The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 14, 1937, Page 5

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EY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG SUNTHIN' ATTER NE BARN N9 0 aff 14 Hueev Po8 ® U8 wub T ir ',:;";‘,}‘,fl»é'mz‘ 5595 2 85550 B3 58! MEDIOCRE BALL They P . ATELKS'CLUB | [FVIVURI BUWL!NF AI.I.EYE WHATS THIS T Stutz bowler Henning and his 550 score took what honor there was on the Elks alleys last night, at Stutz beat Cord, Auburn beat Nash and Studebaker beat Dodge. There was very little bowling to get excited about—a few good in- dividual scores, but the general run and the sum totais were poor. night Hudson plays Olds, Pack- ard plays Reo and Plymouth tack- les Ford. Last night's scores follow: CORD 153 157 134 444 522 STUTZ 191 218 136 176 165 188 492 582 NASH 194 171 153 174 146 140 493 485 AUBURN 185 185 125 170 148 143 458 498 STUDEBAKER 158 210 157 217 125 163 440 590 DODGE 15 “160 *170 *155 Totals 500 500 -—-Average score. Did not bowl. BEIN' 183— 497 144— 493 132— 420 459--1425 161 187 154 Ugrin Hollmann Foster Totals 150— 559 151— 463 146— 499 4471521 Henning Davlin Carmichael Totals 179— 544 167— 494 150— 436 4981474 Halm - Sperling Van Atta Totals 185—*555 171— 466 172— 463 528—1484 Pullen Delebecque Holland Totals 172— 544 1o— 500 ONE BOWLING MATCH ‘10— 418 ROLLED LAST NIGHT AT BRUNSWICK CLUB 15— 45 Only one bowling match ws 160—*480 ed last night at the Brunswick 170—*510 leys, in which Wood Choppers beat 105—*465 Alt Heidelbergs 1592 to 1584. Ed Radde was high with 576 pins 500—1500 —201-1%0-205. Tonigit's Meat vs. Stubkies Snow White. Last night’s scores follow: SKI CLUB PREXY s follow WILL JOURNEY TO JakewuvALT HE“:?; i A SKI PLAYGROUNDS =eker 179 187 158— 524 Radde 201 170 205— 576 Joe Werner, President of the Ju- neau Ski Club, is planning a trip to Sun Valley, Idaho. President Werner will take the Mationg steamer Alaska from Juneau to Se- Saito i attle, where he will go to Edmons Carnegie to visit. a feminine friend (that's ali he'll say) and then east of the mountains to Yakima and Pasco o visit relatives. From Pasco he will go to Sun U. OF A. TO HAVE Valley to get in a little skiing and witness thy ski tournament be-| twcen the University of Washing-' ton and the Dartmouth teams. | Plans for the edonstruction of a He expects to return to Juneau power plant on the University of about January 10. 'Almka campus were advanced at _— the Board of Regents meeting in LOMEN lS GUEST , Fairbanks recently. ! The last legislature appropriated OF PASTOR WOOD $125,000 for the new plant and the Treasurer of the Board of Regents Alfred Lomen, of the Lomen Bro- has been instructed to draw re- thers Commercial Company, who quisitions on the Treasurer of the arrived in Juneau ahoard the Elec- Territory for the plant. tra Sunday from Nome, was the - eee guest of Pastor and Mrs. H. L. Wood i at luncheon today. Pastor Wood and Mr. Lomen be- | HOSPITAL NOTES came acquainted when the former i i visited in Nome on Seventh Day Ad- ventist work. Mr. Lomen is leaving Mrs. Francis Biggs underwent for the south aboard the Alaska. an' appendectomy this morning at — e St. Ann's Hospital, and is now rest- The agricultural department says ing comfortably. that in the last few years, hog numbers in the corn belt have de- Howard Hayes underwent a major creased and increased in southern operation at St. Ann's Hospital this regions. morning. Tubbs Shattuck Wiison Totals 472—1502 15 160 170 155 Spot Shepard Vuvovich Wile games are American and Rainier vs. 539 514 531--1584 WOOD CHOPPERS 188 218 162— 568 160 140 161— 461 199 160 204— 563 457 518 527—1592 Totals Totals — | ouT TH' WINDER AN T SEEN TWO TOTAL STRANGERS CRAWLIN' 'ROUND TH SARN --- ABOUT BASKETBALL POWER PLANT BUILT| DRETFUL QUARE HAPPENT, PAW-- WENT OFF YESTIOON T LOOKT T GOT A 'SPLCION THENY G\VE HONEY POT SUNTHWN TO AT --- 'CAUSE HE WUZ LICKIN WIS CHOPS WHEN T KEM OUT --- MEBBE TW VARMINTS PIZENED JUST SoME PROPAGAND A, READ. " weight crown to Joe Louis, has sign- | | | i TWIN BEAR-BACK RIDERS