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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, DEC. 29, 1936. ¥ | BRINGING UP FATHER By GEORGE McMANUS s S I I e U R R S e . | GET UP- YOU WHERE [N THE SHUT UP- YOU AR FOR GOODNESS SAKE, BIG LOAFER- WORLD DOES THE CON- MAGGIE-THE ELECTION | | WHAT ? YOU'RE GO - SHE INTEND TO VENTION HALL AND WAS OVER YESTERDAY- ING OUT WITH Gao? LISTEN TO MY SPEECH- AND YOU WUZ NOT ME- DID YO WAKE VLL BE ELECTED ELECTT ME UPTOTELL MAYOR IN ®PITE OF 1 ME THAT ? NOu — s N (1[0 (nflhflfi | . | » | | | o ENGLISH MUST | j | | BUT LOSES FOR Sport | sy N NATL. { | | . \ CARNEGIE TECH | Slants | { | — S PUNTES FOR. L > | b e SEASON AVERAGED ‘, ikl } ] " . Some of the suggestions for im- | * . i |’ Resumptlon of Conference | proving the present rule on inler-"Ph‘ladelphla and BOS‘OH Bowling Sees West Point, |ference with forward passes may | Moguls Refuse Waivers | . G |be advanced for the good of foot- | C b I f ld ) | M.LT., Manhattan Win Bl bl G g iaFly o o | on Cub Infielder | ~ BALOWIN-WALLACE - {can “smell a rat” It's the old| | As though nothing unusual had occuhrre:. B::h IFaxlur, the 'f(arn: \!/my L i ther again at the 72 uarrel. T a vhose am| NEW YORK, Dec. 20.—Opening * pitcher, went right ahead with his high school class work at Van : Elfsor{:sntgmtgohg: e .04;%:‘3585 ey im;;[flf]?;‘(fi‘n‘:’:fi“;n S“D':‘:‘: of the Major League baseball meet- Meter, la. after Commissioner K. M. Landis ruled he "21‘08"308'&".';'2{ i layoff, the conference bowlers -2 - ficial ruled interference against INES here was accompanied by a of the Cleveland baseball club. The decision meant a X . O YARDS a¥ bz ve. ARE g Y | the youth who sot a strikeout record last summer, because two big brought with them plenty of the cne of his players wants defending |Brooklyn Dodger attempt to send o 0" nc had offered that sum for his contract. He is shown here . spirit of battle, none of last even- backs to have more latitude in infielder Woody English to the St. in his schoolroom. (Associated Press Photo) | ing's matches being decided until bt 4 warding off pass attacks. On the |Louls Browns, only to be balked AL TS iy s o well along in the third game. R o:her hand, you hear no complaint when the Philadelphia P)?llhes and | | Exceptionally high scores were <aM from the coach on the other side BOSton Bees refused to waive on the EE E A E | missing last night, but Bob Brown, (-'k of the fence. He is perfectly satis- | former Chicago Cub. | rolling a lone hand for Carnegie ANC'S fied, and feels that the receiver Officials of the Phillies and Bees [ | Tech, turned in a good country should be protected. said they regarded English as too \ total of 537; which led the field oF TV'4S (HR (amg Wiy, with. many| YRiUakIS to be AlOwed ) move oub ‘ but was not quite a match for the | NESRASKA other suggestions for changes in Of the National League and into the | combined efforts of the West Point ' D \Y, GO7 OFF AN 82-| (1e rules. It looks very much as American. ; ¢ H — | i trio. k YARD 8Boor though the rules committee is go-| The Dodgers obtained English and| ggATTLE, Dec. 29. — Congress-| GALVESTON, Tex, Dec. 29. — | In the opening match, Paul Kegel P) AGANST OITT. ing to find itself with a bumper Fitcher Ray Henshaw in exchange map Mon C. Wallgren of Everett|Galveston will retain its franchise N of Annapolis, rolled a 208 in the | o crop of changes to consider. Prac-|0F Shortstop Linus Frey at the gnpounced he is prepared to lead|in the Texas League and the Buc- 1 final and deciding game of the tilt' tically every coach in the country MinOr league meeiings held at Mon- 5 fiznt in by of Washington caneers will be completely reor- | against M. I. T. to beat by five| has a pet plece of football legisla- | €8l |duck hunters for a revision of sea- | ganized, it has been announced by | pins the 203 game rolled by L. E., tion he would like to see