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¢ [ 2 [~ [| THIS SR VON PLATTER IS A FINE OH-YES-YES- YOURE MR ( SECRETARY-HE CALLS UP EVERY J6GES- YES-IT ALL COMES DAY TO FIND OUT WHERE THE ES%KYS—S AO\/FH:“C’)\SW | WO‘QK OFFICE 1S - AND HALF THE TIME % HE DOESN'T SHOW UiP- WHICH | ) | SNOW WHAT TIME IT, 1S 2 AN ASSET- HE EVIDENTLY HAS L NO - IN FACT-1 DONIT KNOW FORGOT TEN WHAT DAY THIS 15-- TO 'PHONE R TODAY- FLL |/~ CALL HIM== (A . i 1 L] <1y ] g ey am ., Eddie Murphy and Pat = - - Ryan Matched for Light ainy Rounds — Features ™1 _ - .-l Ticts are to ly again in Juneau, - e\ just two weeks from tonight, Feb- mEA ruary 25 mmu The Juneau Athletic Club an- nounces the second smoker of that = -= organization, eight bouts and ac- oiding io Matchmak wil- : = 1 €} on, all are going toc be sl ‘The main event, eight rounds, will = am @ e between Eddie Murphy, 148 - pounder, and Pat Ryan, 144 pounds Ryan comes from Michigan., He is L 5 years of age and has fought in - an the Gold: Gloves tournaments, = 150 two professional fights, winning o o both. e is fast, of the Gene Tun- Alaska Juneau | = - Murphy is rounding into shape f| & SR .. ¥ nd no doubt will hold up the pres- [l @ GR ER tigg of the Juneau Murphys in the S =|m B big event i A special event will be Big Boy - Erickson, 178 pounder, and Jimmj - cE & Gleason, 171 pounder, of Wrangell mEmm The latter has fought many pro- ¥ = fessional bouts in Wrangell, Ket- - = - o1 1L L 1] chikan and also Junzau. He locks = £0ad in training and hits hard with -....-- .. h hands. The Juneau fans saw o ckson in' the last smoker and they 7T EgT TR0 T e - > = - know there will be four fast rounds v TS 7 as the result of the sign-up of these SUSPeCUng the counlry was leading fl % L) tw S the naval race instead of merely 15 = wo men. e P11 § Match-maker Wilson promises 49 ‘0h0Wing it. i \ rounds of boxing for the smoker, And again the same reason de- el velops for +building up our defen: | cs. Admiral Leahy, chief of naval 7 operati t »s betore the ’ House Naval Affairs committee: t At our doors nothing stands in ; the way of the possible expioitation 1 Vi :\‘;m (~nlr)n.1 Amm'llm«i( n; ;('pl the Fairbanks Sends Teams, At a special m: 2‘-“ at the Br s . Monroe Doctrine, backed by such = i ; wick alleys yesterday alternoon, Ju naval forces as the Unitea States Men, Women to Compete neay Biks won a thr > LONDON, Beb. S Bl gl Ry the use of that force : s with Ketchikan E con iwchitects are Glgzing new i 104 ”~Ifi" e mt; <3 s International Honors ‘:‘;:- 3 iy .i\”' e ftr ecessity shot arise W the etchikan graves for American professionals X 3 e e They have lengthened and FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Feb. 11 rmnlbEstnd ok ‘ strengthened the Royal Clique Ports UNCLE SAM'S RICH Two teams of curlers, both (ym‘nlu.l» = :‘ Rainisr astedts i ety ourse at Deal, Kent, scene of the '~ pui instead of facing merely the 21ired. one men and the other wo- Tt r 1638 British Open golf champion- menace of a victorious Germany, men, left here yesterday in ol " " o 3 ship the first week of July. fhaicatinbry ndk ¥y Esshyy ahotid Toiisdplane pilofed by Nocl Wein” TORIGEYe games. SrerRubbies The course Will measure TOTT coniiaey fhe pocsibiity of a disturh- [OF DAVSOR Where they will engage Arctic und Colun vs. North yards, an increase of 386 yards. and gnee not only on the Atlantic side the Dawson series of Inter Transfer the back nine is now considered the put on the Pacific. So, in his. cal- 1ONAl Games. | Yesterday's scores stiffest in British golf. culations before the committes, he COMPeting teams are described SPECIAL MATCH Most interesting change is at 0% ¢ as the world’s farthest north expo- Junieau Elks . 916 986 911—2813 e 8 Al lumps Japan, Italy and Germany , o “Sandy Parlour,” the short, blind yonetier for comparicon with the TEDtS of the famous Scotch spori. 