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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA |COLLEGE QUINTS POINT NOW FOR POST SEASCNING MRS. ALYCE DALZIEL ANNOUNCES SALE OF NEEDLECRAFT SHOP in ownership of the Needlecraft and Baby Shop, on Sew- ard Strest, has been announced by Alyce Dalziel who been the owner-manager of this popular shop for the past four years The owners are Mrs. Ellen Miller and Mrs. Merl2 Fleming. The latter, who has been a resident of Juneau for many years, is wellknowh and needs no introduction to her future customers. Mrs. Miller comer to the | Harper, Betty Harper, Art Woodley, Lee Hammerley, Cecil Cook, Joe | Holitleld, Alma Tanner. - To Fairbanks—Leonard Paul Harney, Isaac Pirron. From Seattle: John Bagoy, Hald- fin Faro, Norman Lange, Ann Lange, Robert Pesterfield. > Yesterday, to Seattie: Martha Pierce, Cynthia Pierce, Joe Hind- shaw, Julius Hopp, Opal Schaffers- man, Jeanette Mumford, Shirley Baskin, Frieda Egtvedt, Ruby Bas- kin, Emma Doyle, Lillian Gray, Hugh Norton, George Bust, Frank Wright, Marcus Jensen, Prosper Ganty, Tom Gardiner. To Fairbanks: Jack Shepard. From Seattle: Ole Twedt, Frank Stine, Willlam Carter, Art Hedges, David Willlams, Cols McFurland; | Edwin Johansen, Frederick Carlson,/ June MaecDonald, r.inry £errozo. i From Whitehorse: Molly McHugh; | Joseph Sheriff; from Fairbanks: Verva Heimlich, Dorothy- MeClosy key. COASTAL MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1946 Excellent Program Is Announced for BPW Club Meefing Tonight g me 1ess and Professior b to be held tonight at 8 o'cl t the home of Mrs. Crystal Jenne <hould be cne of the most interest ing to be held in some time Under the auspices of the Inter- ational Relations committee, of vhich Mrs. Jenne i chairman, the vrogram subject. for the evening is Peace Is Our Busines prompt is to be n sub-titled the Victory.” James C. Ryan the discussion, anc wclude Joe Rot Virgil Heath e Wagner, e ersonal cor a which each HIGH SCORES N STUD LEAGUERS SUNDAY SESSION Zaiser, A change Sunday’s Stud League rolling ses- the sion at the Elks was topped by Ed ! Radde, who compiled a 637 mm‘NaVy IS NOW SOIG Major from 331, 20 and 28 nes, wut | Court Aggregation Sail= ing Unbeaten Course the high x ate By Ted George 1 YORK, Feb. when nis College of team maee! Northwestern in Evanston, Illinois, on 26. Athletic Director T. B Payseur reveals that Northwestern's engagement with Stagg’s team com- the 1946 Wildcat schedule of mes, coached umphs Pacific Jnive: Octobe AP SPORTS ROUNDUP BY HUGH FULLERTO! NEW YORK, Feb. 4—The folk who have been moaning about the death of “Independent” baseball might do well to have a chat with Eddie Dyer, Manager of the Car- dinals and a “chain store” base- ~NEW YORK-—The Major League ball man from away back. . " spring training season will open Dyer dostb SRl fa~ Gt this week as a group of New York the independents how to make Yankees pile into a plane at Mi- money in competition with the ami on Saturday for a hop to the farms—possibly he never thought Panama Canal Zone, where they it | wirt even so, (Squid) newspaper- Also, Captait ance was not Aces quarte ns, tes at Portland is stay in Mejer 4 from was stationed o Base. During ined by former Juneau luding. Mr. and ‘Mrs and Mrs. Fred Ax- Mrs. Harold enou football at the University of Chicago for 40 and is the only surviving member of the ,group which founded the Big Ten Conference in 1896. Arr and Otterbeing ' 4, comparative new= city, is the daughter of Mr { Mrs. Roy Gillespie, form- er residents who h many fuiends here, whom Mrs. Miller is anticipat- ing meeting Mrs. Dalziel expressed her thanks and appreciation to all her custom and friends who have made her