The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 10, 1934, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU ALASKA MWDAY DECFMBER IO 1934 TWELVE PAGES SECOND SECTION—PAGFS 1 TO 4 ALASKAN IS FOUND DEAD IN HOTEL "5, M. GAYLORD Re ABDUCTION OF | river boatman, brought here (mm[ | the* Yukon country. Bishop P. T. Rowe reminisced old umes of the Kiondike and other‘ FINAL WEEK OF | jJuneau. A relative pursued and made the would-be abductor drop the child. The little boy was playing in the Recovery Program with 14 ’ALASRA,YUKUN DIES; BODY IS INBATH TUB Promment Seattle and Nome Mining Man Pass- es Away in Yakima YAKIMA, Wash., Dec. 10.—S. M. Gaylord, aged about 60 years, well-known Nome and Seattle min- ing man, was found dead in a tub of water in his bathroom in the Donnelly Hotel when attend- ants went to arouse him. The coroner will perform a post- mortem to determine whether Gay- lord died as the result of a frac- tured skull or was drowned. Gaylord came here from Seattle with C. A. Peplow, also of Seattle, and made appointments to see sev- eral persons. When he failed to keep the appointments and did not respond to telephone calls, also noting a light in his hotel suite, attendants entered and found the body in the bathtub. Gaylord lived part of each year in Alaska and spent the winters in Seattle. He was a veteran sour- dough. He went to Nome as a prospector 35 years ago and re- cently made moderate wealth by operating a dredge in the Casa Depaga district, 20 miles north of Nome. Gaylord was admitted to the bar but never practiced law. He was a widower. A brother resides in Saginaw, Michigan. Gaylord was prominent in the Arctic Club, of Seattle, Alaska- Yukon Pioneers and Seattle Metal Association. BOWLING TURNS - “HOT" AT ELKS ALLEY MATCHES All Three Saturday Night| Engagements Prove Close Affairs Perhaps it was the recent an- nouncement of all those wonderful prizes to be offered at the con- clusion “of league play—but some- thing certainly made the bowling | competition at Elks' Alleys sizzling | hot Saturday when C League ten- | pin artists went through their paces. All three matches went the 2-to-1 route before decisions were reached, and, although no records were broken, the bowling was on | a high average plane. The Mojuds opened the play by nosing out the Agfa Sure Shots with & 511-502 victory in the final »frame. This 511 total, incidentally, was the high team single game | tally of the evening. Bowling for the losers, M. H. Sides clicked off the best men's three-game score by totaling 568. The losers claim- ed the high three-game team tally | of 1431 In the second match, although Mrs. Art Bringdale hit 477 and 178 for the best women's figures of the evening, the Spark Oil Heat- | ers had to bow to the Amocats | when the latter team rallied to| take the final two tilts—one game by four pins and the other by three. The final engagement went to | Smith-Coronas over the Kaysers, with Ed Radde’s 203 single game | score, best of the evening for Lhe4 men, aiding the winners. The A League will open the | week's play tonight with the fol- | lowing. three games: S. & W. vs. | Hotpoints at 7:30 o'clock; Squibbs vs. Happy Homes at 8:30 o'clock; Walkover vs. Hart Schaffner & | Marx at 9:30 o'clock. | Saturday night's summaries: } FIRST GAME Mojuds 156 155 151 140 155 154 Mrs. Faulkner. Coughlin Kegel Totals .. .. 462 449 Agfa Sure Shots Mrs. Sweum 12 175 lomgren . 172—*516 | Waugh ... 156—*468 463—1405 HOOP PLAY TO START TUESDAY, Brown Learng Individual Scoring, Although Hard Pressed GAMES TOMORROW At Juneau High School— Moose vs DeMolay at 7:30 o'- clock; Juneau Firemen vs Douglas Firemen at 8:30 o’clock. Rounding into their final week of play in the first half of tone season, four City Basketball League teams will take the Juneau High | School floor tomorrow night in the | next-to-the-last double header of the fall and early winter season. Friday night’s double bill, also in the prep gym, first half play. will conclude the ! Points Proposed; Would Be Rallying Talk for Liberals WASHINGTON, Dec. 10.—A four- |ing, further consideration of vet-d»/ teen point recovery program, helped |erans' needs, legislation to curb ex= by a “greatly expanded and much | cessive service charges by private more rapidly prosecuted” public |electric power interests, speeding works project, is advanced by |the prosperity of the metal and| ‘United States Senator E. P. Costi- | mining industry with improved na- gan, Colorado Democrat, as a rally- | tional prices through more effective ing point for Senate liberals of all | purchases and increased use of gold parties during the winter. and silver, and restoration of Fed- ‘The points included social secur- |eral wage cuts. ity legislation, including Federal e assistance in promoting old age | Tezcatlipoca, one of the chief pensions; legislation designed to |gods of the Aztects, was considered assure genuine collective bargain- {endowed with perpetual youth. Life If He Boosts Price of Gold SEATTLE, Dec. 10.