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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ZENIA KASHEVAROFF HONOR ROLL STUDENT From 530 students attending the| Monterey, California, high school; there are 39 on the honor roll end Xenia Kashevaroff, of Juneau, is| among them. SHe received an A- | plus in Spanish, A in each of bio-| graphy and art, and B-plus 11:; United States History. Miss Kashe- varoff attended the f and second years 4in the Juneau High s:houl! and is now in the third year class| at Monterey. The marks were received by Sup- erintendent W. K. Keller of the Juneau Schools. OF CUP WON 22 YEARS AG LAST REBEKAH CARD PARTY ON WEDNESDAY | The last card party of the pres- ent series of the Rebekahs will be given Wednesday night in the I. O. O. F. Hall. The whist party is the fifth of the fall series and tre| grand prige will be awarded. - at The Alaskan (adv.) FIRST OPEN 1923 Play Inaoor Goli Hotel. R SISO ERORT “Tomorrow’s Styles Todaz” Silk Lingerie Featuring the latest styles in holiday gifts. And this year at 28, Bobby returned to New Y Shortly afterwards, he | tional cpen champion. | lone, the British open and amateur champion. | delphia. A complete line is now on display for BOBBY JONES, ABDICATED GOLF KING, MOST PROUD MA O FROM ALEX A STIRLING WITH HIS FAMILY MERICAN AMATEUR WABWALKER —— AMER cuP OPEN s il TiSH AMATEUR™ OpEN Robert Tyre Jones, Jr., retired monarch of golfdom, won his first “tournament” at the age of six, 15 years later he became the na- ork and met Mrs. Jones and their children, Bobby ¥II and Clara Ma- gathered his fourth major trophy, the American amateur at Phila- By LOREN DISNEY (A. P. Sports Writer) | won it when he was six years old, |and he is not so sure that it is | really his. Alexa Stirling, later the women's champion, Jones believes, lost it through faulty scoring in a little half dozen hole tournament. Though this cup, Jones' first, was { when m boys start to school, golf wasn't Bobhy's first love. | your consideration. Priced to Please NEW YORK, Dec. 1—There is a room in the home of Rob- ert Tyre Jones, jr, of Atlania which glitters with cups and medals. Thirteen cups are s national golf cham; They will not be added to, now Bascball First Love that the greatest golfer of his- In fact, so Bobby says, he took tery has retired from such com- ’\ID the game only because there petition. | weren't enough boys to make up a But the cup Jones is most proud | decent baseball team, out by the ——wy Of is a little four-inch affair. He | Eastlake golf course in Atlanta “Juneau’s Own Store” Why not a watch for him or her or yourself? Beautiful new models of all makes on display and also a few of last year’s models at very attrac- tive prices. The Nugget Shop Dealers in Virgin Diamonds YOU'LL LIKE TO PUTT & ON THE { Midget Indoor Golf Course The town has gone crazy about this game . . . . and we have a very interesting and well kept 18-hole course. Free Instructions to Those Who Ask It | | | though he |in course of preparation. where the family moved. Bobby's first and for a while only club was a discarded cleak. When nothing better offered, he used to follow Stewart Maiden, Scot pro- fessional, around the course. In spite of numerous reports to the contrary, Jones never took les- y sons from the Carnoustic master. | He says he picked up Maiden's|; technique through the natural imi- tativeness of youth. Sraiich During his early years Bobby was|y...... quite frail, although he comes of| vl 2 athletic stock. But by his fourteenth | o . year he had overcome the cause, a| erious stomach ailment. That| was the year he first entered the national amateur. It was played in the Merion Cricket club at Phila- delphia. Jones was only 5 feet 4’{'“ o At inches tall but he weighed 165m gueci o pounds i Starts Throwing Clubs During the opening round Bobby acquired a reputation that follow- ed him for years—that of throwing clubs. Jones explains he threw clubs because he was mad at himself for dubbing shots. He still gets mad, ¢ as revealed, but now the only {indication is a reddening of the ears. Some critics have said that this { temper was one of the reasons wh: Jones failed to capture a major | championship from his debut in | 1916 until 1923. Jones Himself thinks that the: seven championshipless years, de spite the fact he was called one of | the best shot makers in the ama-| | teur ranks, were due to his youth- fulness and in a measure to fate In the matter of youthfulne: is recalled, Jones was only 21 when| | he won his first national champion- | ship—the open at Inwood. Jones recalls that he had many | boyish traits that were handicaps hard, competitive golf. Among oth- er things, he loved to eat ice cream | between rounds, a proceeding that invariably left him feeling stuffy l'and out of shape. | So many things, so many turns of | fate seemed to balk him in tho (11 tournaments during this tim I’that Jones became something of fatalist, in common with the many | professionals who believed that a | certain player is pre-destined win a tournament. Becomes “Grown-up” Jones thinks he suddenly started playing a grown-up game to win his first tournament. He played| “Old Man Par” instead of individual | players. He crashed through {Inwood, and not a year elapse | without his adding a major trophy MORE EVIDENCE CINSO COW id Ramsin ) r ) ove char hrow the Soviet gover ied that officers of 1 Staff prc u sed that armi stat would a in of Poland aud e ald the English consy the ight re have micropho s of plotting ors and decl, punishmen ased for a moment to- a man on trial for t ily defended his hon He said: “I have to crimes of trying to Soviet but T must m; ic writings are honest the nd beliefs and never once in them have I depart hones s of a Ramsin was 0 when