The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 16, 1950, Page 3

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Final Team Standings Won LM( 30 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1950 Capitol Theatre ! Baranof Cigar Stand . | Harry * Race DaV| Ar und On the Elks Alleys iast night the Top Hat league leading Capitol Theatre team | Royal Cafe | became winner of the first round by | Home Grocery ‘dm\nmg Royal Cafe three straight|Alexander Photo . {games. Capitol took over the first Whum Ding . spot early in the season and nevex Scoring for the teams and was displaced, although aeriously dividuals last night follow: HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 16—(#—John L. Davis, the country’s number one | lightweight contender, joins world champion Ike Williams today on the threatened by the Baranof team in | the final weeks. The second round | Whing Ding |J. Porter ... 114 117 list of upset victims of young Char- ley Salas, welterweight wrecker in- 131— 362 93— 314 103— 351 151— 453 149— 453 627—1933 Top Hat 32 142 114 125 115 . 134 662 82 144 114 122 122 130 664 32— 96 147— 432 114— 342 111— 35€ 119— 356 101— 365 624—1950 Handicap F. Wilber B. West A. Taylor O. Winther . C. Rudolph Totals Alexander Photo 2 42 125 112 148 132 124 120 98 89 165 163 702 658 42— 126 134— 371 138— 41t 99— 342 115— 302 188— 51¢€ 716—207¢€ will begin Dec. 29. With the ac- quired experience of the first round | J- Gormley 119 102 and addition of some new players P- Morgan 127 121 {a tightly contested second round |P- Matheny ... 154 148 g T |is anticipated. Most improved bowler | K. Morgan 166 138 Aridn. Xhognte, Auis. lin the league, Lois Nicholson of the| Totals 680 626 Davis, from Oakland, Calif, and |pranot team. In this, her first holder of both the state lightweight | ;oq50n of bowling, Lois began with and welter crowns, dropped a unan- |, ‘g5 ;yerage, and the succeeding imous, 10 round dccision to the|y..u¢ rovealed a 40 point increase smart punching Salas at Hollywood | 50 “nresent,, 125. Legion Stadium last night. | B L Fortunately for him, John L.’s| In the individual scoring last titles weren’t at stake. His timing night, “anchor man” Lance Hen- was off, as Salas slammed him all drickson rang up a 522 high series over the ring. There were no knock- | {or the champion Capitol * Theatre downs but Salas had Davis sagging team. Don Kane had high single | in round nine. game of 188. For the women, Flor- | Handicap Salas, a natural welter, ence Holmquist paved the way with |R. Rudolph 145; Davis weighed 138. a 487 series while Vivian Powers |P. Lee took high single game of 190. . Hawkins e T . Becker . . Kane Totals ... scaled The U. S. Forest Service esti- mates profit from national forests at $354,000,000 a year, $36,000,000 in cash and the rest in improved rec- reational (acllitlss‘ ete. W&*&@{“"l@””% %’% n an effort to prevent knots in the lumber, foresters are experi- mentally removing buds more than 2'% inches high on young pines. Grocery 143 143 138 146 157 149 11 113 112 139 661 690 | Home | M. Davlin | A. Dalziel . Burke . Taylor . Sorenson Totals 143— 42¢ 110— 394 134— 44( 111— 33¢ 149— 40C 647—199¢ Christma: Special 10% Discount on Ski Boofs Capitol Theatre 121 117 118 135 157 134 . 138 138 177 1M .m1 701 Royal Cafe S5 T 128 160 145 138 . 127 135 104 104 172 151 687 699 123— 361 170— 423 141— 482 138— 414 168— 522 740—2152 . Rusher MacLean . Heyder ... . Marsh .. .. Hendrickson Totals . 11— 153— 190— 47¢ 119— 381 104— 312 104— 427 681—2067 33 441 | Handicap |M. Funk | V. Powers | A. Nielson | W. Day ... |p. Fitzpatrick .. Totals ........ 166— 487 139— 394 75— 278 161— 406 169— 457 710—2022 Y BARA hll I gkl 0 !l ! c 1 dren S 341 ultits | Handicap 13 13 13— 38 . Levasseur ... 127 125 142— 394 T. Flint . .. 103 100 Dancing handling on both teams. In the Arctics. ALSO The second game was anyones game until the horn sounded, when' | the Impe: THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA s came out the victors, [ Imperials 48 and Mikes 46. The Imps held the lead throu half time, but Mikes rallied to S() ahead in the third 37 to 6. wnh four minutes to go, the score wac 44 all, and from then on close ball checking was played by both teams to prevent set up shots. Mikes had 1 chance to tie the score but rouldn’t swish one through. ‘ Bob Pasquan played heads up|Drew ball, and was high scorer for the | his lmps with 15, and Frank Brown |¢ had 13. Aase was high for Mikes with 19, | he highest scoring for the evening Merritt hit for 15 counters. Mikes, Columbians and Imps hold 1 three way tie for the lead with |directed character assassin.” 