'Ketchikan Elks 813 704 0812588 fourth. The tee has been shifted Ao ko Return matches will be played Brunswick 861 1781 910—2i so that the hole is no longer blind, g % S G here during the Ice Carnival i AMERICAN T but it’s still a headache The whole world knows that the|pelq from March 10 to March 14. Hermle 141 104— 420 New bunkers are being construc:- Diied States Is rich enough 10! The Dawson Northwest Mounties Thibodeau 133— 442 ed to tighten up the seventh, and PUid a big navy with less Cff’“&"{h will also have a rifle and pistol|Koski 47— 492 18th holes. ,pain than any other' country »“'x team here for the International Shods 2 VST that as a premise, some ruu‘o\\am of carnival shoot. Totals the naval race suspect that the 5 Ao ds noisy entrance of the United States P R i y | Amboy 133 3 Arm?m?“t Race NOW intended to compel the more Terencio 154— 479! Similar to Before |uciiicerent nations to recognize that.| (5[] an Clark 146— 466 s even if they build until they col-, World War;U.S. Nois A B e — ’ y lapse economically, they can't keep 444 516 4331393 up and had better call a halt. (Continued from Page One) s sieiiece i Some index of the popularity in the United Kingdom of darts—the game in which you throw little fea- thered darts at a target—is the fact| that a wave of acute shoulder pains There is big talk of the secret arm- ament of Germany and of the strength of Soviet Russia. At this pomt the United States again comes in. So noisy has been the American entry into the rearm- pac been diagnosed as a “new mdl-1 ament picture that some foreign ady,” darts shoulder. | nations might have been justified in! ‘ James A. Ten Eyck, Syra-| cuse Coach, Passes Away | at Age of 86 Years (Continuea 1:wm Page Que) in handy later, when he took up coaching. | Next Ten Eyck became a profes- isional oarsian. Racing took him| as an inviduaual or as a member |of a team to nearly every part of the country. In 1884 he and three cthers won the championship of the world from England Coaching Days His coaching days began in the learly eighties when he worked with Morgan, Champion single sculler of those days. Then he went to New- ark, N. J, to coach the Newark Boat Club crews, and later to Wor- cester, Mass., to develop champion- ship crews for the Wauchuset Boat AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Club. In 1899 and 1901 he coached the United States Naval Academy crews at Annapolis. | In 1904, only a year after he took |charge at Syracuse, his varsity and 'treshmen crews each won at Pough- R. H. Wiliiams, Sr. is invited to present this coupon at the box office of the keepsie. The varsity won again in 1908, 1913, 1916, and 1920, and his CAPITOL THEATRE freshmen vepeated in 1906, 1915, 11922, 1925, and 1930. | In 1910, after the college rowing season, Ten Eyck coached crews Ifor the Ottawa Boat Club which* {won Canadian and American cham- i pionships. One of “Old Jim’s” ND RECEIVE TWO FREE TICKETS TO SEE “DANGEROUS NUMBER"” Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE assistants for’ - Of Rowing Dies - |develop national amate Totals several of these yi “Young Jim.” Jr., became coach Minn., boat club, reciprocated by his son James, Duluth, and the father aiding the son to r champion crews from 1913 to 1916 inclusive. The World War broke up the com- of the | binaticn but “Old Jim” was at Du- {luth in the summers of v17 and 1918 to assist what oarsmen remained at home. “Young Jim” stayed at Du- luth until 1921. One of the products of this regime was Walter ‘M. Hoover who first pulled an oar in the club eight and then turned to single sculling, win- ning the national title in 1921 and going along in 1922 to capture the world title, James Jr k's two elder other Ten being was the of sons, the Ned. Their mother was "Old Jim's first wife. His second wite, until their marriage at Mt. Vernon, Iowa on October 10, 1918, was Miss Olivia Edna Randall, formerly