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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JAN. 3, 1933. EY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG By GEORGE McM! 1 SHOULDNT HAVE TOLD MAGGIE | WUZ SICK SHE THINKS ¥M WORSE THAN VAM AN SHES LIABLE TO DEND FER A DOCTOR 1 ARE YOU T A DOCTOR? NO! I'M A CARPENTER - } MRS-IIGES WANTS ME TO FIX THE DOOR CAIQET \ | | | BOY WONDER’ OF BILLIARDS Jimmy Caras, 21, of Wiiming. ton, Del., the latest “hoy wonder” of billiards, showed the old mast- ‘ ers come tricks in the national i pocket billiard championship in New York. At the end of 12 innings he was at the top of the standings with four consecutive games to his credit. (Associated Press Photo) S0, CALIFORNIA WALLOPS PITT Western Team, Driving| and Passing, Wins by Score of 35 to 0 PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 3.—Driv- ing and passing as they never did in the regular season, the Univer- sity of Southern California swamp- ed Pittsburgh here yesterday in the annual Rose Bowl Tournament football classic by a score of 35 to 0. Eighty three thousand tors witnessed the game. The Pittsburgh’s defense folded up in the fourth quarter and the Trojans pushed over three touch-! UNJ!AMUND T0 I![}SPITAL It was the fourth victory of the nament play and the second over LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 3.— CHICAGO, I, Jan Pittsburgh, winning in 1930 by a score of 47 to 14 e wAD OF DOUGH lN jl;{‘:‘tt‘r Cook has moved around Alonzo Stagg, famous {quite a bit, but mostly on the Pa- coach, recently retired MOUTH Ale RACER cific Coast. If the veteran catch-|cal hospital with a sev TO WIN FEATURES ¢ and trainer of the Hollywood |influenza = | baseball club sticks through V_‘.b] e 3.—Even 1933 season he will round out 20! 5 ha!; vears of service in organized ba: :-IOCTOGENAR]ANS MAKE {ban |GOOD PLAYING GOLF e RO | CORONADO, Cal, Jan 3—When T HAS MADE F. S. Sherman, 80, Dr. W. G, before he starts his runs. He| BRILLIANT RECORD, cutier, 83 ana or. P. J. Parker, chews it throughout the chase to| !86, showed up at the Coronado keep his mouth moist. ! LAFAYETTE, Ind, Jan. 3.—As Country Club to play a nine-hole Blakeney recently led the Long- Purdue’s Boilermakers prepared to threesome, the betting was even horns to another Southwest con- defend their 1933 Western Conrer-‘they couldn’t finish. ference cross-country title. fence basketball title, proud boost-| “But,” one of the octogenarians T e ers hauled out the Old Gold and pointed out, “we've had 249 years DREAMS CLOSE RACE {Black record under Ward “Piggy” of experience among us.” ;Lambert for review. | He was right. Experience coun- CHICAGO, Jan. 3—When will| The sheet shows that, in the ted more than age. Sherman shot Hardrige, president of the Ameri- 13 seasons the little ex-Wabash 2 49 against par 37, Dr. Cutler can league, was asked what was SI8r has been at the helm, Pur-/took 52 and Dr. Parker 56. uppermost in his mind these win-|due has won or shared in the Big | —— ter days, he came back: Ten title six times, been runner- “Closer races in the American UP four times and have never| OUTSTANDING PRO League. Why, the other night 1 finished below fourth place. | g dreamed it was August 1 and that| Lambert’s teams have an edge| NEW YORK, Jan. 3. — Earl every club in the League was tied 0% €ach of their Big Ten rivals (Dutch) Clark, former Colorado for first place. I woke up right in games won and lost in this per- 'College star now with the Ports- away then, as I knew it was a iod mount Spartans, was the only dream.” | |unanimous choice of coaches for a specta- 3.—Amos f oothall a lo- case of is AUSTIN, Tex., Jan. a good cross-country runner his idiosyncrasies. Lane L. Blakeney, captain of the University of Texas harriers, stuffs a wad of bread dough in his mouth LAMBE —— e, — The advertisements are your guide;place on last year's Classified ads pay. to efficient spending. ) Professional League team. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON GILBERT HAS A SLIGHT EDGE On HANK MILLS IN HEIR RACE FOR FIRST PLACE" RIDING HONORS " JOHNNY #HoPrs To BRING HIS TOTAL OF QINNERS uP TO THE TWo HUNORED MARC BEFORE™ TE YeAR 1S All-National | RIOT OCCURS - AT GRID GAME IN ROSE BOWL Police Battlé—lri—ve Hundred Men and Women— Many Arrests PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 3.—Twen- ty-seven persons were jailed, and half a dozen others, including two policemen, were injured yesterday in a furious melee between the police and 500 men and women who attempted to storm their way into the Rose Bowl for the Pitts- burgh-Southern California football game. Police reserves were rush- ed. The mob was finally quieted when tear gas bombs were used | | | { JOCKEY ELLSTON w PITT GRID ST Cupid made a flying tackle and brought Warren Heiler, Pittsburgh’s All-American haifback, down with a thud. His engagement was recent- ly announced to Irene Malindzak, pretty Pitt co-ed from New Philadel phia, Ohio. Heller refuses to say when the ceremony will take place but the bride-to-be intimates it will be after graduation next June. The gridder's home is in Steelton, Pa. (Associated Press Photo) | COASTS IN THIRD | ‘ ON HOSPITAL COTK‘ | | LATONIO, Ky., Jan. 3.