The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 19, 1938, Page 5

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~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19, 1938. McMANUS The Best Kids Promise By GEORGE BRINGING UP FATHER [ (MD JIG6S- AS YYOU WHY 2 DO KNOW - YOUR WIFE YOu OBJECT 7 YES, MY LUNCLE. HE IS AN INVENTOR. HE IS WORKING ON A MA- CHINE RIGHT NOW. SAY- DOESN/T ANYBODY IN YOUR FAMILY DO ANY WORK ? ‘ WANT S ME TO BE YOUR SECRETARY- | BUT WHAT | WANT £ That They’ll Do Better A MACHINE TO DO AWAY WITH WORK ALTOGE THER! | TO KNOW- 15 ANY DOUGLAS PULLS CASABA FRACAS 0UT OF FLAMES Carolina for Southern conference | |basketball supremacy is in pros- —_— ToER T s ol s S - pect for the 1938 season. - Highest team total a he Elks he Sparl ugs sparked and e DeMolays Trample Elks (0‘1 N generals’ nosed” out| MUSCI",B"‘“de‘S Scheduled | night was that rolled by the Empire fell at the Brunswick last Continue Victorious 'the Tar Heels in the finals of the to Take Plenty of |switchmen as eighteen Railroaders night. 1937 cha ship tournament to P ish tried in vain to come in on schedule.| Fred Schmitz, Spark Plugger Court Pace A the 016 {YPHE oks WG teails unishment The Switchmen tallied for the eve- came in with 567 total pinfall to S i b “l,‘ Kt ersiiniiion & ki | ning record, exactly 1475. take topside honors, three pins| Wiils, furtn heldl tadr swhy, in. the (;.wfd.m.! bt gl When Juneau mat fans raise the| rpa¢ score beat the Engineers by ahead of Art Bringdale of the Em- Teature tilt of the evening as the “°0:ha BIUEXHE Le GOT L oo roof with howls at the Elks Hall gy ning The Supers edged out the pire. | Be DeMolays downed the Elks last! BOth universities boast power next Friday night, they will be DW= | pirenior po" o nincand the Brake-, Spark Pluggers took three game night in the City Basketball League double-header at the Juneau High D¢ heavy favorites despite a general van, if he should step into one of | Engincers The scores follow: Gym, the dope came mighty nigh IMProvement in the quality of teams those fancy little hold creations of gnaw 1 163 _ 505 Spark Plugs being dumped far and wide in the iR the 15-member rnmmrand un- Doc Webb, known as the double permle 136 148 443 J. - Show. 164 179 190 opener as & suddenly-sparkling CCrIAinty as to the effect of the new ankle lock. Foster 116 141 196— 453 F. Schmitz 202 214 151 § Krause five sent a lackadaisical CPVer-Jump rules. : But then again, there is just a —_——— E. Botelho 214 151 184 group of Douglas Eaglea i 4:sud-' Veshington & Lee's Lopes of re- = chance that Donovan may start| rotals 420 452 5201401 A = ! den scurry to eke out a six-poiny MAIRInE on the throne are centr ANDY BERSHAK tossing Webb painfully around the | Switchmen Totals 580 544 it i ed “around two all-Bouthern per-| ooy o0 North Carolina ring on the bad end of a good hank | Redling 163 163 163—*48) Empire B T . The closing’ sontist wak & vepeat 1ormers! glant Bob Bpessard, cen-l; » “MTN T M mer throw—you know the kind— | gyler 139 160 231— 530 Henning 205 193 C .-..‘.»\rm.\ll’l-..n‘\. Fla, Jun. 18 of last week's game which saw the (X' and Earl (Kit) Carson, "““\"“1 comb, lanky center, leading the at- up and over—up and over—and | Bjoedhorn 152 152 152 3 Dow 164 151 465 A“\hx..uml‘ ittle miss of A Wike’ 50, dobimi atien dis O R Spessard, a 6-foot T-inch star, tal- tack, down, oh so hard, each time. No-| —_—— — Bringdale 198 191 564 -‘“:“"‘ o ,(”I.””‘ of a mile w il Baare - it being cirse naaki Gl lied 298 points in 18 games last sea- wake Forest, Richmond and body likes to get chucked over in| motals 454 475 546—1475 RN A river whe n she wa m‘ dorhotsbatad. that o RIeae st das won: |Duke are other squads which may a hammer throw. Doc Webb will Az Totals 567 535 4811583 MC nths old, will tell \v.