The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 2, 1937, Page 5

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RE, TUESDAY, FEB. 2 POLLY AND HER PALS‘ {VE DECIDED TO GET A DRESSER FOR YOU - WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH THE DRESSER - IDIOT-YOL) DONT UNDERSTAND-'VE HIRED A MAN- A VALET- HE'LL Magpies 147 154 190 147. 170 147 441 176 188 M. E. Monagle H. Sterling J.J. Connors, Jr CONNORS ROMPS OVER ROOKIES: ELKS’ 10-PINNING Lightweights B 5 491 uzzards 120 140 118 154 11 Dr. Wil Albert M. McDonr 134— 433 154—°462 425 442 4401307 score; did not bowl. R BASKETBALL POSTPONED w-azue basketball ghts Bag All Three Matches as Condqrs, Buz- , Beagles Bite Dust Setting a most unrookielike pace, Jimmy Connors romped home in front of the field of Rookies & the Elks last night, his total o 536 including the night's high game of 190, and a second of 188. Connors was forced to split the bt . high game honors with Doc Holl- games scheduled for icnight in the mann, who also got a' 190, however, ?:il‘){: _UUUI ((_‘ “1““ sheh Dt ity "1L:‘,;:’]'_‘r‘:{”";;:._,mf"\.',‘:. was scheduled to meet the DeMolays 590, :mlu Douglas L-ixs to play the Gr;nts. Rhnk 1 b Ha e t is probable that a team from Py Z&i‘aflfififl,‘f:fi,lz :;ng Chilkoot will come down soon on Hiedals. was Hob enousty b ksep tue J0e. POIMIDS 10 Diep She' bess Dicy Connors from dropping two games League team. Thelefo‘li‘,vthe myee‘- of their series with the Sandpip- 1n8 Of the teams that was sched- - and atiothte Msviwaight: Kiss., Wed 10 DIRYCRADIgn) wonld baye vl i helped decide the strongest eries with the Beagles, ©VeR though the hoop series was ech Owls bagged the firs; Mot nearly ended. Tiese two im- f In the two eine ves- K this afternoon. FOR BROADCAST Doc Hollmann 190 Paul Bloedhorn L. Holmquist 134— 468 151— 423| 181— 520 be>n post- | team, Howard,! ~ find any trace of his boat at 1 oclock | THIS 1S JARVIS= NOW JUST GO WITH MR JIGGS- AND HE WILL SHOW YO ABOUT THE HOUSE- 1937 By CLIFF STERRETT | SOTHIS IS ‘ WHAT YOU ARE WISHIN' L ONMME= Sl o AW WELL- | KIN SEE THAT IT 1S ONLY A MATTER OF A FEW_DAYS BE- FORE SOMEONE 1S GONNA BE HURT- AN!' T 1S GOIN' TO BE ME Daily Sports Cartoon CAHARLIE -HOFF - oF NORWAY WAS A SENSATION | | | | | | | socn | RAN AFOUL HE A.A.U. AFTER. CLEARING AL MOST | | FEeT craft was moored to{ i Spor. Slants Suyeo Ohe, Japan’'s athletic am- |bassador of good will, is a most welcome attraction at the big indoor | track meets this winter. Ohe is one ~JADANS No. 1 POLE. VAULTER . | OHE FIRST TOR-FLIGHT FOREIGN VAULTER. TO COMPETE IN THE BIS MEETS SINCE HOFF VISITED US HE HAS CLEARE I4FT. 4N, AND IS ONE OF THE TWO FOREIGN STARS TO TOP_I< FEET. ng nen -well ~ lighted wat feet d calmly clear it. And there wes plenty of dim daylight between Lis body and the bar when he stiled over. armory - i STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Feb. 2. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 14%, American Can o d Hoff set the cross bar at 14} 7 HERE T AT BRUNSWICK ~ MONDAY NIGHT Radde and E. Galdo Cap- ture Scoring Honors in Commercial Mix Two close matches and even scor- ng marked the Commercial League suwlng at the Brunswick last night, jshe Free® Lances defeating the Brunswick by oniy four pins in the first encounter, with a 1.473 pin to- tal. Defeating the Alt Heidelbergs in the second match, the Rainier Beer rollers compiled the high total of the night, 1,480 pins, Ed Radde, of the Alt Heidelberg squad was tront man of the session with 554. Ray Galao was next, with 521. Emilio Galao rolied tne nign single game, 204, while Radde plac- ed in that divislon witk 202, Tcnight's Commercial League con- tests bring tegether the Green House and California Grocery teams cn the Brunswick maple at 7:30; iclowed 8:30 o'clock by the Arc- ti~ Beer Parlor end Brunswick trios. Last nights scores were: FREE LANCES 165 157 169 170 168 204 IS HE INPOOR_ Jones Ciark E. Galao 158— 477 152— 491 133— 505 Totals 1473 ERUNSWICK 179 180 168 170 165 157 R. Garao Reidi Kell 162— 521 133-- 471 155— 471 1469 a0 Bighis Reserved by The Anpichted Press Team average ALT HEIDELBERG EDUCATION MEET .