association with the shop such a pleasant one in the past, and her best wishes to Mrs. Fleming and e major amot in tt colleg snift today to season tourneys DNk o s - i to the Empire is will both under consi N . Stdwart to the NCAA and Natic Juneau, long bafor Este tion tourn Garden, had spoiled Saturday qui AR there U ing Dr over :rom the Flushe Late-posted d night's N ¢ A J ing show th g their comman itior Ju- | neau Ic Butler-M and California Grocery each took their matches, each by the odd-game will ¥ " has io tor o AIRLINES show t with the dis- Wirt went to studied for the nd late Two, rried, edge. of it—but as a result of a wartime Will work out for three weeks. Tk operations in the Te: League, Eddie can present facts and figures that might benefit the independent operators. HERE'S HOW When the Texas League sus- pended for the war, owner Sam Breadon first planned to shut up the Houston Park. Dyer pro- tested that it shculd be kept open as a good will gesture from the parent club to a city which had no other first-rate baseball facili- ties, so Eddie w given 20~ zhead. . . . “The { L n, e says, “we split 50-50 with the city and made about $12,000 each. The next year it was more and last season, when I was in the oil busi- ness, the profit was over $50,000 in addition to ‘the cuts from the city and the business manager.” Most of this money came renting the park to sandlot touring teams. Of cour Houston is a big enough city develop a lot of such business, why couldn’t a smart operator even a class “D” town find enough attractions to keep the rent money rolling in? At least they wouldn't have holier to some big league club e the red ink for them. from to but to to oo —— Sports Shorls GUEST OF HONOE When the eleventh annual North- west Golden Gloves Boxing Tour- nament is staged in Seattle Feb- ruary 18 and 19, there’s going to be a special guest. Barney Ross, the great little welterweight cham- pion of a few years back and a Marine hero in the war, will be at the tournament as honorary re- feree. Sponsors of the tournament ray Ross will fly from Chicago for the event. NEW YORK-—Leslie MacMitchell of New York won the -Milrose A. A’s Wanamaker mile in 4:19 be- | fore a crowd of 15,000 in Madison Square Garden. Tommy Quinn of the New York A. C. was second and Marcel Hansenne of France third. NEW YORK—In an attempt to put more scoring into the game, the joint rules committee of soft- ball has voted to reduce the num- ber of players on a team from ten to nime, with the shortfielder being eliminated. ! Three other changes to aid the offensive were made by the com- mittee at its meeting here Satur- day. The officials ruled that thr,-‘ aistance between baselines be re- | duced from 60 to 55 feet, that a| hit batsman be permitted to take first base and that the batter’s box be enlarged to three feet in front and three feet behind the plate. TUCSON, Ariz—Jimmy DeMaret | of Houston, Tex., won the $7,500| Tucson Open Golf tournament with a T2-hole score of 268. Herman Barron of White Plains, N, Y., was second with 272. | MIAMI, Fla—Billy Talbert, Wil-| mington, Del., won the University | of Miami invitation tennis tourna- ment, defeating Pancho Segura, Kcuador, 7-5, 6-1. ST. PAUL, Minn.—Bob Fitzger- ald, Minneapolis, won the National Senior speed skating championship with 180 points. Defending cham- | vion Ken Bartholomew, Minneapo- ls, was second with 130. Elaine | Gordon, Chicago, captured the wo- men’s title with 80 points. | | | | \ LAKE PLACID, N. Y.