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* THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 15, 1934. By GEORGE McMANUS BRINGING UP FATHER 1 WISH THE DOCTOR | WOULD HURRY- I'™M | ANXIOUS TO RKNOW Qr MAGGIE 1D ALL RIGHT- — { | i ! At i ro © 1933, King Peatures Synsicars, buc, Grer Briain rights reserved CASABA LEAGUE ! TO STARTPLAY 1N SHORT TIME Games Set for Tonight Cancelled—New Sched- uled to Be Worked Out Basketball ‘games tentatively scheduled last week to be played tonight have been called off it was announced today by A. S. Dun- ham, President of the Channel Hoop League. He also announced a Meeting of the team managers and coaches in his office in the High Scheol building for 7:30 pm. to- day at which time the schedule will be revised. 4 The second half will find two of the teams playing in the first sec- tion disbanded, and one new team on the list. The Moose team, after | a series of difficulties, and thz| Tallapocsa, which won only one game and was too weak to furnish serious compefition, both gave up the ghost at the end of the first| half. The entry of the Y. P. A. C team, composed of players from the local Indian community, maki it a x-club organization. This 1 shorten the schedule slightly. The second half probably will be finished by February 10. A new practice schedule has been issued by the League management The DeMolays and Y. P. A C| clubs have been assigned the gym on Tuesdays. On Wednesdays mri Juneau Firemen and Elks have it George Brothers and the Y. P. A. C. pracfice on Thursdays. — e BOWLING GAMES The foliowing are results of the games bowled on the Elks' alleys Jast Saturday night in the regular local tournament: Lemons 140 94 117351 170 191 185—545 161 161 161—483 471 446 463 1380 Pineapples Miss Taylor 137 135 Shaw 146 161 Southwell 131 131 414 4271 Oranges Miss Kolasa ... 119 95 W. Pullen 171 168 Barragar 181 199 471 462 Apricots 168 131 139 156 150 135 457 422 Cherries Mrs. Keufmann 132 147 Ravard 176 176 Simpkins 147 147 455 470 Melons 128 128 190 145 120464 169 170 136—475 487 443 393 1321i { Miss Hansen Radde Stevens Totals 167—439 184—491 131—393 Totals 482 1323 126—340 175514 217597 Totals 518 1451 170—462 182477 192—477 544 1423 Miss Monson Boyle Dunham Totals 148—427 176—52% 141—441 Totals 471 1395 Mrs. Andrews 128—384 Robertson Sweum Totals BERGMANN DINING ROOM LEASED BY M. DANILOFF, WIFE| Mr. and Mrs. Mike Daniloff have 1cased from N. G. Nelson the Berg- mann Hotel Dining Room. Mr. Daniloff is an old time resident of Juneau, having been employed as | ight baker at the Peerless Bakery en years, a position he still retains. Mrs. Daniloff wny panage the dining rooms and they are featurifg table board by lhe; week or month and popular priced | meals from 6 to 9 am., 12 noon 0| 1 pm. amd from 5:20 to 6:30 p.m.“ A light luncheon service will be | maintained outside of regular meal hours, scups, salads and sandwiches | being featured. The closing hour | will be 8 p.m. daily. ! —————————— | TWO MATCHES TO BE BOWLED | BY CITY LEAGUE TONIG“Ti for the pas i | Teams of the City Bowling League that will play tonight at the Brunswick alleys are, at 7:30 o'clock, George Brothers vs. Alas- ka-Juneau and at 8:30 o'clock, the Legion of the Moose team wini play the Federal Building aggrega- | tion. 1 BAER, CARNERA TILT LOOMING, FIGHT HORIZON Dempsey Said to Be Key—i man—3Summer Date Seems Likely By DAVIS J. WALSH NEW YORK, Jan. 15—Within a| matter of weeks, officials of Madi- | son Square Garden and Jack Dempsey will sit down at the same table to discuss details of a half- million-dollar Max Baer - Primo Carnera fight for the heavyweight championship in June or July, the writer has been informed by Ancil Hoffman, Manager of Baer. The conference, he said, had been solicited by John Kilpatrick, Pre: dent of the Garden, who first tried to interest Hoffman personally and then turned his attention to Demp- 'y afl he learned that the anager could not be persuaded to abandon his liaison with the former champion. , | Help Promote? H ‘They asked me to bring Dempsey to see them,” Hoffman added. “I take it they mean to declare Jack in as a copromoter and I don't see why not? His name will add $100,- 000 to any gate.” Demp: scheduled to leave im- mediately for the Bast, will first confer with Hoffman in Washing- ton, D. C, then will come on to New York for the Garden confer- ence. The result, it now seems in- evitable, will be an agreement whereby Baer is to get his chance at the heavyweight championship and Dempsey his spot in the pro- motion, | At the moment, the Garden con- trols Carnera up to and including September 30 next; Dempsey, mean- time, seems to have an even strong- er hold upon Baer and I trust I'm not being ingenious i the matter of honor. Hoffman did. | “We have no contract with him,” he said, apparently a little abashed | by this unwonted show -of semi-i ment, “but we owe him plenty and this is our way of paying off.” Jack Figures | He added something aoubtfut about feeling sure that “Jack wouldn’t stand in their way” but indicated that, as far as he was concerned, he didn't stand to let) developments arrive on that basis. Of course, everything in connec-| NOW- DONT WORRY- SHE 1D PERFECTLY OKAY - ONLY SHE MUST BE QUIET AND NOT TALK UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES- MAGGIE. I SENTENCE TO HER — uct VADE MIDDLE WEST FOUR HOURS LATER - The Wildcats of the University of Arizona will travel to the middle west for a campaign with some of the leading basketball teams of that area. Left to right: Jack, Warnock, Filbrun, Byrne, Keleman, the Garden contract runs out, at which time, according to Hoffman, the Carnera people have offered to run out, 0. But that’s just one of life’s little delusions. As far as crowd possi- bilities are concerned, any fight scheduled in this comical climate after September 30 might as well be held on a street corner. — e BETTER, BUT SAME ENID, Okla. Jan. 15. — Phillips University has a better center on the basketball team than last year, although it is the same individ “Slim” Green is an inch and a ller, now pushing L red i 3 T0 EMULATE PRIMO FLORENCE, Italy, Jan. 15.—A giant standing six feet, eight and one-half some day capturing the world | championship from his countryman, | Primo Carnera. His name is An- gelo Bertini. He is 18 years old and weighs 225 pounds. R TELEPHONE DIRECTORY i Advertising copy 1s now being' inches in his socks is| itraining here with the hope of| Johnson, Pensford, Abbott, Vicke,s, Scholtzhauer and Stewart. (Associated Press Phote) SOUTH DAKOTA | | GOING IN FOR PARI-MUTUELS | ! PIERRE, 8. D, . 15—South | Dakote, which heretofore has turn- | |ed a ccld shoulder to legal gambling |in any form, this year will inaugur- late licensed horse racing with pari- | mutuel betting. Taking advantage of a new law adopted at a special legislative ses- | sion last fall, the State Board of| | Agriculture has made tentative |plans for the first authorized pari- | wutuel race meet at the State Fair 1 Grounds in Huron. | Fair officials look to the venture| |to make up a $7,000 deficit incurred | by last year's exposition. Although the law was enacted primarily for “promotion of fairs,| agriculture, livestock and racing as- | scciations,” the Legislature directed that four per cent of the tolal‘, | “contributions” on horses be placed | i a State relief fund. | Not a Game of Chance? Gov. Tom Berry, who raises fast tion with the Baer-Carnera fight is assembled for the new Telephone horses on his 30,000-acre ranch, let predicted on an if-when-and-pro- Directoyy of Juneau and vicinity. vided understanding that Carnem: does not blow the title to Tommy Laughran down in Miami on Feb- ruary 22. Of course, too, they all| can wait until September 30, when' DAILY SPO \ RTS CARTOON Interested parties should communi- cate at once with the Telephone Office. . JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS adv. TELEPHONE CO. the act become a law without his signature despite objections of| churchmen. They pointed to the| 'State Constitution, which says the| , Legislature “shall not authorize any game of chance under any -—By Pap| RIGHT HAND MAN, KNOWS WIS BASE.BALL- 2 IF ANY MAN DOES /. | Tom s ouT 10 GWE T BOSTON A WINNER - AND HE'S NOT AFRAIO TO SPEND HIS MONEY pretense or for any purpose what- soever.” | Replying to arguments that the| law is unconstitutional, State Sen-| ator Otto Kaas said: “This isn't a, game of chance; it's a question of your judgment of horse flesh. No man who bets on a horse race| thinks he is taking a chance.” cide from the coastitutional pro- hibiticn, the Legislature has provid- ed strict statutes against gambling. One law provides that a personi losing money by betting on any game mey sue the proprietor with- in six' months to recover. If he; does "ot do this it is the duty| of the 'State’s attorney to bring| action to recover for benefit of the wife, children or the public| schools. | Harness Events, Too Horsemen hope the new law will | promote the business of raising high grade animals. Thoroughbreds already are well established in the State, partly because of the grow- ing popularity of polo. Trotting and pacing races, popu- lar at the State Fair in the past, will be included along with running events at the first meet, if present plans are carried out. SRR D. A. R. Gift |Flags Labeled “Made in Japan” HONOLULU, Jan. 15.