The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 31, 1933, Page 5

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BRINGING UP FATHER ~OU ARE IMPOSSIBLE- YOU DISGRACED LS AGAIN LAST NIIGHT AT THE PART Y- You BORED LORD FIVENTEN DOING THOSE VULGAR CARD, TRICKS-WE'LL NEVER BE INVITED AGAIN- | MUST HAVE BEEN OUT OF MY MIND WHEN 1| MARRIED YOU - 3 R T LORD FIVENTEN 15 A SOCIAL LEADER AND YO! T S0 WELL N INVITED TO Hi IN EURCPE- | NS LORD FIVENTEN JUST PHONED AND WOULD LIKE MR- JIGGS TO JOIN HIM AT DINNER AND TO BRING ALONG THE CARDS- Made Big Time M' | ' \ AFTER COACH | JOBATO.S.C. vl SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jan. 81 |Murius McFadden, for ten years {football coach at San Mateo Jun-| |lor College, informed friends here 'he had applied for the head coach- | |]unior' Biiliard Champion 5 2 ORI tys HEWE el ok S oo JONES WINNER - BY K. 0. PUNCH, b SLAUGHTER 60 {|gon State for three years, 1920- Since taking over the coach- CLEVELAND, Ohio, Gorilla Jones last The touch of irony in the can- | 1108 A0 a0 oh Maten, 10, Sen| ccllation for 1933 of the pictur-| §. - j | 0Pt SIMRRIED . GRS dn ¢e:que Poughkeepsic Regatta seems | g 2 § |the California Junior College Con- middleweight championship again| by ‘a knockout over Sammy | Slaughter. GROGERS SWAMP BUTCHERS 46 TO 5 IN CAGE GAME George Brothers Have Easy Prey in United Meat Co. Quintet In big, ighter of th season, George Brothers' quinte st night overwhelmed the Unite { Company's cagers by a sco to 5, and moved into a t! d place in the Chann ue with the Moose an Departn Eac teams wo one game. and Orme led tI Burke makir points on fie throw. Bak 1 with six fields an s throws, for 16 point and Orme third with five field end one free throw, for 11 point All of the Butchers' points wer red in the first half o goals by Brown and Fennes) and a gift toss by Cash had numerous o0ppor the basket but faile 17-YEAR-OLD CATCHER SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jan. 31, —Christian Harthe, seventeen-year old San Francisco boy, today was carrying in his pocket a contract with the Mission Reds, Coast League baseball club. | Harthe is a catcher, and is the ungest to be signed by the Reds nce Bill Brenzel. - eee — — Let the advertisements help you make your shopping plans. 123, k5, ik ikhe “IRGESAL, VDA SARCOR i|ference. His junior elevens won the climax to the one sport of “";,1,1\_“2 e which the Carnegie Foundation's 1?0 o el 0., Bulletin 23, in 1929, was able to ‘\1:1; Q:: h‘::,'f pitched of the Baltimore Orioles, of |, o the International League, who will Jan. 31— night won the developed at San| Hans Schalbach, | Maurice Baldwin and Fred Schlichting, all Univers- make his bow with the big timers |\t¥ ©f California. Tiny Sellman,‘ this coming season as twirler for |Stanford, and Jarvis and Leggett, the Chicago Cubs. Richmond’s ex- | who entered Oregon State, were cellent work on the mound for four | tutored by the coach. years resulted in his being given a ¢ 2 shot in the big league. Cubs paid STAlNBA(}'K Is SOLD, §75,000 $15,000 for him. LCS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 81— FT R N William Veeck, president of the Chicago Cubs, dug deep in his ‘]"()th‘i for $75,000 with which to wflN BY JUNEAU back, star young outfielder, Rowing appears to be the only or branch of intercollegiate | athletics from which commercial- ism is absent.” I do not question the costliness of maintaining crews. It has cost Cornell as much as $25,000 a year to float its big Navy on the his- toric waters of Cayuga and else- Washington has raised up- of $10,000 just to send its t crews to the Hudson. Obviously the present and pros- pective situation does not warrant of the colleges continuing such expenditures, with their nor- mal revenues cut in half, yet it is, a fact that the pious phrases of the Carnegie Report of four years und quite hollow in- t of developments w phat only the self commercialized col- football and bas- to weather thel BANKING SERVICES FOR 1933 SAVINGS ACCOUNTS have lost , Baker onslaught, a free four e purchase George (Chick) Stani- from |the Los Angeles Angels. Veeck also will part with three |players, Marvin Gudal, Cub