Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
(* come sign along ’ PG W MM 400 M, Sy g AR > ot BRINGING UP FATHER ouT THERE GOES BoBoY JONES' M:R?C// s ey ., GENE mMAOE A 'SHow" OF WE GREAT FIELD - + WOULDNT GO IN THAT RAIN FER ANYONE- o 1SS Ty \ WNE UNTY Oy pUR BY GOLLY'! AT FIRST | TMOUGHT T WUZ “"8)) Rights Reserved by The Assoclaled Press The renewal of football rivalry between Cornell and Michigan, af- ter all too long a lapse, is a wel- the gridiron paths. These two schools have waged many a ‘riendly and frequently a spectacular athletic duel. They have a good deal in common in sports and academic standards. Their 1votball ions go all the way back to 1889 and into the subsequent mauve decade, during | which Cornell's powerhouse teams | treated one of the gridiron sport’s | nowcomers rather roughly. Thfl‘ Ithicans ran up around 200 points on the Wolverines in five straight | seasons, playing two games in 1892. | The secies lapsed from 1885 to 1911, then continued for seven| straight years. The late Charl Barrett's team scored a big vic-| tory in 1915 and Fritz Shiverick’s | toe broke a 20-20 tie in a sensa- | tional game in 1916, but Michigan came back in their last game to! win by 42 to 0 in 1917. rel All games told, ‘Cornell has and Michigan four. since he was a Minnesota back has Gil Dobie, Cor- football coach, led a team against Michigan. It will revive| memories of the original “brown | jug” for him when he goes back | to Ann Arbor in October, 1933, won 11 to renew a few ancient arguments| = with Professor Fielding H. Yost. | BADGES COST MONEY One of the reasons K why this| Olympic business is expensive is shown by these statistics in our re- | cent cable dispatches: | Country thletes Officials Sweden 50 20 Finland 45 15 Australia 16 7 l South Africa 13 11 { 1 have seen occasions at | and Amsterdam when there were more officials scurrying around on field, wearing big badges, than Paris | there were athleies. There should be rules to limit them, just as the number of competifors is restricted. The Olympics are the ultimate in amateur sports, where fair play is a cardinal virtue, yet some sus- picion seems to develop among ‘those speaking different tongues and as a consequence no country feels it is safe without a quota of HOLLAND HAS LARGE ENTRY AT OLYMPICS official watchdogs on the premises. | Then too, each Olympiad is con- vention time for those who govern our amateur athletics. While the athletes are doing their best to foster international amity on the fields of action, the legislative forc- es take up weighty affairs of state, the merits of the tenth-second watch and the advisability of pe: mitting woémen to rival the more strenuous competition of men. THE BOYS ARE COMPETENT I do not mean to suggest, of course, that the Olympic Games or any other athletic event can properly be run off without organ- ization and supervision. It would not do to give the games back to the athletes. A tremendous amount of careful preparation is necessary to the ‘conduct of any Olympiad, in addition to supervising the compe- tition that breaks out in a dozen or more sectors during a period of | two weeks. If anything along the line of or- ganization has been left undone by such solid citizens of Los Ange- les as William May Garland, Zack Farmer and Bill Henry, it has yet to be revealed. Apparently they intend to have everything, includ- ing the officials, in proper place. SEE YURMAN | New Fur Garments in | New Styles { Cleaning, Repairing, Remodeling | Yurman, the Furrier Triangle Building 1 . MIDGET LUNCH OPEN DAILY UNTIL | MIDNIGHT | Klesinger & Kovich | LOS ANGELES, June 27.