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BRINGING UP FATHER NOW AS YOU SUGGESTED- 'VE CHANGED THE BLUE - ROOM AND ENLARGED THE GOLD ROOM AND ADDED A TEA ROOM ON THE RIGHT WING-NOW- IN REGARDS TO THE PING-PONG ROOM- Texas A. and M. Prove Too Much for California [ Eleven SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 12— Completely oralizing their op- ponents in the second half by an assault that neted six touchdow: the Te: A. and M. cru University of San Francisco's team by 58 outstanding de Xas ned the 1 score of in the foctball intersectional game on Armistice Day. SCORES OF Haskell L4 U OTHER GAME Indians 6; St. Ambrose s S. Idaho 14; Fort Lewis 0. Ox Team Takes Man Off Relief 12—An ox Brown fam- relief rolls t Texas soil Bwun now 41, and despair GI team pulled the R ily of nine from and rooted it into Thr s ago faced economic ruin when the lumber mills with which he had ed 14 years closed | down. | Brown did odd jobs and finally turned to relief Then re a_small pie: land, though he ing | He moved his family to the five- | acre farm. He swapped his hand | saw for a 4-month-old steer and a | few days later traded his plane for | a second young Then he start- ed work. 1 This fall he is harvesting cot- ton, corn, sweet potatoes and other | products from his now 22-acre farm and the family table is load- ed with good things to eat. 1 Mrs. Brown did her share. She raised chickens and traded some of them for a cow. Now the Browns have the oxen, two cows, a year- ing, a flock of chickens and a pig enroute to thp smoke-house. SPORT SLANTS Loyal follc—ers Rangers will not favorites when toe; the ice this fall. At least, no! if Lester Patrick goes through with his plans to use all the younrg blocod available to inject new life into the battle-worn team. Bun Cook has moved on to Bos- ton. His brother Bill is not likely to see much action as he has tak- en over the role of assistant coach to Patrick. Just how much Frank Boucher will be able to play re- mains to be seen. Boucher frac- turned an ankle and, while the | wounded member apparently has healed, no one knows how it will| stand up under the strain of play- ing. After all, Franz is no longer a youngster so far as athletic com- | petition is concerned. He is 34 years old and has been skating around, the ice for a long, long time. Even OIld Ching Johnson, who seemed to go on and on, appearsj to have reached the stage when he | can no longer be counted a regu- lar. As a matter of fact, Patrick offered the 39-year-old Johnson a contract this fall for the service he might be able to offer as a coach rather than as an active| player. Ching would be available | for an occasional bit of service on the firing line. And he would do better than all right in an emer- gency. Wwith powerful defensive young- sters like Art Coulter, Ott Heller, Babe Pratt and Joe Cooper cn‘ hand to take care of things it xs. unlikely that Johnson would be | called on more often than he could stand. The youngsters give the Rangers one of the strongest back- line squads in the National hockeyI circuit. { Heckey's “Lou Gehrig” Manager Patrick is counting| heavily on Murray Murdock for re-| lief purposes just as he has for the past several years. Murdock, one! P the WO of al- 9 | [ the New Yo recognize (h-ir skate out on he | knew little about farm- HOW ABOUT THE PINK ROOM FOR MY DOG FIFL? || AND HERLITTLE PINK BED-7? [e] THIS ROOM HERE 19 FOR RECEPTIONS TO VISITING d DIGNITARIES — HAVES THks AR DAUGHTER WHAT IN THE WORL.D'S MAGGIE TALKIN' ABOUT TO THAT || ARCHITECT-1S {1 SHE GONNA BUILD A NEW HOME ?— S HOCKEY /5 A ROUGH GAME — A FELLOW HAS TO BE LUCKY AS WELL AS DURABLE TO L‘Escn DE IMIURY FOR TEN YEARS Sports Briefs. ... Ace Parker, Duke quart averaged 47 yards on punts | Georgia Tech. Byron (Whizzer) White, Color: University quarterback, has regis tered a straight “A” scholastic av- erage in two full years of college study. Mentioned in and around New Orleans as probable Sugar Bow] contestants this year are Louisiar State University and the Univer sity of Pittsburgh. Lou H. Mahony, Denver Univer- sity athletic manager, says the D U. football teams has played only two games on snow-covered fields in the past seven years at the| Pioneer Stadium. One of the two contests was with Temple of Phil- | adelphia. When Colorado College Montana State at Bozeman this season, it was the Tigers' longe: football trip since they played Army at West Point in 1931. played ) . Bv Pupi -ne IRON MAN OF HE N. Y. RANGERS HE HAS NOT MISSED A GANE SINCE 1926 / MURDOCK wiLL. 8 SHOOTING V FOR THE GO0 MARK TS SEASON ~n0 , has never made “Hooks” was playing same alley. Murdock is probably the most Americanized of all Canadian-born a point in the THEY ARE ALL DADDY- YOuU FORGET SHE 1S RUNNING FOR " AND SHE IS } REMODELING C HE CITY HAI.