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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 23, 1936 0 Good Little Monkeys Nifty 1 Rah-Rah Radio New JUNEAU-YqU HARDWAR NOMINATIONS In The Daily Alaska Empire—Juneau Merchants BETTER TIMES DRIVE Each Nominee Begins With 10,000 Votes ANDERSON, EUNICE AFRICH, ROSIE ATKINS, CLARA BAYERS, THAIS C. BLOMEEN, ELSIE BARRAGAR, HARRIET BARDI, GINGER BOURNE, DOROTHY CLINKINGBEARD, EDITH CONKLIN, GERTRUDE CASHEN, MILDRED DANNER, ROSA DANIELS, BETTY DAVIS, ESTHER EDWARDS, PHILLIS J. ENGELS, JERRY FOX, LUCILLE FURUNESS, LINDA FRASER, MAE FEERO, GENEVA GREEN, DOROTHY GARNICK, ANITA GODDING, EVELYN GRUBER, ELEANOR HICKEY, MARGUERITE HILL, VERNA JACKSON, TULLAH JARMAN, JESSIE KYLE. LADDIE KILOH, MARGARET KASER. ELISABETH KARNES, ELIZABETH LINDSTROM, INGA LOKEN, ASTRID LYNCH, LUCILLE LINDSTROM. MARGARET LUNDELL, RUTH MONAGLE, ROSELLEN MINZGHOR, RHODA McKIBBON, DAISY NORDNES, MARY NELSON, MARGARET PAUL, CHEDE PEARCE, MARY L PUSICH, HELEN POLET. CHARLOTTE POWERS, BESSIE REIDLE, BERNICE ROLLER, IDA SHAFER, MILDRED SNOW, GEORGIANNE WHITFIELD, BETTY YORK, CATHERINE Watch This Space Daily For Standings N C- Q- | ‘“Fragile” Southpaw Paces NOWPLAYING Purdue This Year in Quest for the Thirc AT COLISEUM “Hooray for Love” Stars| Ann Sothern and Gene Raymond, Comedy “Hooray For Love,” musical revue starring Ann Sothern and Gene Raymond, is now playing at the Coliseum Theatre. The plot is concerned with the difficulties met by Raymond in| producing a Broadway show after he | has been successful ’in presenting musicals in college: | A group of top notich artists are, responsible for the musical revue's outstanding ‘entertainment value. Maria Gambarelli, Ameriea’s prima sallerina, makes her sereen debut Her ballet presentation is striking- ly beautiful. That greatest of all ap dancers. Bill Robinson, executes several flashing routines. Dancing | with him is a talented young girl,| Jeni LeGou. The general excel- lence of the musical is increased by Ann Sothern’s rendition of several | hit songs. | Dorothy Fields and Jimmy Me- | Tugh composed the melodies for | he picture. The outstanding tunes ! “You're An Angel,” “I'm in ve All Over Again,’ and “I'm| Livin' in a Great Big Way.” H - -oe SHOP IN JUNEAU! NOTICE OF SEIZURE AND SALE The ges screw or vessel JANIE | official number 216322, of 13 gross and 11 net tons, has been seized at Juneau, Alaska, on Jan-, ;nary 15, 1936, at 2:10 p.m., pursuant to the provisions of Section 1607 of Title 19 of U. 8. C. A, for violation of R. S. 4377, as amended. Kon- stantine (Gus) Fadeeff or H. Vance or any person claiming the property are required to appear and file The m:}n to watch this year \\'hcn; with the Collector of Customs at Purdue’s huxkvfball Boilermakers, | Juneau, Alaska, & olaim for such | CCchampions of the Big Ten, take e L e t:xc n‘m;nn}v?T»nm-pnvp competition of $250, within twenty days from ° }1?(-)<~1[}-\ S senior, carries the date of first publication off ., nqs on his 6-foot frame and this noucc: Un!v_ vsuch claim and jookc s if he might break into | bm?g :’f] m;-d ‘I‘;‘r?‘:"“‘i’fi" k:‘"‘;;gl':;‘ pieces when the going gets rough. scribe: he proj ) Vi e sold a public auction at Upper City Float, Juneau, Alaska, at 10:00 a.m., Feb- \ruary 7, 1936. James J. Connors, | Collector of Customs. ! First publication, Jan. 16, 1936. | Last publication, Jan. 30, 1936. COAST LEAGUE SCHEDULE HAS * BEEN APPROVED Bob Kessler, Purdue’s But his unorthodox left-hand stab ing column. nois and Wisconsin for the confer LAFAYETT! Ind ., Jan. 23. — 165 blows he develops such blinding speed and such a deadly eye for the basket that his scoring total nearly | always runs into two figures. | Coach Ward Lambert’s fast break- | Thornhill Is on Rules Committee PALO ALTO, Cal, Jan. 23— Claude E. Thornhill, football coach at Stanford University, has been |notified he has been appointed a Baseball Season to Start in|member of the Advisory Council of the National Collegiate Football MarCh and End L Rules Committee. September | Thornhill will serve with Noble | Kizer of Purdue, Lou Little of Co- At the recent meeting in Los|lumbia and Ray Morrison of Van- |Angeles of the Directors of the|derbilt at the rules committee Pacific Coast Baseball League and | meeting at Palm