‘.” T fense right under the basket is too Five letermen are available at cause trouble. certainly not like it, but the crowd Firemen - > .H:u‘ haven't ReatLIEnTALIG Yok big a hurdle for the B.P.OE. squad NO'th Carolina, together with a pro-| Eight teams are selected on the|Will : | Burke 156 138 172 460 ok iied M 2 Jaost, a0, to clear. While the Elks were striv- Mising band of sophomores. The basis of conference records to par-i That other ring light everyone | gjendeau 155 178 185— 518 BAUGH UFFERED her brother, John, two years young- ing to penetrate o close quarters Velerans include Earl Ruth, all- ticipate in the annual tournament S anxious to see perform, is Gordy | Garmichael 175 149 111 435 fCi s anpeee e e where their shots could have telling Southern, and Foy Grubb, guards; to be held at Raleigh, N. C, in Muma, who uses that dizzying head | — = o Shac hidvan Yoom Lonsiot i cifect, the DeMoloys lay back and Andy Bershak, Pete Mullis and Bill Marth. North Carolina State should Scissors, that, if it is applied lons, rotals 486 46 1419 $‘|4 nuu YEAR BY fornia without losing a race. peppered their opponents’ hoop with McCachren, forwards win a berth in the title event, leav- enoush, just about lays the reci-) Supers i 5 4 {h“‘. Jusk EHRK Bt -*“““"‘”‘ long twisters that apparently could South Cafolina has the brightest ing Virginia Military Institute, Pient open to any sort of a fall hold.| grown 162 162 162—'486 v onc Ry MasloRs SeH not miss; the upshot of the matter W00k of the four Palmeto state Maryland, Davidson, Virginia Tech, Red Davis may beat Muma 0 Delebeque 157 157 167—'471 going o be Olympic swimmers.” being that the DeMolays came out ©Atries With all of last year’s regu- Clemson, Furman, the Citadel, and 'he "butt” in this case, for Davis,|winiams 156 156 156468 _ This ambition is shared by the of the fracas on fop by a 44 to 34 1ars back. The Gamecocks lost only William and Mary to battle over & cowpuncher from the Lone Star| pem =i ‘Y":f‘“'“ POLR Oy i s B score and are still flying high down i Of 20 games with Guy Lips- the one remaining spot s who 7o BRULL expect 1 el otals 475 475 4751426 Y o i Best who taught them to swim sl e et . . throwing head locks, like a cow- DALLAS, Tex, Jan. 10.—Adrian Almost before they could walk. The thelf récord. yob unbleniished: jump, the DeMolays finished the count stood at Douglas 36, Krause ,'.“"',‘,f'”"" ',"," "“‘;Mh',”,' ";,‘ff’,"f:’ AN e tanyl ERNR O SRS DOl ".‘“'"‘I i it a ',' s A tirst quarter with a 10 to 5 lead, the 35 with but four minutes to go. |poea p a1 A dom ¢ |Lversen 169 169 160307 the publicity bubble which has given 10Us. for bho. YOUREAters o: beco i Abrests a1t with Sai /94 T 1 4 een his stomach muscles up under|pjgye 135 202 153— 490 rise to rumors he in at the re- old cnough to compete in recog- Principal thre the DeMolays, balf ‘with "8;/24 to 15 matgin anc Then, however, wie Island dead- his ribs—just one of those butts'mgonana 147 147 147—*441 ceiving end on a $25,000 salary for Nized meets and race were forwards Elmer Lincy rom and Passed the three-quarter post out In eye Gordon Mills came to life un- can do a lot of damage. | LA | —!professional football, Théy are continuing the gentle Sammy Nelson, who, holdinz the lrum‘sl to 22 e der pressure and looped in another - eee — Totals 451 518 4691438 He added after discounting this Playful method of fraining which range of the ring from all parts of The opening of the ”p”;"-s\b{::‘.' two points for his side. A foul con- Oilers rumor, that he would probably sign enabled the little girl to swim 2 the court, sank 15 and eléven points Was much l_ht’ same as have beeh verteq by James cut the Island ALASKA FEDERAL Monagle 156 154 134— 444'a contract with the Washington feet unassisted before she was respectively. Lindstrom’s six buck- the (rpexllygs of nearly all K‘NU-*_A lead back to a brace of markers, | Stevens 131 163 155— 449 Redskins, professionals, within a few months old. The instruction may ets and trio of foul conversions gave 8ames this season, the Concreters pyt, jn return, Erskine was given two MacSpadden 138 171 234— 543 days become a little more rigorous as the [ him high point henors of the eve- aPpearing over-matched from n“‘v free tosses at the ring, both of RENAMES BUARD - & —| Two salary