enacted. Blacholder Sold L sonal hunting regulations wldich Rey. J. Koehler, acting president Iverson, the Engineers’ leader. But, | Probably because at some time or| . Ccorge Blaeholder, veteran right-/ycyiq give them a reasonable op-|of the Galveston Bascball Asso- névertheless, the Engineers over-| other he felt the sting of an of-|landed pitcher, was sold by the portunity to secure birds. clation, came the Navy lead to grab the | Loy , ficial ruling which did not sit so Cleveland Indians to the Milwaukee = wne gongressman pictured the| stockholders of the club met with match from the Middies. FERDYS well, Club of the American Association!ay k season just closed as one of | executors of the estate of the late The final match was featured Just glance over some of the M @ straight —cash transaction. y, most disastrous ever exper- Shearn Moody and local business i by the two-century game rolled.‘ PLACE -K/CKS changes suggested by prominent|Dleholder, who has been in and jenceq by the hunters of this re-|men in several conferences with by Mrs. Arthur Bringdale, as she | GAVE ST MARY'S 3 coaches: out of the majors for thirteen years, o the outcome that Shreveport’s bid, 5 and Carey Tubbs battled through | S/X PONTS AGANST 4 NGRAMS There is, as usual, a demand "\l Pe thirty-three noxt month.|” mo jaunch a movement to remedy made by W. D. Burnett of Glade- to a win for Manhattan over Bow- | FORDHAM DROP-KICKS from several quarters that the| ¢ WS obtained by the Indians (nis gituation, Congressman Wall- water, definitely was rejected, and . doin. i -ONE KICK COVERED Wow For- point after touchdown be &b[)]lshf‘d.‘fr{_)m the Philadelphia Athletics gren proposed a meeting of sports-| assurance given that the franchise ( The Richmond-Harvard mix | L6 yARDS NAYY OVER. (That one never fails to come up.) :la:»t RO |men to draw up recommendations would be kept here. opens tonight's conference session | D NOTRE DAME Of course, it comes from coaches| RIS T A T for a revision of the existing regu-| Partial success of the ticket-sell- at the Elks at 7:30 o'clock. Fol- | AL § who lost games by the slim mfll'mn"Claimant Loses Sult lations. ing campaign, which had the sale of lowing at 8:30, Notre Dame opposes | M N I . A A1) Rights Roserved by The Associaied Press of a single point. One enterprising | ! “There are plenty of ducks and 1,000 books as its objective, and Boston and at 9:30 Lafayette meets | tutor would count first downs as a | As Mae West Husband ! ined, “but the thirty would assure an attendance of 60, Knox. | 1936 substitute for the point after| day limit established two years ago 000 for the 1937 season, convinced " Last night's bowling scores at the » “touchdown | NEW YORK, Dec. 29. — Frank by the U. S. Biological Survey has stockholders that the goal could be Elks were: | 3 Q Wants Laterals Watched | Wallace, who has sought in the proved ruinously inadequate for the attained with several more weeks Annapolis e e ar ln b 0rts Others insist that the 15-yard|New York courts to prove himself hunter of work, Koehler said, and they Paul Kegel 163 143 208— 514 penalty for failure to pause for a|the husband of Mae West, lost his' “If recommendations, backed by decided to keep the franchise on the H. M. Hollmann 166 155 172— 493 | full second before putting the ball|case when Supreme Court Justice the unanimous opinion of Washing- strength of this belief. Approxi- Jack Finlay 147 147 147—%441 23" into play after shifting is too se- |Joseph M. Callahan granted an ton sportsmen are presented to me,” mately 400 of the books have been e e s e i — Racinz_\, vere. It should be reduced to five |Order vacating the serving of & he declared, “I will go before the sold, and a committee of business o Totals 476 445 527—1448 —— e 250 Ziea - —'yards, they argue, and plenty of jSummons on Miss West. Bioligical Survey and make every men is to be formed immediately to M L T money-winning owner, and Basil . officials back them up. Coaches| The actress contended that sheeffort to have them accepted.” |try to dispose of the remaining g L. E. Iverson ..146 157 203— 506 By ORLO ROBERTSON | James of Sunnyside, Wash., topped Husk c" IE who felt that their teams suffered |Was not a legal resident of New, e | 600 books. A Albert Wile 146 199 168— 513 the jockeys. ! when officials were lax in enforcing | YOrk and that therefore the service NOTRE DAME FAM“aY | Koehler and Jackie Atz, manager Bob Davlin 129 168 177— 474| NEW YORK, Dec. 20.