The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 27, 1947, Page 3

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1947 (OACHWARD Brownsin GIVENFINEIN LeadAmong ICE DISPUTE Grid Pros (By RALPH RODEN) NEW YORK, Oc veland Browns m in either major e today enjoy : ble p margin ind defending America conference champions creased their we lead game and a h cisco y Pacific Coas! Hockey Games Sunday Result in Good Contests (By The Associated “oach Jim Ward of the have yet to week-0ld Pacif season, drew $50 Pres went Refere: ag profe Press) in- Portland win a Coast the tern a over day fin by because protest t's decision last Tuesday Eagles dropped their consecutive game last night Vancouver, B. C.. Canucks m 3-1 an Diego first contest frem Oakland, 2-1 Oak’s fourth straight Seattle nmen it win a Westmir a fourth loss in a 9-6 No games are ut Tuesday night at Fresno, New We Seattle street in Vancc touchdowr second p ving d or Bill Ta- Leader ice at first place New York Yar wstern lead Brooklyn Dodgers, @ 2 at Buffalo, I;v the National L 1e, the burgh Steelers remain a half ahead of the Philadelphia e eastern race as a result t 38-21 triumph’ over Giants in New York while Eagles turned back the Los geles Rams The Chicago Cardinals and the Green Bay Packers tripped the Boston Yanks and the Detroit Lions, 27-7 and 34-14, respectively to r in tied for the top rung in the Nation's Western chase. Chicago’s Bears romped to a win the Washington ins to pull into a third place tie with the Rams, while in the re- maining All-America conference ame, the Los Angeles Dons bur- ied the Baltimore Coits, 56-C. third The out- The by -7, before the locals of t It loss, took their gave 1 successive won their sea Pitt was on the game Eagles of the the ei heduled tonight, tponed now po trike uver has progress been 20 over coreless scored twice within the cle minutes period short time six counters grab a New We Canadians score second period Westminster frame never less tha a man in lead in Pet 800 800 600 600 167 in New closing within Angeles Chicago Bears them ked the Browns An-| THE DAILY Al ASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA High School Grid Star Elopes IMANY UPSETS Den Walling, 18, senior ta of the fecotball team, and and daughter of Associate Wa their Nev., Calif., prison, after Carson City, ® with Vallejo, High. $0. CALIF. IS Red- | 667 600 400 250 000 OFFICIAL STANDINGS shington Boston New Tacoma Vanco Seattle Portland New Westminster York SUNDAY'S Chicago Bears Philadelphia Green Pittburgh Chicago = RESULTS Washington 20. Los Angeles 7. Detroit 14 New York 21 inals 27; Boston T. 14; 34, SOUTHERN DIVISIO San Francisco Fresno Los Angeles San Diego Oakland ALL AMERICA CONFERENCE EAST 0 D DE GAULLE RITS OUT IN FRANCE Pe 150 750 143 143 New York Buffalo Baltimore Breoklyn 6 ) 2 875 714 625 090 Cleveland San Fran Los Angeles Chicago 0 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Buffalo 35; Brooklyn 7 Los Angeles 56; Baltimore 0 Cleveland 14; San Francisco - loilise in (Continued from One) (RPF) which six months ago. No party at present 1as a majority in Parliament. The wartime leader declared that his party's showing had spelled the beginning cf the end for his arch foes, the Communists. Florimond Bonte, Communist Party spokesman, declared that De Gaulle’s statement was motivated by a desire for “personal power and that his desires would “clash with the will of the French people, who will know how to unite its democratic working class force.” De Gaulle’s statement came amid an impending Cabinet crisis and the imminent threat of strikes by three Communist-dominated labor @ greups — the railwaymen, utility d government employees. developments overshadowed cutcome to yesterday’s runoff ions in France’s small towns and villages. - .