The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 20, 1950, Page 3

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MONDAY, N LINING UP FOR GREAT BOWL GAMES (By the Associated Press) Texas is in the Cotton Bowl. Illinois and California are near .enough to Pasadena to smell the roses. A dozen other teams are afraid to stray too far from the telephone lest they miss a ring from one of the big post-season promoters. The “pluck ’em” season is here for college football and the mad scramble is on to fill the massive adia in the warm weathe with the most glamorous available. Right now +he list of eligibles is headed by Oklahor Kentueky, with Tenne (Fla) and Clemson )ust unpicked na and Mis e le Wyoming Loyola of Los Angeles, Alabama, Southern Methodist, Nebra: and Tulsa — their desirability hinging largely on the outcome of the maining few games. The bowl picture at shapes up approximately like thi Rosa at Pasadena — Illinois California. o Sugar at New Orleans—Kentucky vs Oklahoma or SMU. Cotton at Dallas Okiahoma or Tennessee. Orange at M — Miami Tennessee, Clemso: or Wy Important Games The game with the most import ant bowl bearing Saturday is Knoxville, Tenn., where unbeat and untied Kentucky takes on once defeated Tennessee, a team thai( perenially gives the Wildcais trouble. It’'s reported a Sugar Bowl bid is hanging in the balance. Oklahoma, owning mod Bail's longest winning str games, will go @ Norman and probably can \l(",) right into any bowl it chooses, with the exception of the grandpappy of | them all at Pasadena | Sooners May sSit Out The Sooners, Sugar Bowl victors ! the last two years, may decide, | however, to sit this one out. ‘ Dallas is almost certain to make, a strong bid for a return game be- . tween Texas and Oklahoma. The| Sooners handed the Longhorns their | only defeat this year, 14-13. H Texas clinched the Southwest} Championship and Cotton Bowl| role Saturday by beating Te\~s‘ Christian, 21-7, while Rice was{ cooling off the only remaining chal i lenger, Texas A. and M, 21-13. 1llinois can clinch the Rose Bowl assignment by turning back North-l western, three times beaten, at! Evanston, Il Failure to do this| could toss the trip to Wisconsin or Michigan. Wisconsin closes with | Minnesota and Michigan with Ohlo" State. the moment vs Texas Knocks Over Ohio Tllinois earned its faverable posi- tion by the not-so-simple expedient of knocking over the country’s No. 1 team, Ohio State, which still can win the conference championship. touchdowns through the air to pre- vail, 14-7, and thereby shock a ma- jority of the experts. Oklahoma, No. 2 behind Ohio State last week, made its bid for the main berth by overwhelming Mis- souri, 41-7. Babe Parilli, throwing five touch- downs, passed Kentucky to an 83-0 rout of North Dakota. Princeton added to its growing prestige by humbling Yale, 47-12. Army was unable to unleash its full striking power at Palo Alto because of a driving rainstorm and had to be content with a hard- | earned 7-0 victory over Stanford. Oklahoma, Army, California, Ken- tucky and Princeton thus kept their records clean, making seven major teams still unbeaten and untied Wyoming and Loyola were idle. BOWLING Due to the bad weather and some of the regular Thursday night bowl- ers being out hunting, two of the teams bowled their games Sunday afternoon. In that match Juneau Drug lost all three games to Caro Transfer. * In Jast Thursday's matches Pan American also lost all three games to the Alaska Light Co. team. After a relapse from hunting Casler's lost SHOOTING HOURS November Day 21 22 8:29 8:32 am. to 3:28 am. to 3:26 23 8:35 am. to 324 pm. 24 8:36 am. to 3:23 pm. e p.m. pm. The fighting Tllini stabbed for u\vul NOVEMBER 20, 1950 three of i} games to the gue leading Pacific Northern fi Alaska Coa: Jost two out of t three to Sween ‘The only week was S. Tay were C. Porter L. Tibbitts 501, ¢ ‘There will be Thursday, giving. Ti that date wil ‘rolled this High series rown 511 son 500. bowling this rhanks- ches scheduled for rolled the follow- e no Nov being {ing Thursd Team standings to date | | Wou Lost Pacific Northern 21 Sweeney's Bar Caro " fer Casler”: Alaska Coastal Alaska Light and Power meau Dr Co. Pan American 12 15 15 16 i8 19 Pan American 129 131 1. Adams 139 110 . Macchia 144 145 A. Stephens ... 