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WHERE S SARY-?? LL HAVE A TALK WITH HE MANYBOWLERS DONOTPLAY: WATCHES HELD Fanthstic Resuits Reached When Only 8 Play- ers Appear With only; eight bowlers appear- ing’for: action from the 18 expect- ed to turn out, competition, in the Alaska Rivers League furnished some fantastic results last night at Elks Alleys. Take the matches chronological- ly.” In the opener, R. H. Williams had & niee time bowling all by himself. He was the only member of either the Tananas or the Kus- k6kwims to show. Williams clicked | 434, but it wasn't enough, so the ‘Kuskokwtms ‘“average” won, 2 to| | | ! { 'l'he second match was a rea!* battle, make no mistake. All but one bowler were present. The\ Kobuks, by winning the final game, 484 to 449, defeated the Cop- | pers, 2 to 1. Mrs. M. Williams, rolling for the losers, was the high woman bowler of the évening with a 467 score. But the finale reverted to the| absentee class of competition. F‘red Henning, with the high men's tal- ly of 857 to his credit, did the| best he could for the Takus, and Abbie Garn representing the Tolo- vanas. When these.two had fin- ished it was found the Garn's lineup had won a hairline 2-to-1 decision. Douglas and Admiraltys bame‘ at '7:30 o'clock tonight in Alaska|, Islands League competition. Fol- lowing this match, the Baranofs and Zarembos mix at 8:30 o'clock, with the Chichagofs and Dukes bowling in the nightcap at 9:30 o'tlock. Last night's summaries: FIRST GAME . Tananas,. - Mrs. Lavenik 170 170 110—-‘510 Williams, R. H. 199 115 120— 434 Waugh 154 154 184—+462 —_——— 5623 430 444—1406) Kuickvmu ¢ . 123 123 m—'m 183 m—?g . 162 llg lfl—" Totals ... 468 48 4651408 sscom) pu‘l'cn ; 155 107 14— 401 53 185 16— . 193 158 m—-s‘:g Totals Judson McCormick Miss Monsox; ‘Kaufmann .. Barragar, F. Totals | Motors. 31%, [13%, Holland Furnace 8%; mining exdm.\{u = Y mfi,fii%é ! % Mrs, VWilltams Snatfuck Grummett . 150 157 153— 460 | 149 149 18944 ... 417 448 MO—1374 THIRD MATCH Takus : Mrs. Peterman 130 130 130—*390 Henning, F. .. 147 207 208— 881 Thibodeau ... 161 161 161—*483 Totals ... 438 498 494—1430 Tolovanas Mrs. Andrews .. 152 152 152—*456¢ 185— 517 Totals Garn . 157 175 Connors, Jr. Handicap CLOSING Quohhous TODAY,N.Y. EXCHANGE The rouowing are closing prices of yarious issues today on me New York Stock Exchange, furpished by the Wilson - Falrbanks and Com- pany's Juneay, office; . Alaska Junaeu 17%, Amer. Can 113%, Amer, Power & Light 3%, Amer. Radiator 14%, Amer. R. M. 21%, Amer. Smelting 35, Amer. T. & T. 105, Amer, Tobacco, 82%, Ana- conda 10%, Armour N 5%, Atchison Topeka 45. Atlantic Refining . 24%, 15%, , Bethlehem, Steel 29%, C. P. |12%, Caterpillar 38%, Cerro de Pas- co 41k, C. & O. 42%, Chrysler! 37%, Cont. Can 65%, Cont. Oil 17%, Curtiss-Wright' 2%, du Pont |de Nemours 95. Elec.. Auto-Lite 24%, Fairbanks- Morse 18%, Gen. Electric 23%, Gen. Grapby . 6%, G. N.' Howe Sound 45. Hudson 10, Int. Nickel 23, Johns- Manville 51%;, Kennecott 17, Lig- gétt & Myers 104, Loew's 32%, . Loose~Wiles 35%,. Lorillard 194, Marshall Field 9, Mathieson Alkall 28%, MecIntyre 39%, Montgomery Ward %%, Nash 16, Nat. Cash Register 16%, N. ¥..C. 17%; N. P. 17%, Penney nolds Tobacco 47%, Sears Roebuck 3, B. P: 15%. .Sacenty . 1434, Ofl. Cul.. 30, Texas Corp. . !0%. United Airerafh: D.. S, Rubber 14, U.S. Smelting 111, U. S, Steel 37, West. Alr Brake 24%, - West. . Electric 3%, Wool- w 54%, cu!uinet & Hecla, no Averam-vp 30, ; Spot_Siiver—53%e, A to, Vancouver and Seattle Bralorne 1Ty 8%, Stand. Oil N. J. 40%, Timken 34%. , R. X. 176, aoufiuirh $1.20, Gol- na Consolidated Montana e ,76¢ at $1.00, Pioneer , Premler $1.40, Silver- 8 $11.00, Cresson Euas 178 142 147— 467 Bendix | (Gontinued from Page One) vich bill o fiw mharlu Commit- tee which uql‘ d Aeflnn nut. Nerlmd wasn't through. He then called upon chairmen of var- ious committees, especially the Ways and Means and Liquor com-| mittees, for action declaring no! munas had been