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" WCORMICK i§ | DAILY SP BRINGING UP, FATHER WELL- | THINKLI’VE THEYRE LIABLE AN’ | MUST KEEP MAGGIE AND ME DAUGHTER FROM TRYIN' TO THINK OP WAYS TO MAKE MONEY - MISTAKE AND N\/b/\/E SOME ~ WHAT ARE YOU LOOKIN SO WORRIED FOR? MAKE A WENT TO T 89 ©1935, King Features Syndicate, Inc,. Great Britain righta reserved. | } ' ESVA AT~ 'M NOT WORRIED - M ANXIOUS - MOTHER FOCULS MOVING-PIC TURE, S STUDIOQ TOGE T A s JOBIN THE MOVIES ~ HE OT TO — MILLER HAS 70 60 SOME CUTBYLANDIS TOWIN BOUT Members of Tigers and Featherweight Ch ampion | Cubs Given Largest Slice | Has Hard Tussle with | i Game's History Cormier, 15 Rounds WORLD SERIES PLAYER MELON | | CHICAGO, I, Oct. 23.—Baseball| BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 23.—Freddie | Commissioner K. M. Landis has| Miller, Cincinnati southpaw, had to {sliced up the biggest world series| use all of his great skill to defend player melon in the history of the | the featherweight title against slug- | game. He has given each player of the | ging Vernon Cormier, of Worcester, | Detroit Tigers $6,544 but has with- | in a blistering 15-round champion- | held the share of the players of the | ship fight last night in the Boston | Cubs, amounting to $4,198. Gardens. HIGH BOWLER, ELKS TOURNEY Ed Sweum and Gunnar Blomgren Rank Second, Third, in Night Games John McCormick of the Trojans bowled the high game score and the high three-game total in the Pacific Coast Conference games at the Elks Alleys last night. McCormick’s high game score, 204, was the only score in the 200 class for the evening. His total score for the three games was 542. Ed Sweum of the Grizzlies with 195, and Gunnar Blomgren of the Lumberjacks, with 193, were second and third respectively in the high game scoring. M. A. Snow of the Bears, bowled a three-game total of 520 for second place in that division, and Beb Kaufmann of the Broncs was third with 512. None of the teams that bowled last night had any decided advan- tage, each of the victors winning by a margin of two out of three games. The Bruins beat the Grizalies, the Lumberjacks won from the Broncs, and the Trojans defeated the Bears. GRIZZLIES VS. BRUINS Grizaliee— il 420552 JONES HAS PUT OKLAHOMA U. ON A “BIG TIME”. BASIS WITH CHARGING MACHINES, WATER. CARTS AND ALL TE TRIMMINGS » ~C252 l Mrs. Waugh 169 123 137— 429 Sweum 195 144 123— 462 Sterling #164 *164 *164—°492 Totals .. 528 431 424—1383 Bruins— Mrs. Kaufmann 126 172 165— 463 Wile 136 110 155— 401 Sabin . 168 165 168-— 501 Totals 430 447 488—1365 BRONCS VS. LUMBERJACKS Brones— Mrs. Peterman *142 *142 *142—*426 Bloedhorn *147 *147 *147—*441 Kaufmann 168 161 183— 512 Totals 457 450 472—1379 Lumberjacks— Donie Taylor .*143 *143 *143—*429 Petrich ....... *149 *149 *149—*447 Blomgren ... 168 193 144— 505 Totals ... 460 485 436—1381 TROJANS VS. BEARS Trojans— Mrs. Petrich ... 131 139 139— 409 Walmer ... ... 118 150 185— 453 McCormick . 157 204 181— 542 Totals 406 493 505— 1401 Bears— g Mrs. H. Messerschmidt .. 156 109 127— 392 MacSpadden ... 122 115 123— 360 Snow 173 179 168— 520 Totals .. 451 403 418—1272 *—Average, did not bowl, There will be no conférence bowl- ing tonight, the alleys being closed for dressing and servicing. The fol- lowing games are scheduled for the Big Ten Conference tomorrow night: Buckeyes vs Illini, 7:30; Badgers vs Cornhuskers, 8:30; Maroons vs ‘Wolverines, 9:30 p.m. - Marriage Loans Made by Nazis BERLIN, Oct. 23.—Belated statis- tics show that 77,869 couples applied for marriage loans in the first quar- ter of 1935. Refusals were given to 2,205, mostly because of poor biol- ogical backgrounds. - Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. August 28, 1935. Notice is hereby given that Henry Hendrickson, entryman, together with his witnesses, Isadore Gold- stein and Lance E. Hendrickson, all of Juneau, Alaska, has made final proof of his homestead, Anchorage 07871, as additional to his home- stead Anchorage 04146, for a tract of land situate along the Glacier Highway in latitude 58° 21’ 44” N. and longitude 134° 33° W. embrac- ed in U. 8. Survey No. 2125, con- taining 1051 acres and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Of- fice at Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of publication or thirty days there- . after, said final proof will be ac- cepted and final certificate issued. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, Sept. 4, 1935. Last publication, Oct. 30, 1935. WOODS, PAYNE - BOUT IS DRAW | Yakima Negro Knocked | Down But Stages Come Back, 10 Kounds SEATTLE, Oct. 23—Weathering 8 knockdown in the fifth round, Hen- ry Woods, Yakima negro, fought back to a draw and partial revenge Ky, in a ten rounder last night. It was the third meeting between the pair, Payne gaining technical knockouts in previous engagements. Wood weighed 137 pounds last night and Payne tipped the scales {at 134% pounds. - ‘SPORT SLANTS Biff Jones is frank to say the Oklahoma coaching job is the hard- est he ever faced. But he also de- clares in the very next breath that it is the most pleasant. He doesn’t have nearly the material he had at Army ind Louisiana State. Against Nebras- ka, Texas and Kansas State he bucks three teams with plenty of strength. He is bound to lose some games this { fall. But after he gets his system in- stalled, the average should rise. | Even Before Oklahomans had {seen his* Sconers play, the whol2 state “cottoned” to him. Last sum- {mer he traveled all over the state speaking to and getting acquainted with friends and alumni. Mobs greeted him everywhere, even had bands in some cities, turning out in shirt sleeves and mopping their necks in the broiling July heat just to see and hear Jones. Inctells Business Measures The first thing Jones did was to busy himself with the task of com- pletely overhauling Oklahoma's fast crumbling athletic plant and equip- ment. Thanks to Biff the,Sooners now have big league training equip- ment—scrimmage machines, charg- ing sleds, a water wagon, whirlpool baths, etc. Also he put the school's athletic finances into business-lika order, cutting expenses and facilitat- ing the whole plan. Kc has showa everyone that he has ;ound, progress- ive ideas about busiress as well as football. He is athletic director at Oklahoma and house in order. Alghough Jon promising (the three of their nine games last sea- son), the player morale is soaring. The Sooners like Biff and his grulf but good-natured Army discipline. They are hustling their heads off for him. They smack into the charging * material is not so ORTS CARTOON-- Although many believe the player| The aggressive challenger kepl share of the Cubs is withheld for fine | Miller on the run from bell to Lell. “Gabby” Hartnett Is levying purposes on account of the| The champion took many a solid against Cecil Payne, of Louisville, | OKLAHOMA'S YALL -BIG-SIx" FOLLBACK— | machines as though they were i |mng to team them apart. They 1 | Biff’s new assistants, too—Tom Stid- ham, line coach, who was with Dick ’Hanlcy at Northwesterm for eight | yea and Rabert “Doc” BErsKine, | d coach, for the past two years head coach at Loyola of the south at New Orleans , | Noe Intrusions | One thing is certain, have no trouble keeping friends, fans, | parents and fraternity brothers of | his Oklahoma players out of the dressing room. Naturally, everybody ;’Huey Long. The Sooners will have the dressing room all to tnemselves | tnis year. | Oklahoma hasn’t had a champion- ship team since 1920, the year Ben- ny Owen developed his undefeated | ag8 ation that swept to the Mis- souri Valley conference title. | that was 15 years ago and since then ]Swner teams, while they have been | fighters and occasionally scored up- set wins, have played only about 500 percent ball. Biff will | remembers his classic expulsion of | ‘All Rights Reserved by The Associuted Press FISTIC PLANS ARE ANNOUNCED FOR NEXT YEAR NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—The {isti merger of the Madison Square Gar- den and Michael Jacobs removes ! doubt regarding the main heavy- | weight setup for 1936. The merger means Joe Louis will | fight Max Schmeling in June, the winner to meet James Braddock i | September. | The first fight will probahly b | held in the Garden’s Long Island | Bowl and the title fight is a certainty | for New York City . years he spent at Army and L. 8. U,, \is 50 games won, 13 lost, and 7 tied |for a percentage of .793. Roughly, his teams averaged three touchdowns per By Pap, VERBAL CRACK Most Valuable |own AT JOE LOUIS 3Y LOUGHRAN "Pliladelphia- Phentoid’ | Does Not Rate New | Fistic Man, Tops By ROGER D. GREENE LONDON, Oct. 23.