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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, NOV. 30, 1929. "’ S0 MAGGIES BROTHER 1S GOW' TO TRY AN DEE UD TODAY WELL! VE GOT TQ KEER HIM AWAY FROM THIS HOUSE, OR HELL STEAL THE THE NE ~ ME HELL NOT SHOW VP IF HE SEED A CORP IN —E WON'T EVEN COME NEAR ENOUGH TO RECOGNIZE 1 GHBORNOOD l} A WINNER IN BIG | EVENT TONIGHT, Winner of Colliet-Silvers| Go Is to Have Another ! Whack at Soldier ‘; | ‘When Joe Collier and Doc’ Sil- vers climb thrcugh the ropss to- night in the main event on the Le- gion’s smoker card, the pursz will! nét be the big prize, but another ! chance at Soldier Olson, the Haines | battler, who conquered them both. ! And the winner has been definitely | assured that a match with the sol- | dier will be given him. | Cuilier fought Olson last summer. | He lost via the ckout route. But he gave the Haines' man something to worry over and at one time e: in the bout, he had him on th edge of slumberland. At the time, | few if any noticed it, but after the fight Olson, himself, freely admit-: ted that he was in a bad way for a short while. Labor Day Silve same fate at Olson’s hands that Collier met before him. He also, gave the coldier some worried mo- ments. In fact, up until he was]| plastered for the fatal count, Sil-| vers looked like a sure- winner. | On the basis of their showing{ against Olson, tonight's fight shouid be a cl affair. Both men are| clean, hard hitters, rugged and able | to assimilate punishment. Silvers suffered the team, and his bride, the formsr ought t0 be the best bet, but the margin is too close for him to be a cinch to win. | g In the semi-final bout between | . Sammy Ncls}c‘m and Eddie RobcrlswPETERSBURG BEATS | the Legion has arranged a match| that holds as much pubtic interest| KETCHIKAN FRIDAY as its main go. If these two lads| do all that is threatened, a vacuum | IN EI‘KS TOURNEY cleaner and a flock of dustpans will be needed to clear the ring before| Petersburg took two out of threc Collier and Silvers can use it. May- |8ames from Ketchikan in the Elks be it won't be as bad as all that,|bowling tournament last night and but it has all the earmarks of being |Won by a score of 2,116 to 2,045. To- a torrid scrap. {night a request match - will be A last minute substitution was!Pplayed, Douglas bowling Taku at made today by Matchmaker King :8:30 o'clock. Granney Hulse, matched aganist| Lavenix warzex away with scor- Joe Leyson, was still suffering from jing honors last night. He rolled an injured foot, and Young Shar-|193 and 533 pins for high game and key, Unalga’s fighting man, offered‘-high match scores respectively. The to take his place. Sharkey original- | scores in last night’s match fol- ly was matched with Sammy Nel- low: Rainey Cawthon, captain of the University of Florida football Assoclated Press Photo Sarah Lovell Payne of Nashville, Tenn., leaving The Little Church Around the Corner after their wed- ding in New York which was attended by the Florida football squads 900 0o vessese L] SPORT BRIEFS L 0000000000000 Freddie Sington, Alabama guard and tackle has made the scholastic honor roll every semester he has been in college. “Foots” Clement, Alabama tackle, has the largest feet in Southern conference football, wearing a size 132 shoe and placing a special or- der for foothall shoes. Jule Carlson, former Oregon State guard, is playing with the Chicago! Cardinals. The life of an Army foofball ceach; that is, his coaching life, is comparatively short, measured by the yardstick of such veterans in the service as Rockne, Warner, Zuppkg, Stagg and Dobie. But 1v is'not nearly so troublesome, what- ever handicaps it may hold. \ They have no alumni to worry about, nor grandstand boards of strategy. Since the regulations at Wezt Point limit the term of any, head coach to four years, he can! concentrate on the job without the bugaboo of bothering about what will happen when a contract runs! “out. | “On the other hand, the Army | coach has to work with material| subject to the strictest kind of dis-! i , where thers is no chance \for the player to side-step his main | \dut'es, and under the handicap of | peting with college coaches who ! can make the game their business over a long period of time,” points ‘out Capt. L. M. (Biff) Jones, who ends his four-year term at West Point this season. ) Under BIff Jones, Army football has risen to its greatest heights and featured two of its most spectacu- lar stars, “Light Horse” Harry Wil- ! son, captain of the 1927 team that | beat the Navy in the last service game, and Christian Keener Cagle, ! All-American leader of the last Jenes-coached eleven. The last four years have seen West Point attract greater crowds, play .more spectacular football and arouse more jnation-wide interest than in any |other period. In three big games so far against Harvard, Yale and Illinois, West {Point has played before over 200,000 spéctators and nearly 80,000 more will witness the game with Notre Dame at the Yankee Stadium to- day and around 76,000 will fill the big stadium at Palo Alto for the | closing clash with Stanford Dec. 28. ; Jones, an artilleryman, round.,‘ out eleven years of coaching alt o :"l“(‘:“ i ot SOUTHPORT, England, Nov. 30. O Lt tno oo attord to|—The largest money prize for & )’ et they can GLOTC [Q |British professional golf tourna- {that yields nothing in general in- iterest 0 any Army-Navy battle.' By GEORGE McMAN NO-B3UT '™ SORE i HES IN) THE NEIGHBORHOOD!, HAVE YOL DEEN MY BROTHER? | | sl | - Assoclated Press Photo | Engagement of Marjorie “Midge” Gladman of Santa Monlca, Cal, and John Van'Ryn of East Orange, N. J., stars of the tennls ourts, has been announced. - i e Al KRS T 1 one of the greatest open field ball- | BRITISH PROS TO PLAY carriers ‘ofumodern times. FOR $7,500 IN PRIZES | — | o ll | | their own terms of concili- Notre Dame fu rivalry wait ation to be met. nishes a climax |ment will be at stake in the Dally ! v o y this yeuri?‘sl“"cn match at Southport, May The record sum of $7,500 will be | Y given in prizes. Four hundred golf- And asffor the rest of its season,| . oAV CAmbeta? West, Bl s well oceupied taking | ™ ry.s comperition wil be carried p -, g out in two rounds of stroke play. tonal riypls @s Illinols and Stan- |y, jiavers will be divided into ford. sections of 100 each. e s MATCH SEEKERS FEEL FIST OF EX-CHAMPION PITTSBURGH, Nov. 30.—A bunch, of boys were whooping it up in a| downtown hotel the other night, celebrating a football victory. Somebody needed a match and| two collegians went out to get it They surveyed the long hall of the | hotel. The hour was late. There| was no sound, except in the room | from which the two had come. “Let's try this one,” one of the pair gleefully suggested. They bang- ed on the door. Arodused from his sleep the male occupant showed hi For Men The New coTY GIFT SETS Amnisy Bill Fols for the new sized OUR REPAIR SHOP Is Equipped to Handle any Repair Job on YOUR CAR If you damage the Body, Top, Fenders or Doors we can turn the job out looking like new. If your Motor, Clutch, Transmission, Differential or Brakes require attention we are prepared to render Expert Service. Connors Motor Company Service Rendered by Experts WE PRINT EVERYTHING STATIONERY and OFFICE SUPPLIES Geo. M. Simpkins Co. - PHONE 244 Edison Mazda Lamps ABSOLUTELY THE STANDARD OF COMPARISON Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau—Phone No. 6 Douglas—Phone No. 18 ~ THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat o New Ford Fordor Sedan Is An Economical Car to Drive ECONOMICAL because of its low first cost, ard low cost of up-keep. KEconomical because it has been made to stand up under thousands and thousands of miles of steady running. An indication of the built-in quality of this car is shown in the extensive use of fine steel forgings. More steel forgings, in fact, are used in the new Ford than in almost sany other car, regardless of price. Come in and learn about the safety, comfort, smoothness and alert performance of this car by driving it yourself. You’'ll know it's a great auto- mobile the minute you take the wheel. Juneau Motors, Inc. ! son but when the Unalga was called | Ketchikan Jim Magner, North Carolina half- [gether, although serving only the | displeasure. out of port last week, Eddie Rob_iLavemk 3 179 193 161—533 |back, averaged eight yards a try inllast four years as head coach. He There was an argument. Sudden- | currency erts was put in his place. |C. O. Sabin 161 127 172—460 the first 48 times he carried the bali [came back to the Point after the Iy a fist shot out and one of the RY Leyson has several pounds ad- Petrich . 100159 136—395 this season. war as line coach prior to succeed- Jmtruders reeled. o2 vantage in weight over the sailor |{Mrs. Manning .. 