‘I. el Disarms Critics WHITMAN 1S | Los [ | Strader, and now mater, AN(vF.LES, Nov. 12—“Red"” one of St. Mary’'s greats backfield coach of his didn’t like it when ay area newspapers said he ¢ signals from the bench. In lanswer to his critics, Strader didn’t !smoke or wear a hat when St. | Mary’s beat Loyola the next time {cut. He was supposed to have tip- 1 off signal calls by the angles his hat or cigar. - Painted Plgskm GREELE WALLA WALLA, Wash,, —Whitman College has been eliminated from the North- |west Conference football race by losing 6 to 0 last night to the Col- lege of Puget Sound. Willamette leads the conference to clear sailing for the title -, —— 0ZE SIMMONS Nov. 12. of Y, (,nlo Nov. see a striped ball used in a 12— fu()l- A ' OUT OF RACE virtually | . OUT, THEN BACK “ Glass of B Beer, Says Sourdough, Down from North (Seattle Times ) Gust Johanson, who should have . i, y i} been gaping with wonder at the Lmns. Bassett, hmbnnk:_ L%w.)h march of civilization past the win- Donnelly, Palmer; Ray Paradis, qow wasn't impressed at all. The Palmer; Jim Crawford, Palmer; E. go_year-old Sourdough of Kotzebue A. Kchlhase, Sumdum just ordered another glass of beer. R Street, cars rumbled past the Sec- NEW SUPERVISOR, Garden, whece o i SRR NARCOTICS BUREAU &, : day afternoon limousines AT THE HOTELS Mrs Tt nm 1ah; J. Nelson, Tulsequah; Weller T. Andersen; Mrs. V. A. Paine, l\t‘:(n Island; F. C. Deeringer, Juneau Alaskan Torgerson, Juneau; Skuk. Zynda Lewis Mrs. H. Mr. and <lipped by. Modishly attired wo- men hurried along. But it was no use waiting for .his grizzled Alas- an to take n.uch notice. “I'll get around and see things pretty soon,” he said. “I have to buy some clothes first.” Johanson was attired yesterday in the same heavy clothes he wore down con the boat the other day after his first trip out of Alaska in thirty- eight years. That's thirty-eight years. Johanson sailed north in 1898 from San Francisco, after coming from Minnesota. He is “seeing Se- attle for the first time. J B assumed Super New Orleans has duties as Acting District or of the Bureau of Nar- cotics offices in Seattle, temporar- ity replacing J. P. Wall, supervisor, who is on a leave of absence. Mr. Gleeson for six years super- visor of the New Orleans district of the bureau, is one of the oldest supervisors in point of service. Mr. Wall, who has been in ill health, is undergoing , medical treatment at Marine Hospital. He became su- pervisor of the Seattle district in August, 1933. The district includes Washington, Idaho, Montana, Ore- { gon and Alaska. Johanson, after thirty-eight years 3 s oo of mining and prospecting in the | i = mountains and rivers of Alaska, got g Pmi (I;QILNL ATHES - [otes: In foct, he didn't v Nome, the nearest city to his operations, for a fifteen-year spell. And he | After a murr | pins will once again start top- came “out” only after friends per- suaded him it would help his rheu- pling before the skillful rolls of | the conference bowlers this even- - of last evening, the ball game? IOWA CITY, Nov. Brigham Young University of mons, University of Iowa negro back {Provo, Utah, used one in scoring field star, who quit the team last -0 win over Greeley State Col- night charging he was made the lege this season. goat for Towa's defeats, is back to- B. Y. U’s players wore white day. He said it was all a misun- so a white ball was out. derstanding. ate's warriors wore brown > - and purple shirts, which GHAMP FIBHT made the regulation brown pigskin | impractical So they compromised by painting white bands arcund a brown ball. - | ay the fight between Cham- R picn Jim Braddock and Joe Louis COLORADO SPRINGS, Nov. 12. will not take place in the immed- —There is no “lucky seven” on the jate future on account of Bra&dock's Colorado College football squad any bad hand. Promoter Herman Tay- more. Earl (Dutch) Clark, only 'lor, of Philadelphia, has offered a Colorado player ever to make the $400,000 guarantee for Braddock to all-American team, wore No. 7 and fight Louis but Manager Gould said when the former Tiger quarterb although he has tentatively accept- peeled off his black-and-gold jersey |ed the offer the fight is still in the for the last time, it went into the air. trophy room