- yesterday at 8:30 in the morning she southbound at 10 o'clock. Eighteen persons were bound for Prince Rupert, 17 for Vancouver, and 16 for Seattle. Passengers for Prince Rupert were: R. Stanley, Charles Gaunt, J. S. Younge, Tom McIntyre, G Trumpcur, P. Gunderson, A. Wat- n J. Benoit, J. Willett, J. M. Will- n, J. Jones, P. Teman, J. Dean, Turner, W. J. Poitres, R. A. J. Medurd, S. Smith. Axel Eld, D. H. H. Calder, B. R. A. S. Ho- left T Henry, To Vancouver: Marshsall, P. Spark: Amundson, S. R. Marshall, Stephenson, R. J. Themson, W. A. Peterson, Mrs. W. A. on, William E. Cahill, Mrs. \\1Ilmm E. Cahill, G. C. Patterson, W. Lewis, G. Wall, W. C. Smith. To Seattle: Ralph E: Anderson, Mrs. Ralph E. Anderson, R. Dun- ton, Ben Melvin, Mrs. Ben Melvin, william Thorne, Mrs. William Thorne, H. V. Sverdrup, Mrs. H. V. Sverdrup, Mr Elaine Ross, J. Topas, R. Ross, R. Fox. R e - evo 00 e oo th OCTOBER 27 rises 8:02 a.m. 5:20 pm. Sun Sun sets eceescoce eeccecece ee e ve o000 - - % 2 | EASTERN STAR N AMED — George Weiss, Initiction Juneau Chapter No. (above) is the new general mzn-! Tuesday Oct. 28, 8 p.m. ager of the New_York Yankees, ALICE BROWN, Secy. succeeding Larry MacPhail, | ady. T17-12 Soulhboundi The Princess Louise carried 51|Idaho meets an awakened Univer- passengers southbound from Juneau |sity of Oregon eleven Arriving from Skagway | Oregon chalked | fending | Bears down | fashion, 39 | discounts Wi | | | | Bruins figure MAKING BID, ROSE BOWL By RUSS NEWLAND FRANCISCO, Oct alifornia has its difficult obstacles Bowl and the football day was: “W alifornia at accompl weekend Remember UCLA? Tt Pacific Coast title holder and champi feated UCI Bruins important task read, of whittlin SAN Southern of hurdled in the question west re one Rost ans W the Los Ang the -same coast Bruins feat this is the de- Conference until de- have Saturday the California to size. Southern Cali- ins turned the trick and in convincing The Bears became might and speed USC eleven In 1€ that Lorni; Troj la turday ) 14 cubs before the of the strongest many years. outhern California to journeys to Seattle this week tackle the Washington Huskie -0 win- ners over Sanford’s hapless Indians, five times losers. Stanford now is the league's punching bag, which hington’s win some- what. Washington will be up against cmething really tough when South- ern California takes the field. The defending champs, the UCLA to have a fight on hands with their upstate cou- . The Bru- easy their sins, the California Bear ins lost to Southern Methodist, 7-0 last week. Other conference contests, S day, will pit Oregon State Stanford at Palo Alo, OSC coming off a 46-0 workout at the expense of the University of Portland, and a at Eug up a ‘llb\l.llhml win last wek by beating favored University of San Francisco, 34-7. One of the tremendous upsets of last week saw Washington State College beaten 13-12 by the Uni- versity of Montana, and on the los- er’s home field at Pullman. It wasn’t supposed to happen but it did. Football is like that. Washing- ten State meets Portland next in a non-conference game. will rest on its laurels this week Ceast Conference Standings Team w Pct Southern Calif. 3 1.000 ucLa 2 1.000 Montana 1 Oregon State California Oregon Idaho Washington Wash. State Stanford 1 ) 1 1 1 1 1 0 > Hockey Games Here is a quick glance of results of hockey games played Sunday: National League Montreal 4; Detroit 2, Boston 3; Chicago 2. Amer’can League St. Louis 1; Buffalo 1 (tie). Providence 2; Pittsburgh 2 New Haven T; Springfield 5. Indianapolis 4; Philadelphia 2. Pacific Coast League San Diego 2; Oakland 1. Seattle 9; New Westminster 6. Vancouver, B. C., 3; Portland 1 (tie). at San Rafael, his brid rden M. O. return o classes after San Rafael High played a 13 to 13 tie game hote. game end ton 0 Unive Montana ' Calif., hizh school Larue 18, ets at nearby San Que wnd cap- Teets, classmate itin sche to at The two ecloped OOTBALL SCORES scores of played are as follow Final foc 11 week- ading duri the Montana Washington State Washing Oregon anford Portland San F outhern n State Wyorm Tech Ark 19; Al Vermont Geneva W. Virg Dartmouth Duke 13 Temple ama Citadel State 6: N 40 la & 14; [ Wake Forest 21: Buckneil 0. 17; Georfi 0; Geors Notre Da 14; Kan 12; Wisco! Missouri 26; Iowa State 7 Purdue 14 Northwestern 7 Cincinnati ‘Washington Kings Point Syracuse 0 Michigan State Princeton 21, Ohio State 0; Pitt 12. Minnesota 6; Michigan Navy 0; Penn 21 Brown ate pringfield © Yale North Texas State 27; aska Indiana Xavier 25; Davidson 0; Fordham 12 Holy Cross 26; Kentucky 7; Cernell Lee 32 0 6. 13. 13 49 (tie) Whitman 7; Univ. British Colum bia 6. and Mary 47; Bosto sity 13. Vanderbilt 13; New Mexico 1 Wil S 29 Louisiana Arizona - ]UMPER——S:LH.