The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 3, 1932, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, DEC. 3, 1932. ~ By GEORGE McMANUS SOME CORNED BEEF AND CABBAGE — BRINGING UP FATHER NOW YOU LISTEN TO ME-| DONT WANT YOU TO TEACH OUR 9ON ANY OF YOUR g COMMON HABITS-HE 15 A LITTLE GENTLEMAN-YOUR MANNERD ARE HORRID» OF COURSE, YOU WOULDNT UNOSRSTAND WHAT A COLLEGE EDUCATION 195~ HOWDY-MOM- 1S DINNER READY YET? O WHaT WOULD You LIKE-MY Son? LKNOW THAT HID EDUCATION AN’ FIVE CENTS WiLL QT HIM A CUP OF COFFEE~ | | | | [ | | |\ 7% Interes On YOUR Money . .. With Safety! The Unsold Portion of the $50,000 Serial Bond Issue of THE ASSEMBLY COMPANY Secured By THE ASSEMBLY APARTMENT BUILDING in Juneau | ©1932, King Feawres Synatcare, Inc., Great B PIN VICTORIES Nov Mibize Lende 'WON BY GRAIG AND BY CHILKAT Angoon Will Play Yakutat on Elks’ Bowling Al- leys This Evening Is Now Being Offered in Denominations of $500 each. Description Folder Sent on Request. Bonds May Be Reserved by Making 5% Deposit. CALL OR PHONE THE ASSEMBLY CO. OFFICE (Old First National Bank Building) PHONE 28 Hall for Brown. playing a nice floor game andi ‘Gray for Lundell; J. Niemi for |successfully checking every man i]l FI DI WIN FRUMT Niemi; G. Gair for Manning; on the B. P. R. squad except| 55 Manning for Lundell. Smith. BEJTGHERSI PAPS\ Referee—Engstrom; Umpire Lindstrom and Gummett played ) \ Dunham; Timer—Raven; Scorer— the second half with the Referee’s Island Smoke Eaters Have | | { | i Craig and Chilkat rolled to vie- {tory in the bowling contests last Inight on the Elks' Alleys. After "losing e first game to Scow |Bay, the Craig team won the two |next. Chilkat took three straight The All-America situation is ub-|from Tenakee. ject to change without notice, and| Petrich of the Craig team made a highly speculative sport at|the 1est single game score, 234, Shattuck. |hand over their necks. ®ach had Scocnd Game Fast three petsonal fouls against them In the second game, the Moose in the first half. Brown joined and Roadrunners started off at them on the anxious seat in the top speed and held that pace most tird quarter when two fouls were ot the way. The B. P. R. weakened ¢alled on him in Trapid succes- in the latter part of the game, $ion, making his total three. Easy Time—Mgqose and B. P. R. Game Fast end, although they were battling every jump, they couldn’'t match .the Moose sped nor stop the spec- Douglas Firemen scored an easy victory over the United Meat quintet in the first game of the dougle header sta; by the Gastineau Channel Basket- ball League, winning under wraps 38 to 16. The Butchers played ragged ball and were no-‘ match r the Islanders who looked like cne of the strongest aggregations in the League last night in the second quar- w battle in the first and edged away still further to win at the final whistle by a score of 42 to 27. It was a thrilling game and was played at dazzling speed. G. Gair, ex-D. Hi star, staged a pretty exhibition for the Doug- las smoke eaters and led the team scoring with eight goals from scrimmage Johnny . Martin was runnerup with five fields and a free throw for 11 points. Man- ning contributed three fields and one foul for seven and Lundell two from scrimmage for four. Lloyd Peterson, former Juneau High School boy, playing forward for the Bitchers, caged two fields and one from the gift line io lead his team. Jensen, Stedman, Hall,| Fiske and Brown each counted two points on the field goals and J. Cashen chalked up one point on a gift toss. Douglas led 17 to 5 at the half-| time, and finished 38 to 16. Details of Score U. Meat (161) Po D.F.D. in 38 | tacular shooting of Paul Brown, Moose center, Elmer ex-Juneau High star, Erskine. Erskine’s job was the hardest because he was assigned the task of covering Lloyd Bayers which he did so effectively that the carrot- topped B. P. R. tipoff man regis- tered only one field goal in the 25 minutes he played. However. “Kinky"” suffered an injured wrist carly in the game that finally forced him to retire. Smith High For Losers Bill Smith starred for the los- ers both on the floor and in marksmanship. He dropped five through the net from scrimmage and added two single pointers on free throws. Brown was highpoint man for the game. He caged seven from scrimmage and one on a free throw. Lindstrom chalked up 12 points for the Paps on four fields and an equal number of free tosses. Erskine registered in with four nice field goals. Grummett turned in a sparkling