Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 14, 1936 By GEORGE McMANUS ALE |execution. The sale will be held |inside lobby entrance of the Fed- {eral and Territorial Building, Ju- |neau, Alaska. | Dated December 14, 1936. i WM. T. MAHONEY | U. S. Marshal, | By W. G. HELLAN, | Deputy. 1936. 1937. GING UP FATHER ML JUST CALL ON F MA ! No. 3937-A In the District Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, Division Num- ber One. At Juneau Trevor M. Davis and Davis as Executors of the Estate of J. Montgomery Davi De- ceased, vs. Waino Hendrickson as Administrator of the Estate of |First Lewis Lund, Deceased | Last By virtue of an execution issued out of the above court in the above cause upon a judgment rendered on | Nov. 21, 1936, between the above named par n favor of the plain-| tiff and against the defendant in| the sum of $6694.61, with attorney | fee; interest and costs, I have lev- ied upcn all the right, title and in- |, foreat, ol sald efendun TOLme TS Bowels, Tids. you OF Do lowing described real property: Cause & bad complexion. Butler, ; |Mauro Drug Co., in Douglas by Lewis Lund Homestcad Tract, 272'% |Guy’s Drug Store. —adv. acres, Survey 204, at the mouth of | s L Lemon Creek near Juneau, Alaska.’rm,- ———————— NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN i Rice & Ahlers Co. that I, the undersigned, will sell HEATING PLUMBING the above described real property for cash t he highes i 0 sh to the highest bidder at SHEET METAL WORK PIIONE 34 l NOTICE O | BRIN BAH-IT LOOKS AS IF WE ARE GOIN' TO HAVE A WOMAN FOR MAWR ANY- YES-MR-WILL RUNN-1 WANT YOU TO KNOW I'M FOR YOU-AN' | KNOW LS BE ELECTEL- YOU LITTLE PEANUT- DIDN'T YOU HEAR ME CALL YOU ? SHUT UP- DONT TALK BACK TO ME=- | WANT YOU TO GO TO THE STORE- <Ei Cedric M PROMISES TO publication, Dec. 14, publication, Jan. 4, R ‘My Skin Was ©ull of Pimples and Blemishes” Says Verna sSchlepp: “Since using Adlerika the pimples are gone. My skin is smooth and glows with health.” Adlerika washes BOTH public auction, on the 8th day of Junuary, 1937, at 10 o'clock A. M. of that day to satisfy the sald =we=wos | RAGE ENDS IN TE "BRITISH OPEN “ess| THREE-WAY TIE ! ) e Name Your Brand ! CONQUEROROF AS SANTA CLARA DRAKE PINMEN BOWS TO TEXANS McCormick Bags High Texas Christian Win 9-0— Scores in Elks’ Bowling Will Meet Marquette ! | —Susquenanna Wins 1 in Cotton Bowl \l 4 ‘ | TOMORROW you'll be glad you said WHITE HORSE TODAY Jimmy Cain,70f Washing-| ton, One of Three Lead- | [ | 5 A | g Point Gatherers | SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 14.—The | race for individual scoring honors | of the Pacific Coast Conference ended in a three-way tie for the 1936 season. Deadlocked at 37 points each wer: Milton Popovich, University of Mon: (tant; Jimmy Cain, University of | Washington, and Bob William, Uni- versity of Califorinia at Los A“‘J geles. The three backfield aces are | a point ahead of Ed Goddard, | Washington State College quarter- | back, who led most of the season. Williams’ point scoring efforts 'are the most remarkable in that | he has made more points with his toe than from touchdowns. He has booted three field goals and con- verted point after touchdown ten |times. | Leading conference scorers: Popovich, hb, Montana Williams, fb, U.C.L.A. Cain, hb, Washington Goddard, qb, W.S.C. Cruver, fb, Washington Davis, gb, Southern Cal. Sparsk, e, California Gray, hb, Oregon State Kolberg, fb, Oregon State Haines, hb, Washington Jones, fb, Southern Cal - John McCormick, playing with-i SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 14.