The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 10, 1934, Page 5

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E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. SATURDAY, FEB. BRINGING UP FATHER PROFESSOR CLAWR ONETT 15 1IN THE MUSICROOM- GO INLAND TALK TO HIM- DO AS | SAY- DON' T STAND THERE LIKE A NT-WIT - AH-MR.JIGGS) ) LKS' BUWUNG C(mla tlll Count on Josso TOURNEY NOW DRAWS T0 CLOSE PU)-O“ 'Vlatch Between ~ Cherries and Crabapples rhedulcd for Tonght for l\)']}! the cur- xed bowling tour s to a close. The winn tech will contest for Cabbages, t game total s games Witk Garlics of 480. Hight score was made by Kos- with 213 of the same team single game women whe: t try. made at the night were: Mrs. Kosk cd the i ore among th got 203 alleys last Garlies 188 179 153 Mrs. Bavard Andrews Williams 144 204 106 148— 480 173— 556 147— 406 Dr 468—1442 tals 520 454 Carrots dale 127 1fmann 157 128 412 417 Cauliflowers 203 93 172 152 167— 387 Totals Onicns 80 175 147 402 436 Mr T G. . Duncan 114 175 147 George Totals 403—-124U n she | Haines for Victories After Thirteen Years in Big Club 3 0’ Jesse Haines is the “Doctor” of the Cardinals’ “Grand Hotel” of baseball. He's been watching the stars come and go for 13 and he’s the only regular left from the 1926 champions. years new, expect a finished when he does toil. Cardinal ofticials and bleacher performance By KARL R. BAUMAN ST. LOUIS, Feb. 10.—Jesse Josep Haines, the eminent knuckle-ba’ ' has — | center, 10, 1934. BUT I'VE FORGOT TEN SOME OF THE WORDS - By GEORGE McMANUS WELL- THATS SOME HELP -~ NOW _IF YOUVE FORGOT TEN THE TUNE - ALL 1S WELL- 1920 he has played under managers—Rickey, Hornsby, seven O'Far- and Frisch. He has won 190 games while losing 141, and his world se- ries record is three victories and} one defe: \t COLGATE'S CAGE 'FIVE MYSTIFIES Experts Are v Puziled st Work of Basketeers— | Refuse to Be Beaten HAMILTON, N. Y., Feb. 10—Up in the cold Chenango Valley where E: etic theme gs are usually built around the prowess of the foctball-playing Red Raiders, atten- tion of sports followe S NOW s'wr‘r-d to a Colgate basketball team hat refuses to be beaten. undefeated, untied and football eleven of Lhc baskettall five started the season with very ordinary pros- pects. Nobody expected a good team. A year ago, with two stars playing, only five games were won while ten were lost. Student inter- est lagged The young coach who finished at Colgate in 1925, was starting his second y as di- rector of Maroon basketball desti- nies. His record the year before was <0 unimpressive it was a general conclusion that the team wasn't ing any place. But Stock Booms Now Now, having won seven straight games, including a victory over Sy five that won 19 gamos in succession, the general opinion has been reversed. The new deal made basketball stock boom sent team is really “five ds” rather than a cen- ter, two guards and two forwards. Not a man is more than six feet tall. Stacy (Bud) Campbell, the is an even six feet. So is Howard (Red) Laflamme, the 194- {pound forward. Capt. John (Gun- ner) Brooks, guard; John McCor- ]932 Bob Hubbard, Since joining the Cardinals in | | rell, McKechnie, Southworth, Street | It seems about time the football | rules-makers heard from another big group which has considerable to do with the game. I refer to {the sports writers and editors thxoughom the country who cover lhe sport—rain, snow or shine— !hmuzhnut the season. {hoo football, | merous complications, the coaches, sorb jconstant readers |America selections, L highly questionable, jcourse, as to whether the National argue with insults from is yRules Committee can do anything | They bally- | estle with its nu-| and make All-| of | ‘as in the diamond game. (Ed.s note: There is a distinct demand | for these statistics and they are | being developed, among others, by The A, P2 ‘ “But there are a few points on | which there should be uniformity. “For instance, in stories giving All-America selections, | reads that so-and-so averaged fif- 1ty yards on punts while another | so-and-so averaged forty-five yards. Tmmediately one wonders whether | those figures are c¢éonted from the one often | KING LEVINSKY eers oecision; | COAL | B(mED BY FANS WHOILESALE [ and RETAIL Chicago hcwuvmght Does Not Impress as Car- nera Opponent Pacific Coast Coal Co. Phone 412 NEW YORK, Fe vinsky, Chicago hea: aged to drag out a disputed ten-| round decision over Charlie Mas- | sera, 22-year-old miner, from East | Monongahela. Levinsky did not do | much to impress the fans that he is a logical contender for a crack at Carnera’s heavyweight crown. A slim crowd of 3,500 booed the decision. CALL GEORGE ANDERSON Expert piano tuning, guaranteed service. Phone 143. —adv, those figures are counted from the | | point of the boot. Also punts over the goal line are count- ed to the line, roll or merely to the 20-y: “A few other endless disputed | matters are whether touchdowns of | ten yards or more are counted as first downs; whether a team is giv- to the point they | rd line. | whether ' | en first down when, while the punt | is in the air, a foul enables it to retain possession of the ball far- ther down the Z2&7d.” about the sport itself or working | press conditions thereof, calculated to make things easier for those | who make their business to peer in- tently at the procedings from lofty locations in the stands. The prcb- lem is largely one for the indi- vidual colleges and universities to solve, Meanwhile Messrs. Walter Oke- son, the chairman, and Bill Lang- |ford, the secretary of the rules committee, may welcome such com- ment and suggestion as the follow- 'ling illustrates. NEED SCORING RULES “One point which seems to have been consistently overlooked by the rules body,” writes Wirt Gam- mon in the Chattanooga Times, “is the matter of scoring rules, which should not be overlooked at the coming session of the lawmak- ers. “Baseball has its special section of rules for scoring games. A s of such grid rules would be le: important in one respect, since no elaborate statistical totals are kept HARD ON HUSBAN “It occurs to m writes Jack Martin of the Lancaster (Pa.) In- telligencer Journal, “that since you (meaning the leading sports writ- ers) are always in the press box away from the spectators at a |comment pertaining to rules viola- tions, etc. In this section, been my pleasure to sit among the spectators—and 1 have Ilearned that college football rules are not clear to the average fan—also wom- |en keep their ‘husbands from en- tions. “Is it mnot possible for sports give their viewpoints on the pres- ent football rules and let the com- mittee act upon them? College se in a few nal football [ the picture.” years will put it out of - i Shop in Juneau ——— for SHORTER HOURS the joying the game by rules explana- | writers throughout the country to, football must clarify its rules or this profes- | football game—you often miss their | it has | | For a Personal Gift to a Particular Person! make it JOHNSON’S CANDY We have a complete assortment of this de- licious candy in Valentine Wrapped and Heart Shaped one and two pound boxes. ® JOHNSON’S VALENTINE PARTY MIX 60c per pound SMALLER VALENTINE CANDIES for the Kiddies » fans alike are “sold” on Haines' mick, forward, and John Francis | who“tias watched iliem ocome 1933 record, the best of his career | (Lefty) Cahill are just under the g0 under the wand of Sam Brea from an earned run standpoint— six-foot mark. {don and Branch Rickey, only 0|55 runs per nine innings. | Laflamme and Brooks were on linger on himself, is ready for his| Haines, a star in the Cardinals'|the quintet last year. The others fourteenth consecutive campaign| first pennant victory in 1926, is the were reserves. McCormick, son of a | with the St. Louis Car only player now on the roster who local janitor, rose to the first team venerable °I' | has drawn steady pay from the unexpectedly. Campbell, a former psburg, O, 2| club ever since. Bill Hallahan, then Manlius school star, regained his g | toward his firty-first wild young southpaw, was form after playing poorly a year 198 192 198— 58g | being counted on by the owners, | with lhu 1926 team, but went back | ago. Cahill, quiet and reserved, sud- 157 125 148— 430 | Managcr Frankie Frisch and the |5 the minors before returning to denly commenced to play fine bas- R e office 23y to take a regular twrn | win a regular job. | ketball. 