The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 11, 1934, Page 5

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TABLE FER 'EM- LI JUST SHOW DAUGHTER AN' MAGOIE THAT I'M WILLIN' TO HELP NOW THAT WEVE DECIDED TO ECONOMIZE- '"WE CLEARED THE © 1934, King Pearires Syndicate, Inc., reat Britain rights reserved. GCALLS RHOME A V. BOWLERS HAVE NEW SCHEDULE Hine Different Organiza- tions Line Up for Fray, Brunswick Alleys Nine bowling teams have been organized and now constitute the Juneau City League. All games will be bowled on the Brunswick Alleys. The teams and the schedule for the league, officially starting tomor- row night, at 7:30 o'clock, is as fol- lows: Oct. Corps. 12—United Food vs. Signal Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. 14—Local vs. A. J. 15—Sanitary vs.' Spec. Del. 17—Miners vs. United Food, ' 18—Signal Corps vs. Locals. 19—A. J. vs. Sanitary gro. 21—Spec. Del. vs. Brunswick. 22—Miners vs. Bulldozers. 23—Brunswick vs. U. Food. 24—Sig. Corps Spec. Del. 25—Bulldozers Sanitary. 26—Locals vs. Miners, Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct, Oct. Oct. 28—United Food vs. A. J. 29—Brun: k vs. Sig. Corps. 30—Bulldozers vs. Locals 31—Miners vs. November 1.—Sanitary vs 2—Bulldoz Oct. Oct Nov. Nov. U. Food. TS vs. Spec. Del. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov Nov 4—A. J. vs. Signal Corps -Brunswick vs Locals. 6Special Del. vs. U. Food. 7—Sanitary Gro. vs. Miners. 8—Bulldozers A J 9—Locals vs. Food. U Nov. Nov. Nov. No. Nov. Nov. 11—Miners vs. Brunswick. 12—Sig. Corps vs. Sanitary. 13—A. J. vs. Special Delivery. 14—U. Food vs. Bulldozers. 15—Miners vs. Signal Corps. 16—Special Del. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. 18—Sanitary Gro. vs. Bruns. 19—Bulldozers vs. Sig. Corps. 20—Locals vs. Sanitary Gro. 21—Miners vs. Special Del. 22—Brunswick vs. A. J. B ELKS BOWL TONIGHT Tonight’s schedule of the Elks’ bowling tournament brings together six teams in the Northern Division. At 7:30 o'clock the Beavers meet the Bulldogs, followed by the Husk- ies and Webfeet. The final match is between the Cougars and the G lies. : ., MATHEWS GOEs TO SEATTLE FOR WINTER J. R. J. R. Mathews, well known Yu- kon River steamer engineer, passed through Juneau on the Yukon bound for Seattle where. he spends the winter months. Mr. Mathews is known throughout the Yukon dis- triet and to tourists on the Yukon River steamers, for his fine ivory carvings. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! 16—Bulldozers vs. Brunswick, | vs. Locals. | "~ BRID COACHES Three Kentucky Colleges : in 1934 Campaign Are Under New Leaders LOUISVILLE, Ky. Oct. 11.—Three of Kentucky's collegiate football teams entered their 1934 cnmpalgns} under new leadership this fall. At the University of Kentucky,| Chet Wynne, former Notre Dame' star fullback and pupil of the im- mortal Knute Rockne, has taken up where Harry Gamage left off| and will endeavor to make the' Wildcats a serious threat in south-j er several lean years. Wynne came to Kentucky late In | the 1933 campaign, giving up his {position as head coach at Auburn where, in four years’ time, he de- is head coach and athletic director. | Although pointing his charges for all ten games on their schedule, ‘Wynne is priming them especially for the tilt with Auburn on Octo- ber 27, Besides being the first Southeast Conference foes the Wiids | cats will encounter this year, the Plainsmen undoubtedly will be out to make their former coach regret the decision by which he left Au- DADDY- IF ANYONE WON'T BE LL DAY- AND I'M HAVING DINNER TO-NIGHRT wWi\TH . CITY LEAGUE - DAILY SPORTS CARTGON- —| Totals 33372710/ Totals St. Lous Bruoklgn abrh abrh oa Martin3b 401 400 20 Rothrock,rf 400 300 43 Frisch,2b ~ 400 200 11 Medwick,lf 422 300101 Collins,1b 401 300 30 DeLancey,c 401 300 20 Orsatticf 300 300 16 D'rocher,ss 300 200 31 P.Deanp 312 100 00 200 11 00 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 11, 1934. KEATING By Pap R N scorNG 1S E\GHTEEANT VICTORY OF THE SEASON —THE, YOUNGER, OF TE CARDINALS FAMOUS DEAN BROWERS, SHUT— OUT THE BROOKLYN DODSERS WITHOUT A HIT /4 27002313 aBatteds for Lopez in 9th inn! |w-hBatted for Benge In 9th inning. burn to come to the Blue Grass State. At Western Kentucky State College, in Bowling Green, “Swede” Anderson returned head coach and ath- had he Ande; and 1929 and made record. He succeeds Ernest Miller, head coach in 1931 and 1932. There was no head coach at Western last year, Jess Thomas handling the gridders with the assistance of E. A. Diddle. an enviable is at Georgetown College, . K. Evans has taken charge of the unbeatable calibre football and other athletics. Evans used to have when the late Knute imuch in the.“Layden system” that whose three K. Rockne was at the helm. ‘ As a coach Layden admits that|Rockne used to go about shaping coi about football he|ieam. eastern Conference competition aft-| oo ootown from Winter Park, Fla., [learned during his own student| while Layden does not have the ! days when he was one of the “Four | sharp tongue for which Rockne was | " Horsemen” on Rockne’s famous|famed, he does have a keen wit and succeeds Carey Spicer, years of service with ended last spring. He comes the Tigers to where he coached the Rollins Col- lege teams for the last three years. Evans played with North Carolina State for three years and was a : member of the 1927 championship {to the campus here that other veloped a championship team. HiS squad. He is being assisted in his, title at the University of Kentucky new position by Raymond Miller of |ysing innovations and even drop- ping the Notre Dame system, they arouse - the ire of the ordinarily Asheville, N. C., captain of the 1933 team at Rollins College e ANDREW ROSNES RETURNS FROM SOUTH Mrs. Andrew Rosnes, whose hus- band is owner of the gasboat Tern. returned on the steamer Alaska from a visit in the States. F t:rst Phott; of F irst Game W;rl;l geries Pepper Martin, third baseman of the St. Louis Cardinak, slides head first into homeé on “Duck- ey” Medwick’s hit in the sixth inning, in the first game of the World Series at Navin Field, Detroit. Umpire Owen is interested in the slide—but Mickey Ccchrane js following the ball's flight. ticnal Iliustrated News Photo, Interna- 4 -HE SET THE WANSAS CITY_ BLUES : DOWN WIFHOUT A HiTs nce of | el »z—Jordan. Runs batted in—Martin, . Two-base hits—P, Dean, ‘wick. Three-base hit—Med- bases—St. Lous, 3; Brook- on balls—Off P. Dean, 1. y Benge, 1; by P Dean, 6. Sears and Rigler. Time— 5 RISH COACH STICKING TO ETHUD;Chmk. while a trade would bring ' {Relp to strengthen the club in other | By ROBERT WALTON SOUTH BEND, ind, Oct. 11.— repricve only when Joe Coscarart 8¢’ When their opinions differ. “What was good enough for Rockne became crippled from a corn and is good enough for me.” So says Elmer F. Layden, head cold. He was sent home from the| . football coach and director of Ath-|last road trip but promised to mind [¢7¢¢: Which may last through most lletics at the University of Notre his behavior from then on. The third new coach in the state jDame. now in his first season of where attempting to turn out a the he knows team of 1924. And so, when stories drift back |practice with the squad. Notre Dame-trained €oaches calm Layden. While it is usually easier to list Dame officials HERES AN APRON S YO‘S}E\NON"'\' SOIL YOUR SUVT- 'L PHONE “You WHEN I'M READY TO COME HOME- VM DINING \WITH MR. AND MRS, - TO-NIGHT= eam of ways in which pupil differs fr Irish | teacher, the fact remains there is are By GEORGE McMANUS | WELL: IF WERE EVER N J (& UETHER T0 BE |_ INDIANS' BOSS | COMINGSEASON Already New Manager Is| l‘ Making Plans to Strength- | By ALAN GOULD MEET BRANCH RIOKEY Branch Rickey, brains of the St. Louis Cardinal organization, is a AL scholarly, indefatigable piece of ma- | SEATTLE, Oct. 11.—Dufch” Rue |chinery, who succeeds yet is not successful. {ther has signed a contract to man- {age the Seattle Indians of the Pa- cific Coast League' next year and While he Louis office sits in his dingy St figuring how much lalready the veteran southpaw is money the Cardinals will lose this plotting to strengthen the fribe. year, his team invaded the east to !The is $5,000' for the year. beat out the New York Giants. | Rueth zot his chance to win Eloquent, devout, clever, Rickey | himself a name as manager last looks wonderfully like a college | | spring when Klepper fired George|professor. He wears half-moon spec- | | Burns \ (tacles clipped to his nose when he Hi: ymplete success is shown by |reads, talks rapidly, hoarsely, in- 7 the new contract. telligently. 