The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 26, 1932, Page 5

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P e e i, Ps e = o = — - —— i : Si Are Mothers S D GING UP FATHER 4 o i isters Are Mothers Same Day THE PR S50 3 = = ES - HES ONLY S | THE GUIVERSITY 15 rpser [} ) {NerRee) [T Seonsen | [Home v ' SRR Y B GOING TO CALL ON EAL g ) | — P ACK ME WIFE A HATE SR kY o : ~OUL TO TALK ABOUT| N | R | Sgn‘g‘fg‘ié(:{o To THINK OF | 4 SONNY'S FUTURE ‘J l i COURSE ity OUR GOIN' BACK 8 7 IN SCHOOL - HE e UNWERSITY~ ONIVERS [ SHOULD BE AT (@7g N | B, | YOUR OFFICE 3 | O/ AS— NOW - FRENCH BOY KLAWOCKS AND _ KLUKWANS WIN IN PIN CONTESTS Dr. W. W. Council Rolls 228 in One Game and | 202 in Another | 1 Klawock and KiukKwan were in the bowling con- t night on the Elks’ Alleys. r took the two last of from Stikine, and the| IS CHAMPION three gam latter the two first of a three- game series from Killisnoo. Dr. W. W. Council of the Kla- wocks was in fine form. After warming up in the first game, he rolled 228 in the second and 202 in the third game. | Total Score of 592 | His total score was 592. His teammate A. W. Henning was the cnly cther of the Klawock-Stikine ' players to attain the 500 mark. He got 502. Mrs. Faulkner of .he Klawocks rolled a 18l-game and made a total of 481. | In the Klukwan-Xillisnoo con- test, McNaughton and Stevens made | R ( Is the Rockne System, so-called, un the down-grade along with the Jrand of football exhibited by the 1 neadquarters forces of Notre Dame? Perhaps so, if you leap quickly to conclusions after noting that | Georgetown has discarded the old| Rockne ‘System; that Yale prob-| 'ably will do the same thing, afteri this season, and that Frank Car-{ ideo, Rockne’s last al-American | quarterback, has performed uoi miracles at Missouri. | Prcbably not, if you notice on the other hand what fine work has been done this year at Pur-| due by Noble Kizer, at Auburn by | Chet Wynee and his Noire Dame Dainty, blonde Aurora Navarette, staff, and by Slip Madigan, the| 46 native of Guadalajara, Mexico, sage of St. Mary's who may in' was chosen as California’s prettiest time take over the mantle of cenorita in a contest held in Los Rozkne at South Bend, if he yields +f\ngeles. (Associated Press Photo) to increasing pressure. I % A, } o | S0 Pt Moscow Survey | | DIDN” E S / ' | | Warns Red that | | ‘The trutn 1s, that the Rockne, g | system really was a one-man Communism Lags proposition. It was distinetly indi- | vidualistic, but the belief it could | ‘club once during each half, the| NEW CITY HOOP LEAGUE STARTS. * TUESDAY NIGHT Four Clubs Meet in Double-‘ header to Launch Battle for Championship | - | With the Bureau of Public| Roads and George Brothers tang- lng in the first game and the Moose and the Juneau Firemen meeting in the second match of a doubleheader, the newly organized Channel Basketball League will} open its season hiext Tuesday even- ing in the High School gymnas- ium. At a meeting held in President R. 8. Raven's office last evening, attended by representatives of five of the six teams comprising the League, a schedule for the first half of the season was approved. Each dlub will meet every other winnrs of each half to engage in| a post-season series to determine the Channel championship. Two games will be played each Tuesday and Friday night. When Douglas Firemen are playing at home, an exéra game, played by ne team outside the league, will be scheduled to fill out the double- header in Juneau the same night. In January the Friday night games will probably be switched to Thursday nights to avoid conflict with the Juneau-Douglas high school championship contests. Six Teams . The six teams comprising the PASADENA, Cal—Two sisters became mothers just five hours apart, in the same hospital, a six-pound baby boy being born to Mrs. Harold Howard, 22, (left) at 3:24 o'clock. At 8:25 a six-pound | girl was born to Mrs. Howard’s sister, Mrs. Louis Sheldon. It was the first child in either family. f UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH IS KING” — ALWAYS FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES AT CALIFORNIA GROCERY the best scores, 507 respectively. getting 512 and| Tonight there will be one con-, test. Details of Play Scow Bay will meet Kasaan. | Gecrge Dol Momine (center), who as a representative of France wen the seventh internaticnal oratorical contest in Washington, D. C., i shcwn as he was éongratulatéd by Lucylle D. Goldsmith of « Los Angeles, who placed second. Charles G. P. Smith (right) of England was third. (Associated Press Photo) Details of last night’s play fo-; | | ! be transplanted away from the fact | €0 many pupils of Rockne—entered the coaching highways and byways. Sémehow, it seldom lookéd “the same as it did at Notre Dame Madigan, Chuck Collins,/ Harry Mehre, Adam Walsh, Harry Stuh- |dreher and others made their own | interpretations. | The thing that made the “sys- |tem” successful at South Bend, junder Rockne, was his basic meth- od of teaching, rather than the structural character of play_j‘a&sxsbance to farmers, the rights stimulate interest of the fans and (Continued fromn pPage One) | | League are Juneau Firemen, Moose, must rely upon the revolutionary B, P, R, George Brothers, United activity of the workers.” |{Meat and Douglas Firemen, The resolution outlined specific, TInterest in basketball is keener programs to be followed by com- on the Channel this year than in inunist parties in various countries. \many seasons. A wealth of good | With reference to America is said: |material, with many of the play- | 1“The communisi party of theers having college records, insures United States must mobilize the|fast basketball. Most of the hoop- \masses to fight for social insurance |sters have played on the Channel dedinst wdge reductions for im-'and are well known, but there is | médiate relief to the unemplcyed,‘encugh new blood in the ranks to Prompt Delivery PHONE 478 OTELS THE GASTINEAU Jur Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat lows: e ot e e i KLAWOCKS __| McNaughton 184 167 161—512 A. Henning 128 196 178—502 5 G. Shepard 103 123 138—364 DAN BUGKL Council 162 228 202—592 Mrs. Bringdale .. 101 105 124—330 Gardner 145 145 145-°435] e Purser . 115 115 115—345] Totals 719 733 1763-2215 Nuw Gflv GEN Mrs. Faulkner .. 157 143 181—481| <Aycrage; did not bowl. | ' N P | | Total 707 821 821-2355 5 { ; STIKINES Co-Ed Kills Rattlers, | DUBLIN, Nov. 26—Daniel Buck- N. Bavard ... 143 198 150—491} K Sk- H bb ley, former member of the Dail Bernard 163 163 163-°489 | €eps OKINS as IioDDY Eireann for Kildaire, has been ap- Wilson . 146 163 161—470 | pointed Governor General of the Walmer 135 155 193—483, NORMAN, Okla., Nov. 26—Miss | Irish _Free Sta.te,_sucoeedlng James s Monson 131 117 131—379 Mary Grimes, freshman chemical McNeill, who resigned last month. — — — —engineering student at the Uni-| ——————— Totals . T18 T96 ’198-2312lversity of Oklahoma, has a hobby | NEW METAL FOUND KLUKWAN ;unusual for a girl. She likes to H.Messerschmidt 173 178 173-*519 collect rattlesnake skins. SACRAMENTO, Cal—The dis- Stevens ....c...u.. 170 170 167—507, Her collection comprises more‘covery ofia new‘ metal, known as Sweeney ........ 122 141 140—403 than 50 skins, most of them (.)bAiSanbnrnite brought the number of Miss Taylor ... 113 123 144—380 tained in Central Texas. She Kill-| .41 ¢0ing in California to 35. Mrs, Sperling ... 154 137 103—394 e dthe snakes herself. The larg- i — — — ——'est was four and a half feet long was used to ex- Totals ........732 744 721-2203'and had nive rattles. e it et Bl Rgil;:;:;NOO 172 172 172 "‘516; | Horace Abercrombie, 10, of Talla- 8- . adv. S 166 168—493 60c Pioneer Taxi, Phone 443. lpoosa' Ga. VanderLeest . 159 ARTOON DAILY SPORTS C ~By Pap of negroes and the self-determina- | ¢ _tion of the black belt and for the Stdgg or . Dohls credblon Jodk bet fense of the Chinese masses and | ter than the original. Rockne never | Pied 2 did claim to much originality in | ¢ Soviet Union. ! plays. He contended there was | Predicts Class Wars | nothing much new, anyway, and| Describing the present time as| that the simplest forms of attack a transitory period which will lead | |were the best and most effective, 10 collisions between classes and' |given the current performances in!countries—to revolutions and wars| !the fundamentals of DlofRing and|—the “Comintern” claims that' ' tackling. |revolutionary forces are growing | In short, Rockne based his suc- in all capitalist countries but gt | cess on drill and execution, rnther}adds: than originality, on speed rather| “But in the very importans| ithan deception; on finesse, in countries like the United sw,ws.l preference to brawn. He popular- England and France, the speed of ized lightweight guards, specializ- the revolutiopary movement,though ed in stalwart ends (making them wjcreasing, is still behind the ten- (offensive key men) and adoptedsity of international conditions.” |silk pants. Aside from the back-| . Reviewing the world situation |field shift, which was not, of from the communist viewpoint, the |course, a Notre Dame or Rockne |resolution continues: |Creation, there was little in thel “In Spain the revolution i5 go- ;“system” to transplant which did ing on. In China we have a revo- | not require Rockn'e touch or meth- nsionary situation in the greater od, in order to look like the orig- part of its territory, which has | iral. ibeen. marked by great soviet suc- | Rockne could make a Zupke, a B RIPALS. ALERT “In Germany we have a sharp- i If this “system” nevertheless, js | €ning of class antagonisms—on one [ well established about the country, (%3¢ the growth of fascisn and it is due mainly to the fact that O She other the growth of revo- {Rockne helped turn out an alers, |litionary mass struggles. HE