' Prince Kupe-t Daily Npws Saturday, December 19. 1653 Ml BASKETBALL TONIGHT CIVIC CENTRE 6:45 Inlar-B Ne'son Bros, va General Motors 7:15 trier-A Fraser & Payne vs Watts & Xickerson 9:00 Senior H Manson's vs Gordon & Andenon'i In This Corner By DICK AYRES : flt -V m curling ! . . f vw ifr - ; ; J i Good news on the basketball front for local fans is the fact V 5 . :v A A Smart Move . . . When We Do The Job ? -k Because our men take special care with your prized oossessions . . . because they are prompt and quick . . . because our rates are small, we think you'll like our service. Call 60. TFKRY SAWClll K, 23. Winni-peg-liorn goalie with Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League, is battling Toronto Maple Leafs' Harry Lumley for the Vezlna trophy this season. Both had five shutouts in their first 29 games. Sawchuk, NHL all-star goalie for the last three years has won the Vezlna trophy the last two seasons. He turned professional with Omaha in the United States Hockey League in 1947 and played all his major-league hockey with Detroit. OWEN SOl'XD-BORN HARRY Ll'MLF.Y, 27, is having a good season in goal for Toronto Maple Leaf of the National Hockey League with five shutouts in the team's first 29 games this season. He has allowed 43 goals for an average of 1.47 goals a game. A veteran of 10 years as a professional-he joined the Leafs last season he turned professional with Indianapolis of the American Hockey League in 1943. He has played with Detroit and Chicago in the NHL. LINDSAYS CARTAGE AND STORAGE LTD. C Pa -.king ( rating Shipping l.o'-nl find Long Distance Moving ! HOW ABOUT A RAISE, BOSS? A raise it simpler when there "LSAVE IT TO LINDSAY'S" is a "r'm" in the Ice. Plriv the two-ln-one shot Frosty's Down Rainbirds 32-22; Sailors Tied For League Lead The greatest offensive shot in ' the curling game is the raise, yet, it is a manoeuvre too seldom j played. Potentially, a well-executed raise combines two shots in one. It affects a draw and a guard, both carried out with one stone. Under most circumstances its effect is so devastating to the opponent's strategy, It requires the waste of many opposing rocks to undo the damage in an often futile attempt to get control of the end again. Short jguards a foot or two in front of the rings offer the best opportunity to put this lethal YOUR FOOD STORES MUST EE A GOOD PLACE TO SHOP third 11-0 and scored two more baskets in the last stanza. The winners were penalized for 3 fouls to the losers 4 and scored 2 free shots in 5 tries. Bulgers had 3 chances and sank none. A first quarter lead of 10 points to 2 stood Frosty's in ; cod stead last night as the! food locker quintette racked up; its second win of the season : when they downed Bo-Me-Ki' that Bo-Me-Hi capers will play host to the New Westminster Duke of Connaught High school rep team at the Civic Centre on Monday and Tuesday nights, December 28 and 29. The inter-high school engagements cancel out, temporarily, the round robin hoop tourney planned by the Prince Rupert Basketball Commission but the keen competition provided by the Duke's should bring in a couple of welcome crowds to the hitherto half-filled Civic Centre gym. The Duke of Connaught high school cagers held the B.C. title for four or five years and only lost this spring to South Bumaby by two points. Bo-Me-Hi's rep team lost out to Duke 3P-30 in the 1952-53 provincial school tourney so Rupert's high ohooleM are out for revenge with the added advantage of their own floor. Jack Evans will be coach of the Rupert squad which will be n arte up of six players from Inter-A loop Fraser & Payne and six from North Stars. Representing Prince Rupert will be Freddy Krislmaiison, Ron Black, Bill (.Mouse) Morrison, Art Helin, Rod Tail, Greig Forbes, Gary Morison, Doug Sankey, Rey McKay, Dick Nukerson, Jimmy Stewart and Ron Cicoone. Team manager is John !la Donald. Guiding the Duke's