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. POLLY AND HER PALS PAW PERKINS, GO DOWNSTARS . AN! BREAK UP THAT CARD GAME ASH AN'HIS CRAZY CRONIES 1S CARRYIN' ON ! A » 600D CROWD v SEES QPEN 8, .~ RASSLE SEASON Spendlove Wins Main Event in Slam Bang Af- v fair Here Last Night As a matter of fact Billy Spend- Toveé, ex-Montana middleweight | champ, is a kindly family man, the | father of two children, But it would be a hard proposition to convince some 200 people of that, who attend- cd the season’s opener wrestling match at the Elks Hall last night The. Montana flash matched against Karl Umadahl, local favorite the main event of the evening performed all the gyrations and d: IT SUTTINLY SEEMED T'TAKE YUH PLENTY O' TIME T' GET RID O.K BUT WHY D'YUR ALLUS HAND ME TH' Toue Joes WATER WILL CROSS THE RIVER near Calexico, Cal, when these huge pipes measuring 1515 feet in diameter trans- | port All-American canal water acrncs New river. Above siphon is ane of nrincipal engineering feats on the canal's 80-mile route. e t d ) Carpenters an ) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 27, : By CLIFF STERRETT I KNOWS IT AN'T'D A BIN MUCH SOONER-- | \ | | | | | 193 % ONLY ALL T HAD WUZ A TWO-BIT PIECE T! START WITH:----- New President Goes to WorkiOP HEAVY SCORE RUN UP BY ELKS Haida Swamped-Henning Squad Comes from Be- hind fo Beat Krause FEW PLAYERS DO THE CHORES ATELKS' GAMES Four bowlers carried the in the Feathered League Elks last night. The between the Ospreys and Eagles saw | the winning Osprey duet of Sperling and Clark score a three straight victory by topping Eagles average |game counts. Clark won both the Ihigh single honor and weight Henning 34; Krause 29, high indi Elks 69; Iaida 39. vidual game laurels. The Ducks in the escond game Henning's won the opener last rolled against the Teals with an- night from the Krause squad, al- ' other duo representation. The Teals though they had to come from be- | let past performances do their scor- hind to do it |ing. The two-man Duck team of Trailing four points at the first Dr. Council and Ramsay was good quarter end, three points at the enough to capture all but the last half, Henning’s turned on the heat and at the end of the third quar- ter had pulled one point ahead, of Decorators America, Local 1092. Recording Secretary, and Paperhangers of Miss Fern the Hotel and Res- Cooks and Crawford, of taurant Employees, Waiters, Local 871. Sergeant-at-Arms, William Shaf- fer, of the United Brotherhood of Joiners, Local 1944 the Brotherhood of Painters, | game. Council won both high single |and high individual game. | Last game scheduled for the eve- rtions > best accepted ms i dlod ey et 5 i lwhile from there in, they man-| Ning between the Albatross and decision” from his opponent. Spend- aged to keep a few points ahead. Gulls was marked off when no bowl- love took his first fall in the fifth Ed Hoch, in a forward berth, ers showed. round of the eight 10-minute rounds {made ten points for high score| The scores of last night's games X match by a neat application of his (of the game g ‘" favorite “surfboard” hold, which i 5 ¢ : On the whole the game was i a “filendly ltte trick of standing SR L ECE - - -———fi {ragged and slowed up considerably | SPeriing 168 18572400 " on the back of a victim's neck and dward G. Barrew (left), at 71 the new President of the World Champion New York Yankel shown as (by too much body contact g Walson 165 156 155—*485 .. broceeding to pull both arms in he begar: his job going over a desk full of telegrams and mail with George M. Eiss, Yankee secretary. Bar- Elke-Haida 4 ; ark o not approved by Mother o job i rewar 20 years' service with the club as secretary and business manager. Gil DeVault and Frank Carmody ’ Pi rew's new job is the reward of 20 years' service with t g el Mot iast TRRESdx the EINY 4 ¢ TOmRIs nfi?« 486 5221496 Second fall came in the sixth as |swamped the Haida, 69 to 39, : % 2 an anti-climax after Dmadahl made |Jon Numu, ex-blacksmith, “”““"EH.ORlSIS HAVE Tournament Devault making 20 points and NS . 100 N brought a decision to the one-time | b J. L. Wilson 155 155 155—*465 an ambitious dive through the rope: o l . (Carmedy 16, getting a good Per-\ wwildes 145 145 145—°435 and mixed himself with the ring- “";“ PR S i For ng centage of the balls they flopped s 2 , to continue and the hungry Spend- | eferee Jean Huston was ActuAly POflg p'ayefl } ]In fact, all ‘:,he Blks /acodunted] |- TOP 1.:8"; 90 A e love made short work of pinning wmer three wrestler in the ring| OPPONENT TRIO g {for a’'good score showing, the cu-'py.oo. lfl‘o 110 170—°810 shoulders for the count. luring this match. Doc got a little | P ittt set fo. |mulative effect of which makes pianq 165 185 1084 There was some consolation tc|riled about-the frequent objections ing pongists may get fo- |7 o . 16k R anaEay 5 165 165486 o et 18 S ekt L o vatiba: Bl Asbiods; pciabnbe | e gether for a tourney in the near |the Haida's 39 points look small.\pogter 145 145 145—*435 R D 1L obine & handful of hair in one| Alt Heidelberg and Juneau Flor- | future. A nucleus for the pros- | Naggy made 14 points for the s e all by a rough application of the bbing a handful of hair in one : iz A : Haida's high score, but even his ‘ good old Boston crab d and piece of nose in the other ists rolled the only game in Com- pective paddle tennis joust gath- s hig ! S| Totals 480 480 480—1440 » 4 o ey i nally | merc cague y 8 e Bruns- A at the home of Irv Noble |shootifig was not up to par, his Ducks Gaston-Davis Go and pulling hard. Hostilitles finally 'mercial League play at the Bruns ered a . 5 : o : i PEav theh FAL. Bit isadl | Wi 8 g last night to discuss plans and Short attempts giving; miserable Council 200 191 140— 531 Semi-windup match between Wall | ceased after the Ref had tossed wick last night e » |Juck. Ahe Haida team played spir- . Gaston, champion of old Mexico | Webb to an easy fall. The lone contest wound up with et in a little warm up prac- | sipall last nigh {h Thts first Ve b e and Red Davis of Texas, was thc| The. match ended in the fifth the Fiower boys on the sunny end tice. ey ast night for the first Ramsay 187 131 146— 464 neatest and most interesting, from |round when Doc, hanging on to[of a 3 to 0 score. They rolled for Including Noble those present | time. - ; e T e e a strictly seientific point of view | he Blacksmith's crop, total team score of 1602 pins as ~ Were: Dr. W. M. Whitehead, Stafi¥ls forward, Dick May, st Totals - W% ABS . 8901 & DRRICHIX Svesap-c iDL, OF VLo : - ¥ e her. Wilbur Wester, Carl Nasi and on the sidelines last night to per-| *—Average; did not bowl. Only once did the boys revert tc|let §o and in order to br against 1 for the Heidelberg » 5 : form and that when Red Davis took | "¢xt event it was necessary to judge | club. Heidelberg bumped the 500 Corky Brookes. |mit adfingér, ripped in the Krause e TR - v St < o g = + anhARd: /s -— > > — {game Tuesday, a chance to heal an off the record sock at his oppon- | him loser so that the ring could mark once, in the second game g o s Shagh 4 ©nt when he was grc on his|be cleared. With the help of the when they counted 516. The Flor- MAR'I’HA SOCIETY 1v1-)uc'~d"; e z (ROSS'COUNIRY knees after the bell had sounded, |Promoter, two seconds, and the|ist ver dropped below 526 agy. : Generall speaking the grappler |teferce the ring was cleared. negie of the winners stole the | Anolflcr basketball figure, th?‘ ¢ wrestling to remember routine, Ga Weights of the fighters as an- formance and a 585 three-game |also was: out of the picture last ton is a lithe wiry boy who bounds |nounced from the ring: Spendlove tally RS g’ - o Bragliaien SKI (ALENDAR and rebounds like a rubber snake |178, Umadahl 184; Davis 160, Gas- Following are (he of last Tickets are now on sale for the Py @ bad cold. i | Time and itme again he flipped|ton 165; Webb 176, Mumu 168 night’s game show sponsored by the Martha SO-.“"“ “:‘:‘hl;g'stp?:cé“‘:::]‘l‘;;';ar'::d':y; — Limself out of treacherous leg splits| Promoter Moody announced from Alt Heidelber; ciety on next Tuesday evening at the |8 WA . 