The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 4, 1935, Page 5

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ALL T ASK, MR.SMITH-- JUST ONE MORE CHANCE 72 GIT QUTER MAH SIGHT, VAR"M\NT THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 4, 1935. PAW--LOOKY ROUND--T HEV EVER THANG SPICKY AN SPANNY AN' T WUSH YE'O BE A LEETLE MORE KEERFUL WEN YE SOT YERSE'F DOWN/ ALL RIGHT, N HYAR- MAW--NOW GIT ALONG--T HEV A LEETLE | PONDERIN' TER : — By-BILLIE DE BARRAGAR IS ‘BEST SCORER ELKS BOWLING Makes Record for High Game, Also Best { Total Score The best score of the 1935 season at the Elks' Alleys, including con-| ference and non-conference bowling, was achieved by J. E. Barragar, Jr., in the Pacific Coast Conference bowling Saturday night. Barragar, of the Beavers, bowled 267 for the high game of the season, and 630 for the best three-game total of the evening, eclipsing A. W. Stewart of the Huskies with a game score of 247, and a total score of 608. Martin Lavenik of the Beavers was third in both divisions with 214, and a. total of 581. | The Beavers won three games from ' the Broncs, the Huskies beat the Gallopin’ Gaels two out of three, and the Indians defeated the Trojans in two of their three encounters. | The complete scores are: \ Beavers vs. Broncs i BEAVERS i Miss H. Paulsen.. 79 91 Barragar, Jr. 181 267 M. Lavenik 188 179 68— 238, 182— 630 214— 581 464—1449 . 448 537 BRONCS Mrs, Peterman .. 142 142 Bloedhorn 94 120 Kaufmann . 184 154 ‘Totals . 420 416 444—1280, Indians vs. Trojans | INDIANS Mrs. Duncan ... 168 137 Van Atta ........ 128 161 Iverson . 136 175 Totals ... 432 473 410—1375' TROJANS | . 114 185 129— 428 110 145 151— 406 147 130 201— 478 Totals ........ 371 450 481—1312 Huskies vs. Gallopin‘ Gaels \ Hermann .. 87 158 113— 358 ‘Whitehead 113 132 146— 391 Stewart 193 168— 608 "Totals ... 47 483 4271357 GALLOPIN’ GAELS Adams ... 138 156 188— 482 Bringdale ...... 158 158+ 158—*474 Tubbs ... .. 150 134 171— 455 Totals ... 446 448 517—1411 *—Average; did not bowl. The following games in the Big Ten Conference are scheduled for to- night: Cyclones vs. Buckeyes, 7:30; Hoosiers vs. Badger, 8:30; Hawkeyes vs. Irish, 9:30 o'clock. ; e SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake's SPECIAL DE-| LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. Totals 136— 420 119— 333 189— 527 146— 451 157— 446 167— 478 Mrs. Petrich Walmer . J. McCormick .. The following are final scores of the principal football games played last Saturday afternoon: Gonzaga T; Washington State 0. Montana 7; Washington 33. Santa Clara 6; Stanford 9. California 14; UCLA 2. COregon State 19; University of Portland 2. Purdue 7; Minnesota 29. Towa State 12; Marquette 28. City College of New York 0; Man- hattan 65. Detroit 7; Villanova 13, Duquesne 7; Carnegie Tech 0. Texas 0; Southern Methodist 20. Nebraska 19; Missouri 6. Kentucky 0; Alabama 15. Illinois 3; Northwestern 10. Vanderbilt 14; Georgie Tech 13. Tulane 14 Colgate 6. Mississippi State 13; Army 7. Notre Dame 18; Ohio State 13. Brown 0; Harvard 33. Navy 0; Princeton 26. Dartmouth 14; Yale 6. Columbia 7; Cornell 7. Pitt 0; Fordham 0. Penn State 3; Syracuse 7. Pennsylvania 6; Michigan 16. SUNDAY GAME Unijversity of San' Francisco 9; Loyola of Los Angeles 0. DEER FLEET THIS SEASON {Three Hunters Return After Four-Day Trip with One in Bag “Deer this season have The longest legs, and are the fastest ever seen in this section,” said Malcolm Mor- rison, of the Radio staff who has returned from a four-day hunting trip with Dick Harris and the lat- ter's son Tom, aboard the gasboat Ranger. They brought back one deer. During the trip the three visited Olivers Inlet, Hawk Inlet, Youngs Bay and Auk Cove. Morrison said they saw many deer | but “they beat you to the draw and go like a streak of greased lightning, out of range. I never saw.such long- legged animals and the speed they develop is—wow.” The three hunters said trollers were out along the beaches by the score but were having little success. Geese are plentiful but knowing the season is closed, just come around boat and give one the honk-honk. IT WON'T BE LONG NOW! Phone 