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PAGE TWO 'NO EVIDENCE OF SCORES OF X oy oekt BASKLTBALL KEY WEST, Fla.,, Feb. six-man coroner’s jury will Here are final scores of basketball games played over the weekend ‘Wash. St. 45, Oregon 38 A an i STANLEY NICHOLS 19 — juest today into the death of 50, former U. 8 in finals of the Class A Fur Rendez- vous basketball tournament. urday night with a 71-50 win over Fairbanks. Seward walloped Pal- mer 52-40, and dropped the Mata- nuska Valley five from the double elimination tourney. Nome, which beat Wasilla 48 to »— |33, and Kodiak City, 54-36 victors over Kodiak Naval Operating Base, meet in semi-finals of the Class B tournament today. hold Washington 76, Idaho 59. Stanley J. Nichols, UCLA 90, Stanford 67 Marshal at Fairbanks, Alaska. Cordova and Wasilla met in the So. Calif. 49, C | Nichols died in a hospital Friday |second Class B semi-final. Pac. Luth. 63, C 7! four days after he was found un- | Cordova climinated Kodiak NOB Montana 59, Gor conscious in a room at a mowr |with a 39-26 trinmph yesterday and San Jose St. 61 T ) 59. | court Valdez stepped to the sidelines after Colo. St. 61, Idah Chief Deputy ©heri{i Wabber|a 54-18 trouncing & Wasilla. Wilismeue 08, Col 2. | said there was no evidence of foul e T Utah 54, Brigham s plaz. D, Ralph Herts.condicted an Obio. AseM i e.ebral hemorrhage. He sa.d there | Nevada 60, 1 1 were no marks on body IM BASKEI‘BA[[- Santa Clara 50, St. Mary Peace Justice Roy ilamiin said 7 St. Louis 83, Wichita 53 he ordered the jury impanelsd ofter THREE ARRESIED Oklahoma A&M 62, Det 71" [remortariiing e ke KA Tiad H ¢ Oklahoma 49, Kansa 0. | gion thom u Mnd. Dot e g : The jury viewed t.c body and} npw YORK, Feb. 19 —P— Col- Tiinots 90, Puttue 6 then rccessed until today to hear | o,e pusketball was rocked to its e & full ‘repgst ‘b B (AR foundations today by the second big et il Rond 5 29, Webhet 1 e v tae hos-|yopring scandal i¥| aymomh and by Michigan State 3, Michigan 32 | pital told thai Nichul; WAS cOn- | gigeiosure that “fixes” are being in- B e O . |seious from time o time and ra-)gegigated on a nationwide scale Minnesota 70, Ohio State 50 tional enaugh to expiat he had dia- | ggu three members of City Cols Ohio U. 70, Bowling Green €6, betes and reguired certain f00dS. | jape ")r N Yurl‘z‘s na.uonal Lgurnn- Missouri 41, Colorado 36 They said he did not complain of mim tinpitilons and ies. otk Columbia 70, Har 63. having been beaten or robbed. persons \\'erle d‘xken inbo custody b gl 49 Nichols rosizmed as ierhal i eyecteraay on bribery charges, there Sl i ': Fairbanks last Septemle wid- | were these swift developments: i’-“’f“ m‘“;‘, 1'3 hmf"‘; f}rq ow, Mrs. Stanley Nichols, 1. re-} ;. gen Refauver (D-Tenn) sald \;;J :‘; B::,”;;‘”: (’:u(liu- .yb‘ ported enroute hc Jthe Senate Crime lnvestlgnu;‘lg A it { Committee has been probing this Cornell 59, Pml;-rmn 55 HNAU OF (lASS and similar fixes in other cmes’; Syracuse 70, Colgate 59. );'New:ork is not an isolated case, he said. William and Mary 55, Tulane 90, Vandervilt A GAMES, FUR REN. SCHEDULED TONIGHT 2. Dr. Hugh C. Willett, president of the National Collegiate Athletic Mississippi 69, Louisiana St. 48. | i g Georgia 57, Mississippi St. 4@ Association, said the matter is of Kentucky 86, Tennessee €1. . | “great concern” and will be taken No. Carolina St. 68, No, Caro. 53. ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Feb, 19 — | UP at a meeting of the NCAA coun- Navy 85, Duke 60 #M— Seward and Fairbanks lock |Cil in Chicago March 1. Florida 62, Auburn 61 horns tonight for the right to meet| 3. Ned Irish, director of Madi- Rice 54, Texas Christian 49. Anchorage, the defending champion, | 00 Square Garden called the sit- R AR SR AR | uation “deplorable” and added: r 7T o ‘“Gambling isn’t confined to the Your Bepesifs ARE SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS T! 1t bark s pledged to conserva tive The safety of depositors’ funds is our primacy consideration. In management of thu speration DE{DOSWS IN THIS BANK addiuon, the bank is a mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures each 8F 8up BBSRR apriner loee to 2 maximuma of $10,000. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Garden or New York City.” | The three CCNY players caught in the web of the latest scandal are Ed Roman, Ed Warner and Al | Roth, stars of the amazing team that swept to the national invitation znd NCAA championship last year for basketball's first and only | “grand slam.” | District Attorney Frank Hogan said they admitted accepting up to $1,500 each pet game to fix three games played in the Garden. The games were with Missouri, Arizona and Boston College, and CCNY lost all three. Arrested also were Harvey (Con- ‘nie) Schaff, a substitute on the /New York University team; Edward | Gard, a Long Island University sen- lior who played last year, and Sal- | vator Tarto Sollazzo, described by |the district attorney as a gambler who inspired the scheme. \‘ ASS'N. | OFFICE hours will be 8:00 am. to 12 noon, Monday thru Friday | for the convenience of consumers. 736-5t -—-EMP!RE WANT ADS PAY— Hold your glass of Budweiser to the light ana twirl it. See how it flashes and glistens. Raise the glass to your lips. Inhale the fragrance of the bouquet that filters through that snowcap of foam. Now sip . . .and enjoy the distinctive taste that has made Budweiser the world’s most famous beer. Now make the same test with any other brand of beer. You be the judge—and you’ll be tell- ing your dealer, ‘‘Give me Budweiser.. . nothing else. Budweiser LAGER BEE ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. You’ll Prefer Budweiser Another Reason Why Anchorage reached the finals Sat-) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA HUSKIES, WEBFOOTS. ARE TIED FOR TOP IN: NORTHERN DIVISION By Associated Press ‘Washington’s Huskies are tied with the Oregon Webfoots for first place today and a two-game series between the two teams this weekend could decide the Northern Division Pacific Coast conference basketbal championship. Coach Tippy Dye's Huskies movec into the first place tie by making a clean sweep of the two-game ser- ies with Idaho Vandals the past weekend. Oregon was idle. Washington won Friday night, 63-40, and then ran up its second higgest score against a PCC team in blasting the Vandals 76-59 Sat- urday night. The Huskies tallied 77 against Idaho in 1948. Washington State salvaged onée game out of its four-game Willam- ette Valley road trip by downing Oregon State 45-38 Saturday night, but still dropped from first to third place. Oregon State won Friday night 45-37. Idaho ran up a 17-11 lead on Washington midway of the first half, but the half ended in a dead- lock, 27-all. Frank Guisness sparked the Huskies to victory by netting 21 points. The Cougars got a iaste of victory after three straight losses. WSC led mest of the way, but Oregon State gave (hem a few uneasy mo- ments. 316-FOOT JUMP ON SKIES IS MADE BY YOUNG NORWEGIAN STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo., Feb. 19 —® — A young Norwegian’s 316-foot ski jump here yesterday may end the furore over the North American record of 307 feet set on the same course last year by Art Devlin of Lake Placid, N. Y. Ansten Samuelstuen, 21 year old Norwegian Air Force mechanic, sailed the distance off Howelson Hill in the Southern Rocky Moun- tain Ski Association jumping cham- pionships. The meet is sanctioned by the National Ski Association. The national body recognjzes Dev- lin’s record despite strong protests {rom skiers at Iron Mountain, Mich., where the Olympic ski jumping try- outs will be held Feb. 24-25. They claim jumpers at last year's Steamboat Springs meet were per- mitted three jumps with only two counting in the final judging. The protestants contend that as a re- sult the skiers could disregard form on one of their jumps in a gamble for extra distance. DOUGLAS NEWS 0. E. S. MEETING Nugget Chapter No. 2, Order of) Eastern Star, will meet tomorrow, Tuesday evening, at 8 o'clock in Masonic Hall, accqrding to an- nouncement by Worthy Matronl Francis Grant. It is a regular meeting, with There’s nothing like it . . . absolutely nothing oo s BT lOIIIS | HOCKEY GAMES C By Assogiated Press Portland battled New Westmins- ter to a 3-3 deadlock last night to regain a third placé tie with Ta- coma in the Pacific Coast Hockey League race. The Seattle Ironmen marked up|* their third straight win, edging last place Vancouver 5-4. Vancouver scored two goals in 2% seconds to wipe out an early Seat- le lead in the game at Seattle, but Rudy Filion cashed in on a Van- souver penalty to push home the vinning goal. Joe Bell blasted the puck into the open nets at 18:50 of the third per- jod Saturday night to give Seattle a 4-2 win over New Westminster Tacoma and Victoria deadlocked 1-1 in their hockey game at Ta- coma Saturday night. Sports Briefs New York — Coach Clair Bee of Long Island University’s basketball team apologized to W. H. Kisner, Jr., the referee he sharply criticized after LIU lost to Arizona at Cuson, Jan. 29. Columbus — Wayne “Woody" Hayes, former coach of Miami of Ohio, has been named head coach at Ohio State. Harlingen, Tex.—Charles (Chuck) Klein of San Antonio, Tex., has won the $10,000 Rio Grande Valley Open tourney with a total of 269 for 72 holes. St. Louls — Stan Musial has signed his 1951 contract with the St. Louis Cardinals for an undisclosed amount of cash. New York — Fred Wilt captured his first big mile title of the year in 4:09.4 at the National AAU cham- pionships. Travel troubles kept Don Gehrman from his slated appear- ance in the 1,000-yard run, won by defending champion Roscoe Browne jin 2:14. Pole vaulter Bob Richards this season. HOME FROM HOSPITAL returned home from St. Anne's Hospital Saturday evening after keing confined since Tuesday for medical attention. ineeds a week's complete rest c:i doctor’s orders. TO SEATTLE last Saturday for Seattle, wher: he will visit Mrs. Johnson, wh3 1is at the Laurel Beach Sanitoriur: receiving medical care. MRS. MILLS HOME Mrs. John Mills and son Gordon arrived home last week after at-’ tending the funeral of Mrs. Mills’ at Ketchikan. CUB COMMITTEE REINFORCED Malcolm Hardy, Cub Master of Pack 310, announced that Fred Cunningham and . Elwin Dell are new members of the Committee, with Dell to be active Chairman. initiation and refreshments. The MAM ZELLE SHOP 310 S. Franklin — Open Evenings TOPPERS SWEATERS—Nylon WASH-FAST PRINT or 100‘/, Wool DRESSES . Federal Tax i Ticket Offices and Reservations REDUCED ROUND TRIP FARES Upfo 3°7% SAVING TWO WEEK SPECIAL February 14, 1951 to February 28, 1851 BETWEEN JUNEAU ANCHORAGE CORDOVA .. KODIAK HOMER . NAKNEK AIRBASE KENAI . 