The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 29, 1939, Page 5

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"1 HAVE TO, HARRIET. HERBY'S COMING OVER AND YOu KNOW HOW HE ADMIRES HOME- PIECES WON'T MAKE HIM THINK YOU'RE A HOME - GIRL., wiILL T2 WELL, GREAT GASPER ! POUNDING THE PIANO TO OF COURSE NOT, SIMPLETON--- Paul Chr third selection of Tennessee tman of and choice is Cafego second Missourt George HNNICK IS 57 GIVEN GRID o5y rawties HONORS, 39 239 BUT WINDS - UP TOTAL, § Star Halfback of lowa s/ e Named Oufstanding eis, was nigh man tast nighe witn . 569 that started off with a sizzling FOO‘ba"lSt 9, slumped to 149 and ended up with 181. The Ccoks won two of three from ¢ Clark | the Fosters. Jewelers won two from of the Uni-|Medicos and Builders won two versity of T been ‘nam from Sharks. 1939 winner of the John W. Heis-| Thursday night's rolling schedule man Memorial Trophy awarded each is Mail Clerks vs. Femmes, Grocers vear to the outstanding college foot- vs. Snipes and Dark Horses vs ball player in the United States by Physicians, a downtown athletic club. Scores last night are as follows: The selection is made from votes Cook: sports writers throughout the I 142 States. 153 Harmon 7. 20— NEW YORK Kinnick. s 136— 415 156— 495 181— 569 467—1470 of United Tom Kau[mmm Koski of Michigan, | Totals (Spot) | B. Burford | D. Kaufmann | D. Foster 175 99 Totals 499—1403 Medicos 156 138 130 116 143 161 429 418 Jewelers | (Spot) 52 | Paul Bloedhorn 124 Warren Wilson 103 Ocscar Elison 132— 426 154— 400 14— 451 | Dr. Blanton Dr. Williams D Council Totals 52 133 147 138 Tetals 417 470 461—1348 Sharks 126 139 126 215 119 106 370 460 Builders 12 147 130 106 119 115 158— 422 151— 492 150— 375 459—1289 Boggan Lavenik Jane Boggan YOUR SAVINGS ARE INSURED, ARE INSTANTLY AVAILABLE ANP EARN GREAT- ER RETURNS WITH THE J ALASKA FEDERAL Savings and Loan Assa, | of Juneau TELEPHONE 3 Totals 12— 36 192— 528 173— 408 150— 384 | Totals 408 422 5291357 | .- — 12 189 [ (Spot) Halm Davlin M. Davlin | ORDER TREES NOW Order your Christmas trees, spruce |or Jackpine. See the Hi-Way De- lxvery adv. Ncw 1940 GBNERAL ELECTRIC Cleaner-And Get This Attractive MAGIC HOSTESS STUPENDOUS! We sold all our 25c aprons the same day we put them on the counter! SOCN We will have another lot to choose from. Order Yours Early! THEY WENT LIKE HOT CAKES! ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER JUNEAU DOUGLAS By CLIFF STERRETT BUT IT'LL DROWN OUT THE SOUND OF MA DOING THE DISHES! Four (;1rl Hmulful of Liothmg Bl ing Fine | is i When a Philadelphia detective brought these four girls (abcve). at they had appeared in a show t nesses in his complzint ¢ two costumes in {wo mal show was fined $12.50. h boxes, into then held all fou~ ce: Rescued from Blazing 1enement A policeman carries Stanley Hanson, 12, to safety from the blazing Brook- yn, N. Y., tenement where he was trapped. Fire escapes had been in- valled only two days before an explndmg oil stove started the blaze. killing a fireman and injuring more than a score. BARlUND 15 VICTOR IN NEW YORK, Nov. 29. nar Barlund, of Finland, gained a hard-earned 10-round decision last night over Henry Cooper of Brook- lyn Deplh Record ‘Broken,Report ALBANY, N. Y, NO\' 29.—0il men believe a wildcat tesi in southern | Nolane County is the deepest ever| drilled by a portable machine, bet- | ter known as a “spudder.” | George Callihan, the driller, went | to 5000 feet to fulfill his contract with the oil company and then con- tinued to a depth of 6011 { Oil experts said the accomplish- |ment was a remarkable one as the hole was the standard eight-inch size at the bottom. Deeper wells have been drilled but not with portable equipment, Albany oil men said. — .