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BRINGING UP FATHER TR PHONE! HE WAS GOING TO I DADDY-SIR BARON BEERONBAR JUST | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 29, 1936. By GEORGE Me] With no other football to be found we decided to go after the D AND SAID CALL ON YOU TO- OuUR b TITLE GOIN/ TO ASK ME IF HE CAN MARRY YOU- 1T YM GONNA GIT RID OF THIS GUY AT ALL COSTS— RETURN TO MY COULD YOU LET HUNDRED-? MR JIGGS-1 AM SIR BEERONBAR- | MUST e e | NATIVE LAND-THE DUCATUKA ISLAND- ME HAVE THREE PR WHY - CERTAINLY- ‘ | HERE IS FIVE HUNDRED - GO ARQUND THE L%o Lo ( ]ione in the stream, and players, {coaches and fans joined the race. {We headed off the ball about half a mile down the mill-race and fi- nally got the game started again, |putting the pigskin on the 20-yard line as if it had been downed be- hind the goal posts.” 1 D LISTEN-DAUGHTER- ! SCRATCH SIR {Man Pesters Author, Flees Under Threats OSLO, Norw Oct. 29.—Knut {Hamson, 77, literary Nobel prize winner, is still a powerful man. Out for a walk on the outskirts of Oslo, Hamson was pestered by an admirer who asked if he could walk by Hamson's side. The nov- elist refused, and when the man still continued to annoy him, Ham- YOUNG FELLER DAILY SPORTS CARTOON-- CAUSES WORRY IN B. B, CAMPS Q=5 - 490 ,////93/ S5 1 | Child Pitcher Presents Prob- C 1 icm w ase [s Up to Landis S€ By G (Ascociated VAN MF W. CHURCHILL Press Staff Writer) Ia, Oct. All 17-year-old $100,000 probler ioner K w ted 1es' agreemen from the san: Commis exhibition and worries quit pitel thing rd Clevels Steve d to helping me and me wor learn with iis can rule that the t ball whiffed 17 letie: jame should rded to Moini League Cleveland’s claiming o- tested of Feller acquisition priority rights. ot Wo " said Feller, of ma ing I read re | league club| owners would pay me $100,000 to| sign a contract with them if the Judge rules I'm a free agent | “But I never bother about what 711 pay me. Dad (William Fel- who owns a 360-acre farm) | takes care of all that. Al I| bother about,” he added with a! 7 throwin' 'em in there so| they can't hit 'em.” | o, “Dad” agreed his boy would make ever Ao PRINCETON LOOKS CARABLE OF PROTECTING (TS STRING OF VICTORIE PRINCETON ELEVEN Vo) t least start o free money to made Elder Feiler he Is mace a to cost some him, for he's worth the 10ney,” said the elder Feller. “He's {proved it. Wh; Rogers Hornsby told me the other night that Bob |was the fastest pitcher he'd seen in 21 years of baseball. And Horns- by ought to know. He saw Bob strike cut 15 of his St. Louis Browns not so long ago.” Baseball Diet Bob's mother has resigned herself to a baseball diet. “We've had nothing but baseball for breakfast, dinner and supper for years,” she said with a smile. “And I suppose we'll have it for more no But I know club X KEEPING - FIT Eat the right foods, get enough sleep, live moderately. .. And, a whiskey that A 4 HE human system responds differently to different forms of whiskey.” This is the conclusion of 2 group of trained research men engaged by the House of Seagram to investigate the physical results of various types of whiskey. After months of exhaustive work, this group found Seagram’s Crown Blended Whiskies easier if you drink, choose GREES with you. : average man, kinder, more considerate — in brief, “A Most. Wholesome Form of Whiskey.” Naturally, such whiskey is more likely to agree with you. In addition, of course, Seagram’s Crowns are fine, rich-tasting, mellow whiskies because they are blended from one of the greatest stores of fully-aged whiskies in the world. © Seagram-Distillers Corp.—Executive Offices: New York Seagram’s Five Crown Blended this product are 5 years or more old, hiskey. The straight whiskies in 560 straight whiskey, and 75% neutral spirits_distilled from American grain. Botrled under this formula since May 1936. 90 Proof. Seagram’s Seven Crown Blended Whiske: ‘The straight whiskies in it Lot B TLs o mcwe old, BTk s ions Saa e o a 621:% neutral spiries distilled from American Tt e this formula since May 1936. 90 Proof. Seagram s (rown (Blondded (riskies WHOLESOME FORM OF LAST DEFEAT WAS AT HiE. HANDS OF YALE CoacH FILL EM < LEFT VACANT \ 8Y TE GRADUATN| OF /5 SENIORS V=4 Bobby will take care of hir and do his best. He's a good train- er. I don't think there's a boy in the State of Iowa who likes to sleep better than he does.” “Yeah,” grinned Bob. “And it's sure good #o be home where it's quiet and you can sleep. Why in Cleveland and the other big league towns I couldn’t sleep more n eight or nine hours a night unless 1 was dead tired.” KN o PERU, Neb., Oct. 29.—Number 13 is both lucky and unluc when |Peru State Teachers and Midland College football teams meet. This season they clashed for the 13th time, Midland winning 13 to 0 for the first time in 13 years. Peru scored 13 points in each |of the previous five encounters winning four with the fifth ending 13 to 13. Before that, Midland scored 13 |points in each of four consecutive games it dropped to Peru. Manufacturers Stress Quality i | NEW YORK, Oct. 29. — “Quality | construction” will be emphasized in ‘30 displays and housing shows to |be held in various parts of the {country during the coming year by the Manufacturers Housing | Promotion Council. The group was organized by leading manufacturers |of building materials to conduct a Ination-wide campaign for better { housing. | Russell G. Creviston of the Crane |Company, chairman of the council, ‘praued the work of the Federal |Housing Administration in setting lup higher standards of land use "and building construction. He said that he thought a large measure of responsibility rested with the manufacturers to see that these |standards are understood by the "puhllcl and applied by developers land builders. The council has tentative plans {for a series of model homes to be \erected with the cooperation of the {American Institute of Architects ‘and builders’ organizations. Accord- ing to’present plans, local builders |and architects will participate in |each exhibit. Traveling displays will be used for the housing shows. Motor car- avans are being considered for reaching the smaller communities. The 180-acre farm near Kent, O., !t-n which L. E. Call, dean of agri- culture at Kansas State College, was born, has been in the Call family for 134 years—and never had a mortgage on it. WILD GEESE RESTING IN DEATH TRAP Game Protectors Firing Shots in Efforts to Scare Them Away NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y., Oct 29.—Game protectors hoped today to make enough noise with blank shotgun cartridges to chase a flock of 1,000 Canadian wild geese from a death-trap resting place in the upper Niagara River close to the Horseshoe Falls. The birds sat down on ‘the water in their migratory flight to the southland yesterday and a few of them were carried over the torren- tial brink to destruction on rocks below. Protector James F. Woodcock started the shotgun firing last night and thought he succeeded in scar- ing a few of the geese away The main body, howeve B undisturbed and the shooting, re- rted to more or less successiully last year to frighten a larger flock. will be continued. They are far out in the river. Meanwhile, London, Ont., report- ed 500 migrating birds — swans geese and ducks—crashed against the thick lenses of the Pelee Island lighthouse, situated in Lake Erie off Leamington, and died in a shower of glass. The birds were attracted and dazzled by the brilliance of th powerful light and crashed into it during a foggy night last week e - Lode and placer focation notices lor sale at The Empire office. A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, yoa can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anyth less than Creomul- sion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem- branes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, your | druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion rieht now (# 5 PHONE 206 Juneau Radio Service For Your RADIO Troubles 122 Second St.—~Next door to San Francisco Bakery o L SRR L AT 3 | 1 | | R e KAYO FIGHTER Former Champ Gives Har- | ry Balsamo Ten-Round | [hl'ashmg m N Y W YORK, Oct. 29. — Eddie Risko, former middleweight turned in an upset last administering a sound nd (hrashing to young Har- Balsamo, highly touted kno from New York lost the Pacoma, n ni ter ry out St recently Freddie Steele, Seattle bout. The one- samo’'s first reverse in a1 bouts, sixteen of which he by the knockout route <o scaled 161 pounds and Bal- tipped the scales at 160 of in a on was Bal- 21 profes- ded Ri samo pounds oo SPORT SLANTS | nsational or emergency plays in the last thall game: op-nion of Coach Ike J. Arm- n; of Utah University. he pl ur team uses many s in every game are the ones st likely to result in ground ganing as the boys know all the fundamenta of ckle smash- s, center bucks around end runs,” comments the Ute mentor. *Few if any of the players are thoroughly v °d in freak or sen- onal plays and the odds are against completion of such | despite the fact they may been tried many times in practice. Armstrong points out it is prac- tice that makes perfect’ and a coach can hardly expect his bo; ‘perform unusual or freak plays in an emergency that calls for touchdown to win. | *“‘Impossible’ or emergency plays/ with one or two minutes to go) | sometimes win ball games, but usu- ally result in loss of time and fre- quently bring penalties, Coach | Armstrong declares, | and SCORES AND DOESN'T KNOW IT He recalls, however, that an un- conscious player once scored Utah's winning touchdown in a bitter game which virtually decided the Rocky Mountain conference title. | Utah was playing Colorado Col- lege at Salt Lake City in 1928. The Utes, favorites to win, trailed at the half, 14 to 7. They rallied to score two touchdowns in the third per- iod, but the Tigers also tallied and the final period began 21-20 for C.