Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
UNITED'S TRIO TALLIES 1727 IN TRIPLE WIN With Jimmy Hendricks leading the attack with a 616 total, the United Food trio rolled real Ameri- can Bowling Congress ball last night at the Elks and tallied out | 1727 pins, from the with an aggregate of winning three games ‘White Spots. Home Grocery won two from Blue Ribbon and Connors 'Motors won three from Triangle Inn. Scores follow: Connors Motors 183 183 125 200 175 15 483 Triangle 157 183 115 183—"548 172— 497 175—"525 0—1571 Bavard Holmquist Redman 558 Inn 213 183 142 Totals 172— 542 183—"549 157— 414 512—1505 Stewart Robertson Cleveland Totals Metcalf Lavenik Hendricks 184— 519 Totals White Spot 166 159 169 212 183 135 518 506 Blue Ribbon 190 149 175 146 203 137 568 432 Home Grocery 205 161 194 157 168 181 Stevenson iffert Benson 185— 566 Totels 166— 505 179— 500 161— 501 Radde Hagerup Tubbh Totals 506—1506 180— 543 184— 535 195— 544 Totals 564 499 559—1622 * Average score—did not bowl. NEUTRALITY ACT DEBATE NOW FOR EXTRA PURPOSES (Continued from Page One) Ugrin Carnegie Hudson position of the English and French is weakened by the isolationist na- ture of our Neutrality Act. Oppo- nents of the President's policy have said as much. But the present administration things differently. It has not said so openly but it has indicated so in more ways than one. It wants its diplomats to be able to hint, without necessarily speak- ing out, that if trouble comes this country is more likely to be friend- ly to England and France than to Germany ahd Italy. With the Neutrality Act on the books, such diplomatic “under- tones” sound cracked. The Neu- trality Act says, in effect, that Con- gress is not going to let this country be friendly to any one 196— 592 | 600—1727 | 182— 507 | 147— 465 | | 514—1538 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1939. By CLIFF STERRETT when the war comes. That includes England and France. , CUTS PERSUASIVE POWER And because the administration and its cir agents abroad cannot dicd.ay » administration’s friendliness unf d. suasive weight Lheir they n against chance tc It is that ing debate 3 ity Act itself bec little more | than a side issue. Some members of Congress who criticize the gd-| | ministration policy nevertheless | ‘agree with the administration Lhati the Neutrality Act is bad legisla- | tion. | l They don't like the Neutrality | | Act. But even more they don’t like | the administration’s implied rea- | sons for not liking it. They look upen England, France and the Iwhole European scene as a sour job, out of which this country | should keep its hands. | Thus the fight in that respect| becomes again the old battle over | the League of Nations. That affair lasted many, many months, and the isolationists won, hands down. thoug! veis for neticas leoking ap. f b2 ti - | BOUGLAS DOUGL/ Fifty eight children of Douglas| | were given final tuberculin tests at school yesterday afternoon. Dr. J. C. | Haldeman, assisted by Miss Magn- | hild Oygard administered the treat- ments. ..o JUNIOR PROM IS | JUST A MONTH HENCE | One month from today., on Anril 22,0n a Saturday, the Junior Prom of the Douglas High School will be | given in the natatorium according to !an announcement. | Students are already working on | the motif for the annual event which |so far remains a secret. | - | FORMER STUDENTS ENROLLED | Billy and Evelyn Spain who re- turned with their mother from Se- attle the first of the week re-en- rolled this morning in the Douglas | bublic school, the former as a fresh- man in high school and the latter in the sixth grade. ey S W velta ED SHELLWORTH RETURNS HOME Ed Shellworth, father of Mrs. Bob Davlin, returned to Chilkoot Bar-| racks and his position at the head of the plumbing department on the steamer Alaska. Shellworth has been visiting his daughter and son-in-law since his arrival Sunday on the Yukon. | e ——— | ATTENTION REBEKAHS Regular meeting this evening at 8 o'clock. Installation and social to follow. JERRY WAITE, 1 Secretary. adv. [ e WAR GAME, “Carrying the Airplane,” delights scampering Princess Yorinomiya (right), youngest daughter of Japan’s em- peror, who plays with other children at the Peeress’ school in Tokyo. Chinese war CORNERSTONE LAYING TO BE THURSDAY P.M. mporfant Ceremony Will Be Observed at Memorial Presbyterian Church An important service in religious circles will take place tomorrow afternoon. The cornerstone of the New Memorial Presbyterian Church will be laid. A special committee from the Presbytery, meeting at Hoonah, will arrive on the mission boat Prince- ton tomorrow morning to take | charge of the ceremony. All those precooled before and after loading attending the event will meet at 4 o'clock in the First Presbyterian A VERDICT WON against flu, U. S. Atty. Gen. Frank Murphy recuperates at Palm Beach, Fla. Girl is his niece, Sharon. ] < B AL HECK! I THOUGHT YUH'D COME T' APOLOGIZE! YUKON WOLF | AILEEN KARINEN BOUNTY RING NOW BROKEN Two Arrestéflonvided in Dawson by Interna- tional Patrol (Centinued 1rom Page One! { “ & |border. He also possessed wolf pelts with leg bones attached. < The new Patrol, consisting of Al- aska Wild Life Agents Sam White irbanks and C. J. Rhode of Cordova and two Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers, was set up to prevent smuggling of wolf and coyote skins from Yukon into Al- aska and other pelts in the oppo- site direction The Patrol was made possible by the cooperation of Ma). T. V. ~ Sandys - Wunsch, Superintendent commanding the Yukon subdivision of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. with the Alaska Game Com- mission Flying Border Patrol Dufresne said the Patrol would be maintained for at least another 30 days. It operates by flying into the border region by plane, drop- ping c Wild Life Agent and one Mcuntie at a remote point, and the |other pair at another point, the two |then converging on the suspected violator. The piane flies in to pick up the Patrol and the prisoners the next day. Though the Patrol uses a plane, bectiuse violators also are so equipped, the work still calls for many miles and hours of hard leg work nowshoes, Dufresne said. The Patrol w blished along lines predicted by Dufresne before Commi of the Territorial House and Senate here last month when the bounty question was being dis- cussed. On Traili Three Dolan was convicted counts covering use of taking ‘of ille inspired the new sport. y 14 were s ) may be shipped from coast to coast with only one reicing. HEADIN’ into this enclosure, After the roundup, w! FOR THE FIRST ROUNDUP, more than 300 wild elephants were captured at Lobburi, Siam, and driven hich army authorities had ordered. 50 slenhants wers Lané =nd ramainder turned loose again. Years on »oison and church in the native village and rhe Game then go to the Memorial church Comm had 1 his trail where the cornerstone ceremonies [0F three years, I me to will take place at 4:30 o'cloc s atiention wver Sl pelts which Homer W. Jewell, Assista cutive Of- F V ATED il of the, Comm n, at a Ta- i E'N“l coma fur sale w aced back through Denver, Vancouver, B. C,, |NTO LEGION AUX and Lawson to Snag, Y. T. where * Dolan lived. It was found that the beaver had been illegally trapped Last evening at the American Leg- at Nabesna, Alaska. and smuggled jon Dugout, five cAndidates were to Spag. At that time it was sus- initiated into the Legion Auxiliary, pected that Jack Dolan was taking after which an interesting talk was wolf and coyote skins over from the presented by Miss Deborah Pentz yukon and taking back beaver |on matters relative to child wel- pejis, fare. Again last year, when Lou An- Following the initiatory work geron was convicted at Cordova of baskets were awarded:to each Oof conecting on fraudulent bounty the following women: Mrs. Jack claims and was made to pay $800 lg'utch,t Mrd(MErs ?'ncllder‘s’on &'fls' I back to the Territory, Dolan was s aknri‘. bt implicated. Anderton sgid the Snag . mail carrier had smuggled 40 coy- California tests show that oranges ote ‘elts, with leg bones aitached, to Nabesna. Dolan has stayed on the Yukon Territory side of the — |border since, and so has been beyond the arm of Alaska law. Lyckens, a naturalized American citizen, was arrested at his home in the Sixty Mile River country, where he had been trapping both sides of the border. He was con- victed at Dawson of possession of poison, releasing to officers a num- ber of contraband marten, fox and wolf skins. 14 PAS ‘ | SEATTLE, March 22. — Steamer | Mount McKinley, making her first | trip on a new schedule of sailing | en Wednesdays, left for the north at 9 o'elock this morning with 181 | first class and 49 steerage passen- gers aboard. The following passengers are in- cluded in the bookings fom Juneau: H. L. McDonald and wife, C. Pease, | Jr., G. L. Pease and wife, Mrs. N. Jenkins, Mrs. Divid Patterson, Al- bert Alkne, I. W. Parkeypile, Glen Riddle, Sigurd Wallstedt. — et An average wn of cottonseed vields approximately 311 pounds of crude oil, 906 pounds of cake or meal, 520 pounds of hulls and 143 pounds of linters, four St T0 BE BRIDE OF 5 Heir to Beef and Uil Empire * BERT BERTHOLL \April Wedding Revealed" i for Popular Juneau Couple | \ i | The engagement of Miss Aileen| Karinen, of this city, to Bert Ber- tholl, also of Juneau .was revealed today by the well known Juneau couple, ! !have been arranged for the early | part of next month, the ceremony to take place in the Resurrection Lutheran Church. Mrs. Wilson Fos- ter will be the bride’s only a% and Phillip BerthoH, brother of the groom, will be best man. Miss Karinen is the daughter of Mrs. Katherine Karinen, of this city, and came to Juneau three years jago from her home in South Dako- i ta. Mr. Bertholl, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Bertholl, has lived here the greater part of his life. He attended the Juneau High School and is at present on the staff of the Alaska Meat Co. o eee Mrs. Jack Finlay Is Dinner Hostess In celebration of her birthday, Mrs. Jack Finley entertained last evening with a dinner and bridge party, 14 