—Six hundre Alaska and Yukon pioneers ban- deal at the annual reunion. that Capt. Joe Mathews, PIONEERS GIVE NEW DEAL 0. K. Would Elect Roosevelt foir queted here Saturday night and the Anchorage Hospital. The two praised President Roosevelt’s new |children recently figured in news The banqueters ate moose ment‘ Yukon | Plane. gold rushes. ‘William Gilmore, mayor of Nome during the gold rush there, a Pro- gressive Republican, declared Alu- kans would like to elect Roosevelt for the rest of his life if he will | jump the price of gold to $41 an | ounce. e CHILDREN IMPROVE | Little Susie Waskey and Betty | |Smith of Wood River, near Kan-| | yard when the kidnaping was at- temphed SEATTLE CHILD === IS ATTEMPTED - rieec o e [Kidnaper Forced to Drop Vllanes, 0t by 3985 | Young Son of Islander P WABHINGTON, Db 8 Wieok Divas 1 he decision to increase the 4 | akanak, who were seriously injured | [ Army’s air fleet by only 300 planes next year, instead of | recently, are gaining steadily in| SEATTLE, Dec. 10.—The police 500 or more, as the General |are seeking a young man who at- Staff recommended, is attrib- tempted to kidnap James, 5-year- | uted by manufacturers to high- old son of Charles Huckins, sub-| er prices caused in part by the {mnrme diver, who helped salvage ’the wrecked steamer Islander, near | dispatches when they were rushed to the Anchorage Hospital by air- Administration’s Recovery pro- gram. sates SEND THIS COUPON AND GET ‘Tomorrow night pits the Moose ; against the DeMolay five at 7:30 o'clock and the two rival fire de-| quintets from Douglas | and Juneau in a renewal of their | argument at 8:30 partment traditional o'clock. A HILLS BROS COFFEE-GUIDE The DeMolays have two games to | go. By spilling both the Moose and | Douglas Firemen—whom they meet | on Friday—the fraternal club can tie Krause's Concreters for second place but can’t hope for a title chance unless Juneau High School can upset the present league-lead- ing George Brother club later this week. interesting simply from a tradition- al rival standpoint, as neither team | can hope for little else than glory by winning, However mathemati- cally speaking, the Douglas club is in_the same_situation as the De- Molays. / ¥y BROWN LEADS SCORING With but one more week left to play, big Paul Brown, sharpshoot- ing forward for Krause's Con- creters, a hollow one, played its entire six games. His two keenest rivals, Bob McPhee of | George Brothers and Lloyd Bayers ' of DeMolays, both have games to play. Brown, in six contests, has col- lected 82 points for a 13.6 average per game. McPhee, who has one more tilt to play, is in second posi- tion with 75 points, an average of 156 points per game in five appear- ances. However, Bayers, point average, and has two games left to play. ‘The ten leading scorers: Player-Team FG FT PP 'I'P Brown, Krause 3% 12 8 McPhee, George % 713 Bayers, DeMolay 33 3 Erskine, George ... 30 8 B. Lindstrom, HS. % 9 Fox, Douglas 25 1 F. Behrends, HS. .. 18 14 L. Hill, Jun. Fire ... 18 10 Hollmann, J. Fire. 14 2 Heppenstall, Krause 13 10 TEAM SCORING LISTED Offensively, George Brothers team continues to lead the loop. The Green Shirts have tallied 232 points in five The second go tomorrow will be has taken the individual | scoring lead. However, his lead is ! for his team has | third- | place man with 72 points, has tne | best chance of all. He has an 18-, 'I5l the league-leading | COFFEE-GUIDE desz'sned to ncrease your coffee delz'gbt. Accurately measures correct amount of coffee for 2 cuEs of water To make a cup of good coffee you must not only use good coffee but must make - it properly. Hills Bros. Coffee is @lways . the same . . .every step in its manufacture is consistently uniform. To make certain that every cup you brew always has the same unvarying goodness, use the same amount of coffee and water every time. The usual custom of measuring coffee with a tablespoon causes noticeable varia- | tions in flavor. This new HILLS BROS. COFFEE-GUIDE gives you a perfect measure. It will help you to make your coffee taste the same at every meal. Hills Bros. want you to have one of these COFFEE-GUIDES to prove that better coffee can always be made if the coffee and the water are carefully meas- ured every time. Mail the coupon at once and you will receive your free HILLS BROS. COFFEE- GUIDE... made of red Unyte...with illus- trated circular giving complete directions for using it to obtain the fullest enjoy- ment from your coffee. ILLS BROS GOFFEE games for a 464 point average. However, Krause's Concreters have | stepped into the picture since che last averages were published, as the | best defensive team. The Concreters | have averaged, in six games, 25.1 ' points scored against them. The second high-scoring average honors go to DeMolays, who boast |a neat figure of 445 points per game, The second best defensive team is the Douglas Fire Depart- ment, which has permitted but 27.2 points per contest. P SO T The great auk, now extinct, was as large as a goose, stood two feet tall and could not fly. Spark Oil Heaters Mrs. Bringdale. 157 178 142— 477 Council 165 165 165—*495 Monagle 176 128 153— 457 . 498 4T1 ’l'lflll) GAME Smith-Coronas 12 93 . 183 183 165 168 Totals m—lm 124— 329 183—*549 203— 536 510—1414 Mrs. Hunt Selby 172— 448 163—*489 151—*453 Totals .. 481 4861390 ‘Aw. did not bowl. COF \ Copyrighs 1934 Hills Bros. % rnia. Califo e economi- ood 3 am interested :(;nsakggEgFEE GUIDE to the HILLS B

Other pages from this issue: