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AH- DO YOU MEAN TO SAY THAT SHE HAS GIVEN UP ALL HER FRIENDS JUST TO SPEND HER TIME WITH ME ? DO You THINK THAT YOUR | DAUGHTER REALLY CARES FOR ME ONE NOW THAT CALLS ON HER- | ’@ J Football Game Scene of Riot, First Fights, Gas Explosion; Contest Ends in Scoreless Tie BRUINS DEFEAT BEARS1TTOG BERKELEY, Cal cf Ssu SAN NCISCO, Oct. 19. -In a football game, climaxed by miniature riots fights and a gis explosion Mary's Gaels' 1 Jip hopes were oreless tie San Fran- FR Oct. 19.—The ern California scored their vistery over tne University of ia Bears last Saturday 17 to 6 rout ling encounters s while the first eless tie. actators wit- fans | the | Univer the after when posts Flame Sh the game, some 18 spec- (¢ burnad, some ser er of balloons ignit ns were released tunts for a Ci The we t o 1 too much and the crowd and d to bal lighted - WASH, STATERS, %2 S, CALIFORNIA IN SCORELESS TIE Shippery Turf Permits Grid- ders to Get Nowhere in Game on had beaten Caiiforr Loyols by the gridders but ing punch LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct ton State and Southern , both undefeated so far last Saturday after- to a scoreless tie on 5_hefore 25000 spec- > the noon batt sogey tators. Neither team as able to ywhehe over the slippery turf. ithern California was a heavy orite to trim the Cougars. ——— U WASHINGTON - HOCKEY SEASON N COAST WILL OPEN SHORTLY akland -Pu_rchases Spo- kane Franchise—Other Teams in League | | | | | land and Seattle. The season op- YES- OH~ SOMEONE 1S INTHE HALL- DAILY SPORTS CARTOON—_ -FRANCIS - - =NEBRASKAS SHASHING 1 FULLBACK CONTINGENT OF SHOT-RUTTERS ¥ W TwE Olymelc fig CONFIDENCA /S ALL HE HAS LACKED IN HE FAST 00TBALL ARESULTS The following are results of lead- ing football games played in var- ious parts of the country last Sat- urday afternoon: UCLA 17; California 6. Gonzaga 0; Montanz G Washington State C; Jouthern “-| California 0. ! Oregon 13; Idaho 0. Oregon State 7, Washington 19. Texas Christian 7; Texas A. & M. 18. i Georgia Tech 6; Duke 19. { Tulane 28; Colgate 6. AN Rigpts Roservod by The Assoclated Press Al THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 19, 1936. Bv GEORGE MeMANIIS BARON NOHILLWILL~ COUNT MEOUT AND SIR VON ATRAY TO SEE YOUR DALG D HELPL PHONED ANDSAD, HE'D CALL TON\GHT“ = \\\11/ LA z i S © 1436, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserved. Bv Pap $PORT SLANTS There would seem to be no con- necticn between the Olympic Games in Berlin and the football prospects at the Unive y of Nebraska this iall, but the fact remains the Corn Huskers may owe much of what § y have to the world con- The connection hinges up on Sam who is starting his third Lraska fullback. -pound sophomore, Fran- > 5, passes and eats from SHOULD BE CHILDS RLAY side, Jumy AFTER HIS WORK WITH HE 16-PoyND tne wrong shy, seli-conscious everything but the ity warranted. he again was one of attack and defense v teamy, but he nervo @ sur i that should think him so good n he knew he wasn't. During the off seasons Sam start- ce 1 junior ‘the b'g gun for a fine ra It helped him keep in condition, and he had been pretty good at it durinz his high school days. Be- ‘Multi pl(; | spectators and has sufficient space jular “Favor Hus i To Win Saturday ed putting the shot hither and yon. Qver California GRIDDERS MUST LEARN TO PLAY GAME OF RUSBY Mont., Oct. Letterman COLLEGE PAR —Bill Guckeyson the Maryland grid ter in tennis and 1 ing to athletic autk university. But Guckeyson tind timwe ut ¢ He's too busy in basketbal!, track aaa €€ s W foolball. He' . 4-letter man Mary- Md., Oc! back suld let cord- the can’t nese 19 on BUTIE, 19.