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Thursday, December lfr, 1937 TUPPER LAKE FREE PRESS AND HERALD Page 7 OLD GRADS WILL PLAY VARSITY CAGERS HERE FRIDAY TUPPER CAGERS BEAT MASSENA FRIDAY, 22 - 17 VICTORY OIVE8 TUP PER THREE WINS IN FOUR STARTS — SINK jj FOUL SHOTS — TUPPER JAYVKKS WEN, 28 TO lO ; Coach Len Perry's Tupper high basketeers claimed ' their third Northern League victory Friday 1 night when they bowled over; blassena's acrappy Red Raiders at the high school gym here, 22 to 17. The • game see-sawed through four exciting periods, Tupper holding a slim 13-12 lead at the half and managing to keep a two or three-point margin moat of the way. Foul shots, a weak point in earlier games, proved a big fac- tor In Tupper's win, 12 of the locals' 22 points coining via the iree tones. Shields, lanky Tup- per center, was high scorer with eight points. The Tupper junior varsity defeated Massena's Jay- vees in the preliminary, 23 to 10. The defeat was Massena's third In as many starts this season. Tupper Lake holds wins over Saranac Lake, Malone and Mas- sens, and has lost only to Nor- wood by a 21-17 margin. The Red and.Black cagera have tallied 90 points to 76 for opponents. Summary: Tupper Lake (23) O Tice. rf 1 LaDue, If 1 IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS Shields, c Stackhouse, Gagnon. lg Bouahie, lg Quinn, lg 2 0 0 1 0 F 0 2 4 5 0 1 0 12 T.L.H.S. FACULTY FIVE DEFEATS MALONE, 36-22 10 and 15 Years Ago in Tupper Lake (Continued from page 6)' \EVERYBODY SCORES\ A8 lrom Ixm K L * 3t * t0 ^ TtTPPEK TEACHERS TAKE, county line. He urged . Tupper I 1 . A. FACULTY INTO CAMP SATURDAY The faculty basketball team of j were appointed Lake to take care of this end of the new road. D. J. Hayes, B. J. Fountain and W. F Iitpi>ei Lake high school opened ilB season auspiciously Saturday n'ght by trouncing the Franklin Academy faculty five of Malone at help put the proposed winter road through from this end. • • • |4 E. BELLOWS and A. S. He- rn art-, instructor, was the spark- *•» •«* adjaialag the \Bellows plug of the Tupper team, scoring automobile works\ la Lake street. eight points. Superintendent R.'K. t. Wood * Sons were also E. Minnich, Smith O'Brien, band potting ap a garage ia Main teacher, and Coach Len Perry street The auto waa Just begio- contrtbuted six apiece. Johnson niag to come Into Its own. of Malone was high scorer witbi • • • nine points. A return game will IJOLY GHOST ACADEMY in- be played at Malone after the sUlled a new \stereosooplal Massena (11) G Jukowakl, rf 1 O'Shaughnesay, rf . . 0 Avery, If 2 Opalka, c 2 Oliviera. rg 1 Jerd, lg 1 Vic Bottari, top above, will be one of the big guns la California's attack when the Golden Beam meet Alabama In the Rose Bowl, \ New Year 1 !. Day. Starring In the 'Bama line wiu be Perron Saee- ° maker, left below, and Walt Merrill, end and tackle respectively. 3' BY IRVING D1X ; fall, cut down tacklers like ten- _ I 'THE Golden Bears by the , P lns a . nd Btoo<1 llke a ston e 22' length of a whisker. I That, folks, is our last-gasp on defense. But that F P; gridiron guess of the year--pick- 1 1 0\ Bear backfleld— there's a thing of beauty. Roly- poly John Meek, 210 pounds of Christmas holidays. Summary: Tupper Lake Faculty (M) O F O'Brien, rf 3 0 Quinn. rf 1 1 LeBoeuf, if 1 0 Minnich, If 3 0 Baker, c 1 1 Christian, rg 4 0 Perry, lg 3 0 Donovan, lg 1 0 17 2 Maloae Faculty <M) O Finnegan, rf 2 Child*. If 0 Parker, c 1 Johnson, rg 4 Livermore, lg 3 Raymond, lg 0 10 F 0 1 0 1 0 0 3« machine\ aa an aid to study that week. The lantern-machine used i •Udes to illustrate history andl Am * rtcan Le « ion A\*luary. Ben geography courses. jjamln Churco Unit 220, was en- * * * tirely successful. Its sponsors re- jTEM ALUMNI TILT ONE OF THREE GAMES TOMORROW NIGHT H.G.A. Will