The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 7, 1933, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA By GEORGE McMANUS OH! CRAZY TO GO QUT AND SHOW OFF THIS SUIT FYTHINK VLL GV T DAUGHTER TO TALK TO MAGGIE-DHES A SIGHT 1IN 7 THAT SUIT= '™ JUST MORNING - DADDY: HOW 0o YYou LIKE MY NEW QUTFIT? -~ = ©,1933, King Fearures Syndicate, Tnc, Great Britain righs ceserved EMPIRE. BETTER CLOTHES -THEYLL BE WEARIN BRINGING UP FAT-HER WELL- | GUESS | HAD LOCK LUP ME THEM NEXT- FIREMEN WIN OVER CHILKOOT BARRACKS FIVE Soldiers Give Smokeeaters| Hard Tussle in Hard Fought Game | The fair damsel, Lady Luck,| courted several times this season | by the J. F. D. basketball team, | smiled at her old swain again last | night when the Smoke Eaters nosed out the Army team from ! Chilkoot barracks 47 to 45. ) The Soldiers, playing without the services of Red Williams, carrot- topped scoring ace, and consid-/ erably handicapped otherwise, turn- | ed in the smartest offense seen here this season, and although Lhey: went down to defeat, the Lynn| Canal visitors were clearly super-| ior to their victors in all depart-| ments of the sport with one ex- ception: they missed the basket.| King substituting for Williams,| filled the lanky Hoosier's shoes to capacity by caging six field goals. Scoring Spree From the outset, it looked like the beginning of the great scoring} orgy it turned out to be for by the | time eight minutes had passed| away the Post” had'chalked up 14| points while the Firemen were“ tallying 13. By half time the| Smoke Eaters had turned on the| power and stepped out in front,| 28 to 24. Hollmann, diminitive| forward, was responsible for this‘ scoring rampage by hitting the( meshes six times. Light, big pivot man for the visitors, was the backbone of his squad in the initial ‘frame, with five field goals. Firemen Go Ahead In the second half the Firemen increased their lead, with all five men scoring at least once. Harvey, Soldier forward, was the big gun for the losers with four baskets and three free throws. In the last quarter Garn left the game via the foul route and the boys from [ticed for the first time Sunday afternoon are said to be in fine shape for the argument, and work together like old team-mates. All of the men, in thé recent league, were outstanding members of their res- pective teams, and followers of the sport should see one of the smooth- | |est games of the season, for in g |the opinion of the fans wha wit- | nessed last night's battle, the | Soldiers posséss a well-oiled offen- | sive machine and will give the All- | stars plenty of clever competion. | Regele, Skagway coach, will ref- ree, Osborne will umpire. Skagway vs Demeolay | Coach Regele's basketeers from | Skagway will meet the Demolay |outfit in the 7:30 opener tonight {and are favored to win. | Firemen Win Field goals—Garn 5, Hollmann 9, Metzgar 5, Connors 1, Blake 2, Harvey 6, King 6, Light 5 Weir §| 1, McKee 1. Free Throws—Gan 3, Harvey 4, Light 2, McKee 1. Substitutions — F. Metagar Garn. R ' Referee, Stedman. Scorer, Ficken. Hoisting man sized dumbbells is Time-keeper, Dunham. only one of the strong-arm feats in the repertoire of William Earl Hutchins, 26 months old, of Cam- bridge, Mass. He does simple acro- | batics and can push his 167-pound | dad around in a sart with ease. | (Associated Press Photo) Baby Sampson 1 1 for Alabama Looks to S—mith ; As Three-Letter Athlete TUSCALOOSA, Ala, March 7.— It seems to be up to Ben Smith,! ™ now playing guard on the Alabama Garn was third with 13, one point basketball team, to become the, ahead of Light and King. (Crimson’s first three letter man Two Styles of Play since 1929, f The ‘game was one of the most| 'Ben made. lelters in.football in interesting of the season, for the 1929, 1930 and 1931 and a basket-| fans were treated to two altogether ball letter in 1932. He will try, different styles of basketball. The for @ track letter this spring when, winners depended largely on long |the cage.season is over. He throws: shots for victory while thé Post the Javelin and Coach Drew be- five worked the ball under the net |lieves he will be able to set a new with a business-like precision that |record for Alabama in this event. was interesting to watch. The fa- mous Soldier pivot play, used by|CHICKEN “STEAKS” ONE DIME IN ITALY | Lieut. McKee, captain of the squad, and carried out by the center and the fast-breaking forwards, was | night, GIRLS' TEAM MAKES RECORD Has Winning Streak by Running Victory to 100 Straight EAST RUTHERFORD, N. J, March 7.