374-2 rings and a represen- tative will show you samples of the latest creations in beautiful Christ- mas Cards at painléss prices for any purse. HEALTH ASSOCIATION ELECTS The past.and present presidents of the American Public Health ssociation are shown at the closing of their convention in Milwaukee, Wis., ‘vhere Dr. Walter Brown (left) of Palo Alto, Calif., was installed president. Dr. E. L. Bishop (ri )nllh officer, was the retiring s 1 ] t), Tennessee Valley authority ident. (Associated Press Photo) '% . +'in’ Vancouver, B..C. During her ab- o | LOSES CONTEST jCowboys Routed 33 1o 7 { * in Seattle Gridiron Battle | SEATTLE, Nov. 4—The University lof Washington cracked and jolted | the University of Montana by roll- | ing up a 33 to 7 victory here Satur- |day to hold her place in the coast | gridiron race. | Milt Popovich, Montana halfback, scored on a pass in the first quar- ter, which was the first touchdown scored against Washington in con- ference play this season. But when Jimmy Phelan sent in his regulars late in the second half |the Huskies marched around the field at will, Washington touchdowns were made | by Ed Nowogriski, Byron Haines and | Homer Tipton and Ed Rulis. TOP PLACE FOR BEAR RETAINED “Tippy” Dye “Tippy” Dye, star quarterback of Ohio State’s university’s football team, was one of mine players named by Governor Martin L. Davey of Ohio as among those on the state payroll. Davey made his charge as the climax to a bitter dispute with university officials who protested his slash of the educational budget. {in the Coast Conference Saturday | when they defeated the University of California at Los Angeles 14 to 2. A crowd of 80,000 fans watched as California displayed a ragged de- fense and took advantage of the . | B . | breaks to score two touchdowns. Yy UCLA counted a safety on a block- | |ed kick early in the first quarter, | but were unable to stave off subse- | quent Bear drives. | - e ‘ROUND TRIP 1S The Signal Corps bowling team | MADE, NORTH SEA rolled 1,187 points to defeat the A. J. Camp Saturday night in Com-| {California Grocery Plays Columbia Lumber,: Sani- tary Brunswicks Tonight score of 1,144. Stevenson Everetts of the Signal | company, and Gladys Forrest of the | Corps held high individual mree_‘(}ovemor'.s staff, returned from a/ game scores, the former with 447 and |round trip to Sitka on the North the latter with 436. Soulter was|Sea last night. third in individual play with a score | S T cf 416. 1 NOTICE Tonight at 7:30 the California| The regular monthly business Grocery meets the Columbia Lumber | and at 8:30 the Sanitary Grocery| plays the Brunswick team. ' 5 Complete score of Saturday night's | 5 82 p.m. game follows: | Signal Corps !--ddv. Lenhart ........ 99 108 108— 315 s Everetts 167 129 13— 435| SHOP Stevenson .......... 160 145 142— 447| —_ . 1187 1 124— 378 110— 416 -46— 350 NORA B. CHASE, President. IN JUNEAU, FIRST! WOtAls = b iln s A. J. Camp e 106 148 . 131 125 et 120 04 Robinson .. Coulter .. Sheppard Totals | | HUNTERS RETURN ; WITH LIMIT BAGS| Percy Reynolds of the Juneau Ice Cream Parlor and Juneau Liquor store and Jeff Anderson of Craig returned last night from a four days’| hunting trip to Chichagof Island with the limit of deer each. They went out on the Triton, Capt. Charles | Hayes, last Thursday. Reynolds reported there wasn't much snow down low,.and awwugh! there were lots of doa=s along the! beach, they had to climb to-get the | bucks, 3 ————————— MUSICIAN ON ORTH t SEA HAS OPERATION Bob Warwick, violinist, and Ray Holmes, pianist, of the North Sea orchestra, reported that Spencer Brodine, who plays clarinet and sax- | | ophone, was left in the hospital at Ketchikan on the trip north for an | appendicitis operation. He will be replaced temporarily upon the ship's | arrival in Seattle. 