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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE WED ' GIT SICK AN TIRED OF SEEIN' AROQUND DOIN NO‘\’\-{IN BUT READ AN TALK ABOUT FOOT- BALL-\TS ABOUT TIME YOu GAVE TROUGHT ABOUT \WORK "M GOIN' TO QI'T YOU A JOB IN A BANK - ELKS WIN FRUM D, F. D.; GROCERS DEFEAT D'MOLAY Lindstrom’s Shooting Fea- ture of Night's Play— Elks Click at Last h his team lost last night e Brothers by a score of 51, Elm Lindstrom, di- forward of the DeMolay ole e show with as an exhibition of shoot- has ever been staged on al floor. He caged 11 field A o ¢ 39 minutive quint and three on free throws total score of 25, and he only stopped in the sscond half when the Grocers assigned two men to guard him. The Elks had no trouble de- feating the Douglas Fire Depart- ment five by a score of 36 to 14 in the curtain-raiser. The purp!” and white squad clicked for the first time and looked like a for- midable opponent for the local Firemen in Friday night's game. Smith Leads Elks Elk forward, laid close : was fed dw bdh from scrimmage. He get on the floor until the first quarter was over. or the score might have been larger. The Elks passed 100 per cent better than in any prvious game have played, and played a strong defensive game. The Is- landers were off form in their shooting, ‘Manning, particularly being below his usual par. The Bills led at the quarter post 8 to 1; at the halfway mark 14 to 3; at the three-quarter pole 25 to 10; and ended the game 36 to 15. Secend is Battle The second game was & Teal bat- tle from the opening whistle. The DeMolays got away to a flying start when Lindstrom dropped in two long shots in the first two, minutes of play. George Brothers took the lead in about five min- utes and were never headed af- terward. Lindstrom, almost alone, kept his team in the running in the first 20 minutes of play. He shot from all angles and distances and | found the mark time after time In 21 tries from the floor he caged nine which, with three free throws | made, gave him a total score of 21 for the first half out of 23| for the team. | He was stopped in the second | half when the Grocers assigned‘ two men to guard him. They did the job so well that he added only two fields to bring his total score for the game to 25, which was high. 6: Personal fouls: DF.D. 11, EIKS pere will be no matches at the 14; technical fouls, DF.D. 1. Elks tonight as it is regular lodge | Second Game ' night, Grocers (51) Pos. DeMolay (39) | yngjvidual scores in last even- Tm'zgrson a2)....rf Llndstrgm«‘zfil ing’s matches were: Erskine (17) 1f Bloomquist (10) Pineapples Baker (8) c MesSer nfiss Taylor ...155 141 132— 428 rg..... Barggren 4) gpoy 178 15¢ 151— 483 T8 Marshall gouthwell 183 174 145— 502 ns: Davlin, (12) for, sl it " Totals 516 469 428—1413 First Second Total Crabappiss 28 s 51 Mys. Williams ..156 152 132— 440 | DeMolay a3 18 39 Halm 203 176 147— 526 Field goals: Grocers 24, De- yyercon 149 132 125— 406 Molay 18; from free throws: Groc- B R N ISl ers 3' DeMolay 3; Personal fouls,! moa)s 508 460 404—1372 Grocers 8, DeMolay 5. i e b Officials: Regele, referee, D‘“";Mncs Barragar ..125 125 125—°375 ,ham, timer; Shattuck, scorer. \H. Sabin 193 201 191— 585 B A s Y Monagle 130 122 161— 413 GUNNIE MAGK Totals 448 448 4771373 Melcns Mrs. Andrews 125 150 147— 431 Robertson 171 192 216— 579 Swuem 148 164 157— 469 Totals 444 515 520—1479 Cherries |Mrs. Kaufmann. 113 143 190— 446 | Bavard 197 179 201— 577 | simpkins 152 169 169— 490 CHICAGO, Tll, Dec. 13.—Con-| PSR 1 R | nie Mack, of the Philadelphial Totals 462 491 560—1513 | Athletics, has sold pitchers Lefty| Prunes ‘Grme and Rube Walberg, and In-|npyg Sperling ...136 109 146— 391 fielder Max Bishop to the Boston|council 164 174 133— 471 Red Sox. ‘Benson 138 149 160— 447 Mack has also sold Mickey| S RS T RS Cochran to the Detroit Tigers.