- enrne WII-I. GUNVENE il 114 202 178 564 HURSDAY Territorial Board Members | Totais Totals 1461 Are Here for Annual Ses- | RAINIER BEER 173 187 149— 509 200 162 156— 518 174 131 148— 453 1480 R. Galao { E. Galao ! Tubbs i i e e BEAUPREY TRAINS FOR FIGHT Tom Ceauprey (right), Dallas heavyweight boxer, is shown with Freddie Steele of Tacoma, middleweight champlon, as they worked out In New York for Beauprey's fight with Gunnar Barlund. (Asso- clated Press Photo) U.S. SKIERS TO Income Tax: How VIE: DOMINION = to Avoid Errors come tax returns covering the cal- \endar year 1936 begins January 1 lend ends at midnight of March 15. To file early is of mutual benefit to the Government and the tax- payer, Within this period are filed annually millions of individual in- come tax returns. a large proportion of which report income subject to the tax. The latter contain a con- siderable percentage of errors, which if uncorrected by the audit would result to the disadvantage of the taxpayer. Many are errors of computation eesily discovered on the face of the return, which usually is accompan- ied by a payment of more than the amount of tax due. In other returns it is readily discernible that the tax- payer has failed to take advantage of the personal exemption, credit allowed for dependents, or deduc~ |tions from gross income to which he is entitled. } on the U. S. Olympic ski team To avoid these and other errors, and America’s 1935 downhill |the Bureau of Internal Revenue urgs and slalom champion, has de- |es careful reading of the instrus Signs on gathering Canadian |on the forms for filing the returns, Lionors. |Additional information, if needed, From Portland, Oregon and the may be obtained at the office of & Cascade Ski Club, Hjalmar Hyam— collector of internal revenue, deputy an outstanding four-way man—is collector, or an internal revenue ag- socognized in Canada as the dark ent in charge. horse of the event. However, his Also, as a further aid in the prep- Northwest Skiers Plan Trip to Banff for Canadian Championships SEATTLE, Feb. 2. — Canada’s greatest ski events—the Dominicn Four-Way Champicnships scheduled for Banff March § to 8—promses to develop into a three-way battle among two Pacific Northwest and| one Far East ski expert. | Only one of the three will be from the Canadian side of the line dividing the continent. Tom Mo~ braaten of the Canadian Olympic team, represented the Vancouver, B. C., Club, looms as Canada’s big- gest hope to gather in the title of that country’s outstanding event. From the East Dick Durrance of Dartmouth College, No. 1 man 111, American Light and Power 137, | | Anaconda 55, Bethlehem Steel 824, Calumet and Hecla 17%, Common-! WASHINGTON, Feb. dent Roosevelt is broadcas —Presi- of the two foreign vaulters who 466—1411 ng to the have cleared 14 feet, the other being Tojals double dictory in downhill and sla- aration of a correct income tax re- lom races at Mount Hood and his turn for the year 1936, the Bureau son — Await Gorgas - \atiress Explodes; Nishada. B. Davlin Dr. Whitehead J. Walmer . it with the match portant games will be played a tossad away ‘the third game: 25 8 DBW date, weather permitting 5 pins. i can be arranged. Jimmy Connors and Hawley Sterl- 3 P ing both rolled five hundreds for the Magpies to take three straight GASB“AT KITTY games from the Buzzards in easy fashion. i ¥ MISSING TODAY lime go the Elks' Alleys as the Rookies give way to the . neble Ringers for a session of three D matches, in which the Dinosaurs| One gasboat, the tackle their fellow reptiles, the Al- S¢l owned by William ligators &t 7:30 o'clock. Eight- 1S missing as a result of last night's thirty brings forth a couple of sets Storm. of Western critters when the Prairie| The 37-foot Dogs mix with the Mustangs. At the float at Femmer's Dock 9:20 the Crocodiles will endeavor disappeared during the night and to penetrate the defenses of the Capt. Howard had been unable to Armadillos. Scores last night, with no allow- ance off for wind, were: ‘ Condors | 144 145 127 173 166 462 482 Sandpipers 172 157 165 96 134 180 471 433 Screech Owls 143 145 134 174 155 Totals S. Wirt F. Foster J. T. Petrich 432 Beagles Totals 160— 489 176— 437 140— 454 476—1380 151— 439 | 142— 450 155—’455: WELLINGTON, N. Z., Feb. 2— increase of seven 4481354 | Boy Scouts of America next Monday | 3nhei on the twenty-seventh anniversaty of their organization. The President will make his broad- cast at 5:30 o'clock. - PICKET GOLF LINKS Demanding an cents a round, caddies at the Mira- mar Golf Course picketed gates to M. J. Wilcox ... 