The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 15, 1948, Page 3

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MONDAY, NOVEMB-ER 15, GAMES CLOSE IN GRID PLAY ON SAIURDAY Top Two Games of Day Ua- settled Seconds Before Final Gun By BEN PHLEGAR NEW YORK, Nov. 15 (®#—Col- Iege football teams squeezed through | Saturday’s proceedings with a mini- mum of upsets, but with enough fourth quarter thrills for a whole season. The top two games of the day weren't settled until the final gun sounded. More than a half dozen others were seriously in doubt up to the last play. ‘Take a look at than fiction finales: Army marched 72 yards to the clock by 30 seconds in Whip- pinz Pennsylvania, 26-20, after the lead had changed hands three times Notre Dame came from behind in the last nine minutes to edge Northwestern, 12-7. Gil Johnson's desperation pass to Paul Page gave Southern Met ist a 14-12 verdict over Arkansas on the last play of the game. With less than threc minutes re- main'ng Bob Dean scored for Cor- nell and then kicked the extra pcmt that gave the Biz Red a 27-26 mar- gin over Dartmouth which had lea 26-14, at the start of the fourth quarter. Princeton nipped Yale, 20-14, wit! two last period (cuchdowns and then had to halt the determined Elis w.thin the shadow of the go. n the clos C ows refused Minnecot abead, these stranger Minnesota pulled out in the last quarter, 2 . e in- And .unbeaten Clemson, an un- derdcy despite its untarnished rec- crd, moved past Wake Forest, 14, w:th a fourth period counter. ‘There were some lopsides affairs, tco. Michigan scored and scored and scored azainst Indiana, finally wind- ineup w'th a 54-0 verdict that prob- ably will make it first by margin in the Associated Press poll of leading teams. Unkeaten California found Wash- ington State a soft touch and breezed Home in front, 44-14. Once- tied Penn State romped over Tem- ple, 47-0. Georgia stayed on top in the Southeastern Conference by Tolling over Auburn, 42-14, and Ok- lahoma, Biz Seven favorite, had it Jjust as easy against Nebraska, win- ning 44-14. North Carolina trushes aside Maryland, 49-20, in what was supposed tc be a defensive battle. T-e South provided a couple oi surprises. Alabama upset Georgia Tech, 14- | 12, virtually knock ng the Engineers from bow! consideration. And Ten- nessee, which had dumped Tech from th® unbeaten ranks only the Eaturday befcre, wound up on the short end of a 16-13 score against Mississippi. Kansas State came within yards of winning its first confer: ence game since 1944, but its hatec rival, Kansas University, pxe\"uled 20-14. Ohio State warned Michigan that it may furnish trouble this Satur- day. The Buckeyes trounced Ili- nois, 34-7, with three touchdown: in the last quarter. ‘Tulane remained in the running for a possible Sugar Bowl bid by defeating Baylor, 35-13. Of the five major unbeaten and Shipyard acetylene man has switched to Calvert because Calvert Reserve nakes smoother drinks. *of Hickéville Rd., Huntington, L. L, N.¥. cu.vm‘r RESERVE Blended Whiskey Z86.8 Proof—65% Grain Neutral Spirits. Calvert Distillers Corp., New York City b cntassiilinsnsa bt o) colh et beat ! ;'WFS EYAN UH a wide | 1948 FOOTBALL SCORES | Fmal scoies of important col- | {lege football games played over the weekend are as follows: ‘BlleS osc Utah 20. w[ | 7, UCLA 32. o Lovls, \ r | | TANGI.Ei Washington 17; Utah State 6; Denver 41. Idaho 28; Portland 0. Wisconsin 26; Marquette 0. Scuth Carclina 27; Tulsa 7. Oklahoma 41; Nebraska 14. seissippi Tennessee 13. M 6; Rice 28. l CLEVELAND, Nov., 15.