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! BUT-MOTHER! | DONT LIKE | THE COUNT AND | WISH i YOU WOULD LET ME . CHOOSE MY OWN FRIENDS- SHUT UP-1 HAVE INSTRUCTED “YOUR FATHER TO GIVE HIM A POSITION IN HIS OFFICE-THE COUNT 1S A MAN THAT | ANY GIRL SHOULD BE PROUD " TO YES-THIS 1S MAGGIE - WHAT? DIDNT “YOU GIVE THE COUNT A POSITION? THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 6, 1933. B NO- | JUST NOW ASKED HIM |F HE WOULD LIKE TO GO TO WORK- 11l & Features Syndicate, Inc._ Great SOX WIN | Bowiing Tournament Schedulei Tonight In the Elks’ bowling tournament, teams of the Natibnal League heduled to play in the club alleys tonight, at the following hours: 7:30 o'clock—Reds vs. Dodgers. 8:30 o'clock — Cardinals vs. Pi- 9:30 o'clock—Cubs vs. Phillies. A. Henning, of the Browns, had the high re for a single game made in the matches played Sat- urday, with 199 with Roski, of the Athletics second high with 192 High three game total was 545 rolled by Radde of the Yanks. Individual res in Saturday night's games follow: Athletics Koski 176 157 192— 525 Walmer 121 142 140— 403 Van Atta 138 130 150— 413 Totals 4821346 Halm NN 171 145 158— 474| Sperling 160 160 Caro 154 126 Totals 431 4731389 Browns A. Henning 171 199 147— 577 Stapleton 116 114 142— 372 Wilson 149 139 117— 405 Totals 436 452 406—1294 Yankees 163 191 191— 545 V. 145 183 164— 492 Banfield 119 127 110— 356 Totals 427 501 465—1393 *— Average—Did not bowl BOWLING TEAMS OF CITY LEAGUE | PLAY TONIGHT Two Tournament Matches Scheduled for This Ev- . ening at Brunswick Bowling matches to be played in the City League Tournament at the Brunswick bowling alleyes to- night will be the Brunswicks vs the Miners at 7:30 oclock and Connors Garage team vs City team at 8:30 o'clock. In the games Saturday night, the Moose defeated the Alaska Pross team with a score of 1524 to 1186 while the Legion of the Moose were victors over the City team, 1486 to 1269. Individual scores for night's matches follow: CITY TEAM Barragar ... 121 173 Shattuck ... 144 113 173 430 Caro 131 148 105 384 1269 LEGION OF THE MOOSE Saturda: 1 161 455 C. B. M. Seston 167 177 181 525 C. Erskine 143 112 177 432 J. Nello 175 179 175 529 1486 MOOSE F. Schmitz 174 156 136 486 J. Nello 172 165 187 524 J. Kelloy 170 177 187 534 1524 ALASKA PRESS E. Evans 103 181 118 402 Brown 100 148 157 405 J. Ledbetter 133 114 132 379 1186 MICHIGAN JUST WINS BY TALLY OVER ILLINOIS CHAMPAIGN, 11, Nov. 6—In ¢ dramatic gridiron strug- mid-Western Conferance an just managed to last Saturday af- narrowest possi- Michigan thus and untied at gle in season, Michig conquer Tllinois ternoon by the ble margin, 7 to 6. remains undefeated ROWLING SAT, | Three Ma- ch;s on Elks’ Britain nights ccscrved By GEORGE McMANUS AN' HE FAINTED- i HES DTILL l UNCONSQOUS - Lower row, left to right: Lundquist, Helen Palmer and Lulu ke NAVY DEFEATS | IRISH ELEVEN BY 770 0 SCORE Middies End 6-Year Hum- iliation—Notre Dame Dropping Down BALTIMORE, Navy defeated Notre D: 0 Saturday afte n p end to the six years of humilia- tion for the Middies. It was the first time the Middies ever down- ed Notre Dame, also the first] time in history the Irish have been defeated on three successive Saturdays and doubly so as Notre Dame has not made a score dur- ing that time. WASH, STATERS KEEP CONZAGA FROM SCORING SPOKANE, Wash,, Nov. 6.— Washington State rode roughshod over Gonzaga last Saturday after- noon to win 16 to 0 in a non-con- ference game. Gonzaga offered a stiff defens- ive play most of the time but never threatened the Stater's goal line. Jean Danvers, Margare in shape for classes. (Associated Press Photo) Hodgson. Footba FOOTBAL RESULT: F ~ T imp ~ s 1 and notic 1 1p e 0; Navy 1. 13; Fordham 6. ana 0; Ohio State 21. Penn 16 Yale 14. 3 Detroit 24, Maryland Virginia 6. Georgia 14; Florida 0. Minnesota 0; Northwestern 0. gan 7; Illinois 6. ‘Wisconsin 0; Chicago 0. Rice Institute 0; Santa Cl Olympic Club 0; Stanfo Carnegie Tech 7; Purdue 17. Kentucky 0; Alabama 20. Nebraska 26; Missouri 0. Iowa State 7; Iowa 27. Georgia Tech 6; Vanderbilt 9. Texas U 10; Southern Methodist Kansas 0; Oklahoma 20. Utah 7; Oregon 26. Washington State 16; Gonzaga 0. California 0; UCLA 0. Whitman 0; College of Puget Sound 19. ——.———— IS GOING OUTSIDE Miss Josephine Miller, former student at the Alaska College, is a passenger aboard the Northwest- for the states. ern For the seventh consccutive scason Weber college of Ogden, Utah, has a feminine football team that has tossed a challenge to any other eleven of the land, providing it is made up of the same sex. Back row, left to right: Edna Williams, Dora Bundy, Hermese Broadbent, Geneva Farr and Hermoine Tracy. Betts, Ellen Halgren, Bernice Lundquist, Barbara | training helps the co-eds, instructers declare, to |Californians i | | J NGE " SANTA CLARA 4 TOUCHDOWNS GIVE VICTORY T0 OREGON U Mountain Conference Lead- eds Defeated by Score of 26 to 7 EUGENE, Ore., Nov. 6. — The smashing and ever alert Univer- sity of Oregon football team, un- defeated so far in the Pacific Coast conference, ripped its way through the University of Utah last | Saturday to defeat the Mountain conference leaders by a score of 26 to 7. Two touchdowns in the second period and two in the last ac- counted for the Webfoot scoring. Utah scored during the last 10 minutes of the game. —————— ~SPORT- WINNER OVER TEXAS ELEVEN Win 13 to 0 in First Intersectional Clash on Coast SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 6.— The ersity of Santa Ciara de- feated R. Institute of Texas 13 to 0 last Saturday afternoon in the first important inte: tional gridiron clash of the szason here, before a crowd of 15,000 specta- tors. The Saints scored touchdowns in the first and second periods and held their rivals in check in the second half. ‘| Sister Universities Of California Play To Scoreless Tie LOS ANGELES, Cal., Nov. 6. — California’s sister universi- ties, one of Berkeley and the cther of Los Angeles, played a ccoreless tie game here last Saturday afterncon in their first meeting. Forty thousand spectators witnessed the game. —,to— MRS. EMMA ANSON IN ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL st Emma Anson, entered St. Ann_s Hospital this morning to receive medical treatment. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON the head of the race for the Big Ten championship. ONE OF THE SEST HEAVYWEIGHT BOXERS THE ACADEMY HAS PRODUCED — HIS MARVELOUS HANDS ARE THE SECRET OF SLANTS | What a sap I was to think i | had to have a manager, go through |a lot of phoney motions for the | sake of publicity and figure I could ’jusl sit back and wait for the \)n'oms to fall in my lap,” a world- | famous golf professional told me the other day. “Just because I won a few | championships and fell for some | soft, persuasive talk, I woke up and found myself—yes, right be- hind the old eight ball. | “Well, there’s nothing like learn- ing by your mistakes in these {times. I didn't have to wait long | to find out how wrong I was—just | about 100 per cent wrong, like the | fellows who try to pick the foot- | ball winners, hey? “So what? | tled for myself. I made connec- | tions, hooked up with the right guy for an exhibition tour, and | have been doing my own business | transactions right down the line. |T like it and take it from me, there's no substituting for hust- {ling for yourself, with no ‘cutting’ | the other guys in just for exer- cise.” | ROLL THEIR OWN It's a sign of the time that our l;princlpal athletes, not alone the I got out and hus-| i have to be good business men if they hope to stick around the top and make the most of their call- ing. | Golf stars like Hagen, Sarazen, Farrell, Kirkwood, Mac Smith and Tommy Aromur have established substantial business connections, apart from club affiliations or ex- hibition play. | The crack tennis professionals, Tilden, Richards, Kokelum and others, manage their own engage- ments, and have found they do better for themselves than can managers who have a variety of interests. H Ellsworth Vines might have proved a better business man if he had chosen to hop from the ama- teur ranks a year ago, but he has nevertheless made an agreement for a tour with Tilden that should keep the big, bad wolf from the Vines threshold for some_time to, come. No better example of the mod- ern young athlete-business man can be given than William Harold Terry, manager of the world cham- pion Giants. Bill Terry has neveri permitted baseball to interfere with the furtherance of his com- mercial affairs in Memphis. Two days after he came back trium- phantly from Washington Terry signed a five year contract reliab- 1y understood to assure him $200,- 000. BABE A SHREWD ONE Babe Ruth’s climb up into the biggest money baseball has ever known may have been aided by the advice and assistance of his business mentor, but there is no shrewder star along the financial byways mow than the celebrated Bambino. The Ruthian nest is feathered financially against any contingency, now and indefinitely. Ruth cannot boast, as Luis An- gel Firpo once did, that he still had the first dollar he earned in American rings, but he is a big- ger and better business man now than he was when he was a youn- ger and greater ball player. MARTHA SOCIETY MEETS TONIGHT, SPECIAL SESSION A special sewing session of the Martha Society will be held at the home of Mrs. R. G. Day. The session is called for 8 o'clock to- night and all members are urged to attend as a preliminary to the an- nual Bazaar. —— BAZAAR! ZAZAAR! Martha Society’s Great Annual Event—November 17. adv. | professional stars, but the amateur | aces, too, have found they now, —_———— Our Best , Advertisement Are the our Satisfied Customers! Furs shipped to all parts of the world. YURMAN The Furrier | worth SHOP IN JUNEAU T T A many letters praising received from Triangle Bldg. GET YOUR TICKETS Turkey Dinner Chicken Dinner FREE! CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY jl,erdahl-Pollack Company and thé | Northern Air Transport were nol | damaged. : HANGAR FIRE AT FAIRBANKS, P]anle Is Als% Destroyed in; ) nterior City—Loss I $10,000 | PARKE Juneau passengers arriving on DA vrls the Northwestern from Fairbanks bring word that fire destroyed the hangar of the Service Air Line on Weeks Aviation Field and also the structure's contents, which in- cluded an airplane, tools and equip- ment. The loss is estimated at $10,000. There was no insurance. The Service Airlines is owned by Percy Hubbard and Arthur Hines. Ignited From Firepot l The flames started when “dope” a sort of paint, was being applied to one of the wings of the destroyed plane. A firepot near the plane| to keep the hangar warm ignited the wing. ! The blaze consumed the hangar and its contents in about 15 min-| utes. Plane Named Eaglerock The burned aircraft was an Eaglerock, a biplane, that had been in service a few years. Its original cost was about $7,000. The Fire Department made a fast run to the airport, but flnmes: had made such quick headway that nothing could be done to' save the hangar. The neighboring hangars of the - Dally Empwe Want Ads Pay Cod Liver 0Oil (Standardized) Juneau Drug Co. Phone 33 Delivery Service P. O. Substation No. 1 CRAZY CRYSTALS Butler Mauro Drug Co. THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL”-of course! Harri Machine Shop Plumbing Heating Sheet Metal [ HITE LINE CABS 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska Established 1898 IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster