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. o R o TH DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17, 19 AND (UTTER ARE VICTORS Both Games in Local Gym‘ Last Night Are Lop- | sided Affairs Both basketball contests 1<t n. in the high school gymnasium, Whic e High School trimmed the d the Haida walloped the were lopsided and nlike in ry respect, even to similerity in In the opening fracas, Echool squad rolled up 30 nts in the first half to e Elks' ten and went on in a ra . wild rcramble of a second half to make the final score 50 to 21 The Haida team worked likewise smoothly in the first half, passing well and dribbling little to pile up a 31 to 8 lead at the half-time and continue through a sloppy second half to the final tally of 47-22, Scoring Horors Still 2 nomination potentially as ne of the best ball players on the nnel, High School guard Tommy Powers, took high scoring honors with 14 points, although he did not the entire game. Powers, heav- ily built, is a rugged ball hawk and fine material for the last ditch of defense behind Reischl, Hussey and McDaniels on the forward line. The last named three men scored points each last night, which gives an Inkling as to what team- work can do to a group of athletes. El the High Clark D. Shaughness; St(mfm.'(filv Grid Coach football director at the University of Chicago for the last five vears, has been appointed head coach at Stanford University, succeeding Claude E. “Tiny” Thornhill, recently dismissed. First news of his selection came men and here he is at Chicago reading a nroof of the storv. On the scrapping, but hopelessly outclassed and poor-conditioned Elks to Shaughnessy from newspaper- season in as nmhy league starts, puts the Haida up among those who squad, Jim Orme, Dale Druliner and | will have to be considered in the Grant Ritter carried the Elks ball game. Druliner was all over the floor during the time, as manager, he permitted himself to play, and figured in nearly every play on the court Haida Contender The cutter Haida’s victory over the Moose, second Haida win this fight for the championship. The Haida boys are in condition, for the most part. and are well prac- ticed. Their failings lie in broken combinations after substitutions, a tendency of a few men to dribble into an impasse, and a tendency to jam traffic under the basket and batter futilely at the backboard and WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT? ® January Sales Bring Youn Savings for the Family! ® January Sales Bring You Savings for the Home! © January Sales Bring You Savings on Everything! {hoop in general. | Shrigley T | When the Haida squad is pass-| Nosler TN D | |ing chest-to-chest, they look like a —_ - "ball club, and the tallies they roll Totals 22 e up, prove the point Moose Nagy, smooth limbed giant of the FG FT TP | Haida squad, was high point man | Stewart R IR with 12 points, but the Haida team Sundquist y B e does not pivot alone on Nagy, and Joe Smith I i a large measure of their success can Carl Wilson 4 0 8 be handed to big Staack, strong de- Dooley b RN ST fensively, and slightly built Rop- Hamilton 1 0 2 kins, ball chasing forward with an - - always-fighting heart. | 11 0 22 Moosemen seem to lack enoucgh material to round out the squad [ = Joe Smith is a flash for speed, bu LA@HEGEE HAS none of his teammates can pace him. Carl Wilson, frequently ar E‘. i uncanny shot, didn't ycore last fiEAK SCORE' night until the last quarter when he dumped four field goals. Two NGHEY lEAGuE fast men good under the basket 1 would give the Moose a dangerous Sy squad. B Scores in field goals, free throws g ‘:L::"*{:‘;":‘:}E:{:}?‘;fim‘gé and total points are as follows: California ¢ : by Cisude Car- High School negie, whose over-pin ball batted in FG FT TP 595 points for total. Hussey 4 0 8 Carnegie’'s second game, however, Reischl A 8 was a miserable 147 His first was McDaniel 4 N g 227 and his third was 221. Tt 6 2 14 | Rainier Beer rolls Gabby's tonight, Jones 1o TR followed by Barbers vs. New Al- Hickey 1 o g |8sken Rice 2 1 5 Scores last night were as follows: Miller 1 0 2 Juneau Florists Porter 0 LBl Smithberg 170 170 170—*510 Nielson 0 0 0 Halm 178 180 158— 516 | 3 gl B by Carnegie 227 147 221— 595 | SR O e i il E““Z! b R ) 575 497 549 1621 California Grocery | Ritter F4G ‘:r TBP | Ugrin 178 178 178—*534 Druliner 3 0 6 | Barcus 185 156 136— 477 IS Nesman o o o |@Bavara 134 157 159— 450 s i Total 497 401 473— Beck O 17 17 11— 51 Rodenberg 1 1 3 | A i [ R Hanson 0L g Total 514 508 490—1512 Sl L -~Average; did not bowl. Totals LR i oA Haida l NOTICE | FG PT TP | There will be a meeting of the Nagy 6 0 12 { Pirst Division Democratic Divis- Ropkins 4 1 9 5mnnz Committee to be held in the McMahon 1 0 2 { Elks Hall, Thursday evening, Janu- Staack 8% Do lary 18 at 7 p.m., sharp. adv Cabe g vosre gl P Mead 2 1 5 | Emphke Wanu Ads Bring Resnlts. Wagoner R R A e Olson 08 040 o0 ) Todav's News Today—Empire. What's the BIG topic these days? Why all the excite- ment in every home . . . around the bridge table . . . down at the comer store? Something in the air? You bet there is! Something to. demonstrate once more _ that {.r greaier values no plite can compete with JUNEAU . . . with your own local merchants! The Januory sales are