The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 16, 1936, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 16, 1936 o BRINGING UP FATHER i) THEY SHOULD HAVE | GUIDES TO FIND A GUIDE TO LOCATE ANY THING ON THIS LOT- HEY- THROW THIS AWAY ¢ BEFORE ME WIFEGITS IT- WELL-NOW THAT MAGGIE INSISTS ON BEING AN EXECUTIVE AT THE STUDIO- WE WON'T HAVE ANY KIND OF TROUBLE MAKIN THE | BATTLE SCENES- TELL ME- WHERE IS THE PROPERTY TS RIGHT TO THE LEFT- BEHIND THE FRONT OF THE SIDE OF THE SOUTH END OF THE EAST ENTRANCE - Lfi The several children, doctor’s wife died in Seattle years ago and he had no but is survived by several brothers and a sister. A brother, Dr. Frank M. Whiting, lives in Oroville, Cal., another brother, Roy, in San Francisco | COL. LUMBER, ' DAILY SPORTS CARTOON-- By Pap BREWERS BOWL 'COOKING CLASS [N TERRITORY ©. 0 o o i FOLGERS WIN | FIRST LEAGUE 'DEMONSTRATION .. | ATBRUNSWICK - GAMES TONIGHT IS DUPLICATED Stories Told of His Adventures During R.R. Building Days, Alaska IF YOU WANT ANY = THING WELL DONE, DO 1T T(IOUESELF [ i % is an attorney NG a 8 ; Dr. Fenton B. Whiting, who died and President of the San Fran- l Iew Bowling Tournament “AINY ¢’ Crocers League Schedule Similar meoxmdnw Of- yesterday in Seattle, left colorful cisco Bar Assoclation. Two oA | b T ¢ # i i history behind him in the North(brothers also survive, Harry, a San oy 'Mleams 5 T L » Starts r?mOI L fered Last \u’nl ?”d To 1 theusands of friends to mourn | Francisco newspaperman, and Gene quested to Reglster l : Elks AHeys | day-—Large Crowd his passing. One of the interesting| B ramento. A sister lives In £ | s | : 3 episodes of his career with M. J.| Quincy, Cal, the family home John Halm of the Columbi ~ STANFORD | | The first three-game series of th>| Boned chicken, stuffed with bread Heney, the railroad builder, in Al-| ¥h *. Whiting was born. He be howled the be COACH, WORKED | new spring tournament will be bowl- |crumb dressing, end served aska was recounted here last sum- | graduate of Stanford Uni- total 1 the Ci ouT A DEFEA)SE |ed by the Brewers League at the gooseber: was one of mer by Rex Beach, a life long at the Brunswick Alley o SToP GIE , Reper, | Elks Alleys tonight. The games slat- | cacies featured in the V. 1 friend b but C. Ashby : Alt MUSTANGS % TINY pspgm;gp ofi led for this evening are: Olympians | Cooking Demonstration, presented, A strike w led in Cordova| » Sand PASSING GAME % = ¥ FRIENDS FOR DOPE ON vé Blue Ribbons, 7:30 pm.; Rhein-|in duplicate both last evening and while Heney was in the south,| hn te placed first and \ocux\ll MD SNAPPED HIS '*i ': COLUNBIA AND ALABAMA |landers vs Golden Glows, 8:30 p.m S anm 1o0n by Mrs. C. N. Crone, Beach said, “and Dr. Whiting was in the game scoring with 205 and 203 ’! 10 LOS: 1 |Horlucks vs East Sides, 9:3) pan. in the Northern Light the ouly man in charge. Doc was espectively. ROSE BOLL LOSING \y¥ T~ IS ‘ffi&@’ | Tie Grocers League will begi erian Church parlors. up against it. If the men got MR PETERSUN Columbia Lumber beat Alt Heidel- | their schedule tomorrow night w asses, which are under the!away, they would lose half of thei as § bérg, ‘and, Folgets won: from /¥r the following games: Wesco vs H on of the Vocational De- previcus summer season, and sev-| Bruhn, the two latter teams havir py Home, 7:30 pm.; Reliance I nent of the Territorial Schools, |eral thou: dollars to boot. He| or ; present | Heinz, 8:30 pm.; Kratft vs S. & W., |were offered at different hours in |nhad no legal authority to hold the| ! meet 9 S rder to accommodate both office | men, But he had a hospital, and| Folge team =~ workers and housewives interested in i, that hospital he had one pa-| ’ '1: fine art of C"O’::Ui o tient. ‘(. eremony to Take Place | Sixty persons attended the eve-, wupye forgotten what was thel ] SA[}RAMENTO g ey e oIy forsotten, wiat was thel Next Tuesday at Home of D | e matter with the fellow at the time {persons not privileged to witness the ¢ nera was plenty when Doc; Mr., Mrs. M. Lagergren rnoon demonstrations. In addi- | o Son TG PHE Y B e | : MENAGED BY | tion to the main course, a salad of endxve nnd gr'\pofnut with Rus Miss Doris Harvey will become he bride of Mr. Carleton O. Peter- n in a quiet wedding to be solemn- ed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. n Lagergren at eight o'clock him with croton oil, which caused him to break out in red splotches.| | Then Doc took him out on a little | boat in the water, announced it looked like smallpox, and quaran- an THE TEACHER, BEAT THE PUPIL ¢ — MATTY BELL-, ”nmapplp upn.mlc dov\n mke pork {chops with rice, wilted endive, and | games i th= City League were SoMel/o COACH, PLAYED apricot turnovers were demonstrate # Y = - S it % tined the camp. This meant noth-| ‘1 “the evening of January 21. ] __Columbia iumber R Rl 47 C_éA/T;E ColLEEE F I'Th h | Prize winners at the evening ses- | o TR T Wiy The Rev. John A. Glasse will pér- L R. Rieck Mo 122 180wz NOE FE HEN THORNHILL . 00¢ oug! t Imminent in!sion were as follows: Mrs. Daniel | D8 : ; o oY Y| form the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. s I FER OUCH P i e Ross, Mrs, W. L. Jackson, Mrs, Wil | 98wned on them that they couldn’t poftal B9, 156 430 4 WHICH BEAT 4 | Colusa District—River S e W e TRCKSOR, NS Wi | leave; then they went wild. They|Milton Lagergren will.serve as at- « J. Halm 192 166 178— 536 SOUTHE R COACH AT THAT ! {liam Mahoney, Mrs. K. MacLein, 3 1d [‘bll i \1““‘ ]‘;” ,,‘f,y tendants. A reception will follow 4 - £ RETHOOST SCHOOL Sweeps Over Banks | Mrs. George Folta, Mrs. Ruth Gud- | )‘“’;‘ cieh G Bl fIf o 18 ";‘;' }‘[‘ ‘3( the ceremony. o s aw win Op New [ bruison, Mis. K Oray, M O e elen s o0 Drove . Do¢ (096! The bride, daughter of Mr. and £ eidelberg YEAR'S DAY Ry SACRM\!E’\ITO Cel, Jan. 15.-- Swanson, Mrs. L. Carl Lovitt, Mrs. | (i) o ®| Mrs. S. Harvey, Denver, Colorado, \ Elmer Jakeway 87 130 123— 340 = . AL\ rights Reserved by The Assoclated Press ==———eSR New! rains Dlsoed & sarios Hhsimce | BsTE WaLkDS: ) l,”“" boat, led them down to the| .. arrive on the Alaska. She s C. Ashby 205 164 156— lover this region, as mountain dis- Merchants Aid | " | been formerly employed in Denver Ed Radde 167 158 152— 4 enibs ‘and thiey wouldl itowisp) Hian ObacH BRSE BAGHOE o leat 8 tricts reported an exceptionally 5 were donated by the Holly- Ie‘_red. are as follows: Alaska Electric ' as secretary in a large insurance 159 450 43113 SPURT SLANTS more football, would be much more | tied record since he took charge of | Néavy downpour late yesterday in %ood Style Shop, Grocery Depart- Light and Power Co, which fur-|company. ol 459 450 4311340 daring and far superior in funda- |the Wolverine grid program, point | the Neadwater region of the Ameri-|ment of B. M. Behrends Co, Inc, nished the range; Frye-Bruhn Meat| The groom is an employee in the S T e b e e S ot ol and Kann's Five Cent to Five Dollar |Co., which furnished the meats; B.| A-J office and has many friends Folgers i g £ ¥ { 2 B e e Emergency flood waters are ex- Store. M. Behrends Co., Inc., Grocery De- in Juneau. " 91__ 4n9. Now that the pigskin has been | Newman said that Detroit, a team | “removal rumors” which floated LATR FB PG | ? eSS O TR il T i R . rked away It he. 1936 season | that played at top speed, is eastly the |around a few weeks after the season |Pected to keep the high water out ~Other merchants who contributed | partment. J: Barragar, Jr. 100, 1% 101536, e about tie agail. for the old [best team in the countey today, and then quickly died ot Bacramento, (1argely to the support of the demon-| The Northern Light Presbyterian) SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! g T iquestion 