\ otals .....438 432 439—1309 and Pitcher George Earnshaw to! PSRBT S the Chicago White Sox. | The deals are estimated to in-| EXPERT PIANG TUNING volve $300,000 in cash. | George Anderson, zxpert Piano . |Tuner, at your service for a few ‘Telephone 143. —adv. ESDAY DEC. 13, 1933. By GEOROE McMANU S OuM' 1 WON'T M|ND BE|N DRE%\DENT TO START: VoL SITTIN M SORRY - MR:JIGGS, 1ON'T IN-HE LEFT AN HOW)| c BUT MR. CALLMONEY NO MCORE TO-DAY- HE HEN WIL L WENT TO THE FOOT-BAM W HE Q\'T BACK? GAME B JOVET THAT EMIND ME | MUST BE ON MY, AY - I'™M TO e P THERE - o-U! 0 0 1 W u 0 Y ) S 0 ] ENCHIN S Even For Three Quarters It was an evenly-fought contest for three full periods. Not until the fourth quarter, when Erskine found the range did the five fast delivery boys pull away from their opponents. The first quarter end- ed with the Grocers leading 10 to the half, 28 to 25; the third quarter, 35 to 33. The third quarter was the hard- est fought of the game. Neither side scored for the first six min- FRUIT LEAGUE TEAMS BOWLED = utes in it S By winning, the Grocers tied and H Sabm Make with the local Firemen for first ngh Scores place in the League. They are practically certain to win from the Tallapoosa five next Friday night. The Firemen play the Elks on the same date, and if they win, With three straiht wins from the Crabapples, the members of the Pineapple team were victors in the a playoff will be necessary to de- Elks' bowling tournament match cide the first half winner. played at 7:30 o'clock on the EIks’ alleys last night. In the 8:30 First Game Detall match, the Melons took two out DFD.(15) Pos. Elks (36 of three games from the Peaches Manning (7) «t Nelson (D anq in the last match of the even- | Niemi J. (5) 1t Caro jne the Cherries won three straight Cashen c..... Osborne 8 grom the Prunes Niemi T. (2) rg.. Brubaker (5) Mpg, Kaufmann, of the Cherries Doogan (1) 13 MoyerS.(2) nage the high women's total with Substitutions: Ross for Man- 44 with a high single glame score ning; Smith (14) for Caro. 'of 190 in the last game, while H ety First Second Total gapin of the Peaches, made the Douglas Firemen 3§ 12 15 high total for the evening, with 585 Blks i = 36 and Robertson of the Melons had D.F.D. 4, Eeks 15; DFD. 7, Elks Field goals: from free ‘throws, the high single game score when he rolled 216 in this third game | | | SHOP IN JUNEAU |days. DAILY SPORTS CARTOON OHIO STA‘I’ES FLASHY QUAETE/R. BACK» / Two YEARS AGO HiS KICKING, PASSING AND BALL CARRYING BEAT MICHIGAN OUT FOR. HE JOB OF SIGNAL ' LAST EVENING Mrs. Kaufmann, Robertson‘ —SPORT /-8 ference. Chiefly noted for his de- fensive ability heretofore, Milu- lak has been bucking the line this | year with all the earnestness and | drive of a locomotive plowing | through a snow drift. Mike's appetite seems to be justly famous. The story is to!d} | of one of Oregon's trips, when Fat Spears was the head coach and when the boys were told to eat | all they wanted on the way back i from an especially hard game. Ev-| erybody was having a fine time | until the team manager spotted Mikulak's check. “What's this? Eight i | he exclaimed. ‘“Aren’t you about | through?” ! “Just about,” Mike replied, “but; { T haven't had my dessert yet." | dollars!™ ! jsowuNc TOURNEY | BY RADIO IS NOW | | BEING NEGOTIATED Plans are underway for the annual telegraphic bowling tour-! nament between the Elks’ teams of | Anchorage, Ketchikan and Juneau. | Word was received here from the| Anchorage team inquiring as to| whether or not the Juneau Elks would join the tournament to be| held in January. Juneau EIks'| agreed to enter, but sent word| that they would prefer that it is| = | beld in February, and fhere the| Dakotans played four ties in their | matter rests, first six games, an extraordumx\ S e Coach Lou Little and Capt. Cliff Montgomery will lead Columbia’s Lions in their New Year’s day game against the Stanford eleven in the traditional east-west Rose Bowl tilt at Pasadena, Gal. (Associated Press Photo) one exception) displayed an un- canny knack of making it seven points for the day or nothing. Here are five of the first six | results: North Dakota State 0, Concor-| SI‘;AN TS LAN GOULD IS I]ERAILEDE HOT SPRINGS, North Caro- | Take ‘em or leave 'em, here are! 9ia 0; N. D. 8. 