—(®P— H‘ | Jimmy Bivins fights as tough as he’s teen talting when he tangles witk |Joe Louis, the champ says he ma |give him a shot at the title. | Bivins has said he’ll knock out| |Louis Wednesday night in a si | round exhibition scrap here. Wheth- {er or not that's just a comeon to the customers, Louis says he'll fight |Bivins in New York for the title next June if he looks good enough 16 COLLEGE GRID SQUADS ARE INHIGH NEW YORK, Nov. 15—(#—Eigh- | teen senior college fcotball teams re- | jma'n unbeaten and untied in the| )nation with the season rapidly draw- ing to a close. i e - — Two of the clubs—Alma (Mich.) and Michigan Tech—already have i»ni»if,e(l their schedule: Almn won 35 pASSENGERS PRINCESS lOUiSE% h\e Michigan, \\m:r- son, | e g | me, California, Army and Clem- Wask The Princess Louise arrived in is, and Lewis and Juneau last evening at 8:30 o'clock Ore., were knock irom Vancouver, and sailed for t : 1:45 am. today. The | : outhio from Ju- iand Clark, 41-0. arriving on Wesleyan is un Arpin, starts. 16; and Minnesota Colorado 13; Northwestern 7; Notre Dame 12.| 2h 20; Purdue 13. Virginia West Virginia 0. Duke 21; George Washington 0. | Michigan State 48; Towa S. 7. Scuthern Methodist 14; Arks 12. | Indiana 0; Michigan 54 N. Carolina 49; Maryland 20. Dartmouth 26; Cornell 27. | William-Mary 14: Boston Col. | Ohio State 34; Ilinois 7. Brown 19; Harvard 30, Temple 0; Penn State Alabama 14; Georgia Tech' 12. Kansas 20; Kansas State 7. Santa Clara 10; St. Mary's T. f Detroit 27; St. Louis U. 14, | Navy 0; Columbia 13. Ohio W. 7; Lafayette 27. Colgate 20; Syracuse 13. Auburn 14; Georgia 42. Clemson 21; Wake Forest 14. Fordham 6; Holy Cross 13. Princeton 20; Yale 14. Army 26; Penn 20. Franklin and Marshall 7; Muh- cnberg 40. Carneg\e Tech 0; Lehigh 20. | | 47. | he Louise | eaten . and Mrs. | S ee o Laughlin Gil- | sie Jund, Os- - E v | McCor- | dath, | .. John | , Ruth Mil- | 02 Jan Wesley ace ck, Mr. and crt Munio, M r, Mis. Gwe: ORLANDO, Nov. 1‘——'5“— leyan Unive v of Middlet necticut, is a possivility for t | Year’s night Tanzerine Bum foot- ball game here, 1 hovi_h, Chairman Larry Satariano of the anq Mrs. selection committee said there are wyilliams, two reasons a feeler has been sent Weslyan. One of them is a win- ning streak of 22 games. The other is Stavros Demopoulos, ormer Orlando high school athlete ; . | { who was seriously injured as a Wes- | |leyan Freshman football player last | | year. Thom; Rohert Treat and p1 Vlahovi Zilc Thomas Wardleigh, Mr. Albert White, Antoinette - (FCRTY ATTERD (ARD | PARTY, SONS NORWAY Over 40 people attended the Sons of Norway card party, which was {held on Saturday night at the Odd Fellows Hall. Mrs. Bea Albigoff won | first prize for the ladies and Mrs. Katherine Nelson, low. J, Trefz- gar was high scorer for the men and Art Berggren, low. ELKS TURKEY SHOOT | Wednesddy evening, November 17th, Elks Hall, starting, 9 o'clock. PUBLIC INVITED. 40-4¢ vntied teams, only Michigan, Cali- ornia and Clemson wll be in ac- he < Kons- of Nothes il hold | h > ion this week. California plays| woooc card party on Ssturday, | | N tanford, Clemson 1s host to Du- | Norember 2T uesne and Michigan and Ohio! tate tangzle at Ann Arior. Army ests until it ends its season againsu Navy November 27. Notre Dame will | be idie untl the same date when it meets Wa <hmnton ELKS TURKEY SHOOT wednesday evening, November 17th, Elks Hall, starting, 9 o'clock. PUBLIC INVITED. 40-4t "Money can’t buy a hetter heer'" OWLING TFAMS | Distributed exclusively in Alaska by West Coast Distributors, Inc. l Seattle, Washington 4 B e s S Y THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Honor Connie Mack Athletics, w: shown lcnfmg through the book. esented with a book contai tions from the Governors of each of the 48 States 48 years of service as manager of the A’s by Philadelphia Mayor Bernard Samuel (left) and he and Connie are | ied Utah of the Philadelphia ing letters of congratula- He has completed The presentation was made Oregon