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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1936 y GEORGE McMANUS 77T THE REXALL sfOR=" o eoie. Reliable | RADIO EQUIPMENT NOW SON-NO ONE CAN SUCCEED SORRY-1 WUZ A LITTLE SOME SLANT B WITH PAA CONTACTS | _ACCURACY s IN THIS WORLD WITHOUT HARD LATE-JIM-BUT | JUST JOUR SON % o ; s e NP A T S B e | HAS ON LFE- Ll | Two successful tests of the newly- compound BUSINESS-PUT IN A FULL DAY A TALIK ON WORWK=-\'VE - 5 ww X AND WORK NIGHTS = NECES~ ‘E‘E"\- HIN\AA'E‘_I_ KEYED UR i | ;}s\;m;‘! rn:llu1 (*(}n,x the o -DON'T THINK M LECTUR- HAS EW SLANT | PA airchild 71 s were figz(cu— A GM;“, :{ou UR: ON LIFE NOW-— COME ON- | made from the air yesterday after- rescriptions. | noon by Pilot Alex Holden and R 1J. McCrary, PAA radio technician 3| ] | and operator who installed the ap- Butler Maury Drug Co. 1 | paratus, SR s 3y Tests were conducted on all fre- | r— e quencies within the range of the s ; ; radio equipment, and all of the 14 | Rice & Ahlers Co. { PAA radio stations, including Fair- HEATING PLUMBING : banks, were contacted. The Fair- SHEET METAL WORK child plane is now ready for char- 3 | ST ter flights, Pilot Holden stated. PHONE 34 i Lyman S. Peck, Vice President : and General Manager of the PAA, will visit Juneau shortly after May 'y 1, according to Pilot Holden ‘ - >ee | * BOSTON WINS HARD GUNTEST goods companies form the main |earning field for the woman pro- | fessional,” said Patty. “Obviously, : ithere aren’t enough companies to | make this line of work profitable to more than a few women pro- | fessionals.” The philosophy of the midwest- ern high school lass was that golf’s | heights are too jittery, victory too ;uncertain. for a player to pin his |livelihood upon the game. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON- FINE || Watch anc Jewelry Repairing MRS. FAULKNER | PAUL BLGEDHORN | | SHOP IN JUNEAU" |of money now available to the men is put up for the women. Room for a Few “Endorsing clubs and staging ex- hibition matches for the sporting FRONT STREET By‘Pap’{ == TAKES HONORS ELKS ALLEYS |Play-off of Three-Way Tie | in Women Elks Tourney | | Scheduled for Friday The Women Elks Tournament | match play at the Elks Alleys last night resulted in a three-way tie between the Sanitary Meat, Caro Wholesale and Kaufmann's Cafe s NEW MANAGEMENT LEONARD’S VALET SERVICE Elina kantakan Elvi Wolti EXPERT CLEANING PRESSING—HAT BLOCKING « Red Sox “Tecking Crew Does Things to White Sox Hurlers E 1GHT cTRA S\JEHKEY GLENMORE DISTILLERIES (0 BOSTON, April 29.—A quartet of Chicago hurlers suffered under a| ~YOU can never tell when your | 16-hit attack by the Red Sox [8ame Will go sour on you,” she ob-| . wrecking crew who pounded out |served. “I play a lot of golf because | a 11 to 8 victory in the season’s|it happens to be my best, as well as : first game against a western team.|MY favorite, sport. I'd turn pro if PHONE 576 QUISVILE OwinsBORD Lefty Grove turned in a neat tDhat were necessary for me to con- relief pitching performance in the | iU playing in all the best tourna- eighth inning, retiring the last MENs but I'm not interested in string of batters in a row after CArving out a professional career in Chicago had rallied for three runs. |the same. Jimmie Foxx blasted out his| “As for my business career, I'm fifth home run of the season dur- going to have me a store. I want ing the game. |to run a business. I'll go to college, ‘}pl‘efernbly one where I can try for | the school golf team, and study subjects to fit myself for the busi- Oakland 1; Los Angeles 4. ness world. I want a women's cloth- San Diego 4; Portland 11. ‘ing shop, but if I can't make a go Sacramento 5: San Francisco 12.