The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 9, 1939, Page 5

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1 HATE'S THESE FORMAL FRACASSES WORSE'N SIN, JUNEAU PINMEN SOAR TO FROKT IN WIRE BOUTS Ketchikan Lodgemen Fall Off from Fast Start- v Radde Pulls Locals Paced by Ed Radde’s 641 score, the Juneau Elks climbed over the Ket- chikan Antlers to lead by 178 pins at the close of yesterday’s szcond round of the five-game telegraphic tourney being waged by the First City, Anchorage and local EIk teams Jungaw's five-man ' aggregation counted 2846 pifis in yesterday's y round, while the Ketchikan keglers slipped from their big* first-game string to a midget 2,581 total. Re from Anchorage on the secon s rolling had not been received Afternoon - totals to date are Ketchikan, 5.445; round only terday scores for the and Juneau squads were Juneau Elks LY Radde Hagerup Stewart Steve Carne 2,846 Ketchik Zorich 487 Maloca 581 Roady 458 Nelson 507 [2 Howard 548 Total - - BABE RUTH S 10 INSTRUCT - IN BASEBALL Former Swa‘lfiKing Will Probably Sign Up with Mississippi College NEW YORK, Feb. 9. abe Ruth took time out from a party last night to announce that he was inclined to sign a contract to become an in- structor in the Ray Doan baseball cellege in Mississippi He said that he would probably P sien the contract today. Stated the former Swat King: “It is not much of a job but it will be teaching the kids how to play ball and that’s what T like.” the Stock Exchange Brokers and POLLY AND HER PALS ME,TOO, MILT, BUT TH' MISSUs PRACTICALLY STRONG MEN CAME TO GRIPS in Paris when Yvon Robert (right) SO'D MINE . I GUESS WIMMIN' HAS MORE BACKBONE THAN OH, I DUNNO. ) THE DAILY ALASKA EMP French Canadian, put leg scissors squeeze on Henri Deglane of France in heavyweight catch-as-catch-can match. ICE CARNIVAL, WINTER SPORTS NOW UNDERWAY Fifty-first Annual Event Is Being Held in St. Paul, Minn. ST. PAUL, Minn, Feb. 9.--King Boreas, the Fifth, has ascended to | his icy throne to rule over the an- nual Paul winter carnival. It's the 's oldest winter sports car- nival here The sports {es. ceramonie and gaiety brin out the city's working force clad in snow suits Ordinarily sedate business men handle their affairs dressed as Es- kimos, stenographers appear as Chinock girls and drab clerks break |out in daring colors On Capital Hill rise the glisten- ing spires of a Snow Palace. Each night a parade winds through the city’s streets and halts before the palace to participate in the func- tions of Boreas' court A WALL STREET TURN-UNDER INSTEAD OF ‘TURNOVER’ the Jamaica Hawks in New York, . night's games LEAGUE CONTEST SHow DIFFERENT Bennetts 160 171 Little 122 125 TEAMS |N GAMES Harper 146 194 Handicap 20 20 Two games in the new inter league of the Qommercial Totals 448 510 at the Brunswick resultec Emil's Irvings Whingys capturing t Roach 179 151 the short end of a three ceur Jack 124 180 the new Emils trio. Emil hinx i Galao 156 157 led his team to vict by a 211 high single game and 523 Totals 458 488 ndividual match < - In the second corx t the W We Hope Hope trio took first and last games Mrs. Porter 168 - 154 to net them selves a two out of McDonald 158 162 three margin in their battle with John Doe 170 170 the Brunswick trio. Clark captured Handicap 25 25 high count honors with the winne: by chalking a 519 te score Totals 516 511 Utilization of hanc scores for Brunswick the supposedly weaker clubs to Mangalao 171 145 equalize the riva was so muca Clark 179 180 avoirdupois in last night games R. Galao 203 163 as only one game tally would hav been changed if the handicap mar- Totals gin were not used. Full schedule for coming games HOLBROOK RETURNING in the new Commercial League will appear in tomorrow’'s Empire gional Forester, Games scheduled tonight: 7:30 in Juneau thi o'clock, Juneau Florists vs. Three from Petersbur Bullits; 8:30 o'clock, Heidelberg vs. regular field George Brothers. 1 Southeast Alaska district Following are the scores of last past several weeks. Irving’s Whingding Market 177— 508 127— 371 IRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 9, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT MEBBE THEY { JESS SHOWS | MOST MODELS |FEDERAL HELP IN NEW YORK | HELD VITAL TO ARE MARRIED U.S.EDUCATION , i i 'Make Model Wives for|Government Aid Needed if | Model Husbands, One Inadequacies Are | Writer Declares Corrected | ] | WASHINGTON, Feb. 9.—Federal s ics d i aid to education, women club lead- NEW YORK., Feb. 9.