The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 8, 1951, Page 3

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THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1951 IS STILL | CHAMPION —— DETROIT, March 8 —(®—An in- jured left ear today sidelined Ez- zard Charles for two months, dash- ing Joe Louis’' hopes for a crack at the heavyweight champion this April. The 29-year-old titleholder’s ear was puffed up in his successful 15- round defense against 37-year-old Jersey Joe Walcott last night. His personal physician ordercd Ezzarc to stay out of action for at least two months. Charles, who was almost topplec from his throne in the fourth round by a crashing right to the jaw, had the, swelling drained down from the ear at a hospital early this morning Co-Manager Tom Tannas said “The champ is okay but he’ll have to give the ear a chance to heal before he does anything else.” Joe Louis, who received a thund- erous ovation from the 13,852 fanc (875,502 gross gate) at Olympie Staduim, left shortly after the unan- imous decision was announced. He didn’t receive the disappointing news until today. It came as a great shock to the Brown Bomber. Louis has had four fights, has trimmed down to 207 pounds and he feels he is ready right now. He doesn’t want to waste any time. His 37th birthday comes up this May. Walcott’s 37 years didn‘t seem tc hang heavy on him in several spots last night, notably in the fourth and 15th rounds when the 5 to 1 under- dog had Charles in trouble. In the fourth a right to the chin staggered the champion and one more might have sent him to the floor for keeps. But Charles clung to Walcott for 60 long seconds and the challenger couldn’t shake him off. Thus another champicnship bub- ble burst for Walcott, He came close to the crown in his first fight with Louis and he wasn't too far away il his first bout with Charles for the NBA diadem in Chicago' 20 months ago. After the fourth round Charles got cagy and in the ninth he rocked Walcott to the canvas for a nine- count with a powerful right to the head and a terrific left hook to the jaw. That was the only knockdown of the fight although Charles came close again in the 14th. UCLAIN AIR FOR SEATTLE {8 ANGELES, March 8 —(®— Tl UCLA basketball squad flies to Ceattle today in quest of its sec- ond straight Pacific Coast Confer- ence championship, Winners for three consecutive years of the Southern Division title in the conference, Coach Johnny ‘Wooden’s Bruins play the Univer- sity of Washington on the Huskies’ home court. Local observers are none to opti- mistic about the Bruins' chances of beating the taller, fast moving ‘Washington team. Last year UCLA defeated Washington State on the Bruins’ home court in two straight games. ‘Two of the UCLA regulars, Guard- Capt. Eddie Sheldrake and Forward Art Alper, were stricken with the flu, missing yesterday’s final prac- tice. Wooden hoped they would be recovered sufficiently to play to- morrow and Saturday nights, how- ever. Dick Ridgway, a lanky sophomore, led the Southern Division scoring with 217 points, the most ever scor- ed by a sophomore. He also broke the school season’s record, with 439 points in 27 games. ‘The squad is due.in Seattle via United Airlines at 4:40 p.m. T'ST. FRIDAY BOWLING GAMES ARE OFF There will be no bowling of the ¥Friday League, March 9, in order that the visiting Ketchikan Elks may avail themselves of the alleys. A complete schedule of the Fri- SERIES SPLIT BY JUNEAU HIGH WIN OVER KAYHI, 54-46 The Juneau High school Crimson Bears came out of a see-saw first quarter in the game last night to take the second game from Ketchi- kan High school in a best two-out- 5f three series by the score