4 i and head scissors R {he ring that Walt Gaston will Hildinger 181 zuzf 158— Capitol Theatre, and may be ohmm-‘:“f“‘ ';“"‘ E‘CI:’“? (]))tl\::lc ""’ffil"l:“ ]f:";MenS I.anglauf IS Se' for Davis is some double jointed and|wrestle Billy Spendlove in a mateh Koski 154 161— 437 cd by members of the society or Girl jlake Bud Fosters pla id | ab least six times Gaston canght s danis s Itin Ehe Gkt Nelson 178 159 162— 499 Scouts :"'-”;'; vag ”‘"'"I““' 0 e Noofl,sufldaY-Moreau him in the v ly fatal Indian dead | two w £ The picture is entitled “The first| Box scores for the evening lol- H lock, only to his vietim wiggle A good card for some future date Totals 481 516 4811473 Hundred Years” and stars Robert 10W: i leen Sma“ Edge . out. could be offered the public by Juneau Florist Montgomery and Virginia Bruce. | HAIDA (39) | e Half way through the third round | matching Gordy Numu with Red|j Holm 161 167 155 493 Warren Willlam and Binnie Barnes F' Love, 'v‘ With the weather man finally of the scheduled 8-minute 8-round |Davis. Numu is a serious wrestler | (pete for Rag) 166 178 180 524 are also included in the comedy F-—Davlin, 7 Ropkins, 2|predicting one week-end without match, Gaston took the first fall[ who looks out of place clowning. but | carnesie 212 181 192— 585 cast |C—DeVault, 20 Naggy, 14 thaw or rain, Juneau skiers were with a Boston crab. Final fall came | he is tough and active, with the A e |G—Orme, 5 Waldron, 6 |oday waxing up their hickory slid- when (he Old Mexico champ slipped | hair trigger Davis as an opponent| oy 5971602 The U. 8. Department of Agricul- (¢ Paviat, 5 fers, pointing to the first cross- out of a full Nelson and applied a|there would be a good honest, fast R/ 4 & | fure estim that unfermenied |S Smith, 2{eountry ski race yet to be held head seissors which made Davis|and furious bout | fruit juices, excludix cider, increas- | Stephanson, 01iy, the Juneau section. beat the canvas. i SR SHIPPEYS ON NORAH ed from 1.000000 cases in 1930 to S-—-Hill, 2 Offerdahl, 0| The “langlauf” is set to com- Webb vs. Numu N. A. McEachran, broker making John Shippey and Mrs. Shippey 24,000,000 cases in 1 omato juice ——— |mence at noon, Sunday, from the ) Curtain raiser match between Auk | his headquarters here, left for Pet- arrived from the south aboard the jumped from 220,000 cases to 16,000, HENNING'S (3¢) KRAUSE (29) |new shelter cabin at the second Bay wildman, Doc Webb and Gor-jersburg aboard the North Coast. Princess Norah this afternoon. 000 cases | F—Bardi, 3 : Brown, 0/pmeadow, just above the ditch, in 7k e 7 6 w0 —— |F—Ed Hoch, 10 Schubert, 9 {the Douglas Ski Area. It is to be : gy C—Beck, T Chapados, 8| conducted by the Juneau Ski Club ? © G—Anderson, 2 Pope, 8las one of the series of events for ;G—Ed\Vfl_rd& 2 Gilmore, 2|the Henning Cup, trophy emblem- S—C. Wilson, 2 Harretl, 0|gtic of all-around supremacy over S—Johnson, 0. Turner, 0|, gseason of varied men's skiing ;rSWBrlswl. 2 Lawson, 6| ayents. | S—Edwards, 2 To date, a little more than a ! 34 - % dozen entrants are signed up for i the twice-postponed competition, JUNEAU (E"IRAL and, as the course is new and the event the first of its kind here, | there is widely varied opinion as [ ( I_ABOR (o““(ll to who will emerge the winner. With no dope sheets on past per- Hole ElE(TIo" formances to guide their selec- tions, most of the pickers are de- 3 claring the race “wide open,” with Ralph Moreau, in the slalom event Rober' Graham Is Chosen that opened the Henning compe- |tition, accorded a slight edge. Presiden' at Mee"ng All prospective entrants in the svent are required to report at Held I_as' Nigh, |the second meadow Sunday not 5 later than 11:30 o'clock in the fore- Ty noon, that they may be registered At the regular meeting of thp|and allotted starting positions be- - | Juneau Central Labor Council, Am- | fore race time at noon sharp. @ | .iican Federation of Labor, held| It is planned to have the race last evening, the following officers |finnish at the first shelter cabin, were elected: | just below the ditch, and spectators | " president, Robert Graham, of In-|are advised to seek viewpoints ternational Brotherhood of Elec- |there if they would be in on the |trical Workers, Local B 462. thrills of the final sprint for the | Vice-President, Kenneth Lowe, of | tape. !the Bartenders International of | AT 8 ” America, Local 869. 10 PITCH ON (OAST | Financial Secretary, Joe Powers.