The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 15, 1936, Page 5

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" to which Wilson, Frank, Miles and orful end, ‘was not grabbing for-‘h sought, Larry commented that dle. Pwmh o W mxddlewelghtimanu TSRS or (he. itle. {2 war,erv pee. S ly .y p " e S iy crown. |ward passes in anything like the & ’ I gz‘t“’:}:l er‘]‘-‘;‘;le"%“sflt":: ini?if"mam" ehioh. woi it national |8 P;;;X:y]'-:‘:n :c;:ri-r 3:}151 l:c:fce]g IS};cmz is one of the top fighters jimmy Ripple, Giant rookie, John Smith, former star lineman ! - o jover of Europe. s as house at th i 1 i clent, Statue-of-Liberty play and TNOWR 85 4 sophomore and In the | ey ikely had something to do| e o o L T Nothing seals the friendships between used it fo roel oft 8 neat guin|GLUNME T Lo own fosses| WD the election remilts STEELE-MATTHEWS GO | - Young University at Provo, Uteh,|| this store and its customers like quality. 1“;. 1“97 pr:m:rtn}:em:;;‘,’e:n;afi;s tu; dripbie fhisougha Tk nngem‘oncc\ — - SEA'I'I'LEi Oct. 15. — Freddie, prank Demaree, leading hitter of where he was line coach last year. puss attack, everyone. was pretty|"1en Be had a clear field ahead i sl e e Quality Edison Mazda Lam much cmivi;med that the S:awelyifir byl And._angther, Yale "chn'i aar, "c a“ ss;;-dn::;:y nfg;:: n};:le a e;zn ?&fi‘ | ps |down seemed imminent. Last sea-| . & | | ;:S:‘ic:;fil:; I&ftla’:::z:nt:“éimson Kelley caught at least onej f g | bout. i 1 NEw REDUCED PRICES v football glory that once was thexrs.‘i;:;;:gm:;g:‘a;mz:‘:: 1% coch of a [: s "l ", | It all happened in the second . : | | | # quarter after Kelley and Carey, orTé;]eereD:Zz?g:ax:hta;peaix:“:écall:;’t Sy SPEED MAHK Is | Watts Type Was Now bfeglhsiinticn . 0 L0 °§m’fimi13;1;;“‘:3:5“‘“;3:;6 is & capable | oo e Chicago Stadium s ST“-I- IN U s | B Clear-Frosted 35c 25¢ a 1l posed { o] 3 1 ’ fldvfhecoificlude mad:“:'ml::f‘sb:g!ter ends in the country. His pen- ;if;m;::fng" ;egzl;;.:f;meegh?;f 1 O 41 0 e Rl Clear 55¢ 45¢ the Statue of Liberty long enaugh!‘?ham for announcing beforehand pion, and Maurice Strickland, of | 300 ................ Clecu‘ 90C 750 to draw in Cornell's right end,|Just What he is going to do In &l u'se10nq 1f successful in mak-| SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 15—Des- . “|game and then making good has|. A | & | - S Clear 155 1.40 Albert Wilson, the Blue's quarter- | "\ im more attention than the |\ arrangements, the bout will beiplw the record-breaking Atlantic 150 Cl D 1i h 65 55(: a crossin of the Noi d . :’;: k; c:flzt:;f;?dg?fi“fim?fi l;:: scoring plays he has figured in. It 46°d N.T?T PRl :Qrueen g;da.ry, naval ::;:-lg:e s::w} s“n .':omfofl.l'w ‘:“t : R Clear Dayllghi 90C unprotected flank. was s a sophomore that he first |the United States still holds the ery - Lomiori-LOW LOST Suumumn | 200..... ear Daylig. c 80c HURRY AND GET DRESSED- | SAW MRS SARAH KUZE-AND SHE SAID SHE'D HAVE SIR RODLICE IBBUT CALL AND INT! JUST ARRIVED AND IS IN T SERVE HIM TEA WHILE YOU'RE FIXING UP - HES S0 ENGLISH YOu KNOW- t KNOW YOu WiLL LIKE HIM- TUT: TUT- YOU MUST ST _RIGHT DOWN AND HAVE SOME TEA AND TASTE THESE BISCUITS MY H HIMSELF- HE HE PARLOR-1I WIL L. HTER JUST HE EAN'T BE ANV WORSE THAN YOUR OTHER GENTLEMEMN TITLED THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 15, 1936. By GEORGE McMANUS — BUT YOou SEE - | AM- ISNIT _THAT TEA DELICIOUS ? 1 SUPPOSE YOu WOULD FEEL FAINT _IF YOU DIDN'T HAVE YOUR AFTER- B NOON TEA- © 1936, King Featutes Syndicate, Inc, World nghts reserved M | WILL FAINT IF | DON'T | GET BACK TO WORK- I'M | RS SARAH KUZE'S | BUTLER- | CAME TO TELL YOU SHE COULD- NT GET IN TOUCH WITH SIR HAL IBUTT- MONT. MENTOR MAKES RECOR Coach Fessenden Special- izes in Rebuilding Los- ing Elevens MISSOULA, Mont, Oct. 15— |Douglas A. Fessenden, coach of the Montana Grizzlies, has a record | that should be unique in gridiron circles. { He is just about the champion “builder-upper.” led, he was greeted with teams. left behind winning élevens. losing HUDSON, RADDE SPLIT LAURELS AT BRUNSWICK Family Shoe Store and Alt Heidelberg