The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 3, 1938, Page 5

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5 1!!‘(\(4‘ Mr. Morrow supplied the committee was how to start a | strike. He told how he and a group he called Communists started a trike the Briggs (auto bodies) plant Detroit THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, NOV. 3, 1938. By CLIFF STERRETT ‘Maybe Communists Should Be Kept Away From All Gravestones| WAL, IMAGINE MEE'I'VI:J_’1 A YUH DOWNTOWN HERE! g{ I DIDN'T KNOW YUH e WUZ SHOPPIN’ 2] 1S ONLY in in T'TELL TH!' TRUTH. I WUZ GOIN' SHOPPIN!, SAMIL, BUT TIME GOT S'SHORT THAT ALL 1 SUCCEEDED IN GETTIN'.__ TOOK OVER THE WORKS TIDAY, SUSIE 2 Brunswick Togs In Commercial Leagug to Date Midway point in the Commercial League bowling tourney finds the Brunswick keglers well out in front with 16 wins and 2 losses. Juneau Florists trio holds econd place with 14 wins, 4 losses. Standings to Date Won Lost Brunsick Juneau Florists Green Top Stubbies Truckers Triangle George Brothers California Grocery Home Grocery Don’s Demons Snow White Dairy Boys U. S. Signal Corps Games scheduled y'elock George White; 8 oclock I'ruckers. Mixed doubles matches scheduled night were postponed until night. 13 16 5 tonight are: 7 Bros. vs. Snow - Green Top Vvs. last Saturday [ | | l i | | | down A broken fuel line set this midget the midst of a 50-lap race at Gilmore Stadium in Los Angeles racing auto of Frel Friday ablaze a With nd turned it into a racing fireball flames lashing at his face and hands, Friday turned the car into the infield to prevent accident to ¢ther drivers. He was burned criti- son. ASTORIA, Ore. River, close followed When ered he the had fog His gasoline exhausted in tow. Texafs HEMaAny Autos on Its List AUSTIN, Tex., e statisticians 0,000 st Vs, . Nov {fog off the mouth of the Columbia fisherman alert for the lightship whistle in ence he picked up a signal. followed far out into the Pacific, and a tuna clipper took him motorized across the state's i county Following Whistle Wife Sues Irks I_Fisherman Too Ardent Husband NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—A wife who left her husband two weeks after their mar and demanded a separation because he was too ardent, got no sympathy from Su- preme Court Justice Edward Rieg- elmann in Brooklyn Denying tempor alimony and counsel fees to Mrs. Catherine Zim- merman pending trial of her sepa- ration suit against her husband, Charles, the judge noted that Mrs 7immerman had been married be- fore and said: Presumpuvely, at least, she might have anticipated that a man does not court and marry a woman for the mere pleasure of paying her board and washing.” Justice Riegelmann is a bachelor. Mrs. Zimmermann complained that her husband would come home even during working hours to lav- ish his attentions on her. He ad- mitted going home—but said he went only to eat lunch—except for 3—Lost in Alfred Berthel- a ship’s wake discov- freighter he a lifted food supplies Nov. 3. Texas estimate there are vehicles rolling 189,000 miles of roads and city D He Gets a Line on Cache one occasion Frown Upon they might be Communists Previous Red-and-Nazi | in the House been much like the present one. Wit are in- | vited to pour out their imon | without cross examination At one point Mr. Morrow |to read a long typewritten | ment purporting to be a.summary of strike activities in Detroit writ ten by another Communist | “How do you know that an | authentic statement?” asked Rep | Dies of Texas, chairman the committee. “I KNOW it is,” Morrow “Proceed,” said Mr. Dies Two hundred hearings g rounded up Pontiac aud faked } have began the assembl workers that ompany of listant points i only strike, 500 men Morrow | | 1T'S CATCH-AS-CATCH-CAN To reporters trained to the ways courts, the hearing sometimes seems a fantasy. Congressmen can't g | be punished for libel for statements a sell-out s here |on the floor, nor can witnesses be- | casual spectator | fore congressional committees, so| Mr. Morrow. | almost anything goes, proof or no | proof. 000 unemployed the Communists The | of Communists from Toledo, Pittsburgh, Flint. Supplied with identification filtered into the plant through many entrances, turned off power switches in key places and then rushed out to lines to tell the startied ‘We are on strike.” From then on they kept the men at fever pitch” by stories that the was bringing truck loads of strike breakers and militia from and that the men better prepare to defend their jobs. were thus put on said, the picket line was swelled by committee hearings, sat show in Washington, are not any appeared. to hear were badges they but added rounded up by once a more. One Lode and placer location notices One entertaining bit of evi- %r sale at The E=pire Office. i the B8 o J 1 7. Of Squirrel TR caily. (Copyright by Carroll Photo Service—from Asscciated Press) T DANVILLE, Pa., Nov. 3—A spool Ha"d-Klsslng cf thread solved the mystery of how walnuts disappeared from William 3 Scout Iron Men? RIGA, No Latvians are ask- " TWO NEGROES Refuses To Fight BOULDER, Col., Nov. 3.