alternatives faced children grow older ning. Dick May, Elk center, and Outset as the Eagles piled up a 12 10 which he dropped through; while Totals 425 488 523—1436 him, he said. One offered between| Tn her Detroit river feat, Marjorie Mark Jensen, Eagle forward, split 4 edge during the first quarter and|ngiig peat the gun to swish through |+_Average score. Did not bowl $13,000 and $14,000 a year on a made the quarter mile distance up- the runner-up post with 14 markers ran their lead to 26 to 10 at the 5 fing) field goal to complete the | - renewal contract, while the cf{ier stream, in 18 minutes. Then si each; while Elk forward Roy Smith, half. But, during the third period rgjanders’ six-point margin of vic- v . |offer Baugh hinted amounted to cavorted in the water nine mir Krause leader, Ralph Bardi, and the shorter Krause five really got yopy, 1 " Jr SI ns $727 dollars a game. |utes longer while photograph Douglas guard Claude Erskine also their collective eye on the basket Slipshod Start —_ ! l 5§ Jiny - made pictures. cracked into double figures in the [OF the first time this winter and o000 oo on o mere practicel Returning the organization’s ori- | | When she is not in the water, peint column. pepered in. shots “‘D"f_flu._fl"gl%' jaunt against their smaller and less 8inal officers and directors to their| I-Ewls sanEs Marjorie plays with her dolls and Stan Hill and Dale Druliner played Eleven points the Ochomeiers hung oy pertenced opponents, the Island- POSts: shareholders in the Alaska n ea a[ gets a lot of fun out of making their best games of the season for UP during the quarter anf so Con-| o "4y not reglly level during the Federal Savings and Loan Associa-| |clothes for them. Tootball and the Elks last evening, but to no Sistently did they keep the casaba|y,.i -y o0 ™) giate of affairs they tion held their annual meeting and |baseball are John, Jr's favorite avail. It was Hill who spoiled most SPeeding goal\\'xn:d that Douglas was were to regret before the battle was election vh?‘rr this morning at Lht" PULLMAN, Wash,, Jan. 19.—Jess 1 N Isports—next to swimmin of the DeMolay drives under the held to a bare five points. lover, Instead, they played bean- Association’s place of business on|willard, Jr, son of the former S e basket and forced them to adopt the Show Strategy \bag with the ball, flicking the leath-|Se%ard Street. 2 world champion, will meet Harlow FIEk | sniping tactics that led to the Pur-| Nor did the Krause quint relent o\ a.00na in most any direction ee-élected to the board of direc-|Marlow, of the Oregon Amateur| ST. LOUIS, Jan. 19.—John Henry ple and Gold win. lin its attack during the final Se5- | with completed passes being more tors vere: Harold B. Foss, John Ah-|Athletic Club, in the headlne bout Lown.s.‘ world’s light heavyweight An embryo Elk star made his de- sion. Captain Bardi and his €0-/ooincidence than system. Their hap- lers, and James Larsen; while Ray|of a card between the club and champion, knocked out Marty Gal- but in last night's battle in the per- horts, notably forward Rudolph and D. Peterman was added to the board, washington State College varsity lagher, of Washington, in the third con of Joe Smith, last season High School regular. Once in the game, Joe was in on the ball and in the DeMolays hair nearly every play. Slipping Back Notwithstanding all the blossom- CALLING THE CAGERS—No, 2— So. History Should Repeat RICHMOND Jan. 19.—Rep- etition of a 22-year-old struggle be- tween Washington & Lee and North squads again this season and will ‘guard James, held to their strategy of letting fly whenever even re- /motely within range, and the con- jstant hail of leather continued to | pile up Krause points as a fair pro- portion of shots found their mark. hazard style of play stood them well half almost led to their complete frus- tration, when, with the Concreters ;.. . . "’ disclosed that during its turning on the heat, the Islanders 8 to reorganize their at- enough during the first were unable tack until nearly too late but \4/89'$ ATTACHED TO WORK ?, WHAT KIND OF A MACHINE ? IT ] ope._ 1937, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights je-ived TTTTTTIT VARIED HOLDS ON BOUT CARD NEXT FRIDAY ing perhaps as much as Bill Dono- for the three-year term ‘The annual report, submitted to the shareholders at the meeting, of operation, 1937, the Association ‘had completed 22 loans, agereeat- first year| ‘Swifchmen Take SPARK PLUGGERS Evening Honors WIN OVER EMPIRE | With71475 Pins IN THREE GAMES men beat the Oilers by two pins. straight and totaled 1649 to 1583 tighters here January 22, Coach Ike|round of a scheduled ten rounder Deeter said today. Willard, a heavy- here last night. weight, won the first two bouts of| > his career this fall wlbb ll:';ockf(::ts‘_ JUN]OR SK] CLUB | Ed Brady, Cougar Canad fresh- | ROSTER lNCLUDES man and Northwest diamond belt ot bt £OST 1 BILLION WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Harry Lundeberg, of the Sailors Union of 0 . IN SYDNEY, Australia, | ambidextrous Jack Bromwich | (above), 19, beat Don Budge 8-2, 6-3, 8-10, 6-4. This was only the second defeat for Budge after a brilliant season, Ing talent, however, the Elks once|Within three minutes of the open-, = s e ing $109,500. Of the loans, 13 were It was to Jensen and Taumo f5; the purpose of new buLAINg Cuu- again showed themselves not quite ing of the fourth quarter, the CON- Njem; that much:of the credit for ggrcrion versatile enough to live up to their creters had the Eagle ranks in tur-|yn, rganders' ultimate win was due, - . o B , Sy £ i § 8 o ', The report showed that wi early season promise, never coming moil as they climbed to Within tW0, g their tight checking .during the egrort mare to and L:e :Lff'mz‘: within striking distance during the points of the Islanders. {tirst half held down the Krause of the organization too rapidly th; entire battle. | “Three Pinutes later the gap Badtoll, even though no checking could’ Association's. business had shown 3 awa -point narrowed to but one point as the| R Getting away to a four-point P |halt the Concreters' closing drive.'s constant satisfactory rate of de- "| Behind the Krause thrust stood yelopment since its A i Her Name Is Snowball Freddy Harris, who, entering the ticularly pleasing was the fact that game at guard, proved a capable the Association had been able to |enough imitation of the AChinese maintain payments of four per cent Wall to enable the rest of his team- djvidends on investments to share- {mates to forsake the defense and holders throughout the year 1937. concentrate on basket-getting. Har-| Following the annual meeting of ris chief aid on defense Was James, shareholders, the directors of the while Bardi did a steady job of ball- Association held a special meeting, hawking. (during which the following officers IMMARIES iwere for another year re-elected to DOUGLAS FG FP PF TP the posts they have held since the |Jensen, f. 6 2 1 14 founding of the organization: | Mills, 1. 3 1 1 7, Thomas A. Morgan, President; R. {H. Lundell, c. 0 1 1 1 E. Robertson, Vice-President; Har- | Erskine, g. 5 2 3 12 0ld B. Foss, Vice-President; Stan- T. Niemi, g. 0 0 1 0 ley V. Grummett, Secretary; R. H. Edwards, s 4 0 2 8 Stevens, Treasurer. A. Stragier, s. 0 0 0 0 - | - = - - SEIZED FURS ARRIVE | Totals 18 6 9 42 A shipment of 17 blue foxes, es- |KRAGSE FG FP PF TP timated to be worth about $30 each, | Rudolph, f. 4 1 b 9 and which were seized in Seattle Bardi, f. 5 1 0 11 recently by game officials, have Barry, c. 1 [ 1 2 arrived at the Alaska Game Com-' Mercer, g. 3 0 4 6 mission headquarters here from the| James, g. 3 2 1 8 south., The furs were taken from Harris, s. 0 0 2 0 George Grottle, who had taken them — — — —'in the Prince William Sound closed Totals 16 4 9 36 area. Grottle pleaded ignorance of Technical fouls: Bardi, Stragier. |game regulations, officials said | Mercer put out of game on per-| RTINS |sonal fouls, one minute to play in _Arthur Betts, engineer, traveled fourth quarter. SECOND GAME 1,300 miles from French Guinea to {Kinderbook, N. ¥. for treatment| l[or bullet wounds in the chest and DeMOLAY FG FP PF TP arm received in refusing to help E. Lindstrom, f. 6 3 2 15 convicts escape. | Netson, . i e TR 1 R s 14 S Bayers, c. 2 2 0 6' Two young Americans, Francis A | Pinkley, g. F 4V | g ¢ Flood and James C. Wilson, were Snowball of Elmors, 'é:lt“c'l“‘,‘b"‘:r‘;:’;;"g,’;,"_‘f{;‘&%’::‘::;’;;:,’;’_1:",': Woodring, g .....2 0 2 4|the first to ride motorcycles across of New Jersey State . The occasion was the annual show of | Gould, s. 1 0 1 2 Africa laterally. Their course lay sented to pose for her ”"°"°gé°p Club in New York City. — _— — _'between Lagos and Eritrea, north of| the Atiantic Cab Totals 10 6 10 44 Lake Chad the Pacific, today told the Senate s Committee that his union opposes during the past three years have mediation of the Labor Board in over one billion dollars and New members who have signed up v o o karie y .‘ ”,” Y ’ v for the Junior Ski Club were an|disputes. He said the Board takes also declared that the Coast is not = away from the workers their most only losing intermediate business but , e c“aches Revu" 11'109.n°e_d taday and include the fol- |y ;ortant means of protection, a foreign markets as well, | e strike, and generally delays for champion, will meet Cecil Boettich-| er, Oregon State light-heavyweight champion, in the semi-final event. 23 NEW MEMBERS| cost “It is unthinkable for the United BO‘;‘lePh::fi;:m é‘;’l}m?“a’; ’;;:en"mm\l. s a settlement of seamens' States to put money into ship con- ! 9. Sriplin NOROURS/Rriavances, Istruction and for subsidies unless an. 19.—New York . 3 |grievances. struction and for subsidies e George Walmsley, John Tanaka, ™ payor Carson, of Portland, said assurance is given of performance,” prep school football coaches are up in arms against a proposal to place the age limit for high school gridders at 18. Malcolm Faulkner, Robert Boggan,' shipping tieups on the Pacific Coast said Mayor Carson. Cyril Hayes, Nedford Zenger, Bob s ‘Convcrse. Elroy Hoffman, noberl‘ iSnell, Walter Fukuyama, Fred Sorri, - : |Erling Oswald, Eddie Nelson, Ed- -} ward Jewell, James Johnson, Chee mplres flac 83 Hermann, Lew Williams, Jr., Hor-| y ace Adams and Jack Talmage. The Ski Club held its second hike NEW YORK, Jan. 19.—During up the Douglas trail Sunday with the summer, Bo Molenda, assistant!a large turnout. A number of the coach of the New York football members stayed at the ditch, while Giants, is an umpire in the Mid- Robert Snell, Dean Allen, John Ta-| Atlantic League. |naka, and Walter Fukuyama made ———v——— |the trek to the ski cabin idget C.C.N.Y, Midgets - NEW YORK, Jan. 19—Although, i - i | MESSERSCHMIDT, | | PETERSON SEEK it is the biggest team that Nal} SEATS lN HOUSE Holmann has coached in years, the average height of the varsity bas-| Two more filings for the Teri- ketball players at City College this|toridl Legislature were made with| year is only 5 feet 8 inches and the|the Clerk of Court today. They were| 7T LR Henry Messerschmidt of Juneau and| "FG FP PF TP|George H. Peterson of Douglas.| ELKS R. Smith, f. 5 1 0 11/Both filed for the House on the| Davlin, f. 2 0 0 4 Democratic ticket. l May, c. 't 0 1 14 Messerschmidt is a member of the| Hill, g. 1 0 1 2| City Council in Juneau and has long | Druliner, g. 1 0 1 2 been active in civic and fraternal| J. Smith, s. 0 1 3 1|affairs. Peterson is a former boat Paul, s. [J 0 0 o captain for the Forest Service and _ _ _ _lwidely known in the community. | Totals 16 2 6 34 Report also has reached here that Technical fouls: Wocdring, R.|[Jack Talbot, Ketchikan transpor- Smith, |tation man, is planning to seek a . ame: seat in the House. e isilidns Both Games) ™ ings close PBRUARY 1. | HERE ARE SIX REASONS why the John Tarleton Timer: J. Fowler, 1 ->-oo ' Junior college baske n' eam in Mell_er_n ‘1’3 "h B'fi e} E 1 day’s News Today —fmpire, season with a record of 78 straight wins. Coach Bil lom L] Scorer: W. Hautala. i Efv“m“ Rt v “legs make the basketball player,’ .average weight is 165 pounds -

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