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Show STRANGE AS IT SEEMS byJohnHia MtRVlN rWWSOrt- TtV'iU ? in a dw won yvJj7f jiisSJfvirf til 1BCH WON rrtlrt loTlWy f ,V' 1 oh ft VKATKm cRui&t 1 LI m yvWr 1 : tJiu. the man who can't lose , . . Up north in Fairbanks, Alaska, lives "Lady Luck's favorite." Mervin (Buster) Anderson, bus driver, last spring guessed 8:04 a. m.. May 12, 1937, as the time that the ice would begin to break up on the Nenana river. The ice broke up at 8:04 a. m. of that day and Anderson won a $75,000 pool. Only the day before, Anderson and his boss, another.-ife expert, split $3100 on another ice pool the Chena Slough. Now Lady Luck might have turned her favor elsewhere after this remarkable doubleheader, but she was not through. Anderson, returning this summer to Fairbanks from a trip to Cordova on the steamer Alaska, couldn't resist entering a pool to guess the minute the ship's whistle would blow. He won $25. SNAKE SKIN . . . ' The skin of a snake the outer layer of epidermis to which the scales are attached does not grow. Instead, it stretches as the snake grows inside it. On breaking, the skin is sloughed off, turning inside, out, and a new one grows beneath it. (Copyright, 1937, for The Telegram) f I |