Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e L ~ MINNESOTA GOES AHEAD FOR HONORS Smash Another Barrier for Gridiron Glory by Beating Nebraska POLIS, Minn, Oct. 7.— smashed over another barrier enroute to national gridiron glory by defeating Nebraska easily aturday ternoon, They could have scored a couple of more touchdo’ s as they were on the five line several times. was Mir 13, Ne- - Tennessee Pushes Oppon- ent All Over Field in Saturday's Game KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 7 Scoring twice in the second period and again ou on a 33-yard pass a short plunge after a hioc punt, Tennessee pushed Duke & over the field last Saturday ter- noon for the remainder of the time before 42,000 fans and n 13 to 0. THE DAILY ALASKA, EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 7, 1940. " AY-BY-PAY WALTERS fanned No runs, no hits, no errors; none The following are SCOres portant football games pl W 4 | l’i”"*“" 4b; - Do ssato - 11 TIGERS—Higgins grounded out Colgate 0; Cornell 34 to Joost. Tebbetts grounded out to | [ West Vrginia 7; Fordham 20. | npvers. Gorsica fafined | s Northwestern syracuse 0 i i i i = No runs, no hits, rors; Michigan 21; Michigan State 14.|1oft o bage. s no errors; none | Ho|dg Ilgers fo Five Hits, avy 14; Cincinnati 0. | REDS—Werber grounded out to h Virginia 1“’( \r;"‘y‘_H M Bartell. M. McCormick flied out to NO Run.sr fhen Bats i 13; Pittsburgh 1 | Greenterg. CbHdRRs . f Williams 19 reenvers. Goodman singied to eft | Oyt Homer Himsel Army 20 Princeton 7 Harvard 13 }nvld H. McCormick forced Good- man, Higgins to Gehringer. No runs, one hit. no errors; one Vanderbilt 6 Amberst 0 [ (Continued from Page One) They Head Legion for 41 Minnesota 13; Nebraska 7 left on base. ————— Te 13;. Indiana..6 SIXTH INNING opening frame today and was bla Auburn 20; Tulane 14 TIGERS—Bartell singled to left |ed out, which hands Rowe his Kentucky 47; Washington and fijeld. McCosky forced Bartell, Wer- |ond defeat cf the present s Lee 12 ber to Joost. Gehringer hit into a | The Reds put the game on ico‘ stre Dame 25; College of Pa-!double play, F. McCormick to Myers | with four hits and two runs off , cific 7 to F. McCormick, Rowe and young John Gorsica re- Maryland 0; Penn 1 No runs, no hits, no errors; none |jieved the Schoolboy and escaped Kansas 0; Iowa left on base | injury until the sixth frame when Wisconsin 33; Marq 19 REDS—Ripple singled past second |the Reds scored again on two hits, Texas Christian 20; Arkansas 0. b When York rushed in to pro- }a walk and a couple of fielders Duke 0; Tennessee 13 t against a bunt, Wilson boosted | choices for another run. i Penn State 9; Bucknell 0. a single over his head, Ripple gomg"v Hutchinsen took over the Detroit Alabama 20; Mercer 0. to third base before Campbell could | mound chores in the eighth frame University of Wachington 21; get the ball and make a play. Joost |and Walter greeted him with a Idaho 0. walked on five pitches to fill the homer over the left field barrier Montana 0: Washington State 13. bases. Myers forced Ripple, Gorsica | aftcr Myers fannad. Walters has Utah 12; Brigham Young 6 to Tebbetts and bases were still fill«{hic only one home run during the Lafayette 9; New vork Univer- ed. Walters topped ball toward ' entire National League campaign. sit third and Wilson beat Higgins' throw | Rain during the night and early Georgia South Carolina 2 to Tebbetts to score. Bases still this morning drenched the playing Pacific U ity 7; University | loaded. Play scores to fielder’s field and therefore cut the size of Werber hit into a double | the crowd. of land choice Oregon 0; Stanford 13 play, Gorsica to Tebbetts to York. | - e - St. Mary's 6; C ronia 9 One run, two hits, one error; two ! Oklahoma Aggie Oklahoma 'left on bases. plA" Fok TOWING 29 SEVENTH INNING | B ola | Oregon State 0; University « TIGERS—Greenberg grounded out DISAB[ED Bo x E R Southern California 0, tie to Walters. York singled to left| . -~ - — field. Campbell grounded out to | & Joost, York advancing to second FAlls 'HRO“GH B u ' base, Higgihs grounded out to: ears se Myers. y 08 I p No runs, one hit, no errors; one MflllbOa' Fern |s DeIaYed__l left on base. REDS—M. McCormick singled be- ' R Mrs. Louis Lemstra and Milo Warner Here are the ncw heads of the Ameriean Legion for the coming year. Elected at the Bos convention, the two are Mrs. Louis Lemstra, who heads the Legion auxiliary, and Milo Warner of Toledo, O., national commander of the veterans' organization FRENCH FLIERS Mrs. Burke Is ‘ FOR GIBRALTAR . : day with other Jun=auites who have mcved to Anchorage and left on o s | the steamer Alaska to join her hus-| LONDON, Oct. 7.