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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 3, 1936. ALL RIGHT- DINTY- ME LAD-fLL 8E CABBAGE~ WHY-1 WAS SJUST TALKIN' TO TH' CASHIER OF THE BANK- | SHOULD THINK CONSCIENCE WOULD HURT YOU-ALWAYS LYING AS You DO~ 1 CAN'T UNDERSTAND HOW YOU CAN LIE LIKE THAT- | COULDN'T LIE AND MY S| LIEE-IT 1 COl T WORRY ME ILL~ HOLD F-RESPECT-IN FACT, WOULD By GEORGE McMANUS o b 2 King Featured NEW BOWLING SCHEDULEIS MADE PUBLIC 9:30—Yale vs. Princeton. Tuesday, Oct. 6 7:30—Washington vs. Richmond. 8:30—Knox vs. Vanderbilt. | 9:30—Boston vs. Drake. | Thursday, Oct. 8 | 7:30 — University of Alaska vs.| Carnegie Tech. 8:30—Holy Cross vs. M. I. T. 9:30—Syracuse vs. Susquehanna. Spot West Point Bob Duckworth . C. B. Holland Mrs. Coughlin Total Richmond HES T0 BE PLAYED Mosquito'Press CASTNER PARTY of China Flays ' ARRIVES AFTER Olympic Team TRIP IN CANOE STOCK UP NOW BEFORE THE COLD WEATHER A COAL FOR EVERY PURSE . ... AND EVERY PURPOSE Per Sack F.0.B. Bunkers $.70 75 75 .80 .80 .90 1.75 .60 45 Per Ton F.0.B. Bunkers $12.50 13.50 13.50 14.30 15.40 17.50 27.00 11.00 8.00 Indian Lump ... Carbonado Briquets ... % Nanaimo Lump Utah Lump . Utah Nut (boat) . Blacksmith Coal . Steam Coal No. 1 . Steam Coal No. 2 . A Half Century of Satisfactory Service - ATELKS' CLUB ‘Drake, Manhal{an and An- Friday, Oct. 9. 7:30—Lafayette vs. Cornell. 8:30—Harvard vs. Yale. Martin Lavenik R. L. Darnell Maxine Williams 126 NANKING, China, Oct. 3. — The| Capt. and Mrs. 1. V. Castner and University of Alaska Team 130 Enters Elks’ Club Tournament Matches scheduled for next week in tre Elks Bowling tourney are as follows Monday, October 5 7:30—Notre Dame vs. Lehigh. 8:30—Cornell vs. Harvard. RMINAL | | their bids to join one of the Uni-| | versity of Washington's sororities lor fraternities on Monday evening, !which was pledge night on the Se- ?ame campus. And... TONIGHT From 9:30 on . . our regular Sa urday e vening dance. ® Beer 9:30—Oregon vs. Rutgers. Saturday, Oct. 10 7:30—Bowdoin ys. Dartmouth. 8:30—Drake vs. Manhattan. Personnel on the following teams has been changed as follows: Dartmouth A. W. Stewart MacSpadden Mrs. Ed Sweum Spot 33 | Total 466 | A new team, the University of Al- aska, has entered the tournament. |Members are: Warren Wilson Etta Mae Kolasa Mrs. Bob Davlin Spot 177 140 Total L RESULTS OF - GRID GAMES LAST NIGHT The foliowing & 1al resu.s of football games played last night in various parts of the country. Mississippi 7; Temple 12. Birmingham Southern 6; Loyola ola of New Orleans 13. Depaul 6; St. Louis 0. Rice Institute 0; Dugesne 14. Montana 0; UCLA 30. Cheney Normal 7; Gonzaga 27. - e |JUNEAUITES PLEDGED | AT U. OF WASHINGTON DINNER DANCE 6 to 8 Sunday Evening (No Cover Charge) ® Private Booths ® Excellent Menu ® Superb Service According to word received here three Juneau young people received | The fortunate students were: Ruth Hirst, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Hirst, pledged to Dela |Gamma; Herbert McLean, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hector McLean, pledg- ed to Chi Psi; and L. Fred Paul, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Paul, pledged to Delta Tau Delta. Other Alaskans receiving bids . were: Norma Kubley, of Ketchikan; it | Edith Hopkins, of Fairbanks; Fran- |ces Parks, of Petersburg; and Gen- | evieve Strandberg, of Anchorage. — - RESIGNS Mrs. A. J. Adams has resigned her position as president of the Cordova Women’s Club to visit in the States. | napolis Win Bowling Tilts Last Night In the bowling tournament at the Elks' Club last night the Drake team won three games from Bow- doin; Manhattan bested Dart- mouth, 2 to 1; and Annapolis won from Columbia by tle same score Scores made wer Bowdoin 170 176 114 460 Drake 206 164 171 118 150— 484 188— 535 108— 340 A. R. Duncan Dorothy Green | Totals 446—1359 ] | Herb Redman, Jack Elliott 180 \Mrs. Reynolds. 