California in (lose Race forlining - UpinRese Bowl Game LINED UP FOR 2 PLAYING NIGHTS Rcd Ellis 1s lm ng them up for Tuesday and Friday nizht bowling m the Elks Alleys. The following teams and person- | el will play at 7 o'clock, both! lay and Friday nizht: i liow Cat— Red Holloway, Red Kiny Mansfield, McGhee, Iv- erson. Juneau Fleri Lajoie, Whit- Km* Phelps, Smithberg. Inn— Burke, Sturrock, hmilz Hedges. Aviat'on— Baxter, | . Wood, J. McCarthy. P re as follow Porsons Electric— Hagerup, Par- ons Cecot Mork, Stewart. | § ts— Earl Forsythe, | sc— Henning, Smith, Wer- Davlin Metcalf, endrickson, - MARTHA SOCIETY EAZAAR AND GOODIE SALE Friday evening, Nov. 19, parlors | of the Northern Light Presbyter-| an Church. 2 Lavenik, Sperling. "I'HE G.M. Marine Diesel is the answer to power requirements afloat. For ing craft or tug—propulsion or auxiliary electrical power. GM Diesels will and more miles per gallon on low-cost fuel. Quiet, safe and dependable operation'is yours wherever you want to go. From any angle, you'll enjoy h‘aving this compact power-package aboard. Ask us for full details. GM G ENERAL MOTORS DIESEL B W, €O _‘?f‘i‘ (R Service for EVE! er By RUSS NEWLAND SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 15.—(P— bis week-end’s West Coast foottal. | results may write the saga of “the ten puzzied protessors.” They will if Oregon and Califor- n'a complete their conference sea- sons undefeated. The ten puzzled professors will be | the faculty athletic representative: | of the biz coast circuit. it will be eir problem to decide whether >regon or California re; ents the ¢rence in the Rose Bowl. s is ba of course, on ice tl beaten teal ) muudn nal 1ecords, Oregon figure: Orezon State and Cali T win o Stanford. Victories for'the two leaders wili leave them tied in the conierenc v AL Cali required m'nimum | rnia’s overall record ten strals (» [ | 'ifornia, conf e care of such mat- which has been Rcse Bow! gon, which was last represented the post-ceason classic in 1902, iny to Harvard. A California wa bear Alabama 13-0 in the big yacht or work boat, fish- give you greater power £ !’\fi CH. ! | \ | | | | | closes out | Frank Heintzlen owl ten years ago. Both Orezon and California ap- roached their final tests by handy vins last week. The former hurdled \ se University of California at Los | ‘ngeies Friday night. Californa | 1shed Washington State 44-14 aturday. «anford warmed up for Satur- 1;'s contest by tiouncing Montana, | -7 last week, while Oregon State 20-20, last week and| Vashington State, 26-26, the week efore. Oregon cracked Washingtdn | State, 33-7. Other | conference engagements this week, with less at stake, will air off Southern California and UCLA, in their annual crgss-town battle, and Idaho against Wash- ington at Seattle. Southern California measured Washington, 32-7 Last week wand | should do it to UCLA. Idaho whip- | ped University of Portland, 28-0. Washington State travels to E Lansing for a likely beating by powerful Michigan State. Montana its schedule at home, North Dakota ->> against CLIPPERS FLYING AMERICANS FROM CHINA HOT SPOTS. Pan American Clippers ‘have start- | hundreds of American ' s out of threatened areas in h China in an emergency air evacuation following the American Embassy warning to U. S. citizens to flee, Harvey Hancock, traffic manager for the Pacific-Alaska Di- vision of PAA announces, State Department officials in Chi- na, he said, have requested Pan American Airways to fly 1000 flee- ing American civilians from the Shanghai end Nanking areas to Japan. At almost the same time military headquarters in Japan have asked |the company to fly 400 American -efugees from Tokyo to Hawaii or he West Coast, probatly because ol housing difficulties in Japan. Hancock said the company is us- inz all