The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 9, 1937, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA'EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 9 BRINGING UP FATHER YES-TELL MARY: THE MAID/ | DON'T_WANT HER TO WEAR MAGGIE, DARLIN? { FEDERALS Wit Y '\ THREE GAMES; LARGE TOTAL . All Three Winning Teams at Elks Bowl Over Sixteen Hundred Federal bowler Art Bringdale ! went home last night from the Elks bowling alleys with a slab of bacon lover' each shotilder, having rolled high single game score with 245 and high three game total with 584. The Federals won their match ‘with Rolls, Lafayette won from PFranklin, and Chevrolet beat Inter- pational—all winning team scores going over 1600. Tonight’s games are Hudson vs. Lincoln, Cord vs. Dodge and Ply- mduth vs. Auburn. Last night’s scores follow: International G. Benson 171 183 C. MacSpadden 143 181 J. rmle 152 215 204— 558 169— 493 164— 531 ANY JEWEL 1S A SIGHT- THE GUESTS WILL LAUGH AT HER- - | | | MARY- WHEN YOU_WAIT ON THE GUESTS TONIGHT-DO I % RY TONIGHT- SHE eT e WHEN | TELL VALUABLE, HER-- Sports Caftoon flf (S GRUDGE FIGHTS |Daily MAY BEBILLED ONGLOVE CARD &4y Two grudge fights may headline the bill of the Juneau Athletic Club's smoker scheduled now for, Friday night, November 26. | Those who may be paired off for the chance to settle their differ- ences in the squared circle are mid-| dleweights, Sailor Moran and Eddie | Murphy and welterweights Hank| Bourlett of Haines and Sailor Frank. Both of the “Sailor” scrap- pers are off the Haida. No definite matchings have been made as yet, but the one thing LEARNED TO MAKE" sure is that the Romans in the box- GOOD USE OF HIS ing audience would like to see two -4 | FLEETNESS ON grudge fights on the same bill. | Other mitt Tossers who have in-' THE GRIDIRON creased their chances of going through the ropes to a center-ring handshake are Slugger Weaver, Jess McDaniel, Sailor Hussy, Johnny Abott, Les Davis, Ralph Bardi and Ben Wright. } | - HE SYRACUSE SPEEDBOY HAS S 466 579 537—1582 Chevrolet 159 203 201 190 140 181 4 Totals 189— 551 179— 570 177— 488 545—161 L. Holmgquist A. Burke J. Werner Totals 9 R. Stevenson W. Blanton ‘W. Boggan 185 166 . 192 181 563 518 Federal 180. 196 245 192 181 , 158 606 * 546 Lafayette E. Boyle ... 173 §211 J. Walmer 161 *161 D. Nichols 157 189 130— 503 Totals 488—1560 ~A. Stewart A. Bringdale 8. Wirt 183— 559 147— 584 187— 526 Totals 517—1669 199— 583 161—*483 189— 535 549—1601 .. 491 561 Franklin 150 171 121 180 155 170 Totals 466 521 540—1527 *—Average score. Did not bowl. ————g——— LEGION TO PALMER Thirty members'of the Jack Henry Post No. 1 of the American Legion and the Auxiliary at Anchorage at- tended the installation of officers in the Matanuska Valley Post re- cently. Leonard Hopkins, Past De- partment Commander, represented the .department .as installation of- ficer. Totals 178— 188— 174— 539 489 499 J. Barragar F. Riendeau P. Bloedhorn — NG MAN SOUTH Merle H. Guise passed through Juneau enroute gsouth recently fol- lowing development of the lower Nugget Creek property near Fair- banks. He state§ a dragline will be located there next year. O MARTHA SOCIETY Bazaar Friday, November 19. PRACTICE SCHEDULE FOR BASKETBALLERS ANNOUNCED BY PREXY Practice schedule for the City League Basketball season is offici- ally announced today by President Jack Fowler. November 9, tonight, Elks Krause; Wednesday, Firemen DeMolays; Thursday, Krause and Douglas; Friday, Firemen and Elks November 16, Tuesday, DeMolay and Douglas; November 17, Wed- nesday, Krause and Firemen; Thursday, November 18, Elks and DeMolay. Managers will meet tomorrow night at the High School gym at 7:30 to talk over new opening date and to select a referee. e | THE HEART OF A HIGHLY | and ¢ 4 V TOUTED CORNELL TEAM AR ; | and SPCRT SLANTS\ i NORWOMEN WILL EiE | MEET FOR DINNER ' i | ‘All Rights Roserved by The Absoclated Press i | Home Accidents. ‘ Kill 100 Daily i | ‘ . | WASHINGTON, Nov. 8. — What| Bud Whiteside, employed at the| Until Coach Ossie Solem went to|the country needs is a couple of Gastineau Grocery, was admitted | Syracuse, and showed Marty Glick-|gadgets that will keep people from o5t night to St. Ann's Hospital! |which will be a magazine review of | |the monthly publication received by |the Society on missionary work. | e | HOSPITAL NoTEs | | By * WELL- | HAVEN'T ANYTHING VERY THANKS FOR THE WARNING-~- | released today THURSDAY NIGHT Armistice Day evening will be the occasion for the second gathering of young women of the community who plan to meet for dinner from 6 o'clock until 7:30 o'clock in the parlors of the Northern Light Pres- byterian Church. Tentatively designated at the “Norwomen” group, the women will consider further plans of organiza- tion at the gathering. Mrs. R. E. Robertson will preside, and as a special event of the evening, A. S. Dunham will show colored motion pictures of the Mount McKinley district. REBEKAHS TO HOLD ELECTION TOMORROW Election of officers will be held at the meeting of the Rebekah lodge, tomorrow night, when mem- bers will meet in the I.O.OF. hall for a covered dish dinner and regu- lar meeting. Reservations should be made with . Mrs. Bert McDowell and Mrs. John McCormick. Figu:rc Frank C. Walker in New Deal Change; William O. Douglas — — Fyequent turnover in the personnel of the New Deal recently in- volves the names of two other well-knowns. William O. Douglas, 38-year-old former Yale law professor, becomes new chairman of tHe securities and exchange commission of which he has been a member since January, 1936. Frank C. Walker, wealthy New York- er and first director of the now defunct national emergency council, is expected to take the vacant which will have considerably ext s:n of budget director, an office ded power if plans of the presi- man how to use his speed, the baby- faced speedboy was something short falling down in their homes. for medical care. The United States government's | 1937 By GEORGE McMANUS BuUT {hundred and 1110. 3. War Vets | Succumb Each Day WASHINGTON, Nov. 9. — One eleven survivors of 'the nation's wars who are living to- DOZEN BOWLERS IN 180 BRACKET ON ELKS ALLEYS Bowling scores of men and wo- men bowlers at the Elks alleys are by Leonard Holm- quist, bowling chairman. The scores as follows, are for games rolled up to and includmg' November 2 Name M. Lavenik F. Henning Radde Stevenson Ugrin Mealf Bavard J. Barragar Holmquist G. Benson Davlin Stewart. Pullen Tubbs Duckworth Robertson Cleveland Halm R. Kaufmann Sides Hagerup Vukovick Hudson Bringdale Mrs. Petrich Werner Caro Parks Kegal Redman R. R. Brown Council Shattuck W. Wilson Iverson Boyle Blomgren Blanton Wirt Mrs. Lavenik Sperling Duncan Riendeau Petrich No. Games Ave. |day will be dead tomorrow, accord- ing to estimates of the veterans’ ad- ministration Death is removing every day an average of ninety veterans of the World War, fifteen of the Spanish American War, five of the Civil War and one of the Indian Wars. - e Noisy Weddin Parties Banned READING, Pa., Nov. 9.