The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 18, 1938, Page 3

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{ i i el K o IT HAPPENED TOATHLETES; QUEER THINGS By GARDNER SOULE WHIT PARADE" ENDS SHOWING LAST :l::;;f':xmln‘ 1 HEHE TUNIGHT 7 Frances Langford Is Con- tralto Star of Film at Capitol Show Place of Juneau v AP Feature Service Writer NEW YORK — Certain intelli- |gence from Hawaii having arrived by one of the latest steamships it is now possible to complete a re- |port on some of the most amazing sports deveolpments that have oc- Occasionally a story comes out of Hollywood s0 heart-warming and human that one almost believes in Santa Claus again. % curred all over the world in the “.1"11.1():.;;“:( 1 o ‘,’"-‘l pact few months. These happen- Republic’s “The Hi Ollinzs fall fairly easily into certain assifications The Incidents Involving Our Hawaiian Brothers In a Roosevelt - McKinley high | hool football game at Honolulu e Frank Kalama, McKinley guard, The reporter had two dollars in| e bl hiathe e e ‘s]yil on pected a Roosevelt pass, wanted | He candidly told Miss Langford ¢y, pay slippes i?"’\‘ ’rh’x‘lwululw\. ‘.md ;fin\rxuk.\vflluv}:]oi Tony Morse for three years was ‘r‘"‘“ ’ “r‘“ ”x“»(:i] ‘t“‘-‘_’ “(‘“’I‘i:”g so‘mnsmm-pd a interference man : ’l“d~ 3{/‘;1 :1\ Robides d‘ l‘[‘ g of the University of Hawaii eleven. ‘-llf“_‘) ell, they'd spend it, and 1, one game this season he mads | ”‘; a E“‘“‘l ““‘f- o9 L three long runs for touchdowns. ‘mtl":"“h‘\j 1n&m.\‘t\\;';mm-ml:él‘«t‘;. After one complicated play re- fo0 TR MEAY=NI08 I S, 10 sulting in a touchdown off t 18 T IR | halfback position of the opposing (l’n?-h‘i‘ l:l-‘l:'”“h'“‘lfi:i ‘i:“:‘('"“‘”’l:"‘“;“captflm the befuddled captain ap- i iy proached his rivals and said: ?n.l‘n'mu:‘ u_r’nu counfvxfmflvu‘u‘k‘ .; an "'Wh(‘rc you get play like that? »<'}\| ng ;;l mt‘“:l :“:lu(n the|Make fool outa me. Never saw moving picture was ne like him before. Please no more." program, and while he Was paying| Incidents Involving for the tickets a nickel dropped out Wothen in Bito of the young man’s hand and went| Girl students at the College of rolling merrily down the sidewalk.|oyr Lady of Gdod Counsel, White Frances ran squealing after it, but pjo G et TEHT PREVIEW ) 3 (Plains, N. Y. formed a fishing & " s |ifore she could retrieve it [iifta~ sidinduile NOBODY'S BABY | After the show they had a choco-|cheer leaders. late soda apiece, and, with only four| og_eds at the American Univer- hote [to do the kicking-after-touchdown RflflNEY S LUGK |included in the featured cast are pwo Colorado college linemen in- {Eddie Duchin, Al Pearce, Duke El-|gcteq they won the football game | Starring with Miss Langford in gy, the football team. The faculty |ington and Carl Hoff. The picture it Denver because they played | jends its Juneau showing tonight. ey to show off before their girl| | R S rently playing at the 9 atre. A poung reporter, back in her home state of Florida, was told | by his editor to get a Langford story {his pocket MARCH OF TIME SKI SKILL Cartcon—News with coaches and |the Hit Parade is Phil Regan, and gyerryled the girls. n-| lcisely to Angelo Henry Luisetti {up on the southern division of the 18, 1938. CALLING THE CAGERS, No. 1— Pacific Coast Teams Battle for Second Place By SAM JACKSON AP Feature Service Writer SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 18 The Pacific Coast is the only bas- ketball circuit wherein they an- nounce the winner in advance and play out the schedulre merely to ide second place. The championsip is unanimously conceded to Stanford-—or more pre whatever four basketballers happen to be playing with him. Hailed by his admirers as the greatest player of all time, Luiseiti now holds the 3-year scoring récord and is out for the 4 If he shoots 401 points this sea- son, he will surpass the 4-year rec- ord of 1,531 held by Glen Roberts of Emory and Henry College, In 1937, Luisetti scored 410 and, the year before, 416. In one 1936 game he got 50 points. Stanford’s first job is to clean erence, whigh includes Southern California and the traditional doormat. coast Californi UC.L.A Washington at Top The winner then plays the north- ern division champion for the coast title. Washington has long been dominant in the north, but last | Patchwork & Pup DEAN, MUNGO SOMEDAY IN NEV/ YORK n. 18.