|of that, well, T'll branch out and Missions 4; Seattle 5, eleven in- sell anything; even groceries.” GAMES TUESDAY Pacific Coast League b i J “A Vicious Circle” National League Patty believed there was one Philadelphia 9; Piusourgh 7. !broad step that might be taken Boston 5: Cincinnati 2, New York-St. Louis, rain. Brooklyn-Chicago, rain, American League Cleveland 1; New York 2 St. Louis 2; Philadelphia 4. Detroit 8; Washington 1. Boston 11; Chicago 8. . Jtoward professionalizing women's golf on a major scale—a Women's National Open tourney, comparable |to that prime classic of men’s golf. | “This step seems hardly justi- | fiable, though, until there are a lot !more women pros,” she explained, |“and so it’s all a vicious circle.” The Minneapolis links sensation fared well on her Florida sojourn, STANDING OF CLUBS PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE ‘vxmning two of her five tournament Won Lost Pct. efforts, playing in the final of two Oakland 22 9 710 others and reaching the semi-final Seattle 19 13 594 ©of another. Prrtland 16 13 552 It was in the Palm Beach wom- Missions 16 14 533 en’s tournament that Patty prob- San Francisco 14 15 483 8bly had her greatest satisfaction Sacramento 12 17 .414|0f the winter, although this wasn't San Diego 12 20 375 one of the contests she won. It Los Angeles 10 20 333/ Was there that she defeated Mrs. NATIONAL LZAGUE JGlenna Collett Vare of Merion, Pa., Won Lost Pet.|Women's national champion. Mrs. New York .. 8 3 97| Vare stopped Patty in“the final of Cincinnati 7 6 538 |the national at Interlachen, Minne- Phtiadelphia . [ 7 joo‘apolls, last summer, and ironically Chicago .... 6 6 500 the 3-and-2 licking Patty adminis- Brooklyn .. 6 6 500 (tered at Palm Beach was in the St. Louis 4 5 .444 | Same proportions as her loss to the Pittsburgh .. 4 6 400 | Pennsylvanian veteran. Boston 4 7 364, Patty won the championship of AMERICaN LEAGUE golf club champions at Punta Gor- Won Lost Pc‘_‘da and the Miami Biltmore wom- Cleveland ....... RE 4 667 |€n’s invitation at Coral Gables. She Boston . 9 5 643 |reached the final at Palm Beach' New York 8 5 615|and Ormond Beach, but lost in the Detroit [ 4 583 | semi-final, victim of the veteran Washington 7 8 467 Mrs. Opal S. Hill of Kansas City, Chicago 4 6 .400 | 8t St. Augustine. Philadelphia 4 8 333| Her teammates hoped the stub- St. Louis 3 10 231 |by. thick-limbed Patty would draw | England’s young rising star, 19- year-old Pam 3arton, as her oppo- nent in the Curtis Cup competi- tion. SPORT SLANTS Patty Berg of Minneapolis, young- est girl ever chosen to serve on the United States Curtis Cup golf squad, which essays to defend this ——————— FLOAT AND HANG TO BE PAINTED NOW international chalice against the attack of Britain's best linkswomen on May 6 at Gleneagles, Scotland, has some very positive ideas about professionalism. Patty would turn pro, she assert- ed recently in Coral Gables, Fla., only if so many other women trad- ed glory for gold that the amateur tournament field for women be- came virtually extinct. “I don't think this will ever come to pass” said red-haired, freckled Patty, just turned 18. “For one thing, the women aren’t going into the pro field on a large scale until something like the same amount The work of painting the Alaska air Transport float and hangar, in- side and out, will be started tomor- row morning by Mark Storms. Blue and yellow, to match the colors of the Patco plane, owned by the Al- aska Air Transport, and the Klem ‘Skylark” seaplane, owned by the Juneau Flying Club and based at the float during the summer sea- | son, will be applied to the float and) hangar. MINNEAPOLIS ) — AMEMBER OF ™E U.S. CURTIS CuP TEAM AT 1& ~THE YOUNGEST GOLFER. EVER. TO Mrs. Kaufmann 183 184 175— 542 y e & . VAfing;u_;I.E \ S VE N T Mrs. Bringdale. 