—Johnny Pudlik, a 200-pounder who is & right end and a baseball pitcher Colorado, has a dead “pan” hich fooled Joe Mathes, a scout for the St. Louis Cardinals. Conducting a talent hunt at Denver, Mathes looked over Pud- lik and then told him “you haven't encugh fire.” “1 don’t think you would have the courage to fight back if a tough player came after you for dus!ing him.” Mathes bellowed. Pudlik looked at him without changing expression and then asked: “Do you want to come under the grandstand with me and see if I'n fight?” Mathes didn’t. - e, — 45262 WINS The National Silver Ensemble Set which we are giving away FREE—and now has until NOVEMBER 9 to claim it. 44496 and 46548 are the second and third choice numbers, respective- ly—and should the holder of the winning number fail to claim the award, the holder of the second place ticket will have one week to claim before the chance passes to the holder of the third ticket. [ ] Butler-Mauro Drug Co. “Your Rexall Store” ARE TO MEET, TITLE MATCH Champ Joe_]je;\'is. Champ John Henry Lewis Sign to Fight, January NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—On top of everything else that has happened to the boxing business recently heavyweight champion Joe Loui: has agreed to meet John Henry Lewis, light heavyweight king, in a title bout in Madison Square Gar- den on January 27. The bout will be the first all- negro heavyweight championship contest since Jack Johnson met Battling Jim Johnson in Paris 25 years ago. ——————— | NABESNA MINE CREW AWARDED HONOR RATING An honor certificate for 100 per- cent training in mine safety and first aid has been awarded to the Nabesna Mining Corporation. H. B. Humphrey, representative of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, said in Fairbanks that every one of the 34 men in the crew of the Nabesna mine successfully completed the short course in mine safety and first aid. | The short course was given at the mine by Mr. Humphrey, with the cooperation of the miners and Carl F. Whitham, president and general manager of the corporation. The Nabesna company is the fourth in Alaska to receive 100 per- cent certificates this year. The others were Limestone Quarry at View Cove on Dall Island; Hirst- Chichagof Gold Mining Co., and the Healy River Coal Co. Only mines employing 25 or more employees are eligible to receive the 100 percent certificate from the Bu- reau of Mines. In addition to the four companies | which have trained all their men in mine safety and first aid, some | smaller outfits also have the trained . employees. Bahy Starts Life In Patrol Wagon SALINAS, Cal, Nov. 3. — The | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank | Pinkston of Pacific Grove started| life in a police patrol wagon. The| | patrol wagon, driven by a drug store | | clerk and escorted by a screaming | |highway patrol motorcycle, was pressed into service when the Pink- | ston automobile broke down on the !way to a Salinas hospital. The six-l ’pound girl was born on the way. [ o 1 1 i | | Golf mr_Ni Y. Fair NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—Among the sport events slated for New York during the World's Fair is a 72-hole medal play tournament for the professionals. It will be played First Dividend of Nahesnaiflenlared (Cordova Daily Times) Repaying the original investors 100 percent on their investment, the Nabesna Mining Corporation has announced the declaration of its first dividend, to be paid on December 5. The Nabesna property and opera- tions are well known in dis- trict and many local residents are financially interested in the prop- erty. The company was organized in 1929 by Carl F. Whitham and asso- ciates and from a small beginning has had a steady growth until its production has now reached the sum of approximately $500,000 an- nually. The mine is located at Nabesna, 185 miles northeast of Chitina, near the Nabesna River. Carl F. Whitham s president and D. H. Kelsey of Chitina is secretary-treasurer. The main office of the company is lo- cated at Chitina. S e ATTENTION ODD FELLOWS Regular meeting of Silver Bow Lodge No. 2, 1.O.O.F. this evening at 7:30. Work in the Degree of Truth. Visiting members to be pres- ent. Lunch will be served. BERT A. LYBECK, Noble Grand adv. LOWEST ON COMPLETE, lere They Are JOHNSTOWN. Col., Nov. 3.