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THE D AILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SDAY, JAN. 10, 1935. BRINGING UP FATHER GOOD GRACIOUS! HHE JUNERU TAKES LEAD INELKS, BOWLING MEET Local Teamfie—ads Anchor-f age, Ketchikan for | First Day | Scoring 2,593 points—a none-too- high score—Juneau’s entry in the Anchorage - Ketchikan-Juneau Elks Club bowling tournament neverthe- less stepped out into the lead, a comparison of team scores for the first day of pin work showed today. | The Anchorage and Ketchikan ' scores were radioed The Empire to- day and the comparison indicates that the Juneau team’s tally of last night is 87 points better than An- chorage and 121 points more than the First City squad. Anchorage totaled 2,506 and Ket- chikan bowled 2472. The winner will be determined after ten days of bowling. Total . pins will name the victor. No bowl- ing will be done on Tuesday or Saturday nights. ! The high individual honors also went to Juneau for the first day when it was found that Jim Bar-, ragar, Jr, had clicked the neat| score of 571. Second was Johnson, | Anchorage, with 554, and thira was Frank Boyle, Juneau, with 541. Burgun was Ketchikan's best, claiming 547. | The complete Anchorage scoring: Bragaw, 285; MacDonald, 170; Swift, 316; Mathewson, 160; Romig, 485; Johnson, 554; Larsen, 536. To- tal, 2,506. The complete Ketchikan scoring: Thompson, 299; Blanton, 305; Thi- bodeaux, 136; Nowell, 201; Burgun 547; Zorich, 484; Zurich, 500. To- tal, 2472. The complete Juneau scoring: Metcalf, F. 161 Radde, E. 173 Barragar, Jr. 196 Boyle, F. . 197 184 167— 541 Bringdale, A. 186 127 155— 468 929 841 823—2593 — e+ - 1934 FOOTBALL 195 165 1e2 146— 502 173— 511 182— 571 Totals PLAYEDIN AR, SAYS REVIEWER NEW YORK, Jan. 10.—In a sea-| 1 i WHAT DO YOU MEAN? HOW DARE You-TO IN SINUATE THAT MY BROTHER WOULD DO SUCH A THING? WHY, HE WOULDN'T TAKE A PIN FROM A CHILD - WHERE 15 YOUR BROTHER? 3\‘\"[! 4 \ % THAT S ' BECAUSE HE WOULDN'T HAVE ANY USE FERIT- WHQ'S GOT CHANGE FOR A 1934, THOUSAND-ODOLLAR |¢ L ? 1 N 5. — Inc, Great Britain rights reserved. King Features $yndicar By GEORGE McMANUS 3 S i b ) 1 Jamer _Naismith #/ $ Action in a The old plea to “give the game, of football back to the students”| was a good thought. But the stu- dent body and players of the Uni- versity of California didn't wait to have it “given” back to them—| they took matters into their own hands. When Bill Ingram turned in his resignation as head football coach the students quickly accepted it— and just as quickly decided that Leonard “Stub” Allison was the logical man to succeed him. So they appointed “Stub” head coach of the Golden Bears. This action makes Allison the “people’s choice” and as such ins sures him the complete coopera- tion and backing of the stu- dent body. The students appoint- ed him, now it's up to them to stick by him. At least he's the right foot. Four four years Allison was In- gram’s assistant, so the ground- work laid by “Navy Bill“ will be continued. He plans no revolu- tionary system changes—his policy never favored any particular sys- tem, but rather the features of the leading systems best suited to the boys playing football at California If his material is adapted for 1 starting off on The many interpretations of baske have raised a cry from coaches, players and fans for a plan of | power plays—power will be used. By | the same token, speed will be the | keynot2 if his Hoys can Sscamper. basketball game. tball rules in the United States | vegimentation in the game which will regulate the play of all teams. | Since the game was originated in 1 891 by James Naismith, playing tactics have developed in vastly different manners over the country, making it difficult for teams to play in intersectional contests. BAYERS NOT T0 | 'SEEACTIONIN DEMOLAY GAME {Leading Scorer Ill—Prep Title Game, League Opener Friday HOW THEY STAND (High School Series) W L PCT. Ju. High School .. 1 0 1.000 D, High School .. 