way up the base- ball ladder, has been playing the outfield for Omaha in the Western league. Charles, the third, goes u) for a trial this year with Portland of the Pacific Coast league, Port- land being a springboard to Phila- delphia, and the club from which Brother Joe made the big jump. Joe worr 18 and lost 11 last’ sea- son but the most significant feature of his record is that he walked only 62 batsmen in 244 innings. et YOU SAVE in many ways when you buy a FORD ASK JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street THE UNIVERSITY OF OENN. WON ~ME EASTERY TITLE, ‘AL TThis would indicate the 21-year-old | recruit has that rare article known | as control. Up Pops de Bruyn It may be a good idea, in the to keep an eye on a distance run- | ning prospect named Paul de Bruyn a German youth residing in New | York. He will compete for his | fatherland at Los Angeles and he | may be one of the principals for | Paavo Nurmi to beat in the Olym- | pic Marathon. | Last summer de Bruyn went back {home without any ballyhoo what- ever and ran off with the German | national marathon championship in {good time. Since he returned the | | German has been knocking off | course records and otherwise upu- | setting the normal order of things | |over the metropolitan roads. Lately de Bruyn set a -new national record of 1 hour, 22 min-| utes, 55 seconds, for 15 miles, beat- | ing the mark of 1:23:24 1-5 set by Charles [Pores, old Millrose A. A. | ster, in 1919, Managerial All-Stars There is no demand for them to| go into action aegain but the big league managers now going about their business briskly can look back {on the boys when (if gathered to- | gether) they might have presented a pretty fair all-star lineup. Every position is represented in the managerial roster this year, for the first time since we can recall, as a result of a few shake-ups. There 15 good balance on the list everywhere outside of the bat- | teries where Walter Johnson of the | |Senators would have to do all the | | pitching to an assortment of ex- | backstops ranking from Connie Mack and Gabby Street to Dan Howley, Bill Killefer and George Gibson. The seniority rule ‘would | keep Mack on the bench and How- !ley probably would talk himself. out |of the game in order to give the other boys a chance. | ‘The outfield trio would be Burt ,Shotton, Max Carey and Shano Collins, three great flychasers in |their time. For the infield, Lew Fonscea at first, either Rogers (Hornsby or Bucky Harris at sec- |ond, Roger Peckinpaugh at short ‘and Bill McKechnie on third would do. John McGraw and Joz Me- Carthy, despite their increased iwaistlines, might yield to a eall for utility work — e — | [Pete Cawthon, football coach .at | | { | o mighus Beserved b The Associated Prem AE WAS QUITE. A UALFeACie v/ g [ST. LOUIS WOMEN | PERFECT BOWLING FOR ANNUAL MEET ST. LCUIS, March 8—Women ’ | bowling stars cf St. Louis are hard at practice important event in their sport— the 15th annual tournament of the Women's International Bowling Congress scheduled to open here April 7. Several hundred teams, including last year's champion five, from Chicago, are expected to enter the meet. Mrs. Myrtle Schulte of St Louis will defend her singles title and Mrs. Zea Baker and Miss Ger- |trude Pomjoy of Detroit their dou- | bles championship. Cther leading contestants will include Mrs. Floretta McCutcheon of Pueblo, Colo.; brilliant match game bowler, and Mrs. Alta Ment- zer of Akron, Ohio; who holds a three-game mark of 737. - e [ SPORT BRIEFS 3 ATt A “ping pong palace” has been opened in Houston, Texas, with a former Texas A. & M. athlete as part owner. Frnak Gabler, pitching his first season in organized baseball for Bartlesville, Okla., in 17931, struck lout 201 batters. Charley Barrett, veteran Cardi- nal scout, once rode into the coun- try on a tractor to look over a prospect. To hold down expenses in sport activities at the University of Washington this year the annual western Washington high school relay track carnival has been can- celled. ——————.——— RECOMMENDED FOR UMPS PERPIGNAN, France, March 8— It might be a good rule for offi- cials to duck on hanging a penalty on the local football team. Two i shots were fired recently at an| umpire who called an offside on one of the local boys. Neither took | effect. - OAKS GET HOARY VETN OAKLAND, Cal, March 8.—The Cakland club of the Pacific Coast league got a real veteran when; Art Koehler was obtained from Sacramento. Thirteen years in the minor league baseball, Koehler is; credited with 5576 putouts and Texas Tech., also teaches boxing and wrestling, 1,151 assists. He has played in 1, /618 games, in anticipation of an| sive Talent by ‘Farm’ System * THING FOR B. B, ST. LOUIS, Mrach 8—sSeveral advantages are claimed for the “chain store” system of ball clubs developed by the St. Louis Cardin- als. It enables the management to pick and train its recruits. It as- sures a steady supply of young ma- terial. Tt practically obviates the ne: ity of “shopping” for stars. And it keeps down the overhead —the old payroll. Last season many baseball fans —including not a few Cardinal rooters—were amazed by the deal which sent Taylor Douthit, the ball hawk, to Cincinnati. But Douthis, commanding a fairly high salary, had a young understudy in center- field—a product of the farm system —who was coming right along, and who drew no such ‘princely wage. Understudy Martin understudy was “Pepper” hero of the 1931 world's His services for the season 1at tin, series. | cost the Cardinals just $5,000. Burleigh Grimes, veteran spitball artist, had worked himself up to the point where he was getting around $20,000 a year. 