rheteric and public speaking racuse - e FRED ROWE ARRIVES: MOTHER ON WAY HERE Fred Rowe, son of Mrs. Eleanor Rowe and fiance of Miss Mar Nordnes. arrived in Juneau aboard the Princess Norah this afternoon frem Washington State College Pullman. Mrs. Rowe is a passenger north- bound on the Northland due tc ar- in Juneau on Tu THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, FEB. 11, 1938. By GEORGE McMANUS i { SUNDAY - | 'D LOOK | KNOW-BUT IT MIGH OFFICE_AND NOT BEING ABLE TO GET IN-BY THE WAY- COULD YOU TELL ME WHAT MONTH THIS I1S-0OR AM | ASKING TOO MUCH 2 BE AND HOW SILLY GOING TO YOUR JUNEAU ELKS AGAIN SCORE ~ PIN VICTORY |Ketchikan Winds Up Only | Few Pins Behind ! Local Hosts | Total Pins : to Date | 5,12 | 5,210 ] Juncau Women 4,611 | ikan Women 4,001 | | Juncau Elks, men and women, lagain came out of the Inter-lodge |bowiing contest with victory in the [bm‘(‘:\ box last night, but Ketchikan last night knocked at triumph’s {dcor, though they did not turn the ilatch. ! In mnen’s mateh, with F {Radde out in front with 594, for the {Juneau five, and Sam Daniels lead- ling for Ketchikan with 609, the local {lodge team tallied 70 pins better the [than the visitors in the final add- ng. { Juneau won the first and second Igames, but was beaten badly in the 'third ! In the women's contests, the lo- c women won out by the slim edge of 107 pins and were beaten {two out of the three games. Mrs. Martin Lavenik, rolling for Juneau, led all women bowlers with {493, Mrs. Peterson of Ketchikan, 15 close behind with 490 Last night's scores follew MEN Juneau 191 180— 594 A 189 62— 510 Barragar 174 516 vart 192 Stevenson 201 Totals 947 962 881 Ketc! Zorich 208 166, 576 Maloca 168 182— 518 L Daniels 202 203 609 Roady 181 167— 492 Howard 153 203— 5 Totals 912 887 0212720 Nelson WOME Ketchil Kimball 117 124 153— 394 112 107 141— 360 183 126 181— 490 131 132 151— 414 175 136 146— 457 718 Totals Juneau Kauimann 119 143 123 385 Lavenik 178 147 168— 493 Petrich 128 168 429 Taylor 157 160 469 imquist 128 171 Totals 710 789 - - PARTY IS GIVEN BY MRS. J. C. COOPER, MRS. HECTOR TATE Mrs. James C. Cooper and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Hector Tate, were co-hostesses yesterday noon at a dessert bridge party given in honor of Mrs. James J. Mullen and Mrs. K. N. Neill, who are leav- ing for the south shortly. The affair was held in the Cooper residence in the Fosbee Apartments and assembled guests for three ta- bles of bridge including Mrs. R. L. Davlin, Mrs, J. C. Michaelson, Mrs. M. R. Bauer, Mrs. H. S. Graves, Mrs. R. G. Merritt, Mrs, Frank Boyle, Mrs, James Berry, Mrs. James Mat- tox, Mrs. Clarence Wise, Mrs. Lu Liston and the guests of honor. Mrs. J. C. Michaelson was award- ed first prize, and Mrs. James Mat- tox, consolation. Guest prizes were presented by the hostesses to Mrs, Mullen and Mrs. Neill. Spring flow- ers provided a setting for the af- ¢ fair - - - AGENT CHARMAN RETURNING HERE Fred C. Charman, Juneau agent the Northland Transportation Company, who has been vacationing in the south, principally in Seattle nd points in Oregon, is returning ) his post here aboard the North- land Kon Erickson, who has been act- y return to his aboard the headquarters thland MAJOR LEAGUE CLUBS HAVING MANY TROUBLES There Is Plenty to Weep ' About — Thunder Pop- | ping, Lightning Near NEW YORK, Feb. 11. — There's still a lot of patchwork and shut- tling to be done before the major league baseball clubs break from the barrier in April. Contracts have been rosters published, training camps arranged and holdouts soothed. But thunder is a-popping and the light- ning of other player deals may soon strike in several spots. As they prepare to strike out for epring drills, there isn't a club, from the New York Yankees on down, that hasn't its worries, Manager Joe McCarthy of the Yanks isn’t sure Joe (Flash) Gor- don from Newark