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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 30, 1940. 5 i Only Louis, ‘(imn,' Salia [FIST CARD Are Now Holders of Fight = POSTPONED | GOLDEN AGES KEGLING TRIO NIPS GROCERS | [ | | ) & oen, e o o (rownsthat AreUndisputed ONCE MORE EVENING' CLOTHES Brunswick last night, taking all TAILORED "N ROCHESTER four points while North Transfer won 3% points of four from the Baranof. North Transfer won the first two games and the lest was a tie at| 513 each. Juneau Laundry rolls Alaska Laundry tonight and Juneau Flor-| ists follow against the Druggists. | | %Trambitas Quits Ring-Mur- . phy Challenges McCann | for Nov. 16 Bout ! — | | | | | | | | | Trcuble seems to follow Juneau [May we suggest a quick glance at your engage- Boor st night:‘are as = fol- ht promoter Slugzer Weaver. |{| 16% i ¥ Frst, his bout scheduled betw:en i 4 2 | Eddie Murphy and Larry Trambitas ‘ G Gecrge 1[";:0&';11’:3 T (‘\ f”v‘mh'” n the A. B. Rnk was postpontd goH ment calendar : : : and then : : : a more careful inspec- 11 OBl e i ) J chight from an earlier date 1 33 102 14— & g i g 5 ; ¥ ; 198 S e NN 4 |H|“ ' Now, Trambitas has announced | tion of your *'Formal"* wardrobe. This is the time ol R 151 127 14— 426 qy e [ A \ 7/ 3 | 'o Weaver, the promoter said, that | - e Tota 8 a5l 418 ‘j \ | he has quit fizghting—so the fight | yeor the gala season ¢ & » when you will be re- s diomen e 5 postponed again to November 16| bl 158 158 144— 455 -with Eddie Murphy declaring | quired to look your best! v ”“ '~An~~ 165 172 173— 510 himself in perfect physical condi- i ML W L g ‘:‘w tion and sending out a challenge pLigR & 7 | to Billy McCann for another bout. | q P E C I A 1 S A L E S SRR Nothing’s been heard from Mc- | ~ 1 Totals 484 504 4891477 { s “ | e | {oRtor SRy Uik L Ty A Reg. 39.75 and 45.00 TUXEDOS I £ | |the regular promised card, except }' Emily sch::i:;h Tv?nsl;‘zr 181 478 o o o g { i g o scheduled, Weaver said. :"5‘;’"1 5 :2? ;gfi fg:_ :g:’ By DILLON GRAHAM | Jannazzo. | Scrrowing promoter Weaver de- Schimitz 5] — 33 i : + re] " Maryland refuses to recognize clares all tickets purchased will be| H S 'y ice Total 501 542 8131536 Sports Editor, AP Feature Service . ¢ Who beat Henry Armstrong, good for the November 16 bout, if| L | otals O 542 —155/ P ht | it es off, and if plars fall| . o | i he because shortly before their fight|it comes i ) : i 5 « The Baranof | fijf:o?or?;m::g:::“xx ;&;’;’;n? Maryland declared Armstrong's tltle} through again, money will be re-| This week only in a very special event— } Cartpgt 114 143 149— 405 il vacant. This action came when' funded. Our impeccable Michaels-Stern Tuxedos at | o 198305 163 490 5 > Stanley Scherr, Maryland Com-| Promoting fights in Juneau must| Sreat Bavings: | i 136, 3T 22— O\ Ihere can't be milch argument | Missioner, said he had been_told be fun. 1 The formal season is just ahead, and | Tot: a2 |iatont Joe. Tioul, Ha Jidt Bowld e | bY.. ASHISERGBR'D SRIRNGREL, RS oo BT Sae S e 1] here's your chance to buy a new Tuxedo | otals 398 500 513—1411 . Mead, that the titleholder could not New Orleans and Scalzo recently | at great savings i - — As soon as eggs come from the store in paper cartons, remove them and place them in a wire container in the refrigerator. Eggs need air circulation to help keep them fresh; cartons prevent this UNITED STATES | DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE | District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. | October 7, 1940. | Anchorage Serial 09867 | Notice is hereby given that Algers Norton Lenhart, has made applica- | tion for a homesite, under the act | of May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) for a| tract of land embraced in U. S.! Survey No. 2391, and described as | Lot “Q"” Triangle Group of Home- | sites, situated on the Glacier High- | way, about 13 miles northwesterly of Juneau, and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claims in the district land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the Statutes. GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, Oct. 30, 1940. Last publication, Dec. 24, 1940. | Subscripe e <he Dally Alaska Em- pire — the paper with the largest guaranteed circuisiion. 2all over. | That, probably, is the only rea- son there is only one world heavy- weight champion in this country which can count three “world” featherweight champions. The ab- sence of a completely recognized national regulatory orgamzation.‘ arguments between staie commis-| sions and bickering among promo-; ters and managers, along with the old “home town pride” angle, has given us three featherweight “champs.” | Pete Scalzo is the NBA champion. | Louisiana calls Jimmy Perrin the division ruler. New York, and some | other states, side with Harry Jef-| fra. There are two lightweight, two welterweighf, and two middle- weight champions. | The NBA recognizes Sammy Angott as lightweight king. New York, and other states, recognizes| Lew Jenkins. Texas, an NBA| member, recognizes Jenkins, home state pride. | The NBA rates Tony Zale as middleweight champion. New York| ranks Ken Overlin as the boss.