provide this Australian Koala mother with trouble. The cubs always ride thus. %i’OUli LIVE FOXES SENT TO WISCONSIN { Twe pairs of live red foxes from | | south recently destined for the Wis- consin State Conservation Depart- ment. |SULLIVAN FUNERAL WILL BE TOMORRO Funeral services for Miks Sulli- van have been announced for 1:30 Paxson’s lake, near Fairbanks, sailed ip. m:; tomorrow from the chapel of the Charles E. Carter Mortuary with the Rev. Budde officiating. Interment will follow in the Ev- | M. W. (Slim) Moore, trapper and ergreen cemetery. Mr. Sullivan was |guide at Paxson’s was commissioned found dead in his cabin out the road |to secure the wild animals for the a short time ago. 4| improvement of breeding stock on | Wisconsin’s fox farms. | With permission from the | Biological Survey, he trapped two pairs. u. s. CHARLES JOHNSON TO SAIL ABOARD ALASKA TO HOME IN STATES Charles E. Johnson, pharmacist for the Butler-Mauro Drug Com- pany, is to leave for the South on the Alaska en route to his home SRR LN Rl Five out of six pedestrians in-‘ jured in motor car accidents are struck before they reach the middie of the street they are crossing. MANHATTAN STREAMLINES COMMUTING to modern oil-burning ferryboats, costing almost three million dollars, by next spring. Here’s an artist’s conception of how the boats will appear in Ne ade aluminum hurricane decks and pilot house, all-steel non. feat ill - boats and ckromium plated mo in Parma, Idaho, where he will spend Christmas. Mr. Johnson also plans to visit for a few days in Seattle. In Parma he will visit with his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. John- son, who last summer spent a few ‘weeks in Juneau where they have | many friends. — .- SEX SLAYER CONVICTED LACONIA, N. M., Dee. 14.—A jury has convicted Howard Long, 32, of | first degree murder in the sex kill- |ing of a ten year old girl. Mary Neville Johnson, the eirl, | was killed several months ago. 1he | Jury recommended the death pen- |alty for Long. Staten Island with three ultra- which will be placed in service w York harbor. Safety -slip decks, more life TNE'S A-WASTLN, MAW --- CETCH T castor o\ By BILLIE DE BECK L\ Howey Por Ny 7 Sopr_1937, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights reserve - EASY WINNER, = TWO SECTIONS THOMAS FIGHT BRITISH ISLES Puts Chicago Man Down Communication, Transpor-| Seven Times Before tation Are Disrupted— Knockout in Eighth Nine Deaths Occur Gtinphe I NEW YORK, Dec. 14—Max Schmel LONDON, Dec. 14—Bitter winter | ing, former heavyweight champion weather has disrupted communica- |of the world, took the trial hurdle tion and transportation in the {in a stride last night to come British Isles. | back, scoring an eighth round tech- Nine known deaths have been re- I nical knockout over Harry Thomas, ported, the majority from freezing. | of Chicago. Huge snow drifts, in some cases Thomas was downed eight times 12 feet deep, blanketed Scotland during the bout and the German and Northern England. | had an easy time of it throughout. Trains are as much as eight hours Thomas weighed 196% pounds behind schedule, | and meling upped the ul - | BRADDOCK, FARR Now Be Pubished ARE SIGNED UP ;752 Former Champion and Brit- ish Titleholder Match- ed for January | | E Scules LONDON, Dec. 14.—Lord Stra-' bolgi, as director of the publishing firm of Rich and Cowan, announces his firm expected to publish an au- thorized life story of the Duke of Windsor by Compton MacKenzie, noted Scottish novelist and histor- ian, He said MacKenzie was negotiat- ing with the Duke and his legal NEW YORK, Dec. 14—James J. representatives. GOING TONIGHT Christmas Ship Across At-' lantic Is Liner Washington ed for a ten rounder with Tommy Farr, British champion. The bout will take place in Madison Squere Garden on January 21 - jTraflic Laws for Some, Police Officer Learns {Continued | i | | | —age One) { | | | | | { Members of Congress can't be| | |arrested, nor their cars tagged ef-' w’u-c(,ively, but the samé rules don't ‘:xpply~in law—to Administrative |officials. There is historic reason |for exempting law-makers. Time (was in olden days that kings could |sling unruly mermbers of Parliamen’ into the cooler to put an end to opposition to the King's "must” leg- islation. So there are ru against any such tactics nowadays. | The Congressmen tch their ipnvilegns from time to time. When {a local newspaper got nferested’ H H i s o ot e PPOTRCHNG: Maid |it dug up all sorts of traffic tickets: marked “Senator so-and-so to be! ABINGTON, a., Dec. 14.