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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 4, 193 COLLEGE BEATS DEMOLAY 67-53, IN FAST GAME Scoring of Brant and Bay- ersFeature Openingof | College Series In an orgy of scoring on the part of both quints, the Collegians last night won from the DeMo; outfit by a score of 67 to 53 in one of the most exciting games of the | year, The game was featured by the shooting of Harry Brant, form- er lo High School ace, and Lloyd Bayers, DeMolay center. Brant caged 13 from scrimmage, most of them looping one-handed throws, and three from the gift line for 29 points. Bayers sank 10 field goals and two on free thro for 22 points. | Team Play Counts | The CTollegians had a decided edge in team work and that was the deciding factor in the game The DeMolay squad, which was| the strongest it had assembled L)ml season, showed the effects of its| lavoff of the past two weeks. Both clubs elected to play strong offensive game and neglected the defensive side after the first few minutes. The local team held a Ph. Parts ith'\'xsba.nd Kay Francis, glamorous film star, announced that she and her hus-||seventy-eight billions. band, Kenneth MacKenna, motion| picture director, are “amicably sep-| { arating.” January, cor BILLIONS ARE ' REQUIRED FOR GOVT. EXPENSE President Submlts Message Regarding Estimat- ed Outlay (Continued irom Page One) ‘ i seven billion dollar deficit for this year. ! STATEMENTS ARE MADE l WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.—Speak- ! er Rainey said the amount of the deficit for the year was startling indeed. Senator Dickinson, of Iowa, said the Budget was “unknown in peace time and a record of extravagant expenditures and sinful waste.” Rainey added: “There is nothing | S0 alarming about the increase of five to six billion dollars or more in the national debt when the nor- mal national income is around The deficit will not be paid all in one year but in time.” Senator Dickinson added: “This fiscal program will impose a tax burden on this generation and imany to follow in this country. throughout and ended It cannot continue to exist, half They were married in 1931. (Associated Press oto) nsistently a 5 to 4 advantage for fhe first(14 points to the good | subsidized, half victimized seven minutes but lost it at the| In the curtainraiser, the Hw)p S0 end of the first quarter when Brant| School Freshman five nosed nul.‘ started on his scoring rampage.|ahead of th: Grade School fwe FUNERA-L SERVICES The first quarter ended with th2|16 to 13. Smith, diminutive tor-| FOR M. S. WILSON TO Collegians on the long end of a ' ward for the Graders, swept thel 10-7 score. i Never Headed Again They were never headed poi afler | boards for scoring honors with llJ BE HELD TOMORROW Funeral services for Malcolm S ints. Collegians Win | that point. But the DeMolays m]-'Coll:uians (67) Pos. Demolay 153;1Wnstm will be held at Butter- lied several times to carry the| Brandt (29) rf. Lindstrom (14) | Worth and Son’s Mortuary in Se- e within a single point of ty-| Henning (15) 1f. Pelley (9) attle tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'- inz, only to have the Collegians| Johanson (10) ...c Bayers (22) | clock, according to word received spurt again and move out of th2|Franklin (6) rg.... Bloomquist(7) ; this afternoon by Horace O. Adams, danger zone. Midway of the second period, af ‘,\ er the visitors had boosted score to 16 to 9, the locals rallied | ning; Henning for Lundell; and made it 16-15. From that| for mark, the Collegians steadily forg-| Pelle | Karabelnikoff (4)lg Substitutions: the | Johansen and Johansen for Hen-| Angeles to attend the services. Berggren (1) Mr. Wilson's brother, Robert wil- Lundell (3) for|son, arrived in Seattle from Los OShay Mr. Wilson, who died suddenly Melseth for in Seattle early yesterday morning for Bloomquist; | | following a major operation, which Karabelnikoff; Marshall =d ahead to end the half ten points| Pelley for Melseth, Bloomquist for | Was performed on Saturday, was a| %o the good, 32-22. | Marshall. | prominent business man of Ju- Spurt in Second ‘Scnre 1st % 2nd % Total neau and well known throughuuti The locals spurted at the out- | Collegians 32 35 67 the Territory. He belonged to the set of the second half and by a‘DnMomy 22 31 53| Mt, Juneau Masonic Lodge No. 147 pretty exhibition of passing and| Field goals: Collegians, 31; De-|and was a member of the Scottish checking, moved up to within one|Molay 21; on free fhrows, Col- | Rite Bodies of Juneau. 