98.25 ILIAMNA 121.85 BILLINGHAM 160.00 NINILCHIK 106.25 KASILOF Not Included BARANOF HOTEL PHONE 716 LRN AIRLIVES o M( Martin R. Pedersen, Superintend-| ent of the Douglas Public Schools, Mr. Pedersen is feeling better, 115} Leonard Johnson was a passenger | | cleared 15 feet for the second ume\Bob D'uxman_phone 891 ] 1 1 { 1 H late sister, Mrs. William Robertson, ]the team and manager had dinner i here. | of the Hoonah Public Schools, was T ey MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1951 FOR SALE PHONES 676 and 207 NEW listings in Juneau. 4 BEDROOM house in Waynor Tract available Feb. 15. Full basement and furnace. Unfurn- ished except for stove and refrig- erator. SMALL duplex on 10th near Doug- las Bridge—furnished—good in- come. LOTS—Two on Gold Belt with view—one on South Franklin. MURPHY & MUBPHY REALTORS — ACCOUNTANTS Phone 676 over First Nationai Bank W-A-N-T A-D-S FOR SALE NEW LISTING IN JUNEAU— DUPLEX on Star Hill—-NO STEPS. | 1 bedroom each apartment. Fur- nished. $4000. Very livable log cabin on a| very fine lot. BHLLE'S CAFE—Juncaws best| restaurant—Make inquiries—Box 2324, William Winn-Phone 234 Office 1n Gastinean Hotel | FOR SALE REAL ESTATE ANYWHERE! HIGHLANDS home, 2 or 3 bed- rooms, almost new, excellent view, conc. bsmt, garage, furn or unfurn, many nice items. WATERFRONT, 3 or 4 bedroonis, conc. bsmt, nice view, well- planned, near city limits, unfurn. HIGHWAY home, fully furnished, 2 bedrooms, basmt, view, near airport, $7,500 bargain. SUMMER cabin, price reduced to $1,300 for quick sale; must be moved to your own lot at approx- imate cost of $100. PERFECT country location, next to store, beach, 3 acres land, partly finished house with conc. bsmt. worth $30,000 when finished Price $12,600. LEVEL bidg. lot, Indian Village, BOAT SHOP, small home, gardens, beach, 5 acres, beautiful setting. LOG CABIN, 155 acres pat. land near Glacier. $5250. LOTS and acreage of all sizes from 50 foot frontage to 30 acres rang- ing in price from $600 to $7875— Auk Bay, Fritz Cove, Auk Lake and Lemon Creek areas. BUSINESS Opportunities and in- vestment property listings also. GOING OUTSIDE? We have an excellent choice of homes and lots in Seattle. \ Fritz Cove Rd. or 123 Front St. Evenings by Appointment At the meeting, held at the Hardy home, plans were made for the Dlue and Gold anniversary banguet i be held next Friday, February 22, in the dining rooms of the Masonic Hall. TAKU RESIDEN1 | ISITS Louis Le Florian, old-.ime resi- dent of Douglas, now living in the Taku River area, was a Douglas visitor last week, visiting friends KLUKWAN TEA.A ARRIVES Ten members of the Klukwan Basketball team arrived here Satur- )day to enter into the Lions Club Cpld Medal Basketball towna- ment. On arriving here via plane, that evening at the Tom Bowman residence. BOB SHUFF HERE Robert Shuff, coach and teacher in the Douglas Public Schools last year, and this year Superintendent in town over the weekend on busi- ness, He is endeavoring to obtain medical assistance for the resident. of that area—and other lusinest pertaining to the schools. Shuff said it was very possible that the Hoonah schools would soon realize a large addition which would als provide gymnasium and other faci- lities, which were badly needed. FROM SEATTLE Richard Shuman returned home last week after a ten-day business trip to Seattle for the Fish and wildlife service of which he is a member. 