| SCRANTON, Pa., Jan. 27. — The former Cleveland and Brooklyn pitcher, Joe Shaute, was released today by the Eastern League. Shaute, who is county treasurer of Lackawana County and is ac- tive in Democratic political circles, said that he will pitch for Sacra- mento this year, o ANGLE OR ‘ANKLE’ SHOT? while her father flat- tens out to get a difficult “angle” shot, Shirley Hall has her own difficulty—holding the pose. Sh irley was at Chantarella, Switzer- tand. o train for fieure skating tournaments. DOUG LAS NEW ALICE Y, ART MCBRID TO WED SATURDAY NIGHT At eight o'clock tomrorow even- ing in Juneau, at the Northern Light | Presbyterian parsonage, Miss Alice Sey will become the bride of Mr. Arthur McBride, with the Rev. John A. Glasse officiating. Mrs. Jack Westfall, sister of the bride to be, and Mr. Westfall will be the attendants. Others at the| ceremony will be Miss Sey's parents Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sey and her sis- ter Jacynth. Reservations have been made on the Princess Norah for the couple which wil Itake in California and Mexico and a visit with Mr. Mc Bride's parents in the former state - MESTER HONOR ROLL Students making honor grades during the first half of the school term in the Douglas school are as follows: Seniors—Albert Savikko, 2 A's, 2 B's, Juniors—Lorraine Vienola, 2 A's, 2 B’s. Sophomores—Bobbie Fleek, 2 A's, 2 B's; honorable mention, Gordon Wahto, 1 A, 2 B's, 1 C; Glen Kron-| quist, 1 A,2B's, 1 C. { Freshmen—ElImer Savikko, 3 A’s, 1 B; Bill Wilder 1 A, 2 B’s, 1 C; Frank Cashen, 3 B's, 1 C. | First grade—Carol Cochrane, 2 A 6 B's; Leslie Gould, 2 A's, 6B's Douglas Hudson 3 A's, 4 B's Second Grade—Phyllis Andrews, 4 A’s, 4 B's, 1 C; Ben Havdahl, 3 A’s,| 6 B's; Gene Grant, 3 A’s, 7T B’s, 1 C. Fourth Grade—Peggy Cochrane, 10 A's, 5 B's. i Fifth Grade-—Lindy Dupree, 10 A’s, 4 B's, 1C; Curtis Bach, 15 B's Sixth Grade—Winnie Lee Grant| 7 A’s, 8 B's; Ralph Kibby, 5 A’s 9 B's, | 1 C; Micky Pusich, 3 A’s, 11 B's, 1C; | Robert Savikko, 2 A's, 12 B's, 1 C.| super convenience . . . a com- plete home laundry that washes, ‘rinses, damp dries, irons. Has motor driven emp- tying pump. Stowed away in throom under sink or table it serve: a beautiful sani- tary clothes hamper. . STOW-A-WAY Kitchen Laundry Makes Washday a Wash Hour IRONINS the SEavEs ) | metallurgy Seventh Grade —Solveig Havdahl, 8 A Eighth Grade—Frank Krsul 4 A's, 4 B's; Kennefh Shudshift 4 A's, and 4 B's, RS - MR. FLEEK ENTERTAINS WITH POPULAR GAM The interesting card games of Tripoli and Chinese Checkers mage an entertaining evening for a few guests of Wm. A, Fleek at his home served by the host. Those present included Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Al 8mith, Miss Marg- aret Pearce and Willlam Fleek, -+ CHEM. CLASS ON VISIT In connection witn tneir swudy, of Arthur Ladd took his class in chemistry to the Treadwell foundry yesterday afternoon a&d spent a valuable period observing the pouring of the moulten metals. They also visited the pattern shop and in- spected the work done there, The class was given first hand instruction in how various substances are added !to the furnace charge to produee required characteristics in the re- sulting charge. Class members on the trip 'in- cludded Virginia Langseth, Graee Pusich, Metty Mae Wilder, Lorraine Vienola; Boy members are at Haines, - Another Chapler ; Writien Info '39 Session Laws Senate bill No. 1, today became chapter 2 of the 1939 session laws when it was signed by Gov. J W. Troy following passage by Houses of the Legislature. ’X‘hebl‘)il; of technical nature, makes unknow heirs of deceased persons defen- dants in suits involving real pr;— erty. 19 Chapler 1 is Senate bill No. 4, em- bracing amendments to the uné#l- ployment compensation law. B Empire want adds pay. . ¥ s Family Capaci e rd ‘per hour Washes everything from Laby clothes to bed blankets . . . and you can iron everything from sheets to+ shirts in 14 the time . with 1/10° effort, seated in your favorite chair. You must see this sensational e kitchen laundry to appreciate its’ many economies and advantages. Quiet, vibrationless. Ready to use on delivery. No installation expense. Come in for a demonstra+ tion today. Sold on convenient monthly payments. Costs no more than a good washer or an ironer alone. Alaska Electric Liehit & Power Go. JUNEAU- ALASKA———DOUGLAS