154 138 M. Gormley 168 139 Totals 734 663 J. Wood I I Alaska Light Handicap 6 A. Hedges 146 W. Hellan 139 E. Peyton . 52 S. Taylor 8 161 D. Moore 129 Totals 766—2193 Caslers 130 122 159 185 151 47 182— 435 151— 113— 121— 440 133— 462 706—2197 G. Taylor L. West E. Arnold J. Estes J. Wilber Totals Northern 24 24 154 169 152 138 136 136 194 156 161 171 811 794 Juneau Drug Co. 20 20 20— 144 144 144— 130 130 130— 107 151 151— 158 129 149 145 127 124 704 701 T18— Pacific Handicap 2. Krsul Ludtke Pheasant {. Loken . Porter Totals 24— T2 143— 466 164— 444 136— 408 130— 480 189— 52 36— Tyvoll Jones Totals . Transfer 161 134 138 147 176 121 135 174 170 147 780 723 Caro B. Davis P. Hawkins C. Oldham . | L. Tibbitts I. Cahail Totals . 180— 483 92— 501 Alaska Coastal Handicap R. Stewart C. Bloomquist M. Fenster J. Leighton B. Brown Totals .. Sweeney'’s 123 138 139 . 138 167 7056 S. Sheldon P. Schneider . B. Sweeney E. Johnson J. Werner Totals ILLINOIS IS RATED HIGH, | 163 53— ROSE BOWLL LOS ANGELES, Nov. 20 — [ — Washington's Huskies haven’t given up on their own long-shot hopes of a Rose Bowl bid. But if it should be California and Tilinois, they have their own ideas as to who will win. The verdict: fllinois. Quarterback Don Heinrich picks the illini by “on2 possibly t touchdowns” because of better ali- around balance. Rollie Kirkby also liked the Ili- | nois balance, adding that the Big Ten team’s line “is faster and more maneuvérable.” Ditto Hugh McElhenny, Mike Michael, Harold Talley, Joe Cloidc ind Gene Norton. Coach Howie Odell was somewhat on the fence. “It will be one heckuva ball game,” he opined. “I rate Illinois a better team offensively and California best on defense.” Washington lost to both teams by a single touchdown for its only two losses of the year. ! Wash. and Lee 33, U. of Louisville 28 | Santa | headquarters this afternoon or to- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—-JUNEAU, ALASKA FQOIBALL (oast Grid o SCORES . GamesCome To Climax of leading football during the weekend By RUSS NEWLAND rois 13, TR ! ;.\wm-ia:l:xl Press sm:,ruwrltcr) am 40, Indiana ntral S e s H l_; __“_C; wral 19. 1 g whooping climax this week-end 58, Wooster 2 “\),‘(m.l x:u conference Crowh: cn\ 4 . {char 1 and names its represen- and M. 0, Souther o ) ty 0 (tie) outhern Uni- | t4¢ive to the Rose Bowl—probably . [ little more than a formality. e Tech 20, West ster 3 ¥ it estniiinter () The bruising California Bears are practically ticketed for their third | consecutive trip to the Rose Bowl £ But they can end up in a conference Washington State 21, Oregon State 3 nd up i o "*7‘“‘ Btate 7 e 11 it lose to Stanford this i s \ week. This 058! ! rob- Allen University 7. ek. T is possible but improb , Virginia 18. r 32, Indiana State 0. abash 34, Depauw 20. veriord 13, Swarthmore 6. Bucknell 13, Delaware 0. | West s State 47, Hardin-Sim- | mons 31. fampden-Sydney 28, Sewanee 2 William and Mary Vichita 0. State 34, Nevada 2 (l(.u!rl 7, Vir, Final sames played are as follo versity Ca scores Un ern ton 28, South- Pacific 20 State 7, Colorado College 20, lorado 21, € on into dort’s | back every All’"l Uni in rain U.S.F. scored first ard touchdown run Barni. California tic up when Ray Solari, 205-pc ! guard, caught a fumbled ball and ran 35 yards for the score. Halfback { Jim Monachino clinched the contest with a fourth-period