The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1933, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMP. IRE, _MONDAY, OCT. 30, 1933. BY GOLLY-I HAVENT GOT A HEADACHE I1'VE rday afternocon: Stanford 0; Washington 6. Or: ‘Washington State State 2. Oregon 7; UCLA y of Sou 6; California 3. 0; Tn M ana 6; Idaho 12. Montana Mines 0; Montana State College 19. ; Colorado 40. 2 0; Denver Uni- versity 31. Rice Institute 0; University Texas 18. Dartmouth 7; Harvard 7. Army 21; Yale 0. Georgia Tech 10; North Carolina of Penn State 0; Columbia 33. Alabama 0; Fordham 2. hwestern 0; Ohio Stat: y Cross 19. Notre Dame 0. Purdus 14; Wisconsin 0. Michigan 28; Chicago 0. New York University 0; Georgia 25. Southern Methodist 0; 3. Minnesota 19; Towa 7. L5 a 6; Tennessee 13. Auburn 13; Tulane 7. WASHINGTON U 1S VICTORIOUS OVER STANFORD Eleven Huskies Play Through Game to Win by Score of 6 to 0 SEATTLE, Oct. 30—Thirteen rain-soaked fans saw n Washington Huskies play| straight through 60 minutes olj football last Saturday afternoon o | defeat Stanford 6 to 0. | Rated a bad second before the! game, Jimmy Phelan pulled a dou- ble surprise by keeping his orig-| inal line-up in the game through- | out, directing his stellar end, Bill| Smith, on which he pinned hopes | of a victory on his kicking foot.| Bill came through with two field goals in the first and second per- 3 2 S Arkansas 'EM / F I COULD ONLY GIT TO SLEEP TO FORGIT T GOT TWO OF WILL YOu STOP THAT SNORING 7 YOU HAVE GIVEN ME A BEASTLY By GEORGE McMANUS ‘Music - K HUH / T SUPPOSE YO THINK. THATS YOUNG JUNEAU COUPLE MARRIED ON SATURDAY AT QUIET CEREMONY At a quiet ceremony at the Res- urday evening at 7 o'clock, Mrs | Wilma Frankforter and Harry Krane were married. The Rev. urrection Lutheran Church on Sat- | [man of laborers, attended the | Juneau Public Schools. | Mr. and Mrs. Krane will re= side at Mr. Krans's country home | on the Fritz Cove road. CH N 2 | CHESTER ZENGER HAS EMERGENCY OPERATION FOR APPENDIX SATURDAY Chester Zenger, six-year-old son i i i BILL CORBUS -cuARD= eaee MAENTZ ~HALFBACK= FRANK ALUSTIZA FULLBACK= e RECORDS BROKEN —SPORT: W SITURDAYS S BOWLING ©AMES e | which saw Washington’s ball park G. Blomgreu, .Braves and‘barely two-thirds filled with cash Reds Hold ngh Scores |customers for the final stirring ! in Elks’ Tournament game of the 1933 world serles, a | number of college football “warm- Several’ records were broken mlup" games drew more spectators the Saturday night matches of nhcxa“d one outstanding game ?n “?C Elks Bowling Tournament. The | Pacific Coast,‘ between California |and St. Mary’s, attracted twice as faes:ne:’lx;? hg:lg‘e h;ndlAv:‘t:ual s many paying onlcokers as the base- Henning | .y~ pattle climaxing the Wwhole with 233, was topped by Gunnar| .. Blomgren, who made 23 In one| comparison of some 60,000 game on Saturday. Best team 10-| ;g 15 see the coast’s big grid- tal for one game, held until Sat-|. ‘day by the Reds, with 570 wasuron game, while only about 28,- Dy e e of 574 made| 000 Dassed through the baseball caten by the sc 3 turnstiles in the nation’s capital, by the Braves in a single game. is not calculated to make the ma- | While the team with the highest |, o y £hi total, the Red beatw"or league magnates any happier e BONe J e | as they face the problems growing its own former high of 1575 with) ™ ¢ 0™ financially di e a new high of 1625. ! vear. Tonight's schedule shows the fol- | It'they Consn ABEL AL et lowing teams of the American Hhiin ! mean football attracts greater na- M::Z‘:)‘e;)'clock—wmbe Sox vs. Ath-" tion-wide interest than profession- Jatios. 1 al baseball, they must then reach 8:30 o'clock—Yankees vs. Sena- | the conclusion, inevitably, that more tors. | people would rather pay $1 or $2 to see an early season football contest than they would to pay anywhere from $3.30 to $6.60 for the outstanding baseball attraction 9:30 o'clock—Browns vs. Indians.| Individual scores in Saturday's | games follow: &ociated Press Photos) In his first year as head coach of Stanford, Cal. university “Tiny"” hard charging team on the Farm. Alustiza, a good punter, and Maentz Moscrip is considered one of the fastest ends on the coast. Corbus is Thornhill has developed a fast, are backfield mainstays while a veteran ouard of ability. (As- TROJANS KEEP WINNING: BEAT CALIFORNIA U Twenty - seventh Straight| Victory Witnessed by | Notre Dame - Defeated by | Pittsburgh Irish Gridders Have Been Weeks in Succession 70,000 Fans SOUTH BEND, Indiana, Oct. 30. R | —Notre Dame, a mere memory of BERKELEY, Cal, Oct. 30.