The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 17, 1935, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 17, 1935 BRINGING UP. FATHER WELL-MAGGIE'S BROTHER CANT ALWAYS WIN AT THE RACES, SO | GAVE HIM ALL HE WON ME-TO PUT ON THE HORSE HE SAID THAT WOULD WIN FOR © 1935, King Features Syndicate, s Great Britain m-.lu- reserved. | THOLGHT SO- THE HORSE LOST- I'M GLAD THAT MONEY IS GONE~ I'LL 6IT RID OF ME MONEY YET - THAT LOST- BROTHER WAS AFRAID TO PH YES-| JUST READ THE HORSE GUESS MOTH CR5 IONE THE BAD IT'S TOO BAD-| LOST ALOT OF MONEY ON THAT HORSE: | GET TO WHAT DO YOU THINK? BROTHER JUST PHONED THAT HIS CAR BROKE DOWN AND HE COULDN'T THE RACES, SO HE COULDN'T BET- | BOWLING IS (ON TONIGHT, ELKS ALLEYS SR | Due to the fact that the alleys are being dressed to keep them in con- dition for the heavy winter sched- ule and that it was lodge night, there was no Conference bowling at the Elks alleys last night. Conference bowling will be re-|d sumed tonight with the following games scheduled for the Pacific ‘Coast Conference: Webfooters vs.| Trojans, 7:30 p. m:; Brones vs. Cou- gars, 8:30 p. m.; Indians vs. Hus- kies, 9:30 p. m. 1 Tomorrow the Big Ten Conference will bowl the following games: Bad- gers vs. Wolverines, 7:30 p. m.; Buck- | eyes vs. Boilermakers, 8:30 p. m.; Hoosiers vs. Irish, 9:30 p. m. e PORTLAND GATE TOTRIBEHELD UP BY LAWSUIT FORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 17.—Argu- ments were heard in Circuit Court here on whether the Portland Base- ball Club of the Pacific Coast League should pay the Seattle baseball club’s share of May and September gate receipts here to Walter Ruether, Se- | attle manager or to a creditor of | the Seattle club. Circuit Judge Crawford took the | case under advisement. | The Seattle club’s share of the re-| ceipts for the two series, amnunting} to about $4,900, was garnisheed by | the Giant Manufacturing Company after the company, which had in-| stalled arc lights for the Indians,| and filed suit to recover on a judg- | ment for $8,785 obtained against the | club at Seattle in December, 1933. | About $2,400 of the receipts from the two series in Portland already has been paid to Ruether by the Portland club for the benefit of me\ Seattle players. | e o 1 | | ANSWER QUERY A Juneau man has asked the Sporting Editor of the Empire to| give the following information on| the recent world series attendance, receipts and shares. Here’s the answer: Attendance, 286,672. “Receipts—$1,173,794. | Commissioner’s share—$176,072.50. | **Players’ pool, 414,507.60. Each club’s share, $153,324.13. Each Jeague’s share, $153,324.13. *Includes $100,000 from radio. **Includes Radio cut. Players share | in first four games only. i —— e — MEMBERS OF ROCKY PASS GUN CLUB GET | DEER BUT FEW BIRDS Six members of the Rocky Pass Gun Club returned last night from | a two week hunting trip, based at| their lodge on Big John’s Bay. “It was a fine trip except that the | flights of birds all came in every | night after we had gone to bed, and | left in the morning before we got up,” | Dr. Robert Simpson, one of the| hunters said today. “However we did | get five deer and some birds. The | weather was perfect and our rain| coats were excess baggage mrough-l out the trip.” Ed Jones, Guy McNaughton, Allen i Shattuck, John Marshall, and Tom | McCaul, were the other members of | the party. The gasboat Wanderer, | Capt. Kel Larson, transported the hunters. ‘ CRY Strai, !t’his ; Overshadowir Menaces B e JOE LOUIS (This is the first of three ctories on the fistic career of Joe Louis and the future he faces). By CHARLES NORMAN NEW YORK, Oct. 17.—Whith- en the Brown Bomber? Like Alexander the Great at 29, he may grieve that there are no more worlds for him to con- quer, At 21 Joe Louis, tte Belting Benedict, can glance disdain- fully from his perch in the cor- ner, arms stretched out on the ropes, and ask: “Where is the opposition?” Three times in a row the Svelte ‘aluvger has battered the best the exorable pugilistic fates dropped nto the ring to face him. Two were former champions, one | hard to reach because of his clumsy | maneuvers and his gigantic height, F istiana’s “Crown Prince,” 12 All Rivals, raddock Reign JIM BRADDOCK but when reached, toppled and was ! counted out; the other, more dur-| able, but with no defense against a | piston-like left, went