| Billy Soose is the uncrowned cham- pion. He has won decisions over both of them in non-title, over- weight designation is a device that allows champions to risk defeat at| the hands of a worthy contender without risking their crowns. Fritzie Zivic is recognized as welterweight champion in 47 states. Maryland recognizes Izzytime ago in a non-title affair in Only 69.95 (o thisnew - Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. © All White LEFT-AN' BRINGING UP FATHER WELL-1 JUST &OT TWO SWALLOWS OF THIS NERVE . I NEED IT-I'LL TAKE IT BEFORE 1 GO IN THE HOUSE- TONIC ® Activator Washing ® Family Size Capacity ® General Electric Motor ® G. E. Guarantee L4 h.:v'ell ‘Wringer ALSO: Quick Emptying Pump fight anywhere without the con- sent of Promoter Mike Jacobs of| New York. Efforts had been made to get Armstrong to defend his crown in Baltimore against the winner of the Kid Cocoa-Izzy Jan- nazzo fight, Maryland elected to call the victor in this match the champion, | Only Louis, Light Heavyweight| Billy Conn and Bantamweight Lou Salica are undisputed world champions. The NBA recognizes Little Dado as flyweight champion. New York at present, does not recognize a champion in this class, The featherweight muddle came| about after Armstrong gave up ,t.hei title. There were three outstand-| ing contenders—Joey Archiba)d.i Scalzo and Leo Rodak. The NBA ruled—and says all managers agreed —that two should fight and the| winner should meet the third for the title, Archibald defeated Rodai| but an Archibald-Scalzo match was never arranged. Archibald then won a “bad” decision—as former President Harvey L. Miller of the NBA termed it—over Jeffra.~ The| NBA then ruled that they should| box again. As Miller explains it,| ! the-weight matches. The over-the-| “when Archibald declined, the NBA| reverted to Scalzo, originally and| continually its No. 1 man." Jeffra| later defeated Archibald and New| York and other states resognized| him as champion. Perrin outpointed Archibald some Beauty won a clear-cut verdict over Per-| rin in another non-title contest. C. C. Hamlin Passes Away InColorado Newspaperflblisher, At-! torney, Leading Politic- | ian, Dies at His Home f (Continued on Page Seven) for the Fourth Judicial state dis- trict. He was interested in Repub- lican party affairs from the time of his settling in Colorado, served as delegate to the National Con- vention from Wyoming in 1896 and from Colorado at every National Convention from that time on. Into Politics He was first elected National Committeeman in 1924, reelected in 1928 and was a dominating factor| in the party in Colorado in spite of factional fights which developed between Lawrence C. Phipps, for- mer United States Senator, and the John* R. Coen-Frank Howbert-| Hamlin wing. This fight reached its climax in the George Shaw-William V. Hodges primary battle for the Republican nomination for Unitzd States Senator in 1930, Shaw, backed by Hamlin, winning the nomination. Shaw was defeated, however, by Senator Edward P. | Costigan in the election, In 1916 Mr., Hamlin purchased The Evening Telegraph, then a struggling newspaper, as an invest- ment. In 1923 he and his associ- ates purchased The Gazette, Col- orado Springs’ morning paper, and consolidated it with The Telegraph. He was the owner, too, of a large wheat and cattle ranch near Gar- den City, Kan. Mr. Hamlin was born in Man- chester, Ia., January 7, 1868, the son of Henry Fayette and Har-| riett A. (Clark) Hamlin. After com- pleting his courses in the secon- dary schools at Manchester he en- tered the law school at the Uni- versity of Iowa, being graduated in 1890 with the degree of doctor of laws. He went directly to Rock Springs, Wyo., where he practiced law_until 1896. He was twice elect- ed a member of the Wyoming State Senate and in 1895 was a mem- ber of the commission to revise Wyoming's laws. He was married in 1899 to Sed-| die Gunnell in Colorado Springs. They had one child, Elizabeth. Mr, Hamlin was a 32nd degree! Mason, Elk, member of the Con- gressional Country Club of Wash- ington, the Cheyenne Mountain, El Paso and Cooking clubs of Colorado parently aimed at Ioanina, some 30 Date last publication, Dec. 4, 1940. Springs and the Denver Club. |raeus, the port of Athens. {the Gulfs of Patras and Corinth B. M. Beurenps Co. SHOP ITALIAN ADVANCE IS SLOW . Reports Conflict-Dispatch- es Even Declare Greeks | Make Counter Thrust | (Qontinued from rage One) landed on the Greek Isle of Crete and also on the island of Cepha- lonia, 'south of Corfu in the Ionian | Sea. Turkey is reported that if it need be known, her duty is to “give all aid to Greece.” Turkish rail communications have been interrupted, it is report- ed, possibly due to troop move- ments. Greeks Resist Authoritative Fascist quarters in Rome acknowledged the Greeks are resisting stubbornly, but denied that troops of Greece had driven a coun- ter thrust into Albania at the start- ing point of the Italian invasion. These quarters said the Italians are advancing deeper into Greece without encountering “serious mili- tary difficulties.” Great Britain has stepped up aid to her new ally, the Admiralty an- nounced today, declaring approach- es to keep ports on the Greek coast have been mined, notably in the Gulf of Aegina which guards Pi- Sow Mine Fields Other mine fields. were sown in in waters lying north of Crete along the east coast of Pelopnesus. British military circles denied re- ports British troops have