Teams Iri- umphant Last Night Lou Hudson and Ed Radde divided the laurels as their respective teams, the Family Shoe Store and Alt Hei- delberg, trounced the squads from the Als Press and the California Grocery, by more than hundred point margins at the Brunswick al- leys last evening. Lou Hudson was high scorer for an entire game match with 572, but | took second place to Radde for sin- gle game high, with a 206 game (o] Radde's 212. Radde was next in line after Hudson 4n total mutch; jcores with 544, | There will be no City League| bowling at the Brunswick tonight,| but the league will swing back in- to full stride again tomorrow even-| ing, with the Sanitary Grocery and| Team ling at 7:30 and ! Wilkinson, a backfield man in the A. J. Camp meeting Thomas prep school, was quickly put Hardware n; 8:30. 1-,”: night's through Bierman's “quarterback Olky " Tieagus’ reaiits’ iare @b fols |school” and came out with a double low. LARRY Buiy |"A" rating. California Grocery HMSELF b When practice started this fall, G. Bavard 193 161 146— 500 o V297, | Bierman immediately took him out R(‘Ju(sa]g 1 . 131 195 154— 480 ‘lcr the line and named him his No. W. Schmitz 181 140 174— 495 o ‘1 ‘t;,\filkrlts:m ad g Total 1475 f\']) AT LEAS;ONZ }p!lotl“ xxx:;y\‘(vl;vélr]ed IY;IP l(“;‘(:p::‘rl:ina{i Alt Heidelberg et : SCORMNG FASS [14-7 win over the Washington Jakeway . 156 177 159— 492 FACH MAJOR GAME Huskies at Seattle. Hendrick 164 202 177— 543 | “I only used about five or six Radde 169 163 212— 544 g i A5 e AN T b oo i }plflss Wilkinson said after the i | Totals ...... . 1579 have watched high school teams invaded Philadelphia for the game |But Bierman and his aides don't|pap and sand-lotters use the ante-dat- u{ith Pgmsyl_vunia at Frank.lin |agree. ; | 3880 ‘wece hotiIn aiit: ndlther was! Alaska Press ed play with varying degrees of field—right in the midst of a Wilkinson not only is a powerful Wirt .. .. 172 127 142— 481 sucess. Just recently we dropped torrid mayoralty campaign in the| }blocker but has the surest hands Mattox 176 146 158— 480 in° on a high school game in city of brotherly love. One of the on the squad on pass plays. Evans . 153 154 134— 491 sbuthern New Jersey. With Col- | candidates for the office of mayor The Uram - to - Wilkinson pass |lingswood and Palmyra ushering in was Jack Kelly, the famous sculler combination may rival the fa- Totals 1412(the new season, lo and behold, the of a few years back. The town was | IN FleT RfluNn‘mous Wyman-to-Baston team of 20 Family Shoe Store icollingswood quarter came up with pretty well pln_st_ered with postorvs‘ years ago. Duckworth 169 172 161— 502‘Lhe old standby. And it worked exhorting the citizens to cast their | | In the Washington game Andy Keyser 169 166 157— 492(for a long gain after other plays votes for Kelly. Pib SR |Uram passed to Wilkinson for 20 Hudson 194 206 172— 572|bad failed to click. The Yale end couldn't help but Fans Believe Subway Slug-|vards to put the bail on the 10- = Kelley Calls the Turns notice the Kelly banners, stickers | er Should Be Malch- | yard line a_nd the next play, Uram Total 1566! The Statue-of-Liberty play rare- | and posters. It was darned nice, g to Ray King, was good for the SPORT SLANTS Yale's experienced backs certain- 'y pulled the wool over the eyes ?f Coach Carl Snavely’s Cornell sophoore hopefuls when they down- ed the widely-heralded youngsters from Ithaca 23 to 0. Cornell's all- sophomore hopefuls when they down- gullible to the tricks, new and old, As long as we can remember, we | WRI (P.K.] SUGAR COATED PEPPERMINT ING GU CHEW AIDS DIGESTION By Pap/TW0 HUNDRED ~ POUND GUARD [N NEW PLACE |Wilkinson Is Now Hefty | Quarterback on Min- nesota Squad = THE EFFERVESCENT YALE CAPTAIN IS ONE OF THE BEST ENDS IN THE MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 15.