The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 30, 1935, Page 5

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BARNEY GOOGLE AND Sf’ARK PLUG YOou BETCHA LIFE, SAIRY, NOW THAT I GOT MYy DOUGH BACK I'M GONNA GIVE YOU AN' DAN'L “THE SWELLEST DOGGONE WEDDING THESE HILL- BILLIES EVER SAW-AN' T WANT ALL YOUR KIN-FOLK TO BE HERE AN' I'LL PAY THEIR TRAVELIN' RADDE HITS 538 AS KUSKOKWIMS BEAT STIKINES Bowler in Elks League Given Credit for Good Score Not only were two high individ- ual scores turned in, but team com- petition waxed hot in all three matches as Alaska Rivers League bowlers took over the Elks Alleys last night. Ed Radde, who, when he is “right,” is one of the city's best ten-pin artists, was “right” last night. He was ‘‘right” to the very nifty tune of 638 pins, one of the best individual scores made re- cently. Incidentally, his efforts contrib- uted greatly to the 2-to-1 victory scored by the Kuskokwims over the Stikines. Only five pins separated the two clubs at the end of their three games. For the losers, Mrs. T. Petrich turned in the secona outstanding individual count, when she led the women bowlers with the good score of 520 points. The other matches were just as close. The Kobuks grabbed a see-saw battle from the Tolovanas, 2 to 1, by winning the final game, 474 to 427. The Susitnas, although victorious by a 3-to-0 decision, nevertheless had a hard time with the Coppers. There will be no bowling tonight at Elks Alleys. Last nights summaries: FIRST MATCH Kuskokwims 104 108 248 194 190 188 542 490 Stikines 176 178 191 162 165 145 Judson Radde McCormick 139— 351 196— 638 136— 514 Totals 471—1503 Mrs. Koski ‘Walmer Petrich 166— 520 183— 536 132— 442 532 485 481—1498 SECOND MATCH Kobuks Miss Monson .. 136 125 114— 375 Kaufmann 202 158 192— 552 Barragar, F. ... 150 130 168— 448 488 413 474—1375 Tolovanas Mrs. Andrews .. 158 130 Garn 157 168 Connors, 143 143 143—*429 Handicap 2 22 22— C6 Totals 480 463 427—1370 THIRD MATCH Susitnas Totals Totals 117— 405 145— 470 Jr. Mrs. C. Messerschmidt Sabin, H. Andrews 141 158 163 122— 420 143— 467 163—*489 157 166 163 EXPENSES-~~ OH. MY ! HAIN'T THET JES' PLUMB PERFEC--2 AUNTY MARTHY AN' UNCLE GIFF AR JES' ACHIN' FER A TRIP- AN' COUZIN' RUTHY, COUZIN LOWIZY, TOO--TH' FURDEST THEY BEEN FRUM HOME HAIN'T NO BETTER'N FOURTEEN MILE- AN'- N AN' GRANDPAPPY HOPKINS--HE AR JES' DVIN' FRUM TH' STILL FER TER GIT AWAY A SPELL AN' LET ME TH\NK;— WHO ELSE-77?7?-; © 1934 King Feaves Sndias, loc, @ 2V THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30, 1935. By BILLE DE BECK rem s Great Britain rights reserved. KRAUSE QUINTET NOSES OUT PREP FIVE, 28 T0 26 {Two Teams Battle Hard for | yeison, ¢ Victory in City |Turner ... L Burnette, ¢ ceague € Nikish, Brown, g, ¢, f () Heppenstall, g race for the George Brothers quin- tet. McPhee won with 14 tallies. The Douglas Firemen gave the winners a big edge in the first half, then, with Angus Gair in the game, proceeded to make it more inter- esting. Careless shooting hurt the Douglas attack. The summaries: FIRST GAME (28) 3 o " ] | x 1 6 28 TP 8 n 2 0 3 2 26 CITY LEAGUE W. L. Pet. 0 1000 1.000 667 500 DeMolays Juneau Fire. George Bros. Douglas Fire. . Krause Conc. 500 Moose % 000 High School ... 000 RESULTS LAST NIGHT Krause Concreters 28, Juneau High School 26, Geeorge Brothers 41, Douglas Firemen 28. Totals HI SCHOOL (28) B. Lindstrom, f F. Behrends, f Meade, ¢ Paul, g (¢ Scott, g Smith, f et a s A8 e o ol dmooroduloorcon g olowrcwrtulorornmy Totals ... 12 Referee—Dick McDonald. SECOND GAME GEORGE (41) Davlin, f McPhee, f Baker, ¢ Erskine, g Burke, g (¢) Ficken, g Perhaps in the due course of time, there will be played another | basketball game which will equal last night's Krause Concreters vic- tory over Juneau High School for thrills. But those fans with high blood pressure and weak hearts would do well to remain away, for last night's contest, a 28-26 win for the Concreters, had every pos- 5o sible thrill. ot It was a battle from the openingz J. Niemi, f whistle, with both teams seeking ' T. Niemi, f their first victory in the second Gair, f, ¢ half of the City Basketball League Doogan, ¢ play. George Brothers won a tame| G. Gray, g nightcap from the Douglas Fire- D. Gray, g, ¢ (c) men, 41 to 28. The quarter scores of the cur- tain-raiser indicate the see-saw closeness. Krause led at the first quarter, 6 to 5; the preps held a 12-10 advantage at half-time; but the winners rallied to lead at the three-quarter mark, 19-18. There never was more than four points separating the two clubs. With but five minutes of play left in that final quarter, Buddy Lindstrom and Dutch Behrends— who