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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1933. By GEORGE. McMANUS HEY- DOCTOR! YOU HAD BETTER COME RIGHT OVER BRINGING UP FATHER VLL DO AS THE DOCTOR SAID-I'LL TUNE IN ON THE OLD-TIME SONGS SHELL STOP & AN' THEYLL SOF TEN- MAGGIE- THEN ROWLIN' AT ME- i S | CAN T G\'T HER TO STOR ] FIRST PART OF BOWL TOURNEY ENDED TUESDAY Althougn their star performer, Babe Ruth, is still in disagreement with the front office over his sal- ary, the New York Yankees are hard at work on their training chores at St. Petersburg, Fla. The Babe is 'working out with the team and is shown at left shaking hands with Manager Joe McCarthy. Two hard clouting veterans, Bill Dickey (left), catcher, and Tony Lazzeri, second baseman, are shown at right. Above is a string of promising rookie pitchers. Two of them will get jobs. Left to right: Peter Jablonowski, Marvin Duke, Don Brennan, James de Shong and Russell Van Atta. Photos) FANS PLAN RECEPTION T0 WAGNER NEW YORK, March 39,—Brook- lyn fans are preparing to give old Hans Wagner a reception was will a parade to Ebbets Field. In the evening a dinner will be given in honor of the famous old-time short stop. e INDIANS BEAT PIRATES 7-6 SANTA BARBARA, Cal, March (Associated Press VETERAN STAGE NAMED RE FEREE OF TRACK MEET BERKELEY, Cal, March 29.—As a personal tribute to Amos Alonzo Stagg, dean of collegiate football warm his heart when he appears|29.—The Seattle Indians, of the coaches, who retired at Chicago here for the first time this spring as a codlh Pirates. Directed by Borough President Henry Hesterberg, the program will rt with a public reception on the steps of Borough Hall, tollowed by ‘Pacinc Coast League, defeated the with the Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh Pirates 7 to 6 yesterday afternoon in the first of a two game exhibition series. — e —— Promote Frosperity With Psni- er's Ink! University to resume coaching at | Pacific University, Stanford and | California universities have chosen |him to referee their annual dual track meet April 15. Most sports followers know Stagg as a great gridiron figure, forgetting DAILY SPORTS CARTOON B \T's A GooD g (\ > HABIT 7 /~/ THREE™ TIMES , SHE™ IAS WON HE S VIESTERN WOMEA'S CHAMPIONSHIP e . A MEMBE R~ OF 2 THE WOMEN'S 'Q GOLF Team THAT INUADED ENGLAND LAST ! s MRS, AlLL— —By Pap ¥ 2 g MRS, OPAL S. KANSAS CiTyY ,MO. HAS CERTAINLY BEEN HERL GAME * 1N THE <" SOUTH THIS WINTER-, Al Rigits Reerved by Tae Astociatad Proee J. Hermle Tigh Man in Last Matches of Elimina- tion Tournment at Elks NEW SCHEDULE FOR BOWLING TOURNAMENT Elimination Contest Con- tinues at Elks’ Club Alleys This Week Team No. 9 made up of Robori-‘ son and Walmer, and team No. 7, | Tom Georgz and J. Hermle, remain | \ |in the running for honors in the| | elimination bowling tournament, the | | first part of which was wound up | | with the matches played off last| night. Teams eliminated last night | ware, No. 8, Koski and Wilson, and | No. 10, Blomgren and G. Shepard. To complete the elimination con- teat a new tournament has b Z |announced. battered | ‘patails of last night's games fol- into .~ub-‘1°w: Tom George J. Hermle Handicap The rent coi {147-pound class | de n from the mil well-dire rel-chested farm mizisén in one round 151 218 171 156 146—474 163—537 6— 18 315 1029 ed Greena, k of kinky hair standing on | and his double-jo d a ching freely from all angles, the flyweight op2n final from 145—523 156—486 4 304 1018 Blomgren G. Shepard vening Handicap A musician by trade took the| count of ten in short order from a y worker in the middleweight | n, apparently much to the| | Robertson nt of the appreciative gal- | Walmer Handicap 174—529 167—470 5— 15 346 1014 {leryites. | Al of which featured the exhi- |bition of amateur boxing at its best and dressiest in New York, adding further to the conviction of 20,000 tnesses to the annual Golden final, conducted by the Daily (News A. A, that the “simon pure: {will provide more interesting fistic entertainment, per three-round bout, than most professional shows BLUE§'~ APRIL 1 | No doubt there is a commercial | 3side to the picture. Many of the| British Oarsmen Will Meet in Annual Duel on Thames Saturday 166 169—504 | 149 149447 | 5 5—15 320 323 966 Wils Handicap 5 323 |boys are thinking of building them- |selves up for professional engage- ments, spurred on by busy mana- | |gers in the background. Many a {college football player may have | |similar thoughts, but there is no |more question about the earnestness | with which these amateur boxers | go after each other than there is about the sincerity of play in the (strokes April 1 in their traditional average college football game. |“battle of the Blues” on the river Boxing, in other words, is still 2 | Thames. ;Spm't as it is put on by the Daily| The end of months of training | {News A. A. and as it can be con- \will come in a bare 20 minutes, |ducted in amateur ranks generally, |when stout-hearted oarsmen propel {if not harassed by the professional |their narrow shells over the wind- |€lements or subjected to control by |ing course from Putney Bridge to {professional commissions, Tt be- |Mortlake, a distance of four and |longs to the clubs, the colleges, and |5 quarter miles. the Amateur Athletic Union which| Cambridge faces the possibility {has successfully demonstrated its|of creating a record new in the |ability to control the sport in most, annals of the ancient rivalry—10 it not quite all of the principal |successive victories, |centers of boxing. 