32nd De-| point of the College quint at 35- 36.|legians 5, DeMolay 1T; pnrsonal‘ gree, and a member of Nile Tem- | Each team scored two fields in|fouls, Collegians 14, DeMolay 9;|Ple, of Seattle, Nobles of the Mys- | quick succession, then fhe Col-|technical foul, Collegians 1. ! tic Shrine. He also belonged to legians broke loose again with five| Officials: Regele, referee; Dun-| the B. P. O. Elks Lodge No. 420. field goals and the third quarter|ham, timer; Whyte, scorer. AR, SRR ended with them leading 48 to 39. Although the DeMolays contin- n2d to score in the fourth quar-|s$! ter the College maintained its lead ! nia’s lanmxc vegetab]e crop. NEW YEAR SHAMPOO AND FINGER WAVE—S$1 Peter Pan Beauty Shoppe It addS SOmethiIlg Telephone 221 for Appointment TRIANGLE BUILDING {| e e SECOND FLOOR ‘With a market vnlu«- in 1933 of | ATTENTION ODD FELLOWS There will be a regular meeting 'of the Odd Fellows Thursday night |at 7:30 o'clock. All members urged to attend. Installation of officers. S e 47,000, tomatoes were Califor- rrrrrrorrreeeeeeeeeeeeees9 Tunch will be served. CHAS. W. CARTER, | SPECIAL! } BUY FLOUR NOW Homelike, a Fisher Product, 50 1b. bags $2.15 Red and White Bread Flour, 50 1b. bags $2.25 1}/ i At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 | Dance TONIGHT | Capital Beer Parlors | LUNCHES ‘BEER Music | DANCING Modern storage warehouse for Chesterfield tobacco FRESH SHIPMENT Grandma’s Cakes and Cookies ORNIA 478 GROCERY PROMPT DELIVERY 'Maze of Questions Unanswered as W ynekoop Murder Case Comes to Trial in Chlca 20, Ill Quections sufficient in number and interest t3 make a gocd mystery novel remain unanswered in the celebrated Wynekoop case, which will reach anclher climax when Dr. Alice Wynekoop goes on trial in Chicago charged with the murder cf her son's wife. Dr. Wynekoop, her son Earle who was CHANNEL CAGE SERIES OPENS | - TOMORROWP.M. ngh Schoo] Cagers Start| | Annual Series Here Friday Evening High School basketball teams will preempt the cage spotlight herc riday evening when the annual eries between Juneau and Douglas boys and girls teams for the Chan- nel title will get under way. At present the title rests in the hands of the local school which seems to be headed to repeat this season. The girls teams will open the series in the curtain-raiser at 7:30 pm. in the High School gym. The boys meet in the nightcap. The double official system will used as in the past. E. E. trom, Douglas, will referee the and John Osborne, umpire. The order for the girls’ boys games Juneau, will ;mll be reversed games, Four games will be played, re- gardless of the result, except that tin case of a tied series a fifth will be played. - D'ucw for the games after Fri- are: Douglas, January 12; Ju- ‘neau January 19; Douglas, Jan- | uary 26. ‘DANlEL ROSS MADE | ADMINISTRATOR OF e | C. SHELDON ESTATE United States Commissioner J. Fr Mullen today appointed Daniel Ross as administrator for the es- tate of the late Cyrus F. Sheldon, aged pioneer who was found dead in his home on Glacier Highway several weeks ago. H. L. Faulkner is the attorney for the Adminis- trator. | The greater part of the estate consists of a homestead on th2 highway consisting of several acres | on both sides of the road, near the | Juneau Dairy. | e ——— Daily kmnpire Want Ads Pay! ® the cigarette that's MILDER - frecd of chargee girl was found arc shown here. By JOHN W. STAHR CHICAGO, Jan. 4~Into the triai of frail, 62-year-old Dr. Alice| Wyneloop for the murder of her daughter-in-law, Rheta Gardner Wynekoop, will be tossed a ma of unanswered questions that