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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 25, 1935. Heppenstall, the losers would be win- ners today. The former Washington all-state star drove in twice in the closing minutes to send his team in the lead. To this the weary boys clung while the seconds clicked away to that mad finish. Hppenstall Stars Heppenstall was outstanding for the winners. Burnette showed an | amazing improvement over last sea- son’s play, and should be the No. 1 man to stop if improvement contin- ues. Andy Johnson was a tower of strength, and scored twice. For the losers Bayers and E. Lindstrom were best. Brown of Krause was off form on his style of shooting, but his rangy teammates turned many of his re- bounds into scores. Summary FANS THRILLED AT BASKETBALL GAME SATURDAY Krause-De Molays in Hard Fought Contest with Close Decision LEAGUE STANDINGS ‘Won Lost 3 0 Pct. 1,000 667 .500 500 337 000 Krause ‘Tallapoosa Firemen DeMolay ....... Sabin’s Eagles Krause (40) Brown, f. Hansen, f. Nelson, f. Burnette, c. g Heppenstall, g. ... Johnson, g. Frazer, g. Osborne, g. 2 1 1 1 0 €10 e RESULTS SATURDAY 7:30—Krause 40, DeMolay 39. 8:30—Sabin's 44, Eagles 35. Here it is Monday and they're still talking about the Krause-DeMolay " game Saturday night. Never have fans witnessed such a thrilling match as was won by the Concreters “by the skin of their teeth”, 40-39. Spec- | E. Lindstrom, f. . tators were almost 100 per cent for |S: Lindstrom, f. ... the little DeMolay boys, and almost|Davlin, f. ...... 100 per cent of them went crazy|HarTis, f. when they thought a basket tossed | Bavers, c. by Elmer Lindstrom had given the | Bloomquist, g. Livie gang a split-second victory | Garnick, g. over the giants. In fact, it was an-|Livie, g nounced over the radio that Krause lost, 41-40, a closing remark that there seemed to be quite an argu- ment on the floor as to just when the game ended. Totals DeMolay (39) o8- - g woBi8 | conimovos 1 13 8 Bl e sie e e el G e S O oo i e ey Sl et e & e - L ) SlroarmomarmtSl covwnwrmad 8| Totals Sabin’s (44) Behrends f. Carl, f. Rodenberg, f. Sande, c. Foster, g. Paul, g. e EXR-L How It Happened A referee’s delay of several se after Sammy Nelson had scored, probably cost the fraternal five the game. It seemed a foul had been called at the other end of the court, but play continued until Nelson scored. Paul Johnson, whistle-toter of several years ago, and who had his hands more than full Saturday night, discredited the two points for Krause. With the play in the middle of the floor, the game ended, but the tim- er's gun jammed, and in the ensuing seconds, Lindstrom dribbled to his basket and scored, the gun barking as the ball swished through the nets. Stunned for a second by such a story- book finish, the big crowd was si- lent, and then went crazy in a pan- demonium of noise for the favorite DeMolay boys. An official check-up, however, showed that the game end- ed in the middle court. Unlike foot- ball, basketball ends when the time is up. All officials agreed that the Concreters won the game, but Dan Livie, manager for the losers, entered a protest, and a meeting is said to be called for this evening to satisfy the plaintiff. Sabin’s Stronger Oh, yes, in the so-called main event| the Douglas Eagles successfuly de- fended their cellar championship I against Sabin’s Clothiers, losing theh-‘ P third straight game by a 44-35 count. Sabin’s outfit looked much better against the FAEmen with the addi- tion of Rodenberg and Carl to the squad. Carl, a smooth, clean-cut young man from the University of Idaho, was just getting in stride Tobady J3ie.ru i Eagles (35) Gray, 1. Edwards, f. tragler, f. ... Erskine, c. T. Niemi, g. .. J. Niemi, g. Hayes, g. B e e G e g S S B Sl ] R A, Y ] w|lvomocococol |l wrwrmnT Blincotakhult Lo aw Totals HOLLMANN IS HIGH AT ELKS H. M. Hollmann of the Cougars, with a score of 564, defeated Art Bringdale of the Gallopin’ Gaels, by 7 points for first place in the three- game total scoring in the Pacific Coast Conference bowling at the Elks alleys Saturday night. Brin- dale, however, bowled 213 to defeat Hollmann in the individual game scoring by an even smaller margin. Carey Tubbs of the Gallopin’ Gaels, aced third in both divisions. ‘The Gallopin’ Gaels won all three of their contests with the Bruins, and the Cougars repeated the per- formance by beating the Grizzlies three straight games. The complete scores were: Bruins vs. Gallopin’ Gaels ‘ | when Referee Johnson threw him |Bruins— out of the game in the first frame. Mrs. Kaufmann.. 