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N\ ez 0,2 Had a hard dla_y?f,/ L YP!- and enjoy the whiskey that’s SCHEERFUL AS ITS NAME?* SUNNY BROOK TUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY This whiskey is 4 YEARS OLD « 93 Proof Copyright 1941, National Distillers Pro~ .Co=p.,N.Y. zzzzzzzz T NN \X\\W\\\W Distributed by NATIONAL GROCERY COMPANY Seattle, Washington ELKS CONTINUE NN\ LAY -~ k. bourbon sk 107 oLy SUNNY pROOK 77 2 'x-‘mmr'; battle the Capitol Theatre | | squad at 9:30 o'clock. - | Bowll"fi IONIGHI ATTENTION ODD F;I;LO“’S ‘;I Regular meeting tonight at 7:30 | nes on the Elks Al-' LO.OF. Hall. All members request- as the Home Grocery ed to be present. Work in the 2nd the Snow White keglers at degree. clock, the Alaska Laundry the' m’» 1 T« Dcidze Dealers at 8:15 and the En- adv. J'IlIlIIIIIIIII!IIIl|IIIIIIIIIIIllIIIll|I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIllII8IIIIl|I|llIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIilIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIJIII|I||IIIIIIllllllIIIIIII|Illll||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIHIII\I T. HAGERUP, Noble Grand. A DANCE Sat., Feb. | cet.nite Atthe Elks Hall A CARD PARTY At the Baranof Hotel THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JAN. 30, 1941. HURLER SIGNS Pelersburg And Skagway To Play Ball Fowler Gets_Word in Ar- ranging for Southeast Alaska B. B. Meet Word received here Jack ance that way will be represented in nament in Juneau and that phu are being made in Ketchikan t also accept the forthcoming Tour pament invitation. Both “Hack's Hornets” crshurg and the Skagway sGua | have accepted a tentative challenge and are waiting for, tourname: mans and dates before giving answer said Fowler, agway has n bortation arrangements town. with B PUBLIC C.D.A. CARD PARTY At Parish Hall Friday evening, o'clock. Bridge, pinochle, and whist. Prizes and refreshments, 50 cents admission. ad Plan to Attend the President’s BIRTHDAY BALL 1st FRANKLI \ e T today by Fowler gives definite assur- . Petersburg and Skag- the Soutl:east Alaska Basketball Tour- y& made trans- the Dance MAY WALK!? ‘Make Your Contribution 1S o of Pet- ¥ d 5 by | National Guard, DeMolays, Fire- . Sam Gibson, veteran Coast League |men, Eagles, High School and Hen- | ball player, signed a contract with ning teams: [ : & | Player Team Games Pts. Aver.| the San Francisco Seals recently |Bayers N.G-DeM 4 56 1400 for his nineteenth season as & |powers P < % 1ol | pitcher. The venerable Coast :Lindstrom F 4 40 10.00; League hurler—he admits to 41 |L. B. Nelson E 4 35 836 8‘ years — took time out from his \McDaniels J-Hi 3 34 1133 winter labors in a South San Clark H 4 31 850 Francisco shipbuilding plant to |Chapados L4 4 3 8:’:0‘ ink the dotted line. {Swn P 4 33 825 s _ |Bird H 331 1033 "lE S. Nel;on E 4 28 700 | N l)l.El,AN() ROOSEVELT THAT OTHERS * This Year!? * I||||I|IHIIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIlllmlIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllI|Illllllllllllllllflllllll IIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIHHNIII]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI|IIIIIIIIIIl!HIlMIlILHIlljIIIIIIIIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIlIIlIlIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIIII]HIIIIII lIIIIII!IIIlIIII|||lIIlI|IIIIIIIlIIl||lII§ NOVAS GET TOGETHER FOR VACATION BAYERS TOPS 'AVERAGE LIST; 14 PER GAME Powers Is Second High in Basketball Tabulation fo End of Jan. 28 | Kinky Bayers and Eddie Powers are numbers one and two today in the basketball league. Figures show Kinky with an average of 14 points per game, Powers following with a 1250 average. Scoring highs are as follows with | highest number of points at the top| of the tabulation, which includes January 28, and the chart repre- |sents the highest ten men in e | i League and includes members of the | [ | | | FLORISTS TAKE THREE OF FOUR BOWL GAMES 'Roses and Violels Halve| Score in Women's | League Play The Juneau Florists took the Brunswick keglers over the hurdles !last night at the Brunswick alleys {when they finished a four-game match with three of the wins, | chalked up for the flowermen.