The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 18, 1933, Page 5

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1933. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, \YEDN{-ZSDAY OCT. 18, — e f ] AND REDS WIN IN BOWLINGMATCH Teams of National League_ Bowled for First Time in Piesent Tournament tsams of the National League | for the first time in the, 213 Bowling Tournament | evening on the Elks' Club alleys. The threz winning teams in the games were, ‘the Braves, with the ates with 1388 and! Réds who totaled 1550. High | the evening was mzde} fmann of the Cubs, who: 54 and H. Sapin, of the) made second high, with, Braves 549 There will be no games tonight | tomorrow evening six teams! of the American League will bowl.| Individual scores made in n::‘} games last evening were: | Braves | H. Sabin . 226 154 169— 549 | Blomgrsn 165 168 147— 480 Cennors 147 164 153— 464 Totals 538 486 469—1493 | Dodgers : Robe 181 161 146— 488 | Sweeney 155 155 155—*465 ‘Worth 171 147 147— 465 | e s et Totals 507 463 448—1418] Giants l Barragar .. 166 165 163— 494 Sides 158 161 154— 473 Clark 60 61 62— 183 ! Totals 384 387 379—1150! Pirates J. George 165 141 174— 480 Stevens 128 158 176— 462 Wile 166 140 140— 446! Totals 459 439 490—1388 | Cubs i Pullen 175 175 175—*525 Kaufmann 177 192 185— 554 Sweum . 124 153 154— 431 Totals 476 520 514—1510 Reds | Bavard 191 172 183— 546 Petrich 197 158 153— 508 Barragar, Jr. .. 157 165 174— 496 Totalsy 545 495 510—1550 +—Did not bowl. Average taken. BRINGING UP FATHER VTS A GRAND DAY- VLU TAKE A STROLL. ON THE BOULEVARD AN’ SEE THE SIGHTS- | Girl’s At Remarkable photos show Miss Mercedes Gleitze, English girl, attempting to i channel. Heavy winds brought high seas an to gi 4 ad was more than half way to her goal. Lower photo is first ever made of a in swimming the English been in water seven ho: CAN'T MAKE T Home Runs of Hauser Fail to Get Him Into Big Baseball League MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 18. — He hasn’t said so publicly, but Joe Hauser probably is wondering just what a fellow has to do in the big minors to get a tumble from the major leagues. Hauser now is barnstorming with some of his old Minneapolis Amer- jcan Associafion teammates, and reports indicate he still is getting his homers, out where there are no fences and where hibting for the circuit really involves putting | the ball “away.” Joe is 34 years old, but Associa- tion ecritics, after watching him blast 71 homers last season and set a new lop record for total 'WE SEEN THE By GEORGE McMANUS MY WHAT A LOVELY DAY - ‘G | | th Lr | ur co of in nnel channcl swim from a piane. baze: well as lead in runs red and runs batted in, agree that the big first sacker should| get another chance under the big top. He may receive a bid yet, as he is eligible for the draft, and some punchless big league club might be willing fo offer the $7,500 draft price for the man who got more homers in one season than any other player in the history of or- ganized baseoall. - SPORT BRIEFS I The Walnut Hall horse race farm of Harkness Edwards at Lex- ington, Ky., embraces 1,100 acres. Duke Keats, Pacific Coast League hockey player, is sponsoring the organization of a winter hockey league to include Vancouver, Se- d forced her to give up otos Told in Ph beat Gertrude after she attle, Tacoma, Edmonton, Calgary and Saskatoon. Levi Burlingame of LaCrosse, Kas., 63-year-old jockey, had mounts in races at fairs during the 1933 season. Tnree prothers are playing foot- ball for Oregon State College, Cor- vallis, Ore. They are Harold, Woedy and Dick Joslin. Joe Sugden, now a Cardinal coach, was one of the first back- ps to catch all pitches close behind the batter instead of wait- ing for the ball to bounce. “Donkey Baseball,” in which the players are mounted on tral ed donkeys has become popular a stunt sport in the Southwest. as Paul Burnam, successful fresh- man football coach at Alabama, was never able to make his varsity letter at the University. GIVEN BOOST 'DAILY SPORTS CARTOON T | Association Will Send Up Splendid Crop of Pitchers ST. PAUL, Oct. 18—The stun- ning success of Johnny ‘Moose”| Marcum as a big leaguer has caus-' ed American Association experts to predict tnat other graduating | pitchers from that