503 468 483—145¢|cn the mound. | Theyve Come and Gone Refuse to Be Beaten Pitched No-Hiiter | Dozens of popular players and| Thus it has happened that even No one, of conrsc, <xpects “Pop”, ‘not a few stars came and went as|when opposing teams have led until { who achieved ciamond immortality | Big Jesse pursued the even tenor the last minutes of a game, one or by hurling the only no-hit, no-run |of his Redbird way. The list is al- |another of the “five forwards” has game in the major league season of most endless, but Big Jesse always come through with baskets to wir 1924, to pitch as often as he used |stayed on, doing the same diligent It happened against Cornell, against to. But it has become a custom to work. {st. Lawrence, against Baltimore. S el ____|Unawed by the great Syracuse five Colgate refused to be beaten—and DAILY S PORTS CARTOON -—By Pap““’“ Capt. Brooks plays like an All- | America quarterback—just that. He AN AMAZING MIDOLE -DISTANCE works'in the back court, passing, =% RUNNER. -#E WON TTLES giving signals, directing plays. He INTHE SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENG ‘calms 'em down or peps ’'em up. »A) NATIONAL COLLEGIATE , SOUTHERN Nz AdAsl. AND NATIONAL AAU > REETS Parsnips Mrs. Peterman 128 128 G. Messer'dt 152 167 Hoffman 188 177 468 472 Cabbages 128—*381 HOUSE WIFE NRA in the HOME Buy that General Electric Washer today. operate—no oiling. Quick shing clothes. Totals 4321372 Simple to and easy on JUNEAU ICE CREAM PARLORS Percy ReEynNoLps, Manager Mrs. Messe hmidt A. Henning Shattuck v c " 148 151 SAVE TIME—MONEY—CLOTHES $5.00 ... $5.00 CONVENIENT TERMS PER MONTH Totals \ #—Average. - eee —— LET YOUR Alaska Electric Light & | Power Co. ' JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 | alentine be flowers. See JUNEAU LORIS in the New Shattuck Building, Telephene 311. adv. | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat ‘And away they go. - eee— SIX BROTHERS PO EaTe | ALL WINNERS Round-Up e SALE brothers in the Miller family, who [ ] PO ALASKA AIR EXPRESS FOR CHARTER Lockheed 6-Passenger Seaplane i TELEPHONE 22 J. V. HICKEY CUT YOUR FUEL BILL.’ Let us clean your furnace now with the TORNADO FURNACE VACUUM CLEANER Gets the soot and dirt in every nook and corner Hal‘l'l Machme S[lOp Plumbing Sheet Metal kept the name continuously in Mor- ley high school football, basketball and track summaries from 1919 un- I ti1 1933, accumulated a total of 52 | athletic letters among them. | The brothers answered to the HE MACES | front names of John, Jim, Lester IS BIO Fo. INDoOR. !g:rarhe, Columbus (Lum) and Os- TRACIS: HONORS AT HE Three of them Who went away MILLROSE A+As} 1o college collected 24 emblems, and MEET N NEW YORK| |the family isn't through with high- {er education yet. S e STILL STANDS BY OLD “PEP" NEW YORK, P‘eb 10.—John Mc- Graw still regards Ross (Pep) Youngs as the greatest outfielder who ever wore a Giants uniform | Yourigs, a Texan, died in 1927 from | ‘a kidney ailment at the height of | i his career. His batting average was 322 over a nine-year period. | { — e | _Shop ia Juneau SEE THE MARVELOUS BARGAINS WE ARE OFFERING FOR THIS WEEK Heating IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster LEADER DEPT. STORE George Bros. FLAT RACE < OR HURDLES = IT5 ALL! THE SAME - HE NOT O WINS BUT USUALLY SETS A NEW RECORD WHILE HE'S ABOVT (Te All Itghis Reserved Uy The Associated Fross FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery e oF Louisiana Smate Universiw/ ‘A VERSATILE COLLECTOR: OF | TRACIC TITLES AND RECORDS — UE WAS UNDEFEATED IN 1933, Store Open Evenings t

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