—The headquar- | tand 3 | ters. of , General . DeGaulle, leader| / ‘Art Burke, formerly with George, of the French forces still fighting Brethers here, is working with the | new air base. for Great Britain, announced to-| day that eight French pilots were B LT THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4:30 p.m., Oct. T: Occasional showers tonight and Tuesday; not much change in ter perature, lowest temperature tonight 47, highest Tuesday 54; mod- erate southeasterly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Occasional showers tonight and Tuesday except partly cloudy south portion Tuesday; not much change in temperature; moderate to fresh southeasterly winds, Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer, partly cloudy with local showers fresh southeasterly winds; Cape Spence to Cape Hinchinbrook, most- ly cloudy, occasional showers, fresh easterly to northeasterly winds; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay, occasional rain, fresh to strong southeasterly winds; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak, occasional showers, fresh to strong southeasterly winds shifting to moderate to fresh westerly tonight. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer 1emp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 4:30 p.m. yesterday 29.69 51 6 SSE 6 Cloudy ¢ 4:30 a.m. today 29.56 48 89 SE 12 Lt. Rain Noon today 29.51 51 79 E 12 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. tempt. Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30am. Staticn last 24 hours | temp, temp, 24 hours Weather Earrow 31 23 28 0 Clear Nome 39 | 35 35 0 Clear | Dawson 42 | B 37 01 Cloudy Anchorage 46 | 40 40 01 Pt. Cldy Bethel 48 | 35 0 Cloudy Dutch Harbor .. 46 42 39 Lt. Rain' ! Juneau 51 89 Rain Sitka 58 ¥l Cloudy Ketchikan 57 1.00 Cloudy Prince Rupert . 62 58 Cloudy Prince George .. 63 [ Pt.Cldy Seattle 9 0 Cloudy Portland kid 0 Clear San Francisco .. 72 0 Clear WEATHER SYNOPSIS The Monday morning weather chart indicated low pressure arca of about 987 millibars (29.12 inches) about 200 miles west of Sitka and second low center of about 972 millibars (28.70 inches) north of Dutch Harbor with an occluded front extending from this center to about Kodiak Island. A low pressure trough extends from Queen Charlotte Islands southward to a weak low center about 600 miles west of San Francis High pressure area of 1024 millibars (30.24 inches) at 34 degrees north 145 deirees west and secnd high area of about 1026 millibars (30.30 inches) at 37 degrees north 178 degrec west. Rain had fallen ths morning over Southeast Alaska and alon; the coastal area of the Gulf of Alaska westward to the Aleutian Is- Duke has been in Tennessee ter- ritory only twice, - > Stanford Rolls Up Gaels, Score | Nine fo Six BERKELEY, Cal, Oct. 7 Trounced sadly by Michigan in the| cpening football game of the ses-| Freight Ship Will tween Gorsica’s legs. Goodman sac- l rificed, Gorsica to York. F. McCor- H mick grounded out to Bartell, M. | Freeze n McCormick holding first base. Rip- — ple was walked intentionally. Wilson Because the mailship Fern, which walked on four straight balls, filling | was to tow the Boxer from Bethel the bases. Joost grounded out to to the mouth of the Kuskokwim, is Gehringer. | behind schedule, the crippled Office No runs, one hit, no errors; three |of Indian Affairs freight ship will left on bases. probably have to spend the winter |in the ice, General Superintendent shot down enroute from North Af-| rica to Gibraltar, “but a large num- | ber reached Gibraltar despite heavy | odds.” e~ KETCHIKAN MILL | MA“ ls VISIIOR tea given here Saturday afternoon Wome! | by - Club as first of the Fall s Eldon