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PAGE TWO ————————————————— FO R '!'H E Tuxedos and Formal Accessories=- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 9) Gl oL 2 LINEUPS IN BOWLS NEW YORK, Nov. 28—(®—Here's how the college teams are lined up for various bowl games, with sev- eral selections yet to be announced: Impeccably Tailored for the Well Dressed Man! It’s a formal season—and you're correctly—as well as ¢omfortably —dressed in one of our fashion- right tuxedos. Double-breasted in a midnight blue. w ALSO A COMPLETE ARRAY OF SHIRTS AND TIES R M Behiends Co QUALICY SINCE /847 5 | ; EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED |} HER['S (ousounou et \ron NAVY GRIDDERS, Becond and Franklin Juneau l PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTE J By Harold Claassen NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—M—If it |is any consolation to Navy and its | | feotball - following, 16 of the 37| | players used by Army in its 38 to 0| | victory at Philadelphia Saturday in the annual seryice classic have played their final games. That list includes such stars’ as | | Arnold Galiffa, the playing brain, | l\ 5 SEVENTEEN YEARS 20— " |and william Kellum, his favorite | -] 3 | pass receiver. ' But coming up to fill holes in the Army lineup are the stars of an un- | beaten plebe squad that some foot- | | ball critics think is the best frosh squad ever: gathered at the Point. | The remnants of the great team i that splattered Navy Saturday and { the oncoming plebes inherit a string of 20 games without defeat that was started in 1947. In their farewell Saturday the 15 WE'VE FLOWN ALASKA December 3 Glass Bowl, Toledo, O-~U. of Toledo (6-3) vs U. of Cincinnati (6-4) . Evansville, 9-0) vs Refrigerator Bowl, Ind—Hillsdale (Mich) Evansville (Ind) (7-2-1). Shrine Potato Bowl, Bakerstield, Calif.—Boise (Idaho) Junior Col- lege (9-0-0) vs Taft (Calif) Junior College (7-1-1). December 10 Orange Blossom Bowl, Miami,!} Fla.—Florida A&M vs. opponent to be named. Little Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif —Little Rock Junior College, (10- Gold Dust Bowl, Vallejo, Calif.— (Junior college) —Menlo or Santa Rosa J.C. vs opponent to be named. Decemter 26 Shrine North-South Game Miami, Fla.—Two all star teams of college seniors. December 31 Shrine East-West Game, Francisco—Two all-star teams college seniors. Raisin Bowl, Fresno, Calif.—Op- ronents to be announced. of Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif. — California (10-0) vs Ohio State (6-1-2) Cotton Bowl, Dallas, Tex.—North Carolina (7-3) vs Rice (8-1). Crange Bowl, Miami, Fla.—Santa Clara (7-2-1) vs Kentucky (9-1-1) Sugar Bowl, New Orleans—Okla- homa (10-0) vs Louisiana State (8-2). Sun Bowl, El Paso, Tex.—George- town (Wash., D.C.) (5-4) vs Texas Western, (7-2-1). Pineapple Bowl, Honolulu—Stan- ford vs Hawalii. HOCKEY GAMES (By the Associated Press) | George Senick made three goal: last night in leading the Seattle Ironmen to a 7-3 Pacific Coast league hockey victory over the in- vading Fresno Falcons. He converted Rudy Filion's re-) Lound into a first period goal to put the northern division leaders 0) vs. opponent to be named. | San? ) TUESDAY MIGHT LEAGUE STARTS BOWLING SEASON i League bowling will start tomor- | row night on the Elks alleys. 1 The Tuesday Night League, eight | teams, takes the lead and an-| nounces the first round, also the| players as follows: | November 29 7:00 pm—Standard Aviation vs.