—Scor- out partners for Columbia, held ing a touchdown in the second the pat hand of the evening at|quarter and adding a field go the Elks Saturday night, a 213 the third period, Texas Chi n, single game and a 583 total, which |behind the amazing passing and were plenty to enable him to tz\lm‘plmting of quarterback Sammy two of the three games of the Baugh, toppled the last of the na- opening match, against Drake. ition's major teams, Santa Clara,! In the other half of the double- /from the undefeated and untied header, Susquehanna, with Bob|list here Saturday afternoon by Kaufmann leading the way to roll {a score of nine to nothing. | up the next high total of the| Forty thousand football fans saw night, 544, was able to capture the [the Texans defeat the Broncos in first two engagements of its cam- |the big intersectional game. p t Erie. Princeton opens tonight’s confer- ence bowling session at the EIKS| DALLAs, 1exas, Dec. 14, — The by meeting Boston at 7:30, Wash- |Texas Christian grid team which ston following against Duke at|defeated Santa Clara Saturday, was | 0. and Richmond versus Oregon {today invited to meet Marquette g the program at 9:30. | University here in the New Year's Saturday evening’s scores | Cotton Bowl game. Santa Clara meets Louisiana State |in the Sugar Bowl clash in New 520 {Orleans on the same day 463 | — - — - THIS PROMOTER AROUND HiE* GREENS GAVE \ THE NEW PG.A. TITLE HOLDER =7, AN EDGE OVER. THE OTHER. CONTENDERS Pour out for yourself a gen- erous drink of White Horse. Inhale that delicate fragrance. Sip, and roll it slowly over your tongue. Did you ever encounter such smoothness? Swallow. Was there ever such warmth without a trace of fire? TOMORROW you'll be glad you said White Horse TO- DAY. Half-bottles and pints also on sale BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY—86.8 Proof CHOSEN FOR COTTON BOWL | | | Drake 180 144 174 498 454 lumbia 213 178 161 H. Redman J. Elliott Mrs. Reynolds 147 148 159 | [y i THIS IS THE Y& . FIRST TIME SHUTE %fl HAS WORN THE PG A- CROWN - HE WAS RUNNER UP TO TOM CREAVY IN 1931, Totals 531—1483 Col J. Me k N. C. Banfield Miss Hanson Spot 19 161-—"48: 124 ~ 583 3| 2 Sole U.§, impoeteris Browne Vimners Lompany, Inc., New York — Chicoge — Lok Angeles 1S OPTIMISTIC 4901477 HOLLYWOOD, dal, Dec. 14— Matchmaker Charley McDonald of the Hollywood Legion Stadium an- the smoke had cleared away Re- volta had bowed himself out with Totals 7Distiribulots for Alaska Susquehanna B. Kaufmann 156 199 H. Sterling 160 163 Mrs. Caro 139 139 183— 544 173— 496 139—"417 nounced he had telegraphed man- agers of Joe Louis, offering thej negro heavyweight $100,000 to meet | — Maxie Rosenbloom in the 4,400-seat | 501—1457 ,capacity fight arena February 26,| |the night before the Santa Anita | 190— 487 Handicap. 144— 429 | McDonald, brushing aside com-| 184 434 |Ment that the bout would be a| __ ____ifinancial nightmare, declared he 5181400 intended to sell 2300 seats at $100! ;npiece, and the remaining 2,100 at| 1825 apiece. | The film town matchmaker said | {he believed rich motion picture |people and Eastern sportsmen here {for the $100,00 handicap would' i"more than fill the place.” HOLLINGBERY Totals 455 501 Erie A. W. Henning .131 F. Foster 144 Mrs. Kaufmann.155 Totals ... 430 452 Average score; did not bowl. —————— 166 144 145 COUGARS PICK ALL-STARTEAM PULLMAN, Wash,, Dec. 14—Bob Herwig, All-American center of the University of California, was the unanimous first team choice of the Washington State Cougars in their all-opponent conference football team. Max Starcevich, Jim Cain and Byron Haines of Washington and| Del Bjork of Oregon were close to| receiving all the votes of the Cou- gar squad. - SPORT SLANTS The most bashful man in golf had what it takes. Shy Denny Shute, the transplanted Alleghan- ian who now bats for the Boston area, survived the battle royal at Pinehurst and is now the proud possessor of the P. G. A. crown. He thus has collected, in his cur- ious career, two of the three major crowns of all golfdom, for in 1933 he carried off the historic British open laurels. Denny is what the crystal-gazers vbashlu] to the point of complete self-effacement, and no locker room | delight to call an enigma. He is' a big 7 on the treacherous 15th, and Dudley had also resigned, leav- ing to Shute the glory and the $2,500 first prize. This was not the only experi- lence which endeared the palm country to Shute. The