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™ Elks Nose Out by One Point - GOES WESTWARD = DO YOUR EYES EVER BOTHER. YOU MUCH, MISS PERKINS 2 b [ OH,DEAR, THAT YOUNG EYE - SPECIALIST 1S COMING OVER TONIGHT I SUPPOSE HE'LL TALK Y 50, GAL SHOP LIKE ALL PROFESSIONALS MIND IF T LISSEN IN2 / ] . " - HAIDA TAKES | A. J. MINERS IN NIGHTCAP Over Stubborn Krause Men " . Krause, 24. 52; Miners, 39. Elks, 2! Haida Last night in the City Basketball | » loop two evenly matched teams | fought, Elks winning from Kause by one point, and Haida scoring heavily | against the Miners Elks nosed out Krause in the first game, a floor brawl that never let up for a minute. Checking was so close that neither team was at any time V. more than a few points ahead. Gil DaVault won the game for the | Elks, totalling 18 of the 25 points, | and potting six of seven in the free| & throws May ripped a finger early in play Jast night, and was visibly handi- capped. Ed Hoch held him score- Jes T | \ | ! | Bardi was high man for the! » Krause squad, making nine points. ;m the half; after once having tied The first quarter of the game end- | the tally at 26 all ed three to three in one of the hard-| With the second half est checking games played on the | under way, the Coast Guarders local courts. | made few mercy trips to the basket Another highlight of the game was | and most of the time came away %the reappearance on the floor of (with two points. Jimmy Orme, veteran of the maple| g,y Nelson was about the only court who has played over ten Years | yrine; qoing any scoring in the last of basketball on Gastineau Channel | period and it just wasn't enough. Second Fest 3 ! : : That colored boy speed ball, Love, | Big Nagey, Haida pivot jobber, in a forward slot for the Haida, P d higt was high man last night with 21 |second high points for the evening as the Haid- | Box scores follow: demolished the Miners, 52-39. [Pas: Elks—25 Krause—24 ! delberg crew in a freak match which (Continuec from Page One) excluded. It was a fast game and wide open | F- May, 0 'Ed\'\‘_m%' 0 STANDINGS produced a deadlocked score in the - S - - No dates for Latonia at Covington | and the fans liked it. F. Davlin, 2 W. Wilson, Won Lost Pet. |second game. new lease on i~ ab the same time | Were set presumably pending allot- b The Haida stepped out fast in the|C. DeVault, 18 H. Johnson, 0 pjremen 2 0 1000 The boys were in the groove 1ast{ye. spread the infection. Control Ment of schedules for Ohio tracks. | first quarter and got a lead of 17|C. Carmody, 1 C. Wilson, 2 gepning 1 0 1000 night as all games were over 500 | metiiods thus must reckon with an | Latonia is across the river from Cin- to 10, but Bud Lindstrom and Joe Druliner, 4 Ed Hoch, 4 paigq | 666 | and all individual game scores rest-amoct famine-proof disease | CNAUL Snow, taking Elmer Lindstrom's S. Holm. 0 Bardi, 9/ g gk 500 ed in the upper half bracket. spreader. ‘place on the Miners’ team since Orme, 0 Bf‘Ck' 0 Krause 10 500 | Koski with 551 was high man on| ™ pycigentally, Dr. Francis is nnL:RIzlo OF pIRATES Eimer went south, came back in the 3 - o Anderson, & Miners 0 2 000/the Heidelberg team while B.|he only one in the bureau of pub-| second quarter with a fancy brand | Pos. Haida—52 - Miners—39 L Schmitz smashed for & count of 557 ic health who has been afflicted | o marksmanship to leave the Min- |F- Love, 21 B. Lindstrom, 12| e pasketball picture in the for the Tavern boys. i, ARkaerats’” dissdiod ~while S'G“S- HAS BOXER ers only four behind the Haida’s 30 F. Ropkins, 10 Nelson, 13 ge0ond half of the City League play | First game was one with @ score | gtaving them. Dr. Charles Arm- y |C. Naggy, 16 Snow, 12 j¢ peginning to get complicated, but | of 577 pins by the Alt Heidelberg | vong recovered from psitticosis and | |G- Waldron, 5 Niemi, 2 i has all the earmarks of a real and the last game was one by the s haif dogen years ago was able to| HOUSTON, Tex,, Jan. 25—John- AI-ASKA BA“KER e At S race Tavern by tallying the same mark.|gonate a pint of blood to use in pre- | ny Rizzo is not looking for trouble, v {S. Wood, 0 Banta, 0 Tomorrow night, another double-| Following is the score of last|paring serum to administer to Mrs.| but When the Pittsburgh outfielder Stephanson, 0. header is escheduled, with Henning |night's game: Borah, wife of the Senator, who| goes to the baseball wars this spring Offerdahl, 0. 5 o, Rasmmuson, eresigent ot e JURMAN LEAVES FOR Bank of Alaska which operates Fun (ENTERS, sHows branches at Skagway, Wrangell, and Anchorage, passed through Juneau | enroute to Anchorage on the Mount | H. J. Yurman, furrier, is a pas- McKinley. | senger south on the Baranof for Mr, Rasmuson and his wife are|the States. While below he will returning from a three-month visit | Visit the various fur centers and outside during which time they vis- fur style shows and when he re- ited relatives on the Atlantic Coast turns in about three weeks, Will # and in the Midwest. have the models for latest de- The bank president is going to signs in making up of all kinds. e The triumph of the New York Anchorage to spend two months Jooking after his interests there and also to visit his daughter whose | Yankees over the Chicago Cubs in husband is editor of the Anchorage the World Series gave the New > Times, He plans to return to his“Yorkers the distinction of being the home in Skagway sometime ‘in ! first club ever to annex three succes- + April. sive world championships. “ | WRESTLING AT ELKS' HALL THURSDAY, JAN. 26 —MAIN EVENT— BILLY SPENDLOVE vs. KARL OMADHAL ——SEMI-FINAL— RED DAVIS vs. WALT GASTON “DOC” WEBB vs. GORDON MUMU PRICE OF ADMISSION - Ringside i, $1.50 General : lgg Balcony - getting | | rung up 16 points for the night for' A U HAVE TO BE GOOD todoas well as Ed Newell does, jump-turning on steep Mt. Hood near Portland, Ore. Newell, from Boston, is an accomplished skier and tourney official. 500 OVERBOARD " AS BOWLERS IN THE OLE GROOVE, RACE LOOMING IN CITY LOOP CASABA PLAY u‘ed ThUI'Sday Nigh' | play last night. The solo contest was | at High School | the New York Tavern team com-| | posed of Schmitz, Schmitz, and| | Seston, to tie up with the Alt Hei- Alt Heidelberg 169 179 194— 542 214 167 170— 551 194 158 157— 509 - T e 577 504 521—1602 New York Tavern ‘B Schmitz 177 191 183— 551 Seston 178 142 205— 526 'EXAMINATONS 5 FORASSISTANT 55 & i 558 SURGEON SooN‘I ToLals_ * 512 ioia577—1593 me e e o PARK SERVICE, flon, at all Naval Hospitals in the| (A"ADA ASKED TO KILL WOLVES vs. Krause and Elks vs. Haida. | Both are good matches and any Hildinger vietory will do serious damage to Koski the percentage column. | Nelson Totals United States and the Naval Medi- cal School, Washington, D. C., of candidates for appointment in the grade of Assistant Surgeon, rank of | iLiPuuenam (junior grade), in the| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT. | PLENTY, CUTEY. JOELOUIS IS FAVORED AS WINNER Champion Heavyweight Is 1 to 10 fo Beat Lewis— Dempsey’s Forecast SENATOR'S BILL PROHIBITS SALE LIQUOR NATIVES llndian Bu-ré._au Officers! 1 Would Enforce Under | 5 LaBoyteaux Act A bill to prohibit sale of liquor to Natives was introduced in the Sen- ate at yesterday's late afternoon ses- sion by Senator C. H. LaBoyteaux | NEW YORK. Jan. 25.—Joe Louis|of the Fourth Division | has been installed as a prohibitive | The measure, aimed at solving one favorite at odds as high as 1 to 10 of the great problems confronting when he puts the world heavyweight the Territory and one which the crown on the block for the fifth Governor mentioned in his message time tonight against John Henry to the Legislature, would make it Lewis in Madison Square Garden in g misdemeanor for any person (o a scheduled 15 rounder. |sell, barter or give liquor to any So highy is Louis favored that rndian, Eskimo or Aleut resident of | there is little betting. Alaska, Odds formerly 1 to 6 or 1 to 7| Under terms of the bill the offi- skyrocketed overnight to such a ' cers, agents and teachers of the Bu- | point that there is apparently little reau’ of Indian Affairs would be Lewis money in sight. come special liquor enforcement of- | A Lewis victory, however, would ficers, to serve without expense to probably go down in his as the the Territory. | most astonishing upset in ring his- | The bill is the first one introduced tory. this session by Senator LaBoyteaux Jack Dempsey rorecasts that Louis and leaves only one solon, Senator will win by a knockout in the sixth O. D. Cochran of the Second Di- or seventh round but “if Louis does vision, who has not yet introduced not stop John Henry by that time, a measure in the 14th Legislature. he may lose.” Penalties provided in Senator La- Louis weighed in this afternoon ' Boyteaux's bill are, for the first in- at 200% pounds and Lewis at 180% fraction, a fine of from $100 to $500 pounds, about five pounds less than or imprisonment of from 60 to 250 he expected. days, and for subsequent convictions, Physicians said but Lewis was nervous. GOVERNMENT TRYING 0 STARVE FOURTEEN CAVESTICKS, 5 YEAR prisonment of from four months to cne year. The act provides also for revocation of Federal or Territorial liquor licenses of those conv under it. to April 27, Sundays and Mondays |excluded; Dade Park, Henderson, | August 5 to September 4, Sundays Louis was calm a fine of from $250 to $1,000 or im- | contracted the disease from one of a pair of lovebirds she chased. With the aid of the serum, she recovered KENT[I( .- - KY DERBY TO BE RUN MAY 6/ LEXINGTON, Ky., Jan. 25.—The Kentucky state racing gommission | today granted 1939 licenses to four | Kentucky tracks and set the dates| at Churchill Downs at Louisville! from April 29 to May 20, Sundays | had pur-| | he will have a fighter in tow. Rizzo, sensational rookie last year, announced he would manage Kenny Lasalle, former Texas welterweight champion, in the future. The out- fielder said also he had signed his 1939 contract with the Pirates and was ‘“tickled to death with my | terms.” Aot 2L RN R In one season an acre of kudzu | vines in Rutherford county, North Carolina, yielded five tons of hay and enough additional growth to provide a mulch nearly three inches thick. - —— The federal government, with a excluded. The Kentucky Derby will $1,500,000 display, will have the prin- ITALIAN SCHOOL TEACHERS aren't exempt from Il Duce’s desire for physical fitness, so drills like this one at Rome are a common sight. These are elementary teachers training for collective zymnastics at Mussolini Forum. DOUGLAS NEWS racks also and make a trip o Skagway if the Fornance is avail- able returning about next Monday. Boys on the trip are Douglas and Gordon Wahto, Albert and Hjal- < I mar Savikko, George Stragier, MISS SEY COMPLIMENTED Robert Fleek, Dan Kisul and Glén Miss Vera Kirkham was hostess Kronquist. ) her By % at a lingerie shower given at home last evening in honor of MRS. SHAFER TO SKAGWAY' Miss Alice Sey, bride-to-be. After a week’s visit with her som, Cootie entertained the guests, Wilbur, Mrs. Merle Shafer left this first prize won by Mrs. Jack Sey, morning on the Mount McKinlgy and consolation by Mrs. Jerry Hud- for Skagway where she will visit con. A number of dainty and lovely | With her mother, Mrs. George gifts were received by the honoree. | Brown ] The guest list included Mesdames ack Sey, Tom Jensen, Carl Lind- rom, E. J. Baretich, Frank Camp- bell, Jack Westfall, Glen Kirkham, Jerry Hudson, Robert Dupree, Or- rin Edwards; Misses Jennie John- son, Mary Loken, Jacynth Sey. e SCHOOL CAGERS OFF FOR HAINES 'GORILLA’ JONES GETS DECISION | IN PUGLISI BOUT SEATTLE, Jan. 25.