—There's something in the climate of New Jersey that seems to breed extended basket- ball winning streaks. Almost any fan can remember when Passiac High School's great quintet ran up a record string of 159 straight victories a few years ago, and now this city has a girls’ team that threatens to equal or surpass that mark. When they defeated the fast Nyack (New York) team the other the East Rutherford high school lasses chalked up their one- dundredth consecutive victory. The remarkable streak began in March, 1926, the last game of the season. Since that time the personnel of the team has changed several times, but the winning habit re- mains the same. SHAW MAKES HIGH SCORE IN BOWLING: Team No. 4 Well Ahead in| Matches Played in Men’s Tourney {ast Night George Shaw and Joe George, members of Team No. 4 made high totals in the matches played off in the feature of the game, and the completion of the play always brought a roar of applause from the stands. A Soldiers Tackle All-Stars Tonight Lieut. McKee and Co. will attempt to break even. on their two-game series when they ROME, March 7.—Turkeys and the men’s bowling tournament last chickens may now be bought in night, bringing the total of their| Italy by the piece. A hefty drum- team up to 1536, well ahead of stick and second joint costs 18 the other five teams playing dur-| oem.s:_ wings with a liberal slice jng the evening. Shaw was high of “side meat,” 20 cents and thin witn 4 total of 567 and Joe George slices of breast, called “steaks,” second high, rolling a total of 547. 10: cents. The schedule for tonight’s match- Chilkoot took a new lease on life meet the néw Juneau All-stars a and cut down a fifteen point lead | combination of cutstanding players to almost nothing, but their be-|of the late city league. The All- lated rally fell three points short |stars will probably come on the g is: T: .m.—No. . H CASH BAZAAR CO-OPERATES op0° T30 pm--No. 6 vs. No. 1; Credit will be extended to re- liable custofners of Juneau and 8:30 pm—No. 7 vs. | p.m.—No. 9 vs. No. 11. ‘The details of last night's mat,ch-‘ No. 8; 9:30 of victory. Hollmann was the outstanding scorer of the game, sinking the leather nine times for 18 points. Harvey was second with 16 points. floor with the following Iine-up ready for action: Linstrom and Orme at forward Brown at the center post, and Moyer and Burke at guard. The players, who prac- Douglas at this time. adv. THE CASH BAZAAR. | O 2! P Joe Geor The advertisements are your gnao Fo es follow: Team No. 4 187 175 158—547 180—567 N ylan River Dams, Breathes there a football fan of the U. 8. Army? Few men ha divergent occupations. By ROY E. HUTCHENS Building river dams and develop- \ing great fooball teams may not pe related, but tall, erect Major Robert R. Neyland dces both with yemarkable success. He is known ‘as coach of the University of Tennessee football| team—a team that has been de- feated but twice in seven years. His record as an army enginecer has been forced to the background. The major calls football his avo- cation and engineering his voca- tion. He will talk hours about either subject. Neyland is United States district engineer with headquartersat Chat- tanooga. With President Roosevelt now giving attention to the possible | operafion of Muscle Shoals and de- velopment of water power in the Tennessee river basin, Neyland's | position has assumed new import- ance. He is responsible for the mainte- nance end operation of the huge hydro-electric plant at Muscle Shoals. He has charge of 426 miles of the Tennessee river, on which Wilson Dam is located and all of the river's tributaries extending into Virginia, NorthCarolina, Ken- tucky and Georgia. The 4l-year-old army engineer | guide to efficient spending. van At‘t; 133 149—422| DAILY SPORTS CARTOON GiIoSEN THE Mosfr\ VALUABLE PLAYER- N THE INTERRATIONAL LEASUE ° LAST SEASON / : A GREAT PAIR. - OF HANDS 487-1536 | 149—503; 155-*465 | 128—441 | 495 3 204 156 170 Totals ... Team No. . 165 . 155 . 143 i ~By Pap 5 Lavenik Blomgren ‘G, Shepard . 