—Jce Louls may generally as the greatest Jack Johnson, but n, the veteran “Phil- adelphia Phantom,” doesn't rate America’s newest fistic sensation as top: | ‘Louis is good, all right,” Lough- iran caid, arriving here for a series | of bou ainst England’s leading weights, “but he has to do a re bafore he can be thought of | ame category with Dempsey, heav, 1ot m « Baer, Loughran declared: | 1k American sports writers| black boy go to their | 1 | went into that fight with! e of winning, His hands n almost useless for the past year. I'm sure if he'd owned two good hands, he could have held his gainst Louis and maybe beaten him.’ Temmy Revives Ring Game Old-timer of the pugilistic wars| though he is, Loughran is hailed here as the impetus needed to pull British boxing out of the doldrums. Bleak years of yawning at such a| drab leather-pushers as “Fainting | Phil” Scott, George Peterson Len Harvey have soured the clients to apoint where they stay away from their own exhibitions and read wi: fylly of such Américan “gigantics” as the Baer-Louis “Battle of the Century.” London newspapers flared huge front page headlines about the “De- { trait Bomber” and the ::Livermore Larruper,” cramping even Musso- | ini’s space-grabbing style with big pictures of Baer and Louis, and choving the Italian dictator and his Ethiopian quarrel almost off the front pages. English sports scribes delight *in rolling the colorful descriptive tag- lines of American boxers off their typewriters, but oddly enough they hy - at labeling their own home products with such adjectival titles. And that, as viewed by visiting firomen from America is the chief cauge of the current slump. | Undignified, You Know | Loughran, for example, is billed to| and |~ | der the direction of Officers George Cubs' battles with Umpire George i clout as he coolly boxed his way to a Moriarty, Commissioner Landis ex- ‘ unanimous decision, plained the delay by saying: “We A small crowd, only 4,300, paid have not had time yet to mail their | $6,600 to ses the bout. checks.’ * . TR IR | GOODIE SALE SPECIAL DELIVERY TO I)()(J(i~<l b - St LAS! Daily at 10:00 a.m. and 2:30] The Rainbow Girls will hold a p.m. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- “Goodie Sale” at the Sanitary Groc- LIVERY—Phone 442, adv. cery on Saturday, October 26. adv. Player, N. L. 0 CHARLES L. HARTNETT, PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 23. —Charles “Gabby” Hartneit, the peppery catcher of the Chicago Cubs, has been adjudged the Na- tional League’s most valuable player by the Baseball Writers’ | Associaticn ¢f America. Jerome ‘‘Dizzy’’ Dean, last year's winner, was given second place; Fleyd “Arky” Vaughn, of the Pittsburg Pirates, was given third place; Billy Herman, of the cAuFORN'A 1S NEAR—by Cubs, fourth; and Joe Medwick, | ., Jeave Vancouver or Seatle of the St. Louis Cardinals, Was | any day. Be in San Francisco the adjudged in fifth place. pext evening, in Los Angeles the Last Monday the Baschali lgllowing momlpg. And you'll’rA Writers' Association designated r;‘ve f;'e_sh :ne:l ‘fimb‘é re;dy ?efi':&y the white-sande: aches, e :lfm:ll:e(i::;;b":‘ "";“‘"5 : “i'; | ful desert resorts and other play champton : De.ol places where the sun spends the Tigers, as the most valuabie winter. player of the Aferican League. ‘This year, in addition to the flnnv‘y conveniences of train travel, you'll have the comfort of ing from Portland south, No extra cost for this. TO LOS ANGELES ; 21-day From: One Way rdirp, Seattie . . . . $21.50 $34.00 Vancouver,B.C. 24.50 39.50 46 Theseare some examplefares. They are good in coaches on our fastest trains; also in improved Tourist Pullmans, plus unfil berth charge. MEXICO? Per;;rn you're inter- Faresare low. And our new food - | service saves money for you. In coaches and Tourist Pullmans we now serve coffee for 5c, milk Sc, lan(;(wiches 10¢, ’lahdoughn;xu I:nc. cookies 10¢,etc. Then we also have H dining car service with complete ested in this ar winter “Meals Select”” at moderate prices. Write us. We' 1 you all about Southern Pacific Por folders, res: tions or additional information, write to: B. C. TA' A C A e B 7 e BOYS' BOXING CLASS BEGINS UNDER POLICE Officers Gilbertson, Junge Give Instructions— Is Organized 1405 Fourth A 8¢, Vancouvs NOTICE TO EOLDERS OF JUNEAU COLD - STORAGE