Play St. Mary's at Ogdensburg in Catholic League Game Friday—Tupper Drew Bye in Northern Circuit Although the Tupper high varsity five drew a bye in the will be at Ogdensburg engaging St. Mary's Academy in a Catholic League tilt, the Tip Top Towns court fans will not be without action in the basketball line. Tupperi high's old grads—many of them home from college I ~ r~— ~~^T. i 'or the holidays—will teat the Legion Auxiliary ! mettle of the 1937 varsity edition Supper Netted $621 ln * K ame t* 1 * 1 should pack the | school gym Among the former The supper put on Thursday! T.L.H.8. court stars who will be in uniform for the alumni Friday night are Charles Twohey, now a Clarkson Tech student; Larry at Hote , wlnd|>or b the of the week: **D. J. Hayes. the livery valuable team of heavy work nones to K. H. Johnson, well- known Lfttte Tapper Lake hotel keeper.\ The horses weighed S.2M pounds aad sold for $MM. Belgian stock, they had been used to haul freight from the Junction to Tupper . . . \Jaonw Hayes,' formerly proprietor of Beeehwood Ian. hM purchased the Central a* Ni port. The affair netted $62.70. On the committee in charge were Mrs. . Alvina Sovey, chairman; Mrs. Clara D 1 Avignon, ticket- chairman and Mrs. Miranda Cur- cie, who had charge of the dining A sliding mountain convinced Hollywood's movie moguls that Dame Nature ia still in the su- 5, Year's Day. 3) The Bears, the pride of the 2 Golden Slope, coached by Leon- d (Stub) 17 Referees: Conroy and Parker. 8CHENECTADY FIRE CHIEF TO BROADCAST ON FIRE PREVENTION MONDAY From James J. Higgins, chief of the Scbenectady Fire Bureau, comes an Invitation to Tupper townspeople — particularly the schoolchildren to tune in on Station WQY Monday. Dec. 80th. from 6:16 to 6:30 p.m., when he will deliver a broadcast on \Put Prevention\ appropriate to the Christmas season. Mr. Higgins has been an oc- casional visitor here on Asking and hunting trips and has many friends in this vicinity. by the best all-round in the nation, must be granted a slight edge over the Crimson Tide, the only undefeated and un- tied major team in the country, incidentally. _ —- This U the Tide's fifth trip to Pasadena, and the Red Elephants have yet to taste defeat in the blue-ribbon classic. But this year, if you will aootpt cold-blooded The sensational V1 c Bottart performs at left half and has for * P 7V t ^ i a running mate, Sam Chapman, DacKn \ a regarded by many as the best comparisons, Frank Thomas' lads will hit the skid*. The 1937 edition of Berkeley power and brawn is one of the most remarkable ever to perform In California livery. WlUi_Jh« exception of Pitt, the Shear's probably were the beat blocking team in the country. • • • A' FORWARD wa \ which aver- Subscrtbe to the \Free Press.\ I age-t only 188 pounds, tore Only $1.80 yearly or 0c the copy. I great gaps ln opposing lines all y y all-round back on the gridiron out Dave Adtnon fullback. Outstanding In the speedy Bear line are Perry Schwartx, end; Bill Stoll, tackle; Captain Bob Herwtg, guard, and All America Vard Stockton, guard. But don't sell the Tide abort Joe Kilgow, the Beat back In Dixie, Is quite capable of making life miserable for any team. A great ball carrier and passer, he'll able support from fullback Charley Holm, Bradford, and quarterback Vtc halfback George China's Shrine in Hands of Invader Zlvich. who Is a great blocker. Two great ends In Tut War- ren and Perron Shoemaker are ever-dangerous targets for Kll- grow's bullet-like passes, while tackle Jim Ryba and guard LeRoy Monsky are among the best in the ' uslness. • • • THE Crimson Tide will have a decided pull In the weights, with a line averaging 105 and a backfleld of 180, but football games aren't won with brawn alone these days. And that's why those high-geared Golden Bears are