Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_RRINGING UP FATHCR . E ANY THING 1IN OF THE BANK ROBBERS- HE CONFESSED - HE SQUEALED ON THE OTHER TWO THAT GOT AWAY MATH THE CASH - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 12, 1929. By GEORGE McMANUS 1 KNOW - INNOCENT 8o, oy | KNEW | T BEFORE | SAW ITT IN THE PARPER- 1| MET HIM ON THE STREET: HE DAID HE WOZN T 1N TOWN WHEN T HAPRENED BUT-HE SAID HE WOULLD LIKED TO HAVE SEEN IN ON VT 1 TOLD YOLU At the half way mark these coaches stand unbeaten. Rockne, Notre Dame; Phelan, Purdue; Neyland, Tenncssee. Spears, Minnesota; Jenes, So. Cal. Lower, They are, upper, L to r., Cannell, Darimouth; Associated Press Photo Here is the fortificd arsenalifound by federal dry agents when they raided headquarters of a §1,700,000 liquor smugsling syndicate at Highlands, N. J. L to r, Sutherland, Pitisburgh; " B ik " 1 o, BERCER FUNERAL THURSDAY | Alaska. - officiate. The Rev. H. R. Allen will lof the Interment will be in|Father JAY Sports (A ted Press Feature Service) | NEW YORK, Nov. 12—Setting the pace for the first half of the foot- ball season may look good on paper | WE WARNED YOU before the freezing weather to put Anti- Freeze in your Radiator—NOW WE Warn You Again To equip your car with Weed Chains- We carry them in all sizes—for every make of car—BE WARNED. Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts Juneau-Young Mortuary, For Legal Advice, go to a Lawyer; For Medical Advice, see a Doctor; for INSURANCE ADVICE--- consult an INSURANCE MAN Insurance has become a highly specialized branch of business and requires expert study. Allen Shattuck, Inc. INSURANCE—Every Kind LISTEN, RADIO FANS Have you ever heard the new TEMPLE COMBINATION GRAPHOPHONE and RADIO SET perform? 0B | tue, Tennessee and Detroit g 1two of the most noteworthy winning s now existing in college Major Bob Neyland's Vol- unteers haven't been beaten since they drepped a decision to Vander- POss cryiees for Valentine ° Be:ger, of Fairbanks, who died re- cently aboarg Jhe steamer North- western, will"b@ held Thursday af- ternoon at 2 o'clock in the chapel of the Juneau-Young Mortuary, un- Menager officiating. In-| the Pioneers plot in Evergreen |terment will be made in Evergreen | etery. i Cemetery. - HOOLIHAN FU RAL ‘ Thirty-four scholarships are avail- | u. rvices for George Hoo- |able to the 35 students enrolled in #han will be held tomorrow after- |the department of Slavonic langu- | o — but to the big time coaches partici- Sport {bilt late in the 1926 campaign. For pating in this parade it means that much more hard work ahead. | These mentors, notably Cannell| of Dartmouth, Phelan of Purdue, Rochne of Notre Dame, Jones of Southern California, Spears of Min- nesota, Neyland of Tennessee and Sutherland of Pittsburgh, face an- other month of serious effort and then when they relax their teams “ALaN J.GouLn Football coaches like to scoff at |the “one-man team” idea on the may be a few notches lower in the |theory that it is headine stuff, ig- standings. ‘ncring the fundamental facts of Jack Cannell probably will easc|team work. up if the Big Green beats Yale “Eleven men have a job to do on since Dartmouth's other opponents every play,” says Bill Roper. “The are Brown, Cornell and Navy. Still flashiest ball-carrier cannot get he will have to look out for that away often if he does not have other bugaboo. 1blocking and interference.” Notre Dame is favored to take| Nevertheless the evidence is at Georgia Tech and Indiana in its hand, plenty of it, to illustrate the stride but Knute Rockne will have remarkable influence of one youth to bear down hard on November upon a whole team—for instance, 16 when his outfit takes on South- 144-pound Albie Bpoth of Yale, ern California in Chicago. Then who has stepped into the key spot after that engagement he will begin of the Eli lineup as a sophomore pointing for the Army game. just as though it had been made Major Bob Neyland of Tennessee for him. Perhaps it was, for Albie whose Volunteers have won 23 and grew up and learned his football tied two games of the last 25 played within the shadow of the Yale Bowl won't exactly ‘be able to coast! Not even Red Grange, who made through to the Southern conference the All-American team as a sopho- title. Strongest opposition will more, stepped off to any fancier come from Vanderbilt, Kentucky start than Booth, who has proved and South Carolina. ].hfmself the slipperiest carrier of Jimmy Phelan pulled his Purdue his weight and inches in the East Boilermakers through to the Big if not the whole country. Yale Ten lead at the mid-way point but looks like a different team the has yet to dispose of such formid- |moment bare-legged Albie trots out able elevens as Wisconsin and Towa on the field. Booth has the same with Indiana in the offering