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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY OCT. 22, 1934. BRINGING UP FATHER MMEBASE GO TO YOUR ROOM AND DON'T DISTURB ME WHILE | AM COOKING-I'LL AL RIGHT- CALL YOU WHEN T READY=/ e GAELS FINISH SERIES WITH 2VIGTORIES Barragar Rolls High Total, 584—Fred Henning Scores 232 James Barragar wound up his bowling in the first Elks' tourna- ment of the season Saturday night by hitting 584, high mark of the evening, and thereby aiding his Gaels to take two out of three games from the Bruins. The Gaels finished their string by winning 11 games and losing 10. Fred Henning, Golden Bear, roll- ed the best single game, 232, against the Utes, who stubbornly adhered to the policy they established in their first match, of allowing their opponents just two games, no mores and no less. By registering a total of 571 pins Henning snatched the scering leadership from Tom Selby, who has been out in front for some time. The Don ace rolled 553 Saturday and is now trailing Hen- ning by 11 pins, each with three games to go. The race for pin leadership is very, very close. Henning's average te date is 186.1, Barragar finished with 18595, Selby’s average is 18555. Ed Radde, Polar Bear, has an average of 184.3 in nine games. Bavard, Bronco cap:ain, holds fifth place, 183.2. By taking the measure of the Dens twice the Trojans swung back into the running for the Southern Division pennant. The Dons are ahead one game, having won 12 1 lost 6 to their rivals’ 11 and 7 Each team has three more games on its schedule. Tonight's Games The Beavers wind up their tour- ney play tonight when they meet the Webfeet in the first match The Cougars, who can be beaten out of the Northern Division flag only by a miracle, roll the Huskies in the second contest. Polar Bears and Bulldogs clash in the nightcap. Saturday nigh scores: 7:30—Utes 162 162 157 123 145 145 464 430 Golden Bears Henning, F. 232 168 Hendrickson 155 189 Zimmerman 120 120 507 477 8:30—Dons 166 166 180 199 130 191 476 556 Trojans 177 200 *125 502 482 9:30—Bruins 173 173 . 160 191 119 143 452 Gaels 182 150 .. 148 Totals ... . 480 ‘Average did not STANFORD WINS OVER DONS 3 - 0 SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Oct. 22. —A field goal which topped off an 30-yard drive in the last quarter last Saturday afternoon enabled Stanford to defeat the San Fran- cisco Dons by a score of 3 to 0. R Seats on the New York Curb Ex- change had a* recent selling price of abcut. 330000 Don’t Sleep on Left Side—Affects Heart If stomach GAS prevents sleep- ing on right side try Adlerika. One dose brings out poisons and relieves Hoffman Bringdale Monagle 162—*488 187— 467 145—*435 Totals 494—1388 171— 571 155— 499 120—*360 446—1430 Totals 166—*498 174— 553 180— 501 520—1552 Roberson Selby Benson Totals 201— 561 180— 544 159— 419 540—1524 Henning, A. Kaufmann Hunt 183 164 135 Totals 173—*519 157— 508 156— 418 Andrews Mess'midt, H. Davis Totals 486—1445 202— 584 150—*45C 148—*444 500—1478 Barragar, Jr. McCormick Shattuck gas pressing on heart so you sleep' soundly all night. Butler-Mauro Drug Co., in Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. —adv. \9 MAGGQIE- |y~ By Pap - ONE OF NOTEE VAMES STAR- BACKS W 1932 — POOR. HEALTH FORCED HIM OUT OF COLLEGE LAST YEAt - HE'S BACK N HARNES S THIS SEASO! BETTER THAN EVER ) HE TRAVELED AROUND TE LAST 7EAR. IN SEARCH OF NOTRE DAME ROUTS JINX, SCORE 13 - 0 SOUTH BrnNw, ind, Oct. 20— Notre Dame rushed merrily along cn the football came-back trail last Saturday afternocon cruhing its most notorious jinx, Carnegie Tech, 13 to 0, with almost listless ease. Touchdowns came after sudden thrusts on the ground and by air in the first and third periods. .o CORDOVA LEGION ELECTS NEW SET OF OFFICERS | At a meeting held recently of the John W. Jones Post No. 8 of the American Legion, the following officers were clected for the com- ing year: Harold Chadwick, Com- mander; E. M. Jacobsen, First Vice- President; Clarence Hahn, Second Vice-President; Rev. B. J. Bingle, Chaplain;. E. M. Saari, Secretary; Dan McCarthy, Sergeant-at-Arms; J. W. Rhodes, Finance Officer; W. A. Taylor, Service Officer; Dalton Barr and Rev. B. J. Bingle, Ex- | ecutive Committee. WoRLO % HEALTH ’UGLANS BEATEN BRAWNY GAELS BY CALIFORNIA BEAT FORDHAM BEFORE 60,000 NEW YORK, Oct. 20.—St. Mary brawny Gaels trounced Fordham 14 to 9 last Saturday afternoon and scored another victory in in- tersectional gridiron' rivalries. Six- ty thousand spectators, one of the largest gridiron crowds of the day, saw the game. eee EERKELEY, C.,, Oct. 22—A| last period field goal by half-| |back Arleigh Williams broke up | a close and hard fought football | game here last Saturday afternoon and gave the University of Califor- nia a 3 to 0 victory of the Uni- | versity of California at Los An- geles, L eee FAMOUS DOG MUSHER SHOWS RACE PICTURES Leonhard Seppala, famous Alas- BOUND XUE TR ETATES ka Dog Racer, who is now super- | x M jdraul intendent’ of ithe Diteh System of |, A0 eI8 /ensaged in hydraullc) i i i mining during the past summer on fhe Saiibanks Explaration C0. £h- |Peters Greek in the "Talkecina Fairbanks Lodge of Elke receritly |COUNIY, passed through Junean re- | cently enroute to the States. Otis| with a series of pictures depicting | Ross headed” the " d party compose dog races held in Alaska from time \01 T to time, Canada and the eastern | part of the United States. The | e Nome scenes proved of especial| ~~NOTICE EASTERN STARS yalue and interest since the recent | A meeting of the Juneau Chap- | great fire there. The eastern scenes | ter No. 7 O. E. Stars will be held | inciuded races at Poland Springs, | Tuesday evening, Oct. 23. Installa- Montreal, and the Olympic Games | tion, initiation and affiliation. Ev- at Lake Placid. This is the first of \ery member is urged to attend a series of such entertainments FANNIE L. ROBINSON, planned for the mmer Secretary. —adv. NEVADA WOLVES TRIM GAELS IN GREATEST UPSET In one of the most surprsing games of the season, University of Nevada amazed 20,000 spectatc: and thousands cf the sport’s followers. by beating the powerful St. Mary's football aggregation 9 to 7 in San Francisco's. Kezar ;Stadium; ; A ‘perfect @ropkick from the.30-yard line with minutes to play wis the deciding factor for lhe Wolf Pack. This Associated Press photo shows Sauer (Mt in white jer- sey,) Nevada back, making 2 nice’ missing the tackle. nln in the first quarter. Yezerski, giant St. Mary's linesman, i BOY! JUST TH\MK QF T VVE GOT MAGG COOKIN AGIN- | F"EEL AS By GEORGE McMANUS OWH . HELLO, MISS CHATTER! —YES" ——'YOU DON'T TELL ME - GO ON-TELL ME-1I'M DYING TO IF L WUZ BEGINNIN'TO LIVE AGIN— HEAR ABOUT HER— REALLY ? | THOUGHT THAT RIGHT FROM THE START—— WHEN DID YOUL SEE HER OLD STORY —Qll. AND WATER- YES. THE OREGON STATE, §0. CALIFORNIA FIGHT§ TO TIE 'Both Elever;s—T_ry for Come | Back Before Forty ‘ Thousand Fans LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 22— |Oregon State and Southern Cali- irorma‘ both trying vainly to come iback on the ofotball trail, fought to a 6-6 tie last Saturday after- noon before a crowd of 40,000. Milton Campbell scored on a 40-yard pass in the last quarter o save the Beacers' defeat after CIff Propst had rammed the center {line for five yards and a touch- down for the Trojans in the first quarter e * Se— port o Remcmber the C Boners? It's one of the distressing fea- | tures of American sport that fan- dom remembers the fellow who did the wrong thing, rather than the |blgke who comes through with a more heroic gesture. ' It's 100 to 1 you can’t recall who | won the deciding game for the Chi- jcago Cubs against the New York | Giants in their memorable playolf mnnl but anyone knows that Fred | Merkle’s failure to touch second |bade was responsible for said play- | | You may not remember offhand who talliad the winning touch- tlcwn for Georgia Tech in the Rese. Bowl football on January 1, Roy Riegels, the California center, picked up a loose ball and ran about 70 yards toward his own goal in that contest? When anybody mentions the 1917 world ceries, the first crack is apt to be: “Oh, yes, time Heinie Zimmerman chased Eddie Collins of the White Sox across the plate with the winning run?” And the answer is, of course, “yes.” [ 1934 Has Its Share l Consequently, long after all the |box-scores and summaries of cur- |rent events have been stowed away, ‘Lhey will be talking about how back in 1934 Thomas Octave Mud- \dock Sopwith kicked away a glori- ‘ous chance to capture the Ameri- ca's Cup off Newport, how the Gi- ants booted away their National League pennant lead, and the freak circumstance by which Elmer Boe- | seke, lanky Californian polo star, | knocked the ball between his own | goal-posts for the score that meant wvictary for the East in the intersec- tional battle on horseback with the | West. | It may be an injustice to all con- cerned to dwell on the shortcom- ings, rather than the more beau- tiful side of life, but since it is all part of the great American sport- ing show—at a stated price of ad- mission—I - suppose there hardly |can be any objection to the ten- | dency toward magnifying mistakes made under the stress of hard competition. Furthermore, it wouldn't be sport if there weren't a lot of “ifs” in |the wake of any closely contested event or a flock of debates over the outcome. Sopwith may have | had good grounds for ' protest | against “Mike” Vanderbilt’s Rain- bow