The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 13, 1936, Page 5

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" " BRIN(,ING UP FATHER YOU HEARD WHAT | SAD- | INSIST ON YOU GIVING MY SINGING - TEACHER. A PART IN ONE OF THE MOVIES- AGAIN VICTORS OVER STATE 5 Huskies v\XWn Second Straight Game in Bas- ketball Conference SEATTLE, Jan. 13—The Univer- sity of Washington Saturday night scored the second straight victory over the Washington State basket- ball five by a of 40 to 23 in a Northern Divis pame. The Huskies won 30 to 26 Friday « | SUNDAY FINDS MANY SKIERS OUT ON BILLS Douglas Trail, Fvergreen Bowl and Basin Road Popular for Sport Ideal skiing conditi lured many Juneau folk to the cnow- slopes yesterday, with the D ski trail visited by the throng this year. Many other winter sport: iasts were found up the B: and in Evergreen Bowl Icy streets provided thrills several minor casualties for childr and others who spent the day coast- ing. Members of the Juneau Ski Club gave instructions to beginners on one of the slopes of the Dougl trail, and many other skiiers trekk four miles back to the start of the entht n ro: trail to try the course in its en- tirety. Plans are still progressing for the down hill races to be held by the ski club on February 16, according to Vice President Ernest Parsons. A sion Coast Conference largest | n BAH-I| SUPPOSE THE NEXT THING SHELL WANT TO , PUT HER DOG"FIFI IN A LEADING K 80B CAPTAIN OF WE PURDUE BOILERMAKERS WHO ARE GUNNING For MIOHER- BlG TEN CovRT TTLE CopcH LAMBERTS COURT TEAMS HAVE won EIGHT Ble TEN TTLES SINCE HE WENT, -ro \T%wus rved by The Associated Press 00 ammiehts b SOLDIERS’ QUINTET SEEKS 'GAMES HERE BlI-L FAGES Three basketball games in juneau with leading local teams are sought by the soldiers of Chilkoot Bar- HARD F|GHT | racks, according to L. J. Holm- quist, President of the Juneau | City League. Holds Out‘ The army men informed Holm- | quist that they would like to leave Ior Juneau on January 16, aboard Senate Bloc Against Abandonment of | gold trophy has been donated forl the winner of the men's event by Dan Mahler, who supervised the' building of the Douglas trail R OREGON STATE BEATS IDAKO, TWO STRAIGHT 13— CORVALLIS, Oregon, Jan. Oregon State swamped Idaho 45 to| 19 Saturday night in the second Northern Division Coast Conference basketball game, of the season played here. Oregon State took the openinrv game Friday night 31 to 24. - SPORT SLANTS The 18,000 fans who jammed into Madison Square Garden to see the basketball game between Purdue and MNew York University were rewarded with a contest so dramatic, so thrill- ing that they were left limp from emotional reaction after the final Wl e sounded. ew York University’s undefeated team staged a great second-half -omeback and staved off a determ- ined bid by Purdue in the closing minutes to score a 43-41 victory over the Boilermakers and chalk up the first defeat suffered by the Big Ten champions at the hands of a non- conference opponent in two sea- sons. Purdue enjoyed a 20-14 lead at| the end of the first half after hav- ing outplayed an over-anxious and tense N. Y. U. team. The Violets came back fighting after the inter- mission. With five minutes to play, they led Purdue 42-31, and appar- ently had the game sewed up. Kessler Cust Loose At this stage of the game the Boilermakers, led by Bob Kessler, cut loose with a rally that all but over- took the tiring N. Y. U. team. Thirty seconds to play and Purdue was just one point behind. A Boilermaker forward missed an easy lay-up shot and with it went Purdue’s hope of Kessler, the Boilermakers’ captain and all-America forward, was the| leading scorer with five field goals and four foul conversions for a total of 14 points. He was all over the floor on the offense and defense. A slightly built lad who weighs Pt Traditional Trade Rights their boat James Fornance. About 15 men will make the trip if ar- By GEORC McM: { MR JUIGGS WE HAVE A SCENE NI Ty TO TAKE WHERE WE HAVE TO (™ [ THROV. THE HERO OFF A HIGH CLIFF- IT'S A DANGEROUS FEAT. WE N\u\a‘r GET A’DOULBLE" TO y TAKE OUR LEADING MAGGE-SEND - YOUR SINGING < TEACHER DOWN| /, TOTEE. . Ljruolo { I % /‘\, 0.0 field, Mass, Y. M. C. A. College By Pap NEW DEPARTURE = = Allen Is Bell-Wether ’lhc Big Sm led by the veteran pumoml many experime 100k~ | ing to improvement of basketball. KESSLER'S | Alen, whose 1 as a ¢ es- sezcACTY | tifies as to his ability, was the 1S PULLING moving spirit last season in the ex- 5A¢ESF?@E i pe tal games in which the OF HE { Bl 8; !d * Three baskets were hoisted to the 12-foot WTH AL BUT 1g X Adopts O e il Al eoals o INPOSSIBLE 'R. » B it N fC- evel, \\1%\ fie {’ .h')‘fl‘ stepped up = HOT ing but Not of Lir to the value of three points, in- cus Varielv stead of two. His theory was that G | goals two feet above standard ! height would equalize the abilities i KANSAS CITY, Jan. 13. — The of "ok and short. play The three-ring idea, whereby Big Six hoops are m“‘ lUVl'Ml‘"m ‘b'c \';“ conference quintets hope to take floo, };owc;'c" ey ot e the “greater circle” route direct to 2 N, Tabulated statistics of the “three- | better basketball, came through its ‘pub]ic debut with flying colors. oirle! games will be presented to the Naticnal Association of Basket- The innovation concocted at a ball Coack i the Riles C meting of five conference coaches "2/ Coachcs and the Rules Com- calls'ifor ;@ third circle’ 13 ' feet -in mittee. Whether the idea will be- dinmstiaimilar to:the two . free| 2oM€ q nx,u'.n‘- in the national throw - circles—inscribed about the,:'¢> depends lar upon " these center~jump circle. ¥ v R All tip-offs after “held ball” are | executed in the nearest of the!* * * ° i . | three circles—the center ring or ° A THE BOT. . either of the two free throw areas g i e " oty —and ‘all players except the two T jumpers are barred from the circle Gastineau until the ball is tapped Arthur Lundberg, City; Ray C. Coaches expressed the opinion| LC¥e, Soapstone Point; Mrs. Helen this “zoning of the jump ball Safford; Art Nyquist; Tom John- weculd speed up the game, elimin- SOn, Wrangell; Leona Bowling; Lon ate many out-of-bounds plays and, Johnscn, Wrangell. because of the restriction keeping Alackan players others than the jumprs . and Mrs. W. Larson, Hoonah; r‘uL of the “jump-ball” area, would Ed Eglend, Chichagof; Ben Wilson, the advantage enjoyed by Juneau; Herbert Meyexys, Nome; nally tall players. They said Rokert Johnson, Hoonah. it would increase scoring, too. | A \"I‘l()\"l-" TTFR\‘ A First Test “Highly Satisfactory i sty 6. B First tested wnen Kansas met g No 7 Tuesday night at eight Ottawa (Kas.) Universily in a non- conference game, the idea was de- scribed as highly satisfactory, par-| _aqy. ticularly from the standpoint of & curtailing out - of - bounds plays. Heretofore, many “jump balls” oc- curred near the edges of the court, where ' the slightest tip in the & wrong direction might send the sphere outside. When the ball is tossed up in one of the three large circles, it takes more than a tap to send it across the boundaries. In fact, it o'clock. LILLIAN G. WATSON, Secretary. ¢m don’ have to be 2ich: to enjoy 2ac/ whiskey!” MANAGERS OF BASKETBALLTO - HAVE SESSION City League team managers will takes a good healthy slug. ! hold a basketball conference at the The new wrinkle also gives Juneau High School at 7:30 o'clock | coaches the opportunity to work tonight, according to Leonard Holm- |Out scoring plays from three dis- the floor in the the second game i rangements are satisfactorily com-| pleted, and the games are now ;. the Senate Foreign Relations Com- |contingent upon a guarantee of | | | mittee is reported to be holding out | expenses for the soldiers. | against any abandonment of tradi- | tional American trading rights un- \ ‘uer the pending neutrality lcglsla- | | with this disclosure came also the i prediction from Chairman (m‘ald‘ BEST anlER P. Nye of the Munitions Committee that another week of gquestioning |J. P. Morgan and his associates Metcalf Second and Bar-| ragar, Jr., Third in Tour- | ney Won by Firemen ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. — The ‘freedom of the seas” bloc within 1wauld produce a growing record of | {modifications in the World War ‘nr trality policy coinciding with the | in the business of supplying material to the Allies. Cbairman Nye did not expand his| ;rcmarks. k | | | er w O.h_/ 165 pounds and stands six feet; The 4-team bowling match play \'an Kessler looks more like a bean- |at the Elks Alleys last week—won by pole than a basketball player, but h= | the Firemen—resulted in the follow- | makes up for what he lacks in nat- |ing player averages: |ural physical endowment with seem- | Player Team Games Ave. ‘ ingly untiring erergy, a keen basket | Cleveland, Firemen, . 9 197 jeve and amazing speed. His flaming Metcalf, Firemen 9 192 {competitive spirit marks him as one ! J. Barragar, Jr., Elks 9 186 | of the greatest in the long line of Kaufmann, Legion 9 182 | |outstanding hardwood players de- |Sabin, Firemen 9 182 |veluped by Coach Ward Lambert at |Bavard, Elks 9 180 the Boilermaker institution since the | Lavenik, Firemen 9 179 | World War. | Boyle, Federals 9 179 Kessler has been called the jump- | F. Henning, Legion 9 173 | ing-jack of the hardwood and not Hendrickson, Firemen 9 17 without reason. He fairly swarms | Stewart, Legion 9 1’17; over loose balls on scrambles under Sides, Legion 6 175 | |the basket, and frequentiy emerges Bringdale, Elks 3 175 {from the wild melees to bounce off | Radde, Elks 9 174 | the floor, twist like a corkscrew in|Benson, Federals .9 172 | !midair, and flip in one of his de- Petrich, Legion 3 172 ceiving left-hand shots. He is«equally | A. Henning, Elks 9 167 | adept at long range, and is at hisllverscn. Federals 9 163 best against tough opposition. | Stevenson, Federals 6 163 | Below Par | Walmer, Legion 9 162 Coach Lambert does not believe ' F. Barragar, Elks 6 162 his present team measures up to his iAdams Federals 6 150 championship quintets of the past o two seasons. Last year’s team lost HAS APPENDECTOMY three games, all to Big Ten foes, and Nels Mork, Hoonah skipper, who on the eastern jaunt defeated Ford- arrived in Juneau Saturday on the ham and Temple. | Roedda, was operated upon yester- Since taking over the reins at Pur- |day morning in St. Ann’s Hospital due in 1919, Lambert turned in 133 |for appendicitis. He is reported in Big Ten victories compared with 56 |satisfactory condition. conference defeats, for a percentage | e of .712, unequalled by any coach in | MRS. HOOKER BETTER the conference. In all games played ‘The condition of Mrs. Katherine during the 17-year period his teams Hooker, confined in St. Ann’s Hos- have won 224 and lost 75. | pital with a severe chest congestion, Lambert's history at Purdue shows | is reported today as substantially I that his poorest year was his first— improved. 1919—when the Boilermakers wound | —,,——— {up seventh in the Big Ten standing. \ HAS BROKEN CLAVCLE ‘The next year they advanced to sec-| James Simon, A-J employee, en- ond place and since then have won | tered St. Ann’s today suffering from the title eight times and have never |a broken clavicle and minor abras- dropped out of the first division. |quist, president of the loop. General business of the circuit will tatives are urged to attend ‘mll rpmove the cause of your head- of the advance of the game since ache, asthma, rheumatism, ulaln St. | tinct points on same manner that center tip-off plays have been mapped for years. It minimizes the advantages of a tall cehter in that virtually every | player—tall, short, fat, lean—will | jump at some time during the game without the handicap of crowding | by the others. _.uummenls' The idea is another straightened out, Mr. Holmquist , and all managers or represen- - - > - ENSCH'S SIENTIFIC chiropractic indication SCHENLEY'S high blood pressure,| Dr. James Naismith, now a mem- nLB “UAKER etc. Phone 451, 206\bm eof the University of Kansas BHAND STRAIGHTWH[SKEY —adv.' raculty, invented it nt the Spring- BLAZING A TRAIL FOR FASTER, HIGHER FLYING FOUR times Wiley Post risked his life trying to.fly across America in ‘the sub-stratosphere. He never made it. Public attention, attracted by the danger of his feat and the oddity of his “man from Mars" oxygen suit, dwindled as each attempt ended in a perfectly executed "belly skid” landing somewhere short of the destination. Did Wiley Post roar along those high uncharted airways in vain? Were those flights fail- ures? “Nol” says Billy Parker of Bartlesville, Okla., noted flyer, aeronautical engineer and co-worker of Post. In a series of four exciting articles written for The Associated Press and The Daily Alaska Empire Parker relates little-known facts about Post's flights, appraises his contribution to faster, higher flying of the future. These stories will give you a new appre- ciation of the daring flier who died last summer in Alaska. Read the first one tomorrow in THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE WILEY POST: Magellan of the Stratosphere | T \ ions due to an accident while at work. | MWU—M‘MM HESESSE RS b These men have been named by the Republican National Commit. tee to arrange for the party’s convention in Cleveland June 9, 1936. Top, left to right, Charles D. Hilles and Henry P. Fletcher. Below: George de B. Keim, Ralph E. Williams and Lafayette B. Gleason. (Associated Press Photo) WE HAVE BEEN VERY COMFORTARLE SINCE wg INSTALLED THE SPARK | NQ WORK MODJRT ,JUST HEAT P e e e e i tng PR B A S BT X DI S RS AR SRR S KD INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 Juneau i s Alaska OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single 0-2 rings J uneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Seward Free Delivery (" BAILEY’S "~ CAFE “WHERE YOU MEET YOU~ FRIENDS" A Hour Service Merchants’ Lunch Short Ordery Regular Dinasr e UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. PR SR DR WINDOW CLEAN NG PHONE 485

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