| Juneau Florist; Parsons Electric vs Hennings. 9:00 p.m.—Thomas Hard- | ware vs Don Abel; Sick’'s Rainiers | | vs Signal Corps. | December 6 | 7:00 pm.—Don Abel vs Signal| Corps; Thomas Hardware vs Sick's Rainiers. 9:00 p.m.—Juneau Florist | vs Hennings; Standard Aviation \'sl‘ Parsons Electric. December 13 7:00 p.n.—Thomas Hardware Vs Hennings; Standard Aviation Vs Signal Corps. 9:00 p.m—Sick’s Rain- | iers vs Parsons Electric; Juneau Florist vs Don Abel. December 20 7:00 p.m.—Parsons Electric vs Don Abel; Sick’s Rainiers vs Ju-| veau Florist. 9:00 p.m-—Standard | Aviation vs Thomas Hardware; Signal Corps vs Hennings. December 27 7:00 pm.—Sick’'s Rainiers vs| | Standard Aviation; Hennings vs| Don Abel, 9:00 p.m.—Parsons Elec- | tric vs Signal Corps; Thomas Hard- | ware vs Juneau Florist. | January 3 ! 7:00 p.m.—Juneau Florist vs Par- sons Electric; Signal Corps vs Thomas Hardware. 9:00 p.m.—Hen- nings vs Standard Aviation; Don Atel vs Sick’s Rainiers. January 10 7:00 p.m—Standard Aviation vs| Don Abel; Hennings vs Sick’s Rainiers. 9:00 p.m.—Juneau Florist Signal Corps; Parsons Electric vs Thomas Hardware. The team rosters have been lmen' | | vs up as follows: A LEAGUE Hennings — Henning, Sperling, Dowlin, Smith. Parsons—Hagerup, Mork, Parson, King, Hendrickson. Don Able — Lavenik, Lindstrom, Blanton, Smithberg, Schmitz. Thomas Hardware — Snow, : A.} Sturrock, Ripke, Burke, Alexander. | B LEAGUE Juneau Florist—Lajoie, H. Stur- rock, Whittier, Ray, Houston. Sick’s Rainiers—Nordensen, Cole, Hazlett, Mill, Hedges. Stewart, | out in front. The Ironmen added three more tallies in three minutes of the second period to build up a winning margin. It was the only league game of the night. Saturday night the southern di- Army seniors and their teammates { put on what was probably the best | all-around exhibition in the 59 ! years of the rivalry. Army’s defen- | sive unit piled up the greatest mar-' gin of victory since the warfare got under way in 1890. And it is doubtful that ever has been so held in check as were the Middies in the frigid af- fair before President Truman and 102,443 spectators. In the first half the sailors, who came to Philadel- phia determined to upset the Cad- ets, registered one first down and gained only 27 yards by rushing and passing. During the entire game Navy gained only 107 yards while Army, LR » N with third.stringers operating vir- great tradition of dependability. Fly [tually the entire. fourth quarter, { piled up 459. Of these, 149 came by passing. Army gathered 27 first| downs to Navy's eight. { ANOTHER CLIPPER’ EXTRA— Flight crews that guide any team ! are thoroughly trained. ALL sharea - | with the world’s most experienced airline!: : le o o oo =« a 230 00 For speedy 4-engine Clipper service, call e TIDE TABLDI e BARANOF HOTEL —PHONE106 |2 B 50 ’ 4 o e ¥ Piv AMERICIN ¢ "y 13 i de s am. sue . o NG Ty SRR MRS e O R e Low tide 4:09 pm., 45ft. e High tide 10:09 p.m, 124 ft. ® Worio Aigways: \ 7 1:.........: ®Trmds Mark, Pan American Airways, Inc. i lscnwuw BIKES AT MADSEN'S. JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING (O. Appliances and Heating Equipment PLUMBING - HEATING - SHEET METAL - WELDING Utilities Hot water heating Steam heating Hot Air heating Ray Oil Burners H. C. Little floor furnaces 3rd and Franklin Phone 787 Stacks Day or Night Oil Tanks Welding—heavy and small jobs Oxygen, Acetylene & welding equipment O S S AT vision leaders, the San