of 54-46. The evident lesson from the recent Gold Medal Tournament has gone unheeded two nights in a row by the referees — that of calling fouls. Neither team can be said to have fouled more than the other in these first two games of a crucial series for the championship of Southeast Alaska. The evident fouls were even- ly split for both teams going un- heeded and uncalled by the referees. The game got off to a slower start last night with the first basket of the game being made by Carlson of the Bears a minute’ and a half after the starting tip-off. The Bears ( began the game by not getting re- tounds after their ows shots. Towards the end of the quarter,' a referee’s tims-aot was called with | he warning given to both coaches for the players to stop talking back to the referees on called fouls or e thrown out of the game. The lead was exchanged several times during the first period. To- ward the end of the quarter, the Bears got control of the game to never be topped again. XKetchikan was working in under the basket and alternating shots from the backcourt with under the sasket attempts. Score at the end of the first juarter was Juneau 12, Ketchikan 7. The second quarter saw inter- cepting by both teams on bad pass- ng. It was the Bears’ game the first half of this period for scoring with Kayhi doing the sinking in the last half. The Bears were never threat- ened. Defensive Game ‘The Bears were breaking into the key better in a strictly man-to-man defensive game by both teams. Score at the end of the second quarter was Juneau 31, Ketchikan 380. The Kayhis led off the scoring in the third quarter when Simpson dropped in a two-point counter quickly followed by Ninnis of the Bears. Both teams were working in for the set shots. The Bears were using longer passes and missing less of them. Ninnis hit a pay streak in the clos- ing two minutes dumping in three of his four baskets for the quarter. Kayhi was forced to try for the long shots. Score at the end of the third period: Juneau 43, Ketchikan 29. Scoring was opened in the final frame with a burst of two long lbaskets by Maddox of Kayhi scor- ng on long shots. Engstrom of the Bears retaliated with two pushup baskets from the corner. The long passes started to payoff for the Kayhis with fewer inter- ) ceptions, In an attempt to salvage|! the game, Ketchikan tried more lcng shots than they had at any time in the game. But the Bears kept the lead without being pushed || too hard on the scoring. Score at the end of the game was Juneau 54, Ketchikan 46. High point man for the Bears |, was again Ninnis this time with 24|} points while Emard was high man for Kayhi with 13. Summary JUNEAU— Graves, D. . Martin, H. Ninnis, J. Carlson, A. Engstrom, E. . Wade, . . Orme, B Treffers, R. Forrest, D. Total .. KETCHIKAN— Simpson, L. . Emard, G. Rich, R. ......... Murkowski, F. Tucker, J. .. Bue, M. Statter, D. Maddox, D. Householder, Tucker, P. .. Total . Halftime entertainment was stag- ed by the Girls’ Pep Club in march- | »f 3 2 3 e 3 1 3 [ [ pf .2 L2 ) 5 2 3 [ 4 .0 2 5l cocococwro® R - cocomvaRme - cCoovowoormrn e P, ommMOROw®wR [ < e ARGENTINA HAS BIG| LEAD PAN-AM GAMES BUENOS AIRES, March 8 —(® On the competitive side, the first| Pan American Games end tonight with a blazing basketball game be- tween the United States and Ar- gentina. This is the one champion- ship the Argentine fans would rather win than all the other As far as the overall domination of the games goes, Argentina has it sewed up with 1,071': unofficial points to 724' for the United ¢ But national honor will be at when the U, S. and Argentina take the court in jampacked Luna Park, which seats at least 20,000. With only a handful of