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POLLY AND HER PALS I-1 C-CAN'T SHE'S OUTA CONTROL ! AS A ROMEO> GUESS T'M JIST A PUNK , PERK . FIRST CITY'S | KEGLERS TAKE | PINFEST LEAD HOOP G A M E;Howard of Ketchikan Rolls| LAST SECOND BASKETWINS | 643 to Start Tourna- ment with Honors Ketchikan Elks took the lead yes- terday in the first of five daily tele- graphic contests with Juneau and Anchorage Elks, with Juneau run- ning second. Taking high honors for the first Waldron Droflfi Looper to; Break Tie with Ten Seconds’ Play Left Fans saw a story book finish to the Haida-Henning ball game last night in the high school gymnasium Pl8ht n'"; :‘”w"“" of Ratihikn, when, with the score tied, and but a WO tallied % few seconds of play remaining, Bob | b | e o &0 | Ketchikan — Maloca, 578; Nelson. | o Ped @' cos Zorich, 607; Roady, 513; How- long looping_backboard shot from 5233 ZOHIcl i FEEe) : the center of the floor to put the '@ 643. Total 255 e i | Juneau—Radde, 555; Hagerup, 598; 2 % | Stewart. 568; Stevenson, 540; Car- In the first game of the evening, negie 516. Total, 2,777 the Elks ran completely away me: Anchorage—Seel 538: Froizen the Miners, whipping them 70 to 31.| ywo games, 294; Johnson, two games, | DeVault of the Elks, was high with | 308. Wwelch, 533; Lakshas, 548; Rom- 17 points, followed by Davlin and |jg two games, 355. Total, 2,596 May with ten points apiece. - .- The second game was really worth | seeing from the opening minutes to TONY (ANZONERI | i ISMOVING ALONG | 1 the last seconds, a determined Haida five, with colored boy Love drop- ping 23 points, handling his one- | handed shots with deadly accur | The Haida squad led all the w: ] I and were not threatened until the! (oMEBA(K STUNT! last 20 seconds of play. | | The first quarter ended 9-3 inf TR favor of the Haida, the Nalf 18-13,| LOS ANGELES, Cal and the third quarter, 26-20. | Tony Canzoneri, of New York, mov-| As the Henning five made a de- ed another step along his comeback | termined effort to close up, Manager | trail when he outpointed Bobby | Eddie Lawson went into the game Pancho, of Los Angeles, in a 10 and dropped a drive in shot to tie, rounder last night. | the score at 39-39 after dropping a s PR PIONEER Feb. 9—| free toss to put the score at 39-37. o | HONOR LEGISLATORS | { HERE LAST NIGHT| from the center of the floor that hit the backboard and went through Lhei net beautifully. | A welcome was exwended to mem- | Hennings did not have time g enough left to get the ball to the bers of the Legislature and their| other end of the floor before the|Wives last evening at the Odd Fel- whistle blew. lows Hall by Mrs. Dora Sweeney, The Henning loss now puts them President of the Pioneers Auxiliary in a tie for league lead with the(2nd William Markle, President of Firemen who they meet tomorrow |the Ploneers. | night to determine the champion. Over one hundred persons gath-| Krause will meet Haida in the ered at the social, duri_ng which first game tomorrow night. time Miss Sophie Harris, accom- | Summaries of last night's games |Panied at the piano by Miss Vene- tia Feero, sang two selections after and more like an overtime period coming up, Bob Waldron swung one follow: 3 | Elks Miners | Which Miss Feero played two piano; May, 10 Snow, 8! selections. Neal Noore was also Davlin, 10 Lindstrom, 9| guest pianist during the evening, DeVault, 17 Vories, d‘Bnd two numbers were sung by Mrs. | Niemi, 4| Crystal Snow Jenne, accompanied | Haglund, 13 Nelson, 6 at the piano by Mrs. Carol Beery Carmody, 6 Druliner, 8 Hanson, 0 Davis. ! Holm, 8 Speakers for the occasion were | Henning Haida |representatives Leo Rogge, of Fair-| Turner Love, 23 banks; and Howard Lyng of Nome: | Lawson, 3 Ropkins, 2 and Senator Norman R. Walker, of Naggy, 4 Ketchikan. All three men are mem- Waldron, 7 bers of the Pioneers, Mr. Walker, Smith, 2 a0 honorary member of the Ketchi- Pavlat, 3 kan Isloo. ! i Informial singing also proved o be | a diversion of the evening's enter- | | tainment, with Cash Cole, Past Pres- | ident of the Juneau Igloo, acting as master of ceremonies for the af- | fair Chapados, 12 Schubert, 8 Pope, 4 Gilmore, - 0( | Preceding the social, Mrs. David I“ SleH RouND | Waggoner, Mrs. G. Baggen and Mrs. D. Moeller were initiated into the Wa“er Franklin S(Ores Fif- jPionccrs Auxiliary. A plan was also teenth Victory in His | presented to Mrs. J. C. Michaelson, | Past President of the group, during | i i Brief Career | crriNG OF NURSES NEW YORK, Feb. 8. — Walter ]'OMGHT (A"(H.u i Franklin, young middleweight, scor- | ed his fifteenth knockout in his brief career, when he stopped Eddie Babe 12 Announcement was made — e —— PUBLIC CARD PARTY at the Verne Soley residence, CD.A. Card Party, second Of po., cancelled. series, Friday, February 10, at 8 pm., > . Parish Hall adv. e an Empire aa. has "(.Xl!