COMPANY’S FIRST MORTGAGE GOLD BONDS Notice is hereby given that the following bonds will be redeemed on November 1st, 1935—Numbers 90, 93, 94, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 102 and 103, ' In addition the following bonds of November 1st, 1936 maturity The opportunity to receive boxlng: and wrestling instruction, provided | by the Juneau Police Department un- | Gilbertson and Kenneth Junge, was enthusiastically received by twenty Juneau boys between the ages of 12 and 17, at the first meeting of the newly organized boys' club in the Elks Hall last night. fight either Ambrose Palmer, the| The idéa of providing Juneau youth Australian; Len Harvey, the Cor-|With healthful, wholesome recreation nishman, or Maurice Strickland, the | @PParently proved popular with the are hereby called and will be redeemed on November 1st, 1935— * Numbers 108, 109 and 110. These three bonds will be paid at £102.00 has really put his| Sooners won only | game to their opponents' one. e want Ads Pay! | Incidentally Jones’ life-time coach- | |ing record, coverimg the seven| | Daily Em; Score Afiofher w.for | Little Little and fiancee] Here is Lawson Little, international golf champion, and his fiancee, Miss Dorothy Hurd, 18. Miss Hurd, inset, formerly of Wichita, Kas., now of Chicago, met the star two years age. New Zealander. “Ambrose” or ‘‘Maurice” as a fighting monicker would bring howls and not a few “yoo hoos!" from an American clientele. It might help ome if the fight scribes decorated them with the British equivalent of tho Brown Bomber. Over here, how- cver, it would be considered undigni- fied—with the result that the cus- tomers, after reading American bal- iyhoo, lose interest in their own tin- car fraternity and the promoters halk up fancy sums in red ink. Right now, they are banking on Loughran to revive interest in the manly art, and the veteran Tommy's arrival was met by an almost un- paralleled burst of fistic chatter fromy the Fleet-street columnists, Cricket, rugger and éven horse-racing —which usually erowd British sports | pages to the exclusion of boxing— | dropped off to a record low-water mark 8s a result of the Loughran fight boom. Farmers Win Bounties BRUSSELS—As compensation for high production prices for home :rown cereals, Belgian farmers, it is ennounced, are to recefve a premium of $7.20 for each acre of wheat grown in 1934. A premium of $2.80 is to be naid for each acre of spelt, rye, barley or oats. ———— — SPECIAL DELiveEiy TO DOUG- LAS! Paily at 10:00 a.m. and 2:30 pm. “elly RBlake's SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442, adv. % Harry Race DRUGGIST “The Squibb Bicre” - R - | adult generation also. Several Ju- | neau citizens appeared at the meet- | ing last night and pledged assistance | and support. | The boys will meet again at the Elks Hall at 7 o'clock next Friday night. Hereafter, there will be two | regular meetings each week—Tues- | | day and Friday nigits from 7 to 9| |o'clock. The boys are requested to | take ropes suitable for rope-skipping | | to the next meeting. Two sets of | {boxing gloves were brought to the last meeting, but activities were con- fined to organization. A Monitors scommittee, in charge of the club room and equipment dur- | ling the abserite of officers Gilbert= 80 nand Jungg, was appointed last | hight, consisting of Earl Monagle, Bobbie Ferble, and Verne Hussey.| | In addition to the committee mem- | § | bers, the following lads attended the | meeting: Tommy Hall, Kenneth Al—I len, Eddiz Saloum, Roy Smith, Bob |’ n, George Smith, Mike Dani- loff, Fred' Sorrt, Allen Johnstone, | | Erckley Guerin, Tom Osborne, Ralph | e, Wesiey Seelye, “Dutch” Beh- rends, Orville Osborne, J. Willlams | and Jack Lennon; SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST. | i | together with accrued interest. Holders of the above mentioned bonds are hereby requested to present the same for payment at the First National Bank on Novem- ber 1st, after which date interest payments will cease. JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY, Inc., By WALLIS S. GEORGE, Manager. ] | PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 412 The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska | DINE and DANCE | COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and One Half Million Dollars |