Francisco Shamrocks, beat the Los Angeles Monarchs 8-1. The invading San Diego Sky- hawks, the southern division’s sec- ond place team, fell 12-1 before a Tacoma Rocket attack. Tacoma’s total tied the league record. Portland Leat Fresno 4-2 Satur- day night. John Savicky scored three times -for the winners. New Westminster squeaked by Victoria 3-2. LEADING SCORERS, FOOTBALL SEASON| NEW YORK, Nov. 28—(®—Bill; Young, halfback -of Hillsdale (Mich), is the leading scorer of the college football season—X:ut by less than a touchdown. Bill had a scare the past week- end. He watched another halfback, George Thomas of powerful Okla- homa, drive to two touchdowns. That gave Thomas a complete season record of 117 points, just Standard Aviation—Baker, Wil- liamse McCarthy, Baxter, Wood. Signal Corps — Hansen, Gormley, Nickolls, Applegate, Leighton. o Ty § ” COACH MATIY BELL 0.K, CN PREDICTION DALLAS, Texas, Nov. 28—®— Coach Matty Bell of Southern Methodist was in a bragging mood teday. He figures he had shown the sports writers a thing or two or three. “I said before the season started we would lose four games” Matty said with possibly 'more chagrin than satisfaction. “I also said Rice would win the Southwest Confer- ence championship. Nobody paid any attention to me. They went | ahead and picked SMTU ‘o win the| title and laugned at my four-game | prediction. Now look.” Rrice is the Conference champion and will play in the Cotton Bowl. Southern Methodist has lost three games. The fourth, avers Bell, is coming up. Saturday Southern Methodist plays Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl. It's SMU’s last game of the| season. four away from Young's 121. Young, in nine games, had 16 touchdowns and 25 conversions. Thomas' count for 10 games was 19 touchdowns and three extra points. Johnny Freeman of Portland Uni- versity is tops of the Pacific Coast and sixth in the nation with 16) touchdowns in eight games for a total of 96 points. MIRROR CAFE Now open 24 hours daily.—ady. 57-5t — Brownie's Liquor Sfore Phone 103 139 So. Frankiin P. O. Box 2508 i STARS OF FOOTBALL GAMES ON SATURDAY (By the Associated Press) Football stars of games played Saturday are as follows: . Gi1 Stephenson &ad Arnold Ga- liffa, Army Stephenson scored three times while Galiffa tallied once and completed 11 out of 20 passes to a 38-0 triumph over Navy. | Lindy Berry, Texas Christian— | Scored one touchdown, passed for | two more and gained 281 yards rushing and passing in 21-13 victory | over Southern Methodist. | Dick Doheny, Fordham — Com- | pleted 17 out of 24 passes good for 227 yards and two touchdowns to| MEETING The American Legion| IN THE LEGION DUGOUT Visiting Veterans Invited ROBERT N. DRUXMAN, Post Commander JOHN PARMENTER, Adjutant TONI GHT | "Clock | -3 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1949 W-A-N-T A-D-S .|-|-|+H‘l+|'|'|"!‘|-l-H-H-l-l-l-l'+l"l' FOR SALE FOR SALE CLEARED BEACH lot No. Douglas Rd, $500 cash. Wood heater, wood range, tent half price. Green 83, write Box. 2167, Juneau. 61-6t RADIO - PHONOGRAPH, lamp, table, small radio, pillows, ‘iron- ing board, other items. Call Blue 354 after 6 p.m. '61-3t ‘41 PONTIAC club coupe, excellent throughout, radio, heater, orig- inal owner. Priced right. Call 377, 61-3t |1 MATTRESS, some paper, 3 X 4 bldg., “10 $960.00 61-3t flooring. 1 concrete rooms. Possible income per year. Phone Black T10. ] 1942 FOR PICKUP. A-I condition. Ph. Blue 660. 61-5t 1 ” tiful terraced yard, electric kitch- BED complete with coil springs " and deep sleep mattress, over-| € immediate occupancy. G. I stuffed chair, all in good condi- |, 108 tion. See Glenn Allen at Juneau Young Hdwre. 61-2t SHOP the REAL SILK WAY in the comfort and convenience of your own home by calling L. Don McMullin, Southeast Alaska’s on- ly authorized representative of the Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Ph. Blue 483. 61-tf FURNISHED HOUSE $4,000 in Douglas. Write Box 1248 Doug- las. 60-tf BEDROOM HOME IN HIGH- LANDS. Here is a home we are proud to offer for sale. It is com- pletely furnished, including auto- matic laundry and play ground equipment for the kids and is only 1'2 years 6ld. You can move in and start living as comfortably as we have. Reasonably priced with liberal financing available. Ph. 932. 61-6t @ LIVING ROOM extension table $12.00 and portable electric phon- agraph $25.00. Both in good con- dition. Ph. Douglas 612. 61-3t REGISTERED DACHSI’!U_ND pups. No. 6 Windsor apts. after 5 p.m. 58-6 {HAND CARVED and tooled Ladies { * 1947 PLYMOUTH 4-door sedan. Good Condition throughout. Ph, Blue 559. 58-tf 2 BEDROOM house. Phone Red 765. 355-t1 l ARB 5—Packer at Small Boat Har- [ bor priced for immediate sale, |2-BEDRO0M home, hardwood floors, fireplace, view, yard, near school, churches and business district; vartially furnished, base- | ment, ga.age, view. 4-BEDROOM home Douglas High- way, partially furnished, base: ment, garage, view. DOUGLAS apartment and business property center of town, partial- ‘ ly furnished; view, garage, elec- tric kitchen. SIXTH ST, 3-bedrooms, dining room, garage, electric dishwash- er, large basement, furnace, par- | tially furnished, carpeting, G. I. loan. ‘ SIXTH ST., View Home besutifully 1 furnished, verr large rooms, beau- $4,200 takes home Nob Hill Doug- las, 3 bdr:, electric kitchen, base- ment, garage, furnace, etc. Terms. |NEW 2-bdr. home. FHA. Douglas. | INCOME PROPERTY. Ninth Street. { 5 cabins, two small houses, one large house. Territorial Vets loan. MURPHY & MURPHY REALTORS - ACOOUNTANTS Phene 676 gver First National Bank | Fom SALE 1940 STUDEBAKER Sedan. 1947 Ford four door sedan. R. W. Cow- | | ling Co. 59-tf | b — e 141 PONTIAC Sedan—ex¢ellent cons dition throughout—sacrifice , at [ $700. Ph. 81. 5933t; 22 HIGH STANDARD automatic pistol, 6x30 Dienstglas binoculars, 30 ’06 rifle. Ph. Blue 608. 59-(13! !GE PORTABLE RADIO. Battery may be recharged merely by plug- i ging cord in wall outlet, A-1 con- | { dition, but don't need three l‘B—] ' dios. It's a buy, call Green 917 { after 6 pm. 59-tf i i bags, belts, billfolds, key cases, brief cases, etc. Reasonable prices 1 and quick service on made to or- ¢ i der jtems. Res. Ph. 884 before 9‘ b am. ar 9' p.m. Harbor leat.her.{ 13th"and Harbor Way. 59-2t § 2 BED-ROOM house, knotty pine, fireplace and R.E.A., 16 miles out $8,000.00. Call Lucas Transfer 707, 351-tf 36 TUDOR FORD, $90. Green 163.{ LOG CABIN. 28310 1t inside. Hawk Inlet. Call 143. 202 8¢ spark Fordham to 34-6 triumph over NYU. Ed 'Petela, ~Boston College — Scored 34 points on four touch- downs and ten conversions to fea- ture Eagles' 76-0 rout of Holy Cross. Ken Konz, Louisiana State — Started State off to upset 21-0 triumph over Tulane with a 92-yard punt return in the first three min- utes of play. Charlie Justice, North Carolina— Scored one touchdown and passed tc a second to lead Tar Heels to a 14-7 triumph over Virginia. Darrell Royal, Oklahoma — Di- reécted Sooner attack ‘that netted 8353 yards rushing and 181 passing in 41-0 trouncing’ of Oklahoma A&M. ! § FOOTBALL| . SCORES , Final , scores of games played Saturday are as follows: Army 38, Navy 0. Fordham 34, New York Univ. 6. Wake Forest 20, South Carolina 27 North Carolina 14; Virginia 7. Southern California 0, ; Notre Dame 32. Alabama 35, Florida 13. Georgia 6, Georgia Tech 7. North Carolina State 7, William and Mary 33. Boston College 76, Holy Cross 0. Southern Methodist 13, Texas Christian 21. Clemson 20, Auburn 20 (tie) Vanderbilt 20, Tennessee 26. Oklahoma A&M 0, Oklahoma 41. Texas Tech 23, Hardin Simmons 13. Southern ' Illinois State 14. Arkansas 20, Tulsa 7. Colorado A&M 14, Colorado 7. 41, Indiana AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY Work party at the Dugout. Tues- |day 8 pm. to pack the gift box. Everbody come.—adv. 61-3t Boys and Girls of Juneau, Doug- las and Southeastern Alaska. Mail you letter to: Santa Claus, Ju- neau. No box number needed.—adv. 61-2t Follow the Cabs to in Douglas for a Good Time ILIGHT PLANTS ONAN, 600-Wwatt, 32 volt, direct or battery, used less than 100 hours. Delco, 800- ! watt, 32 volt. Complete overhaul, P.O. Box 604. Ph. Black 409. 57-tf e HOME FOR SALE in Douglas $3,- 800. Write 849 Juneau. 56-5t |LARGE SIZE mahogany buffet and | dining room table, in very good condition, also twin beds, springs and 1 mattress, 1 cocktail table. Ph. 322. 56-tf ONE 1947 HUDSON four door se- dan, $1,200. One 1939 Ford Panel | | SOOI D S S A R R i B B 2 SR BR PR et 9 L o o FOR SALE 4 BEDROOMS—An excellent fully furnished home. Only four years old. Full basement with recreation space—fireplace and plumbing— Large modern fully equipped kit- chen and dining space. Living room with tile fireplace and thermopane windows. Two bed- rooms and full tiled bath on first floor. Two bedrooms and ! bath on second floor. Large gar- ‘den and excellent location. Gen- erous terms. ‘ HOUSES LEFT of the 20 houses now nearing occupancy -date in the Highlands section, 13 have already been spoxen for. The houses have two bedrooms and allowance for a third. They have full concrete basements with garage, laundry, electric hot wa- ter heaters and an automatic oil furnace. The houses are com- pletely insulated for a low main- tenance cost. They have a gen« erously sized living room with large view windows and every house has a clear view of Gas- tineau Channel. The dinettes and kitchen are built in with an ab- undance of storage space and fitted with a new Westinghouse range. The houses are financed by FHA. and may be secured on very liberal terms. Secondary financing for down payment is available to qualified veterans. An appointment to see:thé houses may be made in this . office. APARTMENT. HOUSES, commer- cial property. Several two and three bedroom houses. : WILLIAM WINN-Phone 234 Office in Alaska Credit Bureaum ANNOUNCEMENT is made that the Peter Wood office has been moved from 316 4th St. to a new location at Marine Way at Sew- ard Street, across from the local Employment Service Office and next door to Harri Machine Shop. In addition to the usual real estate, used car and boat sales, the new store space (will allow the handling of a volume of used furniture and miscellaneous items. Hours will be from 10 am. to § pm. daily except Sundays, and the telephone number remains the same—911. PETER WOOD SALES AGENUY 316 4tk - - - Telephone 911 FCR RENT ; : BACHELORS QUARTERS, Small Boat Harbor, oil range, sink, show« er, inside toilet. $25 moi Ph. 91L 51-3t NICE Clean Rooms atemm heate 315 Gold 8% 220 i STEAMHEATED oums, weekly & Monthty. Colonial Rooms. 