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THE DAILY ALASKA FMPIRE WLD\ILSDAY NOV. 13, 1929. BRINGING UP FATHLR By GEORGE )i( M \\l HELLO' WHEN- MR- )IGGS COMES N HIS OFFICE -TELL HIM THAT 19 WIFE'S BROTHER 'S GOING TO CALL ON HIM- TO DAY- GEE! THE GUY THAT WL 2Z. HERE A YEAR AGO? pnrison of scores means anything, that the Clemson Tigers walloped .Davldson by a margin of 18 points ‘“hcreaa ‘West Point beat the same azgrcganon by only 16 points. Spofl: With Atlantic City joining the blddmg in a $250,000 offer for the \hph» of Herr Max Schmeling, a lively battle between North and South may develop in the quest for {the winter’s heavyweight fistic fea- ture. Madison Square Garden al- ALaN J.GouLn {ready has laid extensive plans to | The early season suggestion to repeat its Miami Melody but just keep an eye on Josh Cody’s Clem- at present the “subsidizing and re- son Tigers in the Southern Confer- cruiting” efforts of Big Bill Carey’ cnece race still holds good. The millionaires have not succeeded in South Carolina aggregation, with getting Herr Max into the big line- John Justus leading the attack, up. In fact Herr Max scems lined vept through its October slate up somewhat definitely with the without being checked. It draws Atlantic City enterprise. three tough games in succession| The big problem, for cither At- with Kentucky, V. M. I. and Flor- lantic City or Miami, is to get the at the pas theis basketball just as were reflected as vere they Not for versatile ko Nag” of Vanderbilt about started out as YOUR WIFE PHONED AN SAID HER BROTHER 15 GOIN' TO DROP N AN SEE YOU DOME TIME i ing playes mu on ski valuable an im. CHAMPION IS All-American as the gridiron. since m azei of Rut- s gained the distinction of being V\’ATV") Camp’ end in 1 on Camp's All-American choice | and fullback in 1924, | team, has any more | ar appeared than Bron- of Minnesota \ | as an end but has jed | divided his time between tackle and | wr {fullback since then. He was a v tal factor in Minnesota's conquests 1 and Northwestern, |1 all-around | ¢ man as the Big Ten or any other group can cla “Bi Hes comind 1] ‘ OFFICE? | , HE DRANK ALL THE INK WE HAD AN SWIPED THE LICENDSE OFF THE CAT- - RE- (N MY +10E ' T . Great Britai LOCK VP ME DESIK AN’ NA\H_THE CHAIRS DOWN: AN \F YOuL GOT ANY CHANGE {N YOUR POCKKET: TEL gy v NOT comMing right “ HO'S WHO AND WHERE nes Hagen, veleran peace offi- and for many years deputy | United States Marshal in and round Fairbanks, is a passenger Seward on the Yukon. He is urning to. Fairbanks after taking a party of prisoners. and Mrs. William Liebe and h 1d passed through Juneau Tues- 1y enroute to Cordova after spend- Both Mr, and Mrs. Liebe are forme: i 75 [residents of this city. ~ . Roy Rutherfor: President and Knockee Is Given Thirty|generar manager of the Janean n Jall on Lumber Mills, refurned home on the ~ | Yukon after a business trip of sev- Charge of Battery | Days eral weeks to Seattle, Charles E. Naghel, Alaska Di- rector of the Federal Census, re- promoter, who ask- turned home on the Alameda, afte: nberz, heavyweight an official trip covering communi- umpion of the world, to|ties as far into the interior as Fa mect d talk over some bouts banks, visiting Cordova, Valdez t menth, theun knocked the wrest- ' Seward, Anchora and other Alas- they were walking along ka Railroad tow cet, has been con-| Deputy United States Marshal C. victed on a charge of battery and, V. Brown, who has been here for icentenced to 30 days in jail. |the past three weeks, has returned When I came to in a second, he! \to his headquarters at Petersburg. ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 13.- have been days spending the past as the guests of Mrs, tin's parents, Mr. and Mrs Gravrock, in Ketchikan, returned home cn the steamer Yukon. Mrs. Martin has been on a three month v in the south and was joined in Ketchikan by her husband. Mrs. E., C. , Who has been pending the past few weeks as the guest of her brother-in-law and sis- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Harri- son, .at their home in Tacoma, Wash., returned to Juneau on the steamer Yukon -+ few MARGNITA SAILS Motorship M: Capt BV~ erin Swanson, sailed for Skagway and Haines last night at 11 o'clock with the following passeng om Juneau: For Haines—Helen Don- aley, Mrs. Dave Will e .