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Oldest Newspaper In Alaska. “The News of the Day In Pictures” Member of The Associated Press. DEVOTED TO THE BUILDING OF \ BETTER NOME AND THE SECOND DIVISION. NOME IS THE STRATEGIC WORLD FLIGHT AIR BASE— ESPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR COMMERCIAL AND MILITARY AVIATION THE NOME DAILY NUGGET VOL. 38 No. 40 NOME, ALASKA, THURSDAY FEB. 18, 1937 Per Copy 15cts Mozee Girl Increases Lead Contest Joe Louis Gets Technical Kockout Over Brown Dimond Introduces Bill Cover More Air Routes DIMOND ASKED FOR EXTENSION MONEYS POST OFFICE DEPT Measure which failed at last session congress said by Delegate from Alaska to be included budget and therefore hopes for success. (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 18, .for Alaska. —Delegate from Alaska Anthony j J Dimond told the national house today that he would offer an am endment to the post office depart- j ment appropriation bill to add $72,735 for the extension of air mail service to the more popu-1 lous sections of the territory. The proposed addition would be made to the item of $207,454 Because of our short railroad and highway mileage costs are high. If we had railroad service roads and free delivery service now available to the people in the states I would not ask this in crease said the Delegate Dimond said the federal budget had made a provision for the ex tension which he seeks. Brown Bomber Again Vietor in L Fight In Kansas c (By The Associated Press) KANSAS CITY, Feb. 18, -Joe Louis, Brown Bomber from De troit won a techncial knockout ov er Natie Brown, in the fourth round of their scheduled ten round bout, at the municipal aud itorium here, before a crowd of fourteen thousand persons. Louis yveighed 206 and Brown 199 pounds. The first two rounds were tame, with Brown carrying the fight to his opponent. Louis began connecting in the third round. The end came after forty two seconds fighting in the fourth canto, when sharp rights and lefts sent Brown reeling to te ropes. Louis knocked him down once, and although Brown tried to regain his feet, Referee Walter Bates stopped the bout and awarded the decision to Joe Louis. ✓ Louisville Busy Rebuilding City Following Flood (By The Associated Press) LOUISVILLE, Ky. Feb. 18 — This city bustled with re-build ing activity three weeks after the Ohio river had inundated three-fourths of the city. Traffic was congested where streets had caved in, where bus iness houses had moved goods by the carload when seeking to es cape the flood waters. Power lin es are still partly down. Mozee Increased Lead Today In Contest Queen Jeanne Mozee increased her lead by a substantial margin to put her away out in front after today’s count. The relative posi tions of the candidates remain unchanged altho Margueritte Lee and Eileen Stangroom strength ened their holds considerably. Here are the standings todate: Jeanne Mozee . 40,180 Gertrude Johansen .33,420 Margueritte Lee .29,680 Ada Baldwin .26,240 Rita O’Leary .25,860 Eileen Stangroom .22,080 Dorothy Nelson .12,160 Geraldine Rude .6,480 Borgny Ulricksen .4,200 There will be a meeting of the Kennel Club at 8 o’clock tonight at Frank Whaley’s residence to formulate plans for the Queen Carnival to be held the night of March sixth. The contest closes at midnight on the night of the carnival and the votes will be counted then so that the winner may be announced as soon as possible. The Queen must be in Fair banks before March 11th and must be ready to leave on the first plane after the close of the contest in order not to be late, due to poor flying weather. A full report of the Kennel Club meeting tonight and the I Carnival arrangements will ap pear in tomorrow’s Daily Nugget. There is still quite a discrep ancy between votes issued and polled. Quit hoarding now, and deposit your ballots for your fav (Continued on Page Four) Some Intimate Poses of President andFirst Lady of Land EARNEST PUZZLED PLEASED 8MILE3 SCRUTINIZES AN ASIDE Mechanical Ant Described For Boring Into Earth. Has Been Demonstrated Successfully Cal. fBv Tb» 'v r.rr>' rt P NEW YORK, Feb. 18 — A mechanical “ant”, a round-bodied machine thirty feet long and five feat in diameter was described at the annual meeting of the Ameri can Institute