—Al- though there were rumors Holland would not enter the Olym- pic Games, official entries receiv- ed by the sports technical depart ment showed that Holland wil have one of the largest entry lists, as to number of sports, of any of the fifty participating mations. Compleie entry blanks in nine branches of sport were received from Holland. They were signed by Maj. George Van Rosse, secre- tary of committee, who is coming with the team. Miss Marie Braun, of Holland, who was the Olympic backstroke swjmming champion and was close seccnd in the 400-meter free-style, will be among the entries, as will Capt. Pabud De Mortanges, who was the individual champion in the that | the Netherlands Olympic‘ GENE SARAZEN MAKES RECORD, GOLF PLAYING Recognized as One of | Greatest Finishers of { Game—Ties Jones FLUSHING, Long ~1It making his spectacular fin- ‘ last Saturday, shooting the | last round in 66, which was four Island, June under par for a total of 268 for {72 holes, and winning the United : ., |States Open Golf Championship, Clark Humbles Giants with ‘and adding to his newly acquired E' . f M British Open Crown, Gene Sara- xception o an-~ zen equalled the American Open ager Terry Tournament mark sst in 1916 by v Chick Evans. His final round was a stroke better than the previous w‘l?f{‘:ioz‘;]’;?::n I‘ém:{"' ;:“‘; ?7; record for a single round for the g R i ars Sopped BT tournament of 67 by Willie Mc- Giants, except Manager Biil Farlane in 1925 and also clipped g -Su_nday('h "bn"l‘mm: and 4y, strokes off the competitive ooklyn won the battle of south- cource record for here, thus be- paws by a score of 5 tc 2. vy coming the onf pla) Tony Cucinello led the attack on Bobbyp Jones, m‘bcarr;' re both the the Glants aided by Carl Hubbell prgicn and American Open *itles with a home run, double and sin- j\ tne same season gle that brought in three tallies. o ARG f ” Sarazen's sensational finish was | his first triumph in the United States Open since 1922 when just a youth of 21, he finished with a total of 288. From that day on he * has been famous as one of the greafest finishers in tae zame. i Other :unisners were Leo Diegel 204, YWiffy Cox 205, Jose Jurado 296,- Olin 'Dutra 297, Billy Burke 297, vMarry Cooper 207 and Walter Hagen 208, GAR'S LATEST - MISS AMERICA GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast Leaguc ‘Angeles 7, 6; Seattle 6, 11. Sacramento 5, 3; Missions 14, 5. Cakland 8, 11; Hollywood 7, 8. San Francisco 2, @ Portland 4, 8. National League Fhiladelphia 4, 5;/Boston 5, New Ycrk 2; Brosklyn 5. Pittsburgh 5, 9; Cincinnati 0, Caicago 3, 4; St. Louis 4, 3. Amecrican League Philadelphia 2; New York 5 . B 5. t. Louis 5, 6; Cleveland 10, Juneau City League Moose-Elks; postponed on jcount of rain. | YANKEES BEAT ATHLETICS; | GOMEZ CATCHES UP WITH | GROVE, CONSECUTIVE WINS | NE WYORK, June 27.—Lefty Go- mez, of the Yankees, leading pitch-| DBETROIT, Mich,, June 27.—Ra- er in the American League, caught dically different from her famous Miss Saturday as he America X., newest of Gar Wood's the Athletics 7 to 4 creations for the defense of the Harmsworth trophy, is a finished \up with Lefty Grove in the con- predécessors, |secutive win Mst Jturned back \for his eleventh straight victory. | Jimmie Foxx, of the Athletics, product. banged out his 29th home run of When Kaye Don, English pilot, \the season in the fourth inning. Tenews his challenge in September | GAMES SATURDAY over the new Lake St. Clair course, the hull of Pacific Coast League he'll find a longer and vastly heav- Sacramento 5; Missions 2. Oakland 6; Hollywood 7. | Los Angel 5; Seattle 6. San PFrancisco 11; Portland 1. National League New York 8; Philadelphia 9. Chicago 8; St. Louis 7. Cincinnati 4, 5; Pittsburgh 5, 8. Brooklyn 5; Boston 6. American League Philadelphia 4; New York 7. Detroit 5; Chicago 10. |fastest he has built. | Boston Washington 6. | Tt has an overaM length of thir- | St. Louis-Cleveland, rain. [ ty-eight feet, longer by several feet ithan any of its predecssors. i The motors and super-chargers of last year’s boat, which set the “ present world’s record of 111.7196 !miles an hour in Florida, are being rebuilt for installment. — e+ Five Chicago boys were regulars on the University of Washington Freshman™foothall squad last year. England II defeated in the first heat last year. And if the hull lives up to the expectations of its builder, Don ’alsn will find a much faster craft, Despite the seven and a half ton |weight of the Miss America—the .heaviest by three tons of any of } {the long line of Miss Americas— | STANDING OF CLUBS Won Lost P ‘\ Pacific Coast League