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BRINGING UP FATHER | DON'T SEE WHY | SHOULD HAVE ToO STAY IN WITH MAGGIE'S FRIEND ity PACIFIC COAST DAILY B.B.LEAGUE IS OFF, 60OD START Season Officially Opened Saturday — Crowds | Gather on Sunday SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, M,”u‘chI Y0.—Although the baseball season officially cpened Saturday in the Pacific Coast League, Sunday prov- ed the real start as the baseball rarks were well filled with enthus- icatic baseball fans for the double- headers and the players were given 1 regular holiday ovation. GAMES SUNDAY Portland 7, 2; Sacramento 1, 1 San Diego 9, 6; Los Angeles 2, 9. | Missions 6, 8; San Francisco 4, 0. | Seattle 8, 2; Oakland 1, 4. , TEN THOUSAND FAN WITNESS OPENING G AME BETWEEN SEALS, MISSIONS SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, March 30.—Ten thousand fans who braved the gloomy weather last Saturday afternoon watched the San Fran- cisco Seals, last year's champions, open the Pacific Coast League base- | ball season with a 3 to 1 victory | over the home town rivals, the| Missions. Sam Gibson, leading Seal | pitcher, was effective throughout | the nine innings. | SATURDAY GAME! Seattle 1; Oakland 6. Mission 1; San Francisco 3. San Diego, formerly Hollywood, 5; Los Angeles T Portland 0; Sacramento 2. Ao’ mnmwsms A e e | SPORT SLANTS Won Lost 1 STANDI PACIFIC A way back in 1924, Harold Os- Pet. horn won the Olympic high jump 867! and decathlon championships in 667 | paris. He has held national cham- 667 | pionships, indoor and out, and under 667 | the banners of the University -333 | Jinois and the Illinois A .C. I -333 | the high jump records to then un- 333 | heard of heights. At 38, Osborn still 333 | finds time to leave his studies at N o the Philadelphia College of Oste- opathy to compete in the important PARTY SURPRISES { track meets, and comes mighty close MRS. B. MILLER | to holaing his own with the present | crbp of leap Oakland Missions Los Angeles Portland San Francisco San Diego Seattle Sacramento 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 Coming as a complete surprice to! the honored guest, the Rainbow Class of the Northern Light Pres- byterian Church gave a birthday party for Mrs. Byron Miller, their teacher, in the church parlors Sat- urday night. Twenty-six persons attended the dinner and program which followed. | Daffodils and yellow taper candles | decorated the table and a birthday cake had been prepared for the hon- or guest by Mrs. Trevor Davis. The program which followed the | dinner was arranged and given by | the girls of the Rainbow class. Among the guests invited were the Rev. and Mrs. John A. Glasse, Mr. | and Mrs. Clarence Rands, and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Miller. | CHARLES WARNER RETURNS TO HOME Charles G. Warner, of the War- ner Machine Shop, who has beenl undergoing medical treatment in Seattle for some time, returned to | his Juneau home aboard the Prin- | cess Norah. —— .- SHOP IN JUNEAU? NOTICE | In the United States Commission- | er's (Ex-officio Probate) Court | tor the Territory of Alaska, Ju- | neau Commissioner’s Precifict. In the matter of the Administra- | tion of the Estate of JOHN R.| SILVA, Deceased. All concerred are hereby' notified | that J. H. Walmer was appointed on March 11th, 1936, by the United States Commissioner and Ex-officio Probate Court for the Territory of | Alaska, Juneau Commissioner’s Pre- cinct, as Administrator of the es- tate of JOHN R. SILVA, Deceased. All persons having claims against | said estate are hereby required to| present the same, with proper vouchers, withen six (6) months from the date hereof, to me at the “U & I Cafe”, Front Street, Ju- neau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, 14th day of March, 1936. JOHN H. WALMER, Administrator. First publication, March 16, 1936. Last publication, April 6, 1936. this NOW DONT TALK A LOT OF SLANG/ THIS LADY IS A GRADUATE ARD YOU MUST BE CN YOUR. DIGNITY THERE'S THE BellL- HERE SHE 1S CORMELIVE i N -or ComPron Junior: Cor. - — VATIONAL. AcAels OUTDOOR. HIGH SUMP CHAMPION. FROM COLLEGE S THE. LADS AUST HAVE LEGS OF SPRING seo IS TRIO IS S5TEEL- GOOD ENOUGH TO PLACE ONE, THO AND, THREE IN THE COMING OLYMPICS —— WALTER- -“MARTY- ~— HOLDER. OF THE WORLOD'S ouT- POOR RECORD - 6FT.0 81N s e He can do 6 feet 5 inches rl now, and while there are sever youngsters who can top that figure t be too hasty in counting the eteran cut of the Olympic picture Osborn At any rate, his slant on Ameri- ca’s prospects in the coming Olympic games in Berlin are enlightening he three leading American jumpers in the Olympic finals shuold -be Cornelius Johnson, Ed Burke and Walter Marty, if the latter can get in shape following his recent hernia. operation Osborn. “The fourth Am is 2 toss-up among Spitz, former N. Y U. s wreadgill of Temple Uni- ; Rusthforth, Utah; Murphy Ne mes Three i //4(’_4/ /)/(w.sz' your smok =IN HIS FIRST "NATIONAL" MEET \ THIS MARQUETTE FRESHMAN SETANEW INDOOR MARK OF 6FEET 8'9Ye weHes 1o TIE WITH CORNELIUS JOHNSON — BURKE BEAT JOWSON FOR THE _CHAMPIONSHIP N THE JUMP-OFF e f Notre Da Good of n Smith happen Sy hould Kot- and Perasalo of Finland, with olty and Martens of Germany having possible chances of boatmgi, out the first three named and the| third American entered. Gehmert of | Gemany and Bodossi of Hungary| have outside chances of coming through for a place.” Says Johnson’s Best Osborn did not hesitate to name! Cornelius Johnson, the Californial i kos w o HI, KIDS~ SLIP. ON THE MAKE-UP [N AND WE'LL STEP OUT - IS THERE A GOOD BEANERY CAN PUT ON THE FEED-BAG ? C’MON, LET'S GO/ the present About the fu- Osborn is of is certain at- er, due will be n under coach And the rec- to climb mpin ,| nation Tournament at the Elks Al- itions, is orld the " No. 8; the lik er, alt utstanding Tq ac 35§ th mployed anotl yfarr in ommoc Pollack Don Victor, Fairbanks recently , who has tructfon with plane in Tacoma, sold the ? accepting the offer of the Pollack Service to fly here, and expects to reside in Fairbanks per- manent J Pollack Service, which bases at Fairbanks, now has three planes, two Stinsons and a Bellanca, and three pilots, Herm Joslyn, Don Vic- tor and Frank Pollack, manager. pilot d ivirlg Nying ir 1 upon - SPENL WHERE YOU MAKE IT! D - \ SHOP IN JUNeAU. FIRST! wmiye they Satisfy la. le B //;(’9/ gY.L’(’ qyou 1(’/1(1/(1/011 wanl/ n a cioarelle [ ; Farl ("lcve!;nd Takes Hon- And | | contest. J scheduled for tomorrow night at the s WHERE WE ELIMINATION BOWLING NOW ATHALFWAY ors in Tournament Saturday The halt-way mark in the Elim- ‘leys was reached Saturday night when nine more of the original 54 bowlers were removed from further competition. Nine teams, or twenty- | seven bowlers, remain in the contest Farl Cleveland of Team No. 16 sowled the best three-game total re, 586, and the best individual me score, 235, for the evening. H. 1bin of Team No. 18, was second in he totals with 583, and Frank Met- calf of Team No. 9 was third with 74. Metcalf placed second in the | same scoring with 215, followed by | R. H. Stevenson fo Team No. 7 with | 213. Both Metcalf and Stevenson, however, were among those elimi- | nated. Team No. 16, Earl Cleveland, R.| G. Darnell, and Bob Kaufmann, de- feated Team No. 7; Team No. 17, Herb Redman, M. E. Monagle, and | A. Parks, won from Team | nd Team No. 18, Harry Sabin, y Tubbs and T. A. Morgan, beat | Team No. 9; the winners being en- titled to further competition in the | tcurnament. The losers, including | R. H. Stevenson, R. E. Robertson, | Paul Bloedhorn, Fred Barragar, G. Penson, Dr. W. H. Whitehead, Frank Metcalf, J. H. Walmer and Bud Car- el, were eliminated from the | Elimination Tournament games s Alleys include the following A vs. Team B, 7:30 p.m.; |Team C vs. Team D, 8:30 pn., and Team E vs. Team F, 9:30 p.m. Complete scores of Saturday night’s games were: Team No. E. Cleveland .. 184 R. Darnell 17 114 R. Kaufmann ... 176 176 471 457 Team No. 7 R. Stevenson .. 176 167 R. Robertson .. 193 168 P. Bloedhorn ... 113 122 | Totals 482 457 | Team No. 8. | F. Barragar 159 195 | G. Benson 167 187 160— 514 | Whitehead 140 113 186— 439 466 495 524—1485 Team No. 17. Redman 178 205 Monagle .. 157 114 3. Parks 210 196 545 Team No. 160 133 16 167 235— 586 | 136— 367 | 176— 528 Totals 547—1481 213— 556 | 165— 525 104— 339 482—1421 178— 532 Totals 148— 0531 153— 424 176— 582 Totals 4771537 F. Metcalf Walmer Carmichael 215— 574 139— 443 107— 407 Totals 461—1421 197— 583 205— 532 177— 487 513 510 579—1602 C. Tubbs Morgan 166 152 Totals 'YOUTHFUL RING AND MAT STARS IN BIG SMOKER Elks' Hall Is Crowded as Young Boxers, Wrestlers Show Their Skill From the first gong of the curtain- raiser to the last moment of the | tinal event, the smoker presented by he Boys' Boxing and Wrestling Club at the Elks Hall Saturday night was nteresting, entertaining, and en- y successful as evidenced by a owd of spectators, which filled :very available seat in the hall and most of the standing room, and shouted hearty encouragement and wproval to the contestants in the /arious events Juneau Police Department, par- ticularly Officers Kenneth Junge ind George Gilbertson, directors of the Boys' Club and producers of the moker, deserve great credit for the oxing and wrestling ability demon- strated by the boys who appeared on he program, as well as for the fine iegree of sportsmanship, rugge« ourage and determination display- *d by the youthful athletes. Tardi-Tyler Match One of the highlig's o7 e eve- ning was the boxing match between Ralph Bardi and Joe T who fought at 145 pounds each. Both Jardi and Tyler ¢isplayed rema: ble coolness and ring generalship n addition to well-matched stam- na and “socking” ability. Bardi >pened the three-round match with 1 terrific. barrage of miscellaneous ounches, but Tyler covered up and veathered the storm without in- ury. The second round became a harp-shooting engagement, with oth boxers landing several clean- ‘ut punches; the third opened with Tyler on the offensive in a spirited rally, and ended with both fighters resuming sharp-shooting tactics. The eferee’s decision that the Bardi- Tyler bout was a draw met with vo- ciferous applause from the audience. Bruner Scores Knockout Another bout which proved very popular with the spectators was the match between Frank Bruner and Milo Cap, which ended by a knock- out for Bruner. Shortly after the orening gong in the second round, Bruner caught Cap off balance with a lethal right to the jaw, and fol- to the button. Bruner weighed in at 166 and Cap at 165. Heavyweight Wrestlers Most spectacular and hilarious event on the program was a wrest- ling match between Earl (Man- | Mountain) Monagle, 250 pounds, and ‘Rod (Steam-Roller) McLeod, 238 | pounds. The two heavyweight wrest- | lers entered the ring wearing spiked military helmets in addition to regu- lation wrestling costume, and all the man-handling, bone-crushing tac- tics employed by championship pro- fessional wrestlers were featured in the ensuing affray. On two occa- sions, when Monagle threw McLeod partially out of the ring, only the rope-clutching ability of McLeod saved the spectators from suddenly finding a heavyweight wrestler in their laps. Despite a savage defensive and oc- casional flashes of punishing initia- tive, McLeod was pinned to the mat wice by the slightly heavier Mon- agle. Although the event was sched- aled to go only until the first fall, after its accomplishment the audi- ance clahored for more, so the car- nage was resumed. The ring platform creaked and threatened to collapse at times under the tremendous strain of the collosal struggle, but held together until the end. Battle Royal Another interesting and amusing event was a battle royal involving “three cotton-tops and a dark horse,” Frank Thomas, Anton Bartness, James Nielsen and Eddie Nielsen. Al- though the affair was declared a draw, Eddie Nielsen and Frank | Thomas proved slightly more durable than their smaller antagonists. Ned Zenger, 75 pounds, who wrest- | lowed it with an unnecessary right ' led Raymond Seeds, at the same weight, demonstrated the benefit of scientific training by securing a fall with a neck-hold shifted to a head lock, assisted by applied leverage. A fast and furious boxing match between Alex Miller and Al Zenger resulted in a draw with