15 ARRIVE; 2 DEPART SOUTHBOUND _ TUES. ON PRINCESS NORAH; Fifteen passengers disembarked from the Princess Norah while two embarked for Skagway at sailing time Saturday. The CPR ship ar- rives from Skagway Tuesday morn- ng at 10 sailing southbound fo: Vancouver two hours later at 1I a00n. Disembarking from Vancouver Alvin T. Blake, Mrs. Jane L. Eng- Ish, Audrey Erwin, Vera F. anc Donald Forrester, Mr. and Mrs. G Logan, Melvin E, Race, Harol Stratton, Mr. and Mrs. Willard E 3wan, William Winn, Mrs. A, Haw tins and two sons. Embarking for Skagway: Willian dills, Jr., Elgin E. Gregory. FROM KETCHIKAN Mr, and Mrs. C. S. Delaney of Ketchikan are registered at thc Gastineau Hotel. Delaney is witk the U. S, Coast Guard there. W. B. Lydex of Seattle ‘s regis- tered at the faranof Hotei GLACIER HIWAY ELEC. ASSN. Office hours wid be 8:00 a. m. to 12 noon, Monday thru Friday, for the convenience of consumers. 736-5¢ DUPLEX for sale in Pelican City | The former Beauty Parlor and Bakery Shop Bldg. New bldg., t\vo: years old, located in the center| of town. Duplex is 20x40 with n‘ 40-ft. front. 2 bathrooms, with | living quarters in rear, partly furnished. Ideal location for either business or apartments. Pelican is growing fast with good opportunities for almost any new | business. The price is reasonable. For information see or write Don Lorentzen, Box 1058, Petersburg. T37-6t. ATLIN property, corner Lot m‘ business section—$1,600. Payments | can be arranged. Room 611,5 Baranof Hotel. 737-6t. | DAVENPORT and Chair. Phone 304. 737-2t, | GALVENIZED 5/8” chain 20c| pound. Call Douglas 964 after 6 pm. 735-3t. CLEARANCE SALE | Play Pen $12.00 | |9 MM Mauser ] 35.00} 22 Rifle with Scope . 22,50 | | Halicrafter Portable 65.00 | | Boy’s Bike ... 20.00 | Duo-therm Range 75.00 | Band Saw ..o .. 45.00 | * | Jointer ¢ hp Electric Drill 2250 Coleman 3 burner Stove 18.00 | Wire Recorder & Radio Combin- | albn 2 oS 60.00 Philco Table Radio 25.00 | 8 MM Movie Camera . 40,00 Everything reduced for this week. ODDS & ENDS, Across from the | Cold Storage Office. Call szsf 735-2t I R VR v | ELECTRIC Refrigerator, stove, &b Washing machine; extension li-| brary table; Neptune 7% h outboard motor; Call Red 447 be- tween 5:15 and 10:00 in the eve- ing. 733-tf LARGE sunflame oil heater with| five gallon tank and carburetor [ —————————————— —_— £ . | 1936 DODGE coupe—new tires a: —$65.00, also large baby buggy. Howard Hayes, Douglas. 732-6',‘ COMPLETE mmls;]mgs for a bed- sitting room, solid maple like new. Blue 950. 677-tf SITUATION WANTED WOMAN witn éxceptional oxper-i fence in newspaper work and | merchandising, at present employ- ed in Spokane, wants work in Alaska. Azply Empire, 693-t8 GLACIER HIWAY ELEC. ASSN. O.fice hours will be 8:00 a. m. to 12 noon, Monday thru Friday, for the convenience of consumers. 736-5t | < RENT-A-SAW-SERVICE. Ore-man —— Re.rigeration Service Radio Repairs Guaranteed Work Reasonable Prices Days 987—Nites Red 868 Arctic Refrigeration | E | Artle Burcguation TOP QUALITY VALVES IN USED CARS SPECIAL 1947 Studebaker” 3% ton pickup ....$ 875.00 1948 Mercury 4-door sedan ... 1937 Plymoutin 4-door sedan . 1,050.00 1940 Buick 4-door sedan ... 600.00 1941 Dodge % ton pickup .. 525.00 1947 International 14 ton panel ....... 800.00 R.W.Cowling Co. 115 Front Street Phone 57 FOR SALE THREE NEW LISTINGS MONDAY 1. Beautiful newly renovated home in Douglas. New roof, new Frigi- daire double oven stove, new Frigidaire refrig, new Frigidaire drier, new Crosley sink, new May- tag washer, new wall-to-wall carpet in lvgroom and dining- room, new inlaid plastic linoleum, new Briggs Beautyware bati: room, *wo bedrooms, Y: $10,002. Country home on hw; 3 bed- rooms furi., 3 acres, garage, view, lawn, $8,400. Hwy 22 mi. 2 bedroom unfin- ished. Large rooms, $8,400. $2,000 down, balance 4%. Monthly total payment $60. $24,000—3 apts fur Owner financed I income $275 up mo. $7,000 dn. 19,500—2 bed unfurn new. Apt. bstn $50 mo.. $5600 dowa. 17,507—3 bed unfurn. Db! garage, db! plmbng. $4700. 17,050—2 bed furn. Bus . corner Apt. 65 mo. $3,000 handles. 14,000—4 apts. $170 mo. inc. 12,000—3 bed country. Full bsmt, new auto oil furn. 10,500—4 apt. Douglas furn. Inc $210 mo $2000 down 10,000—1 bed 12th. yard, new furn. 8,400—2 bed Hwy, part furn $2000 down bal 4% 6,000—2 apts 2 bed each $3000 dn 50 mo pd by apt 5,250—2 bed furn also apt brings 20 mo. $1000 down 4,250—2 bed Hwy part furn 4 acres. Near airport 2,100—1 bed furn. 2. 3. | BUSINESS—Jacobs Buchanan Ma- chine Shop and 8 yr. lease. At entrance Small Boat Harbor. Ma- chine and stock inventory $15,000. Sacrifice for $8,000 to go mining. Sale includes big contract now in shop. PETER WO0OD Agency No. 2 Klein Bldg. Tel. 911 - 2600 TToR HMISCELLANEOUS WILL care for ch;ldren' in my home by the day. Call Blue 454. 737-6t HOPE'S | WE buy sell and trade. 214 2nd Street. Phone 908. FOR SALE USED CARS 1949 Chev. Tudor Sedan — 8000 miles. Call Red 302. 732-6t 1947 PLYMOUTH Phone Red 965 after 5§ p.m. 30- 653-t4 4-door sedan, 10 new springs, $350. Phone Black 340 after 5 p.m. 703-tf 1936 Chev truck, 1% ton stake— heater and spot light, $300. Good condition—Inquire Baroumes apts, 45 FORD cab chassis, '46 Yodge panel. Phone 707, Foster's Trans- fer, 648-tf 1947 Hudson 6, 4-door, in good con- dition, See Jimmie a! Bubble FOR RENT STEAM bear? | "ooms, 315 Gold St. 735-tf LARGE oftic! Call Black 763. srace—.£lein Bldg 7133-tf chain saw, new Titan, $20.00 day. Skil-Saw $5.00 day. Call 911 SRR, S A TR e STEAMMBATED Rooms, weekly of Monthly. Colonial Rooms. 6oul —_— - WURLITZER Spinit ptano for rent Anderson Fiano Shop. Ph. 143. WANTED COUPLE desire to rent house or apt. Call R. C. Bentley, Room 209, Hotel Juneau. 34-9t Wofll&f‘l desires day work by the nour. Call Blue 1020, 734-9t 00 8 TR » Bl ST AT TSR I WOMAN typist with general office experience. Gooc steady position with long established Juneau iirm. Gtate qualifications and ref- ¢rences to Box 953, care of Em- plre. 733-tf " HELP WANTED S0 e e D R S G o T SELL DRESSES FROM NEW YORK. $4.98 up. Fifth Ave. N. Y., firm desires women to sell new dresses, suits, lingeries, hosiery. Seen “Vogue, Mademoiselle.” Good commissions. Write for a sample book. Modern Manner, 260 JP Fifth Ave, New Yaii. RELIABLE man wanted to <all on friends and neighbors. Wunderful opportunity. $15 to $20 in a day. No experience or capital required. Permanent. Write today. McNess Company, Dept. B, 2423 Magnolia St., Oakland 7, Calif. 137-1t 743-1t LOST AND FOUND SET of keys with name Darlenc Buchanan. Owner may have them by paying for this ad. 736-2t IR TR e