—Mon- rs have 11-man 101 X the fie has ten- with the ciub team n played - under other hali 1 rug - NEW ARENA SEATS 6,000 Colorad omversily Has' Tms “B Finest of Places for Basketball Oct. 19.—Colo- | ch tram R ush" Team Wins _@I Games rado University has one of the CADIZ, Ky., Oct. 19.—This town finest basketball arenas in the has a one-team, one-family “Bush’ Rocky Mountain section in its new league. All members of the team field-house, recently completed at & are surnamed “Bush,” and all are cost of $115,000 either brothers or cousins, aged The structure 4,600 18 to 35. They started playing baseball in: for an additional 2,000 “knockdown” 1932, When softball became popular seats. Thus, it matches the capac- they went in for that sport, finding ity of the Denver municipal audi- a tenth Bush to complete the team. | | i | BOULDER, Col. will seat pad right into i i % a ol ‘ 5Ly torium, site of the national A. A. They boast a 4-year all-victorious & “"’:"]“‘ job in the backlield. He y; jaspethall tournaments the last re rd two years. | Sports writers and scorers go ‘The basketball flooring is port- into a whirl trying to keep tab of able, so that football, baseball and the Bush games. track athletes can work out indoors i aiedl Wi weather interferes with reg- drills French mental 1 hypnotist, was at T France, in 1857. He died in 1926, oo Emile Coue ——— Empir read. . e SEATTLE, Oct. 19—The Univer- Schllllng sity of Washington is favored to sides, it picksd up numerous ponts peat Californmia next Saturday on for Coach Henry (Indian) Schulte's the basis of comparative scores. | 10thiny extra as and the latter walloped Californ a. Cornhusker track teams. At first he was a shot-putter. Good, of course, but 47-foot mark doesn't win many big-time events. Under the veter-, an Schulte’s patient instruction Sam gradually increased his dis- tance. Soon he was touching 50 feet occassionally. i And when the Olympic trials rolled around, Sam tossed his way ‘right ‘nto a place cn the team. Others Had Same Trouble The sea voyage was a novelty, as it was to most of the boys. Sam ienjoyed it, but as yet nothing had happened that might affect the des-, tinies ¢f Nebraska football. It was in the mammoth stadium in Berlin that the change that was to link the Olympic Games with the Cornhuskers began to take place. Going out onto the field to do his chore, with the stadium packed with thousands upon thousands of spec- totors. Sam felt a sinking sensation in the pit of his stomach, as if he were riding in a swiftly dropping elevator. He had often experienced that sensation before football games. High-strung his nerves often were near the snapping point before the kickoff. His muscles tightened, and when it came his turn to perform, in- stead of lobbing the heavy ball in a graceful arc, he pushed it out RADDE TOPS AT ELKS SATURDAY, BAVARD SECOND {Harvard Wins Traditional’ Battle from Princeton \ 1 —Yale Is Victor | Ed Radde topped all comers in the two conference bowling matches | it the Elks last Saturday evening, unning up an individual game score | of 212 and following through to a| PURE \/ANILLA The Huskies have defeated UCLA retains its Jdelicate flavor in all The Huskies are the only unde- feated, untied Pacific Coast Con- ference team. Washington State College and the University of South- ern California are in second place, FROZEN Ium tie each and no defeats. e g Empire ads are read. Good lamps tiiakgFus GGOODEERIENDS eV Nothing seals the friendships between this store and its customers like quality. three-game total of 568, as his team, Harvard, won its “Big