and No. 7 went out| existence. |Kelvinator in Merger Now with Nash Motors - Gloemy Gus 12—Oze Sim- | AFTER “DUTCH" He Showed Cermans, Now Italy, England Want American Coach players. He makes his home in Flushing, L. I, the year round. He | intends to settle in this country when active playing days are over. He is one of those ambitious fel- lows who has an eye to the future. | In the off season he works in an | investment house in Wall Strect| and has hopes of making it a ‘ LONDON, Nov. 12. — Harold (Dutch) Smith, the American coach whose German Olympic proteges sailed into the U. S. monopoly on international diving honors at Ber- din last August, has invitations |from both England and Italy to groom their divers for the 1940 the { olympic Games in Tokyo. permanent job. As the Cook brothers fade from the picture, Manager Patrick comes .up with another pair which prom- ises to carry on in place of Bun and Bill. Neil and Mac Colville are |brothers who will try to make| gince 1920—with the exception ‘R‘\ngel fans forget the Cook boys.!or o third place that escaped the Patrick has just about decided that!americans in 1928—the U. S. had the Colvilles and Alex Shibicky |swept the diving board by annex- will perform as a forward unit i, (hc first three places in the 3- ‘v.hen the season gets under way.|anq Olympic champion- This trio has played together as | pjps 5 a unit rpr the past three years., Then in Berlin last summer In that time they have been With «putch's” German aces, Katy Korle |three different teams. They started jand Hermon Stork, took bronze {with the Crescent club and after | medals in the high dives. hunmng away with the champion- | 5-meter Now amid the clamor for his Returns to Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, Nov. 12—Coach | Elmer C. (Gloomy Gus) Henderson, who engineered Southern California through seven defeats, 40 victories and to national prominence from 1919 to 1924, is back in Los An- geles. This time he is coaching the Bulldogs, a pro team. His greatest triumph was the Trojan 14-3 vic- tory over Penn State in the 1923 Rose Bowl game. SEATTLE, VANCOUVER ARE IN HOCKEY LEAD SEATTLE, Nov. 12.—Seattle and Vancouver are still in the lead in the Pacific Coast hockey League as Seattle defeated Portland last night 1 to 0. Vancouver, several nights ago, also defeated Portland by a score of 1 to 0. s Empire classifleds pay. lship of the Eastern Amateur| | coaching services, Smith, who won League, all turned pro and played ihe Olympic springboard title for |an important part in winning the |the U. S. as a competitor at Los ‘Canadldn American title for the|angseles in 1932, is undecided about | i —At T2, | business men eye and a quiet place in (the country, ruddy-faced Charles |W. Nash, the motor magnate, is 'busy on a new expansion of his huge industrial holdings and a new phase in his colorful career. Directors of Nash Motors and of Kelvinator Corporation of Detroit have approved a merger of the two companies Lo be known as the Nash- Kelvinator Corporation, with Nas! jas chairman of the board of dire [tors., Combined assets are $55,000,- 600, The venture sprends influence again to Michigan, where a job in a cherry orchard pat him on the path to fame in the auto- mobile industry. | when { pipe, slipper: i most big PR Sl Demonstration farmers in west- ern North Carolina say they are finding that a ground dolomatic limestone mixed with superphos- chate makes the latter more ef- ‘ective with pastures and legume cmps Colorado State used Gordon! Philadephia Ramblers. |playing him closely. He has the Winn's punts as an effective weapon | in its annual football battle th‘l( Denver University. Winn kicked 16 times, D. U. safety men fumbled | |eight of the boots, four rolled out of bounds and one was grounded.| up despite his amazing “iron-man”! record. ! For the past 10 years, since he joined the Rangers in 1926, Mur- dock has not missed a league game. | He will come close to his 600th consecutive game some time this| season—a mark never before even | approached by any other player. Murdock is 31 years old and has| been playing hockey since 1924. He captained the University of Mani- | toba team when it won the Memor- | ial Cup, emblematic of the junior championship of Canada. His first professional experience was with| Winnipeg where he played withf |the Maroons in 1924-'25, until the Rangers purchased him. He played two full seasons with the Winnipeg | Maroons without missing a con- test. These really should be added to his consecutive string. Wall Street Job Murdock is a boring type of player, which makes his record all the more amazing. His forte is as a defensive forward, and he does his best work in that capacity when his team is one or more men short. He has the knack of being able to blanket a high scorer by of the most durable athletes the rugged game of hockey has ever known, shows no signs of slowing |speed to match even the fastest 'acher, skaters. For example, Charley Con- one of the league’s best 1 12.