out- | fieider, formerly with Columbus, Ed Baecht, pitcher, and another hurler, yet unnamed. Stainbeck, a product of Lost An- geles high school diamonds, batted ties at register. the final half they missec every try from the -field and all of sses from the presentatior The zone Gélense of the {Local Men Beat Anchorage | and Ketchikan — Wom- en Defeat Ketchikan Plan NOW, your savings and get-ahead program for 1933. If you haven't an Interest Bearing @ Robert Moore of Grand Rapids, Mich.,, naticnal junior pocket billiard champ, will be glad when he's 16 so he won't have to de- it o A are able tide conomic football. Grocers was too intricate for the ‘Butchers to penetrate successfully in the last half. In the curtainraiser, after ¢ torrid scrap, the Douglas grad school five walked off the floor winner over the Juneau graders by a 15 to 13 score. The Islanders used substitutes freely in the last half. This is the second straight game for them. George Brothers Win Grocers (47) Pos. Butchers (5) Orme (11) rf. Fennessy (2) fend his crown again. He prefers GRAND RAPIDS, Robert Moore of Mich., national 'i billiard champion, is one title- wlder who gets no kick out of[ he sport in which he excels. He'll be glad when he is 16 years | >f age Feb. 28 and will not have to defend his title any more. HeH ras held the junior crown for Lhci last three years, being defeated | only once in that period. 1 Mich., Jan Grand Rap- | junior pock- l and make the game a business after he reaches the age limit for juniors.” > VETERAN FIGHT PROMOTER WILL RETIRE MARCH 1 LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 81— Jack Doyle, who started promot- ing fights fifteen years ago in PENALIZE THE AMATEURS Of course the Carnegie Founda- tion investigators and authors of Bulletin 23 pointed out the dang-| ers in the structure of athletic! financing and operations which grew up with the boom times. Re- ferring to the benefits of intr: mural sports, for example, the i port remarked: “The pity is that such beneficial results as are now Ir being achieved are allowed to de- pend universally upon the financial for Juneau defeated Anchorage and om Ketchikan all teams, Ketchikan in the men’s and won and lost to An- chorage in the women’s division of the eighth match in the Elks tri- city bowling tournament. chorage women again set the pace aggregating 2,703 pins to give them an all tourna- ment lead of 103 pins. The An- They lead the Juneau women by 4,205 pins, and Ketchikan 4711 pins. Anchorage men lead the lo- cal Elks by 227 and Ketchikan by 356 in his first season with the Angels last year. He will report to the Cubs in 1934. e S WRIGHT SIGNS FOR 1933 WITH DODGERS NEW YORK, Jan. 31. — Capt. Glenn Wright, shortstop of the Brooklyn Dodgers, wired friends today he had signed his 1933 con- tract. He took a salary cut. —— . Account at this bank already, open one this week, then add to it regulurly. Save for expenses, save for opportunity, save for happiness| Save, and you will have | Start an account this week. 556 pins. Two more matches re- riain to be bowled in the 10-match series. The tournament scores to date e are: Women — Anchorage 21,647; | Juneau 17352; Ketchikan 16,936; | Men — Anchorage, 21544; Juneau 21,317; Ketchikan 20998. CALL 14 Scores for the eighth match R Oy al Blu e were: Lavenik 108 148 Cabs CITY RATES Bavard .. 120 160 25¢ and 35¢ s. Coughlin. 185 173 Andrews 136 153 Comfortably Heated SERVICE—Our Motto Drastic reduct‘ons in government expenditures are being considered by Czecho-Slovaikia. Burke (21)... 1f. tedman Baker (16)... .. . Cashen (1) Berggren. .rg....... Brown (2) Sturrock. A | . Nelson Substitutions: Peterson for For- nessy: Fennessy for Brown. ield goals: Orme 5, Burke 10, Baker 6, Fennessy 1, Brown 1. This lanky youngster, who has | Vernon, announced here that he run 119 on a standard-sized table, was planning to retire as impres- weuld much rather play football, |sario of the Olympics on March 1, but doctors say “no.” He has a when his lease of theé local fight- bad heart. | doms expires. Bob began playing pool in his‘ Doyle said that he has lost father’s billiard room four years nearly $100,000 on the business in ago. Two years