down in a bloody grimace. The third asked that Ir.he slaughter be stopped. Levinsky, Carnera, Baer— The fists that battered down Pri- | mo Carnera and beat a crimson tat- |too on Max Baer rule the heavy- weight realm today. To gain his high perch in the pugilistic spotlight, Joe Louis met and conquered the best. He made short shift of Battling Levinsky. Another might have. | He took on Carnera, stalking his lumbering prey, solving the awk- ward ambling of his ponderous op- ponent and then bringing him down. Baer had done that, too—had done it first. He took on Baer, and the Pugilis- tic Pierrot, one of the most colorful figures the prize ring has ever 'DAILY SPORTS CARTOON- NEBRASIKK. %, pei)) 28-T VICTORY s ovews 3 WINNERS OF THE M . VALLEY L.A.A, couFeRENCE’ CHAMPONSHIP | -nsesz KA +21G SIX " TITLE AN zaais e . | champion has had to face—the ruler ’known‘ went down—the first time his magnificent form had touched canvas; then he went down again. The third time he stayed down—the ‘Airsc time in his career that he had | been counted out. Against Mincing Max, James J.| | Braddock left-handed his way to Ilhe title through 15 weary rounds. | To reach this shot the erstwhile stevedore had left-jabbed Art Lasky { through 15 wearying rounds. | The conclusion is inevitable: there is nothing in Braddock’s record that can put him in a class with the ‘Tawny Terror from Detroit who mar- ried his sweetheart two hours before his engagement in the Yankee Sta- dium and left her for a moment to massacre Max. Nothing? Braddock Has Courage One thing cannot be dismissed. In the annals of the ring it is what fight followers have paid homage to, from the earliest days to the era of Dempaey. It is courage, heart, the will to win that makes a battered, ! bloody figure stretched out on the canvas get up and start over again, face to the foe, fists to the foeman'’s | face. | And in that one respect Braddock !may stand alongside Sullivan and Dempsey, without so much as a “by your leave.” As long as he is in there, Brad- | dock will be sticking out that left of his and standing toe-to-toe. The heavyweight champion of the world, | scaling 195 pounds, is no bigger than his heart. But when that match comes—the | Cinderella Man versus the Detroit | Cynamiter—the man who left the elief rolls to win a crown, against he most dangerous contender a | of the pugilistic realm will enter the | ring the underdog. This tells the story: | JOE LOUIS: Max Baer, KO, 4 rounds. JAMES J. BRADDOCK: Max Baer, decision, 15 rounds. SPORT SLANTS It is quite generally known that two things are expected of the foot- ball coach at the University of Ne- braska. First of all the Cornhuskers must win the Big Six conference| championship and come up with at least one player of all-America cal- iber. If the 28—7 trimming Coach Dana Xenophon Bible’s lads handed Chi- cago in the season’s curtain raiser | can be taken as an indication of| their power, the Cornhuskers are| likely to have the conference cham- pionship wrapped up before the sea- son gets far under way. It is a bit early tp be nominating All-America candidates but Lloyd Cardwell looks like a better than fair bet for a place on the mythical eleven. He did| some fancy ball carrying in scoring’ three touchdowns against Chicago. The Cornhuskers were a pretty | fair sophomore team last season and evidently Coach Bible has suc- ceeded in moulding the same group into a club that will give any team it meets an interesting afternoon of football. | SLOW MOTION “CLINIC” j | Bible was responsible for the in- troduction of an innovation which enabled him and his staff tc take their fcotball machine apart for cli- nical examination weekly, make re- adjustments and put it back to- gether. The taking apart was ac- complished by slow motion pictures developed to a high degree of per- fection by Dr. Bert L. Hooper, chair- man of prosthetics in the college of dentistry. Dr. Hooper was drafted as head cameraman three years ago by the toaching staff because he dabbled in amateur movies. He promptly | discarded the orthodox camera fin- der and substituted one of his own | invention, a sort of gun-sight affair which permits a constant view of the entire gridiron and allows the cam- era to follow the flight of the ball. The cost of the film was rather high, $45 to $75 per game. Each game required 1,000 to 1,200 feet of celluloid. But the resourceful ath-| letic department headed by Bible| made the movies almost a self li- quidating liability by throwing in a few good crowd shots, between- halves stunts, bands, and the like, and opening the presentations in | the public at the modest charge of a dime per person. | | PLAYERS SOMETIME WINCE | | braska football-minded. T L] escape detection from the stands | or bench. “Dressed up” wtih titles, close-ups of players, local color, crowd shot: etc,, the films are used to keep Ne- They are AMER, LIBERTY . ey LEAG, BOBS U state at luncheon and civio club| WASHINGTON,! ©et. 17— The! meetings, boy scout gatherings and | American Liberty League, through & before church organizations. | committee of 59 attorneys, is wills ——to—— | ing to defend the free constitution: An automatic photo-electric cell |Fights of any citizens unable to pay, device counts the number of auto- | counsel fees. mobiles using the Wawena road| This statement was made wdn tunnel between Yosemite National| by James M. Beck, former Solicitor Park and the Mariposa Grove of | General. i big trees. ‘ Beck sald the committee is studys 1 ing New Deal legislation with a view, I to pawng on the consmuuomum SHOP IN JUNEAU! e Whereas Nebraska’s rabid gridiron | fans flock to the showings, in large | | numbers, the players are sometimes | reluctant to go into the theatre. The minute disclosures of the camera’s| eye turn up tactical flaws that might ‘ Apartments Scarce in Seattle Wire or write reservations NOW THE PRESIDENT APARTMENT HOTEL 1119 OLIVE WAY SEATTLE WALKING DISTANCE RATES: Day, Week, Month AN APARTMENT BUILDING DISTINGUISHED BY THE QUALITY OF ITS SERVICE; THE HIGH STANDARD OF ITS TENANTRY AND ITS EXCEPTIONAL LOCATION ATTRACTIVE NEW LOBBY ‘The most exacting tenant will admire these beautiful apart- ments. NEW decorations and NEW furnishings. You may choose either Early American or modernistic design; 2 rooms from $42.50, which includes electricity, elevator and switchboard service, Garage. MANAGED BY EXPERT RENTAL SERVICE White & Bollard, Inc. All Prices, Sizes, Locations. 1222—2nd Ave. MAin 4711 GERMAN BAN ON | JEWS MAY KEEP { ., HARVARD AWAY CAMBRIDGE, Mass.,, Oct. 17.— Harvard University will not send its athletes to the Olympic Games at Berlin next year if the German gov- ernment attempts to hinder compe- tition of Jewish entries, William J. Bingham, director of athletics, indi- cated. MARTHA SOCIETY DINNER REMEMBER Martha Society Din- ner, Presbyterian Church Parlors, October 23. Adults 65¢, children 50c. —adv. — et SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442, adv By Pap s CHICAGO ISSQURA AN Rights Reserved by Tne Associted Press The Right Way —The right way to rea over your shoulder onto the page. —The right LAMP to MAZDA LAMP, because it gives you good light at low cost. —The right size to use lamp for every lighting purpose . . . will be prescribed for you if 'you will come in and let us show you our large assortment of Edison Mazda Lamps. Alaska Electric Light JUNEAU—Phone 6 and Power Co. d is to let the light fall use is an EDISON . and there is a right DOUGLAS—Phone 18 o FR _With every THREE the player with an ticipate in - AWARD EE BOWLING GAMES rolled on ‘our alleys we will present opportunity to par- Free Turkey Award BRUNSWICK BOWLING ALLEYS EMILIO GALAO, Proprietor i Fistiana’s Crown Prince [ THE STORY of Joe Louis’ future, { his meteoric rise up the fistic lad- ! ‘ der and his early life is brought to you in a series of three articles starting today in The Empire | —JOE LOUIS HUNTERS! You can make this youwr headquarters be as-. . sured you will bag the limit. A wonderful game season in this viéinity has ° 19 been provul — MAKE us PROVE IT! Special weekly or monthly rates to winter guests or hunting warties. Sitka Hot Springs GODD:.!IK&’:I&ASKA HUNTING FISHING OPEN ALL NIGI-I'I' Alaskan Hotel Ltquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single 0-2 rings (OAL "= FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. | LUMBER | Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND, TC HAMS AND BACON—U. . Governn.ent Inspected For Every Purse and Every Purpose PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 41% 3 Gastineau Construction Co. . GENERAL CONTRACTING g E. J. COWLING, President Juneau, Alaska - .2 -

Other pages from this issue: