The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 26, 1934, Page 5

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| I . BRINGING UP FATHER g IF GONLB NS T GET & N THAT Woman ey 'S RN M O sBAND, 'D FIX HER-| INTEND TO FIND HER-~ HOUR FOR YOU - MY DEAR' |\ WAS VERY _BuUSY AT THE OFFICE- /Y- J\Gc.‘b‘ WHERE IN THE WORLD HAVE YOUL BEENT UNE Seen WAITING AN You Ki "YOUR oW FATHER HAS LOTS OF WORK TO DO THESE DAYS- WELL-DADDY! IF “YOuU KEED ME WAITING AGAIN LIKE THIS, 'LL FORGET \ AM " TOOTLES” JIGGS AND $COLD YOU - OF ALLTHINGS! THERE'S ANCTHER FAMILY IN THE BUILDING BY THE NAME OF "J/GGS"~ Baseball Chleftam { BAYERS LEADS HOOP SCORERS: 4AS 59 POINTS DeMolay Center Six Mark-| ers Better than Mc- Phee, George Ace With the first three games of the six-game first half schedule completed for all but one of the £ competing teams, Lloyd Bayers, DsMolay's red- leads all City Bas- i (Kinky) headed center, ketball League scorers, a compila- tion of individual scores showed | S, in three games, has hit | for 27 field goals and | from the foul line for | a total of 59 points. That’s very | near a 20-point average per game. | Most of his shots were made from close in, as the big fellow spec-; jalizes in under-the-basket work. Pressing Bayers for scoring hon- ors is husky Bob McPhee, George Brothers' forward. This lad reach- ed his second-place total of 53} points in a freak manner, scoring 42 points in his last game. But Heydler. (Associated Press Photo) he's got 53 markers, made in 24 field goals and five foul tosses, LAYDEN IS TOAST Ford A. Frick (above) has been elected president of the National Baseball league to succeed John A, him. | In third pesition is hustling Bud- | dy Lindstrom, High School forward, | who, had he not been checked to| . but four points in his last game, | ’ might now be leading the league in scoring. Even at that the prep | flash has chalked up 42 points. NEW YORK, Nov. 26.—“Here’s to Elmer.” ident ilding glund, Df ’,‘l}"”?jlf.;a.d*f‘fnz B:;:,sl ,,fe That's the toast that your Notre the two cleanest players among the | Dame University football fan is first ven high scorers. Haglund | | making everywhere today. And El- has committed two fouls, Bayers|mer Layden, one-time member of three. | the famous ‘‘four-horsemen” when The first cleven scorers include: | Knuts Rockne was coach of the Name Team FG FT PF Tl |Irish, is meant. Bayers, DeMolay. 27 5 3 59| For Layden, in his first year McPhee, George 24 5 8 53|as Notre Dame’s grid mentor, has B. Lindstrom, HS... 19 4 6 42’done wonders. Last Saturday, he Erskine, George 17 5 5 30|climaxed a highly successful sea- F. Behrends, HS. 12 7 9 31ison by leading his men into a Brown, Krause. 13 3 3 29| thrilling 12-6 victory over the hith- Burke, George. 13 3 8 29|erto unbeaten Army team from F. Lindstrom, DeM. 12 3 5 27| West Point. Heppenstall, Krause 10 7 6 27| 81,000 wached the Cadets go down Haglund, DeMolay... 12 1 2 25/to cefeat here, the result of two L. Hill, J. Fire..... 12 1 7 25| sensational passes, both made five minutes before the final gun. AR O MR THANKSGIVING DANCE MOOSE HALL, NOVEMBFR 29 —adv. TEAM SCORING Scoring figures also indicated to- | day only two clearly why George Brothers team sits atop the CxLy\ Basketball League, the only team|DOOR PRIZES. ball team, !the ball /three of them against Big Ten | dces. | downs himself for BERWANGER 1S GREAT GRIDDER | {He Not Cnly Throws Wcll but Passes Also Score Touchdowns 26.—When Jay CHICAGO, Nov. | Berwanger, spark plug of the Uni- | versity of Chicago's surprising foot-| tosses a pass and llw\ completed—look out for a touch- down. The Maroon Dutchman tossed 7 times in five games, foes, for nine completed passes of which five resulted in touchdowns. Bui that's not all Berwanger He has. made eight touch- Chicago, travel- ing 97 yards from a kickoff through i the entire Indiana team for one. All in all, the stat sticians figure jBerwanger has carried the ball 101 times from scrimmage and gained 534 yards for an average of better than five yards a tr Then he has punted the ball 58 s for a total of 2,338 yards, or t! better than 40 yards from the line of scrimmage on each attempt. Two of Chicago’s games have been making punt- played in the rain, ing extremely difficu In the matter punts Berwanger pecially in the rain. On those days he dropped 22 out of bounds and only two over the go'\l line. —— .- KRAUSE, PREPSTERS FACE HARD CONTEST|? It's do or die tomorrow night for either Krause Concreters or Juneau High School, entrants in the City Basketball League cham- pionship race. For tomorrow night, 1t 7:30 o'clock on the High School Jloor, the two teams will meet in the first fame of a double- header. Both clubs have met one defeat in three starts. Both teams, by winning, could step back into the first half championship picture. Both teams, by losing, would just as certainly step out of the title frame. The second contest on tomorrow night's double bill pits the league- leading George Bros. lineup against the last-place Juneau Firemen team. This game is expected to zet under way around 8:30 o'- slock. to win its first three games. Figures don't lie—because they say that the Green Shirts are the best team in the loop both offens- Daily Cross-word Puzzle ively and defensively. The George ACROSS Lalr quintet has piled up 148 points in | 1. Tubes lz- gn:;"fl'n thres games. Its nearest rival in :* 5‘[”" fish I:IEBI ICIAIPISEEAPIPTAIL) o F:ld":f ki this respect is the DeMolay out-| 5 V.Pe¥ m [T[CEAF[O[L[T]o] 12. Idolize 17, Pertaining te fit, which has scored 125 tallies in | 13" inglea won- [O[RIAITIO[R]S] the ankle three tilts. der and fear SIPIAIRFADIEIE] 19. Large oll Defensively, the last year champs 14. Unit of wire .E!. E.Em EBEB Lawless crowe® measure- . are just as good. They've held ment m.@ fiflll 2. Unity their three opponents to but 65| 15. Funny E T S EBG ot g points. Exclusive of the Douglas | 16. Risk D] L E e E 23, Fixed charges Firemen, who've only played two |18 Dinlect [YIN] . Perlod of 20. On the ocean light games, the George Brothers’' chief | #1. Sound of catue U] 32, Controversial defensive rival is Krause Concret- | 'i- !xé&fgtl session B 35 WHIOUS e ers, who have had only 72 tallies | 55 Burdon VIE} EBE!E] BBBIIE W34, City in Bel~ made against them. $7. Old musical glum . {nstruments 36. Classify Complete team scoring records: | zs, By the side of 38 Portals Team G For Against | 31. Renders suit- 39. Singly ‘able 40. Not so good George Bros.. 3 148 65 35 Unitof welght o, , =0 o N Aot 42. Endglluh t . Abstrac 3 o nas DeMoiay S M ik B exictence language o Arahinn High School 3 1056 117 28. Clumsy 63. Pronoun 3. Affectedly seaport J. Firemen 3 97 117 AL Obstinate 54. Kind of fruit stately 46. Measure of ¢ 43. Meadow 55. Perceive 4. Slikworm distance Krause Conc. 3 91 72 44, Drug-yielding visually 5. Religious 48. Exclamation Mocse 3 80 160 plant Eg ;;l:fc‘:n P d]ennmlnn- §0. Charater in % o “Unel D. Firemen 2 38 61 " T‘,,'a,‘,":d again I Tom's, St St e 41. Violent storm DOWN & Bkender ob- Cabin' 49. Silver coins 1. Moccasin ligation . Japanese coln UGLA CRUSHES OREGON STATE LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 26.— Believing that a good start is highly essential to any football victory, the UCLA gridsters crush- ed Oregon State College here Sat- urday to the tune of 25 to 7. The winners jumped to a walk- away lead in the first quarter when they crashed over for three | touchdowns. Then, the Beavers seitled down to a semblance of defense, and even managed to score once themselves in the third period—but their reversal was too late. ——etrel e ATTENTION LEGION AUUXILIARY dENNE . | | 77 %%fll. DI, i ol ol ok B B All members are urged to attend FHA pictures and lecture at Moon\ Hall Tuesday night at 8 o'clock. | —adv. | . PP ] I/HIEWIHI AEE A T I CEEI T NN JmEE T ;fl.%;ll R R e | T MaEE JEmaa | S Coronas, National ® |to ticket..102, CLOSE GAMES MARK BOWLING Smith | Crooks, Frye's Delic- ious Teams Win Close matches featured Satur- ‘day night bowling by C. League ten-pin aces at the Elk Alleys. The Smith - Coronas defeated Amocats and Purolas beat Fry's Delicious, both by two-out-of-three margins. And the National Orook lineup, although it was victorious gin, was but 77 points ahead of its rival in total score. A. T. Koski, with 519 for three games and 185 Yor his best single contest, was the best bowler among the men. Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, with 485 and 177, led the women. The Smith-Coronas, 1429 three- game total and 499 single-game tally led those divisions. Tonight's triple-header includes the following games: Walkovers vs. Rexalls at 7:30 o'clock; 8. & W. vs. Hart, Schaffner and Marx at 8:30 o'clock; and Hotpoints Squibbs at 9:30 o’clock. Saturday night's summaries: Mr:. Faulkner 154— 485 Coughlin 155—*465 Kegel 119— 352 Totals 441 433 428—1302 National Crooks 157 143 126— 426 165 185 165—*495 Van Atta 145 152 161— 458 Totals 467 460 452—1379 Amocats Mrs. Pullen 136 140 139— 414 Sabin, H. 172 172 172—*516 Dunham 159 158 133— 450 Totals 166 40 4441380 Smith-Coronas Mrs. Hunt 142 115 128— 385 Selby 183 183 183—*549 Radde 168 167 160— 495 Totals 493 465 471—1429 Frye's Delicious Mrs. Dufresne.. 132 161 148— 441 Koski 152 185 179— 519 Reynolds 107 95 114— 316 Totals . 301 441 4411276 Purolas Robertson . 175 175 175—*525 Sweum . 146 110 148— 404 Grummett 145 110 151406 ‘Totals . 466 395 474—1335 “—Average—Did not bowl. .- - HUSKIES CHECK COUGAR'S BOWL HOPE WITH TIE 38,000 Fa:See Annual | State Grid Title Bat- tle—Kick Missed SEATTLE, Nov. 26—The Uni- versity of Washington football team, soundly trounced by Stan- ford two veeks ago, did Stanford a wonderful favor here Saturday by holding Washington State Col- lege in a 0-to0 tie in their an- nual state championship game. Out of things themselves when it was apparent that Stanford was beating California, the Huskies went fo work and eliminated the Cougars. Washington State, be- | fore the game, had been the only other Coast Conference team with Stanford that had not met defeat or the tie in conference play. But when Stanford beat California and Washington tied Washington State —hopes of a Cougar team in the Rose Bowl this year faded. A capacity crowd of 38,000 wild- 1y cheering fans watched the strug- gle. A goodly portion of them groaned in dismay when red- haired Elmer Logg's place-kick attempt for the Huskies was wide and low in the third quarter. It was the only real scoring threat made by either team. B WANT NUMBERS Number 92 is wanted at the Im- perial Pool Hall for the Eli Rado- vich diamond pin; if not awarded AT ELK ALLEYS over Mojuds by a three-game mar- | by December 3 pin will be awarded B TR The following are final scores principal football games play-k d last Saturday afternoon: Washington 0; Washington State ‘Indians, Minus Grayson, | Moscrip, Defeat Cali- Stanford 9; California 7. | Oregon State 7; UCLA 25. i 1 Yale 14; Harvard 6. | fornia Eleven Northwestern 13; Michigan 6. ‘ of 0. BERKELEY, Cal, Nov. 26— 14; Rutgers 0. 0; Columbia 12. The Rose Bowl invitation for Stan- mouth 13; Princeton 38. ford’s mighty football team seem- ia Tech 12; Florida 13. ed but a formality today as Pa- cific Coast grid fans recalled the Indians’ 9-to-7 defeat of Califor- nia here Saturday. | The Golden Bears, in their | traditional “big game” with Stan- | ford, were granted to be the last | opposition in the path of Coach | Thornhill's machine for an invi- | tation to represent the West in Notre Dame 12. 0; Tempile 22 7, Ohio State 40. Minnesota 34; Wisconsin 0, Illinois 6; Chicago 0. 0; Grinnell 23. ana 17; Purdue 6. Sewance 0; Tulane 32. Michigan State 6; Kansas 0. Missouri 6; Nebraska 13. LR lary 1. SUNDAY GAMES i And 70,000 persons watcned “Na- Santa Clara 12; Columbia of |vy Bill” Ingram’s Bears almost Portland 6. | upset the Indians. Stanford play- Montana Mines 0; Gonzaga 53. ‘}cd most of the game without the b much-needed services of two stars, Bobby Grayson, fullback, who was forced out in the first period with ‘two broken ribs, and “Monk” Mo- \scrip(, stellar left end and place- -kicker-de-luxe who suffered a knee injury in a final practice session. A third-quarter field goal meant | victory for the Indians after they (had scored a touchdown in the Nov. 26.—'| first half, for the never-say-die For the first time in ten years, | Bears crashed over with a touch- Yale University today is possessor |down in the last minute and a of the historic Big Three football half of play. championship. | Washington State’s tie game with That possession is Yale’s thanks | Washington at Seattle gave Stan- to a 14-to-0 pasting administered | ford the record of being the only Harvard University here Saturday. |Coast Conference team to be un- The Bulldogs scored twice in the beaten or untied in conference first half and then held the dan- |play. Washington State had been gerous Crimson crew at bay. Stanford's only rival. B o - YALE DEFEATS HARVARD, 14-) NEW HAVEN, Conn., ; Thanksgiving Give Her MUMS VThanksgiving is a very special day.. The order and spirit of the day call for ‘more than just flowers. It’s the big day for Mums! Let Mums carry your mes- And to make the message really thoughtful, select the blooms fresh from our modern »?age of thoughtfulness to her. greenhouses. Large, well rounded blooms with long stems and home grown! ORDER TODAY! We will deliver at any designated time *: . Juneau Florists Shattuck Bldg. Shop Telephone 311 Greenhouses—Glacier Highway B - ——— BEARS LOSE, 8- 7 |the Rose Bowl classic on Janu- | Will Continue to Advance Diamond sales in the East and Eur- ope are showing heavy investments in many places. Whether this is the fear of depreciation of money, or war, or merely a return of a measure of prosperity or a combination of all three, we do not know. We do know that through the cen- turies, Diamond have been one of the safest forms of investment when bought right. We have a few larger stones that are in this class and in- vite inspection of those interested. Compare the value of your present diamond with any other personal in- vestment of ten years ago. And as a well known character noted for his I| diamonds once said, “Them as has The NUGGET SHOP et VISIT THE PARIS INN i MUSIC DANCING DINING 1 “CURLEY” FRASER—LARRY BUNGER b r-,-m- iHflSLHLAPMZE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night Private Booths e UNITED FOOD (O. : CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 - ascuisote phesra iy | t—errrreee i bt THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat | OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single Q-2 rings GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners Wines—Beer Hal'l‘l Machme S[\Op “ELECTROL—Of Course” 24-Hour Service Beer, if desired Merchants’ Lunch BAILEY’S CAFE i “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS” FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 ~ B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg Saeaasan

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