floor game and was particularly efTéctive on the defense. He contributed to the general cause by caging two from serimmage. Moyer was runnerup to Smith for the Roadrunners, with three field goals and one on a gift throw. for seven points. ed_ for five points and Bayers two. Trail at Quarter The first quarter was a see- saw affair that was lightning fast. I% ended with the Roadrunners and Claud Lindstrom, Nelson account- | The Sad Mceose (42). Poo. Lindstrom (12) .r{ Lzdbetter dd Bloomquist 1f Brown (15) c Erskine (8) rg Grummett 1g 1g Mess2 Substitutions: Bloomquist for Ledbetter; Smith for Bayers; Os- borne for Smtih; Messer for Moy- er. Referea—Eng ham; T8imer— Shattuck. Story BP.R. 27 ‘Torgerson (1 Osbo: Baye @) Nelson (5 Moyer (7) (&) 4. m; Umpire Dun- Raven; Scorer BASKETBALL STANDINGS Won Lost Pet. Jureau Fircmen 1 0 1,000 Juneau Firemen 1.000 Couglas Firemen 1,000 Moose 500 B. P. R A .500 George Brothers -000 United Meat SARAZEN SHIES AT MAKING SPEECH TO BEAUTY OPERATORS lane, Heller and Sebastian of Pitts- |C. Sabin .. ,Sarazen, holder of the American and British open golf titles, may shoot perfect golf before a gallery ;of almost any number, but he draws the line at making a speech to women. | When Gene recently played an {exhibition in Amarillo, he was in- |vited to talk to 600 beauty opera- |tors of Texas holding their con- |vention here. | “No, T'm here to play golf,” was' |Sarazen’s reply. “It would never Smith (i2 yet there is no question of outstanding calibre of such players as these: Ends—Moss of Purdue, Skladany | of Pittsburgh, Palmer of Southern California, Matal of Columbia, Mar- {tinez Zorrilla of Cornell and Wil- son of Michigan, Tackles—Smith and Brown of Southern California, XKurth and Krause of Notre Dame, Colehower of Pennsylvania, Hardy of Harvard, | Armstrony of Army and Crawford | ,of Duke. Guards — Summerfeld of Army, Smith of Colgate, Corbus of Stan- ford, Gall\js of Ohio State, Kabat of Wisconsin and Vaught of Tex- 'as Christian. Centers—Ely of Nebraska, Gracey of Vanderbilt, Bernard of Michi- gan, Krueger of Marquette, Engle of Pennsylvania and Wilder -of Columbia. Quarterbacks—Newman of Mich- 000 jgan, Chase of Brown, Montgom- | Mrs. Goddard ery of Columbia, Griffith of South- iern California and Widal of Ar- my. | Malfbacks—Zimmerman of Tu- Blach- burgh, Purvis of Purdue, | h AMARILLO, Tex.,, Dec. 3—Gene a0 of Ohio State, Feathers of |Sweum Tennessee, Roberts of Vanderbilt, Hitchcock of Auburn, Oliver of Texas Christian and Sander of ‘Washington. Fullbacks—Hurstman of Purdue, {Manders of Minnesota, Viviano of Cornell, Brovelli of St. Mary’s, Melnkovich of Notre Dame and |Kay of Texas. INJURIES REMOVE THREE Injuries have a habit of wreck- ing the All-American calculations r{ ... Gair O. (6) leading 9 to 7. The Moose forged'qo for the news to get back to|Of the dopesters, as well as the Stedman Fiske (2) Hall (2) . Cashen (1) .. Livie Brown (2) . Hall a Substitutions: ‘Gair A Lundell (4)! Gray, Niemi J. Hudson for Pet-! erson; Stedman for Jensen; Hall tion of the second quarter. Grad- |ers. for Fiske; Livie for Cashen and ually the Moose boosted its lead,|—adv. DAILY SPORTS ONE OF. THE BEST IN"8IG TEAN ahead shortly after the second and a field goal. The B. P. R. toss. ‘The Moose then got the old ma- chine working on all eight. .. Niemi T. half ended with the Paps on the|in town. long end of a 21 to 15 score The second half was a repeti- CARTOON " COMPE 1’;‘90&1 D97 {New York that I was out here . Martin (11) got under way with a foul shoc“m Texas making speeches to beau- !ty operators.” . Manning (7) tied a second later with a gift| 3 ballyhoo for the individual. | 'Dick King, Army's great left end, |looked to be a sure thing for the |all-tar line-up until he cracked an | TOYS, GIFTS, HOLIAY GOODS ankle in the Harvard game, elim- [Crcdit extended to reliable custom- Open evenings. CASH BAZAAR. —By Pap P We have the largest stock of inating him from West Point's The | TOYS, GIFTS and holiday gox's last three games. Please look over our| |stock and prices before buying. Broken ribs removed a 1981 All- America back, Pug Panther of Northwestern, from the late No- "v:mher picture. Orville Mohler, Southern Califor- nia’s great quarterback, also was (forced right out of the All-Amer- !ica running in mid-season by the doctor’s orders. FOUR BASIC FORMATIONS sive formations in football as out- lined for the Athletic Journal “by {Glenn Thistleweight, are as fol- lows: 1. Single wing-back or “Z" for- mation, usually with an unbal- ranced line. Z. Notre Dame’s formation with balanced line and shifted back- field. | 3. Double wing-back formation, { with balanced or unbalanced line. ‘; 4. Short kick formation, with !ends close or split away. | The preponderance this year is with the wing-back or so-called [the East, where this system is the |basis of the ‘Army, Colgate, Pitts- |burgh and Brown offensives, with |some variations. Purdue and Au- burn follow theNotre Dameé style I'6f play. Michigan and Vanderbilt {favor the kick formation, long a lprefemnce of Yost and adherents. e ———— ‘ JUNEAU WOMEN'S CLUB The four most common offen- | Warner formations, especially in | and the highest three-zame total. /585. His team-mate Koski got | threc-game aggregate of 504. Pass 500 Mark C. Sabin and Lawry, both of |Scow Bay, passed the 500 mark, the former registering 526 and the latter 506. In the Chilkat-Tenakee contest, Raufmann of Chilkat, was the only player to roll better than a 500 total. He scored 527. Tonight, there will be one con- test, Angcon against Yakutat. Monday night, Kake will meet Sitka and Klukwan will play Sti- kine. Last Night's Results Detailed results of last night’s contests follow: CRAIG— Koski | Sides | Petrich Mrs. Peterman 188—504 127486 234685 132—369 132—341 813-2285 102 | ¢ | Totals | SCOW BAY— | T. "George 707 167 192 186 138 101 84 157—521 162—526 155—506 125—375 125—335 T24-2263 Lawry {Mrs. Petrich. | Totals . CHILKAT— Kaufmann ... J. George Erbland Sliva . |Mrs, Andrews.... 172—527 194—495 146—492 110—332 128—384* Totals 750-2230 TENAKEE— {Pullen | Nelson Van Atta Mrs. Pullen Mrs. Erbland 177—531* 152—456* 135—401 132—396 114—361 Totals . 710-2145 *—Average—Did not bowl. ARNOLD HERBER | FAMED FOR HIS ‘ ACCURATE ARM NEW YORK, Dec. 3—When Ar- nold (Flash) Herber of the Green Bay Packers snaps his arm back {to throw a forward pass, the odds ere better than even money the pass will be completed. National professional football league statistics reveal that Her- {ber has thrown thirty-five passes |ot which twenty have been com- pleted, five of them for touch- downs. His closest rival, Earl (Dutch) Clark of Portsmouth and Benny Friedman of Brooklyn, have completed eighteen iy forty-six at- tempts. Herber also leads in punting with an average of better than forty- six yards. Clark is the leading ground-gainer with 419 yards. —_—————— A new record for more than 11,200 applications to the Missouri game departments for fish for stocking purposes was set during the 1932 seaon. i Stan Fay, halfback, will lead the University of Michigan eleven nexi fall when the team defends its 193 Big Ten title. (Associated Press Photo) ‘MUDDY’ RUEL GIVEN RELEASE BY TIGERS ST. LCUIS, Dec. 3. — Herold “Muddy” . Ruel, veteran catcher, who has been a member of six major league baseball teams, was notified of his unconditional re- lease by the Detroit Tigers. e TOYS, GIFTS, HOLIDAY GOODS We have the largest stock of TOYS, GIFTS and holiday goocds in town. Please look over our stock and prices before buying Credit extended to reliable custom- ers. Open evenings. —adv. CASH B/AZAAR. AT MOOSE HALL Tonight i | | BY Serbian Flag Society Serenaders A Local Investment Where You Can See Your Dollars Earn 7¢. IS NO FURTHER AWAY THAN YOUR TELEPHONE WE CAN DELIVER ANY QUANTITY AT ANY TIME We Specialize on INDIAN AND CARBONADO Phone 412 BAILEY’S SPECIAL Every Night from 8 P. M. CHICKEN NOODLES and CHOP SUEY BAILEY’S CAFE CONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS and CRESCENT FELT BASE RUGS Juneau Paint Store Use Alaska Lumber JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 358 THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” —OHIO STATE" | : : | CAfiTAIM X : { The regular monthly lunch of L {the Juneau Women's Club will he held Tuesday, Dec. 6 at Mrs. Hook- er’s Coffee Shoppe. An interesting | program is assured, MILDRED LISTER, Secretary. % Open 3 P. M. to 11:30 P. M. HE wWAS HE STAR OHIO STATE'S VICTORY OVER. : Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone 136-2 ‘ i Admission, $1.00 ’D“mbfl ; e PLAY MIDGET GOLF! o The Indoor Health Game for Young and Old | SECOND FLOOR, GOLDSTEIN BUILDING i ALASKA MEAT CO. & e Wi THE SANITARY GROCERY BEEN oM A LiQUID i Erd DIET FOR. A WEEK. “The Store That Pleases”PHONES 83 OR 85 All Rights Reserved by The Associated Press QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:39 |Old Papers for Sale at Empire Officg

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