already landed on Grecian islands of Corfu and Crete following a broadeast | from Rame i which dispatches said Itallan troops have also landed at Corfu and are fighting the Brit- ish. Amid sparse reports of actual fighting, evidently trimmed in heavy censorship from both sides, Athens reported the Italians were striking hard in the western sector of trailer were' found unhurt. MEN°S der. African Warfare The Greek Command said briefly “The situation remains unchanged” | along the upper half of the battle frent in Western Macedonia where Alcxander the Great began his march of conquest into ancient Per- Neutral military sources in Ath- said the Greek advance guards are slowly retiring from main de- fense sectors in the Metaxas Line in keeping with a preconceived plan. It is reported the Greeks will there make their “do or die” stand. - e—— Found-- Champion Losers LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 30.—Jack Rodes and June Cronan, Louis- ville horsemen, st out for Lexing- ton, Ky. 60 miles away, with a] horse in a trailer hooked to their car. Arriving they found the trailer was gone, Frantic telephoning as- certained they didn't have the trailer when they had stopped at Frankfort. It had broken loose at a railroad crossing only a few miles out of Louisville, Both horse and UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR General Land Office District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska, September 18, 1940. Notice is hereby given that,Ros- coe M. Laughlin, has made appli- cation for a homesite, under the act of May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 808) Anchorage serial 09862, for a tract of land described as Homesite No. 599, Lot D-D, Triangle Group of Homesites, U. 8. Survey No. 2391, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad-! versely any of the above named land should file their adyerse claim “Dangerous Corner” Sitka Fighl Is " Postponedfo November21 e (Billy McCann to Meet Cal | McGraw for Alaska Fight Title Information has been received by Dean Hamlin, fight manager for Billy McCann telling him that| the scheduled scrap between Mc-} Cann and slugging Cal McGraw on November 13 has been postponed until November 21. Both men are to tip the scales at 147 pounds, and the battle is to go 15 rounds or less for the) welterweight championship of A.l»] aska. This comes as good news to Mc- Cann who will have more time to condition himself for one of the most important fights since his battling began in Alaska. The fight will have added inter- est in the fact that a champion- ship silver-plated belt will be the possession of the winner. McCann, who holds the title for Alaska and the belt at present will put it on the block in this event, it was re- liably reported to the Empire to- day. The belt, a very neat affair, is very original. The buckle is about four inches wide and six inches long of a highly polished silver. En- graved across the face of the buckle is “Welterweight Champion of Alaska.” It also has a picture of a pair of boxing gloves en- graved on it. A velvet belt strap COMING SOCIAL EVENTS: Shrine Dance—Saturday, Nov. 2 '—~Nov. 8 and 9 completes a very nice emblem. The is fight on November 21 expected to draw a huge crowd to Sitka, McCann will be out te ! keep his championship title and the belt too, while McGraw says he'll knock it off him so fast hell forget he ever had it. Sitka seems to have considerable confidence .in McGraw, for the rg. port is given that anyone wanting | money on McCann won’t have any trouble getting it, McCann is t¢ start working out in the A, B Rink soon, ——————— | For a leftover help: Crumble cake crumbs into buttered custard ot cherbet cups. Fill with a creamy cus+ tard made from egg yolks. Chill for several hours. Dress up with any little leftover dabs of fruit, jam, jelly or sauce. Top with whipped cream. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Commissioner’s Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Num- ber One. Before FELIX GRA Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Last Will a Testament of ANDREW HOLM, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE that the undersigned was, on th 22nd day of October, 1940, duly a) pointed executor of the Last Will and Testament and of the estate Andrew Holm, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased are r quired to present the same, with proper vouchers attached, to the undersigned at Juneau, Alaska, withs in six (6) months from the date of this notice. A Dated at Juneau, Alaska, October 22nd, 1940. Y i H. L. FAULKNER, Executor of the Estate of Andrew Holm, deceased. First publication, October 23, 1940. ** Last publication, November 13, 1940, Subscribe 10 The Daly Alaska Empire—the paper with the larges. paid circulation, in the district land office within| G l A ( I E R the period of publication or thirty days thereafter or they will bLe barred by the provisions of the Statutes, GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. Greece’s defenses in a drive ap-| miles from the Greek-Albanian bor-/ i ~ By GEORGE McMA Date first publication, Oct. 9, 1940, adv.| NUS T ——— —— DAILY Copr. 1940, King Features Synducace, Inc , World cihis comsved HIGHWAY DELIVERY TRIPS COAL——WO0O0D LUMBER—GROCERIES PHONE 374 "SHORTY" WHITFIELD