Springs, Cal., Feb. President W. C..Tuttle, the sea- ruary 14, 15 and 16. son’s schedule was approved. A -+ new provision was also approved | that stipulates each club must SPUBT SLANTS ‘| keep fifteen Class A players or | (better on the reserve list through- Late arrivals at boxing matches |in the near future will be aski out the year. The season's schedule “What's the score?” if a plan a {vanced by Frank Gatto, Kans ] includes the following dates: Opening ' series, Saturday and Sunday, March 28 and 29, Port- land at Sacramento, Mission at City San Francisco, Seattle at Oakland, tion he believes it merits. Hollywood at Los Angeles. Gatto’s idea on the surface ap-| Memorial Day—Oakland at Se- pears as sound as the dollar once| | attle, Sacramento at Portland, Los was, and is so simple it is in the | Angeles at Mission, San Francisco “Why-didn't-I-think-of-that?” class.| at Hollywood. | It makes boxing a match game, Fourth of July—Portland at Se- the same as football or baseball, attle, Mission at San Francisco, and as in those games the boxing| Sacramento at Oakland, Hollywood fans will know at all times who is at Los Angeles. winning. Labor Day — San Francisco at. The plan calls for a big board “Seam;le, Los Angeles at Portland, to be placed at a spot in the arena {Sacramento at Mission, Oakland at visible to all spectators. The board | Hollywood. is divided into squares, a square Admission Day (Closing week of for each round for each fighter. season), Sept. 8-13—Seattle at Port- At the end of each round the !land, Oakland at Sacramento, Hol- scoring records of the two judges :lywood at San Francisco, Mission and the referee are collected and at Los Angeles. cumulative total. | who posts the total, and as the, ——————————— CANZONERI ls Just for Example 1 1 : For instance, Joe Louis is fight- | wlNN‘EH UF Gu ¢/ing Max Schmeling. One judge | 9 |gives the first round to Louis, 6 {ie T " |to 4. The other judge makes it 5 N[NTH RnuN to 5, and the referee also calls it even. The figures on the board # would read 16 points for Louis and Technical Knockout Scored 14 points for Schmeling. The pro- cedure in the second round, if any, by ChamF BOUt and succeeding rounds is the same, Is Halted only in addition to the round score| the totals for the preceding rounds | NEW YORK, Jan. 23—Tony Can- also are posted. zoneri, world champion lightweight,| In this manner the fans may jwon a technical knockout over follow the progress of the fight the| Brecio Garcia of Mexico in the same as they would a football or| intmh round of a ten-round non- baseball game. A football game in“ | title fight last hight. which the fans didn't know the| The bout was halted in the ninth | score would lose much of its inter-| round to save .the Mexican from est, Gatto points out, and where| further punishment. | would be the thrill of a ninth in- Garcia was floored once in the ning rally in baseball if the fans seventh reund, twice in the eighth didn't know whether the rallying | and twice in the ninth. team was one run behind or 20| Conzoneri weighed 138 pounds runs in front? | and Garcia 187 ‘poands. If a fight is close at all, tm! ———a————— fans have no way of knowing who| SHOP IN JUNEAU! |is winning in the estimation of| sure-shot basketball bean-pole in some respects, being 6 feet tall and weighing only 165. | eral aggressive tactics put him at the head of the Boilermaker scor- He was a potent factor with Purdue’s Big Ten cham- pion team of 1934 and the mainspring of the attack that tied Nli- | His speed fits in perfectly with | @ matchmaker, gets the recep- - DAILY SPORTS CARTOON~ 1 Championship | THELMA TODD PICTURE IS AT CAPITOL NOW “Take thehgt_f;nd." Melo- drama by Earl Derr Big- gers, ()pens Tonight ¥ the Stand,” exciting melo- drama arring Jack LaPRue and Thelma Todd, opens tonight at the Capitol Theatre. he play is based on Earl Derr Rigg successful book “The Dence of Hearts” and is guaranteed to hola tne audience until the final aring in the eas ick, Burton Churehill, Fenton and Sheila Terry re Gail eslie one of those which gav 44 to 43 victory over the y of California in the clos- iny seccnds of their intersectiona. game here. Although Kessler's specialty that unorthodox, southpaw one- handed shot which he pushes over is| ELKS BOWLERS RESUME MATCH PLAY