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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1945 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE THRFE st temperatur s were minus 25 degres wh mence at 0 oclock. l bl BASKETBALL Compr the four clubs are Lo b g O IS TOMORROW Administer Oaths k, J. Scott, Lou i Members of the W.S.CS. of the | if, Wa Methodist Church will hold a social, WASHINGTON, Dec, 4.—The Sen- | DOUGLAS HIGH McKir evening in the form of a Christmas ate. agreeing to House Amendments, ‘ party tomorrow from 5 to 8 o'clock ;‘rllm\h'h‘(l Ir)-ai.\hm\n- z\i'lmn on a VS. Carnegie, Leonard he social rch bill to authorize postmasters in Oy S Py S pimidons, BNl | LT Snrae (A B Alaska to administer oaths and af- SIGNACS | ee has trying o fir I { - . anten, Ed Radde As ]‘I:Il:l of the program enter- firn ions and sent it to the White . 4 v0 states * nik, J. Hulberg, Dock sing and Mrs. Clifford Robard will The amendments require the P.AA. :5? u.nd Cm‘~‘ vhnd“n i an :‘Lms B L Bavard rcad a Christmas story. Christmas postmaster to keep a record of all VS, pi(K As NUMBER Tuep P SR R pA(E iN HEELER BEG'N SEASON 1 2h, Howard Cro- carols will be sung by the entire asknowledgements which relate to JUNEAU HIGH | TODAY'S GUEST STAR > < ken, Ted Laughlin group. Each member has been re- transfer of real property bl il ONE TEAM OF YEAR Hop Sopuen S S iEAe}fiE AT H.KS TONIGHT EI.KS U i n e 2o i PR JUNEAU HIGH SCHOOL GUM Evening News: “With everybody v [ fiE!S BU(K FEVER exchange durifg the evening FROM GODDARD d 2 Gdd L GUN e ochrane various e : Refreshments will be served by - . A . N S Past Tide t Sffi?flf fof'“t‘l‘)e :::u\:l:*:;(n[ ki Irma Jc arheaded the Eoye Eivacomac Lined U = the co-Rostesses, Mrs. Floyd Phelps, Mrs. R. E. Moore, Goddard resi-| Ends Last Rouna or City iLesgus avy Jqueezes ast Tide 0 the title from him, it appears that "GAls” to a three-game sweep over esomes Line p R : and Mrs. R. L. Emil. dent, is a guest at Hotel Juneal. pss s e ar i o't need 5 referce. |the “Doalls” inlast ¥ s High Heel ' G. Mal- Grab Second Place :\}:;: D e @ Teleree= ) rolling at the Eiks Alleys. With for Tuesday Men’s colm McDonald today excused Wal- . . . 3 a high middle line of 189, she count- A do Sharp from jury duty for one in Final Rating ‘ o ¢d a 483 fotal for the set League Matches eek—with an agroement. that, thb The captured team B Judge gets a venison steak if Sharp By MURRAY ROSE BASKEIBAll honors, t first game total gy clear « ior the Mafor | €SS @ buck i NEW YORK, Dec. 4—Without a being the high team single. They peagrors tc t the . His ik \im‘: excuse appeals to n:r; single dissenting vote, Army’s foot- i followed thist start With 875 and 838 jovs"Ls the Tuesday evenlng men's| it Jradee told Sharp, who had ce ball eleven has been named the The following are final scores of 8ames for a 1709 grand total that jcep opens i hedulzd roliing f (.‘““db s “‘,'.h”m“” Betore No. 1 college team of the country, important basketball games played WA well in front of the best efforts ). geason the deer are all shot for the second year in succession. last night of any of the three other four- o . oo o couace have besn - [’):1;\‘_ PR In defeating Navy decisively, 32- Iowa 91; South Dakota 26 s X ted the Tue btk SR SRR E VAN UG SRR FENY 13, Samrdaygfor lyhelr eighteenth Utah 43; Idaho SUlI(hL‘:n %rmmh, The other match was a much :11:‘;‘:‘1 ,{:‘Ll\]:f‘i\r;xf “,,.,( “‘“i.—;‘?:k Rty .8 fiavorsd - with ploves consecutive victory in two seasons, 26 closer contest, with = the “Skirts” \'/Iot‘mlrh (“j\ul : “'.[V }:‘x'vd cinnamon, lemon essence, or mal the Cadets convinced 116 experts Wisconsin 59; Ripon 24. nudging out the odd game from the o o0 ¥ L e number- R 5 7 votdd in the fiua) Assoclstedt Press| Minnesotn 78; Bonth ~Dakota| MOHs" Sfter droping the eenter ¢ I LS R e | BIONEERS tod ACSALIARY e rating poll that they stand in a State 23 ::"y[]U “““.Hmh Heeler results last 0 (00 W o its expected that i d AUXILE/ [/ 7 g rl‘;:,sl:stb"\’ert\};(’r:::‘\f‘&drv\v 95 of the SR Molls- e ns soon will be. Business-Social meeting Wednes- ) // 7 121 first place ballots while runner- J Garrett 147 - 188 13— BB TR S a s ehn A day night at 8. Also nomination of ) 7 / » ita Qr S 0! S Mack 124 180 120— 434 'he schedule for the first three officers, Odd Fellows Hall Y // / UE Do SeeE gl D and Johnson 117 101 186 384 ecks of Major Le cegling pits: JOE GREEN i iy / / :\}lll(;erw;;;vb;fi‘ofins T,\.