1 4-2 record each in the Gastineau Pearscn reported in a state- Channel Basketball League. nt that his record “in fighting mmunism. is well known to veryone—except the headline hap- Senator from Wisconsin.” He threatened to sue McCarthy. " GET RIGHT mro oN CUTTING XMAS TREE: RE i1 15, READ 1T reply to inquiries to cut Christmas Trees from accessible to the ay, Acting Division Malcolm E. Hardy, Service, has the following to [DREW PEARSON ARE| N CLASH AGAIN WASHINGTON, Dec. 16— (B — | Senator McCarthy (R-Wis) and Pearson have clashed again time in a word battle over mmunism, McCarthy declared in late yesterday that as “this voice of interna Communism.” imnist-tommentator a Pearson ion- Moscow- Box Scores Last Night Columbians ft Bonnet, ¢ Asp. g Smithberg, f Scott, f Forrest, g Manning, f Hanson, f Relly, g g Fhhomo®o chnowomng 18 Arctics J. Moore, f H. Cashen, f J. Borbridge, ¢ S. Bach, g F. Cashen, Arnold, ¢ Wilber, g Pinkerton, Peterson, In right —-—n'g © 8 Super- cown oo Forest f CHRERRANWND CONWGR®S ommocomMONR 9 Trees for home use of the per- !'son cutting, or for churches or frat- ernal organizations, can be cut trom National Forest land without prior approval of the Forest Of- ficer, cut from any point within 100 feet of recreational areas, such as Auk Village area. The purpose of this restriction is to help preserve the Imperials Kearney, f . Nielson, ¢ J. Jasquan, f B. Pasquan Brown f Thie, £ . J. Moore, WEED, g Pegues Rohrberg, g mowrmowmomOR vowHomOowNE way. Uncontrolled cutting over a period of years would seriously mar the appearance of the road side. Persons cutting trees are request- ed to make sure they are satis- fied with a particular tree before ii e is cut. It is obvious that many trees could be wasted by being cut and Mikes Aase, g . Vuille, g ... Linne, ¢ Rude, f .. Merritt S Blanchard, g ....... Russo, g Sey - Floberg, ¢ McCormick, f CrRmmbDwO o wE desirable one found later. Christmas tree cutters should al- CooowWMORONR WOOROMIO NN |erccowowown Your Depeosits ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS oL DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the banl is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to 8 maximum of $10,000. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION | A. Warner ... 158 158 158— 474 | Totals ... 698 662 688—204¢ | M. Flint ... L1271 118 SUN]) AY In the Douglas Gym Columbia second half the Lumbermen scored until Christmas . Folta 148 123 111— 382 . Nicholson ... 136 133 138— 407 Wilson Figure and Hockey Skates | P | F. Holmquist .. 175 146 DEAN’S SKIINN oo o | Totals .. 681 631 COLUMBIANS BEAT | Lumber swamped the Arctics in the 4P.M. TO 8 P. M. | first game of last night’s double- | header by a score of 71 to 39. The BUBBLE ROOM |~ 5% OF THE 333‘::::: t?asmle]ig‘:cst::‘;sreiulmr the Columbians with 18 points and By LEOTA'S DRESS SHOP on the TERRACE and Gregg and Darimouth Baranof Cigar Stand . Chantry . 116 110 126— 352 P. Hagerup . 130 125 1 ] ARCTICS; [MPS IN | first half showed much loose ball voF HoTEL Bach was high with_ 11 for the in the GOLD ROOM &-& Christmas Dance auspices American Federation of Musicians Local 672 and Juneau Ceniral Labor Council Public Invited Monday - December 18tk AF.L. Hall 10:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. ADMISSION FREE b7 0k youthful qualities of SHAVE EVERY DAY? Here's a remarkable new brushless shaving cream especially made for daily shavers! Gives closer, faster, more comfortable shaves. ...- and contains a special skin-freshening ingredient! TODAY, MORE THAN ever before, your chances for business or social success are enhanced by a well-groomed, handsome appearance. That’s why more and more men, all over the world, are making it a point to shave every day. But daily shaving is hard on the face. Your razor’s harsh action tends to dry out the skin, leaving it old- looking, wrinkled and raw. REMARKABLE INGREDIENT To help men solve this problem, we developed Glider—a wonderful new brushless shaving cream that com- tains a special skin-freshening in- gredient. Now—every time you shave with Glider—you give your face the benefit of this remarkable substance that helps preserve the get a closer, faster, more comfortable shave . . . and finish your shave look- ing and teehng remarkably fit. GREAT ADVANCE IN SHAVING TECHNIQUE! Youwll find Glider fast, easy and pleasant to use. No brush is needed —no lather is wasted. You just wash your face thoroughly— spread on Glider with the fingers and shave! Glider saves you time, effort and money in shaving. It’s the modern way to shave! If your position or personal stand- ards demand that you shave every day, you’ll want to start using Glider tomorrow. Glider costs no more than ordinary shaving creamb—and is available at better stores everywhere. NO BRUSH IS NEEDED. JUST WASH THE FACE, SPREAD ON GLIDER—AND SHAVE! X the skin. You . SENATOR McCARTHY,| the Sen-| He called the col- | s about the| Glacler | of the| provided the trees are not | the road, or from designated natural beauty of the Glacier High- | then discarded in favor of a more ! PAGE THREE so remember that COTTONS TO SALT LAKE Mr. and Mrs. Sam Cotton and three children of Tenakee are leav- many tracts of | SPECTATORS WELCOME privately-owned land border (h(‘l Spectators are welcome to at- highw and the first Nationalltend a meeting of the Taku Trav Forest land to be crossed by the|elers, a Douglas square dancinging Tuesday morning on the Prin- road is located seven miles fromfclub, at the Douglas- Gym at 8|cess Norah for Salt Lake City. Juneau. There are large Ifr-|o'clock tonight, Val Pcor, said|They are stopping at the Gastineau | tions of the land bordering Glacier| today. There will be special mu-|Hotel, Highway bLeyond Mile 7 also pri-|gjc, | vately-owned. Permission to take | trees from privately-owned areas M G | must, of course, be obtained from| william Hammar of Glennallen | the owner. The Division Supervi-|is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. sor’s office, Room 318, Federal i R | Building, will gladly give advice "“,“ PETERSBURG on whether or not a particular tract Phillip Gray, of Petersburg, is MidTatornl FOrest Jand i it the Gastineau Hotel. He is en- | Cutters planning to sell Ohvist-f .0 home after a trip to Anch- mas trees must secure a pertitfoage irom the Forest Service before any| __ cutting is done and the operations | must be conducted in accordance with the timber sale requirements | of the Forest Service. A charge of {five cents per tree is made, with a minimum sale of $3. ! There are practically adjacent to Juneau on Natlonal | Forest land that contain sult- | able Christmas trees in substantial quantities. Some of the best areas | of Christmas trees are on the Men- | denhal] flats outside of the recrea- | tion area. TO GUSTAVUS J. C. Pfeifer and Robert L. Singleton, with CAA at Anchorage, left Juneau today for Gustavus where they will work. I'R()Vl SITKA Mr. and Mrs. A, B. Rutherford of Sitka are stopping at the Bar- | anof Hotel. INDIAN CEREMONIAL DANCES By Juneau Camps No. 2 N.B.—A.N.S. SPONSORED BY ROTARY CLUB Saturday - December 16-8 P. M. ADMISSION—Students, 50¢, including tax ; Adults, $1.50, including tax Bill Wagner, Alaska chain radio station owner, arrived from An-| JUNEAU MEMORIAL LIBRARY BENEFIT chorage yesterday and will be here| | for a day or two. He is stopping |at the Baranof Hotel. no areas BILL WAGNER HERE HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM '+ Fly with the leader— i | + Give DAD » 1 : Telescope Go by Clipper* SEATTLE @ Seattle is only a few hours away by big four-engine Clip- | per. En route you enjoy good food, relaxing lounge seats, traditional Clipper service. Convenient daily service to Seattle . . . frequent Clipper flights to key cities inside Alaska. For fares and reserva- tions, call Pan American at... Baranof Hotel Phone 106 WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINE eeecccscscssce for Christmas W W Scopes, Mounts, Re-loading Sl{pplies Custom-built Rifles Skinner's Gun Shop Home of the Alaska Magnum 211 Second St. ®Trade Mark, Pan American Werld dirweys, Ins. 2 don't just Dream about a WHITE CHRISTMAS He'll HAVE a Very Joyful one if you make it a WHITE CHRISTMAS Give him a beautiful “SNOW-WHITE" Dress Shirt made of Lovely shimmering 100% Pure NYLON Fibre A Large Stock for your approval Sizes from 14 to 18 (inclusive) Sleeve lengths—32 to 35 (inclusive) See them at Graves-The Gift Shop for Men Sox for Dad - Sox for Brother . . . . Sox for the Man You Want to Please! They're beautiful and gay Ankle Length and Full Lull Length All sizes - Beautiful colors These are the famous. “CAMP” SPUN NYLON SOX, knitted of 1009 virgin, crimped fibre. ® Qutwears all other fibres known + @ Won’t shrink or strech ©® Dries Quickly ® The more they’re washed, the better they look H. 5. GRAVES Choose Your Gifts for MIEN “THE CLOTHING MAN” —— Juneau, Alaska —— .. in a Store for MIEN

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