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BARNEY GOOGLE, AND'SPARK PLUG YUP_I RECKON WE~L.IN‘S HED A RIGHT SMART NOTION OF SETTIN' ALONG..I'LL JES' GO LONG LIVIN' IN TH' WOODS LIKE A WOLF AN' EF MR.GOOGLE ASTS FUR ME ,YOU-UNS JES' SAY I AR NOT 'ROUND TER-DAY, BEIN' GONE OFF ... uP TERGETHER,E'GAR.. BUT HIT'S NO USE NOW..AN' I BETTER BE JOLTIN' A e 2 SAIRY..LISTEN TO MR _GOOGLE'S. $1800 EVERY CENT OF \T. WHY DID YOU SAY YOU ME..DID YOU KNOW HAS BEEN FOUND ? THE DAILY ALASKA"EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 12; 1934 SNIF__SNIF .. CAZE I'D FAIRLY DIE OF A BROKE HEART EF DAN'L BARLOW WAR LEF' TER SUFFER IN JAIL, E'GAR .. [4 ' ' 1l | | ' | ' 11 STOLE THE MONEY? THEN HE WHO STOLE THE MONEY ?? ! AND NOT LITTLE DAN'L BARLOW, THE HILL-BiLLY. TSK_TSK ... \'T WAS SAIRY. - AOAl(fD;ags Léarning New Gr;d Trl;rks Thi§ Y&ir; Passéng Show Headed by V eterans; Kerr, W arner, Zuppke, Leaders 1llinois POP_WARNER - em, Football may be a young man’s game cn the field, but on the sidelines, in the well. Leading the game of football into its wildest passing era ar ¢ Bcb Zuppke, Illincis; Pop Warner, Temple; and Jock Sutherland, Pitt. By JAMES B. RESTON (Associated Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK, Dec. 12.—Five vet- pran football coaches, who learned the game when it was a form of legal homicide, are teaching it new ricks this season. They are Bob Zuppke, Illinois;. Pop - Warner, Cemple; Andy Kerr, Colgate; Al- bnzo Stagg, College of the Pacific; nd Jock Sutherland, Pitt. Originally, Pop Warner taught [he sporting world that deception pn the gridiron was not a pun- shable crime. He popularized fa- kery. Then when the “experts” itarted pointing out that the War- her double wingback offense was ho good, that it could be stopped pasily, that the wing backs didn't have a chance to make ground be- pause they were slanting into the ine, Warner went to Temple and fashioned one of the East’s fin- pst teams. Warner’s 1935 team has all the rickery, all the - speed and size hnd drive of a championship club, hnd he has introduced innovations his season which indicate that it be many a day before the coaching upstarts catch up with im. In the middelwest sob Zuppke is struggling along with an Illinois leam that relies an jts l;i;n and its ingenuity. Zuppke been pblaying hide-and-seek with the ball In the ‘Big Ten all year. With ack Haynon’s arm and Lee Lind- perg's toe to rely om, bhe has showered passes on the confer- nce and managed to cling tp the op of the Big Ten ladder. Zuppke introduced one of the most amazing plays of the year hgainst Ohio "State in the first Banished forever are the clothes basket, wash line, and laundry tubs. And she's a gayer, jollier companion for her husband now that she sends her clothes to the laundry. ) ALASKA ‘\Blg Ten game of the year. There seems to be some doubt even now 'as to the exact nature of the play. To make a rough guess, it was a criss-cross lateral-forward-lateral, and it sent the Buckeyes down to their only defeat of the season. | Even ‘Mike Tobin, the ingenious | Ilinois publicity director, ‘was un- | able to figurey the play out, so | | he called it the “flying trapeze” |and let it go at that. | Though there is no coach in the country more convinced of the value of football , fundamentals, Zuppke attempted to win a Big of the two men. To do so, he made his passin attack so dangerous that opposing teams es to meet him. Dick Hanley, Northwestern's coach, used a five man line in an attempt to stop the Illinois air attack, and though they managed to do so, they weakened the de-' fense against the running attack' and were beaten at the tackles. | When Andy Kerr's football team | employed four lateral passes on! one punt return against Tulane and mopped up the Big Green ‘Wave, 20-6 the East finally con- cluded that Andy was abead of ,me boys. His record of only five defeats ¥in the past five years speaks for itself. No yeuth is Jock Sutherland, Pitt’s dour Scot, who has built another smashing, versatile team. Despite the defeat at the hands of Minnesota, the notion prevails in some circles, that Suthreland's team today has no superior in the country—not even Minneapolis. in the country, Amos Alonzo Stagg, former Chicago coach who is