Daly, General Manager of“c{,ml events for Douglas DOUGLAS NEWS W. C. TEA, SUCCESS fifty women attended the D. X Abcut the Douglas Island Past pres- the Ketchikan Spruce Mills, has|jents of the organization, repre-| son, the California Bears finaily| EIGHTH INNING | Claude Hirst was notified today. - found a scoring punch in cracker-| TIGERS—Tebbetts grounded out| The Boxer lost a propeller blade. o‘n s Jack halfback Al Derian as they to Werber. Barl Averill, batting for | Arrangements were made for the upset St. Mary's Gaels last Satur- Gorsica, grounded to F. McCormick | Fern to tow the disabled ship down- day afternoon by a re of 9 to|whn tried to beat Averill to the bag |river to Kuskokwim Bay, where it Lightning Thrusts, Mystify- ° ing Plays Holds Ore- gon Scoreless Oct. 17 PALO ALTO, Cal, Stanford’s Indians, under new coach Clark Shaughnessy, called on a hocus pocus football briefly last Saturday afternoon, but effectiv: scored an impressive 13 to 0 Vi tory over the University of Oregon squad before 20,000 spectators Two lightning thrusts in which were uncovered a mystifying sortment of plays, baffled not only the Oregon team, but those in the as- stands, and Stanford rolled up points that brought them their initia] Pacific Coast Conference win - e HAWKINS RETURNS Oscar Hawkins, Rice and Ahlers employee, came back over the week end from Seattle where he attenacd a family reunion recently. He is at the Gastineau Hotel Subscripe to The Daily Alaska Em pire — the paper with the larges' guaranteed circulation RIGHT ON TIME AGAIN, SKIPPER ¥ KA CAN BE MIGHTY PROUD of its steamship service—good transportation in comfortable ships and regular mail schedules the year around. It’s a service that benefits all Alaskans, And Alaska’s Canned Salmon Industry is glad that the business it gives Alaska steamship lines makes these all year possible. * Trojans Corflefi Within Four and ended in what looked like a | could be taken in tow by the Indian dead heat, F. McCormick colliding | Affairs ship North Star, now south- with Umpire Ballafant and both | bound out of the Arctie. The North falling to the ground, F. McCormick 'Star itself has too great a draft to dropping the ball and the umpire |reach Bethel. OREGCN STATE, |ruled Averill safe and an argument | The Boxer will probably be towed (AlIFOR “IA m ‘miluwled for several minuteés, F.Mc- | into a slough near Bethel‘to freeze Cormick was charged with an error. | jn away from the heavy river ice. - - Sullivan batting for Bartell, flied |Repairs will be made during the 9ut tp M. McCormick, Averill hold- | winter, so the ship can start south |ing first has_o. McCosky flied out to | ynder her own power when the M. McCormick. breakup comes. No runs, no hits, one error; one | — left on base. REDS — Freddie Hutchinson, of e Seattle, now pitching for the Tigers | S(AI‘ISE GOES and Frank Croucher is shortstop. | Myers fanned. Walters hit the first | | pitch, a home run, over the left field | | wall, 330 feet from the plate. Werber | | flied out to Campbell. M. McCor- mick walked. Goodman flied out to Yards of Knocking Over Orange Shirt Eleven LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 7. — The orange-shirted men of Oregon State and the Trojans of Southern California, weary and ragged worn, walked off the Coliseum at dusk G’ge"""& g #: Tast ‘Bhturiay Sftetribon ‘Biter bats | 08 TUARIONR b, 10 CIEUIR; OUB {ling each other to a scoreless tie. |left O base. |years in state prison. 1 Both teams were glad to get| EIGHTH INNING | Scalise was convicted September out without a defeat. | TIGERS—Gehringer reached mstiu of grand larceny and theft of | Fifty thousand spectators roared|pase after Myers’ bad throw at first funds from his own union. | NEW YORK, Oct. 7. — George Scalise, former resident of the Building Service Employees Inter- | naticnal Union, has been sentenced to a period of from ten to twenty| tribute to the two teams just as|of his grounder. Greenberg walked. e | they howled a few moments before | York hit into a double play, Werber | DFD. Dance. Douglas Nat. Oct. | the game ended when the Trojans to Joost to F. McCormick, Gehringer 2, adv. TR - TS came within four yards of kl)()ck-"gnjng to third base, Campbell flied ing over the Staters. | out to M. McCormick. ! 