—The na- tion-wide campaign to still’ the clamor of American cities goes on apace! Reading contributes ban on noise—that wedding serenades. No longer may automobiles filled with wedding parties wend their raucous and clattering way through the city’s streets “Reading is not a village any more,” said Mayor J. Henry Staump. “The next wedding party that pa- rades with honking horns and dragging noisemakers is going to jend with the arrest of all the driv- ors.! the la against noi:y. | R BIRDS ANNOY PHONE GIRLS ELGIN, Ill, Nov. 9—The tele- phone girls have a new alibi for giving wrong numbers — it's the ' birds. They said blackbirds and spar- rows set up such a din in a tree outside the exchange that they (the girls, of course) could not hear the numbers correctly. e Empire classifieds pay. Mrs Messerschmidt Benedict Darnell Redling Keyser Mrs. Taylor R. H. Williams Mrs. Burke Mrs. Holmquist Mrs. Elstad Bloedhorn McDonell Van Atta Mrs. Bringdale Mrs. Delebecque Mrs. Burford Holland Carmiachael F. Foster D. Foster Mrs. Dav}in Mrs, Brown 17 48 15 139 136 136 125 124 123 13 30 DR, COU _FROM HUNIING TRIP Dr. W. W. Council and Joe Lynch returned at midnight yesterday from-a hunting trip to Gambier Bay; aboard the Betty Ross, both sue-! cessfully completing their limit in deer for the season. Following his return here, Dr. Council heard from Dr. R. H. Ro-, mig from Anchorage that the gu- mored infantile paralysis epidemic at Newhalen was unfounded. Tha two reported es proved t~ jbd rheumatism and a sore threat - o Empire classifieds pay. Dewar’s (PRONOUNCED DO-ERS) WHITE LABEL For I Service Sth King Edward Vir's Own Larcers of sensational as a football player. He was rated quite a footballer at James Madison high school, Brooklyn, N. Y. But about all he had at Syracuse was speed. On those infrequent occasions when he got into the game, Glickman would grab the ball and scamper for the sidelines. Usually for no gain. This season he has been the spark plug of the Syracuse attack. He played a major part in the stunning upset of the highly-favored Cornell eleven. He scored the two touch- Accident Prevention Conference, pointing out that 100 Americans are killed daily by home injuries, listed the much-needed inventions today as a light that will turn on auLu~l matically when you get out of bed and a non-skidding, not-tripping rug. Hama's Daughter e o o' s BUYS LaTgE RAnCh His first-period dash through the 1 entire Cornell team, after catching] DENVER, Col, Nov. 9.—The Post a punt on Cornell's 44-yard line,|says it has learned Mrs. Ruth Hanna upset the men from Ithaca. They'SlmmS. former member of Congress never recovered. In the third per-from Illinois and daughter of the} iod, after Syracuse had smashed late Mark Hanna, had purchased, through Cornell on a 4j-yard drive, the historic 287,000-acre Trinchera| Glickman hurdled the line for the ranch in Bouthern Colorado. | Tinal yard and a score. The purchase price, the Post said, All’ that afternoon he was a was understood to exceed, $500,000. slippery, shifty ball carrier. No - longer a distance runner, he turn- ed on a dime, completely reversing LINDA FURUNESS ls the field and tearing off long | HONORED AT PARTY gains. 5 Only an athlete with amazing BY MRS- CLEMENTS speed could have completed one : | of the plays that gained 36 yards| Miss Linda Furuness, bride-elect for the Orange. Glickman received Of Mr. Paul Ecklund, was the guest the ball from center and passed jt'of honor at a surprise kitchen show- | to his teammate, Wilmeth Sidat- € given last night by Mrs. E. F. Singh, who faded back to the 40- Clements at her home in the Mead yard line and hurled the ball over Apartments. . | the right side of the Cornell line.