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PAGE SIX Snow and Mud Made Safurday Games Tough By RIP WATSON NEW YORK, Nov. ing out Monday's football you'd better hang it in the if the weather is anything Saturday’s. It was a great day for television and the California and Florida Chambers of Commerce, but that’s small consolation to midwestern and eastern fans trying to recoup from the battle with the elements . . . They used bulldozers. to clear off six inches of snow at Ithaca, N.Y,, but Cornell Coach Lefty James was ready to shovel it back on the field again after the Big Red blew one to Columbia, 21-20 — what hurt the most was the fact that Colum- bia also edged Cornell, 20-19 last year. The longest slide since the World Serles was recorded at Franklin Field when Eddie Bell of Penn dived after Charlie Sumner as the Wil-| liam and Mary speedster flashed to like Is It lllinois Vs. Trojans In Rose Bowl? NEW YORK, Nov. 5—P—Illinois and Southern California were the logical candidates for the Rose Bowl assignment today, but they still have some formidable obstacles to hurdle. The Illini must get past Ohio State and Northwestern in Big Ten games, while Southern California has a Saturday date with Stanford an undefeated team that could throw the Pacific Coast conference race into confusion. If the Trojans beat Stanford they then must whip UCLA, and they're in. Actually, Southern Cal, on the basis of its performances all year, should whip both. Illinois has three Big Ten games left — against Towa this week, Ohio State on Nov. 17 and Northwestern on Nov. 24. Illinois had to settle for a 7-0 victory Saturday over de- fending Michigan. The score came on a pass from Tom O’Connell to Red Smith in the final 65 seconds. In other Big Ten affairs, Ohio Tiny Texan Valerie Duncan discovers re THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA (Gov. Gruening Says Satehood Fightin Open (Continued iroin Page One) Gov. Gruening said, “When last year a group of southern senators talked to me about their opposition to the Alaska statehood bill, not one of them gave this as their reason They used the arguments invariably used in opposing the admission of oth tates: 1) That Alaska is too far away; 2) That we do not have the natural resources nece: and other arguments which are often found to be at odds with the factual infermation.” Governor Talks Gov. Gruening says he asked for the flc after the Georgia crnor had voted against the hood resolution and pointed cut that | Gov. Talmadge had at various times Feen extremely critical of federal roachment. 1 sought to point out to him as a citizen of a sovereign state that he had had far less experience with ‘federal encroachment’ than we in Alaska who live in a territory. I FirePower at Chrysler Recognitien of China Kicked Out By UN Assembiy rejected at its final session tod a Rusi a touchdown on an 89-yard run... Bell left his feet at the 10-yard |State kept its hopes alive by beat- line, landed in the goo and slid‘lng Nortnwestern ~n a field goal slowly across the line in Sumner’s by Vic Jjancdicz, 3-0; and Wiscon- wake. ‘.