TONIGHT | League bowling at the Elks Alleys uspended last night to allow the cus- tomary mid-week dressing and ser icing of the alleys, and also the regu lar lodge sion, will be resumed to- night with the Grocers League bowl- | ing the following games: Krafft vs Libby, 7:30 p.m.; Heinz vs S. & W, 8:30 pam nd Del Monte vs Uneedas, Ouring the first week of matcn | lay-—ending Tuesday night of heir 8-weeks spring tournament schedule, Grocers and Brewers League bowlers have established se tournament records which may {ail to be broken. J. Barragar, of the Wescos in the Cirocers League, leads the masculine field with a game score of 243, and | 1 three-game total of 620. Mrs. J. T. | Petrich, of the Hop Golds in the | Srewers League, heads the list of | omen bowlers with a game score of | . and a total score of 525. Tha |Krafft team in the Grocers League | holds first place in the team totals| | the head of his opposing guard, he | ywith a score of 1525. resembles a | ace, shot, illustrated above, and gen- ence title last season. ng style of offense, and his team- | mates keep a “feeder” passes he fir one-handed, over-head, racing un-/ der the backhoard at top shooting from the edge of the free throw circle. A Southpaw Specialist Despite his rather frail appes going to him and very scramble for a loose ball ppear under the basket He will suddenly a cork W in mid- ir to flip in one of his deceiving left-handed shots the judg If the score is posted, the fans might disagree with the judges’ opinions, but at the end of the bout there would be no changg for a judge to change his decisiohs | The points are on the board in plain sight of the crowd. When a fighter wins so many points in a round those points are his, and nothing can take them from him. | team Thrills and Rallies { Many fans are misled by a last- | round 1 of some fighter whoi has been badly outpointed in earlier rounds. With the visible point sys- | tem, the fan can see for himself | how a man might be badly beaten | in the last round, yet win the fight | on the basis of his point advantage | in earlier rounds. CGatto declares his plan also would add thrills to the bouts. For instance, a fighter is trailing by 12 points at the end of the sev- enth round. He picks up four points in the eighth, and four more in the ninth of a 10-round bout. With the last round coming up, the fans, is equally adept with the customary two-handed toss from leng range. Last year he was runner-up in tpe Big Ten scoring tables with 150 points made with 53 field goals and |44 free throws, for an average of | 12 1-2 points a game. This year he amassed 84 points in Purdu first seven non-con- ference mes, with 31 field goals and 22 free throws. That Kessler is just as good when the going is tough is shown in Pur- first loss of the season, to Of Purdue’s 39 points Kes- |sler scored 20--and with Butler's | fastest man guarding him. When the Boilermakers dropped 14 Purdue points. When the Boil- end one of the most disastrous them through the hoop|eastern trips in history for Purdun.iGror'(‘l‘y tied for second with Kessler did not play the entire counted for 11 points. As a sophomore, Kessler was a rember of Purdue’s undisputed Big Ten championship team Last !Tllinois and Wisconsin year he | 1t three titles in a row. >~ UNEAU, FIRST! SHOP I {he can earn a draw by four more points, or win with five. | The plan also provides a better system of rating fighters, Gatto explains. A fighter” who wins by 20 points could be rated higher than a fighter who won over the same opponent by a single point, although the old comparative score bugaboo bobs up again. A football that wins its game by six touchdowns is rated better than a team which boasted a one-touch. down margin over the same op- ponent, S e 'REDS WILL GO TO PUERTO RICO FOR SPRING TRAINING CINCINNATI, Jan. 23.