guests being present for the occasion. A yellow color scheme carried out an Easter motif for the table dec- Pictured in his first cowboy suit is 16-months-old E. C. Mullendore the Third, of Hulah, Okla., in play preparing for the role he will fill someday 1s head of a multi-million dollar beef and oil empire. The 50,000-acre canch on which his family lives is one of six they own in eastern Okluhioria, Tentative plans for the marriage ™ TO LEARN THE ROPES in diplomacy, John F. Kene nedy, Harvard junior, son of U. S. ambassador to Great Britain, packs up to go to U. S. legation at either London or Paris to be« come a “glorified office boy.” He'll return to classes next fall, orations and honors were won dur- ~ ing the evening by Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sweeney. - .- Empire Classified Ads for resuits. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. January 9, 1939, Notice is hereby given that R. L. has made applit additional home 6 R Anchorage serial tuated approximately 1 mile west of the Juneau Douglas bridge on the east shore of Douglas Island, embraced in U. 8. Survey No, containing 2.77 acres, Latitude 58° 18’ 45” N. Longitude 134° 26’ W. and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Al- aska. | Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claim in the District Land Office, within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter or they will be barred by the Statutes. | | GEORGE A. LINGO, ; Reeister, First publication, Feb. 8, 1939, Last publication, April 5, 1939, NOTICE OF SALE | REAL PROPERTY | IN THE UNITED STATES COM-| MISSIONER'S (EX-OFFICIO PROBATE) COURT FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, JU- NEAU COMMISSIONER'S. PRE- CINCT. In the Matter of the Estate of GEORGE PAUL, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that in pursuance of an order of sale made and entered by the Pro- bafe Court of the Juneau Commis- sioner’s (Ex-Officio Probate) Pre- cinet, First Division, Territory of Al- aska, on the 4th day of March, 1939, ,in the matter of the estate of | GEORGE PAUL, deceased, theun- | dersigned administrator of said es- tate will sell at public auction, sub- ject to the confirmation of the above-entitled Court, the following described real property, to-wit: Lot 1, Block 44J, in the City of Douglas, Alaska. Said sale will take place and be| | made on the 12th day of April, 1939, fat 2:00 o'clock P. M., at.the front door of the Federal-Territorial Building in said town of Juneau,| Juneau Commissioner’s (Ex-Officio | | Probate) Precinct, Territory of Al-| | aska. | | The terms of said sale being cash, | !L:om coin of the United States, ten!| per cent (107) being payable upon | confirmation of said sale by the above-entitled Court, Dated at Juneau. Alaska, this 7th day of March, 1939, ALASKA PERSONAL SERVICE AGENTS, Administrators. [ By R. E. ROBERTSON, { President. Publication dates, March 8-15-22-29, ) 1039, | | G U. S. FOREIGN POLICY gives grave concern to these ranking Republican members of the important senate foreign re- lations cominittee. Here, Sen. William Borah (left) of Idaho talks over problems with Sen. Hiram Johnson of California. Reservations for - Norwomen Dinner End This Evening | Tonight reservaticas may be made | for the Norwomen dinner by calling Mr. and Mrs. Borge Skov are the peq 410, the monthly affair being parents of a baby girl born vester-|given tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock day afternoon at St. Ann’s Hospital. i,y the parlors ef the Northern Light The l#tle Miss weighed 6 pounds, 13 preshyterian Chureh. ounces. A large attendence is expected and -~ " |the dinner is being espeelally pre- John Marks was admitted to SL‘p,"ed by Mrs. Vena Crone. ¢ Ann’s Hospital for medical care last| “The Possibilities of Socialized night. | Medicine” will be a topic open for | discussion, which is to be led by the Jack Dunn underwent a major | Rev. John A. Glasse, This form of operation this morning at St. Ann's|a medical benefit association has Hospital. | proved very successful in the stat- - - |es and a few of the views of this Bessie Paul, of Kake, was dis-|city are expected to be voiced to- missed from surgical care at the morrow night by the women present. Government Hospital yesterdu_v[ A yirnsciinf afternoon. HosriTaL NOTES A baby girl, weighing eight and one-quarter pounds, was born at St Ann’s Hospital yesterday afternoon to Mr. and Mrs. R. Mortinson of, Douglas. CENTENNIAL EDITION 100 YEARS BASEBALL J0PE BOOK| UNOW READY " | HIGHLIGHTS + ORIGINAL RULES - James Miller was dismissed from | medical care at the Government | Hospital today. Frank Dennis was a medical dis- missal from the Government Hos- pital this afternoon. - Execessive speed is the chief cause of highway accidents in Texas, sta- tistics of the Department of Pub- lic safety indicate. S e ANNUAL REBEXAH DANCE At Elks Ballroom, Saturday, March 25. Royal Alaskans. adv. B Portuguese’s African colony, Moz~ ambigue, has a non-native popula- tion of 45,750 persons. o0 YR & S S Louis, 50