herel So be prepared fer excit- ing savings in every store. And watch THE EMPIRE {for news cf these events! ‘1 Washington Starts Out 40. E | | door Ro win e g Practic United States, the University of Washington's freshman crew held their first outdoor drill in Lake Wash- ington (Seattle) with temperature in the 40's. 635 PINFALL PACESTEAMS IN ELK FEST, “Shavey” Kosz1, Grocer bowler at | the Elks, turned in a total of 635 pins last night as his team defeated the Humples two of three and lost | the second game by but two pins. ; Koski's fancy total was piled up| with a 211-193-221 se! . The Brewers beat the Engineers two of three, Benson rolling high | with 530, and Dolphins won three | from the Builders with Bob Duck- | |worth marking 580 | Tonight is lodge night with im- portant bowling questions to be dis- | cussed. Tomorrow's games are Jew-i elers vs. Editors, Luckies vs. Amazons and Fosters vs. Supers. Scores last night are as follows: Grocers | Benedict 143 162 182— 487 Benson 178 172 183— 533 Koski 211 193 221— 835} Total 532 527 586—1645 Humpies Spot 45 45 45— 135 Vukovich 156 181 108— 445 Olson 172 152 158— 482 Reynolds 154 151 126— 431| ‘Total 527 529 4411497 H Brewers | Burke 156 156 156—"468 Holmquist 148 189 162— 499 Benson 162 171 197— 530 | Total 466 516 515—1497 “ Engineers ! Spot 30 30 30— 90 Mrs. Taylor, 113 146 144— 403 Sterling 171 104 187— 472 Bavard . 165 147 137— 449 Totals 479 427 508—1414 Builders Halm 145 166 124— 435 Bob Davlin 148 156 147— 451 Mrs. Davlin 128 94 141— 363 | R | ‘Total 421 416 4121249 | Dolphins i Spot 58 58 58— 174 Mrs. Duckworth 109 103 95— 307 Bob Duckworth.. 206 207 167— 580 Mrs. Overby 127 123 103— 353 Total 500 491 423—1414 *—Average; did not bowl. | | What? | . Again? i i BERLIN, Jan, 17.—The war has| given stimulus in Germany to| campaigns against alcohol and m-( !bacco. It is.a German's duty to| | be as' healthy and fit as possible, ’the Reich’s health and medical |leader, Dr. Leonardo Conti, re- ‘minded the population. Modera- |tion in the use of alcohol and to-| bacco, or better still, total ab-| | stention, 1s & blow against | the | enemy, he asserted. | i T NN | JR. GUIL> CARD PARTY | Friday night, January 19, in Trin- ity Cathedral Parish Hall, public cordially invited. adv. POLLY AND HER PALS WAL, YUH MADE POLLY'S PAL, PETE, LEAVE IN A FINE PEEVE, PRUNE/ IT WUZ A LITTLE LATE, BUT I DIDN'T ASK HIM T' GO NER NUTHIN'. THEN WOT DID YUH DO, DOLT 2 By CLIFF STERRETT -+ 1S WALKIN' THROUGH TH' PARLOR,EATIN' A BOWL O' BREAKFAST FOOD/ Coe 199, Rine Porrures Synicare, Ine. Workd shdes coxcrwl | many. for | this might L [ - Armstrong Wins by Knockout Henry Armstrong, welterweight boxing champion, stands over his foe, Joe Ghnouly, just after the knockout in the wifth round of their scheduled 15-round fight at St. Louis, in which Armstrong’s title was at stake. Nazi Won't Collapse in Easyidannep (Continued from Page Cne) how hard the fleet may suffer from the German air attack. However, Meyer voices a view held widely here that a victory for Hitler “would be both a defeat for! Germany and a defeat for Europe. “It would be a defeat for Ger-| no transitory increase of military and political power could out-balance the definite de-| struction of all the better qualities' of the German nation as a result; of the National Socialist destruc- | tion of law and justice; of political | freedom, replaced by political in- sincerity and hypocrisy; of free- dom of science, education art and press; of free labor and free enter-| prise, of free worship, and of all Christian, ethical principles.” GERMANS NOT HATED So far Meyer has found no bit- terness against the German mass- es; either here or abroad, but won- ders whether the bombing of the big cities, so often predicted, would not generate a spirit for another punishing Versailles. That, he said would bestir in Germany a des- | perate fear of an Allied victory. “No help can come from telling the’German masses that the war is condu not against Germany but only nst Hitler. Although entirely true, never- are tragically remind- 1918, when they were the war was conducied only against the Kaiser. Yet after the Kaiser, they got Versailles and Germany was dismembered.” It is true, he said, that oppo- siticn to Hitler is d ping within into a sclid front, but the including the conscript will not turn against him without a solid conviction that his presence is Germany's worst Ha-| bility | “Nothing would better clarify theless t} ed of 191 told that the situation and promote by defeating Hitler,” he s , “than the proclamation of about the fol- lowing principles: (a) No change of frontiers except on the hasis of self-determination for all, for Poles and Czechs, for Germans and Austro-Germans; (b) establishment of international law, enforceable for the first time in human his- tory because of establishment of an international police force, larg- er than all private armies; (c) consolidation of some major colo- nies into an international pool; (d) establishment of a ropean union—of the United States of Europe.” peace - HE IS NOW COAST CONFERENCE BOSS Edwin N. Atherton (above), form- er FBI agent, was appeinted high commissioner of Pac'Jic Coast Con- ference for three vears, in a move to enforce its future athletic poli- cies.