The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 14, 1945, Page 3

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R L] B W B v | 5 fl-——-—-'r Sport Short: SWEET DREAM AP SPURTS gomon: 8 oeerad ad tom - ing Prowess Of CUITEN! | v xom Nov 14muse from Robert Orendhaw; Ship Nts- the Pdral Comminicit Com o iy - feaord of Winne . Gecrge Savitsky, University of ter. X mission. NEW YORK, Nov. 14—Good way set 12 years ago b o s the outstanding foot- them by Mr. and Mrs. Vic Johnson yove, gecording to Kenneth B to get in wrong Andy Gustafson, 'rope. He still has a m By GALE TALBOT ball lineman of the week. wmf. “\m" “g(;' ‘v'm"‘fl?(i“.f,h"‘p e of t ¥ ford, cecretar Arioy batkfleld coach, thinks that malf of the season left, and needs' NEW YORK,' Nov, 14—Stout The 252-pound tackle, who gets [ JHieht, he Marlscal Sucre Was (1., American Radio Relay League, is Mississippis’ Shorty McWilliams isn't 35 winners to b the 301-mark Steve Owen of the New York foot- g crack at the Army's famed for- "1" 'L l‘~ ‘_[‘»‘»; )-‘_‘““*)“"" ""1"-'}‘ yostoration to the amateurs of theix as 'good a halfback at Bobby Jack set for one year by Westrope in P8l Giants can expect to have his ward wall on Saturday, casily won mu]‘d ot “b’}""l. (‘;»“31 \"“‘“m“‘l}‘.“‘ 28,000 kilocycle band which in pre Stuart former Tulsa flash who 1S 1933. Ted Atkinson copped honops P:eVious high standing among the (r. Ascociated Press poll for his -, i ‘"[‘v"\““lf‘_\“ name &% war days carried many an interna- Shorty's rival for the right half jast year with 279 first places. professional gridsters seriously im- teeth-jarring performance in Penn's -‘i‘\““‘f‘[“' 0 ¢ }“‘ ) _‘);»‘x_lj“l'o 'tienal conversation spot at West Point The differ- > 4 : paired if he doen’s cease and desist 32-7 defcat of Columbia on Frank- “‘_‘U‘“ ‘C“‘l‘“!“:"_"u : f:“;;“‘“g‘n“‘. snce is that Stuart has more speed NEW YORK. Nov. 14—Welter. LTOM raving atout Army's football jin Field in Philadelphia last week. | © o O *l-l;‘v“ \‘l“i" ‘lm;“ m'm‘“ Wois. ot On the other hand, Lt. Carl weight Ray “Sugar” Robinson hus ‘2™ New:papermen, coaches and play= 8 F TG FI SO S e f being re- ; Anderson, former Army footballer soieiq to fight a war bend bout The Giant's mentor is flaunting €1s Joined in praising the work of oo T ”w‘ .(‘nrol‘m."sl o 'm‘v'n‘ the FCC's with- and hurdler, maintains that Me- Dec 17, at San Franeisco. Robin- CNe Of the cldest rules and traditions Savitsky, who =2t up Penms first -\ 500 Sy 0o o anonor hibition of for- Willlams probably could be elected "ol oaranteed $12,500 to fight Of the play-for-pay circuit by re- three touchdowns by blocking one T o eeks, fl‘h‘cy ed of the 60,000 Governor of Mississippi in about five . wi her of Oakland’s Nov. 20 fusing to say that any team in the punt and recovering two fumbles. He L\".(‘(‘l‘(l 1‘0 'umh\*xuu‘ll’wn' Alaskan © nsed, experimentally years . . . One sure thing is that it & " B0 B 0 ider ana National professional league could Wes such a nuilance to the Lions', o0 "oy inawa but with “V-J° vate communicators will they'd put goal posts on the State o, .0 poiers lick Army, or any other college out- that Columbia Coach Lou Little as- Diys b pikith w"fi Shanped, ‘and forward to renewing in- capitol, Shorty would run toward £e fit, three times in an afternoon if certed “He was an All-American i, M“‘Cm““’" “‘qfie\led n;at. they 1 friendships.” v, JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Nov. 14— the light held out against us if T ever saw one.” GEOXES ||\ Loy 'ty tokys, sfid that also released for Py The sccond annual Jacksonville! “I'm simply not going to say one - enn coach, chimed n with, 0 o Giearattss are much in use is the 56-60 vegacycle simply i E n’'t been any tackle 0 to be shiftad to 50-54 MC. against Temple, ROUNDUP WHO TURNED HIM LOOSE? Penn State's big center, Kosanovich, did the unusual for a lineman by scoring two touchdowns Kosanovich tallied the first one on a lateral pass and then recovered a Temple fumble for the second touchdown. Joe Gootter, Paterson, N .J., Eve- ning News: “Billy Southworth has been named manager of the Boston Braves, a spot where he won't find the sort of material the St. TODAY'S GUEST STAR Cardinals were abl= to give him . Ncene but the ((bi serves the Brave Eddie Compo, Conn,, featherweight who he doing very well lately, is the His ambition, ter ROUGH ROAD AHEAD Haven, of a family of ten. he says, is “to lick all the guys who beat my brother, Johny, including Willie Pep.” Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis is sojourning for a spell in Cali- forhia_before going into training for the New PIN MONEY LEAGUE his' title fight with Billy Conn . During his stay, the Champ is pick- ing up some handsome small change for refereeing jobs. Oakland, paid Joe $1,750 for round preliminary on the jaw, either. team . . Broncho Louis an) fair de- PRO BOSS SEES QUAKER TACKLE ARMY TEAMIN Acid Test Saturday vs. Army Forwards CHICAGO, Nov. T seeres penn S1€VE Owen Press-Agent- Open Golf Tournament, with prizes totaling $7,500, will be held March another,” he replied firm- vhen asked how he thought the g Franklin Field linemen singl this year. d out gced ‘on Of the other 14-17. Guy Botts, general chair- Cadets’ unbeaten eleven would fa&ce - acciaim Rodney Giske, of Wash- man of the local Aycees Tourna- against one of the good professional jngton State, turned in the most un- ment golf committee, announced clubs. “All I would do is make ugual foat On one play he threw the dates after a conference with some people mad 4t me. Besides, gych a strong block on two Oregon Fred Corcoran, tournament man- It's like trying to say whether Joe pjayers that both Oregon men were ager of the P.G.A Louis could have licked Jack Demp- kpocked out. ——— sey.” Other players nominated this LOS ANGELES, Nov. 14 — The = Agked, then, if he would appraise | week world’s bantamweight champion, Ccoach Earl Blaik's team strictly on, Eitds—Hank Foldberg, Army; Manuel Ortiz, will meet Proctor its merits, Owen brightened at once Frank Jenkins, Penn.; Bill Gear, in 20 Heinold of Oklahoma City, 10-round non-title bout Nov San Antonid, Texas. a at end threw his 300-odd pounds into Texas Aggies; Dale Schwarzop, Tex- whet plainly was one of his favor- as; Bruce Badbeer, Rice; Bob *Nel- ite topies. son, Washington; Max Dodge, Nev- “It's one of the greatest football ada; Jack McBride, Rice. teams I ever saw,” he said. “T've Tackles—Dewitt Coulter, Army; never seen two such backs as Glenn Tony Connalley, Holy Cross; Mike Davis and Doc Blanchard in the Paidousis, Tennessee; Bernie Wink- ume Lackfield, and that big, swift ler; Texas Tech; Mikes Castronis, NEW ‘YORK, Nov. 14—Beau Jack, former holder of the New York- Pennsylvania world lightweight crown, will oppose Willie Joyce of Gary, Ind, in a 10-round bout in line c¢i theirs is nothing short of Georgia Madison Square Garden Dec. 14, it wenderful.” Guards—Art Gerometta, Army; was announced today 1t would be difficult to think John Mastrangelo, Notre Dame; Warren Amling, Ohio State; Claude - back to a college team that might ¥ M [ Fave played on even terms. I can't McQuady, Tennessee; John Rea, name any college team I ever saw Southern Californmia; Al Hemstad, Ihe Thlng that I would say was the equal of Washington. Centers—Broncho Kosanovich, of tois one.” { > Penn State; Hershel Fuson, Army; I s H u nled DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! Bill McGovern, Washington. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA Giant PennWSfiasher Gels <. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPth JUNEAU, ALASK 'CREW OF MARISCAL "HAM' OPERATORS A jar ing” in Tokyo Bay, had of Alaska salmon, r many weeks for a “grand open- VOTED LINEMAN SUCRE ENJOYS JAR GO BACK ON AIR GLORY OF WEEK OF ALASKA SALMON ~ EARLY TOMORROY/ saved that open- !ing about October 10, and was great- ly enjoyed by the officers and crew of the Mariscal Sucre, acc letter ording to a received by D. B. Femmer demand in Yokohama, he said, with a tr ing black market fers them for money. Yokohama has ch siderably since Crenshaw's there several year: with the greater pa tial section “liquidated,” al docks and business sectic pretty fair shape ago, 300 yen—$20 of the res which 0.