available Clipper flights rom the Orient to handle the emer- gency, loading each plane to full ca- pacity. -+ AEINTILEMAK 1S N PORTLAND T(DAY; | JUREAD NEXT FRIDAY Word has been received from B n, Regional For- ester, that he expects to-te in Ju- neau for a few days. probably ar- iving here Friday. He will be {n Portland, Ore,, today and tomorrow, conferences of the > Rines made of silver coins once were believed to cure convulsions nd fits: rinzs set with an elk sof, epilepsy PAGE THREE CONDITIONS OF WEATHER ALASKA PTS. Weather conditions and temper- aturcs at various Alaska points, also on the Pacific Coast, for 24- hour period, ending at 4:30 this morning, and released bty the Weather Bureau, Juneau, follow: Anchorage 15—Cloudy Barrow -20—Clear Bethel 10--Clear Cordova 23—Pt. Cloudy Dawson 8—Snow Edmonton 27—Pt. Cloudy Fairbanks . 8—Snow Haines -~ 30—Pt. Cloudy Juneau Afrport — 27-Pt. Cloudy Anrnette Island .. 41—Rain Kodiak 32—Pt. Cloudy Kotzebue 2 8—Clear McGrath 11—Pt. Cloudy Nome -2—Clear l“ BY SMMI. B‘)A‘ | Northway 0—Snow The Victory, captained by Wag- | Petersburg 36—Pt. Cloudy Iner Jensen, unloaded more than 0| Portland 45—Rain Itons of staple groceries for the|Seattle 43—Rain West Coast Grocery, this morning. ‘Sl‘kfl 43——Cloudy The craft dockeq Saturday from | Whitehorse 21-—Snow Seattle. Yakutat . 30—Pt. Cloudy TIGERS WILL BE MANAGED N 1949 BY "RED” ROLFE DETROIT, No 1.’». {M—The De- troit Tigers today named Robert | A. (Red) Rolfe manager of their baseball team. A former Yankee star, Rolfe in 1947 was named director. of the Tige minor league farm system. He succeeds Steve O'Neill, whose contract was not renewed. D HO(KEY GAMES Final scores of games played Sun- day in the Pacific Coast Hockey League are as follows: Tatoma 5; San Diego 2. Portland 6; Vancouver 4 New wmmm.tm 4; %v-vuh\ 3. - MORE GROCERIES Alaska Coastal offers you a new service—to - speed you on your way. Through your local ACA agent you can reserve your seat on Pan American to the Stafes . . . and then to any spot on the globel And now, for its patrons in Sitka, Hoonah, Tenakee, Skagway, Haines and similar communities ACA holds a special block of seats on Pan Am. .. . giving them equal priorities with those who buy their tickets in Juneaul nlflSKm ooy ELLES AIR LINES ILY TRIPS FUNEAY TO KETCHIKAN Psiershurg and Wrangell 1 anections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg ‘unvenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 PM VOR RESERVATIONS PHONFE 612 COUPLE GIVES AWAY 7 CHILDREN! It seems a mother and a father were unable to sup their seven children—couldn’t give them all they. d:ould have. So they advertised in the paper that they were giving them away—soon found homes for all seven children, A pretty tragic thing, but we'll bet there are very few of you who haven’t been driven into such wild thinking— worrying where and how you were going to get enough money to give your kids the best. And yet the solution (or at least a part of the tolulinn) is sitting right there in front of us—aytomatic savings with U, S. Savings Bonds. Sure,mkmulllbou!USSuvlmBon&.Bnt have you ever given them really serious thought? Have you thought that it’s one compl«dy painless, completely automatic way to save? Just a little bit ‘each week through the Payroll Savings Plan (at your office) oz the Bond-A-Month Plan (at your bank). And think about the returns. $4 for every $3 you'in- vest. $400 for every $300. $4000 for every $3000. It mounts up fast. The chances are one in a million that you'll never have to give your kids away—but you'll never have to give them second best (either) if you start in saving the auto- matic way with U, S. Savings Bonds. Today. Save the automatic way with U.S. Savings Bonds

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