—The Cin- cinnati Reds will spend the first three weeks of their spring train- ing trip in Puerto Rico. They will play seven exhibitions at S8an Juan in a new Government-built stad- s well as the fighters, know that ium seating 10,000. given to the operator of the board,! § |'fight progresses also posts Lheiv [ OEMPSEY'S FORMER BATH 1S K WAS SAME STAGE OF DSVELOPMENT. _ @ MAVAGER INSIST; BETTER TAN J T Al Richis Reswrved by The Associated Pres 1 gy g BOWLING TEAMS GIVEN AWARDS New Schedule at Bruns-: wick Alleys Will Open ! Next Monday 1 With the md:fE‘ second half of the Commercial League bowling games, awards were announced to- | their second game, to New York day by Emilio Galao, proprietor of | University, Kessler accounted for |the Brunswick Alleys. First prize of $10.70 was given the steady stream of | ermakers lost to Temple, 42-47, to|Pioneer team, which won 22 games, The City team and the California 19 igames each and were each awarded | speed, or|game but while he was in he ac-|$2.65. | Frye Bruhn and Sanitary Grocery | tied for the “boobie priz and mem- |bers of both teams were given free | | theatre tickets. | But when the starting whistle | ance, he is in the middle of almost year the team shared the title with | Highest individual scores in thn] | The new schedule at the Bruns- | | wick Alleys will start Monday, Galao | |announced. | | WASH. STATERS DEFEAT ORECON PULLMAN, Wash, Jan. 23.— Washington State College last night defeated Oregon State 32 to 31 in a regular basketball game ori the Northern Division Coast Con- ference. | Paper Reli;? RIO DE JANIERO.—The Federal Council for Foreign Commerce is trying to work out a plan on behalf of Brazil's newspaper publishers which will give them relief from high exchange rates which have made the cost of newsprint burden- some. Most of the paper comes from Europe. ——a SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! SHOP IN JUNEAU! LATEST HEAVY~- WEIGHT £INO BOASTS A RECORO OF 37 KNOCKOU' IN 28 FIsHTS LR R TR, TONIGHT IS THE NIGHT M H HOFFMAN puacnls. LESLIE FENTON SHEILA TERRY Memories and Melodies Silly Symphony in Colors NOTE This theatre gives 25 votes in the “Better Times Drive” for each adult ticket purchased! and the young lady who heads the list as published in Sat- urday, February 1, Daily Alaska Empire will receive A TWO WEEKS' PASS AT THIS THEATRE. CAPITOL MIDNIGHT PREVIEW INE SWARNER OLAND U SR AR HOOP GAME CANCELLED The basketball game scheduled for And this | tournament were chalked up by Ed | tomorrow night between the Juneau wants to keep his -- and |Radde and Mike Ugrin, each of |High School and Sabin’s has been out of one of those mixups,| Purdue’s -- record clean by making | whom averaged 177 for the series. | | twistling like cancelled, L. J. Holmquist, president ‘l | of the city hoop league, announced today. The doubleheader Saturday | night has also been postponed. - ALL HAIL THE QUEEN! Tune queen enters the race! Doug- {las Island's Bridge Queen, Miss| | Phyllis J. Edwards, has been placed | |in the nomination column of to-| jday's Empire by a friend. | This brings the total to 54 can- didates. At the close of nomina- tions, the Merchants’ Commu.v.ee‘y will meet to decide on the eligibil- | ity of all contestants and rule them according to age limits, moral character, and marriage status. > " SHOP IN JUNEAU! O. B. Williams Co. CASH and DOORS BUILD NOW Building Cost Will Soon Increase Our Prices Are Always the Lowest Plain 2 Light Windows 24x24x24x1 % 28x24x24x1 % 30x24x24x1 % 36x24x24x1 % GM—Glass Measure Special Sash 20x35x1 %, 6-light 24x41x1 %, 6-light 24x47x1 %, 6-light ... 24x53x1 %, 6-light ... 24x54x1 %, 8-light OM—Outside Measure No. 1 One Panel Doors 2'0"x6'8"x1 % 2'4"x6'8"x1 % 2'6"x6'8"x1 % 2'8"x6'8"x1 %/ . 10-Light French Doors 2'0”x6'8"x1 % 2'4"x6'8"x1 % ... 2'6"%6'8"x1 % 2'8"x6'8"x1 % . Lumber by the Carload 2x4 No. 2 Com. Per M FBM $17.00 2x6 No. 2 Com. Per M FEM 16.00 2x8 No. 2 Com. Per M FBM 16.50 2x10 No.2 Com. Per M FBEM 16.00 1x3 No. 2 Com, Per M FBM 17.00 Subject to Change Without Notice ‘Write us for all your building requirements. QOur Prices and Material Are Always the Best Special 6% Cash Discount All Orders $50 or Over Write for Free Illustrated Catalog 0. B. 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Every Month in the Year AUCTION SALES DATES February 13 March 11 April 15 May 13 June 10 July 15 August 12 September 9 October 14 November 12 December 16 Special Sales Held on Request of Shippers Advances will be made as usual when requested. Transferred by telegraph if desired. The Seattle Fur Exchange 1008 Western Avenue Seattle, Wash. T BAILEY'S CAFE “WHERE YOU MEET YOUn FRIENDS" ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. S. Government Inspected