regarded so highly. Not that Alabama will be a pushover. Nothing like It.. The Tide la one of the most powerful teams Frank Thomas ever has turned out. In fact it wouldn't Come as a stunning shock If the Red. Elephants came through for their fifth Rose Bowl victory. And right now we're thinking of that California speed and ver- satility, and there our judgment rests. HOW THEY STAND IN THE NORTHERN LEAGUE The pen may be mightier than the sword but it takes more Jhan moral suasion to silence Japanese artillery. _, « . \Joseph ; per-coiojgjj producer class. . - - 2 Leaaere tendered bis resignation; y-~ »! as constable of the Town of Alta- . . . Xavtor Oagnon died at the « moot Monday\ . . . According to Holland House that week and waa 0 the Nov., 191S Issue of the. Moon- burled from Drew * Oswald's on- tain Home Telephone Company's' dertakiag rooms . . . Charles 8. directory. Topper Lake had Just Rytteaberg, former -T-*-*-II* til subscrlhen, as compared to noose pkysktea at the Tapper \John Lake Sanatorium, associated with 22 938 at Saraaae Lake IVAvlgmMi purchased IS heavy! Dr. A. Macdonald Bell, married work horses la Uttea last week. BUns Anita Lasmroa of Cincinnati One team weighed 1.44O pounds\' that week. ; y Quinn, who holds down a first- string berth with the St. Law- rence University freshman team, and Ray LaPorte, also of St. Lawrence; Larry Brown. Len De- Grasse, Dorran Boushle. Clifford Stackhouse, Al White and Don Smith, all of whom saw varsity service with former Tupper high Basketball fans will have three games to watch Friday night, the Senior \Wildcats'' and the Sopho- more \Leopards\ being slated for an interclass league game while the, Tupper junior varsity will play the Piercefleld high school jayveea hi the preliminaries. Economists point to increasing cigar sales aa sign of prosperity, supporting New Deal assertions that the depression has gone up in smoke. Subscribe to the 'Tree Press' Beauty seldom moans much\vK'rim men of war , relentless fighters such aa the Japanese pictured in top photo advancing cautiously over ruins of destroyed houses ar, they pushed past the magnificent tomb of Dr. Sun Vat-sen, father of the Chinese republic, and on to Nanking. The imporinp mausoleum, shrine of all China, shown In ljlwer photo, waa almost the only structure left unburned by Chinese retreating to Nanking's walls. They said: \Even the Japs ' will not desecrate this tomb.\ Potsdam Canton 3 Gouverneur Tupper Ijik Norwood . Ogdensburg; Massena .. W L P 4 0 126 0 82 3 1 116 s t m 2 2 75 0 2 42 0 3 50 Saranac Lake 0 3 62 Malone 0 3 74 O Pet 80 1.000 SOJ.OOO! 89 \750 76 .750! 89 .500 86 .000 71 .000 86 .000! 90 .000 Gamrm Last Fridny Tupper Lake 22, Massena 17 Potsdam 26, Gouverneur 21 Norwood 29, Saranac Lake 26 Canton-Ogdensburg (postponed) Malone (bye) Gam* Tuesday Potsdam 36, Malone 27 Games Thl* Friday Ogdensburg at Maasena Saranac Lake at Potsdam Malone at Canton Norwood at Gouverneur Tupper I<akfi (bye) Santa has a good reason for coming down the chimney. Think of all the hill collectors he'd let in the front door. Evidently the modern woman, buying the new style oversize hat, wants to get the most for her money. Subscribe to the \Free Press.\ Only $1.50 yearly or 5c the copy. Get Him What He'd Like To Have Shirts - Pajamas - Mufflers, or a New Stetson Hat Our Store Is Overflowing, as Never Before, with the Largest and Most Varied Selection of Practical Things for Men That We've Ever Shown! Other Suggestions Gladstone Bags rn , , CMI Moorhead Hosiery, Mit- (Some with Hanger jn a ^ d D Sl , lk tens and Gloves; Hickok Fitting.) and Beacon Robe « Belt and Buckle Sets And the Real Gift of AH HART S^HAFFNER & MARX Sll Him Happy with a New OR OVERCOAT FOR XMAS! << Do Propp's, Inc. Xmas Shopping at Tupper Lake's Leading and Largest Store r