now at the College of the Pacific, has convinced the Pacific Coast con- ference teams that his team is no “breather.” Southern California was fortunate to get away with a {6-0 victory over him, and Califor- nia, conquerer of the once mighty ‘Trojans, barely managed to squeak through, 7-6. And though the University of {Michigan has been cuffed around !in every Big Ten game this year, | the Wolverines are still playing smart football and will continue to (do so as long: as Fielding. Yost stays around as athletie director of the university. An invaluable | counsellor of Harry Kipke, Yost {was one of the first to make use 'of the forward pass, and has con- tinued to contribute his theories ,of the pass's ibilities through ithe last few inactive years. i | NUGGET SHOF i Special gift tables loaded with , ch $1.00_and less. or, a0, %, have had to change their defens-: Dean of all the football coaches ; & coaches’ WEALTHY MAN DIES SUDDENLY, - RESULT STROKE \W. T. Waggoner, Who i Made Fortune in Cattle, Ten title on the passing ability| (il Lands, Passes Away | | Continuea irgm Page One) i | | i ASBOCIATED PRESS PHOTO) WM, THOS. WAGGONER it is known tnat at one time he owned 600,000 acres of -the best land in Western Texas. As early as 1873 Waggoner be- gan accumulating Jand in the Tex- as Panhandle, acquiring huge hold- ings in Wichita, Wilbarger, Bailey, Ford, and Know counties. His suc- cess . in the cattle business was made amid the difficulties that surrounded the early cattle-raising pioneers, ranging from opposing the rustlers to fighting and pacifying Indians! - " First Big Money Waggoner made his first big, money -driving & herd of cattle| from Texas to Kansas City in the spring of 1870, where he was paid $55,000. With the money he bought steers at $8 and $1250, and the next year he sold them for $30 straight. When oil was discovered in North Texas in the Burk-Bug- nett and Electra fields, in the l:‘% of his holdings, unestimated mil- |lions were added to his already great wealth. ‘Waggoner was born in Hopkins county, Texas, August 31, 1852. From the age of six lived on the Wise County ranch of his fath- er, Dan Waggoner. As his | mail. Winter and Pond. seat, the old men secm to be doing very Andy Kerr, Colgate; associated with him in the firm of Dan Waggoner & Son. Interest In Banks | Banking was one more concern |of W. T. Waggoner's later years. |He was one of the organizers of | the Waggoner National Bank . at | Vernon, Texas, and served as its | president. Later he was president | of the Waggoner Bank and Trust Company, Fort Worth, and a di- rector of the First National Bank of Fort Worth when these institu- tions were consolidated. In 1877, he married Miss Ella Halsell. They had three children: Electra, later Mrs. A. B. Wharton, Guy and Paul. The town of Electra, in the center of the North Texas oll fields, was named by Waggon- er for his da}hwr, who died in 1925. Is Your Complexion Blochy and Pimply? If your complexion is dull, mud- dy, sallow due to clogged bowels take Adlerika. Just one does rids your system of : poisonous wastes that cause pimples and bad ‘skin. Bytler Mauro Drug' Ca—in Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. w=adv. e e 5 « “FRAMED ART PRINTS” Alaska subjects in Christmas Wrappings — boxed, and ready to adv. P " SEE BIG VAN | { Guns and Ammupition | LOWER FRONT STREET | | | - Next to Midget Lunch | ELECTRICAL )’Wir_ing Servicing gl Repair Work 2 PHONE Mize 3804 father lived, W. T. Wi ’ . THE SANITARY GROCERY. . “The Store That Pleases” 8 T STUDOYIN 'BOuT| %y HAIN'T MARRYIN' * NOBODY YT, E'GAR- s | DOUGLA NEWS GOETZ CHOSEN MASTEB,\ OF MASONIC LODGE; | OTHER OFFICERS ELECTED Alpert E. Goetz, P. W. M, was | last .night returned to the position | of Worshipful Master of Gasti-! neaux Lodge, No. 124, F. & A. | at the annual election of officers. He succeeds E. E. Engstrom whose term ends with, the current year. Othen officers chosen were as fol- lows: Robert Fraser, Senior Warden; Ed Andrews, Junior Warden; F. A, | J. Gallwas, Treasurer; Samuel De- von, Secretary; J. R. Guerin, Chap- lain; E. E. Engstrom, Marshal; C. H. Bowman, Senior Deacon; Rob- ert Bonner, Jr., Junior Deacon; Ed | Cashel, Senior Stewart; Mike Cher- ovich! Junior Steward; Adolph : Hirsch, Tyler, and Glen Oakes, Or- ganist. Installation of the above officers will take place early in January. STREET WORK STARTED Repair of City streets was started yesterday with several men work- ing under the FERA. Good progress is expected with continued favor- able weather. D | Administration Spokesmen Using Y Einstein Theory (Continued rrom :age One) and doing so much to increase the powey’ and prestige of organized la- bor?%4 LWITNESS AL SMITH Citations could be multiplied without limit, in both political par- ties. Witness Herbert Hoover, regarded in 1928 as so{unorthodox that he had to whip the Republican old guard to get the Presidential nom- ination. | Witness® up-from-the-city-streets Al Smith, now a pillar of the Am- erican Liberty League. There are those who believe some of these situations would stump even Mr. Einstein, One certain D IESE WORKERS and uNEM. E . P LEAR DIEIILQ - lage of DIESEL Engines for In- purpesss I the werld. New Cummins, o uda, Pagkard Alreratt, many oth ELS now used sverywhere, trains, shavels, ships, airpl ini -.Ill‘l, power g and Homs Easy Torms. Freo “Dingel News'" tolls of Big Opportunities. Nationwcide Employment Service is Free t0 oll Hemphill Graduates Hemphill Diesel Engineering Schools 2118 8an Fermndo Rd., Los Angeles, Calif. 411 Wostiaks North, Seattlo, Wash. FIRE ALARM CALLS Thira ana Franklin. Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Pront, fear Gross Apta. PFront, opp. City Whart. Front, near Sawmill Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem HAI thing is that it all is very confus- BILLE DE BECK WAAL, 'LL BE DBURNED . EF HIT 'T SAIRY HOPKINS FRUM HOOTIN' HOLLER OuUT SPARKIN' WITH A CITY CRITTER.. OR MAH NAME ing to the layman, and hard on the eyesight. e —— A plant usually thought of as a= pest in sugar beet fields, the net- tle-leaved goosefoot, robs the soil of food but also lessens the force of curly-top disease if it passes through the weed before attacking the beets. e MOOSE CARD PARTY Will he held Thursday evening, Dec. 13, at Moose Hall. Bridge, whist and pinochle. Door prize. Refreshments. Admission 50 cents. P —adv. R it a0 The Panchatantra, oldest extant collection- of Sanskrit apologs and stories, was compiled by Vishnu- sarman, a Brahman. havé -rf)o.rlle; when YOU NEED IT ASlvings Account at this bank added to regularly will help you accumu- fate a substantial fund of ready cash that will be available when you need it for emergencies, opportunities, or pleasures. If you have an Account here already—| fine, add to it. If not, we invite you to open one. Then save and have money, \when you need itl First National Bank Juneau, Alaska Old SRR A4 1 7 B papers for sale at Empire Office What more delightful gift for the home than a big comfortable EASY CHAIR. Heve vears to come. is a gift that will be appreciated for We are showing a variety of styles in several colors. Priced as low as $23.00 OCCASIONAL CHAIRS as low as DAVENPORT and CHAIR Mohair as low as $90 Tapestry from $95.00 to $147.50 The entire If family would enjoy a beau- tiful overstuf- fed suite. Our display of OCCASIONAL TABLES, MAGAZINE RACKS, SMOKING STANDS, LAMPS, DESKS, CARD TABLES, RADIO and TILE:TOP TABLES affords you an opporunity to select gifts for the home for as little as 75 An exceptionally attractive assortment of SOFA PILLOWS—Priced from $1.50 to $3.25 DISHES are always acceptable and make delightful gifts for friend or the home. If your funds do not permit an entire set why not give a few plates or cups and saucers. The bal- ance of the set ¢an be filled in later. Many sets have been started this way. The attractive Dogwood pattern is avail- able in 32-piece sets for $7.75. Hollyhock, stock Gretna Green, Also open Sterling Rose Crawford, Dimity, and Marina are all patterns that would pleage. OREN STOCK DU GLASSW ARE What would please the lady of the house more than a set of 8 Goblets, Cocktails, Sherbets, Wines, Cordials or Plates? An attractive cut set of 8'low-footed Goblets for $2.50. Other patterns from $3.75, $5.00 and $9.00 a dezen, 1 oz., 2 0z., 3 0z., 5 0z., and 8 o0z. Tumblers— $1.00 du_z'(_:n. R f4X 4 k) MAKE THIS STORE YOUR SHOPPING HEAVDQI;'ARTERS—Ynu are welcome to spend your spare time looking at our display whether you buy or not.