1 - e l—f—s | No runs, no hits, one error; one Fmpire cmstiear oring resuits left on base. The Dally Alaska Emplre Has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska newspaper AND THANKS T0 YOU WE'LL BE RUNNING REGULARLY ALL WINTER! - 756% of all Alaska steamship revenue is dependent upon the Canned Salmon Industry. While most of the Salmon Industry’s freight and passenger traffic moves inspring, summer and fall, it is the revenue from such traffic that enables the ships to keep running in winter. This is another way in which the Canned Salmon Industry contributes to better living here! _|Eugene and Robert, sailed on the| been spending the past few days| gepied by Mrs. Mike Pusich, Mrs. 7 Qe B T AT o | Lena Sebenico, Mrs. F. A, J. Gall- y came up on the Alaska Sat- | Mrs, Charles Fox d Mrs urday and expects to return to the|ns.,p jensen, poured. Assisting with City tomorrow where the mills the serving were Betty Bonnett till operating and it is plz\nned‘s(‘h,P;E Favdahl Alfreda Fleck rate as late as possible this| o4 s Balog. | For added entertainment Mrs. — e W. E. Cahill sang, “Forget Me Not” jand “God Bless America.” She was | accompanied at the piano by Mrs. A. E. Goetz. WORK BOOMS ON ANNETTE ISLAND ARMY AIRFIELD - | Some 4,000 feet of road on An- : nette Isand is under construction| with her son and his family during| and nearing completion, Regional| the wint She reported that 3| Engineer Arthur E. Glover of the N\, Slater was fully recovered from | Forest Service said today on his|effects of the illness that took him| return from a visit to the site of|scuth from here at the beginningi the new Army airbase. of the cannery season this sum- The road leads from the dock to|mer. a rock quarry from which ma- terial will be taken for the field. FOURTEEN Men engaged in the construction work, both Army and CCC per- A kindergarten opened this morn-\ sonnel are now encamped on the ing for the first time in Douglas andl island under canvas. fourteen small children were on - e | hand at the schocl in company of | their parents to undergo the at-| tendance requirements of health | tests and registration. Regular work | Carothers Go ‘ To Anchorage i, tn bl 40, She. ApepR 3B 9: : i fore- F. E. Carotheis ‘and Som‘gzp;rmn 9:30 to 11:30 in the fore. - - M HAGA LEAVES Mrs. Hilma Haga was a through | seenger on one of the last steam-| going to Anchorage to reside SR T [ READY | | Mrs Alaska Saturday afl for Sew 3 6D aska Saturday afterncon for Sew-|gynp RADIO IS ADDED | {ard; beund for Anchorage to join| o | Kt sCorolnire. TO SCHOOL EQUIPMENT | Carcthers has been employed at| g . it land Women's Club, a new R.CA.| Anchorage for some time and lhclrad(o. one of the most modern to! ‘1' thie in ‘the Remy oy Douglas public schools and is now | | —p > > —_— P | | i | part of the regular equipment ofi Grover C. Winn, ST s dli - chine, the radic has a built-in aer-| gmver C. Winn, Juneau attorney, | tomatically, a microphone for pub- sailed for the States on the steamer |lic addresses and has receptacle for ness matters. : Formal presentation and accept- | He was accompanied by his daugh-|ance of the radio will be made later ‘v' returning to her home in Wal-| - —————— | lace, Idaho after a visit in Juneau. PASSENGERS FOR DOUGLAS due some time tomorrow, is Mrs. R.| A. Hollingsworth of Seattle, to re- A donation from the Douglas Is-| Carothers plan to make their new date, has just been received by the x‘rhe institution. Daughter Sou'h 1Ial. in addition v.n. phonograph at- tachments for playing 10 records au- | Baranof in connection with busi-| television altachment. ter, Mrs. William J. Roberts, who|on, it was announced. )“EHRKVOR“’R’I‘“ s MAY Aboard the Aleutian for here, | L BE HELD THURSDAY | i, w2 ' shcomman ied by their three-year-old sen Da-| | Funeral services for Henry Nehr- ‘korn‘ who died Friday night at St. [vid and thcy expect to make their Ann’s Hospital, have been tentative- [heme in Douglas for the winter at |1y set for Thursday afternoon at 2| jeast. o'clock at the chapel of the Charles | W. Carter Mortuary. Interment will | of a beauty shop in the Puget Sound | be in Evergreen Cemetery. metrepelis and but recently sold Nehrkron, a native of Germany, |cut her business to come north. was 53 years old. He was last em- ———————— | ployed at a CCC camp here and had MRS. WAHTO IS HOME | been a patient at St. Ann’s for three | After five months under doctors | weeks. care in Seattle, Mrs. Gust Wahto 1 St oty BT returned home Saturday on the Al- LICENSED TO WED aska. Though not fully recovered Harold Gunderson and Dorothy | her health is some better and she Mae Tykward, recent :arrivals in | expects to further improve by being Fairbanks from Juneau, have ta-|with her family again. | ken out a marriage license at Fair- | e | kanks. | CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARIES | it il SO | Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jensen cele- | DFD. Dance. Douglas Nat. Oct.|prated their third wedding anniver- 12, adv.[sary with a dinner party at the —ee—— Douglas Inn Saturday evening. Thelr ~NOTZCE quests included Mr. and Mrs. Mark Jensen and Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Ed- wards. Teday being the seventh anniver- AIRMAIL ENVELOPLE, showing or route from Seattle to Nome, on sale at J. B. Burford & Co. adv. Mrs. Hollingsworth was proprietor lands and at a few stations over the Interior and in the Bering Se:n partly cloudy to cloudy skies were overcast with local showers and moderately low to low ceiling, fairly good visibilities were reported ove: the northern portion of the Se« attle-Juneau a reported over the Interior ani sary of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Johnson was the occasion of a family dinner being given for them last evening at the home of Mrs. Johnson's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Edwards. - CLARKS BUY HOME Capt. and Mrs. J. M. Clark are now residents of the Island, having purchased the cottage near St.| Ann's Avenue, formerly owned by the Wocdburys. They have been making their home aboard their boat Alma which is berthed in the new channel boat harbor. | — ., — CLUB DINNER Dcuglas Island Women's Club | will sponsor a “Stainless Steel”| dinner to be given at the City Hall | tcmerrow evening at 6:45. The af- fair will be for members of the club | r invited guests and any of them | who plan to attend are expected to | centact Mrs., Henry Woods for res: ervation. | - — RUDY PUSICH RETURNS ! Rudy Pusich arrived home from | Fairbanks on the Baranof yester- day to spend the next few months! FOR KINDERGARTEN | with his folks and perhaps make a g_ | st. trip south later on. During the year and ‘a half he has been away he worked at both Fairbanks driv- ing truck on the airport job and at Circle; where he ran a 'dozer for one of the gold dredging companies. Starting of the winter freezeup in the Interior is causing the shut-! down cf mining work there. e OUT OF HOSPITAL Jimmy Devon was released from Ann’s Hospital on Saturday after a week’s illness and is now recuperating at his home here. i DOUGLAS-Coliseum | " SATURDAY—SUNDAY ‘"GULLIVER’S TRAVELS'’ IN TECHNICOLOR 1 e : | ' McNAMARA & WILDES | Registered CIVIL ENGINEERS |« Designs, Surveys, Investigations | VALENTINE BLDG. | Room 3 Phone 672 e = “WHAT NOT” SHELVES | Something New . . Something Different ; Plate Glass Set in Chrome ! ® CORNER STYLE ! e SEMI-CIRCULAR ! o DOUBLE WITH MIRROR ! e TRIPLE WITHOUT MIRROR ! RICE & AHLERS CO. | Third and Franklin Streets PHONE 34 'i YOU WILL FIND NO PREMIUM — NO CATCHY PRICES Just Consistently PHONE 1767 A-1 Merchandise ~at Reasonable Cost at the . RIFT CO0-0P 3 Retailers of Famous ‘ SHURFINE and TASTEWELL PRODUCTS NEXT TO CITY HALL Assurance of Safe Pat a Covic Diesel in Your Boat 1f You Want ® MORE ROOM IN YOUR BOAT More Miles for Your Money A Comfortable, Quiet Ride An Engine that Instantly Starts Freedom from Fire Hazards A Broad Range of Smooth Speeds Low Operating and Maintenance Costs Reduced Insurance tcates Smokeless, Odorless Exhaust Full Diesel Dependability An Engine that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked CHARLES G. WARNER CO0. | 6MC TRUCKS ! Comipare Them With Al! Others! PRICE - APPEARANCE - ECONOMY DURABILITY " PHONEALL Trips