4 —_— e SOUTH ON VACATION Miss Madge Hildinger, dental nurse | with Doctors Kaser and Freeburger, | left on the North Sea for a six| | weaks' vacation and visit with rela- tives and friends in Seattle, Ta- oo’na, and Bremerton, Wash., and sence, Mrs. Gladys Comstock will | assist In the dental office: | 'TO WASHINGTON | LOS ANGELES, Cal,, Nov, 4—Cal- SIGNAL GOHPS ifernia’s Golden Bears rampagedl 1 | forward as the only unbeaten team Canada to Wait On England About Olympic Games MONTREAL, Nov. 4—Canada | will await the decision of Eng- | l2nd before replying to Ger- many’s official invitation to par- ticipate 1 the 1956 Ulympic games in Berlin, it was decided unanimcusly in a special meeting of the Canadian Olympic Com- mittee, DARTMOUTH HAS BREAT TRIUMPH |Big Green Trounces Eli for First Win in Half Century NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 4—A wild demonstration swept huge Yale Bowl Saturday as Dartmouth defeat- ed Eli 14 to 6 for the first time in more than half a century of their | grid rivalry. | The crowd was misled by the big i time clock which tolled the end of the game ten seconds before the ac- i tual time. Dartmouth cohorts surg- ed onto the field and fistfights broke |out in several quarters. {*"“The goal posts were unrooted and torn to bits, before officials, aided |by the police, cleared the field so that the teams could run one more play to bring the game to an official close. Pandemonius then broke loose | agdin“and continued until the huge | erowd finally wore itself out and dis- persed, BEAVERS MARCH - T0197T0 2 WIN Mrs. H. Knight, wife of the agentI CORVALLIS, Oregon, Nov. 4—Ore- | mercial League play at the Bruns-|for the Northland Transportation|gon State defeated the University of | wick alleys. The miners had a team | Company, Mrs. J. B. Burford, wife Portland 19 to 2 in a game here Sat- | (of the ticket agent for the same urday which nearly was rated as an | The University of San Francisco IN YALE BOWL BONZAGA TAKES COUGARS' TEAM IN BIG UPSET Second Consecutive Vic- tory Chalked Up by Bulldogs PULLMAN, Wash,, Nov. 4. — The upset Saturday and defeated Wash- |ference game here. | Counted the underdogs as the game | started, Gonzaga invaded the Cou- gars’ own territory to outpass and outgain them all the way. Every- thing looked like a touchdown march for the Bulldogs, and they caught many Washington State plays before | they crossed the scrimmage line. The lone touchdown came early in the fourth period when Olsen flipped a 20-yard pass to Justice, who raced |32 yards to the goal line. Karamatic converted the try for point. STANFORD WINS BRONCO BATTLE PALO ALTO, Cal., Nov. 4.—A field |eered by Fullback Bobby Grayson |gave Stanford a 9 to 6 edge over Santa Clara in a a gruelling grid contest here last Saturday after- | noon. James (Monk) Moscrip, whose kicking toe defeated Washington a | week ago, again sent a place kick between the uprights early in the fourth quarter after both teams had scored touchdowns in the second period. Neither team converted the extra try for point. SAN FRANCISCO U BEATS LOYOLA 9-0 SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Nov. 4— upset. ‘The Beavers found it neces- defeated Loyola of Los Angeles 9 to sary to send in their first stringers 0 in a Sunday game of football. to turn the trick after Portland The San Francisco eleven scored a proved about equal to the second | touchdown in the third period and a meeting of the Juneau Woman's | Club will be held in the City Coun- Brother representative, returned | cannery, and Mrs. Rosenberg are cil. Chambers Tuesday, November from a round trip to Sitka on the passengers to Seattle on the North team. | it | RETURNS FROM SITKA | Norfth Sea. | | J. P. Nyquist, owner of a crab | cannery near Sitka, is a passenger to the States on the North Sea. N. A. McEeachran, Schwabacher ' | safety in the last period. - eee——— DOUGLASITES GO SOUTH | Einar Rosenberg, of the Douglas | Sea. | . i M. L. Custard, Wrangell contractor, isniled for his home town on the North Sea, R 1 DAILY SPORTS CARTOON- Pasin GRADUATION AND CONFERENCSE. RULINGS THREATENED TO ROIN MNUNESOTA'S TEAM 80T WE GOPHERS FOUND REMSELVES ROSCOE" RETURNED A NEBRASKA KICIoOFF. 