at a critical stage of the America’s Cup races but the Brit- ish yachtsman’s feelings on the whole must be like those of the |golfer who kicks away his match |after being “two up and five to 20.” Sopwith “blew” something like a six-minute lead at the half- |way stage of the third race and |with it apparently went his con- fidence and control at the wheel. Thereafter he was like a wild |southpaw pitcher with the bases full, Look at the Giants ‘The Giants seem to have a long- \stnndinz habit of getting mixed {uP on one end or the other of a lmuflng finish, The 1908 New York | | permant, club had what looked like a com- nding' lead in the stretch, only w- it away, finally wind up in a tie with the Cubs and lose the famous playoff game for Lhe 'fln case of the Giants and Pt- -!' moscow, IDAHO, OREGON PLAY IN MUD . LASTSATURDAY ! e i Webfooters Defeat Oppon-| | ents by Score of Thir- teen to Six Idaho, Oct. 22.—The University of Oregon ploughed through the mud and took to the alr whenever the going got rough to defeat the University of Idaho in 1908 for the National league pen- wasn't that the | ! officers were installed: Worthy ad- |13 to 6 last Saturday afternoon. | Oregon scored in the second and | third quarters by line drives and passes. | Idaho scored in the third period | when Anderson, sub-end scooped up a blocked punt and raced across | the goal line. rates of 1921 is the best parallel,' however, to the current case of the Cardinals and Giants. Pittsburgh had a seven-game lead going into the September stretch of the 1921 season, but dropped five straight to New York at the Polo Grounds and 10 out of 11 games to the Giants altogether in the closing part of the campaign. New York took the lead near the finish and kept it. This year the Giants led by sev- en games on September 6, as they bezan a long home stand, and looked to be a lead-pipe cinch to win handily until it began to de- velop, first, that they couldn't shake off protracted hitting slump, and, secondly, that they couldn’t shake off the hot pursuit of the St. Louis Cardinals. a 1920, but who doesn't recall that| ‘The following are! final scores of important football games played |last Saturday afternoon. Minnesota 13; Pittsburgh 7. | Georgia Tech £; Michigan 9. Brown 0; Yale 37. Sewanee 0; Army 20. Washington and Lee 12; Prince- ton 14. Holy Cross 26; Harvard 6. Detroit-Villanova, scoreless tie. Rutgers 19; Pennsylvania 27, Colgate 7; Ohio State 10. Carnegie Tech 0; Notre Dame 13. Navy 18; Columbia 7. St. Mary’s 14; Fordham 9. Wisconsin 0; Purdue 14. Towa 6; Iowa State 31. Nebraska 9; Oklahoma 6. | Oregon State' 6; University of Southern California 6, tie. University of California at Los Angeles 0; California 3 .. University of San Francisco 0 Stanford 3. Oregon 13; Idaho 6. Gonzaga 33; College of Puget Sound 0. | SUNDAY GAME At San Francisco, Santa Clara defeated Olympic Club 13 to 6 to retain the distinction of one of the few undefeated teams on the coast. R FAIRBANKS RAINBOW GIRLS INSTALLATION At a meeting of the Fairbanks Rainbow girls held at the Masonic Temple recently, the following new viser, Virginia Rothacher; Asso- ciate Adviser, Laura Rynearson; Charity, Nancy Traub; Hope, Bar- bara Brewis; Faith, Margaret Wag- ner; Chaplain, Helen Carlson; Drill Leader, Margaret Gilbert; Love, Eileen Sturgell; Religion, Ernestine Erickson; Nature, Helen Aase; Im- mortality, Betty Hering; Fidelity, But He Never Kept a House WARM . .. and Brilliant sales talk with High Sounding superlatives and exaggerated claims never kept a house warm, either. Thousands of Northwest Home Owners have learned that it takes GOOD DE- . PENDABLE Coal backed by an institu- tion that has proven itself dependable. More than ever before, this'fall, Home Owners in Southeast Alaska are turning to our three leading brands of coal. In buying from us they are sure they will receive honest weight and a full dollar's return 1 GOOD, HEALTHFUL HEAT for every dollar spent. ABOUT THE INDIAN CARBONADO UTAH Known Coals of Known Quality to Economically Fill Every Heating Need PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. HUSKYHALFBACK READY FOR SEASON [ Art Ahonen (above), Washin-t-n half, is one of Coach Jimmy Phelan’s speed merchants in ;=-"ing the ball. He is also a capable passer and good field general. (Asscc'ated Press Photo) LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Ottt e b e, OWL CABS 106 I Next to Bailey’s Cafe PHONE “THEY NEVER SLEEP” Louise Simson; Patriotism, PFran- ces Woodward; Service, Shirley Linck; Confidential Observer, Ruth Ogburn; Outer Observer, Jerenne Oshorne; Musician, Edith Hopkins; Choir Director, Dorothea Geragh- ty; Choir, Eevlyn Baker. 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