of Mining and Met allurgical Engineers, by J. B. Newsom of the Idaho and Mary land Mines Corporation of San Francisco. He says it enables a man to drill the earth like an insect. It has a body like a steel barrel, about fifteen feet long, housing a powerful electee motor, and jaws in another fifteen foot barrel hol low and which revolves under the drive of the motor. It is fitt ed with teeth on the lower rim of the barrel. The teeth drill both earth & rock. As they boro down ward the empty barrel fills with the “core” cut out of the earth, and when it is full a cable hoists it to the top of the shaft to be emptied. digs. He sits at the motor con trols with a steel umbrella a half an inch thick above his head. Newsom said the machine has drilled a five foot round hole 1125 feet deep in Grass Valley, Calif ornia. It’s five foot diameter is bigger than most blast shafts after they have been timbered, and af ter the ant's hole has been tim bered it is still a larger hole than the old method. Newsom said it has great poss ibility and shou’d be of potential value to the oil industry when the t:me conies t’ at the dwindl ing supply has to be “mined.” [■'■ate f>^is Aid v press • OI VMP'A F b. n, — The state ’odd. > re p. cJ t e memorial Urging congress to prevent the Japanese from using their float ing canneries off the coast of Al One man rides the “ant” as it aska. American Fed. Of Labor Behind F.D. fRv The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, D. C. Feb 18, —The American Federation of Labor rallied behind the Roose velt court program with the pre diction by Secretary Wallace that the farmers favored the plan, following close on the A F of L announcement. William Green, federation pres dent said the program would achieve social and economic ad vancement for labor, which will campaign for the program. John L. Lewis also favors it, the issue being one of the few questions Green and Lewis have agreed on. Secretary of Agriculture Wall ace said the program was neces sary to the constitutionality of p\ posed farm legislation. !M AVI) DREDGE MEN T p Nome Daily Nugget carries ev t 1 forms of printing blanks for vour convenience — Dredge Lops, thawing and drill reports, Mining Deeds, Placer and Lode Location Notices. Vouchers, and Special Power of Attorney forms. Doings Legislature (Special to the Nugget) JUNEAU Feb. 18, —Just as the senate did Monday, the house today swept through the Brun nelle memorial asking the reap pointment of John W. Troy as Governor of Alaska, and express ing appreciation to President F. D. Roosevelt and the administra tion and widespread interest he has shown in Alaska. The senate passed a resolution today by Brunnelle and Walker, inviting the chief executive to visit the northland. The Brunnelle bill which would set up regulations for aeronaut i ics, was special order of business ! today. The senate passed the Roden bill appropriating over six thous and dollars to pay claims against hospitalization which included hi: t v four hundred dollars to the Ketchikan ho pital and nine hun dred to the Seward hospital. Flo >d, law revision and other bills of a minor nature were in troduced in the senate today. Alaska Glaciers Disappearing Is Report Surveys (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON Feb. 18. — A1 aska’s great glaciers are shrink ing away slowly said governmen geologists, but it will probably b thousands of years before the; disappear. R. II Sergeant, head of the A askan Geological Survey said tha in forty years one large glacie had been reduced one thousam feet in thickness, and others ar shrinking similarly. S R Capps who was near th Black Rapids glacier last sum mer said it was unlikely the en tire glacier had made any grea forward movement. Possibly section near its terminus ha broken off and upset an accum ulation of ice and vegetation nea it. The normal speed of the gla ier is an inch a month. The fas est speed of any glacier record ed is a foot a month. Thomas Riggs member of th International Boundary Commit sion, and a former governor c Alaska said the glacier whic comes to the ocean at Glacier Ba north of Juneau is receding aero: Alaska and the Canadian bourn ary and may give Canada a ne northern seaport. Subscribe for The Norm Daily Nugget: $2 a mont