133 J. D. Van Atta .. 142 W. Wilson 153 428 146— 422 the course when club officials ord- 151— 447 |ered them off the links. They were 153—*459 |getting 43 cents a round. - .- 450—1328‘ Try an Empire aa. Totals his countryman, cnd Japan's No. 1 pole vaulter un- {til Ohe came along to top 14 feet 4 inches. | There has not been a foreign pole vaulter of championship caliber to Iperform in the big indoor meeis |since Charlie Hoff paid us a visit lin 1926 and showed our lads how |to vault. Unfortunately Ohe comes along when indoor vaulting, in the East| at least, is at low ebb. Keith Brown, the record holder at 14 feet 4 in wealth and Southern 3%, Curtiss Wright 7%, General Motors 66%, International Harvester 106':, Ken- necott 60, New York Central 42, Southern Pacific 47, United States Steel 96%, United Corporation 7, Cities Service 4'2, Bremner bid 2%, Pound $4.89 15/16. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today's Dow, Jones averages: industrials 188.20, up 1.61; rails 5527, up 41; utilities| r 1, Paulkner, of Juneau, is presi- and threw it into his stove. Things 135.96, up .23. es, has retired and. there is no oth- | - er Easterner who can scale the 14- foot mark. If Olympic Champmn]REFEREE KNOCKED OUT Earle Meadows and George Varofi, the national champion and world record holder, (14 feet 6% inches), in a soccer match betwen the re- accept invitations extended to them. serve teams of Brentford and Chel- {Ohe may find all the competition sea, the referee was knocked out (an athlete could desire. ;and was unable to resume. A lines- LONDON, Feb, 2—Hit by the ball| | The first meeting of the Territorial P l L t h M lBoard of Education, scheduled to be 'held tomorrow, has been postponed until Thursday to await the arnvul; 5{ P. C. McMullen, of Seward, who is Juneau bound on the General W AROMA PARK, Il Feb. 2. — C. Gorgas. Bert Skelly, war veician, found out | Other members of the Board of |What it really means to be “under Bducation, in Juneau for its meet- fire” when he battled with Lis mat- |ings, are Mrs. Ladessa Nordale, of tress the.other day. vagroanks; Michael J. Walsh, of, Skelly’s mattress was too wide Nome: A. H. Ziegler, of Ketchikan; |for the bed so he cut off a strip winning of the Silver Skis at Mt. has prepared a series of short news- Rainier last winter backs pretty|baper articles of which this is the well the Northwest's claim that|first, advising the salaried man, Hvam will be a threat for the cham- | Wage earner, professional and bus- pionship. |iness man—in fact, every class of Courses for the events will be out- | individual taxpayer—of his require- lined on the sides of Mt. Norquay. Ments and privileges as interpreted The downhill run starts 7,400 feet under the latest regulations, rulings, high in Canada’s beautiful Rockies|and decisions relating to the income- {and ending 2,800 feet below. The !X law. course measures one and one-half| miles in length. It has an nvernKE‘Red crm l-'lood dent of the Board and Commis- sioner of Education Anthony E. Karnes is secretary. e MRS. SHIPPEY GOES SOUTH Mrs. H. C. Snippey, proprietor of the Fern Beauty Shop, was a passen- ger on the Princess Norah when it of 25 degrees, with occasional abrupt | Relief Fund Over began happening. The strip exploded. Skelly pour- ed on water but the more water he poured the more the flames spread. | Skelly grabbed a broom and started 'sweeping burning embers out the door. The wind blew an ember back upon the bed, setting it afire. | Skelly finally extingui hed the 140 degree drops. The slalom with an 800 foot ver- tical drop, will be timed by tele-| Top at AIICII ge phone set-ups at the start and fin-| ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Feb. "; ish. The langlauf is a two-lap g city contributed $848 for figure eight affair starting and fin- | peq Cross relief fund. The eit; ishing at Mt. Norqual Ski Lodge. |quota was $400. To make competitions keener in| the fourth event of the multiple man took charge of the game sailed early this morning. Mrs.