—It isn't | ers heard, is the answer to the prob- erally known that most of the beau- jom of millions of American boys | tiful models you see featuring smart anq girls now receiving inadequate | magazine ads or working in ex- ' equcation or none at all pensive Fifth Avenue shops are mar- | By GEORGE TUCKER Dr. Howard A. Dawson, rural spec- ried. But they are, and usually to . o ror ; L . hard-working young architects who ;\“::;‘d;t‘;;“l“f‘dvr:',:fv'\'(‘l"'("“l ,("‘f"‘:_'l‘"“‘“‘t‘ labor from daylight till dusk and -o Al KpVErEna assistance in a speech prepared for | the board meeting of the neral | PFederation of Women's Clubs. Earlier, Mrs. Wiley Morgan of Knoxville, ! Tenn., in charge of the h-drratlun's! educational program, had proposed | come home so fatigued they can't tell a gardenia from catnip. I have this information from no less an authority than a model her- self. a very pretty model withal, and a bride. Fortunately she appreciates ; the fact that her bread-winner s a ¢ following questions hard worker and is entitled to a few “Where are the one million chil- | moments of quiet relaxation at the dren between the ages of seven and thirteen who are not going to school She was telling me of an inciden: Decause no schools are available or pertinent to this set-up the other 8¢ 50 located that attendance is and it shows you what a jewel Pratically impossible? 5 young man has, for, in addition Pro and Con Cited to beauty, she has the added gift of “What about the 3.500,000 young a sense of humor people to whom no high schools are The husband arrived home afiey Aavailable, or who are in high schools an unusually vexing day and sani Which have courses of study unsuited at once into an inviting under-slung to them? chair. He had been home less than “Shall we remain blind and deat five minutes when in walked his ta)l to the needs of handicapped. chil- and comely bride. She didn't walk dren? What about intellectually gifted children? Where are the one end of his day 6-foot 6-inch freshman, who's Blg Bottle Order Given CLEVELAND, Feb. 9. Brewing | o § IT TAKES ALL KINDS (o make a track squad, and the. * University of Pennsylvania is no exception to that saying. John Drebinger (left), a miler, is an outstanding candidate for the team, but he has to yield plenty in height to towering Ed Beetem, © scales at 262 pounds. He came from Mercersburg Academy. 196 466 With the usual walk that most people slithered in in one of slinky, toe-in-front-of- g0 know. She . those long, 20— 4501408 toe glides which are essential to good Corporation of America announced the award of an order for forty- eight million nonreturnable beer bottles to the Owens-Iilinois Glass | Conipany. The corporatio; represented an expenditure of $800,- million children whose school term is less than six months in length?” Dr. Dawson, outlining arguments both for and against Federal aid to | to probate. t modeling. 0 144 474 Prom the depths of his ¢hair the eduaction, declared that he believed 173 477 8Yoom observed all this, With a bersonally lhal“l-vhfl government will 311 523 Ve mile he waved his hand and have to help “if we are to have # %% \ttered just two words: ‘Honey,” he anything like acceptable educational T sald, “de-glamorize.” y advantages in the areas where the 1281474 it biggest part of the children are To men who slave with paint and 8rowing up.” g 4 _ canvas in the sunlight, this ought to _He said there could be Federal 158— 475 o heering news. For at long, long, financial aid without undesirable 145 465 1,51 electricians have approximated Federal control of education; that 1707510 o ntight, How often have you seen Matters of school curriculum and 25— artists work desperately to get as Personnel could. be left to local % — much done as possible before the authorities. 4981525 Backs Up Claim last rays of sunlight vanished. They need the sunlight, for colors Arguments for Federal aid listed 156— 472 can't be mixed under artificial light, by Dr. Dawson included statements 160— 519 Couldn't is a better word, for they that it is within constitutional pow- 146—512 can now. This new light so closely €IS, is already in practice for land- 462—1503 Wellman Holbrook, Assistant Re- was expected hack afternoon by plane He has been doing work throughout the the for featured this rough hockey game between Players collected 16 penalties and sore heads in a busy evening. —— approximates sunlight that you can’t grant ‘colleges and vocational edu- tell the