| Smithberg of the Brunswick was { high man_for the evening with a total of 564. In the Women's League the Roses |end the Violets split the score 2 to 2, Lyda bowling high ball with The Novas were a happy family in Chicago after arrival of Lou, recent conquerer of Pat Comiskey and ranking heavyweight title contender, from New York, and Mrs. Nova and their daughter, Bertha Lou, They're starting a vaca tion tcgether in Madison, Wis,, and Hot Springs, \rk Government Hospilal ‘At Mountain Village 'Will Be Abandoned | 5 Announcement was made today | that the Office of Indian Affairs Hospital at Mountain Village would | be closed, probably by the last of | June. According to Dr. Langdon | White, the building has been con- | demned as unsafe and the service iffl‘ls it will be necessary to aban- | don it because of the physical con- ditions of the structure: The Office of Indian Affairs s | asking for a new hospital to take 21 morths, from California. | 470, care of the natives in the area Games_scheduled for tonight are |now served by the Mountain Vil- \ the Junu\u Laundry vs. the Baran-| | lage institution. It is hoped that 'of at 7 p,m. and the North 'l‘rnns-: ‘;thc Federal Government ~willl ‘he | fer vs. Golden Age Beer at 8 p.m.| able to make the much needed ap- | Juneau Florists prepriation for the replacement of :H.llm 199 171 159— 529‘ the hospital, | Lajoie 161 155 147— 463| > eSSk | carnegie 179 179 179 537) :* t | Totals 539 505 485—1539 B 0 w L l N G Brunswick . E. Galao 179 144 170— 493 i Rhodes 161 136 146— 443“ Smithherg 181 194 179 564 | Totals . 521 474 4951500 | Roses i | Lyda Museth 138 182 150— 470 Dora Poole 88 136 129— 353 Totals 226 318 279— 823 e | Brunswick Bowling Alleys Orpha Haugen . 146 124 142— 412} | Frances Smith .. 128 121 155— 404 e ° ) * | s —_——— — T SO DUST Y—Less ‘dust from dirt r long whic! i Totals 274 245 297— 816 the troops are maneuvering will be swallowed n:::’":-nki to th‘.‘ SII'OIIQ .‘..' army’s new dust masks, being worn by a soldier at Fort Benning, | *Average score. Did not bowl. Ga. Disks at side of mouthpiece serve as filters, —— > He Has e Sweet | IN THE /| Hobby| HOUSE |t ; INTRODUCED—H. J. M. 2, by| APPOTOMAX, Va., Jan. 30. —|Davis and Harvey Smith, supporting Nme‘wfl;-{mr-old Havflngecflubcogr. | Dimond bill (HR. 94) to forhid ap- r., is nicknamed “Bee” ause he i i E has followsd & beeline to more than pointment as Goven.nox of Alaska 300 honey-filled trees in ten years, |20Y Person not a resident. | The Columbus, S. C., youth who B R T R spends his summers here first tried his luck at finding bee trees when he was nine. It was plenty sweet— | a hive in the second tree he exam- | ined. His favorite method of locating a tree is to wade down a stream, watch bees sucking water from wet sand, and follow them. Sometimes he put.s hnney on flowers and line of bees. July is the best monm to find the trees, he ‘I_ believes. He has located as many as | five in a day, but one to three is, average. He cuts the tree down and | ships ;the honey to South Caroling for sale. The bees are placed in hives. Stings? Lots of them, but “Bee” has become immune to swelling. | He can’t follow the bees in win- ter, so he pursues his hobby by studying 30,000 to 80,000 bees he | keeps m a g'l S !nve G-E Sunlamp gives your Baby all Winter long the BRINGING UP FATHER DOCTOR MIKE ROBE IS HERE NOW <HE WILL TAKE CARE OF YOU- YOU MUST FOLLOW HIS ADVICE -1 WILL ROP _IN vltra-violet that doctors recommend. Use a G-E Sunlamp and pro- vide your baby with “Summer Sun” at the flip of a switch— anytime. Buy your lamp on the easy rental plan. GENFRAL S SUNLAMPS | Alaska Eleciric — Light & Power Co. ELECTRIC CHAN G E_By casy ftages Yakichiro Suma (above), the new Japanese minister tb Spain and former spokesman for | Japan's foreign office, is making ki way to S e reached i "u jf‘ i sco u!!”““fi“‘”‘ { “ e Athens, Greece, got its name {from the patron goddess, Athene.