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THERE'S E.Z.NIMROD, THE WILD ANIMAL HUNTER. I HOPE HE DONT SEE ME HE'S ALWAYS GOT A BiG LIE TO TELL WOMEN ELKS ARE TO BOWL OWN TOURNEY PersonneT;f‘TeamS An- nounced—Also Sched- ule and Prizes A new Elks tournament for wom- en bowlers, comprising eight teams, will start tcmorrow night at the Elks Alleys. Several attractive prizes have been donated by local business houses and a schedule of matches has been arranged. The personnel of the various| teams follow: | California Grocery Edith Bavard Mrs. Caro Kay Goodwin 171 136 124 Team total 433 Sanitary Grocery Mrs. Taylor Donnie Taylor Mrs. Pullen Handicap 153 148 129 3 Team total 433 Santiary Meat Co. Mrs. Faulkner Mrs. Stewart Dalma Hansen 1M 138 124 Team total 433 Piggly Wiggly Grocery Mrs. H. Messerschmidt.. 160 Mrs. Peterman 146 Alice Coughlin 127 Team total Kaufmann Cafe Mrs. Kaufmann Mrs. Bringdale Mrs. Reynolds . 153 150 130 Team total 433 Bon Marche Store i Mrs. Lavenik 166 ! Mrs. Sperling 149 Helva Paulson 117 Handicap 1 Team total 433 United Food Store Mrs. White Miss Monson Mrs. Burford Handicap 162 | 151 o 14l 10 Team total 433 Caro Wholesale House Mrs. Petrich Mrs. Duncan | Mrs. Tilden Handicap Team total Schedule The complete schedule of match play in the new tournament in- cludes the following games: ] Friday, March 26: i 7:30—California Grocery vs. Sani-| itary Grocery. | 8:30—Sanitary Meat vs. Piggly | Wiggly. | 9:30—Kaufmann's Cafe vs. Marche. Monday, March 30: AH, JIGGS! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1936. | HAVENT SEEN YOU SINCE | CAME BACK FROM AFRICA- | WILL TELL YOU OF My EXPERIENCE Jdoe —~DIMAGGIO - THE SENSATIONAL COAST YOUNGSTER- MAKES HiS BIG LEAGUE DEBUT; W ™HE PUTS HIM ON THE 4 sSPOT” - 8U7 THERE IS A READY - MADE SPOT AWAITING HIM N THE NEW YORK £ s OUTFIELD ~THE YANKEES NEED & > JOE HIT 298 LAST SEASON HE TossaEUO AND THERE | WAS=-ON THE RIGHT OF ME WERE TWO LIONS. ON THE LEFT-THREE HIPPO- POTAMUSES- IN BACK OF ME By GEORGE McMANUS DO THEY CHARGE THE LARGEST TIGER I EVER SAW By Pap| 21 THE FIRST CONTRACT ~ © HE YANKEES €AMT HIN 18HT 8:30—California Grocery vs. Unit- ed Food 9:30—Sanitary Meat Marche. Saturday, April Vs, Bon 18: 7:30—Bon Marche vs. Caro Whole- o sale. Tuesday, April 21: 7:30—Sanitary Grocery vs. ‘Wholesale. 8:30—Kaufmann’s Cafe vs. Unit- ed Food. 9:30—Piggly Wiggly Marche. Prizes Donated Among the prizes donated by Caro vs. Bon {are: High game total—One Pyrex Cas- | serole; donated by Thomas Hard- ! ware Company. High three-game total One! Spode cup and saucer; donated by Ludwig Nelson Jewelry Store. Greatest improvement—One stand lamp; donated by Alaska Electric Light and Power Company. Low game total—One $2 box of candy donated by Stocker’s Pool Room. Team prizes are: Most games won—Cash, $21. Second team most games won— | Cash, $9. High team score—3 games, 1 pen- | $3 and $4 each are donated,one each by Butler Mauro Drug Store, | SPURT SLANTS The advance notices on Joe Di- the coast youngster who s his big league bow with the New York Yankees this spring, have placed him on the well known “spot,” but at the same time, no rookie ever found such a ready- made spot awaiting him if he has the goods to deliver. The Yankees are badly in need of a hard-hitting outfielder. Their |local merchants for the tournament efforts to land one by trading with other American League clubs failed to produce the right man, so their thougnts and hopes have turned to the young Italian from San Fran- | eisco. Joe Picks 'Em Off The experts on the coast are of the unanimous opinion that Di- Maggio is a great ball player in | the making. They report him to be a devastating hitter, fast as they come and blessed with a throwing larm that has struck terror into the hearts of ambitious Pacific Coast League base runners last season. His record of 30 assists indicates that he has been very {much on the job in tossing to the BON ¢l each. These pencils valued at right bases. | DiMaggio, through his own mag- | nificent performances on the dia- 7:30—United Food vs. Caro whole-‘}{an-y Race Drug Store and Juneau | mond, is entirely responsible for the sale. 8:30—California Grocery vs. Pig-} gly Wiggly. ; 9:30—Sanitary Grocery vs. Sani-| tary Meat. Thursday, April 2: ) 7:30—Sanitary Grocery vs. ngly\ Wiggly. | 8:30—Bon Marche Store vs. Unit- ed Food . 