—Mrs. telephoned when this comes up” or' Wilma Carpenter, 28, a widow, was |“atlention Representative this-and-!shot to death last night by an in- |that.” Some bore the simple no-itruder in her fashionable home at| tation: “Friend of Senator Goofus. Camp Hill, nearby, when she went It hasn't been decided yet what to the rescue of her maid, being (will happen to Officer Kuhns. Prob-|attacked. lably nothing. But an officer can't| Mrs. Carpenter attempted to beat involve the whole city administra-off the murderer, who said Mary| (tion in a “look-into-this” investi- Griffin, 23, told police had as- gation and expect them to smile so saulted her. ‘ sweetly. - e, i b o st s DON'T FORGET { The Pan American Union former- The cooked food sale at Hollmann's| Dec. 18, by the Methodist Bureau of the American Republics. Ladies’ Aid. adv.! ly was known as the International Sat., Orphaned by Toys NEW YORK, Dec. 14— The liner | Washington leaves tonight for Eu- rope—the Christmas ship of the Allantic. | ‘The laden ship is carrying a mil- lion pounds of Christmas mail from | Americans to friends in Europe. This is the largest consienment | of foreign mail to go out this year. Woman Murdered stre | ( | | Motherless are Jerry Feldstein, 6, and his baby brother, Henry. Theit toys are blamed la:{heir mother’s death. Mrs. Helen ?‘ddfldn. anxious about her children playing in the street in New York's lower east side, yushed to the window of her home. She tripped over a pile of toys and plunged through the window, three stories, to her death. "AME WING when Vera H uba (above), performs at a New York rink, Garden’s winter sports show, »IART® ] Czechoslovakian figure skating champ, a5 L0 Line Baiy i asen Syuare - HE'S'NO SWISS HILL BILLY and appears far frow silly as he apparently defies gravity on a Badger Pass ski slope in California’s Yosemite National Park. In reality this skier is deftly performing a Christiana (skier’s sharp turn). Early snows turned the park into a winter wonderland, drawing crowds of snow and ice sports enthusinsts. British River their supervision in 1915 during the | first World War. Displacement—625 tons; comple- 3 Aw | wimensiuns—Length over all™— 12371 feet. Beam 36 feet. Mean draught 4 feet. Guns—Two 6-inch; one 3-inch anti-aireraft and 10 smaller guns. Also Attacked | Machinery—Triple expansion, twin —_— screws. Boilers, Yarrow, 2300 horse- The British River gunboats Lady- power, speed 14 knots. On trials bird and Bee reported attacked by| 18 knots was easily obtdined. Fuel the Japanese at the same time as 34 tons coal; 54 tons oil. the US.S. Panay was sunk, are a| _— trifle larger and more powerfullyl ELECT FAIRBANKS TEACHER armed. The flotilla of which the At a recent meeiing of the Fair- Bee is flagship of the Senior Naval banks School Board, Fred Kosch- officer includes the Aphis, Bee, man of Cheney, Wash., was elected Cicala, Cockchafer, Cricket, Gnat, to the upper grade position left va- Ladybird, Mantis, Moth, Scarab, cant by the resignation of Thelma and Tatantula. Yarrow and Co., Hunt. Glasgow shipbuilders, were solely re- Mrs. Wackwitz is filling the posi- sponsible for the design of these tion until the arrival of the new vessels which were built under teacher. AS A PAID-UF SUBSCREIBER TO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE John Karness is invited to present this coupon at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO FREE TICKETS TO SEE “NEW.FACES OF 1937 \ Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE

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