~ in_our anged ton- 's last visit Wwro, he though t n were in The Mariscal Sucre was fortunate in mis swept ing several typhoon over the area, but had to run that had over to the China Ceast in order to The 1 left miss one of them. with which the ves deck load herz, was still aboard, and after having had it that long, they were n to lose it in any of the sto: shaw wrote. He sa ot anxious rms, Cren- d officers and crew of the ship are locking forward to returning some day to Juneau, and the pleasure of renewing ances when they do so. -~ to having acquaint- BABY GIRL ARRIVES FOR HARRY LUNDELLS Mrs. Rosalia Lundell produly an- nounces she is again mother, this time to a a grand- baby girl weighing 8 pounds, 15 ounces, born camumi:m lx;‘::;x;rcne‘;k.:; WEATHER BULLETIN to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lundell working & sixs DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 12TH MERIDIAN TIME yesterday morning in Fairbanks, . After that POTTSTOWN, Pa., Nov. 14—The Max. temp. | TODAY where they have made their home Louis worked on 2 50 percent of the nocturnal tramp-tramp-tramp of a last | Lowest 4:30a.m. 24 hrs Weatherat for the past few years. gate basis and took in $6,800 ref- posse combing the woods of nearby Station 24 hrs* tem temp. Precip. 4:30 am. Harry Lundell is well known ereeing in four California cities . . . Sheeép’s Hill for a mysterious beast f"J“mlfagé l§ 5 “4 0 Clear ;h_l'rt. having been born at Tread- That's a fair amount of dough, and that makes 20-foot leaps, cries and Barrow fasi] - - |well and spent his boyhood days the Bomber wasn't taking any clouts screams like a baby and steals Bethel 8 2 4 0 Clear |in Douglas and Juneau. A graduate chickens, is not good for the Cordeva 25 16 16 0 Clear of the University of Alaska, he is o iy Dawson 30 | -25 0 Clear now a civil engineer at Ladd Field, NE-MINUT. PO. Especially, says Mrs. Edward Edmonton 4. 2 0 y Snow near Fairbanks. The Harry Lun- Tol:eEAschi[;NgnSof g;ig};Agie_ Oreger of Sheep’s Hill, “to mine.” f;l{rbtans Ig »2{1; -2(3 g S:eirm b \‘dclls were married five years ago ball Coaches will hold its first win- She complained to police that lmn h:‘n‘(‘_“:l 1 ;x 12' o Pl oudy |at Anchorage. Sioi ter meeting in St. Louis Jan. 8, the hunting parties trespass across her ° » s H day before the National Collegiate A. property #and take pot-shots at e e » o Cloudy | GEORGE B. WILSON HERE 1 2 % i etchikan 40 30 36 21 Cloudy 5 A. meeting . . . One topic of discus- black shadows late at night. Soteting g i 2 » by | - sion will be an All American ball! “Maybe Tl start some shooting M°é““ :‘; % S i i i | George B. Wilson, Albany, N. Y., . The Sugar Bowl program myself,” she said, “if this nonsense mme . : 7 g e | i# registered at the Gastineau which used to run a week, again doesn’t stop.” va.liwa' 5 e P 0 Cl;:ar Y | Hotel. will be strictly football this winter.! Meantime, “the thing”—as resi- Peterat 3’Y % | P poy P e > | dents in the area have tagged the ©CroloPuis LIS e < ¥ HERE FROM CORDOVA Rl s | | mystery animal—s responsible for Prince George I o 4 4 Soow 1 - |four casualties among those who Lrince Bupert 43 34 41 48 Cleax | J. A. Ritchie, from Cordova, has Al A Bl G0 O ¥ ine atalked Uit theshat: five L WA 51 40 50 Rain arrived in Juneau and is stopping dm ( i : San. Pranelaco, 61 46 . lat the Gastineau. d TIDE TABLE R i Seattle .. 52 34 34 33 Cloudy ¢ Police reported William J. Bran- Sitka 2 27 29 P Snow | o o November 15, 1945 ¢ e e del, 18-year-old Poitstown youth. | yypjieporge 9t 8 T. Snow | o |was struck in the thigh by a 27 It 26 0 Pt. Cloudy | |jeeecscccce Low = 3:52a.m., 2.0 ft. 10:24¢a.m., 15.7 ft. 6 p. m., 26 ft. 22:40 p.m., 150 ft. o ® e 000 s 000 00 e e November 15, 1945 SUN RISES — SETS Sun Rises . Sun Sets 8:45 :39 a. m. p. m. | Yakutat | | *—(4:30 a. m. yestérday to 4:30 a. m. today) MARINE WEATHER SB8ULLETIN “pumpkin ball” bullet; Betty Hart, 7, of nearby Douglasville, was in- | jured in the left arm by a “trigger | | | . o 'nervous” posse member, and a Reports from Marine Stations at 10:30. A. M. Today « |young couple—tracking “the thing” | WIND Height of Waves o/ by auto—were seriously injured | Station Weather Temp. Dir.andVel. (Sea Condition) | when a frightful screech caused | Cape Dgcision Snow 2% E 14 3 feet o the driver to lose control of the!cape Spencer Cloudy 19 NE 50 o car. | Eldred Rock ..... Cloudy N 55 8 feet John Hipple, a Montgomery | Five Finger Light Snow 23 NNE 30 Rough | County farmer, says he saw the| Guard Island Rain 38 N 18 2 feet | animal. “It was like a big cat,” he | Lincoln Reck Cloudy 29, ESE 2 Smooth o recounted. “I shot at it and it| Point Retreat _Cloudy 17 NW 60 7 feet o leaped 20 feet into the air and, | MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Lynn Canal—north- o | screaming, disappeareq. : erly winds 60 mil=s per hour decreasing to around 40 miles per hour Thurs- Variously it has been described as day—Cloudy, lowest temperature near 8 degrees. Inside waters, South- a panther, a puma, a wild chow dog, { east Alaska, south of Lynn Canal to Sumner Strait—northerly to north- a hear and a black fox. But until| casterly winds 35 to 45 miles per hour decreasing to around 30 miles per ‘uhe prowling posse nabs the shriek- | hour Thursday—snow. Inside waters, Southeast Alaska, south of Sumner |ing beast it will be just “the iof Sheep’s Hill.” westerly winds 15 miles per hour--rain and snow showers. Outside waters, e Sitka to Yakutat—easterly to northeasterly winds 25 to 30 miles per hour— | DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! partly cloudy. | SANITARY MEAT Phones 13 or 49 P HEADQUARTERS FOR Fresh Paciic Oysters Petersburg Shrimp In Bulk Broadhréasl TURKEYS ALSO: Ducks, Geese 1 thing | Strait and outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Sitka--easterly to south- | «..a friendly answer to what and how to serve When young folks get together it's never long before you hear the welcome words Have a Coke. By right of unanimous adoption Coca-Cola belongs to their world of refreshment and friendline: easier way for Mom to win their approval than to be sure that ice-cold Coke is in the family refrigerator . . . ready to serve. SOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNFAU COLD L-—-——---!—' teur operators) will ke sitting up tenight to celebrate th return to the air on tb irequenc Leginnir moved to a 144-148 MC band 3 I tered at the Gastineau Hotel | - PAGE THREE Lights burn brighter and cleaner when [ do the job. WEST HARTFORD, Conn. Nov The nation’s radio “hams” ( r peace for released , tomorrow, 1 at 3 a. m vision stations are new channel) and the > oo ARIZONA MAN HERE Phoenix, A u and is re ymend Morgan, rived in June DUTCH SAYS: ‘These big fellows with the deer ierby horns are still high up 'mong the timber, The smaller ie-r are near the beach in thick brush. About six inches of dry snow covers all the trees and as you touch a branch a cascade of now goes down your neck, covers your hands and wrists and plugs your gun barrel and cursss? Sure, it's tough, but you can go fter those big fellows and ck 'em down and drag ‘em out regardless. i It's not as cold in the woods as it is in town. The does and fawns stop sometimes if you whistle They will stand and look at you for ten minutes if you whistle without moving, whistle them a iy tune like the mocking bird or s jolly coppersmith or over the M 27 waves waltz and they won't move till you make somg other noise. They think, perhaps, that you ars a ‘blue jay, a jolly old lark or some other nightingale of the woodlands. Best wishes. Sure music charms the bed t like good cooking charms the two-legged beast. Tire Pumps, Cross Chains, Bumper Jacks, Radiator Alcohol in stock. A little alcohol in your car tanks and erankcas®s and in bath rcom fixtures will discourage fce and prevent damage. Alcohol is good for priming gasoline stoves. [} And, Mr. Boat Owner, don't forget to drain your boat en- gine. The salt water in them can freeze and burst them, too! DUTCH’S GARAGE % WRECKING YARD | THREE F o ¥ . And there’s no .~the global Thigh 28 uct of The Coca-Cola Compaany. STORAGE CO. © 1943 The C-C Co

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