m many story book mysteries m simple by comparison. This already-famous case, slated for tridl beginning this week, does not follow any fiction formula by presenting a long, contrasfing list of suspects. will “Confeszicn’s” Big Role But in setting, psychological a“dj physiological angles, intra-family intrigue and contradictions, the| “operating table slaying” assumes most if not all the ingredients of a Poe brain child. Perhaps the biggest pre-trial question of all is: Will the ‘‘con-| fession” which the . elderly doctor igned three days after the tragedy be her defense, or will it be the| state’s biggest weapon? | That statement, writfen in the| third person, stated merely that| the young woman died of an over- dose of chloroform while being| treated by Dr. Wynekoop— "u\dl that “a bullet was discharged” aft-| er death merely to give the ap-| pearance an intruder had killed Rheta—has been termed by d = terested legal minds as a “per-| fect defense document.” But the defendant, by turns, has| mepudiated. confirmed and again repudiated the ‘“confession.” The defense may, after all. sfand upon Dr. Al wp\umun her amum“, | death by of being an aceessory to the slayin;, and the eperating room in which the body cf the poise, her career as a respected physician, and her original state- ment that an outsider committed other e 2 multitude of which may complic Among them are these: Farle Wynekcop, 27- personable husband of ta, bm 50 carfridges for his mother’s 32 calibre ol—found eside the y-nude body November 11, just 10 days bzfore he tragedv? And why did Dr. Allce at deny knowledge of a $5,000 e policy on Rheta’s life—carr double indemnity in case of violence—when she her- self had paid the first premium on so on November 11? ar ing More Puzzles Why did Earle write an affection- ate letter to Rheta from Kansas City on November 4—though when he returned to Chicago for several days he didn't even telephone the wife he called his “mental infer- for?” Why were there two blank cart- n(lfles in the death pistol cham- Wh_v did Dr. Alice, when she scovered” Rheta’s body at 8:30 hat Tuesday night, first call her daugt Dr. Catherine Wynekoop, then call an undertaker—police not being notified wuntil four hours later? And there are dozens of other puzzlers, any of which may assume major propdrtions. er. WE HAVE AW ARDED TURKEYS TO WORLD'S ARM SESSION IS 0. H. HATCH 0. F. FLOBERGSUND VERA BLACKWELL d J. B. GODFREY . BILL TUROFF 2 WE WANT- 4547 ‘ 88415 | - Italy Takes Stand Regard- ing Coming Confer- ence at Geneva ROME, Jan. 4—Italy, in the per- son of Premier Mussolini, is rep- sented viewing as useless the World Disarmament Conference at Geneva in light of the present Franco-German impasse. Italy, it is said, does not mean xho will refuse to attend the com- g Steering Committee meeting hut if delegates are sent it will be | cnly because “Italy will associate | herself with others in recognizing the lack of wisdom in convoking | the conference under the existing | to the Taste and makes them Milder hesterfield the cngarettc that TASTES BETTER ...:-."«(‘.I... . Zynda | ‘ Irene Harvey and family; T. R. GEOR(flE BROS Curtis and Mrs. Curtis, Seattle. Alaskan L] Emil Backlund, Seattle; Olaf Bol- ! i g Gastineau I{| Telephones 92—95 Five Deliveries Daily | : o, IS EUROPEAN WINE CELLAR o OMETHING like the method : . . . . ) of ageing fine wines is used in age- ing and mellowing the tobaccos for Chesterfield cigarettes. The picture you see here was taken R inside one of our modern storage ware- 2 ] y houses where the tobaccos for Chester- g field are put away. - There are about four and one-half i miles of these Liggett & Myers ware- i houses filled with thousands of casks of Domestic and Turkish tobaccos, most of it lying there ageing and mellowing ¥ for Chesterfield cigarettes. It takes just about three years to age “f the tobacco for your Chesterfields. Everything that money can 'buy and that science knows about that can make a cigarette that’s mild- " er, a cigarette that tastes better, » © 1934, LicesTr & Myzas Tosacco Co»