‘t,:m;(::} I]:: 113 113 113— 339 1 ‘31 s ”I‘ \‘-” ‘ 11\\“;1 \(t)!"prln“l.:‘ (10,133-t President v.'%////y// ) service teams were not included in ~MIAMI, Fla, Dec. 4—Early bet- e e e THines vs. Four: Decem.| DRINK KING SLACK LABFI ' .//// the poll. The twice-beaten Buck- ting today rated the University of 501 532 513—1546 4 '(/// // ;};i;\ l‘x;:l‘:”:f:l"‘ Dplmeed e ?,I,l(,]"‘il 1?‘,',:,"“]}1{()1;,mx2m; PR Spot 100 100 100— 300 U. s COMMEROE, WEATHER RUREAT ? As a result of a stalwart second Orange Bowl here on New Year's Metealfe i IAU, ALASKA / VAN half stand against Army in the Day. DA g e QATHER RULLETIN service classic, Navy mustered suf- The Hurricanes, with a record of “7% : — 466 127 g ficient second and third place sup- eight victories, one tie and a defeat,’ . 57 ) TOD. o:!::.flb:’:““m eeder port to wind up in second position Were unanimously selected yester- 0 ! Freasie Towbit 180 a.n Wenther at LN with 942 points, while the Rose day. i . Y Yot ‘ Be-aadeunil i, Bowl-bound Alabama gridders took Selection of Miami marked the . don ey ,_ -7 5 0 Sne i Ll thitd with 933 points. Aimy piled first time in 10 years that the , - Johnson .. 146 189 148— 483 g Sie T Pt. ¢ up 1160 points on a basis of 10 Orange Bowl committee had gone 18- 199 LI AUk ¢ 14 3 T Cloudy points for first, nine for Second outside the Southeastern Confer- r_; 1‘,: 1287 :S') -8 -8 02 Snow and so down the list. ence in picking its southern repre- % o The Ranking Teams Pts. sentative Frgei sene T Cloudy On : i i { ey 1.160 Fhsilh 596 575 538—1709 Ay 4 il I 2—Navy CLEVELAND, Dec. 4 — Jimmy o ; 38 tha I \ ¢ A ] 3—Alabama Doyle, fast-rising Californian, s 3 22 : P 5 4—Indiana clouted former Lightweight CI 4 4 84 the complete pas v Alaska i 5—Oklahoma Aggies 651 bion Lew Jenkins all over the ring 82 -10 K inlinan. Dok ana B8 ; i 6—Michigan 278 last night to win a technical i -2 T A 11line 1ne 66 miion l 7—St. Mary's 320 knockout in the fourth round of a qpua; 14 1:,»; 134 4 Ly 8—Pennsylvania 218 co-feature 10-rounder on the Cleve- .piq ot powt : 2 T 9—Notre Dame 217 land News' Twentieth Annual g i Pet 84 10—Texas 163 Christmas Fund Show at the Por 19 Others: 11—Southern California, arena. At the finish, I s face re- p = @ Prince George i 121; 12—Ohio State, 82; 13—Duke, sembled a piece of raw sirloin. HGT BTOVQR) pUT Prince Rupert , ‘ 74; 14—Tennessee, 73; 15—Louisi- — Frar ana State, 62; 16—Holy Cross, 56;| TUSCALOOSA, Ala, Dec. 4 ’E}QTS TQ BO‘UMG 3 17—Tulsa, 35; 18—Georgia, 29; 19— Alabama’s Rose Bowl bound foot- ¥ itk 39 08 Wake Forest, 11; 20—Columbia, 10. ball team as four pi t \ 10 14 :n (l'zuuu;‘ i b kit TSt ociated Press’ all- stern p: . 28 ) 27 48 loudy | Jonference team for 1945 Mmof '_e'ai_]‘JE{S (_‘O()kmg m. yesterd a. m. today) | R R LA season. The Crimson Tide's sensa- Liw ~r iy WEAT OP or center has continued to! Ap SPORIS tional passer—E cimer—ana Up Tough Chewin’ for |« G i a second low pressure center located | o Center Vaughn Mancha | i b ) miles off the t of Oragon is m g northward about 40| most unanimous choices Ia r: Liic orning. Temperatures we \erally above freezix . RouNDup The other two are End Rebel COLUMBUE, Ohic rn porticn of the United States and Car - By HUGH FULLERT! Jr. COLUMBUS, Ohio, Dec. 4—Leslie O’Connor’s final task as baseball's handyman is to compile a “book” of the late Commissioner Landis’ more important decisions—a sort of “Common Law” of baseball. And some of the wiser gents gath- ered here for the Annual Minor League Conclave will tell you noth- ing will be done about revising baseball procedure until