|fire but both of his bands were start snow fracas, the jumping hill e . Mrs. Maude Robinson, who once enjoyed the extravagant attentions ol the Maharajah of Kashmir when he was known only as the “Mysteriows Mr. A” and who was a prominent figure in the subsequent $1,500,000 blackmaii scandal, is ready to go home to England after a visit with her i.usband, who is held in New Jersey on a swindling charge. Mrs. Robin- son overstayed her leave as a visitor to the United States, but she was permitted to depart unpunished. Should Star Indocrs | There is no reai reason why the| Japanese star should not come close | to his best marks on the fine indoor runway in Madison Square Garden | given competing athletes no cause; for complaint. ing I skyscrapers. {contend with. Ohe should have no great diffi- culty in adjusting his style to in-| door conditions. In build, bhe is not so very different from the great Norwegian vaulter of a dozen yeais Hoff had less than a week to sd-| |just himself and to prepare for his first big meet. He did it, all right. { He ‘Inched” Up i Hoff was in a class by himself. In| |those days the accepted record was! about 13 feet. Hoff proceeded to iraise the mark by eights and six- teenths of an inch until he pushed 14 |feet. Charlie had an ambitious |schedule mapped out, and in order | |to treat every audience to a record- | breaking performance he had to be | mighty careful about his advancss| ito his ceiling. He did it a bit at a time. { Just what the Norwegian star’s | 1cenling actually was no one will} ever know. Certainly 14 feet was | not even close to it. Unfortunately | Hoff got into difficulties with the| |A.A.U. over his activities and was | |banned from amateur competition |before he had cut loose with the lsnrt of vault he was capable of. In practice one afternoon, in a B KING’S CUP HELD UP CALCUTTA, Feb. 2.—Mas d'An- Certainly the lighting facilities have |fives, bred by the Aga Khan, won the King-Emperor cup here but If anything, compe(-"he trophy could not be presented indoors should be a help to the |immediately as the new King-Em- There is no wind to Peror had not been proclaimed. Four women, seated in the car shown here, Th:'nplonlon occurred when a repair crew sought to patch a pipeline leak with an acetylene torch. T | | her shop and resume b Shippey has gone south on a pleas- blistered and two pair of pants ure trip and expects to return to|Were ruined, including bis Sunday usiness about |best. Skelly is convinced the mat- tress was stuffed with guncotton. ——————— | - Restricted Indiais own 2726-| More than 2,500 men and women 346 of the 44,000,000 acres in Okla- were emyployed in December trans- March 1. leased or given away without the FIERY BLAST KILLS SIX homa. Their land may not be sold.ir’l'fin'mnxnrz1 gsz?bud: n:mzn;;a tzn c(x’:go acres - sanection of the Government. ties, Texas. . MELTS AUTO and two pipeline workers died In an oil blast near Pryor, Okla. car in which the women were waiting for their husbands was melted by the flaming oll, and a nearby truck wi demolished. (Assoclated Pr Photo) |Eanitary Grocery. Starting at has been remodeled to conform as nearly as possible to the Olympic jump at Garmisch-Partkenkirchen. | The hills capacity will be 250 feet. I Others listed to finish in up- per brackets in the downhill and slalom races are: Alfred Lindley of Minneapolis; Jack Taylor, of Vancouver, B, C.; Norman Knight, Banff, 8Ski Runners of the Canadian Rock- ies. In the jumping duel, Hans and Gunnar Gunnarson and Invind Nelson, all of Rev- elstoke, will be serious threats to the field. The women limit their activi- ties to slalom and downhill racing. In these affairs two Canadians are looked upon as probable winners. They are: Mrs. Tom Mobraaten (Peggy) Harlin) ; and Gladys Atkin, the Western Canadian Champion- ship winner. The carnical is under the co-spon- sorship of the Calgary Ski Club Pacific Bottlers Supply Co., Inc. Carnival gayety will rule (.hruugh-f out the affair, even though keen the winners will be held in the Cas- | cade Room of Mt Norquay Ski GOODIE SALE will be given by the Rainbow Girls | Exclusive Distributors and Ski Runners of the Canadian competition is the order of the four Lodge as the finale. \ | next Saturday, February 6, at the | for Alaska Rockies, Banff. | days. A masquerade ball, honoring | - e, 10 c'clock. MRS ES AR Today’s News Today—Empire.

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