—Out | its former gridiron self, fell be- of a tangle of legs and arms last | fore Pittsburgh 14 to 0 last Sat- Saturday afternoon, popped Irvin|urday afternoon. Notre Dame has Washburn, Trojan man of might, | been held scoreless two Saturdays who dashed 60 yards for a touch-|in succession for the first time down which gave Southern Ca: in 16 years. Carnegie Tech turned fornia a 6 to 3 victory over Cali-|the Irish back a week ago last fornia in the final period, after | Saturday. trailing from the start. | Notre Dame made a strong rally _ California scored a ficld goal| i, the last half and nearly scored in the first period. {in the closing moments of the Seventy thousand spectators saw | game but lacked the last moment iods for the only scores of the|sn, game which was the Trojans'| drive. contest. twenty-seventh contest without a | PRGNS et Stanford never threatened to|goraqt | | J | Walter “Pudge” Heffeldinger, score and reached the Washing- ton territory only once although the southerners put up a brilliant | defensive battle, | IDAHO MAKES 9 TOUCHDOWNS | T0 BEAT MONT. MOSCOW, Idaho, Oct. 30.—Ida-| fio slipped over two touchdowns| last Saturday afternoon in the fi- | nal period to defeat Montana 12| to 6 in a Pacific Coast Conference game. REGON BEATS UGLANS BY 70 LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 30.— Oregon kept the slate clean by de- | Yale’s all-America guard of the Thirty members of last year's}so's‘ was the first player to pull football squad have returned to| out of the guard position to run the University of Nevada. ! interference. BLOCKED PUNT WINS FOR 0SC, 2 T0 0 SCORE Turned Back Two {Oregon Staters Break Jinx| Held Over Them by Wash. Staters CORVALLIS, Oregon, Oct. 30.— A blocked punt which rolled be- hand the end zone, gave Oregon State a 2 to 0 victory over Wash- ington State last Saturday after- noon and smashed the jinx the northerners have exercised over the Beavers for the past five years. The narrow victory kept the Oregon State College at the top of the ladder leading to the Pa- cific Coast Conference supremacy. The Staters have not been de- | fea%a this season. D o o v The Galveston Buccaneersswept more series than any other Texas League club in the 1933 season, taking seven by straight victories. SPORTS CARTOON DAILY % —By Pap 4 s ~TdIS cuaP FROM WACO, TEXAS, IS THE SPEARHEAD feati the University of Califor- | nia at Los Angeles last Safurday | OFAAT.SAMYS by a score of 7 to 0 before 25,000 ci— epestatars, “NOUTHFUL. . 7 A pass, Parke to Pozzo, scored|| NEW HEAC A he 1-ne ‘touchdown in the first || COACH O Ptk ROCTOALL. WISH I HaD B x HIS GIRLS PuoUE SHOP IN JUNEAU @WEST PowT ¥ | SEE BIG VAN | | Gunsand Ammunition | | 208 Front St. 205 Seward St. | | 1\ ™ Mgt%usf | GUNS FOR RENT ! S o{.‘.:'ff" RS = TooOK OVER MiLT Yo 2 %gfl’;go‘z:sl_n’s | +J. W.SORRL | B Corra e ! ALSO movep Cabinet Makin | Woodworking Cal g | i sl Small Jobs a Specialty | | Phone 349 85 Gastineau Ave. | 5 *—Average—Did not bowl. LAST OCT. GAME IN CITY LEAGUE WILL BE TONIGHT Prizes for Bowling Tourna- ment to Be Announced, Distributed After Game Tonight at the Brunswick bowl- ing alleys the last game in the City League tournament will be played at 8 o'clock sharp when the Grocers' five and the Brunswick team meet. After tonight's game the aver- ages for the tournament will be figured and prizes awarded, it was announced. All members of the City League teams are requested to be on hand for the distribu- tion of prizes. Victors in the games played on Saturday night were the members of the Moose team who defeated the Alaska Juneau Car Shop five with a score of 2482 to 2363. Individual scores in Saturday's games follow: «Coach A. A. Stagg of the College of the Pacific holds two workouts daily, one in the afternoon and one at night. G ———o—— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay, e r® Mrs. and ¥ ong on the Channel and is emplayed | the heart. He was a cook by occu- Phillies | Bote 167 176 167— 510|°F them all Bringdale 213 146 198— 557 SLIGHTLY STUBBORN 160 391 ({Batthwel I_l’l e Ef-_} In the past three years college Totals . 497 583 “9_“581!oocban managers have cut the Red: { prices of all but on or two of the Bavard L 177 201 194— 572 most conspicuous attractions. These Danner . 170 147 164— ““;zducnons have ranged as high as Barragar, Jr. .. 