\in scored in the last minute to Illinois and Southern California, | stop Indiana, 6-0. who hope they'll meet in the Rose; i tha, i a Bowl next Jan. 1, must have thought | p 000 ‘: r\i:l,lf;ror;r nfi‘zve"g:n;}:d they were in the florist's deep freeze | Army 28-6, in the rafn and mud of yesterday. The Illini battled tWo | yanree Stadium. That one didn't inches of snow, 29-degree Weather, | coun iy the Pacific Coast standings, a 45-mile per hour wind and the |y, california’s 21-7 defeat at the | Michigan football team : A0G1hands of UCLA did — and it was they won out, 7-0 . . . The Trojans, o mighty important one for it just wishing they were back in Califor-| .00 wyocked the Golden Bears hia, were just as uncomfortable in |,y of the race. Now they've lost Yankee Stadium here, but the 0P~/ ty, Stanford halted Washington position was less {ormidnl;le- | State 21-13. Pat Cannamela, the Trojans great| yneqey is the head that wears the linebacker, probably set some ort| . ... in the Southwest Conterentce, of record when he travelled 3000, g,yor found out Saturday. TCU miles to appear before the “home™| i req Bavior 20-7, and now the folks . . . Pat's home is in NeW|p,naq Frogs are the only unde- London, Conn. feated team in the conference, though they've lost to outsiders. But TCU still has to play Texas | and Rice, so there’s no reason to| get excited. Texas showed it was |not ready to throw in the towel by hanging a 20-13 defeat on Southern Methodist, while Arkansas upset Scores of important football games | Texas A. and M., 33-21. over the weekend are as follows: R M e S VMI 35, Davidson 13. Massachusetts 6, Vermont 0. | Amherst 21, Tufts 13. ‘ Colorado 47, Towa State 20. | Oregon 14, Idaho 13. | [ e qolball Scores By the Associated Press Bowling News The Friday Night Mixed Bowling | League wound up with Ross’ Oasis jlendmg Glacier Cab 3-1 and Capi- | tol Theater giving the same treat-| | ment t6 Butler-Mauro Drugs. Ross | Mills’ 519 was high for the men| |and P. Matheny's 443 was tops. for| | the ladies. In the nightcap half, | Home Grocery registered a 3-1 win | | against Country Club and Harry , | Race Druggist took a 4-0 drubbing | | from Caro Transfet. L. Tibbetts’| 14, | 526 and Florence Holmquist with al | 452 led the scoring. Ross’ Oasis 136 127 Oregon State 40, Washington 14. Stanford 21, Wash. State 13. Colo. Col.|26, Colo. State 0. Clemson 21, Wake Forest 6. Riggy 21, Pt 13 Texas 20, SMU 13. Arkansas 33, Texas A. and M. 21. UCLA 21, Cal 7. Princeton 12, Brown 0. Southern Cal 28, Army 6. Bowdoin 27, Bates 12. Maine 24, Colby 0. Notre Dame 19, Navy 0. Geo. Wash. 20, So. Carolina Columbia 21, Cornell 20. Duke 14, Geotgia Tech 14 (tie). | |B. Mill 126 Carpora of T 1 tion’s “New Worlds In Engineering” s which has been seen by more than how at the State Fair was just getting wound up when 000,000 people in two |1 oo b . The 180-horsepower Chrysl she is posed is part of a displs The 70-exhibit show will run in 8 ugh November 16 and will be Los Angeles in December and Jan Sports in Brief By the Associated Press At Pinehurst, N.C. — United States’ professionals defeated Great Britain 9': to 2 'z in Ryder Cup. matches. At New York — Counterpoint ($6.90), stamped himself as country’s No. 1 horse tc by winning $59,600 Empire City Handicap under 130 pounds. At Sydney, ia — Four players of the U.S. Davis Cup team — Ted Schroeder, Dick Savitt, Vie Seixas and Tony ved here for interne A fifth member, ardson, expected days from Japan. rabert - At Philadelphia Victor Dyrzall, New York, won the National AAU 30-kilometer cross ccuntry cham- pionship. At Phoenix Jobnny P sons, winner of ti U Indianay olis 500, captured the Phoenix 103- mile automobile race in 1:10.54 At Brooklyn 151, Buffalo, knocked out Early, 148, Brooklyn, 7, last Sa day night. At Philadelphia — Ted Ca 179, Philadelphia, and I 215, Philadelphia, drew, 8, in a bout Saturday night. Alabama 16, Georgia 14. 389 | Illinois 7, Michigan 0. Oklahoma 33, Kansas State 0. Texas Christian 20, Baylor 7. Kansas 27, Nebraska 7. | Miss. State 10, Tulane 7. | Brigham Young 21, Colo. A.&M. 19.