difference. That is why {flltonv that poor schools in any |artists all over New York are equip- State affect all the States, and that ping their studios with this new way inequalities of educational opportu- to perpetual daylight. You just turn nities are not due to States' lack u.cpzwfim, and there it is. of effort but to differences in fi- nancial ability to pay taxes. The annual luncheon of the Anti- Dr. Dawson said a large part of Superstition Society was lots of fun. business and lndustry_ of mo‘ nation Thirteen of us went down to the i5 owned by corporations doing na- New Yorker for this brazen flouting tion-wide business but located in a of tradition, and none of us has few financial and industrial centers. b —— been hexed yet. ‘ cards broken mirrors were used. | There was a bed set up near the | festive board on which we all tossed lour hats. Above the table was sus- m;‘?f’:gf:‘-&g;-nfig sz-‘;Mlt;;; ded & umbrella. At each ’gf;eei,:: e oo, NOT to have totaled $9,203571, the annual be knocked on, And pins were scat- Téport of Ray Shannon, State Treas- | , NOT to be pick- Urer, shows. "(:‘:fi,m" Kt o0 I Profits from the State’s liquor Then there was a gargantuan Stores totaled $5315521. Seond larg- | cake, the crest of which was a black ¢St source of revenue was the beer oval with the numeral 8 iced clearly license and tax, that brought in $2,- on it, thus placing us emphatically 713,120- |and at once behind the eight-ball. | When we weren't eating we spent = the time lighting three cigarettes on one match, and thumbing our noses | at similar “don’ts.” k . Ice Skating Answers . .. | Nothing very awful has happened ! to us—yet. Here's hoping By DIANE CUMMINGS—— | Author Of *Pigure Skating A3 A Hobby - > - | Empire Ads Pay. LEGISLATUREIN LATE AFTERNOON | 000, 1 - - "BIG VAN" NOW | UNDER CARE AS STROKE VICTIM. Shoe Stor; 'Isroprietor Is Found Helpless on Floor of Shop J. M. Van Tress, known as “Big Van,” suffered a stroke this morn- ing at his shoe store at 278 South Franklin Street. He was found on the floor unable to move. Van Tress. was under medical care this | afternoon. Speciailfifi&lfl Train Provided For Old Masfers CHEYENNE, Wyo., Feb, 9.—A cal load of paintings by the world masters, insured for $20,000,000, was held in Cheyenne recently until a warm air circulating system could | be installed in their railroad car. | Experts who accompanied the ship- ment said the installation was neces- sary because they feared the sudden warmth of low altitudes to the frig- | idity of the continental divide west of Cheyenne might crack pigments | on the canvas. The paintings were enroute from the east to the Wrold's | Fair in San Francisco. 1 a weight man. Beetem tips the ¥ state:, Méa}s E SEATTLE, Feb, 9—The late’ G0k Fredericw Mears, retired Army gg ficer, Assistant Engineer for: 3 Great Northern and formerly cofi- nected with the Alaska - Railropg! who died here January 11, leffin $15,000 estate to his widow, Mrs; Jennie Wainwright Mears, it m-fi closed when his will was'adinitt - - 3 TWO CITY LEAGUE ,_'i} HOOP TILTS T - i Krause vs, Halda and Firemen, W, Henning s the bill Tfor . tonight’s basketball show at the High School Gymnasium: The first of the twe City League contests starts at 280 p.m " - » Although Jefferson’s Decl.u»uqm; of Independence was adopted July 4, 1776, the colonies had adgp= ted the resolution of indepcndent July -2 ’ { Will Be Open SUNDAY Between 10:30 a.m. and ' 1:00 P. M, (weather permitting) For Benefit of - A. J. Employees on afternoon shift Admission 35¢ & ek S BT . SESSIONS TODAY Members Tour Mine - No i Activity in Senate and House Chambers | | b | | How shoulc ice-skating boots be laced! Rathe loosely at the ' bottom; tight. ly over the in- step (so tha, the ankle wil be firm) loosely at the Mises Cummings to]p (or else the v 2 % . talf of your leg will ache due t¢ order to allow members to make 2 e :‘!lt‘ll' biennial tour of the Alaska | poor blood cu‘culahon). Be sure ! Juneau Gold Mine to ‘“‘}“k the b?ws Ofbyuur'l};ce: At 3 oclock this afternoon the | il:u:i:eee‘\("gftotg:“l;rno‘:o!bséconf:: |”””"‘l‘_]”‘"‘”; with 11 members Pres- | yngone, there will be no danges ent he enate was to convene (.l[ ot lrlpplng. 5 a'clock e was little activity along the both con- ive front today and House withheld as | Senate |vening until late this afternoon in Elks’ Hall Friday, Feb. 10th & Promoter—-U PRICES: RINGSIDE $1.50 GENERAL 1.00 BALCONY 1.00 .D.MOODY

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