seven-yard touchdown effort. The Bears are going for e O Sun third successive undefeated pawiie oot GaURE 87 What does Stanford offer Middlebury 7, Vermont 24. way of opposition? Plenty, N.C te Col. 6, Wake Forest 6 word for it. ‘V“E" 1 Stanford made a good scoreboard igaie showing last week by holding mighty 'Army to only a 7-0 victory. The { score, however, was not indicative | of the true power of the visiting Cadets. Tradition also steeps two other conference engagements to be con- cluded this week. They are Wash- | ington-Washington State at Spo- {kane and the Oregon-Oregon State eeting at Portland. Southern California takes on its cross-town foe. University of Cali- fornia at Los Angeles., | Washington . 28-13, last Saturday to its hoped for a share of the ' conference title alive, With such | aces as pa throwing quarterback Don Hei and hard running acks as Hugh McElhenny afd Roland Kirkby, the Huskies will fe| favored to outscore Washingion State. W.S.C. tacked up a solid 21-7 win over Oregon week. 13-7, 50, Otterbein 13. Xavier 20 te 7, Indiana 18. Georgia Tech 19, Penn State 18. juehanna 6 Marquet rs 14, 6, Su their eason. in the is the (tie). Ce cuse 14. Auburn 10, Georgia 12. Michigan State 19, Pittsbur Union 26, Hamilton 19. zh 0. North Dakota 0, Kentucky 83. | ouri 7, Okiahoma 41. Iowa State 13, Nebr: Kansas 47, K € Kas 2 I‘I\A\u Chll tian 7. and M. 13. Villanova 29, Boston College 7. Davidsen 39, U. of Richmond 0. Tampa 0, Quantico rines 48, Detroit 20, Okla. A. and M. 13. Clara 9, St. Mary's (Calif) 0. HOCKEY GAMES (By the Associated Press) Victor Cougars scored three goals in each of two weekend Pa- cific Coast Hockey League games, They d one and lost the other. The tie came I night as Reg Abbott backhanded a shot into the Portland net just 5'2 minutes be- fore the game’s end to overtake the Eagles for a 3-3 knot. 'lhe Victorians bowgd 7-3 in a ht encounter at Ta- with the Rocke garnering ; day. first victory in six starts. | UCLA. New Westminster downed Van- week. couver 5-3 in another Saturday| The ninth conference night contest in tighten its grasp on ! Idaho, travelled last week first place. | feat Boston University 26-19 | goes on the road again, this time to ! meet Arizona State of Tempe. ASEFF, CARROLL U, | LEADS INDIVIDUAL (24 TEAMS nsmm - SCORERS WITH 138 UNBEATEN, UNTIED; NEW YORK, Nov. 20—f— cari | SEVE" ARE MAJORS TA 22.year-old fullback (n the John Carrcll University team eland, today led college NEW YORK, Nov. 20 —Twenky II's individual scorers with four college teams remained in the oints. | nation’s unbeaten and untied rank today including seven major el- evens, Taseff, a 5 foot 9 inch 185~ pounder, tcok the lead from Neb- 's Two were dumped over the week- end—Xavier (Ohio) and Flovide Bchby Reynolds Saturday | blazing to four touchdowns a | Jehn Carroll defeated Baldwin-|A and M. Cincinnati beat Xavier Wallace, 33-25. That gave Carl 23!33.20 and Southern University Hc'd TDs for his team’s 10-game season, | Florida A and M 0-0. now completed. ¢ } The seven major teams still i —_— | the elite group are Kentucky, Army DR. NOYATNEY RETURNING Ok]ahnma. Frinceton, California, Dr. Dorcthy Novatney, Educa-| Loyola of Los Angeles and Wyom- | sther tion Supervisor for the Territorial | xt);[‘;m:he;:v:e\:; Brfi 1::}‘“,,(?“,(1 Department of Education, is ex- v i b their seasons. The thirteen er pected to return to her Juneau‘mamg haNe TRehea . their %3 | paigns. One of these is Lewis and Clark, Portland, which won eizh! }games without defeat. State nevertheless figur to by an Oregon team which floundered through its worst n in some time. Oregon has I eight of nine games and was de feated by Colorado, 7-21 last Satur- coma their had an open date last member, to de- and morrow from an extended trip to the westward on her annual fall survey of schools. Dr. Novatney has been to the| Aleutian and Pribilof Islands, and | FOLKATEERS TO MEET visited schools in the areas adjacent to Kodiak, Cook Inlet, Kenai Penin- sula and Prince William Sound. The Folkateers, newly organize¢ folk dance club, will hold its regi- | lar dance Tuesday night at 8 o'clock |in the CIO Hall for this one 615-tf | only according to Co-President land Mrs. Donald L. MacK Sewing mashines ITor rent at the | The usual place of meetine e White Sewing Machice Center. |CGrade School Gym, is not available 642-tf | due to the Art Exhibit. HOME CAFE—DOUGLAS Closed Every Monday. HUNTERS OVERDUE Jimmy John, Billy Duncan and Lester Boyd of Juneau, are reported four days overdue from a hunting trip on the north end of Douglas Island. Joe Kanosh made the report to U.S. Coast Guard headquarters here late last night. The three men left in a 14-foot skiff with an out- board motor and failed to return as scheduled Wednesday night. The CG is investigating. For a Real Fit-Made-To Measure suits at Caslers. 634-4! DR. TED OBERMAN Optometrist TELERHONE 266 BIMRSON BLDG.. JUNEAU EYES EXAMINED VisSuAaL TRAININD DOOGAN JANITOR SERVICE — Windows washed, storm windows removed, Venetian blinds, overstuffed furniture, walls, woodwork, floors trounced Southern Staté last In spite of its latest loss, Oregon | TOMORROW EVENING cleaned, waxed and polished. Rugs shampooed B o BRI Con Brussels Sprouts Proceoli — Cauliflower White Turnips — Yams Sweet Potatoes — Parsnips Danish Squash Hubbard Squash Cabbage — Bunch Carrots cen Peppers — Celery Tomatoes .— Cucumbers Gireen Onions — Radishes «ettuce — Parsley Coconuts — Pomegranates Limes — Chestnuts mas — Oranges inberries eet Tangerines SWEET POTATOES - D, ui‘ o 2 FRESH “RANBERRIES 2 Ibs. 45¢ JONATHAN APPLES Large hox 3.95 ALPINE iCE CREAM Quart 43¢ FROZEN Sirawberries 1% oz. pkg. 59¢ obtainable. Roasting Chickens Cut-up Stewing Chickens Cut-up Fryers — Ducks Shore’s Local Fryers Beltzville Turkeys ENJOY ONE OF OUR WASHINGTON CO- OF BROADEREASTED QVER-READY TUBRKEYS this year for your Thanksgiv- ing Feast . . . . These are the finest birds PAGE THRER Pumpkin Pies Mince Pies Fruit Cakes Brown and Serve Rolls 7 Kinds of Dinner Rolls Stuffin’ Bread CHECK THIS LIST Cranberry Sauce French Dressing Stuffed Oliv Ripe Olives — Sage Sweet Pickles Spiced Peaches Mince Meat — Oysters Pumpkin — Shrimp Crab — Lobster After Dinner Mints Kitchen Bouquet Worcestershire Sauce Pumpkin Pie Spice Spiced Apricots Plum Pudding Salted Nuts — Dates Fruit Cakes — Catsup Fancy Box Chocolates Wild Rice Rum Soakies Korn Kurls Cheese Ritz Philadelphia Cheese Dinner Napkins Cocktail Crackers { Cocktail Shrimp {Prawns .— Oysters \prpercd Salmon \( ut-up Rabbits {Stuffin’ Bread REDDI-WHIP - 3 oz. fin 35c CHATKERS - - Pound e -uR - - 3 quaris 1.00 F?fiAYflNNMSE Quart 75¢ BROWN SUGAR - - - §lb.bagbic S and W BRANDIED MINCE MEAT - 78 oz jar 55 SHAMROCK — GRADE A — LARGE CANADIAN EGGS - DozenTlc FINEST BUTTER CHURNED DARIGOLD BUTTER - Pound 75¢ No. 2" in 18¢ THIS AD IS GOOD DEL MONTE PUMPKIN Imperiant Food Demonstration The Juno Bakery and A. Schilling and Co. are having another fine food demonstration in cur store next Tuesday and Wednesday. Come in and enjoy a good cup of Schillings Coffee or McCormick’s Tea and some of Carson Lawrence’s Fine Bakery Products. SCHILLINGS — Regular or Silex CCFFEE 21bs. 165§ APPLE CIDER - Half gallon jug 43¢ PLUM PUDDING FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS DEL MONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL No. 2" tin 43¢ PALMDALE YAMS TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY - 15 oz tin 59¢ 1b. 43¢ No. 2 tin 35¢ We Wish You A Happy Thanksgiving DELIVERIES JUNEAU — 10 a.m., 2 ond 4 p.m. DOUGLAS — 10 a.m. BOAT ORDERS ANY TIME MEAT PHONE 704 PHONE 60

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