nobody badly hurt. Miller, weighing 115 pounds, and Zenger the same, provided plen- ty of action and were still fighting at the final gong. Baby Boxers Jackie Turoff, 52-pounder, and Bobbie Burns, who tips the scales at 49 pounds, engaged in a fistic argument which ended in a draw. Despite their extreme youth the Laby displayed fast and clever {aob and real hitting ability. obby Ferby, 98 pounds, and Jack MecDaniels, 106 pounds, swapped am= bitious punches for three rounds, and Sammie Nelson and Boebbie Con- ., who weighed in at 83 pounds each, fought a spirited three-round battle, both bouts ending in a draw decision. Gabe Paul, 90 pound wrestler, won a fall from Fred Sorri, 95 pounds, and Harold Zenger, 125 pounds, defeat- ed Tom Powers, 113 pounds, i a mat tilt. Elroy Hoffman, 88 pounds, and Ernie Tyler, 80 pounds, exchanged punches with considerable enthusi- asm for three rounds, ending in a draw. Official Staff | All of the boxing bouts were re- fereed by Billy Franks, and Con Carthun officiated in the wrestling encounters. Frank Metcalf announc- ed the various events, with the ex- ception of the Monagle-McLeod mat struggle, which was announced by Herb Redman. Norman Banfield served as time-keeper, and seconds for the various fighters and wrest- lers were: Jack Lennon, Robert Dal- ton, Leonard Stokes, Robert Ham- {lton, Valeria Trambetis, Grant Rit~ fer and Bobby Firby. Dr. W. W, Council attended as official physi- cian, Following the smoker all the youthful contestants were guests of officers Junge and Gilbertson at a hnmburgqx party in the Gastineait Cafe. Proceeds of the smoker will be used to purchase equipment for the Boys' Boxing and Wrestling Club, and to provide a picnic and outing next month for members of the club. SPLIT SEEN IN RANKS OF CALIF. TOWNSENDITES Dissention Increased After Reprimand by Leader to Congressman V/ASHINGTON, March 30.—Dis~ sention among leaders of the Town- send movement has increased with publication in the Townsend Weekly of a reprimand by Dr. Francis E. Townsend to Representative Me- Groarty, California Democrat, au- thor of legislation to put the plan iinm effect. | “The recent appeal by McGroarty \for Townsend people in California ;w immediately register from Repub- {lican to the Democratic party has created unnecessary confusion throughout California,” the article !said. Townsend in his article said McGroarty had gone right ahead |despite the statement from Town- | send headquarters that it would not :nndorse anyone to head any Presi- | dential delegation. | McGroarty has given permission |fo use his name in the California Presidential primary, asserting he is not a candidate but merely wanted the delegation to the Democratie |convention pledged to urge the Townsend plan plank. —————— \ ADMITTED TO HOSPITAL Anna Berhtold was admitted to the government hospital this morn- ng for surgical treatment. ,—— ENTERS HOSPITAL Paul Jones entered the’govesn~ ment hospital this morning as a surgical case. ¥ WOMEN BOWLERS RESUME SCHEDULE The Women Elks bowling tourna- ment will be resumed tonight at the Elks Alleys when United Food will bowl against Caro Wholesale at 7:30 o'clock, California Grocery will meet Piggly Wigggly at 8:30 o'clock, and Sanitary Grocery will encounter Sanitary Meat at 9:30 o'clock. IVERSENS RETURN FROM HONEYMOON L. E. Tversen, with the United States Forest Service, has returned with his bride, nee Elaine Radalet, from a honeymoon tour of the Pa- Old Mexico. ‘The newlyweds are living in their new home on Fritz Cove. Mr. Iver- sen is Deputy Fiscal Agent for the Forest Service. ———————— DRAMA CLUB TO MEET A meeting of the Drama Club will i be held tomorrow night at 7:30 in the high school assembly hall ac- cording to announcement made by ,‘Mra Grover C. Winn. All members are requested to attend as an im- portant business meeting will be‘ cific Coast, which included parts of | INSURANCE Allen Shattuck Established 1898 Juneau LLJHON ! _— ‘ OPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single 0-2 rings THE TE RMINAL “Deliciously Different Foods” Catering to Banquets and Private Dinner Parties