following winter, after he had won the Brit- ish open crown, he was challenged to play Johnny Goodman, the Omaha amateur who had won the national open crown at North Shore, for the Doherty Gold cup, emblematic of the world's cham- pionship. He accepted the challenge and became the second holder of the cup, trimming Goodman as Gene Sarazen had conquered Olin STINER, AIDES . ~ ARE RE-HIRED | Tuesday Night DECEMBER 15 BASKETBALL [ ] BOUGLAS DE MOLAY CORVALLIS, Ore., Dec. 14—The Intercollegiate Athletic Board at Oregun State College approved a program to turf Bell Field here and announced it would offer Coach Lon Stiner his fifth yearly contract. | The board says preliminary work on the field would begin immed- jately under the supervision of Harry Schoth, Federal agronomist. Completition of the work would give Dutra in the prveious year's match Oregon State the first turf field over the same Miami Biltmore among major schools in Orezon. | Country Club layout. | The board also voted to offer - ‘contmcl renewals to Backfield iCoach Hal Moe, Line Coach Jim Sports ; |Dixon and Freshman Coach Howard Brief rers.... Maple. Captain of next year's West Point | | i | New Year's Bath | grid team is James Horace Isbell,| H | six-foot, 220-pound tackle, of Union s ur I “ | ] | City, Tennessee, who entered i CHICAGO, Dec. 14—New Year| Filrst Team: Center — Herwig, AGAIN COACH City Orders Cow | SHRINE GAME o Stop Mosing | ROCKFORT, Ma: California; guards Starcevich, lever echoes with either his exulta- Washington, and Kuhn, Southern tion or his alibis. No expert has | California; tackles—Bjork, Oregon,fpointed out the beauty of his style, land Belko, Southern California; and few duffers have ever copied | - Dec. 14. —lo 4c Clark, Stanford, and Hibbs, |the elements of his putting, which, Ehe Poerd gf Heullh: otgatel Her'iS«auLhern California; quarter—Cain, |though deadly, is engineered from SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 14— m”;;i:;' gfiifl;?nifl‘éibfii f:;en:::lWashmswn: halfbacks — Haines,|What 1ooks to be the world's most Preparations for the annual East-| .10 0 Sleep. ' Washington, and Popovich, Mon-“lmum@fl-able posture. His knees ‘West football game here New Year's | chohy Baid e ol oo i¢| tana; fullback—Meek, California. [sag a little and he lines the bail Day started with appointment of 'y o"peo o™ 14 nim how to d.f;,o | Second Team: Center—Wiatrak, up squarely between his feet, shun- coaches and William M. Coffman,| " |Washington; guards—Ferko, Stan-|ning all the pet angle-theories of ! i, iford and Radovich, Southern Cali- some of the other experts. Chicago, as managing director. The coaches will be Andy Kerr | lnstmments Stolen fornia; tackles — Zagar, Stanford, | A of Colgate and Dick Hanley, for-‘ jand Bond, Washington; ends— Ehe new. B oG- £ oligpion de- ; TRUCKEE, Cal. — Thi de Schwartz, California, and Johnson, [S¢Ves 8ll the credit he has won, i S opes e % o *land more. He is the classic exam- (7:30 P. M) 1 J. H. S. GRAVES (8:30 P. M) @ academy from the regular army.| merly of Northwestern, for the, According to Army tradition, he| Bastern team and Orin Holling- a hard climb and a strange haul Yery of Washington State and Per-|on lofty Mount Rose. Scaling the «y Locey, University of Oregon ath-| 10,800 foot peak, they broke into iastic director, for the Western!'the snow survey cabin and stole squad. They have been in charge|several hundreds of dollars worth | of the coaching of the respective of meteorological instruments own- teams for several years. Iecl by the government. | Washington; quarter—Davis, South- | ple of the explosion artist who made good. Unlike the ill-fated Roland Haneock, who folded up over the-home stretch at Olympia Fields and was heard of no more, e skt Lol rlleds Ipay_ Shute has made the golfing world 3 |forget his failure at Winged Foot ern California; halfbacks — Coffis, Stanford, and Gray, Oregon State; | fullback—Cruver, Washington, and | Williams, U. C. L. A. (tied). ROSE BOWL 'OR NEW YEA Rose Bowl time 'l;:hm llill;ni.