the Prosecuc 1sed him of writing under fic robe of anti- Soviet propaganda. Ramsin said he was proud of his writings for which “I am known in many countri aring t a nfessed wreck the traged | it to |to his list. | Bobby finds competitive golf des- | perately hard work. This is one of !'the reasons he has quit. He lost or 15 pounds in each tournam can play the sam amount of casual golf and drol no weight. During his later “days Jones s0 he wouldn't putt without se ‘the imaginary line to the hole. T! at times required a nerve rackin concentration. He also concentrat on at least three components of every drive. Jones is married and is the fatl er of two children, Bobby III, an Clara Malone Jones. - e TO TELEPHONE PATRONS l | A new telepnone directory is now Patrons ' Juneau M idgét Golf Course GOLDSTEIN BUILDING K 1 contemplating change of address O! persons who wish to have tele- phones installed are requested to notify the Telephone Com Telephone 420. All changes for I directory must be in office by D¢~ cember 10th. —adv. | MONDAY, DEC. 1, 1930. ,/march to Oyster Bay when Roose- insist | d from H:n'\ T RY “MOTHER" JONES IS DEAD Militant Crusader for Rights of Laboring Men Passes Away (Continuea 1rom Pzge One) hed common school, alternated between sewing and teaching. Her first teaching posi- tion was in a convent at Monroe, Mich Then she opened a dress 1g shop in Chicago. preferred dress making ing little children,” she said But she went back to teaching for a time in Memphis, and in 1861 ried a young iron-moulder m she met there. Just as she enjoying domestic life with husband and four children, the fever epidemic in 1867 them &ll away. she to bos he yellow swept Victim of Fire uble pursued her to Chicago she went then to start an- dress making shop. The great » fire of 1871 made ashes of the silks and ribbons which the | xchellious young Irish girl had been | fashioning into gowns for Chicago’s | wealthy women. | It was the sight of hungry job- men that winter, tramping the freezing lake front which she could see through her window, which sent Mary Jones headlong into the labor movement. She de- |cided to take an active part in; aiding working people to better the litions under which they lived and toiled | Her first participation in a strike | iwas in the 70's when employees the Baltimore and Ohio Rail- road quit work. From then on her idays were one stormy succession dramatic events. | She was jailed, threatened, de- {ported from States and went |through all manner of hardships | Whenever the message came: “The Loys want you to help,” there went Mother Jones, sometimes carrying belongings in a little black Asked once where her home said: “Wherever there is ht against oppression.” he organized children working cotton mills for a spectacular othe her wl ! she | | | in | | velt was President. would not be She knew they received but it brought national attention to the child labor problem. She fought the Rockefeller interests in the Colorado mines and in 1914, after the Trinidad trouble she was seiz- ed by militiamen and ordered out of the State. She was active in the defense of Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone n 1966 and raised money and made summoned before Congress in 1910 in connection with the Mexican |question. She freely confessed hav- ed money for the defense ans who were jailed in Los Angeles for opposing Diaz, Mother Jones |100th birthday at the country| home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter| Burgess, near Silver Springs, Mary- JJand, with a big party. Telegrams {from labor organizations came from all over the country, including one | |of congratulation from her old celebrated her | |as heart failure according to Mr. | Ketchikan since 1010. Besides her | J. Hewitt, of Ketchikan, and | Wendell, wife of a druggist in | Alaskan Hotel, |“enemy,” John D. Rockefeller, Jr. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllllliIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"llllIlllmlfllllllllllllllll_n COLISEUM TONIGHT ——————————— 7:30 and 9:30 HUTEHTI T ARE you immunse to love? Do you want a good laugh? This laugh-a-minute pep-tonic will give you a new zest for living. June Collyer, Morgan FFarley, blonde Miriam Seegar, supporting the dashing Dix. An uproarious farce from the stage play, “The Boomerang.” OO OO ALL-TALKING Directed by MELVILLE BROWN nnenm TR T T T T T T R D T T = MRS. KUBLEY PASSES AWAY | IN KETGHIKAN Pioneer of First City— Mother of L. Kub- ley, Is Dead Mrs. Mina Kubley, oldtimer and pioneer of Ketchikan, mother of Lawrence Kubley, who is well- known in Juneau, died at her home in the First City yesterday after a long illness, according to a cable- gram received today by Erick Paul- n, who is in Juneau on business. Immediate cause of death is given FRESH as new-laid eggs. .. "™ Hills Bros In the original vacuum pack Paulson. Mrs. Kubley was about 60 years of age and had been a resident of © 1930 son Lawrence, Mrs. Kubley is vived by two daughters, Mrs. ST | Controrsp Roastine gives Hills ;’:’3’ | Bros. Coffee a flavor no other coffec Wwe. | has. And bcciu:lc Hills hnnl‘;sél Coffec ¥t g e WE- | is vacuum packed, air, which destroys :‘.m hee. The latter was in Ketchi- | ghe flayor of coffee, is completely taken an at the bedside of her mother. | ouc of the can and kept our. Ordinary eIt air-tight cans will not keep coffee I yegistered ab fresh because there is air in the can. D. Dillon the [ PSSP S S "|speeches in their defense. She was| Attention Radio Fans R. C. A. Victor with Home Recording—Very Latest in Radio and Record Reproductions NOW ON DISPLAY Anderson Music Shoppe Alaska Representative, Kohler Brambach Piano Co. SMO KERS like ’em g fand stick to ’em — —that’s Why! © 1930, Liccerr & Myeas Tosacco Co.