- — Empire Want Aas Sriog Results. | | TOUGHBOUT; — Gun- ~ "How's Your Scoond At Prof. Fred be or cise are (he wo alle optimists. seven parsons oo tied Koeh, profes- YW LhmP and dramatic Ire cui of every 10 purchased a radio. One out of 36 financed a refrigerator—and one out of 75 wrote a play.” Out of 1,000,000 theatrical brain- children conly 40,000 even reached dramatic agents or producers, and ly one feund fame and fortune,” Eoch declared. Most of the plays, he said, ave written for the 1,000 or mcre non- professicnal theatres that range from . redecorated country barns school audioriums and magnifi- cent civic halls. “Fortunately,” said Koch, “at least €5 per cent of the authors have no intention of making a livinz writing plays. The other 5 per cent think they are xood enough for Bromlwas - Italians were the most numer- ous foreign-born group in the Upited States in the census of 1930, R RS The value of fishery products in the United States last year was $100,845,000. as Myers court as wit- clad, he proved his point by placing es in his hand (below). The manager of the SEST@E 'S 611 STILL TO0 LOW T0 WIN MATCH °. Mike Seston, Rainier Beer kegler,' rolled 611 last night in three games at the Brunswick, with one game of 234, but did not roll high enough to take up the slack for his team- mates who dropped three of the four counters to the Signal Corps. New ‘Alaskan keglers all rolled over 500 and Home Grocers rofled under 500 with hotel bowlers getting three of four counts. Tonight's games are George Brothers vs. Barbers and George Brithers vs. Royal Blue, Last night's scores were as fol-| lows: Home Grocery 181 136 Thibodeau 159 150 Koski 178 (Handicap) g 135— 452 14 455 | 149 480 8- 24 Hermle Tolals 510 472 4381420 New Alaskan Hotel 155 210 186— 551! 172 181 149— 502 134 108 208— 540 461 589 543W~l593 Rainier Beer Reynolds 126 137 164 164 177 234 16 16 483 551 488 1522 L S. Signal Corps 148 177 186— 511 170 155 156— 481/ 179 179 179—°5 Guazon Ragudos Gomez Totals 08— 371 164—"492 200— 611 16— Stevenson 497 511 521--1529 - - Mrs. Laiblin Goes To Sitka on Visit Mrs. George Lnblln and daugh-| ter Agnes, sailed on the Northland for a visit with her mother, Mrs. Ann Dennard, in Sitka. George Laiblin, prominent Nonw- ite, former Representative in thc‘ Torritcrial Legislature and now ident of the Nome Demogratic ub, is to join his wife on. the next. steamer arriving from ' the| Westward. | ——— | T0 DREDGE RANCH Totals OROVILLE, Cal., Nov. 29.—A 315- | acre ranch on Little Butte creekl has sold for a pretty fancy prl(.ef $55,000. Explanation is that a big | dredging company will work the soil’| for placer geld. { - e | Try The Empire classifieds lox! results, —— .- Empire classifieds bring results. | all Title Fight Postponed Two Weeks Ambers, Armstrong Match Delayed-Negro Has | Severe Cold Nuv. 20.—Lou Am- Armstrong will Friday night for championship N bers not the title. ‘The bout has been posponed at least for two weeks because the little negro titleholder has a most severe cold. / YORK, and Henry fight next welterweight - NORTHLARD IS [N FROM SOUTH The motorship Northland arrived in Juneau from Eeattle late yes- terday afternoon with 19 passengers aboard and three days first class mail Arrivals from Seattle were, Mrs Genevieve Gill, Ty Gill, Helen Ful- kerson, Mrs. A, M. Bolen, Jam Bo- Jen, Mrs. J. Garrett, Mrs. Edna Plummer. Den Clark, Osmond Stop- ple, Arthur Oja. From Southeast Fclta, R. E. Coughlin, cn, Henry Roden. Mrs, M. Di Dr. R. L. Carlson, Peggy McLeod, A, \,’x\nMn\l‘Xn and Mrs. Jean Soren- Alaska—George Harry Clay- ‘ul'n‘w to Sitka were Ben Bel- |'nmy, Mre Chris Ziegenfuss, D. B. Spencer, Mrs. Dorothy Kessler, Hen- ry Heino, Andrew Baker, Ray Peter- man, Eugene Dawson, I. G. Ander- son, Betty Baggen, Mrs. George Laiblin, Agnes Laiblin, Mrs. John Rasmussen, Aline Rasmussen, Frank | Babek, Steve Hornyak and K. Nel- e Increase Shown