champion- ships undecided, here are unofficial team points: Argentina 1,071'2, United States 724', Chile 279, Brazil 253, Mexicc 248, Cuba 113, Peru 100. KETCHIKAN TO T BOWLING ALLEYS Big event in bowling circles tomervow afterroon when Juneau Elks ax Ketchikanr alleys. whe Ketclikan women arrived by plar the prcoram for the t ( fair is as follows: Today, 7:v p.m. — Reception Elk lounge for Ketchikan bowlers 8:30 p.m. — Smorgasbord at Whing Ding’s for all Elks and their ladies. Friday, 11:00 a.m. — Cocktail hour at Elks lounge for Ketchikan wo- men and Juneau women, 12:00 noon — Luncheon at the Baranof Gold Room for Juneau and Ketchikan women. 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. — Bowling. 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. — Bowling. starts the an men day anc af- ing. 3:00 to 5:00 pm. — Bowling. 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. — Bowling. 9:00 pm. — Dance in the Elks auditorium, Sunday: Singles and Doubles. (Time to be announced later). Here is the lineup for Juneau bowlers: Friday — First game at 3 pm.— Men: Hagerup, Snow,.Smithberg, Blanton, Scott; women: Oldham, Warner, Mills, Faulkner, Grove. Second game at 5 p.m. — Men: Hagerup, Snow, Smithberg, Blan- ton, Scott; women: Oldham, War- ner, Mills, Faulkner, Grove. Saturday — Third game at 1 p.m. Men: Lindstrom, Smith, Mork, Ripke, Cahail; women: Holmquist, Matheny, Hagerup, Davlin, Est Fourth game at 3 pm. — Men: indstrom, Smith, Mork, Ripke, Ca- hail; women: Holmquist, Matheny, Hagerup, Davlin, Estes. Fifth game at 5 pm. will be rolled by the squad with high total pins for the two games they rolled. Sunday — Singles and doubles championship. The persons to roll will be determined by high aver- ages for the tournament. "WATER WE DOING' Ace San Francisco fliper Al Lien calls for shelter from the rain in the spring “sunshine belt” as the Seals started practice at Modesto, Calif. Holding the umbrella and all rigged out in his swampin’ boots is Neill Sheridan, outfielder and long-ball slugger. () Wire- ing formation to music furnished by the high school band. Members of the club ended the marching formation with a “J” and “K” singing the alma mater songs in honor of the two teams. The junior varsity took a one- point game over the freshmen team at 36 to 35. The crowd again packed the gym photo. ALTER SPEAKER AT SOROPTIMIST CLUB Amos J. Alter, Director of the Division of Sanitation and En- zineering of the Alaska Department #lay League will appear later. Next|last night with the probability of|of Health will be the guest speaker bowling night will be March 16..... IRWIN TO PALMER Don Irwin, in charge of Alaska experiment stations for Alaska, De- partment of Agriculture, retumed‘Anehonse stopped overnight at the | countries yesterday from Petersburg where he SRO for the final game of the series tonight. HUGHES ENROUTE G. L. Hughes with the CAA at Gastineau Hotel enroute to Haines, at the regular luncheon meeting of the Soroptimist Club Friday noon in the Baranof Hotel. Alter will talk on his recent four months visit to the Scandanavian on a research project sponsored by the World Health Or- had inspected the experitnental fur|where he will be for two or three|ganization and will show slides farm. He expected to leave today|months in connnection with instal- taken by him on his trip. —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— ELKS OF JUNEAU, | Saturday, 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.—Bowl-; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA {MONTE CARLO SKI SCORES 0 F | (LUB PARTY COMES BASKETBALL 0 ¥ihe bves The Juneau Ski Club Monte Carlo o " Party, complete with games, floor show and dance hall girls, opens for a one night stand Friday night at 9 at Whing g The party, open to the public, i to help support Tournament held 18. Fund: will also be Douglas Scores of basketball games’ night were: Juneau Hi 54, Ketchikan Tii 46. Pac. Luth. 52, ¢ ‘1. of Pug, Sd. 51. Olympic JC of Bremerto::, Wash., 81, Vanport of Fcrtiand, Ore., Gl.r‘h (Winner to National J. C. tourna-|{,. . ment). th Wyoming 82, Denver 61. Idaho St 69, West. Montana 57. Montana St 67, Rocky Mt. 61. Canisius 69, Syracuse 66. Columbia 173, Princeton 66. Colgate 76, Rutgers 58. Rh, Iseland St 79, Brown 70. | Villanova 87, Wm. and Mary 50. | AT COMMISSION MEET Penn 61, Penn State 58. Oklahoma A-M 57, Houston 39. y in an the here raised i by [ improve | trail 1 The | lines’ | will & | tion W of mad Kansas 70, Iowa State 64. Oklahoma 58, Colorado 49. Missouri 68, Nebraska 57. Carroll 74, Mission House €0. Sncris Briefs and in pe seasonal indu and canning favoring cer- | ntatives of ‘; uch as'fishing - { New York — D aftorney’s | rcg ffice said Connie haff, NYU player, admitted taking bribe to fix the NYU-Cornell game last New Years Day. i payment benefits. y a tech 1 bill was completed and sent to the senate iciary committee. There are no - basic changes in the bill, commis- St. Augustine, Florida — Bobbie) sion members said, but merely cor- Dawson, Piedmont, Calif., upset de-|rections of technical errors in fending champion Edean Anderson,. printing. Helena, Mont., 2 and 1, in Florida! East Coast Women’s amateur tour= ney. —EMPIKE WANT ADS PAY— ssoe Fly with the leader— » Miami Beach — Tim Holland, amateur from Miami, shot 34-33-67 to lead qualifiers in $10,000 Miami Beach Open tournament. ®eeessccssccessscsssosecsccsssssinse Miami Graham, $11.10, feature race at Gulfstream, won Acadia, Calif. — Pancho Supreme, $4.70, won San Gabriel handicap at Santa Anita. JOCKEY GAMES SEATTLE, March 8 —(®—The up- ‘and-down Seattle Ironmen were “up” lagt night and their 4-2 vie-| tory over the Tacoma Rockets kept alive their slender hope for a Pa-| i cific Coast Hockey league playoff | berth, | Tacoma grabbed a 2-1 lead in the first period, but Danny Nixon and ;e Stan Maxwell put the lronmen:' ahead with goals in the second, Gordy Kerry added the clincher in the third. 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. Ceuvenient daily scrvice te Seattle . . . frequent Clipper flights to key cities inside Alneka. For fares and reserve- tions, call Pan American at. Baranof Hotel Phone 106 > MISS TYNER HERE e Dorothy Tyner of the Anchorage' § rent control office is in Juneau|e conferring with Walter Walsh of | | the regional office. She is stop- ping at the Baranof Hotel. | ~EMFIRE WANT ADS PAY— e T dlscavefed fbe-;/;:keq’ ; BE YOUR OWN WHISKEY EXPERT! Trust your taste buds to tell you which brand is right for you. Because the whiskey that tastes best to you is the one to buy. Compare Calvert Reserve with any whiskey. We are confident you will choose smoother, mellower Calvert. But if you still prefer your present brand, stick with it, Fair enough? IT’S SMART TO SWITCH TO Calvert - CALVERT RESERVE BLENDED WHISKEY—86.8 PROOF—65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. CALVERT DISTILLERS CORP., NEW YORK CITY ces —— Lowest Everyday Prices — Lowest Everyday Prices —Lowest Everyday Prices — Lusvest Lverday Prices — Lowesi Lveryday Prices — OLDTIMERS" NGHT AT ELKS 1S GREAT EVENT There was big doings at the Elks ast night. It was Old Timers night with the accompanying Jigeg's din- 1er. Over 250 sat down to the din- ner at 6 oclock and service was Jlendid. The cleanup bunch got busy and the lodge was d on time at 8 alted Ruler lis George gave praise to these charge of the special feature. Nomination of officers for the coming year was the agenda of the susiness session, session w in The dinner was prepared under he direction of Harold Fennel, hairman of the activities commit assisted by his corumittee mex ers and others Honorary life membesship cards ere issued to James S. Drake, Wil- am J. Reck, John G. Molincux, harles O. Sabin, Fred red A. Sor nest on and J. Fillmore Warder. Twenty-five year membership suttons were given to L. W. Turoff, J. B. Larry A sen, A. | 1or. Rudolph Sar Ted Keaton, J. Je Wa Herm George. Burford, Park R. Du | | | | To the | cleaning Edit your ‘mcmux‘ but n erson that g certain citi 1 law that their sidewalks, | is such - 1 alk t on was cover end. There i Ppe The side is Henning, | type of walks. It would be a s O. Swanson, | matter to sprinkle rock yseph J. Stocker, John L. McCor- | walk, but quite a few iick, Frank Pierre, Earle C. Jame- | tco lazy to do such a I wish you s that. , KENNE Andrew Radde, Jorgen- Edward J. Martin ncan, Ver Lurdstrom, Berntsen rren Geddes, John Williams and Joe vela, Al I - (OMMU or: If you lay off idewalk you are a nost of all to every s on your walk. In n the states, there is sople have to clean In Juneau, if there aw, is sor 1 ell not be in force, hat T broke my ankle d with one no need such mple alt on the ice fc ng le t would dews H McC PAGE THREE TICKETS 70 GO ON SALE TODAY P-TA SCHOLARSHIP FUND Tickets went on sale today by Juneau Public School students for the Parent-Tteacher Association Scholarship Fund benefit film show, “Stars in my Crown,” March 21, 22 and 23 at the Capitol Theatre. A part of the proceeds from the tickets sold for the show will be | turned over to the P.-T. A. Scholar- ship Fund. All persons interested in aiding the Fund are urged to | purchase tickets irom the student sell Proceeds from tickets sold at the theatre will not apply to the Fund TYPHOID IMMUNIZATION CLINIC HELD TOMORROW | The typhoid immunization clinie will be held as scheduled at the Juneau Public Health Center, 318 Main street, tomorrow, Friday, March 9. Hours are 8:30 to 10:30 for school children and 10:30 to 11:30 for adults in the morning. The Helath Center will be open 1 the evening from 7 to 8 also. "owest Everyday Prices — Lowest Everyday Prices—Lowest Everyday Prices ,______._._.—___._.—__‘ZL__ GROCERY PHONES FREE DELIVERY EXTRA FANCY FANCY YAKIMA EXTRA LEAN ib. ZHe HOME STYLE PEACHE Dainty Pack 2 laxgs cans ¢ TREND All Purpose Detergent YES TISSUE Honey Maid GRAHAM CRACKERS 2 pound box §5¢ BOOK MATCHES carion cf §{ pkis. 19 — Lowest Everyday Prices — Lowest Everyday Pri 2 large packages 40c DELICIOUS APPLES - 10: 30 A, M ., 2:30, 4:00 P. M. (G o o ot o o e o o o o o — () YES, Business Is Good. jbih the dozens ple who say, “'BERT'S IS BEST"! 161b.bag §].59-40 1. bex §5.59 FANCY MEDIUM PGTATOES 25 Ihs. §1.33 ' ONIGNS - 10 pounds 49¢ JUNEAU’S FINEST MEATS Lean—Boneless Ib. BACON “Shamrock” BACK, 8 oz. cello pkg. . 63c - SPARERIBS VEALROASTS| BEEF HEARTS B3ec Swift's Palmdale APPLE SAUCE 23 ALLSWEET COLORED MAB,GARINE GIANT NU- BORA 13c Package B .. Large 300 Size 29¢ MJB ICE Fancy—Long Grain 2 1b. carton {3¢ MIRACLE WHIP RITZ CRACKERS - - - CHORE GIELS - Better Elockl!p .o CAMPBELL VEGETABLE soup Can 15¢ Dozen $1.75 Skinless WEINERS . 63c pound Bruce'’s Unsweetened ORANGE J UICE 6 oz. can 43(: — Case $499 of new peo- ih. 39ec NIBLETS CORN 21¢ ... POUND 42(: LIGUID SUDS § oz. bottle 39¢ (i'RATED TUNA Can 35¢ Quart Jar 75¢ - Pound Box 39¢ Each ¢ HAPPY HOME SYRUP large 74 0z. (g | — $031id ADpAlea] J5am0T — 590K ADPAISA] 159M0T —SadHJ ADPAISAT jSamoT— S9d1d ADPAIaAT [SeM0T — $90lid ADDAISAT jsemcy — - saduid ADpAIeay

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