COST PLENTY e e THIS VICTORY NETTED #HiM 328,465 99 Vo are wycmrsn s s Nl NORMAN CHURCH AS A YEARLING ] of power to residences, trom thu {resourceful type of young footbail| ““Some other countries also are ! player whose natural talents and |inclination, after an apprentice- | approaching a revolutionary crisis, notably Poland, and we also may | predict the same for Japan. | *In India and Latin-America a \reyolutionary crisis is prevented by |the bad organization of the pro- letariat.” i Would Attack Unions |learned, under Rockne, to the sit- A “constant animated connec- juations and material on hand. tion” between the communist par- | { Some of the Rockne products, lties and a majority of workers in like “Sleepy Jim" Crowley, caughtfevery country is necssary the reso- { hi§" humorous spirit; others, like]mw‘n said recommending that vi | Stubbdreher, his ‘painstaking at-|gorous campaigns be carried on in {tention to detail andhrewurcetul- labor unions and also AMONg un- ness, still others, such as Adam|prganized s and the unem- Walsh, his dynamic forcefulness. |ployed. sicpers o Even if some of the alarmists| «Jt i necessary to increase the at South Bend are blowing the polshevist mass work and acquire | Whistle, there seems mno real rea-ju', our side a great majority of the :eon for worry about the l’oobballlwm-km' class” the committee said. future of Notre Dame. “Our opponents have not lost the OB v, s support of both organized and un- . organized workers ch fact pre- Electflfi cl.ckl Time Tlleft‘.vm adequate revolutionary @c- 1 2w Itivity and endangers our success. BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Nov. 26—| '“The main problem of the com- {If there is necessity for establish-!intern in all capitalistic countries iing the time of a theft of electric!is-to fight against capial, fascism ,Wire here, there will be no diffi-!and reaction, agains: advancing culty, for all eléctric clocks in thelimperfalist wars and intervention community stopped af the same/ the Soviet Union and de- time. Thieves removed 1800 feet) the wnass influences exercised |ship at South Bend, led nim to (seek a coaching career. Their success has not rested upon duplication of a set of man- leouvers and formations but in ap-| | piying the basic principles they | make the outcome of the games more doubtful. How They Line Up The personnel of the six teams follows: Douglas Firemen — James Man- ning, manager; Gordon Gray, An- gus Gair, Harry Lundell, Alex Gair, Tauno Niemi, John Martin. Juneau Firemen—Howard Hayes, Ed Metzgar, H. Hollman, Jim Con- nors, Abbie Garn, Bill Manley, V. 'W. Mulvihill, manager. George Brothers—Jimmy Orme, manager; D. Baker, Art Burke, Alex Sturrock, Einar Jackson, Chas. Wiltanen, H. Berggren. B. P. R—John Osborne, Lloyd Bayers, Sam Nelson, Bill Smith, Tom Moyer, Berb Torgerson, W. Rodenberg, Ben Messer; Leonard Holmquist, manager. Moose—Paul Brown, Claud Ers- kine, Stan Grummet, Eimer Lind- strom, Al Bloomquist, Mike Hunt, Jerry Ledbetter, Arnold Hildre, Pierre Cooper, E. F. Rodenberg, manager. United Meat—Bob Brown, man- ager; Carl Jensen, George Hall, John ICashen, Jack Gould and Lloyd Peterson. First Half Schedule Following is the schedule for the first half of the season. All games ‘will be played in the Juneau High School gymnasium except on De- cember 6 and 20, when the Doug- las Firemen play George Brothers and the B. P. R. at Douglas. November 29—B. P. R. vs. George Bros.; Moose vs. J. F. D. December 2.—Douglas vs. United Meat; B. P. R. vs. Moose. December 6. —George Bros. vs. D. P. D. at Douglas; Firemen vs. United Meat. December 9—B. P. R. vs. J. F. D.; George Bros. vs. Moose. Deceniber 13—Moose vs. D. F. D.; B. P. R. vs. United Meat. December 16.—Moose vs. United Meat; George Bros. vs. J. F. D. December 20.—George ' Bros vs. United Meat; B. P. R. vs. D. F. D. at Douglas. December 23—D. F. D. vs. J. F. D. Greeks Putting On Bread Tickets ATHENS, Nov. 26.—The govern- ment decided to introduce Duce| bread tickets as the wheat reserves of the country were reported as cl ¢opper ’ wire, carrying 110 volis; by soclal ‘democracy—all in of the broad masses jhe_population of the world” the of'and food situation of the country| near exhaustion. The economic is causing grave concern. i BAILEY’S SPECIAL BAILEY’S CAFE Every Night from 8 P. M. CHICKEN NOODLES and CHOP SUEY CONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS and CRESCENT FELT BASE RUGS Juneau Paint Store FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. Use Alaska Lumber JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 358 THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 — PLAY MIDGET GOLF! The Indoor Health Game for Young and Old SECOND FLOOR, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING Open 3 P. M. to 11:30 P. M. ke ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 = |

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