The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 22, 1938, Page 5

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THEM JONASES MAY BE BIG MOGULS IN TH' MOUNTAINS, BUT —4 THIS CITY LIFE'S PSS SURE LAYIN' YEAH,BUT NOW THEYVE TOOK. UP QUARRELIN' WITH OUR. NEIGHBORS -~ SEE WHO'S AT TH' DOOR,WILL YA, SAM TH' JONASES ARE COMIN' BACK FROM TH' WALK T SENT 'EM ON. DON'T TAKE T' T™H'BIG TOWN, I HILL BILLIES, GUESS. A_THOUGH ! JIM BARRAGAR ROLLS UP 801 FOR IEH BALL A 601 total for three games was blue ribbon score among the King Fish bowlers at the Elks Ilast night, with Jim Barragar hitting 228-184-189. However, the Dolphnis Barrgar’s team, won but one of three games from the Albacore. The Pickerel won three st from the Belugas with only one bowler present from each team. The Porpoise and the Tarpon had a hot contest, the Porpoise nosing out in totals by three pins, but winning only one of three. The Small Fry have a double- header tonight, Sardines vs. Grey- ling and Trout vs. Ouligan. Scores last night were: Dolphins Barragar 228 184 189— 601 Council 175 175 175 Tubbs 197 145 179— 521 Totals 600 504 5431647 Albacore Stewart 187 190 191— 568 Redman 194 200 181— 575 Robertson 178 189 182 9 Totals 559 579 554—1692 Pickerel Metcalf 185 185 185--*555 Hagerup 206 178 185— 569 H. Messer- schmidt 170 170 170—*510 Totals 561 533 540—1634 Belugas Lavenik 182 182 182—*546 Hudson 191 148 151— 490 Hollmann 175 175 175—*525 Totals 548 505 508—1561 Tarpon Holmquist, 157 191 162— 510 Sperling 180 180 180—*540 Burke 143 171 201— 515 Totals 480 542 543—1565 Porpoise ifert 204 175 202— 581 Kegal 131 181 156— 468 Kaufmann 173 173 173—*519 RS et pen Totals 508 529 531—1568 *—Average: did not bowl. - PUBLIC CARD PARTY By C. D. A. at Parish Hall. Tues. Oct. 25. Bridge, Whist and Pinochle. Prizes and refreshments. adv, ——————— Try *The wmmpme crassifieds for results. T D 5 l l I ;‘bl"_"‘g'“ until November 9 fol- in Skagway, Commissoner White 1e E ll ows: ¢ Serum su““’lward reports. The new school building Grid ecided Increase Enrollment Tuooay for Al e o s-rimes o reports e new el buline ¥ - — | A< J, . < e sidewalk job is now under way and (yanles At the close of the first 6 weeks of school, according to the report ‘iled . Wednesdsy, Oct. 26—Elks and : there has been considerable private i i ; ducation, the Juneau Public Schools :how Heanning. With serum for the diphtheria p 450y quring the summer. oA with the (;omm.mpnm of Education, the Juneau : hools 1 | e r I s Thursday, Oct. 27—Krause ,and scare at Metlakatla, AAT Pilot Tohn . NORMAN, Okla, Oct. 22.— The 2 decided increase in the enrollment over previous years. Tables ic J\E' Firemen. Amundsen took off this morning The old A.,puj,hsonhgrhocod buirl:l- of Oklahoma football same period for the past five years are given: | = | Tuesday, Nov. A. J and Elks. in the Lockheed, taking George ing, the fom;e.x ‘onée or‘ k?mp 0. 1l find itself in the movies 193: 1935 1936 1937 193 ; Wednesday, Nov. 2 Henning and | Pearson, Department of Health lab- 1. the first llctc Ar&lnhern(‘)od o;-_ this fall. University officials made Total Enrollment—HS. . 213 212 207 214 214 Only Five Teams to Make xrause. oratory techniclan, to the scene ;“'v‘”—"“‘":“‘);{';‘;i::"r‘fl::’delid“fr"lr arrangements to have movies taken Total Enrollment,Grades 537 532 554 548 581 ‘ U C.l L C Thursday, Nov. 3—Firemen and With the serum and equipment. 9&YS. _“ a : i g b ; p Gity League Cir- Van. M et ecenwe, Use 8s a City Hall, he said, the of each game; and the pictures Wil Total Enroliment 750 144 761 62 825 ] At Ay A. Van Mavern was a passenger 8¢ B 6 (VW ER O N8 belng be shown in 34 Oklahoma cities and pnrolment by Grades: cuit This Year Tuesday, Nov. 8—Elks and Hen- from Juneau to Wrangell. D itieiier vk L NS to:vx\). 'rhcyt will have sound ac- Rinddeartan 14 34 38 4 3% | P m,‘;g_l g - - - e I g S B ccmpaniment. 3 - 56 7 | ednesday, Nov. 9—Krause and _ e Flrst pic g 4 . | City League basketball practice Firemen. SKAGWAY BOOMING, Tangemenia wire il BRUEE S Second 55 2 4 67 s | e SR e Gty A i to acquire the building with the Third 66 a1 66 64 R e T R = U. S. COMMISSIONER stipuiation that it will be always il Fourth 65 57 49 63 67 lgclock, President Jack Fowler an- REYNOLDS TO KETCHIKAN C. WHITE REPORTS available as a community center Fifth 63 63 66 50 65 |nounced today. Percy Reynolds is a passenger when needed Iy 1 ” 3, —— Sixth 44 51 62 66 55 | Only five teams will be in the |aboard the North Sea for Ketchi- . s Commissioner Canvass White Seventh 56 41 59 67 65 |league. They are, Juneau Firemen, kan, going on a business trip. of Skagway, well-known pioneer of | Compulsory social security has Eighth 51 52 54 55 67 Henning Clothing, Krause Concret- | G e = |{hat region who has been in Juneau | existed in Germany for more than Ninth 50 e 64 54 67 (ovs, AJ Miners, and last years' Today's News Today—Fmbire. on a visit of several days, is plan- 40 years. P l N v I G T 0 R 8 Tenth 49 50 31 59 63 —— . Eleventh 45 48 52 41 58 | —— Twelfth 36 42 35 46 7 el Home Grocers won three from Eost Graduate 2 il i 1% ;g | the Dairy Boys at the Brunswick Number of days taught. 29 29 29 20 ; T, D .I 5 l . v . > and the Green Top won two of three ance, High School . . 5,703 56285 5345 39095 67015 | = frem California Grocery Number of days attend- Tonight's games are mixed ance, Grades 14,521 12662 15023 10136 158590 | doubles matches and Sunday, Com- Whole number of days | SHORT TALKS ON ADYV ERTISIN G mercial League games. attendance 20224 182,905~ 20,368 140455 225,605 SRR A Tonight's schedule is Paul Kegel Number of days absence, | [FIFLH SERIES) and Dolly Kaufmann vs. Lance Hen- . 5 4 ! 17 181 144 1005 103 drickson and Mrs. Frank Dufresne’ o };’f“h”z’,“’_"ll S . at 7 o'clock; Fred Henning and N Wnber of days absence. 3 P Prepared by the | Florence Holmquist vs. Tom Petrich| Grades 419575 1,301 o2 b sl Bitoi of Reseavel and Bilucats A b ottt Hed skats ey and Bess Lavenik at 7:45, and Ar- Whole number of days . A A | 4 sed a ducation, Advertising Federation of America mand Duncan and Margaret Burke absence 5365 1,382 525 445.5 537 vs. Martin Lavenik and Toots Dun- Number of times tardy, ! can. High School 70 81 100 23 54 Y W l l . Sunday's schedule calls for Truck- Number of times tardy, our u;_ms and Al verusmg | ers vs. Don’s Demons at 7 and Stub- Girades 98 o) 160 41 162 | % % b’?a:'f'n?r}"':.“g"‘ AL f”“‘_d; Lows. | Whole number of times Las ght's scores are as follows: | loray 168 156 R0 e 216 | Home Grocery : | Hermle 159 179 166 504! No. of pupils not absent Thibodeau 152 135 168— 455 or tardy, H. S. 121 93 81 133 148 | Koski 159 172 164— 435 No. of pupils not absent | — S e’ S or tardy, Grades 29% 121 312 331 320 { Number 1 Totals 470 486 4981454 Whole number not ab- ; g Dairy Boys H . e 393 470 468 . o . 9 Gued p . Peterson 143 170 129— 442 sent or tardy s a% There is a lot of advertising in this Millions of purchases are inspired by ad- Jones 132 118 1383— 388 Retoent: of -styeninnog: 9716 0132 92.52 9671 9733 | country and it has a definite purpose. It is vertising. When the volume of buying is | Adams 118 142 170— 420 Grkdes L g : ; there because somebody wants to sell us high, business is good and there are many — — — — Percent gtatielden oo 06.92 9746 97.49 98651 Jello, Ford Automobiles, Spearmint Chewing jobs. It is not only the ability of consumers Totals 393 420 4371250 High School 7.8 ; : § Gum, Pepsodent Toothpaste, Frigidaires, and to buy goods but also their desire to buy California Grocery Seston 201 147 187— 535 E. Schmitz 185 172 129— 485 B. Schmitz . 147 185 192— 524 Totals 553 504 508—1565 Green Top 13 Huntington . 162 172 203— 537 | Roit 180 180 216— 576 | Ellenberg 156 179 164— 499 I . 498 531 583—1612' | Totals THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1938. I'M FROM TH' DALY BLAT. SORTA LIKE T'GET A STORY ON THESE HILL BILLIES Y'GOT VISITIN! YUH .WHERELL TFEIND TH' OLD BOY 2 E WUZ GE ;IOME RIGHT SMART HUNTIN, BY BLAZES J ;meau Public Schools Show By CLIFF STERRETT YUH'LL FIND HIM OUT IN TH' BACK YARD WiTH TH' NEIGHBORS --THIRD FIGHT FROM TH' LEFT! T\WERE, BUT MOST &F TH! TRAILS WUZ MARKED WZOoO", Practice Starts | champions, the Elks, ‘The practice schedule for avail- hair Nov. 18. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Anderson New trial motions were being planned by attorneys for Mr. and °ph B. Anderson, under sentence of death in the Arkansas The two, together with two other men, were cted at Wot Sprines of the slayine ¢ e orocerv chain store al. Amundsen Takes ning to return to his home aboard the Denali tonight. There is lc's of building activity *—Closed two weeks by health office. PYLES RETU Di. T. J. Pyle, accompanied by Mrs. Pyle, returned aboard the North Sea from Sitka. R B SRR SONS OF NORWAY Special meeting, Sunday, 2 p.m., to meet and hear District Deputy, | ;o fioors of the local fish exchange now in Juneau. adv. YOU CAN BANK ON THESE clerk-marksmen at a Providence, R. L, bank to thwart hold-ups. Left to vight: E. S. Stone, Burrell Berrie, R. H. Hawksley, Frazer Doyle, George Archer. i, SALMON PRICES £0 DOWN TODAY Ten salmon carg4-s were put over | today and yesterday evening with | prices taking a drop for the first | time since the season opened. | Prices on large reds dropped | three cents to 22 cents a pound and | dropped two cents on smalls to 12 | cents, while whites remained at 8 cents. Boats arriving were: the Ace, Her- | bert Savikko, 700 pounds; Dixon, | |Emil Samuelson, 400 pounds; Em- ma, John Winther, 400 pounds; | Tern, Andrew Rosness, 400 pounds; |Hyperien, Oscar Oberg, 3,000 pounds; Margaret T. 600 pounds; Diana, 200 pounds; Elfin II, 1,700 pounds; It, 500 pounds, and Helen, /400 pounds. \ 'HARRIET MALSTROM | | GIVES SCHOOL TREAT | Harriet Malstrom, popular vocal | |artist, entertainer, and greeter for| |a number of hotels in the States, | | entertained the high school student | ibody yesterday with a group of |songs and readings. | | Biggest hit at the afternoon as- |sembly was the reading, “The Gum |Chewing Stenographer.” | Miss Malstrom will fly to Ketchi- |kan on her way south, early next week, .- Sunkist Oranges. We know that advertising helps to sell these things and thousands of others, and we know that it provides a valuable information service to consumers. That much is plain, but did you ever stop to consider that advertising affects your per- sonal income? No matter what your occupa- tion, the amount of- your salary or wages is affected by the total volume of advertising on the part of all manufacturers and store- keepers everywhere. This statement is worth examining. In this country, we produce and consume more than twice as much goods for every man, woman, and child as is produced and used in other principal countries of the world. Why is this? Not merely because we have vast natural resources. Not just because we are better at inventing and or- ganizing. It is mostly because we all want so much to have the good things in life and because we have the individual ambition and ecnergy to get them. The purchasing power of American people is used all the time and it revolves very fast. This is where advertising comes in. It creates desires for new things and encour- ages ambition for higher standards of living. Suggestions from advertising are often re- sponsible for the purchase of a new living- room rug, an automobile, better clothes, or a new kind of breakfast food. that makes factories run at full speed. Ad- vertising is one of the greatest stimulators of buying desire that has ever been knowa. New industries depend on advertising to get started. A factory is built to manu- facture a clever electric razor. No one ever heard of such a thing before. Hardly any- body wants to buy the device until the manufacturer explains its advantages in a national advertising campaign. Almost im- mediately, thousands of men buy these ma- chines and the company increases produc- tion. The result is lots of new jobs for factory workers and traveling salesmen. Advertising has built many other new industries, big ones and little ones. Similar- ly, advertising has expanded countless old industries. Raw material and other related industries are directly benefited. In every case it means more employment, more wages. Our whole economic life is speeded up, the national purchasing power is en- larged, and everybody’s income goes up. The merchandising force of advertising is very important among the various factors responsible for our having the highest wage level in the world, with a buying power nearly twice that in Great Britain, two and one-half times as great as in Germany, and more than ten times as high as wages in Russia. In more ways than one, advertising gives a lift to the pay envelope. Copyright, 1938, Advertising Federation of America

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