| Vanderbilt 19, Chattanooga 14. |3 DowRn Utah 28, Utah State 20. Detroit 7, Bradley 6. Wyoming 34, Montana 7. Dartmouth 14, Yale 10. Tennessee 27, North. Carolina 0. Fordham 7, Rutgers 13. Tulsa 35, Okla. A. and M. 7. Kentucky 32, Miami (Fla) 0. Wash. and Lee 60, Va. Tech 0. Virginia 39, The Citadel 0. Maryland 35, Missouri 0. Towa 20, Minnesota 20 (tie). | Ohio State 3, Northwestern 0. | Wisconsin 6, Indiana 0. Drake 35, Great Lakes 20. Purdue 28, Penn State 0. Cincinnati Heads Unbeaten Record NEW YORK, Nov. 5—(#—Cin- cinnati with eight victories, heads the list of 27 unbeaten, untied col- lege football teams today. Five of the nation’s top teams are still on the list. They are Ten- nessee (No. 1), Michigan State (No 2) which was idle last Saturday, Illinois (No. 3), Maryland (No. 4) and Princeton (No. 6). Each has won six games. Unbeaten teams |I. Fitzpatrick 106 145 with seven victories each include |P. Fitzpatrick 167 157 Stanford and San Francisco. | Totals 637 1710 |R. Mill A. Kessner R. Rudolph C. Rudolph Totals 160 111 119 110 636 Glacier Cab 144 133 141 135— 352 | 145— 364 | 82 Totals 614 533—1849 Capitol Theatre 96 132 155 128 129 151 109 136 | J. Rusher | T. Heyder | C. McLean L. Jones J. Marsh 147 145 | Totals 636 692 619—1827 Butler-Mauro Drug P. Matheny 134 165— 443 | J. Porter 104 109— 334 M. Doyle 112 120— 337 D. McMullen ki 146— 329 J. Alexander 150 156— 444 | Totals 579 696—1867 Country Club 75 100 125— 415 143— 388 — 175 109— 103 118— 412 1315 401 100— 339 134— 452 5921938 114— 3581‘ 167— 406/ 124— 413 124— 375 136— 460/ J. Becker D. Franken R. Abramson O. Winther P. Hagerup J. Levasseur Totals 143 134 126 153 165 631 715 Home Grocery | A. Sorensen 126 118 P. Taylor 105 134 | M. Davlin 133 156 151 136 163 ads s ; up on Brifishers M. Mallory 92 90 | P. Morgan 130 128 R R RO, Nov. bin | K. Morgan 132 139 110— 381 g A MOV, Bt 17, ¢ (Dibbebls 163 102 171— 526 The crating job Arthur Lacey, non- Totals 646 708 688—2042 | playing captain of Great Britain’s | Harry Race Druggist Ryder Cup golf team, had hoped| g Hoimquist 115 172 165— 452 to have done on the international |, gyint 107 95 | trophy has been postponed E. Gray 17 89 Uncle Sam’s profegsionals saw 10 |\ Fling 136 129 that yesterday when they ran off |y Holmgquist 141 221 with six of the eight singles matches Totals 616 706 and tied another to clinch the two- day competition by a 9% to 2% score, second highest margin since | cup play began in 1927 | | 168— 456 | 99— 281 : 140— 398 | 134— 340 125— 390 141— 503 SONS OF NORWAY The Sons of Norway are giving a When the English arrived in this | pinochle card party, second in a country two weeks ago Lacey said | series, at the Moose hall, Thursday | 171— 519 BUSINESS, PROF] 94— 326 | WOME 665—2012 | . 88— 290 | 653—1975 | 3 SIONAL HAVE SESSION There will be meeting of the Busi- 671—1950 | ness and Professional Women's Club | er of the city sales and service tax next Monday, it was announced by (7 ks 3311Prcsident Hallene Price at the ulub‘siwn e delinquent after October 31,' David Kitka, and Harold Kitka, all 86— 382 | meeting : 105— 381 |room today. Armistice Day, Nov. 11| 307 Will be a holiday for the club as|al property taxes are also coming in | 146— 388 | Well as for offices and places of at a brisk rate, Popejoy reported. of Mt. Edgecumbe and John of in the Baranof Terrace business. At the meeting today a certifi- \c‘a?e of award was l'ecex\'(vd by Miss | that the penalty is 15 percent plus prothers in Sitka, Frank, Pete, 96— 314 | Price from the territorial BPWC one per cent inte 124 387, honoring . the Juneau club for its | sponsorship of the new BPWC at Mt. Edgecumbe. A hamper for the 131— 423 Dursery at St. Ann’s hospital has