Three” match, almost straight in front of him. But he noticed the same thing ens early in November. Western Maryland 0; Calgary denied withdrawing from 13, the League and still wants to be in- Michigan 0; Minnesota 26. cluded this season. ! Indiana 9; Nebraska 13. S | Kansas State 0; Marquette 13. JUNEAU WOMEN’S CLUB Manhattan 7; Holy Cross 13. RESUME BROADCAST[NG Virginia Military Institute 0; Co- mbia 38. Syracuse 7; Cornell 20. Beginning tonight at 7:30 o'clock Aypan G2, Detrel) 9. the Juneau Women’s Club will re-| ArmY 32; Harvard 0. sume broadcasting as was done last Wynesburg 6; Fordham 20. winter. The program committee Ducknell 0; Georgetown 19. consists of Mrs. Crysial Snow Jenne! DePaul 7; Catholic University 12 and Mrs. Ralph Waggoner. Princeton 0; Penn' 7. Tonight's 15-minute broadcas! Purdue 35. Chicago 7. over KINY will be a good program,| Yale 12; Navy 7. a short address by Mrs. J. M. Chase,| Duquesne 7; Pittsburgh 0. violin solo by Miss B. Parrott and vocal solo by Lola Mae Alexander. Villanova Quality Edison Mazda Lamps NEW REDUCED PRICES ‘aking two games from the f'“"“?'lwns happening to the other boys. on Tigers. Nick Bavard's runner- He saw many fine athletes getting up scores of 202 for a single game, |only 45 or 46 feet with their tosses. and a 529 match total, were instru-| That was the turning point. Sam mental in his Yale team’s win over figyred he was no different from the big red and white squad ”“’"{anybody else. Those other boys Sornell. | were nervous, t0o, and most of them Tonight's watcnes send off Erie|weren't doing as well as he. vs. Drake at 7:30, followed by Man-; The husky Nebraskan relaxed, hattan vs. Annapolis at 8:;30 and |forgot the crowd, and his best toss, Dartmouth vs. Columbia at 9:30. although not good enough to win, Saturday’s match results: |was the best shove of the American Cornell ] contingent. Frank Metcalf 198 186 1 Lesson Stays With Him Garland Boggan 156 130 168— 454 | gam was learning his lesson. In Mrs, Stewart 146 137 173— 456] a barnstorming. tour over Europe e W | following the Games he consistently Yim 453 {got 51 feet or better, and he piled i 'up an impressive string of first ‘:;Cul; g?(;l:(;gorn fgz places. His best toss was 53 feet, 1 ‘\{rs Tavenik inch, which surprised him as he ¢ wasn't feeling so steady at the time, having just completed his first air- | plane ride. 212 568 When he returned to Lincoln just 144 432 n time to start football practice this 146— 461 fall. he was a self-assured, poised __ ___ young man at home on a prairic or 5021464 I & crowd. “T learned plenty aboui competi- tion in the Olympics,” the burly southpaw says. “I feel this will help me in football this fall and I know it will prove advantageous in track next spring.” So when Nebraska’'s opponents find themselves bowled over by 210 pounds of animated brick wall this fall they will know they are getting }:lm Olympic touch, delivered by a e e Now 25¢ Type Was Clear-Frosted 35c Clear 55¢ Clear 90c .Clear 1.5 Clear Daylight 65¢ Clear Daylight 90c Better Light—Better Sight Alaska Electric Light & Power Go. LUMBE Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Tu 161— 525 502—1435 Second Half Drive Neces- STEELE MEETS sary, However, to Put MATTHEws IN 0 SEATTLE, Oct. 19.