The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 27, 1941, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, J fol & ‘ Men's Clearance Sale MUNSINGWEARUNDERWEAR - . . . $2.95 Kenned‘yv ‘ %fisgg;;;yg;g,;*;;n o otk DOUBLE PlAY_‘AComiskéY—B;\tfered—Hangs On That's Kennedy the showman . ] But there’s a Kennedy the official, Ic In too. There must be, because Pat I ’ gets some mighty important as- | signments. ‘ | | Pat, who started his foul-calling a e ame career at 15 in a Hoboken athletic I club preliminary when an official failed to show up, now works one E {ache, the block by a player who son By FERD BROWNIN { has just passed the ball, is a di- The DeMolays will meet the AP Feature Service Sports Writer rect result of that fact, In the East, Eagles in the first session, and the —_ | players and coaches agrec that the National Guard squad is scheduled e game of almost every -collegiate TN Y 50%-25% Rayon and Wool —Cotton and Woe Formerly sold Re"eree colorful 0"' H I doubleheader at the Garden. In a doubleheader tonight two S Tt e e on a Ve Formerly sold up to Ita Because of their intersectional formerly weak but fast improving E izes 36 to 48. | nature, these games are especialiy basketball teams will fight it out| NS A O QAR e A ANy Y A T BU' FO“OWS Ba" a' tough to call. im explaim.p " jon the new Douglas court against Oy PRIt | o e e e S WILSON BROS. FANCY DRESS SHIRTS - $1.65 y | rules differently. Our biggest head- Well in the first part of the sea-| 0 » Sanforized, fast color, st s, plains. rted ve lengths. Formerly NEW YORK, Jan, 27.—The man, basser, after the pass, must not to play the Firemen in the second BOBES M 1 w l . in the fancy shirt tooted mightily contact the man guarding him,pro- fray of the evening. The first game === {°CN S WOO E SIIk’ Beaconclolh Ry $2‘95 s whistle, went into an ex- viding the guard gives the offensive starts at 7:30 o'clock. The bus leaves Pl P R R 5 U P < A . o ted drum major’s strut, and Mman three ieet in which to move. | Juneau at 7:15 o'clock lain and harmony. trimmed vrap and button. Formerly sold up to $10.00 sercamed: “The western interpretation gives —— e L A 5 L “You walked!" the passer more leeway toward| admits missing one now and then & ™ Tae young rule breaker meekly brushing his guard out of the play He tells about an L.IU.-Duqueshe SWEATERS—WOOI n sllpo“, COal: and Sleeveless . s? 50 tosced the ball to his accuser and ' after the pass.” game in which an illegal field goal| ok ? ° an appreciative chuckle rippled Pat credits intersectional games carried the contest into an extra Formerly sold up to $5.00. Fancy and plain through the basketball cowd of With going a long way toward a period. A Duquesne man was fouled i s i e s i b S 16000 at Madison Square Garden. u":j‘lfl"-*]':l mtell')l;relnlion lvn that| a5 he missed a shot and another ‘1hat’s the double effect Pat Ken- and other troublesome rules, Duquesne man made the follow- SHORTS r B d l h ne'y has been getting for 17 years hSpenking of rules, k:’m is all for| yp Action was so fast, s Ken- _— ancy roa c ot . . . . . . zsc frcn a combination of competent the faster game (three times as pedy, that he thought the original TR RN P R G L e 4 5 e 08 14 7 ofiiciating and a flair fo showman- | fast, he says) now in effect—even| ghooter had scored. He signaled| 5,‘._,{” ! ‘S‘l{'r ‘1'4-"") 4’? side, 3-button fron. All sizes 28 to 38. Ribbad ship if it dogs put a greater strain on| «pasket counts” when it really ‘The Hoboken Irishman swears| officials as well as players. He ex-|ghouldn't have. Only two pesons thzt his colorful court performance lrilains l:m tto:ay‘sl nlfi;iu]lf mwus"; be | saw it, Pat reports, and L.IU. fin- is purely natural: aster than the play itse €€ | ally won anyway NEcKTlEs b r Y P ll e 50 “That's just my way of calling On toD of the game. He must look| " pap's showmanship, usually a anc ainerns G e L c ‘e1a. 1 work every game with my|ahead, anticipate every move and| crowd-pleaser, can be pretty grat- Wool Lined — Resilient — New Patterns. heart and soul in it. If I seem en- be there to see the play when it i, jf your red-hot favorites are FPOL T ORI TR P R A T e S thu well, I just am.” happens. losing. It boomeranged on Pat Pat Comiskey’s battered and puffy face shows why he lost the ten- i Not the Wora | To get in shape, Kennedy spends| gnce, in a pro league champion- round bout on a decision to Lou Nova inh New York. Nova's constant soé Ks AT r sl k Enthusiastic is hardly the word twWo hours a day in a gym for siX|nin'game, and players had to es- hammering at Comiskey’s face had the hapless New Jersey heavyweight & ancy ac $ . . . . . . P zsc out on his feet at the end of the fight. for Paddy. He follows the ball Weeks before the season starts. He| .o.