158—441 | | G. Shepard i Stewart | Stevens , Hermle Team No. 181 155 136 . 472 Team No. 170 177 . 177 524 Team No. 176 155 142—510 | 155-°465 154—446 451-14‘Zli i g Totals . 170-‘5101 138—453 160510 T. George Erbland .. Wilson ... - Totals .. | t i Robertson Kaufmann 7wt Monagle 458-1304 | 166—458| 167—541 | 144— | | | | 477-1385 Colds that Hang On | Don't let them get a strangie | hold. Fight germs quickly. Creo- mulsion combines the 7 best helps known to modern science. Pow:r-| 'ful but harmless. Pleasant to t No narcotics. Your druggist vl refund your money if any cou gh or cold no matter how long sta ,Ing 1s not relieved by Creomulsio: —adv. | LORIEN- ~DETROITS ROMISING ROOKIE SHoRTSTOP e, and football coach was born in Greenville, Texas, the son of a lawyer. He studied engineering at Texas A. & M. one year and then, at the age of 20, received an ap- pointment_to West Point. Had War Experience There he took a general course in engineering was graduated in 1916 and sent to the Mexican bor- der with the First Engineers. En- gaging in levee work on the Rio | d, the lir;ginet;r, Builds of Coach Bob Neyland’s Tennessee fcotball eleven? But how many know Major Robert R. Neyland, brilliant engineer KNOXVILLE, Tenn. March 7.— Football Teams who isn’t familiar with the feats Probably not. ve been so successful in two such Grande, emergency bridge construc- tion and road work, Neyland gained his first practical engineering ex- perience. He was called to 'Washington in| ing for the world war and later joined the First Corps Engineers school and First Army Engineers school in France. Before the war ended he was called back to the| United States and took charge of training the Eighth Mounted En- gineers and division engineers of the 15th Cavalry division at Fort Bliss, Texas. It's A Special Arrangement He took extra work in mechan- jeal and electrical engineering at Massachusetts Tech and returned to West Point in 1921 as assistant adjutant: in the administrative de- partment and assistant coach in foothall, boxing and baseball. He was transferred to Tenness€e as R. O. T. C. commandant in 1925 and elected head football coach in 1926. He was permanently located at the university until 1930 when he became assistant to Col. Lewis H. Watkins, district engineer at Chat- anooga. In 1931 Neyland succeeded ‘Watkins and by special arrange- ment continued as football coach of the Volunteers. ERBRS e L Ll WHY LEND YOUR MONEY AT 5 OR 6 PER CENT? First class real estate mortgage for sale, bearing ten per cent inter- est on improved real estate in Ju- neau, worth double the mortgage. Mortgage -due in one year. Phone 494 for appointment. —adv, Classified ads pay. Star Pony P Jockey Altréd Robertson, one of the ace riders of the 1932 ilot and Bride season, is shown with his pretty bride, the former June Oberlin, of Miami, Fla., who came to see her new hubby work out is prevaring for the opening of the il vide for the C. V. ?.t] the Hialeah track, where Alfred orida racing season. Robertson (Sonny) Whitney stable, | the spring of 1917 to begin train-| i ¥ 7 ~53 “Plane Sissors” That Beat Lewis Ed “Strangler” Lewis, erstwhile champion of the wrestling world, is shown as he presented a fine i :ation of a bear in the grip of & python, grimacing with pain a v of Missouri, applied the “airplane sissors” during the ison Square Garden, New. York. Browning finished h a body slam that put the quietus on the Strangler anc itle. 3 T it oo ] CASH BAZAAR CO-OPERATES A cat was blamed for an aute=- | mobile accident at Miami, Fla, Credit will be extended to re-|which cost the fife of a man. The g.:)k;l;lagu;tortx;j:st;ge-!unenu g cat’s sudden appearance confusad adv. THE CASH BAZAAR, |the driver of the car. SRR ) WE INVITE YOU V You will find at this bank complete facilities to meet your banking needs and to simplify and safeguard the handling of your financial l affairs. You will enjoy our friendly helpful service and genuine interest in your financial progress. We invite you to make this bank your bank- ing home and let us serve you as we serve many of your friends! First National Bank OF JUNEAU Where Sound Management Guards Your Funds. _’; 4 4 - You'll Do Better When Buying Your Job Printing, by Placing Your Order with the EMPIRE PRINTING CO. Telephone 374 [

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