—As a re- minder of their allegiance to the -United States the local chapter of the Daughters of the Amerisan Revolution presents to each nat- uralized alien, most of whom are Japanese, a small American flag. A newspaper article recently call- jed attention to the fact that on the staff of these flags is printed: “Made in Japan.” Mrs. Grace Npble, Regent, explained that suitable flags of American manufacture were unavailable locally. Vauy Empirc Wani Ads Pay. . Personal . . . attention is given to every detail by this establishment . . your sorrow you can be certain that the final ceremony will be dignified, beautiful and in harmony with “your ideas. Funerals, cem- plete in every respect. . The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” pari-mutuel | sin | THIS SILENCE 1S DRIVINY NEVER LIKE \“‘\W, THIS - [ mmb' /R-5 —SPORT Among the gridiron matters about whicn the last word or two should be said before winter set- tles down completely is the situa- {tion of Mr. Gil Dobie as head coach of Cornell University. | After a lot of early bad luck, the i loquacious Mr. Dobie’s pupils ac- !qumed themselves with neatness and dispatch against their last two 'rivaLs, Dartmouth and. Pennsyle ‘;vania. The rumblings that could be (heard diminished to a polit> wh i-per. They have now disappeared |entirely and Mr. Dobie will con- tinue serenely as head coach for |an indefinite period, sibject no doubt to intermittent rumblings. | During the season the Cornell Daily Sun, student daily, received }and printed letters for a time, com- | menting on or criticizing the foot- ball situation. Some of the letters were signed ‘“Constant Reader,’ which, so the story goes, prompted the following remark from Mr. Doble one afternoon after the freshman ,team had taken a bad |beating from the third varsity: “Therell be a lot of Constant Readers next fall.” BLIGHT OF 29 Cornell, like its one-time grid- iron rival, Yale, seems to have been affected athletically by being nominated and elected to member- ship in the “lily white” register of the Carncgie Foundation’s noted Bulletin 23, published in October, 1920—a date remembered as pain- fully in Wall street as in the col- legiate chancelleries. These and some score of col- leges, all told, were held up as models in athletic behavior. They did not subsidize or recruit, said the Carnegie report. The intima- tion was that they had cleaned house, taken the »‘“turn to the | right” and that it was hoped they would live up to all the nice things said about them. The idea seemed to be that some species of fugitive activity, like bootlegging was involved in the efforts of an earnest alumnus to obtain a scholarship for a deserv- ing prep school star or otherwise ‘persuade and help him to enlist at {the old alma mater. Naturally, what the Carnegie Report viewed with alarm were the extreme meth- ods employed at times to recruit and subsidize college athletes, but the ‘effect was to blow the whistle on any and all activities of the sort. In some respects the deflation of college football was and is much |to be desired. Nevertheless the four-year period since the Carne- |gle Report and old man Dapres- sion struck simultaneous blows has shown the fallacy of many so- called reform measures. They have not altered the fact that the coun- try's foremost amateur sport re- mains likewise the biggest inter- Not Because We Are Cheaper | BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what Job will cost” Harry Race DRUGGIST The Squibb Store Notre Dame coach, congratulates collegiate business. The aim is both to get the besi results. HE'S THE MAN Elmer Layden, writes Bill Hart from Morgantown, “had three teams at Duquesne this fall, one just about as good as the other. The fact that Pitt and Carnegie Tech are located in the same city has served to help, not hinder Du- quesne’s rise, through the fact that the Duke supporters rallied to*face a common foe . . . Not to my knowledge have the Dukes falled to get their share of raw material from high and prep schools . . . The man overlooked in praising Duquesne for its sen- sational rise is John D. Holahan, graduate manager. He is the strong, silent man behind the guns.” ———— Daily Empirc Want Aads Pay. It’s TIME BLENDED ¥ With a grin on his face; Heartly “Hunk” Anderson (left), retiring his successor, Elmer Layden, and wishes him luck in his new post. The two met at the annual conference of the American Coaches’ association. (Associated Press Photo) | A | TRIM TRAINING TRIP i NEW YORK, Jan. 15. — The | Brooklyn Dodgers, without any urging by the Carnegie Founda- tion, have decided to de-emphasize spring training. The full squad will not report at the Orlando, | Fla.,, camp until March 11, per: | mitting scarcely a month in which | to et in shape. |Constipated 30 Years | Aided by Old Remedy “For thirty years I had constipas | tion. Souring food from stomach | choked me. Since taking Adlerika I am a new person. Constipation s a thing of the past.’—Alice Burns. Butler Mauro Drug Co., in Doug- 1lfls by Guy's Drug Store. adv. ———————— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay HCGn ’ this year tha saving! 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