—Charles (Bud) he shoes Wilkinson is the answer to question: “Who can fill the of Babe Levoir and Glenn the Minnesota quarter- Levoir and Seidel were |lost by graduation, Coach Bernie | Bierman faced a difficult problem. These two men were considered as possibly the best field generals in Minnesota’s history. L fall, in the Northwestern game, the 200-pound Wilkinson, a brilliant and fast guard, intercepted a Northwestern pass and barged down the field like a 10-ton truck |until he was run out of bounds jnear the goal line. That gave Bier- man an idea he declared, of Philadelphia, to| during each season. Certainly ev- Welcome him in this whole-heart- | eryone who has ever played any ed fashion—even wanting him to football at all is familiar with it.(run for mayor. But, if this was all |Still it works more often than it @ scheme to get him to let up on fails. Perhaps that is the very the Pennsylvania gridders the next thing that cloaks it with an ele- |day—well, he wouldn't even consid- {ment of surprise. Whenever it crops | taking the office regardless of {up in big-time football, as in the the result of the election. Yale-Cornell contest, it always Kelley had a world of fun at the causes a stir. |expense of the Quaker eleven the |next afternoon and later, when Captain Larry Kelley, Yale's col-| ;o gony fajled to gain the office ly fails to put in an appearance game. “I guess I'm not so hot."|anqy Johnson and Woody Bur- ed with Steele o | 15.—Harry | | winning touchdown. | e NEW YOORK, Oct. ‘S Balsamo, Subway slugger, knocked | ports out Eric Seelig, German refugee,!| < last night after one minute and four Brlefs seconds of fighting in the first| LA A round. i New York fans and also sports| Trayis Jackson was the only writers believe that Balsamo, who|player in the 1936 World Series has scored sixteen knockouts in/who was in the 1923 %fall classic— twenty fights, rates a shot at Fred- the last time the: Yankees and After graduation from the Uni- versity of Illinois in 1927, Fessen- den went to coach at Brownsville High School and Junior College in Texas. Until his arrival, Browns- ville had never lost fewer than five games each season. In Fessen- den's first year at Brownsville, his team piled up one of the greatest records in the country. Brownsville SAILORS AND KRAUSES HOLD { Everywhere Fessenden has coach- | When he left, he always| |at least’ four touchdowns in every battle. TIn 1929 Brownsville losbk {only one game, the State chams | pionship contest, 13-12. 11 Then Fessenden went to Fenger | High in Chicago. During his 4-yeag reign there, the Fenger team rose | from the status of a “set-up” to & perpetual pennant contender. In his first year in Chicago, Fessen- den piloted Fenger to city and sectional honors and kept the team up there until his departure. 3 Last year was Fessenden's first at Montana. Starting with a sm squad, he turned out a first string that was just about equal to any it had to meet. The Grizzlies didn's win many—but they did beat Mon~ tana State, their ancient rivals. | And they tied Gonzaga and Oregon State. This season Fessenden fore- | sees better things for Montana. R DUTCH SAYS: The town is full of crabs, few people smile when it rains—(Saw ray of sunshine today on a sign down the street. It read Silver nite $250.00). After the rain look for a cold snap. Don't let anyone | fool you with Super Pyrol hooey |use Prestone in the radiator. It's ~ HOOP SESSION 'Holdovers from Last Sea- son Furnish Sparks Last Night Shining lights of the basketball practice of the Tallapoosa and Krause City League teams, at the High School gym last evening, were mainly the holdover stars from last season's play. A ten-man squad turned out for the "Sailors and seven players for the Concreters. After spending the first half of the practice session hoo baskets, the two squads tangled in scrimmage for the re- mainder of the time. No lineups of teams have as yet been made, but rather, frequent substitutions were made in order that the man- agers could get a line on all their men under playing conditions. | From last night's scrimmage sns-‘ sion it would appear that the basis of the Sailor quintet will be the remaining players from the big| fast squad that proved a stumbling block for other teams last season.! won every game, scoring 426 points the best yet, and we have tried —ady, to the opposition’s 2, and scored'a lot of them. Adios. STOCK UP NOW BEFORE THE COLD WEATHER A COAL FOR EVERY PURSE ... AND EVERY PURPOSE Per Ton Per Sack F.O.B. F.0.B. Bunkers Bunkers Indian Lump $12.50 $ .70 Carbonado =i 13.50 J5 Brgtets =i 13.50 75 Nanaimo Lump .......... 