—Willie "Oo\i- illa” Jones, of Akron, former mifl- Douglas High School basketball gleweight champion, decisioned Ap- team with Coach Martin Pedersen gely Puglisi, of Dyluth, Mlnneso’. left this morning on the Mount jn a 10 rounder last night. McKinley for their trip to Haines to play a series of games for the glory of D.HS. They expect to en- gage a team from Chilkoot Bar- Jones weighed 158 pounds, al hammered Puglisi, 166 pounder, wi long range punches to easily win the decision. b . s | As Conn Upset Apbstolim | Fred Apostoli of San Francisco (left), recognized middleweight cha: in New York and California, and Billy Conn, Pittsburgh Irishman, trz be run Saturday, May 6. Dates for| cipal single exhibit at the San Fran- I Keeneland at Lexington are April 13 cisco world's fais. Medical Corps of the Navy, begin- ning May 8, 1939. | This examination will be limited to candidates who have completed or are about to complete an intern- ship in a civilian hospital; between the ages of 21 and 31 inclusive at the time of appointment; a citizen of the United States and a gradu- ate of a Class “A” Medical School. Anyone interested may obtain complete information and applica- tion blanks by addressing the Bu- reau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department, Washington, D. C.” NOTICE OF HEARING FINAL ACCOUNT ! The undersigned administrator having on the 24th day of January, 1939, filed his final account as administrator of the estate of Harold Grimstad, deceased, in the Probate Court for Juneau Precinet, notice is hereby given to all heirs, creditors, |Senafe Memorial Appeals for Aid in Alaska’s War on Predators Appealing for help in Alaska's war |on wolves and coyotes, Senator | James Patterson of the Third Di- | vision yesterday introduced in the | Senate a joint memorial addressed | to officials at Washington and the Capitals of British Columbia and |the Yukon Territery. | The measure asks the National | Park Service to institute some form of predatory animal control in {Mount McKinley National Park, Katmai National Monument and Glacier Bay National Monument, in all of which preserves no measures are being taken at present to eradi- | cate wolves and coyotes. Patterson says it is obvious the and other persons interested in said | Territory cannot effectively control estate, that Wednesday, March 29, Predators, even by spending large 11939, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon |Sums on bountles, if these areas lof said day, at the office of the are kept closed to hunters and the United States Commissioner, in the | 3nimas are allowed to multiply there | Federal and Territorial Building, in | and spread throughout Alaska. Ithe City and Precinct of Juneau, Officials of British Columbia and Territory of Alaska, is the time and the Yukon also are asked in the place set for the hearing of said ac- | Memorial to cooperate with the count and the settlement thereof. | Territory in controlling predators. : H. B. LE FEVRE, B T S A Administrator of the estate of | Harold Grimstad, deceased. First publication, Jan. 25, 1939. Last publication, Feb, 22, 1939, Since the richer gold mines were worked out the population of Yukon Territory has declined’ from 27,000 to about 4,000. HARD LABOR’ IS THE SENTENCE captured by insurgent General Franco's forces and pi a bridge; other prisoners are busy in the same area building flyhmmhnmndwmphfl.ndmlmuy:m BUT THE to in punches in their ten-round bout at Madison Square Garden, New -York City. Conn scored an upset vlc:ioay gy htnkinz the decision, It was not & e fight. YEARS AREN'T SET for these Spanish loyalist soldiers prisoner’s camps near Malaga. These men are crushing rocks for use - roads. Most important to an army which must always look to its food soldiers spend their days draining marshy ground. Ne idieness is per insurgent