Hollywood 51 35 Portland 50 36 San Francisco 48 31 |Los Angéles 43 40 Seattle 40 46 Oakland 39 46 |Sacramento 39 47 i Missions 32 53 581 554 518 465 450 453 376 — e rrrr e three-day event of the equestrian | sports. | The equestrian team will arrive on the 8. S. Seattle on July 3, and is expected to be a strong contend- er for both individual and team championships, Holland having ‘been victorious in the team cham- pionships for the last two Olympic Games. | Holland’s team will be approxi- {mately as follows: Three men in equestrian events; four men in the {track and field, three men in cyc- ling, two men and one woman in fencing, one man in pentathlon; |two’' men in rowing, one man in | shooting, four women In swimming land two men in yachting. | e | HOLE-IN-ONE WITH JAVELIN | PATRFIELD, Ia., June 27.—Bob e Long of Parsons College, is not a! |champion javelin-thrower, but he claims one record. In practice one day this spring he sent the spea hurtling into the very hole in the !ground made by the steel tip on the throw just previous. PHONES 83 OR 85 R 2 R . R N P T DY “The Store That Pleases” THE SANITARY GROCERY National League | Won Lost Pot | Pittsburgh 33 27 550 | Chicago 3% 20 547 | Boston 35 31 530 Philadelphia 36 8¢ 514 | Brooklyn 33 84 493 |st. Louis 30 32 484 QUALITY | oincinnati 31 4 45 at e "8 % % | SENSIBLE PRICES Won Lost . 45 19 36 21 37 20 3 80 36 31 33 32 23 40 12 51 Pet, 03 571 554 552 537 508 365 190 New York | Detroit | Washington Philadelphia | Cleveland lSr Louis | Chicago | Boston Juneau City League | (Second Half) | Won Lost Pct. American Legion ... 0 0 000 Moose ‘ 0 0 .000 | Bisk 0 0 .000 | - Springfield, Mo. June 27.—Llarry !Barton, first baseman for the Springfield club in the Western | Association, is a better player than Jim Bottomley was when he broke into organized ball, says Charley Barrett, veteran scout who discov- ered hoth men, H. 8. Graves The Clothing Man besides | 1 READY T0 60 ier craft than that which his Miss {Wood is certain the hull is the| OUTPOINTED BYITALIAN | MILAN, June 27.—Vittorio Ta-| |mangnini, of Ttaly, outpointed Al Brown, Panama Negro, recognized | im some quarters as the world's| jbancamwrigm champion, in a ten | round non-title bout here last Sat- | ( | urday night. —— et \ ONE HUNDRED | - METRE TIME | | - GETS CLIPPED | VANCOUVER, B. C., June 27— Persy Willlams ran 100 metres in ten and six-tenths seconds in the British Columbia Olympic trials last Saturday, cutting two tenths of a second off the time that won | the event in the Olympics at Am- |sierdam four years ago. S SR Pt i T BIG TEN MA - DIVERT FUNDS CHICAGO, June 27.—The some- | what lean Olympic fund suffered a relapse recently when the Bi:: Ten Conference threatened to use| the proceeds from its recent out- jdoor track and field meet to de-| fray the expenses of its own rep- resentatives to the Olympic games. was held, the Big Ten, like m of the college athletic conference: promised to turn over all proceeds |to the Olympic fund. During the meet, however, sev- eral directors suggested that the money be kept from the fund and be used to take care of the Big Ten athletes. Maj. John D. Gri fith, conference athletic commi: sioner, immediately started a poll to determine the action. b L T PITCHER BASS IS GLUTTON FOR LONG BASEBALL GAMES ASHVILLE, N. C., June 27.—This | boy Dick Bass, Ashville Tourist| pitcher, whose going this year has been very good, likes those extra innings when the score is tied. Bass, property of the Louisville Colonels, is a former University of Miami moundsman. While at Miami, in 1930, Bass pitched a 21-inning game against the University of Cincinnati to tie the standings of the two teams in the last game of the season, The previous year he pitched an 18-inning game, two then went 14| |innings, one of 12 and another of | (11 innings. e — "SPORT BRIEFS Ty Cobb had a batting average of 367 for his entire 24 ycars in big league baseball. Intercollegiate foothall is to be! resumed by Cumberland Univer- {sity, Lebanon, Tenn., this Fall. Dick Goldberg, home-run slug- ger in the Western League, quit a career Wichita. Eddie Moore, outfielder