Leslie finishes that task about Jan. 1....! They may decide to do just the opposite of what the Jedge ruled, but they can't even do much about that until they find out what he did rule. . . . Commissioner Happy Chandler hasn’t done anything about appointing a baseball promo- tional director and doesn't intend to do anything until he Ilearns how much promoting the big leagues want to do.» Maybe he’ll find out at next week’s Chicago meetings. CONVENTION CHATTER | Don’t look for any big player deals this week, though you’ll al-| ways hear trade talk when a bunch| of baseball guys get together. Con-| census is that the clubs overstocked with talent—notably the Cards,| Yankees and Dodgers—will try to sell the surplus for cash and that the buyers will be cautious. . . .| Schoolmaster Branch Rickey staged | a five-hour blackboard drill Sun-| day night for the benefit of his, covey of farm club operators. . . .| Story here was that it was a $10,-| 000 boost in salary that induced | Billy Southworth to switch from| the Cards to the Braves. . . . Lead-i ing candidates for Bruno Betzel's job as Montreal manager are Clay! Hopper, who piloted the Dodgers’ Mobile, Ala., farm, and Al Todd, who handled the Royals part of| last summer. . . . What ever be-| came of the talk about ousting Judge Bramham as head of the| minor leagues? His position may be stronger than ever after this week's meetings. | WORTHY AMBITION J Among the ambitious projects being lined up by the Scholastic Sports Institute (limited in name| but apparently not in scope) are surveys of injuries among high| school athletes and of eligibility| rules. It's a safe prediction that Headman Herb McCrackyn| and his staff will find that in-| juries are most frequent where coaching and medical supervision is| weak and that the eligibility sur-| vey will produce one grand head- ache. . . . Baschall's high school Steiner and Tackle Tom Whitley. NEW YORK, Dec. 4—Larry Al Hoosman suffered his first profes- sional licking last night after 23 victories as the veteran Lee Sa- vold of Paterson, N. J., scored a 10-round decision over the Los An- geles Negro in the St. Nicholas ‘| Arena’s main bout. CHICAGO, Dec. 4—The search for football’s “man of the year” as selected by the Football Writers’ Association of America has nar- rowed down to five men. The nomi- nees as announced by Association Secretary, Bert McGrane, are Coach Bo McMillin of Indiana, Fullback Doc Blanchard of Army, Coach Earl Blaik of Army, Half- back Wedemeyer of St. Mary’ and Coach Jimmie Phelan of St. Mary's. SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 4-—The National Collegiate Cage champs of 1944—the University of Utah In- dians—are heading east for a barnstorming tour. The team has a high-scoring record in early prac- tices and points toward more power this year. The Indians were nosed out in the national playoffs last year. MRS S T SERRA CLUB will HAVE TURKEY SHOOT ON SATURDAY NIGHT The Serra Club will pull off a tur- key shoot in the Parish Hall of the Church of the Nativity, next Satur- day evening at 8 o'clock for members and also the public. There will be entertainment and refreshments. Merchandise orders will be issued to the fortunate ones at the shoot. g e HOSPITAL NOTES Two medical patients, Joe White of Hoonah, and Mrs. Gudmund Jensen, were admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday. Mrs. WJensen had sustained a broken ankle in a fall. Discharged were Marcia Kendall and James Stewart, who have been receiving medical care at the hos- pital, and Mrs. Ellen Calviness, a surgical patients. - e BUSINESS MEETING Emblem Club business meeting tonight, 8 o’clock, Elks Hall. Nomi- nation and election of officers Good attendance urged B e League's aims. (10,133-t1) | trade wind at the 44th Mino: Convention and there wasn't a in a sail Most of the deleg vention, which won Lea tes to the con- open officially until tomorr insisted they were interested only in selling ball play- ers. As a result, nothing much is expected to happen until the Major Leagues ther in Chicago next week and perhaps it may be even later than that before they get around to the business of exchang- ing player: That was the attitude preceding the convention which will consider such questions as: An amendment which might make W. G. Bramham, the head of all minor leagues, the final ruler in all differences in the minors, and take away from Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler the right to throw out all legislation he con- sidered ‘“detrimental to baseball.” Much of that can not be settled, however, until next week. | The next biggest problem seemed to involve present class AA leagues —the International, the Pacific Coast and the American A a- | tion—and one of the two Class A-1 loops—the Southern Association. | The three Class AA leagues al- ready have asked for Class AAA rating. The Southern Association is due to move into Class AA. Now the Pacific Coast League wants| major league rating and opinion seemed to favor the Pacific Coast‘ ALASKA AIRLINES FLIES 18 10 WEST Alaska Airlines fiew the follow- | ing passengers from Anchorage to Juneau ‘ Arnold Cameron Rich, Elsie Rich, Forlian Mills, Jack Slavens, Earl Waring, Orville Han- sen, Walford Polak, Lawrence Smith, Richard Mitchell, Robert E. Baum- gardner, Milford Hewitt, Patricia O'Brien, Floyd Longcarp, Harry Blondhein, Fred Southerland, Mar- tha Ross and Mrs. W. Shellhorn. - R MRS. MORE RETURNS; HUSBAND HERE SOON Mrs. Verne More, formerly of Juneau, who has been visiting her husband, with the Signal Corps in Nome, for the past several months, has returned to her position as stenographer with the Territorial Iealth Department. Mrs. More re- turned to this cf en her hus- hand was transferred recently to| DRINK KING BLACK LABEL!|the Juneau Signal Corps office Northwest Territory, and minus 23 degrees at or snow has fallen along the coast from nor California to Southeast Alaska and at scattersd points along the Aleutian Islands and the interior of A nd Canada MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports from Marine Stations at 10:30 A. M. Today WIND Height of Waves Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) Cape L Snow 33 24 3 feet Cape Sper Rain 37 35 5 feet Eldred Roc! Snow 29 10 1 foot Five Linger Light Cloudy 39 6 2 feet Guard Tsland Pt. Cloudy 38 20 1 foot Lincoln Rox Pt. Cloudy 37 3 13 1 foot Point Retreat Cloudy 32 NNW 10 Calm MARINE FORECAST FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Lynn Canal, Taku Inlet—northe: winds around 20 miles per hour increasing to 30 miles per hour tonight—snow flurries. Inside waters, Southeast Alaska, south of Lynn Canal and north of Sumner Strait—southeasterly winds under 15 miles per hour backing to northeasterly and northerly winds around 20 miles per hour tonight—rain changing to snow flurries. Inside waters, Southeast Alaska, south of Frederick Sound and outside waters, Dixcn Entrance to Sitka—easterly winds 20 miles per hour backing to northeasterly winds. Sitka to Yakutat and Cross Sound, Icy Strait area asterly to northeasterly winds 20 to 25 miles per hour—snow flurries. | ‘NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION C O M P ANYY SERVING ALASKA Nothing Will Produce RICH VITAMIN D as Efficiently as a Short Daily Exposurefoa Sun-Kraft Ultraviolet Lamp . . . A lamp that will give you the same benefits in just a few minutes an hour’s exposure to the sun will give. ... It will build up within you a resist- ance to frequent head and chest ills that will make these gloomy winter days as enjoyable to you as sunny southern days. Purchase One of These Health M akers at ALASKA ELECTRIC 11GHT AND POWER (OMPANY Phone 616 PODEOSIILI VI L LIITELEDIE08000000000060000000000000000 5000008800050 c 002" | | | | Kegular Service from Seattle and Tacoma FREIGHT . . . . PASSENGERS REFRIGEBATION ALASKA TRANSPORATION CO. Gastineau Hotel Phone 879 J. F. (Jim) CHURCH, Agent 0000000000000 000000090000 000000600000000000000000000000000000000000000080