Baranof Hotel. been installed as a club project, it was announced. e B William T. Runyon, 83, a grocer in the Woodlake district of Fresno, Calif., s2es nothing unusual about tim'e within three years. y tracing the development of Chrysler The baby he is admiring was born on his the announcement came that Gov. Talmadge had withdrawn his objec- tion with the provision that the re- cord show that he had made it. Gov. | Jar yrnes, of South Carolina,| joined this position.” Another resolution passed by the| governors, Gruening said, would give h state, including| territories, the right to determine| !whether not relief rolls should be made public. He said,t} ation came as a conseque Indiana making these rolls public er V-8 FirePower engine on which It Lake City from November on exhibition in San Francisco and uary. Mlaska May Have First | Bismuth Mine Says Mining Engineer Norman C. Stines, mining en-; gineer from Los Gatos, Calif., re-land getting their matching fede turned Saturday from the Admi - |funds withdrawn. He said the reso alty-Alaska Gold Mining properties | jytion did not go into the merits | at Funter Bay. He is hopeful that| gy demerits of relief lists being made the properties can be developed to public, but that- this used | produce much needed nickel, cop- | mple of federal encroachment | | per and cobalt > rights. s since overruled the | or as Stines has spent six weeks on the | Peterson placer tin properties on Cape Creek near Tin City north of Nome. A $60,000 matching loan has been granted for further prospect- | ing on the Peterson claims, he said. | He reported two likely prospects in the Nome area for strategic min- |erals. “Alaska may have the first ihi‘»mnl,h mine in the world,” he re- | vealed. “Bismuth, a strictly controll- |ed metal worth $2.25 a pound, |ordinarily recovered as a by pro- iduuL of lead, zinc and copper smelt- ing. | “However O. A. Magraff and As- ciates of Nome have found what appears to be the making of a bis- muth mine 32 miles north of Nome.” | “Another promising prospect are | sheelite, (tungsten) veins uncovered by Hugo Linfors and Charles Jones Nome,” he said. “It occyrs in high grade bunches associated with ' ins 24 miles north of Nome.' Stines left yesterday for Seattle. his pr action by ea ay for Gov. Gruening also attended the | meeting of the Board of Governors | of the Arctic Institute of Americ which organization, he says, is working towards closer cooperation Letween Canada and the United States in further arctic research in fields where Russia is known to | have made great progress. vFinaI Services For James Kiika Will Be Tuesday | Funeral services for James Kitka.: who died at Hood Bay on November | ‘l, will be held on Tuesday niter-l « 'ncon at 2 o'clock in the Memorial | Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Wal- | ter A. Soboleff will officiate at the | final rites and interment will be.| | ity Clerk’s Offie | s 4 }Busy (o“edmg Taxes |in the Evergreen Cemetery. | Mr. Kitka was born in Sitka on BcL“'pen taxes and taxes the Ju- July 17, 1899. The body was brought | neau city clerk’s office is busy. |to Juneau aboard the boat Martha Belated returns on the third quart-‘x and was taken to House 34 in t _ 8 the village to remain overnight. are still coming in although they | Pallbearers will be Herman Kitka, | City Clerk C. L. Popejoy said today. ' or Sifka, and Sam Hopkins, Henry City of Juneau real and person-i,;ndc-rson, and Will Ross. ( Survivors include two sons, James | These taxes can be paid up until| juneau; three daughters, Katherine, | December 1 without penalty. After Annie and Cecilia of Juneau; four t