—A pair of | 'pomnoon a son of the speedy the rule think 15 yards is a fair |W@S illegal. Justice Callahan used | jof the Buccaneers during the last — — — ——|3-year-olds, little known at the start pompey met defeat only tivios: it penalty and want to see the present | Wallace's own assertions in support| SOUTH BEND, Ind., Dec. 29— | half of the season, went to the mi- | Totals 421 524 548—1493; Of the year, wrote 1936 turf history ejont starts in earning $62,260. He u“ rs “g a" rule rigidly enforced. of his decision, pointing out that Mike Crowe, a junior at Notre nor league meeting at Monireal. Carnegie Tech with feats so dramatic that the per- |y oweq 1o Mary Hirsch's No Sir in | "Some would have the goal posts‘the plaintiff admitted he and Miss Dame, will be joined this year by Two outfielders, a catcher, one more h 2. E. Robertson.177 177 177—*531 | formance of other great thorough-| s jone start at Saratoga, came 1 2, returned to the goal-line. It|West had been separated for many his brother, Emmett, former In- seasoned pitcher to go with Ed R. R. Brown ....155 190 192— 537 |breds faded in the dusty wake of .. (o whip the Nation's best in ln wheel chalr shouldn't be necessary to add that |Years: |diana all-State high school quarter- | Cole, Orville Armbrust and Beryl Mrs. Darnell ..100 100 100—*300 | their flying hooves. the Belmont Futurity and then lost | they very likely have capable field-| Wallace's suit, therefore, is of no back, on the Irish cage team. The Richmond, and three outfielders are Spot S1T 17 17— 51| Bold Venture, survivor of a fireliy nys Mars Reaping Reward in —_— goal kickers and want to see that|VAlue to him in the New York Crowes have been winning letters sought by Koehler. [ — — — ——|at a 2-year-old, figured in two °f']the rich New England Futurity. | LONDON, Dec. 20—A 2,000-mile Phase of the game encouraged.| COUrts and his only apparent re-|at Notre Dame since 1923 when | ——————— L Totals .......449 484 486—1419|racing’s most dramatic finishes,| pnro Mars' Case Ace might have:w\fl' around England in a wheel Even at the risk of injury to the COUrse is to bring a similar action |Clem, 1925 foothall captain, won | The 50th anniversary of the un- West Point capturing the Kentucky Derby and | sfereq Pompoon an argument, but|chair—that’s the program of husky, players. in California. his first. The string of monograms |veiling of the Statue of Liberty in B. Duckworth ..190 143 189— 522|the Preakness flying the silks of lye was forced to retire after vwin-icrippled William Chambers of One coach, whose team had con- — e - was unbroken until 1934-35 when | New York harbor was celebrated re- C. B. Holland ..112 139 199— 450|Morton L. Schwartz. The bay SO |ning the Arlington Futurity. De- |Blackburn, |siderable difficulty trying to cope‘ Empire ads are read. the chain temporarily ended. cently. Mrs. Coughlin ...169 107 194— 470|0f St. Germans survived a great| gyt pope's Maedic piled up the fine| Today he is on another of those With lateral passes, would like to| ~ _ 777 e T e 5 Spot 20 20 29— gu|stretch drive by J. E. Widen's high- |yecorq of winning five straight!