had born the brunt of the prep offense—each collected a bas- ket, and the count was brought to a 24-all tie. Lindstrom's shot was a beautfully arched long, and Behrends’ basket, another long, followed a moment later. | Then, after two minutes of hec-| tic play, it 'was time for Capt. Paul | Brown of the Concreters to grab Woods, Yakima, Wash, negro light- -t = Totals (28) FG FT e v ol woormmor | mowrmmmew gl vocorFwea Totals Referee—Harole Regele. W0ODS, FACING TITLE BOUT, NOT POPULAR IN WIN |Yakima Negro Gets De- cision Over Ari- zona Fighter a loose ball and dump it in for Weight boxer who has a title match | a 26-2¢ Krause lead. Brown, ajvvith Barney Ross of Chicago fac- minute later, took a neat pass| ing him here next month, won an from Sammy Nelson to put the unpopular decision last night from game on ice with another cripple,|Mike Stankovich of Phoenix, Ariz. Substitute Roy Smith's cripple for| Woods weighed 137 pounds, Stan- the losers wasn't enough as the|kovich coming in at 134. final gun sounded. . e e S The finale was a dull affair, with NEW NEW NEW hustling Bob Davlin, “sure-shot”| Just received a new shipment of Bob McPhee, and Claude Erskine costume jewelry at the Nugget conducting a merry little scoring,Shop. —adv. 5|Gold team ba SEATTLE, Jan. 30. — Henry| IHUSKY QUINTET 'HEADS HOME AS OREGON LOSES | to Remain in Sec- \ ond Place | EUGENE, Ore, Jan. 30. — The University of Washington basket- ball team was on its way back %o | Seattle to f! having split even in Northern | Division, Pacific Coast Conference, | stand in Oregon since Friday might. The Huski made it two wins {to as many °s by nosing out the University of Oregon quintet hiere last nig 22 . The Lem- cn-Yellow f d the visitors| throughout, b the neces-| |sary push to break through me| Huskies' stubborn d se. i Washingten had two in a row to Oregon State College over | the week-end, but the pair o!\‘ wins scored against the University of Oregon sends the Purple and) to Seatile in sec- | ond place. i U. W. Wins 22-20 Thillere P 9 | 2 0 1 0 | mid | i to explain the ich basketball s oying this season. the east intersectional games caught the fancy of the sports . On two successive week- | ends capacity crowds of more than| 16,000 jammed Madison Square | garden in New York city to witness | the contests. Most eastern colleges numbers | are playing to greater than ever before. The decision to include exhibition basketball games in the 1936 Olym- | pic program may have stimulated | interest in the cage game. At least | this recognition proves the game Ahas grown to international propor- | | tions. { This year the tournament spon-, sored by the Amateur Athletic un-| ion will hold more than the usual (nterest. Heretofore the east showed only passing interest in the A. A. | 7. tournament but it is very like- |1y that the leading college team in that section will participate this | year. With western, far western | and southern teams taking part,| the tournament promises to be! truly national in scope. It has been pretty generally con- | ceded that the best brand of bas-| Totals .. 486 462 Coppers Williams 142 124 .. 191 167 139— 497 e 149 149 149—°447 Totals 482 440 420—1342 *Average—did not bowl. BOWLING STARS OF ENGLAND TO COMPETE HERE LONDON, Jan. 30. George Wright and T. C. Hills, champion bowling greeners of England, have announced they will compete in the American winter championships starting at St. Petersburg, Fla., on PFebruary 14. Outdoor bowling is one of the fa- vorite sports of England and Scot- land during the summer months. More than 200 competitors attend- ed the championships here, won by Wright and Hills. e, AUTOMOBILE LICENSES DUE 428—1376 Mrs. Shattuck Grummett 132— 398 Automoblle owneis are urged to get their 1935 license plates now to avoid possibility of penalty for non-payment of license fes, which were due January 1. Period of “grace will soon expire, after which time the penalty will be added to the regular fee, Territorial $10, city $5.00, in case of all cars found operating without 1935 license plates. A. W. HENNING, City Clerk. ———— Empire Classificd Ads Pay, _ . —adv. TLL SHOOT wHEN T SE& THE WUTES OF HEIR £Y£S NORM COTTOM, CONFERENCE HEH SCORER LAST YEAR, 1S BACIC AGAIN . DAILY SPORTS CAR TOAON-; - Te BOILERMAKERS FINE GUARD between fair and foul often being! ketball has been played in the mid- west. But the way the edstern teams have been drubbing mid- westerners of late in the inter- so fine that while an official may honestly see it one way the' thou- partisan ones—may see it another. sectional battles has caused cons In trfying to popularize the court siderable surprise comment. game ‘it might be well to borrow Wisconsin, Ohio State, Notre|the old football cry to “open up Drake and Indiana have)the game.” The center pivot play, before eastern rivals. | so widely used in many sections, York university defeat,ed; will not give the spectators the ac- e Dame decisively and mnow.:tlon they demanded. To have a ed it up a week later with a sin- Mman spotted under the basket and gle-point victory over Kentucky, constantly feed the ball to him so the wonder team of the south. he can shoot becomes monotonous. The far west evidently lags in It is drab and slows down the ac- backetball development, for the tion. Stanford team which invaded the It is going to take speed, accur- midwest experineced a disastrous | 8¢y and plenty of stirring action to tour. If Stanford is representative | hold the new converts to basket- |of what the coast game has to of- ball if the game is to secure its fer it must be rated below the Dew found gains. est standard. = i the e new interest| FOOTBALL IS OVER b i AND NOW HE CROONS stir up so uch criticism. Lack of tunate that the officiating should concistent inter ation of Lhc' BOULDER, Colo, Jan. rules has, in several cases of in-|the football season is tersectional games, left the defeat- (Kayo) Lam, Colorado ed teams disgruntled, to say the quarterback, devotes his time to least. ‘wrestling and crooning. Crooning? Sure. “Kayo"” sings cated Wisconsin in the | with telling effect through a mega- ; on a foul toss in phone and helps pay his way seconds of play, just|through school by conducting a U topped Kentucky. | dance band. cases the partisan fans| “Kayo” was mat the roof in voicing the Rocky Mountain conference leasure at the official's in the 155-pound division last year and is regarded as the mainstay of the university grappling team. SHOP IN JUNEAU! 30.—When over, Bill the la In both about ra their di d n Backetball officials have a diffi- cult task at best, the distinction Bargains YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO OVER LOOK! 12 Pair Men’s Brown Oxfords, $1.95 pr. 26 Pair Youths’ Shoes and Oxfords, $1.00 pr. ONE GROUP Women’s Shoes $1.45 pr. ONE GROUP Women’s Shoes $2.45 pr. COME AND SEE THEM! [ Family Shoe Store “Styles of the Times” LOU HUDSON, Manager 1y Shoe Store ® f Seward St. CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Private Booths Lunches Dancing Every Night INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska Established 1898 UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 sands in the stands—especially the) university | champion of | WILSON-FAIRBANKS & CO. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON 1200 Second Ave. Phone SEneca 2772 JUNEAU, ALASKA Ground Floor Seward Bldg. Phone 353 Facilities for Executing Orders on Listed Stocks in all Markets NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO SALT LAKECITY DENVIR LOS ANGELES ~ SAN FRANCISCO PORTLAND SFORANE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE QUOTATIONS BY WIRE DAILY CANADIAN MINING MARKETS VANCOUVER TORONTO MONTREAL ALASKA MINING STOCKS All Local & Pacific Northwest Stocks & Donds BOUGHT — SOLD — QUOTED , Complete Brokerage and Statistical Service ‘ Just say Happy-Peppy ‘ When in want of real good Bee It will make you Happy-Peppy And will give you lots of cheer. LARGE AND STANDARD SIZE BOTTLES IN HANDY PACKAGES == I “YES ... .the ; First National Bank is MY BANK!” Our customers find many occasions to refer to this bank with justifiable pride as THEIR bank. They know we are genuinely interested in their af- fairs. They appreciate the whole- hearted welccme that awaits them here. They know they can depend ly service. They know that their upon us for prompt, efficient, friend- funds deposited here are SAFE! It is only natural that they think of this bank as THEIR BANK! For complete banking satisfaction, you too are invited to make this bank YOUR bank. We are at your service! [ First National Bank Juneau, Alaska = ‘ Y (7 N LA Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery PHONE 58 THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS The Gastineau Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat BAILEY’S CAFE e “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" 24-Hour Service Beer—if desired Merchants’ Lunch GASTINEAU CAFE GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILDING French-Italian Dinners . Wines—Beer FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. N /\i //-/l ; | Sk | Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single Q-2 rings FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery

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