destinies on Its northern toul will be Bob Ilimlmarch. Original alternative plans to hold the postponed round-robin basketball tournament in the first week of January were dmpped when it was realized that Challengers, composed mostly of Manson's Omegas will be on its Ketchikan tour on January 5, 6 and 7. The Connaught high school tour, while welcomed by the financially-embarrassed basketball commission as a stimulant to basketball, has sort of kicked the props from under the commission which was honing to make sufficient moola from the tourney to assist the Challengers in their trek north. The Challengers have got to be in Ketchikan and Metlakatla on the appointed dates. The only way they can do it is to produce the money by digging into reserves if there are any, or by borrowing it and hope that they can break even when the round-robin tournament comes off. And the only way for the commission to break even is for Mister and 'Missus, sister and brother, girl friend and boy friend basketball fan to support the 10-game series when it is staged in the near future. The commission isn't in business to make money for itself. It merely wants to provide the public with the best type of cage entertainment it can. And while they are digging for funds to send the Challengers north the commissioners might as well delve deep enough for ten players instead of the planned six or seven. A team half dead from playing without substitutes isn't going to do Prince Rupert any good, either in the way of reputation or attracting good gates in Alaska. Understand that radio announcer and basketballer Mel Thompson who became a proud father this week, is on the horns f a dilemma. He doesn't know whether to steer his new son into Basketball or into radio. While the new arrival has the lungs for voice woik its the question of the CBC accent which may prove the problem . . . CCC coach Pop Pay has headed south for his Christmas holidays. His Pulp Mill squad are hoping that he gets Hack in time for the first CCC game of the new year. Maybe he will brin? back a solution as to why the Cellulose gang can play so doggone hard and still not win . . . The rule book comes out tonight as high school coach Jack Evans tries to convince Fred Calderone that his (Jack's) interpretation of the foul ruling on "the approach to making a shot" is correct. We're betting on Freddy . . . Incidentally It will probably be Fred and Vern Ciccone for the refereeing chores for the Bo-Me-Hi and Dukes games . . . With n intention of bragging, it could be casually mentioned often where you can wirk in one of your stones just in front and roll In yourself. Play for a raise when a draw would require your getting out to the heavier Ice on the side of the sheet. 9 Avpid raises on very crooked or very tricky ice where the percentages are against you. Primarily, a raise requires draw weight, but occasionally w hen raising one of your own stones to remove an opponent's, very little more than draw weight should be u.ed. Try a few more raises this season. You'll be amazed at the llei'Weness of this almost-forgotten art. Rainbirds 32-22 in a regular I A. Leigiuon scoieu n 'o i.vui--iris' league basketball game at' the winners r.nd Row' .etv-r 3 the Civic Centre. j for the jeweller--. In the Junior Boy's league Sea Lineups: Cadets chalked up their fourth j straight win to pull into a ANNUNCIATION Dumas 4. Le- THAT'S WHERE Toth a, Bury 13. I first place tie with Sports Shop j tourneau. mitn, Jim Joe Arseneau. Lyons. Ba.sso 10 PEOPLE SHOP! OUT OF Arseneau, Comadina. Total lil. SEA CADETS ChrurtofT 3. lluwcll 7. Iverson, Ncwfield. Flood 21. Huo-lick 6, McLeod 1. Total 38. ! for the loop leadership as tney i trounced Annunciation 38-21. j I Orme's handed Bulger's a 32- j ;12 shellacking to place them ' right behind the junior league j i pacesetters with two wins and! weapon to good use. A stone on the front rings