‘ TH'BRAKES ELKS | WOT'LL I DO W OTLLI DO 222 ) WAL, MAGGIE SHOWED ME HER NEW-FANGLED AS'T ME HOW T LIKED 'EM. BOWL CLUB REGISTERS ONE OF TOP TALLIES Three games in the Classic League at the Elks Alleys last night resulted in Biue Ribbon club taking three straight from the Connors Motor in the initial contest with Radde con- tributing a healthy individual match nts score of of the s Home Grocery was no match fox the 2,3 hot dropping Stevenson garnered high count by lannexing a 570 in individual match game 8, one of the best cou 50N, losing White Spot trio. in order. They almost salvaged contest, middle by three in the it only poit play. Triangle Inn won (wo in a r from United Food in the fi lof three nt, There are no games scheduled for | ATTY | match. Highest score was contrib- | uted by Cleveland of the losers. Met- | {call helped his club to a two -out | win by capturing a . GENERAL T0 APPEAR AT CIRCUIT COURT, Truitt Leaves for San Fran- cisco in Carscadden Attorney General James 8. Truitt aboard San Francisco to appear before the is (ase the Baranof enroute U. 8. Circuit Court of Appeals the case of Melville St. Elmo Car- {scadden vs The case, dealing with an estate |escheated to the Territory, was de- | cided in favor of the Territory when |tried here last year before Judge | Carscadden, | lan heir, filed the appeal, which is |to be heard February 16. | George Centra ‘Tulane the Territory. F. Alexander. in 1 point of dispute Nt e University, which pus in New Orleans, wor%"r WORK.! )~ 12 me‘l lcase is the statute of limitations, | . this | which during the time the estate R._nsko. former middleweight cham- | morning that the scheduled meet- |Was in process of being escheated to pion, in the sixth round last night. |ino of the Gastineau Channel Nurs- |the Territory was changed from ten | es Association, set for this evening |to seven years is 104 years old, occupies a 93-acre cam- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 8 By CLIFF STERRETT —e® SHUT OFF TH' DERN METER ! o 1 1ts. rOW nal 540 | tonight | greatest. She put Soviet women in Following are the scores of | the world spotlight, I night's games { { Behind such opportunities for Blue Ribbon | ‘\\nnln-n [1‘;. of mur:wr.l Jusc}])h Vi p p sag , !Stalin. That women fliers do no 3:1:}:-'1;p I‘tl)}) i:g ‘ll:i gjldz :1“5(‘: ST(-'\N THE NAVY (AL MOST) —is col. Carl forget this was shown in the mes- ag 9 1 : X Estes, ,u_ _pul‘)h;h«-( named an :ldl_mml in Pennsylvania's non- sage sent by Grizodubova and her Tubbs 192 200 129— 521 existent navy. The uniform was a gift of Governor-Elect Arthur o . 8 % T H. James whom Colonel Estes advised in 1938 election battles. SPIRARIgE L0, LR IL BARKET BEDANN Totals 632 571 540—1743'__ _ S : BNy il A 1) Connors Motor | ‘With your name in our hearts Blrrgar 195 178 166— 541 plane Rodina which, with an all- |we, the daughters of the great so- | | Holmquist 168 170 177— 515 AMAZON oF woman crew, flew non-stop “""_“»‘rlnlisl homeland, flew non-stop Redman 175 175 175—*525 Moscow to the Far East, an ¢ir |through clouds, sfog, cold and L3 nee of miles | darkness, even to the banks of the | Totals 538 523 5201581 denting and her companions, | Amur | Home Grocery Lieutenant Marina Rask l(»bk,INSuRAN(E IS | Ugrin 144 152 189 485 off just as the western European | | Carnegie 170 189 169 528 powers seemed about to plunge into Hudson 155 200 168— 523 war, But their flight was the big | opERAIIVE 0“ White Spot news of the week in Russia, es- Stevenson 197 193 180— 570, pecially after communication with | Iffert 148 172 181— 501 STk the plane suddenly ceased and the FIRE DAMAGE Benson 1 119 18- 545 \Women of Russia Puf in mation for eight days was in doubt ikt s : il iionat (Continued trom Page One) als 544 550—1617 Total 523 544 550—16 New Staius by Da"ng L I Triangle Inn | Of Ofle Of Sex It finally developed the Women|equipment were moved from these Stewart 181 193 167 541, had landed unharmed in a swamp | offices at the firsi fire danger. !Robertson 166 157 162— 485 By near Komsomolsk. Their return to Tenants are Losers | Cleveland 170 229 159— 558 By WADE WERNER Moscow was & triumph | Greatest number of suffers from | MOSCOW — For weeks Soviet| Not only had they demonstrated|the big fire were the some 60 house- Totals 517 519 483—1584 Russia has been throwing its col- again the capacity of Soviet flyers;|holders who lost all belongings in United Food lective hat into the air for Valen- their flight was a spectacular lllus-fthe conflagration. It is estimated Metcalf 183 183 183—°543 tina Stepanovna Grizodubova, 28, tration of the status of woman in|that only 3 or 4 of the persons re- | Hendricks 140 155 204— 499 buxom Amazon of the civil air the Soviet Union. All three were|siding in the structure had any Lavenik 190 163 170— 523 force. | “daughters of the people” such as | coverage whatsoever. All these loss- —— —— —— —— | She was commander of*the air- never could have hoped to partici- o8 easily average from $200 to $500 Totgls 513 501 557—1571| e — - — e LU family. * Average score. Did not bowl. ‘ ]0 b k) A G d N fe Sar]c:s cont;aimng vmlunblre records E— e 21 | for the various business firms re- ’1”)’.; rm o0a as on !maln buried in the smoldering heap to | in! The Allens, John, the Mrs. and John, Jr. ! Yep, Johnny Allen’s arm is as good as new. The star righthander | of the Cleveland Indians, who underwent a recent operation in b Cleveland, shows his flipper to his wife ana son, Johnny, Jr., at St. Petersburg, Fla, where the Allens live, 939. AN’ ALL I DID, WUZ TELL HER THEY WUZ JIST AS PURTY AS TWO FISTFULS ! RADISHES | | [pate in an important venture un- | der the Czars. Ossipenko came from a collective farm. Raskova is {a musician’s daughter. As for Grizudubova, |almest say an airplane was her | cradle. Her father, Stepan Grizo- | /duboy, was an airplane builder in |the days when men who built fly- 'ing-machines led a precarious fin- ancial existence. Her mother kept the wolf from the door by work- ing as a dressmaker. In Gorky Squadron | In 1928 she entered a school for | pilots; she was 18 when she re- ceived her license. Soon she was first: among pilots of the Ossoavia- chim (the voluntary organization {for air and chemical defense). She | one might !trained 86 pilots, then was a | signed to the Gorky propaganda squadron. | 'She has established women’ cords for altitude, speed and dis- I tance, usually in light sport plan Between flights, she married an army flier, Captain Vietor Soko- loff; between flights she became a mother. Her two-year-old son, Val- ery. 15 nicknamed “Little Hawk.” The non-stop flight to the Far ast doubtless was Grizodubova’s |and Fire Chief V. W. Mulvihill be- lieves many documents reposing in the receptacles can be salvaged from | them. ' | Ammonia Tanks ' | Ammonia tanks in the basement used to operate the refrigerating ARE STYLI No pale-face make-up for Ann Mil CONFLAGRATION HAS ELEMENTS OF DIME NOVEL Thrilled Hundreds See Drama of Third Alarm Reenadeq Here (Continued rrom Page One) A safe stood at the corner of Second and Main with a restrauaing line made fast to it. On Roofs Firemen went climbing from roof top to roof top stamping .out minor blazes and fighting more seri- sus fires started in other nearby buildings. Piremen even had to go to the sld Federal Jail building on Court House hill to extinguish a roof flaze started by flying cinders from the Goldstein Bullding four blocks away. Fires were started in the Williams Building on Second Street, doing considerable damage, and fires were also started all through the Gold- stein Block proper, with some fire even being started at the old Annex Boarding House, where five fire- men and a hose had an hour of work, Terrific Heat Windows broke in from the ter- rific heat, in humerous nearby busi- ness houses across the street Ice built almost curb