circuit would: cut important figures in he ma- jors next season. One other has already won his spurs as a staring hurler. He is Monte Pearson, picked up from Toledo by the Cleveland Indians. In general mound work both/ Pearson and Marcum, Who got two | five-hit shutouts in his first two starts with the Athletics, ranked in the association below such fling-' ers as Paul Dean, Clarence Heiese and Bill Lee, all of the Columbus/ club and all slated to “go up.” | Tee was sold to the Chicago Cubs and Dean and Heisee will rt next spring to the St. Louis Cardinals’ training camp. Another association chucker rat-; ed the equal of Margum is Les Munns, who won 19 games for St.' Paul. Munns, like Dean, is a fast pall fiiprer and is big and strong.' Several soouts reported favorably, oh him but the Yankees are be- | h lieved to have first call. —— NOTICE All candidates for the Moose bas- Ketball team are requested to meet at the High School Gym tonight at 17:30. ~THE GAME" QUICH BROUGHT HIM FAMNE @ILL— ALWAYS POT. @IT4 PROE To TiE LOYALTY T wAs SPEED THAT CARRIED HIM HRousH 30O RING BATTLES WITHOUT A MARIC. ~ HIS MANIA roe. SPEED WAS THE cause OF THE ACCIOEAT WHICH PROVED By ALAN GOULD The ion voice of another |newly crowned boxing executive | been raised in objection and protest against the so-called dom- | ination of professional pugilism by the managers of champions or | near-champions.” It remains to be seen just how much this crusading spirit will ac- | | comp! in the form of definite | results, for a number of obvi | reasons, but Edward C. Foster, {of R e Island, the new presi- | dent of National Boxing Ass ciation, agrees with Colonel John Kilpatrick, new mogul of son Square Garden, that something should be done about | the “managerial mess.” It is all very well to set up a loud outcry about ‘‘chiselers” and “racketeers” who may infest the boxing game and lower its sport- ing standards to the decadent in- | fluence of back-room bargaining— in other words the “fix, C in octs or features of pugilism are | subject to seasonable control o inoculation. Yet the very sport | itself, sprung from fugitive foun- | dations, is such that the separa- | tion or elimination of its several "clemems might prove fatal tonear- al all concerned, including the E purifiers. | LITTLE NEED FOR MANAGERS | { | WINS FIFTY an Sea AN BEAT TOLAN SEATTLE, Oct. 18. — Winooke e new wonder horse of Aus- isn’t alone from way “Down seeking laurels in this alia nder” untry. famous is equine sprinter accompanied by Austin Robertson, | profs onal Australia. Robertson only recently arrived the United States and came to to join the Winooka party ace himself under the man- foot racing champion d 1 agement of Rufe Naylor, manager of the league. have the greatest a e in the world, but I have the fastest human runner as well, and stand ready to Dt $1,000 for a race for Robertson,” “Rob 1, who in our country is admitted and conceded to be Yakima negro lightweizht, won his i a4 Wakgers 52nd straight victory last night e it Negioiptin i = & : & ° .|100 and 200-meter events of the when he handed Joe Guerrera, of Los Angeles, a ten round pasting B 6 bt Karber. is in training, and we stand ready Woods won every round but #01 oot 41,000 /5 R, e Guerrera took all offerings and ot » match race Sl CHNE T R bt sprint distances. We would like ;ame back for more. to meet Tolan in Chicago. { PITEBIAR ST 22 kel NORWEGIANS PULL FOR LUND TO WIN NATIONAL HONORS MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 18—A husky young Norwegian named Francis ‘Pug” Lund promises to give Min- nesota's predominant Scandinavian population its long-awaited oppor- tunity to cheer for national star- dom for one of its own ancestry. The University of Minnesota has 1ad its share of all-America grid- lers, but the Norwegians and swedes have not been represented on the mythical clevens. Still, some of the Maroon and Gold’s finest players, just short of all-America calibre, have been of Scandinavian stock. Lund stood the test last season m n si: C 1932 Olympic JOHN JUNEAU ARRIVAL ON ALASKA | Wrangell whe: mer with his brother-in-law and | Karl Theile and was cmployed in Mr. Theile's | the Diamond K Packing | . He expects to spend‘ the wintér in Juneau. cannery, Games. Robertson “If the Olympic champion does not want to accept the challenge, then States 1s welcome to the offe in the United any sprinter Robertson, Naylor said, has run 100 meters in 10.4 seconds and 200 | eters in 21.2. ,e— - M'LAUGHLIN IS ilin arrived in Ju- steamer Alaska from ¢ he spent the sum- John N eau on ster, Mr. and Mrs. 