8s to whether & good col2| The former Michigan all-America| Since 1939, Kipke-coached teatn:| ¢ TL° Sacramento River swept over stration,.and Without whose coopes- Ohirch contributed the use of it T 0N Totals 334 319 282 935 Questi deaiisied E i g R 4 £ : its banks near Red Bluff last night ation the classes could not be of- | parlors for the demonstration. SHOP IN JUNEAU! Prye ‘Bral lege team can beat a good profes- | S sharpening his ice skates in pre- have won 41 games, lost but 14 and hirdai i . i | | L e e S iy paration for the 1936 professional |tied 4. In 1930, 1931, 1633, and 1953 | hundating the lowlands and two __ 5 T AL EIR LS s e s Lo Hedson . 143 107 s 398 T Harry Newman, a headliner in |football season. the Wolverines were Western Con- |MEAWOYS L 203— 512 lege football at Michigan and a| “SKating is the best thing I know |ference Cha.mpmn i pl‘z M‘; “ro; “‘ggj'“ ¥ Totals 258 297 350— 805 Stor With the New York Giants, is|0f to develop hip-swinging, judg- E— il o s O N ST jualified as well as anyone to give Ment of distance, suppleness, d - P opinibn. The Giants were beaten terity, pivot and angle turns. I wa uara“ l"e I i > 20-7 by the Detroit Lions for the |Off form in 1935 and the main rea- | | AR%XNSC;![?SO\[;E;‘.IE'AI? National Professional Football cham- | 501 Was | "”;“d“:“ Il o o ‘ka““!: peant last winter. id a lot in 1932-33 and | \ T HERE rierstiy Hangs, Anchorage s ‘Detroit would beat any college | ‘ollowed it up with a great season | 3 ¢ The proposed trip of the Chilkoot || €A™ Of 1935, says Newman. “I think ?'\”lh)v zrl;inon T'll be ready next G | v s 9 the best college team of the year was | {all when the season opens.” i 2 A - | ? & ?.\.l.,txxhw\; ll]m :;\u.m to . mmg?il. Minnesota and the Detroit team| _No Wolves For Wolverines n:\anlelid)&/\\:Jj’ ‘:,lk“ 5 ,)G, \n\ Deputy Marshal Walter G. Hel- | user ° or a .l(-n.lx qp y‘:: gd‘rlwvx \\Y’ sa,' would beat Minnesota. There is no| Newman’s alma mater, the Uni- '“m.;m‘ iy 5 OJur'm‘mr' sty |10 left ez this morninz for| 0das ‘: \:u ) )n lu;’oxr o : D4 | 4oubt that Detroit would win. versity of Michigan, has approved : eakanaion g | Sumdum, to bring the five children r;n\wr;w :n\: 1;\;;?( lere concern- Lions Have ‘College Spirit’ $190,000 thudgct for the 1935 Wolver s P of Pater Sumdum and the body of ) - 7 an “Some argue that the college teams | ine sport program, and incidentally e : § e | ‘heir mother to Juneau | Thie molainie oFisinaky alast : : t ek ITUATIC § ; ‘1] e sn‘]ihfw Y'mvfm};!\. FJI n\'x‘;q 10 have the spirit the professionals | the coaches ar‘unt going to worr ;\“,:B,\:lzl: :“Nl;(':lf;?] NVESSV(_‘ The deputy sailed on the boat x; vn:‘r_\ u:x ,',,',’,',:,f;‘" r:jyxltu:vc;’" 1‘:1:1 lack. Detroit is a team of high me- | about the usual post-season rumor of ‘searlet fover have de. | NOrth Light, captained by Nels! able to make the necessary arrange- ments for the games here. >+ IF YOuR ARR SICK of being sick, ENSCH'S scientific X-Ray chiropractic will remove the c trouble. Phone 451 Main St. use of your or call at 206) to enjoy 2ck whiskey!” Pay’n Takit Liquor Dept. Groceries—Liquors—Meats Y SCHENLEY'S OLD QUAKER: BRAND STRAIGHT WHISKEY GEORGE BROS. " “We sell for LESS—because—we sell for CASH” adjustments | ¢ You dont have to be 2iche chanical skill plus a love for the zame. The Lions have the old col- lege spirit. “Detroit would have just as much spirit as Minnesota, Ohio State, Tex- as Christian, Southern Methodist, anford or any other college team vou can mention. They would play just as hard as their college oppon- at AT— Per Quart Per Pint 95¢ 1, Pint 50¢ Here Is Old Quaker Rye Really Provident Prices “YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE RICH TO ENJOY RICH WHISKEY!" OLD QUAKER BRAND STRAIGHT WHISKEY { The Old Quaier Co., “bout grid coaches destined to los heir jobs. Salary increases have been votec he coaches and athletic taff by the board of control of ath etics. The salary bocst will rep: ent about half the reductions caus 2d by depression economy moves. Michigan alumni, in defendin: % SCHENLEY'S sloped here and if no new. cas evelop today, the quarantine w ifted tomorrow. - NO BEAR STORY EAST LANSX;G‘_‘B./HCh.. Jan. 16.