182 109 180— 572 Beufmf;m-me Gl Totals ;{, E.; ;5&;—1625‘1“3“3 baseball has not reduced : Dodgers |its standard prices of admission, | Robertson m 1m 171_.513feicher for regular season play or | Thibodeau " 168 170 168— 506/ for the world series. The argu- Worth " 180 125 104 4g9|mMent of the magnates is fairly © . 0 7 _|sound. Since they did mot boost o ¢ 466 533—1518 prices during boom times, they R v, 8 o should not be called upon to cut J. George 183 181 184— 548 them during a depression. Yet Stevens 162 223 164 549 | this policy seems futile in the face Wile 128 131 142— 401 of steadily dwindling receipts. | 2 77 7| Pmany, the jump from $1.10 for 3 490—1498 | @ grandstand seat during the reg- G o Br:vvses B ular baseball season to $5.50 for H. Sabin 183 195 149— 5272 similar spot during the world Blomgren i 137 153 234 524 Series s so substantial as to scare connars v 127 129 191— “.,iofl thousands of potential custo- B BT T | mers in current times. The proof 1498 | Of this is that not one of the five PR g AT o games between the Giants and the DAEREN S ML1T8 Zéa— 22’5’ sel:‘lo'frsev::; as:ee:t:a:: who paid horin " 12 1% 120_-ago|the price of seeing the series, prob- iy G i A0, G ably 1,000 others listened in to the Totals ... 409 480 503—1482 details over the air or by mega- phone, which is something else for the club owners to think about. BETTER THAN BANKRUPTCY Most American League men ap- parently do not like the proposal for a mid-series season of inter- league games, in July and Aug- ust, advocated strongly by the late Wwilliam L. Veeck of the Chicago Cubs. They say it strikes at a funda- mental of the major pennant races and is an expedient that will be cast off when better times and more customers return to the parks. Whether they are right or not, the fact is that American League as well as National League club owners face an immediate and ur- gent necessity for taking measures that will offset further financial losses. There is a limit to which over- head can be cut. If the inter- league idea is the best put for- ward to stir up more interest, Na- tional Leaguers argue, why not give it a trial? — e, — Dan McGuin is serving his twenty-ninth year as head football coach at Vanderbilt University. - e — Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Moose B. Schmitz ... 125 166 165—456 G. Paul . 172 131 145448 C. Ashby ... 160 169 169—49% 0. Koski .. 148 180 164492 M. Seston ... 182 267 139—588 A. J. Car Shop F. Schmitz 169 191 146—506 A. Garn 189 156 125—470 J. Nello . 140 166 112—418 C. Erskine 176 160 181—525 VISIT THE 7 Relloy ... 149 152 145—444 e Salmon Creek rs, and has many friends in the | Alice 'Kelly attended the| under bride. who was charming aftired | operation at St in a pale green crepe gown. Mrs. Krane has lived in Juneau |is said to be getting aleng nicely. |9 o Douglas for a number of| Erling K Olafson officlated and|of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zenger, went an emergency appendix . Ann’s Hospital at lock Saturday evening. He S-SR Oscar Sampson, aged 65, oldtime while Mr. Krane, who has resident of Alaska, died recently at of the most popular orchestras | Fairbanks following an attack of at the Federal Building, as fore- ' pation “With prices going up I want to buy a lot of things. But not another thing till I get a Maytag. Because with a Maytag I can save money to buy other things I want.” 0 That’s sensible buying. Because it is buying quality — quality you can use—quality that pays a weekly return on the money you invest. ® It is a fact that the Maytag washes clothes faster, washes them more thoroughly, more gently and at lower cost per washing because it is a better designed, better built washer. You can prove that to yourself. @ Select your Maytag at today’s low prices. THE MAYTAG COMPANY Manufacturers Founded 1893 NEWTON, IOWA -20-25-38 THING I'M GOING TO BUY IS A You can still $ Maytag for as ° little as —_— For homes without electricity, this Maytag may be had with Gasoline Multi-Motor at slight additional cost, W. P. JOHNSON Authorized Dealer LOW PRICES ON ALL MAYTAGS EQUIPPED WITH GASOLINE MULTI-MOTOR TOMORROW NIGHT! SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN DANCE MUSIC AT THE Capital Parlors and BALL ROOM Private Booths Private Dining Rooms The Finest Hardwood Dance Floor in Alaska \CHES! SANDWICHES! CHILI! COFFEE! BEER! Phone 569 for Reservations LU

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