74 YARDS B BlehEs Raserved ASAINST NEBRASIKA Gonzaga Bulldogs repeated last year's| amination upon which hinged the {ington State 7 to 0 in a non-con-| !goal topping a 77-yard drive engin-| i | SLANTS The University of Minnesota's foot- ball team is a “phoenix,” built on the remnants of last y r's national championship claimants. Rising from the shell of the great 19034 aggregation, the Golden Go- phers, struck down by graduation losses, conference rulings and fi- | nally eligibility of Jules Alfonse, who was groomed to succeed the All-- | America ‘“Pug” Lund, started prom- |isingly by beating Nebraska's mighty | Huskers. | Apparently thriving on adversity, the Norsmen, staggered last fall by the ruling which ended competition for four members of last year's team, including the battering ram full- back, Stan Kotska, began rebuilding its team. cal ability to make the Minnesota machine go. This fall Roscoe has been moving along steadily but now seems tg have earned the right to the berth made vacant by Lund’s graduation, The brilliant blocking, noteworthy team play and relentless drive, pro« vided an answer to the crisis who predicted a dark future for the Go- phers, Only the question of manpower remains unanswered. = Where last | vear'’s squad was three deep in all positions with capable players, the Gophers went through the Nebraske |game with fewer than 20 men, al- | most succumbing to weariness and | Nebraska in the closing minutes. ° Bierman is still hunting reserves. P B W | OLD NEWSPAPERS | In large bundles for 25¢ per bundle. |Just the thing for starting fires | these chilly mornings. Get them |at THE EMPIRE'S office. { | e e,—— Not the least of their problems was |SPECIAL DELIVEE* TO DOUG- finding someone to fill the shoes of LAS! Daily at 10:00 a.m. and 2:30 Captain “Pug” Lund, sparkplug oflp.m. “elly Blake's SPECIAL DE: the offense which carried the Go-iuvmy—nume 442, L phers to overwhelming victories over | BRSSP PO Oppnmth, {Don’t Sleep on Left Side—Affects Hear If stomach GAS prevents alnpl ing on right side try Adlerika. Oi dose brings out poisons and relieve |gas pressing on heart so you sleep |soundly all night. Butler-Maurg {Drug Co. — in Douglas by Guy's |Drug Store. _.dj BEATS BAD BREAKS Head Coach Bernie Bierman thought he saw the answer to this one in Jules Alfone, gifted backfield- er. The final blow fell during prep- aration for the Nebraska game, when the university authorities announced that Alfonse had failed in the ex- right to play. ‘This blow apparently was the spark | needed to set off a sluggish and dis- | couraged outfit, which had played raggedly in the opener against North Dakota. But against Nebraska, pick- ed as the team to beat by sports ex- perts the country over, the Oopheu( winning 12 to 7, proved they could ( With anything come back, not only against oppo- nents, but against bad breaks as well. ‘The Nebraska' game produced both a successor to Lund and an answer to critics who felt the Gophers were| on't be slipping. | druggist is authorized to George Roscoe, whose 74-yard re- | Creomulsion and to refund turn of the kickoff opened the game | m&'& ‘fmyg‘ :h": %‘fiw with' and whose all-around play was out-| Get Creomulsion m standing, stamped himself as the o long-sought sparkplug. COSMOPOLITAN BEAUTY SHOP Even failed, d Roscoe, a 195-pound senior, is big, fast and cool, a triple-threat back in performance. He is rated one of the best forward passers in the Western conference. {SHY ON RESERVES | Long or short, he hits the mark! with his accurate shots. He's a punt- | er, too, and can pack a ball with the ’best of them. But for two years Lund was ahead of him because “Pug" continued a flaming compe- I'titive spirit and matchless mechani- Gastineau Construction Co SENERAL CONTRACTING E. J. COWLING, President Juneau, Alaska UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 Private Booths CAFE AND BALL ROOM Lunches Dancing Every Night BAILEY’S ™™ i WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" i 2 Heating Plumbing RICE & AHLERS CO. Sheet Metal Work PHONE 34 .French-Italian Dinners GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING Wines—Beer | Telephone 409 FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. | COAL For Every Purse and Every Purpose 7} PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. " { PHONE 418

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