“grand tours” about the land in S a fifth official on the field — — — ——|ly-regarded Brevity to Win the|grapes at Saratoga, including the a home-made, hand-propelled chair. Whose sole duty would be to watch | Totals ......500 418 611—1529 roughly-ridden Derby. He came gopefyl, but was considered strictly| Sixty miles a day—that’s Cham- lateral-pass plays. The coach is Manhattan from behind to whip William Wood- |53 mud runner. Reaping Reward 'bers' speed. iof the opinion that at least half Carey Tubbs ....181 168 168— 517)ward’s Granville by a nose in the;rallowed up his New England vic-| He made his “go-cart” out of of the laterals attempted are il-| e John Walmer ..149 149 149—*447|Preakness and then was forced into|¢o1y with a triumph in the Jockey bicycle wheels and a box. legal. i Mrs. Bringdale .200 120 145— 465 |retirement with a bowed tendon. |Club stakes at Churchill Downs| Already he has been to John' Another coach with a small squad | i : — — — ——| Granville, after tossing his rider|and, as a result, probably will be O'Groats, the topmost tip of Scot- Would like unlimited substitutions | Totals .........530 437 462—1429 in the Derby and bowing to Bold well backed in the 1937 Kentucky land far to the north, and to Permitted so that his boys could | Bowdoin Venture in the Preakness, came back Derby future books along with Jef- |Land’s End, the “last stop this Compete on a more even basis with G. Benson 133 151 169— 453/to rule the 3-year-old division and|fords’ Matey, victor in the Pimlico|side of America,” in the southwest the big squads. Allowing a team | A. R. Dungan ...165 165 165—"495|chalk up an impressive triumph|Futurity. {corner of England. [to take time out without restric- Dorothy Green .127 127 127—*381 |over Alfred G. Vanderbilt’s Discov- Once on a night journey Cham- tons likewise would help the small- — — — ——lery in the mile-and-three-quarters Diuovm Slips bers followed a will-o'-the-wisp and,‘“‘ squads, he contends. 1 Totals .........425 443 461—1329 |of the Saratoga Cup. | Discovery, heavily weighted in ev-|janded in a swamp. | Favors Wider Field | *Average score; did not bowl. Following much the same trail €IY race, won only $34,790 in taking| pis legs are paralyzed. Apart| The fellow who wants to change ¢ blazed by his great sire, Gallant|Six of his 14 starts before finishing|from that, he is described as the the size of the playing field is here Fox, six years ago, Granville piled |Dis 4-yeor campaign. As the result,| picture of health. |again. This year he would widen - 5 H e Makes up an enviable record of seven tri-|he Was forced to share honors with |it some 30 feet, bringing the, width b umphs, including victories in the|A- A. Baroni’s Top Row, winner of of the gridiron to 190 feet. The [} Belmont Stakes and Arlington CIM-;_‘hE $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap H ;same chap suggests that the ball Em Tough sic, and three seconds in ten starts In one of his two stars, Mrs. F. A. an al“s mse“ |be brought in 15 feet from the to earn acclaim as the horse of the|Carreaud’s Time Supply, and El- |sidelines, instead of 10 as at pres- & s year. Never more than a nose back | Wood Sachenmaier’s Roman Soldier. 'ent, to give the offense more elbow [ MILWAUKEE, Wis, Dec. 20.—|at the finish, the Woodward ace, Jacobs, the former pigeon fancler| IOWA CITY, Dec. 20. — Every room. i Some of the credit for Marquette'sfajled only in the Wood Memorial,/ from Brooklyn, enjoyed his greatest| University of Iowa winter and' Among other suggestions is one highly successful (7 games won, 1|when he lost to Teuiel, a stable-|year on the turf. Before the start|spring sports team for 1937 now that the recovery of a loose ball | % ! lost) grid neason must g0 to|mate, the Suburban Handicap, in|Of the Florida season, he had sad- has a captain. Richard Millen, behind the goal-line be made a e Trainer Ed Rozmarynoski of the|which he trailed Walter M. Jeffords’; dled 167 winners, to surpass the old | wrestling leader, was last to be el- touchback, irrespective of which Golden Avalanche. Only three Mar- | Firethorn, and the Preakness. | record of 147 set by C. B. (Cowboy) |elected. Other captains include: team recovers; that identifying - quette gridders were out at all dur-| Agter battling his way to the top Irwin 13 years ago. Chief among|Basketball, Kenneth Suesens; track, ! numerals on players' chests be ing the season. End Lee Muth miss- |of the money-winning list, with ear-|Jacobs’ developments of the year|Andy Dooley; baseball, Lowell Gos- mandatory; that the rule regard- ed four games; Guard Mike Czern-|nings totaling $110,295, Granville| Was Action, the reformed plater tor!ser; swimming, Richard Wester-|ing the kicking of a free ball be | ecki missed one; and Pullback Ward {followed Bold Venture to the side-|Which he paid $1,000 in the Spring.|field; gymnastics, George Nissen;clarified, and so on and on. | o . cuff was out of two. lines as the result of a leg injury,| The 7-year-old gelding moved up|tennis, Charles Fleming; golf, Leon- | -5 | eacher S...flnppy Brevity, winner of the Florida Der-|rom the ranks of selling platers to{ard Rhue. Now Yaart i KES- DOMINANT by in what was then world-equaling| the handicap division in winning AR SRR IR TR wed 4 Huul’s ew Year....the two DUKI time of 1:48 1.5 for a mile and an|10 Of his 12 stars, eight of them in | : | y go together like Teacher’s 2 S eighth, retired after trailing Ogden & TO%- i Artlst GOPS MILWAUKEE, Wis, Dec. 29.— Phipps’ White Cockade in the With-| Mrs. Mars, who invested more, 7 4 | and soda. You’ll like the o Dugquesne University's gridders, only |ers Mile at Belmont Park. than $100,000 in yearlings at Bnra-l e ones to beat Marquette this year,| Jacobs Sets Traimer's Mark |!0ga for the second straight year, Over Bl i hearty tang and distinctive . landed six places on the all-op-| While Granville and Bold Venture| failed by nearly that amount in| g — o8 i ponent teams picked by Golden were capturing the fancy of the rac-|€qualing Vanderbilt's mark of a year| BELGRADE, Dec. 29. — Mata flavour of this mellow Scotch. Avalanche gridders at the end of ing public as few horses have in re- |80, but won $205.450. Vanderbilt's] SANTA CLARA, Dec. 29.—After |AZhadajitch, of Sarajevo, courted a the season. Capt. Mike Basrak, cent years, J. H. Louchheim’s Pom-|horses accounted for $159,545 to Lake!me Auburn-Santa Clara football | 8irl for eight years—an excgption« 86 PROOF Made by Wm. Teacher & Sons, Lid. Duquesne center, and Boyd Brum- poon won general recognition as the ‘second place. igame, Howard Brodie, newspaper|8lly long time for a courtship in » baugh, left halfback, were on the standout 2-year-old of the year. Dis- BRI T |artist, went into the dressing room Yugoslavia, where its average length Glasgow and London. Estab. 1830 A first team of Marquette’s foes. On covery lost his position as undisput-| an expedition of the American|to line up some sketches. Several is six weeks. Then he married her the second team were Platukis, ed king of the handicap division.|museum of natural history, New|Auburn players came in to con-| Within four hours of the wed- & left end; Barko, right guard; Ter- Hirsch Jacobs hung up a new Amer-|York City, recently brought back gratulate the winners and without|ding, and although apparently in & . rone, quarterback, and Matsik, half- jcan record for trainers in from the South Sea islands nearly exception they shook hands with|Perfect health, he suddenly fell - back, all of Duquesne. the title for the fourth straight year,|11 tons of coral. Brodie and told him what a fine|dead while dancing with the wed- . The Empire classifieds f it I i) ot e e e PlYeS dm'xgheame'uwwm 11' . Try L. or Milky Way farm of Chicago, Try The Empire classifieds for PRI, oo A ve lost | i i iy planiar L S, ) e P! ; j e 89 lhe, reason following the shock, | SOLF AGENTS FOR THE UNITED STATES. Schieffelin & Co., NEW YORK CITY . IMPORTERS SINCE 1294 B g 2 anderb| leading reml Bupire o %