0 1 .000 | GAMES TOMORROW At Juneau High School—Ju- i Coach Harold E. Regele’s Ju- neau lads go into the game with a one-game- edge, .scored on the | Douglas floor a week ago wheh' they won a rough battle, 21 to 10.' Coach Martin Pederson’s visitors will be battling hard tomorrow, | because if Juneau should win again only one more victory for that team would be needed to claim the crown, | It was announced today that| Chuck Whyte, Juneau High School | graduate and Douglas resident,| and E. E. Engstrom, Wrangell High | School graduate and also a Doug- | las resident, again would relereel the high school game. Coach Re-| |gele, umpire-in-chief for the City ! will handle tie Krnuse-! League, DeMolay clash. DILLINGER WAS | Rcasonable Demands Allison's demands are not un- reasonable. All he asks is a squad that wants to play football under m. and not necessarilv a big squad. Just 11 men for the team with 11 to back them up and 11 more to come out and scrimmage with them. As he views the football -situs-~ tion, he ‘holds ‘scant hope for i< proving on California’s 1934 record next fall. He knows as well as the next fellow that he is no miracle man, and doesn't hope for mira- cles. But with a fair share of the breaks he ought to do well enough. ‘With the wealth of material com- ing up from the undefeated fresh- man team—the outlook really isn't so bad. Sanely, Allison discourages any ballyhoo for the boys' sake. Time enough for headliners later on when and if they “click” in varsity competition, he reasons The Golden Bears, with Allison in command, completed their 1934 [bye, Arleigh laughingly said: “Bill, |8ia by.that time, but when I found season with the playing of two 7ames in Honolulu during the Christmas holidays. “You Can’t Take It!” ‘The series in Honolulu wrote “finis” to the collegiate football ‘No More Baseball? George Earnshaw “I'm through with baseball,” de. clares George Earnshaw, accord- ing to reports from Philadelphia’s sporting fraternity, because the Chicago White Sox weteran hurler was reputedly offered a salary cut in his 1935 contract. S0 COACHING'S ONE TOUGH J0B? JUST READ THIS Take the Case of Glenn (Pop) Warner— Get New Angle 5f water has gone under the bridge PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 10.—A lot sincé Glenn (Pop) Warner pulled in his law shingle in favor of @ football career, but get him in a yarn-spinning mood and you're still sure to hear about the season he turned out winning teams at two different schools. Schools, mind you, as far apart as Towa State, in the Midwest, and the University of Georgia, far be- low the Mason and Dixon Line. The accomplishment is just an- In bidding his Io;:‘z{e;’coachvg'oud‘ you're through, you're all wash- >d up. You can't take it.” “Yeah, and how about yourself?” Ingram came back; “youre an old has-been yourself. You're finished.” A warm handshake lasted fully other indication that the “old fox"” | nickname they gave Warner when his Carlisle Indians pulled the “hunchback” play on the much- surprised Harvards thirty years ago, might have been applied ten |years earlier—in 1896, when he | proved himself a successful “com- muting coach” and a very astute business man at one and the same | time. | The way Pop explains it, the time was shortly after his graduation from Cornell. He'd opened a law office in his home town of Spring- ville, N. Y, but business was such that young Mr. Warner got thc idea there was a one-man de- pression on—and he was it. | “In fact,” Pop recalls today, ‘I didn’t have a case for more tha: two months after I opened m | office.” Lucky en Grid But Fate, frowning on the lawyer Warner, turned the sunny side of her face to young Glenn in mole- | skins. “About the first of st,” says Pop, “the manager ofY the next year's Cornell team—the 1896 squad —received a letter from Iowa State College asking him to recommend a Cornell player to coach at Iowa| State. | “The manager brought the letter |to