131 115 141387 ing John J. McEwan in charge of | Somebody called an attendant scrapper. The latter willingly con- |Miss Taylor 80 80 80—240' Coach Gwin Henry of the Univer- [the team. His successor, Major “Lucky you didn’t get anything | ceded to the handicap and said he:Handicap 10 10 10— 30 sity of Missouri does not differen-|Ralph Sasse, a cavalryman who | worse,” he remarked. “Of all the | was in first class shape for the| ——— —— —— —— tiate between his four backs, re- commanded a squadron of tanks on {rocms in the hotel, you had to pick bout. | Totals 661 684 1700 2045 ferring to them as “just backs” |the Western Front, takes over the|the one occupied by Benny Leon- | ¥ The curtain raiser will be a four- | Petersburg | {job as head coach witl seven years |grd.” | The Nyal Service Drug Store round go between Don Smith and Hendrickson 180 169 120—469| gports for all is the policy of the |of coaching experiencé behind him. | B R | Phone 25 We Deliver Pete Ervig, two hard-hitting young- | Eringdale 157 148 126431 ‘Red Wing, Minn., high school which |With the class of 1916, Sasse played | Dell E. Sberini, Jumeau's pluno tteb sters developing in the Legion’s|Hermle - 100 166 126—392 has organized 24 basketball teamsfour years at end himself and since | uner. Hotel Gastineau. ~ —adv ' gymnasium. The second bout is, Davis 138 148 187—473 into two leagues, the best of the the war has developed a fine crop | a preliminary between Jerry ROD-iMFSZ MeLean 119 108 124—351 | players making up the school team. of wingmen, among them Born Har- | erts and Stan White. { { 694 739 683 2116, s T W RS Totals Commereial Job» printing at The —_— e, ——— Empire. PICTURES FOR CHRISTMAS 1 -—»-1 Lessons in pencil sketching and!| NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT OF "FINAL ACCOUNT {inson‘ Telephone 4503. | Commissioner’s Court for the Ju-| neau Precinct, Territory of Al-| NOTICE OF HEARING FINAL aska, First Division, in Probate. | ACCOUNT ; In the matter of the Estate of The uncersigned, having on the JOHN E. NELSON, Deceased. |19th day of November, 1929, filed NOTICE IS HEREBY ®GIVEN, his final account as administrator that V. A. Paine, administrator With the will annexed of the estate with will annexed, of the Estate of Anna Glass Bock, deceased, in of John E. Nelson, Deceased, hav- the Probate Court for Juneau Pre- ing filed in this court his First cinct, Alaskz, notice is hereby given and Final Account of his admin- to &ll heirs, creditors or other| istration of said estate, the hearing persons interested in said estate, of same has been fixed for Friday, that Monday, January 20, 1930, at the 3rd day of January, 1930, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said| the hour of ten o'clogk in the fore- day, at the office of the United noon, at the court room of saidStates Commissioner, in the United, court in the Federal Court House States Court’ House, in the City in said Precinct, and all personsland Precinct of Juneau, Territory interested in said estate are hereby of Alaska, is the time and place notified then and there to appen;set for the hearing of objections and show cause, if any there be_‘w said account, the settlement why the said account should not,thereof and the distrib be settled and allowed. |residue of /said estate. Dated, November 1, 1929. H. B. LE FEVRE, '(Seal) A. W. FOX, Administration with the will an- Commissioner and ex-officio| nexed of the estate of Anna Probate Judge. Glass ock, deceased. | | Pirst publication, Nov. 23, 1929. Last publication, Dec, 21, 1929. First publication, Nov. 2, 1929. Last publication, Nov. 30, 1929, —_———-——— COLLEGE BUYS BUS WINTER PARK, Fla., Nov. 30.— | water colors. Mrs. Walter H. Rob- Rollins colleg?_ }fas purchased a h“'“iNuvy. has done more than anything | adv. to transport its athletic teams 10 felse to keep the Cadets in spot-! games away from home. The re- |sult is expected to be a saving in/ transportation costs. e — ATTENTION Painting, Paperhanging and Dec- orating. Gauaranteed First Class work only. Max H. Mieike, Phone 1191, —adv. anddojtright | bold, Messinger and Carlmark. | | | West Point’s policy of taking on! representative teams from all parts of the country, since the break with' 11|ghr. Major “Phil” Fleming, in the role of “graduate manager,” has | conducted these successful maneu- |vers to increase Army Dpristige in| |the athletic world, helped no little | by the personal explpits on the field of the well known Mr. Cagle } |1t was a break for West Peint that | |at a time when it decided to “step | jout” and take on the toughest of | the lot the team happened to have Men’s Top Coats $19.50, $22.50 and $27.50 | J. M. SALOUM “-O'I'H PETE SAYS: “No foolin’---1 ber 3rd. Help me do this by paving that little account you owe ME.” must leave not later than Decem- | | Juneau-Young Hardware Co. ETA JUST ARRIVED—New Stock of WALLPAPER Juneau Paint Store o Old l;épers for sale at Empir’e Offi