¢ him to his dressing room. Terry Cloth and Rayon. like a hawk, toots his whistle al-| Works baseball in the summer UP | —pa¢ stayed there for three hours Y most gleefully when he catches a | until mid-July, then goes in for| _pacticing new didoes—until it in the Southern Division of the wrongdoer, and zips immediately| s0ll and swimming. During the w5 sfe to leave. Pacific Coast Basketball Confer- BA n into [5iF aisk 6 fpratimier satura | frfter | CAVS Bo S PUINORL cdbe - BN R ence with a comfortable margin - f1éa 0 s - 'or l m of the violation. tion instructor in a Hoboken junior o Scme evening, showing a hack- | high school. | ATTENTION EASTERN STAR . GAMES SATURDAY NIGHT e e e S ing foul, Pat is going to break an Pay for big-time basketball 0[-‘ Stated meeting of Juneau Chup'- H University of | Washingten - 94: arm—he brings the right down ficials varies, but a big game|ter No. 7, on January 28th, at § n ea In Dikgon State 33 SHoEs — ror Houghest work . ' . . . $3 25 across the left like a woodchop- between hot rivals—Army and | p.m. Cards and refreshments. Idaho 39: Oregon 38 4 : L] HELEN WEBSTER, Composition or leather soles. Leather counters, Formerly sold to $6.75. per working on an eight-inch log.| Navy, let's say—is worth about | | DA - Tor hipping he uses a hip-throw- $75 to officials like Kennedy |adv. Worthy Matron. gt SR IR SN T A ing roatine that has the Broadway | Average big games run about $30. | mur T as e BullDS AROUND burlesque girls green with envy. He Admits Errors WHY oUFFER Wi DRESS GLOVE A l d c l l lify holding, Kennedy, wrest Kennedy is no Bill Klem — he Phone 648. Chiropodist Dr. S—- Ssorie 0l10rs 3 i ; To sl pves s 4 E IS A” Alone m No”hern OAK: Is IN HOME Woolen Leather — Unlined Cape. Formerly $2.95. Division-Stanford Still | AP Fea P DR, S R e S MOUNTAINGIDR, N 3un RUBBER or HEMP DOORMATS - . - - §1.25 leads in Somh Dr. Fiske Wood, retired Westfield surgeon, decidéd to enlarge his 2Y2 x 1% feet. Formerly $2.25. (By Associated Press) mountain cabin and make it his it s hington | PEFMAnent home, but there was a { The University of Washington gy ooy oak tree in the most likely basketball team is all alone out injgpat for his living room. Dr. Wood O r:nulpol ‘Ih.-cr\mn\;;mk X‘l)’mis]uu(\ of { just built around it, . . b the Pacific Coast Basketball Con-|" ppe tree about 30 inches thick at UA ference standings and is sure 10! e base.:pushes its way through a Q TY SINCE 1887 stay »QiBre Jor:ope. mora: weSk hole which has to be enlarged every A one point victory over Oregon|fey yvears. A piece of automobile e Sponasz State in the game last Saturday or s t] ole against Keep a piece of alum in the oo night kept Washington's record of 'fi, “,fgbfi,,jif_" s holp, agh! drawer with silverware. Tt often Dodgers 'o BR Klv" S("mum no defeats clean while Idaho was| The cabin, atop Watchung moun- | prevents tarnishing. g : night by a similar margin over room, Dr. Wood and his wife have |02 the first seven months of 1940. Oregon transformed it into a rambling six- | Since 1934 the prairie chicken FI Food In BROOKLYN, Jan. 27.—It may Washington State plays two games yoom bungalow. population of Missouri has increased have been just a quirk of schedule against Oregon State or Corvallis. The tree is just another picce of |from 5000 to 20,000 birds, the state making but Brooklyn Dodger bases this week while Washington State fyrniture to the Woods. They do conservation commission estimates. ball fans are chuckling over a has a single game with Idaho. not like to reflect on the nossibilities B e BROOKLYN, Jan. 27. — The|spring exhibition scheduled listing Stanford continues in the lead of a strong wind’s uprooting it Empire Classifleds Pay! BookIn oodgers, who will spend| which lists the Brooklyn “B" team & e s — |part of their spring baseball train-|as opposition for the New York s —— Talaer T " fl {ing camp time working out in Ha-| Giants in Miami. The “A” tea: Generals on the Range le Out New Rl (- vana, are considering flying their | supposedly the first Brooklyn out. own meat, vegetables and eggs to| (i, will be busy elsewhere while Cuba. the second team takes on Brook- iyns hottest rival, far behind the NO DRAFT FEARS | v serinet Empire Classifieds Pay! FOR LIPPY LEQ | s BROOKLYN, Jan. 21. — Lippy B“WLING Leo Durocher, manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, doesn't have to worry about the draft so far as he is concerned His local draft board in Brook- {lyn informed him that he shad been placed in Group 3—almost | a guarantee that he won't be called before the end of the 1941 [ season at least, Ao | Brunswick Bowling Alleys sified ad In The Empire | Baséball Star, Wife Visit Five U. S. generals try their skill on the rifle range at New Haven, Conn., as the new,!mpravcd Garand rifles come off the assembly line at the Winchester arms company. This marks beginning of p{mlucuun 7 > of the rifles by a private company: ‘Left to right: Maj. Gen. Charles M. Weason; Maj. Gen, George A. ! Lynen; Maj. Gen, John K. Herr; Brig. Gen. Gilbert H. Stewart, and Brig. Gen. Charles T. Harris, J ) | BRINGING UP FATHER | By GEORGE McMANUS | bt ) THE NOW. -1S THIS YOU ~ gEESSUCII; FACE- QUIET-PLEASE-} DOCTOR L. gOJOINTS? YOU EVER LEAVE IT TO 'LL GIVE YOU THIS HIT ON THE NOW_JUST WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THAT? Visiting his mother-in-law at Duluth, Minn,, Joe Di Maggio, star outfielder of the New York Yankees, is shown with his wife, right, , Wnd his relative, Mra. V. A. Olson, at the latter’s home. Di Maggio's wife is the former Dorothy Arnold, movie play

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