later he won the %the last six years. Free throws made: Orme first junior championship. He is| The promoter added, however, he | Burke 1, Baker 4; Cashen 1. so good he is barred from all locnl;wcuxd still keep a finger in the |eyed gridiron monarch. The . fact : Engstrom, Referee; | championships, even with adults. | fight pie by retaining his lease “Hnuw seems to be that the sports & , Umpire; Raven, Timer;| “He is tired of the game,” sand}Wrfigley Field for two or three|cancelled or the events curtailed Rodenberg, scorer. |the father. “I doubt he’ll go on|cutdoor cards a year. are being erased from the 1933 DA ILY SPORTS CARTOON RO picture in direct ratio to the s mon-pure element involved. . SUNNY I 4 rrzsimmons. en competition may be, the chance it appears to have of su viving existing conditions. Certainly it ipdicts those who de- cried the commercialism of 1929, when all the big colleges had su - AGAIN TOPPED TE LIST OF QINNING TRAINERS WHEN THE THOROUGHBREDS UNOER— HIS CHARGE WON $349,340 DURING THE ST SEASON prosperity of football.” But it went on to say, also “High gate receipts inevitably re- flect commerciaiism and all the evils that follow in its train.” Luxuries were cited, but among them were not listed the great sport of rowing or the other poor intercollegiate cousins of the mon- FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF JUNEAU MAKE THIS YOUR BANKING HOME 1, rs. 178—514 122—402 152—510 138—4217 125—368 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat Erbland 109 134 788 1769 Juneau Men 188 192 207 176 189 172 158 170 Totals T15-2221 Lavenik Barragar . Henning Halm Erbland _ | Bringdale 162—542 194—577 169—530 179337 —328 165—335 869-2649 JUNEAU-YOUNG Funeral Parlors and Embalmers Night Phone 1861 Day Phone 13 WE HAVE IT ] at the Right Price Harris Hardware Co. Lower Front Street 019 Someone( | | MENTION A DEPRESSION ! 158 170 912 868 Anchorage Women Scott Silverman ‘Wendler Welch Fischer plus money in the bank, but who now are decrying the circums C es that force the abandonmen the least commercial of all c FRESH BAKED DELICACIES and HOME OF “HOME MADE BREAD™ JUNEAU BAKERY (Next to Juneau Drug) ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 89 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 Totals . ! | | | | . 555 652 492 490 610 WEREN'T GIVEN A CHANCE The stewards of the intercolleg- iate Rowing Association may be quite correct in their conclusions and decision, yet I think m including the oarsmen themselves. weuld have liked the chance (o (Put up a struggle to retain so thrilling an event as the hig gatta on the Hudson. ‘Who will even forget how Stan- ford’s boys scrambled their w {Poughkeepsie in 1915, borrowe ;shell and almost beat one of Cor- |nell's greatest varsity eights? Or, for that matter, what a fight all Ryus the old-timers made for years to Peterson keep rowing going, when its fol Petersen tlcwers had to “dig down” to sce Payne the sport disappear? Prestige would not have depend- ed on having a capacity fleet on jthe Hudson again this June. With an earlier date, the boys would {have managed to train at hon and get to Poughkeepsie some: with enough shells to boat crews. I l | ‘Total % Anchorage Men MeDonald Bayer Johnson Weiss Larson “SUNNY IM ? conpucTs THE LARGEST PUBLIC TRAINING STABLES IN THE COUNTRY - HIS STRING INCLUDES THE HORSES OF OBDEN MILLS, SECRETARY OF TE a.s. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” ADVANCE SHOWING of NEW SPRING Dresses and Millinery Total ... .. 2,544 Ketchikan Women Close . 3175 442 418 424 514 Total e 2173 Ketchikan Men Daniels Chapman Burgun Thibodeau . Zurich UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH IS KING” . 571 519 513 506 533 2,642 ~— | JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 New‘Wall Paper Here! See the New 1933 Patterns. Freshen Up the Home. Full line of BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS JUNEAU PAINT STORE ———-——— oz Total SAN FRANCISCO BREAD Effective February 1, 3 loaves for 25c at all grocery stores and San Francisco Bakery. —adv. ———————— Pave the Patn o tzosperity Wi Printing! . INOWIDUAL - HORSES M i

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