high in places as it steadily grew in the stree fattening wires and poles grotesquely Approximately side the fire area were killed by the blaze, but will be reinstalled by to- night or tomorrow morning, it is believed. Many firemen took their lives in hand, working in the shadow of stone walls that threatened to fall. Some firemen, working between buildings, experienced such heat from flames raging beneath the buildings, that other firemen played hoses on -their comrades to keep them from being burned while they worked. Piremen's wives, worried for their husbands, carried them hot coffee and cups. Most of the work was done under the American Legion Auxili- ary, who asked that thanks be ex- tended many merchants contribut- ing. Thi afternoon practically all those living adjacent to the Gold- 50 telephones out- | HEALTHY LOOKING CHEEKS SH ONCE MORE She heightens her natural color with carefully placed tcuches of paste rouge. ller, movie dancer, | By BETTY CLARKE | AP Feature Service Writer Stark-white faces with blood-red lips are no longer in vogue. Once' again, it’s smart to look healthy, And the most effective way 1oy achieve that effect is to rouge a lit- tle additional color to your cheeks, : Choose your rouge to conform to, !the rest of your natural coloring: If youre blonde don’t make it tod I neavy or too dark. If you're a red+ head stick to rouges with a toi¢h of |orange in them. (Auburn-haired sirls can wear slightly darker rouge with less orange.) Brunettes ean go in for the more exotic violet-reds. Paste rouge, most wnmen’flnd: lasts longer than cake rouge. It should be mixed with a bit of faea cream and applied from the pal of the hand after the powder base is put on but before the powder is patted on. It may then be re< touched with powder rouge. } Many make-up experts - advise placing rouge where the nfitu@ cloring shows up when you bl Sometimes, however, you may- im- prove on the color scheme natu |gave you by a little camouflag | remembering that rouge plac {high tends to lengthen the h&fi | placed low or far out, It seems ladd width. 4 : | One beauty specialist 'ndvises | placing some rouge close to .the |eyes to bring out their brilliance. ¢ | You should not wear rouge when you're having your photogra taken. What the mirror shows as innocent re-touching job shows on the film all too often as a gi | big black smudge. i ————m CHOIR DINNER HAS ° BEEN CANCELLEQ st The dinner scheduled for tomors |row night in the Parlors of thd | Northern Light Freshyterian Chureh by members of the Martha Society; honoring the members of the church cholr, has been cancelled, it was afs nounced today by Mrs. Ray Pe;i | man, president of the Society. « S 2 M 3 7 Approximate 17,000 Four-H club { boys had small tracts of tobacgo | cultivation in Kentucky in 1938, | e 5 Ottawa, Kans., city of 10,000 pee‘ ple, has had no fatal traffic acely ' dents since July 26, 1936. i stein Building had moved back j quarters. Firemen were still pllfll‘ | water on the flames in the Gold; stein Building at 4 o'clock. i i plant of the United Food Meat Com- pany contributed to the difficulty jof fighting the fire. These tanks ;bum. and created a fume condi- | tion which made passage through | the basement practically impossible. Attempts to fight the flames from | the outside were hapered by low | set windows which prohibited the firemen turning streams of water | on the blazing ceiling of the base- | ment. . e | Basement material such as la?u‘- |dry in the apartment room, boxes jand crates and odd stuff in the | apartment house lockers made ready | iuel for the fire. iR | Oil Tank Intact | The oil tank for the furnace heat- | ing system remained intact through- out, protected by several feet of | earth and concrete from the ac- tual flames. | Insurance agencies handling the | policies covering the damaged build- ! ings claim that if this reservoir had | exploded more serious consequences would have occurred. Agents for the insurance com- | pa concerned are Shattuck | Company, Juneau Insurance Agency | and H. G, Shepard and Son. Tomorrow Evening Students 15¢ HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM Use Sixth Street KRAUSE vs. HAIDA FIREMEN vs. HENNING BASKETBALL Entrance ONLY