can replace Tony Lazzeri. Shortstop Frank Crosetti's weak bat ism't a joy. McCarthy would like to find pitching support from the nice-looking gang he's brought up; and he’s probably won- dering whether domestic troubles will have any effect on Lefty Go- mailed, mez. The New York Giants could use a better all-around first-baseman, another active backstop, and a right hand pitcher like Van Mungo. Carl Hubbell hardly will be the work- horse he has been for several years. The Detroit Tigers need pitching and the left side of the infield isn't certain. Rogell may move to third base, to replace Maryv Owen, and perhaps Crewther or Christman will get a chance at shortstop. Vernon Thirty-Second | Annual Ball after- |- JUNEAU VOLUNTEER FIRE Music by Wesley Barrett’s | | | | | Kennedy, from Chicago, should help the pitching and it will be good news is Schoolboy Rowe i3 worth anything. Detroit fans will miss Gerald Walker The St. Louis Cordinals are on the lock for a crack catcher and another intielder. Perhaps their greatest need is a comeback by the Brothers D e Cards like the looks of 1 Slaughter, the Co- lumbus fielder, who led the American Assoclation at bal The Chicago Whiie Sox got out- Gerald Walker n in Marv Owen, 1t they tett-hand and pert inother intielder. The Boston Red Sox nheed a catch- tield punch and a thir with ers 2 er and a pair of pitchers, Vosmik, from the St. Louis Browns, should add power (0 B outtield Washington could use a hard-belt- ing outtielder, a and pitchers, The Athletic: ers man, iladelphia ngthening all inficlders and hurl- need chiefly Il Cleveland Indians places if O Vit can inje it and find another intielder Browns improved their mound during the winter but there ¢ a lot weak spots may t spir- The staft still go Mungo would usetul the 120 Cubs Chicago also be to well as to others, wants a slugging outfielder. And then there is the matter of Grimm-Hartnett-Lazzeri harmony The Cincinnati Reds need more punch and the Phillies could use an- other hard-hitting infielder and outfielder as well as some pitchers. The Brooklyn Dodgers used infield replacements and a couple of pit- chers,. The new boss, Larry Mc- Phall, may cut loose some of their datfiness. — EMERGENCY SERVICE CALLS — 5 P. M. to 8 A. M. and on Holidays and Sundays Oil Burner or Refrigeration—John Houk (Blue 403) or Jack Gould ( Electric Thawing or Welding—Clyde DeVault or Ed Wheelor (571) Plumbing or Heating—Oscar Hawkins (Blue 403) Sheet Metal Work—Fritz Carrothers GENERAL—JOHN AHLERS (611) Rice & Ahlers Co.—~Phone 34 ° DEPARTMENT ELKS’ HALL February 12 Orchestra WRESTLING— Monday—Feb. 14—Elks Hall—8:30 P.M. ; DOC WEBB vs. RED DAVIS 8 ten-minute rounds BOXER s. WRESTLER 30-minute time limit 2—OTHER BIG BOUTS—2 No Reserved Seats—Ladies, 55c; Gentlemen, $1.10 5 Hustle is needed at Pittsburgh, along with another -infielder and more pitching reserves. The BoOs+ ton Bees require more punch and a guarantec that the old vets, Tur- ner and Fette, will be just as godd. - PIPE THAWING CAUSES FIRE . A small bachelor house to the rear of the Housel Apartments on Fourth Street between Seward and Gold, was damaged by fire this morning to an estimated $200 extent. Firemen spent over an hour put- ting down flames that started when a blow torch ignited woodwork while pipes were being thawed. 3 The house is owned by Mrs. Florine Housel. George Kodzoff resides there. HOSPITAL NOTES | .- - B William Jarman, who recently uh- derwent a major operation at St. Ann’s Hospital, was dismissed frdm the hospital today. 3 mil Tennanen underwent a mas jor operation this morning at St Ann'’s Hospital Mrs, Willlam Witte underwent: a or operation at St. Ann's hos- pital this morning. . » Irene and Mary Jacobs, Helen George, and Dora Eldemar were ad- mitted yesterday afternoon to Government hospital for tomsileg- tomies, RPRLS AL ity Empire classifieds pay. 73 W e R i 117) e Lo