—Appar-| ‘amly headed for the riding cham- | pionship of the country, Jockey| Gilbert Ellston plunged to the hard surface of the jockey-club |track here, and now m never |{ride again, though doctors y {is far from likely. | But even if he is unable again to take the saddle, Ellston prob- ably will finish third among the leading riders of the year because of the brilliant work that put him at the top early in the season. { The accident that sent him ! down killed the hopes of two jock- ! ‘cys for riding leadership in 1932, for Monte Parke was held re- | sponsible and was suspended for the remainder of the season. At the time Ellston had takeh | 748 mounts, and had won on 168 |of them. His elimination left the | contest for top honors between Johnny Gilbert and Hank Mills. | { It has been a tough year an looks like a tougher winter fo | the sport of thoroughbred hor: racing. It may be an uphill prop- osition all the way to keep goin but the proof of the persisten: and confidence of the sports back- ' ers is that the horses are stil galloping. | Take New Orleans, for instanc |since the struggle there precedes | the probability of another at Mia- | mi before the winter is over. | “Jefferson Park, across the Or- leans Parish line,” writes Harr O. Martinez, sports editor of ti {New Orleans States. “cut thel |purses to $400 and opened tI gates free to the public. They did! this as a last resort to get u | people to the track. The play in ithe mutuels the first week wa | terrible, but it is now up to about; $50,000 daily. { | “The running will shift to the| | Fair Grounds from Jan. 23 i | March 18, inclusive, at a time when | ithe winter tourists are headed for |New Orleans and the Mardi Gra: | { THE ORIGINAL OPTIMIST | i “Joseph A. Murphy, who h ,charge of the Hawthorne track | Chicago, has practically the sam:| men from Chicago in d the Fair Grounds now. They" | taken over control of Col. E. Bradley’s interest. “Murphy is the original optim He has outlined what we think here a splendid winter prograr |For a long time Col. Bradley tric |to hold up the minimum purse oi- | fered to $1,000, but last year con % down to $800. The minimum pur {this year will be $500. {' “The idea of running the Lou! (1ana Derby as the last event of t season is done to keep up int { |est and at the same time try a |develop a candidate or two ’ ‘;lh& Kentucky Derby. | | “As you know, Omar Khayyaw\ |and later Black Gold were derb | | Baggenbaggage. | program and perhaps a and later Kentucky which fini econd to Bubbling Over in th 1926 Kentucky, was developed here. €0 was Boot to Boot. “Fair Grounds has one of most be ful tracks in the coun- o by the generosity of Col. Bradley; who ‘made it a show | place and called it the Horseman's Playgrounds. went Der winners here and won the up by. EASTIN GRID the | Fistic Encounter Enlivens Eighth Annual Foot- ball Classic SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jan. 3. The West defeated the East 21 to 13 in the eighth annual gridiron classic played in the name of the state, nor the bettor. charity here yesberday afternoon. tanit Hank Schalbach, California half- Due to the legal technicalities| . . 5 back, scored all of the West's involved, there is no chance lor}t Ky AR PO e et e & any restoration of horse racing| o ot D b wagering in New York on a pa“_chlrn points, mutuel basis. The agitation for) = it prompted. by business depres-|Prief fistic set-to HeEwen, | Joe y |Kurth, Notre Dame tackle, and sion, has been too dilatory to be! i p eftective, Opposition, too, . would|FAIPD Stone, San Francisco Olym- be difficult to overcome. Mean-|PiC Club end Both principals fle. . ent | Vere banished from the field. S g el ”’f;,“f:‘_':;a;‘,'” The East dominated the game |in the first half but the West re- turned to take the lead in the sec- |ond half. FIVE-DAY WEEK : here has been some {alk that!| the New York season of 1933 would ! have to be curtailed and some of | the smaller tracks closed, due to the shrinkage in receipts and a system of “oral” wagering which benefits neither the management, racing week will be in order for the new ycar. e o BOXER IS PLAYWRIGHT Nome in Newspl: a Only Waits 100 Years Spala, Italy’s former heavyweight - champion, has turned playwright.. FORT PLAIN, N. Y. Jan. 3.— His first play, entitled "Thrawj'l‘hv- first hundred years are the Farcical Rounds” and dealing with | hardest in which to get your name a prize-fighter's life, is having a|in the paper, according to Miss successful run here. | Margaret ~ Lumley, centenarian, 2. i 1 | whose biggest thrill was in seeing Advertisements. are her name in the press for the beok editorials. They | first time, on her hundredth birth- merchandise news. !du,\-. | MILAN, Italy, Jan. 3.—Erminio | your pockel- interpret the Wanderwellr Bufial ét Sea While a bitter cold gale sang a crazy funeral dirge through the rain- drenched rigging of the yacht Carma, the body of Captain Walter Wan- ell, slain adventurer, was cast into the Pacific, three miles off Long Beach, Calif. Inset shows the murdered man’s widow, Mrs. Aloha Wan- dlrwzil, being assisted during the grnmnic rites aboard the funeral yacht, WEST DEFEATS | | The game was enlivened with a ~ CHARITY GAME | | TEED MINERAL-SURFACED TINGLES For New Homes and Over Old Roofs COLORS ARE PERMANENT Protective — Permanent — Fire Resistant and Economical May be had in any type, design, colors, or color combination Thomas Hardware Co. GET OUR PRICE BY THE JOB— Not by the Hour 30 Gallon Range Boiler $9.50 Toilet . . . . $15.00 (Standard New Pattern Bowl) RICE & AHLERS CO. 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