“ood of Ditton, Kent, England, takes a hurdle over a jeep with his motorcycle during British Army contests held recently at Sara- fand, Palestine, sam Hous- | '| ONGRIDIRON l ONSATURDAY 'Big Surpnse Is Columbia’ ! i 21-20 Defeat of Army i ~Other Turnovers By NEW coul AUSTIN BE YORK unt the teams MEAR Oct P major ¢ on the f toda You victorious ngers of hands and if you calculation after the the halfway mark there probably will two that wen't even toctball your two 'lr}- the same jseason {next be be put to use. | The biggest wave of {21-20 { that | sting urd diget or shock of last week’ was Columbia’s Army, a team sh 32 games knowing the urprises triumph over had gone throu 1943 without of defeat | Culfcrnia, Bay tand West {rudely f and | tied Wake Forest Virginia were hauled om the all-victorious ranks ilinois, unbeaten but once- | saw its hopes for another Big Nine title all but disappear in a 114-7 loss to Purdue. Both Illinois and Baylor were iln- of clear-cut upsets, as were as Harvard, Indiana Ohio State and Okla- M Perfect wreckage me, Geor Penn State, Southern Utah and Virginia em- (erged as the only major outfits still 'owning perfect marks, while Duke Southern California remained | undefeated but once-tied That list is due for further iming Saturday when Texas, which ankea Rice, 12-0, collides with i Southern Methodist, 7-0, winner 1OV UCLA, at Dallas; and Duke, which ended Wake Forest's th: am 13-6, invades Georgia Tech winner cver The Citadel Michigan squeaked sota and will catch Illinois on the rebound Saturday ‘at Champaign Netre Dame, which made it four straight with a 21-0 conquest of Towa, takes on Navy. Northwestern, kuoyed by a 7-6 win over Indiana, entertains Wisconsin, while Iowa to Purdue and Indiana to State for other Big Nine tus- | g\ ms 1 Such avorites M ippi thoma A and Have the Notre ! Pennsylvania : Methedist, res Oout Texas, ! chigan Mi- and trim- past Minne- goes Ohio sles Pittsburgh, State, invade: 12-0 upsetter of Ohio Miu In Ivy League Columbia returns Ivy League lay by visiting Cornell, which lick- |ed Princeton, 28-21, with Pennsyl- vania, which kept its record clean , by shutting out Navy, 21-0, going to Priceton and Dartmouth to Har- for cther Ivy League fra ide the southeastern confe; Alabama, fresh from a 1-7 win over Georgia, will be at Ken- tucky, 7-6 winner over Michigan State; Auburn at Vanderbilt, Loui- siana State at Mississippi and Mis- sippi State at Tulane Virginia stakes its winning streak 'against invading Richmond, while West Virginia invades Maryland and Wake Forrest goes to Willilam and Mary for other Dixie highlights. ! Arkansas, which surprised Missis- {sippi, 19-14, returns to the South- | west Conference to entertain Texas ta ot \ ‘Tech, | Beach, is A and M, the team that snapped a me losing streak ; Baylor, 24-0, and Texas Chris- | tion, 20-7 winner over Oklihoma, | goes to Baylor for another | thre | | tilt | Southern California, now the Pa- cific Coast Conference favorite on the strength of its 39-14 walloping of California, will invade Washing- ton, 25-0 conqueror of Stanford. - e e o0 000000 TIDE TABLE OCTOBER 28 tide 0:48 am, tide 6:44 am.,, tide 12:57 p.m., tide 19:13 p.m.,, 16.2 ft. 1.5 ft. 179 1t -04 ft. High Low High Low . — Waltresses ana rozataln Girls wanted at Percy’s Cafe. Representing Transportation Companies WORLD WIDE we will arrange for your satisfaction your reser- vations and tickets for BUSINESS, PLEASURE or NECESSARY TRIPS REGARDLESS OF YOUR DESTINATION ALASKA TRAVEL BUREAU “Never a Service Charge” Baranof Hotel Phone 646 in stop-' league 665 of | PAGE THREE Aleufian in From Wesl Going South Alentian arrived Juneau westward on Sunday 30 a'clock. She sailed for \t 2 o'clock this morning from Seward were: Wil- Black, Sam Brown, Jo L. Florence, Reni Kane, Alfred Prevost T ilstad, W K Twins Score Identically in eve- 10 uth Arrivin m D Elivin George Antic, Mar- * n and James E. Hill Cordova: J. H. London Seattle were were: Mr Gordon M. Vance, Charles Kennedy, Jim Smith, Mrs. A. Ja- Mrs. John Lowell, Mr. and Glenn Fletcher, Mary Lee Mary Waldron. ¥ Rmes, B. C. Gomez, old Swansen, Mrs. Ray Rand, Sam- my Tuyada, George Sakamento, P Respicio, E. F. Burton, R. M. Hill