—The poll oon will disclose the voters' verdict n baseball's Hall-of-Fame nom- inees, are b ns of exclusive Basebzall writers their annual selec stars to join the group now entrenched in erstown, N. Y., shrine. seball writers are balloting previous pools, Grover Clevland exander, Eddie Collins and Wee Wil- lie Keeler loting on b me's little e Coop- are Other possibilities are George ler, Joe McGinnity, Miller Huggin: Roger Bresnahan, Johnny Kling Ed Delehanty, Rube Waddell, Hal Chase, Johnny Evers, Fred Clarke, Ross Young, Eddie Plank, Joe Wood Harry Heilmann, Addie Joss, Nap Rucker, Dazzy Vance, Dave Ban- croft, and Herb Pennock Players active now are not eligi- ble, so, while the scribes are puz- zling over their current choices let’s peer ahead a few years and mill over the probable future nom- inees. ! Hornsby Heads List It would be hard to imagine an honor roll without Rogers Hornsby season was beaten by Washington Others who've proved their mettle coast’s southern loop was over a long stretch are Frank five years ahead of the national Frisch, “Iron Man” Lou Gehrig, rules committee in abolishing the ANGELO HENRY LUISETTI AND ADMIRERS |Bill Terry, Al Simmons, Paul Wa- center tip-off, and this section of | ™ NS i im r, Carl Hubbell, Lefty Grove the U. 8. is sold on the new game. results in fewer injuries, bec prospect, unorthodox Coach Bund|Jess Haines and Mickey Cochrane “There’s no question—it’s done a some of the most serious hurts have is seeing his theories work out well.| Joe Cronin was the highest- lot for the spectators,” says Don|resulted in players rushing in after| Next September, Bunn will be- priced player in the game’s history Liebendorfer of the Stanford Ath-the tip-off.” come dean of men nford. Cap-|and won an American League most letic department. “We figure the Bunn Backs Tt tain Luisetti will duate, and the 'valuable award. - Maybe his day will ball's in play seven or eight min- Possibly the strongest campaign-!coast conference again will be wide come. | utes longer. er f eliminating the jump has open. | And then there's Cronin's father-! goo o eostumes in winter resorts “They say in the east that it tires been John W. Bunn, now in It is whispered about the cam-|ing-law, Owner Clark Griffith, of | o'n shine if not colorful. Here is the boys out. If so, nobody here eighth year as Stanford coach. With pus that Luisetti can have the Stan-|Washington. He was a crafty pitch-| Gloria Baker, New York’s No. 1 has noticed it. And we believe it his third straight champio hip in!for |er long before he became manager, jociety girl, in a crazyjama outfit coaching ants it job if he ton instead of calling signals. Leonard H. Bachelis of Los An- geles invented a bathing suit that can be taken off and put on while HELD, PETERSBURG + MASONIC BANQUET \iE at Palm Beach, strolling with her pet dog. Three-uf:a-Kinfl | |and then club owner of the Sen- s |ators | | The writers also will consider Jim-! STOCK QUOTATIONS | ;0 hykes, Tony Lazerri, Rabbit * | Maranville, Charlie Gehringer, Gab- | cent of the ballots are selected brought from the | s | friends. wearing clothes. It's done with'zip- T NEW YORK 18 Closing | by Hartnett and perhaps Dizzy i y TGRble Catwed: by s One hundred and forty persons|guotation of Al Jundan ‘Hitne | Dean MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 18.—Art Roo- REFEREE SH|RT‘ Fog and Smoke | The Payson (Utah) high school |ttended the banquet given by Pet- | stock, today is 12 rican Can | DiMag, Perhaps ney, the new “Pittsburgh Phil” § s e At Pullman, Wash., football te; football team played five tie games, | °rsburg Lodge 262, F. & A. M. 791y~ American Light and Power| Many stand out now and only time| SEATTLE, Jan. 18—The Univers now minus his praying partner, i from Southern California 1| In New Jersey, more serious recently at the Sons of Norway|gss; Anaconda 34 Bethlehem |Will tell how theyll weather the sity of Washington has three Voel- not finding The Tropical Park race Washington State battled to a|cidents were reported in touch Hall. Invitations were extended 10| ggee] ( Commonwealth and |test after their mames have van- ker brothers playing basketball. Dick track as easy as he did Empire scoreless tie as fog hid proceedings |football than in the honest-to- |all members and families of the|goythern 1%, Curtiss Wright 5%, (ished from the headlines. Consid- is the varsity center, while Jack City and Saratoga from the stands and sports writers ness game. Masonic fraternity, members of the | General Motors 35%, International|r Bill Dickey, Hank Greenberg, and Bob play guard on the fresh- Up north, Rooney is reported tol —_ |asked coaches after the game what| Coach Jack Rabe of Dearborn |Order of the Eastern rand ter 66'%, Kennecott 40, New [Joe Medwick, Mell Ott, Joe DIMag- man team have won $108,000 in one day bet- DENVER, Col, Jan. 18.