monthly. |Henry, and Nicholas; two sisters, | Mrs. John Jacobs of Juneau and | Mrs. Alice Davison of Seattle. He is also survived by his aunt, Mrs. | Lilly Yarkon of Juneau. o Bl gls THE GIFT OF LASTING PLEASURE FROM SEATTLE C. H. Malcolm of Seattle is at the — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — al 83 An appoint- ment made now will assure pre- J Christmas delivery. Joseph Alexander Photography becoming a father for the second PARIS, Nov. United Natic 5—P—The {fifth General Assembly an demand that the ques-| at to the in the tomorrow. 20 & tion of giving China’s Communists be given pi th assembly, opening The vote was 11 for, and 11 abstentions. t Russia's Jacch the explosive question representation into what diplomats had hoped would be a non-contro- | versial, ceremonial windup of the; fifth sess) A. Malik threw of Chinese time | ceful peo- He to put an attitude toward angrily declared “it is end to this disgr the Chinese tionalist C d Russian ted to “decrease 1e regime Malik has been de- sembly as an ag- n peace. proposed to nounced by the gressor in K. | de- | After rejection of the mand, the rest of the meeting in the Palais de Chaillot went off a scheduled. VISITOR FROM ANCHORAGE Walter W. Cooley of Anchorage is stopping at the Hotel Juneau. Juneau Brug Co. Phone 33 - Box 1151 Mail Orders Filled Promptly On Safurday Affer | Brief lliness MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1951 Pefe Hammer Dies | Pete Hammer, pioneer Juneau merchant, died at St. Ann’s Hos- tal Saturday evening following a brief illness. Hammer s proprietor of the Ideal Curio S and nad lived in Juneau 0. He n Earl residing in San F Mr. Hammer was born in Norway | on August 21,1881, and came to New York City in 1906. He was married to Miss Mary Wiski in 1910 and the is and a| rancisco. | | couple moved to Portland, Ore. During World War I, Mr. Hammer served with the Merchant Marine in the Atlantic service. Mr. and Mrs Hammer came to Juneau in 1920 and operated the Scandinavian. Grocery and nine years later opened the Ideal Curio Store, Mr. ammer was a member of the Pioneers of Alaska. The remains are at the Charles W. *Carter Mortuary and funeral services are planned for Wednesday. FROM SAN FRANCISCO Fred Kislingbury of Sin Fran- cisco arrived here yesterday on PAA from Seattle and is stoppng at the Baranof Hotel. DR. TED OBERMAN OPTOMETRIST 20TH CENTURY THEATRE BLDG 2nND FLooRr For Prompt and Service Phone . . . . 666-0-959 GLACIER CAB Ride in Comfort PHONE: OFFICE 61 JUNEAU, ALASKA Courteous It’s yours when you fly Pan American ® Pan American is your best way to get around Alaska. The big four-engine Clippers* fly every day of the week from Fairbanks, Juneau and Ketchi- kan to Seattle. Two Clipper flights weekly from Whitehorse and Nome. And when you fly Pan American, BARANOF HOTEL — Phone 106 whether it be Inside Alaska or Out- side, you have no travel worries. Pan American handles all arrangements through to your final destination... makes your reservations, sees to your tickets. It’s the convenient, carefree way to travel. Just call.... 2w Aurrrcan Worto AIRwA WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINE 51x9 LAGER BEER gr— Budweiser There’s nothing like it . . « absolutely nothing they had brought the best-balanced, | evening November & at 8 o’'clock. finest conditioned squad ever (o4 The social is public with awards. Refreshments will be served. _ cross the Atlantic. 83rd birthday. His wife is 27 and the older boy, 3. Phone 303 Shattuck Bldg. married seven years, (P Wirephoto. They have been ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . .. ST.LOUIS