me, and, although I still wanted | to practice law, the $25 a week and expenses looked plenty good. So I decided to take the job from the | 15th of August to Thanksgiving Day—the dates stipulated. | “But when I got to thinking it | over, I decided that if Iowa Smtei could pay $25 a week, some other | college probably would offer more. So I wrote to every one listed in the almanac, asking if they were nterested in getting a coach. Better Offer “Along came a letter from Geor- , offering me $35 a week and 'Xxpenses to take over the coaching Job from Septetnber 15 on. “Right then and there, deciding I could swing both jobs, I wrote ‘o Towa State officials, telling them I'd take their job for one month, August 15 to September 15, and then I'd go to Georgia “Towa took me up, offered me! $150 and expenses for the month, and I took both jobs. | “Both teams were successful. As | I recall, Towa State won five and ‘ost three and Georgia was beaten only three times in ten starts. “I remember, too, that the great- est thrill I ever got out of coaching | was that season when Iowa State licked Northwestern. I wasn't even at the game, having gone to Geor- out that the underdog Iowa State boys scored five times on the big fellows, you can bet I was plenty i thrilled.” After that first season, the law | practice and anything other than| I W Pay’nTakit | George Bros. LOWER LIQUOR PRICES ALWAYS Pay'n Takit George Bros. Phone Your Orders! Store open until midnight PO JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNFR DRUG STORE" P. 0. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY Every Month in the Year AUCTION SALES DATES 1935 January 16 February 13 March 13 April 10 May 15 June 12 July 10 August 14 September 11 October 9 November 13 December 11 Special Sales Held on Request of Shippers Advances will be’made as usual when requested. Transferred by telegraph if desired. The Seattle Fur Exchange 1008 Western Avenue Seattle, Wash. LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Philco—General Electric Agency FRONT STREET Shop in Juneau! “, PAINTS—OILS Builders’ and Shef HARDW _RI i L|' Thomas Hardware Co. ! FINE | | Watch and Jewelry Repairing | at very reasonable rates il | il “ PAUL BLOEDHORN FRONT STREET INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 neau High School vs Douglas High School at 7:30 o’clock (Gastineau Channel prep title son marked by extensive use of the, forward and lateral pass, Minne-| sota and Alabama stood out in the| career of Arleigh Williams, Cali-[a minute without another spoken |football was packed in mothballs fornia's colorful and capable cap—' 1934 intercollegiate football strug- gle and the New York Giants stole the professional show from the Chicago Bears. While Knox and Hobart colleges | gained dubious fame for their rec- ord of 27 straight defeats, the Gophers thundered to a Big Ten championship and an Associated | Press poll of the experts showed: them to be generally accepted as the outstanding team of the year, despite Alabama’s more impressive scoring record. The Crimson Tide rolled out 287 points to 32 for its ! buzzing game); Krause's Concreters vs. DeMolays at 8:30 o'clock (City League second half opener). As though the second game of the Gastineau Channel high school championship series and the open- ing tilt of the second half of the City Basketball League were not enough to start Juneau hoop fans about tomorrow night's doubleheader here, a most start- ling announcement was made pub- lic today. Kinky Bayers, leading scorer opponents, while Minnesota scored in the first half of the City League NEAR DEATH ON DOCTOR'S TABLE p 4 1L Y SPORTS CARTOON-- | | i CHICAGO, I, Jan. 10.— Dr.l‘ Harold Bernard Cassidy, testifying in the trial of Attorney Louis Pi- | quett, charged with shielding the | Testimony Given Regard- ing Face-lifting Oper- ation in Chicago 270 to its opponents’ 38. Playing this year with a new football, which admittedly changed the game very little, only nine teams remained unbeaten or un- tied, and 10 others, including Stan- ford, were unbeaten but tied once. Santa Clara's 7-7 tie was the only mark against Stanford, but did not keep the Cards from representing the West against Alabama in the Rose Bowl game. In additionr to Minnesota and Alabama, the undefeated and un- tied teams were Birmingham-South- ern, Augustana of Illinois, Kirks- ville, Mo. Teachers; East Texas Teachers, Tufts of Massachusetts; Trinity of Connecticut, and Upper Towa. The Associated Press named the following players on its all-Amer- ica team: Hutson, Alabama, and Larson, Minnesota, ends; Lee, Ala- bama, and Reynolds, Stanford, tackles; Barclay, North Carolina, and Hartwig, Pittsburgh, guards; Lester, Texas Christian, center; Grayson, Stanford, quarterback; Borries, Navy, and Wallace, Rice, halfbacks; and Lund, Minnesota, fullback. The greatest surprise of the year was Yale's 7-0 victory over Prince- ton, ending the Tigers' string of victories, which had reached 15. — - — Shop in Juneau! |and star center for the DeMolays, | will not play tomorrow night! 3 Jate desperado, John Dillinger, said | It was learned today that the the gangster n_early died under the big red-haired ace has an illness|ether undergoing an operation by which will keep him on the side- Cassidy and Dr. Wilhelm Loeser wg |lines at least for a week. Inas-|Fevamp his features last May 28. He | |much as the fraternal five is| Was saved by arm_xcml respiration. | !known to have definite hopes of a| A second operation on Dillinger | § i i June 3 lifted his face. championship for this second half, | 2 | | Bayers’ loss is a definite set- Homer VanMeter obliterated Dil- | i linger’s fingerprints. back for it. { S 8 . For, in the second game of Dr. Cassidy said his fee for the | morrow night's double bill on the face-lifling operation was $1,200, | high school floor, the Demolays are ‘handled through Piquett and his | scheduled to facela greayy | dssistant Arthur O'Leary. !slreng(.hened Krause Concreter | . O'Leary, who pleaded guilty, also {Hneup. The DeMolays and the 88Ve testimony at the trial yester- | Krauses tied for second place in |98y { the first half play. So, the stage | is set for a great Second half | MAYOR’S BOA1 ARRIVES | opener. The Sitka, schooner owned byi Yesterday, the DeMolays an- Mayor Isadore Goldstein, reached | nounced the addition of Harry |port at 2 o'clock this morning from Brandt, former leading scorer for Seattle. The vessel, skippered by | the Alaska College quintet. At the | Capt. William Doucett, left Seattle | same time the Krause five told of |Saturday noon. She brought a load Bill Nikish and Dave Turner, two of freight. Her southbound depar- new men expected to bolster that |ture is set for sometime next week. | quintet. et eeii e But the City League opener GAZILOFF IN HOSPITAL won't be the only feature tomorrow.| Sam Gaziloff was taken to St.| No, sir; not by a long way. For, Ann's Hospital in an ambulance | at 7:30 o'clock, Douzlas and Ju- this morning, suffering from an | neau high school teams will square | attack of influenza. off in the second contest of their | championship playoff for the Gas- | OLD NEWSPAPERS tineau Channel title. That game| In bundles fo: sale at The Em- —_— ., —— tain. I word. The coach and his star pu-;ful' good so far as Pop was con-| pil parted! ) cerned. Wy WNNER 'OF TE NARRAGANSETT (SPECIAL AND "HE 8AY' (MEADOWS HAVDICAP 1S " ByPap *entzReD W TE $100000 . SANTA_AN(TA HARDICAR, | MOST OF GiE: B SEASON HoPANG! ordinarily would be a Stellar at- | pire office, 25c. Fine for starting traction by itseif. our. fires these chilly. mornings. CONNORS MOTOR CO. GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected BAILEY’S CAFE Short Octens “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. D e | —— Harri Machine S[lop “ELECTROL—Of Course” WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 24-Hour Service Beer, it desired Merchants' Lunch