7, St. Thomas 7}/ jina Dec. 13. — Engineer Arthur some of the All-America early re- N- D: S. 7. Morningside 0; N. D.|gouchins was Kkilled and three | turns: S. 0, Superior (Wis) 0; N. D. .| others were injured when the 7, U. of“N. Dakota 7. Southern Railway's crack Carolina | “Joe Skladany (Pittsburgh end),| who received considerable acclaim | for his fine all-around work last| AN s§ FULLBACK year, especially on defense, is ev- ery bit as good if not better this year.” “Charles ‘Buzz’ Cross tackle) has ing in every game. vard's goal line charge single-han- ded and place-kicked the goal that beat the Crimson. Was line “ > 2 star on the day that Detroit wal- Ready-to-Mail e o CHRISTMAS FRAMED PICTURES “Francis ‘Pug’ Lund (Minnesota fullback) seems destined to be The most popular Alaska picture ever made 1 | “LIGHTS O’ JUNEAU” unanimous choice for all Big Ten and other new subjects special was derailed here last | night. S e GOODY SALE Also Fancy Hand Work for Xmas For the first two seasons, “Iron | Mike” Mikulak, 200 pound fullback Harvey (Holy of the University of Oregon, has| Gifts will be held by the Girls’ been outstand- been, about as well regarded as| Loyal Club at Garnick's Sat., Dec. Stopped H:u-‘ any b’iCk in the Pacific Coast con- '16 Sale starts 10 a.m. —adv. backfield and a probable All- American.” “Undoubtedly the greatest back in the Big Ten this year is Duane Purvis of Purdue. He is not only an elusive, hard-running back but he can punt a mile and pass 50 yards.” . . B i R s Complete line Golden Glow Christmas unquestionably the outstanding Greeting Cards center in the country. He weighs | 6 pounds and is the backbone ° o the Michigan detense” Winter and Pond Co. of the Michigan defense.” “Everything in Photography” COME SEVEN \ Until North Dakota State Col- lege bowled oVer Moorhead Teach- —— - ers to the tune of 20 to 9. the feewserercerecorrroororoooes Fargo outfit was well on the way WIND0W CLEAN NG toward hanging up one of the most unusual scoring records of any college team in the country. As Jack Stevens points out from his long-range post of observation PHONE 485 in - Litchfield Park, Arizona, the R flIIIIIIHIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillIIIIIHIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII at the present time.| [ record, in addition to which \hv | team and its opponents (with cnl'.’ " NEW TOYS! P TO ARRIVE TODAY-SEE THEM Parlor Pool Table, large size . $8.95 Parlor Pool Table, smaller size . 6.95 3.95 @ These items are greatly underpriced but have been marked to sell! Toy Grocery Store, complete . . ettt e - Leader Dept. Store ~ CALLER. - HE COULD NOT REMEMBER HsS OWN LOCKER NUMBER - 11 Rights Reserved by The Assoclated Press GEORGE BROS. 000000000000 Store Open Evenings SRR flIIIIINIIII_IIIIIIII||IImIIIIIIlllIIIlllIIIIIIII||||IHIIIIII|II!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Dance Music TONIGHT Capital Beer Parlors BEER LUNCHES DANCING THE FASTEST SELLING ON THE MARKET If you don't care to pay fora lot of fancy trimmings and glorified attachments, but DO want a washer that washes anything from 5 oz. lingerie 1o 5 Ib. heavy blankets per- foctly clean with perfect safety . . . If you wart a dependable washer—one easy lo operate, one that will really pay for itself In sav- ot this fine G-E it at our store or ask us to demonstrate it right in your home—FREE. PRICE RISES ARE EXPECTED SOON Wkhes A Practical Family Christmas Gift Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU;—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL’’~of course! Harri Mac[nine Shop Sheet Metal Plumbing Heating FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver =~ Meats—Phone 16 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS l The Gastineau Onr Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery Old Papers for Sale at Empire Offic Foaras