69 @ just up from states, $825.00. See WUR——_IL'IZE!—E Sp——mit pieno for 1 "n“‘ at Jay's Super Service. 46-tf . . . L . . . € . L) 1934 Airilow DeSoto, 5 ® e passenger Coupe. Perfect ® e condition throughout. Radio, ® ® heater, $600. Red 250. . e 6 & &6 o 0 0o 0 0 o o GUITAR INSTRUCTION a4 Alaska Music Supply—Ph. Doug Gregg; Blue 750. 1942 . PLYMOUTH, 5 passenger - coupe,” good condition, _radio, heater, Ph. 64 days, Green 930 # evenings. % FOR SALE: Weing and body re- pair shop suitable for general re- and machine shop work; priced for quick sale far below “value. See Stan Perry, 100 Wil- loughby Ave., after 4:30 p.m. 28 tf M R I e T SEVERAL large ana Small Dia- monds. Perfect stones. Bargain prices at the First National Dank. 35 o George Sundborg is returning from New York City directly to Ju- neau in order to attend the three- day meeting this week of military and Interior Department heads, ac- cording to Kenneth J. Kadow, Al- aska Field Committee chairman. CHAPEL-BY-THE-LAKE BAZAAR Dec. 2 at 7:30: Fancy work, pie and coffee, pop corn, delicatessen, potted plants, candy.—adv. 61-4t REMEMBER THE DATE Dec. 2, Lutheran Bazaar, sewing booth, food sale. Desert served be- ginning 7 p.m.—adv, 61-1t CALL FOR BIDS Notice is hereby given that bids will be reecived up until Decem- ber 20, 1949, on the Diesel Screw vessel KENMORE, official num- ber 205458, a fish packer with home port at Ketchikan, Alaska. Regis- tered length, 78.1 foot; beam, 16.5 feet; draft, 9.2 feet. Powered with D-17,000 Caterpillar marine engine; her engines, machinery, masts, boats, anchors, cables, rigging, fur- niture, and all appurtenances ap- pertaining and belonging to said vessel. The right is reserved to ac- cept or reject any and all bids. ZARUBA and SCHAUB Box 2161 Ketchikan, Alaska. Il’ubllxh: Nov. 21 to Dec. 19, 1049. Anderson Piano Shop. Ph. 143. WANTED RELIABLE MAN wanted to call on friends and neighbors. Wonderful opportunity. $15 to $20 in a day. No experience or capital required. Permanent. Write today. McNess Company, Dept. B, 2423 Magnolia St. Oakland 7, Calif. WANTED--GIRL for detail work, bookkeeping. experience helpful, permanent. Alaska Coastal Airlin- es. Ph. 706. . o Bletf GARAGE in vicinity of Main Front Strs. Dr. Montgomery. Pi 471, 61-4t iALAsKAN VET needs furnished 2- bedroom house for rent or lease. Box 1444 or Red 213 after 5 p.m. 360-4t WILL PAY CASH for good build- ing lot. Ph. 416. 58-tf CARPENTER wants repair work by contract. - Lewis A. Orrell, P.O. box 2796. Ph. 346. 58-9t R o TO RENT garage in vicinity of 330 W 8th St. Ph. 322. 56-tf ESTABLISHED MUSICAL instru- ment Wholesale Company with established trade in Alaska de- sires representative on a commis- sion basis. Must be an experienc- ed salesman who can furnish re- ferences. J. M. Sahlein Music Co, 718 Mission Street, San Francisco, Calif. 355 HOUSE CLEANING; washing, ir- oning or baby sitting. Call Bock at 957—7 to 5 days. 46-1mo MISCELLANEOUS GUARANTEED Realistic Perman. ent, $750. Paper curls $1 up Lola's Beauty Shop, Phone 20L 315 Decker w:y, o —— WINTER and POND, CO. Ina, Complete Photogrsphis Supplies Developing - Printing - Enlarging Adirondack Park, N.Y. covers 3,281 square miles, has 2,200 lakes, 19 peaks above 4,000 feet, and can accommodate one million campers daily. »