invites the thought too, particularly If it ' can be pushed gently into the four-foot circle out of range of enemy artillery. A thousand and or.o opportunities of this nature ; beckon the imaginative skip : during a curling season, but if i yini want to be L'Tticulariy effective in undermining your opponent's composure, keep these point:; in mind: Next article 'Be Alert for Rolls" BULGER S Lambic. H o w e Tv.aile. Halvson. Vva!mou;li, Johnson 2. Gur.iey. P. Johnson Total 12. ORME'S Leishton 11. Duncan Lemmen 8. Mcintosh 6. Hewitt. WHY DON'T YOU GIVE 'THEM A TRY? IIAXniCAPPEO AKTIST The great French artist Pier- i two losses. The loss nudged the i jewellers into a fourth place X-j with Annunciation with one win j and three losses. 1 Frosty's win over Rainbirds gave them a two-win two loss record and edged them closer to the thus-far unbeaten Dom.j. Kelly. licul 2. CI. C'tlo.'. Plav th" law of averages hodiikinson Total 32. short uJses are ca-sier. re Renoir used a brush tied to Draw around a long guard his wn.t after he became crip-but raise a short 'guard. . pled with arthritis. Kr.ulM?n I Wood i. ) Jonus. RAINBIRDS BotrokolT S 3. Jackson 2, Farmer 3, hanson. SelviK. Martin GisKe. Total Uz. i Dot Marshall scored 8 points to j pace the winners and Margaret jsnd Nina Youngman netted 7 j md 6 point each respectively. I Top scorer for the losers who FROSTY'S M. Younijman 7. N. Youngman 6. Wmdle 2. Marshall 8 Sharpe. Home. Matson 4. TurcotW Stewart 1. Thaln 4. Total 32. 1 (went down 10-2, 7-6. 10-10 and i 5-4 by quarters, was Sue Mar- tin with 8 points. I Flood was the standout for : Sea Cadets as they mowed down For action try Classif ie'i jr - r I i Annunciation, scoring a total of 21 points, 10 of them in the first quarter. The sailors, wh committed 9 fouls and sank 8 WORLP out of 10 free shots took ttk-game 14-1., 6-7. 6-10 and 12-2. Annunciation collected 7 " per-.onai una cne technical foil :nd made good cn 8 fee shot in 11 tries. Bury scored 13 ;oints to leid the schoolboys. Bulger's 10-point ral.y in the final lu -rter was much too late :s "-ip 'irujpists took t'.ie fivst aa.ne -0-0, th- secona 7-2. ihe , t' that we think the Daily News entry in B Division of the Mixed j bowling league set a new learn high single game record for the vear. The newspaper gang composed of Eric and Claudea Sanderson, Jean Nixon, Muriel Avres. Noble Powell and yours truly racked up a one-game total of 1283. Of course there's a handicap to come off that. Unconscious that's us. ("Okay dear. You better clip this out and send It to the folks. It'll probably never happen again.") . . . Tonight at the Civic Centre Senior B loop cellar-dwellers, Gordon and Anderson's will try to whittle down the six-win-one-loss record of Manson's Omegas. In the Inter-A loop, Watts and Nickersons are still out after their first win when they meet Fraser and Payne and in the Inter-B circuit climbing Nelson Brothers will try to edge ahead of second place General Motors. Australian Miler Fails Jy, 1 wrmU0 -rp is 1 rrfrrv.iv i For Top f,i Service, nnri-riudlity ' 1 1 HI' ' lLQND6!t'ntifriiIhirurig';- sftme'iIrrie'lrfiehbourrt ohUMn's hi thtltw nfcwBMim Aifcwn'liai .JatmlArrMy!r'-gn'bt ftas tralian miler Don MacMillan to- been chasing the elusive four-day fell more than five seconds minute mile for the last year, short of matching the four-'ran the distance in 4:18.2 today minute, 10-second qualifying in 101-degree heat, time for inclusion in his coun- j Although the great Australian try's Empire Games team. runner had announced he was ! 1 1 i i at reasonable prices Call Blue 881 days, 101 evening:. mi v The Australian Olympian, now n(Jt going to try for a record, the ! teaching school in southern Eng- j relatively slow clocking was a land, was fighting for a place i disappointment to track fans on the squad in competition with here. 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