in Enroliment Figures " Of Juneau Schools i Interesting figures showing the -toml enrollment and attendance in the Juneau Public School were -\ submitted today by Superintendent A. B. Phillips. To date the num- |ber of students attending shows ‘an increase of 47 greater than last | year and 1256 more than the year previcus, By the end of the school year it is expected that nearly 100 pupils will be enrolled in Juneau. “As enrollment increases it is only natural that absence and tardiness also increases. However, the high school record is too high | with 223 cases of absence over a period of only 27 school days. “Likewise, the number of tardi- ness cases in the high school is too great, especially when com- | pared to the grade school record. The grade school had only 147 tardy cases for 281 students. The grade school record was about one tardy case for every four students and the high school was one tardy lcm‘e for each two studenis” 1937-40 1938-39 281 #250 . 613 804 Ill.& enroliment | Grade enrollment ( Total | Days absent, Days abeent, gmdv; ‘Totul days absent 47 | Times tardy, H.S. Times tardy, grades 147 Tectal times tardy 287 Peicent of attend- ance, JHS. Percent _of ance, grades 96.64 attend- 96.57 Total pevcent of at- tendance e SIMMONS BRINGS TWO. LOADS HERE . Three passengers were brought in | from the islands last night and five this morning by Shell Sim- mons, 96.60 Simmons yesterday brought ‘n Joe Hill and Jack Littlepage from Joe DiMaggio's beauteous bride, is shown cutting the in San Fra marriage baseball bats, symbolic wedding isco. The of Jue's career with the New York Yankees. 5 'DiMaggio’s Bride Cuts the Cake Arnold of radio and ser eption following their Dorothy en, cake at the r frieze on the cake is of crossed BRITISH BOMBSHELL_With this flying leap through space, England’s 16-year-old ice skating queen, Maria Belita Turner, shows how she may sweep New York skating fans off their feet. She competed in the 1936 Olympics. Chic Cobol Simmons and Mrs childven, k- In Ww. 8 g brought Peckovich and two Nick from agof, and Oscar Eliason from Jukich FLY FOR FUR Jimmy Rinehs Petersburg York fur atlended buyer, the yeslerday confiscated flew up with Ketchum, fur tion here during the afternoon, turning to Petersburg today. in Mr. from New who auc- re- BOY FOR COPSTEADS A boy baby was born this morn- ing at St. Ann's Hospital to Mr. and Mrs, Arnie Copstead. The new arfival tipped - the scales at 7 pounds 12 ounces at birth and both he and his mother are feeling in the best of health The proud papa is today treat- ing the staff of the Alaska Elec triec Light and Power Company with cigars. e Winifred Johns underwent a minor operation this morning at the Government anuul Dally Cross word Puzzle ACROSS L. Ogles 6. Fortune 9. Brother 12. Young bird of rey 13. Second note of Guldo's scale 14. Guided 16. Simpletons 16, Island in the north At- lantio Exposed to public view Kind of her- ,alate crons 1. Flag Reulluzed. Aruncml lan- uage 3 Allnpled . Division of a school year . Golf Instructor: collod. 10. Cook slowly #. Flowers $7. Topaz hum- ming bird #8. Asserts L. Public store« houses Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle 8. Wigwam 9. Lowlandg along a river 10. French annuity 1, Fou‘nd the suw of 17. Goes ashore 19. Bursts forth violently, 21, Fragment 22. American 23. humoris¢ Shops 26. Anger 28. Th LT, which to) E(h&f . Diminished gradually . First woman xisted Sequence Walking sticks Rich brown b4, Watch secretly . Abounding in marsh grasses % - Modieval playe i card . Record of a hip's voyag . Female sheep! 3. Feminine name . Ingredient of varnish 5. Cublc meters . Deposited . Killer whale 3 Skll}:. as a :lm ver water 48, Large pistol formerly used 49. Plgpen ENd JEE ARG EEE af 5 )

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