—Everett | had happened Mich.) high school used a 4-man |heir escorts Central 18%, Southern Pa-|glo, Cecil Travis, Lefty Gomez, Van ity o N ting the Saratoga races when ac- Shelton, coach of the National A.j At Berlin indoor sports meets, line and & 7-man secondary The committee in charge of the |cific 20', United States Steel 593, Lingle Mungo, Lon Warneke. “e: (1] companied by a friend who prayed A.U. champion Denver Safeways smoking spectators created suck The Evansville (Ind.) football | banquet D. E. Crocker, T. K. |Cities Service 1 Pound $4.99| The first poll in January 1936, Anufller F"‘st for him to win. He is said to have basketball team, can smile now as haze no one could see what was|team ended its nine-game schedule Winsor, and Knut Thompson. Mrs. | 13/16, Bremner bid 2, asked 4 saw Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus been that much ahead when his he tells how a referee’s shirt cost|going on. Police banned smoking. With no wins, no ties, and no points | Justin Lind, Mrs. William Stedman Wagner, Christy Mathewson, and sl e friend advised him to go hom one of his teams a ball game | In a London fog, Goalkeeper |scored and Miss E. Moore prepared th DOW, JONES AVERAC [Walter Jflltl\‘_“"_M‘ll“‘“'d. Last ye NEW YORK, Jan. 18. — Michael “If you don’t,” the friend is quo! helton was coaching the Ster- Bartram of the Charlton soccer — - turkey dinner which began with The followir r Dow, | Tris Speaker, Cy Young and Na-, p ..o i< pelicvsti to be the first ed as saying, “1ll pray against you.” ling, Milks team of Oklahoma City.|team protected his goal for min-| Iowa State College researchers say|shrimp cocktall and ended with |Jones averages: industrials 13153, |Poleon Lajole were added. A few 1 u0. "o caten g baseball thrown Rooney stayed with the races and In a game with the Kansas City utes, and wondered why no plays|a pig apparently puts on us much pumpkin pie with whipped cream, rails 31.06, utilities 20.78 weeks ago the Major League heads p/tef © C00 & SEERE O RENG his friend went home, cvidently|Anthletic Club, the referee wore the'came his way. Other players had | when fed “hard” corn as coffee, and after-dinner mints - added five others, whose services g .. jun. i1 1918 keeping his word. An those | same color shirt as Shelton’s play- jeft the field, the game having |when it is fed “sofi” corn. The dinner followed by a| Sir Edgeworth David, Welsh ex-|to baseball extended beyond the el o % who claim to know say Rooney has,ers. They were constantly throw- peen called off. - program of mus hort talks and plorer, was the discoverer of the|actual playing: George Wright, Mor- lost heavily at the Florida track. |ing the ball to him. | Gigantic Hoaxes Today’s News Today—Empire readings. outh magnetic pole. !' n G. Bulkeley; Ban Johnson, con- Water from Jordan = oo | Finally one of the Milkmen asked Wihiat Booerred | v S fnie Mack and John McGraw. To Christen Child the arbiter to change his shirt. The| Kenneth Bailey, British book- A I{l DO bu‘,‘,(,s.s. Each writer names 10 player e HEAVYWE'GHT referee decided the player was im-|keeper, appeared at the Paris ex- I [ 4 A Fiioke JAOR - apResEE OX IS AT e Jan. 18—Water pudent and awarded the K.CAC. position in a track suit and {captain, Buck Weaver, a free throw. |nounced he had run from Bourne- | “Aw, mako it two,” growled theimouth, Eng, circling decks of the BU[’T S PPEB player. Weaver got another. “Mike Queen Mary en route. Feted, he it three,” roared Shelton’s boy. admitted having ridden a train to |Weaver did make it three. Finally, paris, Because of Northwestern SYRACUSE, N. Y., Jan. 18—Bob the count reached six. Weaver declined Coach | Pastor, 185-pounder, won a tech- | a seventh free|pynn Waldlorf’s tearful stories be- | nical knockout lzst