9:30—Sanitary Meat vs. mann’s Cafe. Saturday, April 4: 7:30—Piggly Wiggly vs. Kauf- | mann’s Cafe. 8:30—California Grocery vs. Bon | Marche. 9:30—Sanitary Meat vs. Caro ‘Wholesale. Tuesday, April 7: 7:30—Sanitary Grocery vs. Kauf-| man’s Cafe. 8:30—Piggly Wiggly vs. Food. 9:30—California Grocery vs. Caro Wholesale. Friday, April 10: 7:30—Sanitary Grocery vs. United | Food. 8:30—California Grocery vs. Sani- | tary Meat. 9:30—Kaufmann's Cafe vs Caro ‘Wholesale. | Monday, April 13: 7:30—California Grocery vs. Kauf- mann’s Cafe. 8:30—Sanitary Grocery Vs. Marche. 9:30—Sanitary Meat vs. Food. Thursday, April 16: Kauf- | \ | | i United Bon United | 7:30—Piggly Wiggly vs. Caro| ‘Wholesale. yDrug Store. Poor team score—3 games, 1 din- ner each. { ballyhoo that precedes him and buud.s up so much hope in the ,‘hearLs of the Yankees. His work OUT TO TRY AGAIN IN 1936 Lou McEvoy (left) and the veteran Sam Gibson (right) are two members of the 1936 pitching staff of the San Francisco Seals. Though the Seals copped the Pacific Coast league pennant last season, a tougher road is forecast for the 1936 season. (Associated Press Photo) BAC ' for the past two seasons has been such that even the most conserva- tive judges of baseball material cannot see how he can possibly fail to make the big league grade. Al- lowing even for considerable d=fla- tion, his record indicates that he has enough to earn a regular place in the Yankees' outer garden. Young Joe hit 399 for the San Francisco Seals last season, hitting 46 doubles, 17 three-baggers, and 3¢ home runs. He batted in 151 runs with his 269 hits and scored 171 runs himself. He is a right-handed hitter, but that really doesn’t mat- ter much, for he is definitely a line hitter. Of course, the short right field fence in the Yankee Stadium is inviting to a man bat- ting from the other side of the plate but Manager Joe McCarthy | is likely to be satisfied if Jo2 comes through with his share of line’ drives which land safely in the vast left field area. Hoag a Problem In the past the Yankees have had fair luck with their coast leaguc purchases. Bob Meusel, Mark Koe- nig, Lefty Gomez, Frank Crossetti and Tony Lazzeri learned their| baseball lessons in California before starrring in the New York livery. Colonel Ruppert has had his dis- appointing experiences, of them. Right now, one of the| problems facing Manager Joe Mec- | Carthy is just -what to do with| Myril Hoag, another coast leaguer! who came to the Yankees with a| $60,000 price tag. Hoag came up as| an outfielder, tried for a spell at| third base and now is being groom- | ed to take his turn on the mound. Hoag has a marvelous throwing arm and looked good on those in- frequent occasions last season when | he was sent out to pitch in batting practice. | It is interesting to note that the Yankees have been unusualy lucky with Italians from the coast. Laz- zeri and Crosetti of the present day squad stand out, while a few years ago the colorful Ping Bodic delighted Yankee rooters with hi hard hitting. and amusing antics. HEADS VIOLETS NEW YORK, March 26—Milton Schulman, veteran forward, has been elected Captain of New York| University's 1936 - 1937 basketball squad. He also is a cross-country runner. | | FLIES 2,000 MILES | SAN FRANCISCO, March 26.—A' pintail duck banded near here and then shipped to the island of Molo- kai, Hawaii, was later shot at Los| Banos, Cal. Its course over the sea, was more than 2,000 miles. 1 e | SHOP IN JUNEAU. F'RST! : — e SPEND WHERZ YOU MAKE IT! too—plenty | - You TO GET IN THAT ZOO ? Washin gton U and Oregon State Playoff Tonight in Game for Olympic Fin als Stanferd although there was only a to 7 at the half. | e will have a final| nity tonight to nge th ‘ straight defeats in the con- ce play at the hands of Wash- N | The SEATTLE, State College March 26. — Ore; nd the Unive: fought their w ¢ games here last in Staniord iversity of pped Scuthern Cali- ier t ew York City. .o ROBERT ROUSE IS CGMING TC SPEND SUMMER lN JUNEAU| B game finals in of tonight's Olympic winner Washingicn v fernia 41 to Results of last night's game ed the Pac Coast major basketball in a weird tangle State in the ern Division ch drive nosed out ¢ Rebert Sonkel soloidling & year course at the Univer: of Washington, is a northbound - senger on the motorship Northland, | which will arrive here tomorrow The young man, who will his ur com night through an ea Southern C led all tr Ferrell Brothers ]om Red Sox srnia 1 the battle with Deail y> C fbss;cvo}d P:z_z_zg ACROSS . Piecea of work . Join battle 433rd asterold . Small wild ox 5. Protective covering . Short note to og the mind: collog. . Having won one game In a rubber of contract . Box 20. Flower il. Deposits of ore Skill . Pet name for a close relative . Ethereal salt ., Contestant . Russian moun- tains . Monkey . Lubricate . Related on the mother’s side . Tears apart . Guiding straps of a harness . Fodder pit . Concerning 6. Base of the decimal . Complement ot a mortise Allusion Cord . Sorrowtul Kind of wood Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle Historical perlods . Unit of weight for precious stones 21. . Think . Causing for- getfulness . Expire . The pick . Flower 35. Tally Ancient slaves . Crystalline pre cipitation from the clouds 2. Clock in the form of a ship 5. Cut suddenly [A] T [¢] P S P A [¢) D (0] R . Withdraw . Hindu demon 1. monkey 60. Rugged and steep 64. Hastened 66. Supernatural 68. Beseech 69. Muse of Iyric and amatory 0. n 3. Prophet DOWN 1. Variety ot « Reddish colored 5. .: 2 who causes eclipses by swallowing the sun and ‘moon Anclent Roman officials . Entitled Serpents . Nimble and active: . Metal cement . Large woody plants . Type mea- sures . Atonement . Persian poet Arrange and classify Great Lake . Render uncon- sclous . Force air nolsily through the nose collog, . Russian ialand sea 59. Glut . Learning . Crescent- shaped figure Belgian river 5. Stain Massachusetts e 7 ] | II' g1 1 11 71 1 1 1 | AR RCARRTRRCAC 00 JUNFAU BOYS’ ATHLETIC CLUB SMOKER 35 ROUNDS OF BOXING AND WRESTLING v Firgt workout of the Ferrell brothers, famous brother-battery of the Red Sox, after they had joined the Boston squad at their Sarasota, Fla., training camp, indicated that Pitcher Wes, left, and Catcher Rick, right, would figure importantly in chances of Tom Yawke team to snare the pennant. Cancelled rent receipts . . OR A completely paid-for HOME! Money is now available for financing Let Us Explain Our New Plan COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY Phone 587 ELKS’ HALL Saturday 8:00 P. M. All proceeds to be used for the purchase of new equipment. Admission 50¢ i Sl 0000 A ! ) HOROUGH AND.. pconOMICAL everything you want you'll find in a GENERAL &P ELECTRIC AMONG ITS FEATURES! Activator Washing Action. Permanent Oiling. Life-long Adjustable Mechanism. Quiet Washing Operation. Trouble Free GE Motor. Built by General Electric. ONLY $60.00 CASH—A Real Washer Value if there ever was onel 100% General Electric quality. SOLD ON EASY PAYMENT PLAN Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18