—Iron men? You heard anything until you learn about the Johnstown high school grid Phantoms ough a schedule mixup, Phantoms found themselves w two op ts clamoring to play them on the same day. So they met and beat Berthoud, Col, 12-7, in the afterncon and Mullen Home of Denver, 7-6, that night. have - Mysiery Cloaks Finding of Foot SAN BRUNO, Cal.,, Nov. 3.—Pen- insula police were confronted with a mystery recently following discov- ery of a silk-stocking-clad foot be- neath a culvert in the heart of San Bruno. The foot was believed to be that of a woman between twenty and | thirty years old. Discounting any mutiliation the- ory, Dr. Alfonso Shankey, city health officer, said the foot prob- ably had been severed in an auto-| mobhile accident. Daughter Born, Greek Princess ATHENS, Nov. 3. — A daughter Jwas born tive to the Greek throne. PRICES! HIGH QUALITY CLEANING SERVICE—INCLUDING Pick-Up and Delivery AND EXTRA-FINE REPAIRING Suits, Cleaned and Pressed ... $1.25 Suits, Sponged and Pressed Ladies’ Coats and Dresses, Cleaned and Pressed... $1.00 and up Triplex Dry Cleaning ' SAM THE TAILOR Telephone 642 to Princess Fredericka,' wife of Prince Paul, heir presump- | T. Deeter’s cellar. to n walnut and the unwound fiber led him to a woodshed and a peck of his walnuts—cached by a squirrel >ee - — Empire classifieds oay ed not to kiss hands when they meet or leave their lady friends. The health and fitness organiza- tion decided that this courtly cus- tom contributed to the spread of illness. He tied the thread The Daily Alaska SHORT TALKS O (FIFTH Prepar Teacher’s s always been good Scotch. Nothing will ever charge it. “ | sote u.s. acents, Schieffelin & Co., NEW YORK CITY.- IMPORTERS SINCE 1794 Empire Presents-— N ADVERTISING SERIES) ed by the Bureau of Research and Education, Advertising Federation of America « More for Y our Money Number 4 Money is important only for what you can buy with it. What you buy is important only for the satisfaction it gives you. And greater satisfaction is the only thing that is important in getting more for your money. That is why the service of advertising is so helpful. Merchants and manufacturers advertise primarily to sell their goods, but in the long run no advertising can be suc- cessful unless it helps the consumer to get more for his money. The most important business job that each of us has to do, next to earning an income, is to buy the best possible living which that income®can afford. Wherever we go, at any time of day or night, we constantly see and hear many kinds of advertising. On all sides, industry offers i wares, presenting an enormous show window of everything that money can buy. Nothing is overlooked. Beans, movies, garters, automobiles oranges, refrigerators, fishing poles, asphalt paving, and corres- pondence courses. You decide what you want and spend your money accordingly. Adver- tising gives you a world’s fair in motion, a continuous parade of merchandise. The more you see of it the more you know about the world’s, goods and the better you know how to make your material life a happy one. By serving the interests of consumers everywhere, advertising does a very impor- tant job for industry. It is the only means by which the huge quantity of goods pro- duced today can rapidly be moveed to mar- ket. Advertising is the most economical and most efficient part of the selling pro- cess and if it were to be discontinued we would have to slip back to a much slower pace with a far smaller volume of goods to divide among us. Without this modern high-speed market- ing machinery Ford, Chevrolet, and Chry ler automobiles would cost much more be- cause fewer would be made. The same is true of fountain pens, radio sets, and frozen foods, all of which owe their wide distribu- tion to advertising. Thus advegtising, with all its helpful information, costs the con- sumer nothing, and brings many articles within reach of the common man’s purse. Advertising has also put identifying trade- marks on food, clothing, and nearly every- thing else you buy, standardizing the prod- uct of each advertiser. If you like a certain brand you buy it again, and if you don’t like it you avoid it—the trade-mark tells the tale and advertising put the trade-mark on the goods. If you want to know what you're get- ting you buy a well-advertised product, made by a manufacturer in whom you have confidence. Because there is so much advertising in this country, we are the best-informed peo- ple in the world on what there is to buy and where to buy it. Because advertising is an economical salesman, we can buy things cheaper and the country is more prosperous. Because advertising identifies produects, we can buy with greater confidence in their quality. Advertising is one of our greatest helpers in the important problem of getting more for our money. Copyright 1938, Advertising Federation of Amerrca

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