night over toss, but by that time, his team was|fore his team’s game with Minne- Hans Haverlick, Austrian, when four peints ahead and ed there|sota, Minnesota supporters met the stopped | for the rest of the gam team with an ambulance, two | the heavyweight bout W in the eighth round because of a A B SRR | physicians, and two nur: cut over Haverlick's eye. i H Incidents Involving o Onefime Partners | o e Distilling into brandy was an| | Frank (Bruiser) Kinard of Mis- early method of preserving fruit] NEW YORK, Jan. 18—Stub Al-|sissippi Kicked off to Ouachita, | 1ison, California football coach, and|fell on the ball over the goal for ractices in North Carolina. = a touchdown, kicked goal. He had e |Judge lenn Carberry, Fordham Uni- ; tne wmpire classifieds for | versity line coach, were teammates [scored seven points unassisted. | lon an AEF. championship eleven. Jack Stringham, Brigham Young — | fullback, blocked and line-bucked so vigorously he wore out five headguards during the football sea- | son. Johnny Meek of California, who | never had kicked the ball for the varsity team, won the annual con- tesi among squadmen to determine the champion punter. He averaged 53.3 yards. Miscellanecus Items Worthy of Note There never has been a quad-l ruple dead heat in the history of |horse racing. At Rockingham Park, Salem, N. H, Coya won first in a race—by a nose. Miss Tad was second by a nose; Flowery Lady third by a nose; Shantime fourth |by a nose; Teeter Totter fifth—by |a nose. Because his players were weak in mathematics, Football Coach H. A. Applequist ordered his Sacra-{ {mento team to go into the Big | Apple, a rhumba, or the Charles-! Try results. C Y USKEN | IF MAGGIE THINKS | K- FER A SEC G ing their trophy and a sample of their prize celery are the Mullen S:'l:lu.u Zel:llr (Iefl:)’and Louise, oftsht:flord, N. Y., after they had been i hampion gardeners of the New York State 4-H Clubs for fii‘?’“fi :m‘i was made at the annual Potato and Vegetable Growers; GONNA HAVE A GUY THAT LOOKS LIKE A TH!%GCYOU FIND UNDER AR TARY-SHE'S ALL WRONG- BRINGING UP FATHER | CERTAINLY DO-~ BeuUT YOU DIDN HAVE TO THROW. ME OUT OF THE WINDOW- | CAME BACK TO GET MY LLNCH-1 ALWAYS { BRING MY LJ_lNCHJ M WHAT'RE YOU DOIN’ BACK IN HERE? DONIT YOuU KNOW RE~ YOU'RE FIRED? AND: “HAS FOUR JEARS |daily like clubmen, to bask in % - " TQ H |S C RED‘ T | warmth, Katherine de Mille | R S s >auline Moore The discovery that mosquitoes Keye Luke N JUNEAU/ § RO PN RN River Jordan in Palestine es, y for the purpose used to christen the daughter nouncer, Eddie Cantor was the child’s godfather, and Glenda Far- RA rell and Deanna Durbin her god- - o MARTHA SOCIETY FOOD NEW YORK, Jan. 18 , Saturday, Jan. 22 at Sanitary- The club'gq1e life of the grasshopper has been piggl; Wiggly, starting at 10:30 am, discovered by John S. Kennedy of adv. the British Museum. §——— — This club life of the grasshopper! is probably the long-sought start- M *h ! ing place for the destroying locusts | ° e's —the swarms of flying hoppers' In treating your family’s colds, which have been the intermittent| don’t experiment scourges beginning with Biblical|{ and don’t take chs narrative. [ chances...use VapoRus | Ordinary looking grasshoppers| I RCARE R LINTLE turn black, take on the distinctive, - R A S |in swarms. Scientists have changed c these ordinary hoppers to locusts by solitary cages. | But where in nature, do the hop- . Olympics’ |millet ficlds in the Sudan. There Jith |he saw solitary hoppers gathering with |markings of the destroying locusts,' LAST TIMES TONIGHT merely breeding them | pers get together, to strike up a moh Warner Oland R1PPo OLLEGE:; acquire voracious appetites, lose in crowded i . I cages, and have changed the de- C’.(lrlle Chan | |life? Mr. Kennedy thinks he found | their liking for solitary life and fly stroyers back again by breeding in |the places in sunny bare spots in carry germs of malaria was made by Sir Ronald Ross in India. S e - | Try an Empire ad. PLUS Carcfully Selected Short Subjects of Merit By GEORGE McMANUS . | ONLY EAT CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE AND | CAN'T GET IT IN ANY RESTAURANT LIKE MY SISTER AT HOME COOKS IT-, YOU'RE HIRED AGAIN- OPEN YOUR LUNCH-~ BOX - You A g3 ¢2-as]]| TR A A e emeenscaca o sl

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