170 { s Totals 556 167— 535 144— 474 170— 496 481—1505 468 Dartmouth A. W. Stewart... 193 205 Mac Spadden .. 191 183 Mrs. L. Taylor *149 159 533 537 Manhattan 143 212 165 142 157 198 Totals 465 552 | Seder Columbia J. McCormick. 155 190 N. C. Banfield. . 149 174 |Dalma Hanson *124 124 Spot 1905 1% 441 501 Annapolis Paul Kegal 163 128 H. M. Holmann. 173 149 ;Jack Finley . *147 147 | Totals 483 424 522—1429 | Tonight the following schedule {will be maintained: 7:30, West | Point vs. Rutgers; 8:30, Rutgers vs. Lafayette. 152— 550 168— 524 149— 447 Totals 469—1539 Cary Tubbs John Walmer | Mrs. Bringdale 135— 490 217— 524 196— 551 548—1556 136— 481 130— 453 124— 372 13— 39 403—1345 Totals 204— 495 171— 493 147— 441 =l SO MULLEN GOES SOUTH, . SHORT BUSINESS TRIP | J. F. Mullen, who recently re- signed as United States Comlmis- | sioner, is a passenger south on the complete route of China’s Olympic! Lieutenant E. M. Bowan arrived in team at Berlin, where not one son|Juneau on the Yukon to join the or daughter of Cathay survived even' Chilkoot Barracks Army tender and a first round or heat, is being taken!return to the Post. . 4s a major loss of national face by| During the summer the party o a people which now realize that its|three made a trip down the Yukon sports consciousness has developed |river from Whitehorse to Circle in faster than the ability of its ath-|/a canoe dug out of cottonwood by letes. |the Chilkat Indians of Southeast China had nothing but praise for Alaska. che one-man team which made an| The party left Whitehorsé Aug- unsuccessful but creditable first ap- ust 23. Their canoe was equipped pearance at the Los Angeles g#mes with a one-cyinder Evinrude out- in 1932. But the millions of Chin-!board motor. They traveled from ese fans who rushed to their ra-| Whitehorse to Circle and made a dios and increased newspaper cir- side-trip up the Charley River, culations during the Berlin games which comes into the, Yukon near only to hear or read over and over| Woodchopper. The total distance again that the Chinese entry fin- traveled in the canoe was nearly ished last in a first heat or fell out 800 miles. The motor used only n a first round have no praise and 17 gallons of gasoline. little sympathy for the men and Feel Effects of Flood women who left China in a blaze. In speaking of the trip, Capt. of patriotic glory a frw months Castner said: “People along thej ago. Yukon still suffer from the damage) The “1uusquito” press, single sheet done by the flood last spring. Live- papers of doubtful ownership, more| Stock was lost by many along the doubtful reliability, large street cir- Yukon. Many interesting stories PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL PHONE 412 culation and great impertance in| moulding and expressing the opin- ions of the man in the street, {have led the more respectable press| in expressing popular dissatisfac-| tion with the state of Chinese ath- | ritory regarding the flood. An un- are told by people in Yukon Ter- usual result of the flood was the cutting in two of a great black bear. He was caught in an ice-jam. “All the way down the river the | ]nf disappointment at the failure at people were most hospitable. The| Canadians along the river had heard of our coming from the Mounted Police. We were greeted sometimes with the exclamation, “We expected you sooner” and at