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T'S SURE SOME SNOW.GUESS T . HIT 600D (LIP Is Winner a7 ey avtevs i '} Two Major Leituc games played up some top flight bowling. —— First game botw-aa Jancou - H : ber Mills and Al n Hotl fia 1 Welterweight Cham pion ju, win e o s on v Takes Match by Tech- lend when they took o 1 akes Maich by lec ender. Individually the boys kept . | their heads up, no kegler going nical Knockout [ under 503. Best count was registered S | by Hagerup with 567. HAVANA, Cuba, March 6.—Henry| After a wobbly start Brunswick Armstrong successfully defended | crashed through the windup frames his welterweight crown Sunday |capturing best two out of three by against Bobby Pacho, of California. | healthy margins, in the second Armstrong won in the fourth mateh of the evening between them round by a tethnical knockout and the Capitol Theatre, Emil Galao Over 10,000 spectators witnessed and Carnegie garnered single tro- the fight. | phies by posting match tallies of Armstrong weighed 134 pounds 579 and 566 respectively. and Pacho weighed 147 pounds Games scheduled for tonight: ol |7:30 — Accountants vs. Architects; 8:30—Doctors vs. Merchants. | juNEAu EDGES Folowing are the scores of Sun- |day's games: Juneau Lumber Mills SAI.EM IN WIRE Iffert 186 170 147— 503 Hagerup 190 *190 187 567 BowuNG MAI(H Hendricks 184 158 172— 514 Stewart 196 186 160— 542 Stevenson 184 184 182 Juneau Elks team, lodge 420, yes- —_— = — terday afternoon won best three out | Totals 940 888 8482676 of five telegraphic bowling tourney Alaskan Hotel with Salem, Oregon Elks team, lodge | Radde 197 186 336. Vukovich 173 152 — 513 Although the match play decision Benson 158 171 521 went to the local quintet the Salem- Hudson 162 168 185— 515 jtes garnered high pin victory with Lavenik 167 180 202— 549 a margin of 16 pins, scoring 4601 Ny By e to 4585 for Lodge 420. | Totals 871 857 9292653 The Juneaw team started their | Capitol Theatre match win with a six pin margin Metcalf 178 195 163— 536 in the first game. They dropped the Baragar 181 181 ! next- two but came back strong in Holmquist 192 174 198— 564 the closing games to come in front | Burke 161 161 161-*483 handily. Ugrin 149 187 143— 479 Salem boys rolled consistently et B, e Mo coming under the 900 wire only in Totals 861 898 846—2605 the final game. Brunswicks Best individual mark was chalked Carnegie 183 178 205— 566 by Coe, an Oregon contestant, who R. Galao 165 158 517 tallied for a high tally of 1014. Next Hildinger 151 201 175— 527 in line was Iffert of the local team E. Galao 166 234 179— 579 with 944. Seston 146 151 201— 498 Following are the scores of the —_— e | telegraphic match: Totals 811 922 5942687 Juneau—No. 420 *——Average; did not bowl. | Radde 191 200 170 172 169— 902 A3 e o TS T Iffert 152 164 202 212 214— 944 | | Metealf 194 207 168 170 171— 910 HINDU Holv “ Stewart 212 159 172 194 193— 930 | Stevenson 173 166 179 214 167— 899 ‘ Totals ...922 896 891 962 9144585 ( I TY S(EN E | Team Average—183.4 ! | Salem—No. 336 | | Kay 172 196 192 171 145— 876 . | Kline 181 194 225 171 140— 911 | VanWeider 184 134 17h 188 189— 866 | Hart 184 216 194 158 182— 934 Coe 195 180 200 213 2261014 BENARES, March 6. — British i 0 AN SN troops, patrolling this Hindu Holy Totals ..916 910 982 991 882—4601 City, fired into the ranks of riot- Team Average—184 ing Moslems and Hindus. Casualties | - CHAPELADIES TO MEET A regular meeting of the C)mpol-’ adies will be held Wednesday even- | ing, March 8, at the Fritz Cove home of Mrs. Harry Arnold. The meeting is to start at 8 o'clock and all mem- bers are requested to be present. Todav’s News ° WHAT COES UP, MUST COME DOWN and here’s a ski enthusiast ready to start the trip up Mont Tremblant near Monireal, Canada. He sits comfortably in the new aerial ski chair ropeway, believed the only ome of its kind in Canada. The éndless cable operating around two huge 1,100 feet vertically up the mountain side in 10 [ wheels 1ift the ski experts over the weekend are estimated at least 30 killed and 100 injured. - JUNEAU WOMAN'S CLUB Business meeting at the Alaska Electric Light and Power Com- pany’s Penthouse, Tuesday, March 7, 2 pm. ” MRS. C. C. RULAFORD, Becretary. |adv. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, M LISSEN,BOSS, ON ACCOUNT O' THIS STORM T CAN'T COME DOWN TIDAY ! - DAWSON CURLERS BEAT FAIRBANKS - IN COMPETITION Visitors Are Held from Re- turning Home on Ac- count Wind, Snow DAWSON, Y. T. March 6—Daw- son curlers won all but one game in the Bonspiel competition with teams from Fairbanks, but the visi- tors were prevented from returning home due to poor flying conditions. Wind and snow grounded all planes. The visitors from Fairbanks were well entertained Saturday and Sun- day at many social affairs. It is expected the weather clear up some time Monday. A return match is scheduled to be pla in Fairbanks on Thursday during the Ice Carnival. ——————— LADIES' AUXILIARY will eau Ladies Auxiliary plans for a dance, to be sponsored April 15 at the Union Hall, were discussed At the dance the hope chest will| be awarded, tickets for which will be put on sale in the near future, Announcement was made that a special meeting has been planned for Friday of this week during which time further plans for the dance will be formulated. —_———-———— Today'’s News Tuasv.—Empire. | At a meeting Friday of the Jun-| o minutes. |and individual averages: By I'LLsaY ! IN FACT, T AN'T EVEN ARRIVED HOME YESTIDDY! World ngvs pewrved FROM CUBA'’S SUGAR CANE FIELDS came young Roberto Ortiz (above), to try out for a pitcher’s berth with the Washington Senators now training at Orlando, Fla. Diz Watches Old Sou pbom; - w - Jercme (Dizzy) Dean, Cub pitcher, gave the old soupbone a careful is first workout at Avalon, Cal,, of the National League pennant w Andrew Lotshaw, Cub trainer (left) also seems interested in Dizzy's flipper. RADDE AND HIS- Over Fifty Atiend LUMBER QUINTET ‘party, a benefit held Saturday, eve- Headed by the Juneau "‘“mbfl}nhm in the Legion Dugout, and five-man team, the Major League R st Presi . swings into the fourth week of its :fig"g‘:fifhl:y 0 Pt Presidonl B late winter schedule, with the four | p i aq wo::' during the affair in- participating quintets marking 12| ,qe: For bridge, Mfs. O. W. Reid, contests, for the sessign. | ladies' high; Homer Nordling, men’s A compilation of individual av- pjon; Mrs. Waino Hendrickson, erages of the league places Radde 1,4ie5 Jow; M. MacSpadden, men's in the top niche, closely followed |,y by Hagerup and Ugrin. :: | Following are the team standings | For pinochle: Mrs. Inez Brown, ladies’ high; George Gullufsen, men’s high; Mrs. Eli Tanner, ladies’ Team Stantngs {low; A, P. Walker, men's low. ‘Won Lost Tied > Juneau Lumber ... 9 2 1 Capitol Theatre ;e (ll“l( “ow IN Alaskan Hotel 4 7 1 Brunswicks 3 9 0 NEW LOCATION Individual Avengu Games Average Radde 42 190 Hagerup 39 188 The Juneau Meaical and Surgical Ugrin i 891+ 185 Clinic has moved to the new loca- Carnegie 33 183 tion at 172 South Franklin above E. Galao 33 183 the Bloedhorn jewelry store, ac- Stewart 42 182 cording to announcement made to- Metcalf 271 182 day. A Iffert . 42 181 | Equipment purchased Outside, Lavenik 39 180 following the Goldstein Building Stevenson .. 42 179 fire. has been installed and more Barragar ... 3 176 |is expected to arrive in Juneau in Vukovich 9 176 the near future. Hildinger . 39 175 ‘The new offices are those form- Hendricks 39 174 occupied by. Dr. W. W. Coun- Hudson .. o - ) 174 cil,head of the clinic, several yea Holmquist, . 39 173 |ago. Seston , .39 173 ——————\ R. Galao .. . 39 172 BERNHOFERS ON TRIP Benson 30 167 J. B. Bernhofer and Mrs. Bern- Burke 30 164 hofer are passengers nbuin-d the st e T, Princess Norah for the south. Be- Radio: ownership on the farm is fore returning they will \give the 13 per_cent less than in the city but | once over to the San Francsico Fair, the farmers use their sets relatively T e st ; mare, ) Empire want adds pay. Benefit Card Party SHow Iop FORM‘ Over fifty permn_.x attended the American Legion Auxiliary card ARCH 6, 1939 CLIFF STERRETT SENATE ( LONG CALENDAR | - LATE SATURDAY| 115 Measures from House Disposed of Before | ; Weekend Rest | | Senators adjourned with a c conscience Saturday evening, hav- ing gone through one of the longest calendars of the session and nob left anything over for Monday morning—except the general ap- propriation bill which came from the House too late for consideration Saturday. | 1 House Bill No. 76, the appropria~ tion measure, spent a few hours in the Senate Finance Committee and then was reported out just before adjournment with the recommen- dation that it be considered in Com- mittee of the Whole. So the Senate's work for the next few days is cut out for it House Measures Passed 1 Among measures passed late Sat- urday were House Joint Resolution No. 6, providing a $500 bonus for the clerical force of each house; House Joint Memorial No. 34, asking that student airplane pilots be trained at the University of Alaska; House Joint Memorial No. 37, asking the Federal Goverrfment to build a steel revetment to protect the Nome waterfront from storms blowing in off Bering Sea; House Concur- rent Resolution No. 2, asking the Alaska Road Commission to pro-| vide mattresses on the cots of work- men; House Joint Memorial No. 35, urging that'the Office of Indian Af- fairs make a tuberculosis sanitorium of the abandoned White Mountain Industrial School in the Norton Sound area. The Senate passed House Bill No. 128, licensing collection agencies after voting down an attempt to raise the yearly tax from $50 to $150. Tabled WORTH HIS WEIGHT stances, five-year-old James Clayton, jr., holds an iron bar-bell over his head at St. Louis. His proud father says that Jimmy— | note his chest development—can lift 100 pounds to his waist with- sut even straining; he’s been practicing five months. The bar-bell weighs 30 pounds, fiv - A (i & in gold and other metallic sub- e more than Jimmy. 3 $2,000 fine, with no imprisonment. | Nuisance | Senators granted that one thing that would be accomplished by the bill would be the affidavit “nuisance value” which would greatly hamper shipping. After receiving a thorough tongue- lashing, the bill we re-referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee for re-drafting. | Representative Drager was called into the Senate chamber to explain what was intended to be accom- | plished by another of his measures, | House Bill No. 132, dealing with injury to property. After hearing his explanation, Senators voted seven to one to indefinitely post- pone the bill. Habitual Criminal Act A substitute measure for the House habitual criminal bill went through second reading and will be | on final passage today. Continued in | second reading for action later was Representative J. P. Anderson's bill calling for a referendum on the liquor question. After questioning Chiropractors M. J. Whittier and G. A. Doelker at Three House bills were tabled. Nos. 136 and 110, both by Repre- sentative Harvey Smith, would have instructed the Commissioner . of Health to promulgate regulations for operation of company houses and living quarters and would have prohibited employers requiring that men patronize a certain store or certain boarding house as a prece- dent to being hired. Representative Carl Drager’s House Bill No. 141,/ dealing with initiative and referen- dum in municipalities met a similar | fate. o } Criticized by Senators as “another | example of sheer carel ess” in drafting was Drager’s House Bill No. 103, which would prevent a steam- shig companfy from transporting from the Territory any fish pro- ducts without requiring from the shipper an affidavit stating that there were no labor liens against the shipment, Senator Henry Roden said the bill, if enacted, would merely re- duce the penalty' for moving such shipments, an act already on the statutes covering the same abuse calling for a fine of $2,000 and im- ' prisonment for six months for in- fraction, whereas the proposed act would make the penalty merely .I , which would length regarding House Bill No. 81 license chiropractors and set up a Board of Chiropractic, ! and amending the bill with a free hand,. the measure was sent back to the Judiciary Committee, | o R S, Kentucky collected an average of | $37.36 in taxes for every automobile | or truck owned within its borders in 1938, VEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CB WASHINGTON'S OLDEST | TELEPHONE: 109 | ) Announcing . . . . The REMOVAL of the NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY'S up- town ficket office, to new quarters at the CITY DOCK. elfective Monday--March 6th. 'Northland Transportation HENRY GREEN—AGENT . Martin, asking the Office of I House Joint Resolution No. 6, | Committee on Ways and Meal authorizing payment of $500 to t) clerical staff of each house for ov time work. a House Joint Memorial No. 34, Passed Saturday Coffey, asking that student airpl pilots be trained at the Univer: of Alaska. House Joint Memorial No. 37, Dowd, supporting Delegate DI mond's bill for construction of a wall at Nome. j House Concurrent Rcanluuunn’ 2, by Martin, asking the Al x Road Commission to provide magé tresses on the beds of employees. Substitute for House Bill No. X licensing collection agencies. i House Joint Memorial No. 35, Affairs to convert vacant buildi at White Mountain on Sound into a tuberculosis sanitor{x um for Natives. SO, The consumption of oranges, lems ons and ofher citrus fruits has ed to increase in recent years, whi the cons: umption of apples has dnn‘j NDUST Co.