| Utah pounded its way to the C. C. 20-yard line. Ralph Good- 1 win, halfback, plunged into the line| and was injured, but said nothing.| The center snapped the ball to Goodwin on the next play and the halfback romped through the entire; Tiger team to score the winning touchdown. He began to stagge {one of his gridde title to &liec u touch- minute of son walked up to a policeman and {asked: about the field and was taken from| “Am I allowed to give that man the game. a thrashing?” Rushed to the dressing room and| The policeman gave a smiling revived, he knew nothing about his|consent, but before Hamson could sensational 20-yard run. How heireach his “admirer,” the man had managed to catch the pass from,taken to his heels. ‘Go;)d l;rc;ducfion of Silver Is Announced SPOKANE, Wash,, Oct. 29— A Sunshine mining company produc- tion report of 2582205 ounces of silver for the third quarter led min- ing sources here today to claim for the rich North Idaho property a new world three-menths production record The figure boosted the reported nine-month production to 6,138,918 ouneces, compared with 4,110,238 for the same period in 1935. - eee —— Rattlesglakes Bar School House Door RULETON, Kas., Cct. 29. — For once the pupils at District No. 17 school had no desire to dash out the school room door—seven rat- tlesnakes had crawled into the entry way. As soon as the snakes were sight- ed the farm youngsters grabbed books and everything eise at hand and pelted them at the snakes. They killed four of the rattlers and the others escaped. center remained a mystery. Good-————————————— win said he was knocked uncon- { scious on the line plunge just prior RUSSIA o his long run and could remem- h ber nothing more until he was ta- ken to the dressing room. Coach E. L. Romney of Utah State Agriculture College reports “lost his glas e at Logan and an ac- teammate combed the ! veral minutes before vers convinced him it was 1L6A Gastineau Avenue fellow pla 1 joke s ball ¢ ad du the biot d his 1 why ered, he told| | mates he must have lost| ses, s he conldn't | ropped to his| back | The other and d forth in the the spectacles, 1 mind blank because of a battering and exhaustion | | | NEARLY LOST THE BALL Ge: M. Varnell, veteran Pa- cific Coast Conference ¢ 1, goes, back a long way to recall an un- Al football incident. { 5 one of the queerest hap- | I have ever seen in foot-| 1 do remember exactly | was playing Willamette Uni-| but I think it was Oregon College,” Varnell recalls. | game was back in 1909 at Salem, Ore., in the days when only one football was brought out for competition and not a very good one at that “Shortl; who versity State fter the battle started Willamette's oppcnents were forced to punt in Willamette's territory. The ball sailed over the goal line end into a mill-race. “Here we were without a foot- ball to finish the gaine, and at the STEAM BATH and SHOWERS GPEN 4:00 P. M. TO 1:00 A. M. WEDNESDAYS——FRIDAYS——SATURPAYS Phone 349 Open Wednesdays and Saturdays after 1 a.m. by appointment only, AFTER 6:00 P. M.!!! PHONE 226 If your Daily Alaska Empire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY. same time I wasn't sure as to what _— the rule should be on the play as the pigskin had not touched the ground. ¥ree Delive JUNEAU CASH GROCERY CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Streeis | PHONE 5! EDISON MAZDA LAMPS ECONN This store Iis head- quarters for everys thing the band or or- chestra player needs. Seo our big stock of Instru= ments and accessories. 100 watt clear 200 watt clear 200 watt frosted ... 300 watt clear medium 300 watt clear mogul base Ask about the Light Meter MAKE SURE THE LIGHT YOU ARE ALASKA MUSIC SUPPLY 122 W. Second Phone 206 They Stay Brighter Longer 10-15-25-40-50-60 Watt inside frost ....15¢ 75-100 watt inside frost base USING IS CORRECT _Connsn X Ti-lI.RD Juneau Alaska Electric Light & inler Co. Douglas LUMBE Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. 230 South Franklin Telephone 411 CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc Distributors CHEVROLET PONTIAC BUICK & SENECA CA | WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 488