recently released by Fort Worth, held the Texas League record for consecu- “, Before the Big Ten track meet | in dentistry to play with| ‘Tossing 1 8()—P0imd Plates Gave Klein Batting Wrist Vg 3 o4 CHICAGO, 1l., June 15. — The of 180-pound steel plates Klein's batting average t be obvious at first glance, Fhillies' slugger thanks his with the former for him achieve the latter. -powerful wrists and fore- ich make it possible for the ex-Hoosier to swing a 42-ounce bat—the legal limit for big league bludgeo: with comparative ease says Klein are his chief stock in trade “Catehing” 180-pound hot steel plates with tongs and “tossing” them into the jaws of rolling mills down in Indianapolis was Klein's job when he was still in his teens 'GALLANT KNIGHT and had no definite ambitions to WINS BIG EVENT be a big-time baseballer. It de-| g veloped his iron wrists. | CHICAGO, June 27 alians Confidence in this forearm pow- Knight, heavily played favorite, wou er, Klein £ays, also helps keep him the $10,000 added Peabody Memor- from getting into trouble with his ial Handicap last Saturday ar_tcr- foot work. Since he doesn't have noon at the closing of ‘Washing- to lunge or “get too much body” ton Park’s 80 day meet. Spanish into his swing Play was second and FPittsburger A 14-day try out with the Evans- Wwas third ville, Ind. team of the Threc Eye BN R B STR League and a 10-weeks' stretch ! with the Fort Wayne, Tnd. Central League e y in 1928 constituted all of Klein’s minor league c: He went up to the Phillies near the end of that season for $7,500 RS Vi S and from the start has been one f_’________ of the outstanding hitters in the majors. He's only 26 now. Always a pitcher when playing with his high school nine at South- | port, Ind,, where he also starred in | basketball and track, Klein admits he was “pretty green” as an out- fielder when he got into organized ball, but studied hard and has rounded out his game so that he is never accused of being of less than average capability in the field —and he surely is above-average at the bat. Diatrict Attorney George F Phil Jolie. Every member party obtained a fine mess of cut- throat trout. The party left Juneau Saturday evening in Mr. Jclie's mo oAt Sheila, making the trip into Tur- ner Lake, which is near Taku Glac- fer, in an hour and forty-five min- utes:. The fishermen camped on. the lake shore Saturday ni and turned here oarly yest af- rnoon. Selightful, sunny the Take -ee - 1y weather pre- ed ab Bernie Neis, now playing man- ager of the 'Knoxville Southgrrt League baseball team, once scored from second on a sacrifice bunt toward first. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” EVERY DAY | THIS WEEK WOMAN'’S TRAPSHOOT MARK IS RESULT OF HER STEADY WORK ATLANTA, June 27—Mrs. Walter P. Andrews of Atlanta, whose trap- shooting mark at the Kentucky- Tennessee championship match set a new world record, has long been one of the outstanding shots of this country. She has been a regular competi- tor at Vandalia in the Grand American handicap and allied championships each year. She won the women's championship of North America in doubles five years ago and has shown great form at sinzles and handicap ranges eral times. Her previous record on 200 con- |secutive targets was 192 or 98 per cent. The new mark of 195 out of 200 Hopkin e, Ky, or 07% per cent is regarded by experts as an unusual mark for a masculine | riflist. Mrs. You will find un- usual values at our SEMI-ANNUAL Clean-Sweep Sale BUT SHOP EARLY verything Cash— No Approvals No Refunds No Exchanges Andrews plans to eniel | Gra American in \August. - FISHERMEN CATCH tive games played with 573. AMBROSIA DEAL 1 Flask, value ... J & J Coueftes, value Ambrosia Funnel, value .. FREE With each $1.00 size AMBROSIA the 1-minute facial BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS Phone 134 Free Delivery T T TURNER LAKE TROUT Good fishing was enjoyed Sat- urday evening and Sunday meorn- ing at Lake Turner by Dr. W. W. Council, Assistant United States, Juneaw’s Own Store .+« is qualified to give your timepiece the expert attention it deservas. THE NUGGET SHOP T