150 150 150—°450 Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat IF[Q35 TITLE R SQLAD Mrs. Reynolds .. 123 173 161— 457 RS <) Dar’ SR TOURNAMENT A Fights Revorved by The Asavciated Fross Totals 456 507 486—1449 Ay SOt e T oo R L UNITED FOOD i 4 % kT 2 Mrs. White 182 204 156— 542/ McCormick 208, e b i"] EMhS Monson . 184 154 137— 475 s T T i Mrs. George .. 151 132 128— 411 B i B Handicap 10 10 10— 3 TWO IES APPROVED LAMPS for Sab! 201 203 191— 595 o T iRy EI_IM'NATIUN i 197 154 156— 501‘HUNGEH PRUTEST Tl 521 500 4311458 o__s .al Kegel 166 190 152— :’)08' Bon Marche vs. Sanitary Meat @ pecl o 3 F L » el g | i BON MARCHE 4 — P - Mrs. Lavenik .. 188 156 201— 545 | - Totals 564 547 499—1610| ST. LOUIS, April 29.—Forty job | SEMl INA Team A eliminated. |less men and women are encamped Mrs. Sperling .. 149 161 161— 471 COMBINATION OFFER R s o N |in the City Hall for the second day :el‘:“ Paulson . 120 142 134— 405 IN Styl IES Brid L as a hunger protest against failure Handicap 1 1 =09 ew Style ri e Lam Neck-and-Neck Contest Is FOR.EST SERVICE of the Aldermen to provide addi- Ly E & E ;;; Y g P ? " tional relief money for the unem- otals — Bovlvled Lat Elllksh Al TO nglg}ifi'sf_ll.mchs’r Lo | AN AR s i 1 New Style IES Table Lamp eys Last Night | The Aldermen adjourned to May Mrs. Faulkner . 178 222 201— 601 ; 11 after referring the urgent relief Mrs. Stewart ... 152 157 145— 454 If you want to havg a pair of these Team I, inciuding Vukovich, Mor-! o g porwara, Forest Examiner, aid appeals to a special board Dalma Hanson. 170 141 146— 457 lamps, DON'T WAIT! gan and McCormick, eliminatec | has left on the Ranger X. Forest as a relief committee. e T A TR \Team A, composed of Sabin, Bog- |Service vessel, for the West Coast - .‘ '{s':::ze' o :2‘: b«fi)i?l 492—1512 ® i ince s Island, taking ; . gan and Kegel, in a spectacular :r fii;;‘g" :;n:v‘“':ss;fi"g timber|® ® ® ® % * ~ ® e & o & o The personnel of the three teams closely-contested bowling exhibition | v yc0 in that area. Dan H. Moller | ® AL THE HOTT'LS @ |who will compete next Friday even- ] . at the Elks Alleys last night. Team | will be chief of a party of elght or[® © ® € = o @ ¢ o o « v o Ing for the championship of the AIaSka Elect"c I-I I" & Puwu cn (I will bowl against the only team |nine CCC men who will be located |Women Elks Tournament follows: L] i ¢ in the contest, Team C,|in the district all summer making | Ehednien |_Sanitary Meat — Mrs, Faulkner, remaining in the contest, Team C, |10 the dis Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hough; C. S. Mrs. Stewart and Dalma Hanson, JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 lincluding Cleveland, Evans anc Forward probably will return w‘Canadny, Ketchikan; Otto Wlldc.i Caro Wholesale — Mrs, Petrich, ! Hudson, tomorrow night. for the | juneau in about six weeks. | Petersburg;, Mary Stroup, Yakima,|Mrs. Duncan and Mrs. Sarvela. \championship of the Eiks Elimina- i tion Tournament. Every member of both teams broic 1500, and both teams amassed. teanm totals of more than 1,600 points Team I won the first game by thc narrow margin of 7 pins, and los' the second game by the same count \resulting in a tied score of 1,111. In | the third game Team I staged a last- minute rally to win the game and the match by a difference of ¢ points. Sabin, of Team A, bowled the best total score of the evening, 595, and was second and third in the game scoring with 203 and 201. Mec- Cormick, of Team I, bowled the best individual game, 204, and was third in the totals with 544; and his team mate Vukovich was second in the totals with 548. A MATCH BETWEEN THESE teams, with a play-off sckmdulcd} for next Friday evening. LD BE A &’;%Nki?_rfi::”\:(—se AM:RlCAN Mrs. Faulkner, of the S,\nl;nv'v} AND BRITISH TEAMS MEET AT | Meat team, the cnly. bowler Formula for cutting fuel costs: INDIAN to start the fire . . . CARBONADO to to| GLENEAGLES, Scofl_ANcP:, o] [reak 20 Swioeulooh fimt plkos: l:’;i bank it day and night. MAY @' FOR. THE CURTISCop bowied the best game of the even- | PRICED RIGHT ing, 222. Mrs. Lavenik of the Bon G St PACIFIC COAST COAL total scoring with 545; and Mrs. | Kaufmann, of the Kaufmann's Cafe | team, and Mrs. White of the United JFood team, tied for third place COMPANY —PHONE 412— with scores of 542 each. Mrs. White | was with second in the game scoring 204, and Mrs. Lavenik and| - Feulkner tied for third place scores of 201 each. Kaufmann's Cafe won from Unit- ed Food, and Sanitary Meat defeat- | ed Bon Marche with the following complete scores: Kaufmann’s Cate vs. united Food KAUFMANN'S CAFE } ~ENGLAND'S § \Q-YEAR -OLD STAR WHO WAS [ RUNNER,-UP FOR THE BRITISH WOMEN'S TITLE LAST YEAR- THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the W. A. Chipperfield, District Rang- | Wash; Mrs. J. E. Bower, Yakima,| Kaufmann’s Cafe — Mrs. Kauf- er, returned to Juneau at the week | Wash. mann, Mrs. Bringdale and Mrs, end from the Sitka district where Reynolds. he was supervising Forest Service Zynda Dr. Harold Weatherman, Juneau:; {Mrs. A. R. Haydon, Annex Creek; e ENGINEER TO WRANGELL s i B e |Claude M. Hirst, Juneau; H. G.| . ”m Barrington, Wrangell; S. M. John-| H. J. Stahl, junior highway en- AFTER 6 00 P u.. 700—FO0T DOCK ls {son, Tacoma. gineer with the Bureau of Pu::;‘x: .4 o e BUILT, FUNTER BAY Alaskan iRoads, and two assistants, Richard | Philip Kinton, Seattle; L. Sin- A new 700-foot dock is being built at the Admiralty Alaska Gold aska Air Transport. A pile driver is still at work, Simmons said, but the new dock is nearly completed. - ~——— ARRIVES FROM SOUTH Ed Delaney, Carter Rice Paper Company representative, arrived on the Northwestern from the South. | - Mine at Funter Bay, according w,daughter‘ Tenakee; Mrs. Ole Sang Pilot Sheldon Simmons of the Al-)and boy, Tenakee. clair, Tulsequah; Carl Nielsen, Sit- ka; Mrs. R. W. Brundige and| .. ' ATTENTION ELKS Open House scheduled for tonight for Elks and their families has been postponed. Watch for later date. —adv. ————— LEAVES HOSPITAL Gerivels and Lloyd D. Liles, left| from Wrangell this morning on the B. P. R. vessel Highway to start work on the Shoemaker Bay- | Pat Creek project in that vicinity. It is a grubbing and clearing un- dertaking. SHOP IN YUNLAU, FIRST! — DR e e gl Complete scores were: s Mrs. Kate Smith and her baby | | ALL STOCK AND % mn; Hogg:L o Men's Eiimination Tournament ENTERS HOSPITAL were discharged from the Govern-| | J F’;TU'I“ES “You can get a E | Team I— Nick Peratrovich was admitted to | ment hospital last evening. | Juneau Frock Sho { ‘or a dollar or less — and It's 2| Vukovich 193 192 163— 518 [the Government Hospital yesterday, ——— | e JENNIE BRUMB‘::gg " Vinner! Ask your liquor dealer.”| Morgan 174 154 198— 526land will receive surgical treatment.” SHOP IN JU/NEAU, FIRST! 9. ‘n ‘- - - 2. - z BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG CAN YA (MAGIN SNUFFY? AN 8TOB E_THAT, JUS' GO (N AN' FIGHT, WEASY--AN' REMEMBER HOT AND HE'S WORRIED ABOUT WHAT T BEEN TELLIN' PEEK SNUFFY-- You ('M GONNA WA(T HERE--] TAKE A OUTSIDE AN By BILLIE DE BECK MARCELLY ! |‘ | CLOSING OUT | PHONE 226 if your Daily Alaske £mpire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by’ SPECIAL CARRIER to you THAT MUG HE'S GONNA FIGHT-- HAW-- HAW -- I HATE TO THINK WHAT YA ABOUT THAT RIGHT HANO --WHEN YA SEE TH' OPENIN'-- LET (M -HAVE T~ SEE WHAT'S DOIN'--- You LOOK KINDA HE'S GONNA DO To Bi(G BENNY--- HAW-- HAW-- ANX(00S -~ ANYTHING IMMEDIATELY. LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. ad