Z. V. Fernandez To Ketchikan: William Mahoney D. Drebeblis, H. M. Olsen, Casey Moran, C. M. Schilling, Pat Hot- stead, Thelma Basford, W. H. Seiv- VEW AUXIIARY (oo w. o aua & & dohnwon WILL CONDUCT : MEMBER DRIVE The Ladics Auxiliary ot Post, Veterans of Foreign Wa conducting a membership driv the result of a decision reached at its Friday night meeting. Mrs, Daniel W. Mahoney, Auxiliary Pres- ident, said today that it will cam- paign for new members at the ime ¢ the Post conducts ||A membership drive,” but that the drive women members will end December 31 ind Valdez From 25 and "They Laughlin, William pas- Mrs Hall, Mike Mr. and Michael F, § Tom Mus Kennedy cobsen, Mi counéil, Johmnic and Louic Bu al twins, of Defiance the Ohio Senicr Softball League season with identical batting at bat 8 times apiece, cach. Luuie and s at left, The brother ntical raised many cyebrews with wonder concerning the mysticism for ages wl Soundphoto) scored 27 runs each and ig outfield. ages cf . got 30 hits Jehnnie s is catcher Johnnie rhon copy™ id scoring Har- surrcunding “numbers.” (Internati MRS. V. HENSEY IS RECOVERING, SUICIDE ATTEMPY Hen: at St. A recove the Juneau awmill Spruce Corporation - son R e LARU LODGE Call Mary Joyre at the Baranof for reservations and transportation arrangements 604-tt TIME FOR GUN REPAIRS GET YOUB GUNS READY . . Hunting Season Is Here! We repair gur rods, reels, cameras and binoculars BARNELL’S Sport Center Dc Hospital from in- attempt- rning M today juries rapidly tained when she Sunday m Taku uicide early , 1s taken to the nospital at as k seeking to take her own life by swallowing tincture cf merthiclate and slashing her threat with a knife She is under the care M. Whitehead, who that the knife missed all teries, and the effects of the mer- thiolate were negligible. Mrs. Hen- ! sey will probably be released from the hospital tomorrow Mr. and Mrs, together at the O nertly before the yesterday morning Mrs. Hensey was deeply distres ed by attempts of her first hus- band to take their two children frcm her it issaid. She has four children, two of them Hensey's. Hensey is presently employed at o'cle fter of Dr. Wil- reports vital liam r- for Wives, and daughters foreign ership well fous overseas sisters, mothers of veterans of U. 8. wars are eligible for mem- in the VFW Auxiliary, as former members of the women’s services who serv- during wartime The two members of the Auxil- iary who recruit the most new members will receive paid up dues for 1948, Mrs. Mahoney re- Hensey were st in Doug near-tragedy d cards vealed. 3rd Annual Deer Hunters' Derby 1947 PRIZE AWARDS Previously Sponsored by Case - Lot Grocery DARNELL’S Sport Center Wwill Award PRIZES for the BEST DEER ANTLERS Brought to Our Store This Season Taken in the Juneau Area l s' pR'lE a 5 n (when available), OR CHOICE OF A 12 ga. REM- INGTON AUTOMATIC SHOT GUN. The Award will be madp for the LARGEST DEER HORNS according to Dr. Churche’s rules for measuring trophies. The widest spread, longest points and largest diameter at the base are more important than the number of points. Any horns with an odd point will be docked the length of that point. ’l;:()R THE MOST UNIFO. HORNS AND BEST 2nd PRIZE ... ROPHY—2 POINTS OR OVER. All horns must be from Alaska Black-Tailed Deer taken this season. Only the horns will be entered and they must be connected with bone and in their natural state. 3rd PRIZE ... THE JUDGES WILL BE: JACK O'CONNOR, Fish and Wildlife Service MILO CLOUSE, Alaska Sportsmen’s Assn. BUCK HARRIS, Registered Guide ——The awards will be made shortly after the hunting season and the deci the judges will be final. One set of antlers cannot win more than one prize. ——These prizes are offered in the interest of good sportsmanship and good will. There are no strings attached. All antlers will be on display at DARNELL’S Sport Center until the end of the season and will then be returned to their owners . ‘ . N \ ] N \ \ \ \ \ ¢ - A MODEL 70 — (30-06) WINCHESTER RIFLE A 30-30 WINCHESTER RIFLE WILL BE GIVEN A HAND-MADE HUNTING KNIFE WILL BE AWARDED FOR THE MOST UNUSUAL AND “FREAKISH ET OF ANTLERS from Alaska Black-Tailed Deer bagged this season.

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