- - BANFT, Alta., Nov. 13—The Zanff vinter carnival, which will be pre- sided over by Miss Owen Small- siece of Calgary, as queen, will be 1eld February 2 to 9, 1930. During he week named the Calgary to Banff dog derby will be held. D C. 8. Adams, Riverdale, Utah, WE WARNED YOU before the freezing weather to put Anti- Freeze in your Radiator—NOW WE Warn You A gain 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 Edison Mazda Lamps ABSOLUTELY THE STANDARD OF COMPARISON Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. | farmer, specializes in raising peach- es 12 inches in diameter, 16 of which fill a crate. ida, to be met in the drive down match that will draw the most gate the November stretch but no one receipts. Jack Sharkey is at the can convince a Tiger partisan that command of the Garden group. He any one of these foes can halt thelis also the leader of the heavy- big rush. | weight pack, as the result of his Clemson is especially anxious to knockout of Tommy Loughran Phil | iift Florida’s scalp in return for the Scott, the shuffling Briton, migh trimming administered by the 'Ga- be called in to battle Sharkey but | tors last year. To be better pre- the fact remains that a Sharkey- pared for the visit t9 warmer cli- Schmeling match is the logical af- | March 21 and 22, 1930. The usual * mate, Cody has had a special uni- fair, if some definite conclusion i | program will be run off and in ad- form made for the Florida Game, desired in selecting a successor to!dition the 300-yard medley, which consisting of a pair of rayon pants Gene Tunney. consists of consecutive 100-yard | that “weigh nothing at all” and a swims with breast, back and crawl boy last night ab. 7 Wrangell. | cotton shirt. Lighter equipment and' “Who were the best ends in the strokes in the order named. Ann 1. Moth- | Mrs. H. B. Crewson, wife of the! more and better reserves will give past five years of college foothall?” SRR AT TP s and $o: re doing 3 ¢ Alaska representative for Schilling Clemson- the edge, Cody believes. | Ostermaan of Miehigan and Han-| LET Almauist Press your Sult«’ - > )« |and Company, arrived in Juncau son of Syracuse, without much ar- We cail and deliver. Phone 528.| OId papers for salc at The Emg jon the steamer Yukon. | It may be worth noting, if com- gument. Both were marvels on' pire office. | Mr. and Mrs R\Iph 'vm rtin, who = ) tanding over me saying he| Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Chidester and YALE SCHFDULES ked the champion | their two children left on the Ala- - it T was a cheesy champlon |meda for Ketchikan, where Mr.|~ il i g SWIMM[NG MEET e g the wrestler testified. | Chidester will be stationed as Pro- | ———eeeee l - | hibition agent. | | 3ER SHOP | J. H. Newman, Federal court re-! VICTOR RADIO ! porter, returned home on the Yu- } 10 Tubes Complete [ $178.00 | ! | ‘ | Juneau—Phone No. 6 Douglas—Phone No. 18 — D NEW HAVEN, Nov. 13.—Yale will be the scene of the annual in vidual championships of the Inter- The Brunswick Bowling Allcy.lknn. after a short trip to the collegiate Swimming Association on|on South Front reet, has luased‘statcs, A Late Assortment of space for a two-chair barber shop.| J. Bernhofer, of the Harri Ma- | VICTOR RECORDS s |chine Shop, returned to Juneau Now Being Demonstrated TIAVE BABY BOY |on the Yukon afier having spent! ert N. Orme gave birth |the past few weeks on business in| WE PRINT EVERYTHING STATIONERY and OFFICE SUPPLIES Geo. M. Simpkins Co. PHONE 244 JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE Temporary location over Dr. le"s Office at St 4}1&‘/(.&.9 in Codeapa in Cline i \EW York ovhe Rherc Cunsr ...in a cigarette it's . TASTE/ AN official South American commis- sion reports Chesterfield’s blend as the ““most desirable.” In the Canal Zone, that international crossroads, Chesterfield is far and away the favorite. Tourists write of deliciously fresh Chesterfields in India, or that it is the one American brand in this or that French village. Good taste knows no frontiers. All over the world you find appreciation of Chester- field’s unchanging standard: EXICE in NC1PLES QIZ’I{/IL‘TJIK S O 4 i AR ARG b A 8 T o o AR @ ARGENTINE “TASTE above everyt/zin]" MERICA _[D 7725 YRD al the cs'oun/ OLE MILD, yes...and yet THEY SATISFY PN e