—Piloted’ by Stanley Benham, the Lake Pla- | cid Bobsled Club’s entry won the Mational A. A. U. Junior two-man | and four-man championships. i NEW ORLEANS—Bob Montgom- | sry, 143'%, Philadelphia, New York | —recognized lightweight champion, | outpointed Will Parsons, 142%,| Danville, Ill, in a non-title ten-| round bout Sunday. | PHILADELPHIA—Willie Mosconi, | of Barrington, N. J., world’s pocket | pilliards champ, begins defense of | 1 cf the Yanks—the number one band—will start belaboring the horsehide in Florida on February 1 eattle Ironmen night's Pacific Coast ague hockey game to the Port- Eagles, 4 to 2, and thus moved down from second to third place The Ironmen might have dropped into the Northern Division cellar if the New Westminster Royals hadn't lost their Sunday night game to the San Diego Skyhawks. ‘The Ro; yiel 6 to 2, largel throug the efforts of San Diego’s center, Al Papike - INAL SCORES ATBASKETBALL of basketball night scoves games ay e as in |* 3 ; Colum. Univer: Dartmouth 49; Princeton Mubhlent ; Bucknell Cornell Pennsylvania Yale 67; Arr tate 48; Pittsburgh 37. 67; Tufts 65. oly Cro: ; Brown 51. Wichita N Uw(St. Louis) 35 Detroit 3! arquette 2 University of Oklahoma 44; Iowa State 43 DePaul ers 42 Iowa 68; Chicago 36. Wisco: n 58; Michigan 57. Purdue 65; Minnesota 40, Ohio U 64; Ohio Wesley: of Arizona Indiana State Teach- 1 48, 7 New Mexi Brigham Young 57; Wyoming 51. Colcrado 70; Denver U 59. Jtah 34; Utah State 31. Ideho 57; Washington State 46. University of Oregon 63; Univer- sity of Washington 55. Montena State 64; Montana 57. U of San Francisco 49; Stan- ford 39, s University of British 52; U of Portland 38. Mississippi 61; Miss College 41. Texas 71; Rice 46. Baylor 55; Texas Christian 40. Florida Georgia 57. Arkansas 74; Southern ist 46. Tulane 56; Auburn 48. Kentucky 59; Mich. State 51. Georgia Tech 55; South Caro- lina 45. Duke 56; N. C. State 33. North Carolina 61; Wake For- est 32. Columba Method- >oe - HOCKEY GAMES Hockey games played.last night resulted in the following scores: Toronto 6; New York 6 (tie). Detroit 2; Montreal 0. Chicago 3; Boston 1. | Cleveland 9; Hershey 5. New Haven 5; Indianapolis 5. Providence 6; Buffalo 2. Kansas City 5; Omaha 1. Tulsa 3; St. Paul 3. Fort Worth 6; Dallas 1. New York 4; Baltimore 1. Bosten 9; Washington 3. A Reenlisiment Daie In Regular Army Is Exfended, June 30 HEADQUARTERS, Alaskan De- partment, Feb. 4—~The date on which Roldiers can enlist jn the] Regular Army with their former rank, permanent or temporary whichever is higher, has been ex- tended from February 1 to June 30, 1646, a spckesman for Brig. Gen. A. M. Gurney, commanding the Alas- kan Department during the tempor- ary absence of Lt. Gen. Delos C.| Emmons, says. Reenlistment under these condi- tions must be within three months after the date of discharge from ac- tive service. After July 1, the priv-| ilege of reenlisting in grade will be This evening, it’s the ladies’ turn on the alleys, the High Heelers tak- mg ¢ for their week ssion; iollowed Tuesday evening Stag loop, Sunday's were Stud League results Rad Messerschmidt J. Vuille Duke 203 637 236 547 204 577 98 306 Total 681 T41 206 Jokers Carnegie Lindstrom 565 485 594 468 760 2112 Straights 208 180 161 549 Fiushes Holmquist Jaceko Parson: 171 167 576 499 Total Metcalf King G. Vuille 481 1382 Total 447 - .o BOUGILAS | NEWS MAYOK SOUTH SUNDAY Mayor Marcns Je terday noon, Vi PAA | on a two or ti > week's trip. Du 2 Cashen wili be Douglas, and Ralph Mortir manage the Mayar's busines: & Jensen Groceri s busine Thomas NO SHOW Due to a breakdown of equipment, patrons of the las Coliseum, went heme la ning, before completing the nrogram vital gz, prese LODGE Gastineau Lod A. M. is holding Tuesday evening, Feb. be in the M. M. Deg TO NEW Mr. and Mrs. W. R er, v cd over the weekend to their new- 1y purchased home on Third Street, across from the City Hall. The for- mer