first were rath-| er mystified.” letics. | The more bitter commentators on| China’s inglorious failure at Berlin charge national athletic officialdom with having lowered selection stand- ards and having padded or falsi- fied records made in trials or na- tional meets by local champions in Cclnfla"y Commander order to please both competitors| Capt. Castner 1s commander of and fans. Without sparing feelings Company E at Chilkoot Barracks.! or withholding names, the “mosqui- He has been at the barracks the last to” press charges the public with three years. having overpraised Chinese athletes, West Point in 1933 and was a mem- and with having swelled their heads ber of the United States fencing, |and slowed their limbs to such an/team which went to France in 1924 |extent that they were useless and|and participated in the Olympic | worthless when pitted against ser-| Games. i ious competition. kn parncular.l Lieut. Roman received his com- | press scorn is vented on the Chinese Mission when he graduated from aquatic star, Miss Yang Sau-king,! the Military Academy in 1932. | known and pictured throughout the| ~Capt. Castner’s father is Brig.| land as the “Beautiful Fish.” Miss, Gen. Castner, who was topography | Yank finished 15 yards behind the Officer on the famous U. 8. Army winner of the first elimination heat, Mapping expedition to Alaska in in the 100-meter swim. | 1898, which started at Cook Inlet The more respectable press, \\'hxch‘“"nd penetrated the Interior. B"g\ for the most part is semi-govern- O¢n: Castner made the first map ment controlled, admits to feelings| ° the Matanuska . Valley region.| He is now retired and living in Oak- | He graduated from/ - { RUSSIAN STEAM BATHS | and SHOWERS OPEN 1:00 P. M. TO 1:00 A. M. WEDNESDAYS——FRIDAYS——SATURDAYS 186A Gastineau Avenue Phone 349 Open Wednesdays and Saturdays after 1 a.m. by appointment only. ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF —DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected LUMBER | | Princess Louise. He expects to con- : |Berlin, but sees in the unbroken duct his business th a short time| . | string of s 5 ar] | |and return on the Princess Norah | @ sale b sein waming land, Cal. | B § Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. | Mrs. George McDonald, former vice ‘suinng froin Vancouver on October that China must improve its phys-| -mpire f:lnsslllias pay. @ Wine ical welfare. ® Sandwiches ® Fountain | president of the organization, suc-|19. ! |ceeds Mrs. Adams. Other officers| RS, i i TR of the Cordova club are: Mrs. A.| ELECTED TO OFFICE % |J. Mestall, Mrs. R. J. Storey, and| F. A. Jones, of Cordova, has been f Mrs. Mayne Watson. elected manager of the Cordova| . SN o0 oo e Drum and Bugle Corps, which prov-| Try an Empire ad. 'cd so popular in Juneau during the S "~ [American Legion Convention. e Lode and placer ocatien notices for sale at The Empire office. AT THE HOTELS Mrs. Iva Clements, City. Alaskan M. Fuller, Eagle River; E. Waden, C. Matison, City; D. M. Berry. Say PHONE Waiting room across from Coliseum Remember... For TAXI SERVICE To and from your Favorite Entertain- ment Spot. CALL A Comet ) 9 | n’t Say Taxi-Say COMET” Waiting Room Across from Coliseum WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48% Dance Tonight John Marin's Douglas Inn Dancing—9:30 on to . GLENN EDWARDS' ORCHESTRA REFRESHMENTS—LUNCHES BEER — WINES THE TERMINAL “Deliciously Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties For Prompt, Safe, Efficienc + Service CALL A CHECKER CAB —_— JUNEAU CASH GROCER CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Streeis Free Deli PHO! PHONE 556 6