1935 plans are a bit| Onetime director of Ohio Wesley- but they look something|an university, Rickey smokes con- +|{like this |stantly, but never swears or touch- | Chick Ellsw oldest Indian in es liquor. When he managed the point vill be traded for St. Louis team yecars ago, he re- | newer fused to direct the team on Sun- | Something must be done to speed idays, turned his job over on the {up the right side of the Indians’|Sabbath to Burt Shotton, former |infield. Too many balls go sailing |Philadelphia manager, now coach through there for base hits. lof the Cincinnati Reds. A shakeup in the catching stdff| If Rickey wanted to give his time | | impends, with possibly one of theiover to lecturing, he could make | present staff being used for trading |a better living at that than at base material ball. Before a large audience, he Two or three younger pitching |talks even more brilliantly than in | ars will be sought. |conversation; here is is the actor, | A good deal of that help may |Starting his speeches so quietly| {that the audience must be dead| jsilent to hear, and then stirring| |himself up until his audiente sits| |amazed, and he is so hoarse he \must stop. To take advantage of his person- | come from the Indians' new tie-ufy | with the Detroit Tigers. The Tribe's {outfield became pretty well set when the Tigers turned over Bill Lawrence’s contract and promised at least some pitching help. | Elsworth’s passing is virtually |8lity, he seldom deals for players | |certain. Chick has been & regular [Unless he talks personally with the | I'with the Indians since the 1026 /Person with whom the deal is be-| | . y ' | season. That is, until'Chet Smith, |in8 made, Consequently, his trans- | sensational young shortstop, sup- |POTtation and telephone bills are ;‘pl‘um»:l him. A change might help |28 (_}uts:;mdmg figure in the organ- ization’s red-ink column. A keen student of the game, { spots. Rickey has his own ideas about | "Chick drew a suspensioni recently jhow a ball club should be run, but gaining atdoes not interfere with his mana- |for breaking training, | Whenever possible, he has the Smith was taken ill with a heavy |Presidents and managers of his ner clubs together for a confer- Jof the night, and usually ends with _ |Rickey in a long night gown, talk- om | 1D€ Jjust as quickly and enthusias- Itically as when it started. Says he: “When we discuss ball v | Players, consider first whether the; old timers of the Wayiy..."ihe heart, then if they navs ithe speed, then if they can field i and throw, and finally if they can reminds |it’s in constant use during his dajly | the o'd days when Rockne dictated |the university’s athletic policy. Rockne was a one-man show. He, Until this year the job was a had his finger on every dcta:l—ilwo-mnn affair with Jesse Harper even to.the distribution of foot-|acting as ~athletic director, and ball tickets. ‘Heartly “Hunk” Anderson, another In entrusting the combined duties Rockne pupil, as football coach. of athletics to one man, Notre| e ——————— have gone back to ) Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! Whiskies is SMOOTH —M $ lesl bofore you lasle . .. The aroma of Seagram’s Crown DISTILLERS SINCE 1857 eagmm’s CROWN WHISKIES MAKE THIS TEST YOURSELF HIS is the professional way to test whiskey. 1. Pour a little into a glass. 2. Swish around to moisten in- side of glass. 3. Pour whiskey back into bottle. 4. Inhale aroma left in glass. The aroma of Seagram’s moderately priced Crown Whiskies will be mel- low, warm and smooth—like that of the most expensive whiskies. The aroma of other low-priced whiskies— especially those that contain young, green whiskey—is usually harsh and biting. Aroma indicates quality —as you will verify when you taste. ¥ T e Only Seagram dares invite you to test moderately priced whiskies, the way pro- fessional buyers test costliest whiskies. et "FINEST PEPPERMINT GUM S EEE e B R PRR T UNITED FOOD (CO. ! CASH GROCERS * S Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 | Rt SR b e AT o Vot A4 “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” “Juneau’s Own Store” i GEORGE BROTHERS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. e it D = Bty - . S INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Ine. Established 1898 Telephone 409 L e Juneau, Alaska | WINDOW CLEANIN PHONE 485 : THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat L S OPEN ALL NIGHT FREE DELIVERY Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single Q-2 rings OB - IDEAL PAINT SHO If It's Paint We Have It! 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