ca.ued and vir- auests had been made to all com- ! mittees that bills be held, until cer- |tain. persons, wishing (to_be heard | KOs 'could arrive on the incoming boats. “Thaf’s. just what. T've been wait- to hear” exclalmed A, G, Nor- ,. Jumping -fo_his_feet. “The u:ue thing happeneéd last session and Il like to say. right here and now, that the Legislature doesn’t ‘have to wait for anybody. We're here to. do busihess and we ought ito go ahead Wwith it.” Liquor Bills Coming A. H, Ziegler, Liquor Committee !Chairman, said there was nothing: before his committee as the Senate members of the joint ‘committee were drawing up some bills which. | would be introduced shortly. | Mr. Nerland and several others said they didn't care what the Sen- ipte, was, doing and, Nerland cau- tloned. the liquor committee had been - instructed to, bring in pro- posed Jegislation within 30 days, “If the proposed legislation is not submitted within 30 days I, as \Ghaltman of the committee, will |be glad t¢ submit fo the censure iof | this - House,” Mr. Ziegler re- Clll It Day 3 who had been t:yins to. get through a motion to adjourn for some,time, finally, got |* action when Mr. Nerland proposed calling it a day, the body agreeing to meet again Monday morning at |67%, Puliman 48%, Radio 5%, Rey-10 oiclock. | Hearings on labor and fish bills come up Monday and Tuesday with promise to center the at- tention of the members next week. ‘Two resolutions passed the House ths morning, one providing $350 for janitor service and another $500 for a trip of the Legislature to the" Pioneers’ Home at Sitka. Two new bills also went into the hopper. Lingo asks $5,000 from Fourth Di- jvision road funds for rehabilitating roads in the Nenana district and Green brought in & law, revision measure” dealing with the duties of the Treasurer. : —————— For the first time not &' single undeliverable Christmas parcel re- mained when the Topeka, Kas, post officé cleaned up the 1934 in- flux, oo g e "'"«‘R"’?" B et everythmg' e ;.Upon his return., frg of handling the All-smp Hg_ pie-} tured Ruth in the role of dmbas-] u@or of good will and lauded” him all he had done in the inter éume day. the nner;s are ' go- ing to_realize the futility of trying to guess what Connie Mack is go- ing to do. .. In their minds they have retired{ s Rim every fall for the M-.” years; planned trades for him that{> Never were consumimated; Qnd w in their rmdnm for, he . goes right just as he pleases—and siderable success. Fact s, more otten than ot Te does exactly the opposite of what t is expeoted of him. That' comes|letics for the naxt elght, sohsons, ufder the heading of strategy. fe, untll he reaches 80. .. { Recall, ¥f you please,. the open- & i 1} ing game of the 1920 world series|. He has no use for a:'good. will between the Athletics and the Oubl ambassador” around _Shibe in Chicago. While everyone was| What ‘he really wants $ . !fi debating as to which of his three{youmg, hard-hitfing outfielder but| star pitchers—Grove, Barnshaw or{Babe Ruth bardly fits' the pig- | Walberg—he would choose, the wily/ture. Looks like they've guessed Connfe conmipletely crossed them/|wropg again; all and senit the shop-worn ‘How-! There is one other angle dle,wfld ard Ehmke fo the mound. Mack: guessers have -overlooked—Ruth is ‘himsell muist have been mildly as-|still-the property of the New, ¥ork tonished . when the veteran slow-|Yankees and Col, Jake Ruppert: In-| baller nét only won the game but{sists that to.date no. one has: ap- also set up a. new world séries|proached him with anykind of an strike-out Tecord by fanning 13 otm for the big slugger. Cub _batters. | ponmeugckumxnmdut Mack has repeatedly named this’ after the vacation in: the far, cdst, s the outstanding thrill of his 51, making his plans for the coming years in baseball. campaign. He plans to' use Jimmy Foxx behind the plate as he did | After having mentnlly bvuncad when the - chubby-faced Jimmy re- Babe Ruth all around the Amef l- po Jto . the A’s a rodkie, Frank can Leagué, and a xooé part of t} will be on third -base as National as well, the guessers do-' uuupl, despie all the. trade.rumors. cided, &h&l the rl&ht 5pot, for ‘the 'More, thap. that—just sit tight un- 1 iwLLuuumc ‘O CONBRESS to Be Proposed by Senator Copeland ‘By mzmn PLUMMER ,wmd"mn, Feb. 24~ Work , s0glal security and the bon- m' will fi‘?m the a‘pomgm 1h' Wash- but another ’n}e Bemte‘a only M. D.