as a electric effect upon the Blue charge possible threat. | that Grange had upon Illinois, Wil- Jock Sutherland’s Pitt lfnnthers son or Cagle upon the Army, Clark must dispose of Ohio State and on Colorado College, Marsters on Carnegie Tech and run the risk of Dartmouth and the late George being upset by Penn State. |Gipp upon Notre Dame. For want Dr. Clarence W. Spears, Minne-'of a better word it can be labelled sota coach, has the heaviest part “football It.” of the schedule between his Go- phers and the big Ten title. Indi-| October shook up the gridiron ana, Towa, Michigan and Wiscon- dope. Harvard looked to be head- sin in the order named, remain t0 ed for another good year, after be dealt with by the 1929 edition of smearing Yale as a climax last fall, the Giants of the North. |but the Elis have no cause to be ———————— | pessimistic as they look forward to J. B. Stapler, engineer-in-charge the renewal of the ancient classic of the development work done the at Cambridge. On the same day past season on the Eaton property,that Booth was leading the victori- der the auspices of the Pioneers of | 100n at 2:30 o'clock in the chapel |ages at the University of Texas. 25 successive games, they show 23 victories and a brace, of ties, one with Vanderbilt and the other', with Kentucky. And nothing has bobbed up so far this season to check Tennessee's big parade. | Detroit, coached by Gus Dorais, | old Notre Dame star and famous as a team-mate of Knute Rockne,! U has run through 19 straight games | battles in a row, to Army and Notre | Dame, early in 1927 but hasn't been stopped since, showing one of the few clean slates in the whole coun- | try last year. ! . ALASKA JUNEAU PIN | BUSTERS WIN FROM | . BRUNSWICK SUNDAY unbeaten, untied, Detroit lost two! g The Alaska Tr=aau bowling team | defeated the Brunswickers Sunday E evening on the Brunswick alleys,| winning by 40 pins. The mine ag- | gregation’s total score was 2,462 to| 2421 for the Brunswicks. | Koskey was high scorer of the| match with a total of 533 pins. Pat- rick bowled high single game with 205 pins. The same teams are slated to bowl at'7:30 p.m. Wednes- day on the Brunswick alleys. The scores by games follow: Brunswicks | s 2087 157 138—500 164 159495 .. 161 167—517 125—403 | 154—501 Patrick Lang Nabalas Avoian Seston Totals ..... 743 2421 Ellengen Howell Schmitz Ashby Koskey 147491 161—496 | 167—474 169—467 163—533 807 2461 151 197 Totals 822 812 LOCAL MAN IS MADE PREDATORY ANIMAL ofoanale "‘ALASKA’ By Lester D. Henderson SECOND. (REVISED) EDITION IN CHRISTMAS ENVELOPE READY FOR MAILING FOR SALE AT NEWSTANDS Drop in on us in the near future and we will put on a demonstration that will tickle your radio taste. Alaska Electric Light and Power Company Juneau, Phone 6> Douglas, Phone 18 in the Taku district, left Juneau on the Princess Mary and is enroute to his home in Los Angeles, Cal Operations in the United Eastern camp were suspended for the season last week and will not be resumed 'ous Blue charge against Army, the Crimzon was being overwhelmed by the Green horde from Dartmouth. Washington and Michigan were at the peak just a few years ago, _yet each finished the October route HUNTER, GOES WEST‘I S. A. Branin, of this city, has; been appointed Territorial Preda- | tory Animal Hunter, it was made| known at headquéarters of the Al-| "ALASKA" until early in the Spring of next\with three successive defeats. In year. {two seasons the Wolverines have e . 'lost more games than they usually Michael Monagle, who recenily g.op jn g half dozen years. graduated tron! the Marquette ngi Princeton failed to win a single School, at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, y,4or game in October. To show arrived in Juneau on the Pnncess‘huw swiftly the mighty tumble, Mary and Is visiting his parents. G.o.gia Tech has been beaten Mr. and Mrs. James Monagle 8% yyic and eliminated from the their home .on Fm;h and East goiihern Conference race after Streets. Mr. Monagle passed the holding the champlonship two ycars State Law Examinations of Wiscon- o o roy sin last July and expacts to make his home in Juneau. Where consistency is a rare vir- aska Game Commission today. He| was formerly connected with 0.hp| isame division of the United States| Biological Survey in Montana. | Since coming here, Mr. Branin, has been connected with Rice & | Ahlers Company. He will leave to-| night for Cordova and proceed to} Chitina where he will meet R. K. Stewart, director of Alaska’s pre- } datory animal control activities. ,“ e 1 Commercial jJou printing at The, o S btRGEE i oa e e e e Will make an ideal Christmas Gift for friends and relatives living Outside. *‘ "Jfir Edison Mazda Lamps ABSOLUTELY THE STANDARD OF COMPARISON Alaska Electric Lighi & Power Co. Juneau—Phone No. 6 Douglas—Phone No. 18