'ompar - e Daily Empire Wanv Ads Pay. b e e s et B e b N 5 ANZAC SPRINTER ONE CODE IS BETS $1,000 HE HELPING OUT ~ ONE INDUSTRY Employment Back to Pre- Depression Days—Big Increase Payrolls NEW YORXK, Oct. 18—Hailing the application of the cotton tex= tile code as a remarkable achieve- ment, George Sloan, President of the Cotton Textile Industr said the industry’s figures are “back to pre-depression levels with the weekly payroll 100 percent aboveé that of early March.” il L) CONTENTMENT Brewed to smooth away the rough edges of a bad night or a hard day —our coffee. | ‘ Served steaming hot. | Smooth. Stimulating. t Blending richly with the | good thick cream. And | SATISFYING. \ BAILEY’S CAFE USSR SIS when he did most of the Gophers’ sunting and passing and more than ais share of ball-carrying, while serving as quarterback. “Pug,” has Mr. Foster, it would seem, as his | remarks are relayed to me by | Jay Vessels from Minneapolis, would give boxing back to the boxers, a circumstance which might | have: the same: effect as giving back to the horses. Tt is my opinion that with very faw exceptions, the so-called man- | ager is an entirely unnecessary L adjunct to the boxing game,” says | Foster, “for where boxing is le- | galized there is always a commis- sion and of course it is the duty of the commission to see that any | boy boxing in its state is properly | protected from wildcat promoters lor from any other condition which might arise which might be con- | strued as detrimental to the boy's | interests. | “For that very réason I can s2¢ 0 ino real valid cause for these | called wise managers chiseling in on these preliminary boys’ purs- les to the extent of at least thirty | per cent. One way, in my opinion. to help remedy this mess would be to raise the fees of the so- called managers to such a figure that' they would be relegated back to the position to which they | belong, namely, that of trainers. “Qf course there are a great many fine, capable managers who do splendid work and are very con- scientious with their boxers....” A HOUDINI NEEDED All very well and high-sound- | ing,! no doubt, but where is the | Houdini who can separate the “fing, capable, conscientious” man- ager from the “chiseler” or “rack- eteer?” /Where, also, will be found the missionary to go forth -among the pugilists, preaching the gospel of fair play to them?” ——————— 1 twisting, driving way of running that gained much yardage with very ordinary assistance last fall. Others who lend .a strong Scan- dinavian flavor to Bernie Bier- man’s 1933 lineup includé Capt. Roy Oen, “Butch” Larson, Phil Bengsten, George Svendsen and Stanley Lundgren. FORMER TRACK COACH GF MICHIGAN IS DEAD ANN ARBOR, Mich.,, Oct. 18.— Stephen J. Farrell, aged 70 years, former University of Michigan track coach, died here late yes- terday at his home. —— . BERNHOFER ON TRIP; TO INSTALL ELECTROS J. B. Bernhofer, of the Harri Machine Shop, left on the Alaska for Skagway, where he will in- stall Electros. While there he will also visit his aunt. | GORDON'S Ladies’ Ready-to- Wear Seward St., near Front .# Dally Empire Want Ads Pay - Four Hours ... a Few Cents... and an 'HE old chair in the corner with the tched Thh o o+ the dull walls ...th-dnb,':l.d fashioned atmosphere. Gone! One afternoon made the transfor- and in b We recommend Rasmussen Four Hour Enamel. Our line of Rasmussen paint products is complete. Rasmussen & IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint PHONE 549 :;:l::n:.flw s+ color is every- newed with lors quick drying col Let us tell you how have varne s, floor bric-a -brac have been re- hundreds Company We Have It! Wendt & Garster prints everything from a visiting card to an advertising campaign—accurately, beautifully and Phone 1933 SUN. MOw. 2 3 & 8 9 10 1 15.16 17 118 Ve wip OCTOBER at low cost. 374 1933 THY [ SAT. 5 6 7 12 3 14 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

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