| The affair was marked by games, Glickman bobbed up and caught'during the evening, and prizes, the ball. It was a dazzling play. Were awarded to Mrs. Harold Brown, Spectators wondered how it had Miss Pegzy Pierce, and Miss Lou- been possible for him to get down €lla Tucker. field so quickly. The answer, of, Guests present at the occasion course, was speed. (were Mrs. John Furupess, mother Other evidence of the good work Of the bride-to-be; Miss Alpha. and | performed by Coach Solem oc- Miss Rosella Furuness, sisters of curred in the St. Lawrence game_EMiss Furuness; Mrs. Jack Metzgar, | Glickman led Syracuse to a 40-0 Miss Mildred Apland, Misg Gerald- triumph. He scored two touch- ine Feero, Mrs. Harold Brown, downs on long runs. But the im- Mrs. Ture Holm, Miss Peggy Pierce, pressive thing was that he tossed and Miss Louella /Tucker, | passes to set up the other scores., The wedding of Miss Furuness Not bad for a boy who had omy‘tu Mr. Ecklund will take place on speed—a year ago. | November 27, — ... | ———————— L i 'MISSIONARY SOCIETY New Telephone Directories have been distributed, Anyone not having TO MEET WEDNESDAY received their copy Phone Business | ey Office 420. When calling please refer! The regular monthly meeting of to directory as numerous changes the Interdenominational Mission- have been made. Also preceed num- ary Society will be held at 2 p.m. ber with color when indicated. We Wednesday in the First Presbyter- wish to thank the public for their ian Church in the Native Village. cooperation during the installation| The devotional service will be of new equipment.—Juneau-Douglas | conducted by Mrs. O. Carmichael Telephone Co. adv.{the tcpic of her message being “Th ! pgene Stewardship of Time.” Another talk I will be given by Mrs. C. Personcu: | | -oo Empire classifieds pay. Mrs, Kyler MacSpadden Thibodeau Hermle Kyler Burke Boggan Mrs. Dufresne Delebecue Hollmann Hutchings Nicholls Ferguson Mrs. Reynolds Wile Walmer Hermann Whitehead Rupe Shepard . Mrs. Kaufmann . Mrs. Sperling ... Sterling A Stevens Mrs. Duncan . Gallemore . George Smith, a medical patient, was admitted last night to St.| Ann's Hospital. Mrs. Harland Salbach was ad- mitted today to St. Ann's Hospital for medical care. Mrs. Hal Kimmel and daugh\er., Sharon Lee, were dismissed today from St. Ann’s Hospi .- MRS. COWLING SAILS Mrs. E. J. Cowling left for the south aboard the Princess Norah enroute to Seattle where she will visit her mother. Mrs. Cowling ex- pects to be in the States for four or five months. - ceee MEHERINS GO SOUTH J. J. Meherin and wife are pas- sengers south. on the Yukon for Seattle and other coast points, on| business. and pleasure. Mrs. Holland Mrs. McCormick ... 3 92 Mrs. Stevenson 23 89 Don’t Sleep on Left Side—Affects Heart If stomach GAS prevents aleep-! ing on right side try Adlerika. One | dose brings out poisons and relieves 4as pressing on heart so you sleep soundly all night. Butler-Mauro Drug Co., in Douglas by Guy’s Drug Store. adv, 19 94 JAKEWAY Distributing Co. LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. Prince’s N Duchess of Kent and Prince Edward On the occasion of the second birthday of Prince Edward, son of the Duke and Duchess of Kent, his official picture with his ther, HOTEL GASTINEAU' Every Effort Made for the Comiort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION AS A FAID-UF SUBSCRIBER TO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE T. Spicer is invited to present this coupon at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO FREE TICKETS 10 SEE HISTORY IS MADE AT NIGHT Your Name May Appear--WATCH THIS SPACE the former Princess Marina of Greece, was taken at the Kent i London,

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