150 150 150—*450 He was standing flat-footed in front| Wile ... 142 142—*426 of John Neimi when the latter H.Sabin. 136 129— 426 charged in and tripped and fell Manager Harry Sabin protested the| Totals 471—1302 action, but with no sccess. Gallopin’ Gaels—' Best for Sabin's were Dutch Beh-|Adams ... .. 172 170 147— 489 rends, who rang the bell for 20|Bringdale 212— 555 points, and Willie Rodenberg, who|Tubbs ....... 191— 551 fed the blonde forward, and scored T R he | i six points himself. Claude Erskine| Totals ... 550—1595 for ‘the losers was the high scorer of the evening with 21 points. He Grizzlies vs. Cougars scored seven baskets in the last half, | Grizzlies— set-ups under the hoop. Mrs. Waugh . 123 174— 487 Opener Sensational Sweum ... 143 143—°429 The much-discussed opening game | Sterling . 167 137— 449 started like a walk-away for the Con- e e M W e crete Goliaths. With Woody Bur-| Totals . 478 433 454—1365 nette, six-foot six-inch pivot man,| Cougars— and huge Andy Johnson making|Hollmann . 207 165— 564 their first appearance, the strength- 154 154—*462 ened squad rolled up a terrific lead 184 160— 505 from the opening wristle and lead 1 at one time by 15 points. During 474—1531 this scoring orgy in which all the| ‘—Average—Did not bowl., plays, Burnette, Sammy Nelson, Clint | the following games tonight: Wild- Heppenstall and Capt. Paul Brown cats vs. Hawkeyes, 7:30 p. m.; Cy- each gathered three personals|clones vs. Cornhuskers, 8:30 p. m.; called against his men was protested ety 2 1t AR by Brown on the grounds that it was pure checking but the referee ig- Gnln SGUHES whistle over them, the handi: Concreters weré helpless A Wwhen a deluge of DeMolay plays The following are final scores of Krausers at the half. The crowd|Saturday afternoon: went wild as the fraternal lads scored| Nevada 6; Tdaho 26. four fiéld goals in less than two| Marvland 12; Georgetown 6 . hander from the corner as the first| 10Wa 0; Northwestern 0. half gun sounded. The referee okay-| Chicago 7; Tllinois 6. ed the shot but officials claimed| Detroit 6; Duquesne 13. Baylor 0; Southern Methodist 10. time, so the half score stood Krause s 26, DeMolay 17. Rice 6; Texas Christian 27. 34 Fouls Called ‘Washington 6; Oregon 7. Army 34; Vermont 0. Burnette committed their fourth of- $ fense. The DeMolays took advantage| Princeton N Dartmouth 6. of the situation and closed the gap| Vilanova 21; Temple 14. During the mad third frame the g:]” St;u 36; Michigan 0. young Masons also lost Buddy Lind-| T “‘:" s 19, Browh 0, strom and Al Bloomaquist by the foul| NOTth Dakota 7; Western Mary- So. California 13; Notre Dame 20. in the showers early in the fourth 4 . : period. Thirty-four fouls were called Chicago 7; Tilinois 6. e during the game. Special Delivery to Douglas Daily grabbed a slim lead, and were lt’noz ,‘ for the. clever scoring of the slippery Concreters counted on high-passing| The Big Ten Conference will bowl against them. Almost every foul Gophers vs. Boilermakers, 9:30 p. m. nored the remarks. Laboring wm: rolled up the score to 28-17 for the important football games played last minutes. Brown dropped a one-| ‘Lovola at Los Angeles 6; UCLA 14. the ball was not in the air at the| Oreson State 0; Montana 0. In the second half Brown and Stanford 13; California 0. to 30-all at the fourth quarter post.| YAl 14; Harvard 7. route. Ed Garnick joined the boys|'and 13- In the final stanzs, DeMolay|s.30 p, M. Telephone 42 adv. SHOP TN JUNEAU! INDIANS BREAK PENNANT HOPES OF CALIFORNIA |Bobby Grayson Leads Stan- | ford to 13 to 0 Grid- iron Triumph | | PALO ALTO, Cal, Nov. 25.—Stan- | ford’s mighty men of football shat- tered the championship dream of the California Bears last Saturday afternoon. The hitherto undefeated Bears went down 13 to 0 before a crowd of 90,000. It was just too much Bobby Gray- son, Stanford fullback, for Califor- nia to take. Grayson led the Indians to two first period touchdown periods, which sunk California. Monk Moscrip added one extra point “after one touchdown with a place kick. ‘The victory is expected to send Stanford to the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day, notwithstanding a 7 1to 6 defeat by USLA. OREGON UPSETS WASHINGTON IN TTOB BATTLE Place Kick by Pepper Turns Trick for Web- foot Grid Team SEATTLE, Nov. 25.—Oregon scor- 2d another major football upset last | Saturday afternoon when the Ducks triumphed over the Washington Uni- | versity Huskies by a sco.e of 7 to 5 before 20,000 homecoming fans. Gerald Donnell tallied for Ore-| gon and Byron Haines on a pass for | Washington. Windrec Pepper place-kicked the | additional point which gave the Ore- gon victory. OREGON STATE, | MONTANA TIED MISSOULA, Mont., Nov. 25.—Ore- both playing sterling football and both on the defense, passed and | | thrust without effect last Saturday afternoon, the game ending in a scoreless deadlock. | The contest was played on a muddy | field. | The Montana eleven struck close to the goal line six times to four scoring thrusts by the Staters. | - ee— [DAHO ELEVEN BEATS NEVADA BOISE, Idaho, Nov. 25.— The Uni- | versity of Idaho broke out with a touchdown rash last Saturday after- noon to overwhelm Nevada 26 to 6 in a nonconference football game. BARETT HIGH MAN * AT BRUNSWICK | D.$Barett of the Frye-Bruhn team was the only player to bowl an indi- vidual game in the 200 class, and the only bowler to break 500 in the three game total scoring in the Commer- cial League bowling at the Bruns- wick alleys Saturday night. Barett scores were 176, 125 and 207, for a total of 511. His nearest competi- tor in both divisions was Pat Robin- son of the A. J. Camp team, who bowled an individual game score of | 171 and a total score of 455. A. J. Camp beat Frye-Bruhn in two of their three contests with the following scores: . Frye-Bruhn | -151 126 108—381 162 104— 388 128 207— 511 415--1280 416 171— 455 157— 430 155— 429 477—1314 Totals .. The Commercial League gzm bowl 369 ‘468 the following games tonight. Fol- gers vs. Brunswick, 7:30 p. m.; and Signal Corps vs. Alt Heidelberg at 8:30 p. m. — . SHOP IN JUNZ FIRST! D e “Tomorrow’s Styles Todav” New Tennis Styie 1 Paulette Goddard, leading lady in Charles Chaplin’s new picture, wearing a tennis costume of shorts and an abbreviated polo shirt at Palm Springs, Cal. (As- sociated Press Photo) i esosuve e vl . AT THE HOTELS » s e e e e oe w0 s Gastineau i J. Herman, Sitka; James Trapea, Skagway; G. T. Oien, Seattle; H. E.| Williams, Valdez; M. W. Odom, Ju- neau; L. W. Turoff, Juneau; Charles| having appeared in a number of va- | D. King, Seward; L. R. Sisson, Sew- ard; N. Wright, Fairbanks; H. Pigg,| Juneau; J. W. Mathews, City; W. w.‘ Spencer; O. Gustman, Seattle. Alaskan | John Bobek, Juneau; Louis Lund, | Lemon Creek; Chris Brugger; Capt. H. McAllister, Bellingham; Linus| Carlson, Marshall; Joe Michaud, Sitka; Ida Dades, Seward; George Woodruff, Homer; Dorsey Hulbert, | Sitka. Zynda | Mr. and Mrs. Harry Krane, Fritz} son State and Montana University, | Cove; B. F. Ficken, Sitka; Mr. and {0nd Street. Mrs. W. B. Healy, Cordova; Ben Neli‘i son, Cordova; Mrs. Pete Kirkibo, Fairbanks. - - NOTICE! Women of Moose Public Card Party Monday, Nov. 25. Members and general public invited. Phone, Sitka, died of pleurisy in the Pio-! for reservations, telephone 5451 or!neer's Hospital yesterday. | entertainment committee. —adv. | R 2:30 P. M. Telephone 442. ——————— — - — SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! — e - SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! SCANDINAVIAN MENU 1 —eee—— ——= Tuesday, November 26, and Every Thursday After This Week! "MENU Rice-Raisin Soup (Trondhjem Suppe) Polenta Pudding Lamb-Cabbage (Faari Raal) Pigs in Blanket. (Kaal-eRuletter) Veal Roast Old Country Steak Sur-Rom Norwegian Meat Balls Stued Erter) Herring Creamed Po! Stuede-Potetere) Norwegian Stew (Lapskaus) Betty and Hanna Cafe Opposite Goldstein > a pool hall there, recently served in | Special Delivery to Douglas Daily | Juneau on the Grand Jury. | garet McIntosh, and three daugh- SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! | ters, who live in Linden, Wash., andl a married daughter, Mrs. Edith Kohl- er, wHo lives in Bellingham. in Seward. DAVIS WOULD | JOIN HOOSIAC AGAINST AR ‘Formgr Democratic Presi- dential Candidate Seeks Court Action WASHINGTON, Nov. 25.— John| W. Davis, once Democratic candidate for President, has asked the Su- | oreme Court for permission to join the Hcosiac Mills in contesting the | 4| validity of the,AAA. He was joined by Nathan L. Miller, former Gover- nor of New York. William R. Perkins, in a request | ‘I'that he be allowed to participate as | a friend of the court, contended that | the AAA was in all essentials a coun- ' terpart of tk CELEBRA Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Harris, long- | time residents of Juneau, are cele- brating their silver wedding anniver- | sary today with a quiet family re- union at their Juneau residence. | The wellknown couple was mar~[ ried in Juneau 25 years ago today,| at the home of Mr. Harris's cousin, | his namesake, who was then Chief of | Both Mr. and Mrs. Harris | born in Alaska, the former in Juneau, where his father was one | of the founders of the town, and the | latter in Cordova. They met when | Harris, in his work gathering speci- | mens for the American Museum of | Natural History in New York, made a trip to the Westward. Shortly after- | wards Mrs. Harris, then Margaret ! Whitehead, joined him in Juneau. | The couple has had nine children, | one of whom died last year at the age of 17. The others are in attend- | ance at Juneau schools. ! Mr. Harris has been much associat- | ed with the theatrical profession here | riety shows in the past, and hav-| ing been employed for some years in the theatres producing sound ef- irwu for silent pictures. | “I was waves, and wind, and thun- | der, and almost everything else a trap drummer could be,” he said to- day. “I worked in the Grand The-‘ ater for years, and afterward for Mr. Gross.” | During the day, Mr. Harris paint- | ed scenery for the various theatres. | Since sound pictures arrived, he has been operating a paint shop on Sec- | ROBERT M’INTOSH DIES IN SITKA Rebert McIntosh, 73, resident of McIntosh, who was proprietor of | He is survived by his widow, Mnr-l Mr. McIntosh lived for many years Style (Kalve- me) (Klot-Kaner tatoes (Sill Building TE SILVER | ~ ANNIVERSARY TODAY | | Company, with headquarters at Se- THANKSGIVING COPPER RIVER RAILL SEASON NEARS CLO | X All operations on the Copper River and Northwestern Railroad are ! pected to cease next Saturday 2 | cording to passengers from the west- ward arriving in Juneau on t N | Northwestern. After that time, m | parcels and light freightwill be ci | ried by air. Interior residents. miners have their winter suppl enroute or at the dock waiting Elks Receive “Flash” from Santa Claus Gets New Deal Post - A radio “flash” was received from Santa Claus this forenoon by the Elks announcing his special coming to Juneau. The “flash” addressed to Walter P. Scott, of the Elks Christmas Com- mittee, stated Santa Claus will ar- tive In Juneau Monday afternoon, December 23. At that time he re- | the last trains this week to the ins ™ quests all the children under 12| terior. {years of age, to be at the Capitol | iheatre where a movie program will oe given free and gifts distributed. Santa Claus said he was making HAS FRACTURED ARM John Branch, mine employee, his arrival here earlier than usual | confined to St. Ann's Hospital," 15 he had many other schoduled | fering with a severely fracts avents right after Christmas. | right arm. Malke the Postman Your Banking Assistant! Many Juneau people, and many who live outside the city, send deposits regularly to their First National Account by means of our Bank by Mail service. The postman i3 their banking assistant — he carries our services as near to them as their nearest mailbox. 4 2 3 James W. Morris James W. Morris of Tampa, Fla,, | was appointed assistant solicitor- general to replace Angus Mac- Lean who resigned. i OFFICIAL, COLUMBIA LUMBER CO., IS HERE H. H. Greenhow, Secretary and Treasurer of the Columbia Lumber ‘wuen you bank at the First National by mail, you can build up the balance in your Savings or Commercial Account—or you can make withdrawals with safety and con- venience, bur Bank by Mail service is a your service, The First National Bank JUNEAU, ALASKA attle, is visiting the local yards of | the branch in Juneau. Mr. Green- i how will return to his home on the | steamer Yukon. | i SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT!/ i ITS 7 Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. | when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer DINE and DANCE WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 Al For Every Purse and Every Purpose " PACIFIC COAST COAL CO PHONE 413 LUMBER s 5 - Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. . INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alasks | ) Established 1898 RICE & AHLERS CO. Heating ~ Plumbing Sheet Metal Work PHONE 34 FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON i Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg.; UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 SPECIAL DINNER THURSDAY CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM i Lunches Dancing Every Night BAILEY’S ™™ i o CAFE “WHERE YOU MEET YOUx PRIENDS® Private Booths ol