—Colorado’s |two leagues, played four games in Now they are ready to step out as Rangers L5 T 1 | 0ugn briagers | GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., Nov.| western slope ap-| parently breeds high school football players of a hardy nature. | Craig high school, competing in nine days and won them all. Grand Junction high defeated Price, Utah, on a Friday night and came back the next afternoon to beat Palisade. KALAMAZOO FINDS | FORGOTTEN GAME, KALAMAZOO, Mlch Nov. 12— Coach Chester Barnard learned the | other day, to his surprise, that his| Kalamazoo College team has an extra date on its 1936 schedule. A letter from Bluffton (Ohio) | College contained publicity material | to be used in connection with a| Kalamazoo-Bluffton game here on | November 21. Barnard said Kalamazoo offered | the date to Bluffton officials last\ spring, that they replied they did ! not care to play on that date, but | neglected to notify Kalamazoo they had changed their minds. Anyway, the two teams, whlcl’u ton last year, will meet again No-| vember 21, which was an open! date for Kalamazoo. his plans for the future. Among the offers tendered him is one from | California which is receiving much attenticn, he disclosed here. Smith planned to return to his athletic directorship at Palm Springs, Cal., by November 1. On a tour of the continent, the Scan- dinavian countries and the British Isles he was applauded by capacity houses. By arrangement with the High- gate Diving Club he gave two com- bined exhibitions in London with | Pete Desjardins, the Florida Olym- pic champion of 1928, an estab- |lished favorite in England who has |appeared here every summer since 1933. The dual exhibition proved such a success that if “Dutch” can't return next year with Desjardins, Hnghgaw officials will try to get Marshall Wayne or Katherine Rawls. D TICK ON TICKS ON SAN BRUNO, Cal, Nov. 12.—Al- though he is cight years old, has broken down and twice retired to, stud, a game racehorse named Tick On came back with a blaze of glory at Tanforan. He won from a fast |field in the Burlingame Handicap |and equalled the track record for six furlongs in doing so, e e Dune, the name first given to ipattled to a scoreless tie at Bluff-|sandhills along the seacoast of the | Netherlands and northern France, has a similar meaning in the Eng- lish word “downs.” November 13 BASKETBALL KRAUSE GRAVES (7:30 P. M) FIREMEN JUNEAU HIGH (8:30 P. M) Adults—25 cents Students—15 cents Grade or High School 'Sixth Street Entrance ONLY matism. “T feel all right,” he conceded, “but |T think T'll go back in the spring.” 1nz_. at the Elks. ; X After he buys his new clotthes, he opening match this evening | jonanson will “hole up” for the | brings together Susquehanna and | winter in Stellacoom. He hasn't Bowdein at 7:30, followed at 8:30 by 1 to worry zmmu.. He brougis Drake and Dartmouth, with the g sizeable amount of gold dust with {evening topped off by the meeting him, and his properties in Alaska of Manhattan and Minnesota, at are under lease and being worked 151:30 o'clock. by big gold companies. . | Only when two fire trucks went Grinnell College authorities have screaming around the corner did | given women students permission | Johanson turn his stolid face to the to smoke — in the clubrooms of window for a moment. Then he I men’s halls—for the first time in |studied a neon sign and finished ! the institution’s history. his beer. LUMBE Juneau Lumber Mills, Inec. REPIINe h 230 South Franklin Telephone 411 CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc Distributors CHEVROLFT PONTIAC EDISON MAZDA LAMPS They Stay Brighter Longer 10-15-25-40-50-60 Watt inside frost ....15¢ 75-100 watt inside frost 100 watt clear ... 200 watt clear 200 watt frosted 300 watt clear medium base 300 watt clear mogul base Ask about the Light Meter MAKE SURE THE LIGHT YOU ARE USING IS CORRECT Alaska Electric I.IEIII &. iner Co, Juneau Douglas AFTER 6:00 P. M.!! 226 If your Daily Alaska Empire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY.