The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 20, 1933, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 20, 1933. BRINGING UP FATHER DADDY- MOTHER HAS A COLD AND 1SNT GOING TO TAKE A SINGING LESSON TO-DAY AND THE RECEPTION TO-MORROW AFTERNOON HAS BEEN POSTPONED AND BARoN LAND A %) B i Ve Y ‘ Stanf&d 3 Wallops Montana WASHINGTON IS VICTORIOUS OVER U. C. L. A, Homeco}ninfirad Cele- bration Ends in Perfect and Proper Style Cardinals Score in Every Period to Pile Up 33-7 Victory PALO ALTO, Cal, Nov. 20.— SEATTLE, nNov. 20.—Willlam gianford crushed Montana 33 to Smith, University of Washington's| 7 in the Coast Conference game en8, gle handedly conquered! pere last Saturday afternoon. The the University of California Cardinals scored in every quarter Los Angeles here | and smashed through Montana ternoon by a s almost at will, especially in the and the victory was celebrated in jgst period. proper style by the homecoming —————— University of Washington. Smith red a touchdown in the first period and added an extra point from placement. He booted a field goal in the fourth period. Four weeks ago last Saturday, Smith booted two field goals to RESU'J-S at Stanford 6 to 0. [ Fog Shrouded Field | < Fifteen thousand fans saw th: The following are final scores of Saturday which was principal football games played last Saturday afternoon: UCLA 0; Washington 10. Idaho 0; California 6. Oregon 0; Southern 26. Montana 7; Stanford 33. Oregon State 9; Fordham 6. Notre Dame 6; Northwestern 0. Minnesota 0; Michigan 0. Penn Military 0; Army 12. Penn State 6; Pennsylvania 6. Nebraska 0; Pittsburgh 6. Cornell 7; Dartmouth 0. Navy 0; Princeton 13. Brown 6; Harvard Towa 14; Purdue 6. Chicago 0; Illinois 7. Ohio State 6; Wisconsin 0. Kentucky 0; Tulane 34. Auburn 14; Georgie 6. Iowa State 6; Kansas 20. Oklahoma 0; Kansas State 14. Vanderbilt 6; Tennesee 33 Utah 6; University of Denver 13. College of Puget Sound 21; Pa- cific University 0. e e———— contest last layed in a fog shrouded field. Homecoming was mightily cele-| brated here Saturday night with the Alumni Home-coming Cabaret at the Olympic Hotel which in previcus also taxed tne ca= pacity of the two largest ballrooms te the limit. y the first isiting grads was to home - coming in the lobby the Hotel Edmond Meany, where reception and information headquarters were maintained. Then arm-in-arm with some long-lost classmate, the “old grads” stepped forth into a suc- cesson of activities. Reunion Dinner aternity and had arranged some form of open house event. The big reunion dinner was héid Friday night for all former “W” men and another was held for the independent men. ! The cabaret Saturday night was in charge of the committee head- ed by Harold Bauer, assisted by the Messrs. Winfield Langlie, Har- old Quilliam, Clarence Winberg, Bog Buzard, Orville Mills, Jack Cissra, Waltre Hodge, James Fra- James Charteris, the Misses Josephine Sykes, Marion Diehl, Betty Taylor, Mrs. Chapin Henry and Mrs. John Turner. - e ATTENTION JUNEAU WOMAN'S CLUB The Juneau Woman'’s Club will erve tea Tuesday afternoon from 2 to 4:30 o'clock in the American Legion Dugout. At this time the Calisthentics Class will give a demonstration of their work. A cordial invitation is extended all the women of the Channel to at- tend this Tea. NORA B. CHASE, Secretary. " California official act of of 12. Every sorority SKAGWAY BOY GIVEN HONOR AT WASHINGTON U. UNIVERSITY OF WASHING- TON, Seatfle, (Special to The Empire), Nov. 20.—Bob Dahl of Skagway, was initiated into Purple Shield, University of Washington’s , underclassmen’s scholastic honor- | ary, last week. Purple Shield members are chosen from the ranks of the Freshmen class on the merits of their high school records. They must maintain a high scholastic average during the first quarter in the University to be initiated. S e Don't neglect your feet. Fallen arches corrected. Corns. Next to Brownie's Barber Shop. —adv. . ——— Daily Emprre Want Ade Pay WHAT A RMAPPY DAY THIS 'S TURNIN OUT TO BE- OREGON STATE | "WINNER OVER ' FORDHAM, 9§ - § Franklin Go:s—93 Yards for| | Touchdown—Schwam- | mel Boots Field Goal | NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—The roll- | ing hips of Norman Franklin and| the sturdy toe of Ad Schammel last Saturday shattered Fordham's dream of a trip to the Rose Bowl as Oregon State defeated the Rams 9 to 6 before 40,000 shivering spec- | tators. | Franklin raced 93 yards for a touchdown after receiving the ball in the first kickoff at the start of | the game while Schwammel bont-‘ ed a field goal in the second per- iod. ‘ Fordham scored a touchdown in the second period. i —e——— [ | $0. CALIFORNIA 'COMES BACK T0 DEFEAT OREGON Southern Team Holds Web- | footers Scoreless Be- | fore 60,000 Fans ‘ | LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 20.—| Oregon’s hopes for the undefeated | | Coast Conference championship | !and the Rose Bowl contest bid| i were dashed last Saturday after- | noon as Southern California re- | turned to the grid wars with ven-| ! geance and rolled up a 26 to 0} victory before 60,000 spectators. SAN DIEGO MARINES | ! LOSE OUT TO LOYOLA| | ! SAN DIEGO, Cal, Nov. 20.—| Loyola of Los Angeles defeated the San Diego Marines at foot- ball Sunday afternoon by a score of 13 to 6. 'GONZAGA WINNER ; OVER COLUMBIA U| | PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 20.—Gon- | zaga, of Spokane, defeated Colum-| bia University, of Portland, Sunday ,afternoon by a score of 13 to 8. ————— Machines that sell bus tickets when coins are inserted have been installed along some of Paris's streets. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON MEET THE YOUNG #2LLOW WHO HAS BEEN THE SEASON'S SENSATION IN THE SOUTH ses W HOWARD, * BUeKy s SHREVEFPORT SOPHOMORE 1S ONE OF THE SHIFTIEST RUNN N e SOUH,’ Al Rights Reserved by The Associated Press Qo' OEVELOP SNAKE, ///// : ~By Pap T MIGHT ™ HIPS BITTEN BY A SNAKE _ LAST SUMMER ,HE WP SPENT TREE fl WEEKS IN BED. -HE's STiLL- TRYING TO REGAIN THE 25 POUNO® LONGEST RUN OF THE SEASON THAT TELEGRAM JUST ARRIVED SR~ ‘The deep south, our scouts re- port, has more gridiron rabbits this year than ever and that sec- tion has long been noted for its production of nimble backs who could fade from the arms of rug- ged tacklers. Georgia's unbeaten Bulldogs have several light, speedy and versatile halfbacks who have been showing consistently brilliant as October slipped by. Homer Key is having a great year. This little halfback, now a senior, is as fast and elus- ive as ever. Cy Grant is another Georgia halfback, weighing around 167, who can outrace the fastest ends if they give him an opening. TULANE'S BACKS WHO IN THE WORLD KiN THIS BE The Green Wave has nine triple threat backs of first string calibre. Johnny McDaniel, 193-pound quar- terbeck, can run, punt, pass, block ' and tackle. Bucky Bryan, left halfback, is rated the finest soph- omere prospect at Tulane since Don Zimmerman. He weighs only 162. Barney Mintz, another sopoho- more, Little Preacher Roberts, ver- satile Tulane captain, and Little Monk Simons, a great kicking half- back, help round out the most de- ceptive offensive lineup in years at the New Orleans institution. Tulane has scored in 49 of its past 52 games. Auburn’s plainsmen have a fine little running back in Casey Kim- brell. They also have onz of the finest ends of the year in Gump| Ariaif and a strong tackle in Bat McGollum. Georgia Tech has a well bal- anced line, one of the strongest in the south, although it would be hard to single out the best player from the group. Hupke of Alabama standing guard. Louisiana State has. a wealth of material. Abe Mickal, a sopho- more fullback, is a great Kicker, fine passer and dangerous ball carrier. is an out- | meetings. | i yin LONE SURVIVOR For the first time in years, only one team in the deep south came to November unbeaten and untied, Georgia being the only survivor.! At that, the Bulldogs had a close run against Mercer, winning by a slim 13 to 12. The familiar leaders of the past | few years in that section—Ten- nessee, Auburn, Alabama, Tulane,| Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech—all have| i By GEORGE McMANUS MY SON-HES COMIN' HOME FRoOM COLLEGE - | KNEW SOMETHIN? WOULD HAPPEN TO SPOIL THE DAY - Notre Dame Wins Game, 7 to 0 Score Irish Make First Tally Against Northwestern in Five Starts EVANSTON, Ill, Nov. 20.—Andy Pilney led Notre Dame out of foot- ball's wilderness last aSturday af- ternoon with a 7 to 0 victory over Northwestern. Pilney dashed over for the only| touchdown of the game in the sec-| ond period. | It was Notre Dame’s first score| in the last five starts. -, GAELS, BRONGOS BATTLE TO TIE. SUNDAY CONTEST SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Nov. 20 —With half a dozen or more fist) fights climaxing the game, the St.| Mary’s Gaels and Santa Clara's| Broncos battled to a 6-6 tie Sunday afternoon contest. There were no serious casualties | and all ended well except for torn | clothes, a few black eyes and bruises. ! The game was the most bitterly | contested event ever taking place between the two schools in twelve Each team scored one touchdown the first period and battling | through three tough periods there- after without a score. The crowd battled more than 15 minutes after the game before the ¢rowd could clear the Kezer Stadium of the milling mob. in the annual football| CALIFORNIA BEATS IDAHO SMALL SCORE |Bears Have Hard Fight on Hands to Win Six to Nothing BERKELEY, Cal, Nov. 20.—Ex- hibiting lots of power but to little purpose, the University of Cali- fornia eked out a 6 to 0 win over Idaho last Saturday afternoon. The only score came in the third period when Keefer, Bear fullback, went over after the Bears recovered their own fumble on the one-yard line. — e————— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. SEE BIG VAN For the largest assortment of Alaskan Made Christmas Gifts in Juneau! | 204 Front St. 205 Seward St. | | VISIT THE Salmon Creek Roadhouse ANTON RIESS been beaten. Louisiana State Tigers have been twice tied. Football crowds in the south have been holding up well com- pared with previous years. Tulane and Auburn drew 23,000 at New! Orleans; Auburn and Georgia Tech attracted the same number at At- lanta; Georgia and N. Y. U. sold 25,000 at Athens; Centennary and L S U, drew 20000 at Baton| Rouge; Alabama and Tennesseee | played before 24,000 at Knoxville. ———————— SHOP IN JUNEAU | Our Best Advertisement Are the our worth Captain Biff Jones' & many letters praising received from Satisfied Customers! Furs shipped to all parts of the world. YURMAN The Furrier Triangle Bldg. J. W. SORRI Woodworking Cabinet Making Small Jobs a Specialty | Phone 349 85 Gastineau Ave. | { | | L [SUSUTUSUUSSPSS RS “SO DO 17 Eat At BAILEY’S CAFE BEER served if desired Jonteel Face Powder 50c Bridge Book FREE! Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders” UTAH SUFFERS FIRST DEFEAT; LOSES BY 10 University of Denver Turns) | Cards Against Rocky Mountain Champs | | i DENVER, Col, Nov. 20.—The University of Utah was swept out of power in the Rocky Mountain ternoon by falling before the Uni. versity of Denver 13 to 0. It was the first conference de feat of Utah since 1927. The outcome of the remaini games in the Rocky Mountal Co'nference is necessary to deci the conference championship. COLLEGE OF PUGET * SOUND WINS Tl'l'l.% FOREST GROVE, Ore., Nov. 204 The Cbllege of Puget Soun§ & at Tacoma, won the undisputes Northwest championship here la: Saturday afternoon by defeatis the Pacific University by a swg of 21 to 0. ———————— | Conference here last Saturday af- Daily Empire Want Ads Pay CARDS DISTINCTIVE! DIFFERENT! SOLD BY— and Imprinted by THE EMPIRE Printing Co. PHONE 374 And Our Representative Will Call! Or See Them at the Empire Ofice! f you save for a definite pur- pose and make regular weekly or monthly depoiits this bank. Lay your plans, in an account at set a goal, then save for it. This bank will help by paying compound interest on the money you deposit. Stat NOW ~—save and havel First National Bank THE SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases”

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