— ilthough Michigan State loses eight f its first football eleven by gradu- tion, Coach Charlie Bachman is not | loomy over 1933 prospects. He is heerful over a staunch sophomore‘ ne coming up. LEFT-HANDERS BEST CINCINNATI, Jan. 16. — Left- anded hitters batting at Crosley "eld here during the past three ears have out-hit right-handers, 201 to .284, despite the fact the left Yield fence is only 339 feet from the nome plate at the foul line, compared | to the 377 feet to the right field | fonu WAKE UP YOIIR LIVER BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go 1t you fesl sour and sunk an looks puzk, don’ 'll‘lh'll“n?a.;flil‘- £ e s e e v, eiat €2 n sty 22 buoyaat aad full o sussbine " *Y! 'R'm-l"dfll&"hflufl ly move the lunlav-tdo-lln-t is 5‘!“\'& lllbo\l.\d Illflltd?:: .:H. of liquid { biaInto your Powels daily, | Landin, and is expected here this | | evening. i Mrs. Sumdum was found dead | {near her home Monday morning. | It was first believed that she had | frozen to death, but investigation ! by Deputy Marshal Judson Brov\m showed that the woman's body was | badly bruised. An inquest will be | held on the arrival of the remains, | according Marshal Willilam T. Malioney. i The woman’s husband has been | placed under arrest and is being held in the brig of the Coast Guard | Cutter Tallapoosa. ] No word was received from the cutter today, which is cruising the vicinity of Woewcdski Harbor in a search for Emil Hungerbuhler and Lloyd Fenton, Port Alexander | hunters who have been missing for two months. The Tallapoosa is ex- | pected back in Juneau within two |or three days. to - MEHERIN TO KETCHIKAN J. J. Meherin, Hills Brothers’ repre- sentative, sailed for Ketchikan on the Victoria. NOTI(L OF SEIZURE AVD SALIL [ The gas screw or vessel J'\NIE‘ | K, official number 216322, of 13| |gross and 11 net tons, has been| seized at Juneau, Alaska, on Jan-| {uary 15, 1936, at 2:10 p.m., pursuant | | to the provisions of Section 1607 of | Title 19 of U. C. A, for violation | {of R. 8. 4377, as amended. Kon-| | stantine (Gus) Fadeeff or H. Vancew’ |or any person claiming the property | are required to appear and file\ | with the Collector of Customs at| ! Juneau, Alaska, a claim for such | property, and a bond in the sum ‘or $250, within twenty days from | Ithe date of first publication of | | this notice. Unless such claim and | | bond are filed within the time pre- | scribed the property will be sold at | i public auction at Upper City Float, | ‘Juneflu, Alaska, at 10:00 a.m., Feb- {ruary 7, 1936. James J. Connors, ! Collector of Customs First-publication, Jan Last publication, Jan. 16, 1936. 30, 1936, one, my friend / —not for this whiskey. There’s a barrel of quality in every bottle! Just sip it slowly—straight—undisguised, without any mixings or fixings —there’s a real test for a whiskey. And it’s a test that Old Quaker will pass with flying colors! Mellow Old Quaker rolls right down your throat, just as smooth as you please. Not the slightest bint of burn. And the taste is rich! And its fragrance is rich. And every drink you mix with it is rich. But you don’t have to'be rich to enjoy rich whis- key. Make friends with Old Quaker today! " SCHENLE Y'S A0 ) @UAJ& STRAIGHT W As you prefer in BOURBON or RYE HISKEY It bears the SCHENLEY MARK of MERIT Copyricht, 1936, The Old Quaker Company, Lawrencebarg., Ind. Division of SCHENLEY PRODUCTS CO., Ine. ER APPLEJACK NDY RUM SLOE GIN

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