'With three brilliant youngsters available in “Dizzy” Dean, Tex Carleton and Ray Starr, that began to sound like a lot of money to the Redbird front office. So big Burleigh was traded to the Cubs for Hack Wilson, one- time home run king, and the latter brought a reported $50,000 from Brooklyn on the auction block. Is Business Proposition | Running a ball club as the Car- |dinals are run is a business propo- sition. Business methods, business Jjudgment and business foresight enter into its success. Of necessity, a player's ability remains the chief factor in decid- ing what shall be done with him or how he shall be handled. It would hardly be possible to build a club like the world’s champions on the any other basis. But ability is no tthe only cri- terion, Tt is considered in relation to its cost, and in the light of effi- cient substitute material — almost always available—which may cost even less. - SHOP IN JUNEAU of these sections and others have 40 minutes of activity in every bas- | MIDGET - LUNCH - NOW OPEN Home Cooking NEW SCHEDULE OF PRICES Owned and Operated by MR. AND MRs. Tom STURGE ' “If You Can’t Eat at Home Eat at THE MIDGET” ketball game. | Allen says he is certain the rules| body will take up the stall at its . next session. Tigpes Oifo Sule ! “The members of the National The Universities of Kansas and p g eon Goaches' association em- Missouri played @ game recently il ohatically declared that stalling | »\;hnc}\ stsour} controlled the ball was a menace” Allen says. “My | 12 mninutes without attempiing €0 impression fs that the stall will kili defied each other longer thanthat R AR and neither would “knock off the | OTiCE chip” to precipitate action. George R. Ed After March 10th no telephone | coach, whose team uses * for the month of March offense,’ 'cites the coaches' asso- Will be accepted at a discount. All ciation’s own interpretation to remittances by maill must bear prove he was within the law when postmark of mot later than last his cagers held the ball. discount dalc.“ :]l:;sebgeugro:;nt b i JUNEA GLAS AR 0% Travedy adv. TELEPHONE CO. The interprevation, drafted by T Edwards and seconded on adoption by 'Goach F. C. “Phog” Allen, of | Kansas, asserts “stalling is the re- fusal of the team which is behind in the score to play aggressive bas- ketball.” There is no penalty ex- cepp jeers from the crowds at G - Missouti meritor Holds that since his team led Kansas by two been exposed to examples of the inactivity possible under the pres- ent rules, A NEW STOMACH Odd as that sounds, it is virtually | as true as though a new stomach | were really bought and paid for— that's ‘what thousands of former | stomach sufferers tell us. If UL-‘ CERS, GAS, ACID STOMACH and points the burden of aggressiveness indigestion have made you mXSer-‘ + able for years, what would you do| fell upon the Jayhawker quintet, whieh presented a 5-man phalanX for 5 new stomach that made eat- | abomt the Tiger basket and refused jno gand living a pleasure ngain?] to go after the ball in the Kansas would you spend a 2c stamp? Write | offensive territory. to Minneapolis Von Co., Dept. K,| During the 12 minutes preceding 1108 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis, | the halftime intermission Kansas Minn, for full information. adv. | players reclined on the floor and i SR & | < NOTICE TO CREDITORS | In the Commissioner's Court for' the Territory of Alaska, Division | Number One. Before CHAS. SEY, | Commissioner and ex-Officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Last Will and Testament of JACK PETERSON. deceased. THEO. S. PEDERSON ALASKA HOME DECORATOR Estimates Furnished Free General Painting Contractor NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the undersigned was, on the 15th day of February, 1932, duly appointed executor of the last will and testament of Jack Peterson, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased are required to present the same, | e With proper vouchers attached, tol| Shep Phone 354 Res. Phone 402 Shop at Third and Seward SEE YURMAN New Fur Garments in I the undersigned at Juneau, Alaska, within six months from the date| New Styles of this notice, AUGUST ANDERSON, Cleaning, Repairing, Remodeling | ! Executor of the Estate of | Yurman, the Furrier || Jack Peterson, deceased. | Triangle Building | ' First publication, Feb. 16, 1932, . o Last publication, March 8, 1932. Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska INDIAN LUMP $11.50 per ton at dock CALL US DIRECT PHONE 412 PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. Plymouth Floating Power The engine floats in the chassis with the freedom and stability of a dock or ponoon bridge. It floats on rub- ber supports which function, how- ever, in a way that rubber engine mounting were never before em- ployed. JUST ARRIVED—Another new stock of WALLPAPER Juneau Paint Store BAILEY’S THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS o THE GASTINEAU Qur Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat ree