—The Uni- versity of Washington rolled up the | second successive Coast Conference | | OAKLAND, Cal, Oct. ing Oregon State 19 to 7. {Non-title Match Will Be in professional Tce Hockey Le 1t took a second half drive, how- | Q having purchased the Spckane Seattle on Wednes franch The other teams in the half ended with 7 all. | day ngnl The game ran true t> form as! ‘Washington was a pre-contest fav- champion Freddie Steele, of Ta- | coma, and Allen Matthews, the | negro Dempsey from St. Louis, are AT BRUNSw‘CK ON SAT \ten round non-title bout here on * | Wednesday night. ¢! the tous TN schediiied tor | eTEIUE RS Dosled. SLOUO. thay City League Bowling at the Brun-|,., pounds. | e e - not one arrived upon the scene of battle and two more matches arc) postponed. Alt Heidelberg is slated to meet the Family Shoe Store at 7:30 and the| BUCHAREST, Oct. 19—A new Brunswicks to engage Mike's Team ;plan provides for 28 grades of civil B kg |the lowert brackets and reductions Empire ads are reaZ. in the highest. Washin ) Over Victory victory last Saturday by conquer-| 'land has entered the Pacific ever, to decide the issue. The fxrsL‘ League are Vancouver, B. C., Port- SEATTLE, Oct. 19.—Middleweight orite. o | NO TEAMQ, NO BOWL]NG»rininsmng training today for their his weight will be between 160 and swick Alleys last Saturday evening, | This evening at the Brunswick, at 8:30 in City League fracases. |servants’ pay, with increases in Vanderbilt 0; Southern Methodist 16. 179 138 . 147 182 503 499 Harvard Ed Radde 188 . A. Morgan '*144 144 Mrs. Duncan ... 150 168 482 480 Princeton Earl Cleveland *161 161 3. Wirt .. . *153 153 3. Mrs. Petrich ... 136 173 148— 529 146— 438 178— 507 472—1474 SUNDAY GAME St. Mary’s 0; University of San Francisco 0. u;kies Show Théir quer | gto;t H GON WINS FROM IDAHO Two Touchdowns Made in| Fimal Quarier by Webfooters PORILAND._(;':;on. Oct. 19— | Two touchdowns in the final quar- ” 168 4 ] = ORE 4] * 161-- 483 450 487 4841421 “—Average—Did not bowl. I3 230 South Franklin Tefephone 411 i/ CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc Distributors PONTIAC CHEVROLFT BUICK This action picture from the University of Washington-U. C. L. A. game at Los Angeles shows the Husky power in action, and the play resulted in a five-yard gain. Al Curver, Washington half, is running behind the interference of Merle Milled, half, Charles Newton, quarter, and Max Starcevich, guard, as George Robinson-(10), Bruin end, closed in to attempt the tackle, The Huskies defeated U. C. L. A. 14 to 0. (Associated Press Photo) iH' S. Gridders | | Take Thirty iter gave the University of Oregon | Stn- IIt Th | boy who found himself in the great- a 13 to 0 victory over Idaho last g uts |est athletic test of them all, and Satuiday afternoon. b e |won't get lost again, | Tre first three periods were list-| SALIDA, Coi,, Oct. 19.—The high | —————.——— less ones. jscnool football team in this west- § | A 60-yard run by Braddock scor- ern Colorado town had a special ed the first touchdown in the last mission this season—an attempt to qua cler. |add further luster to one of the { Then right on top of it, Idaho finest records ever made by a Colo- by | 'mede a fumble on its own 19-yard rado prep team. The Salidians WILMINGTON, N. C., Oct. 19— line. Oregcn was put in a scoring | have won three consecutive State|August 30 was a rare day at Wilm- —— | pcsition again and when the Web- champfonships and triumpher in ington. The town's first airplane {fcoters recovered, Nicholson circled 30 successive games. Their last de- |crash was reported; for the first e |tae right end for the next play for feat was in 1932. time in the memory of many a WIN n o w c L E A N l N |the second score. ———.——— shark was seen in the surf and 3 ————— Wake and Midway Islands are un- a water spout, something unusually ; Lode and piacer Iucation noticesder jurisdiction of the Navy Depan-'mre on this section of the coast, PHONE 485 jior sale at The Empire office. ment. was sighted off shore*