owners, Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Dotson, left on Saturday for their former home at Skagway. OLDTIMER PASSES ON Word was received here recently uf the death of David Russell an !cld Treadwell resident, who was noted for his activities in the Treadwell Band. Russell, died at the age of 94 years, at Saanich, B. C. which is an outlying community of Victoria, B. C. He was buried by (the Odd Fellows Lodge, at Victoria, |having been a member of the 1 1.O.O.F. for 50 years. Russell had three children when and MEETS No. 124, F. & a regular meeting 5. Work will MOVE !residing here, two daughters | ene son. |MID - WEEK_ SERVICES ° " AT LUTHERAN CHURCH STARTING TOMORROW Beginning tomorrow evening, Tuesday, February 5 at 8 o'clock mid-week services will be held weekly at the Lutheran Church up to Holy Week which begins with Palm Sunday on April 14th, These mid-week services will take up an intensive study of the Gos- pel according to St. John and will pe in the form of informal devo- tional services. . The public is cordially invited to participate with the members of ! the congregation in these devotion- als. STANWORTHS RETURN Mrs. Dan Stanworth was an in- coming passenger on the steamer Alaska after spending the past sev- eral months in Seattle. She will be joined here soon by her husband, own fishing craft. Among the many who were burn- ed out in the Coliseum fire, the his title today against Jimmy Gar- |limited to a pericd of 20 days fol-|Stanworths will make their home as, Wilmington, Del., in a 10,950 point match that will be played in 10 cities in the next eight weeks. CHICAGO Veteran football coach Amos Alonzo Stagg is going to play one more game near t.he' scene of his greatest coaching tri lowing the date of discharge. —_——————— i NOTICE There will be a regular meeting of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers night at 8 pm, (185-t1) Monday | with his parents, Mr. and, Mrs. Steve Stanworth, until other apart- ' ments are available, SAVE THE DATE Juneau Fire Dept. 40th Annual Dance, Sat. night, Elks Hall. (185-14) who left Seattle Thursday on his| | were trippe Jost to Northwestern, Congregational Chicago w! N in Connecticut where wife were nicely located. anted to get into the wi basic training at a base . near Boston. He was sworn Unofficially these the *teams ¢, ned dri ThE S0 Tosit e ander u:n.\l(il"xutu:) the us or and just before the war NCAA district season K \ s at a Portland Oregon iigures.) haplain, Now, k to Alaska .o . ile by Philadelphia. Both aight. Navy kept its hipping Columbi wrch his had slate clean 62-41. A it by Island State Harvard 8-1, -1, JANE ENGLISH GIVEN York 10-1 . Dartmouth Two—Muhlenberg inia 13-1, New 10-3 Three— vet, but Towa 12-1, Ohio State placed on the honor roll of M Indiana Notre Dame hurst College, Oregon, at the end Akron 14-1, DePaul 13-4, Of the fall quarter. Miss English is Bowling Green 20-4, and Valparaiso in freshman year the col- e high lege. She is wellknown in Junea Oklahoma Aggies & 8! ate of the Juneau High and 15-1 A S assistant hostess The Southwestern USO 1, which will 2 or Arkansas at ac also at - TWO FROM SIiTKA Thomas D. Willi Waughe resid rrived here at the and Sitka y are both Baranof | Pic 11-3. Di No menti et, Brigham Univ, 6-4 0 teams defin- F nts of but Wyoming ha 10-7, Color- d Utah 10-6, &re prospects. s e fin o District Eight-—The nomination ¥ 1Ok will . I“P:irn‘u Coa lv Con- Bewale LG"’?}i from common colds | That Hang On| ern California and California tied in the Southern Divisicn, with all five teams, Idaho, Oregon, Oregan State, Washingtc and Crc(;?ulslon‘rl'l}ictvripruw b washington State, in the ru o cause it goes right to the seas ashington State, in the running go,11e" fo help loosen and expel for the Northern title»The Winners germ laden phiegm, and aid nature cf the two di ms will meet for to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- tne Conference tit wed bronchial mucous meme Many of th above ranes. Tell your druggist to sell you TSNy 0 M08 ANIYE 8 bottle of Creomulsion with the un- y receive a bid to the Madison derstanding you must like the way it lare Garden invitation tourney Qquickly sllays the cougieor you are and elect to compete there instead to have your money 4 of in the NCAA eliminations. CRE o REOMULSION suxhs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis 'K KING BLACK LABE s, Chest Colds, 1 FOR SALE $125.00 $100.00 $75.00 $50.00 $15.00 $125.00 $3.00 $50.90 $12.50 voor 40¢ $25.00 $25.00 Utility Tables or Wrapping Counters Attractive, useful cabinets for basement or other workshops ; linoleum tops, green tileboard finish trimmed in chrome edging— 20c per cu. fi. oung registered best 9 ) to teams also in n 1 “HOBART?” Senior Electric MEAT SLICING MACHINE 1 "AMERICAN” 1} h. p. Electric MEAT SLICING MACHINE ‘BARNES” Computing Counter SCALE: 24 b, Capaci “DAYTON” Computing Counter SCALE: 24 Capacity .. “WELLS” HANGING DIAL TYPE SCALE; Chrome Finish ... “DELIATOR” ELECTRIC CUBE STEAK MACHINE THREE-ELEMENT ELECTRIC HEATER A 2—9 ft., Plate Gla: CASES and COU Meat Display NTERS, Each 1 “CORBIN” HYDRAULIC Di OOR CLOSER 50 ft. Steel Meat Rails with Hooks— Spaced every 10 inches 1 “BUFFALO” HANGING BEAM SCALE, 1500 1b. capacity ... 1 BACK BAR, WITH SHELVING DOORS, WINDOW GLASS, SCRAP LUMBER, MARBLE SLABS — 100 FT. 15 INCH PIPE 20th Century Super Market BOX 409 PHONE 202 he ¢ iing the program will be mu- rtainment by Estelle W Wagner and Joanne Nowell in ¢ tume Assisting Mrs. Jenne csses will be Mrs. Edna Lomen a Miss Ruth Coffin. * This meeting is one which BPWC member should miss, cording to Mrs, Lillian Uggen, pre le and a good attendance is a ticipated. as - FROM ANNETTE Island, residents regis at the Baranof were J mith, George P. Gracey, Walker, Joseph L..Hart, a rge ‘W. Henry - ISLAND Annette DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! cohost- ac- Lt Mrs. Mille in their new undertaking. Flanning to take about months, vacation, Mrs. Isave latives agd friends in Oregon and California - > oo PAN AMERICAN olf il Wa no n- WEEKEND FLIGHTS On flights to and from Juneau|C t- during the weekend, Pan American carried the following pas- im senge Eaturday, to Miller, Harvey nd Eeattle: Downs, Betty Lilly, Wayne Lilly, for the best of Dalziel will on for the states to visit re- Joe George Holmes, Willlam Mathews, success a three Juneau yesterday: . To Skagway-—Mr. shington, SHINSLOM: | Martini; FLIGHTS SUNDAY, TOD Alaska Coastal Airlines flew tl following passengers to and and Mrs, to Haines—Mr. and Alfred Milotte; from Haines—J. McGee and Elvira T. Maurstad.e To Sitka—Ralph Mize, | Baggen, Emil Tang; Dr. W. Wright; | Tang, Jr.; | Johnson. ON to Hoonah- to Tanakee—Ol from Hoonah—All Mon this morning's flight LEON ——— Richard Irish, Harlow neau. Announcing The Reopening of the NEEDLEECRAFT SHOP TODA under the owners Y hip of MES. MERLE FLEMING MEL amnd - ELLEN MILLER We Are Larrying a Complete Line of All Your Bahy Needs and Needlework Supplies Phone 417 i A 7 - =DC: - Al plone routes 11% Seward Street /) 3 7 7, T 3 scheduled rovtes ke Alrlines feeder Regular Service from Seatile and Tacoma FREIGHT . . . . PASSENGERS REFRIGERATI ALASKA TRANSPORATION CO. Gastineau Hotel C900000000000000000000 _Phone 879 J. F. (Jim) CHURCH, Agent hristine Heller for Wrangell Frank Marshall for Petersburg. R. BAGLEY HERE Leon R. Bagley of Fairbanks rived in Juneau during the week. end. He is staying at Hotel Ju.