—Doctor of /New York—on the d.y of the present session gL ngregs Jntroduced a bill des- tined to provoke perhaps as lively ‘a , bpttle lon Capitol Hill as any WhIGH Will be Seer, It is the proposed new food and | drugs Jaw. sueh & storm of obhcunn was | ralsed’ fn the last Cofigress to al jlwfll.r (bill. - sponsored _ by . Sena- Copeland that. it finklly . was bermitted to die. The doctor s back, however, with a mew bill} which he “believes stauds & better chance. ;. AMPROVES LABELS The Copeland, bl was drawn With dn eye o meeting the, objec- | tions of the Department of Azrl-' cultire to the Original Plire Food and Drugs act passed in “1906. It| ‘has ‘been the . Department'’s ‘con- terition. that :this act- dpes- not' Pro- tect - the consumer - Against .nis- ‘branded or even ‘adulterated. foods and . drugs - becguse 'it . does not| Bambino was with the Athletics.| til ihe .season;.rolis;: around, you \'cover "the' drastic chahges Hadn't Mack and Ruth been very, won't.get to first base guessing. BEER WINES _ @ Music’by Niemi and E SPECIALS TQM ‘ B Gglanket Sai MUSIC - industries hm undergone sinee 1906. Senator ' Copeland’s bill would| sequize_ Jabels, which toll cCeffite- | Iy what's b . ‘ One of iné. principal remure 18 that two cuumm,ees would be set. Up=+ané on public héalth, the oth- | er on ' food standards—to prescrive rules;: AN eghilations, i These . committees would lnclude NMMUV‘S of ghe lndusmes‘l will: as “five members desig-| nluu.w s prestdant with a view | 20! amngplshed sclentific | shn&nt lnd interest in public calth, o pomlell affillation.” I yi £ WOULD BAN ~cum.' ALLS" ould not. be lqmn- mered ficapt undgr caterul super, detinite :bans on - advertis: lm of. specific “cure-plls” (gne of the . main ¢ objeetions to'.Copeland's previous bill) as well as the remov. . withaut, Tegard to their | 5 g ¥ stiffer benfltha for violations e¥on fo the Poink, of cfi‘eridm of btories under téder a 1 permit whitre public” health cah fiot oth- erwige :be mtécm élso is pro- vided, | . | “Tn as much as the Ccvpehnd bill recognizes vast changes since en- actment_ofthe. original pure. food nd drugs act, & stll! Tght s in Proppect. . It promises_to nnk in import- ance with the major questions to come before Cofigress this session. e men:mn. ABSOCIATION IS TO MEET ON MONDAY ‘The Minister{al Msochtlon of Juzcau apd Douglas. will meet in rdfi? mohthly session Monday f | morning, February 4,.at 10 o'clock, n'thehomaol the Hev. John A. The hiennial repart of. the. Ida- ho state land department. showed an increase in_revenue, with 402- 754, more acres - of land under 37TH ANNifi‘flRéARY Peppy rhmeam 9: Douglas ! Ferry leaves s 3% leaves ORDER OF = by Dou,an Kerie 1174 Eagles’ Hall, Douglas TONIGHIL-FROM 10.B, M. ON! lease. OF THE FRATERNAL EAGLES, Musie! 40 P, M, Retummg at 1:30 AT M ADM}SSIdN—Gentlemen, 75 cents This new idds yeahr:? fort of your home. 1 Private Boqtha I:UNCH dwadrds LU ndw:ches an id BEFORE AND AFTER THE EAGLES DANCE KE i TONIGHT DR@F!NTOMI s b ol e e ‘.PR'O.TFCTJON At Biit Half the Usual Cost "cushion removes the shocks, life to your rugs . . . deadens the noise, and adds to the luxury and com- Gives luxurious depth and resilericy to all drugs and is a new protection against wear caused by grimy footsteps . . . . and .. . at prices lojver than ever before! NOW ON DISPLAY AT Hardwa' ¢ Co BALL mou Liniches — Daieng Ev-rf h:m - UNITED FooD co. Phone 16 &Igh'v ver GROCERS " Méats—Phone 16 m Hudq'uuuu—_ A:k for P;rml.nent Rates. Wdadisg HOTEL 14 NEW WASHINGTON Healiles Moil Dllingulihed Aldies