1 Twice in ffie fhistory of the boat There appears no good reason, in {race," which had its beginning in New York, for example, to take am- 1829, Oxford has amassed nine ateur boxing away from the A. A straight victories and failed in the U. or the colleges and put it un- attempt for a “ten-strike.” Now der the jurisdiction of the State |Cambridge, fliish at the head of athletic authorities. It would be just its first unbroken string of the as sensible to have the Jockey Club |same length, has the chance. |assume control of harness racing at Rowed a Dead Heat the county fairs, | Oxford has fasted victory only eight times since the turn of the A number of names still are being |century, compared with Cambridge’s mentioned for the head football 20, and in the whole history of the coaching job at Holy Cross, the only |epic rice, Oxford has won 40 times, outstanding 1932 vacancy still un- mbridge 43 times, and once there filled, but Harry Stuhldreher of was that rarity, a dead heat. Villanova seems to be one of the Cambridge’s oarsmen, by no leading candidates. means heavy as crews go, average The “Four Horsemen” seem to|174 pounds, Oxford is still lighter, be on ‘the gallop again. Jimmy |with an average of 170 pounds. Crowley, who has just taken over| Coxswain of the Oxford crew is the Fordham job, and Stuhldreher bronzed, 117 pound Siamese, C. played together for nearly three full |Komarakul na Nagara, believed to seasons at Notre Dame. Both rank be the first of an eastern race ever among the brightest pupfls of the |to find a place in a university late Professor K. K. Rockne. fux'ew. | Train on Ale that he played a prominent part| A Striking difference from the in track and field athletics up to AMerican routine in training crews | a few years ago, refereeing at 5 the presence of ale in the diet. Drake, Kansas and other big relay Cambridge’s custom is to allow a meets. int and a half of ale daily with The meet will serve as Stage's * ©l8ss of port wine during the introduction to Pacific Coast colle- ‘5% month. giate athletic cireles, With the crews unsettled for a —————— good part of their training by ill- o —___ o 0¢85, there has been little opinion i, AT THE HOTELS from critics as to who may be the T — ) winner, D. Zorelll and Mrs. Zorelli, Prince | —————— Rupert; William Fromholz, Ketchi-| Classified ads pay. kan. LONDON, March 20.—Cambridge | | | and Oxford universities will match | ' BERGMANN DINING | Zynda Mr. and Mrs. Mogseth, Mary Nordness, Ketchikan ——— TURKEY DINNER By Women of Moose Saturday. April 8, $1.00. Includes dinner, —adv. Juneau; Continuing, the elimination tour- nament which is being held in the bowling alleys at the Elks' Club, a| new schedule has been announced by the committee in charge. Those| playing in the sent tourney are teams which were not eliminated in the first round completed last ght. The new schedule follows: March 20: 8 o'clock p.m.—Team' No. 4 vs. No. 12; 9:30 o'clock p.m.— Team No. 3 vs. No. 9. M 31: 8+o'clock p.m—Toam No. 2 vs. No. 11; 9:30 o'clock p.m.— Team No. 7 vs. No 16. The semi-finals in m:nt will be held at the Elks’ Clubj on Mon evening at 8 o'clock eand the finals on Tuesday at 8, c'clock B. B, TROPHY IS AWARDED T0 H, Student Body Receives Perpetual Trophy for Second Time There is something to being high basketball team at the close of the school basketball season in Southeast Alaska. Honors are not just a matter of printed scores and congratulations. Something more substantial, as honors go, is accorded the winning basketball team, with the presenta- tion of the Southeast Alaska High School Basketball Trophy, a large silver basketball mounted on an ebony pedestal and donated by the Nugget Shop. * At the regular High School as- sembly at 3:15 this afternoon,] George Karabelnikoff, captain of the basketball and President of the Student Body, presented the trophy to the High School student body through Bill Friend, Student Body Vice-President. This is the second time the Ju- neau High School has won the Nugget Shop’s perpetual trophy and the school body is just as proud of it today as when it first appeared to adorn the High School Audi- torium. the tourna-|, New Wall Pa};er Here.'w N ol WE INVITE YOU WV You will find at this bank complete facilities to meet your banking needs and to simplify and safeguard the handling of your financial 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 Menagement Guards Your Funds. ; FOR INSURANCE See 1. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. See the New 1933 Patterns. Freshen Up the Home. Full line of BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS JUNEAU PAINT STORE THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 THREE CAPTAINS END CAREERS AT NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL, N. C., March 29. —End of the winter season marks the passing of three captains and brilliant stars from the sports stage at the University of North Caro- lina. Wilmer Hines, basketball cap- tain; Marty Levinson, boxing, and Percy Idol, wrestling, have written their college athletic histories, ex- cept that Hines will play a final season of tennis. One of Carolina's greateést for- wards in years, Hines scored as many as 21 points in a single game his last season. He holds an array of tennis titles and was formerly national junior champion. Levinson, from Waterbury, Conn., has been one of the leading feather weights in the Southern conference for three years, although He never quite won the championship. Idol was undefeated his last two years on the wrestling team and topped his performance by winning the unlimited championship at the recent conference tournament. Let the advertisements help you make your shopping plans. HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. 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