14,30 .80 Utah Ltinp e 15.40 .80 Utah Nut (boat) Blacksmith Coal Steam Coal No. 1 Steam Coal No. 2 17.50 27.00 11.00 8.00 Last night's Tally attack was led | by Tange, Riston and Frodle, with Hundwin, a newcomer, displaying some nice ball handling at guard. The main strength of the Krause | squad seems to lie in the quintet| of Sammy Nelson, Jerry Ledbetter, ' Larry Hill, Specs Paul and John Young. Young, who showed last evening for the first time, looks to be a quite adept casaba tosser. Krause mainstays from last Dick Gerwel, a new man from! {whom much is expected. | | This evening, tne Jjuneau Fire- A Half Century of Satisfactory Service | PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. 4 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL PHONE 412 ;men and Sabin’s squads will hold ! {forth on irrom 7:15 to 9 o'clock, the High School gym in their second practice meeting for the approaching season. the Chicago Cubs, is considered lamong the fastest typewriter key Iticklers in the country. 3 Good Jack Frye, senior halfback at the University of Missouri, was a sen-| saton in the Southwest Conferenoel when he played for Rice Institute in 1931. Frye transferred to Mis- souri after one year of competi- tion at Rice. The favorite spectator-sport of Earl Sargeant, U. C. L. A. guard, | fGKeyusKGOODXERIEN lamps s attracted attention when, on the leve of the annual game with Princeton, he volunteered the in-) formation that the highly-touted | Princeton team wouldn't 1ook so| good with Larry Kelley of Yale |pleying in its backfield all the fol-| lowing afternoon. | True to his boast, Kelley did raise havoc with the Tiger backs from the moment the opening whistle blew. He has been at it ever since. Kelley does a lot of talking but as long as he con- tinues to play a lot of football his tloquacity only serves to surround him with color. Last fall the Yale football squad GLEY AR === CONFERENCE BOWLING | ocean speed mark. In 1928 the air- craft carrier Lexington, enroute RESUMES AGAIN AT , ELKS THIS EVENING mome o mites n s stmote: aod | for an average speed of 30.66 knots. After being empty last evening,|The Queen Mary's best day was the Elks alleys tonight are agam"'lsa miles, the Normandie's 754. ‘the scene of conference bowling - it matches, At 7:30 the Vanderbilt| SAVE THE DATE squad will line up against the! Hard times dance by Women of pinmen from Boston University.|the Moose, November 14. Eighty-thiry brings Duke and Rut-| R — gers together with Oregon and| Lode and placer tocation notices La Fayette following at 9:30 o'clock. lor sale at The Empire office. Y At that very first —adv. ... Use this unique aid for preventing colds, especially designed for nose and throat where most colds start. Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps to avoid many colds. CKS VATRO-NOL DOUBLE QUANTITY 50¢ . . . these are the considerations that cause seasoned travelers to choose the Northern Pacific when they go East. Theré's genuine comfort in its luxu- rious Pudllmans, tourist sleepers and modern reclining seat coaches. There's plenty of room to move about or loll in luxury. Radio, library, baths, card rooms, and other conveniences make travel- ing by this route thoroughly enjoyable. Every Car Air-Conditioned on the NORTH COAST LIMITED “Famously good’’ Northern Pacific meals in the diner, or tray service at your seat in tourist sleepers and coaches at lunch counter prices. Let us help plan an enjoyable trip for you anywhere. Cable, write or call: KARL K. KATZ, Alaska Representative 200 Smith Tower, Seattle Better Light—Better Sight Alaska Electric Light & Power Go. ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S hABY BEEF —DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected

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