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BRINGING UP FAT N BY GOLLY, THAT IDEA OF ME PRETENDN CERTAINLY PRE - VENTED ME FROM JUNEAU DOWNS KETCHIKAN IN ANOTHER GAME Third of Senes n Radlo Bowling Taken by Local Fives For the third consecutive both the first and second Juneau Elks bowling teams won from Ket- chikan last night in the Elks tele-| With | graphic bowling tournament. three of the five games on the chedule already won by both teams, nd a lead of several hundred pins ach in the grand total of team points, the Juneau Elks are prac- ly assured of victory. Apparently spurred on by rior scores rolled by the team on Tuesday night, team developed a burst sic bowling form last night bow'ed 190, 214, 244 for total of 648, a new high in t telegraphic tournament. His team- mates J. E. Barragar, Jr., H. Stevenson, were second with 579 and 578 respectiv Complete Juneau scor FIRST the the e Boyle Stevenson Pullen Radde Barragar, Jr. 244— 648 Totals Sub-total 8334 Grand total SECOND TEAM F. Barragar 156 145 Benson 162 179 McCormick 155 221 Duncan 172 146 Caro 178 823 159— 500 169— 54¢ 184— 502 Totals Sub-total Grand total Ketchikan Team—Howard, 568; Dan- ; Boos, 600; Thibodeau, 502; Bldnlon 488; total, 2685. Second Team—Zorich, 485; ell, 551; Barnes, 491; Maloca, Davies, 448; total, 2380. Following are to date: First Team—Juneau, chikan, 7605. Now- 8334; of | Ed al HER M SICK HAS | and R.! 194—- 579 178— 479 THI: DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY MARCH 5, I936 fLL CALL UP DONIGAN AN THANWK HIM FER GIVIN' ME THE IDEA- HELLO- 1S THIS YoU., DONIGAN? THIS 1S JIGGS CALLIN'- VYEA-IM GLAD T WORKED - BUT LISTEN- | JUST By PaPUAPAN $ ACE HAL PR.E, HEAPLEY S WoPPER -Ts GIANT 4 -YEAR-OLD S ONE OF THe BIGEEST WORDUEHBREDS EVER FOALED WHOPPER WAS Ml SENSATION OF ™HE FLORIDA WINTER- RACING SEASON. ' e "CaRiERA OF fite TOREY STANDS |7 HANDS HIGH MDD WEIGHS OUER. 1700 POUNDS poIT- AN Al R Gas-House Gang Lines Up Six Rookie “Sack-Swipers” to Pal with Pepper Martin 4955 | the grand totals Ket- | Second Team—Juneau, 7959; Ket- | chikan, 7213. SPORT EVENTS GANCELLED BY IA. BLIZZARDS Athletes Twiddle Thumbs as Wintry Blasts Bar Roads AMES, Ia., March 5.—Recent bliz- ards have caused Iowa State ath- ietes to twiddle their thumbs on at| Jeast two occasions and have re- lted in definiate cancellation of one intercollegiate sporting event. Midwestern drifts that made all| kinds of travel impossible led to| postponement of a Big Six basket- ball game between the University | of Missouri and Towa State at Columbia, Mo. As a result the game| was tentatively set ahead to some- time this month. At the same time a dual swim-| ming meet with the University of Minnesota here was cancelled when the Gopher tanksters were unable to make any progress through the snow from Lincoln, Neb., where they were marooned after competing| against me Umversn,y of Nebraska. REGULAR BOWUNG RESUMES TONIGHT ON ELKS’ ALLEYS There was no league bowling at the Elks Alleys last night. Tonxght,‘ the Grocers League will bowl the following games: Krafft vs. Amo- cat, 7:30 o'clock; Libby vs. Heinz, 8:30 o'clock; and Wesco vs. Pabst, 9:30 o'clock. e | | | | | | [ | Ameng the rockies ready for their 1936 debut with the St. Louis | | | cause of his size =/ ights Reserved by The Associated Press SPORT SLANTS Hal Price Headley’'s Whopper is exactly the sort of horse you would expect a colt bearinz that name to be—a shade under 17 hands and ! weighing more than 1,700 pounds. He is one of the largest thorough- breds ever bred in this country. Whopper was broken as a yearling but did not train as a juvenile be- According to Mr. Headley he was the largest foal he ever saw. The brown coll is by Pharamond 2nd out of Romance. | Headley, who has bred and raced horses for a generation, rates Whop- per as the most promising colt he ever owned. Carnera of Theroughbreds The Carnera of the thorough- breds raced last year as a 3-year- old, and while he did not’ set the turf world a fire he showed enough to promise big things as a 4-year- old. He got off to a fine start by winning the Inaugural handlcap at Hialeah Park, in Miami, and later added the ' Miami Shores handicap to his string of conquests. He lest a couple of close ones to lightly weighed horses but on each occasion showed the speed, courage | and endurance of a real cham-| pion. He was easily the sensation' of the Florida racing season. This equine giant, with legs big and strong enough to carry his big body, is just the type of thorough- | hida e \cfvmpxcs because he had been con- |at Oseka |tongue in chac Cardinals are half a dozen lads from the minors who averaged 44 stolen bases in their respective leagues last season. Lyle Judy (right) set a world record of 107 base-thefts while with the Cardinal farm at Springfield, Mo., in the Western Association last year. The sec- ond-ranking bag-pilferer going up to the Cardinals is Lynn King (left), who swiped 35 sacks while playing outfield with Houston’s Texas League club last year. They will team with Pepper Martin (shown in action), who led the National League in stolen bases in 1933 and 1934 and placed second } ST. LOUIS, March 5.-—National | League catchers may find |have fallen among thieves when {gang of St. Louis. } To accompany the base-stealing genius of the veteran Pepper Mar- | tin—second among National League |bag pilferers last season and first| ‘the two years before—the Cardinals .ha\«e added six rookies whose tal- lents run to larceny of the base | paths. | The six averaged 44 stolen bases | per‘man last summer. | Lyle Judy, who stole 107 for ‘Sprmgfield. Mo., in the Western Association, to break the world |record last. season, had consider- lnb!e te do with the high average, |but all the rookies finished near |the top in their respective leagues. Next to Judy comes Lynn King, Houston outfielder who swiped 35 they | they meet the 1936 model gas-house in this department in 1935. lColumhus O, was third among American Association “thieves” with |29 stolen bases, and 27 steals by Stuart Martin, Asheville outfielder, |earned him fourth place in the Piedmont League. Louis Schoffic and Eddie Morgan lare a base-stealing pair from Bloomington, Iil, of the Three-I | League. Morgan grabbed 30 bases to take second place in the league and Scoffic was third with 23. The newcomers will be shooting ‘a! Pepper Martin’s place of suprem- acy among Cardinal base stealers, but Pepper has demonstrated his) |ability to lead fast company. He/| picked off 20 bases lase season, 23 the season before and 26 in 1933. e e——— GO TO CHICHAGOF John Neimo and George Snyder bred breeders in this country have been trying to develop for many, many years. Slow in growing into his real strength and speed, he has been wisely nursed along by his owner and should leave an im- pressive record on the American turf before he is retired. Omaha Trains in Private In his determination to see that his thoroughbred, Omaha, is given every possible opportunity to train unhampered, William Wood ward borrowed a page from the boxer's book on training and ordered that the American 3-year-old champion of 1935 be trained in private. News- paper photographers and others have been barred from Freemason Lodge, the training stable operated by Captain Boyd-Rochfort at New- market, England. British turf experts have shown keen interest in the 1935 Ken- tucky Derby winner and the gen- eral impression is that if the colt is as good as they are led to be- jlieve, and if Captain Boyd-Roch- fort is not hampered by a recur- rence of the leg trouble which hindered Omaha last autumn, then the chestnut son of Gallant Fox is reasonably sure of starting for the coveted Ascot Gold Cup as the favorite. SPEND WHERE YOU VIAKI-: 11" |sacks to equal the Texas League are passengers aboard the Roedda| The Ascot Gold Cup entry, num- - e BIIOP IN JUNEAY, FIRST! record. Pat Ankenman, shortstop from ‘Ior Chichagof where they will be ‘employed by the mine company. erically ‘strong, is not particularly classy. None among the present | WHERE N THE WORLD 1S M& OVERCOAT ?I'VE LOOKED FOR\T EVERY WHERE - POLE-VAULTER | FOR OLYMPICS ekt for Army Service| Plans to Enter Big { Inter. Games \ TOKYO, March 5.—Shuhei Nish- ida, Japan’'s courageous pole-vaulter who captured second place in his event in the Olympic Games at Los Angeles four ago, probably will make gh for American vaulters again at Berlin next sum- | mer. Until recent! weuld y it una feared Nis- ilable for the But when he examination army surgeon, with and probably with ructicns n higher up, found Nishida. who is one of tnhe finest all-around athletes in the world, physically miiitary serv- ice, The pole-vau't from service for e army for physical an unfit for r and to! when the g in with the plans of Jap: authorities. Nishida already light training, and barring will be a ma! y of the Ja track and field team at Berlin Last year was Nishida's best y He ‘¢pnsistently cleared 14 something he did only rarely 1932 when he defeated Bill and all the other American stars except Bill Miller of Stanford at Los Angeles. His second place leap then was 3.28 meters (ab feet), while Miller di a half better. Fourteen feet is no gres ment for American vaulters days, but Nishida has the quaiity of turning on a little of something extra when competing for the Em- peror and the Rising Sun. He had |never done within 3 inches of 14 feet before he had to do il at Los Angeles OREGON unIV. beautifully in aber BEATS IDAHO MOSCOW, Idaho, March 5.—The University of Cregon basketeers lest night defeated Idaho by a score of 49 to 33. en«.ry. except. Omaha, is rated very highly. If Omaha is a shade better horse than was the American-bred Reigh Count, which finished second to \Xnver&hm at Ascot in 1929, the | British experts are of the opinion | that the home-bred contingent will have to show improvement of | last year’s form to beat him. Reigh Count won the Coronation Cup at Epsom in a field of nine, 'but was beaten by two lengths in| the Ascot race by Invershin. U. S. Department ot Agriculture, Bureau of Public Roads, February 26, 1936. Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Bureau of Public Roads, 419 Federal & Territorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska, until 9 o’clock, AM., on April 2, 1936, for surfacing 4.918 miles of the Mitkof Highway, Petersburg-Cannery Section located within and adjacent to the Tongass National Forest, First Judicial Di- vision, Territory of Alaska, involv-| ing 2,000 cubic yards crushed gravel, i top, and 500 cubic yards crushed gravel, supplemental. The attention of the bidder is directed to special | provisions covering subletting and | assigning the contract, minimum | wage rates and alternate bid to be! submitted in case he may desire to offer any foreign articles, material or supplies. Where plans and speci- fications are requested a deposit of $10.00 will be required to assure their return within thirty days after the opening of bids. Checks shall be made payable to the Bureau of Pub- lic Roads, Juneau, Alaska. Plans and Specifications may be examined | at the Bureau of Public Roads, Fed- eral & Territorial Bldg., and the U. S. Ferest 8ervice, Commercial Build- ing, Ketchikan, Alaska. Bid Blanks may be obtained at the office of the Bureau of Public Roads, Juneau, Alaska. M. D, Williams, District Engineer. DEMOLAY MEET {the Douglas Eagles Tuesday | ALASKA MINING LOAN REQUESTS STUDIED FORMER SKAGWAY RESIDENTS ARE TO | MANAGE CAL. INN val has been an applications Finance Cor< loans, Territorial of Mines B. D. S:ew-‘ iminary given to some for Recor poration mi. Commissio art said today Attention was called to ibe fack that applications must be madé early, as last year most of themj were entered after August 15, and as a result only ten per cent were granted “Mining to make Engineering If wing of ore, loan may app Al The Los Molinos (California) News ictic Herald of February 20, contains the following article relative to prom- | inent Skagwayites Mr. and Mrs. M Seattle, Washington, arrived in Los ‘Molinos Sunday to take over the management of the Los Molinos Inn for Mrs. R. E. Gault of Skagway, Alaska, the owner of the Inn, and a niece of the late P. W. Snyder, for- mer owner. The Vandykes, formerly of Skag- way, and old-time friends of the | tate Gaults, have for the past six yvears| .y, ymanaged the Hawthorne Squa re|me: i Apartments in Seattle l'up ‘the property.” Mr. and Mrs. Gault have for the R past six weeks been staying at the ) Inn, SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! J. Vandyke of loans are not granted bodies available,” The and Mining Journal there is a definite a $20,000 develops be made to opefl 1 SITKA FIVE IN HOOP CONTEST 'Fast Tliger Team Tangles with City Champs in Game Tonight Washable Kalsomine LAUX WA The Siika Tigers, spurred on by their speedy showing in trouncing night, will meet the DeMolay basketeers in a four-star contest in the Junea ) High gym tonight. The DeMolays, champions of the Cily League, will attempt to main- tain their position as a topnotch team against the assault of the fast Sitka five, who have lost only one out of 11 in their playing tour of Southeast Alaska In the opening game, schedulec to start at 7:30, the Tallapoosa Sail- crs will meet (he Douglas Eagles The contest was one of those post- poned from the City League sched- HABLE KALSOMINE is applied 1 ordinary calcimine, and is inexpensive, durable. It has the soft, delicate beauty of water colors. It has great hiding power, and will cover practically all stains and discolora- tions. Finger-prints and dirt cleaned from this durable finish by gentle washing or sponging with mild soap and water. Ordinary water spots leave no stains. Maximum washability is obtained about four weeks after application. may be perfectly One coat is sufficient over most surfaces. Laux Washable Kalsomine is very easy to plv, has much better coverage than ordinary calcimine and kills and covers most stains and discolorations. Mix with cold water only Thomas Hardware Co. PHONE 555 Walter P. Scott — You are invited to present this Joupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and recelve tickets for your- self and a friend or relative to see “Mark of the Vampire” As a paid-up subscriber of The Daily Alaska Empire Good only for current offering Your Name May Appear Tomorrow WATCH THIS SPACE @ HENNESSY COGNAC BRANDY! | jote . s. acents. Schieffelin & Co. ' NEW YORK CITY « IMPORTERS SINCE 1794 O. B. Williams Co. CASH and DOORS BUILD NOW Building Cost Will Soon Increase Our Prices Are Always the Lowest Plain 2 Light Windows 24x24x24x1 % 28x24x24x1 % 30x24x24x1 % i E z THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau QOur Services to You 3egin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat 36x24x24x1 % GM—Glass Measure Special Sash 20x35x1 %, 6-light . 24x41x1 %, 6-light 24x47x1 %, 6-light 24x53x1 %, 6-light 24x54x1 %, 8-light OM—Outside Measure $1.14 1.34 147 1.65 1.67 SEE US FOR PERFECT SERVICE! CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. No. 1 One Panel Doors 2'0"x6'8"x1 % 2'4"x6'8"x1 % 2'6"x6'8"x1 % 2'8"x6'8"x1 % 10-Light French Doors 20 'x6'8"x1 % 24"x6'8"x1 % 26"x6'8"x1 % 28"x6'8"x1 % ... Lumber by the Culofld 2x4 No. 2 Com. Per M FBM $17.00 2x6 No. 2 Com. Per M FBM 16.00 2x8 No. 2 Com. Per M FBM 1650 2x10 No.2 Com. Per M FBM 16.00 1x3 No, 2 Com. Per M FBM 17.00 Subject to Change Without Notice Write us for all your building requirements. Our Prices and Material Are Always the Best Special 6% Cash Discount All Orders $50 or Over Write for Free Illustrate¢ Catalog O. B. Williams Co. 1933 First Ave. So. Seattle, Wash. 370 THE TERMINAL “Deliciously Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ALASKA MEAT CO. FEATURING CARSTEN’S BABY BEEF—DIAMOND TC HAMS AND BACON—U. 8. Government Inspected