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BRINGING UP FATHER [ Witk yoU ceT us- SONNYRITS ELEVEN SCLOCK: DO YOU HEAR ME? i ONE THING- SONNY YOU MUST LEARN To BE PROMPT. NG ONE WILL HAVE ANY RESPECT FORYou IF YOU ARE LATE - 19 QIVIN'HIM SOME SOUND ALLRIGHT MAW - wWELL "M GLAD TC HEAR SHE EVEN IF YOU ARE JUST A BOY: You WANT TO QET THE| ADMIRATION OF BLOGNESS MEN AND EVERY ONE YOU COME IN CONTACT WITH IN YOUR TRAVELS THROUGKH LFE (] THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 9:.1932, By GEORGE McM NUS ' GUESS HELL i SHOW UP AT \WORK ORR T FROM NOW O UMMU’M U SO HURRY- YOU PROMISED | TO MEET YOUR B0Y FRIENDS AT THE STADIUM TO SEE THE FOOT-BALLGAME M /Eug(n Al Y Tz THIRTY'SEVEN :—“ Come On Sande!” SasW:fie GRID PLAYERS ‘ DIE, INJURIES Football Season Takes| Large Toll, Despite Added Safeguards | - NEW YORXK, Nov, 28.—Despite d feguards in ‘the rules,| Jeath again took a heavy toll among football players of thej| during the season| ically ended. | show that 37 players| to injuries with most of the victims on high school e!cv-: ens, The death total for the year! will probably fall well below the! record of 50 last' year but the| P nt figures the the greatest| | With « great record for coming through with flying colors on the race- iack behind him, Earle Sande is shown here as he makes a determined | eort to come tarou h again. This time he is fighting a real battle. He X i five | @ Shown with his wife at the Roosevelt Hospital, New York, where he Of the 37 dead this season, five| _ ently underwent an operation for appendicitis. Mrs. Ssnde s the were on college teams, 17 on high former Mrs. Clarence Kummer. widow of the famous jockey. school teams and 15 on sandlot, previous to 1931 One of the largest 1925. a5 20 in As Edward “Slip” Madigan roll- ed back west with his batterad Gaels of St. Mary's, there was just one thing about the Fordham beat- ling in New York he couldn't un- | derstand. Peter Coyle had failed Notre {Dame and its traditions for the { first time. | i INTRODUCING PETER Peter is a slim, dark man, who | must be somewhere in his forties, |an employe of the city of New |Haven, Connecticut. He's Notre | Dame’s two-eyed Connolley. One day when Knute Rockne d Notre Dame were riding the heights together, Peter managed |to attach himself to the great i Scandinavian. Once “in” he never jcould be shaken loose. He be- |came Notre Dame's unofficial mas- |cot in the east, for once Peter ar- |Tived Notre Dame couldn’t lose. | Peter took it all very seriously. semi-pro and club team compe-| S 7 LARRY GAINS TEXAS LOOPTO | KNOCKSMORAT MAKE PAY CUT/ ouT IN FIRST ....... Nov. 29.—Salar- DALLAS, Tex., {Belgian Heavyweight Con- es of other years ranging from | $500 to $700 monthly merely wit| tender Slumbers for Two Minutes |to find a new star for his team. bec memories in the Texas League Norris Dean, a Mississippi soph- next season, judging from com- ments s the cir- for ech, displayed an unusual h ;:;:L;v:}crn:lgub owners at the BRADFORD, England, Nov. 29— | ©© Tec displayed had played under the great c " P |Larry Gains, of Toronto, negro One executive said the highest| 3 = pald man on his 1933 squad would |Nolder of the Empire heavyweight GEORGIA TECH Ga, Nov. 29. — If Off i |Georgia Tech's surprising defeat Winding up always on the Notre ol Alabama did nothing else, it Dame bench for the game. | pave Coach Bill Alexander a chance punting ability and saved the day and now are coaches in their for his team several times as the!yight, |great Tide bore down upon his“mc: with Madigan. ;For days before a big game in New {York he would bombard Rockne {with messages, assuring the coach {he would be there to help walking if necessary. This never failed to loosen Knute's heart or pocketbook. S (enough, Peter would be there, car- | |tving Knute’s bags, pulling Rock | in a corner to advise him, | | ‘I HE MEETS MADIGAN i In time, Peter proadened | omore, playing his first full game legiance to include the men who | Thus did he come in con- 5 Out to Beat Dad’s Recérd | Making an early start in the steps of his famous father, Charles Pad- doek, Jr., baby son of the “Fastest Human,” is shown at his home in Pasadena, Cal., as he recsived instructions from his sire in the art of getting away from his mark with a zip. This is the first photo ever made | of Baby Charlie. Arrangements had been made to photograph him some | time ago, but the little chap ate a cigarette and was too ill to keep his date. break is The! bloke who got the toughest it i villain |short, |soon to be release UP |ing Jack Dempsey. € lassa Mauler had to lay him out the |ruore verve in his left The old Man- | McNamara, six-day hook. . . The soft, southern boo, as devel- |leg. oped at Tulane, apparently has it | the Bronx |of the last of ‘the east’s traditions | his al- |to tumble, TWwJ' members of the St. Mary’s oach [cleven have heen promised con- OwWn | traets. with the New York profes- | |sional Giants next season if they | all - over variety, one | | merchandise news. ODDS and ENDS in a movie sprinting champion before he made d. featur- |good on the gridiron was a fractured .|skull, a broken jaw and a broken ————— | Advertisements areé your pocket- book editorials. They interpret the WE HAVE IT at the Right Prico a Reggie bike veteran, is the original doctor’s delight. He seven $imes before the director was has suffered 11 broken collar bones satisfied, and each’ time Jack put|three cracked ribs, BOLF LINKS - MAKE MONEY TULSA, Okla., Nov. 29.—Four- {ifths of the American cities re- | ing in a municipal golf tour- | nament by a Tulsa newspaper eith- €r were breaking even or showing a profit on operation of their links. The 58 cities, ranging in popu- | a lation from 40,000 to 400,000, had 116 courses in use. Grand Rapids Mich., with four courses, reported | tj its profits from gold approximat- | t} ed 40 per cent. Eleven of the 13 cities of more | than 200,000 population either had | broken even or made a profit R NN, BLEACHER BACKS MENACE PROFITS i OF PRO GRIDDERS | CHICAGO, Nov. 29.—The chican-;‘:l |80 Cardinals, National league pro|. |football team, is alarmed lest a lcoslly precedent has been estab- | | | | P! su Sp a la for | P | attempts. In a game with the Green Bay | was made away with by an urchin |in ‘the bleachers |of the season’s most spectacular |broken field runs in escaping from | |the park with his prize. | Contrary to the time-honored & baseball custom of ignoring balls | fouled into the stands, the Car-! all such wayward kicks {810 footballs returned to the play ing field. al i High School football did | squad in a game. OFFICIAL STATUS schola: of Peaches, one ball was lost when ! Sandlot” booted over the fence and another |83Mmes had returned to corner lots |once occupied by miniature golf who made one |COurses. FOR PREP SPORTS URGED ON SCHOOLS LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 29. — A whereby competitive inter- athletics, like physical ST. lan ic education, would be made an inte- gral part of the St. Louis public hools' program is being consid- ered by the Board of Education. Should the system be adopted, director of athletics would as- ume centralized control of com- ive sports, and the usual prac- ce of supporting sports events hrough sale of admissions would |be discarded. 5 David €. Todd, a member e education board, stands ponsor for the proposed change, |contending that if interscholastic thletics are to be continued at 1l, “adequate provision for their rganization, development and sup-! ort” should be made. The movement for centralized! thletic control received impetus the action rom of Henry P, Schroeder, board member, in ad- |mitting numerous spectators to al | lished, football game at Public Schools/ Playing their home games at ! S:adlum without charge. 1 Wrigley Field, the Cards or their| = = D Cpponents sometimes boot footballs| e . |into the grandstand, or even over) | SPORT BRIEFS the left field fence, on field goal | ® A survey of Kansas Cliy showed: baseball and football For two successive seasons an |amateur cricket league has played regular schedule in St. Louis. Virginia has not used the sama dinals are desperately eager to have 'Starting backfield in any football of game this season, § In two years of football unden it |the coaching of Mike Pecarovich, Members of the Commerce, Okla. covering 12 games against many of the |nightly “chores” for Dick Logan,|teams and St. |farm youth, who broke his nnk]e!nt Spokane has strongest Coast Conferenca Mary's, Gonzaga never failed ta 'score at least one touchdown. FRESH FR Prompt Delivery THE GAS THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS Qur Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat f ALWAYS UITS and VEGETABLES AT CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 TINEAU BAILEY’S SPECIAL | titk ) & rat, o o pitoher who was plenty |Scheduled 15-rounder hére last | R night. : good.” Most of the club owners predict- ed salaries of $200 to $300 per month. | goal. —————— Morat’s jaw. | merchandise news. Morat was out for fwo minutes.i —————— ONE-PUTTS ————————— Read the ads as carefully as you read the news articles. ., 50c Pioneer Taxi, Phone 443. adv. Floyd Boone, Corsicana Country |Club golf professional, toured the POSINg teams scored. new municipal links at Galveston | in a tournament with 11 one-putt | greens out of the 18. ported to be increasing. Let the advertisements help you make your shopping plans. have mothing better in mind. ... The first time “Slip” scheduled|A southern gridster, upon being |a game in the east Knute said to|tola he was to play in Yankee Harris Hardware Co. t Every Night from 8 P. M. | Advertisements are your pockeb-3mm Gains used a right punch to|book editorials. They interpret the' Thé Duke University team un- 11 GREENS |cer Coach wallace Wade has been (defeated five times and those were| FORUIDANA, TSk Y A e Yoty atads i WA the Steel production in Italy is re- DAILY SPORTS CARTOON AGAINST COLUMBIA HE Toorc A. 30 YO. PASS AND CARRIED T 1I8YAROs Te A ToucHpowm | - HE ONLY SCORE VIRGIN/A MAD] IN THE SAME 11 UNINERSITY OF VIRGINIA T e . --B& Pap “A fellow will come up to you |in New York, put his hand up to jshield his mouth, and whisper hoarsely and confidentially into |your ear, Hello, Slip, old boy, old| boy, old boy. “That will be Peter Coyle. Put him on the bench. He's good luck.” Everything happened just as| Knute predicted. But Peter had trouble getting to the ball park He arrived between halves with St. Mary’s trailing Fordham 12 to 0. St. Mary’s promptly came back | in the second half to win 20 to| 12. WHERE DUTY CALLS Noble Elzer brought Purdue to |New York to play New York .Uni- versity the same day Jimmy Crow- | ley was in the East with Michigan | State team tackling Syracuse. Pet- ler was torn between two duties. Finally he wired Crowley his de- cision. { “TI helped you beat Fordham last iweek. Kizer and Purdue need me \this Saturday.” | To Klzer he sent this telegram: “Hitch-hiking from New Haven (o help with team. Save me some | breakfast.” So Madigan, with Peter meeting | !8t. Mary’s on arrival at New York | this year, had every reason to be-: |lieve the Fordham game was as | jgood as won. Peter never had| failed. | But as the team rolled back | home, ‘beaten 14 to 0, “Slip” h.ld‘ |real reason to wonder. Tt's just| {possible - Peter will be buying his! own breakfasts on Saturdays next | A ey { Go window shopping in your easy | chair. Read the advertisements. marked: ‘Walker has son., “Red” |Stadium, is supposed to have re- mean Damyankee “You Oliver, promised to win 18 games for the Cardinals next sea- Texas (Christian's backfield ace and leading scorer of Bill —Only Sheaffer’s for Lifetime Service Examine the mechanism of a SHEAFFER BALANCE? pencil and you will find that there are twelve distinct features why it is the world’s outstanding writ- ing instrument. Because of this matchless superiority, Sheaffer is able to definitely guarantee the pencil to be mechanically perfect. When choosing a pen or pencil, consider Sheaffer advan- Desk Sets tages. Ask your dealer to Baserof ! Genuine onys, demonstrate the exclusive \ manbi,bronce features of a Sheaffer Lifetime®. SHEAFFER’ PENS PENCILS-DESK SETS SKRIP W A SHEATTER FEN COMPANY + SORT MAGISON. JOWA, Ui & A Cheg, U. 8§ Pat, OF, and glass Lower Front Street | CHICI(EN NOODLES s 2 and | CHOP SUEY BALD? s i in || BAILEY’S CAFE m . UNITED FOOD co. “CASH IS KING” FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. CONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS and CRESCENT FELT BASE RUGS Juneau Paint Store Use Alaska Lumber JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 358 THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 —— PLAY MIDGET GOLF! The Indoor Health Game for Young and Old SECOND FLOOR, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING Open 3 P. M. to 11:30 P. M. ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29