‘fiqm are shown spraying chemicals 3 for " GROOMED FOR NEW YEAR’S DAY GAME rsectional football classic on New Year's _mately 87,000 persons. (Associated Press Photo) T e |in 1929. In that year he had a glowing chance to win but stum- ' Jones in a dismal play-off with Al Espinosa. Now It's Medal Piay From Pinehurst, suate is head- ing south. He will have plenty of opportunities to meet the men he bested on the Carolina greens, but when he skirmishes again with Bill Mehlhorn and Jimmy Thomson and others the formula will be meda! play. Denny put .the Indian sign on them, individually; now it re- mains to be seen whether he can turn that match play win into an introduction to a big winning win- ter season. The precedents are all in Denny's faver. In the past he has given a good account of himself in the Florida competitions. Back in No- vember, 1932, when the masters were massed for the Miami Bilt- more $16,000 open, richest golf tournament of them all, Denny survived the wholesale crackup— days in the P. G. A. bled on the last few holes and left aver the grass in the big bowl the title to be won by Bobby ‘Day. The bowl seats approxi- Ed Dudley. just as he did during the last few' steps, came Denny Shute, and whenjvntle. was elected on the way home from the Navy game. After eight matches of the world's checker championship tournament in West Palm Beach, Flroida, which is to be decided by a 40-match series, neither the titleholder, Asa Long, of Toledo, Ohio, or the chal- lenger, Edwin F. Hunt, of Nash- ville, Tennessee, had won a vic- tory. All eight matches ended in draws. The University of Idaho has in- vited tne University of California boxing squad to Moscow, for match- es tentatively scheduled for March 12, One tribute to the great line play of the Huskies in the recent Uni- versity of Washingtlon-Washington in Seattle, was the remark of Al Hoplowit, WSC's first string cen- ter, who was kept out of the game by injuries. “We needed Al in there” said {Cougar trainer Dr. Wilbur Bohm, 'after the game. “Aw, T was better off on the bench,” Al responded Wife Had Baking Aid; Gets Divorce DETROIT, Dec. 14. — George { In the 1932 battle Johnny Re- Loeffler told Circuit Judge Toms all farmer has gone back to more an- volta, then a complete unknown, nis pride in his wife's cake-baking cient days to get his crop of corn was roaring down the home-stretch, | ability vanished when he found that from the fields to storage. Because fighting neck and neck with bm;"anathcr man” did the baking while of a shortage of horses, he and his But, dogging thexr‘ht was away. Loeffler won his di- friends are carrying the big sacks s State Thanksgiving Day grid game | ‘morn is no time for enforced bath- |ing, Mrs. Rose James Wilkes, 28, claimed in her bill for divorce filed against her husband, Norman, in! /the Circuit Court. [ | Mrs. Wilkes, attractive bolnde, iwas once the wife of Jésse Jumcs,“ grandson of the two-gun bandit of the '80s, but divorced him in Evans- ville, Ind., in 1932. However, she asks her attorney, Sol R. Fried- man, to demand that the name of James be restored to her il al !decree is granted in her present| suit. | The bathing episode took this year, when the inconciderate Norman filled the tub with ice water and dunked Mrs. Wilke;, .clothes and all. e Counte}leit‘C' ins \ Fill Slot Machines Adults—25 cents Students—15 cents Grade or High School Sixth Street Entrance ONLY place - The First National Bank JUNEAU [ ] CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$75.000 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES Man Power ' MOUNT CLARE, W. Va. — One \ 2% Paid on Savings Accounts CHICAGO, Ill, Dec. 14.—Profits| on pin ball games and slot ma-i chines in the vicinity of Waukegun’ have been falling off lately, but not | on account of any mechanical de- | fect in equipment. The nickels| hove becn accumlating as fast as| tut the trouble is that many | » coins are counterfeit, | i D ! { ifrom the fields to the bins.